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•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wedntlday, May 15,1891'

.

. STORE HOURS

NOW
AVAilABLE
FROM
POWELL'S

.

MoRday fbQJ Sunday.
8 AM· HfPM

.

Ohio Lottery

Reds end road
trip on losing
note ·S-2

Pick 3:694
Pick 4:4488
Cards : 10-H, 6-C
• 3-D; 8-S
Super Lotto:
10-14-17-24-27-38
Kicker:814165

Page4

BAKERY

298 SECOND ST.
.
POMEROY, OH._
PRICES EFFECTiVE MAY
THRU SAT., MAY 18, 1991 .
. . 12
.
.

SUB

at

SANDWICHES

Turkey,
Roast Beef &amp;·

Vol, 42, No. t
• CopJrtQhted 1181

Commissioners ·meet

$
Round Steak-..... ~·~ • .269
GRADE A
Whole
-Chickens
.~·~.
S
9
&lt;
CUBED .
Pork -Stea'k ••••••• ~~. $2 39

By BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel News Stall'

VAN CAMP'S
16 OZ. CANS
AARON SHEETS

.

(
Country Sausage ..•• 9
. 9

11.

•ox

granI.

scon
·MARGARINE
lOYAL

. SUSAN HOUCHINS

Ll. QIAITJIS

KY. BORDER

12 OZ PKG

oz.

MAXWELL HOUSE

MAmR BLEND

(OF FEE

·

34.5

oz.

FLAVORITE

•

GALLON '

2°/o Milk ••••••••••••••

s·l'" s9.

R.C. COLA.
PRODUCTS

,r

KRAFT INDIVIDUAL

24 PAl, 12 OZ. CANS

·

Cheese Slices .•~.o:~~=·$189
FLAVORITE

GROUND
99
Ice Cream •••••••••••••
Ultra Tide .•.••.:!:!·.. 2
BEEF
DEL MONTE
BANQUET
Catsup •••••••••••••••••• 99&lt;. TV Dinners •••• ."•••••• ~ 99&lt;. $J490
112

GAL

•

10 Ll. PACKAGE

32 OZ. SQUEEZE IOnLE

(

WillE CLOUD

TENDER lEAF

SUNSHINE

TOILET TISSUE

TEA BAGS

DOG FOOD

v•

c.ta••

100
CT.

$199

GoM (lilly At ....., S.,. Volu
Gold ... ll "'"' s.t., . , 11, " " .
lillllt I Plr (1111-

20 ll.
lAG

$299
·

GMII Only At Pow.'s Su,.- Volu ·
Geed Mar 12 thru S.t., Mar 11, 1991
l.itllit I Per Customer

9 LIVES CAT FOOD -

C:;·4/S1

6

Good Only At Pew••• Supor Volu
Good Mar 12 thru S.l., Mar 11, 1991
limit 4 Ptr C.te....,

SLICED BULl

BA(ON
10 II. PACUa

JENNIWERRY

By BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel News Starr

DARCIWOLFE

Meigs will graduate 139 seniors
Sunday; honor studenls named
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
· Sentinel News Stall'

Yellow Onions •••••• 99&lt; $399
;

day fund." Democrats want to tap
into the fund for. $300 million to
balance their·budge~. __
• R~p- Thomas Johnsori, ltNew
Concord, was voted down 60-37 on
his amendment to restore the fund,
despite claims -· denied ·by Riffe .
and others - that using the money
would destroy the state's bondmarkel credit rating.
Senate • President Stanley
Aronoff, R-Cincinnati, said he
Continued on page 3

MR/DD's Wedem~yer resigns
AMY WARTH

3 LB. BAG

pired vacation an&lt;l stck pay for a
relired employee was also
approved by the board.
The commissioners announced
that yesterday was the last day of
Meigs County's agreement with the
Washington County building permit office. .
All unincorporated areas in
Meigs County, along with the village of Rutland, must now refer to
Columbi,!S for building pennit matters. The villages of Pomeroy, Middleoon. Syracuse and Racine have
continued their individual contracts
with the Marietta office, and residents in those areas can continue
oblaining building _permits and
information from Manetta.
In final action, the commiss'ioners agreed to enter into an extended
warrantx with Xerox forthc cop!cr
at the Meigs County Sheriff's
Department.
Attending were Commissioners
Richard Jones, Manning Roush and
David Koblenrz and Cler~ Mary
. Hobstetter,

COj..UMBUS, Ohio (AP) ..,.. efforts o(Voinovich lo bring state
Gov. George Voinovicb's two-year· spending under control.
, ,, l~~i_~l b,ill has ~en . overha)lle,d
House Speaker_Vern Riffe, 0nd ~y lht Rl:m&lt;x;nu-domt- • Wh~lersburJ, defended tliC docitnatcd HoUse, but 11 faces an uncer' meiit aS one lhat does what it can to
tain fate in .the Senate where heip citizens in D'Oubled economic
Republicans will be .calling the limes and protect the elderly and
shots.
· o1hers from the governor's well·
The massive, $27.1 bill docu- meant but misguided cuts. .
ment cleared lhe House 60-38
The biggest issue in a floor
Wednesday, virtually along party debate that went on for more than
lines. Republicans claimed the bill two hours was over a GOP amendwas irresponsible and thwarts the ment to restore the state's "rainy

ULTIA
DETERGENT
42

~

AMY WAGNER

CHEER

•
.
·
.
W1eners •••••••••••• ~ •• ~.

DETERGENT

MAURJSA NELSON

.

Woolpert Consultants is based
in Dayton, and has extensive experience with airport consulting and
design. Leighty slated that the firm
was responsible for the master
design at Wright-Patterson Air
Force Base in Dayton, and .has
done work wilh Port Columbus
· Airport, Cincinnati International
Airport and several other small airport authorities in Southeastern
Ohio.
·
In other b_IJS,iness, the commissioners transferred $2,709.15 into
the county's general fund from the
contingency fund for the payment
of worker's compensation. Jn a
rela1ed vein, Commissioner
Richard Jones requested a breakdown of the fund, following the
payment of the worker's compensation money.
The tuberculosis office also
requested a transfer of $73.70 frorri·
the departmenl's supplies account
to the worker's compensation
account. A transfer of $3,220.48
from the department's unappropriated 'funds for the payment
. . . of unex-

Ohio Senate gets Voinovich's
budget;. ponders changes

39&lt;

'

...; 0111r At ,_..,. s.,.
a..1 -., 11 tin s.t• .., 11, 1991
IJMit I Plr

JENNIFER TAYLOR

CRACKERS

OAK RIDGE FARM-LB. ROLL . . .

89(

KRISTEN SLA' WTER .

La

,Ch1cken Breast .~~.

410U
PIG.

The Meigs County Commissioners met with a consultant for
the Gallia-Meigs Airport Authority
at the regular commissioner's
meeting on Wednesday afternoon.
Francis "Fritz" Leighty of
Woolpen Consultants discussed thl!
agency's work on a grant program
at the airport, located at Gallipolis.
According to Leighty, $55,000 in
grant money is expected to be
-awarded $0metime this year. (The
commissioners reviewed a letter at
last week's meeting stating that the
county would be required to provide $750 to the project cost next
year.)
According to Leighty, the
authority has stated their interest in
enlarging runway space to accom,
modale larger aircrafL Such a pro·
ject, Leighty stated, might require
moving the facility, and that possibility will also be investigated by
the feasibility study funded by the

PORK &amp; BEANS

CHICKEN

.$ 89 Leg. Quarters •••• ! .. 49.&lt;
Rump Roast ••.••.·••• 1
BONE.LES
..
. . $
9
4
2

with airport engineer

.

BOTTOM ROUND or EYE OF

aASectlone,
12 Pagea 25 cents
Muhlmedla Inc. Newapaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, -Thursday,_May 16, 1991

Ham.
Also Available: ·· Fresh
Salads.
.
\

Low tonight in mid-60s.
Showers likely. Friday,
high in 80s. Chance of
rain 50 percent.

•

•

HOMEMADE .

.

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

.

Aaron Bradford Sheets, Kristen
Ayne Slawter· and Jennifer Laurie
Taylor have been named tri-valedictorians of the Meigs High
School class of 1991.
Fenton Taylor, principal,
aMounced today that the three students have all achieved a grade
point average for their high school
years of 4.0 or all A's, $0 they wtll
share the valedictory honor.
They will be speaking at Commencement Exercises for the 139
graduating seniors to be held Sunday at 4:30 p.m. in the Larry R.
Morrison Gymnasium.
Honorarians of the class are
Susan Elizabeth Houchins, Maurisa
Oaym Nel$0n, Amy Michelle Wagner, Amy Lynn Wanh, Jenni Lynn
Werry, and Darci Malinda Wolfe.
TRI·VALEDICTORIANS
Aaron Bradford Sheets, $On of
Jim and Jennifer Sheets,.Cotterill
Road, Pomeroy. will be attending
John Carroll University where he
will major in pre-:medicine and participate in the wrestling program.
At Meigs he has excelled ip academic and athletic endeavors. He
wa§ a member of the National
Honor Society, the Academic Quiz
Team, Student Council, Spanish
Club, was active in the vocal music
~gram. on the yearbook .staff and
m the senior play.
.
.
In wrestling he was nanied the
All Conference Most Valuable
Wrestler, a sectional. champion,
conference champion, and state
qualifier. He also played football
and was -a three time offensive
player of the week as well as offensive lineman of the year.
Sheets has been awarded the
Ohio Board of Regents Scholarship; two scholarships from John
Carroll University and one from
Buckeye Rural Electric.
'.

Kristen Slawter is the daughter
of Ben and Jeanne Slawter. Mid-.
dleport. She is a member of the
National Honor Society. Student
Council, the senior class treasurer,
a varsity cheerleader, and belongs
to the Fellowship of Christian Students, the Spanish Club, Teenage
Institute, and has been a regional
scholar, an All-Academic Team
member, and an Academic Exc.ellence Scholar for four years.
In addition to her school activities, Slawter is a 10 year 4-H club
member, active in the Middleport
Church of Christ. Youth Group,
clogger with the Shady River Shufflers, and has participated many
years in gymnastic and dance activities. She will be attending the University of Akron where she has
been accepted intu an honors program. There she will receive Honors and Presidential Scholarships.
Jennifer Taylor, daughter of
. Fenton and Jeannie ·Taylor,
Pomeroy. will be attending Marshall University in Huntington. She
plans to major in pre-physical ther·
apy . .
All four years of high school,
she has been a class officer, and
active in the Teenage Institute for
the Prevention .of Drugs and Alcohol, HUGS, the Helpful Understanding Giving Students, and the
Fellowship of Christian Students.
. S.he is a member of the National ·
Honor Society, and on the year
staff. serving as editor her senior
year.
Taylor has taken Tri-Valley
Championships in several tract
events as well as volleyball. She
also played basketball all fout
years. In additi.on ·she has received
several recognitions for academic
excellence. She is the recipient of
the Edward W. W. Lewis Scholarship.
. HONORARIANS
Susan Elizabeth Houchins,

daughter of Stephen and Vicki
Houchins, Middleport, has been
accepted into the CoUege of Educa~on al Ohio University. She has
received the Alpha Delta Kappa
Scholarship.
At Meigs she is a member of the
Nalion_al Honor ~~iety, the'lfellowshtp of Chnsuan Students,
HUGS and Teenage Institute, and
on the yearbook staff. She is a
dancer and has participated in
numerous activities over the years.
For her academic excellence, she·
has been recognized at the Meigs
County Aeadem ic Excellence
Honor Programs.
Maurisa Dawn Nel$0n, daughter
of Don and M&amp;urisha Nel$0n, Middleport, wilt be attending Ohio
University, College of Health and
Human Services.
She is a member of the National
Honor ·society, the Varsity Cross
Country Team, and plays girls basketball. She belongs to the FeUow·
ship of Christian Students, the
Teenage Institute, and HUGS, and
works on the yearbook staff.
Amy Michelle Wagner, the
daughter of Mike and Jane Fry.
Pomeroy, and Huck Wagner,
Racine, will be attending Ohio
State University where she will
major in nursing.
At Meigs she has been active
with Teenage Institute, HUGS, and
the Fellowship of Christian Stu·
dents, a member of lhe Student
Council and the National Honor
Society. She was the recipient of
the Holzer Science Award, and last
year was awarded the Danforth
Award as the outstanding girl in the
junior class. She has been active in
volleyball aQd track during her
high scbool years.
Amy L. Warth, daughter of
Charles and Jennifer Warth •.
Pomeroy. will attend Ohio University where she will major in public
Continued on paae 3.

•

F~cing an uncertain financial
future, the Meigs County Board of
Mental Retardation and Develop·
ment Disabilities has announced
the resignation of the MRIDD program's superintendent, Lee Wedemeyer. Wedemeyer's resignation
will be effective on June 14. .
Wedemeyer has held the position since January, 1985. According to a department news release,
Wedemeyer has been offered a
similar position in northern Ohio,.
where he and his family plan to
. relocate.
Prior to arriving in Meigs County, Wedemeyer was the Assistant
Superintendent of the Columbus

Jury finds
Eban guilty
A Chester man has been found
guilty of gross sexual imposition in
the court of Meigs County Common Pleas Court Judge Fred W.
Crow III.
'
A jury of 12 returned with the
~uilty verdict Wednesday followmg two hours of deliberation,
Gross sexual imposition, as
charged against Greg Eban, is a
felony of the third degree. According 10 Meigs County Prosecuting
Attorney Steven L. Story, Eban
was accused of engaging in sexual
contact with a nine year -{)ld boy.
Sentencing of Eban has been set
for May 30, awaiting the preparation of a victim impact statement
and a pre-sentellcing investigation,
both documents required by law.
"Cases like this one are hard to
prove," Story said after the trial,
"and 1.am very pleased wilh the
verdicl."
"Cases involving allegations of
sexual conJact (as opposed to rape)
provide little or no independent sci·
enlific evidence," S1ory said.
"Here, the case turned on the very
compellin~ and eersuasive testimony or the YJC;Om .
Pomeroy Attorney Charles
Knight, who represented Eban on
the matter, was not available for
comment on lhe case.

Developmental Center. In the past,
he has held other administrative
.and direci service positions, including CommuniJy I~stitution Coordinator fot Ohio University. Case
Management wofk for the Ohio
Department of MR/DD and man·
agement in Gallipolis Developmental Center.
"Under Wedemeyer's administration of the past six years," the
news release states, "the Meigs
County Board of MR/DD has
achieved local. state and national
recognition for excellence in service delivery to people who have
disabilities." .
" The board has received several
commendations and certifications
under Wed.emeyer's aciministra-_.
lion, including .certifications from

the Commission for Accreditation
of RehabiliJation Facilities and the
J.M. Foundation's National Search
for Excellence.
In addition, the county board i ~
one of five counties in the state to
have been certified by the Ohio
Department of MR/DD for total
compliance with state slandards for
adult services programs.
.Most recently, however, the
MRIDD program has claimed
financial difficulties due to several
failed tax levies.
A civil lawsuil was flied earlier
this year which temporarily prevented a layoff of several board
employees. That layoff was later
executed, and the civil case is
pending in Meigs CounJy.Common
· Pleas Coun.
·

~-Local

briefs---.

Water leak repaired
A water leak: in the Browntown area of Pomeroy has been
repaired, and water service should be restored sometime on \bursday.
·
The water leal;: was disc~vered early last week. According to
Pomeroy Village Administrator John Anderson, a temporary bypass
, of the leak was made and water service was restored 10 custOmers
via this, bypass on May 7.
_
The pinpointed leak was repaired on Monday by using a hydra- '
how and building a dam with material dug from the site. As of yes·
1erday afternoon, the lines were being discharged and disinfected.
An estimated 50 households in the Brownlown, Rose Hill and
Senneca D~ive areas are affected by the work, and according to
Anderson, service will be interrupted briefly today while the the
water line is being put back into service.
'
Anderson al$0 advised that water in those areas should be boiled
for a minute for the 48 hour period following the restOration of
water service.

Stolen truck recovered ··
A 1989 Chevrolet pickup truck, reported stolen in Washington
Coun1y on Monday. was recovered-.sborlly after midnight on
Wednesday morning on Route 124 jusl C4st of Dorcas according to
the Meigs County Sheriff's Depanment. The truck, owned by '
Wilma Sams, Route 2, Waterford, was parked on Route 124 just
east of Dorcas shOnly after midnight. A white male was reponedly
seen gelling out of the truck and left in a red vehicle that stopped
behind him.
On Wednesday the department was notified by Leading Creek
Conservancy District that two tool boxes of tools were taken from
one of the service trucks. The theft occurred May 3 or 4 according
to the repon.
SheriJI James _M. Soulsby reports that a number of am:sts for
trespassmg have been made al the swimminl! hole on Gold Ridge
Condaued OD pap 3
·

•

,l

•

•

�Thursday,

•

Commentary

. ..-'

May 16, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-2-T,,e Dally Sentinel

Friday, May 17

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, May 16, 1191

Accu-Weathere forecast for daytime conditions and

Judge says birds are ·contraband

MICH.

Jack Ander$on
a_nd_D_ale_V4_an_A_tta

Senator becomes lobbyist ___

The Daily Sentinel

e

1ll Court street

PA.

·1Mansfield I 83° I•

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTEKI!STS QF THE JIIIEIGS·MASQN AREA
IND.

.MU.TIMEDIA.INC.
ROBERT L. WINGETT

Publbher

CHARLENE ROEft.ICR
General Manar:er

. - , •!eolumbusl

~·I

PAT WHITEHEAD
AaslataDI Publlahl!r/Controller
.

'f' '

A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Dally Press Asso·
elatiOn and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.

,· ties.

v

~ ShoWINS T-sl!lrms Rain Flurrfft

'

-----

Saturday through Monday:
·
A much cooler period with a
chance of rain Saturday and Sunday. Fair on Monday. Highs 65-75
Saturday and Sunday with mostly
60s on Monday. Lows 55-65 Satur·
day, in upper 40s to upper 50s Sunday and m the 408 Monday.

• South Central Oblo
'; Tonight, showers and thunder, storms liltely. The low 65-70. The
: chance of rain is 60 pel'cent. Fri·
,": day, variable cloudiness with a
., chance or showers and thunder•. storms. The high 80-85 . The
: chanCe of rain is SO percent

..
:Cooler weekend temperatures
~predicted
for Ohio area
.•
•

~

Some relief from the sweltering way. Showers and thunderstorms
,, weather is in sight in the next day are expected across the state
:;or so.
t11night and could cOntinue into Fri·
The National Weather Service day.
... says things should start to cool
The record high temperature for
•. down on Friday and, by the week· this date at the Columbus weather
;:-end, the bighs will be 25 degrees station was 96 degrees in 1900.
:" cooler· than they have been this · The record low was 32 in 1959. ·
• week.
Sunrise this morning was at
:;,. Some stormy weather will 6:16 a.m. Sunset ~ill be at 8:40
~ accompany a oold front headed this
p.m.
'
&amp;

~,...---Local briefs... ...;;;....._......_,
,.
~

•

But it isn't only guilt feelings
that are leading some former wort~ mothers to stay homo with their
chaldren.
"What people want now is more
time around home and hearth,"
says a Time magazine covet story.
"Tired of trendiness and materialism, Americans are discovering the
joys of home life and things that ,
last.'' The article is titled ''The ·
SimP,Ie Life: Goodbye to Having It

WiUiam S. Doyle
Vice President
. USW A Local5668
.Ravenswood, WV

••

,
Continued l'rom pllfie 1
-Rm;d off Route 681. The owrer of the projJerty, who resid~s. In
Cincinnati, has given the department pow~ of a~mey regardi~g
filing of trespassing charges on people ~y;1mmmg m the old stnp
mine pit.
·
Sheriff $oulsby advised that the owner took this action beca~se
· of liability in the case that someone should drown while SWllllmmg •.
there. The no uespassing signs are being removedJIIId destroyed.
The sheruf reported that the· departi!lent has _itceived complai~ts
of the swimmers parking and blocking Gold Ridge Road. Deputies
will routinely patrol the area and issue citations to the 1respassers.

Marriage licenses issued

••

Marriage licenses have been issued in Meigs County Probate
Court to Steve Allen Burton, 35, Pomeroy, and Rose Elaine Thorn·
ton, 34, GaUipolis; Orville Lee Philtips, ~6, Pomeroy, and :Patricia
Ann Sigman, 31, Pomeroy; Jeffery Lee Ridgway, 34, Pomeroy. and
Crystal Dawn Richmond, 19, Rutland: Johnny Albe!l Doucet 111 25,
Racine and Shauna Annette Tackett, 27, Racme; Bnan Clark Ratch·
hart 36 'Syracuse ~d Mary Lenora Custer, 28, Syracuse; Douglas
Raymo~d TerreU, 41, Parkersburg, W.Va., and April Dawn Wiener,
17. Pomeroy; and Calvin Ray Dowen, 44, Long Bottom, and ¥1ene
Faye Krautter, 40, Long Bottom.

'
••

••
•

•
••

Squads make three runs

All. • .

WiU today' s hard-pressed families. be' able to make it financially
without mother's paycheck? Cerlainly those families where both
parents now have well-paying jobs
would have no trouble. The Ochers
may have to sacrifice the exll:as 8Jid
settle for the necessities. But
·maybe Katie and all the rest of us
will find it nicer to' have mother
back home. '
(C)l991
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

c
H
·
•
•
t
th
I
?
GaryD.Evan;,o~s:~j
an.. awa11 ap geo erma energy

ported and votedforthelevy.

e

Southern Local
Board of Election

Tells a little secret

90

Today in histo~y

•

into the east rift zone of Kilauea
Volcano southwest of Hilo here on
the "big island" of Hawaii The
magma-heated water and ~team
now trapped in subterranean compartments would be lifted to the
surface, then utilized to drive the
turbine blades of power generating .
units.
Although the plan envisions
multiple production sites with a
rated output ·of 500 megawatts,
only two projects now are in the
initial slages of developmenc A 25
megawatt unit being built by
Orman Geothermal near the
islanl!'s easternmost point and a
100-megawatt unit being construct·
ed by True/Mid-Pacific Geothermal in the nearby Wao Kele 0
Puna Forest.
.
Some conservationa'sts argue
that 'he integrity of "the largest
remaining expllllse of low land uopical rainforest in the United States"
will be imperiled by geothermal
facilities in the region spewing into
the air "toxic hydrogen sulfide and
other chemicals" that could deci·
mate plant and animal life.
But Kilauea, whose constant
eruptions since the mid-19S0s
make it one or the world's most
active volcanos, already cmiu a
daily avet!IA8 fA 'n toil fA'hydrogen sulfide and 1,850 tons of sulfur
dioxide - amounts thousands of
times greater than the geothermal
projects would release.
Commercial energy develop·
ment will involve clearing some
1\

Rober( Ulalte•s

•
1 '
1 '
·
rr j
.forest land, but geotbermat'iechnol·
ogy requires limited space. A 100
· f

::::~~~~a!~~:'3ooror':~~~~

600,000 acres of b'Opical rain forest
in the state.
· Some Hawaiians have attacked
the concept on other grounds, argu·
ing that drilling into the volcano
constitutes the sacrilegious intru·
sion and desecration or Pele, the
powerful native goddess of fire
(and sometimes likened 10 other
cultures' "mother nature") who is
J)elieved 10 reside inside the
Kilauea's fiery caldera. ·
Even though they never con·
ducted any religious activities at
h ·
· ·
1 e sue, natave critics argued that
the gebthermal initiative violated
their rights 10 free exercise or reli·
·
Th
goon.
eir legal challenge was
~eJ~~~ ~~:.ver, by !he Hawaii .
The geothermal project is hardly .
nawless. Its promoters have, for '. ,
example, engaged in 1 tawdry
Washmgton, D.C., lobbying cam- :
paign to semi-secretly secure feder·
al funding for what clearly is a
Slate and local financial responsibility. . ·
·
But- .the work ought to be
allowed to proceed. Even though
ecological tradeoffs are involved.
both the slate and nation must
reduce their reliance upon oil- . · .
domestic and imported- as an ,..
energy source.
I)

'

Three calls for assistanCe were answered by squads of the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Service Wednesday.
.
. At 11:19 a.m. the Syracuse squad transported J~hn ~ermilt
from Mulberry Ave.. Pomeroy, to Veterans Memon!l' Hosp1tal; at
7:25p.m. the Racine unit went to the Front Street resadehce of Fred
Scarberry and took him to Veterans Memorial: and at 7:30p.m. the
Middlepon squad transported Terry Michaels from his Laurel Street
. residence to Veterans.
·
At 8:05 a.m. Thursday the Pomeroy unit toolc Willa Gum to Vet·
erans from the Pomeroy Nursing and Rehab Cen~. ·

: L,----------------~----------------------~----~

Middleport court news

·

. HILO, Hawan (NEA) -. Execs· have mrned to a wide variety of,
save dependence upon otl as an alternabve energy sources.
energy soiD'Ce has' become a cause
Hawaii already is one of the
'
for cone~ throug~~ut the countrr. country's leading producers of
B~t here m Haw~n. petroleum as
elec~c power generated by w!nd
beang consumed 10 awesome pro- turbJ~es (~ contemporary y~on
Dliar Editor:
summer was flattened back 16 feet · portions unmatched ~ywhere else. · or wmdmalls) and has mltlated
. I know a little secret to tell.
from the edge of the road. Another
Mo!,e tha~ . 90. percent of ambahous efforts to draw energy
Some long·suffering and over· left a barbed wire fence looking Hawaat s electncaty as ~enerate&lt;! at from both the SWl and the ocean. .
Biomass, another form of '
taxed property owners living on like a cyclone had blown Sblff into ru:wer~!ants that use oil as a boiler
some rural roads dread to see these it. Rower bed and lawn edges are uel. ~e comparabl~ figure else- renewable energy hardly tapped
gyro ditchers being used on town· sprayed. Stuff going into pastures where m the country IS less than 5 else'Yhere in the country, is used as
ship, county and state: roads com- and ;neadows won't do the pawtch· perct;nt;
.
a boiler fuel to generate more than
in&amp; their way.
es o cattle any good.
Oil1s the source of less than 50 7.5 percent of the Slate's electricity.
li may be fun to sit up there and
Take a gentle hint and watch out percent of ~I energy . ~ n~tion- The source is bagasse, the fibrous
Wlltb these high speed gyros sling . where and how these gyros are wade- b~n Hawau ~h~~/•g.'!l:e
post-harvest residue of sugar cane
SlUff witb the greatest or ease but it used. We want to be nice people agam exc
. ,percen . wauts ·stalks and leaves.
iJ expensive and noxious to be on and realize that papa generally by far the nauon s most otl-depen·
Now, a state anxious to become
the~eceiYing end.
~w best. but this time papa ought dent srate.
.
. .
more energy self-sufficient also
Fences are being damaged. A to listen.
.
Althoug~ pubhc offtc•al~ ~ere wants to dmw upon its clean, safe
Gayle Price can do nothmg about th~ pnoopal and inexpensive geothermal energy
bay field on a state highway last
cause of that dang.erous ambalanc.e potential·- but that initiative is
mid1
- a remo~e m1 ·C?Cean ocauon encountering intemperate opposith~ makes ·~ponabon of other Ira· lion from environmentalists.
dataonal.fossal fuels ~uch as coal
Specifically, slate energy offieconomacally unfeasa~le -they cials want to sink: geothermal wells
By Tile Aalodated Prell
Todly iJ 11wrsdly, May 16, the 136ch day of 1991. 1bcre are 229 days
Jete In lbo ,..
Andrew John11011 as it took its fllllt ballol on one of II articles of impeachmenupinsl him.
·
. T~fs lfllldi&amp;bt in History:
011 May 16; 1929, the first Academy Awards'were premMed during 1
·' In 1905.1Cto1' Henry Fonda wu born in Grand lsland;Neb.
•·
In 1920, Joan or Are was canonized in Rome.
biP Jitel 11 tbo Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel. The movie "Wiags" won
"Ia&amp; pudtK:don"; Bmil Jannings and Janet Gaynor were named best
In 1946, the musical "Annie Oea Your Gun," featuring songs by Jrv.
ICIDr ... beiiiCftA
.
in&amp; Berlin and llln'in8 Ethel Mennan, opened on Broadway.
In 1948. dte body ill CM lfiM c:orneji &lt; 11 Ocap POlk -lblmd
On tbil cllle:
'
Ia 1163, tbo
luicograplier, author and wit S1111uel Johnson in Solonlb Bay in Oreec:c, I week after hiJ disappearance; Greek leftists
and rightists blamed llllch other for the lrilling.
·
~~~~t•llllllallle ~.James Boswell. .
Ia 1170, Mlrio Ae~"i•teU, then 14,nurried the future King Louis XVI
In 1955, Amerlc:ln author and ailic James Asce died in New York.
of PI e wbo WillS. •
In 1960, 1 BIJ Pow 111111mit conea,nce in Paris collapsed on its open·
Ja
~ IIIIIIDriJlDd minting of the five-cent piece.
ina clay • tbe Soviet Union IO¥IIIed IPY cluqea apinst the u.s. in the
'
.
Jn 1868, lhe U.S, Seaate fliled by one voce to convict President wake or tbe U·2 incidenL

••

018e1 A~w.hr, Inc.

?-:... ~ -----Weather

Cooperation praised

1866.

Pr. CloUdy Cloudy

Sunny

Snow

..

Dear Editor,

Sa=

I

'''

•w' VloA-PrHsGrophlesN«

Why environmental

Dear Editor:
On behalf of our-young people,
the Southern Local Board of Education thanks everyone that sup·
•

i)Ql.a

•

•

Letters to the editor

'

McARTHUR, Ohio (AP) request an appeal. Brame said that
Aaomeys for the Oblo Gamccoclt if the appeal is g11111£d, tbo associaAssocillion said they would appaat • lion ~ must pay for care of the
would appeal a Vinton County fowl dunng the 8ppQIJ process. ·
judge's ruling that gamecocks
SevCI'II of the 20 people in the
seized in two weekend raids and courtroom moaned and muuered
owned by residenis of the county when Brame announced his deci·
belong to ~ state.
sion, but none would ltdmit owning
The raids occurred Saturday in the birds. In a hearing Monday,
Vinton and Scioto counties. The Brame made it clt.ll' that anyone
decision doesn't apply to birds who claimed the fowl might race
~wned by residents m other coun· additional criminal charges if the
ues.
roosters Wei\\ declared contraband.
Common Pleas Judge Michael
The gamefowlllreeders associ&amp;·
Brame ordered that the animals be lion was left to defend the birds.
humanely dllstroyed. ·
·Edwin W. Evans, president, said
The judge ordered association the birds should be a~~~;tioncd off to
lawyers to post $2,100 to cover the the highest bidders. He said bis
cost ofcanng for the birds during organization wollld pay the cost of
the seven days he gave ihem 10
·
1

lrccping the birds until the auction
and would provide veterinary
inspections to make sure there was
no disease.
"We're asking that they be
given a c~ to live,'' Evans said
before the hearinJ. "The Humane
Society will kill thein. These are
tbe original chickens. They're not
genetically en~ Their value
to the gene pool of commercial
poultry has yet to be lapped, ••
The jud¥e brushed aside ttie
request saymg conuaband cannot
'be aUowed to ran into the hands of
the people who might fight them.
The judge also refused an argu·
ment by John P. LaveUe, an attor·
ney for \he breeders association.

Lavelle said the state had no proof
the roosters would be used for ·
cockfaghting.
·
"Had these thickens been
seized at the 4-H barn north or
town, it would be a different set of
cin:umslances,'' Brame said.
~ost of the 379 people charged
.in the two raids weA: fined $60 or
less, said court officials in tbe two
counties; Many of them were from ·
other states, including lllinoi·s, :
Michigan, Florida, California, :
Pennsylvania and Kentucky.
·
The maximum penalty for cock- ·
fighting in Ohio is a $250 fine and
30 days in jail. Violating the feder·
al cockfighting statute is punish·
able by a fine of as mu&lt;:h as $!,000 ·
and a year in prison. ·
·

Coal bill hearings ·underway in Senate

· LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words lOflll. AlHetters are subject to editing and must be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be pub·
• llabed. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not persona II·

.
In the heat of·an environmental
blltlc, it is often easy to forget the
underlying reasons why an envi·
ronmental group is formed. The
battle takes on a dimension of its
own and the group's purpose
becomes hazy to many people. Perhaps now is the perfect time to
clearly delineate the reasons why
environmental groups were formed
and to relate these groups to their
swroundings.
· Throughout West Vir~ia's history, we have been explolled by out
of state lumber companies, coal
opcmtors, and oil: industries. These
cOmpanies did not care about the
desecration of the land. the contamination of lhe water, or the ruinatiOn of the air. Most environmental
groups were formed to give input
to' the common, everyday wprking
man w.ho puts clean aar, water,
land, and the protection of our
mountains over the promise a short
term reward. The environmental
groups are much like a milon-pl'O:
. vidin~ a forum for its members and
fighung for what is good for the
individual as well as the group.
In reality, the environmental
groups and the unions have much
in common: both were formed by
the workin~ man to deal with
working man s problems both must "
deal' on a day to day basis with
those people who do not really care
aboutproiCCting the.worldng.or living e~vironment of the people. As
the unions work for. safer. cleaner
conditions within the work place,
the environmental groups work for
cleaner, safer CJivironmental condi·
lions within the community.
Again, if we look at the history
of West Virginia, and in particular
the SI!Uggle of the miners at Malewan to establish their union, a com.mon bond between the ~nviron-

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3

'
•
:
-

defacing a parking meter, $100 and
five days jail: Danetr.e See, Middleport, $25 and costs, consuming
alcohol under age 21; Gladys
Yates, Middleport. SIO and costs,
accumulation of garbage and trash;
and Jimmy Harris, Middleport, five
days jail for criminal trespassing.

Four people were fmed and one
forfeited a bond in Tuesday's court
of Middleport Mayor Fred Hoff.
man .
Forfeiting a bond was Roger D.
Shoemaker, Middleport, SSl,
speeding.
Fined were Oreg Carpenter.
Langsville, $25 and costs, consum- .
ing alcohol under age 21, and

Pomeroy court news
Six people forfeited bonds and ·
five were fined in Tuesday's court
of Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler..
Forfeiting bol)ds were James W.
Casey. Middleport, $50, speedina:
James Plants, Apple Grove, W.Va., .
$49, speeding; Lyman Staqley,
A,lbany, $43, failure to y~ld: Gary
Mitch, Pomeroy, .$63, expired reg·
istration; John W. Brown, Rutlanil,
$43, failure to yield right-of. way;
and William Van Meier, Middle·
port, $43, stop sign violation.
Fined were Michael Hindy, .
Syracuse, $63 and costs, disorderly
manner; Anthony Nickels, Columbus, $43 and costs, left or center,
•

and $375 and costs, DUI; Catrina
Snodgrass. Racine, $375 and costs,
DUI, and $43 and costs, failure to
yield riJht-of-way; Darlene Boyd,
Pomeroy, $63 and costs, open container; and James Travis II, Racine,
$43 and costs, stop sign violation.

Wednesday by Sen. RobertNey,.R· have to be cleaner coal from other option s~ould be kept &lt;&gt;{'CD• based . ·
states.
.
on 30-year cost compansons wil)l :
Barnesville.
- ·
The company said a decision for imported coal. AEP earli&amp; provid·
He stressed that legislation is
needed by June 30 to help Ohio's Gavin power plant in Gallia Coun- ed figures that sho\. ed coal switch:
biggest coal-burning power plant ty to stop burning Ohio coal would ing the lel\St costly, b'ut its study'
choose between anti-pollution tech· cost the jobs of 1,2S8 miners at its involved only the fii'St 10 years of
nology and switching to !Ow-sulfur mine in Meigs Cowtty in 1994. The compliance with the federal act
decision is likely to affect other
Ney, House Speaker Vern Riffe
coal from other srates.
He did not me.ntion to legisla· utilities, Ney and others said, ' Jr., I;&gt;·Wheelersburg, and others
tors the problems in the House threatening the jobs or 7,000 min- said they were encouraged by the
report and felt that the findings
involving a bill identical to his ers throughout southeast Ohio..
After June 30. "It's too late. should be reviewed in conjunction ·
when it staned out, but said after·
·
ward he understands there were The miners' jobs will be gone," with the pending legislation.
Riffe cited the report as a factor
concerns over committee- amend· Ney told the committee, referring
to a deadline cited by American in the House delay on the bill ;
Am Ele Power ..................28 1/2
ments. •
'
Ashland Oil .............. ,...... .32 3/8
although be earlier said were o~er ·
"I wasn't pan of that process," Electric Power Co,
AT&amp;T ............................... 36
he said, adding he felt he should . Ney noted that on Tuesday, the problems. They. include amendBob Evans ........................ 17 3/4
get the Senate deliberations under Public Utilities Commission of ments broadening the tax breaks :
Ohio released a staff smdy suggest· wi~u~ the commi!fee looking into
Charming Shop ................. l6 l/4
w~y to speed passage by both housing to AEP that the scrubbers the unpact on slate revenues.
City Holding ..................... 13 3/4
es.
'
Federal Mogul................... 16 3/8
Recent amendments to the fedGoodyear T&amp;R ........., ....... 22 3/4
eral Clean Air Act require utilities
Key Centurion ...:.............. 13
thai burn Ohio's high-sulfur coal to
Lands' End ....................... 11}3/8
mike major reductions in sulfur
He was a mechanic.
Limited Inc.......................27
emissions beginning ·in January Dorothy Drake
Survivors include a daughter, ;
Multimedia Inc ................. 27
Dorothy Martin Drake, 81, of
1995. The emissions have been
Karrie
iones of Syracuse, NY; one .
Rax Resraurant .................. 3/4
Flushing, Ohio, and formerly of
blamed for acid rain.
son,
John
Paul Jones of Gallipolis:.··
Robbins&amp;Myers ............... 26 3/4
The bill would provide tax Pomeroy, died Wednesday, May
three
.isters,
Mrs. Earl (Judy) Nib- .
Shoney's Inc ............... ...... 16 1/2
breaks and other incentives for util- . 15, 1991 at BarnesviUe Hospital in ert of Gallipolis
Ferry, Mrs. Dana. ,
Sw Bank ..........................21
·.
·
ities that inslall scrubbers and con- Barnesville, Ohio.
(Loh,
l
)
Moms
or
Silver
Springs, Fl..•
She was born on S~tember 30,
Wendy Int'l.. .................... 9 518.
tinue to bum Ohio coal. It would
and
Mrs.
Harry
(Faye)
Coughenour
,
Worthington Ind..............'.23 5/8
require utilities that switch to other 1909. in Fernwood, Ohao. She was
of
G:lllipolis
and
his
step-father,
·
Stock reports qn thtl0:30 a.m.
fuels to demonstrate that it is the daughter of the late John T. and Logan Haskett of Beard's Fork.
.
Mary Jane (Poner) Martin. She was
q11ot-s pro PUled by Blllnt, Ellis
cheaper than scrubbers.
Funeral services were hell! ,
Al&gt;P said it must decide soon a member or the Pomeroy United
and Lolwl of Glllllpolis. Bob
,
today
at Wilcoxen Funeral Homo.. ·
Evt~~~s, Welldp t:t-diPUltllds.
because of the time needed to order Methodist Church.
Burial
was in the Eddie Chapel.
She is survived by her husband,
install scrubbers, if that is its
Cemetery
in Leon .
a=---;;;;;;;=;;;;;;;=;;;;;;;=~;;;a and
decision; otherwise, the choice will Harry Drake; three daughters, Mrs.
William (Connie) .Mason, Morehead City, N.C., Karen Smith ,
ContinuedfrompaJie 1
Gahanna, and Mrs. William (San·
Continued from page 1
relations.
A. Grueser, Kevin A. Haggy, dra) Stobart, Lithopolis, Ohio; one
At Meigs she is president of tile Pamela 'Jean · Haggy, Timothy sister, Ethel Burge, Pittsburgh. Pa.: thinks most of the House debate
National 'Honor Society,~ Student Michael Hall, Resa Rae Harris; 10 grandchildren and two great· was over relatively minor elements
of the bill. Most or the budget goes
Council, in the Spanish Club, and Candace Suzette Harrison, Lori grandchildren.
for
essential services and state rev· .
Friends
may
call
at
the
Warren
on the yearbook S!Bff. She clogs Denise Hayes, Eric Heck, Sbelly D.
enues
are declining, he said
.1
Funeral.Home
in
Flushing
on
Fri·
with th~ Shndy River Shufflers, is a Pullins Henry. Dale Jerrald Her"Mter aU the huffm4 and puff-.'
day from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. and 7
varsity cheerleader, in track and man. BetinnaJayncHill.
cross country, and active in the FelTammy Sue Holley, James p.m. to 9 p.m., where services will ing, there really aren t a lot of ;
towship of Christian Studen~ and Arthur Howerton, Bobbie J. Huff· be held on Saturday at 11 a.m. major differences.'' he said. How- ·
JIDGS.
·
man, Tara Renee Humpbre·ys, Burial will foUow in Fon Steuben ever, Aronoff said one mi~ht safely ·
Jenni Lynn Werry is the daugh· William Hysell, Michael S. Jacks, Burial Estates in Wintersville, assume that the Senate will restore· ·
at least some of the rainy day fund. · .
ter of Frederick Werry and Rose· Kelly Renee Johnson, Donald Burt Ohio.
He said he hopes to get the bilL •
mary Werry and plans to work a Kennedy, William Thomas Kerr,
Ernest
Paulin
ready
for a floor vote by mid-June,
year before continuing her educa- Jr., Penny Lou Klein, Bridgett
aUowing
two weeks for the deliber-· •
tion in the field of cosmetology; Sherrie Lambert, Cathy Ann Lam·
Ernest
A.
Paulin,
87,
of
Dayton,
of
a joint conference com· ·
allons
She is a two year member of the bert, Sandra Ann Landaker, Anp;ela
a
former
Meigs
County
resident,
mittee
before
the state's new bien· .
National Honor Society and Dawn Larkins, BronSQn Lee Laud·
nium
starts
July
I.
Sunday,
Ma,
y
12,
1991,
in
died
belongs to the Vocational Industrial ermilt, Melissa Gail Leach, Emma
The budget represents an
Clubs of America. ·
Lee, Jimmy R: Lcc, Jr.., James Dayton.
He is survived by a sister, Katie increase of about 12 percent over
Darci Malinda Wolfe, daughter ·Ryan Lemley, James D. Lester.
of Fred and Jeannie Wolfe, Middle·
Talman Shawn Lipscomb, Weber, Middleport, one nieee and the two years ending June 30. State
port,' will be attending Rio Orande James Allen Little, Michelle A. one nephew. Preceding him in spending had increased 20 percent
College.
Malhotra, Steven Michael Martin, death were his parents, Melvin and in the previous two-year period
· She has been an Academic Steven Russell Manin, Michael Mary Paulin, his fii'St wife, Gladys, amid the more prosperous times or
:
'Excellence Honoree, received the . William Mayer, Timothy Ray his second wife, Josephine, two the middle and late 1980s.
Riffe and others replaced some
Senior Athletic Award and was Mayes. Jeannette Lynn McDonald, brothers, and one sister.
Funeral services and bmial took of Voinovich's priorities.
TVC All Academic Teant. Sbe is a Amy Beth Might, Derelc Matthew
member of the National Honor MiU&amp;, Amanda Lee Molden, Tina place in Dayton.
"
Society and is on Student Council · Kay Molden, Jesse Eugene Morris, ·
and belongs to the Spanish Club Mary Elizabeth Monon, Leigh Stella Spencer
.' '
' and HUGS. She was varsity cheer- Andrew Myers, Christopher
Stella Searls Spencer, 41, of
leader for two years and a reserve Matthew Neece, Bobby Jo Nitz, Rutland, died April IS in Columcheerleaderforayear.
Kimberly L. Osborne, Jennifer bus.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER ..
Peyton, Jr., Shane A. Phillips, Lori
OTHE,R GRADUATES
She is survived by her by her
Discharges, May IS . Julia
· Other seniors who will be L. Pierce, Forest G. Qualls, Terry husband, Richard Spencer; mother, . Boyles, Dottie Deacon, Dianna
received diplomas at Sunday's Ray Reuter, and Kenny Reynolds.
Nora Searls; one son, William Fultz, John Hawley, Ruth McCain,
commencement program will be
Amy Dawn Rouse, Spring D. Spencer; one brother, Pearl Searls Bryanna Rose, John Sharp, Patricia
Jeanie Renee Arms, Gina Arnett, Reed Rupe, Denise Wynne Russell, of Columbus; one .sister, Ruth Sword and Dustin Thacker.
Tina Amen, Ste~hanie Ann Banks, Shannon L. Scott, Danette Lynn Schartiger of Gallipolis; and severBirths, May 15 . Mr. and Mrs.
Christina Virginaa Barrett, Jennifer See, Slacey C. Shank, Kyle Sin- al nieces and nephews.
Ronald Skeens, a daughter, Ripley,
Barrett, Larry Junior Barrett, II, clair, Charles Lee Stnith, Cynthia · She was preceded in death by W.Va
Stephllnie Gail Barrett, Virginia Ann Smith, Joseph Smith, Kelly her fatht;r James E. Searls: a sister,
Mae Boyd, Scott WiUiam Brinker, Lyn Smi!h, Krislen Marie Sranley, Isabelle; and a brother, Edgar
Michael B. Call, Krista Chadwell, Martha Beatrice Storms, SuSan R. Searls.
The Daily Sentinel
Michael Allen Cleland, Geoffrey E. Swan, Monte Howard Swindell,
Funeral services were held at
Cogar, Mark Conley, Joan M. Cor- Kevin A. Taylor, George Thomp- Cook and Son Chapman Funeral
&lt;UIIPS lUitl)
A IMv ..IGII of MuiCimedl•. lftc.
coran, Brian Randy Corsi, Michelle son, Jodi Lynn Tillis, Paul E. Van Home, Columbus, with Rev . Bill
Ann Curtis, Ronnea Lynn Davis, Cooney, Ken Everett Van Matre, Rodgers and Rev. Murray official·
Publlsh81 every afrernoon, Monday
Teresa Marlene Deem, Barbara M. Michael R. Van Meter.
ing. Burial was in Obetz Cemetery,
through F'Tiday, 111 Courl Sl .. Po·
meroy, Ohio. ~Y th~ Ohio Vallo:/ PubDonohue, Rebecca Renee Durham.
Stephanie Lyn Walker, Sean Groveport
lllhlng Company/ Multimedia, Inc ..
Amber Renee Eblin, Raena Lee Walton, Timothy Ewing Wells,
Pom~roy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992·21!16. S.·
Eblin, Tracy Dawn Eblin, Angela Pamela Dawn Whaley, Richard A. Forest Jones
cond class pq~tage paid al PomeroY. · ~
Ohio.
Faith Elliott, Tracy Ann Ellis, Kur- White, Scott A. Whobrey, Kathie
Forest Jones, 40, of Leon, died
tiss Franklin English, Kimberly Rush William·son, Lucy Ethel Sunday, May 12, 1991, at Pleasant
Mtmbfr: ThP A.ssociattld Prtas. In ·
land Dally Prf'u Auortatlon and ftlt
Sue Ewing, Roben E. Fields, Car- . Winebrenner, Theresa Wines, Cat· VaUey Hospital.
Ohio Nfi'Wspaper Association . National
olyn Fitchpatrick, Daniel Ray rina Lee Wolfe, Daymond A.
He was born October 15, 1950
AdvertlllnJC Repl"f'H"IIIatlve. Branham
Folmer, David Biron Frymyer, Wolfe, Brenda Lee Wnght, Jason in Fairdale, WV, a son or Helen
NewspaPfl' Sale. , 733 Third Avrnut" ,
New York, New York 10017.
Mary Stephany Gardner. Joseph R.
Allen Wright, Jason Lee Wright, McKinney Haskett of Beards Fork,
., •'
Gilkey, Jr., Juanila Lee Green, Kip Sally Ann Yates, Jason Michael WV and the late Boyd M. Jones.
POSTMASTER: Srnd addrrss chan~
Yeauger, Stacey Lynn Young.
to '111• Dolly Sontlnol , Ill Court Sl. . ' '
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Hearings are undet way in the Sen·
ate on a bill to help Ohio's high·
sulfur coal-industry survive the fed·
eral Clean Air Act, despite an
unexpected delay on a companion
biU in the House.
The Senate Energy; Natural
Resources and Environment Com-.
mittee heard 'the bill presented

Stocks

--Area deaths-__,;

Meigs .will...

Ohio ...

Hospital news .

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Pomeroy, Ohio 4571111.

----Lottery numbers - - - -

Hospital news
•

• VETERANS MEMORIAL
·
Wednesday Admissions: John'
. · Laudermilt. Pomeroy; .James
• ·-McKenzie, Pomeroy; Hugh Han·
son, Middleport; Leo Gilmore,
Pomeroy.
. Wedncsday Discharged: Laura
..~
.....- Mary Eblin • Barbin HarnauUNn,

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The Daily Sentinel

Sports

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.

1991

Seattle hands Tribe
6-~ loss Wednesday

Tlluradaiy, May 16," 1991
Pag&amp;-4 •

Cardinals post 8-2
victory over Reds

By CHUCK MELVIN
,
AP Sports Writer
·,'
·
C+EVELAND (AP) -:- It toot Rich DeLI!Cia a little Ionaer:llaaa he'd
plannod to get to the maJors. So he wants 10 mate sure he ~ 't blow It
now. ·
··
,
~hoped to be here maybe a year ago. Now thai I have oppor·
tumty, I JU.Il want to make the best of it," the Seattle tmlde said aftllr he
pitcJK:d aeven Strong innings and beat the Cleveland lndiaas 6-4 Wednesday night
The Mariners have won nine of their last 10 games. They remain a half
game behind first-place Oalcland ;n the AL West
T_he 26-year-old DeLucia (4·2) pitched at all four Jclvels of tile
Mariners' ?;:~ last year, starting at. Class A San Bernardino· a step
baclcwards
the previous season - lll)d jltOgressing to the big IeQw
by Seplel!lber. He went 1-2 with a 2.00 ERA in five starts f« sMifi;; at
theendof1990.
,
He got otr to a slow stan this season, giving up 14 eanlcd runs in hil
first three starts. But in his last four appearances he's gone 3.{) willli" a
2.13 EAA,Iowerin$ his season ERA to4.I5.
'
. &gt;:
"I feel I'm gettmg better each time out," he said. "I SQirled outldnd
of 1011Jh this year, but I got Iuclcy and got 10-llruns iwict.. Tbat didn't .

•

:·x

By PAQI,. LeBAR
. AP Sports Writer

ST. W UIS (AP) - St. Louis Cardinals manager Joe Torre is looking
for another turnaround.
" I'm not s;aying we're going to srore eight runs a ~arne, but I know
we're better than we've been the last 10 days,' ' TQtte Sllld after the Caldl·
nals' 8·2 victory over the Cincinnati Reds on Wednesday. "It'-s just a
matter of going through some streaks. You really don't become good
players or good teams until you go through a little adversity.•'
.The Cardinals, before coming up with a season-high 14 hits, had lost
six o.f nine games.
" It's kind of contagious," said Bernard Gilkey, whose tie-breaking
home run triggered a four-run. sixth.' "We needed somebody to hit the
ball. Ho.pefully the rest of the guy's cateh on."
·
Felix Jose matChed his career high with four hits, and Todd Zeile had
three RBis for the Cardinals.
"We're coming around again after that lillie spell," said Bob Tewks·
bury (3· 1), who scattered nine hits. "We're going to be fine."
St Louis, which had hit .227 and averaged 2.7 runs its previous 10
games, waited five innings to break through._
Gilkey hit a 1·0 delivery from Tom Browning (4-3) for his third home ·
run. Rex Hudler had a two-run double following two infield hits and a
groundout, and Tom Pagnozzi's RBI double opened a 5-Ilead.
. Gilkey, a rookie, flied out with the tying runs in scoring position as the
Cardinals lost 3·1 Tuesday night.
'
"Last night I came up empty," Gilkey said. "It just kind of carried
over. I went up to the plate kind of relaxed. I still had the confidence." ·
Gilkey also singled in the seventh, helping St Louis put the, contest out
of reach on Jose's RBI double and Zeile's two-run single.
Jose, a switch-hitter, doubled in the second inning ahead of Zeile's sacrifice fly and had singles in the fourth and sixth.
"I'm starting to get my confidence bact," said Jose, who had hit only
.152 (7-for-46) since Avril before WednCS(Iay. "I just try to concentrate
and hit the ball to all fields."
·
Jose's final hit came offScou Scudder and went to the opposite field.
·· "Right now you're seeing the same hitter we saw in April (,354 aver·
age)," Toore said. "He wasn't struggling a lillie; he was struggling a
whole lot"
·
Tewksbury labored to finish St. Louis' fll"St complete game, but didn't
struggle as much as Cincinnati.
"It's not going to stay this way forever," Reds ll)anager Lou Piniella
said. "Somebody's going to get hot. We can't keep playing .SOO ball (16· .
16) with this kind ortalent ..
Paul O'Neill doubled twice and singled for Cincinnati and Luis
Quinones tied his career high with thtee hits, all singles. But the Reds
scored only with the help of a hit batsman in the fifth, tying the gllme 1-1,
and again in the eighth on Hal Morris' grounder.
"Anybody would pitch better if they had more runs behind lliem,"
Browning salli "I wish I had the sixth inning over."
As Cincinnati headed home from a disappointing 3-6 trip,. the Cardinals looked to more successes at Busch Stadium, where 1/ley stimd 11·5
- the best record in the National League.
"I'm just a little bit more comfortable with it now, after going through ·
a slump," Torre said. "I thinlc we've lcept our head above water."
Elsewhere in the NL it was Pittsburgh 8, Houston 7; Chicago 6,
Atlanta 1; San FrancisCo 4, Philadelphia 2; New Yorlc 7; San Diego I; and
Los Angeles 4, Montreal 3.
. .
· Pirates 8, Astros 7- The light-hitting Houston Astros may not get 18
hits in a game the rest of the season. They may not want io, .
The Astros, who have already ~n shut out thtee limes, put together
18 hits against visiting Pittsburgh, but lost 8-7 Wednesday night .
''We had four hits in one inning and didn't score, we had two balls that
would have been homers.last year fall for doubles and we have a thtee·run
lead with one out in the eighth and give up six runs," Astros manager Art
Howe said. "Those kind of things just don't happen very often."
Craig Biggio, the National League's second:feading hitter at .360, singled in each of his filS! thtee at-bats and the Astros beat out four bwlts for
singles.
.
But Don Slau~ht's pinch three-run triple snapped an eighth-inning tie
as the Pirates rallied.
"It was juSt one of those nights," Biggio said. "Slaught hit one to a
spot where we weren't playing him."
.
The Pirates, !railing 5·2, scored six runs in the ei$hth inning off three
relievers. Andy Van S!yke ~ the comebaclc With a two-run homer
off Jim Corsi. The Ptrates loaded the bases off AI. Osuna and Curt
Schilling (0-3), who wailced Curtis Wilkerson to force in the tying run-

Strike the Gold not to
be slighted in Preakness

By ED SCHUYLER JR.
AP Racing Writer
BALTIMORE (YIP) - Pan the
"Gold" at your own risk.
"Anybody who discredits this
horse is asking for trouble quote, unquote," said Nick Zito,
trainer of Strilce the Gold.
Trouble with a capital F, which
stands for foolish , which is how
Zito feels his colt's performances
have made critics look.
Zito, who grew up near New
York's Aqueduct. acts like he' s
been slcewered by one of Churchill
Downs' famed twin spires when he
perceiv~ that ~ .Ken ruck)' Derby
winner IS not being g1ven h1s due.
"To win the Kentucky Derby,
you have to be special,'' Zito Sllld
Tuesday.
·
The 43-year-trainer was rankled
when some racing observers chose
to question Fly So Free's creden.
tials and his trainer's strategy
rather than credit Strilce the Gold
for upsetting tbe two-year-old
champion of 19~0 in tho Blue
Grass Stakes on April" 13.
It was wriuen that Fly So Free
was bealell by a colt who qualifiod
for 111CCS ·for non-winners of two,
even though Strilce the Gold in his
stakes deliut. had missed up~uing
Fly So Free by a length m tile
Florida Derby.
·, Zito chafed under questioning
about his colt not having the
Dosage Index figures required of
Derby winners. The Dosage lnde11

.

is a complicated formula which
predicts the Derby outcome based
on breeding.
Strite the Gold, who won the ·
first race of his carc:er on the day
his sire Alydar died - ·Nov. 15appean~ to be more than just a colt
who was right on Derby Day.
He is a colt who has run three
good races in IIUCCCSsion and loolcs
to be in the pinlc of condition for a
shot at Saturda(s 1 3/16-mile
PrealcDess at Pimlico.
It seems Strite the Gold will
have six rivals. Three of them challenged him in the Derby - Best
Pal; who was second by I 3/4
lengths; Mane Minister, who finished third as an 86-1 shot and Corporate Repori, wh&lt;i was ninth,
Strike the Gold's main challenger could be Olympia, who has
not ra~ed since he won the
Arlcansas Derby on A_Pril20 for his
third straight IIIIa VICtory.
·"I've got a fresh horse, we;re
coming at them with," said trainer
Ron McAnally.
Olympia could well be the bettinB favorite for the Prealcness,
wh1ch does not •nay Zito.
Strilce the Gold has been favored
only once his eight career starts.
That was for a sel(en-furlong
allowance in his three-year-old
debut Jan. 26 at Gulfstream Parle
- and h finished third.
wi/Strilce the Gold 11 Plmllco
is Thirty Six Red, wbo finished
ninth in the Derby and second in
·Belmont last year, but who did itot
race in the Preakness.
Thirty Six Red is in Ballimore
because he was in Louisville when
Strike the Gold won the Derby. In
fact, he won the Churchill Downs
Handicap on Derby Day. .
Senator To Be owned by Zito 's
Jan, will foil in for Thirty Six Red
by running In a race at Pimlico on
Prealcness Day. Thirty Six Red's
next stan will be the Metropolitan
Handicap on May 27 at Belmont

hun.,.

,,
STEALS SECOND - St. Louis Cardia1l Todd Zelle (bottom)
slides into second !lase for the steal as Reds shorUtop Marilno Duaean takes tbe late throw l'rotD catcher Jeff Reed ID the fcilartlo iDDIDR

, I

of Wedaesday's NatiOIIII League game Ia St. Louis, which the Cordi- .
Oils WOD 8·2, (AP)
.
"'.,

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Slauglitfollowed with his bases-clearing triple.
·
Bob Patterson relieved Bob Kipper (2-1) 10 start the eighth and was
charged with a rurt Bill Landrum finished for his fifth save, despite maleing a wild pitch with the bases loaded for a run before getting pinch-hitter
Ken Oberlcfell to end the game on a p()pup.
·
"These are what you call growing pains," Howe said. "Still, I thought
we might pull it out there in tile bottom ot the ninth. That would have
really '--·
·
.
, ·
"""'' something."· ,
1
Dodgen 4, Expos,3 - Brett Butler singled home the tie..flre8king run
in the seventh inning off reliever Barry· Jones to lift Los Angeles ovl'l"
Montreal at Dodger Stadium.
·
In the top of the seventh, Darryl Strawberry hurt his left shoulder when
he hit the right-field fence while catching a fly ball. He was talcen to a
hospital for precautionary X-rays. The injury wasn't considered serioUs .
and described as a btuise. ·
,.
·
Thew~, the Dodgers_' ihird straight and sixth in their Iast seven, gave
them undisputed possesston of fll"St place in the NL West
Cubs 6, .Braves l -Luis Salazar broke a seventh-inning lie with a
twO"run homer as Chicago beat Atlanta at Wri~ley Field.
.
Juan Berenguer (0.1) hit Andre Dawson wtlh ·a pitch with two outs in
the seventh. Words Wei): exchanged and both benchies emotied, but order

"'

was restored without incident. Salazar hit the next pitch itito the left-field
bleachers for his second home run:
·
Paul A.uerunacher (2-0), the second Cubs pitcher, allowed one hit and
Struck out four Ia two innings.
. Giants ., PidDles 2 - Bud Black came within an out of his thitd
straight shutout u San Frlncisco beat Pbiladelphia at Candlestick Park.
, Black (4·3)· allowed fi'f;e hits in eight and two-third innings; struclc out
• afid walked .our.
•
He 1'11alked the bases Ioaded m
· the run
· th and .gave up
SIX
a two-run double to Chaitie Hayeton an 0·2.pitch. It extended Hayes' hit·
tin streak to 12 gliDes.
·
·
·
Grimsler. (1-4) allowed three runs and six hits in five innings.
San Francisco s only victories in 15 games since April27 have been in
starts by Black. His_26 consecutive scoreless innings matcbed a career
higl).
.
Mets 7, Plidr.es 1- At San Diego, Dwight Gooden pitcbed a seven·
hitter and New Yorlc got home runs' from Dave Magadan and Kevin
McReynolda. The Padres have lost seven of eight.
Gooden (4·3) struck out eight to inc:rease his National League-leading
101a1 to 54.
·
Ed WbilSOII (2-4) gave up seven earned runs and 10 hits in six and
two-third innings.
.
·

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Parcells resigns as headi. _coach.ofNeYe Giants
'

Coach Bill Parcells'
wHh t~e Olanta.

w

Year
. 1983
1984
1985

•

9

l
12
7

10
14

6
2

0

6

9

0

10

6
4

0

3

1987
1988
1989
1990.

,_,rd

12

.13

T
1
0
0

0
0

Won Super Bowl

1...------:;:;;:::

.By TOM CANAVAN •
AP Sports Writer
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J.
(AP) - Just because BiD Pan:ells
walked away from his dream job
with the New York Giants for a
rest doesn't mean his NFI.. coaching"career is over. Not by a long
shpt.
Parcells 49, resigned as head
coach of the Super Bowl clwnpions after eight seasons Wednesday,
but he left the door wide open for a .
P.Ossible return to the siilelinea, a
prospect some Giants officials
don't want to discuss.
Giants general manager George
Young refused to 8J1..swer questionS
whether the club would sland in the
way of anyqne wanting to h~ Par·
cells, who left the Giants with a
year left on his contract.
For his pan, Parcells said relax·
ing was lU he wanted for now.
"Let me get out, walk around
and act stupid for a while,'' Par-

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HOPING FOR VICTORY- Jockey Chris Anlley hopes for vic·
tory whea he rides billleed Strike the Gold in the 116tb naDlaa or
the Preakneu Saturday at Baltimore, Md. Ir the Kentucky Derby
wiaaer can break the tape nnt, only tbe Belmont remai111 on the
road to the Triple CI'OWII. (~P)

"

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•.

cells said when asked wbother his

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have? In show business you want
future. plans might include coach~ to play the Palace. I was fortunate
ing. ''I don 'I have a crystal ball. to play the Palace for a while. ••
I'm not rulinJ it out, but I'm not
Ray Handley, the Giants ' soft·out there looking for a job." ·
spolcen offensive coordinator, was
.f..ea~in(l tho Giants was not an immediately named the team ~ s ,
easy docuion for Parcells. He head coach, a ~ilion once thought
mulled it over for months after destined for BiU Belichiclc. · ·
·~
New Yorlc's 20-19 victory over the
However, Belichick took the
Buffalo Bills In the Super Bowl in Cleveland Browns' top coaching
Janu~ before coming to a deci- job in February and that cleared the
sian .this J;liiSt weekend.
wa-y for Handley, 46, ,vho had
"It's ume," Parcells told a jam- entenained !\Oughts of attending
packed new~ conference that had Jaw school after the season.
all the appearances of one being
The resignation came liS a surheld for the Super Bowl instead of prise to most Giants players, with
a coach resigning. .
Parcells on top of the coaching
"It's time to move on," he world, having led New Yorli: to its
added. ' 'That's the best ":Yay I can second Super Bowl victory in five " ,
say iL It's been 1 ~t Clght years years. But _just lilce Bill Walsh of · ~
here. Who's been Iuclcier than I
(See PARCELLS on Page 5)
• •

..

Rio Grande track teams end
season with non-storing meet

There were no fust place desi~·
nations for the University of Rto
Grande nien' s aild women's track
teams, but both competod favor·
ably qainlllarger opposition last
SacunlaY in tho Billy Hayes·Invitational at Blooniingron, Ind.
It also marlced the fmal season
appearance of the teams. Coach
Bob Willey, Assistant Coach F.ddie
Atkinson ai1d top women's distance
runner Renee Pecic will travel to
Stephenville, Texas, May 23·25 for
t1!e NAIA Tracie and Field Nationals. Peele, a sophomore from Baltimore. Ohio, has been the only Rio
Grande athlete to qualify this ~Peele com~ ted in the women's
3000 meter run at Bloomington and
finished third with a time or
10:07.48. The meet drew athletes
from such schools as Indiana,
Manchester, Louisville, Western
Michigan, Ball State, Findlay ,lndi·
ana Wesleyan, Miami, Morehead
State, .Cincinnati and soveral
regional tract clubs.
In other women's _c:ompetition,

"

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Vonda Stiles (senior, Shawnee) fin·
ished lOth in the long jump at 15
feer, 4-1/4 inches, and placed tliird
in the triple jump at 33 feet, two
inches. Teammate Sherry Cooke
(senior, Sunbury) was fourth at 33
feet, one inch.
Men's results saw Tim Murphy
(junior, Zanesville) place fifth in
the llO meter hurdles at I5.32 seconds, and lOth in the high jump at
six feet, six inches.
Rambo
(senior,
Travis
Columbiana) was ninth in shot put,
47 feet, two inches, and 15th in discus, 14'1 feet, · to inches . Kurt
Tyson (senior, New Lexington)
placed 21st in discus ·at 101 .feet.
Joel Spencer (senior, Gallipolis)
was ninth in the javelin, 159 feet,
one inch.
The R,edmen I600 meter relay
team of Murphy, Aaron Griffin
. (fieshman, Wellston), Brian Breis·
lord (freshman, West Lafayette)
and Marc Michigan (freshman ,
Kettering) placed eighth at 3:23.4.

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SPRING VAll H C!NfMI\

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PICK YOUR OWN
STRAW8EIIIES

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CONTAINERS" FURNISHED
HOlliS= Mon. "'"' Sit. 10 CI.JII.-7:30
5utL 12 --7:30p.m.

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SYIVlSI!Q

TH-DAY 4 p.IIL·I ·p.m.
SAHIDAY I a.m.-12 neon
MONDAY 4 p.&amp;•l p.M.

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~IALIONI

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p.lll.l

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HARRIS FARMS &amp; GREENHOUSE

. MAllET 14.9-5193
54110 ST. IT. 124

nORAl SHOP 143-5171
POIIlAND, 01110

3 MILES FROM RAVENSWOOD BRIDGE
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JJe:Lucia s~ _slowly Wednesday, too, allowing doubles by Mill:o
Huff m ~ ~~ ~ and Chris James in the !J:CCOnd. an RBI single by
~ LeWIS m the third and a bases-loaded sacnfice fly by Felix Fermin
on the fourth. But he ended the fourth by strildng out Huff then struck out
the side in the fifth.
' · ·
He lasted seven innirigs, giving up !Wo tuns and six hits, walkmg two
and striking out seven. Rob Murphy replaced him in the eighth' lllld yielded a two-run home run by Albert Belle, his seventh, before Bill- Swift
pitcbed a perfect ninth for his fourth save.
The Mariners' bullpen is IO-for-II in save siruations.
"We know if we can get into the sixth or seventh ~· with the way
the bullpen's been going, we ean be tough," DeLucia said. "There's a
·
positive atdtude in the dugout."
.lldgar Martinez homered, singled and scored three runs (or Seattle.
Hlr?ld Remolds h_ad two hits, ~xtend_ing his hitting stn&lt;at to 11 glimes.
AI von Davos drove on two runs w1th a smgle and a sacrifice fly.
The Indians, 2- I 0 at home, have won fewer home games than any
other team m the majors. They've lost seven or their last eight games
overall.
·
Eric 'King (3-4) toolc the loss, allowing six runs and nine hits in six and
one-third innings. He's 0-4 at home and 3-0 on the road this year.
"We cannot put two, three base hits together,'' manager John 1\.JcNa·
mara said. "We're throwing a lot of heal at our pitchers. And it SOWids
lilce sour grapes, bot the halls we've hit have gone foul . The balls thoy hit
tonight fell inside the lines."
The. Mariners improved to five games above .500 for the fmt time
since last Aug. 5.
·.
.
Elsewii!Se, it was Boston 9, Chicago 6; Califomia .IO, New Yor.lc 2; ·
Kansas City 6, Toronto 4; Oakland 6, Baltimore 3; Milwaukee 4, Minnesota 2; and Texas S, Detroit 4 in 12 in'nings.
• ·
Red Sox 9, White Sox 6 - It was another l()llg night, and Carlton
Fisk sent the Fen way faithful home happy one more time.
His 12th-inning home run that hit the foul pole- wiMing Game 6 of
the I.975 World Series for the Boston Red Sox - ended the longest
World Series night game.
.
His sixth-inning passed ball Wednesday helped the Red Sox win the
longest nine-inning night gamo ever played.
,
·
"I'D ta1ce credit for the record," said Fislc, who left Boston for Chicago via free agency in 1981. "If I had eaught that ball, the game would
have been over an hour sooner."
·
·
Instead, the teams beat the record by nine minutes as the Red Sox beat
the White Sox 9·6 in 4 hours, 11 minutes.
.'
The passed hall - . on what should have ended the inning - tied the
game.
'
Scott Radinsky replaced Donri. Pall (0.1) and Mlice Green\Vell hit'a'
two-run double.

'
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Joe, Heslceth (1-0) the third Boston pitcher, worlced the sixth for his
fll"St Victory since Apil 16, I990, when_he was with Montreal. Jeff .Rear·
don, the ftfth Boston pitcher, worlced the ninth for his 12th save. .
The game eclipsed the record of 4:02 set June 22, 1962, when San
Francisco played at Milwaukee. ·
Rangen s, Tigers 4...,. Juan Gonzalez hit a two-run homer in the 12th
inning to rally Texas over Detroit,·handing the Tigers their sixth straight
defeat.
Julio Franco led off the inning with a single and, one out later, Gonza.
lez hit a 2-0 pitch from Steve Searcy (I-2) into the left field stands. Rich
Gossage (4·0) pitched two innings as the Rangers won their fourth
straight game. .
.
Athletics 6, Orioles 3 - Queen Elizabeth departed after two innings
at Memorial Stadium, so she missed all the good stuff - 12 of Oalcland's
13 hits and three Baltimore homers.
The Queen and Prince Philip, perhaps bored by watching five walks,
headed for the exit with Oa1dand holding a!.{) lead.
Bob Welch (4-2) allowed three runs and five hits in five and one-third
innings. Dennis Eclcersley got his ninth save as the A's SII8Jllled 1 threegame losing streak.
Jeff Ballard (2-5) allowed seven hits and four runs in five and twothird innings.
Aagels 10, YaDkees 2- Wally Joyner's three-run homer at Yanlcee
Stadium highlighted a six-run third inning and Marie Lanaston had a complete game for California. .
Langston (4·1) allowed eight hits, struc1c out six and wallced five. Jesse
Barfield's two-run third-inning homer accoupted for the Yankee scoring.
Lance Parrish knoclced out Chuck Cary (1-4) later in the iooing with a
two-run homer.
Brewers 4, Twins 2 - Paul Molitor became the fourth Brewer to hit
for the cycle as Milwaukee snapped an eight-game losing streak.
Molitor tripled in the fll"St inning, singled in the third, doubled in the
fifth and led off the seventh with a horne run at the Metrodome off loser
Kevin Tapani (2-3). Molitor groiDided out 10 third in the ninth to finish 4for-5.
Chris Bosio (4-4) gave up six hits and two runs in seven and one-third
innings. Chuck Crim worked one inning and Dan Plesac got the last two
outs for his first save.
·
Royals 6, Blue Jays 41"- Bret Saberha$en pitched a strong game as
Kansas City stopped Toronto's four-game wmning streak.
Saberhagen (4·3) allowed eighl hits and struclc out eight while walking
none in eight innings.
Bill Pecota hit a two-run.double off rookie Ieft-handei- Dennis Bouchet
(0·3) in the second inning. It scored Carmela Maninez, aboard on a foeld•
er's choice, and Kun Stillwell, who had singled.

- llldlau ClfCler Joel ftiDDer ..,. ... lwll v ..
Seattle'• Pete O'Brlea ID u lll·f'lltld .U..pt by die 1attv te ICirtiD

.,

Minnesota hands Pittsburgh S-4 defeat
· By KEN RAPPOPORT
. AP HocU, Writer
PITTSBURGH (AP) - The
fll"St pine of the Sllllley Cup finals
went according to fonn.
The Minnosoca North Stars won
and the Pittsbur&amp;h PenguiDJ lost.
And Bobby Smith isn't quiiC sure if
it's a good omen or not for the
North Stars.
"Maybe they think they have us
where they want us," the North
Stan center said following
Wednesday niJht's series-opeaing
5-4 viCIIlry over the Penps.
Smith refen-ed to the rigid pet·
tern the playoffs have taken so far.
In their earlier series against Chicago, St: Louis and Edmonton, the
North Stars have 'won every opening game. Their jump-starts have
been a big reason why they're in
the finals.
·
The Penguins, on the other
hand, have been. doing things the
hard way. In their series against
New Jersey, W11hin110n aad
Boston, !My loll aU tine O(JIIIin&amp;
games before C0111iDJ bet 111 will.
If earlier series .-e any iJidial.
lion of a trend, the North Stan now
must llllllllllinll CMI"COIIfidlnu
in Game 2 011 friday niJ~L They
lost all three of the ~~eOIId pm11
iit theii carller liCrios. ouiiCCll'ed by
a whoppinl17-6.
Minnesoc,~ forw.d· Brian Propp
said it hasn't been as mm:h 1 letdown by the North Stars in second
games as it has been the desperate
state of the other team,
"AfterJ:' win the first game in
somOOM
'1 buiJdiRa; they have
to come out Arlfi'UI in 1M .alld

'-:'~!:~ ~~y the openin1·

game patterns havo developed for
both teams, few of the players
could explain it. But Minnesote 's
Brian Bellows perllaps came as
close as IllY one.
"Our team '1 got an advantage,"
be said. "We alway~ feel our team
has to come up with a bil effon. If
we're JIOlfOI:dY to play in Game I,
·
,
we're in trouble."
· 'By now, eveJ!OAC knows the
North Slln' story: Allllllllerdoa all
throush lht playoffs, they have
continually blocbd off SIIJIIX*dly
superior tcama.
Aaainst tho 'Pen1uins, tlley're
still playina the same underdo1

11

1::

.,,

.

·;~

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

ro11..:... but iren 't IUrpl'isiiiJ people
811
~!f'h!·North Stars showed us
that ther play a good aame of
hockey, ' said Pittsburgh's UIC
Samuelssoa. "The forwards are
~:t·~ in our end. We were

too1c care of all but one.
Pittsburgh had five power plays in
"That one-for-eight dQOSJI't do the first period atoioe.
justice to the fact that
had two
So it' s back to the drawing ·
five-on-threes, but we d1d a good boatd for the Penguins.
job of killing them,'' Smith said.
"We're not panicking, we've
"We got the saves we needed and done this be[ore,' ' Lemieux said.
we got the defense. All the guys "Tomorrow will be a good day.
wh9 are out there are doing a good We'll have a meeting and talk
Small wondet. On Wedneaday jOb...
about the things we have to "
night the Penguins bad eight
Pittsburgh coach Bob Johnson improve.
·
power-play chances, including a looted like he had lost his best
"When we regroup .tomorrow,
couple with two-man advantage1. friend when ho appeared at the we'll thinlc abow the next game."
··.·
The Nonh Stars' penalty-lcil[ers post-game news conference.
'
"I
very disappointed," he
II
said. "We had some great power- Belle's victim found
(Continued from Page 4)
play opponunities, but we dido 't
,,
the San Francisco 49ers, Parcells execute. It was a combination of with criminal past
left on top.
the North Stars' penalty killing and
'·'
Several playen said they had ~ ~:~ance. I think it was hal~
CLEVELAND (AP) - ThJ! . .
seen Pan:ells in the Ioclcer room on
heclder who was hit by a baseball · · •
Monday aad Tuesday and he had
The North Stars continued their . thrown by Cleveland Indialis out- . ,.,
given them no indication. he was playoff trend of outscoring their . fielder Albert Belle filed a report ., ·•
leaving
o.pponents in the first period, lead- with police , who subsequently
~Us said he informed Young ing 2·1 on goals byiNeal Broten
found an outstanding warrant '' •
and OWiier WellinJIOD Mara of the ,-4nd Ulf .Dahlen after Samuelsson against the man, an ex-convict.
deciliaa about 2 o.m. Tueldav. and scored fust for Pittsburgh. In the
"He (spectator Jeff Pillar) foled '..••
they offerod Handloy the b an . opening periods this playoff sea· an official police repon with the
.___ , _
1011, the North Stan have outscored
Cleveland Police Deparunent," Lt.
- ......_
- ·had..__ • .. oL..• ...._
their opponents 32-16. '
Martin Flaslc Slid
. Tuesday.
;
,,_,.
,_,, •IIJIOiiO..., ._.
Wednesday
n1"ght,
MI
"
tlnesoll
"Th
II
.
·
o
a
eged
victim
has
the
II• wu concer•• d abo Ill h11 held the •••ly advanta:r,: desp1"te
co
boaltb
and that be had beea offend
responst'bil"uy to consult with the · ~
a job u 1 a.levisioft footlla1l ana- bein1 outshot 17-9 in
first 20 prosecu(Mr's office, who will
;
..
minutel.
The
Minnesoll
penaltydecide
wllether
probable
cause
1~It, b. t Parce II• d••Ied t.em killen and goaltender Jon Casey exists to issue a warrant fat Alben ,'
~~~~~~~ had a lot to do with that because Belle's arrest," Flaslc.said.
tMI he had- not beoD olfnd ·a TV
•,
While proeessi~g the report,
position.
phohkce rapn. a rouu~e computer
PlrceUs also Slid that his coechl'l' •
c ec on 111ar and oound an out- • ·
in&amp; cOntract bad nod!ing 111 do with
.
stionding 1989 warrant against him . 1
his decision 10 quit. He said he
filed by an ex-girlfriend, Detective
chose not to tallc with the team
Denise Reeves said.
. ·
~ ' .
about a now contract aftor tile
There will be 1 wallc·a·thon
" ·' · ~
Super Jowl becM•te lie didll't wa apoaaor~ by Form U3 Weight
it to lffcc:t whether be stayed or Loa Center of Gallipolis that will
MOW OPEN FOR THE . 't,
left. He would have been paid like place on Saturday, May 18 at
$750,000 in the. final year of his 10a.m.
SPRIIIO SEASON
·
·~ . .
four·)llar COIIIniCt
In the event of rain, the walk-aComplete
Unt
of
V'lftable
· ParceUs joined the Giants for·a than will be rescheduled for Saturcind ltddiltg Planh,
second time in 1981 and was day, May 25 (same start time).
'!
named head coach late in 1982
lloomlng lllld Foiloge
The course will beain at the
wheD Ray Pemns left to go to the Gallil"'lis City Park and end at the
Hanging laslttts. Fruit afMI
Univmity of Alabama.
Haskins Memorial Park. There. will
Flowering Tr111, Shrubs,
Pan:elll JUided the lelln to five be a picnic following the wailc that
Azaleas. Rho~ad• ...ons and
pla)'Oif appearances and posted 811 is open to the public.
·
-~.
lfelly Trltl.
1.5-52-1 racord.
· The proceeds from the event
'
"I've JIYCD what I have for 10 will go to the Guidin&amp; Hand School
Hubbard's
ytll'llll constniCt, )lroleClltld build in Clicshire.
SYRACUIE. OHIO
this franchise," Parcells said. "I
Interesred individuals may piclc
882·1771
just don't feel - I don 'I _,I you up forms at the center or call 4460,... Dllily 9·51 S... l·S
.
to call it burnout - I just don •t 4664.
thillk I could $ive tho same to Jli"O'
teet the frat!Ch!SC...
.
••

ther

...

am

Parce s...

,~

JO.

"II7aJk•a•thOD Set
for May 25

.
~

• I

.
.

.-:

Gr.nhoust

-·

IIYial·
Clinseco's name has been in tho
New Yorlc tabloids since he made a
Iate-ni&amp;)ot visit to Madonna's Manahattan apartment last Thursday
ni&amp;)ot and was spotted by paparazzi.
"We were gettin&amp; on him a little
bit," said the 30-year-old Shabs,
who wu ejec:te4 from the stadiwn
for whit security officials
described as "excessive verbll
abuse."
"Hey Jose, how's Madonna?
'Where 's Esther?" one fan quoted
Silabl as •ying.
'
Tony Maldonado, 29, iaid
$11abl yelled "Oo beck to Cuba"
to Canseco, who was born in
Havana.
. Since May 3, Canseco has
rafua~ to talk with roportera
except those from Bay area news·
papc:rs. He attached a newspaper
arucle 10 his Ioeker at Yankee Sta·
diwn and put a cardboalll sign next
to it: "No More Free Luncbes for
the Media!! If I Don 't Know You,
You Don't Tallc to Me." His T·
Shirt Monday read: "Leave Me ·
AJoM,"

Aft« Monday's pme, Cllllll:O
told lay 111'111 reporters dill rans
llad tossed applu and boulcs 11
him in riJ!)Jt fteld dllriq the ICries.
"Doll't c:omo out 1111 poi8t 11
players, cloa't coafnltlt IMM,"
CIIINCO llid. "Daa't tilt . .
IU...uy _, b1a .,._,"
CaRNCO'! IJeDl D..nil
Oilbon, uld Taelllly tbe OIJlfleld.
v'aiiOOd)' llehaviar.,.. cr 11 d 11y
twlldaa 1111_.

._...fC*'
•
,... lllllilllldll •

•

PHARMACY
TOPICS
BY YOUR

Fan-player clashes growing
more frequent at ballparks

By RONALD ILVM
AP Sports Writer ·
NEW YOR.K (AP) -The Oak·
land A's Jose Canseco confronted a
fan at Yanlcee Stadiwn on Monday
night liter ho was heckled about
his wife and his friendship with
pop star Madonna.
Earlier in the day.; Cleveland
Indians outfielclet: Alben BeUe wu
suspended for a week for hitting a
fan with a ball.
The Cincinnati Reds' Rob Dibble was sllSpended for four pmes
on May 3 for throwin&amp; a bUI into
. the stBRds and hiaiiiJ a fM.
· "Any time you're a player and'
see and hear everything in the
stands, yo.u 've aot problems,..
Portsmouth Metn&gt;politan Housina American Lcalue orcsideni Bobby
Authority as community coordina- Brown said. "'hwfs llways been a
tor for a drug-elimination program . . dictum that's been there."'
Commissioner Fay Vincent
His office overlooks the projects
dcscrcibed Belle's action as a "very
where he grew up.
"
"I can relate to theSC' people," serious incident,' ' but didn't want
to pass judgment on Canseco's
he said. "I'm one of thein."
confrontation.
It was clear that offi·
He would like to continue with
cials
want
ptaxers
to ignore the
both jobs, but said if it becomes too
customen.
·
much he will relinquish his posi. "This is I conc:crn and I'll talk
tion with the housiiiJ:dlority.
to
!be~ prlli!Jeml,'' ViDCillt
Olivl'l" also il
I fliiMa II
llid.
"To the at1r11t dla the leape
Shawnee Stale, wolldiiJ to-.1111
presidents
tlliak it'l appropriate,
associate's dearee. He considers ,
we
'U
clec:ide
whallllould be done.''
his laclc or a college depa to be a
Monday'a lnelclent came in the
hindrance.
"I have a mea~e I HRd out Dnt innitla. whlll.[e ~ Sllabl of
y llllnred
strongly to llblelea, Oliver uid. L)'lldllunt, NJ..
"I have aiOQd job now. !Kat the CiRMco fnllll 1M .... _. Ill die
only reason is. I haw name lclendty Oakland dugout and Can11'0
and people skilll. If I bad a deJree, wallced over and confronred him.
"Ho looks at me an~ says, 'If
I could probably Ft a head bue·
malce anoth~r ra&lt;:ttt remark
ball coac:bin.ljab ~
dill.
I'• 1111n1 10 bull your
"WHl il T!*_~!· ........
Iliad,"
Sllabs
4~.•CIDNCO u .
with no 111111 aapauarr" '

'

: '·'

'

Oliver hired to start baseball
program at Shawnee State
PORTSMOUTII, Ohio (AP) Former National League batting
champion AI Oliver has been hired
to organize a baseball program at
Shawnee State University.
Oliver, 44, a ·Portsmouth native,
batted .331 in 1982 with the Montreal Expos and had more than
2,700 hits while with seven major
league teams before retiring in
I98S. He WIIS \lrOu&amp;bt inlll COidiihJ by his IIIah .:bool COld!. Hilly
Weinbrecbt, now athletic director
II Shawnee Stale.
"So far, it has been fun talking
to hi11h school coaches," Oliv~
llid. '~"•They've been very receptive
lrivioBtr liS infonJIIIion. That'S tho
you bave 1 great nppon
coaches around the country."
Shawnee State will b.egin
National Associllion of lnteltolleliate Athletiea blaebUI cOIIIpeti·
lion in 1991-92. Ulllil- OIMr
. Ia continuin&amp; to work for the

the aec:oad IDDIDI of Wedaetday Dlgbt'a Amerk:aa Leape game iD

Cleveland, which tbe MeriDen WDII 6-4. (AP)

,'' .
.. -t

SWISHER LOHSE
PHARMACISTS
r,.,.,.,.nt Patient•belt8r "*'-·a ltudy found . A year
after the operetion, 12 PIIOWII of thole with lddn1¥11rom c:eda_..
doing

- still eliw; IUCCMI ..... IC* up to 17 P11 - I t wllh kidnays from
live dot)OI1. Other organ lnneplante c11c1 almott N wen.

. ''

****

Bruit milk not only glv• the baby eomeofthe mother'• immune
leeton. It may aloo epeecl the development of the baby'o o-lmmune eyltem, uy reoeerchan at the Unlver81ty of Taxa1 in 0•1·
veoton.

,,

****

Experimental n- drug fOf ltrob patlentt," MK·801, may aleo
p-ent morphine edclctlon In pltlentt who take morphine for
pain relief, ••v pharmacotoglote -lng MK· 801 It the unlveralty
of Michigan .

****

••
I

'
'

-nge juice. - - to ba better abeorbacl then ather forma the
USDA uyo.
• ·

****

'.

• • ",I

****
Calcium citrate rMiate, a fo"" of aalcitlm often •d•d to

Ex!*lrnen'!'l druga tlrlt. bloclc the betic caute of allergy attack a are
tieing UHd In otucll• repo111dln the N - England Joumel of Medi·
cine. Drugs rnr,: prevent 8ltll1N1 and hay fever without aide eH.cta.

.,

•':

..

"I

u

,,

'I ')'I

~

If tpringallergi• ere making you miMrable, glt relief from lnif·

fiHand ollllerHat...

. ..,.'
. ..
' •

,

....... .

--- .............
I

._
I .PII.

h ..

,. ...

......., IOtGe 1 .111. 11 4:GD p.111. .
"'tiCII.,-IIHII
PH. · l·atl
1. '
.....
P ••11. 0K.

I

.,

. -...
'

'

1

"

' •
• ' ·•

. ol~t," Oilblltllld.

•

�•'

Page 6 The Dally Sentinel

••

Pomeroy_.lddlepon, Ohio

-

By HOWAllD ULMAN

AP Sports Writer · .
. BOSTON (AP) - The Detroit
Pistons knew the Boston Cellics
winners of an NBA recc.'Cil6 titles;
had the will and the still to rally
from an 18-point deficiL
The Pistons also knew, having
won the last two championships,
that they wouldri't come unraveled
when the Cellics came beck.
A 79·61 cushion shriveled to
nothing when Lany Bird's 18-footer tied the score at 100 with 3:40
left.
·
But Bill Uimbeer's loog-range
bombing c~ed the Pistons to a
116-111 'cjory Wednesday night,
givi!Jg them a 3-2 lead in the best·
of-seven E&amp;&lt;ltem Conference semi.V I

Racing shorts

day night's NBA playoff game in Boston, which
the Pistons won 116-111 to take a 3-l lead In
their ~-of-seven series. (AP)

By SC01T WOLFE
Sentinel Correspondent
.
The unwinged California Racing Association (C.R.A.) sprint
cars begins the Ohio portio11 of its
Midwest tour this Friday and Saturday at Earl Baltes' famed Eldora
Speedway in Rossburg.
,
. The tour began last week at
Knoxville, Iowa, home of the
. · nationally televised Knoxville
Nationals, then passed northward
to South Dlilr:.ota and Wisconsin
before making its furthest pass east·
into Ohio.
Mter the May 17 and 18-dates
at Eldora, which has warm-ups set
for 6:30 p.m. each night, the tour
moves on to MillSiream Speedway
in Findlay, Ohio. Gates open at .3
p.m. and racing at 7 p.m.
The group moves to Union
County Speedway in Liberty, lndi·
ana on Tuesday, then continues on
Wednesday night, May 22 at the
famous Limaland Speedway in
Lima, Ohio. Warm-ups begin at
6:30 and racing at 7:30.
Lima~and is located 4 miles
westofLimaon SL Hwy 81.
. Some of the drivers listed to run
the events are C.R. A. champion
Ron Shuman, ESPN televised driver Leland McSpadden, Brent Kaeding, Mike Sweeny, Rip Williams,
Bily Boat, and legendary Jack
Hewitt.
·

final. Detroit is a win away from a
third straij!ht conference final
matchup W1th the Chica~o Bulls,
who defeated Philadelph18 in five
games.
Portland plays host to the Los
Angeles Lakers in the opener of the
Western Conference fiDals on Sat·
urday.
In a series in which the homecourt hasn't beep an advantage,
Detroit can clinch at home Friday
night. Boston, 1-1 on the road and
1-2 at home in the series, would be
home for a seventh game on Sunday, if
. "It's not gnm 'in here," gwird
Dee Brown said in Boston's locker
room. "We just bave to go back
there and'(win) again."
"I like Boston, but I sure don't
want to come back here for Gaine
7,'' Detroit head coach Chuck Daly
ssid. "Only on vacation."
Wednesday night's game was
hardly that for the Pistons, who
couldn't' relax until the final seconds even though they never trailed
in the last period.
"They made a ttemendous run

•

necessarr.

.

James Edwards ssid. "I knew ~Y.
would."
f"
And the Pistons, with aU tlieit'
big-game experience, were readi_
for iL
"'
"A few years ago, we probablt
would have lost our poise m a situ;
alion like that," Detroit's Vinnilo '
Johnson said, "but we kept execut::·l
ing offensively and defensively." ~ .
The deadliest executioner wat;
Laimbeer.
•
He had made just 16 of 47 shots~.
a 34 percent average, in the fusr,:
, four games. But on Wednesday·;
night, he was 8-for-14 and made, ;
his last three shots.
In the first four games, Joe_;
Dumars made 37 percent of his·'
shots and Johnson only 31.6.
'
But in Game 5, Duman was 9:;:
for-17 from the field and 13-for-13'::
from f:he foul line for a game-high;:
32 pomts. Johnson was 11-for-1~ ·:
for 24 points. Laimbeir also had",

-

Dear Ana Landers:· I am a · DEAR IOWA R.N.: I have said
registered nurse working in an this in .the.column bef~ ~I ~ve
. intensive care uniL 1 love my job · no hesitation about saymg u agam. I
and I want to !xi a nlli'IID for the rest believe health professionals who
of my life. This letter is • plea f&lt;~C serve patients bavetherighttoknow
my safety as well as that of my !f those, patients have AIDS. ~
husbllld and family. .
mstrucUons are to take precaul!ons
Yesterday, while 118ndling blood and assume that every patienl is
. and othet JCCretions 1 accidentally infected, but in 'instanceS where the
stuck myself with a cJiny needle..The patient knows that he is infected, .he
only reason it happened is that I should have the ~y to teU the
was being cautious and wearing nurses, doctors, denusts and others
rubber gloves. The hub of the needlC who take care of him. Since you
stUck to the glove, then turned and had direct contact with ~ patient's
stuck deeply into my index fmger.
bodily fluids, y9u certainly are enThe next hour and a half was spent titled to know if he is mv positi ~e.
getting the doctor to come into the
Dear Ana Landen: I would fike
hospital and obtain consent from the !'&gt; ~ about.some of the good people ,
patient's family to do an mv test on m thiS world. We hear so much about
him. This family consented. They the others.
could have refused. The results of
What my 16-year-old son, Willi
the test are confidential which doing in Maine, or why he was there
means they will not re~eal the with his bicycle, no money ~only
results to me even if it is positive.
~e clothes on ~IS .back, 1s not
No consent is necessary for the 1mponant. The pomt 1s that he was
hepatitis screen, for which I have coming home to New Jersey. .
It took my son two w~ to get
already been immunized, nor is
consent necessary for any other lab here. Naturally, I was cunous and
test. 1do not want to hear about gay asked him how he surviv~ w!th no
rights because AIDS is no longer a money and no food. He sa1d 11 was
gay disease. It is a fatal infection no problem. He recounted how some
that is spreading throughout the ~f the ~pie he met along tJ:le w~y
general populiltion. I have no fear mv~ted , h1m 10 spend. the .mght m
of caring for AIDS patients. 1 do theu homes and gave hun dinner and
feel, however, that I have a right to bteakfast. The rest of the bme when
know if a patient I'm looking after he was hungry, he would approach
has AIDS.
, a stranger and ask for a loan to ~et
Am I being unreasonable? My food. ,The: peo~le who gave h1m
supervisor thinks so. What do you money ranged m age from 25 to
think? Right now I'm plenty upset. about 40 -- ~th sexes. Whenever
•• R.N. IN tOWA
anyone gave h1m money, he wrote

''We knew, sooner or later. the~:
guards would get hot," Boston::
head ·coach Chris Ford saicl::;
"Deiroit shot the ball real well." "•::. -'

-WITH PAnO AND FURNITURE FROM LIFESTYLEEVERY PIECE NOW ON SALE!
,,,

Community calendar
Community Calendar. items ty building. Cost is $5 for adqlts
appear two days before an event and $2.50 for children under 12.
and the day or that event. Items ·Ham, chicken, n09dles, dressing,
must ~ received weD in advance other entrees and desserts are
to assure publication in the cal· included. ·
endar.
MIDDLEPORT - The Meigs
County
Retired Teachers will meet
THURSDAY
Saturday
at the Middlepon E&amp;&lt;ltem
RACINE - The Racine Ameri·
Star
at
12:30
p.m.
can Legion Post 602 will meet
·Thursday at 7:30 p.m. Refresh·
POMEROY - The Meigs Junior
ments wiU be served after the m.eetHigh
School will have its all sports
ing.
banquet on Saturday at 6:30 p.m. at
MGM' AREA" Support group the junior hll!h school (note-change
meeting for members of th~ com- in location).
munity aff~ted by domesbc VIOMIDDLEPORT - There' will be
lence will be held Thu,rsday from
double-elimination class D and E
5-7 p.m. sponsored by Serenity
House. Call Crisisline and ask for Men's Softball Tournament at
Hartinger Park in Middleport on
Serenity House
Saturday and Sunday. Shirts to
I
POMEROY - The Meigs Coun- champion and runner-up teams.
ty Democratic Executive Commit- Sponsor trophies for top three
tee wiU mej:t Thursday at 7:30 p.m. teams. Entry fee is $65 plus two
new balls. Ca11992-7114 for entry.
at the Carpenters Hall in Pomeroy.

•Swivel Rocker

log. 1241.00

.

SALE S189,
•41" Tablt &amp;
Four Chairs
lteg. 1193.00

;?E;:-""",:"'\~~ SALE 5699

.. '

Primera
Patio Group by
Telescope Casual
'
. '
Cool and comfortable, quality

Matching
umbrella
Reg. 1209 SALE
Chaise lounge
Reg. 1320 SALE •2•!1 I:
Base Free w/Purchne of Patio Group

Ufestvle
----------

FURNITURE SHOWCAS[

Carnir llinl -.J 1DMt

ROCK SPRINGS - The Rock
Springs Better Health Club will
meet Thursday at l p.m. at the
home of Frances Goeglein.

•Fret Delivery

•Daily 9-S, 9-8 Friday ·

MIDDLEPORT • George
McClintoCk, a professional model
builder, will speak at Thursday's
meeting of the Heath Mo.del
Builders Club at the Heath United
Methodist Church at 6 p.m. Public
is invited.

•Visa

•Mastercard

Gallipllis

•Discover
•Financing

446-3045

Aralia bit

FRIDAY
RIPLEY - The Liberty Mountaineers will perfonn at the Skateland in Ripley, W.Va. on Friday.
. TUPPERS PLAINS - There will
be a round and square dance on
Friday from 8-11:30 p.m. at the
TuppeiS Plains VFW Building featuring-o{he Hot Point Strtng Band:
Ronnie Wood 1s the caller. Public
is invited.

. ,,

El ,EB

"-C.,.. eo.................,
At Tanlplke 01 GalllpoU., We An 0.1111 Out For AU The Bualneu.
'49.00 OVer moloe, Everr Da~, Everr Da~, Everr Da)'!

•
•I

SATURDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS - Bake Sale
at the Tuppers Plains VFW Hall,
beginning at 9 a.m. Sponsored by
II!~ men and women on Post 9053.

I

Saturday, May 18
10 a.m.- s.p.m.

As you know, Car Buying Is Serious Business. It involves serious money.

Perhaps you've been putting off buying that new car or truck you so
seriously need.· Well, now ... Thanks to a serious new Pricing Policy at
Turnpike of Gallipolis ... You can buy any new Ford car or truck for *49
Over Invoice. This Is not a sale ... Not a special promotion ... But this Is
now the every day low price ... Only at Turnpike of Gallipolis: *49 Over
Invoice on any new Ford car or truck. Invoices are posted on all new cars
and trucks. so shop Turnpike of Gallipolis when we're open or closed and
check our exclusive low pricing.
Why'Pau More Somewhere Else?
'49 OVER INVOICE .. ;
THAT'S THE PRICE EVERY DAY AT TURNPIKE OF GALLIPOLIS
lt'a No Wonder Turnpike UndeneU. Thoae Who Woa't Be Undenold!

ON

LONG BOTTOM - The Long
Bottom Community Association
wiU have a smorgasbord dinner ~
Saturday at 5 p.m. at the commum-

Face Painting... Horse Shoes .. .

. Clown Act (3 p.m.)

..
.~

Everyone's Invited To Join In The Fun!

...
-1

.~

,._._ '
.~

•"'
~

'

Ann
. Landers

The May meeting of the River
Valley Herbalists was held at the
Long Bottom Community Building
with Sue Hayman as hostess.
ANN LANDERS
.
Karen Young and Karen
1111, 'Lol ,\qelel
Showalter Wele guests.
· Betty Jones reported on basil, ·
-~­
the herb-of-the-month. Basil is one
down their names and addresses and · of the most popular herbs. There
are approximately SO varieties.
theamounL
To back up this inc:redible stOry, Basil is an insect repeUen~ and is
he handed me the piece of paper 'good for the sinuses and is comwith the names, addresses and monly used in tomato dishes and
numbers on it and said, "l'hese were teas.
Final plans were discussed
the people who loaned me money . . about
herb fest to be beld
Will you please send them a check?" 1une 1theatmini
Blennerhassett Island
Of course, I maile4 the checks out from noon to 4 p.m. Samples of
that same day.
foods prepared with herbs and
Isn't it good to know there BTl! some crafts will be displayed.
.such people in the world? -- A
Connie Hill announced to the
GRATEFUL FATHER IN. NJ.
DEAR NJ.: What 1! nice story.
I've always believed there are many
more good people in the world than
bad, and if given a chance, they'D
Virginia Pooler was ihe best
prove iL Thanks for the evidence. loser and Phyllis McMillion was
(P.S. Your son must have an honest the runner up at the recent meeting
face and a ton of chann.)
of Ohio TOPS Club No. 570 held
What's the truth about pot, co- at the Carpenter's Hall in Pomeroy.
caine, LSD, PCP, crack, speed and
JuliaHyseU was the KOPS loser
downers? 'The Lowdown on Dope" l!R4 Amy Smith was the best teen
'
haJ up-to-the-minlllt informotion on loser.
Virginia
Dean
won
the
fruit
hasdrugs. Send a self-addressed, long,
busintss·siu tn~lope and a check
or money order for $3.65 (this includes postage and handling) to:
Lowdown, c/o Ann Landers, P.O.
The annual mother-daughter
Box 11562, Chicago. Ill. 60611·
banquet
of the Middleport Church
0562. (In Canada. send $4.45.)
· of Christ was held recently with
attending.
graduates 180Aladies
grilled chicken dinner, pre·
Elizabeth
Golowenski, pared by several men of the church,
Pomeroy, received a degree from was served.
A program depicting the old
Ashland University during its ·
113th commencement on May 11. television game show, ''To Tell the
Golowenski received· a master of Truth" was presented with several
of the ladies acting as guest paneducation degree in supervision.
11

er.-.s,...........

'l

PLEASANT VALLEY

•

.Nursing Care Center
Sand HI Road, Point Pleasant, WV (304) 675-5238

'

.

group that the Fairfield Herb Society will sponsor a garden tour and .
herb fair on June 29 from 10 a.m to
6p.m.
·.
· The second River Valley Herb
Fest will be held Sept. 28 in
Ravenswood, w. va. Linda McCoy
is in charge of the fest and various
committees were diacussed.
A silent plant auction was held
with money going to the treasury.
Refreshments of Italian pasta
salad, bread with basil butter,
sttawbeny jeUo cake and raspberry
mint tes were served by Sue Hay·
man, Nova Couch and Debb1e
Gilmore.
•
Jhe June meeting will be held at
the home of Juanita Conrad in Ripley, W.Va.

TOPS announce best loser
ket ani.J Ola SL Clair won the surprise girt
.
A letter was read from Kay Sage
and Ola St. Clair'was presented a
10-year KOPS ribbon. Everyone
said something about their mother
and Linnie Bell Aleshire read a
card from her daughter.

Mother-daughter banquet held

Golowenski

elists.
Awards were given in several
humorous categories such as mother and daughter with the l.ongest
combined feet, mother wnh the
slimmest waist, mother v.:ith the
heaviest purse, lady wearmg the
most jewelry, lady with the longest
earring mother-m-law who came
the farthest, and mother with the
dumbest son-in-law.

GRETA L. RIFFLE

D of A announces
scholarship winner
· Greta L. Riffle, daughter of
Sharon K. Riffle and ~randdaugh­
ter of Mary K. Holter, IS the recipi··
ent of a $1,000 schoiarship ·rrom
the Daughters of America, of
which she is a member.
Riffle is a 1990 graduate of
Eastern High School and a member
of Ohio University's Honors Tutorial College. She is a Political Science major.

Tax form reminder
It has been reponed that income
ronns for the Village of Mid·
dlepon are now past due. Anyone
not flling should do so immediately.
.
tax

CLASSIFIEDS ...
Your Key to Great Buys

POMEROY - The Belles and
Beaus Western Square Dance Club
will hold a dance on Saturday from
8-11 p.m. at the Pomeroy Senior
Citizens Center with Jim Under·
wood, Hurricane, W.Va., as the
1
• .
caller.
K~NAUGA - The Libe'rty
Mountaineers will appea~ at the
D.A.V. Center in Kanauga on Saturday.

6.

POMEROY - "Case of the Cos·
mic Cat" and "Cat in the Hat"' will
be shown at the Meigs County Pub·
lie Library in Pomeroy on Saturday
at 2 p.m. and on Monday at 7 p.m.
at the Middleport Library.
SUNDAY
, ,
HARRISONVILLE - Garden
tractor pull with speed sled at Sci·
pio Township Voluntee.r Ftre
Department in Harrisonvtlle on
Sunday. Weigh-in at 12 p.m . Pull
Starts at I p.m . Classes conSISt of
900 lb. under and over: 1000 lbs.
under and over; and 1100 lbs.
under and over. Refreshments will
be available.
POMEROY - There will be a
12-step AA meeting on Sunday at 7
p.m. at the JTPA office, 117 West
Second Street in Po~eroy .

(

The Riverview Garden Club met
recently at the home of Mrs. Janet
Connolly. Mrs. Ella Osb~rne
served as the co-hostess. Devotions
were presented bl Mrs. Maxine
Whitehead using ' Spring" as her
topic and closing with prayer. Roll
call was answered by members
telling a new plant (vegetable or
· flower) members plan to grow this
summer. Thank you notes were
read from several friends that
received fruit ttays from the club.
' The Atcadia Nursing Center wrote
a not thankill8 the group for Easter
fava"S.
For the pro~m, Craig Math·
eney, owner of 'Flowers by Craig"
in Coolville and Guysville was the
guest speaker for ihe evening.
Matheney, a horticulturist and floral designer, showed several
arrangements using baskets with
live flowen and plants, bird • ·
wreaths and various interesling

'·!

containers. He also displayed many
types and colors of ribbons for use
in bows to create certain effects in
flower and plant arrangements.
Following a bow making demonstration b&gt;: the guest, members
made large velvet bows to be used
during the Christmas holidays. A
gift of appreciation was presented
to the: speaker following the pro·
gram. .
Refreshments were served to
Matheney, Pauline Myers, Nola
Young, Frances Reed, Nancy
Wachter, Marilyn Hannum, Grace
Weber, Maxine Whitehead, Gladys
Thomas. Betty Bogp, Ruth Anne
Balderson, Margaret Grossnickle,
Phyllis Larkins, Mary Alice Bise,
and the hostesses. Mrs. Myers

3.29

PINE BARK MULCH

SHADE IIX
.ED: 3 lb,
Fast-germinating. long lasting.
PLAY TIME LAWN .ED IIX: 3 lb.
For a child-proof lawn.

3 cu . ft. Gives landscapmg
well·groomed look, conserves so11
moisture. adds ·organ•c va lue to so11 ,

....., ...
.._I'Ur

5,000
sa.
FT.

7 99
•

10 99

REG .

1,000
sa.
FT.

8.99

•

REG.

11 .99

TURF BUILDER"' PLUS 2

TURF BUILDER"'
Greens quickly wilhout burning.
10,000 SQ. FT...... II£Q, 1I.H.....14.tl

15,000 SQ. FT...... REQ. 11.H .....11.tl

Lawn tertillzer/weed con1roller .
1a,ooo SQ. n ...... N!G. aa.n..... 21.tl
11,000 SQ, FT...... RIG. 11.H..... 21.11

Riverview Garden Club meets

Pony Rides ... Train Rides ... Petting Zoo... fortune
teller...Craft Sale &amp; Auction ...Games Galore...

Cotton Candy... Popcom ... Hot Dogs ...
Pizza ...Baked Goods ... Pop

River Valley Herbalists
plan for mini herb festival

a

you can see. Sleek, sculptured
no-rust aluminum frames feature.11:
baked-qn polyester finish.
Weather-resistant Telaweave
vinyl mesh covers.

Acolytes and Youth Group were (L·R) Andy
Betz, Sam Davis, adviser Bill Davis, Terry
Qualls (to BUI Davis' left), Jimmy Wiseman, Jed
Doolittle and BB/BS executive director Judy
Sofranko.

S49° OVER INVOICE

·Page-7

AIDS is no longer a gay disease

LET'S HA~E AGREAT
MEMORIAL DAY HOLIDAY!

STARS na.tional champion
Mike Balzano was in towQ with a
ni~ht off from the STARS tour last
Fnday night to capture the 30 lap
Super Late Model A-main at Sky·
line Speedway.
Three of the top five drivers
were driving Mark Richard's Bullitt Chassis as they crossed the finish line.
~· '
Following' Balzano across the
line was Lag'y Bond/ Andy Bond,
Kenny Johnson and Racine's Scott
Wolfe,'.·
, ~ ..
Also participating but getting
•into a late race mete was Benny
Hickel. Bob Adams, Jr., defending
six-time Skyline Champion, suffered a cut tire in the early laps, but
after setli11g fast time hopes to be
back in winning form this week.
Another local driver Chris Diddle, who has been in the top three
all-year long, suffered a broken
ring and pinion in warm-ups.
The Meigs County gang will
take on the best in the business
tomorrow night, May 17, at Sky·
line for the Earl Hill Mel!lorial
Race whcih pays $l.SOO to 'win.
Gates open at 5 p.m., lime trials
at 7:30 and racing at 8:30.
Skyline is located 5 miles off
U.S. 50 between Athens and
Coolville on County.Road 53,

0

~

lliursday, May 16; 1991

. •·-

•

::

~.

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

•
•

'
in the fourth quarter," Detroit'J,

~....._

PARTICIPATE IN TOURNAMENTThese youths receatly participated In the Big
Brothers/Big Sisten Bowl For Kids' S.ke Bowl·
ing Tournament at Skyline Lanes in Kimauga.
Bowling ·. for St. Peter's Episcopal Church

••

Thursday, May 16; 198

Detroit beats Boston 116-111

ELBOWS BlRD - Detroit forward Mark
Aguirre sticks his elbow into Boston forward
Larry Bird during the first quarter or Wednes-

I

, ASSORTED

·TREES
· Reg. $16.99 &amp; $14.99

ASSORTED

Purple Plum
·Silver Maple
Red Bud

Junipers
Yews
Reg. S1 0. 99 &amp;

~9. 99

2.29BAO .

COMPOSTED MANURE
or POTTING SOIL
40 lb. Composled manure lor plant

40 LB. ORGANIC PEAT

goowth . 40 lb . All purpose polling soil.

1 GAUON
ASSORTED

Sc lenlilically blend!)d loomula lor
more vigorous plant growth Helps
to loosen hardened soil

ASSORTED
2 GALLON

Shrubs

Pussy Willows
Azaleas
Rose Bushes

•••• •3.99

•••• $9,99

$200

rece~edthe~~.
IGs.rn;~----------~~JL----~------------_JL-~----------~--~~~--~~~----~--i
A game was presented by Betty ' r

BoM~e of the next meeting will
be aiUIOunced.

il

SI~VER

BRIDGE

PLAZA-GAL~IPOLIS,

OHIO
,.

�•

•

,
Thursday, May 16, 1991 ·:

Pomeroy-MiddleJIOrt, Ohio

Stubbornn'ess, perfectionism may~:
raise risk of anxiety· disorders
...•

-

!Beat of
the Bend..

KIDS ON THE BLOCK • Tbe Kids on tbe Block rereatly visited Salisbury ElemeniBry. Tbe puppet sbow presented to introduce
students to disabled C!)nditioos. Tbe puppeteers did skits witb tbeir
puppets tbat broupt out audience questions from tbe third and
fourth grade students. Blindaea and epilepsy were sbowa to tbe
students in a manner so tbat they did not feel afraid to ll!lk questions about tbe disability. Tbe show was sponsored by SEO·
SERRC, SEPAN, McDonald's, tbe Arthritis Foundation and United Way.
.

Professor gets patent for
synthetic version of Taxol
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP)A Florida Siate University professor has received a patent for his
mel!lod of making a synthetic version ofa cancer-fighting drug now
available only from the bark of the.
PacifiC yew tree. ·
,
· Research on the drug, called
laXol, has been hindered because it
lakes the bark of about 12,000 trees
IO'pfoduce only 2 1/2 pounds of the
substance. The uecs are sparsely
distributed in the Pacific Northwest, including areas where log. · ging is banned 10 protect the ~t­
Ied owl.
Chemistry professor Robert
Holton received a patent Tuesday
for his method of combining

Mr. and Mrs. Ron Murphy, Santana, Brick and Elhan, Torch, were
Saturday visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
Tom Hayman, Mr. and Mrs. Dorsel
Larkins and Mr. and Mrs. Paul·
Hauber.
A cook-out was held last weekend at Oorael and PhyUis Uakins.
Guests were Mr. and Mrs. Steve
Salisbury and children, Mr. and
. Mrs. Mike Larkins and children,
Gallipolis; and Kenny Wood and

Bob

&lt;.

The Carmel-Sutton Methodist
Chwches will be having a consigntaxol's two chemical components ment auction this Saturday beginin the laboratory.
ning at 10 a.m. at the Carmel
. "We've managed to come up Chwch which is located on Carmel
With something that IOC)ks like it's Road, just off County Road 28,
going to be quite practical," Racine-Bashan Road.
HollOn said in a slatemenl "It may
Co!lsignments for the sale will
evenlllally provide an answer to the . be accepted between 6 and 9 p.m.
supply of laXol."
'
Friday at the chwch or those wish•
Taxol has shown great promise ing to consigil via phone may call
in the treatment of ovarian cancer Rev. Baker, 949·22:!9; C. T. Chapand is being tested for lung, breast man at 949-2963, or Larry Curtis,
and colon cancer, among others.
949-2996.
One of the drug's cqmponents
The results of the G~ Ameri- .
can be prepared easily in the lab by can Face Off will be announced at
chemical synthesis. The other is the auction with the winner:(?) 10
more complex, and · Holton's receive a pie in the face at that
research group is working to syn- time. The youtb group is using the
thesize it with funds from the Face Off as a fund raiser havinj!
National Cancer Institute.
placed donation jars with the nornJnees named on the jars in various
churches and other localions. The
nominees are John (Doc) Rose,
Maxine Rose. Dan Smilh llld C. T.
Kathy Larkins and children, Chapf!Ian. V~te is by donalion and
Coltunbua. Gainea were played.
a ~enngue pte was deemed a most
· Jimroy.-Young and Tom· Hay· · . ~le •'lflf!k ~lions for your
mail went on a seven! day fishing favonte nommee ~ill be !!CCC~
trip in the mountains.
!he day of the aucn~ IDitil the Jlle
Ruby Brewer, Janie Fitch and IS presented for the b1g Smll!lh.
,Brandon and Pearl Powell visited
Since you've barely just paid
Bernice Deem and family in Vien- your
1990 income tax and are now
na, W.Va.'
.
wnrking for the government for the
Mac McPeek was a Sundar dinner guest of Ada Bissel and next several months to .pay the
1991 tax, perhaps, you would be
KeMy.
interested in laiowing where some
of your money g~.

St. Paul Willing
Workers meet
.

Kurds continue to pour into .c\.llied area:.

.

TO PLACE AN AD CAll 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
a A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY

ne.

.

c

~:(~ . ~~ '·
Gil

I:'til ,:Y~:1 rli::'l.tr-f;~~==----

.
" . .,a. . . Ia . . ClldJUIII41.....
.
1.11111 IIIIIAT A - VAC:ATIIII Coolll I wllllllllllllol- I
Only one certtllca!:e·may IJe used per tlctlet. Travtl fhnMih Aprt1, 1192.

.

MOND~Y

/)UIIr

12" Woofer

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Easy-to-Use Home PC

a '1Miclye 1000 RLX
a 40MB Drive t MouM
a 1MB RAM a VQA

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Job Done Fast

Reg.171.15

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t

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Evwl

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U,OOOW..dl

.,

f

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by tlclc

I. 2IMI Ave.

$

. VIOLET, PINK, WIITE

:!IIANT SIZE

-

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U.AIItlll'or-·
a 24 Walta a I·Band EQ

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CMcll Your Phol• Book for the Rlidlo Shlclc StaN or D•ar Nat ut 'You

•••.,.rt,

Ohio

SWITCHAIII.E TONE/PULSE""""' wort onloolh IOiol ... pu/11-. Thoroioot. In INU hrlino 001y ,...lrollrllliiiJ Nnts.
"'"con d UIO roquiolng - · FtC ~· Noi fQr COOl 01 1*11 inti. WI - wo 101 lloof ~·
----· DolbrLIIIOOM~Oil"*-'"'l~
'

.

:CAULIFLOWER.............
·SMAll NEW WIITE

j

mo1"U¥

lnsur~nce

21

Rusin•• Opportumly

22

Mon.; lo Loan

23

Ptole1110n.a Sl!fvius

Aell Estate

41
42

Houses tor Rent
Mobile Homes for Rt~nl

W~led

61

Farm Equ•pmunt '

62
63
6j
65

Want!!d to Buy
liwl:!stock
Hay a. Gr•in
Sued &amp;. Ferhhtef

Transportation
71 Auto'• tor Salu
72 Truck• lor Sttle
73 VhRS I. 4 WO ' s
7t Mot01cycl•
75 8u1111 &amp; Motors 101 St~~ht
76 Auto Parts &amp; ACCIISSOflutli

43 F11m1 for Rent
4A · Aperlment for Rent
4S Furnish~ Room s
46 Space lor Rent
47 Wanted to Rent
48 Equtpm~mt lor Fhmt
49 For leMe

Helo Wanhld
Situation Wanted

Point PltiSIIII . 175-692&lt;

I
I

LINDA'S
PAINTING .

lnterlar • lxtlll'lor

.rm ISMaus

. Takt the RCJ!n out of
painting.
ht mt do It for you.
YIIY IUSOIUU
IAYIIIfi-CIS

(61C) 915-CIIO

4- 23·1 mo. pd.

•

In Memory

2
I

U
Fl\THI!R, CARL LEE
Ho WM I _,.rful
fllthlr,
Ho pllylld llfe'o ,!'lttll

577 FLAT
FLAT.

aquar•.

No rn~~tter when .
n11d1d him

,......

W• - y o found

(

77
78

Auto Repi11J

Com•p•nu Eq111pmun1

79 Cilmpeu &amp; Motor

MerchandiSe

Honu:~

Serv1ces

Household Goods
62 ·• Sporting Goodl
53 1Anuque1
54 Milt Merth•nd•te
55 Burlding Supphea
5ti Pell·tor Sale
5 ·7 Musical lnslrum..,ts
58 Frurts &amp; Vegtftlbl85
59 For Sale Of Tude
51

. 81 Hom•ln•ptowmenh
82 Plumbmg &amp; Huling
Bl E•e~a11n9
84

lEo

Et~r i c .. I. Refug011111h0n
Gun~tral Haultny

86 Mobl\tt Hvrn u Rep11u

87 Uphol11ury

POTATOES.................. 4 LIS.·
·'·

him

fltherl

Who nover hod time to
tltlnk ol himootf
Lut -8J• thOught of

.

othero..

CEDAI
CONSTIUCTION
992·6641 or
698·6164

love,

Chgdltn: Corol.
ChlrtloandLony

YOUNG'S

WASHm-$100 ..
DIYIIS-$69 op
1EJ111EIA101S-$100 ..
UNGES-. ..--$125 op
FIIEZEIS-$12S ..

CARPENTER SERVICE

W'i7Nr.o;R, ""'

V. C. YOUNG Ill

PROFESSIONAL
SUNROOF
INSTALLATION
Contact
STEVE WHITE

WHALEY'S

949-2161

We Need Uollnp! .
.
11·5·10-tflo

ol Mli~"'"'

UPHOLSTERY
2U·Ie. Sectlld

lllfllleport
Hand Tufting .
Cuatom ·D111pe1

C•1ta11 Fr- lapalr

992-6463

otYOUral

11·14-'90 tin

OPEN

TuBidloy thru SllturdiY

10:00 om· I:OO pm

. 7.. ,.2421
21ft MI. outsldt

lutl•d .......

u-111.5·10·1Hhi.

DAIWIII, OliO

15/11'11 / 1 rftO.

H••
Time

•Caraet

APPALACHIAN

WATER

HAULING

CUSTOM lllll
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At l••nablt Prien"
PH. tCt-2101
or let. 9C9·2860
Doy or Night

POOLS,
CISTERNS, EJ(.
.1,625 GAL.-135-145
lt. I, h• 71-A
RunAID,
01110 45775·9626
614-Jc:t-2904

4-28-81 · I mo. pd.

16-16·111

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o8LOWNIN
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INSULATION

11. I, lutloM, OH,

742·2C51

3·14.'91-tfn

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and

•••ovaL
•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD
BILL SLACK
992-2269
USED RAILROAD TIES
8·12·10-ttn

..CIOWA¥1
OVEN IIPAII
IU•m

·lri.. It .. Or We

... ._ ..

•••·s~..'liucr
SIIVICI

"'F- l!lllmlll••"

PH. 949·2101
or ltL 949-2160

992·5135 or
915·3161

Acren ,,_ l'alt Offlca
1171........

......,,,OliO

Jll/10/

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HD.

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J.ll·dn

HAPPY
BIRTHDAY
BILL HOBACK
NUMBER 39

: We Have Whitt CucuMbers

Let's Cell

:-MEIGS FARM MARKO

Him end Wish
Him A Happy

a·lrt hda Y·

949:2976
,._...::;..:.:::;....:.;:;..;..;.._,

THE

• GROOM . ·
· R-OOM
Complttt Grooming
For All Brtttls

EMILEE MERINAR
Ownlll' I Operator

614-992-6820
P-ror. Ohio

'-----_:;2·~11!;!·•:!;1-!!ltfloiJ.• ' .

•R•modellng and
Home Repalre
•Roofing
•Siding
•Painting

NO JOB TOO SIIAU
FREE ESTIMATES

·..• •
•

.,

••
•

CEDAR
CONSIIUCnON ,
' 992·6641 or : :
691-6164
·•
12·11 ·10· ....

-..

r--~~--..·· ·

J&amp;L

•

INSULATION .
•VInyllldlng

•RIPIIC-t

Wlndowti
•Roofing

•
••

•
••

•lniUIItlon

JAIIIS OISII

H2-2772 or
742-2251

1131 Bryan Plan
Mlddi•PO"· Ohio

I ·14-

.

•SSPI &amp; IUIO
CONSTBCTION

ROOFING .
IVIIYTIING UNDIINEATH

WE DO

. . . . IIMII

...,....
eCo•phtt
.._..._..

'

4·1·'90·1 mo.

pd.

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

NO SUIIIAY (AU$

.

698-6591

•Oulllly Work
•F- Eallm•leo

Mill llWlS, · · -

OIUY eSIU eftADI

1-100-ua-eoto

BISSELL
aUILDERS

Quality
_Sweeper
· Repair

CAIPUCWIIIS
nnd 11&amp;1 FlOOI CAH
•Rueon•bl• R1111 .

61C·992·2S21

GUNS &amp; SUPPLIES

992-7013
or 992·5553

1/71'11 / 1 mo. f.

IIIQ,

Floor Flnl1h

STEWAU'S

NEW. USED PAI!TS
FOR ALL MAKES •
MODELS

After ·5 p.m.

4-5·11-1

56 Y..ro Eooportenoe

Wo I8J Whet W. Do.
W• Do Whot Woaoy.
IO·lt-llllo.

Pom•oy, Ohio

SJMCialililltl In

FREE ESTIMATES

SPEEDY VAC

tNDIJIIIIKIII ·

992-6215

AUTO PA~S

NEW- IEPAII

COMMERCIAL

HOUSEI•LOTIIFAIIMS

-Rooflna
- lnterlof a E•tertor
p..., ....
!FREE ESTIMATES]

992·SUS or 985-35'1
Across fr- I'Ht OHico
PIIMIIOT, 0M0
10130/'19 1111

ROOFING
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

-Eioctrioot ond Plumb!"'
-Conaretework

•no ovEIIS-$79 .,.
KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE

Howord L Wrltesll

205 N. Socn Strlll
II!IIID&amp;IPO!Ir. 111110 4sr 60
OHico 614·"2·2816
HOME 614·"2·5691
DOTTIE S. TUIHII, 110111

-lltoom Addltlont
-Gunarworil

NO SUNDAY CALLS
5

'· ~

ll-14·'11·tfn

USED.APPUAIIICIS

•

w•

So on thlo dly our hlll'to
go out
To 1he dllrlll ond bnt of

.
EA.

$ 129

.

•Remodeling and
Home Repalra
•Roofing
•Siding
•Painting
NO JOI TOO SMAll
FREE ESTIMATES

.

toDAYWAIUm

UALITY

300 . .Sf --·- 511••
L,;.;.....:..:__,.!P~OM~R~O!,!Y~,..!O!II~O~--..J

PRICES APPLY AT PARTICIPATING STORES AND DEAL&amp;I'II

t

letart
Butl•o

992·7451
4-21·11- 1 mo. pd.

~~rby

Large Selection of Herbs

houst

SHOE PLACE

895

937

H.ven .

FREE EBTIMATES

SIGNS

:.'BROCCOLI....................39(

Ole

N~¥~~

DUMP TIUCIS
AVAilAILE

CttAtlllt

: ~IXED PANSIES ....,... $4 97 FLAT .
~(ABBA GE ~LANTS •••• 8 FOR 77c

l4

Birthday:celebration

trit~_gt

Mason

882

36

I;IIDIDI

576 Apple Grove
773

Homvs lor Sale
Mobtht Homes tor Sail!
fiilrms tor Sale
Rusin en Buildmos

35 lots a. Acreage

Busln•• Tr111rHng
Schools • lnSirucuon
16 Rldto. TV &amp;. C8 ffttp1ur
17 Mllc~laowou s
' 1.8 Wanled To Do

BULLDOZER •nd
. BACKHOE WORK,
. HOME SITES,
LANDCLEARING.
WATER 1nd SEWER
LINES

742-2588

:BIG GERANIUMS ............ 68
.
1Q FOR $599

They Feel Good:"

11
12
13
14
1S

HOWARD BROS.
EXCAVATING

SANnAliON

.MARIGOLDS ............... $633

MEGAN BRODERICK

Sepdlag cards and gifts were
Emma Broderick, Christine
Qrueler, Jin and Jamie Broderick,
. Beckf Steele, and Fran~!;, Linda and.
Vincenl Brodtrick.
·

742-2368

4· 23· 1 mo. pd.

PETUNIAS...................

Reg.41.15

a Excellent
UNotetaker"
t Auto-Stop at
EndOI Tepa

GiveM~~~Way

&lt;'i llwt!SIOLk

•

31 ·
32
33
3I

Business Services

20 VI!ARI IXP./FRU El'f
(al New Fer -illllilllt Prko

54 Miscellaneous
MlrchBncllte

LARGE SELECnON

Champion ' Leal her Oxford

Blllldlt.

........

SEPTIC TANK PUMPING
PORT-A-JOHN RENTAl

: FLOWER SALE

3388

Reg.3U5

949 R1cin•
7j2 RYit.nd
667 Cootwille

n••,.,... ..._,........
....

LiRhl R~lreshmenls

'D'Im·Fo~

Women's

Leon

A
&amp;LAWN en•

.at the Hammo~d Organ

.'

•lbuch-Rac1181

Pt. PIMMant

458

'ri~OUNYY

The pnce has been reduced to
$81,900 and owner financmg of up
to 80% of purchase amount may be
poiisibte for Quatrfying person to
buy very nice large home on ·311
acres in Racine. 4 BR, 3 baths, 2
garages, rented 1 BR apt. Property
includes 4,800 sq. ft. farm bldg.
and mobile home.

. 121·21148

Desk/Wall

• Lighted Keypad

67&amp;

M1CkU-..or1
Pom.,ov
985 Ch•ter
843 Ponl.nd
247 letart Falls

FMII I SlillPI IP.S

•"

SENIOR CITIZENS DANCE
FRIDAY, 6 to 10 P.M ..
PT. PLEASANT MOOSE:LODGE
FREE for Seniors 55 and Over
"GEORGE HALL"

119!!, 24985 ~===,ldu=l=for=Home==Offlcemi:J

U.AotiiPer-·

112

Call 614-992·7104 for Appt.

Save
'110 .r-=-c:.-

High-Speed Dubbing Deck

True Wash'" leather Keds®always look their best.
That's because the leather upper is machine washable
and dryable. What's more, the specially treated fullgrain leather won't shrink and slays soft through
repeated washings and dryings. Available in a variely of ..,.
classic Keds® s!yles, all with a durable rubber outsole
for that classic, clean Keds111 look.

Mej!&amp;!l Broderick celemi!ed her
fJTSt birthday recently with a pany
at her home, hQited by her parents,
Martin and Nancy Broderick.
A teddy bear theme was used.
Cake l!ld ice cream were saved
10 Jo1hua and Holly Broderick,
Dave, Jeremy and JIIDie Buskirk,
Janice Evans, Tnvis and Vicki
Adams, and Sherman and Mae

.

'. .

Add I 111111·2211 Clllr VIlA lltJnlllr lftl-4044) lllr IJIIr ....

Save•&amp;o

446 Gallipolis

Ch-""e
Vinton
Rio Grande
Guv•~ DisJ.
64J ArabiaDist
379 w.......

PRICE REDUCED - PARTIAl OWNER
FINANCING AVAILABLE! .

••

Ext111 Charge 1
(Worth Upfo 1188.95)

Annoucement s

5 Htppy Ads
6 l011 end found.
1 . , Yll'd Sale lpatd tn ach.iln ce)
8 Publh: S.le &amp; Auc;:tion
9 · Wanted lo Buy

1111'

Muon Co .. WV
Area Code 30•

(Computer OuUet)

• Select 1 Df 9 Bonus
Programs lit No

f'fll 'f'r

Metp Coun1y
Aru Code 614

367
388
24&amp;
256

eng1ne. New upholstered seats for
6. Can be seen at2101 Jefferson ·
Ave., Pt. Pleasant 675-7141.

a s• Mld111nge
• 3" cona'IWMter
a o.nulne Walnut
Finish

.06 / day

Galli• County
Area Coda61•

Boat $2950.00. 455 Oldsmobile

N~WI

Card of lhMils
In Memory

· '4

}'c)//uwing I ;•lt'Jiht;tlf' t•xdwugt'L.

Areal fun Boat 18 foot Martin Jet

Reg. 189.95

51 30 / day

. ( :/aN.~i.fi('fl f!UJ{I'N

2 00 PM. FRIOAY

BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE
4: 30 ~:s~~x~~~ORE

•so
8~

16
15

1
2
J

SWVII,I)&gt;

2 :00PM THURSDAY

WASHINGTON (AP) - An
Air Force general says Iraqi mili·
tary leaders were the target of a
powerful new U.S. 110mb dropped
on a fortified Iraqi bunker at the
close of the Persian Gulf War.
•.
Gen. Ronald Yates, commander •
of Air Force Systems Command( . :
told reporters on Wednesday that · :
the bomb, called the GBU-28, was ;
dropped on a single ~get, which •
he i!cscribed as a command and :
conuol complex containing ;
' 'senior statr' of the Iraqi milimry.

Real Estate

Employn1:nt

SATURDAY
MONOAY
TUESDAY
WEONESDAY

BULLETIN BOARD

3-Way Speaker
With Huge .

Optirnus 950, 140·1122

"New Washable/Dryable
Leather Keds~
Not even a cat has
this many lives."

11 .00 AM
2 .00 PM .
2 :00PM .
2 '00 PM .

~

Slooci&lt; com-

iiiiil'"iil""~trom HaWiii Of VirQin l5llnds eWude!l.

'

PAPER

TUESDAY PApE~
W[ONf.SDAY PAPER
THURSDAY PAPER
tHIUAY PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

OU1-

"""-" '*'""'Oil Rado Shack dome &lt;leoiers anol COnlon. Comln """'onil-"""·

15
15 .
15

AatHant tor conNc:utNe ·~ns . btokenupd.,-5wrll bedl•gad
tot each dill •• separate ads .
· ·.

1
OAY BEFORE PUBLICATION

COPY OEAOLINE

I . .... 11W RMIO -.ro-01rn two Cortmults lor ......... r-.
smo or more: eam tour Certi~tes tor purchastStotalilG ROO or ITIOI'1 ; or nm six
Ceniflcates for purc:haies 10tal~ $300 or more. Receipts muSI be elated betwetn
Mol&lt;h 28. 1W1 and May 18, 1911 .
I. All&lt; for oiiiiAT- VAC:AT1011- '-11....... F•
Infolml1ion. onc'oso anclllllil your rocolP!Sior - 1 ond oslli/lQinlnl,.,.
d1ln!J lot oiS1 .75fQr oOCIIGREAT Amoricon VACATION C o - -·
•. MEAT --VAC:ATIIIII-IIIOfll-- _...., . . ,.,
_ __

-

Over 1 &amp; Words
Roll
.
.20
$4.00
. 30
$6.00
&gt;
$9.00
:42
.60 .
$13.00

Word&amp;

3
6
10
Monthly

tttpt
cl;es.~t•hud d•spi.dy , 8usmun c;ard ;1nrl lt.'UM nohces)
· w+ll ,llsu iiPPtlat 111 tht! PJ Pluasant Rt~!JIItlur illld th• Gall•
puhs 0,11ly Tr1t.1ne. machmg ovur 18 ,000 h0_1UtlS
'

fEh Cenlnutels good .tor: S30 off artY rotJndtrlp excurSioft ol S119 or men. 150 off
llfl roundtrip IICUI'SIOI'I Of $279 or more. $70 Off any ~ IIUirsion of 1379 01

......

,

"A cl;•s•fu1tl o1dverlilu'rnunl pi~Ct.'d Ill ThH Dally Sullllltttlllllll

General confirms :•
super bomb target .•.
:.
.
.

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

n•

1

•.

RATES

Days

POLICit.S
'Ads outsldu MCHgs, Galli• o.r Mas(l_n countiM must bu pre
pa•d
, '
' Roc:tttYtt S.SO d•c:ount tor •df poud '" adYt~nct:,
: Free 01ds GivUWIY and Found ads undct" 15 words will be
run l d-ws at no ch•ge.
"Pt•at ol •d f01 all cap~~aii•U•rs •s doublu pnett of ad cost
~7 poinl lll!e typu unty used
, ,
•st!fltltH!I •• not re1pona!flle fDf errors ilhur llfsl d~ (Check
l01 ltffUJS hnt d~JW ad IIIUI IR papur) . Cilll ludote 2 00 p
dif¥ ilfler pubhct~tion to INk tt c::orrecuun
'AdS lhi1111VI1 be p.trd •n •dvllflCO 0111!
Ciltd ot Thanks
HiiPPV Ads
In MllmOfliltn
Yard Salus

•
yield a solution allowin,g refugees.: ·
to return to Dohuk wJthout the :allies being drawn iniO it.
::;

'•

Classifie

,'

5'1'011...

,-= .

ZAKHO, Iraq (AP) - Allied efforts.
Kurds feeiiOO vulnerable to return
commanders in northern Iraq said
U.S. and aUied officials fear set- to Dohuk without allied military
today that they can'!f~ tents fast ting bogged down in northern Iraq protection or an overall political
enough to accomm
the waves . and balk at moVing into the provin- solution with Baghdad th!lt would
of Kurdiilh refugees returning from cial capital, horne to 350,000 peo- · guarantee Kurdish autonomy.
Turkey and Iran.
pie before the failed uprising that
Western officials have said from
It had been hoped the Kurds prompted the Kurdish exodus.
the beginning they did not plan a
would use the allied camps mainly
Aln::ady, the U.S.·built refugee long-term presence in northern
as way slations, but many refugees camps in the northern citl of Iraq, and have started turning
appear ready 10 stay for some time Zakho, eight miles south o the refugee assistance efforts over 10
)&gt;ecause l111qi uoops continue to Turkish border, are overflowing the United Nations..
control their hometown- Doh.uk. -· , wi!IU!l!IIIU~OOO ~
.'
On W~ne:li, the U.S. comThe provincial capital is just
Some of the re(ugees were · manderofthe
'tionforcesrepasouth of the 3,600-square-milc retumin11 from Iran, where about I triating Iraqi Kurdish refugees
allied security zone.
miUion Iraqis sought shelter when asked Baghdad 10 reduce its mili"If we doo't go down lhere (to the Iraqi army crashed the Kurdish tary presence in northern Iraq so
Dohuk), we could wind up with a rebellion in lale March.
more Kurds wiU go hO(TIC.
·
quarter million people. here, which
Almost aU of Dohuk's residents
Iraqi and U.N. officials h·ave
would be crazy," said Army Maj. took refuge in the barren border been discussing the deployment ,!lf
Gen. Jay Gamer, commander of the . areas with Turkey afte{ the failed a U.N. polic~ force to replace allied
U.S., British, French and Dutch March rebellion. They make up soldiers guarding the Kurdish
forces in northern Iraq. ·
most of the 450,000 Kurds who camQ'ls. .
T"""'S army has refused to with- ·fled to Turkey. More then half of
fnc'als
1 1 have Sat'd · th ey hope
- dra~lts uoops from the Dohuk them have returned to Iraq. ·
.talks in Baghdad
between Kurdish
area, frustrating allied repatriation
Kurdish leaders argue that leaders and the government will

SCHWARZKOPF GETS SABRE. A'rmy Gu. Norman
Schw•rzkopf, right, gets a ceremonial sabre trom C•det First
£~pt. Donglas P. McCormick of Harrlsbur1h, P!l, durln1 a .
wednesday cadet ~ri11ade review at the US Military Academy,
'
West
Point, NY. (AP)
.. ,
,_

(

IIADIO SHACK 8RINGS YOU

.

.

Wednesday.
.
.&lt;
"It looks lilce in this cue clink·
cal judgment is being proven cor- .
rect." said Dr. Bruce Pfohl, an
expert on personality disorders at
lhe University of lqwa College of
Medicine.
. · ·•
Results are based on lliterviews '
lasting 9a minutes to three hours
with 759 residents of east Baltimore. They were drawn from 3,48.1· •
subjects interviewed in a random •
sampling. Some had shown a psy~ :
chiatric problem in the tint screen. :
ing, while others were choiCII ran-:.·.
domly. '
··
Researchers assessed ~h person on a 0-3 scale for severity for .
each of five traits: perfecti9J!ism,
stubbornness, excessive work
devotion, indecision and what psychiatrists call emotional constriction, which is reduced ability to
express emotions.
·
The disorders inc! uded obses- ,
sive ~ompulsive disorder, in which a person has persistent intrusive ·,
thoughts or imFulses, 'or docs ::
lhings lilce repetiuve hand-washing ..
in response· to his obsessions or in ·;
some stereotyped way.
'

GREAT American

'

The Willing Workers of the Sl ments for Vacation Bible School in
Paul United Methodist Church in July. The decorating committee for
Tuppers Plains met on Tuesday at · the family ·celebration will meet at
. 1:30 p.m. in the church social n()()n on May 23. The diMer will
begin at 6:30 p.m. Some of the
room.
will be going to Athens in ·
group
The meeting was opened with a
July
to
IOC)k at a quilt display.
reading fnim the Holy Bible about
The next regular meeting will be
"The Coming of the Holy Spirit"
by Joanna Weaver and Evelyn Har- on Tuesday, June 11.
mon said the ~ng prayer.
Other readmgs were given by
Hazel Barnhill, Mary Jameson,
Mae Vineyard, Bulah Maxey and
Edna Harmon. ·
·
Mildred BTOC)ks and Mae Vineyard gave
reportS. Pat Hall
and Mildred
dwell suggested
that part of the grouP.'s funds be
used to assist with tbe church's
buildinl program and buy refresh-

mont.:l

By MALCOLM RITTER
AP Science Writer
NEW ORLEANS (AP) -Stubbornness, perfectionism and indecision will probably not make you
very popul8r, and a study says they
may also raise your risk of developing an anxiety disorder.
Excessive devotion 10 work and
a reduction in the ability to express
emotions also appear to contribute,
researchers said.
The work also found that, at
leaSt in urban areas, nearly 14 percent of people show "severe"
stubbornness and about 8 percent
show a high level of perfecuonism.
The research is 10 be presented
Thursday at the annual meeting of
the American Psychiatric Associa·
lion Orleans by Dr. Gerald Nesladt,
an assistant professor of psychiatry
at the Johns Hopkins School of
Medicine in Baltimore.
He noted that the study cannot
prove that the personality trai.ts
cause the anxiety problems, but can
only show an association between
them. But it is certainly plausible
that the uaits;which probably came
first, COC)tribute 10 the developlnent
of anxiety disorders, he said

. -··

5cOu Walton will be arriving in
Tueted inra the feileml budgets
Pomeroy Friday after spending the during the past two or three years
past year with the armed forces in and only recendy coming to light
Korea.
were:
.
· Scott will be gelling bilck baile
$566 million, rising tu $900 miljust in time to lltelld graduation at lion later this year 10 send Amerjthe Meigs High Scboollale Sunday can cows to Europe to participate
afternoon. His son, Sean, is a in an "Export Enhancement Promember of this yar's senior class. 11ram"·, $S00,000 to study the
Following ,.._.,.
..........hftft' there Will be effects of cigarette smoking on
a c~mbined welcome hQme and clogs; $10'7,000 to~~~ the mating
graduation party at tbe home of · hallits of Japanese q · · $84,000 to
Scott's mother and Sean's grand- study why people fall in love; $1
mother, Mrs. Jane Walton, on million to study bicycling and
Mulberry Heights.
·
walking safety; $50,000 to prove
that sheep dogs, do, indeed, protect
In case you wondered who was . sheep, and the list goes on and on.
under the very hot and heavy
By the way the Citizens Against
chicken costume at the annual open Government Waste, the Heritage
house at Veterans Memorial Hospi- Foundation and the National Taxtal Sunday afternoon, it was Karen payers Union dug_out the informaRoush, an employee of the hospi- tion on the spending listed here.
tal. Thqse heavy material costumes
with over the head masks get very
lsn 't it great • now we can comwarm on days like Sunday - even plain about the weather being too
in an air conditioned building.
hot. Now that's a switch. Do keep
smiling.
Bill Diles, formerly of Middle•
port and now living m Athens, is
doing a great job in getting the
Middleport Class of l,JI41 toj!ether
for their 50th reunion. Bill JS frequently in the Meigs area in conjunctiqn with his hearing aid business . . The class wiU have a ilepamte reunion in the afternoon before
jqining other Middleport High
.alumni in the evening,

Friends and family gather
'

By

The Dally Sentlnel~age e

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Alii CONDIIIGNUS • IIAT PV•s tn1
FURNAQS FOI MOIU I DOUIIEWIIII HOMES
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

BENNET .
T'S

Sfelt &amp; Co11¥are
''" lstlmatt1

•o-110111

~:=•'

915-44r3
l.elllllft 0. Wfer'fll Sdlt~l K off It, 1C1
667 •6179
~:-:---~5-::.~;JI·~·IO~tfn~.
161CI 4t6·tC16 or 1·100·172·1967 ·•::.,..&amp;
:::::
__
1.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _._ _,:;4-azt:::
',,

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'

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FIIE .EmMAm
"-----------::u£lJ.U.~..a

'

.

.

,

.,

�---~"'~·-"""'·~··

--- ....

•

0-The n.JJv Sentinel

1991

Thul'8day, May 16; 1991

SNAFU~ ~

IInce Beattie

The Deily

OhiO .

UT 'N' CAlL~ .llr X., Wrflllt ·

71

AUIOI for Bile

F I . . l:)Oht 'OJ A-.*~""
tM?1lll· tK'f fltnllel I WILl. ...

r-

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,Television
Viewing

... I tlli'L.O 11151tT 'M' GIIDI'
IT"IO....,.._.IIW

(
'

4

Giveaway _

I I I 12 I

32 Mobile Homn
. . tor Bale

3 yr old doa. IIIII &amp;
tan. lholt -.... ........
....

I I I I I' \

OnAnr 8100
_
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REIAlll
--

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4 TrootorTINII,_ 114-4414Ht.
lwkold---·

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F,_ Elooo- Contor. -

loloctlon Whloh To
l'lnonolng A..U-.
Cllll-712-1220. .
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neE ARi. FOR lfOU, MAAM ..

---·-·
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' · 5PRIN6 FLOWERS ...

"

WELL, 't'ES ... I SUPPOSE .·
1 AM Tl-lOU61-1vFUL .... .

PRO.
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p.m.,

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WANTED: Futw.... om~
In rour own holM u • ......
l o - W - wMh , B-~

Smd onolo .....,, will moloo
.rn~llclog , :J04..171..1171.

8-1

hoOII only: 2 fomoll
11119110. lltlrtlna a running. 11
moe. old. 111 MIIMI

To

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dhtduolwlth- - mutt Ill ., llolto l)ounly.

Lost &amp; Foulld

6

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SM:pla d.

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lltckllly.
t-12 lnchoo 111.
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Nllghboltl oad Rold.

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Vulnerable: Neither
There are times when a defender's
Dealer: West
play makes hil intention pretty clear.
Of coune maybe the declarer cannot
. West Nortll Eool
do anytbinR to lhwart the Machiavel· Soolll
2t
It
I.
lian thrust. But occasionally, with a ~ •
All pass
.
little imagination. he will hnd a
' .
Opening lead: t K
ripo~te .
·
·
'
West Jed the king of diamonds and
East dropped the queen to show the
.
. _
~salon of the Jack. Nl'Xt West East 00 lead' tor n1sruu . ana the con..awitched to the two of clubs.
ract made
·
To one South in a match,.that meant 1 South cl~arly missed his calling il,l ·:
nothilll. He won the tr~ck tn the dum· life when he turned down a promlsinR ·
my and Jed a tnmp. But West :"'0 " career •lth the epee.
·: '.
with the ace of spades, led a low dia·
Sometimes wishing to Slle&amp;k a look ,.
_rqand to his !Partner's 1ack and re- at the dummy 11 an expensive IUllury.·&lt;
ceiftll a clvb ruff to. defeat the West immediately apolollzed to his
coatr~et .
.
·
· artner •If only 1 had led my club at
Tlte other declarer, thou&amp;b, heard 'ckoM lwouldhavebeateatbecoo·
lbe UJm-tom&amp; beating out a rhythm t~act." that is true. Tilen West will get
IIIII weal: "SinaJeton, singleton, stn· biS ruff whatever South cl-. In f!lcl, _
&amp;leton." 11 was clear wltat West was if declarer leads a trump at trick two; ·
trying to do, and South saw how to stop a West with nerves of steel can get lwtl -:
West's plan dead in its trac~He ~: ruffs. underleadina bil diamond hon-.;
the cluti'Jead in the dummy
ca
01'11 twice
.
for the lcifll of hearts. When East
® 1• 1,'...,. . ., .. . . . ._ . . . . . . .
:~
played low, South discarded his second
_,
diamond. West could ~o ion~er get
. .,

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RESTIIIC'TID IIUILDtNO,
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lloVI-., 13,100. - 2 4 M ,

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34

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DIDGI:

Cocltlo • ,~...,.....ao;m:
or P.O. loo 104, DFFlCI II'ACI FOil L1A1E 011
21111 Ave., Glltlp ala CIDII to

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33 Farms for Sale

~

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llor IUI,tliO:OO Ul 4:00.

-31dm-lnP-.op
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42 •Mobile Homes

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; Vlclnhy

tor Rent

Hootlnalr Plow,

Ill -

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48 PrefiiHnt

13 Potpourri
14BIMII....

1124
L llaln - · P_..,.
Hour.: II.T.W. 10:10 Lift. lo 1:10
p.nL, . . , . , I :00 lo l:tiO p.m.
114-II:IL

15 Old n11111for
lender
17 lmiiiCUIP"

52 Singing voice

18 LlfVI knife
18 Doubtecurvt
21 Cut ahOr1

81 Factual

Uncoln

.......,

50 Cogllo ergo

58 8llortly
58 Qoodllre, In

lured rteut•

=. . . .

2 lit J oom mobile home. unfur. 1tet Coot ll;op. Oolllr. D I D
........,
,.,.. n~J
•maH
~ 111 141
chlldNn IOC lilted a.o tralllr
. At. I l.oouot Rood on
Point , _ . . . 1104-1111·
oual
adlii'
2 - !lit
- f.i ·
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IX7
.
....... ...._ llriDIIIIn Poll
,.... . . . . . . . . . . . 1111.

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Foltfted

i.uy;-;01;-;-;'i..fi~••~iii;;;.~Anl~.....
-

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ful tlrnt lucdolt~er, ~Me
auction . . . . . I
1 lo,

44

46 011- well
47 Trre of ,..,.

lndtbtednau

Tokyo

·

828ylhe-

- -to

22 Nlllhted
PlloeniX
25AIIIr-- . 63 Comparatlvt

know
27 11111 century

aullll

64 TobaCco kin

e~ptorer

30 lhlfP dlak on

3 Unclotf1141
4 Old Prtnch

65 Pavlnt atoM
68 -

Molll•

coin

I plOW

'

34 Everr
38 Cry of poln
37 - lilY

---------- .....
-,'

__
81

Home
Improvements
...;
:---- ' ;•
I

;,'

1 Goalo

39 Pacific l....d

TATII II HERE'S SOME
HANII•CIIANIID
ICf CIIA#f U

'

5 Glllfto
6 Covtrod wllh
mud

DOWN

33 IIIICIL bird

•

I '""lfjlrtolloe 110 ond .... I

Riel! ,..,_ Auction eom,.n,,

-

12 P.,er

AntlqUM

53

42 Not II aee

Solhern
4 W11tr drain
8 Totalt

pota.IM-441-'11144. .

------

f lii.IIIC!,il

Public Sale
&amp; AuctiOn

lbr
Trollor,T- Recaulred.· Dopoolt
I
Ltscw
NO P•r.
111 uetm.
.

41 Wldaalloe

1 AclrHI

Vln¥1 Floor eo..tna: .,.. . .
ll1dro.».ll10 N.llaln a, A.. ..... .. ..... .......... c.r-

Fit,

....

ACIIOII

7 Seed
contalnoro
8 Ful olrcr11t

2 Pari of

speech

HAll f1 WHAT
WAS THAT
Tllllll.f

THUD? .

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COQI{-

1 quH llultlnG o n - ..,._

W.Mod to bur. lt-ng tlmbor,
lob I Bono IJ4.112.
1441.
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Com ,...... ..

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.,_ooilcltton, eotloltOr 4

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•san.

.

114-

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a.p. lol atilc~Jr. I ·

WI- To II!J:

For lda3ttllfl.

Lillo
To .... Air Can....,,
,.....
lll'4.

Oold~-­
~lliiila· r. PT. No

a-., TJm.
bor, Collollor 7p.Jn. tl4-3f).l'ltt.
Employrn cnl Scrvrces

oltorllpn. T--IIIIIllful11 pe. • 'nlnl ••·....,.
.... . . . lilt. Nul " " but """
P4ol while MPJIIIII 1111. New 1ft
rtd of. -.o
Jell1

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T.... IIT I CAPICIIIIN PRINT·
lNG ICIUIPIIIINI'. cc.ouTI
liT 1111 WIUINCS TO TRAil.
14,100. PIIONI1100 IZI - .

11:JO~~TCitiJIIII . . .

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

11 , Help Wanted ·

(I) •uhllll
(!) ...... llrl · Jlilllt'l OM

...

..

.,_YPAOCIS81NO
CIIIMMI PEOPLE
CALL YOU.
NO IJiiiUIENCI NlCOSARY.
1 - •• Ga12 IXTEHSioN ...
1111

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Hie .,_ meant J81; hit no meant no. Thtrl -

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by

NIA, Inc.

.••"•'
• i

18
'

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'•
•

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.

GENEVA (AP) .The
1apanese cities of Tokyo and Osaka
remain the world's most expensive
for expalriates, according to a sur·
vey published Wednesday.
But the su~vey said currency
changes and inflation the past 6
inonths have narrowed the gap
·. between them and the cheapest
major city, Quiro,Ecuador.
The survey, prepared twice
annually by the private Genevabased C!lrporate RCS!Iurccs Group,
ranks the cost of living 11f about
100 of the world's most I)&lt;lpulous
cities.
Although Tehran topped its list
numerically_. the survey said t!tis
w.~ ~leading. The Iranian capital
hiaJ'~~ mdex 11f 254, based oo offi·

!7'""···-· .......... ........ , .................,..... -----.-~

14

·····- ...

I

.

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....
..
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;_

.

.

4
5

6
7

. ''27Rk:kanbac:l&lt;er Ail Guard Base
'\• . Columbua, Ohio
,
Island Nav~ Station; Ben Francloco 28 Myrtle Hooch AFB ..Soulh
'
'&lt;.
.,,
12 Orlando Naval Training Center, Fla.
C.rallrur ·
13 Chase Field Naval Air Station,
.• 29 Carswell AFB, Fort Woith, Toxaa
Beeville, Tex..
. ~ ~g~\i(.,;, Aii{J1~•11n, Texas '
•·: ·
' • ••
14 Pugel Sound N ~·-• Station, SnHI•. ·
MARINE CORPSe

Q...

15 Whldbey lsiand AirStation:ook

=~~:~:~·=~val Air s~;on,

.

·•·

By BARRY SCHWEID
AP Diplomatic Writer
JERUSALEM (AP) - Secre.
tary of State lames A. Baker III
and Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak
Shamir met for nearly six hours of
inc!lnclusive talks Wednesday on
terms for a Mi&lt;4wt peace confer-

•· It helps international C!lmpanies
determine c!lst-of-living differen,
tials in salaries paid to expattiate
.
emp Ioyees. Accomm odau110 cos 15
are excluded because cmnpanies
and governments b'eat them as separate allowances.

·

· ....v ..•..•••.
31.Tustin Air Station, El Toro, c.ur.
····•·
·..· .' · :; t:;' ; ?i'

ence.
. ht-1tp
. ped t hrough11ut
·
Baker, ttg
the 'day, toll! reporters that he and
B he
Shamir had made progress. ut
evidently did n111 resolve differences between Israel and the Arabs
on a fonnat for a peace conference
and made plans to fly home Thursday after a brief, fmal meeting with
Shamir.
This could have the effect 11f
leaving it to the Arab si* in gener. al and Syria in particutar, 10 make
·the nextllll)ve.
Avi Pazner, the media adviserto
Shamir, said the understanding

New York's C!ISI of living is
taken as the base of 100. A oompa' m
· dexny of!itct'al sm'd ·the surveys
e.s were calculated 110 currency
~~:rlf rates as of the third week

----'--~.:...C.--"-.:...C.-'-f- 'F"'&lt;:.-"i'\A"'.f"Cf'"'
'~:f'-'rf,;_.J"_~_.,."'e:-. ..; . ind~eo~'f~~Y~~~~?~s~~dr:

8

L _s,..
•n_n_r•_•.,.
••·..,cc=a:111:.sOurce: Department of Defense

M'

.

. ·

.

Finnish capital Helsinki and

Pick 3:443 ·
Pick 4: 0147

Cards : Q·H, J.C
6-D; Q·S

cent.

•

•

at

"

Vol. 42, No. 10

· Pomeroy-Middlef!rt, Ohio,

Copyrighted 1ttt

·'il;

wouldbe madepubl'tC be'•!)IC Baker andanne--•
,..... 1·0 !981.
flew hOOIC. Also, Baker and Israeli
The best Baker could _manage o
F11reign Minister David Levy that explosive point was an_~! '
planned ro h&lt;&gt;ld a news conference standing that the ncgottallo!Js;
at Ben Gurion airport bef11re take- woold lie based oo two U.N. reS&lt;hiooff.
luti!lns calling for Israeli witlidraw~
Baker had held open the possj- · a! from lands the Arabs bad held: -:;,
bility ofexte!Jding his fourth ttip Ill
The senior U.S. official, w~~ ·
the Middle East in two months, in ' spoke only on conditi11n p&amp;••·
- agam- •.or fur- anonymt'ty, sat'd the Amen'can an
orde r ro go to syna
ther talks with President Hafez Jsmeli diplomats were worlring "t&lt;t
Assad
make certain that areas of agr"'e•.
.
.,
At a meeting Sunday in Damas- ment and areas of disagreement~
cus the Syrian leader registered two well-undetstood."
' :
demands Shamir woold not accept
"•
a decisive r11le for the United
Uvy said it would be up to ~
Nations in peacemaking and agree- Arabs "to prove their intentions." •
menttorewnvenetheconferenceif
·~we Jre 'trying to sum uq:
direct talks between Israel and the und rstan ings thD,t have emergl'1
Arabs deadlocked
.
. in all our. ':'leeting.s," he said•
Additi!lnlilly, Assad sought "These understandtngs are ovet
assurances that he would recover coordinati!ln between Israel !IDd Ill~.
the Golan Heights, which Israel United States. This is very o~i:
captured in the 1967 Six-Day war mistic."

By EARLEEN FISHER
Associated Press Writer
HARAMIAH, Bangladesh (AP)
- Five Blackhawk helicopters on
Wednesday launched the U.S. military's relief operatioo to survivors
of a devastating cycl!lne, ferrying
American soldiers and bags .of rice
to Sandwip Island.
Hundreds·of villagers lined the
playing field between a school and
a pond where they used to get
water fot cooking and bathing.
Now the pond is· too salty for
human consumption, and one of the
Americans' fiiSt I8Sk will be to set
up equipment to purify water.
· "What is it? What is it?" the
crowd cried as two Blackhawks
hovered 11ver t,he playin~ field and
dropped big nets holdmg burlap
bags of rice from the Bangladeshi
govemmenL
Most of Sandwip Island, 10
miles from shore, was inundaled by
the tidal wave churned up by the
April 30 cyclone.
The Bangladeshi g11vernment
says 139,000 people were killed
when the storm roared over lowlying islands in the Bay of Bengal
and struck the coast. The figures
are impossible to verify because !If
poor communicati!lnS, ponderou~
bureaucracy and beCause so many
bodies were swept oot to sea.
The daunting task at hand is 10
get food, safe water, medical help
and shelter 10 many of the 10 million people living near oo or the
1~0- mile stretch of coast hardesl hit
by the stonn.
About 7,000 U.S. Marines and
sailors, veterans of the Gulf Wat
who were headed home when President Bush diverted them 111
Bangladesh, are nearing the coast.
In the meantime, an advance team
of 275 servicemen and women
have arrived by air.
"We like to say our operation in
Kuwait was in the name of free-

.

COLUMBUS, Ohio {AP) - A study by the Public Utilities
. Commissi11n of Ohio says the. cost 11f digging' high-sulfur ooa1 from
a Meills County mine is too high.
.
The study, made public this week. rerommended that American
Electric Po~ C11. consider the opti!lf! !lfinstalling air-cleaning
scrubbers so tt can q&gt;nbnue burnmg htgh-sulfur Ohio coal at its
Gavin power p~t in Gallia County.
·
AEP said ]an. 28 thatit was leaning toward switching to out-!lf·
state, low-sulfur coalro meet new standards set by the federal Clean
AirAct
·
.
But the PUCO sl8ff also·concluded dial continued use of coal
from the Meigs County mine, which is 11wned by an AEP afftliale,
' is not~ ''viable ec!ln~~mical optioo'' because of its hil!h cost
A PUCO decisi11n last year capped the cost of c11al fr11m the

SERTA
PREMIER COMFORT
saa

American Electric Power said
today it plans to c11mply with the .
Public Utilities Commission of
Ohio's rcqpest for system-wide
informati!ln on the company's
environmental c~~mpliance strategy
by May 31.
The PUCO has been studying
AEP's options for complying with
the 1990 Clean Air Act amend·
ments at its Gavin Plant in Gallia
County. A PUCO staff analysis
released this m!lming requested

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COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A feet tall, dtew instant praise as a'
bronze bust of House Speaker Vern go11d likeness when Speaker P,ro
Riffe 1r. now sits atop a white Tem Barney Quilter, 0-T!lledo, a
pedestal in a stale !lffice tower cl11se friend, pulled the c11ver from
already named for him, across Ute the sculpture by Denver anist Ed
Dwight
·
street from Ohio's Statehouse.
The' speaker thanked Dwil!ht f!lr
Two f11rmer g11ve.rnors were
am11ng sc11res of former and pre- "a good job" bul j!lked tl)at, "I'm
sent House members, officehold- glad you did a little wC)t'k on that
ers, lobbyists and others who e;atb- nose.''
ered Thursday for the unvetling
But turnin11 more seri!lus,-he
said he was both proud and humceremony.
The 65-yW-old Riffe, a Dem!l- bled by the worll;. His wife, Thelcrat from Wheelersbtirg, has been ma, and more than a dozen (amiJy
speaker .since 1974 - 'longer than members stooc1 beside him and the
!IDy predecessor - a Hoose mem- $70,000 sculpture, which was paid
.
ber since 1959 and has no present for with private funds.
He
thanked
Rep,
Pauick
plans to retire.
The b!'Qnze bust and pedestal, 8 Sweeney, D-Cleveland, and others

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~-

Sieve Musser, Pomeroy, will be · and wasfresented the Executive
the s~er at Meigs High School's Master 11 Busineas Administration
baccalaureate service to be held at All-Around Excellence Award.
4 p.m. Sunday in the Larry R. MC)t'·
riS!In Gymnasium.
A 1987 graduate !If Meigs,
Musser is the soo of Joon and Dot- '
tie Musser, 515 Mulberry Heights.
He will graduate fwm Obi11 University oo June 8 and has accepted
~ployment with Eaton C!lrporabOn.
An accounting and manufacturing engineering maj11r, Musser
entered the College of Business
Administration at Ohio University
as a C~~pe~d Scholar and is a C!lrporate Leadership Fellow.
He is a fast president of the
University s Student Alumni
B_()JIIlJ, treasurer of Bela Alpha Psi,
and a member 11f the Dean of Stu~ts' Council 11f Presidents.
He recently was selecled as the
--~~ts~ding senior in his college

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Prices are low · · Quality Is high.
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.,

ROll IOIISz Monday f1H•IzOOr THtday·Saturday 9:30·5:00

Wed · '11 befvre tbe Orlol• piiJid tile Oak·
Jaad Tbe queen watcbed ber ffnt b1seball
11me.(AP) ·

•

992·3671

I

'

DOWIIIOWII PO-Ol

..

VISA

IIASTIICAID ·

•

fills have !)pened in Wisconsin,
wilh only two disputes unre·
solved.
He said his bill would "ootOanlc the Nimbies, ·' an a~:ronrm
f11r "not In my back yard.' It
refers to those who liahtto keep
dumps and other facilities from
their neiahborhooda.
"The location of landfills
today is becomia1 m11re and
more diffteult. becaur of stringent regulations &amp;lid the emotional problems aeated by a few
people," Corbin said.
He was j11ined by Larry
Long. director 11f the c!lmmisSi!lners associati11n, at a news
conference where they spoke or
Ohio's growinll need for ~pace
and the rapidly declining capacity of existing landfills.
The proposal was endorsed
by his organization and inay
attract support from the administrali!ln 11f Gov. Ge11rge
Voinovidt.
1aae Dailey, !lpObiWoman
(!)l ~Ohio EaviloGIIIriiMII Prvtectioo AJCncy, said EPA officials have not studied the bill.
"But if it helps the districll in
their Platmiaa .JI!IIUII, we IUJI·
port it," lite said.
Ma. Dliloy Nfemll te llistriciUIIJII hy a 1989 ilw dtat
split the ltate into 48 entities
wllerc local officials join to
solve COIIIIIOII problellll COD•

MtjSSer named Meigs
baccalaureate speaker

We have 10 ditferent
styles of carpet on sale.

IN STOCK

who raised money f11r the sculp- ·
ture, sayina. :'I am very grateful.
I'm 5!1 humble. It's bard to express
h11w y!IU feel." .
He paid special tribute to his
wife.
"She has dene more for me, to
make sure that I was iR a position
111 do my job, than anyone else in
this state. I am very grateful,"
Riffe said.
Among several current and former Republican officials was former Gov. James A. Rbodes, 81,
who has a stawe on the Statehouse
lawn on the other side of Capitol
Square.
· "I think it's a great likeness of
Coetiued oa page 3

. ihr~~ system of binding
. COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) ~
arbi
lln .
. A bill pending m ~e Legislature
The decisi11ns could not be
:could make it easier for Ohio's
blocked by local zoning !lrdilocal governments 10 fmd badly
nances, under the proposal that
needed landfill space.
Corbin, R·Dayton, patterned
Rep. R11bert C11rbin, with
after a statute he said bas
baclcing from the County Comworked well in Wisconsin.
missioners Association 11f Ohio
· Since that law was passed in
inuoduced a proposal Thursday ·
1982, Corbin said 33 new landproviding fm site selections

BUY THE PAIR •••~.................ONLY$ 5 9900

'

of its high cost, even if the decisiop is made to install scrubbers.
Consumers' Counsel William SpQtley has not called for closing
the Meigs mine, but he has repeatedly said AEP'is paying too much
for coal to ftre the Gavin plant.
''Our goal is 10 ftnd a way to keep the mine open while providinll the least cost for coosumers," Consumers' Counsel spokesman
Stephen Ostrander said.
Larry Ward, presidem of United Mine Workers Union of America, District 6, said a switch 111 other sources of Ohio coal while
abandooing the Meigs mine would not help the pwi?le at Meigs.
"It w11uld devas~ this pan of the state," Waro said. "I think
we can fmd a way to have clean air while keeping the mine open. ...
Just because the cost is hil!h·today d!lesn't mean it will be as high
tomorrow."

additional information from AEP.
The PUCO staff stu4y analy~
"The PUCO staff analysis of the · the cost of the Gavin clean-up 11ver
Gavin situation is ll thoughtful and 30 years. It sunested that AEP
detailed study !If the many eco- should c11ntinue t11 hold onto the
nomic, environmental and energy opli11n 11f installing scrubbers at the
concerns for AEP and its cus- plant until it completes its systemtomers,'' said Gerald P. Mal!lney; wide analysis and determines ·if it
AEP executive vice president and will .receive the necessary scrubber
chief firlancial officer. "We appre.. allowances.
· ·
ciate PUCO Chairman Craig GlazAEP's preliminary analysis of
er's ·commibnenl to reasonable and Gavin's outlo!lk f11cuset1 on the
cooperative discussi11n of the Gavin first 10 years, the time during
plant's compliance sb'ategy." ·
which the company can most accurately predid tts actual fuel C!ISts
transponatioo coots and, ultimately:
1he goal !If providing the lowest
cost service for our customers
Maloney said.
'
"Any c11mpliance strategy f!lr
Gavin will affect electric rates most
•sharply in the ftrst 10 years," Malooey added. "That was t1Je reason
11ur evaluation focused on costs
from 1995 to 2004.
.
;"
Maloney said AEP' s iotal comr-~::~:l~~p:lan hinges"on the Gavin
I'
That decision will be
reviewed by other Slate jurisdictions as well as the Federal Energy
Regulatory Commissi11n.
"But we cannot yet predict how
these regulat!lrs will handle the
transfer of allowances from an
AEP plant in !lne· jurisdicti!ln to
ID!)ther plant within !lut system but
in another slate," Maloney said.
"The Clean Air Act requires a
light timeline for c11mpliance. lt
may force us 111 reach our decisi11n
on Gavin bef11re we kn11w h11w
many emissioo allowances we will
receive and what they will be
Worth," Ma111ney said.

Ohio's median age
is now over 30
WASHINGTON (AP) Ohio's population changed during
the 1980s, with increases shown in
the number 11f people over 60, oneparent families, one-person househlllds and m11bile-home dwellers.
New details of the 1990 Census,
released Thursday by the C!ln.merce Deparanent, showed. poople
over the age 11f 60 made up 17.5
percent of th11se C!IU~Ied in 1990,
up from 15.3 percent m 1980.
· The L9 million people in that
category included 138,030 who
were over the age of ·Ss. A decade
earlier, the Census f11und 108,426,
Oht!)8DS who had passed their 85th ·~
birthday.
::-

Proposed bill could help local
governments get landfill.space

-3 TEMPS.

-3 WATER TEMPS.

blllt ot bl• j I'
'lllltlnttay at tile RUi'e
Center ror Gtmnuaeat IIIII tile Arts, wllere it
wiD bediaP.ilyed. (AP)
'

Riffe sculpture unveiled

5329.00 ROPER

-

-LARGE CAPACin

SA.LE

Vern Riffe Jr., take11 a close look 'at a broe~e

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*Green, lrawn, Gray
*1 00% Olefin Pile
•35 M1111th No-Fade

$695

-Herbor VIew

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-20 Veer

*Extra llta~ Grade
"l2 ft. Width.

Warranty
*Reg. S9.0Q sq. yd.

· SElJA
PERFEa SLEEPER

5369.00 ROPER
I •

PORCH &amp; PATIO

5108 s299

IWWI
U. 1'(,.

Inc~~!:'..!:

.AEP will comply w~th request

IN STOCI

-Firm Support -QuHted
~10 Veer Werranty

AUuiU~t.

Meigs ll!ine at $1.75 per million British thermal units. That is lower
than the $1.87 rata sought by AEP but highet than the $!:50 cost for
11ther Ohio coal.
•
· J11hn Borrows, belld of the PUCO utilities division, which pre·
pared the Gavin teport, said AEP can exercise s11me c!lntrol over
coal costs bec•nse the Meigs mine il an affllialed !)pefati!ln.
The Meigs County opemioa, which empl()yS 1,258 people, is a
deep mine rather than a sttip mine. The coal is in a seam laden with
rock, increasing the cost ol diuiag il !lUI of the ground.
The high-cost assessment of the Meigs mine agrees with earlier ·
conclusions by AEP, the Ohio Offtee !If Coltsamers' Coonsel and a
PUCO Consultant.
.
.
·.
AEP ~fficials have said they might ci!ISe the Meigs mine because

.

d11m," Maj. Gen. Henry Stackpole, cats that can scoot over swampy
c11mmander of the American task ground, and helicopters fwm an
force, said. "We're here in eight-snip task force led by lhe
B!lllgladesh in the name of humani- amphibi11us assault ship USS
ty.H
Tarawa.
Stackpole, a Marine, estimaled
In addition, the five Blackhawk
the task f11rce - comprised of helicopters, which. .were flown fa
tro11ps from the Marine Corps, Bangladesh aooard a giant C-5
Navy, Army and Air Force Galaxy, will bring supplies and
w!luld spend 30 days in relief workers from CARE, a U.S .•
based international relief organizaBangladesh.
·
"We're looking 81 a very inten- tion. Besides Haramiah, the Blacksive two weeks ahead of us, fol- hawks are bringing supplies to the
lowed l)y a stability perioo of 1wo coastal 1owns of Maheshkhali,
weeks,'' he wid reporters at Chit- · Ku1ubdia, Chakoria and C11x's
tagong airport on the mainland Bazaar.
after the Blackhawk helic!lpters
Milli!lns of people in the affectreturned from their ftrst ttip.
ed area are threatened by disease,
The first helic!lpter to land al hunger and exposure. Infonnation
Haramiah carried c11mmunications Secretary Manzoor-e'M!Iwla said
gear and three s11ldiers wh!l will in Dhaka that 367 pwple have died
camp in the village and start assess- 11f diarrhea "and aoout 10.000 new
ing what help is needed.
cases are teported each day.
"We'll be carrying out damage
CARE and 11ther relief gr!IUjlS
assessment. There are S!lme places have been w11rking on Sandwtp
before where relief couldn't be dis· since sh11rtly after the c'yclone
ttibtited, so we'll look for a beach struck, but have not been able 111
landing,'' the team leader, Army reach thousands of pwple on the
Capt Grant Davis, 29, of McAllen, is~d.
'
Texas, said as he unpacked his gear
Aoout 300,000 people lived on
at Haramiah. He will be assisted by the island before 1he cyclone.
a medic and a civil engineer.
Bangladeshi civilian and military
The bulk 11f the operation is estimates of the number 11f pwple
expected to be oorne by amphibi- killed on the island range from
!lus landing craft, includinll Hell- 3,000 to 30,000.

40 1'11

3 Secllo

Frtctay, 1May 17, 1991

:Coal from Meigs ·mine costs too much -PUCO

U.S. helicopters start
airlift to cyclone survivots
~

Low tonight in mi~·60s.
Party cloudy Saturday.
Chance of rain 50 per-

PageS

•

'

10 Long Beach Nav~ Station, C.lll.
11 Hunters Point Annex of '[reaSure:·

;6

·

0
~~e ~~a~~e:!~"b~~!e~:~~:-~::

8
9 Philadelphia Nav~. Slatlc!l. ~~, ,. •-hi;~ ,,./IJtajk;;, (!&lt;~•~ P!IY, ~o. .

New Ymk's 100. Hong Kong fo~l
'
lowed with 163, and Bejjing an '
Osaka tied with 142. Tripoli w ·
next with 107, followed by Londo '
atl02.
·~
All other cities surveyed wetc.
less expensive in liousinll term!;
than New York. The Pakistani ci~
of Karachi was cheapest with Ill .
index of only 18.
;
A furtber index based oo bote
and restaurant prices ·similarlyt
ranked Tokyo as most expensive ar
139. Tripoli was secood place. a ·
131, and London was third w1tli;
125.
~

Bak er prepares
.
t 0 WID
• d Up t rip
•
;:;.
h
t
d
.
·
fi
~
Wit ou accor on peace con erence :i

· 11 Eaker AFB; Blytheville, Ark.
, 18.~I)' AFB. Dtfl~r . "·,~
Fort Benjamin Harrison, lndlol~la 19 Grissom AFB, Peru, Ind.
Fort Devens, Aylr, U.aa. ,,
~ Wur1Bmlli:' AfB; OecOII~. Mich. ,
Fort Dix, Wrlghltlown, N_.J.
21 Williams AFB, Chlondlor, Ariz.
trades at
aboutis ooe
20 times
that
amount,
Tehran
11f the least
FortChalfee, Arltonaa.a { ·
· .2~ ClsllliAEP: III.,ce~. c.nf:
expensive cities in the wmld, it
Sacramento Army Depo~ C.Mf._. _·-·. ---.-···&lt;{ .23
Moody
AFB,
Valdotla,
Ga.
said.
- . ·• . .-.·;:.·.·-··-:···:,.-, ... · .,_ •.. _,, . . ,._.:- -.-.-.···"
The survey samples the costs !If
.L .&lt; .. ·
· ''''.'.' •. · •.j·:· .. 24Eng·liu\(f AFe.: Alexandria, :La&gt; · '
NAVY~
· ,r.: ·
. · ·
· ·· · ·
151
d 8 · 1 d'
f0 11 d
•
..
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·.
l
othtpnrg!l
ruecc:ea
'u·t
nncanudmtrang
spon.'
.
11
Phll... olphla Naval Shipy•d. p._
'''2S~iciilli1s-G&amp;b\lurAii'fi'eselve .· ..·, j c

1 Fort McClellan, Anniston, Ai..
2 Fort Ord, se..lcle, C.IH.. .
3

Gabon's Libreville were next .a t
At the !lth.er end Qf the scale,
130, followed by the African city · Quito bad an index of 60, the surof BrazzaYille and Stockbolm, tied vey said. It added that the differ81129.
.
ence between Quito, traditionally
The Taiwanese capilal of Taipei the chelpest major city for expatti·
jumped from 14th to sixth in the ates, and Tokyo had fallen 21 perrankings, sivinll Asia three cities in ceru the past six months.
the top 10. With an index of 126, it
HoultOil costs were assembled
ranked equal with Norway's Oslo by CRG in separate dala showing
incostofliving.
the average monthly rental for
Tripoli in Libya, a newcomer to three-bedroom accommodations in
the list, was seventh at 125.
each city.
After the Nordic capitals, the
This again put Tokyo at the top
Swiss cities of Gene':&amp; ~Zurich of the list at 227 compared with
were the most expenstve m Europe
'
81119.

Ohio Lottery .

Pavin leads
Memorial golf
tournament

· ~

'

15."·
....- ;
~'

Some sma/ifJr inlrilfladons ·
c;red ror closure are nor Hs/J&gt;d

"1

Tokyo remains most expensive city for expatriat~~

MaJ.or U.S.- Military Bases
Recommended for Closure

ARMY*

111uraday, May 16, 1

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-12-The Dally Sentinel

'

.

rI

.'

cernin JOII4 WtitB.
0~ had 106 1ieehsed landCoedll.e4• . . . 3

···- ·---

' '

NHS INDUCTEES • TMie !litera Hl11t
Sellool lllldellll '"re reee~~tly ladtJCted Jato tbe
ICitool's NlltloullfoaGr SodelJ. Pictured, rront

row, . l·r, are Karen Morris, AnaJe Murplly,
Cbrllll• Pooler, JuDe Rllrle, SHrri WoJr, ud
. Amy Well. Second row, l·r, are Lorle Fills,

_ _...;·-:..._.-1\1-----~-

1 Clay, Lei.. Aue WoYIIn, Aadrea Clelaad, Carrie ~orrlsey, aad
Krllllaa COIIIIOIIy. T1llrd row, J.r, David Gu•pr,
Chris Adams, Mark Murplly, Aaron Wll-,
aad Daalel Sbort. Not plct•red were Nleole
luuunrlllky •d Mary A.aa Kibble.

Sn • • Wilt, S•

1
------!!\~-- ---....;

'

,.

- -'L·

'

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