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                  <text>Page--:-16-The Dilly Sentinel

Wtdn11day, May 22, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, OhiO

Ethiopia's Marxist president .resigns, flees advancing rebels

J

ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia (AP)
With re\lels advancing,
Ethiopia's Marxist President
_Mengistu Haile Mariam resigned
and fled into exile on Tuesday,
ending an iron-fisted 14-year rule
over his impoverished rounlry.
The White House welcomed
Mengistu 's depanure. Spokesman
Roman Popadiuk said the Bush
administrauon hoped "the door is
open for the realization of peace
and democracy'' in Ethiopia,
which is beset by famine as well as
war.
·
State radio said a former defense
minister, Lt. Gel\. Tesfaye GebrcKidan, had taken over as acting
president of this Hom of Africa
nation, and the government said it
would try to arrange a cease-flfC
with the rebels.
· Rebel leaders, whose fighters
control the northern third of
Ethiopia, expressed skepticism
abou~ the government's readiness
to change, and vowed to continue
fighting .
. But the insurgents said they
· would attend U.S.-brotered peace

family the last six months. However, aoun:ea llid he flew to Nairobi,
. capital of nei&amp;hborin&amp; Kenya. That
could not· immediately be con-

BIG .BEND

. Your Locally Owned,

3-D; 3-S
Super Lotto:

4-S-13-16·30-40
Kicker:863488

Page4 .

Showers likely tonight.
Friday, high in mid· 80s• .
Chance of rain 50 percent.

•

Memorial Day

LOW-PRICED
SUPERMARKET.

R•gular Stor•

Noun

Z81C~&gt;J
A
Mulll .1:

1991

ODLAN

County to advertise
for bids for Issue 2
road improvements

HEAVY HITTERS ENTRY BLANK
Address:.................................................................

said suspect
in killings

............................................................................•.

.

. Phone: •.•••.••••.••. ;•.•.•....•..•.•.••...••••••.•••••••••••••••.•••.••••.

LEESBURG, Fla. (AP} -A

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task fon:Al probing tbe J!O$Sible seri- ,
al murders of II tniCk stop pvsti-

I 001) 1 \'\11 '1'1 I I \I

county garage this summer, as
well. The bridges will be replaced
with large culverts instead of new
bridges. According to Roberts, the
culverts are far more economical to
build and maintain than the small
bridges. Additionally, Roberts said,
the culverts will allow for a l~er
noon.
path
for vehicles than do the existMeigs County Engineer Phil
Roberts announced tlw tbe county ing bridges.
Those bridges scheduled for
highway department had plans to
pave 13 miles on four county roads replacement are located on Oak
this summer, using Issue Two Grove Road, where there are two,
monies.
and Beech Grove Road.
Those roads are Bald . The commissioners approved
Knob/Sti versville Road (ei11ht two funds transfers on Wednesday.
miles), Wipple Road (one mile), A transfer of $900 from the Corn.Hysell Run Road (three miles} and . mon Pleas Coun's traveling judges
account to transcripts account was
Story's Run Road (one mile}.
Roberts stated that he had approved, as was a transfer of $700
attended an Issue Two meeting in from the Juvenile Court:s ~ther
Marietta reaarding changes in the expenses account to the md1gent
procedure for applying for Issue defendants account.
The commissioners authorized
Two money, but stated thst the precise details surrounding the Board President Manning Roush to
changes had not yet been examine .a broken air conditioner at
the Me1gs County Home and
announced.
Three .small, one-lane bridges replace the machine if it needed to
are scheduled to be replaced by the

I Ill 1'4•\

GET A FREE 'CINCINNATI BASEBALL PLAYER CARD
INSIDE PARTICIPATING MULTI-PACKS OF
PEPSI-PROQUCTS
HEAVI~ST HITTERS.
YOU'LL FIND ONE FULL-COLOR COLLECTIBLE CARD COMPLETE
WITH STATS INSIDE PARTICIPATING MULTI·PACKS Of· PEPSI
PRODUCTS. SO HURRY TO·YOUR GROCER AND PICK UP A PACK
AND A HEAVY HinER.
r.iiiWO:.l!J"'i.«~

12 PACII
12

YOU CAN SCORE ON 20 OF CINCINNATI'S

~""i

oz.

CANS
limit Pne With Coupon and
Additlanal Purchase
Qoad thru Satu,.y, M.y 25, 1991

.,,, ..•....,.... ""'-"' ~.,. ....-:-~ .

.

By Brian J, Reed
Sentinel News Smtr
The Meigs County Commissioners authorized their clerk to
advertise for bids for Issue Two
rood improvemeru proj~ts at their
regular meeting Wednesday af\er-

Must be 18 years or alder to win. No purchase necessary.
fnler at fastman's Foodlancls.

P~P~II~ lOAD~D WITH HfAVY HITifR~.

ABANDONED HOUSE BURNS - Fire , ~e oa Tlelday evmlag. The 11ft destroyed
an unaccupled lltnictve. Three trucks, 21 nrecrews from tbe RadDe Volunteer Fire Depart•
-.
men and tbe Raclae squad responded. (Sentiael
ment responded to a 11re OD Piae Grove ROIId In
Photo by Deanls Wotre)

be replaced.
.
According to Commissioner
.Richard Jnnes. the air conditioner
is in need of a compressor, the estimated cost of which is $390.
1'he need to repair a ceiling leak
in the courthouse stairwell was discussed. Jones also stated that he
would like to see the courthouse
interior painted this summer. It w~
decided that proposed renovation
work in the auditor's office ll1d the
probate court office would be discussed at next week's meeting.
Those renovations are scheduled to
be·completed by year's end.
The commassioners voted to
cancel the bond of Sbelly Fortune,
an employee of the Pomeroy Police
Department woo has resiped her
position. Fortune was authorized to
accept bonds for Meigs County
· Court.
:
Present in addition to Roberts
Jones and Roush were Commis:
sioner David Koblentz, Clerk Mary
Hobstetter and Highway Garage
SUPCrintencknt Ted Warner.

Coal operator states
[~~{l!!Yif!/JS al~q o
at.stake ·Administration claims
ASST. FLAVORS

coi.uMB:'us·: Ohio (AP)· ::Ohio's coal111111en are not the only
workers wOOse ~ will be in jeopariiY if the ~sJature does not act
to soften the IDipllet of tbe federal
"Clean Air Act, a Senate committee
has been told.
•
Robert Murray, president of
Ohio Valley Coal Co., said the act
will increase the cost of d~lricity
used 10 run factories and that high·er operating costs will force some
·of them to let workCJS go.
·
Murray was among the first witnesses to testify before the Senate
Energy, Natural Resources and
Environment Committee on a biD
providing utilities with incentives
to continue burning Ohio's highsulfur coal instead of cleaner coal
from otJtei states.
A similar bill is pending in the
House .. Sen. Robert Ney, R-Barnesville, said Wednesday that he
811d House sponsor Jerry Krupinski, D·Steubenville, hope to get a
.

.or

FOOD LAND

HOTDOG
BUNS ·

ICE CREAM .·
Buy One, Get One
Witlo 11io

21. , .. ,

·1 American Electric Power Co.,
which owns the Gavin power plant
ia Gallia County, is to decide this
snmmer whether to install anti-pollution equipment called scrubbers
or switch to low-sulfur coal from
other states. The plant is Ohio' s
largest coal-burning unit.
AEP is leaning toward switching fuel That could cost the jobs of
more than 1,200 miners in Meigs
County who supply Gavin with
about 6 million tons of coal a year.
The Public Utilities Commission of Ohio last week ordered
AEP to update with systemwide
data a Shldy soowing that switchin11
fuel would be cheaper at the Gavin
planL
.
Murray and other industry
spokesmen said the legislation is
crucial for AEP and all of the
state's utilities. He said that under

~

Malltlfacliill'l

Marlboro Special
Carton Price

'2"

Off ..... Whill

s..,ty t..ftl.

Jali~ hearings will continue next

ersDuring budget hearings, Senate
Finance Chairman Theodore M.

·

Gray, R.COlumbus, ~ressed con- of an emergency clause. su1111ested
cerns over what he
ed one-time by Sen. Richard Finan, R-Cincinrevenue pickups. They include use nati, refl~ted the popularity of the
of the rainr.-day fund, which will issue among constihlents who are
not be available to balance future frustrated by the lower speeds.
budgets. .
An emer11ency clause allows a
." It's always a learning pro· · measure to take effect immediately
cess," Gray said after Bmwnmg's upon the governor's siiiJlaiUre. Oth.testimony.
erwise, bills cannot become Jaw for
Gray dido 't say when the com- 90days.
mittee might vote on the bill. SenGov. George Voinovich has not
ate teaders have targeted June I~ as determined his position on the biU
the date for action by the full Sen- and will not do so until it reaches
ate.
his deslc, said Cun Steiner, the gov,
The bill to increase to 6S mph emor's deputy chief of staff.
·
the SDCed limit on up to 2tj() addiMeanwhile, Senate Minority
tional miles of interstate highways I Qd«T Robert Bogs, D-Ielferson
statewide, mostly on the outskirts said the popossl to give the attor:
of Cincinnati, Dayton, Cleveland, ney general's office authority to
Columbus, Akron and other cities, . investigate allqed misconduct was
must now go back to the House for needed to assure Ohioans ''that any
approval of the Senate Chanj!e.
Coalinued on ~· 3
Areas in which the limll could
be iaised from the current S5 mph
are e&lt;!rlions of the interstate system
eligible for the change under federal regulations.
Sen. Barry Levey, R-MiddlePIKETON, Ohio (AP) - About
IOwn said the last-mmute addition a half-dozen Manin Marieaa Energy Systems n:lirees picketed near
the Portsmouth Gaseous Diffusion
· Plant Wednesday IS contract talb
broke off between a union and

Retirees picket
Piketon plant

plant~.

.---..........__Local briefs-..........,

Now thrv

......oy. ·

Safety break this weekend

.., 29, 1991'
,.,~,._FTt.-..

I

\

WIN A
MYRTLE
BEACH
HILTON
VACATION
ON US ....

ihird,.._

•
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~~--------------------------,

NAME: .......................................................
ADRESS:• .................... ~ •••••••• !'•······················
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~································································

PHONE: •••••••••.•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
Drawing Will Be Held
May .25, 1991

-------------------------~--J

team.

Meigs sheriff investigates accident
The Meigs County Sheriff's Departmeni investig•ed a two-car
accident at the intersection or Union Avenue and Route 7 Wednesday nighL
.
According to the report, Matt Peterson of Rutland was westbound on Union Avenue, stopped at the ~~~hen a 1991
GMC van traveling north on Route 7 beclllle
in the dark
and sJcidded into the left fender ofPetmo11'1 1990Ford.
The vail was driven by Donald L Hall of Whitehall.
. .
No injuries were reponed and moc1er11e damlge was listed to
both vehicles. Hall was cited for failure to ClOIIttol.
Colltinaed on pap 3

BAND AWARDS· Tllest aealora l"ere
tbe UIIDJ band Sludeatl '11110 received
aWIII'ill at Moaclay alabt'a 8UuaiiNiad banquet
. beld at Melp Hl1b Sebaal. Onr 480 ll"lrds
were prnealld by Toney Dlalfll, director, to
studeats, senntb tbrouJfb l2tb·1rades. Tbe
•
1180DI

awardi laduded tile Olilo Maslc Edueatloa
Aaaoclalloa lltate coatnt medals aa4 patdles.
Tile tliree Nalan-recopbecl were tram tile left,
Kevla Taylor, JoiiD PliDip Soua Aqrd, Derek
MUier, aiCI Seaa Waltaa, Award.

.•

'
•)

I

•

The reured workers are upset
because the company has sa1d it
wiD not continue to pay cost of living increases in their pensions, laid
John Knauff, president of tho Oil,
Chemical and Atomic Workers
. Local 3-689.
The cost of living increases averaging about $10 or $IS a
month - were included in a retire- ment contract when tbe plant was
managed by Goody~r Atomic
Corp.. Knauff said. Martin Marieaa
was contracted to manqe the plant
in November 1986.
"My pension's supposed 19 pa
$23.50 multiplied by my years
service, but they're figurin11 it on
$20.50," said Walter Stover of
Piketon, woo retired IS a chemical
operator in 1989.
.
.
Union and plant' officials met
Wednesday but were unable to
reach Ill apment. Mlnin Marietta Said in a news releese.
•
·In reviewing a counterproposa[
offered by the unioo on Tueiclay,
the company aaid it could nol
accepttheCOiili'lc:L
"
The 1.100 hourly production,:
maintenance and seMce worten
continued to work after union
members overwbelminpy ..ttjected·
a proP._Oted contr~~et May 5. The
union 1 three-year COilb'8Ct expired
May2.
The company said no funher.
negotialions bavc been lcheduled. :

J

The annual safety break of Meigs County REACT will be
held this weekend at the Route 33 southbound Jl!ld.
Members will be at tbe park from 6 p.m. Friday through Monday
at 6 p.m., 24 hfJW'S a day, providing coffee llld soft drinks as well as
information to motorists travding over the holiday weekend. The
safety break is an annual community service JI'Oject for the REACT

- ~ -lhi"'•:· u .. - ; lllll'ollliopll01 "10&lt;;' D......... -lOCI's SoiiiM_l....

ta .. ··...-:'12 .. ..__,.,., .. ,lilp:11 .. "tar:' 1.2 .. •M•

·
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)Bud11et Director Greg Browning
says the House version of the state
budget is about $100 million out of
balance, even though it lljlCDds the
state's $300 million "ramy-day"
fund.
He testified Wednesday as the
Senate Finance Committee opened
hearings on the $27.1 billion plan
to run the state for two years beginning July I. He denounced and
questioned the wisdom of numerous changes b'y the Democratic
House.
In other action Wednesday, the
Senate approved a last-minute
emergency clause that would accelerate the effective date for a 6S
mph interstate speed limit;
announced a bill granting the attorney general the power to investigate charges of corruption in state
government; and heard a witness
testify in suppm of a bill desianed
to save the jobs of Ohio coal min-

WHEELERSBURd. Ohio (AP) District Court of Appeals.
- Game fowl owners and their
The pme fowl breeders wanted
veterinarian had their fmt chance to see if tbe birds were being cared
to tour a bam holdin$ more than ·for properly. Some of them were
700 gam~ks seized m twO cock- allowed to visit the farm on
fight raids this month.
Wednesday.
Last week a Vinton County
They included Glydc Maish, a
judge ordered the roosters, confJS- New Albany veterinarian and a
cated May 11, humanely destroyed. director of lhe breeders association;
The Ohio Gamefowl Breeders Edwin Evans of Glenmont. presiAssociation appealed that orde.r, dent of the breeders association;
and it is now before the 4th Ohao
Conlinlled nn page 3

•

.Spada!

~.from tbeiJ; customers. . . .
I wCMJ!dn .t b~e the llll!JUes
for fuel s~tchm,, Murray ~d.
The bill provides tax c~ts of
$1 per for ton for all Ohto. ~~al
used. It .also wo~ requue utjliues
that swatch fuels to demonstrate
that they chose the. least. costly
method. of complymg w1th t11e
Clean Air Act.
.
.
It ~so would prov1de low-cost
r.~m' for ~bbers through the
Ohio ~ar Quality Developll\ent
Authonty, ~speed ul' ~e process
through whtch ~e uuhues cou!d
get ~bber permtts ~m the Ohao
Envi!UI\IIIeniB;l Protecuon Agency.
Murray wd ~t. ~nder current
procedures, the uul~lles could not
get a scrubber~~~ before 199S,
the. year by wht~h they .must
achieve !IJe .fllSt~J~ reducuo~ m
sulfur d1oxide emiSSions requared
bj Ithe achL
.
E
.
n ot er tesumony, xecuuve
Director Mark Shanahan of the Air
Quality Development Authority
said his qency supports the legisweek.

..

Ohi·o Hou"s·e' bu'dg"·e-t na·we··d

"'next
cO.isOudatedm~-passediitthe
~ia,Z;
~~snoguaranf tee
few weeks.
Ycan ~ ""' cost o scrub-

I
'
·
rne.
I
lOW
owners·
Ga
tour rooster barn

Former Athens Kroger
employee sentenced

Wednesday _....,.,., Wagner and

Cards : J.H, 2-C

Open

from Florida

ordered bun to IJaT I $S,()Ol) rliiC
and $50,000 in f'C"iWion
'
Goldsberry told Waper INt if
he paid tbe compall)' 550.000 within 18 months, his fllle would be
rednced 10 $1,000.
'
Athens Co::a Proleeator
Michael Ward
Wqncr wu
charged in S~ber 1990 with
grand theft, 1
felony,
and tamperinll wiiJI ftiCadl. I - ond-dcgree felCIIy but die IWO were
found to be rellled .r m Wild
said Wagner J)Jerded pilly In Jg.
uary.
.
Coun documents ui4 KnJaer
accu•ed Wagner of atellla1 u
much es $200,000 but Wlflll« ~
fessed to taking $50,000.

Pick 3:25.9
Pick 4:3142

•

Name: ....................................................................

ATHENS. Ohio (AP) - A for·
mer employee of Kroger Co. has
been &amp;c;iltellCed to four to 15 yem
in prison or. a charge of tamperina
with records
Don W~g~~«, 33, of Athens, was
scheduled to report today to the
Orient Correction Center near
Columbus.
.
Athens County Common Pleas
Judge L. Alan Goldsberry on

Ohio Lottery

New baseball
managers are ~
announced

lllks, n said one. spe.,ting on con- · taken through diplomatic channds Tuesday for 1 sPth sltlight day
dition of anonymity.
to 1ry to ar::fe a cease-rue with north and weal of tbe capital, Addis
The United States and most the rebels,
the U.S. Embassy . Ababa, With insurpnll mavins 10
Wes&amp;em ~ 01tions had qui- confinned it had lnunedialdy con- within 40 miles of the city.
"
oo~d~OON.
~
etly urged has ~~ure to help tacted tbe insurgellts.
However, the rebels bave said
Tbe whereabouts of Mengistu,
Diplomats in the ~tal. Addis aloilg tbe .-:e
and the rebel
In ~ent months, Meqistu 'a they bavc no intention of lryiDg to
49, IIOl announced. but diplo- Ababa. said Mea,gishl s departure
groups had made his ouster a virtu- army, the largest in sub-Saharan march on tbe capilli
malic soun:es said be was likdy to improved pro~ts for the peace · allft-conclilion for an end 10 years Africa. has suffered ooe humiliatgo to Zimbabwe, wbete be Is said negotiations. 'This should give of hostilities.
Tbe AllaDUc II tbe busiest ocean fo~ ·
ing defeat after another at the hands
to own a villa and to ~vc kept his great Impetus to the upcoming
The CouOciJ W&lt;f SlepS had been o( rebels. Heavy fi11hting rqed . commercial trade.

talks. which to begiD Monday
in London. The rebels say they
want to negotiate a broad-based
llllll8itional10vcmment that would

Second man

tutes in five states is investigating a
former Ohio man charged with two
murders in Tampa and suspected in
two other slaymgs, according to
published reports.
The Ohio Auomey General's
Office confirmed Tuesday the task
force has been examining Oscar
Ray Bolin Jr.'s possible links to
those murders, the Dally Commercial in Leesburg 1eported today.
And the Columbus Dispatch
reported today that Sheriff Gerry
Billy of Licking County said the
Ohio task force was investigating
Bolin, 29. but tlw Bolin was not a
" prime suspccL" .
.
. The task force JS, focusmg on
seven of the 11 slayings involving
known or suspected truck-stop
prostitutes. The victims were beaten, stran11Ied or suffocated, and
their bodies were found alon_g
interstates in Obio, Alabama, Dlinois, New York and Pennsylvania.
· The OispaiCh said a transcript of
Bolin 's credit card purchases
before his arrest in 1987 in a separate case shows tlw Bolin was in
the areas of at least twO ·Obio slayings in 1986 and 1987 either days
before or after OOdies were discov.efed.
· Bolin is in the Hillsborough
County (Fia.) jail, charged with
murder in the deaths of two Tampa
women in 1986. He also is suspected in the murder of a Land 0'
Lakes, Aa.• womBII in 1986 and a ·
Dallas woman in 1987, Hillsborough authorities said.
·
Bolin, a Jon11·distance truck
driver and former carnival worker,
was sentenced in 1987 to 23 to 7~
years in the Lebanon Correctional
Institution for rape, felonious
assault and kidnapping.
Coun records say Bolln forced a
truck-stop waitresS into his lb'8Ctortrailer rig in 1987 in B!&gt;wling
Green and repeatedly raped her
before releasing her in Venango
County,Pa.
The records show that Bolin
was in prison in Ohio when an
anonymous tip in August to Indiana State Police linked him to the
three Aorida slayings, and a homi·
cide in Texas.
In florida, Bolin is charged in
tbe slayings of two Hillsborou11b
County women in 1986: Natalie
Blache Holley, 25, and Stephanie
Anne Collins, 17.
The Florida homicides had no
connections to truck stops, but
Aorida officials said the body in
the Texas slaying was found
dumPed along an intentate.

.

i

;

�·Commentary

Thui'May, lilly 23, 1981

.

The Daily

WASHINGTON - Sen. Bob election ciunpaijn, l'd prefer to

DEVOTED TO THE INTERB8T8 OF THE MEIGS-MASON ,tREA

'

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lar 'War chests without taking a
penny from big-business polilical
action committees.
·
Packwood has relined the fundraisins science ofwhat some would
call junk mail. He sends letters to
strangers across lhe countty soliciting conlribulions to his re-election
campaign. PaCkwood has mastered
wallet-limberinJ solicitalions that
begin with this line:
"Dear Friend. Please forgive the
informal nature of this leUer, but it
is late in lhe evening, and my secretary already bas gone home.
What I wsntto discuss with you is
Israel's future. It simply could not
wait unli! m~."
As the reader visualizes huntand-peck Packwood at hi~ typewriter, the three-puc lener conlinues: "Instead of sjiending all my
time ~ing money for my own re-

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Man111er

PAT WHITEHEAD
Aaslltant Publllller/Contnller
A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Dally Press Asso-

ciation and tbe American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less tllan 300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be slgl!ed with
name, address and telephone number. No unalgl!ed letters will be publiShed. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personal!·
ties.

Letters to the editor
"

Please obtain all the facts

Dear Southern Local Board Membcn:
• A few years past. my family and
; I moved to the Southern Local
•School District and 001 long afler
allaldcd a Soulhcm foocball game.
· I rememller the surprised feeling
:we bad 10 neither see nor hear band
: members durinJI lhe homecoming
· fesilvitlcs. I fell 1t portllyCd a lack
:·or support, pride and interest of the
:entire school district. I was pleased
10· see a band there in later years,
:and even though it was small, our
·llladenls, ~ as our ath!t:tea, were
:lrying their best 10 give I good per:fDIIIIIIIICe- It was Wllrtb lheir effort.
Now I read the headlines of our
· new~ and learn of a decisioo
to eliminate tho band director's
posilioo at Soulhem due 10 "lack of
:mterest". I ask you, board mem. ben, 10 please oblain ALL the facts
:before makinJ il decision such as
:this. Accordmg to my research
:there are indeed a small number of
high school band membe~ at the
present. However, there are cur' rendy 19 junior high students and
:52 elcmenwy students in~ved in
: the band at Ibis time. This repre, sents greater lhan 11% of the chil: cken 81 the Jr. high and elemenlar)'
:levels respectfully at this time.
• lllcluding high school members this
' is a IOta£ of a cllilchn in the dis: lrict who 1ft ill the band progrB!II·
· And you propose 10 elimmate the
•

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enlire program because of lack of
interest?II f!l
These s1udents are extending
their education beyond that of academics and athlebcs. Any amount
of musical knowledge and expertise they may learn from playing an
insmunent will sray with lhem for
the rest of their lives. 'These students have put in many hours of
DAILY practice to learn to play
their instruments; this is not a "seasonal" bobby. In addition. lhe parents .have been willing to fiDIIICially obrain instruments for !hem, no
doubt hoping that some of lhe students may one day wish to pursue a
musical career.
I have a lot of admiration for
anyone who chooses to obtain and
maintain a position on any local
schooltimes
board,ofespecially
these
financial during
crisis.
Unfortunately, I do not have any
answers for lhe dilemma you are
facing. However, I do encourage
you to re-consider your position
regarding lhe elimination of the
band director's position. In the
future, please consider all factors
before making such a decision that
will influence so many of OW' children's lives. After all. OW' children
are our most valuable resourees.
Respectfully Yours,
Connie Little
32890 Pleasant View Road
Racine, Ohio 45771

Dan Quayle is not dumb!

'

- -Dear Editor:

~ ; · I really didn't want 10 write this
~: ietler

be&lt;ao« I think the JJJQre you
the more
.: confused it becomes. But when
:;:President Bush developed his
:- :receat health problems, the news. -i, JIIPII!IIIId
and TV were
:- ~ llall of
about the teirible
::: lhinp that might befall this great
·; country in the event tbat Dan
:·: Quayle became Presideni.
~I just have to say that I thint
·: Mr. Quayle is selling a bum rap.
: ' George Bush, who enjoys 1 very
;:i healthy approval rating and, by
~ most measures, has the p1blic lrUSt,
"" says and has said that Dan Quayle
~ is doing Mt outslanding job as VJCC
-: PresidenL I believe George Bush
::;. when he says thaL 1 believe him
-: bee•« he is probably the best per:; soo to make such a iud&amp;menL Mr.
i Bulla was himself a Vici President
"(. for eight years. He has given Ibis
~ Vice President I .YUiety of im~­
:: tant assignments and certainly
!= should know 'i f Dan Quayle is
~ doing I good job.
,. 1r.f the pleasure of attending a .
; rally in GaiDa County lasl fall at
r which the Vice President was the
~ featured sp nl er' Mr. Quayle gave
, . a rousing speech - an old-fub~ ioned speecllllld ' strong defense
~ of the polleies of the Bulla admiois~ tration. His remarks were warm
:= and from the heart. showing a side
-;. of this man thal mrely mabs it oo
r. TV. The speech contained no
~- gaffes, no misstatements, no
~ embanusin&amp; slips of the toogue,. so, of course, it didn't make lhe
:;: llllliooal TV news programs, and it
;: didn't get quoted in the New York
~ Times or WashingiOn PosL None
,.. of the libll'al media lepotred on the
:: speech or analyzed it. either as to
•' content or ltyle.
:
The flct is that when lhe Vice
•

:.-talk about some things,

=!MIS

.

j~ Today
••
••

President does a good job, he kind
of disappears iniO the President's
shadow. Only when a Vice President stumbles or misspeaks or falls
short in some way or splits from
his buss .does it setm he gets
noliced.

In fact, the better he does his
job. the more invisible he becomes.
One political pundit said he
drew some comfort from the fact
that Dan Quayle couldn't be as
dumb u evCI')'OIIC says be is. That
is a cheap shot. It is neither true n&lt;~:
fair.
'
The fact is that Dan Quayle is
001 dumb. The fact is that he is an
inldligent, articulate voice f&lt;~: traditional Ameiican values. The fact
is that he is a loving husband and
father. The fact is that he is a hardwcrting Mtd loyal Vice President.
But none of that is news.
Dan Quayle, despite what his
crilics 101"!4t
want you to believe,
wu not
out-of-the-blue by
George usb. Dan Quayle, at the
time he became Vice President,
was serving in the Congress, in lhe
United Sta.tes Senate. There,
despite his comparative youth. Dan
Quayle worked hard for the people
or Indian• He chose to give np a
safe seat in the U.S. Senate for the
most lhlnkiess job you can imagine.
George Bush picked Dan
Quayle to be his running mate,
knowing that Dan Qnar.le might
well suocecd him as PresidenL
So, the next time you hear a
joke about Vice President Dan
Quayle, and you will, remember
that poking fun at our leaders is an
American tradition; being meanspirited and telling lies is 001.
Verytndy,
Paul Gerard
618 Sooth Third Avenue
Middleport. Ohio

in history

"

By Tile Allod8ted , _

~

·

ously crossed-out typographical
errors and concludes w·ith:
''Whether you give S2S or $250
today isn't nearly as importan110
me u knowing I can depend on
you as a speci11. caring friend."
The image of the e.nest, hardworting late-at-his-desk sena10r
app~ndy works. Packwood has
already raised $1.9 million through
direct mail for the 1992 campaign.
His re-eleclion campaign has sent
out a lOCal of S2 dil'l'mnt mailings
since Oregon re-elected him for a
(ourdi six-year tenn in 1986.
In the process, Packwood
believes he is taking the higher
ground in campaign fund raising.
He has forsworn all PAC contribulioos because ol its "dirty money"
stigma. He argues that be 1s "not
taking special interest money''
now, but just soliciling help from

I

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Doubts plague

nu~lear

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. ~) ·subterranean salt formatioo .it says
- The nation's f'rrst permanent is ','essentially sla!lle and v~y
reposilory for 'the radioactive unaffected l!Y . earthquake ... acuvawastes genenlted in the ~uclion ty."
of nuclear weapons ,originally was
Moreover, .the department says
scheduled to open here in New the salt contmues to g~ow. new
Mexico in 1988. But the federal cryslals that eventually will nghdy
government will be lucky if its ~rap ~und the dr.ums, further
problem-plagued facility begins tnsulatmg aDC! procecnnf,.~·
operations by 1998.
If the test IS success "'• as many
For much of the past decade, the as 900,000 drums ~~ .wl!lte from
.~tofEnergy'sWaste Iso- !&gt;O£'s wea~ .facilines m Wasblauon Pilot P!Jnt - expecled 10 mgllln, Califonua. N~VIIda. I~.
cost $800 million in p~blic fundS Co!orado, New Mexico, llbnm~,
~ has been beset by technical Oh•o, TennCS1117 and South Carolierrors, engineerin' blundeq, sn:uc- na could be burl~ at WIPP..
1ura1 flaws, ~ement lapses and
B'ut a techn1cal analysts prepolitical miscalculations. Many pared several Y~ by the Envuonremain wueaulved. '
..
mental Protettlon Agency warns
-'-Located 26 piiJes east of CltlS- that flammable gas~ .could .leak
bad, Jil.M., in the state's far south- from lhe dru~ contammg radioaceastem comer WIPP is s~ uve and cherrucal wasteS, producto serve as a flnal disposal slle for ingan explosion in lhe salt b~
transuranic waste, a special class of 2,150 feet under_ground. .
plutonium-contaminated materials
Olh~ troubling quesuons have
with low to medium levels 11f been ratsed about the seepage of
radioactivity.
~a~er into coml?art.ments DOE
During an initial five-year msasts wal.l · ~mam ug~dy sealed
experiment, DOE plans 10 eniOmb for c~ntunes, th_e qualny of con8 500 barrels of that waste in a strucuon at the Site and other safe~aze of csvems, crypts and tunnels . ty-released issues.
carved from a 225 million-year-old
The Southwest Research and

Nancy Reagan recycles her
and other unwanted articles, Kitty
Kelley says in her biography of the
fanner first lady.

in.~ c~g ways by her mot!Jer
Minnie walh whom she was fussing
and feuding all ber life. In her will,
Aimee bequeathed Minnie $10.
Ma was scarcel;t more JCOCIOIIS.

Nancy's 2-year-old grandson
once left his teddy bear at the She left Aimee $200 out of an
White House after a visit to his esta!f~ valued at $200,000 (equal ~
grandlpother. Mrs. Reagan had her a million doUan today). As Minni~
maid gift-wrap the toy and she had been ajuniouerplt major in
gave it 10 lhe boy for a present on the Salvation Army, Aimee's biOihis 3rd birthday.
rapher, Lately Thomu, was led 10
On another occasion, she gave remark that the size of Ma's holdher stepdaughter Maureen som~ ings was "proof that a tambourine
pewler swizzle slicks as a wedding in ·the right hands was a remuneragift. The awizzlo sticks had been live instrumenL''
10 Nancy by one of her hudAimee's career as an evnnaelist
's Republican suppMa'S.
began in Los Angeles in I918
· This is the kind onltin&amp; Aimee when she was 29. She and Ma had
Semple McPherson would have crossed the countty in a touring car
done. And did. Sister Aimee, the bearing slogans like "Jesus is
most-talked-about woman preacher Coming Soon."
in hiSIOry, may have been coached
Four yean later, she opened her

t.':

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.

::t;u"'

•

•

•

'

ByTIIeA_,.ted ,.._

lhat the seN'OI''S ll(icaning, yet-lObe-named foe, was oxpec:ted 10 be

"well-financed ..
Last year, Packwood voted
against lqiWtion that would have
set campaign spending limits on
clndidates. The measure p 1 ell. the
Senate, but the House clodied iL A
similar bill is on deck this year. It
puts campaign finance liml.. for ·
SCJJ8IIln 011 a sliding scale with the
population of their states. If il pasaes, an Oregon senator would be
limited to a maximum of
$1,990,114;8 oo a Senalle race.
.
Packwood says he hopes 10 IIIIC at least
million for his 1992 ,;:
campaign, and expects to attract :.
150,000 to 2SO,OOO contribaton ::,
through the raail. He will aticll: to ..::
lhe Jllllellted formula. A Pactwood •
spokesperson explains lhe seaator · :
writes the fust draft of the IOlicita- :
lions, then a direct-mail profession- .~
al ro-writes lhem. In the Cli!!t' of the ::
"late in the evening" letter, it was ....
sent out in its_ original form. :::
stnight from Packwood's typewrit- '::
er. His spokesperson noted that the -::
letter was written at 11 p.m. and •
thal Packwood is "not a very good ·~
••

;ear,

• • • • •• •

0CU

®

•:
..
~

:;
~:

"'
~
"!
'.~
~

•

;,:
·..:

::
::::
:;:

10 reverse lhe transfer lhrough !iiigalion or legislation. (DOE initiaDy :,:
promised New Mexico ve10 power ·.~
over important decisions affecting .•
WIPP; but subsequenlly agJeed 10
only a ''consultation and concur- :.
renee'' arrangement)
:;
DOE's handling of WIPP is :':
especially imporlallt because it is :
among the inilial projects in a long ~
overdue, expensive and ambilious · .
cleannp of the department's nuclear ·;
weapons facilities everywhere in •
the country. (The entire effort ;
could consume $200 billion in pub- "
lie fundS and require 30 years to '";
complete.)
·
:
Indeed, that wort already has •
been criticized by lhe Office of ·~
Technology Assessment. a respected congressio:lll agency that con- :
dueled an IS-month-long indepen- •
dent investigation, then concluded ;
that ~E's. waste management pro- ;
gram ts senously flawed.
~
Specifically. the recent study •
said that the ~ent lBI:ks ~ •
required experuse and orgam:ranoo
to deal .with a cleanup o~ aWCIOIIIC
~and that onvli'OIIIIICIItal ,
~ public health toocems are not ;
bemg adequately resolved.
~

Dl II €!1 1:::3

--....

-H.«--

·!:jS . ~· (I

r . t _ l l _ - ICI

.,...

fl

~

own magnificent . Foursquare
Gospel Chlln:h known as An~
Temple. With a seating capact!y of
S,OOO, two balconies, swee~inc
ramps and a baptismal pool With a
painted backdrop of the Ri- Jardan, Angelus Temple was a monument 10 Aimee's charismalic powers. She bad flair.
Once she came on the stage
dressed as a traffic cop- 10 "pull
sinners over to the curb and put
them back on the right road. •'
Aimee had wanted to come csreen;
i~J~~~wn the main aisle of lhe
a · ·urn on a rnotoreycle, but lhe
city's chief of police put his foot
down. He did let her part a police
motorcyCle on the stage and sound
the siren.
Her message was IIIC of "uninhibited joyfulness with religious
exultation.. It was a non-stop outburst of joy, joy. joy," says
Tbomas in his boot ~·storming
Heaven." He notes: "'I'here was no
dismalnesss at Angelus Temple, no
mourners' bencb, no depressing
emphasis on damnation and hcUfirt.''
Aimee's congregation was
devoted to her. They all called her
Sistel' Aimee - she was •'every-

·

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Enforceme111t of the state's mandatory · seat belt law sbould be
expanded .but penalties imposed
against violators should remain the
same, Highway Safety Director
Charl«~S Shipley said
Shipley oo Wednesday oudined
a new ~ampaign invqlving local
law enforcemem agencies thai will
seek to boost rompfuince trom the
current 47 ~m 10 70 percent by
lhe end of 1992,
"The moiOring public will see
some immediate results of Ibis initiative this summer as lhe Highway
Patrol and these local olf'tcerS join
forces to promote safety belt use
through the publ'c information
activities and increased enforcement of safety belt law_s," Shipley
said.
He
joined at the briefing by
officer.s · from the Cleveland,
Columbus, Zanesville and 'Ohio
. University police departmeins, and
· sheriff's departments in Athens,
Franklin, 'and Richland counlies.
Shipley said he supported
strengthening the seat belt law so
that officers could enforce it ·the
same as any other traffiC violation.
Currently, citations for failing to
wear a seat belt can be issued only
in lhe event a motorist is stopped
for another offense.
.
"We will recommend that that
.
·- be reviewed by the Legislature,"
Shipley said. "It's a legislative
decision. It's not some~ing that we

was

can decide IIIC way or the Other."
He said he did not favor any
increase in pelllltiea under the law.
which has been in etTect Since May
1986. Violators now may be fined
$20 for driven and $10 f&lt;J: pasaengers. The fines can be waived if
motorists see a film about tho
advantages of seat belt u.ie. Coun
costs 1ft not waived.. .
"I'm· not sure that the penalty
needs to be changed,'' Shipley.
said. "We're looking at thas as
somelhinj ..,e'd like the p~blic to
voluntarily cdmply with." .
The 1,11trol has issued about
SO.OOO alations 110 far this ~ for
non-compliance. Patrol Cl.tations
lYPicslly repreaent about 70 pczcent
o( the seat belt tickets handed out
yearly, with the other 30 percent
handled b local authorities.
LL
Richard Cunis, assistant
patrol superintenc!ent, .said using
safety belts was the Single most
important 51q1 motorisli could take
10 prevent traffic accident ·injuri~

eol

and fatalities.

"It's tiot rocket $Cience. It_does

001 ~ a lot of training oo the

driver s behalf. And it certainly
doesn't require the expending. of
additional funds to buy equipment," Curtis said. "All we need
to do is encourage people 10 use
them . So law enforcement has
taken upon itself in the .state of
Ohio this _......
summer to bnng that
message to~·

..

bod •• Iiiier...

~evortheless, rebellion was
always llllkina just UDder the surface amoog die Temple h1enrelty
~ho were conatandy coming and

•
I•

(tliree) ofDiamoods
CLEVELANO (AP) - There
. 8-6-3-4-8-8 '
3 (three) of Spades
·
were no lickeu sold lllllnin8 all six
.
(eight,
six,
three,
four,
eight,
Sales
in
Super
Lotto
totaled
numbers drawn in Wednesday
eight)
.
.
Sales
in
the
Kicter
$5,393,491.
riigbt's Super LotiO drawinl with
tolllied
$719,980.
Pk:k3
Numbers
.
$16 million at state, so Sannay's
There were 114 Super Lotto
jackpot will be $20 million, the · 2-S-9 .
(two,
fiVe,
nine)
tickets
with five of the numbers,
Ohio Lottery said.
and
each
is wortb $1,30 1.. The
Pk:t
4
Numbers
Here are Wednesday night's
• 3-1-4-2
6,604 tickets showing four of the
=c=bcn:
· (three, one, four; two)
numbers are eacb worth SJO.
C11rdl
.
.
. In Kicker, one player had the
4-S- .13-16-30-40
J
(iack)ofHeans
exact
six-digit number and can
(four,. five, thirteen, sixteen,
2
(two)
of
Clubs
claim
$100,000.
thirty, forty)
· The five Kicker lickets showing
'
the first fiv¢ digits are each w!)l'lh
1
$5,000.
The 69 wilh ,the tint four
conllliuecl
..,
numbers are each worth $1,000.
allegation of wrongdoing will be requesl!:d by the Legislature or The 637 wilh the tim three numbers are each worth $100, and the
invesligaled and proaecuted 10 the JIOVemor.
·
6,S2S
with the first two numbers
fullesteXJent olthe law."
At a Senate hearing, Robert
Boggs and others in his CSllCUS Murray, presillei:tt of Oflio Valley are eacb worth $10.
oudined the proposal at a news Coal Co .• said the C111111 Air Act
conference where they were joined will increa the COIIt' ol electricity
by AtiOrney General Lee Pisher used 10 run facuxies and that highand Inspector ·General David er operating costs would make it
Coptlnued from paae 1
Sturtz. Bo.th endorsed the bill, impossible for sOIIle of them 10 stay and Larry Cantrell of Minford.
which is 10 be introduced Thunday . open. ·
·
Manb said he was concerned
by Sen. RiciWd Pfeiffer 1r., DHC said factory and coal mining abciut
condilions ~ found the
Columbus.
·
jobs will be klit unless the Legisla- animalsthe
being kept in.
Stuitz invesliptes s1a11e agencies tore saves the state's high-sulfur
"No conupUcial poultry farmer
thai report to the governor. His . coal industry from the con so- would
ever keep birds m these
efforts would be
by quences of the federal act.
kinds
of
Marsh said ·
Fisher, who could
into charges
Mtmay was amoog the first wit- "If he did,conditions,"
he'd be out of business.
against the auditor, tn.awca, aecre- nesses 10 testify hefon the Senate If there is a local humane society
tary r1 state or their employees, as Eaergy, Natural Resources a~d
bere, they ought 10 come out and
well as membcn rlthe l.elislature Environment Committee on a tiill have this pa closed down." ·
or their emp1oyeea.
providing utilities with incentives
Marsb said he found wet feed,
Under Jll'lellllaw, the at11lmey to continue burning Ohio coal aisae in the watering lfOUgh, and a
general may inveslipae c1Jarsea of install ol swilclling 10 cleaner coal dead chicken floating in lho knee
government wrongdoing onJy.when from other states.
deep pits under the rooster C!IJCS.
_.lThe pits are caldl basins for chickMeigs announcements
en excrement from the wire cages
above.
·
Vacation Bible Sehool·plaaaed .
Marsh
said
the filth on the floor
·
The Riverview Community
could
be
a
bree4ing
ground for
Bible School wili btl heJd,June 10- · Veta'IIIS Memorial Hospital
which
~an be
tapeworm
larvae,
14, 1991 at Riverview Scbool at
. WEDNESDAY ADMISSIONS
uansmilted
lli
the
roosters
by
flies.
. from 7:30p.m. 10 9 p.m. -Helen
Reedsville
WED
. Williabls,
NBSDAY~
DI
GES The roosteiS, however, are not in
The annual pr&lt;~gram is spouOred
imminent danger, he Said
by Reedsvifle an~ Long Bottom -None.
·
•'They'll survive Ibis kind of
United Methodast Churches,
Reedsville Cburch of Christ and . HOI U:R MEDICAL CENTER treatment, \)ut it's not the way they
Eden United Brethren Church. · Discharges, May 22 - Anna should be treated."
Steve Mowery, enforcement
Classes will he held for JXCSChool Churchill, Ronnie Hollis, .Rya'tl
supervisor
for the Department of
children tbrouJh aqd including Horn, 1e~ Roush, Howard
A.gnc
· ulture, said the Sescoe farm
adults. The public is invited 10 pat- sar~ ~y ~: and Mrs. was lhe best the state cOuld find oo
ticipate.
'
Mr. abort nolice. •'This wlli supposed
Kevin Roush, a son, Rae me;.
Reuolon plalllecl .
and Mrs. Lyle Shillinpm. a son, 10 be a eemporary facility..we ~
. The Southern High School Clasa Gallipolis. Mr. and Mrs. Wilbert not expect 10 keep these birds Ibis
'
of 1971 will celebrate .i u 20th White, a son, Gallipolis. .
· long."
.3

tram~

Name contest winner

Hildean E. Chapman, 24
Smithers Avenue, Gallipolis, was
named winner of the May 19 Sunday Times-Senlinel Mystery .Farm
caitest. Tile fum picture app!laring
last Sunday' s paper was that of
Cody Booth, Mercerville (Guyan
Twp.) Sectioo 11, SR 218.

The Daily Sentinel ;

Game... .

'::rlemented

Hospital news

.

The Ohio Lottery will pay oul
$367,392.50 to winners in Wednesday's Pick l Numbers daily game.
Sales in Pick 3 Numbers IOtaled
$1,201,8S7.SO:
In lhe two other daily gamek,
Pick 4 Numbcn playeiS wagered
$246,S09 and will share $205,100,
and .C8nls players bet $SS,l15 atld
won $1&amp;,690.
·

(U81'814Ntl)

A DIY..... tf Ma..modla, loe.

:

.

Pubflihed every · alternOGII. Monday
tllrcUJll Friday, Ill Court St., f&lt;IC

moroy, 01110~ by !Itt 0~ Vollty Pul&gt;
Uahtns COmpsny/Mullmodla. Inc., ,
Pomrroy, Ohio 1518, Pb.. M21116. SeC
eoad rl••• PGitllt paid at Pomft'O)I,.
Ohfo.
•
Mem~: '!lie AIIO&lt;IIIed PrH1, In·"
land· Dilly Preoa AIIIOCIIIIOII and the

OhfoN..,....5Auoolatloll. National .
A&lt;MI'IIatna

rooentattw, Branham

POS'I'MAlrrER:

s.nd · - chsnpa '

Newll)aper
!II, 113 Third Avenue,
Now York. Nell! York 10017.

to The o.uY Senllnel, Ill Court St.,•
POmeroy, Ohio imll.
IVBICIIJPTION RATI!8

a,. Canter or Mlol• Rolle

On• Wool&lt; . .... ........,. ..... : ...............SUO
One Month ............. ,, ....... .. .........$6.!1!1
One YHr ...... :.......................... 553.20·
SINOLIIOOPY
PatCE
.
Dally ..... ..................... '," '"'" 25 C..ata,
Subocrlbera not dflll'lnl loPIIY thecar·.

-·

rler may remit b'l

advan~

direct to

TheOally Sontlntlon a 3. 6or 12 month
billS. C~t wtll be !llwa Clll'rl... eecb

No 111bocrlpllona by maD permttlod In'
areu when ~ e•rler Rrvler 11
available.

~

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.

MollS......._....
'
,_•MelpilootaiJ '
•
13 Wt!tlca ..... .........:............ ... .... S21.N
:II Wt!tlca ............ ...................... $43.1652 Wt!tlcJ .; ........... ..................... 184.78

011-....... CO.IItJ .

13 Wt!tlca ............ ..... .. ............... $23.40 ·
26 Weeki ............ ,., ................... 145.50
52 Wt!tlca ........ ,.... ............... ...... la40

Past mlllrons to meet
1bC Hmilonville Put MatroDI
will meet Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at
the home of Janet Bolin. All put
matrats are invited
Senior• to meet
The Harrisonville Senior Citizens will meet Tuesday -' 7 p.m. at
the town house. Those attending,
· are 10 bring snacks and all merilbers are 'urged to attend.

~LIL.Oyd(/.'Fianders

Bazaar to be held ·
There will be a bazaar and auction at the Fellowship Church of
the Nazarene in Reedlvillem June
1. To reserve a table cal1378-6422.
Table space is SS.

i

.

---Local briefs.. ~----.

When Aimee was found dead in
a bold room from an ovmlole of
sleepiDa pills in 1944 • the aae of
S4 (the- I:"Aller said her deldJ was
acclder..al), the cl1111iD _ . down
on ·o~llat one historiu caiiJ "tho
lilt IiddY splllll" ol reVivllllm in
America.

The Village of Pomeroy and sevaallocal ~ have ~­
pleted im(liOVCIJICnts at Beech Grove Cemetay in lime for Memon11 Day weekeqd.
·
AcconlingiO Cleric Brenda Morril, new f1owal have been planted at the cemetery entrlllce in wtdid0l1 10 the 1111111 cemetery main-

C011tinued from pqe 1

Squads respond to 8 caUs
Meigs Counl)' Emergency Medical Services respooded 10 eight
calls for assistance on Wednesday and early oo Thunda~.
At 9:25 a.m., Rutland S!J.uad went 10 Dye Road. Lucille. Lambert
was taken 10 Holzer Medical Center. At 11:06 a.m .. Mtddleport
squad went 10 Bradbury-Road. Thelma Dill was l8ken to Veterans
Memori81 Hospital.
.
At 1:27 p.m., Pomeroy squad went 10 Frank Road. RaJ Maholtra
refused treatment. At 7:13p.m., Pomeroy squad went 10 State Route
1 for Homer Cole, who was l8ken 10 SL Joseph Hospital: At 11:41
p.m., Pomeroy unit went to Condor Stteet. Larry Davtdson was
uansponed 10 VeteranS.
·
On Thursday at 12:24 a.m., Pomeroy_squad wu sent to U.S. ·
Route 33. 1ohn DeMoss w~ taken 10 Veterans. !-t 1:50 a.m.,
Pomeroy squad went to Main Street forR~ DJCkerson1 who
was taken ro VeteranS. At 6:40a.m., Pomeroy urut went 10 Lincoln
Heights for Bernice Frye. She was tnll1lpOI1l!d to Veterans.

Cemetery improvements completed

~· Krauuer and tho villap street cn~w, Bob's Market ·IIJ!d

SandY Bell were Ill instrumental in a1111pletingthe work, Morris
said

'·

All-Weather Wicker

Beauty... Comfort~ ••and Durability.
Ca•ual Outd.o or Fumlture
at it• Fln•t
.:

Weather

leaving in a steady stream.
Lawsuits rained on Aimee mostly for unpaid bills.
Aimee and Ma often quarreled
themselves over finances. The)'
were always having a falling out
and then making up.
Ma wa• all smiles one day
when, recovering in the hoi!JiiW
from a broli:en nose (she said
Aimee had "slugged" her), a bas.:
ket of flowers arrived for her.
There was a card lltaChed: "From
Aimee with love."
But then, as Ma was puttina the
bastet on a bedside table, another
card fell out: 'To Sister Aimee,
with love."
Ma was crestfallen. The bouquet
was second-hand. Aimee bad recycled flowers that somebody had
sent her!
The newspapcn Jlllllrally loved
Aimee. Sbe not only wu IOOd
copy, she was Pr:::fenic.
Reporters of the day re
10 her
bright red hair and "figure of a

..

day, including Atlantic City, NJ.,
wbere lhe high of89 edipted a 27year-old tec:Ord II)' 2 degrees. New
York Ci!y's Jeadina of IS broke the
1977 ta:0n1 of 84, and lhe high Qf
69 in Kodiak, Alaska. shattered b,Y
3 degrees a record that had stocid
since 1931.
:
The high f&lt;~: lhe nation Wodnesday was 96 degrees in Palm
Sprin$S, Calif.

'
Highs were expected 10 reach
the 60s in the northern Plains; the
701 in moat of New England and
the Pacific Northwest; the 80s in
ihe South, Midwest and midAdanlic swa; IDd the 1101 aacl 90a
in the Southwest.
Several cities ael higb temperawrc records for the date Wednes-

reunion
with aElementary
picnic oo Sunday
at ••.- ·
· lllll••••••••••llllil~----.•••••~
the Syracuse
Scbool
beginninglliiOOIL All C!m JIIC!!II·
bers attending are to bring senror .
•..
yearboots.
•

M

schiJolairl ••

Kicker

Expanded enforc~ment
Administration... .
of seat belt law sought

~

":

&gt;'

trA-

WEATtiER FORECAST- The Ae1:11 Weather foreeaat for
Friday preclieta acaltered tllll!lde~ for .... ol tbe Eat with
showen expected In nort:llwsten New Yon, IIOI'lllll'll Malllt uc1
~ofthtPaelflcN~t.(AP)
·.

,:
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.:
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waste .site Robert walter~

Information Center, a regional
environmental organization based
in AlbuQ.uerque, says one danger of
1~ IS posed by vast quantilies
of bnne under pressure less lhan
600 feet below the level where the
wastes are 10 be siOI'ed.
"WIPP is a disaster waitingiO
happen," says that group's Don R.
Hancoct. "The 'new' DOE says it
wants the public's trust, but leaky
facilities aren't going to inspire
mach confidence."
Early this
DOE ·anta$0nized many o the state's leading
polilician! by securing possession
of the 16-square-mile WIPP site
from the Interior . Department
through ·an administrative transfer
rather than coogressionalaclion.
That infuriated all five members
of lhe state's congressional delegatioo - three Republicans and \WO
Democrats - who fear that abandoning nuclear waste in the repository on the accelerated schedule .
DOE has establisbed will compromise New Mexico" s health and
safety concerns.
Supported by the state's Democratic govc:mor, those twO senators
and three represenlalives now vow

IIWfJ;

:

;~

'

least through Friday,

Saturday's Ohio Lottery . jackpot jumps to $20 million

ss

In the meantime, the midnight
oil being burned in the Capitol
building means that Oregon's
senior sena10r is at his typewriler
- no doubt his secretary fast
asleep at bonie.
. FiNANCIAL OUTLOOK - It
llSed 10 he that insurance compaDies checlt custotnen f&lt;~: risk. Now
the tables have turned. The queslion being raised by fioancial officials is: Will the insurance iiltlustry
be lhe next S&amp;L crisis? Finaqcial
regulators in Washington worry
that lhe ailing insurance industty
poses a multibillion dollar hazard
10 lhe U.S. economy. The unexpeeled collapse of some of America's largest insurers underscored
· lhe weak regulation and shoddy
·, investment practices of many firnis
in !his industry. Consumen should
check out their .insurer by checking
with, amoog others, the A.M. Best
Co.. an Oldwick, NJ., concem lhat
rates insurance COOtpanies. If your
insurer has an A-plus rating, there
is litde need to worry.
·

on Wodne"'ty, with 1.92

incb01 of rain recorded .aa Peru,
Ind., lllil 1.111 indies at Ponca City,
Okla. Hall also fell oo Amlrillo,
TIL ·
As the tlnmclantmns dispersed;
the Midwest and D1l1ll of the 1llllt
Coeat were leA with clear lkiel and
nn e t'tllbly warm weather today,
which was expected 10 continue at

nation=

Jaek Anderson
atul Dale VanAtta

typist,.

storms

· Warm welth« aacl clear stiel
greeted macb of the
today. allhoup mill fell 011
Dakota, Tennessee and New
Orleaoa, and drellcbint::derstonna were forecast for
Scattered tbundentorma also
were expected in par11 rl the Rocties and the Southwest.
The Midwest got die thunder-

Giving second-hand
gifts
old hat
·
·
.
:
J!fts
George Plagenz

i~ !~ l:ltJ; ~ l:!n.:~

,,

IIP,tnmLn::t

iM'3Cie. CPNSUL'I'iHG Fi~. Ttl@H t
P;c.KeD cJP THe Datf 4laYLe
-~ TeD r&lt;eN~PY ac~
THe saMe weeK!

In 1873, Canada's North West Mounted Police fon:e was Cllablished.
In 1915, lilly decland warm Austria-~ in World War I.
In 1937, indilslriallst John D. Rockefeller died in Ormond Beach, Fla.
Bonnie Pllteund Clyde B.-row were .
In l!US, Nazi official Heinric:h Hlmmler committad lltlidde while in
~ ..,_., tiDidlln a IJOlice I!"'bush a they rode illllde a stolen Fml DeiW~e
prison at~· Gonnany.
'• )Jill taadln 8ienvll1e Plrilh, La.
.
In 19110,
IDIIOUiad it bad Clpl1lnld former Nazi official Adolf
:: On ... Me:
.
Eichmann
in
Arr1cntina.
:• In 1430, J0111 rl Ale was CIJI(ured by the Burpndians. who sold ber to
• tho BlldiiL
.
In 1977,the 0.5.
Coan rc11uec1 10 bear the IIIIIJel)a rl former
Nillm
White
House
H.R.
Ha1deaum and John EluflCluntm and for1n f533, the -thee of Bn&amp;land'• ~ Henry vm 10 Catheaine I(
mer Allomey &lt;lenlnl John N. MkdtcU in coanec:don with their WIIIIJr.,. A111111 Wll clecllntl naB IIIII .old.
·
~ li 1101, ClpL Willllm Kidd Wll hinged in UJndoil after he Wll con- gate covu.gp convlcdons.
In 1983, Vladimir Danchev, aa an!IOUncer on Radio Molcow, sur... victed rl piney llld .....
Prised
evayoae by prailina Moalem Iebell in Afthaniltaa IDd t:ritlt:lzlng
:; Ill 17111. SciadJ Clmlina beeline the eigbth 1111e 10 ratify the United
Soviet
policy before he was llkea off the air.
~ Slllel CoillliiUiion.

'•
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••

bls IIU(JpOitaS aaoa the countty.
Paekwood may bave an
admil'lble ...alion 10 PACs, Wt he
has little COIII~mction about playing to people s emolions. In one
1et1er 10 a carefully selected audience, Packwood laments the coosequences of beiag a "staunch
friend'' of Isnd:
"Over lbe JCfDo I've become a
kind of
for the politicsl oppoatlioo.
lime I run for
re-dcction,l 111n11:t powerful. weDfinanced opponents determined 10
bringlbout my defeat ••
Rep. Peter DeFazio, D-Ore ..
IOld our associate Jim Lynch that
lhe claim was "blatanlly deceplive" and "ridic:ulous." In 1986,
Packwood outspent his rival by
more than a 100 10 one (S6.S million 10 his opporl(lllt's $64,000). In
1980, Pactwood OUtspent his oppoIICIIl almost 10 to one. In his 1974
re-eJei:tion bi( it wis four 10 one.
A Packwood spokesperson
explained that the 1986 opponent
was considered "powerful" and

I HaD a STRIJGGLitfa LiTTLe ~

Today is 'lbunday, May 23,the 143rd day rll991. There are 222 days
:· leA in the,.,.,

t

u....-.............

'

Packwood, R-Ore., knows bow 10 devote my time aa4 energies· to
corral campaign money as wen as . prolecting and dofending the" ~u­
anyone in the Senate. Yet he now riiY of Israeli"
1ft81111CS 10 raise multimillion dolThe 1ct1er c:ontains 10 C0118picu-

Ill Court S&amp;ree&amp;
Pomerey, Oblo

ROBERT L. WINGETT
hbllaa.er

Warm ·weather, .clear skies greet most of nation

Tilt Aocu·W.-.,.Iortcae~lor noon, Frldly, May U .

Packwood eschews ~PACS for direct approach

Sent~nel .

'

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Pagl 2. Th8 o.IIJ Sentinel
Pomeroy--Middlepoi't, Ohio
Thul'ldlly, May 23,1981

Soulh Central Ohio
.
Tonight, showers likely with
lhundersrorms Possible. The low in
the mid-60s. The cbanc:O of rain is
60 percenL Friday, variable cloudiness with a chance of showers,
thunderstorms also possible. The
hiJh in lhe mid-801. The chance of
ram is SO percenL

ExteiHied lorecalt
Saturday tJ1n!aP MOIICiay:

· A chance of showers and ~­
bly lhunderstonnl eacb day. lfilhs
in the 80S oo the weekend and mid70s 10 mid-801 on Memorial Day.
Lo~s mosdy in the 60s. 1

'

·LLOYD/FLANDERS

su

Stocks
Am Ele Power ..................29 1/4
Alblan«l Oil ......................30 1/2

'

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ER FURNITURE

Reg. S131 . Lo-back Spring Base Chair •.••• Sale S79
Reg. S153 Hi~back Spring Base Chair ••••• Sale •89
Reg. S28.9 Spring Base Lounger •••••••••••• Sale S179

AT&amp;T...............................3S SIB
Bob EVIIIS ........................18 3/4
Charming Shop................. l9 1/2
City Holdin&amp; .H........: .........13 3/4
Federal Mo1Ul...................l6 31B
.QoodyearT&amp;R .................24 SIB
~ Ceaioll .................. l2 3/4
I..arada' Elld ...............,••.•.••19 7/8

UaUted Inc. ..............~.......27 7/8
~ II'IC •••••••••••••••••28 1/4
Jtax ReatiUI'Iftl,,,, ,,,,,Hooooo.2J/32
lloMJini!Myer~ .............. .26 314

'S

Sllolleytalllc..................... 17 1/4
s. Bri ..........................20 314
Wendy Int'l..............
.10 1/4
WorthinJion Ind....... .23 71B
H .....

H . .. . .

Slllet ,.,., ,., IUJIJ:JI ....
fllllll
'!BIIuu, Bllll
_. LHwl eto.m,-111.

,..w

FURNITURE, APPUANCES, TV'S, ROOI COVERING

STOll HOUIS&amp; Monday 911t•MIJ T•edly·Saturday t&amp;JO·SaOO
992·3671

I '

DOWNTOWN POIIIOY
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VISA

IIUIIICAII

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The Daily Sentinel

Sports

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Thuradiy, May 23, 1991
Page-4

.

Powered by three homers,

.

when they opened with an idenlical
mark and finished fr-·.-...
""'"' San"'--.
n""
cisco is IS games under .500 for
the fiust tml
. c smce
·
1'ts !()().'-·-sea
r
!98S
"""' •
son o
·
Br dropping the fust two games
in CIIICiJ!nati. ~ Gia!~ts have lost
12 ?!their p senes this season. ,
• .~on t. ... ~ee~. ·;· I don t
know, Crmg Sllld. I ve got no
answers, I'll tell you.
"In ' my opinion, it's unusual.
And I think we just have to have a
game where we break out of the
gate quick, score some runs and let
everybody .relax. I think everybody's puWng too much pressure
on themselves."
Eric Davjs, Chris Sabo and Paul
O'Neill bqmered IO·belp power
Cincinnati.
·
·The Reds ~red five runs in f:be
fust three mnmgs off Don Robmson (1-3) to take command. Iose
Rijo (S-3) allowed three runs and
four bits in five innings to get just
his second career victory in seven
decisions against San Francisco
Cabs 5 Metal
·
Greg Maddu~ (S-2) pitched a
flve-hiuer 10 fl\!lke Essian's debut a
sucessful one.
The 40-year-old Essian became

th
c. youn~est
manager in the
majOrs,
taking over a team loaded
with big names and b;., salaries bu
·
18-20
.,. ·
t
JUSt
an
record.
Zimmer,
was
fued on Tuesday and Joe Altobelli
served as interim manager for 0
. game.
. · ne
. Luis Salazar and Hector Viilanueva each hit solo homers for
the Cubs while Ryne Sandberg
drove in pair of runs 'th dou
ble and sacriflcefl 10 . . 1 •
ofFrailk Viola (S-~.
osez
CardiDals s, i&gt;lntes 3
St Louis' scored two runs after
Gold Glove left fielder Bar
Bonds dropped 81
· · ry
.
. apparent mrung~ndin~t flv ball tn the ~nd as the .

a

!

s~~==burgh an&lt;~,

Drabek (2 7) th 1990 • ·
LeagUe cy Young eAward~'::::.~
allowed nme hits and r.0 · · · 10
''
seven innings
11!'. runs
Pedro Gu~rrero dro · 1
runs and O:izie Smith ~ ~n ~ w~
with an Qt.
· orR 1i
C · Carp
d.e~ns · enter (5-1)
was
PhiiU~ 8 EKp
·
Dale Murphy bad~ bits and
drove in two runs d J h KruJr:
· an
n

°

added thiee RBis.
. Pat Combs (2-2) pittbed a ninehiqer for his fust complete pmc of
the season.Brian Barnes fell to 0-2.
l'ldres 7, Braves 2
Bruce Hurst pirched a six-hiuer
and Benito Santiago homc:rcd.
. ~antiaj!O l~d off the fourth
mmng wllb h1s. fifth homer off
Steve Avery (S-2) and added an
~B_I single in a four-run fifth
mnmg.
.
Hurst (S-1) lost his shutout in
the ninth when Ron Gant ddubled
and Dave Justice followed with an
RBI single. Rafael Belliard added a
run-scoring single.
.
ABiroll3, Dollters 2
Jim ~haies, ~bounding from
a poor start, gave UJil one run and
two hits in seven inmngs. Deshaies
(2'4) is ~-0 lifetime against the
Dodgers 11 the Astrodome.
·Brett Butl~r led off the game
with a sipgle and Deshaies didn'i
allow another hit until Darty!
~trawberry bit his third home run
m two games in the fourdt inning.
Mike Morgan (4-4) gave up
three runs and eight hirs in six and
one-third innings. Craig Biggio
went 3-for-3 and drove in a run for
the Astros. ·

fitch

a

hav~e~?=·~=~;ighofreliefthan

Sc()rCh()ard
'

In tbe majors...
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Eat Dlfllloa

W
......... Z!
T........ :14
......... 19
Wil- .......... 11
Ole 1 f
,..... " 14
lin Ylllll ........ 14
· - ....... 13

-

L

Pd.

14 .622

17 Jl5

'·
01
I

19 JOO 411l

M1
22. .319
Z! .371
:14 ..lSI
21

6 Ill

L

W

r...

Pd.

........ 23 16 .590

.. ......... 211
........... 23
CaJifomM ......... 22
a.Jooao ......... II
,...
•
,,, .. 19
a:-01y ...... 16

14

11
II

..'Ita

.m
.550

9
10

011

Ill

112

I Ill

II JOO 3 Ill

:tO .487

22

.m

c..-,-62;R.I-51; MoDow.U, Cbicaao. S3; B. Wilt,

4

6lll

Wedllllday•a nsutts
Ootllll4 2. r..- 1

·

SAVI!S Roudoo, ....... 13; D. Word,
r-.., 12; l!dunle7, OoklaDII, u; ~~ar­
.,.,. ("eti' ' , II; I. a.-u,
10;

Hess

&amp;112

WostDMIIoa
Ookll.t

.151, 2.11: ~.aa,.um, Cllifamia, ! -1, '
.133, 3.60.
S'tRIUOUTS-R)IIll, Teus, 63;

r...,so.

,,x-..Qiy,IO.

after

DA,VIS HOMERS - Tbe Reds' Eric Davis trots home
bitting a 1010 homer off San Frandsoo bnrler Don.Roblnson Ia the
third lmtln&amp; of Wednesday alght's National Leape ~rame 1n Clitclnnatl, wbkb the Reds WOII 9-4. (AI')

r...._

Natlollti Leacue

BATIING (99 at INII&gt;-T. Gwynn, San
Di•ao•. 354; a;,po, Haomoa, .347; H.
""""'· C!ncioluili, .342; Ic., Sl. ......
.341; P. MoGDJI', Son Dicp, .331.
RUNS-Nbioldl. """'-1. 21; T. Fer·
...-_ SM Dioto. 27: F. MI:Orilr, San·.
Dicto, 26; Banllla. Pialbur&amp;b, 25; Col..
man, New YOlk, ZS; Sanuel, Let Anpleo, 25.
'
'
RBI-W. Caok, Son ............. 34; r..k,

Cubs makeEssian majors'
youngest jield·_manager

P!d'=·

31: CaldoiOo.-30:
F.
' , Sa.
Dl..o, 27; lllllico. Ar.lmta, 27; T. 0.,0.. Son Dicao. 27.

s-.

HITS-T. OwJna, Saa ~ie_,o.!. 57;
t... A.poo, .,. P. Mo!Jdll', s...

· -4,MIJ-0

5!-t~1SI. Loaio, 47; w. Caok,

' Now Yodll, eo..tood I

·-'·•-s

foN.

p
St. Loail, 14; B.ok.
Pi • P,lZ; H. Moaii,Cjebnci,ll·
SlllllloorJ. CU..,.. II ; Gnoe,

. r-qtz3.-l
'T. . ' ·
dl 2, 12 iaa.
):hlcoF s. c.ur-a 3
'

Cblaao:

i

10;--"'-'a,IO.
TIUPLES- T. Gwfllll. Son Diop, S;
Cee.fee!r. Hau~taB. 4; L a
'· ~~au&amp;•on, •: t . Fom•D•ez. S•o Diaao, .4;
Foldo!, . . _..., 3; Roley,-

3.
JIOMB RUNS-I'. MoOzitf, Sm D!,..,
10; ~ loo 1'1 1"0, 10; G. Bell. ,
Chl4oao, \!:~::.·Now Yorl&lt;, 9; w.
Caok,~
9.

S'IOLilN B~- No,. Yod;
27; O.Shieldt, Nc.~tnal, 11; Oriaaom,
MonUHl, l•t Niaoa, Atlanll, 14: 0 .
SL Looi1, II; R-._ San Dicp,
11 .
'
•
Pri'CHJNO (4 decj•'..•)-R. Mutiaa:,
, 7:1.r..·IJ!. US; Smile)',
l, .w-1, ;uw; C
·, SL

s-.

Look. I, .133, 2.91: ..... ~ -

NAnONAL LEAGUE
. Eut DIYioloa
WLPd.
GB
· ~
........ Z! 14 .w
Now Ylid&lt; ......... 21 16 ..161
2
SL l.&lt;lldl .......... 21 17 J!3· 211l
!
......... 19 :tO •• 11
Clllcqo
!
......... 19 :tO .487
• fh 111deJphia ....... 19 20 Al1

Wnt Dlvllloa

·

·
'

.

'

WLP&lt;t.OB
La~ ....... 21 17 J!3
Al!lllia ......... 19 16 Joll Ill
C' i Mi _,..... 19 11 .514 I Ill
2
lleDIIF ....... :tO :tO JOO
6
......... I! 23 .395
S. P 'eo ...... 12 'Z1 .301 9 Ill

5-l, ,I,, Ul; 8 . ~ SL Laail, .:1;
.100, • •05; I. - . I-.., 4-1, .100,
i-:~=~4-I,.IOO,.W.
llnYIIIII,61;
B-.s..
( 51; Rilo. CiJicimd,
4"
4);'01mno, At-

G.-·

-~''l""'·San
SA ,
lmidl, SL

.

•s.
..
' , 12; D1bb1o,

Cinc:lllnati, 11; D. Smith, Claici;Jo, 10;
Leffert~, San Dieao, 9; Franco, New
Y~,l; M. WDU.m.,P'd 1·d-lphie I.

Stanley Cup finals

· NEW CUBS MANAGn- Jim F.ssian, wbo was the maiiager or
the Cbli:tlao Cubs' AAA team Ia Iowa, wu promoted to field boa of
tbe ..oilier club Wednesday• the succ~r to the ousted Don Zlm·
ll!er. ,Here be stretches wlfb bls new· team prior to Wedaeaday
U1gbt I game agalDst tlte New l'ork Mets, whlcb the Cubs woa 5-2.

' (AP)

.

,

.

Binkiewicz 'finest example
ofSOUTH
student-athlete'
•
Murphy
BEND, Ind.
wanted them to remember him as a
(AP) -

With a 3.4
12

point average and . great baseball player who became a
Ioe doctor, not a ~reat doctor who
played baseball, ' Murphy said.
.
· "He's got a great perspective on
life. He's got great maturity. He's
unique. Joe Binkiewicz will be successfull in whatever he· chooses to
do."

phy said of ·
man-pitcher.
· The Wintersville (Ohio) High
School
~1181e is studying biolog~~capwnan~~ served as lhe

Binkiewicz said he can't explain
the power surge.
"I never considered myself a
home run hitter. I'm more of a RBI
man, a guy who bits doubles and
finds tbe gaps. 1 really haven't
Binltiewicz started slowly this changed anything. I've just been
season, playing in 14 of the fust 24 seeing tbe ball well and swinging
games
and batting .167.1n the next th b
15 games,
however, he hit .531 _
w!ts~~. we 11 the past coup 1e of
26-for-49 - with 10 homers, 25
En route to earning the team's
RBis and a 1.224 sluggin11; percent- Freshman of the Year award two
ageBut '""•·ball isn't the only thl'ng ' years ago, Binltiewicz became the .
fourth Notre Dame player in histo""""
, :C.~inkiewicz's mind," Murphy ry 10 have five hits in one game.
This year, he beCame the first
"He stood up before the entire Notre Dame player to twice 'bit
team in a meeti and said he
Pomei'OJI
Houra:

By BEN WALKER
"Everybody started teasing,"
Dunston said. .
· AP Baseball Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - The
Essian, however, does not plan
Chicago Cubs put a lot of big roiloalotofthingsdifferently.
~·on the fteld, and lost Now,
. "I'~ under no great pressure at
they hope putting a not-so-familiar this pomt to make great changes or
f~ in the dugout will help them ' use some son of pseudo-psycholowm.
~Y on the team," Esuan said
The Cubs made Jim Essian the 'With the players the cs,libec of ~
youngest manager in the majors . Ryne Sandberg, Andre Dawson
. W~nesday, promoting him from ·· George Bell and Mark Grace I just
Tnple: A Iowa a day after firing think we .need a little spark. Mv
Don Zimmer. The mqve came lhe c.hallenge IS to provide that spark.' r
same day another manager got
Essian, a major league carcber
fired - Kansas City's John for 10 seasons began tnanaging in
Wathan joined Philadelphia's Nick the minors in '!985 with indepenLe}'va ~ Zim~ as managers to dent Miami in the ClaSs A Florida
lose ~tr jobs this year.
State League. He spent 1986 with
ESSIIIII, 40, took over a team that Class A Winston-Salem the next
was favored to win the National two years at Double-A 'Pittsfield
LeagiiC East after adding All-Star and was in his second season at
fre~ agents George Bell, Dave Iowa. Iowa was in fust place at 22Sm.nb and Danny Jackson. But 14 when Essian got the call to
Ch1c~go had struggled at 18-20, come to lhe majors.
and ~er was gone.
General manager Jlm Frey said
ESSIIIII'.s first game was a winner Essian was the only candidate seri- he gu1ded the Cubs past the ously considered, and he was hired
~ew York Mets S-2 W~esday through the 1992 season. ·
n1ght
,
"This ball will go in my trophy
case, along with the ball from my.·
rust mAjor league hit," Iissian said.
"It.,also will go with the ball from
my first win as a minor league
manager and with the trophy when
I was the M.VP in the Eastern
SUN.
League." .
Essian made a couple of ,
changes. First, he continued a tradi·
tion he began as a minor lea~e
manager in 198S, holding a mmiPG 13
team meeting before the game.
AND
"I like to pther them all together so that we all go out together
onto the fteld," he said. "It's a little rah-rah."
Then, Essian moved Shawon
Dunston, who usually bats eighth, i!t, fAMilY(tlMil&gt;Y W IIIIC1 II fHI ~,\....,IIY
to the leadoff spot. The shortstop
PG
responded by going 2-for-S against
446-1011
the Mets.

EDWARD
SCISSORHANDS .

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HOI\ I ElaALO~e

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. 992•2124
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1,1 am to Mid. Sun.-Tburs.
11 am to 1 am Fri. &amp; Sat.

.Yankees down Tribe 8-2 for
.win No.2 in last eight games
By CHUCK MELVIN
AI' Spora Writer
CLEVELAND (AP) -For a rookie getting liis
firstseem~~ aatliti~J~~~ games c:au
,_
· .... -.ro.....uy
''I WCIIIdeled if it would ever c:omC: •• Kelly said
Wcdr-lay llilbt afler be got his first 'me;or-Ieague
hit. 8 two-run double that shook New YOllt out of a
long slump as the Yank 11 beat the Cleveland indians 8-1.
The eight runs, all in the lint five ~ exceed·
ed !he.Yankees' ~ of seven runs in thea pm-ious
59 mmngs. The w111 was tbeir second in the Jut eight
games.
''1 think the key hit was Pat Kdly's" said Kevin
. ~· wbo '!ad ooe of the Yankees'~ borne runs.
His l'iqt bit couldn't have come at a beUer time.
We've ' - t lttUggling to gd hita with men in scoring poailiGa, but tonight we 101 scme ciUICh hits with
runners cm baie.''
New Y&lt;R sc&lt;nd line runs in tbo !IIICond inning
all after Alvaro Espinoza struclt 0111 for what should
have been the tbitcl out, Tbe llriUOUI pllcb by Tan
Candiotli, bowever, was a tnucltlebaii that eluded
caldter Joel Skinner, letting Maas score from third as
Espinoza went to first. It was ruled a wild
"Just beca11se there's a ~y ·on lhlrd, c:au;t SIIOp
thrOWinJ the knucltleball,' Candiotti said. "1 just
hope Skins can tlwow his body in front of it I threw
one that Stins stood up for,. and it hit 'bim in the
chest. I think he was having more trouble than I
was.''
The wild pitch kept the in~ alive for Kelly
who tooh close 2-2 pitcb for a
before looping
3-2 pilth into the left-field corner for a two-run double.
"I didn'.t get the call on a 2-2 curvcball a.. could

Reds post 9-4 win over San Francisco
By Tile AIIOdated Prrss
With his record of success in
San Fran~isco , Giants manager
R"""" Crai~docsn't have 10 worry ·
abOUt his · - probably.
The managers IU'e going d(lwn
¥ and furiouS this ~edt1 and tile
G111111S have I~ ~1 o( theu laSt 27
games. B~t qaig ~~safe for now.
S The Ctn~mnau Reds beat the
.• n FranCISCO 9-4 Wednesday
~ght at Rivedront Stadium, send·
1ng the last-place Giants to their
ftftb strllgh! losa.
. ~while, new Cubs ~er
Itm EssW! got off to a promismg
start as Chic&amp;go beat the New YOllt
Mets S·2 at Shea Sladium. Essian
~ over for.~ Zimmer; a good
friend of Craig s: It was only two
years ago that Ztmmer and Craig
met as managers in. the National
League playoffs.
lrlsewhere in the NL, it was
Pbi!adelp.hia 8, Montreal I; St.
Louis S, Pittsburgh 3; San Diego 7,
Atlanta 2; and Houston 3, Los
Angeles 2.
The Giants are on their worst
roll in IS years. Their fifth consecutive loss lef! them at _12-27, the
worst record m the lll8p' leagues
and their worst slarl smce 1976,

1991

WE IIOW
HAVI'
Dl1 PEPSI

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•

S, Minnesota 2 Ia 12 innin&amp;S; OetJ'Dd 2, Toroato 1;
Boston 4, Milwal!ltee 0; Detroit 9, Baltimore 5;
KaMU City 3, SeeJ!Ie 1,11111 Q!icqo S, C8lifonlia 3.
5, Twlaa 2 (U ltul.)- It would be b8ll
to convince the Texas Rangers tbat losinl could
again become a way of life. But when they do come
back to earth, the taste of defeat shouldn't be an thll
bitter.
"We're having fun playiq. and I don' t think a
loss or a couple of Ia-. will take that IIWIIY,'' manager Bobby Valcaline said after tbo Rugen set a
~ub record WedneiCiay nilbt with lbclr ninlh lllraight
viCtory.
111Ck Daugherty, a by to the Rangers' S-2 12inning victory over the Minneeota TwiDI, isn't thinking about thei!OIIibillly ofiMinl
"It's just like anytblna cl8o, lite hitting or
ing. When a te1111 is In sync, lbclr cw@Jence
grows and you feel you c:au do "''- that- - ·t
do otberwiJe," be llid. "On ~ b, ~-CIIi be
t111ee or fo..- tiDIS down, but we'n~ jail waillna for
someone II) tum it up a 80I1cb and pt lite job done. ••
Rafael Palmeiro did Jult da
"I just tried to 11ay t.:lt and bit lite ball in the air
to score the miD from tblnl." Palmeiro llid of his
one-out double thll broke a 2-2 tie.
. The victory aiJo pve lhe Rangers - who had
won eight straight five times in club history - the
longest winning strellk in the ~ Ibis season.
Daugbcny, wbo lied the game wilt a sacrifice fly
in the ninth, led off the 12th with a linJIC off Carl
Willis (1-1). After Oeno Petralli sac:rlficed, Brian
Do~~ singled. Palmeiro then doubled down the
right
line 10.score Daagheny, llld Juan Oonzlllez added a two-run single one out lalet.
Gezald Alexander (2.{}) pitched three lnninp for
the viciOry and Jeff RW18Cll WQI'Ud the 12tb fcr ltis

•=r•

C;

R oyaJs fjIre Wath an as manager; .~'
~
• ter1m
• fjJe Jd b OSS ··.~·
appOID t ·SCb aeter
ID

~~=3,Mirlners ,l-Tom0onlonthrewa

four-hitter to become baseball's ERA leader as
•
Kansascity-hoursarterthermngofmanager
John Wathan - knocked visiting Seattle out oi a ·
share of first place in the AL West.
·
BJ DOUG TUCKER
Gordon (3-2) came within an out of his first
AP Spora Writer
shutout this IIC8IIOII,Iosing it when Ken Griffey Jr. hit
lCANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) his third home run.
Herk Robinson sounded as if he
Gordcm struck out three and walked three in low- had just hired John Wathan, not
ering his ERA to 1.38.
' fm:d him.
.
Wblte 8oJt 5, An1e1J 3 - Charlie Hough fell
"Every person, IIIII I mean this
short or pitching the lOOth complete game of his as sincerely as I can . _ it, every
career, but Sunmy Sosa hit a three-run homer.
person whose life he bas toucbcd in
The 43-year;old Hough (1-2) was mating his this organi•aujop is a bca« peiiOII
333rd start and fourdt since joining the White Sox as because of it," said tbe general
a free agent in December. The 22-year veteran manager of the Kansas City Royallowe4 five hits in seven and two-third innings, als. "He's a wonderful, wonderful
strilting out six and wallting two while raising his person."
career record to 187·171.
But tho Royals, after apending
Bobby Thigpen pitched a scoreless ninth tor bis more than $33 million the pi!St two
ninth save.
·
yean on free agents, bave not been
Tl&amp;ers !1, Orioles S - Cecil Fielder had two 8 wonderfullellll.' And on .Wedneshome runs- one in a six·run second l!ming- and . day,
41, became .the tblrd.
three RBis.
major league manaacr fired this
Bill GnllicJaon (S-2), gave up nine hill in seven year.
·
and two-third innings. Included were consecutive
It '111M a welcome move to most
homers by Cal Rlpken and Sam Hom in the eighth.
fans and media reprmolatives who
Ben McDonald (2·3), gave up six runs on three had beeD increasingly critical of
hits and three walks.
·
.
Watban's low-lr:ey, uiUIS8ummilll
Red Sa 4, Bn:wa &amp; 0 - Tom Brunanslty hid a approacb. But if it hid been put 10
homer and three RBis, and Danny Darwin made a a vote of Jillayers, Wathan would
strong return from injury as Bolton swept the tJne. problblf still be in charge.
game IICrics at Fcnway Pin.
·
''He s the same guy wbo won
Darwin (2·1) allowed six bits and no walks,IIIIIClt 92 games for us two years ago,''
out four and threw 57 pitches in five ~ (ftg
said fltlt baseman George Breu,
Harris pve up four hits in the laa four IIIDIDp for ·who roomed with Wadlm 20 years
his first save.
ago in the minot leagues. ,
Athletlca 2, Blue Jays 1 ..;.. Mike Moore beat
"It's unfortunate for blm tbat
Dave S.tieb as Oakland scored twice in the first we wc1e playing
bad,'' said
inning apinat vlsitlna ToroniD.
.
pitcher Bret Saberhagen. "But
1ose C8nseco's UI double and Brnesl Rilea' tun- when a team's struggling • muc1t
scorinJ grounder in the rust against Stieb (4-3) were as we are ... "
enough for the A's to win the final pmc of the t111ee-. · "I 'm shocltetl," said outfielder
game series.
Danny Tanabull. ''I thought tbare
had been better communication
between the manager and players
this year than any time Iince I've
'been bere.'.
Immediate , speculltion to
replace Wathan cenwed on Hal
McRae, a member of tbe Royall'
be a little bit bard to yo 10 tlt'e Sprlnp on W'!IIIOidttY nlaht
Hall ol Fame who turned do'WII lite
mound, sit in the dugout 1al1ted to
"I tblnk lhC Anllll!h 1tave a Jot of job on an Interim basis wben
some of the coaches yesterday, confideltc:e in ni;~ llid "They Wathan was hired with 36 games
they said, 'Don't brin those bats.'
·
'
left in the 1987 seBICII. Now hitting·
I S8l'd, 'That's fime."' g
think
I
can
help
the
"The reason we tam.
signed with the coach at Montteal, McRae said he
"When the Dodgers released Angels they wanted me more than had not been contacted but would
me at the end of sprina trllning. the the otbCr 1ean11. I wanled 10 be with . beinla'elled.•
other ICalU had their tOIICtS aet." someone wbo needed me They
"I'd be willint to listen. If they
Valenzuela said. "I knew it would think 1 can help them "
·
were interested in me, I thinlt I'd be
not be ~Y· I knew it w~ld ~e
Valenzuela was ·13-13 Jllith a willing to listen,'' said McRae,
long.~ s why I ltcpt worlting.
4.59 ERA and pitcbed hf'ffirst whose son Brian is a fust-year cenDctads of the 30-year-old left- carea- no-hitter last season He- ter ftelder for the Royals IIIII ODe of
bander's c:ontract with the An&amp;els 21-11 that season his
ys • the lone llrilbt spoil in a misentble
were not announced. Re~ly, a 20-pme
1tart whicb bad the Royals lS-22
be ~ earn up to $1.2S million, · Valenzuela won the Natioaal
P.rov1.dcd he meets all the incen- Lea1ue Rootie of Year and Cy
uves 1n the agreement,
Young Award in 1981 the only
Valenzuela pitches in Palm player ever 10 do so.
'

celebrating.
"ldidn'treallycarewhattbesihwionwas 1was
just. glad to set it out of the way," be said. "i got it
agamsta good pircher, and thlt makes it even beuer.
There was a little bit of pra~sure."
Matt Nokes, robbed off home runs twice in bis
p~vious three games, led off the fourth Inning with
hiS seventh home run. The Yankees broke it &lt;~pen
~ith four runs in the ftfth cm Don Mattingly's RBI
smgle and a three-run home run by Maas, bis sev·
entli. ·
Candioai (S-2) left witb no 01111 In the fifth, his
sborlcst outing of the year. He yielded eight runs and
nine hits, and his ERA climbed from 1.48 to 2.49.
"I felt praty good with the knucldcball," he silid.
"It was moving a lot. But it was moving more la!etally tonight, instead of liP and down."
Tim Leary (3-3) got the win, bis first since April
19, allowing one t\m and eight bits 111 seven innings.
He walked two and struck out m. Eric Plunlt piiCbed
two perfect innings, striking out three.
Chris James and BrookJacoby CIIICh had t111ee singles for Cleveland. Jaco!ly singled home a run in the
second, butiames was thrown out at the plalc lalet in
the inning after he tagged up on Sltinncr's fly to Jesse
Barfield in right Bameld bas seVCII outfield assists
this seasi&gt;n.
New Yodt:'s Steve Sax, who moved to third base
tlllee pmes ago to make room for Kclly at second,
struggled with his daowing an nighL 'l'hlec times he
forted Mattingly to make difficult plays at rust. and
he overtltrew Mattingly completely for an error on
Mark .Lewis' grounder in the fifth. It was Sax' second error of the seasoil, but his first ever at third.
The Indians compleuid a 13-game bomestand with
a 4·9 mark. Their 5-14 record at home is tbe worst in
the majlll'li; they're 9-8 on thelllld.
·
"We've run into scme pretty &amp;ood ballclubs here
at home: Boston, Texas. Oaltl8nil, Seattle, California," manager 1o1m McNIIIIIaDI said. "But I do hope
we play bettCr on the road than we did this homestand.''
Elsewhere in the American League, it was Texas

w..-.

winner:

(Continued from
tiuee homers in a game - against

Evlllllville and Mic:bigan - and
the fli'St player in 24 yean to homer
lbree times in a pine.
Binltiewicz is also the only
player - professional or otherwise
- to hit a ball over the center fteld
wall at South Bend's Covalealti
Stldium. The wall standi 3S feet
hi&amp;b a11d ia 405 feet from bomc
plalc.
.
He does 110111e mound work as
well, compilina a career won-loss
record of 6-l with a 2.85 earned

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01111

run average. He basn 't lOll a pme
in two IIC8SOill.
Eligible for the IIIIMJilr drltl.
Binltiewicz bas been COIII8I:Ied by
the New Yodt: Mets ~lution.
"It •s a goal of mane, yelling
cltafted. and if I'm select&amp;d, 'd definitely have to cCIIIlder it I
rtnisb IChool- my ptmary lOll In
life is to go 10 medici! ac:hool. Jut
if I received a ~ offer, one dill
included them paying for me to fin.
ish school, I'd jump at it. Wbo
wouldn't?"

As you know, Car Buying Is Serious Business. It Involves serious money
Perhaps you've been putting otT buying that new car or truck you so
seriously need. Well, now Thanks to a serious new Pricing Policy at
Turnpike of Gallipolis .N 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 everyday low price ••• Only at Thmpike of
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It'1 No 'Wolldlr Trmlpih Undtnells Tholl Who Won't-Be Undtnold!

,..10

NO

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c;,:m.:a

llill-

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I

plus stUOIII wilh the Doqlll. He
aiJo contributed at the plata, collectlnl 163 bits lncludiDI ollht
lloiaen and drivinl Ia 12 r1111
wbiJe ltiaiD.I .202. Last .,., he bit
.304 wilh llRBis.
But be 'WCII't
10 bit
widt the Anpll
tbe ~­
leaD Leque USCI dto delil Snd ·
ltilla' rule.
"For me, tbe main tlllal II
lbrowinl the ball,'' he said. "It'D

,

. ·· •·
namw possibly~ -ly as Friday .., .. ,
Despite their free-agent spend-'"'·
ing the past two yesrs, ,the R~:
were only 1 .1/2 pm.es but of~~'
place last year m the American ~
League West, a division they used :
to dOminate. Their sblty start this I
year had them in last place.
'
·•'John Wathan probably does ~
not deserve full blame for this," ~
said Robinson. " I wish we had a :
more creative way to fix a situatioq · ~
like this. Had there been, we would ;
have used it''
l
Wathan, who has spent virtually
his entire adult life in the Kansas ~
City organization, leaves with a ~
287-270 record. A close friend who '
spoke with him Wednesday l'
described his mood as "devastat;
ed.' '
•

4)

lJ 1 .mod 1111 l¥ll'lp ~ 1111 10.

----

when Wathan was fired, in last
place in the American League
West.
.
McRae said th\1 Royals' situalion seems better than it diillate in
1987.
"For 36 games, I was offered
the job and there~d be an evaluation
after that," McRae llid from Montreal. ''I didn't think that was a
good deal for me."
Also mentioned as possible candidates are Royals pitching coach"
Pat Dobson, Don Baylor and Pitts·
burgh coach Gene Lamont
Coach Bob Schaefer was named
interim manager on his 47th birth·
day and jolted, "I'm on a multihour ccmln!Ct"
Robinson, declining to discuss
possibilities, said a permanent
replacement for Wathan would be
·

to

Ex-Dodger Valenzuela elated about
st~pping ~nto Angels' starting rotation
By JOHN NADEL
AP S.,...._ Writer
LOS ANGELES (AP) - FerDando ValenzUela is back in base·
. his bat behind .
ball, bu t leavmg
Spealting at a news conference
Tuesday, Valenzuela •aid that
while he knew when the Los An1e·
les I&gt;odgers waived him March 28
be'd be O':J the sidel~nes for a
IC!'gthy period, he was JUSt as cerwn he'd retum.
And now that he's back after
sign~~~ a O';JC·Year contract with
!iJe . . i.fomta Angels, ,Valenzuela
1s exet~ about cbangmg leagues
and believes he can help tbe
!'"gels, who have a clear&lt;ut openmg for a fifth starter.
"I'm very happy 10 be stay~
in the Los Angeles area,'' he
reponers 81 the Greater Los Angeles Press Club. "I kept worltin1.
throwing. I'm ready to stilt throw· '
ing again in a game.
"I bave a lot of confidence In
myself. l'm .heallhy, my arm feels
1reat. As long as my arm feels
IOOd, I can keep going. I'll be
ntady (10 pW:h) every fifth clay.''
Team officials said Monday
night hiS ptogirss will be evaluiled
after tbe lbree minor league IIIIlS.
The Angel$ have the option to
renew the contriCt next year.
"No more than 75 (jJltcbel) the
first time," Valenzuela said.
''They say I can be cm my own·for
the first 11me. but no more than 75.
I think it 'II be a IiJ!Ie bit fDUgh in
the be~inning, it's a new team.
(But) I m a professional.
"The only thing I w•t to do il
do my job, belp 1M IMJI,"
Vllenwla - J41-116 wllb a

Wedae,clay ai&amp;ht's AIBerlcan League game • '
against tbe host Clevelaod lltdlans, wbo lost 8·2. •
IDdlau llbortltop Felbt Fet'BIIn takes the throw · •
frCIII bls pitcher o• the play. (AP)
· · :~.

GETS BACK TO SECOND -New York's
Steve Su (6) 1et1 back to llfCOnd base after
almost being pk:ked off In tile tblrd Ianing or

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�Page 6 The Dally Sentinel

Four Andrettis to hit track
in Sunday's lndanapolis 500
ByQANKLOWENKRON
AP SporU Writer
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) When it comes tn lhe Andrcttis at
Indianapolis, it's like father like
son: like father, like other ~: like
uncle, like nephew.
There's an Andretti in each of
the first four rows for Sunday's.
Indy 500 .- the first time four
memben of the same family have
raced here in lhe same year.
Mario Andreui, lhe 51-yCM"-old
palri!lreh of !he family and Willner
of !he 1969 race, will sran his 26th
Indy 500 on !he outside of the front
row.
Michael Andretti, his 28-yearold son, sits in the middle of the

second row, with cousin John
Andretti, also 28, on the inside of
the third row,
· ·
Jeff Andretti, the ,!f.fi::Jest
member of the quartet, q ·
his
Cpsworth-powered Lola in the
fourlh row a 217.632 mph.
" I never thought it would come
to this," said Mario. "It's some·
thin$ that I'm happy and proud of,
but 11 certainly wiSII't planned this
way.''
Mario has led m01e lips (7 ,338)
!han any driver in Indy car history.
He's won three Indy: car and one
Formula I championship. But h~ ·
says he's learning from - and
enjoying racing against - the

'

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Tllu,.day, May 23; 1991'
.

t

By The Bend

.Page-7

"I tltint there's .,._.., 10 learn
there. We talk ab&lt;iui'ihlnp, but
each one does his owo. WbeD there
are questions that need 10 be uted,
there's always an ear ltere,'' be
said. "Not necessarily with John,
because he's with a different team,
but we do have a great reladonsbip
that I think in the end beljls all of

Annual academic :
quiz bowl winners

us."

''We grew up around the sport.

That's bid a bit influence on us,"

Groff likes reliability
of Cosworth engines

.

rear

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IUIIIJIC)IIs MOior Spedway. Actiotl at the Brick· ~
PIT PAINTER -1oby w.ltebead of lndi·
"'::
aDOlls palDis Arle Lu1flldyk 's DUie Gil the Will ' yard wiD bqln Sallday. (AP)
ot Iut year's Indy 500 champion at the lndl·
....
the wall, so he can tbank me for
that," Mario said. "To me, it was a
blessing in disguise that he never
SPRING VAllEY CINEMA
qualified last year because of the
446 4524
' '
eq~L
.
' Lookillg at the positive side,
he gained enough experience !hat
coming here this year with a solid
.team, and having had three races
under his belt, three top 10 finishes,
his confidence level (is high) .
There's no comparison.''
"I know the place. I know the
track and know the race car, and
I'm comin. back with first-rate
equipment,' Jeff said. "It's all up
ID dare, a new engine. It's a whole
different ball game for me this
year."
Mario says he's not thinking yet
about retiring, but he is likely m be
racing wilhout Michael as a team11181C next year. And it may well be
the only time the four family members will race each other here.
Michael is expected to move to
FCilllula 1 next year.
loo,f~

.-rs

Three-year-old T-hird gives
Martin Coca-Cola 500 pole
N.C. (AP) Mark Martin turned ID an old mend
to breathe some new life into his
season of discontenL
"This feels so gOod, and 10 ilo it
in this car, I can't CYCII believe it,"
Martin said Wednesday after he
won the pole for the Coca-Cola 600
with a record qualifying run at
Charlotte Motor SDCCCiway.
A three-year-old Ford Thunda'bird that Martin refused ID let be
retired was responsible for putting
Martin at !he head of lhe field for
Sunday's 600-mile race.
Martin, who finished a close
second to I&gt;ale Earnhardt in last
year's Winstnn Cup points baale,

has been SlnJU)ing this -.son. He
has fini~ no higher than fourlh
in nine races, and he has wound up
21st or worse lhree times. He is
10111 In !his year's drivet standings.
Martin had a poor showing at
Charlotte in last Sunday's running
of The Winston, the circuit's annua1 all-star race. So he asked ream
owner Jack Roush m switch from a
newer car they were using 10 the
oldest one the tean1 has.
The car has long been a favorite
of Martin's, and team manager
Sieve Hmiel and crew chief Robin
Pembenoa bave 1r.ep1 upd•ted bodies on it for those rare occasions
when !hey miahtncod iL

Eastern Michigan scraps
Hurons nickname for Eagles
YPSILANTI, Mich. (AP) Eastern Michigan University decid·
ed that after 62 years as tile
Hurons, the new nickname of
Eagles has little chance of offend·
inganyone.
University regents voted 6-1
Wednesday to change the name.
The Eagles, Green Hornets and the
Express had been recommended by
a special committee.
The schoql dropped its . longtime moniker last year, saying it
might have offended American
Indians. But instead of picking a
new one right away, the regents
appointed a committee ID inveati·
gate potential names and recommend three ID the baird.
Meanwhile, some conlpeting
reams were confUied and referred
10 the Ypsillnti IChool's teams as
the Hurons or the No-Chief Yellow Hawk of the
Soutbcasl Mlchipn IIIII NorthWCII
Ohio Native Amlril:lll A.,..arinn

aiiCIMie&lt;l wet· 'Rr'• Jlleedal,...,
said die JIIIOII•h ,,_, wu illi·
meatal not only ro abe dlat bibe,
but 10 Ill AIDIIUIIn !'
But Bob leaHU, peat·JI'eat·

grancllon of Clllef Jalaplt Wltile.
last Hmoll cbiel of abe AndemOII
ResemtiGn. llld lbe Huron name
should be kept.

ENTIRE STOCK GRASS
SEEDS, FERTILIZERS
and LAWN SPREADERS

"We haven't offended anyone.
Why should they not want 10 use
our name if we haven 't offended
anyone?" he said.
Regent John Burtnn, 80, former
mayor of Ypsilanti and the only
dissenting vOle, said Wednesday:
"I didn'tlike the (Eagle) name. I
lhougltt !hat they could have done
more research."
·
Eastern Micbifan is a member
of the Mid-Amencan Conference.
Other members include Central
Michigan, whose teams are nick·
named the Chippewas, and Miami
of Ohio, whose teams arc ca11et1 the
Redskins.

lire,

NOW 1.88 TO 29.98

A large assortment olall purpose
weed ,killing and starter lertillzers, rotary and drop spreaders and many '
varlet1es of grass seeds lor a beautiful lawn.
&amp;~,.,, no ,..nc·Jc' t . ~ 41,., 1~.

ORIGINALLY 2.49·39.95

5frfN,.,...,,

111n

WAlDING
RGU

,_,, •••

ORIGINALLY 3.88-28.99

ENTIRE STOCK .LIVE PLANTS,
SHRUBS and TREES ·

...

_"_.., ___ .,_

NOW 2.47 TO 20.01

A wide variety of plants

t-- ancllhrul!ll to brtgllten yqw landlclfl8.

OFUOINAU.Y 1 .99-3. 79

,

•

.ENTIRE STOCKIr-::::/R)_::--~---..;....;_,
BARK PRODUCTS W=-~----~
L...,;.

NOW 1.48 TO 2.84 Includes 3 cu. h. pine bark nuggets
or mini pine bark !lUGQtl&amp;. pine blrk mulch, manure and more.
. . ,, ................. 41 ,., ..... .,... .., ...,., . . .

SILVEIIRIDGE
PUZA-GILLIPOLIS, OHIO
•
..

SCHOLAR-ATHLETES· Aaron Slteets and Jennller Taylor
wear tile medaiUons tltey were presented during Wednesday's
aW!IrdS ISilelllbly at Meigs Higlt School in recognition as being lite
oulstandlng!~~=holar-atltletes In the clus or 1!191.

·. Meigs students honored during an
_ nual banq.uet
By C8ARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel New~ Starr

~here was a Ray ~c Yo'!th

AchJCvement Award which earned
a $200 gift which went tn Candy
Scholarships totaling thousands Harrison. The Presidential Fibless
of dollars were awarded to this Awards went to Kristen Siawter,
year's graduates at the annual Kelly Smith Susan Houchins
awards assembly held Wednesdsy Aaron Sheets.' Amy Warlh, MissY
atMciJsHiJh.SChool.
. Nelson, Jennifer Taylor, Randy
In .addition to scholarship Corsi,andResaHarris.
awards, plaques and trophies w~
Academic awards of distinction
. presented ID outstanding scholars wciltiO Jason Wright, Darci Wolfe,
and athletes, and academic c:ertifi- Lucy Winebrenner, Kathy
cates were awarded to the high Williamson, Pam Whaley, Amy
-achievers of each class.
-Warth, Amy Wagner, Ken Van
· The Ohio · Board of Regent Maire, Jennifer Taylor, Kristen
Scholarship, $1,000 a year for four Stanley, Kelly Smith, Kristen
-years, was awarded to Aaron Slawter, Aaron Sheets, Shane
'Sheets who is enrolled at John Car- Phillips, Derek Miller, Michelle
·roll University in Cleveland. It was MalhoUa, Jamie Uttle, Ryan Lemnoted that runners-up for that ley, Eric Heck, Lori Hayes, Tim
award were Jennifer Taylor, Amy Hl\11, Stephanie Gardner, David
: :Warlh, Kristen Slawter, and Missy F.amycr, and JenniferBa!tett. ',
I Nelsoo.
·&lt; · · .. ;i;1J&gt;crieDUIIendanu aWitidl 'went
Darci Wolf received the $6,000 1D Joey Casto, Kip 0rueat'1', Aaron
Rio Grande Honors Scholarship HlQ'per, Joseph Heck, Denise
and the Central Trust Scbolanhip Shenefield, Loraine Oller, Darci
of $900, and Kristin Slawter Wolfe, and Tjlinmy Qu\lCD. A flag
received a University of Akron was awarded to Resa.Harris, the
'Schol~!f along with a $200 outstanding government student.
Meigs
Teachers Association
AWARDED CERTIFICATES
scholarship. The $125 Student
Students who excelled in their
Council Scholarship went to Jen- respective classes were presented
nifer Taylor.
certificates. They included the folAmy Rouse was presented !he lowing students:
$550 Louise Morhart Grant, Pam
Wort Study: Mary Mortnn.
Haggy·a $900 Central Trust ScholEnglish: Barbara Anderson,
arship, Amy Wagner, the Holzer Tara Gerlach, Heather Daven~.
Science Award of $200, James juniors, Lori Burnam, Dann1elle
Howerton and Resa Harris, the Crow, Jason Witherell, freshman,
McDonald's Entrepreneur Scholar- and Miisy Nelson Aaron Sheets
ships of $1~ C¥h, an~ Missy Nel- Kristen Slawter, J~nifer Taylor:
so!'• an Oh10 Umverslly .schol.ar- · Amy .Wagner, Amy Warth, Darci
sh1p of $800 and the Me1gs H1gh· Wolf seniors and Debbie Alkire
School Faculty Scholarship of Rusty Tripp: Michelle Young:
·$250.
.
.
. .
Kevin Lambert, sophomores.
The Hocking Techmcal Prine!·
Drama: Missy Nelson Aaron
pal's Award went to Ken Va~ Sheets,JenniferTaylor,AniyWagMat~e, $300, and Randy Cor~1
ncr, Amy Warth, Darci Wolfe,
rece1ved a $225 Student Council Kristen Slawter, Debbie Alkire,
Schol!!fShiP..
Kevin Lambert, Rusty Triplett,
Plul Harrison was present at the Michelle Young, Kelly Smith,
assembly 10 present five scholar- • Steve Martin, Susan Houchins,
ships from the Rodney Paul Harri- Aaron Sheets, MicheUe Malhotra,
son Memorial Scholarship Fund. . and Sean Waltnn.
Receiving $500 scholarships were
Amy Warlh, Amy Wagner, D!lrei
Wolfe, and Jennifer Taylor.·A $250
scholarship went to Richard Pey-

Yearboo~ : Jen~tfer T~ylor,

Wolfe, with Jim Cilpenter, Chase
yearbook ediiOr, Miranda Nichol- Cleland Dave Lester Tracy Eblin
son , Mary Compston, Kathy and Ed!ia Hensley as 'the high perWilliams, Stephanie Haggy, formers, Carolyn Fitzpatrick as the
St~phanie Price, Connie Sauters, l1lp student, and Edna Hensley as
Michelle Young, Jason Dowell, the Student of !he Year.
Ronald Vance, Allison Gannaway,
OWA: Jill Blake student of the
. an~ Misty Butcher.
year.
'
Typing: All A's, Mary Comp- · Nursing Assistant: Lorri Baker,
ston, Verna Compston, Miranda Kelly Johnson, Tracy Ellis, and
Nicholson, Beth Ann Roush, Tara Humphreys.
Michelle Young, .Carrie Bartels,
Chemistry: Barbara Anderson,
Wendy Clark, Kelly Doidge, Ran- Frank Blake, Heather Davenpon,
dall Johns!Dn, Katrma Turner, and Tara Gerlach · Emma Lee Joe
&lt;;ourtney Midkiff, personal typing; ' McElroy, Bo'bby Vance.' and
and Kim Fetty, Lorena Oiler, Lucy Robby w alt.
Winebrenner, Heather Pauley, TypQuiz
Awards were preing I.
sented to Aaron Sheets, Lucy
Spanish Awards: Tricia Baer Winebrenner, Jamey Little, Randy
and Chrissy Weaver.
Coni, seniors: Barbaric Anderson,
French: Kathy Willian1son.
Ryan Cowan, Stacey r;&gt;ullCI!I, Tllll
·Industrial Arts: Ken Van M$1re, Gerlach, Joe McElroy, Roblly
NJII'It avtnae: IDaVid .a.dman, Wyatt, ~uniors; ,Randall Johnston
mechanicallhwing, Olarles King, and Alison Gannaway, sophosmall ellgine, Jeff Tracy, mechan- mores,andMattCiark,freshman.
ics, Tony King, Paul Chadwell,
Jack Stanley, Wood Tech I; Matt
Cook, Jay Cremeans, Charles King,
Wood Tech 2, and Matt Cook, and
Steve Reitmire, carpentry.
American History: Tara Gerlach, cop student; Elizabeth Downie, Gavin Logan, Rusty Triplett,
Courtney Midkiff, Randall Johnstun, Robby Wyatt, Frank Blake,
Barbara Anderson, Chrissy
Weaver, Tim Baker, Kim Hanning,
Lorena Oiler, Kevin Lambert, ahd
Tricia Baer, all A's.
Math: Dlm::i Wolfe.
Science: Jennifer Taylor.
.
Ele~entary Algebra:. Demse
Shenefreld, Lorena 011er, and
Tam".IY Queen.
_Sc•ence: S~on Spaun, Jason
Wuherell. Lome Burnam, Dannielle Crow, M~lo White, Jack
Stanley,JasonMiller,MattClark.
Alegebra: Lori Burnam, Jason
With~ll. ,
.
DII'CCtor s Award (Chorr): Holly
Williams and Michelle Young.
DECA: Mike Cleland, Jason
Yeauger, Amy Mi~ht, and Catina

IOn.

The Parker Long Memorial
Scholarship was presented 10 Resa
Harris.
The Bedford Township Scholarships were awarded to Terry
Reuter, Dave Frymyer, Lori Hayes,
and Tim Hall, $250 each, and Amy
Wagner and Randy Corsi, $7SO
C¥h.

RECOGNIZED

leadenlti .

c.,,,,

"HEAVY DIZZY"
FIIDAY, MAY 24
10 PM·2 AM
•t.oo cova CIAIGI
THE

Tini Hall; secood row, Lori Hayes, Resa Harris,
Ken Van Metre, David Frytayer, Jamel Howerton; tltlrd row, Amy Warth, Kristen Slawler,
Duel Wolle, and Richard Peyton, and fourtlt
row, Jennifer Tayll!r, Randy Corsi, and Am:t;
Wagaer.
•
·

SCHOLARSIDP WINNERS • Memllers or
the Meip Higlt Scltool 1991 graduatioa clus
. presented scholarships at Wednesday's nards
. assembly were lel'l to rlghl, .fronl, Pam Baggy,
Amy R,ouse, Maurlsa Nelson, Aaron Slteets and

The outstanding junior girl and
boy selected to receive the Dan. forlh Awards were Barbara Anderson and Robby Wyatt. The two
received !he "I Dare You Leadershio" Award which is given in
recognition of personal integrity,
bala(HWI living, and motivation for

:

/11

· . .Thursday,
Mey 23,
1991
..
.

younger~benofthefamily.

said Jeff, who has his fust full-time
Indy-c., ride this season llld has
finished in the cop lO in all three of
his career starts.
Michael Said that can be a help
- or a hindrance- when a career
decision is made.
"I dtink you can look a it one
In his Indy 500 Lola racer,
.
of two ways. You ~an either get
sick of it or you want more. I think,
between the three of liS, we wanted
mc;,c," he said.
a lot
of Last
time·m an r::=~rrt
· effort
10
· have Jeff race here, althoualt he
By HANK LOWENKRON
He Stlllds 10 pick up a lot more hadn't sat in an Indy car until parAP Sports Writer
. Monday night when the pune is ticipating in the U.S. Aum Club's
INDIANAPOUS (AP) - Mike divided at !he traditional Victnry rookie orientation program in
.
Groff, the fBSieSt rookie ever in the Dinner. The lowest payoff from a April. '
"I didn't know what to really
fastest Indianapolis 500 starting record purse of $6,325,803 last
field, likes the reliability of the ~was $108,02110 last·plac:e fin- expect," said Jeff, a veteran of five
Cosworlh engine that powers his rsher Stan Fox; the highest was seasons of minor league openLola chassis.
$1,090,940 for winner Arie wheel competition, including the
American Racing Series, Super
" We haven't blown a motor. Luyendyk.
·
V
ees llld FCilllula Atlantic.
.
'.The Chevrolets bave and the
The 35-year-old Ribbs made it
He qualified here last year at
Buicks cenainly have,'' Groff said into the race in the final hour of
Tuesday. "We k.now we're not time trials - having overcome a 210.268 mph, but was bumped in
going 10 outrun them. We just have series of engine problems and a the final hour of time trials.
to keep our car running, not be limited budget.
"I've certainly used that experi·
super conservative, but conserva"It was so close 10 not happen- ence ID my advantage !his ~ .' '
. live and see how things unfold"
ing t,hat I still fmd it hard m realize he said. '"I came out here wtlh my
Groff is one of five rookies in an it's happened," said Ribbs, busy eyes wide open because I knew
historic Indy field and is one of Tuesday trying to attract some what 10 expecL"
three who qualified last year but sponsors. "Indy is the bit 1pple.
His family was there 10 provide
were bumped by cars which com- There's no bigger'sporting eYCIIt in CIICOil1'8gement last May.
pleted their l 0-mile qualification the universe, and when )'0_11 come
":riley were very supportive.
run quicker once the field was full. here, qualifyinJ is a big cJtaUenge.
They mid me, 'Just get 'em next
"When you come here and
"I felt good about it because the year. You'll be stronger next
spend an entire monlh, give every car felt good. If the car is good, it's year."' he said
ounce of sweat and effon and don't like going out there and diiving tn
Sometimes, however, the family
make the race, I've never had a let- !he grocery store."
can be 100 helpful. ,
down like that," Groff said. "It
"There were a couple of sugThe 23-year-old Lazier is the
was an empty feeling and one I youngest driver in the race. His gestions that I made 19 him on a
don't ever want to experience father, Bob, finished 19th in his setup
(last year) that got. him iniO
'
again.''
·
only Indy race in 1981 when ·he
The other rookies have distinc• was the oldest rookie stantr.
til)ns of thejr own.
"Last year, I left qualifying .00
WiUy T. Ribbs is the first black had a difficult summer trying to
to qualify, Hiro Matsushita is the cope with it," said Lazier, who
first Japanese to make the field, skipped graduation ceremonies at
and Jeff Andretti and Buddy Lazier C~ College in BostQn last year
have family history as sccoad-gen- ID drive at Indy.
eration Indy drivers.
"Last year I was a studenL This
Groff,.who will stan on tbe out. year I'm a race driver."
-side of the sixth row,
no Wild
Seven odie~' rookie hopefuls arc
"dash to the front wlien the race missing this year's race for a vari"begins.
ety of reasons - lack of experi·'It's a 500-mile lliCC and some- ence, crashes or just plain too slow. ·
one who tries 10 win it 100 earlf is
Says 27-year-old Jeff Andretti,
~s~y out esrly," he sai4. "I JI!SI one of four Andrettis in the field:
wanttn go out, gradually move u~ "I know the place. I know ihc II'BCk
. positions and be there for lhe end.' and know the race car and I'm
The 29-year-old Groff, who set coming back wilh firSt-rate equipa rookie qualifying record of ment. It's all up to date, a new
219.015 mph, picked up $2,500 for engine. It's a whole different ballbeing the quickest rookie qualifier ~ for me this year.''
in a field that averages 218.590.

- CONCORD,

The Daily jSentinel

'

M~ions were presented ID
Aaron Sheets and Jennifer Taylor,
selected as the outstanding scholar
athletes in the senior class. The
best of the senior class awards went
10 Aaron Sheets, Kristen Slawter,
and Jennifer TaylOr, while the outstanding senior boy and girl award
went 10 Jennifer taylor and Ken
Van Matte.

Pendonl and Keyrlng designs of "6EST FRIENDS"
and of "MIZPAH~ All are handsomely gltt boxed and
all have the look and feel of 14K gold. This Is quality
folhlon jewelry by GRANADA" with a Llfeflme Gudrantee:
Friendship Is priceless but tpese tokens. $26.50 each . .
VIsit us for all your fine jewelry needs.

News brief

END OF SEASON

molher-daughter banquet was held
CLEARANCE SALE
recently. The theme was "Showers
of Blessing."
ALl PLATS OF
Derek Stump had the dinner
BEDDING PLAN1'S
. prayer and lhe men of !he church
a.,.. 16.50
NOW S450
served the banqueL
.
1
0
ItCH
A program was conducted following the dinner at which ~!ita
HANGING IASim
Stumpgavethe..welcome. ·
... 15.75-16.75-17.75
. . ~~.songs, Showers of ~lessNow$450
mgs, I~ My ~~~~gsa
12 INCH FUNS
Mel2dy and Sunsh1.ne ~~ My
Soul .w~ sung by alli!Je ladies. · log. 19.95
NOW $650
A spectal by Bonme Warner,
4 INCH MUllS &amp; .
Madeh~e Painter, Karlita Stump, .
Paula P1cke~s and Evel~n Wood.
GDANIUMS
Several special presentauons were
.... $1.00
NOW
-~~
also made.
•
"WbDe
Suppllell
Lut"
Guest speaker for the ev.enmg
Opott .... thrv S.t. 9 __ , , .
was Mrs. Ruth .S.eevers, w1fe of
CIDHII Sia.fi _.
Dar
Don Seevers, mmiSter o~ th~ Walnut Street Church of Christ m Bel·
MuiiiMtrtl's GrMnhouse
'
SYRACUSE, OHIO
pre.
· .
",
992·11771
The cresmg song .was I. II Be a
Sunbeam and Karltta Stump had
" " - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -....
-

50C

•••lal

GOOD SELECTION OF
MEN'S AND WOMEN'S
WEARING APPAREL
"

FOR THE MEN

•Shirts
•Pants
•Suits
•Sport Coats
and Blazers
•Jackets
•Levi's Denims
•Dress e~nd Casual
Straw Hats
•Neckties
•Long and
Short PJ's
•Interwoven Socks
•Work Uniforms
•Bib Overalls

Tuxedo Rentals
_Now At
Reduced Prices

FOR THE
WOMEN

.,.

•Sportswear by
Catalina and Janhen

•Knit Tops
·•Shorts
•Skirts .
•Swimwear by

•Levi' s Bendover
Slacks IN NEw coLoRs
•Ladies Blouses
and Shells
•Leather
Hand Bags
•Ladies Jackets
and Coats
by london Fog

•Dresses
~

BAHR CLOTHIERS
MIDDLEPORT
OPEN MONDAY.SATURDAY 9: 30·5: 00

~~= ~-:- 8C«&lt;nning

•

.

CataHna, Jantzen, Castaway
and Rose Marie Reid

'

In tropical rain foresll, home to
ltalf of Earth's plant and anilnal
speciN, 60 acres a mjnure n
being denuded- a qlllller o( them
lo the --toothed bile o f -

.,p

team

Bradford Church of
Christ
banquet held
The Bradford Church of Christ

The annual Harrisonville Ele·
menrary Academic Quiz !)owl was
held recently with students io
~~ two, four and six tepresentmg Rutland, Salem Center and
· ~sonville Jllementaries p3rtici;
patmg.
· •.
The students responded ID ques~
lions based on the courses of study
in. the areas of !&amp;"guag_e arts, math,
SCICIICC and social studies.
:
· Kitty Hazier, Meigs Count;r
Schools Gift and Talented Coordinator, asked the qlfestions an4
judges for the event were John
Costanzo, elementary superviso~
Lynn Bookman, second grade
teacher at Harrisonville; Mary
O'Brien, fourlh grade teacher at
SaJ~m Center; Julie Randolphj
sixlh grade teacher at Rutland.. •
· S;dem Center Elementary stlk
dents of Mrs. Sandra Walker won
the sixth grade competition. Rutland Elementary students of Mrs.
Carol Evans won the fourlh gridc
competition. Hanisonville Elemen;
tarY students of Mrs. Lynn Book•
man won the second grade competition. Rutland Elementary won the
overall co.npetition.
The event was attended and
received by educators. students,
parents and community members
representing all participating
schools.
••

•

�The

Sentinel

· 111u,.day, May 23, 1991

Community calendar

•

.

·

,

Pomeroy !cldleport. Ohio

.

SumrMr season starts this weekend

00

QuilleD at 949-1A38 from 8 Lm. 10
4 p.m. ~ 949-2695 lifter S p.m., ~

NBW YOllK- M tbe I U - nrarion IC8DI ticb off this ·
holiday wllllkend, the lravel indumy ia hoping 10 &amp;bake off the '
etr.ectl ~ warlnd-sioa IIICI aevhe tbe~aslllllrilt lrlde.
Somo ln tho "'l'ioen say tbat whileiilnes lbouldn't keep
peop1o fJan ~ 11_1er may ~ less IUid plan shorter trips, .
visilinJ family and rricnda I. . . . . of ..... touriJt lllriCtionJ.
More lbail 24 million Anlcnt:.., llleut 10 percent of tbe populali.on. 11e expoc&amp;ed to cmel over tbe Memorill Day holiday. tbe .
traditi01111118rt of tbe summer vacation seaaon.
· ·
' · Moll will ~el by IIIlO, lli4l ~ for lbe. Data Cenrm, a
noo-profit uavehesearch apx:y bued in Washington, D.C. tbat ·
based its pmlictions on a nalional telephone survey of l.SOO aduiL~

Pam Diddle II 949-2749.
POMEROY • The Pomeroy

Higb Sc:bool Claa of 1941 will eel·

THURSDAY
Cbrale ill SOib llllli--r witb a
RACINE · The Southern Local get-togelbet 011 Saturdly from 1-4
Board of Education will meet p.m. at tbe Pomeroy Senior Citi·
Thursday at 7 p.m. at the high . zens Cenrm. All class members are
school. ·
. urged 10 attml.

'

l

POMEROY · The Tuppers
LONG BOTTOM • The
; Riverview Garden Club will meet Plains VFW Post No. 9053 will
~ Thursday at 8 p.m. at tbe home of
bost I membenhip drive II~
.Delores Frank. Mace! Barton will · in l'tlmllnJy llld in Racine on 'Satur;ipeak on "Roses.w
day. Thole inleleSled in becoming
a members sbould bring necessuy
-; : POMEROY • The Preceptor proof of eligibility.- Keanetb Hag&gt;beta Beta Chapcer, Bell Sigma Phi ger is tbe COIIliiUIIIder.
;:saronty will meet Thursday 116:30
•!p.m. at tbe home of Joan Corder,
POMEROY - Pomeroy Alumni
: •297 Wright Slnlet in Ponaoy for a Associllion's Banquet IJid Danc:e.
*:picnic.
will be held in the Meigs High
.
School Cafeteria on Saturday at
;! PORlUND • Revival witb Sis- 6:30p.m.
• : rm Shirley Leala', Coltanbus, at lbe
:-suversville ww of Faitb Church,
RUTLAND • The Rutland
:; :Bald Knob-Stiversville Road in alumni dinner will be held at tbe
&gt;;Portland will be held Thursday Rlllland Civic Cenrer on Saturday
;:;t~rough Saturday at 7:30 p.m.
at 6:30p.m.

'

..

:·

~ ~ rugbdy.

•

~ ; BRADBURY • The Meigs
:·: County Women's Fellowship will
• •meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at lbe
:-: Bradford Church of Christ. Ann
~.: L8mbert and Linda Bates will be
~ · demonsttating tbe making of falxic
;. ,fans. The public is invited to
r
,· . auend.

..
~:

POMEROY • George and Char: :lotte Dixon, evangelists and
· •singers, will be in revival at tbe
: :Pomeroy Chun:h of tbe Nazareue
:: :tonight tbrough Sunday witb ser·
·:·vices at 7 p.m. nightly and 10:45
:- :a.m. IUid 6 p.m. on Sunday. Pastor
·: 'Glen McClung invites lbe public.
•.'

.

'• .

'

FRIDAY
. - MIDDLEPORT • The Middle·
port High School Class of 1941
will have a JliWIY on Saturda)' Ill 1
p.m. at the old American Legion
• · hall. All class members are urged
•• - 10 anend and all alumni are inviled.
•.

POMEROY • The Pomeroy
.&gt; Senior Citizens Dance Club will
:- have a dance on Friday from 8-11
·: p.m. witb music by tbe Happy Hoi- •
: low Boys of Atbens. Those attend·
: ·ing are to bring s'\a~k~ f~r the
• snack table. The public 1s mvned. ·
,

POMEROY ·The Pomeroy Ele·
mentary PTO is sponsoring field
day on Friday at tbe Meigs FOOiball
f"JC!d. Anyone interested in assisting should contact Susie Abbott at
992-6114 or the school at 9922110. Rain date will be Tuesday,
May28.

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TUPPERS PLAINS • There Wi/1
be a round and sq~ dance on
Friday from 8-11:30 p.m. at the
Tu~ Plains VFW Building restunng Case of Country Band wi~
Alvin Chutes oo tbe fiddle. Roome
Wood will be lbe caller.

Women in History Month
contest winners announced

zoo vtsrrs • Tile Col•bas Z!IO Docent, Betty GoodwiD, ·
Over 7 S people attended t.he place, Rachael Pangia. Jacque IUid
caurteay JIICk Hanna, 'ffllted the resldeats of Oyerbrooll Cater
montbly meeting of the Middle- kachael ate students at Rejoicing
reeeatly wltll RYeral small ••lm•ls Tbe 1011 normaUy doelllOt
portiPomeroy Brlneh of American Life SchooL
trl\lel OY• 50 llilelaw-.c::iuer, at the reqlllal or ROICO R&amp;
Association of University Women.
In tbe fifth and sixtb grade essay
RUTLAND • There will be a March was designated as Women
bart aDd Terry Stot11,
ty Director, Huaa aathorlled ~
men's class D and E softllalltour· in History Month. and reci ien11 of categ~ winners included: Letart
trill.
Tiley
b
.
fOIIIbt
•lltolnP::lldnres
ud 100 JIOIIIeal for tile
nament at tbe Rutland F'JCld oo Sat· school and c.ounty awar~ in tbe Elementary. 1st place. Ryan N~~.
reildeats.
Pletured
are
Betty
,.w,
Columbus
Zoo ._nt, aad
2nd place Renee Turley, 3rd place
unlay and
Cost b entry is )l()Sia' and essay contests sponsored Kimberly Roush. Winners from
Rollert Sbenrla, 0Yerbrook Center resident, who is lloldlag
$65 llld two
• For mme inforby AAUW were m:ogriized.
Turbo, the Aagora rabbit.
Chesler Elementary wm: 1st place,
mation contact Rick Stewart at
This year tbe contest was open Betbany Cooke, 2nd place April
992-6365 ~AI Evans at 992-5845. to all students ~ 3-8 in Mei$9 · Foreman
and 3rd place Stefanic
County. 45 entnes were received m Bearhs. Receiving recoplition from ·
RUTLAND - There will be a tbe poster contest and tbere were
hymn sing sponsored by tbe Rut- 52 entries in the essay contest. Pomeroy Elementary were 1st ·· The Heath United Methodist ing part in lbe pugram were Laura
land Christian FeUowship on Satur· Topics ranged from Betsy Ross, place winner, Taryn Doidge, 2nd Church of Middleport held its and Megan Harrison, Jessica Cale. '
day at 7 p.m. featuring The Narrow Joan of Arc liJid Florence Nighten- place, Tara Grueser IUid 3rd place, mother-daughter banquet in the Donna Jenkins, Pauline Horton,
Way and Chosen. Rev. Robert E. gale to Harrit:~ Tubman and Hellen Cheryl Jewell. Tuppers Plains win· cbun:h dining room recen.dy.
Emma Clatworthy, Clara Criswell
ners were 1st place, Vlcllli Adams,
Musser invites tbe public. .
The theme was "I Remember llld Beuy Fultz.
Keller.
:.
2nd place, 1oey Weeks, and 3rd
Mama.w
Rece1ving special recosnition
First through third places at place Misty L)'OilS.
LOTTRIDGE • Country Music each school received a certifiCate
The dining room was decorated and flowers were Clara Criswell,
County winners in this category
Night at tbe Lotlridge Community and first IJid second plal:e winners
in
piolt, white and lavender witb Mary WJSe, Grace Johnson, Donna '
Center will be held Saturday from in each grade •gory at the coqn- were first place Ryan Norris and cutout silhouettes and fans.
Byer, Jesnne BJ1Jdblll}'. Kathleell
6 P.·m· 10 midnighL Refreshments ty level received a bamed certifi. second place, Taryn Doidge.
' Paisy Hepburn, San Francisco, Scott, Cathy Lentes, BeUy Fultz,
w11l be served and tbe public is cate and rosette.
~
In tbe seventh and eightb grade Calif., was the guest speaker. Sbe Jane Ryan, Carol McCullough.
invited 10 auend.
Poster winners were as follows: category county and school win- is a lectura' throughout tbe United
Decorations were by Pat Phil·
Grades 3-4 Rejoicing Life, 1st ners were from Southern Junior States and ~· She has sevend soo, Betty Fultz, Scoaie Hayes and
SUNDAy
place Candace Werry-, 2nd place High School. Receiving first place published wntings including Jeanne Bi'Bdbury. H.,..es were
•
was Jennifer Lawrence. Second numerous books and bible study Nancy Olle and Scollic Hayes.
.BAS HAN • Guy ~allory of ~:~~=;;~~ ~4J place was awarded 10 Cass Cleland courses.
Tbe benediction was by Rev. '
~mter qan1en. Fla. will hold spe- . grade category from Letart Ele- and tbird place wiMer was Grant
The welcome and grace were Frank Smith.
given by_Twila ChildL Olhers tak·
ciai semc:es oo S~y at tbe Red mentary were I st place Dustin Circle.
Brusboad CS~h of Christill
.._ g"eldBashanat
lO . Miller,, 2nd J!lace•!aney Hili and
R • emces w ""
3rd place JCSSJCa Alley.
Lm. and 6 p.m.
County winners in tbe third and
RACINE • The Racine Volun- fourth grade cli~gory were Can·
•
teer Fire Department will huve a dace Werry receiving first place
'
chicken barlJecue on Sunday at the and Dustin Miller receiving second
fuc station beginning at 11 a.m. P~·tbe fifth and sixtb grade cate·
Homemade ice cream will be sold.
gory winners were: TuppC:n Plains,
RACINE· The Racine Ameri· lst place, Misty Lyons, 2nd place,
.
Lamar $andid~. 3rd place, Shaun
can Legion Post 602 will bold Long. Rejoitilig Life Schobl fust
Memorial Day 'services on Sunday place winner was Tara Beth Davis.
at 1 p.m. at tbe Browning Ceme~ery Winners from Chester Elementary
at Portland and at lhe Letart Falls
2 d
Cemetery at 3 p.m. Members are 10 were 1st place Keili Bailey, n
be at lbe hall by noon.
plac.e, Bethany Cooke and 3rd
place Stefanic Bearbs.
Fifth and sixth grade county
POMEROY · A 12-step A.A. winners•were first place Kelly Baimeeting will begin Sunday at 7 ley llld second place Misty L)'OilS.
p.m. at tbe JTPA office, 117 West
In tbe essay competition winSecond S!reet in Pomeroy. ·
ners both at tbe county and school
MONDAY
level for 3rd and 4th grade were
BURLINGHAM • The Bedford first placeJacque 1il!l' and seconA
Community will be selling sand'
wiches, plate lunches and other
Starting At $499
foods sucb as homellllde pies and
breads on MemOOal Day, Monday,
from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. at the
Burlingham Modern Woodmen
Hall
.
Rtg. 1759.00
SAlE$399°0

or

With

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Revival

: · George and &lt;;harlotte. Dixo~.
· evangelists and smgers, will be 10
: revival at tbe Pomeroy Church of
· tbe Nazarene tonigbt through Sun, day witb services at 7 p.m. nightly
·: and 10:45 Lm. and 6 p.m. on Sun·
: day. Pastor Glen ~cCiung invites
'.tbe public.
Memorial Day servke
The Racine American Legion
Post 602 will hold Memorial Day
ICr'lices on Sunday at 1 p.m. at tbe
Browning Cemetery at Portland
llld at tbe Letart Falls Cemetery at
3 p.m. Members are to be at the
: hall by DOOIL

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Offices to close
Planned Parenthood of Soutbeast Ohio Patient Services offices
will be closed Monday in observance of Memorial Day. Offices
will reopen Tuesday at 9:30 Lm.

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• VeteraDI Service C0111millioD to
meet
The Meigs County Veterans
; Service Commission will meet
' Tuelday at 7:30 p.m. in tbe Yeler·
': ans Service office in Pomeroy.
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MeetlD&amp;to be beld
:
A lZ-atep A.A. meetiag will .
: begin Sunday 117
tbe Jll';A
· office, 117 Well
Stteel m
Pomeroy.
.

t:;.:

· lloiiDd aad Square daDft
There will be a round and
squate dance on Friday from 8Jl:.30 p.m. at tbe Tuppen Plains
VFW Building feawrinl C.. or
Country Bllld with Alvin Chutes

All with dtluxe innerspring

on tbe fiddle. Ronnie Wood will be
!be caller.
Couatry music aigllt
Country Music Night at tbe Lot·
tridge Commuaity Center will be
held Sllllliday from 6 v..m. to midnight. Refreshments Will be served
and lbe public is invited 10 attend.

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S

•Queen Set of
Bedding

Statting At $39900

OUTSTANDING • Nick
Triplett, son
Rick and Judy
Triplett or Raven, Va., and
grancllon or Leon aDd Pit McK·
nigllt Ill Pomeroy, recelltly lltrack
out 18 llatters ill a 110-bltter abut·
out Hltle leque buelld game in
Raven. Triplett alllo lilt a bOIIIe·
rua In the top the slxlh laDing.
Triplett's team, The Tigers, won
the game agalut the llldlaus 6.0.

or

matt.~m=ses~-~~~~~~j
,._.

Stattlalg At

$S900

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PAnO GROUP

I
I

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•

.:..'119.00 s

SAlE S8900

•SoHcl Oak Magazine lamp Table
.... •m.oo
SAlE S12980

;.

•S PIECE DilliNG GIO..
Stt lnclullts w· Umbrlla ,...... 4
Strap CIMIIn..

.... •Muo

SAlE

j(

VI•

Malttrcard
Dltcaver

01 USE OUI EASY
c•DIT TERMS.

Thinl &amp; Olive

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446-3045

In loving memory

DMier. d8Ughter,
Glan... Hunt •""

· 1011·111-lilw, Richard
· Hunt granclclhHdran:

Bmy Jo RoH •

Andy, fllcttl• Hunt.

Keith Hunt,
K1yHunt.
H- ,_,, In • pl8ce
with hie Heavanty
FIJI her.
Chrllt.

frurls • Vegtltabl•

59 F01 S.te or Tr•de

.

•

GROOM
ROOM

c-..l•te Grooml..

•LIGHT HAULING

For All lflllls
EIILEE .INAI· .
o.- &amp;Opantw

•FIREWOOD ·

llll SLACK
992-2269

614-992-6120

=c=

Ott. . wll be -eel It
the - · ol ........ v.
Fultz. 11 11-i W. . Mlln
ltftltt. , . , . . ,. untl
friday, Mey 24 It 10:00
p.m. for tilt .... olthe

"' ,......

::.-:...-:.= ::'"...':~

10
•• partalnlng
- ...·
tlon
ol the INII.""'IIDt
thlin tlw deyt prior ta the

Flollle AllnatnH1h reel

-Mttor_....

eltate lltualed at ., 2
a- ••-· Midpan, Ohio. The "'
It I z -.,, 31

... heating.
large lot.

•r

•Ramodeilng and
Home Rtjlllra
•Roofing
allding
•Painting

110 JOI TOO $1ALL

FlEE ESTIIATES

c•AI

COISIIUcnON

991..641• '
691·6164
,

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.--------t
IISSIU I 1110
COfiSIIUC1IOI ·

ec a

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UNDA'S
PAINTING

lwtwltr • hhrler ·

,_IS1IIA11S
TaiJt tht pllin out of
,altltiJII.
lll••ltfwy...

YilT IIASOIAIU

IIAVIIIfi-US
16141tiS·4110
4-23-1 mo.

pd.

201 N. Sic... Str•l

...urotr, OliO 4JJ.O
Olflct 614-99!-2116
lltiMI 614-t92-16t2

.....

eVINYUIDI~

•ALUMINUM II!)INa

'•ILOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SID.G CO.

...........

''FI'M Eltlmatel''

... 949·1101
., .......,.Jtl~

Gutter CIHnlng
Pelntlng
' FREE ESTIMATES

667-6179

........

211· ... s....

. H1nd Tufting
Cuatam 01'81111
S6YeM'I£l,...._ee

.....

lapalr, Trophies,

614·991·1311

We .., What We Do.
W.DoWioltWIIIy.

10-lt:IIIO.

SPEEDY VAC
Quality
Sweeper
Repair
698-6591

~~

JOHN I. IIAFOID
111101 8111111' •
CA.... QIA.IS

... 111 PLOOil

APPALACHIAN
WAID
HAULING

can

eR-Rbto fllllell
eQuellty Wortt
•Fr.. IIIIIIMtft

TliiM

.

•High Olou on Tile
Floor Flnloh

••uwn. o..·
lt. I, lotiMII, OH.

141·1411

3-14-'11-lfll

,

BIWAII'S
GUNS I SUPPLIIS
OIUt' •SIU 11101

POOLS,
CISTEINS, ETC.

TuNday lhru la1urday

1.625 Gll.-S3S.S4S
It, I, Ita 71-A
II:JLMD,, ,
OliO 4177S·t6U
614-742-H04

...........

WE DO

OPEN
10:00 am-1:00pm ·

742-2421

2'11MI.ovt114t

U..ltl.

5-lf.11-lfl.

ROOFING

AND .IYDYIIIIG INDR.AIH .

TROMM BUILDERS

FIBimMAYIS

•20 Y11ra lbpeltonce
•Duality Homta and

CUitom R•mocllllng

.742·2311
11122/lflo

JUDGI

Common,.._ Cauo1.

MtJI.

,_Divlalon

'*"'" ....

Malga

Ill 23 1to

UCCIIDADC

fllTJI

Cca~nty, O~ID

J&amp;&amp;

l'riSUUftON
'
eVIftwlll 'I 1
efl~t

IROS.
EXCAVAtiNG

IUu.DOIIR tnd

IACKHOI WORK.
HOMIInQ,

:::=n

LANDCLIARINCJ.

WATIR tnd I!WER
UNEI

Du.1IUCIS

•Remodlling and
Hbme R....lra

eflootinl
•lltllna

ePelntlng

110 JOI100 sruu.
FM11111UTIS

CIIB

.......

CWRIUCIIOI
..1..... ...

J-•

lllllcwlnt Lord.

'11-tlft

•••

..

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IIHkll
• COiilmqtiiS • IIAT PUMPS 8ltll
FUINAGS FOI MOKE &amp; IM*IIWIIE HOMES

••••••• • ••• • • • ••••••••••••••••••••

. . . 110"1

.... I
En 'S .,
c.....

l&amp;caiMO.Wfn ldtlll.._.,.lt.141
(614t ...., .......

I

eC1rget H11 Felt Dry

r'

Downapouta

915·4473

'' Mllill,.,

UPHOLSTDY

4·21·11 . I mo. pd.

ltOswiAY

Guttera

•tt 'ltll

ACADmiC
AWAIDS
GOLF USSONS
6 roa .sss
CUSTOM GOLF ·
CWIS

4-1-'90-1-

IIW- IIPAII

11
I llrl

"At lta•n ..fl Prlas"
PH. 949·1101
or 111: 949·1160
' ~y .or ~igllt
NO SUNDAY CAllS
1 . .

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IOOFING

•••a J l!
s- &amp; c
•-.

-llooftol

' . 992-621

hw. . LWrlteMI

1111

1
:ate

frM

Plumbing

V. C. YOUNG Ill

ROIERT I . lUCK

----·-badroom ....._, 1

~olliiwled

HI-SUS

CUSTOM IIILT
HOMES &amp; GAIAGES

-·--· ..-

· - ....
,-con--ole

l'alllliot
(FREE EITIMATEI)

e.t:t-10-lflo

Uewln ....... DIOIUJd.
UTATI NO. Hlll2- Fl·
nil .,d Dlett..,_ Acaount
ol Rlohanl aa.y, e-tor ·
olthe ~- o1 Jam lllhl.

o1
'"'· at - w111o11
t1-J.....
..... _...,.
be
oonlkllred and _........
10 dar until flnallr
ol.

w.

&amp;II'S':..'GANCI
SIIYICI

-0--

-floornAddltlone

USED IAUOAD nES

POIIIII'ty,

Ml .,d Dlett..,_ Aocount
o1 Doi1e J - Neeee, Exeoutrla olh . _ o l D -

'-Y

AU IIIIlS
. . . It .. Or

BISSELL
BUILDERS

CARPENTER SERVICE

SHIUI &amp; TilE
TIIMand
IEMOYAL

•

O.nud.
Unllu
eaCtlllflOna IN

YOUNG'S

•ciOWAYI
OYII UPAII

1/7/'11'1-

.........
EITATE NO. 241710- .fl.

PubliC Notlct ·

FOR.IALI

B•dly miiMd by
wife. Dorio M.

1'
••••

lOUIS
DAI.l
910 5
FIIDAI
910.

992~6434

After S D.m.

..,.....r ..........

aald Court on 11ta lth

:
'·

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,.••

•Free Parking
•Free Delivery

~UALITJ

:r :.-:·..:=:.,-...::: .......
II ' 1a1

REV. GLEN 0.
DEETER .
Ht left Ul MIIY 23,
1988, 3 yeera •go.

•1

S$9900

S1m WHITE

EITATE NO. 21042 .:_
c - Aooount o1
ltim1d1tt11 H. An fl eDit,
luaaueor-TrultM' of the
True! C - Uncltrthe Will
ol Harrlo Marte lmllh, 0.

_,.

Table

~9.*tfrby

"*''
o.auud.

,.

•Select Group of Glast, llack &amp; lrau

PIOPBSIONAL
SUNROOF
INSTAWnON
Contact

by tlcJl '"Ditlt"f

E-•

,.,.

•
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81 Home Improvement •
82 ·· Plumblf!g a He•W.u
83 E~••ting
84 Elec:uiclla A•lngllf'Mhon
85 Gun••• Hauliny ·
86 Mobtle Home A• pair
87 Upholsterv

/1/'l111mo.

SIGNS

ESTATE NO. 241111 - FIMI •d Dl•llut.... Aocollltl
ol Phyllo ...rh.. - ol the
ol Rolin Dill,
D1
nd. .
·
UTATE NO. 21a111 Twelfth c......t A-unt o1
a.n.rtl V. Fulll. TN...e ol
llta TN It CI'Miecl bw I - 10
ol the Lut Will .,d T-·
ol Ander1011l. Klllllla,

FordT-1 II

.•.
•,·
••

51

.,

St:fVIC~S

Building Suppli•
Pe11 for lela
Muticallnnrumeru s

NIIWIN,OIIO

CIIAtlil&amp;

M. Dannll, a...,.
. . , · of Denlel LH luak.

callatarttl:

.•'

79 CMmpera • Motor tton1n

Mile, Mtfchandite

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

4-11-1-...

v-

PUaliC NOTICE
NOTICE Ia hereby giVen
that on llturrlly, M" 211 .
1111 , 11 10:00 a.m .. 1 .p ub·
He .... wNI be held II 1 Oli
Union Av-.e. Pometay;
Ohio. 10 . . lor cuh llta lol-

,.

.• &amp;4
65
56
&amp;1

... fOU ...

Eltlldh

•
•••
••
••

.

ertti·SSSJ.

SIP11CTANI ......I
POIT-A·JOIII RINTAl
742-2111

EITATE NO. 243311 IIIIth Amual .-..unt o1

•

ly lel•cope

Li .

fti.COUrnY
SAinAnGI

PUILIC NOTICE
INTHE
.
COMMON PLEAS COURT,
PROlATE DIVIIION
MEiaa COUNTY, OHIO
IN THI MATTER OF
lmt.EMEN1' OF
ACCOUNTI,
PROlATE COUIIT.
Mila&amp; COUNTY. OHIO
AHbntlend Y01 a,_l of
the tala lng llll'l'lld tlduafa
......... lhd .. thebata Cca~rt, Mllaa Caun!Y.
Clitia. tor

Bas1c·to Advanced classes starting soon. Nancy's in Burhn·
gham, half way between Athens
. and Pomeroy. Call for more in·
formation 992·6465 .

c..._•-••••lr
NF:. ~~~~~:~R~I
992~7011

Public NotiCe

learn To Decorate Cakes

;:___;;,;,.;.;.;...;.;.~--

76 lu.tll • Motors lor Sale
76 Auto· Pwls • AcceiOf••
1-1 · Auto Aep.;r
'
78 Camping £qtilpn•.nt , ·

51 Houeihold Goodl
52 - Sport6ng Ooodt
&amp;3 Antiques

MOD ILl'

It II In with no IX·
. d or lmpllld Wlrr-

-

sI liB. . . .

141·1160

tlaa given.
Ill 2~. 23, 24

•

Ia'*

•

-

WHAUY'S
·AUTO PAllS

.
. ·• trl :;.
20.YIARI
IIIP.Iflllll
Cai . . P••
'I Prloo

- - the, obova call.wll prior to IIIIa. Furthir,
The Fa,..... ...,k .,d levinti Compeny , . _ lite
right ID rojeot ..., or Ill blda
Mlbii*IMI· lntlnlmum blda
ol t300.00 ...1
furtlier, lite above calli·
.... wHI be-In the can-

VIDEO TRANSFER

!· --":'""'::::----2
lnMtmory

,

Services ()ffered

, . . . . . . . . . . 1....

Kuhn, 1 Minor.

.•

.

PUBLIC NOTICE

NOTICE is hereby ginn that on Saturday, May 25,
1991, at I 0:00 a.m., a publk sail will bt htld at I 0,5
Union Av111ue, Pomeroy, Ohio, to sell for cash the following collateral:
1915 Ford TempoS# 2FAIP22X2FBI05121
(body in good c•ditlon, lltlds motor repair)
1915 Ford Escort S # FAIP0759FW1197if
(body in good c•ditien, lltlds 1110tor rtpair I
The Farmers
and Sawings (ompany, Pomeroy,
Ohio, reserves the right to bid at this sale, and to with·
draw the abowe collateral prior to Jale. ·Further, The
Farmen a..k and Savings company resents the right
to reject any or all bids submitted. Iminimum bids of
$300.00 ea.)
Further, the above collateral will bt sold in the con·
dillon It is in with • upreuecl or implietj warranties

446-4517 •.446·6939

.

fill I l.AWIII CAn

.

The For....,. ..,... encl
levinga Com-. Pomeroy, Ohio,
rltlhl

•

i

~

nHda motor rapllrl

: .\ ...~~.::~~~~;;:;~...-~

2

72 Truck• lor S.te
73 Vans &amp; ·4 WD 's
7A Mo t.o rc:ycl•

Mt:rr~amltse

21 ltMin.i1 Opportuntty
2Z Mo..., to loan
23 Prof•lional S•vicn

Let... I
Buttlkl

1FAIP071il~111711

(body In good condition.

Pt. Pleasant

•'

•

. --:Y
&gt;

,...,. Htwen

,...... motor repllr!
11111 Fard Eocort I II

,._theand to

..,

•

.

ApploG• ...
lbton '

l'

71 · Autos tor SJie

~tmtnt

47 WM'Ited to Rent
.,
·' 48 Equipment tor Aunt
.49 For Le•e

w.,_,_. To Do

k

I

41 Spac• tOt Rent·

Pl. Pl._...l
Loon

.

to bid It lhla aole.

ON SALE..l991 MEIGS HIGH
SCHOOL GRADUATION
VIDEO TAPES.
Call Amy Carter

I

1'

!•r (

s

Hou•• tCH Aent

tor Runt
"" 45 • Fu,niahed Rooms

17 Mi•cellaniOUI

2FAIP22X2FI1ot1ZI

Will BE· CLOSED
MONDAY, MAY 27th
FOR MEMORIAL DAY

Starting $
As low As
9900
Seltctions of Country,
Cont1111purtwy, WMd &amp;
Glass &amp; lrass.

/ /
li' ~ .

or

""''-"~
687 CC)(tlrile

4.4 ·

1

r, l 1p•

61 -- F•rm Eqwpmon1
62 Wanted le Buy
6 3 Liv .. todl
64 Hey 'Gr1in"'
65 S•ecl • F•tlli1er

42 Mobile Hom" for R11n1
43 f•ms tor A•nt

1I SenoR • lnstrucllrin ·
_ 11 Reclio. tv • ce A~~p••r
1~

.'\ LI~ 1'

1;@111

PubNc Slle • Auction

12 SiluatiDn W•led
13 lntutHC.
14 ~ Busin•• TnMning

(body In IIDOd condition.

SAVE-A-LOT

•Dinette Sets

Brass Headboards

143 PoniMd
247 Letart hils
941 fhcine
742

I

•
•
•
•
•
•

•

( ,• ,I ,'I

2 IJO PM . fRIDAY

Call 614-992·7104 for Appt.

Layaway Now for
Father's Day

•New Shipment of

2'00 P.M. THUIISOAV

--

11~

458
171
77tl
112
IH
137

18&amp; Cha•r

245 Rio Grande
2&amp;1 Gu.,... Oisl.
143 Arabie Oisl.
379 w......

includes 4,800 SQ. ft. farm bldg.
and mobile home.
·

'•
•

~

11 . ..... w....

A... cocte 304

Pom•oy

381 ,Vinton

acres in Racine. 4 BR, 3 baths, 2
garages. rented I BR apt. Property

La-Z-Boy. Benchcraft
8a Lane Action

Starting At S 9900

,.2

446 Gall;poill
367 Ch•IW•

The pnce has been reduced to
$81,900 and owne.r financmg of up
to 80% of purchase amount may be
possible· for qualifying person to
buy ~~ery nice large home on 3~

RECLINERS
snm111o ar$29900

SAlE·$69900 10th l'i.C.s

•Sleep Sofas

Meigs announcements

MeetiDI time c~ed
: · The regularly scheduled meeting
.r~ tbe Ken Amsblrv ~ lzaak
: Walton League ol Amenca has
: been postpOned from Monday to
· T~y at 7 p.m. The turkey~
; contest will be judged at this wne.

,

Rtg. 11511.00

ArHCode614

PRICE REDUCED - PARTIAL OWNER
FINANCING AVAILABLE!

•

1/w

rr 11r •11,

32 Mobtltt Homn tor Sit! ~
Jl flftm• tors .. ,
31 Busin•sBuildinu...: 35. '• Lots • Acr•"•
31 Real Ealltt W1nted

1 Y••· Sale (J)IIid in •cham:..

I

MnonCo .• wv

MetpC..,ftl:y
A141a Code 114.

G•Ui• County

BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30P.M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

•Sofas
•Country Glider /Rocker LOveseat

~-"

4
&amp;
""'"",..
I Lo••
and Found.

jollowi11g Il'l!'llhmw t•xl'laall/{1'.~.::

BULLET.IN ·aoARD

Rt. 62 North ·

.10
.05/d"

,.

,-

PUblic NotiCe

Style

.,u

t9.00
• ,3,00
.1 .30/d•y

Cfa.~.~i/itifl llal{t's I'OI'I•r

.

2 :00 P M TUESDAY
2 .00 P M. WEDNESDAY

SUNDAY PAPER

Sumrner ·Sale

llush strock pattern in putel colors.

.

c.•• ,

1
lll•lla
Z In Memory
l Annouctments

.30

~I I \ •

2 00 PM MONOAV

THURSDAY PAPER
t-HIUAV PAPER

•e.oo•

.

Reel Esi.Jie
31 • Homes tOr SMe

f '11)1111·1 Tl:lll

OAV BEFORE PUBliCAtiON
11 .00 AM SATURDAY

TUE SOAV PAPER
WEDNESDAY PAPER

••. 00

11i
15
15
:. ' 1 &amp; •.

o..,
15 lfl!otdl
.
.20

.41

puht Qjt•ly Tnbune. m ach•ng over 18.000 honuts

MONDAY PAPER

Rate

9 WlnlediO Buy

'A d •s•t•od ad&lt;werl k tununt .. lo.cvt.lm lhe Ponly Stmt•utllu ·
c:t:Pt
daS.S.Ifl t.'t.l dts plwv . Busin«ftiS Catd and ~~.,•• nohcn,
wtll 01ls o appttiM "' lht.: Pt PI c.-ant R~:wslllf and lhe Galh

COPV DEADLINE

.

'

Monthly
A••n•e tCMcon•cutift runs. bro..... Upd_,a.,...bec:h•ged
lor •-"' dar n .,...,••• Mh.

....

Furnitu~e from·Lifestyle~s

•Contemporary Sofa &amp; Loveseat

10

"Rc cttt'lu ~ . SO dlscount tor Mf.-,td 1n adv omcw.
'filM rNts
Gtveawav af\11 Found .m undet 16 worch w•M be
run 3 d., s at nu c h•ge.
,
•p,,'(:• ot •d hH all c tPill•ll .. ten is do ublu ~uct~ of ad cos t.
• 7 po int hne type ontot uMd.
•
' Sitnt 1nt!l IS not responalble tor enOfl ttttur first d.w . CChu&lt;*
lor error s tiut d"W' ed runs in paptH"I• Call hetore 2 .00 p .m
dwt ah ttr . Pubkcilt~n t o fnitk" c or,.u;ttun
"Ads tha1 mual b e p.11d •n adva,u:u ., , ~
Catd of Thanks · ·
H-eJpy Adti
In Mtlmo lia-1•
t
· Yard Sill t.~

.

Words
15

1
3
II

"Ads o utsadv Meigs., Galha or Masun counh• mu&amp;l btl Pfe •

Heath UMC banquet held

. Summ~r .In

o • .,, ·

POUCtES

sm:&amp;·

• The Area's Number l Marketplace

RATES

TO PUC£ AN AD CALL 9412-2156
·MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
I A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED SU.NDA Y

I

.

Classifie

at the Bead Area Golpll Jallllee •
· ud 2 at tbe
Couty ll'alrp-Otllldl Hjl ' 1 at t p&amp; adl
day. AdmlllioD is free 1o tlle llldoar stqe aad - - area. Con·
c I1liB will lie anllallle aad tile public is laYIIed lo attn«L
Quartet wDl

SA11JRDAY
POMEROY • ''Cricket in -Times
• Squarew and "Dolphin w will be
: · shown 11 tbe Meiga County Public
• Library in Pomeroy on Saturday at
; i2 p.m.IIJII on Monday at 7 p.m. at
CHESTER • The Chester Fire
: tbe Middleport Libraty.
Department will be having its
annual chicken balbecue dinner on
• RACINE · The Racine Soulbern Mooday beginning at 11:30 a.m. A
• Alumni Banqtiet will be held Satur· parade will begin at 1 p.m. The
: day at 6 p.m. For further infonna· public is invited.
· .
•

..
•

8

0

:l ========================================~
lhe blnquet conllttJoyce
Commulty Caleadar Items tioo
·. appear two days before 111 eftlt
~ ud tile day Ill that eftllt. Items
' mllllt be received well Ia ad_,
; to - r e publlcadoll in tbe cal~ eDdar.

n. Dally Sentinel Paa•

,

·

t

�sentinel
SNAFU~

Ohio

...

.,., ,

BQRNLOSER

1991

Thursday, May

NIUII

by IInce Beattie

32 Mobile HomI I
tor Sale

44

Aplibiwnt

~

_.,
,a

low

10

form four

beworda.

~mplo

•

Llllll'a ....._ l!!olo.

ca,.
-.,.....
....... "· -..

Crwwn

...."'..,

-:8 four
Roar"'nto lollon of
oer&lt;omblod word•

for Rent

3 Announcements

-

· The Deily Sentlnei--Page-11

Itt -

ltt1. . . .

...

IYENING

a.-ooa)e

&lt;lle • o•

(I)

0 ....

(I)CIMittoaln~l;l

i -e :::l;l

•' ACOM.Y.ON

I

IT IS OFTEN
SEEN IN
PWONS WITI-l

CAUSE OF

SIIOUI.DEili'AIN
IS INAC1WITY
OF Til~ ARM"

Thola'f.Awad Olgeel

=~=Q
nr• •lea

8:05 &lt;II .....,

I

8:30 llle o JIIC .... Q
(I) Allllolllltd CUI liD ·

SEDENTARY

... . II

f£ &amp;•...:..New81;1

. JOBS"

(J) 3-2·1

. ··,•

'

Cottt8cl8

I

•«11eo,.,.,
• caa
NeWs 1;1
Clrltfllh

PRINT NUMBERED -LETTER.S IN
THESE SQUARES

OUpa1:35 (I) A!ldJ Orlftlth
7:00 )ll• 0 Wltetl Ol F -

6 UNSCRAMBLE
ABOVE LETTERS
· TO GET ANSWER

IJ} I DrMm Dl ....nnle ~

f£ ~I.~'="-= 1;1

iii= ~ttaw

- ----

-~---

8-~

--- -

lhtock

7:05 (I) HappJ Daya
7:30C2le IIJI Jnpa

(I)

~~

.uatn.~t

tabu:n

for

=

N64~l

-=~~~~==--:FX=s--.::::::::~:::--;Do::,::::....
=-,,

......, Loot f1ML
-1
· ·4no
" --= o ,o- l l l
. . .12210fl141.

P,OOO. IIW

Jlm'o Form~uipMI!It ~~- 31,
W.. GIHI
, 114 4 lmi
- - -aUMdtorm
1 - .......... luy,
ool~ - . I :CJO.II:OO -....,.,
SM.UII-.

&amp; VIcinity
ALLT... --IoPIIclln

~-

Llveatock

DIADIJNE: 2:00 p.m.

tM o!oJ lotioN tM .,. lito run.
....., - . . . 2:00 p.m.

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

i

, 1 -,

171-4117.

Hondo 110.

-

beet ott.r, 304-111-2111.

-3044111-tll1.
,_.. v.._

•

....

...... ......,.
.-.au,.-...
....,.....

...
CNdll
Alpoot.- 'Clot ~Crodl
Cordo. oa...- IIMultL

In"-·
a . - - .......
lnoluJIIntl
......
.._...
..........
'*""

PAIIT•TIIIE OfFICE POSmON •
twlna ond
-~ ........ , IIIIo

lbt.OI1111. .

'

raower, gune, 1r1111r end more.

Pomeroy,
Middleport

I VIcinity

~":'1.:~11=~ '

lor ~

OIIod call :111-331'7157 oftor

Rr~11

t:OOPM.
For tiiM tobacco lllolment,

Fstate

r,:..'bo,RuHIII
20 .....

or RH on l'tvt,.7 - - - - - - - - o r ...... an 31 Homes for Sale

.........ad.....,
r

...... on ,.,. fll •
1lnce.
Clll
"-r
ltld, 1111 forint. . . It IJt Ill .... An

c-

- n-.-1.-tv
as.

I til di'OIIft\ 1 elary fra•J
- 1 :\~0:::1
b
-Ill ••
aaree,
pon, $41.500, iS14-

Wolnul

30 ""

....

130 bd ft

a.rw
w.-Pit.,
.
litmVwnon
M,'· Pt.

11241M•
..,_. Oppllllunttr lmplc;a.
l:IO,IIOO Mlln Stroot, 1br Trlllor, F1111114111d. Dopoolt.
11PD 100111 1'011 MYiiiOO. o lbr -

111M714114.

-

Onoono ond ........, lhop Pot
01oom1na. All lnido, 41VIOL
Pol
;Julio
Webb.
can -.,. ueDoollr.
0211. t-100-

IIIIo. No III)IIIIOIIDI. CoM I N7-"IIII ltD.-1 or wrto:
MIE-H'IItl, 111 S. 'Lir1ioNMiW,

. . . , _ . n d _... . _ _

_...,...

hon I UU ... I . Clll for lllniZtna
riDD . .

ml

413D,Gt.31.

I

44M211.CIIJi
I :"%:""
18~1. Yoril.
er.n

sew

56

ttl till.
'* IM
~W~·~·~·-~~IIIqvlrod;.;·~No;;~ot~o.
2 btdr.om
home, unfur-

- 4- . . . \i""·
--t - .......

N.Aurori,IL-

MObile ,
.............
omd
101
1
041Moald~RIYW, s111r.. From - - .
,.4W,
·
clllldlln _ _ . ·tnllor
114Rt. t l.ocuol on
Point PloMolll, IOWlll-

lbr ....._, 1 Aerl, L.-a. Bam,

f:lJ:t· .,.._.,.,,,

~~~...up,
-··

clty
z bedroom, .,.,. monlh 111110
goOd loalllon.
111.
utiMioo, omoU -~~. Alllton
5 room hcKioo with
Upllnd Rood,~-.
"·-•n A - .nd
• Not
-'"'"""-· -Furnl-• c~
RMIIDN
CAll,~
· --..
""
Mit.
,
.., _ . Cololo Anlllblo. I
441 4341
Ohio: 3 lA houoo "''
loll,
ocro. $11,000. Win

~

.,_nl

....

poymolll. 304 421 5330. .
GOVERNMENT HOMES hm $1 Trolllr lor 11nt,S22B. por monlh.
(U ~
,
tor
..,_t)'.
. Your $200. ~- 2 prior ........
- · 304-l.,..1. ..
(1)
- · lilt. GH-

----Mot.

44
2

Apartment
for Rent

lodnn

rt d1 cafliiiM,

.\fol.

Upotlln,

••herldi'Yir
llook..,p, no polo, $221. 114-112·

?ON.

.

liia.c~•!~Di~
·- ·
_ , Sullo (I pc.), h41.00;

l

.

302

Transportation

with 211 - . Zft \

T«&lt;oorft -.tco. 1111111 com ond 1
710 ........ Hallof $t50. 304- 1

a

,

•

79

71. Autoa for Sale ,

NOPe ..• r!M AN
ONI..Y CHIL.D.

tll7 ICoreury Co- canv.........brskoo•_..::orhluot.J.'!"Hory,

lop, loo,IOO OIIV. 114-31WoOM2.
tm vw luo: ~ GI)Od, 1450
010. Colli~ ·onor 1 or

onwwn.ncle.
tm Clmoro, 350.VB, block,
..., . .k llrlpoo, ........... 304-

1111-41112.
tm Oldornobllo Doll• !II _
1100.
1114-441-2110.
twt Trone Am, lid, T·Top, 350 4
opood, 12,1100. o304-77H244. ,

C1

54 Mlecellaneoua

32ft

~Country Alro

till whool
wlhtlaiL IIUII: .... ucrtne., U·
CllllrA _,.,lion. S.m Cunlo
114-t41-214t.

' ,. . 1111 Anlaglnlttl
Jack dlfendt • wife lll!lllltd
o

Brandon and Stav1 1118
conned by 1w0 woman whO
steal s-·a YaM. (R)

'

Ill MDVII: Olltllletorl
lllahatlltf (RI =~ Q

""'*

ONiahvlll

Home
Improvements

BARNEY
I'M TAKIN' OVER
YORE BUNK FER
TH' NIGHT,
SNUFFY

tm Codllllc Floolwood, aood
cor. Mich. oound. SIBOO, ·oao.

,..~ndlae
11 cu. 1 . .....,, uc cond, call

Stwao.a

l

Servrces

81

YO'RE Filii TO .
GOON HOME

t1711 Clwplor COftfDbo 3110,
~..lor,_ rwu1n

hil Children.

JET

t-

Aorotlon Mot-. ropolrod. -

........ - - I n ...... IVANI, J~,
~5!7-IIU.
•

~

-

Ron"o TV lonrleo, . . .lollllna - In Z.ntlh atoo _ . , . moOt.:,

1·10 ._~~ .... othor brsndo. - - · 4tiiiiiiiiDI ....... WY•
lonl CondKion. 114-•J.r..., ot- .....,....OIIIol144*311t:
t• lp.m.

1nttuenc:.a thai are governing you In the pi-o&lt;lucll... Being IIOne will enhance
year - · Send for Gamlnl"a Aalro- your concenlrallon end enable you lo
Graph predlctfone today by mailing focus your fhoughla.
$1.25 plus a long , self·eddreued. IAGmAIIIUI (flow. ~. 21) Rellamped envelope to Aalro-Graph, c/o llect on poulblllltes foday regarding
lhia newspaper. P.O. Box 91428, Cleve- lhinga you'd like 10 do 1nd how you'd
land. OH 44 10 1·3428. Be 111re lo stale Nke 10 do lllem. Your vlolonary abllltlea
BERNICE
your zodiac sign.
perceiW 1 IOUnd blueprint
BEDE OSOL CANCER (June 21-.lulr 221 Sornelhlng Wlll=you
C~CALI(DeLD- 1t1YourlnIn wlllell you"ro - l l y Involved can luHIYe' a~ 10 tune Into lila puiM of
~:&lt;
')W'
be Nllllaelorlly conduded today - H diroiiOpmenlaloelay can be I big a.el
"' •
'\
you make II your primary obfecllve. It's In IIIIPJng you atlaln 1 dHirod goal.
bell not lo let lhia-matler dangle any TrUll your - - · ,
longer.
AQUARIUI (.Mn. a.l'eb. 111 Ha.. fallll
LEO (oluiJ 23-Aut. 221 Try lo oee altua· In your ldeu Ieday, and don'l leluaoIlona for wh" lhay are today wHhoul clot..
~before you· .. had a
lnlleipatlng negati.. diMiopmanla c111nee 10 toy 111em out You'ro moving
111at may- occur. Deal with roallly, In lila right cllrwtlon.
not IIIIIP Dillion.
PISCIII (l'ell. • II '*•I lomallllng
VIIQO (Afll. 23-hpt. 22) You may be thalltaa lltolft ltamplrklg your pr~
moro edroll al hanclllng comrnarclal or can be aii8Nd today - Nyou ha.. llle
llnanclll m1111r1 IOCiay than you will be fortilude ~ 110 ao. Thu1 far, ~ h-'1
llaJ:M, 1"1
?omorrow. Don't .., lndlr.aatoe c.uee quite _,..., ~- rourMif lllal IIIIa II
~olanca could be ralhar unique . ~ lo cou1 on by when~ -.tel fo. ......,your~.
.._. p; uto I1-Apol 111 A frllnd Of
In 1ne veer llheed and )'1111 "'-tee Ill.. CUI on
opportunitieS to'-IIIIa advanlage o1 ~ (hpt. D IIIII D) le 1\Jro to yo~n w11o
too- could
lhlnga lloal .,. noll!ll*enl lo olherl.. P'-'Y ack-11 ~ge a- who coetp- hive awuMitlng of tfnpora.tct to aay
Cipllallze on your intlglll.
,
· - e - you ltiCI hiiP you In your IW· tOday. lnataacl of luning lhlt challlriiOX
1111. . . (MaJ 21..,_ 20) You mly IX• 101111 ltiCieavOra IOCiay. Tl\erll'o a OUI, liaten lnlenlty. .
Pll 1111c:e aome pteuant, unexpected lltronQ IIOIIIIIIfflly ~·N need lllllr Ulfa. TAUIIUI (Aplll JNOay 20) Keep your
IOCfal turnalodaylhal you hacln'1Mileo
110M to 1M grtndlllatoeloday or, Npaeipated. EnJOY yG1n11f; HOlhoulcln'IIIIIW· ICC AI 10 (011. II •1:. II) H you can llbta. ....,... pulh • lllttolltllld In
111ro willl any1111ng vt1a1 you"ro puriUing. do whllllledl to be !lone INa from oul·
You'M be glad you look 1'Gel a fump on life by undlntanellng lt. ak1e I , . . _ tOday, rou'll be more mu~Uroscomelornon'ow.

=
C!.
1-

._ C '

d••-

P

abla CUI._ Cllml,

:~~·- ..........

Pontloa • • "'"" good,
~--::.. .......... - · 1141117 Cl\ovy · -._ tlrlo.
5:1'=~~
ODIIII,

-Dodge ......... - - · 4
.... ..., .. "'· .... lift

=..·· •. . . .

wli!!l.o II!Jo!od --~ 114lor

1117 Aul-11 Wllh Air,
. ,. .,
1113
Cnollor
Aoitoonitla, .,,..; 111t iU.iiiinl

'·

Opening lead: • 3

.'".

pau&amp;e, sOuth ·led the 10 of hearts to ~
trick three. (Would you have even
thought of that play?)
'- ~
Time stood Jlill. Eventually West
decided h1a partner must have started ·
with K·J doubleton in hearis, so Ito! •
played bis five. The 10 of hearts won;:
Declarer cashed the king of bearta._
drove out the ace of clubs and won 12
tricks. Plus 480 was, of course, a top
lcore.

•

Who was this magician? Jeff Meet. '
alroth of Reynoldsburg, Ohio, who ha' •
won three world titles: the &amp;nnuda;.
Bowl In 1981, the Open Pairs in 1986 ·
and the Team Olympiad in 1988.

l

r

Anawr lo Prevloul PUIIII

...

48~=r-:
Pierre52 Girdle
53 Doltl

54- Eaprau
H lllg- (WWI
gun)
58 Rllf anaw

t Arrow pollon

3 PIC lltriiJ

' Ptlb tltlttlot
I n udore, for
aholt
8 Kitchen

'·

.....

I

..........
7 Actrwaa

Cttetta-

8-by

CDIItltllpatt

10 AltMrlellt
Indian

84

ln.

1.-1 on lila Prize SleroO.

(jj llndlr .....
• 0 . Al'1 ........ KJitl

t••

011
Lauren a-11, ~
Clrily, Torn Crulaa. Angle

ASTRO..QRAPH

•lllllll.lll•tilll•lil••••··
I'W onci

t+

Prum

repre- a gul~-riGdan
COUIIIaJ.!I~s-. Q

Chevy

- T--.

2+
f t
Pass
f ass

oeniUri. with

f..!:l;a9lmltlme Uvl

-.111Mlll-7tlt.

Eut

2•
Pass
,Pass
Pass

s-. 1:;1

twt Oldo CUIIoloo ISO ~~~:/
~fll~· Runo .- · I .
.........lchi
I AKC ~ 1114 Por8hl 144, aU power, .un
401 Nrlon Gold Clrpot. 2
oloL
...
.,.......
• - · M:. ~71-7111.
10117. SID For -.114-

till

ntan3e Slort
38 Flihlnt alda
40 Sl1orl for
Nathan
41 Garden plot
42 Steakl'l
IOUnd
48 Ilea., burden
48 cana111a11

... Jerome CoffM (33-5-1'
11 KCII~ 10 rounda, frOm
LaaY...-(L)
• Larry 1CIIIg U..l'

10:00 llle 0 L.A. Law Abby

•-wm.

Nor..

Pass
Pass

The World Almanac•Crossword Puzzle

2 Scoltlalt altlld

e!Wii.K.r.'A;o:;

Gnond Nltlonll,
AIWM -no. olr, PiS, Pll,
Ill UUutbo VI · 7t,000 mlloo,
~ bll«*, Gllflblook lnlorlor
Clll
....SID,IOO.

Well

,,
.'

.0BantatnMialll
Tap
IIDidntl
bout: Ke~nody

thllllm Dl thl

1:3GPM,col~75-llll.

till -

When you are in an apparently im·
possible contract, try to find a play
that gives an opponent a guess - he
may get it wron1. Rememll!lr, he pre·
sumably cannot tee your'cards.
Today's deal oc:curred during th1
Open Pairs in Atlantic City. The bid·
ding is typical of a pain event wllen
both lldes bave a fit. Everyone contin·
ues bidding to at least the four-level,
Jn bidding three no-trump, South
hoped thai no-trump would produce
the' same number of trlcb as hearts,
In which case be would score more
points. On a spade lead, he would have
been ript, but not if West found an in·
spired alamond start.
HoWever, when East proceeded to
bid out his lwo-suiter, Sollth competed
In hearts to the five-level, He won the
spade lead 'with his ace and cashed the
ace or hearts, West dropping the nine
and East the jack.
Readinlllhe position perfectly, declarer reali:aed West had dropped the
nine as the start of an ecbo lo show
three trumps. With no noticeable

• DOWN

11:30 a) e 11J1 lo~ofald Jerry and
his frtandl hava trouble
gelling -led II I
rntaurant Sllrtc. a
(I) (I) • My Life lticl Tlmel
Ben rertlll'llblra' c:elabrllirlg

ovto. -

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

·

Mcl&lt;tnnay (l 5-0-1, I Q KO.I

114-251-1443, blwn. I o.m. • I
p.m.

=· L":!

levelly H11e, 110210

GJ) •

!'

- - - . . . . ; . . - - - - -,::;

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South

a

•'\

175-1134.

lnet lind

turn hia 1118 around. (R)
SlefiiO. D
Ametfoan Mualc Shop
t:iJo llle 0 Clleen S.m gela
Involved In a property
dispute wtth tile r"tauranl
owner. (R)·BiefiiO.
(I) (I) • My Ule aftd Ttmel
Ben ,_KIIhe ·OhiOa ancj
confullon of hll wedding )o
RebeKa In t985.
m (J) Mt•lliit1 Sytvte
Million may hOld lh4l kay 10
1 cupboard lui of akelelonS.

•

Auto Parts&amp;
Accesaortes

-or

a buill get 011 the

•

Buy or - . R - Ant .....
1124 E. Mlln • - · P_...,_
Houro: II.T.W. 10:00 o.m. to l:tiD
":'ia";1? 1:00 to 1:00 p.m.

:r."":R
R1d n11 nn lnd bath-a nn
- I l l . I - • cloln lolnd.
""""' up • clown. 231 Llneotn
1!11- f!MIZ·IZIO
.

por

WANlal; lolltcco plonlo, wholo
....... ol - . 304-1111111121 or &amp;11-ZitO.

w:.,.-:.~The Babe• ..lp

I

tracker trailer, ccwer. Never '
uood, A·l condition, 114-1112- ;
11041
.
•

and hit towr. Stlrao. CJ

lfoulo Mtln Contonory.

="r~.'::M':t
~. 114 41t 1'1 •
.

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

I

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,

Of rnutdlrtng her huWirid

"2711411. -~­
pool ...
.·
-·....,
,. - , .
...
,.n1r
....,
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oowr.

... llllosa :: l•oloe TrwJ!nl. 10
Woolt " ' - · Htuolng a
'
1111 )Ill A\llltlblo, (II
11 Helpw.nted
Oo 'f!4oll, . . or JID ..........
. . . . . . ~Coli .....,. M n
..,. •• ·; • ,..
.......... ........ lcllool
fll Ale a rtlns.Wn Haw Yin.

~----·

-

8 MOYIE: ThDia Redltaada
, _ ...... (2:00)
1:30 a)e 0 Dlllltwtt WOI'Id
Owlyne and Whllley haYa
lroubll rapancllnjj time alono,

4

Dnowor c - . 144.11; IIMik
lod, 1221; Complolo FuM Mlft
Boi«&lt;t $105.00 Sot; 7 pc. Coder
-EN :
room s uno, ..
.." ·oo ·""'
Mondor Thru ~-~.':.;"'· lo
llp.m., - Y 12
Til
llp.m., ' Mlloo 011 Routo 7 On

·~1IAOothW411DII.

•IJIIII-

..,.h

Joll.-

·-

' ·eO
,,...n,.-••

MZ-0211.

21/Zton--C.A...,.,

SIO.OO llorvtco 0111 on
'""""' 11M IIIPI'- plcll-up.

~

lb, loloWllllol,_, 304- 76

111-11111.

!'eta for Sale

1141121110

18 wanted to Do

iiJ
Munier,
Siwao
...

molorguldo, - ftnct., minnow
lo:aflnl
lotm..\ 21 ....... per lb. If lntor- rnoeor,
bucket, a chelt. Extr•; . . .
"L.Nolng" 110 lilt

ohlfta. , .... , •
~

t-..

65 Seed &amp; Fertllzer'

lui.
lit
obit lllid
hlft1M ololltty ID 1....
.,.._ ond ......... WOII.
...., - 1 0 - Dolly ......
loll, I "112 mlloo ... 11ne1, ao. nes, 111 eou~ 11,

londhll ~. R....... Ac- Frl Pon..ow.
ond lot, t:OO 1111" ?. R..nt

II' T h u - 'l tiD•
Mor, coif llli!w.n":
1:00. :00 IOW"II-1117 oftor 5:00
304-11W121.
:~
1110 Buo Tloc. . PFII bolt . !

for Slle

~75-

llorclt block

23 Profelalonal .
Services

CRI Slirao.

:1030 .. 1711-34:11.

10 acree. euy ecceee,

24hr. R-nt· 211-411121\

•t•

~

Boata &amp; Molore

.

llttt•••r'il

....
•"

tA6

•• 71

By PbDiip Alder

Drug Bue~ r.a. Angalas
Fraew1y Strangler; A K·l
Team (A) Sbirea. a ,
GJ) • The
Bart
runa awey frOm . _ Bitt&lt;
getting In
wltll Lill.

300 bolll hly, ,.....
- · Umothf. I04olll-tll40.
- t o cut hly on 11\oreo,

.AK10742 ,

Speed is
of the essence

Gl 1111e Tap eopa aoaton

2010 .. 30.-.loltll.
,.
Yomohl 121 End""' ao II aGO;'!
aftwi:OO Pll, ~
\.c

22 Money to Loan

+AK

&amp;..;..,,lltler DowUna

(J) 11rec111taw on
HonttaD . . . D

1110 S\iZUkl Quodoport 210 lw'!
S2lQO or Dlfor. ~~

....

o-

I'

1I

tKJI032
.11.2

SOUTH

'.MJitefift Dowling a~ ·Slave
hunlllle klllar Of an
undercover policewoman, (R)
Shirea.Q
&lt;IlOn!MW-Ja .

'Hondo

171-4231:

.Q95

•v s

Bravea(L)

0

EAST
.
.Q 101165 .

tQ74

a:oo llle o CoiiiJ 111ow Rudy

•

'

.J

WEST

+JD 7 3 2

ALDER

and Kenny laam a IoUgh
le,._, In reporting. (A)

-i:illfl=-:-:-=:-:lQO=:--;:M::-og=no=.-N=so::: :
flrrn. Con oftor I p.m. 114-441,;0
~- '
~

+t

PHILLIP

7:35 (I) Major Laague la..~all
San Otego Ptdr.. at Alllnla

~a.oo)

i:=lCl

lnlldl ....: ca.r Twclta ....
Ftldor a lll"!..do!io N. -..,
...... Clot.......... -

(S~H, CHiWTtC/t

::_:;.:;s::,m::•iii-;QR:;;;-:;;110;;;-;"Ii;::om=pt=•=. !
1100 lnlre.. blckrolt, OIC. cond., '
-

-~
,.~ ............ lloNJ
,_,~...,··"·
lo4.C:...Gf-..IM ••·
Rlo . . . . l1.- la71.
~
ta .__ ca.tllolol. Clal•"' 11\o

..

~11·11

NORTH

't1;1

0 LMT IUitll Hammer
Was...., ()pan from Tempe,
Ariz. (L) ,
8 Cnlallira

EAT- 11.9~

•
750 cc, .'

mo. 114-241-MM.

........ -:................
Dolo_,...,
....

~,...,

CAN

4 C¥1. $tOO. or :

..... 2:00

Pt.P.....nt
&amp;VIcltlhy

AJ../. you

•

V-41 libra ... .
oond, $1,700. 30oK75-11'11 or-

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

·

~;":.'..~!';:"-1;1

~AN~ A1'1P f!tNr6~
CHINI'$1 ,v~FET

•

Qreot _,., fi80. I:
30W71-117C or oftor e;GO PM ' •

Gallipolis

..
..'·..

.863
t985
.KQJ 1063

(1) .......... ,....,

· KDX 400,
1111

Yard Sale

7

·

BRIDGE

....-

1171 MoOueuw

-~.

DIME!"

1111. lntllllltttnelll
Tonillll Stereo. !;I
.

1: MCk
~~~:. :z.100~r;: -::74::-:-:--Mofo~-=n:yc:::-=:-Je-=1=-=::-:
1112:
Ifill Honci.o :1110 CB, MOO, 114- •

,- ..

1;1

(I)

Ill•, 111 or"""· 30oK75-11121.

.....

SCII.:tM l.irs ANSWERS
r -Jl.
Simile - Oasis - Fence - Deadly - ELSE'S DIME
One old timer to anolher, ·One of llfl'a almplest pleasures I relish most, Ia f*!&lt;lng on someone ELS"E'S

Major League - 11~11
ChielgO Cubl It N- Vorl&lt;
Meii(L)

61 Farm Equipment
1.42!

..."'

tnrecrow and Mrs. King

f "' 11 Sut'fllrr,,
!'. l

I I I .1 I I

Dieklneon, Karl Malelliii,

Sylv- Slllfone, Plllrioll
Nlal and olllera honor lht
Influential-. (1:001 .

.,

Stwao.a

&amp;.'= ::r-= 1111 Nell

·='-~'='
.
....."""

"i

COI'ftf'ftUM

52 Htart

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0

11:001u
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IIIJIIICouftl
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a&amp;r'tlo .... Stereo. !;I
VIII SlefiiO.

:.:r

I···----ICing
Tlnlglll

.....,Iaiit,

1011 , ...

·-·

11:30~· GTOIIIIIM._
&lt;~~•urn•

._liNt".

&lt;Zl,_Mil..&amp;*As'wOne
•0111

your-·

~~L.a

•

l,t•

10:20 (I) MDVII: Mr. Hom (3:001
10:30()) ....
(J) Wlel Y•JI II R8pDrl
• Cnlelllltd Cllale

•

0

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'L.~VDIMI'EG :

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TXMKYMII .

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: '" I I lllg achle'ltr In high ochool. 1C I'm
nol ulld 10 thil (winning Oloarl lUnd Of tiling." - Kevin Coal-,
23

• 1tthr MIA. 1n0.

-Air, .......w........... Wllh
f14.211.127D.

1

•
,.)

\,

'I

0

�'

Rutland Friendly
.Gardners gather

.. Greene hurls
no-hit, no-run
tilt for Phils

tio::-~:i=~~~e1 !;f::
1

were Lilly Kennedy, Shirley
...., ..,____"and ...,o___ ~
• Miller, Marvel Pelry and Melba
••o · - ...,_.
ll!ld Bob Kelly.
ll tbe recent meeting of tbe R
1bc ·
· I
·
Friendly G~deners held at tbe dic:uued~ :,!t~
home d. Lorri Barnes:
. Gltdeoen providing the program
,_}~ ~ ~· ~~~: booklets with the covers being
""' ... resJgna 00 eu.,.;uVC at uwo
' ••.1 by 1
Bol'
-··"'
.
'den Kim pam_.
ID, MJrpret
"'"""1111 WI'tb viCe-pre&amp;
t
• EdWII'ds and anet
Ioanne Feuy
belly WillfmiiD ac:rve tbe mnainThe Rutland Post OffiCe winderOftbeyesr.
do
.......... .or
• Apn'land
...._.._._ Da . and ,__._ MOr
w was """"ra• ..-........
VIII
.._....":'
• early May with a sp,rina sbowera
ns .arc ID make corsages w1tb ~ and flowers tbeme by Mujorie
resJdents of tbe Extended ~ Urut Davis. Lorri Batnc~ is in chanle of
~tcrans ~ Hospnalas the display for May. The club
tberaDYbul ba ,___ . ._.. agreed to f!D"IIisb vase irrange0 bulbi
ve "':""' mno •.,.. meats of hsb flowai·fer lbe Rut·
fro . e Rutland C1v!c Center land AIUllllli IBMI.uetoo Salurday.
plantillg 10 be n:placed m tbc. fait
Ianet Bolin won tbe ApilcravA w~ft day was, set to continue e'!ing prize brousht by Margaret
Jllllltinl - - - ' .•~·
Edw.-.11 and alan a iNc from Iudy
- Eanb Day acllvtb.es elf tbe cl,ub Snowden. Carrie Monis got one
were ~ C?Ul by maldn~ deliv- from Suzy Clnlenter.
~! ~:ftli·= =~IDC~ Kimberly Willford reminded
~ tbe Meigs Litter Con gardeners that earlier harvests can
trol and Rutland Bran h 0 f
6e made of vege..bles if cold
.One
c
frames, row covers, cloches and
Club members making a lOUr of ~ts are ~· Sba stated lbat
· · Ohio
Kim
tbc ~ of soil 11 recommended
Amish
.
.
e
o.untr)'
m·
WC111
• and that 1t should not be worked
berly y.'dlf~rd, Iudy ·Snowden, when it is very wet. Protei: lion for
Maljorie Davis, Joanne Fetty, Mar·
1
be i
'tb
garet Edwards. Ianet Bolin and young P ants can
I ven WI
Marie Birchfield Others aaending canlll&lt;ad boxes, sheets .of newspa.
per and botromless plutic milk car-

Bank

DANFORTH AWARD WINNERS· Barbara. Andereon and
Robby Wyatt were rec:oplvd as tbe 011tstalldln2 boy mel plio
tbe junior class to receive the "I Dare You Leadenhlp Award."
Tbe award Is given In recopltioD ol penailallntegrlty, blllaiK:ecl
living, and motivation ror lelldenblp.
·

tons.

Carrie Morris reviewed "Early
noting that the
flowedna
IX fonytbia, lilacs
and azalas hmld the true arrival
of spring witb their colorful show.
Lmi Barnes spate.'on vegelable
plan~, ciulionmg lbat most tiD·
der edibles cannot go into lbe
ground muil the danger of frost is
past and son bas warmed as plant·
mg ~ore 1tunts root growth. She
went on 10 ssy tbat seed beds need
to be wubd up, mlled fill and be
fiec of stones With :;l!.eJ-"ted in
· ed witb
a shallow groove,
tine soil IIIII ~ in:g~acc.
Janet Bolin diSCIIS
Olll8liiCII·
ts1 gruses inclndin&amp; ribbon grass, a
tsll old hardy striped variety witb
about winru arasaes in the area;
blue fesco, blaclt pas. miniature
ss and fountain grass,. most
gperennials.
A plant excbange was held for
tbc roll call witb Joanne Fetty as
chairman. Birtbdays of Msrie
BiR:hfield and Marjorie Davis were
celebrated and the progl'llllll for the
regional meeting were canpleted.
. Showsto~

so

C

Ohio L~ttery

•

Pick 3:637
Pick 4:5023
Cards : 5-H, 2-C
J-D; 3-S
Low tonight in mid 60s.

Saturday, high in 80s.
Chance or rain 70 percent.
·

Page4
.
FREE SCUENING • .
Pbelpl, RN, Pbyllla Bnnnt, RN,
and Haria Eutller, LPN (left to rtpt) are ~bown beside oae ol tbe
. skiD eucer screeniDI poeter dllpiiJI In Holler Medlc:al Center
aad CliDlc. Tile)' wDf be "listing wltb free exams this Saturda7

fnlmltolla.m.

.

Free ~kin cancer screening ~
set at Holzer Clinic ·May 25 ,
. The free skin cancer screening
at Holzao Clinic !his Saturday, May
25, from 8 10 11 am., is the smart
and healthy way 10 start your swnmer Con Ibis Memorial Day week·
end.
·
·
Holzer Medical Cenw, Holzer
Clinic and tbe GaDia County Unit
of tbe American Cancer Society,
urge everyone 10 bave dlis skin·
mole eliaminalion es IIIIOiher sunny
summer season arrives.
Skin cancer occurreace is
increasing faster tban 81(y other
cancer; over 600,000 C88CI will be
diagnosed in tbe United States this
year. By being aware of the paten·
tial dangers from tbe sun;qting
· advancage of the wide llll'IY 'ol sunblocking products, and follOwing
p!oper mcdical advice, ou!dOor fuil
can slill be safelf enjoyed.
The vast ~ty of skill can·
cers arc tbe biply curable basal

!=ell (or squamoua cell) can.:inomas.

However, tbe incidence of

melanoma, a very serious type of·•

cancer, is rising. Early detectiOn iJ'
critical.
.
:.
. a&lt;llzer physicilm and staff will
be 'providing this important skin
screening 11 no cbarae on Saturday
from 8 10 11 a.m. the Iocstion is
the Holzer Clinic main facility on
Jackson Pike in GJ!Iipolis in tbC'
UrJent Caie/lnterllll Medicine
w11ting area ncar tbe clinic front
entrance. Edncational videos deal.
ing with suD/skin safety will be
shown. Free :brochures, infonna-,
tional mat,.-ials and sltin care prod·
uct samples will be distributed.
.•
Appointments may be scheduled:
for !eSting by calling Holzer Clinic
at ~5773 between the hours of 9
to ll am. and 1 to 3 p.m. dally. .
This valuable service could be a
potential "lifo-saver." As you plan'
your SUIIIIIICC recreation activities, •
plan also for this skin cancer
screening. Begin your summer fun
safely.
'

'

•

at

.VoL 42, No. 15

Capyr!ghl8d t•t

OUTSTANDING SENIOR BOY AND GIRL
• Ken Van Matre aad Jennlrer Ta)'lor were
selected by.Melp HIP staff as tbe OIIIRIIPC!Ing

. .lor 110)' Ud tlrl bi the c:laa ollllfl. Dey
were ~tleate4 c:erllllcates during tbe Melas
-~ Proaram Wedlleslf4ly.

; COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - State senators have .
:gone home for tbe long Memorial Day weekend after
·postponing a vote on a bill that would authorize
:direct government f111811Cillll of housing projects.
: The House abeady was out of IDwn for a spring
brealt Ibis week. Botb chambers are to resume voting
:sessions Wednesday.
· Senators tentatively had been scheduled to vote
Thursday on a bill to implement a constitutional
:amendment, adopted in November, that. allows tbe
:state and local governments 10 make grants and loans
·10 build and ~habililllte housing.
Action was delayed because of a dispute over the
·wage rstes 10 be paid workers.
.' In other business, the Senate unanimously
·approved a bill autborizing use of Ohio Lottery

' reserve funds if needed to ensure tbat the state has
· enough money for payments to local school dislricts
next month.
And Sen. Raben Neale; D·Barberton, introduced
a bill tbat would require each local school district 10
adopt a policy encouraging parents 10 become more
involved in the eduCation of tbeir children.
. Senate President Stanley Aronoff, R..Cincinnati,
said attempts would be made to resolve differences in
lhe housing bill ov~ whctber workers would be paid
local prevailing wages set by tbc slate or rstes deter·
mined by federallsw; which often are lower.
. As recommended by the Senate Financil! lnslitu·
lions and Insurance Committee, public and non-profit
groups sponsoring housing projects would have 10
pay the stale prevailing wage rates comparable to

Mich.:

'

••••1

PJ'GIIfor MeJp Coullt)' Litter ccin.
trol, put np a alp edvertillag tbe riverbank
c:leannp project. Bert lie dlspla:JS oue of tile T.
slllrts to be given to esc:ll voluateer.

I

RAC ,refuses OSHA inspection
USNO. :1
·NEW FLORIDA
WWIE POTATOES

FRESH
HALF·RUNNER
BEANS

RAVENSWOOD, W.Va. (AP)
James Seaman, 36, of Elk Gar- Ravenswood Aluminum Corp. · den was listed in serious condition
officials denied acCess ID Occupa· today· at Charleston Area Medical
tiona! Safety and Hcaltb Adminis· Center, according to a nursing
ttation inspcciDrs tbe same dsy an supervisor who would not be idenaccident in tbe plant injured two lified.
worlccrs, one seriously.
Seaman and another worker
The company said it refused 10 were hurt Thursday morning while
let tbc inspectors in because of COD· moving a piece of equipment, a
cems they were being used in a spokesman who asked aot to be
union ploy.
identified told Tile Charleston

,----Local briefs-~
Memorial Day speaker named
FLOIUDA
VJNE.IUPEMED

TOMATOES
.S wwa f:l .rufey

UiJr• Bonaqrown)

CALIFORNIA
·STRAWBERRIES

leeCol4
CRIMSON SWEET

WATERMELONS

Boll's Still Has
A Lar11e Seleetion Of
Fresh QIUIIft~
Beddinl Plants And
Hanlifll Bas•ets

The Rev. Gerald Koster of Columbus, a colonel in the Ohio Military Reserves, will be tbc speaker at the Memorial Day services of
Drew Webster Post 39, American Legion, at Beech Grove Cemetery, Pomeroy, at IO a.m. and at tbe Chester Cemetery at 2 p.m.
Mondsy.
The Rev. Mr. Koster, reared in Meigs County, IIJIVCd tbree years
in World War ll. He aaendcd Otterbein Colleae. s!lrtcd his miniltr)', and then returned 10 the United Methodia Seminary at Da)'IOD
for additional ttaining. For the past '1:1 yem he has been with tbe
Ohio Institute (TICO) in Columbus.
In addition 10 Beech Grove and Chester, the legionnaires will be
conducting memorial ~ices at Sactecl Heart CemeiCry, Pomeroy,
at 11:30 a.m., at Memonal Gardens, Route 7, Pomeroy, at I p:m.
and at Hemlock Grove Cemetery at 3:15p.m.
A wreath will be placed on tbc Ohio River at tbe Pomeroy levee
at nooo in a special service.
"Let us not f~et lbat Memorial Day is a dsy set aside 10 pay
respect to our semce persons who proiCCtcd our nation in times of
war," said Post Commander Ricluuil Rnsscll, in encouraging public
support and participation in the tributes.

No paper Monday
The Daily Sentinel will not be published Mondsy in order for
employees 10 observe the Memorial Day holiday. Publica!ion will
resume Tuesday.
,

Man cited in crash

.......
..............,..
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~

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

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Senators appi:oved 30-0 aiid sent 10 lhe House a
bill authorizing the.use of $44.7 miUion in lottery
reserve money if needed 10 malre next month 's payment of staiC aid 10 local school districts.
Transfer of tbe money would help offset a project·
ed $61 million shortfall in tbe amount the lottery was
supposed to generaiC for schools but was unable 10
produce.
Nettle's bill would require each local school district 10 adopt a policy of its own design on parents!
involvement in tbe schools.
He said many districts already had policies under
which parents are infonned uf skills to use at home 10
improve tbeir children's apademic success. The bill
provides no funding for such programs.

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News S~lf

RIVERBANK CLEANUP· PlaDs.,
log alleed ror Melas Count)''• partldpatioD II!
the tblrd aanual Oblo River Sweep to be held aa
June 15. Tbunday afternoon Kenay Wlutu.

'

ihose fnr private ,projects in the same geographic
area. ContraciOrs would negotiate with regional
building and Irides councils for a lower residential
wagersiC.
.
Sen. Roy Ray, R·Alaon, the chief Senate sponsor,
advocated use of tbc lower federal wage rate.
"I think wbat we need 10 do is find some accept·
able langnaae tbat everybody can live with and at the
same time we can build affordable housing," Ray
said in an inlavicw.
Aronoff said negotiations involving labor, the
governor's office and members of tbe committee
would seek an acceptable compromise.
"(The) governor believes that if you use local pre·
vailing wage you won't get locally funded projects.
They'll be out of tbe price ~ge," Aronoff said.

Third annual Ohio River
Sweep scheduled here June 15

Arvena Lewis of betroit,
ing at home.
was the wino~ .of tbe Amish quilt
Nellie Lowe, Louise OC:.~~e,
given away by the Harrisonville Virginia, and Tom Price of · or· ,
Senior Citizens on May 4.
nia, visited at tbe home of Kathleen
Mr. and Mrs. Arlie Price, Anti- Price in Tyler Mt .• W.Va. Tom, •
oct, Calif., and a couple of their Nellie, Kathleen and her gmndson, ~
friends are visiting llis sister, David, tben .made a trip 10 Niagra ·•
Bessie Graham and Neliie Lowe · Falls.
·
andotberrelatives.
Mr. and Mrs. William Scott,
Russ Eshelman, 'wlio s~ · Nelsonville, visited her sister and
wcelt u a medical patjMt in
husband, Hazel and Duane Stanley~ ,
Medical Center, is now recuperat·

'

2 S :lklno,11 Pageo 25 centa

A lluhlmed!a Inc. tt.wepaper

·Housing bill hits snag 'in Ohio Senate

Russ Eshelman returns home · :;

LET
BOB'S MARKET
MAKE YOUR
MEMORIAL WEEKEND
PICNIC or DINNER
DELICIOUS

..

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, May 24,1991

t

r

•

A Oallipolis man was cited for failure 10 maiatain an assm
clear distance ibead 'Ibmsday following a two-ar accident on StaiC
Roure 7.
Bryan W. Anburs, 27, was cited after he llti'UCk BDOiber car in the
rear-end In Salisbury J'ownshlp. According 10 a report l'rom tbe
Gallia·Meigs post of the StaiC Highway Patrol, Arthurs wes southbound when 1 car in front of him, driven by Wetley M. Ral~. 70.
Middleport, alowed for a large hole in the road. Arthun failed 10
stop in lime and IIJUCk Ralph's car in the bact end.
·
Heidler driver Wll injured.
Cnndllued OD Jill' 3

'" .

II(

'

Gazette.
,
The two were subcontractors
working for Califmria Rigging, die
spokesmail said.
A labor dispuiC at Ravenswood
lias idled about I,700 United Steelworkers since last November. The
Steclwmkers say they were locked
out; the company says they arc on
strike.
"I think it's typical for the company to tum OSHA awar," said
Dan Stidham, president o Uni!ed
Steelworkers Local 5668, which
represents Ravenswood workers.
"I think it.'s (small) of the company to do that. Any lime that they
do that they have something to
hide . ... Other than that, they
should be happy 10 bave a go\lemmeut agency to do·an inspcc!ion for
lhem if they'I'C so concerned about
safety like they IIY."
Ravenswood spokeswoman
Debbie Bog~ believes some of the
charges the OSHA inspeciDrs want·
ed to investigate may be out of

The work will be done between · its mouth at Cairo, Ill, totaling
4,962 miles of shoreline.
9 a.m and 12 noon.
''The Sweep is unique in tbat it
Volunteers are asked 1D sign up ·
SeJected siiCs along 57 miles ·of before June I at the Meigs County is the only known river cleanup
the Ohio River whicb fl&lt;&gt;w along Litter Control office located at die project in 1he United States that
tbe banks of Meigs County will be intersection of Union Avenue and combines volunteer efforts in six
cleaned. in 'tbe third annual Oh!o lhe S!3te Roule 7 by-pass. Sign-up states," said Jeanne !son, Project
River Sweep.
· ·
can also be made by !elephone, DireciOr for lhe Ohio Riv~ Sweep.
Kenny Wiagins, program man- 992-6360. Youlh groups, such as
The cleanup pro~t is organized
ager for Meigs County Litter Con- boy and girls scouts and 4-H club . by the Ohio R1ver Valley Water
trol, announced IDday tbat plans are members, and civic organizations Sanitation Commission in coopera,
moving forwsrd on Meigs Coun- are encouraged to get in on the tion with the Environmental Pro·
ty's participation in tbe Sweep on riverbank clcsnup.
tection Agencies in the six states,
June 15.
Wiggins said that he is .still the U. S. ·Corps of Engineers,
"Volunteers sre needed," said available to tsl1c 10 groups who are Department of Natural Resources,
W!ains. who noiCd tbat "anyone, interested in knowing more about Division of Litter Prevention and
yoana Ol' old, indlvidaala or e~ !lie ~ ........ un pJllject, or to provide a Recycling.
&amp;rouP~. wlio 'WIIIl!O iuba.differ~ VI~ die Ohio River Sweep.
-Tbc ,.local-program ·dlrec·tor
. ence In the quality of the Ohio
. All participantS will be given an noted that Increased use by
River,. can actively participate in Ohio River Sweep "Let's Keep it campers, boaters and others have
tbe community service event.~
Clean!" T-shirt. Beverages wilf be led to a ~rreater amount of litter.,
There will be worksites in each · available at all of l.he worksitcs.
and he wd lhat lheir assistance in
, COQIIllunity, accordin&amp; ID Wiggins,
The litlcr control direciOr said keeping the Ohio River clean and
who noted that each one will have lhat last year the Sweep involved safe far all is being solicited.
adult supervision. Trash bags and 14,000 volunteers in six stateS and
The national corporate sponsor
gloves will be provided. All ttash that over 8,000 tons of trash and for the ~weep is Ashland Oil whp
which can be will be~clcd debris were removed from the . has put m $50,000. Other contribu·
while the rest will be eli
of in banks of lhe Ohio River.
tors include Dow Corning, Proctor
an environmentally acceptable
The Sweep encompasses the and Gamble, Neville Chemical,
manna by tbe local Litter Control entire length of the Ohio River, $5,000 each, and Buckeye
office.
from its origin in Pittsburgh, Pa. 10 Pipeline,$300.

Study shows
.acid rain is
blamed for
acidic lakes

By CHARLES CAMPBELL
AIIOCiated Press Wliter
WASHINGTON - A"ktudy of
thousands of acidic lakes and
streams found evidence that acid
rain caused tbe problem in 75 percent of tbe lakes and 47 percent of
lhe SlreBDlS.
In the others, the acid cooditions
were lhe result of natural acidity in
the watershed or acidic draining
from coal mines, researchers
re~ 'Ibilrsdsy in Science mag·
mne.
Acid rain iS industrial pollution
lbat may carry long distances in the
atmosphere before returnt~L to
~ in rain, snow or 8001, • 'ng
aqnilic life.
NatunJI processes can also make
a lake or lliream acidic, and some
have 8l'llled tbat acid rain's contri·
date.
.
bution has ~ overstated by those
"I think it is very possibly a · who urged expensive action 10 curharassment tactic from pressure Ulil it.
Last year's Clean Air Act will
from the local union," Boger said.
"We don't want 10 be a pan of any- requi~ electric utilities and other
thing like that Ir it's a legitim ale industries to cut roujhly in half
issue tbat they need to come .iniO their emissions of sulfur dioxide, a
the plant on, then we will work . major component of IICid rain.
with OSHA."
.
"What we found was that the
Earlier this year, OSHA fined majority of tbe acidic lakes in tbe
Ravenswood $27,000 for seven survey were acidic becaase of
violations ~lating to the dcslh of a acidic depositiOJI, mostly sulfuric
worker electrocuted while chang- ~:t':ition ," said Lawrence A.
jog a fuse.
, a scientist at the University
The company also was fined of Minnesota R110urces Research
$4,000 for violations stemming Cenw who led the study.
from the deaths last year of two
Baker llid lhe researchers relied
heavily
on a chemical analysis of
workers overcoftle by fumes while
the acidic water to identify the
fighting a fire.
An additional SIO,OOQ 6ne was source ol tbc acid In oicb case.
Their work uMd data from 1
levied in tbe death of a worker who
suffered a heart attack after being surveJ by tbe EnYinlnmental Prok!Ction Apacy of 1,180 latel and
fon:ed 10 work owrlime.
Stan Elliott, area director of 4,670 ttreaml In wllat tile EPA
OSHA, said Ravenswood Alu- detormlnod to be acid-sensitive
minum Corp. officials met wi!b the _,IX lbe Uniled Stllel.
The- wbcn lskel wm: most
inspectors 'lbundsy before turning
likely 10 bave been affected by acid
tbemaway.
"I drink tbe company is afraid rain - the Adilondack Mountains
this is being used • II!IOiber ttJOliD of upstate New York. Biter said
the researchers alto found that
Contillued 011 pap 3
'YJ Coatlalld 011 pqe 3

'

'.'

'

........

. ,What goes up must come
· ·. wqw acid l'lln forma
ilnCI 01111- damage:

· '

.·····. ~

dow~

. ........ ,/

',

..... " . .~ ..

' 1. Gues -.mcmly
suHur dioxide and ... .f
nitrogen-oxygen . ·, ....

coir4'0undl - are
creilled by bumlng
coat, oU and Its ·
byproducts, such .gasoline. ·

,/..

/
.. •

2. T~e gases stick to waler droplets,
snowflakes or fog parllclea, Cl'llatlng
wha!'s generally called acid rain.

...... ......... ... ......... .
~-

1 .

··· ..

,

·· ..
4. Acld r.o11n ·N'
aquatic !We by
~ldlfylng watar and
poisoning plants and animals
. with 'minerals Hhas
fri&gt;m·IOJI.
.

leach"'
.

to rapalr.

Measuring acidity (pH)

=
~

Milk of
a. liking
All'imonll 111111...11 waw 'aodli Mlk
-

: E'rwtoou•••~

Gameft--

House approves plan to
protect Illinois coal industry · .
SPRINGFIELD , Ill. (AP) groups are worried that
utility companies could cheat CUS·
10111en under a bill inlended to proteet Winois coal-mining jobs, but
the groups aren'tClpllOSing the bill.
The bill Is part of an aareement
requiring Illinois Pow~ Co. and
Commonwealth Edison Co. to
install antl-pollntlon coal IICl'llbben
at two pow~ plants. The compa·
nle1 and state regulators are to
neaotiale a set~t for the inltslla·
Consum~

lion- posalbly more than $500
million - tbat could be paned on
ID IIICplyers.
The consum~ groups, Citizens
Utility Board and Illinois Public
Ac!lon, say the utilities could
inflate tbe1r COil eltimatea and
fon:o c111101ners 10 pay much more
than neceaary. The biD's sponsor
says consUIII«&lt; are proiOCted,
The consumer groupa agreed not
to oppose tbo bill 10 It could be
Coa~ oa pap 3

'..

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