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                  <text>Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis. Ohio-Point Pleasant.

Page-D-8-Sunday Times-Sentinel

w. Va.

April 22, 1990 .

Committee warned new farm policy law .will be expensive ..

•.

Larger cu ts, peaking at $2
billion a nnually. would be expected in the fo llowing four .
.vc~ars.
·
Committee members havebeen heading the oth er direction.
They tenla t ivety have approved
c hanges in crop support progra ms •es timated to cost an
additional S6 billion .a bOve the
cost of the current program,
Panetta's figlires call for re·
ductions in spending below what
the farm program would cost if
there was no change from the
provisions now in effect.
" The message was we've goqo

By CHARLES J . ABBOTT
UPI Farm Editor
.WASHINGTON - The House ,
Agr iculture ·committee was
warned · tast week its proppsa ls
for the new farm policy taw
would cost billions of dollars
more than congressional budget
writer s are wllling to allot for
farm subsidies.
· During a closed-door meeting.
House Budget Commit tee Ch air·
man Leon Panetta said the
committee would ·h ave to reduce
-~SI:iculture spending from the
so-ca:tled·budgefbaseltne by $900
mttllon in fiscal1991.
·
·

recognize there . ~~e problems
Wlth the budget , , Rep. Dan
Gttckman, D-l&lt;ap ., said after the
hour-long meeting with Panett.a.
The meeting was followed by a
number of caucuses by · House
Agncutture subcommittees to,
talk about what the Budget
Committee figures would mean
fo~. their programs. •
My goal lS we ve got to
rea~onably meet the numbers.
We re .. ove~ bud~et at the mo-.
ment. sa1d Ghckman, chair·
man or the wheat , seybeans and
feed grains subcommittee.
Rep. Timothy Penny, D·Minn.,
satd the budget .f igures meant,

"We've got a lot of adjustments
By that measure, Panetta
to make."·
"gave us a few dollars more, "
The White House has proposed
.Penny sa'id.
a $1.5 blttton cut In agliculture
Admtnlstratton officials respending for flseal1991, to tower
peatedly have ,warned Agrjculthe cost of the farm program to · · lure Committee members at1&lt;&gt;ut
·$10,2 bllllon.
·
the likely cost of their proposals.

r\..AJtJ
·;..-peratJ•VeS plan me•Oier
ae

DELAWARE- The directors
ofCountrymarkinc. ofDelaware
and the Indiana Farm Bureau
Cooperative Association, Inc. of
Indianapolis have 'agreed to a
joint management approach that
could. lead to a merger of the two
cooperatives.
The president and chief executive officer of the Indiana Farm
Bureau Cooperative, Philip
'""
French, will serve as Countrymark's president and chief exec·
utlve officer and leader of this
effort.
French will also retain his
responsbllltles as IFBCA 's
president.
.The two agliculture coopera- .
.
tlve said the agreement announced Friday represents "a
· good rami undertaking."
"We fundamentally belle'{e
that the eventual joining of our
two cooperative systems can
result in a much stronger future
for our farmer-patrons, our
members and . our reglonals,"
Countrymark chairman Don
Benschne!dcr and farm bureau
chairman Lloyd Arthur said in a
joint statement.
·
The two chairmen said the ·
joint management exchange was
to "explore strategic, management and operaHonat iss.ues and
opportunities which could lead to
the· development or !'long-term,
cohesive Countrymark and
IFBCA merger." ,
The announcement said the
strategy
was In the interests of
early one-room school buildings.
both
organizations
and their
Submitted by
stakeholders.
By Charles A. Murray
.!he joint managemen.t deal
119 Lariat Dr.
Galllpolls, Ohio 45631

wut not change the existing
by-laws, governance procedures, board responsibilities,
and member or other stake·.
holder obligations of either
organizatiOn.

Ohio Lottery

Braves end
·slump; snap
Reds streak

In addition . to approving a
proposal to index crop subSidy
rates, members have approved a
new dairy. program that. would•
cost mure th.a n the admlnistra· .
iionptan, have endorsed changes ,
ln domestic feeding programs
that could cost $900 ml1Uo11 a
year, andarelQ9kingatreytsions
in the cr op insurance program
that could cost more than $1
bllUon a year. ..
The budget committee wants
to reduce agriculture spef!dlng
by $1.7 in flscaf 1992 ,and by $2
billion tn each of the following_
three years. ·
•
·

Qaily Number
876
Pick-4
4530
Kicker
5-8-10.16-22-35
Kicker 870261

Page 3

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"

Can you identify this rural school?

,

Continue research on identification
of rural schools in Gallia County

Coutinued fr om D-1
Stocks
...
utility average !eli through a
further to attract investors· to

"j

support level at . 210, cto~ing
replace the Japanese. who have
F r iday at 208.19. ' 'That's a signal
apparently backed away for the
of sti li higher rates ahead. " he
time being..
·
"No one wants to buy stocks sai d.
On the trading floor this week,
when rates are high and bonds
are a good alternative," he illM was the most active issue,
up 22 to 109¥. alter its strong
added.
"The problem is that there has earnings report.
P hilip Morris followed , offlto
been serious damage to tha t
elusive thing called confidence. . 41. Harcourt Brace Jovanovich
was thi rd. surging 1Y, to 4 amtd
It 's been bloodied thi s week and
ta keover speculat ion involving
it's going to be difficult to put il
Thomson Corp. of Canada.
back logether again soon."
Among the other blue chips,
Brad .Weekes, senior vice pres- ·
AT&amp;T fe ll l), to 41, General
!dent in charge of sales and
trading at Donaldson, Lufkin and E lect ric felt 72 to 65% and
Jenrette Securities Corp .. noted Ge neral Motors rose % to 46%.
the. interest rate-sensitive Dow

New program to. teach
about wildlife.hahotats
CALDWELL, Ohio !UP!) Wlldllfe are attracted to areas
that offer a good source of food
and· protection from pred~tors ,
says Edward L. Smith, natural
resources specialist at Ohio State
University.
·
Howev.e r, few .people know
what makes a good habitat for
various woodland anlm&lt;tls. The
Ohio Coverts Projects plans to
change that. .
A "covert" in this context is a
thicket that provides shelter for
wildlife, Smtth says. The project
~Ill gather qu!lllfled Ohioans for
seminars to reach sound
multiple-use forest management
practices.
"Ninety-four percent of Ohio's
forest land belongs to thousands
of private individuals. most of
whom have an interest In wild·
llfe." Smith says. "We will trai!l
selected· Individuals who can in
t.urn train other woodland owners
· in their communities. "
T(aining will include indoor
. and outdoor sessions in ecology,
· . forest and wildlife management,
and communications. Demon·
stratton forest sites wlll serve as

Ohio University · ·
College of Business Administration.

Executive MBA
P~g··ant

The College of Business Administration of Ohio University ts
currently recrUiting the fourteenth group for Its very successful
weekend Executive M.B.A. Program at its Lancaater Campus.
Classe.s will begin tn September 1990.
Ohio Uni ucrs lty Is a n aj1irma rtve accton tnsWutton .

For details , call 6 14-593-2028 or 614-593·2029, or
complete the col.!'pon and mail it to:
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•

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• • • • • • • • '0

0

•••••••• . •••••••••••••••••••

Director, Executive M.B.A. Program
College of Business Administration
Copeland Hall, Ohio University
Athens, Ohio 4570 1-2979
Please send me information on the Executive M.B.A. Progriun.

"'

classrooms for participants to
see management practices in
action.
Most likely participants would
be woodland owners or others
involved tn natural ·resource
agencies and organizations.
Smith says. They'd be the people
In local communities who. are
most often ap,proached by others
with conc~rns about nat)Jrat
resources.

26 Cento

Leadership
is theme of
Sen. Branstool

I

GALLIPOLIS - ·Can you iden- Sc hOols of Gallia County.
One important research area
tify thts early one-room school
in
volves
photography. In the
which existed in Gattia County in
1930s
when
the one-room school
the 1930s?
era
ended.
Bion Bradbury was
The Gallla County Historical
the
superintendent
of schools. At
Society and several members of
that
time
he
took
photos of
the Daughters of the American
a
pproximately
seventy-five
Revolution are a·g ain doing re-.
search on the one-room schools in sehoolhouses. Many of these
have not been identified, and
Gatua County.
local
. senior citizens, former
The proje.ct was started by the
.
s
tudents
and teacher~. may help
local Chapter of the D.A.R. two
j¥ilh the proper identification.
· years ago when that organization
e,artlcipatedin a statewide pro· , . If one WOUld like to help With
thL• proj ect tn any way, contact
"feet. Since then much research
Mrs . E st ivaun Matthews by
has been done at the Ga tlia
County School office. and other caliing 446-1956 or Charles A.
secondary resources have bee n Mu rray 446-2272 for further infor·
utilized. The Gallia County His- mation. Some dates and places
torical Society hopes to preserve will be arranged to accommo·
date ·everyone who is interested,
this important part of Ga ltia
County's -heritage by publishing and hopefully someone can help
a book called' The One-Room wi th the iden tirtcalion of these

1 Section. 10 Po goa
A Multimedia Inc.

· Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, April 23. 1990

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Fax: 446-7082
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'

~

' TALKING IT OVER - Lot!l'lme nemoorulc party faHhpll
Normaa''Wtu enjoyed a dlscul!lllon With Sen. Jau Michael t.onrat
.Saturday niJhl's Meigs DeJI!oorailc JeHerson.Jackaon Day
tl,lnner.

Risi~g

health -. · .

KEYN()TE SPEAKER - Sen. Gene Branalool, candidate for
(Jeulenant · Governor and present minority whtp of the Ohio
Senate, was the keynote speaker at the Jefferson-Jackson Day
dinner of the Melp Co~u~n~ty!J~~m~oc~ra~t~lc:_!~!:._-------,

he

'

costs big
concern·"" . $)fflc!~ls a,t the Meigs Highway ,
' ·Department areconct!rllfd ab!Jut ·
the rlsthg· costs or health Insurance coverage -(or highway
department employees. ,.
County ·Engtne.e r Philip Ro· ·
berts and 'T ed Warner and DaVId
Spencer of the hi![hway departCANDIDATES ATTEND DINNER- Speaking Quickel, Cecil GIUogly, and Janet Howard, Meigs
ment, voiced their concerns at
at the' annual Meigs Democratic Jefferson·
County Commissioner; , Rep. Mary Abel, Sen.
Friday's meeting of · the Meigs
Jackson Day dinner Saturday night at lhe Senior
Gene Branstool; Sen. Jan. Michael Long, and
County Commissioners.
Citizens Center In Pomeroy were these candl·
William Shaw, office of Judge of the Ohio Fourlh
Wednesday's regular meeting
dates, from the left, Michael Mullen, Judge of the
District Court of App~als.
of the commissioners was postMeigs County Probate an~ Juvenlie Court, Blll
poned , ,11nt11 Frlda;v, due to
Wednesday ntght's. Lincoln Day
Dinner . tn Middleport. Next
Wj3ek, the meeting returns to
Weqnesday.
.
· According. to ,Roberts, insurance rates with Central Bene!·
its,· ,a
Cross -Blue Shield
Compahy. have, increased ap·
pr~l(lmat.ely 42 .percent this year.
'COLUMBUS, Ohto iUPI, War II Ohio," said Gov. Richard enthusiasm for public service as
In dollars, that amou~;rt.s t.o about
Celeste In a statement tn which mayor of his beloved Cleveland,
Former
Gov.
and
Sen.
Frank
J.
$4~,!)()() more a year for -the
Lausche,
who
'
dted
Saturday
he asked for flags to be flown at as ·governor of Ohio, ana as
highway department's insurance
senator of hls country."
after
an
extended
Illness,
was
half
staff until after the funeral.
qlVerage. . . .
Lausche served two terms as
remembered
as
an
eloquent
"He
was
an
eloquent
voice
for
Although the highway departmayor
Cleveland before seeking
voice
his
for
hls
state
and
country,
state
and
country
...
a
ment have a 30-day extension of
the
governor's
office. He served
dedicated
pat
riot
who
could
and
a
legend
In
the
Democratic
las.t year's lower costs, the new
in
that
capacity
rtve terms, -and
bring
.
party.
tears
to
the
eyes
of.
premiums will probably have to
was.elected
to
the
U.S. Senate for
audiences
young
and
old,"
the
RepubliCans as well as Demobe accepted stpce insurance
terms
.
.
two
governor
said.
'
·
crats :paused to remember the
benefits at the highway depart·
His political career spanned 36
man whose five terms as chief
"He brought tears to my eyes
ment are negotiated under union
years,
ending in 1968. As a
llxecutive, led to · a change th in 1964 when he spoke to Youth In
cpntract. The department's un·
widower
, he lived In Bethesda,
Ohio's constitution to limit the Government when I was getting
iqn contract does not expire un,ttt
Md.,
but
was transferred to ' a
term of governor.
·
my first taste of politics,"
Aprll 1 hext, year. Additionally,
nursing
home
In Cleveland In
"Frank Lausche was the most Celeste.said. ' 'His eloquence was
employees · ag·r eed under consignificant figure tn post-World ma!ched by his Integrity and hts
· ' Contir&lt;ued on .page 10
tract to begin this year picking up
some oftheir premium costs, but
even so, the Increased premiUms
will still put a crimp in the overall
highway department budget, Ro·
berts said. ·
''
"
, OVer the coming months, .the
commissioners have agreed to
meet with hil(hway department
dtfJcials . ro re'vfew all health
Insurance avenues, in an effort to
find coverage at a tower cost.
It appears that If . Meigs,
VInton, Jackson and Hocking
Cb.t'lntles d~id~ to submit an
ap:pl'i catton ·to the state .'for
partial funding to construct a
regional jail, the counties would
stand good chance of receiving
the funding. That was )he report
from 'the Metgs'County Colnmts·
stoners to Allan ' Kohnen, of the
SeasongoOd and Mayer Com···
pany, a Cincinnati bonding ftrm.
Kohnen,, who visits Melgs
County periodically on behalf of
lffs ' company, was at Wednes·
day's meetlngofth~commlsslon­
ers to' check on the status of a
regional ]all for thts area.
·Kohnetb; finn bas assisted In the
· preparation ot financial packDAY
- Bap coll&amp;alaln1 . lhe ,Melp County Utter Control office. Plcllll'l!d
agesforotherreglonaljallslnthe
Oower aeect. 1111d Vl~lnla , plne seedllnp al0111 left to rlpl froal are .Jake Bfrehfleld, B. J.
slate.
·
'
with l"ter law and recycllnl panipbets were
KelllledJ, Zackeey Bolin, Brook Bolin, aud
The commissioners, who at.
dlslrlbuted to every ho- In Rutlaud Sunday
Jamllba Wilford recelvln1 seeds fz,om Joan M"l'
-tended a meeting this past
alter-n by seoul aud t-H club memben. The ol Baak Oae, ... baok, Kenny Wl11lnl, Melp
~Iter Control ~or. with Brian Dalley,
Monday In McAI'tiJ!!I_wll!ill1.uth~~~-!&lt;lvlc J!ro~ , wu apoaaored by the Rutland
regional jail proposal was again
Friendly G~enera with the Dower aeeda being Jere1117 FeiiJ, PIQIIIt()Jark, Beverl;y Slewarl and .
discusSed, said It Is their under·
dona&amp;ed bJ .llllllk One Of Rutland, lbe aeedllllllp by Amaada M»1nr, Tbree hundred ollhe bags W\!re
dlstrlbu led Ia obMnanee of Earth Day.
· · ·continued on page 10 .
the Ohio lrorestry Division, aud lhe pampbets by

Blue

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By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Sentinel News Staff
' 'Leadership, which often ·re·
quires difficult decisions and
sacrifices, Is what this election is
all about, " satd Sen. Gene
Brans toot, candidate for Lieu ten. ant Governor, tn hts keynote
address at the annual Meigs
County . Democratic Jefferson-Jackson dinner held Saturday
ntght at the Sen!or Citizen~
Center.
' sen. Branstoot talked about
leadership and the direction tfiis
electi.on campaign is going to
take , noting that sometimes
unpopular but wise decisions
have to be made by public
officials.
To emphasize his points on
leadership he referred to the tate
Pres. Harry A. Truman and the
decision
made to fire Gen.
Douglas MacArthur, noting that
it was highly unpoput~r at the
time but right as hls tortans
reflect upon it today.
·
- "One baste thing we hold very
dear tn this country is that civtt
au thortty is superior to military
authority, and whtte Gen. MacArthur was a great man, he was
a man who was Insubordinate to
the presi(jent. he didn't follow
orders." the speaker said.
.
"Effecttveness tn leadership Is
based on doing what is right. We
found that out in the the case of
Pres. Truman. His dectston to
fire Gen. MacArthur w'a s unpopular, it was bitter medicine. but It
hjld to be taken, and time proved
tnat the decision was right.''
Bran'stoot continued.
The census and lts lmportance
to leadership roles was discussed
by .the speaker who noted .that
new Senate and House districts
wlll be drawn to reflect the
population shift. He said 't hat
Ohto stands to lose two
congressmen.
The speaker stressed that It is
the '"legislature with leadership
from the governor that sets the
tone of 'Pl!b!lc policy whtch wilt
affect us as a people for the next
10 ye...s in education: the rights
.of working lnen and women,
health .care, protection of the
environment, the needs ol elderly citizens."
"All of these things and more
are formed tn the legislature and
that Is what is Important about
the redistricting," said Branstool.
· Commenting on what has happened tn the state over the past
several years, the speaker said
that when Gov. Richard Celeste
took office there was a deflctt of
$527 mllliom, that schools were
closing, that Industries were
fleeing, and that Ohio owed the
federal government two bttllon
dollars in the unemployment
compensation funnd on whtch the
state was paying Interest.
'·our financial house Is in order
now, Industry has moved In and
expanded. but there's lots more
to be done," the candidate for

Lausche remembered by·both
Repu,blicans and Democrats.

lieutenant government satd in
calttng for support of the Democratic ticket headed by gubernatorial ·candida te Anthony
Celebrezze.
The speaker was compUmen·
tary of the work of both Rep.
Ma~y Abel, D-Athens, and Sen.
Jan Michael Long, D·Ctrcteville .•
He said they have been part of a• ·
"nucleus· which has been able to•
make the legislators from South·
ern Ohio start to work together,
they have been a part of the
catalyst to help southern and
eastern rural Ohio to have their
voice heard."
"Rural Ohto is important. I
represent famtty !arming, Appalachia. coal and tImber produc- •
lion, and that is why I believe
Tony Celebrezze selected me to.
nin wt'th him,'' Brans tool said. In'
closing he urged his ttsteners to
\eatty get behind the Democrattc
ticket "because It represents
strong leadership. and t!Jat's
what this election is really all
about."
Not Forgotten
Meigs County is not a forgotten.
county as some have charged;
Sen. Long told the nearly 150.
Democrats at the dinner before
taking them on a "walk down
memory lane. ' '
"Whether it is a boat launching
facility in Middleport or something that affects all of Meigs
County or Southern Ohio, we
have been there in support.
· "When the bridge was about to
be closed a few years ago and
there. was concern by many
businesses about how they would
sell their merchandise, and how
people would get back and forth
to their jobs, tite people came to
the · state and we gave help i'!
getting a ferry .
"When someone wants to start
up a new kind of business, they
come to the state for,asslstance
and many times we have been
able to give that.
"Our doors are open, " Long
said.
He talked about the role which
he and Rep . Abel and Sen.
Brans toot had tn retaining funding for the Ohio Valley Assocta·
tlon of Libraries rOVAL), and of
their support for the Eldercare
program which wilt make It
possible for may senior citizens
to remain in the'tr homes rather
than have to go to a nursing
home.
He acknowledged there are
problems yet to be -solved and
pledged his lull support to work
toward solutions which will contribute to better economic condi·
lions In Meigs County and SoUthern Ohio.
In her talk Rep . Abel called for
a positive attitude and a real
commitment to the Democra·tic
slate tn the falL She satd that
nothing can be taken for granted
and to encourage commitment
dlsptayed volunteer cards for
party members to sign as a
Continued on page 10

r-l..ocal news briefs-·-.
DOH to conduct highway suroey
POINT PLEASANT- Survey questionnaires will be handed .
out to vehicles on major highways in the Point Pleasant area
early next week as part of a West Virgtnta Department of
Highways study for a routing of a proposed highway between
the Mason County ctty and Charleston.
Announcement of the questionnaire distribution was made
Saturday by the DOH Division of Hig!tway Planning.
To keep trafflc delays at a mlntmilm, drivers will be given a
pre-addressed, sell-mailing questionnaire to be retw-ned to the
DOH within five days. Similar surveys on other routes In the
past have Involved stopping vehicles tong enough to obtain
ans\Vers Involving travel de$lres.
.
Such questiOns will not be asked at the site, but can be
answered at leisure In the home, according to the DOH.
. Signs will be placed to indicate that vetilc!es should be
prepared 10 stop for the survey, which will involve some !oat
1notorlsta, butts primarily concerned with out-of-state traffic,
·
particularly trucks.
Continued on page 10
'

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�Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

.,

The Daily Sentinel-Page 3

.'-* ' '

Commentary
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS.MASON AREA

Alb

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1

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~m~ rT-t.........IL--.-.~d·-=-

qjv

'

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

•

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Ma,n aJer

PAT WHITEHEAD
. Ass~tant Publlsher/ControUe~ ··'·

A MEMBER of The Unlted Press InternatiOnal, Inland Dally Press
AssociatiOn and the American Newspaper Publishers Association. .
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words long. All letters are subject to edltjng and must be signed wlth
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personal!·
ties.
·
. ,
·
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Fisher shoots himself
in the foot in a.g.'s race

JaCk Anderson &amp; Dale Van Atta
new antibiotic.
But Zaslo!f ran Into bureaucratic roadblocks and got little
support trom his bosses. He had
to leave the government, join a
university and form a partnership with a drug . company to·
commercialize his
breakthrough,
11
Either through Inefficiency,
· Incompetence or just plan over·
protectiveness, the.. government .
Is contributing In a big way to the
trade Imbalance with countries
such as Japari, Korea and Talwan. Those nations allow
government-financed techno!. ogy 10 be ~ass produced. 1\t the
same time, the United States Is
falling behind In the markets for
semiconductors, drugs and other

Today in history
By United Press International
.Today Is Monday, Aprll23, the 113th day of 1990 with 252 to follow .
The moon Is waning, moving toward Its new phase.
the morning stars are Venus, Mars and Saturn .
The evening stars are Mercury and Jupiter.
· Those born on this date are under the sign or Taurus.
•

w~aT ~Re. VOCJ PoiNG

' ll~@@

~®@@

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I

THe·DaY aFTeR eaRTK PaY?

When ·teachers betray tlt~ir students·
At first, I dldn' t recognize him
as he stooped over the courlter of
the convenience store. He was
slighter than I remembered and
seemed shorter. I remembered
him as tall and strapping.
When I did recognize him and
spoke, his eyes narrowed and
tried to.focus. "Oh, sure, Sarah,"
he said, but I knew he didn't
remember me as his student
from 20 years ago. We walked out
or the store, an(! I asked him If he
was still teaching.
"No, not any more. I was
working at a nursing home, but I
lost that job. But I think I'll be
teaching again, soon." With that,
he stood up, squared his
shoulders, · turne;d and y.ralked
across. tlle parking lot toward a
street filled with cheap apartments. I could hardly believe my
eyes. What had happened to him?
He had been such a lively and
dedicated teacher, even If his
temper had become explosive
during my senior year.
A few years after I graduated, I
learned he had been having an
affair with one or his students

that year. I was shocked then, but
even more so later when I
learned theirs hadn't been the
only teacher-student sexual rela·
tlonshlp at my school. The
Information came from reliable
sources - one, a fellow teacher
who discovered the affair and
testified In the teacher's husband's child-custody suit; and
the other, a fellow student who
had ·helped her good friend hide
the relationship.
I would never have susPe&lt;:ted. I
believed our teachers had our
best Interests at heart, or else
they wouldn't be teachers. And
while I might not have known
much about affairs then, I sensed ·
that having sex with a student
would have been a violation of
that trust.
Even after I learned what had
happened at my high school, I
dldn' t expect that during my four
years as a teacher, there would
be more Instances of 't eachers
having affairs with their students. There were: ·
. Since then, other teachers haile
told me of such relationships, and
of admlnlstl'lltors who swepl'the

Sarah Overstreet

, Incidences under the rug, rather
than face the repercussions If the
knowledge got out.
Last month, an Illinois . band
teacher was sentenced to four on the order of p. TV star. ',,
If this Is" so, then we need to
· years probation and counsellng
after having an affair with one of cover the subject more thohis students. He resigned his roughly In teachers' colleges, so
teaching job. The girl's parents these teachers wUI fully under·say· that since the man's arrest, stand the Implications of having
their daughter has .been mlsera· . sex with their students. After
that, .I am not opposed to prison
ble and her grades have suffered.
The chief prosecutor In the' case for offenders. If becoming· edu·
argued the man should have been cated about what this does to
children Is not · enough, then
sent to prison.
punishment s~ere enough to
· I can't say I· know what an
appropriate sentence would be stop It Is the only option left. .
As I wa!ched my former
for a teacher who has a sexual
relationship with a student, even teacher shuffle off In the dQrk,
what on earth had happened to
though the behavior ~nrages me.
What I do know Is how.vulnerable him wasn't the only question In
children are, and how they look mY mind. i thought of the time I
up·to their teachers. I think some was a junior In high school and
of these offending teachers may ·Idolized him, I was a cutekldwho
'delude themselves Into thinking worked hard and was eaeer to
please. I was also emotionally
• they are dealing with fellow
fragile,
a COI\fllle!i child from a .
adults just because these chlidtroubled home. If I bad been the
ren's bodies may look adult.
one he had taken a sexual
Perhaps they have forgotten
Interest In, I don't know It I would
what It Is llke to bean~dolescent,
have ever recovered from ·the
when an attractive teacher bed!lmage.
comes an Idealized hero almost

Imagine being an old .communist
·

·

· ·.

·

·

c::()l~. ~
t,· ~c .

" OK, I'll tell you where It was built. But first ,

you tell me if you want to 'Buy American •or If
you want Japanese quality. "

•'

' ". ,,.

. ··

v' .

SHAYER REPAIR
CLINIC

Seles captures Eckerd Ope~

William Rusher

·Old soldiers, It's said, never
The government, with reason, · prove no trouble at all. But the -..:.·-._:;.....::::::::..:.:....:.::=::::..::::..
die; they just fade away. But . feared what Harry might manwriter. lnter,vlewed a few of the to put a wrinkled but stUI
what do old communists do?
age to do for the Sovl~t Union In doughty old "Idealists,'! and servlce.able thumb In Uncle
'they too were soldiers In their
tlieevent of a hot war, for he had found- .not unexpectedly- that Sam's eye,
way, fighting Stalin's battles for
formidable clout In Callfornta
they are far from repentant. ,
him under circumstances that, In
and Hawaii. (The Speaker or the
Take Sadie Tomkin, 82, a ·
- ,CORRECTION: I owe iny
the United States, at least, were
Hawaiian House of Representsformer manager of the· commureaders
and editors, and the
lives, In a gesture of total
nlst publication "People''s
o!ten far from Ideal. .
journalists
I quoted - JQhn
Fifty years ago, when I was
abasement, actually presented
World," and herself a lifelong
CoGllran,
Harry
Smith, ilnd the
entering college, the notion of an
hls gavel to Bridges.) But . It
cominunlst. ''I am v~ -happy
editors
of
Newsweek
- ,an
"old communist" was an oxy·
never succeeded In deporting
that I'm living In a place where
apology.
·
moron; they were practically all
him to his native Australia; and
I'm free to participate In social
In
iny
column.
for
release
April
young. It wasn't until many
the media played his death as the
Issues or the day " she told the
12, the. third, fOI!rth, and fifth,
years later, before a debate at
usual story of a great man
Times.
,
'·
tbe University of Washington,
bedeviled by McCarthylte
It turned out, though; that 'she alleged examples of untalr :atthat a frail old geezer entered the
smears.
wasn't expressing her gratitude tacks on former· President Rea·
Lesser communists, though,
for American freedoms (as dis; gan, attributed J;o the aforesaid"
auditorium and was helped to his
apocryphal.
seat, smUing and waving, to the · aren't always so lucky. So, I was
tlngulshed from the grim sltua- journalists,
I
Innocently
usj!d
the quotes
Inte,resled, the other day, to read
Uon In the Worker's Paradise she
. accompaniment of, a smattering
the
Media
Research .
and
credited
of collegiate appla1Jse. It was
a sentimental story In The Jl!ew
chose to serve) . ·Slie was talking
lit
whose
newsletter,
.
Center,
explained to me that he was a
York Times about a retirement
about Sunset Hall's habit of '
Media
watch,
!hey
appeared.
~ut
home In Los Angeles . "F'or
eneouraglng Its residents to stay
well-known local communist,
fooled by the MRC, which
and suddenly I realized thai at
political activists" - many of
acuve In politics. In 1984, they I
the quotes In a newsletleast some commies were getting
whom turn out, · by coincidence,
c·anvassed their neighborhood
~te~lded as an Aprn Fool's
pretty superannuated.
to be communists. (The Times'
for Jesse Jackson for president.
Of course, a few of the more
headline writer, struggling to
Last year they joined .a picket
cet&gt;tl~ln ls.n ' t justified, even
famous American communists
avoid the "C" word, act)lally
line . of striking LOs ' Angeles
I !'.o '
In
,,
.
t:J•
have managed to su1&gt;port themc a II e d t h em " p oII t I c a I
teachers. '
'·
,
Coincidentally,
I
am
on
the.
'' .' .
selves until the end. Harry
Idealists"! )
One supposes ' that untO reBrldges, who died just the other · The real purpose ' of the story
ceiltly, It must have ~en kind of board of dlrectorli of the MRC,
day, was an Australian aDd a
was obviously to whip up a little
fun, · sitting around tile · fire· and I will make It a point to leU ·'I
the young staffer• Involved that
lltelong communist who ran the
financial support for the home,
~ackllng about rallies long' ago
the
believability of their prQduct
Longshoremen's Union on the . which Is short of cash. With
and going out every now and
Is
Its
most valuable asset.
West Coast. until he retired.
Hollywood nearby, that should
then, when the,weathenvas nice,

(

Blues take 2-1 lead
·in playoffs ·with ~iri

. 2-----·............

ALL BRANDS

$395

Salll!t

'

ar!)

"

Benzinger, his first of the year.
" We've let the rest of the world
know , we're a good teain,"
Benzinger said. " We' re confident. We know we' re good. We
have all kinds of weapons. Now
we'll go to Philadelphia iTuesday) and start another streak."
Elsewhere Sunday In the Na·
tlollal League, New YQrk white·
Washed Montreal 5·0, Philadel·
phla beat St . Louis 5-3,
Pittsburgh edged Chicago 3-2,
l-os Angeles blanked Houston 2-0
and San Francisco topped San
Diego 3-1.
Mets 5, Expos 0
At New York, Sid Fernandez
pitched a two-hitter and Keith. ·
·Miller hit a two-run homer to help
the Mets win two straight games
for the tlrst time this season.
Fernandez, 1·1, allowed two
singles to Tim Raines, one In the
fourth Inning anct one In the
·seventh, walked two and struck
out four . Montreal starter Mark
Gardner, 0-2, now has five .
major-league decisions without a
win.
PhUlles 5, Cardinals 3
At St. Louis, Randy Ready
homered and drove home all
three Pjllladelphla runs to lead .
the Phlllles. Pat Combs, 1-1,
earned the viCtory by scat.terlng
game In Cincinnati. The Braves handed the Reds
DOUBLE PLAY - The Reds' ChriS Sabo slides
four hits over. seven Innings.
a 3-1 loss, ending the Rhlnelanders' season·
hard and upends Braves shorlstop Jell Blauser In
Roger McDowell got the final two
this fln~l·lnnlng double play duri,ng Sunday's , opening winning streak at nine, (UPI)
outs for his fourth save. Ready
hit his first homer of the year In
the eighth Inning off St. Louis
rei lever Rick Horton, 0-1.
Pirates 3, Cubs 2
At Chicago, Bobby Bonllla
stroked a two-run double as part
ST. LOUtS tUPI)' - Gino caromed off Riendeau into the
of a three-run fourth Inning to
Cavalllnl's first playoff goal this net for his first goal of 'the
lead the Pirates . Neal Heaton,
postseason.
year was a big one.
3-0, pitch·ed Into the seventh
By DAVE RAFF'O
"We don't feel we've decimated
picks, seven were linebackers.
"I lost sight of the puck,"
Cavalllnl, a checker for St.
inning for the victory, allowing
UPI Sports Writer
the team' by this trade ..We'll stay
The New York Jets followed
Louis, scored on a rebound with Riendeau said. "When I saw it,
two runs and (lve . hits as the
NEW YORK ' !UPI) - The productive. We haven:t thrown at the selection of George by taking
nine seconds remaining In the he shot and it went In off me. I
Pirates swept the three-game .
ques tlon of who got the .b est o( the
a level we would like since Penn State running back Blair
third period Sunday night, lilting thought 1 was through with weird , series at Wrigley Field. Ted
!quarterback) Bert Jones left In Thomas.
Jeff George trade will be debated
the Blues to a 5-4 victory over the ·goals."
Power got the final five outs for
the next few seasons by fans !Ji the ear~y '70s. We've struggled to
After that there was not
Chicago Blackhawks In Game 3
Steve Thomas put Chicago
his first save, Cubs starter Jose
Atlimta and Indianapolis, and replace Jones and I think we 've, another running back taken until
ahead 2:12 later. A(ter taking a
of their Norris Division final.
Nunez, 1·1, took the loss.
other cities around the league.
done that.," .
.
Dallas selected Flofdia's Em·
"You never quit un(ll the check behind the St. Louis goal,
Dodgers 2, i\l;tros 0
Both sides were already claim·
New England and Seattle mitt Smith with the 17th pick. But
buzzer sounds," Cavalllnl said. Thomas came around In front
At Los Ang~les, Ramon Mar' ;
lng victory .Sunday In· fhe hours swung a trade for (he third pick, four backs were 'taken among the
''I just wanted to put It on net and and, while lyi ng on the ice,
!Inez fired a three-hitter and
after George officially became and both teams seemed pleased final seven· first -round picks.
It goes ln. The feeling Is directed In . a shot by Greg
Lenny Harris drove home two ·
the Colts' No. 1 pick.
with the results.
Smith and Hampton were the
Gilbert.
Indescribable."
runs with a pair of singles to lift
Jeff Brown had given th~ Blues
"I believe the Falcons .are the
The Seallawks moved up to first -round junlorTunnlng backs,
St. Louis leads the b~s t -of·
the Dodgers. Martinet, 1-0, ,,
one wit he tie and the sport coat
seven series 2· I, with Game 4 a 3-2 advantage with a power- · struck out nine and walked one to ,,
third to draft Miami defensive with quarterbacks George and
w Falcons receiver Andre
scheduled for Tuesday night in play goal at 10: 18 of the second
ta~kle ' Cortez Kennedy , then
Andre Ware and safety Mark
post his third career shutout.
Rl
said. "Surprised? I was
period. Rod Brlnd-Amour and
St. Louis.
added defensive help In the Carrier maklllg It eight juniors
Terry Puhl had two of Houston's
s ocked. So were a lot of the Colts second round with · Syracuse . selected in the opening round.
CavalUnl scored by lifting the Hull made crisp passes heading
hits, with · the other by Ken ~·
players and a lot .of the Colts fans.
linebacker Terry Wooden. and
A total of · 15 underclassmen
rebound of a Gordie Roberts shot up the Ice on a break and Brown,
Oberkfell. Mark Portugal, 1-2 ,
"But , I think It's great for me . . Baylor defensive back Robert were selected Sunday . The final
from the · poJnt over sprawled lett alone in the left face-off
was the loser. '
Now, I'll get a chance to Blackmon.
circle, slid a wrist shot along the
goaltender Greg Millen.
seven rounds will be conducted
Giants 3, Padres I
showcase my talent. Now that
''Any goal Is great'," Roberts lee, beating Millen.
"As .I've been saying {or : Monday , beginning at 10 a.m.
At San Diego, Kevin Bass
the.Falcons have me and Shawn years: : saliefe slve coordina- EDT.
The Blues scored just 18, clubbed a two· run home run and
said. "My point job Is to put It up
Collins, t!Jey have a couple of tor Tom .C
, "we are a light ,
The other linebackers selected
front and Gino was there and seconds into the game on a goal
Allee Hammaker won his first
receivers ·like Pitts burgh had . defenslv,e te m. "At 295 pounds, In the first round were Fran'cls,
scored. It was fantastic to see It by Sergio Momesso - the quick·
game since last June for the
when the Steelets were whining Kennedy Is 25 pounds heavier Chris Singleton, Percy Snow and
est goal In St . Louis playoff
go in.''
Giants. Hammaker, 1-1, scatall those Super Bowls In the '70s." than anyone we have. He's the Tony Bennett. Four defensive.
CavalUni said he ·saw Millen · history. Hull pasSed out from the
tered three · hits over eight :.
The Falcons acquired Rison kind of penetrating, ·agressive llnempn were also picked, and 14· wai; down as he shot.
·
corner to Peter Zezel, who was
Innings before giving way to
and offensive tackle Chris Hinton player that draws double-teams of the first 22 picks were
"Before 1 turned, Mlllen went camped in the crease. Zezel was
Steve Bedrosian , who got the
in the trade that sent the No. 1 and frees othergtiys. We'd like to defensive players . Anthony
down,'.'Cavalllnl said. "I didn't knocked down by Bob Murray
final three outs for his second ·
pick of the draft to Indianapolis. get a few more big guys, too.''
·Smith and Renaldo Turnbull . think I'd have that much time. I but pushed the puck to Mome~so.
save. San Dlegp starter Eric
The Falcons .thought they filled In
The PaJriots acqulre!l Seattle's followed Kennedy and Agnew
saw the puck and.J\Ist lifted It up. who lifted it over Millen's left
Show, 9·2, gave up six hits over '
some other needs Sunday by two first-round picks and drafted among defensive linemen.
You're that close . .You have to shoulder.
.
six Innings. ·
taking Washington State running Arizona linebacker Chris Sin·
Doug Wilson scored on power·
Although offensive selections
shoot." ·
back Steve Broussard late In the gleton and North Carolina Stale outnumbered defensive picks
Millen said Cavalllni "shot It play goal 'at 17:48 of the first
first round, linebacker Darton defensive tackle Ray Agnew.
71-66 through the five rounds, the . right over me. He was at the rll{ht period to tie the score 1-1 . Michel
SPRING II AllEY CtNlM~
Conner of Jackson State In the , "We probabl y got two draft had a decidedly defensive
place at the right time. We Goulet passed to Wilson, .who
446 ~~~~
second and pass-rushing defen· Mercedes-Benz In excha ge for a !Javor early. Forty-six of 81
scored
on
a
slap
shot
from
the
top
piayed a great third period. "
sivE' end Oliver Barnett In the . Rolls Royce," Patriots general selections over the first three
CavalUnl denied the checking of the slot.
;p ,,;;J
____,_,
third.
manager Patrick' Sullivan said.
rounds were used on defensE'.
line was on the lee to presery.e i)le
But the Colts, who agreed to
"The French Quarter"
rtllllll tllnl .,...,.
The P.afriots added to their". There were 17 defensive selectie and go Into over.tlme.' ,.
pa~· former Illinois quarterb_ack
"Anytime you're on the ice,
Pr•enta
fleet with Louslana State quar- tions- and no quarterbacks- in
flAil '
If!!!~
"FOR MEN ONL V"
George $15 m Ullon over six terback Tommy Hodson and Round Two. ·
you try and score," he said.
v.r &amp; Sllltttn•ts
.A
..
Speciel
FEMALE
.
R
EVUE
l.l
!O
&amp;
1:00
tl
years, said they addr~ssed some Texas Tech running back James
"You win with defense .In the
' 'When we tied It, we never
UIQI C" l
Friday,
April
27,
1990
needs, too. They followed George Gr~~· In later rounds .
thought overtime. You win when
National Football League." K~n·
8-10 P.M .
by drafting Notre Dame fullback
For the most part, the first five sas City General manager carl
you can. You don't wait for
"FOR
WOMEN
ONL V"
Anthony .Johnson In (he second rounds of the draft lived up to its Peterson, who drafted Snow No,
anything. VIe worked very
·
The
·c.jun.Room
round, and picked Florida wide · bllllng as the Year of the Junior. 13. "Every opportunity you get to
hard ." '
WIH Be Open
receiver Stacey Simmons, Sputh· Underclassmen made up nearly help your defense you should
St. Louis goaltender Vincent
Coming
M•v 3, 1990
ern Cal guard Bill Schultz, one·thlrd of the first-round picks take advantage of It."
Riendeau stopped 44 shots and
The
lith
Annual
Stanford defensive hac!&lt; Alan · and helped linebackers and run·
Brett Hull scored two goals,
Dallas traded up for PlttsB•t ug• Conta•t
Grant, and Texas A&amp;M tackle nlng . backs dominate· the top burgh's 17th pick and drafted
Including the tying goaL and
lltar lilt IO!IIMfs ef "Rod·H01111"
Pat Cunningham with their four choices.
Smith, marking a record eighth
added two assists for the Blues.
GAIUPOUS, OH.
446·9261
fourth·round picks. · ·
"This was a big, big win," St.
Three of the seven linebackers straight year a Florida player
"We think we have an excellent and two of the six running backs
Louis Coach Brian Sutter said.
was taken In the first round. The
football team In place," Colts taken In the first round left Stee(ers, who gained an extra
''The Blues have a lot of heart to
general manager Jim Irsay said . coUege after their junior sea· third-round choice In the deaL
come back the way they did .
, "This Is a SO-minute game. It's
sons. Juniors Keith McCants, d"opped down to 21st and se·
Junior Seau and Lamar Lathon lected Liberty tight end Eric
like a boxing match. You keep
hitting, keep hitting; you just
were among the premier llne- Green:
The Daily Senti,n el
backers to go early. Of theflrst18
can't go down."
'
(USPS lfwttlt
,
)he loss upset Chicago Coach
A DI\'IAion of Mul&amp;lmedla, lne.
· · -·
Mike·Keenan.
"We made bad defensive er·
Publish~ t&gt;very afternoon. Monday
throogh FrldBy, 111 Court St., Po·
· .•rors," Keenan said. "They tthe
LARGO, Fla. tUPI) - Top took· just 29 .minutes and Seles' . ·: Chicago defenders) shouldn't be
m eroy, Ohio, by tbe OMo Valley Publishing Companyt MulUmedla. Inc..
seed Monica Seles of Yugoslavia · never lost a point on hel' serve. ·
In the National Hockey League.
Pomeroy. Ohio 457QJ, Ph. 992·2156. Se·
routed fourth seed Katerlna
cond class postage paid at Pomeroy,
"She pretty much couldn't burt We' re not strong enough on
Ohio. 1
Maleeva of Bulgaria . 6·1, 6-0 me," Seles said.
·
defense. We're no!Intelligent."
Sunday
to win the $225,000
"I don't think iSeles) hits the
The Blackhawks had taken a
Me111ber: United Preis International,
Eckerd _Open.
Inland Daily Press Assoclatlon and the
ball t.hat hard," Maleeva said. 4-3 lead at 14:38 of the third
Ohio Newspaper AssoclaUon. National
, Seles, 16, took care of Maleeva "Her slrength Is she hits It very period before Hull tied the score
Advertising Representative. Branham
In 54 minute!! to earn the $45,000 early and that makes It difficult for the Blues 43 seconds later.
Newspaper Sa1E!I, 133 Tblrd Avenue.
winners' check. Maleeva, 20, to anticipate where she's going to Hull tipped In a shot by Roberts
New York, New Ytlrk 10017.
Day
pocketed $20,200.
hit the ball."
from the polntfor his second goal
POSTh!AS'I'ER; Send address change
AI Parts Extra
' "I wasn't missing many
to 11te Dally Sentinel, 111 Court St.,
of
the
game
and
lOth,
of
the
Pomeroy, C»tio 457Elt.
balls," Seles said. "The ground·
~
Things only got worse for I&gt; layoffs. .
·
strokes
were
working
I
t~lnk. I .
SIJBSCRIPTION Ro\TDI
Maleeva In the second set. Seles
Chicago pressed Riendeau .
knew I had to hit a lot of never her a chance to get back
lly£anier or Motor Route
hard
In the third period, oulshootOne W&lt;ek ...................................$1.40
winners."
Into
the
match,
banging
winners
ln~
the
Blues 21-7 for the period
, One Month ............... :................. $6.10
Seles hit 32 winners to be exact, from every angle at the baseline. and 48-28 for the game.
One Year .:............................... fn!.BO
'
while Maleeva managed just Fittingly, on IJI&amp;Ich P.Oint, Seles
SINGLE cOP.)'
The Blackhawks outshot the
.,. nine.
·
PRICE
finished
off
Maleeva
with
a
13-0
before the Blues finally put
Dally ...................... .......... 1 ~: ~Cents
INCLUDES: CLEANING, OILING,
Seles, who lives In Bradenton, forehand voUey. one of her rare . one on net with 8: 30 left In the
SQbscrtbers not de&amp;lrlng topay"thec;ar·
Fla., has now wOJi 20 of her 23 approaches to the net.
ADJUSTING, G"EASING.
third period. Chicago !!egan the
rter may rerutt in advance direct to
,
matches,
Including
15
In
a
row
The Dally sentinel on a 3, 6 or 12 m011tb
period on a power play and had
RAloU MAY II DIOftPID OFf IN ADVANCE .
all in srr"lght sets.
baals. Credit wUI be given carrier eacb
two other· power plays, but
week.
"I knew she was a goo(j day . couldn't get one by Riendeau
, · Maleeva was out ol this match
court
player," said Seles. "So I
No subscriptions by mall pennttted In
from the beginning. Her signa·
until 7:34 remained.
·
areas where borne carrier JerVice II
thought
It was going to be a tough
tute steady buellne game was
"11 seemed like they were ·
available.
992-6491
totally unetrecuve against \he. one. But I was playing really . always shooting," Riendeau
well."
' Mall8ubooQIIIo•
'
786 North
hard-hitting Seles.
said. "We were always a man
IMide Melp l:ount7
Both
playlfi'S
head
nO)V
to
Seles won 18 of the first 23
down. ·1 felt good we were only
13 Woeks .................................. $19.24
Second
26 Weeks ................ ,.... :......... , .. 137.98
· pollits and led 4·0 before some Europe for several'. clay court, down by one goal. "
52 Wel!ks .................................. $74.36
tournaments leading up to the
Middleport,
people found their seats at
Trailing 3-2, Bob Murray
Oulllde - P Ctenl7
French
Open,
the
second
Grand
1't Weeks ........... ,...................... 1:1),80
Bardmoor Country Club. Fl·
scored off Riendeau's pad at
Ohio
u. -...ekJ .................................. 810.ao
nally, In tl)e fifth eame, Maleeva Slam ev,ent of the season.
·
12:26
to
lie
the
score.
Murray
was
~· 1\eekJ, ........ .. ..., ............... : ... fl!i.to
won a game. The first set alone
behind the net apd his sbot

Colts sign top pick·. George ·
tq six-year, $15 million pact

I

·

Berry's World

key Industries:
The Japanese even capitalize
on lnventloris made In U.S. labs.
VIdeo cassette recorders are the
most blatant example. They
were developed In U.S. labs, but
Japan has cornered the produc·
tipn market.
Rep. Ron Wyden, D.Qre,, Is
leading the effort to force the ·
government to loose,n Its grip ·C:ID
federally ,. funded technology.
Wyden told our associate Scott
Sleek that government sclentllts
are fr.u strated beeau~ tbeycan't
see their Inventions through to
fruition. And businesses are
dlsgus_ted , With .the government
· because they can'-t get their
hands on valuable Information.

'

"

By LEE LEQNARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS - State Sen. Lee Fisher·, D·Shaker Heights,
attempting a come-from-behind win In the Democratlc contest for
state attorney general, saw an opening last week and tried to drive
through it .
Unfortunately for Fisher, he got a Utile reckless and drove Into the
wall. He bounced back, but the damage put a serlous·dent In his hopes
to win the ~tate's top legal job.
.
·
.
Fisher, who has been In the Ohio General J\Ssembly for10 years and
Is highly visible In Clevell!nd-area Democratic circles, has been
eJ!dorsed by the Ohio Democratic Party Ill a four-way contest. .
But Fisher's main obstacle Is Charles Brown, a Cleveland attorney
who Is ahead In the polls by virtue of his last name.
"Brown'' has been a popular ballot name for years In Ohio, and the
best situation for Charles Brown Is a quiet campaign that lets his
name speak for him on May 8. The less said, the better.
•
Thus Fisher's forces were overjoyed when they discovered that the
. Ohio Right to Life Society embraced Brown's candidacy as a fervent
anti-abortionist; Fisher. has long been allied with the other side those favoring a woman 's right to choose.
And the Fisher camp believes thata .strong majority of Democrats
also favor the pro-choice view. So Fisher scheduled a press
conference with the N.atlonal Abortion Rights Action Leag)le's Ohio
chapter and Ohioans for Family Planning, to draw public. attention
and make abortion a major Issue.
•
Everything went well until Fisher began fielding questions from
reporters. What would he do, he was.asked, If the Legislature enacted
a law restricting abortions and he was required to defend It In court as
the state:s chief legal officer?
·
'Feeling the gaze of nearby pro-choice advocates upon him, Fisher
said prelimlnarfresearch Indicated he might have some diScretion In
choosing not to defend a statute he feels Is unconstitutional.
The question Is not clear, he said, bot "the benefltofthedoubt ought
to go to the attorney general's discretion. Where I do not have
discretion, I will do m~ job.''
Fisher could not Immediately cite the law giving him the authority
t!l pick and choose which laws to defend, ·nor could he give a specific
example of When' such llexlblllty had been used.
His aides later produced a memo citing the attorneys' professional
code of responsibility as prohlllltlng the defense of any frivolous
statute and said Attorney General Anthony Celebrezze Jr. lqvoked
that principle In 1984 in refusing to defend the constitutionality of a
state law requiring newspapers to print corrections.
Celebrezze, who Is running for governor on the Democratic ticket ,
quickly Informed reporters that he disagreed with Fisher; th;lt the
attorney general must defend the law,
.
So, naturally, did Brown. ''That's ludicrous!'' he exclaimed. "I
can't believe he'd make such a statement."
All Fisher had to do was tell reporters he'd defend the law as best he
could, even If he personally disagrees with lt. He could have assured
his pro-choice supporters privately there might be some discretion,
They know where he stands.
.
But tlle senator opened himself to the charge, true or not, that he'll
selectively enforce a law based on his personal opinion of II . ''Lee's
too honest," lamented one supporter.
Fisher has about two weeks to make another run at the lead, and he
is reported to be spending upwards of $500,000 on a television blltz
showing his accomplishments In environmental, C(,&gt;nsumer and child
protection legislation,
_
', .
One consolation for Fisher: the Republican candidate for attorney
genera.!, state Sen. P;;~ul Pfeifer of Bucyrus, couldn't reslstjolnlng the·
fray. ·
·
.
Instead of sitting back and letting Fisher hang himself, Pfeifer
resorted to this verbal plllng-on: ''Lee Fisher Is running for attorney
general, not God," thus a!Jenatlng his own natural pro-choice allies
·
for the campaign next fall. ·· ·.

¢1 1WO~NEA, Inc; .

government-owned and operated
labs are ever commercialized.
Some governm!!nt labs have
Ignored federal laws designed to
encourage the ·transfer of new
technology to the private sector.
Others have simply not set any
guidelines for complying with the
laws . .
Congressional Investigators
say the problem has frustrated
many government· sponsored
scientists to the point that they
flee to the private sector where
they can capitalize on their
_, · ·
Inventions.
Three years ago, Dr. Michael
Zasloff, a )lclentlst at the National Institutes of Health, discovered Important healing proper·
tles In the skin of frogs and other
amphibians. He used the Information to begin development of a

WASHINGTON -The American public doesn't even know
what It's missing - some or the
nation's most Important dlscov. ertes are languishing on shelves
because the federal government
Is slow to share Its research.
·.The government spends $liO
billion a year fu ndlng· research
and development. That money Is
poured Into lab!; where scientists
try to !lnd cures for diseases, new
ways t.o protect the environment
and Industrial Innovations. The
labs make great strides, but few
ot the discoveries ever benefit
the American public.
That Is because the federal
government keei&gt;s private Industry from turning thes!! Innovations Into commercial products.
Less than 10 percent bf the
Inventions created In

•

even If I gave up 15 hits," Glavlne
By JEFF SHAIN
UPI Sporls Writer
said. "There's. no defense for
The Atlanta Braves, Clnclnna· walks. But, put the ball In play
II' s whipping boys during the and you can defense It.
Reds' nine-game winning streak
"This was a huge victory for
to begin the season, decided they us. We've been walking on
weren't going to take the pound· eggshells. We all knew we were a
lng any longer.
lot better team than the way
Dale Murphy clubbed a three- we',ve been playing. This Is a. big
run homer ;;~nd Tom Glavlne and monkey off our back."
Mike Stanton combined on a
Stanton kept the Reds hitless
seven-hitter Sunday, helping the over the flhal11 -3 Innings for his
Braves hand Clnclnnatr Its first second save of the season.
Cincinnati starter Tom Brown-.
loss with a 3-1 triumph.
Four of Cincinnati's nine wins lng, 2·1, gave up six hits and three
had been at the expense of the earned runs over six Innings.
"Nine outoflO Is good baseball
Braves .
"It seems like we've been ; and I'm proud of the team,"
playing this club for three Cincinnati Manager Lou Plnlella
months," Atlanta Manager Russ said. "We've played well."
Atlanta jumped out to a 3-0 lead
Nixon said. "And the way they
kept pounding on us, It seems In the first on Murphy's homer . .,
even longer. Well, the Reds can Jeff Blauser and Jim · Presley ·
start another streak If they want · singled and Murphy . blasted a
to, but It · won't be · at our towering drive high over t)le
left -field . wall for his second
expense.'' .
·
homer of the season.
Glavlne, 1-2, surrendered a
''The homer was the only thing
first-Inning leadoff single to
Chris Sabo, then retired the next we got off Browning, so It came
11 batters In a row before glvlng down to our pitching," Murphy
up his 5econd hit. The left-bander said. "The key was to hold those
guys to one run because they're
wound up yielding seven hits and
one run over 7 2-3 Innings, explosive."
striking out five and walking
Cincinnati, after six scoreless
none.
Innings, scored Its only run on a
"I had made up my mind I seventh-Inning home run by
wasn't going to walk anybody,

Labs· should share wealth

The Daily Sentinel
,.

Braves bounce back to . snap
.Reds winn~g streak at nine

Paga 2-The D.ifYse ilinal
PoiM oy-Middlepo11. ''Ohio
Monday, Aprl23, 1990

Serwice

TUESDAY
APRIL 24th
4 TO 7 P.M.

...

'

I

j

Il l

I

•.

..,.

,...,;

/

I

�. Ponwoy-Middleport. Ohio

Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

Monday, Aprl23, 1990

By The •Bend

Walks prove costly a8 Tige~
drop 3-2 encounter to Orioles
.

.
games. I think the short spring League, l(alii8S Glty •' topped
By ERIK K. LIEF
Toronto 7-1. Cleveland sniped
affected
11. I hope so."
UPI Sportil Wrller
·
Chicago 5·2, California dropped
Winning
pitcher
Gregg
Olson,
.• If the .Detroit Tigers harbor
Minnesota
5-2, Boston upended
1-0,
retired
Gary
Ward
on
an
a ny thoughts of Improving upon
Milwaukee
4-2 In 11 Innings,
Inning-ending
double
play
In
the
last season's dismal record, they
Texas
nalled
New York 10-4 and
lOth
on
the
way
to
2
2-3
innings
of
better start concentrating on
Seattle
slapped
Oakland 5-2.
hitless
relief.
·
runs, not walks.
Royals
7,
Blue
lqs I
·
Detroit,
which
didn't
record
a
Detroit's pitching staff Issued
At
·Toronto,
Tom
Gordon
scathit
after
the
seventh
Inning,
12 walks Sunday, the last coming
tered
five
hits
over
seven
Innings
.
scored
only
seven
runs
In
the
with the bases loaded In the 12th
and Jim Elsenrelch hOmered and
Inning to P\lSh the Baltimore four-game series.
knocked In three . runs to pace
Cecil
Fleld.er's
two-run
homer'
Orlo~ to a 3·2 victory over the
Kansas
City. Gordon, 1-0. sti·uck
In
the
fourth
Inning,
his
third
of
Tigers.
out
nine
and walked two In
the
year,
gave
Detroit
a
2-0
lead
arady Anderson, the Qrloles'
Improving
to 4-0 lifetime against
until
solo
home
runs
by
Joe
designated hitter, drew his
the
Blue
Jays. Bo Jackson's
Orsulak
and
Craig
Worthington
fourth walk of the game off loser
two-run
homer
gave the Royi\IS a
tied
It
2-2.
Mike Henneman, 0-1, to force ·
.
2-0
lead
In
the
first Inning off
Worthington
opened
the
12th
home pinch-runner Rene Gonstarter
and
loser
John Cerutti,
with
double
.
to
right-center
off.
zalez from third base with the
1'2.
Henneman,
and
Orsulak,
who
winning run.
Indians s, White
z
also had three singles, was
"I was trying to be patient, "
At
·
Cleveland,
Bud
Black
intentionally
walked.
Billy
Anderson said. ''I wasn' t looking
pitched
eight
innlligs
for
his
first
Rlpken
popped
a
bunt
between
for a walk, just a good pitch."
victory
and
Felix
Fermin
hit
the
the
mound
ahd
third
base
that
a
One of Henneman's pitches
first
home
run
of
his
professional
diving
Henneman
missed,
loadalmost hit Anderson, who recareer, boos.tlng Cleveland.
celved .Baltlmore's 35th base-on- Ing the bases.
balls of the four-game ·s eries,
"Once we have a solid lineup, Doug JQnes picked up his fourth
ending the 4-hour, 26-minute we'll be a. fimdamentai\y sound save after Black ylejded two
game.
club," said Detroit's Chet singles with no outs In the ninth
Tiger pitching has now Issued Lemon, who had two singles. "If Inning . .Black held Chicago to
three lilts and one earned run
69 walks In 115 innings.
Ml~e (Henneman) had caught
while
walking ·only two batters.
"Walks did it all," said Tiger that bunt, we would have turned
Greg
Hibbard,
1·1, took the loss.
manager Sparky Anderson. "I a triple play."
Anreb
5,
Twins 2
can't remember a pitching staff
Elsewhere In the American
At
Minneapolis.
Donnie Hlll
walking this many over four
stroked three hits and drove
.home the tie-breaking run to
helping Calltornla snap a fourgame losing streak. Chuck Finley, 3-0, gave up seven -hi\S and
'
NICE.• France (UP!) - Juan
unforced errors to allow Aguilera two earned rims over 61-;J Innings
Agullera of. Spain, seemingly · to break and go up 3-1.
of work for the win and Mark
washed up until the rains came,
The Frenchman Immediately Eichhorn notched his third save.
Sunday rebo11nded for a 2-6, 6-3,
broke back · but lost another Allan Anderson, 1-2, took the loss.
6-4 victory over Guy·, Forget of
service In the eighth game, and
Red Sox t, Brewers 2
France to win the$260,000Phlllps
Aguilera went up 5-3. The Spa( lllnnlnp)
1
Open.
. nlard then won the set on an ace,
At Milwaukee, Jody Reed
In an error-riddled match
a drop shot and two forget singled home two runs with two
between unlikely finalists at the
miscues.
out In the 11th Inning and four
Nice Lawn Tennis Club, Aguilera
''A!tei:Jhe rain cjelay, I felt like Boston pitchers combined on a
prevailed in four hours, including
I was Jllaying another match," , two-hitter to down Milwaukee.
a 90-mlnute rain delay.
Forget said. ''I was uptight ahd I
Randy Kutcher and Marty Bar: -· ·
Neither player Is ranked In the
probably rushed a little. I wanted rett srored when Reed lined an
top 50 and all the tournament
tp .get It ovel'. When I lost a
0-2 pitch to left, maltln_g a loser of
seeds were eliminated by the
service break In the third set, It reliever· Dan Plesac, 0-1. ·Lee
quarterfinals.
.
·
was too late."
Smith, 1-l,, aliowed on~ hit over
Agupera.• who earned $33,700,
Aguilera broke Forget .in the the final three Innings for the
was briefly ranked In the top 10 in
first. game of the third sef and
victory, sti-ll!lng out five and
' 1984 but entered' the tournament
took a 2·0 lead. The 28-year•o ld walking two. '
ranked 51st. Forget was ranked
Spaniard then lield to flitlsh the
RangerslO, Yankees t
No. 71 on the ATP Tour.
' match,
At Arlington, T!!xaS, pinch·
The 25-year-old Frenchman
Forget was the second straight
hitter Mike Stanley hit a threewon the first five games of the
left-handed Frenchman to lose a
run homer and Rafael Paimerlo
match and captured the first set
final at Nice. Last year, Jerome added a two· run shot as part of a
6-2. But Agullera found his
Potier lost to Andrei Chesnokov five-run eighth lnnine. Kevin
strokes after the rain delay .
of the Soviet Union. In 1988, Henri
Brown, 3-0, allowed four runs and
"Guy was very strong In the Leconte, still another French 11 hits over 7 1-3 Innings for the
first set, ·and I was a little left ·bander, defeated Potier.
victory. Jeff Russell pitched the
neryous ," Agullera said. ''Then
In the .doubles. finals, Alberto
final 1 2-3 Innings to record bls
afterw~rd ; I played with a little
Mancini of Argentina and Yan- fourth save. Tim Leary, 1-1,
more patience, and I think that's nlck Noah of France defeated
allowed just three hits but
what turned 't he match around. Horst Skoff of Austria and
absorbed New York's fifth loss In
Patience Is good for me. Guy .won Marcelo Filippini of Uruguay 6-4,
a row,
more points atthe net ; but I did 7-6 (7-3)' '
M~lnen 5, .,.thletles 2
better from the baseline."
At Oakland, Calif., Jeffrey
The match was halted with
Leonard and Ken Griffey Jr.
Aguilera ahead 1·0 In the second
drove
home two runs apiece to
Golf
set. In the fourth game of the set,
lead
Seattle.
Erik Hanson, 1-0,
Bernhard Langer shot a 5·
Forget blew a 40-30 ·lead on two
.
allowed
one
run
and six hits river
under-par 67 to win the $450,750
6
2·3
Innings
for
the victory and
Madrid Open by a stroke and .
Mike
Jackson
pitched
the final 2
flnlshecj the four rounds at
l-31nnlligs
for
his
first
save.
Scott
Puerta de Hlero at 18-under 270.
Sanderson,
2·1,
was
saddled
with
Australia's Rodger Davis shot a
the
loss.
66 for 271 while another stroke
back was Brett Ogle of Australia.
... Frankie Mlnoza of'the Phlllp·
ripped a single to score both
CLIFFSIDE
pines
turned back Jap~ne5e PrO
runners . Humphreys later
GOLF COURSE' .
Teruo Sugihara In a playoff to
scored after two Trimble errors
, . to give Meigs the lead.
captue' the 100 million yen
4 PERSON SCRAMBLE
($645,000) Dunlop International
' Melgso~~~~ade It 6-4in the fifth on
Open and overall title of .the 1990
consecutive singles by' Chrissy
SATURDAY, APRIL 28 .
Asian Golf Circuit.
Weaver, Kathy Lambert and
OPEN TO THE PUBLIC
Jud~
Osborne.
Osborne's single
Yoko Tanabe, runner-up In the
12:30 SHOTGUN
scored Weaver to give Meigs a
72-kg
class
at
the
World
Cham•
short lived 2 run lead. ·But the
110 Entry Includes
Lady Cats came back to score 4 plonshlps In Belgrade, Yugosla·
Food &amp; Prizes
via, last Ol;tober, won the naruns In the sixth Inning to take the
ENTRY DEADLINE 4/26/90
tional women's open weight judo
a 8-6 lead.
title
In
Nagoya,
Japan
for
the
CALL 446-GOLF
Meigs made it 8-7 In their half
fourth straight ye!il".
of the Inning on a Tricla Baer
walk, she later scored on a Kelly
Smith single.
After the Marauders held the
Trimble bats down In the top of
the seventh the Marauders
staged their comeback. Weaver
once again started the rally with
a single, after a Lambert walk,
'
Wlnbrenner beat out a bunt to
load the bases. To set the stage
for freshman Missy Sisson. Sis·
son lined a 2-1 pitch up the middle
to score b!&gt;th Weaver and Lambert to post the win. Tara
Gerlach picked up ·the win for
Meigs, Peart was the loser for .
Trimble.
Meigs wlll travel to Trimble
,tonight for a rematch before
returning home on Tuesday night
. :·
to play Vlnt9rt County.

Monday, April23, 1990
Page .6

OU dean's list ·announced
POMEROY - Fifty Meigs
County students were listed on
the Ohio University Dean's List
for the winter guarter.
To be named to the llst, a
student must have earned a
grade point average of 3.3 or
better on a scale of 4.0 for the
·quarter and . have earned 16
hours, 12 of which were taken for
a letter grade.
The following students were
Included on the list:
Middleport: Allen Glen Arnott,
Shelly R. Thompson Dubose,
Sharon K. Wllson .Hawley , Mark
Randall Smith, Kimberly M. Van
Matre. · •
Pomeroy: Deanna L. Laney
Apllng, Jeffrey Jon Arnold, Melissa Ann . Ca,laway. Marty Lee
Cline, Jodi Ann Harrison, Chris·
topher. Scott Kennedy, 'Larissa
Lee Long, ;Judith L. Mees, Steven
Ala"n Musser, Angela Kaye
Sloan, Jennifer Leigh Swartz,
Jackie Ryan Welker, and Susan
Renee Young.

Sox

l'I

Aguilera wins ·tournament

second base In the second Inning of Sunday's
game In Cleveland. 'J1he Tribe won 5-2. (UP I)

SAFE AT SECOND - Scott Fletcher of the
Chicago White Sox jumps up to puU down a high
. throw, as Fhe lndlnns' Candy Ma1donado steals
1

Oilers take 3-0 .series f!dvantage_
' INGl-EWOOD, Calif. (UP!) To.hear Craig Simpson tellli , one
· would think the Edmonton Oilers
were almost glad to see the Los
Angeles Kings score twice In the
final 40 seconds of the first
period.
After Los Angeles grabbed a
3·1lead with the two fastest goals
in its playo!f history, the Oilers
awoke to score four unanswered
goals In the second period .
Simpson triggered the outburst
with his second goal of the game, '
and Edmontonwasonltsway to a
~-4 victory and a 3-0 lead In Its
, Smythe Division final.
·
"We were fortunate to get out
of the period just down 3-1," said
Simpson, whose team was out·
~hot 13-1 In thP opening sPsslon.

"(The two goals) brought every- York Islanders In 1975 - pave
thl,ng into perspective. If we 1\ad won a series after tralllng 3-0.
left the ice tied 1-1 I don't think we
"Last year· we were down 3-1
would have dug down like we (in the series with the Oilers);
did."
.
this year it's 3-0," Kings owner
Bill Ranford turned in another Bruce McNall said. "Maybe 'this
brilliant effort in goal for Edmon- team has to have adversity. All
ton, stopping 35 shots, Including year when we've been down
all but one of the 26 he face&lt;;! In the we've been able to come back."
final two periods.
Edmonton scored Its five goals
"I guess I just tightened up;
on only 10 shots and won despite
It's hard to explain, " Ranford
taking only 18 shots - just one
said.
more than the club playoff lowThe Oilers, eliminated In the to 39 for Los Angeles.
first round by the Kings last year,
The Oilers held Wayne
can advance to the Campbell · Gretzky, who appeared slower
·Conference final as early as
than usual because of hiS back
Tuesday night with a victory In Injury - without a point In the
Game 4 at the Forum.
series until he gloved the puck,
Only two teams in NHL history dropped it and scored from the
- Toronto In 1942 and the New crease with 69 seconds. left to
make It 5-4.

Scoreboard ...
.Majors

Chlt•ap at San DleKQ. II; U p.m .

-·

Phl!llu llh Ill SUI FriUicit~eo, ID::!il p.m.

.\M ERJC.4N LEAGUE
Tl'lUn

W L

St . Loub1 at Lo11 Anpll!!i, 10:35 p.m.

Pet .

G,B

Toronto ............ ............ 11

5 .815 -

MU"·d ukc-1' ....•... , .•......... 6

5 .5.15

I

Baltlmort&gt; ..................... 6

G .500

l 'lr

&amp; "ton ..........-...·............. 6

\\'rs t
O:altlund .......•.•..... . ..•. ... !1
('ltlcur,:o .... .................... .i

5 .$00
&amp; .100
K .:J11!1

NATIONAL Bi\SKETB.U.L ASOOl'.

:ll,1

Allanite Dlvblon
Te am
W L Pet. GB
y-Phlllldelphla .............U t9 .IM x-BOI&lt;ilon ......................l~ 30 ,,:JI I

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talllornla .................... , tj

Kunsa." l"ltl· ............... ... 3
S.•llllk&gt; ..............•..... .. ..•. l

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51 1

.30K

SW.u rd~v Rl'!l ~t s
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1'oronto 5. K un~,.; fil)' l
l\lll"11.u ... t' t, Bo.ool.on II
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Tt•xa.o; 11. Nt'w \ 'nrk 6
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Ot•l rule lU l\11 Rl'l'!iota, nll{hl

Sl•ull lf' at Nf'" ' \ 'or", ni,r.:ht
( ':11Uornt" tll. Bo!ilon, nl(hl
( 'l('\'l' lund al Tororio. night
Oukl:1nd ul Balllmort&gt;, nfiChl
fhlcU~tl) at T nall. 11\,r.:ht
".\TIOI\AL LEAGUE
Eu:H
'l't• tun
\\' L P ti . foB
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t\tlantu :1, Unclnlllltl f
1~1 1 tstmrxh 3, Chl c~JrO 2
Lu~ 1\n~l ~ ~. Houlotori 0.
San Frltnci!K'o 3, SlUt Dl e,r.:o I
Monday Game~~
PllhilmFRh (Wnlk D-2) a1 St . 1Alld11
(Tudor 2-0), '1 : 3$ p .m .
!irian Fra nti ~o 1Gu llder110n tt- l ) iU San
Olt · ~ /Brnt!l !-1) , II: OS p.m .
l'ue!Od ~ Games
Atla nta al Nf'w l'ork, 'l:3S p.m .
ClnchUJIII Ill Plltla ddpllla, 7 : 3~ p.m.
Monlrl'al

I'

ut HouYoD. H: 1M p.m.

1
9

II;·Ho•,slo n............. :......-11 U .510 15

at Minl'll'!iola ( R.

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Df'lroiiiT!UIUna~IJ.It

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x·Dnw.r .......... ...........-13 39 .IIU 13

flf!\'Piund (l"ar"'ll 1-11 'Ill Toronto

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1'uf"lld"-'' Gumt'S
Kan!iil.o; f'il .' ' at llilw:~uiM• t•.

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EliiM ler n Co nterertee

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•~llac:hed playoff berth .
y-cllnched divis ion &amp;llle.
SatriQ R~lllttt~~~
.4.t1Jtnta ••· Mlam-1101
MlhwaAWr91, New Jer!e)' §
Purtland I Ill, Sacramento 110

LA Lakeu IU, LA

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SIUI AII&amp;OIIio ·181, Phot'Dlx 13
, Dd.-.N lit, eblcas;o 101

Denwl' 115, Mlntnota 108
C.olden State 12.1, Seattle 122
Ori!Uido 110, """"' Jeney 102
Da iiM 118, Chrlof.le 107
Ho•aton tilt, Ulalt Kll
Portland ISO , LA. L11kt&gt;r" SA ·

MondQ Sports Cal endar

Boxtnr
WBC Super·llantamft'eiJht Tltk&gt;
Lo11 Anpl4!11 - c·Danll!l Zaraaou u .

Paul Banle.

n.

Hockey NHL Pla,onlil
Dl\lllkllt .,. .!1

Wales thnfereDce
Pat ttek Dlvlfllo n
New l'ork at. Wllllhlqton. 7::11 P:m.
Ad ant DI.YIIIon
BoNton al Molitreal,~'h~ p.m.
· ~rae, SwM'Ier .. nd - World Hockey

Ctuun- lo•IJI!ll

·

s unday Sports Tran•cllom
Bueblll
Baltimore - i\cUvated pllder Mark

Wllllan11on from

lhe · dlaAhle d

ll_.t·

o pllue d'pltcbfl' lo~~~e BIUIIIIIIatolloc:lbee't K ot tbe ln&amp;er•U0ral

Leapae (.t.AA).

Teau - Placed third b._maa men

Bueehele en llae 11-dar di•IIIH lilt;
c alledMpthtnl

Meigs softballers split
pair of conference games ·
By DAVE HARRIS
The r.):elgs Marauders girls
~oftball team split a pair of
T.V. C. games last week losing a
tough one at Vinton County 12-4
and the Lady Marauders came
from behind to defeat Trimble in
a thriller 9-8.
In the loss at Vinton County the
Marauders and the Vlkes were
tied up at the end of 5 at 2-2, but
the Vikings exploded to score 10
runs In the final two Innings to
post the 12-4 victory. Trlcla Baer
led the maroon and gold at the
plate with a triple, Kristen
Stanley added a double and Kelly
Smith anp Kim Osborne each
,singled.
In the win over Trimble, 'the
Lady Cats jumped out to a 4-0
lead, but the Marauders cut the
lead In half when Missy Sisson
walked. Tara Humphreys laid
down a perfect bunt that the
Trimble pitcher threw away. The
error allowed Sisson to score and
-Humphreys to advance to third,
she later scored on a base hit by
Kim Osborne.
· Meigs took the lead In the
fourth with three big runs . Kathy
Lambert led off the Inning with a
single, after a walk . to L,u·cy
Winebrenner and a Trimble
passed ball, Tara Humphreys
Chamtl Catfish 4-6"· @ .34/_.
6-1"@ .45/oadl

Results

b,_,..scoutoolb....-11

frm1 Oklahoma City of the American
A.r.KOCIII;Ion tAU.) .

-Sports briefs-

JENNIFER R. McKINLEY, KEVIN W. TANNER

McKinley, Tanner wed ]an. 20
MIDDLEPORT -Jennifer Re. bekah McKinley . and' Kevin .
Wayne Tanner were united In
marriage on Jan. 20 at the United
Pentecostal Church In Middleport wllh . the Rev. Clark Baker
officiating.
The bride wore a full-length
white gown with a chapel-length
train. Her veil was of beaded
flower.s which went around the

forehead with white beads
throughout the netting. Her corsage was of white and royal blue
carnations with matching lace.
Kenda Kloes was maid of honor
and Michael King served as best
man.
A reception followed In the
c burch basement.
The couple wlll reside In North
Carolina.

·Community calendar
MONDAY
POMEROY -The Flatwoods
United Met,hodlst Church on
F.latwoods Road will be ho)dlng
revival serviceS Sunday through
Tuesday at 7:30 p .m. nightly .
Rev. Kenny Baker will prea,ch
and the Children of G&lt;rd wlll sing
on ·Tuesday.
MEIGS -The Mt. Moriah
Church of God wlll have revival
through next Sunday at ·7 p.m.
nightly with Rev . 'Bryce Utt,
Marietta. There 'wlll be special
singing and Pastor -Jim Satter•
field Invites the public.
POMEROY - The Mason Gal·
lla Meigs Crusade for Christ
revival wm be beld through
Sunday at 7 p.m. nightly. There
will be special singing and
preaching each night. Rev . Clyde
Henderson invites the public.

organizational meeting at th.e
Jay Mar Club House on Tuesday
at 9 a.m .. All lady golfers are
Invited to attend.
RACINE -Inspection of Ra·
cine Lodge F and AM No. 461 will
be Tuesday . There will be work In
the EA degree and refreshments
wilt' be served following t~e
meeting.
HARRISONVILLE -The Harrisonville Center Citizens will
meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. at 'the ·
town house. All members are
urged to attend and refresh·
ments wlll be·served. ·
POMEROY - The Ohio Eia
Phi Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority will meet Tuesday at 7
p.m. at the Grace Episcopal
Church.
·

WEJ)NESDAY
MIDDLEPORT -The MlddleTUESDAY
POMEROY -There will be a -. port Literary Club will meet
meeting Tuesday at 7:30p.m. at Wednesday at 1: 30 p.m. 'at the
Meigs High School for parents or Pomeroy Library. "Grapes of
juniors and seniors Interested In · Wrat.Q" Will be reviewed by
helping with prom activities.
Helen Hayes. The hostess will be
Jean Fisher.
POMEROY -There wl!l be an

WALK-A~ THON

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

.

10 A.M.

RAINDATE: MAY 5, 1990

'If you'd like to Join the team effort of th~
Meigs County citizen• etriving for a better
future for our children contact:
YCNMG - 915-SJOJ

-u•

''

.,.

lin

'Rhapsody in Blue' wins whistler

.---People in the news-....,

N0¥1 OPEN FOR THE
$PRIN8 SEASON .

tUESDAY
RABBIT WINNER -Iris Stewart of Sprlnl Ave., Pomeroy, was
lhe winner of ihls Eael'llzer Bunny In llie recent O'Dell Lumber
Co. Easter promollon. Pr&amp;ent1n1 the bunny to Mrs. Stewart 18
David Davis, O'Dell employee.

Spring meeting set_for dubs
POMEROY - Spring meeting
· of the Meigs County ,Garden
ClubS Association will be held
Monday at 7:30p.m at the Meigs
·e ounty Extension Office, Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy·.
Pauline Atkins, C!)unty contact
chairman, Invites all garden club
members to attend and partlcu·
larly ur.ges that each club have a
·representative at' t!le meeting

slm_:e the Mel~ County Fair
FloWer sliow will be planned. ·
Clubs will be drawing for
classes of .t he fair show In which
they will be responsible for
exhibiting.
·
The Bend of the River Garden
Club will present the program
and U!e Shade Valley Club will be
host for Mondc1y's meeting.

we understand your ne~ ood
piovlde o loving atmosphere for
core. In
' Intermediate and sklled
.
addition to pleasant surroundlngs,,you
Or you fomUy member will hove access
to physical and speech therapy, plua
numerous recreational activities. For the
finest core or reasonable rates, cal today,

NIGHt
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gravy, oole .... lloC roll 8ftd .......
~. no ..atlluell eJUJePt

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llddltiOnll=

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FEATURIN

Pl. ft~·54SJ

-

s. 325
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"

446·7112

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HOMEMADE DINNER ROLL

Gallipolis, Ohio

4SIAIIAN1

PO ?lOY, OIL
F•lwl gl ls*t frW Oh..a
\•

•

Ann
Landers

ANN LANDERS
What do you think it will cost in 16 betause they haven't had adequate
~ 1989, ~At!~ Anfll"'"'
parental care or felt valued and loved·.
read five or six letlels in your column years?
Tim""' SyrtdiNII'.anll
c,......,. _Syndlr•r
I don't want anyone looking at me What in ihe world could be as impor·
from readers who seem to take great
pleasure in bashing wtir~ng moth- funny, because I choose not to stay tant as being at ljome for your kids?
home with my children.l am a realist, ·When I hear women say they want a
ers,, I felt it was time I spoke ouL
I have a 2-year-old and a baby of 6 and this is the Je8l world, Sign me -· higher standard of living for !heir bolh red beans and filet mignon and
children, I ask myself, what does that let me tell you, 111 take the red beans
months. I made the choice, and I WIT.METI'E, n.L.
DEAR wn.METI'E: Thanks for reaUymean? A better neighborhood? any day of the year. -- A PROUD
believe it was a good one. Yes, I'm
one of those "wicked" women. I speaking your mind. Here's amlher Private schools? Betterclolhes? How MOTHER IN MOBD..E, ALA.
Is life passing you by? Wanr to
important are those things?
decided to go back to my job on La point of view:
improve
your social skills? Write for
Howaboutaprayerfor"non-workDear Ann Landers: The Jette~;
Salle S~reet(in Chicago) and pay my
aunl to lake care of the children. I from "A Working Mom in Ken- ing" mothers? I am l&amp;lking about too Ann Landers' lltll' booklet, "How to
made this decision for two reasons, tuclcy"mademesee~ That woman ones who are shunned in our society Malee Friends and Stop Being
one in the best interest of the children is drowning in self-pity. I could and called lazy. I mean the ones who Lonely.• Sendaself-tuidressed,long,
· and the other because I believed it see "poor little me" in every line. can't get credit, because they don't bKSiness-size envelope lllld 11 cMck
have "a job." If the truth were told, it or money ortkr for $4.15 (rltis ill:
Whiners make me sick.
would be beuer for me.
Who is pushing.her out the door is the most important job in the wor!JI. eludes postage and hmldling) to:
My jOb makes.it possible for my
children to ·have el\cellent heallh past her crying 3-year-old on her way Believe ine, Ann, I know what I am Fr~nds. c/o Ann Lmukrs, P.O. Box
insurance. Anyone who dOesn't have downtown to work? She should sil in talking about, because I have had 11562, Chicago, II/. 60611-0562. (In
Canada, send $5.05.)
health insurance is in real danger. a quiet comer for hour or two and
And don't tell me, "Theyhavetoiake get her priorities Slllliglit.
Her children grow a little every
care of you," because it isn't so.
Sevetal of my acquaintances have day, and before she knows it, they
'
told me horror stories about family • will be·gone. When that happens, she
LOlJISBURG, N.C. (UP! ) when more than 3,000 people '
and friends who .were turned away can walk away from home and work There were iots.·of puckers- and were considered for th e contest.
from emergency rooms because all she wants.
apparently no jealous wives or Each contestant must perform a
"Your case is not an emergency" or
Eatingredbeansandrice will seem husbands - In Louisburg at th e class ical song and a popular
"We just don't have room , .. go to like filet mignon when she cooks it N a t 1 o n a 1 w h 1 s t I I n g tune.
The competition, with 45
for a family that loves her. The · Championship.
aoother hoSpital. •
whistlers
vying for the grand
Greg Smith puckered up to
I gradualed from the Univ~ty of mended clothes will seem like robes
championship,
was about the
Chicago, and my husband went to of velvet and gold to her children, George Gershwin' ~ "Rhapsody
toughest
ever.
The
judges had to
Georgetown. We want our children be(:ausetheirmothermadethem.Thc In Blue" and won ,top honors
break
a
three-way
tie to award
to have the quality education lhalt we old car will shine like a limousine if · Satlirday in the / 17th annual
first
place,
said
DeHart.
had. Do you have any idea what those their mQtlier is taking them to the competition.
Smith, 32, .?f Raleigh, N.C., · · The competition also attracted
schools cost today? Well, they are library or til the part.
1 believe the reason so many also whistled Booglewoogle Bu· Its largest audience, he said.
both over $20,000 a year, including
"Now there's a following.
gle Boy" to capture the title of
room and board. I'm talking NOW, children are in bad shape today is grand
People
are showing a new ~··
champion In the contest
respect
for
whistling as an art
that featured partlclpan ts from
form
,
"
said
Dehart. "It Is more
more than 20 states.
than that, It Is a vocal artfonn. "
Smith edged out las t year's
Peter Hassell of New Rochelle, •
By United Press International
champ, Sean Lomax, a San N.Y .. was namedbestsuppordng :
HUTfON ON DIVORCE, DATING: Timothy Hutton has been
Diego, Calif.; navyman known as male· whistler and Mimi Drum- •
divorced from Debra Winger since December but says the love
the "whistling sailor." Lo111ax mond of Horsham, Pa., won best
still lingers for hlm. "Yes, that wlll always be there, " he told the
came In second place with " The supporting female whistler.
New York Dally News. "But we both have separate lives now."
Barber of Seville" and "The
Huttc;m says he still tal-ks• to Winger regularly and they work
Theme From Superman."
together In raising their sbn, Noah, 3. Winger !las taken up with
Jeffrey . Tillett,' 10, of CenterI
her pre-Hutton boyfriend, Sen. Bob Kerry, D-Neb. , but Hutton
ville, N.C .. won the children's
says he finds dating to be an ~j~lien concept right now. ''On
title. and Amy Rose, 16, also of
Saturday nights while l'msltting home alone people are going to
North Carolina, defended her
the movies on dates, huh?" he said. "Well, dates are strange
title as the nation's best whistling
Complete line of
things, sort of a tough thing to do." Hutton has a new movi e, ' 'Q
teenager . Tillett w h js tled
&amp; A" with Nick Nolte, out and now Is on Broadway In " Prelude
Vegetable and lltlding
Brahm's " Lullaby" and Rose
to a Kiss. " He.took over for Alec Baldwin and had to learn the
chose selections from Mozart.
Plants, Blooming and
role In just 13 days ~ " I ran the lines all day and used a _/ape
Smith won $300 cash, two
Foliage Hanging Baskets. .
recorder all night whlle I slept," he says.
r oundtrip airline tickets to anyALONE WITH PAUL LYNDE: What did Greta Garbo do
Fruit and Flawering Tr•s,'
where In the continental United
while she was alone all that time? She watched a lot of trash TV,
States and peFhaps a shot at
shrubs, Azaleas and
. according to People magazine. Garbo collected classy art and
television.
Rhododendrons
antiques but her taste in television wa~ . rather pedestrian. A ·
"The David Letterman show
Garbo friend, Raymond Daum, told the magazine that she once
HUBBARD'S GREENHoUSE
usually has the winner on there,''
said, "I watch the dreck . Schmutz. If a program Is advertised as
SYIACU$1, OHIO
· said Allen Dehart, founder of the
experimental, I never turn It on." Kenny Kfnpton, a psychic
992-5776
National Whistling Convention.
who Garbo consulted, says she was especially enthralled by
Open Daily 9-6; Sun . .1·6
The search for '1he country's
"Hollywood Squares ." "She a(jored Paul Lynde," he said. "I
best whistler started In January
'
think she even wrote him a f-an let ler."
VIETNAM SAGA: Actors Richard Crenna, Dr. Halng S. Ngor
of "The Killing Fields" fame, Rosalind Chao and others
gathered In Washington Saturday night for a special screening
of .heir TV movie " Last Flight Out.," a dramatization of the last
commercial American flight out of VIetnam 'before the. fall of
Saigon. The flight , on April 25, 1975, took more than 400
American and Vietnamese civilians out of the country. Also
attending the screening was Dan Hood, an Pan Am pilot who
traveled t.o Vietnam to help with the evacuaUon.

Dear Ann Landers: After having

.·

Meigs Cou~ty Jay~efs
APRIL ·2·8, .1990

SnJDENT OF THE WEEK - Kelly Grueserwas honored as 111111
week's Student of the Week at Melp Junior High School. Her
recognition came from Mrs. Emalene Pratt for her excellence In
English and hbtory. Kelly received a certulcate In recognition of
··
her outstanding academic !'Chlevement.

To work or not is the question ·

MARCH~OF.-DIMES

Sponsored by:

'

Reedsville: Robyn Gall Barnett, John Wetzel Rice, and
.Robert Vernop Steele.
Rutland: Sharon R. Lucas
Edmonds, Brady Gene Johnson.
Shade: Teresa M. Pratt Fields,
Kathy Alana Jones , David Kent
Ramey,' and Brenda . Susan
Sinclair.
'
Chester: Ronald Todd Clay.
Cheshire: Susan Elaine Ml·
lam, Emllle Ann Sisson .
Coolville: Joy Ann Coulson, .Jill
Kristina Ethridge, Amy Joanne
Penick, Whitney Dawn Smith.
Long Bottom, Amy D. Louks,
Heather Camille Shuler, and
Trisha Anne Spencer.

WHEN
CARING &amp;COMFOKr
WIMPOtmm·

THE GREAT AMERICAN

f·l SIJit . . 11y1n1 ...,.
@ .35/oa. · 3-5" @ .55/oa.

Racine: Jennifer Jayne Ar·
nokJ, . David Jennings Beegle,
Randy 0 . Dudding, Paul Bryan
Harris, Tammy Dawn Holter,
Melissa Kay Lucas, Ryan Craig
Oliver, Shelagh .Wllson Porter,
Veronica Provo, Rachel Laura
Reiber, Susan Elayne Roessler,
and Dixie Kay Wolfe.

.-

Walk For Our ·
Children~s Future

FOR

The Daily Sentin~l

,,

�•

'

A skit, "Churches in Solidarity
With Women Dur.ing the 90's"
was performed by Sarah Ca ldwell as Ann: F lorence Spencer , ·
E llen; Ger trude Robln$on, Sara ;
Charlotte VanMeter, Sue; Osie
Follr od, Mary.
Martha Poole read about the
challenges of the 90's from "New
Wor ld Outlook."
; Nellie P arker led t he program
a_nd closed with a poem, "A Time
to Change" by J apanese e ntertainers a nd group reading of
" Blessing."
During the business meeting
Mrs, Poole gave the. secretary

report and roll call wit h nine
members present. Sixty-five
sick calls were reported. Mrs.
FoUrod gave the treasurer's
report and took · the regular
co llection. The group discussed
helping a family who lost their
home by fire, Sine Cera's letter,
and Meigs Cooperative Parish
clothing distribution.
Nina Robi nson had the prayer
calendar .and chose Teresa Santilla na of Llma, Peru, who works .
in . laity and m issionary work.
.The group signed a bir thday card
for her.
Mr s. Folirod a hlirnorou s readIng, "Old Folks."
During the social hour, Mrs.
Van Meter aild Gertrude Robinson served sar!dwiche$, chips,
and soft drinks.
The next meeting will be held
May 22 at the church. Mrs.
Spencer will be the hostess and
Mrs. Folirod will lead the

.-.
~

. "''

' ... &gt;·

'

.

•. ..

.
. '.

!

es.tabllshed In . 1887, continues to emphasize
lamUy, home and alirfcullure, and co.ncernsltsell
with the welfare ol others• . AI Wednesday 's
meeting are, I tor, PauiiDeAtldnswidPattyDyer,
representing Grange, and ·In back, Commissioners Richard Jones, Manning RAiush and David
Xobleatz.
·

JAMES LANGUELL

'
fFA
District honors given
•

. • The Racine Future Farmers of
Am erica Chapter received several a wards at the District 1Q
It-vel award's banquet held'

contes t.

Monica MUier received a s ilver
rating for reporter's book; Mlc helle Brown received' a silver
r~cently.
rating for secretary's book; and
: Aaron Laudermilt placed se- · Aar on Knopp received a sliver
oond in electri~ ity, second in turf
rating for the treasurer's book.
and landscaping, fourth in forest
Krls ten Newlon conducted the
n:tanagement. and fourth in
welcome for the banquet and Don
placement in production. James
Norman gave the Invocation.
Languell placed fourth In fruit
Jerry Rauch introduced the
and vegeta ble, and Brent Rose
gues IS and Valerie Parks gave a
pla c ed· fourth wildlif e
speech a s the keynote speaker.
J11anagement.
John Miley gave the closing
remarks and foUowlng the ban:The chapter c aptured second
111 one category and received a quet the new of!lcer s received
their training.
· • s11perlor rating ·tn the chapter

•

Xi Gamma Mu chapter has meeting
Members were reminded of
sorority Founder's Day onTpurs&lt;Jay_at 6: 30 p,m. at the Down
lJnder in Ga!UpoUs when the XI
Gamma Mu Chapter, Beta
. Sigma . Phi Sorority met at the
home of A.R. Kn lght In Pomeroy.
Ly nn S huler r e mind e d
members that fair ads must be
turned ·in by May 1 a nd P a uIa
a aynes requested that members
bring canned goods to the re- ·
inalning meetin gs.
Kay Adkins, Carolyn Grueser,
Charlotte Hanning, a nd Jacki e
I;Ioover- were nominated for the
girl of the year award. ·
. Susan ·Baer and Sandy Jannarelli presented a cultunil repor t
· on "The Power of Non-Verba l
· Co mmunication" with ·gu es t
speaker . Betty Hoffman of Car let on School who spoke on many
programs available to me mbers

who utlllze theservicesofferedat
the school.
Johanna Shuler and Dee
Spencer pgesented a cultur;ll
program on " Effectively Assert ing Yourself" citing eKamples of
asserting rights under different
circumstances.

The 75th anniversary of the
Committees for the tea wer e
Phfla thea Society of the Middle- • Clyda Allensworlh, Sea Stewart,
port Church of Christ was ob- F arie Cole, and Thelma Bye r ,
· served recently with a formal invitations; Mildred Riley apd ·
tea.
··
Kathy Ihle, registrailon .and
. Maryln Wlloox, president, -ex- favors; Clarice Erwin and Phyl-·
tended the welcome and opening ·lis Gilkey, decorations; Sharon
prayer was by Farie Cole.
Stewart, Donna Hartson, Kathy
The observance opened with a Wilfong, and ·Regina Swift, replano solo, "Butterfly" by Clar- freshments; and Maryln Wilcox ,
ice Erwin.
·
Terti Hockman, and Dorothy
Dorothy Roach gave lhe his- Roach, program. '
Past presidents attending were
tory of the Phllathea.
The decorations , refresh- Clyda Allensworth, Martha
ments , and installation ser.vice Childs, Rose Reynolds, Dorothy
carrled ou t the Phllathea colors _ Roach, Phyllis Gilkey, and
of blue and gold. The groups
Mildred Riley ; They each comflower Is the rose. Velvet rose
mented on special remembran corsages were given to all ces at the time they were
attending.
president.

Lewis Manley Unit meets
In was announced that the were turned In by Mrs . Casey .
nominating committee, Annette . The children and youth report
Johhsoil, Dorpthy Casey , , and was given by Florence Richards
Lula Hampton, apPQinted by · In which she discussed . pamMargaret Bowles, will report at , phlets on suicide of children,
the next meeting, when the child abuse, drugs, and teenage
American Legion Lewis Manley financial assistance. She also
Unit 264 met at Dale's Restau - spoke on safety in the home and
.- "
rant in Gallipolis with Ruth fire prevention.
Brown as hostess.
The next meeting will be held
A memorial service was ~on­ at the home of Dorothy Casey in
'
dueled by Lorrene Qoggins and Galllpoils.
•
Edith Ross.
•
Bulk mailing was handed out
from the department to committee chairmen, and report form s
were completed. .
Donations for the national
headquarters emergency fund

KOUNTRY
KITCHEN
Located
liM Str11t From
National Bank,
Acron
Homo
Third ancl Poarl Str11t in Racine

.

8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
'.

· An installation servi ce was ,
presented by Donna Hartson.
Sharon·stewart, avd Terri Hockman. Officers reins ta ted were
Maryln Wilc ox. p res id e nt ;
Mildred Riley . vice pres ident;
Dorothy Roach , s ec re ta r y;
Kathy Ihle, assistant secretary;
and Farle Cole, treasurer .
There new members were
welcomed,KathyBaker,Angelia
Gilkey , and Nancy Freeman.
· Others attending were E lla
Mae Daugherty . Margare t
Butcher, DorothY Davis, Nettie
Boyer, Clara Conroy, Ma be l
Walburn, Mar tha Fry, ·Dorothy
Bak.e r, Delete Forth. Elizabeth
Roush, and Pat Wehrung.
•

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'

. '

., ·~

.

.

,ajt

Mary R&lt;lush spent the weekend.);
with Rev. and Mrs. Ricllard..,.
. Young at Sidnev.
· · .
· l:
. Chr is Circl e 'and sons, N'prth':.;
Carolina. vis ited with Lula c'ircle ~~
on a recent Saturdav.
""
Susie Fos te r a nd J ennv Jo .!!·
Grueser. Columbus, were at ther.
home of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lee ;;:
on Saturd ay . Mrs. E thel 'o r r .!:;
_ Chester . a nd Paul Moore were ;: ·
dinner guests at ,the Lee home on·,,
Saturday.
,.
There· wer~ 78 present for =
Sunday sc hool on Aprll15.
' :
.
;:i
DOWNIN~

...

CHILD·_C' ;_
U.
MULLEN MUSSER' ::!~

j

•

·

_IN. SURAN(I:II!"

111 Set:ond St., Pomeroy

YQUR INDEPEIII!DEIIl
AGENTS SERV.G,.
MEIGS COUNTY
: SINCE 186
, 8.

m••

10
cor•ectlon. '
De paid in·ectpnce ait

.Card of Th -~
In M~Of' ilft\

4 - GivtMIV
&amp;- Happy Adt

6 - Lost snd Found

·

7 - V•d Sele ! Pii~ in act..-encel

Htppy Ada .

8 - PubUc Stle • Au ction

Y•d Sll•

9 - WM"d 10 luy .

•••rt-.'mlllt

•A cltuifild
placed in The Deity s.nti~t'l (-.·.
cep.t - cl•llfild dilpltV, 8~o~sin•s Cll'd tnd ·l-all noticll)
will tt.o epptM' In tht P't. Pl . . .nt RegltNir tnd tht Gtlli·
.polis D•ily Tribune. tet~ing over 1 I ,OlJO homn. • .

.DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION

DEADLINE -

- 11 !00A .M . SATURDAY

MONDAY PIIIPER
TUESOIIIY PAPER .
WEDNESDAY P.APER
tltURSOAY PAPER

-

2'00 P.M. r,tONDAY

-

2 :00P .M . TUESDAY

- ~ ' 00 P.M. WEDNESDAY
- 2'00 P.M. THURSDAY ·

FRIDAV PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

-

2 :00P .M . FRIDAY

Classified pa~es· corer ~ e
follou.:inf{ telephone exchan~es ...
441 --G•IIipolil
317 - Ch•hire
318-Vinton

Area Code 114

Artl Code 304

t92-~iddl.par1

ne - Pt. '''"'"'
458-ltQn

PomtrOY
9115- Chlller

241- Aio Grlf!de
211-Guvtn Dist.

~~ ~

A_,..,

for lilt
lor S1l e

1143 - Par1~nd

a43 - Arlbi• Din . · $41- Aecine
742 - Rudend
'379 - W-'nut ·
667- Coolvitle

882 - ~ew

46- Furnished Aooms
48 - lpece tor Rent
47- Wented 10 A-tnt 1
41-EQuip'ment tor A1nt'·

PUBLIC NOTICE
propoula are dellired from repuUble auppliers of automotive fire
apparatua for one qulf1t~ple
combination fire 1pparatu1
with 1600 GPM p,ump, 300
gallon boooter tonk. ond 88
or 76 feet •rial ladder with
p!etform.
·
~ Bids wll be ra::eived at
Villege Hall, 237 Race St.,
Middleport. Ohio; 46760 until 3 p.m. May 14, 1990.
ln 1ny contract entered
into between the Village of
Middleport and the IUCCH I·
ful bidder, it shall be the r"ponlibtity of ttte contractor
tb conform to the _require111entsof NFPA 1901 for this
type of apparatus unleaa
o'tharwt.o opecified. The opparatus will not be acCepted
by the Village of Middleport
until ell tHt requirements •
l(tiputatad in NFPA 1901
hava been paMCI and the
tblt rnult•madeavlilableio
the Chief of the Middleport
Fire Dapanment at or before
the time of delivery of the
completed apparatus. In the
evant the apparatus faille to
meet the test requirement•
of NFPA 1901 on firlt trial, a
Mcond trial may 'be made at
the option of the bidder
&gt;!llthin thirty (301 doyo of the
flrat trial date. The aacond
trial will ~final and conclu•Jve 1nd t•lure to meet reqa*ementa will be cauae for
l'ltlllllllon. Storing tho opporetuo In ony building owned
or occupied by the purchMor
wll not conatitute eccapt;nce. ·~
• Eoch bid thollbe accom·
~nled by o Htolled deocrlp~ Sealed

ti!NI ~theflreopporetuoond
'eqljlpmont which the bidder
pfclp- to furnt.h. o~d to
whloh tho app-uo fur·
nlohed under the contrect
muct conform, ond 1 copy of
1111 werrantloo thel opptv to
the 1 - ' u l l The ouccooa
lUI bidder oholl ol•o prov-

Public Notice

to .trio Middleport Fire Do- to furniah. Each bidder mutt
panment a detailed set of ol•p fill out completely the
blueprint• of the apparatus bidder complience sheets
to be built. Th•• blueprints with th•o opecilicetion• by
"'ult be approved by the marking ,.., no. or excep.
Chief of the Middleport Fire tion. It lo under$1ood thet
Deportment before con- eome bidder• inay teke ex·
ception• to the ._.flc.ootructkm beglno.
The apparatus shall be tione a written, however. if
completely equlppoj! u per nception 1$ taken it mu$1 be
these specifications upon er- lt.ted on • ooparate P"'l" onrival end, upon completion titled "Exception• to Spaciof any required 1cceptance ficatkJnJ". All exc.ptions
t ..ta, aholl be reedy for im- will be rovlewed by the Midmediate 11rvice in the Mid- dlePort .Fire Dep8rtment ond
dleport Fire Department. If they ore detltrmined to be
Any and all alterations re- equal or ouperlor, moy be acquired at the time of delivery cepted. F811ure to complete
bidd.,
compliance
to compty with these specifi- the
cations shall be done at the aheeta and liat all u.ceptions
can be cauae for rejection of
contractors expense.
Each bid shall be accom· the bid.
Complete ond thorough
ponied by e 10% bid bond, a
100% performanca bond, tr•ining on operation end
and a · ligned statement of m'lntenance of the eppara·
the bidder that the Middl• tu• will be given by the men,
ufactuNr.
~ _ Fire Department JpeciFino! oc:ceptance of the
f1cet1ons for quintupla CJimbinatian eppat'lltua hiVe ouccenful bid wHI be conbeen read and are under- tingent upon on' octual demonotratlon. by the bidder,
stood.
Each ·bid shall also de- of tho obillty ohhe PfOpoNd
ecribe the procedure re- opperotuo to Ntiaf8ctorlty
quir•d for payment by the porfrom noceoury function•
' Village of ,.ldcleport for the • dotormlned by the Midapparatua and if tht prloie u · dleport Fire D-rtmont.
bid is with or without • down The domonltnltlon be
conducted In the Vlllogo of
payment.
·
Theeo •pociflcetlono cov• Middleport uolng on oppereonly the general requir• tus of the Mme make, belie
·man'' •• to tM tyJ* of con- deolgn. and olze 11 the one
ltNction and compartm.. - · opeclfiod herein ond· will Intatiori along with certain de- clude, but not be limited' to,
tollo of flnioh, equipment, m.,_robillty. obitlty . of
ond oppllonceo with which the eertel to reoch oolecied
the •ucce..tul bidder mu$1 lti'Uctures, end cl•rence.
conform. Minor details of in•ldothe fire ototton. Fe! lure
conatruction •nd m.terl.t1 of the opperotuo to perform
where ncrt otherwl$o •paci· 11 roqubd by the Mldcl•
lied ore left to the dlocretion port Fire D-rtment wMibe
of the monulocturer. who cou• to termlnote ond void
oholl OO$UmO •ol• roopon•i- ony co.,._, o n - Into by
billty for tho dMign end the Vlloge of Middleport.
conotructlon of oil feotur•. Thla demonotntlon wit toke
Eoch bid oholl include 1 oot of plec&lt;~• $00n eo poo$1111o ond
contractor• epaciflcotiono will not b e - eo doy• from
oonolotlng of • dotolled de- ~ deto of the bid opening.
-.ompleto $pacilicotlono
ocrlptlon of tho. opporotu•
ond equipment they propoM '""Y be obtoined ot the

Meyor'a Office. 237 Rece
St .. Middleport, Ohio 415780
or Fire Chief Jeff Der.C: at
286 Rece St., Middleport.
Ohio 415780.
Tho Vllloge of Middleport,
Ohio r M - the right to,._
joct any or oil bido recoived
end to waive anv informality

In the bidding In favor of the
Vllloge.
(4116. 23. 2tc

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
Notice la given that a hHr·
ing will be held on the 9th
doy of Moy, 1990. Hoorlng
rm. 1, 10th Fl.. 369 15- High
St.. Columbuo, f:IH . ol3216.
upon • petition for aeizure
of the pro~rty and / or con·
traband: two electronic

ot tho reguler p i - of voting thltoln. on Tlilllctey, the
eighth doy of Moy, 11180.
the q-ton of twytn1 e..X,
In nc•• of the ten mHI Mmltetlon. for tho bonollt of Elltern ~ · School Dlotrict
for the purpooo of !Jrovldlng

Eaotorn Locol llchoof Dl•

trlot of Molgo Coui!IY. Ohio,

11168,86, weeltly poyoff
record•. tip ticket• ond fi•h
bowlo. Sold property w11
-ed on Jonuory 27, 1989
ond Morch 1, 1989 by Dept.
of Liquor Control from FOE
2171et224E . MolnSt.,Pomeroy, OH . 46769 end I$
pr-ntly held by tho Dept .
Any pereon hevlng 1(1 ownerlhiP or &amp;leu rily intereSt
in the eboveidelcribedproperty moy contNt tho peti-

~

l

for the emergency requiremont• of tho ochool dlotrlat
,ond to' reduce the. opootlng
doflclt.
•
Sold te• being on oddl tlonal t•x of 5.0 mill1 to run
for 121 two yeoro, ot o rote
not oxc-ng 5.0 milia for
- h one dollor of votuetlon,
which emount~ to fifty cont•
ltO.IIOI for ooch one hundrad doltero of voluetlon. for
two 121
The POHo !of uld Election
willie open ot .1 :30 o'clodt
A.M. ond mnoln opon untl
7 :30 o'cloalt P.M .
ly ·onior of·the Boord ot
Eloatlono. of Molgo County
Ohio.
.
Evolyn Clerk, Cholrmon
:J- R!l- ~rv!"Yer, D!rector
Doted 1110 21et ol Februory, 11110;
Ap~l . 11,23, 30.4~

will be open et 8 :30 o 'clodt
A.M . .r~!d remain open untl
7:30 o'clodt P.M.
By order of the Boord of
Eloctlono. of Melgo County,
Ohio.
Evelyn ·c lork, Ch!llrmon
Jane M. Frymyer, Director
Doted tho 2 1ot of F8bruory, 1990.
AprH 9, 16, 23, 30, 4tc

/i

.'

0

{'

('

(I

0
0
0

{'

{'

('

&lt;'

0

0

{'
{'

(~

{'

{'

('

{'

{'

0

0

l'

('

0
0

('
0

'

-·
oxc:-·

totlon. for
Molge Locot
for tho pu-

p

.

( l

INCREASE YOUR R.P.M ,
(RESPONSES PER MESSAGE)
WITH A WELL-PLACED 'AD T,O DAVI
ln~t~ rnational Cla.~~ified A'dt.• erti.~iilg

.

. -,

.

Week
. · .. .

April 22-28, 1990

Celebrate With Us .... A LL 3's Special!
3 Day8- 3 Paper8 -'- 3 Lirie8 'n s worols&gt;

.

' $3.33 .

.

\\'h4'n 'you place your ad lt .wlll be listed In a113 of our
nrw~papers: Gallipoll~

.

Dally Tribune, The Dally Sentinel, and

Point Pl4'aslud Reg!Ater.

·

l'hon~: -------'------~- Cluslllcatlon: ------'~--

Print on e word.. In el).Ch ~pace below.
Each Initial or group of . ligures
count~ A~ A w:ord . Count name nnd
addrrss or phone ~U!Tlber if US("d.

tion.

141 23, 2&amp;. 2tc

...,

'Cash

Only!
' Mall or Brln&amp; In penon.

I. ·_ - - - - -

II .------~·~
· ------

-~-.:.:...;;;:__

1!. _.:.....:._ _....;__

!.

MAKE IT ARUlE...
USE WANT ADS.
AHANDY
. TOOl

·3. _

.

'

___;__ _..:.._

u. ---"---"
14. - - ' - - ' - - - -

4. - - - - - - . . . 'I
5. ...,...:.:..,...__
_ __

.
Pctm~r.oy Dally sentinel· ·
••.

11. _

_;;____.:::.~___;-

'

•E~~CUtc,._-..ala~~u1Cittpon:CU.62~. ~1111t.

·

Public Notice

Namr .- - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - -

,r

PubliC Notice

veor•-

AU , ADS MUST BE PAID IN ADVANCE alld received to be publl~hed 11n
·
,
. ,
•r h~lnr~ nur 1\prll 38, llltiHdtUon. .
1
l'l~.a.•~ 11•1 tht' rolu1nn ynu would like your ad to rnn nndrr.

video gambling machln•.

•
~·----

Public Notice

Public Notice

Ohio, pooood on he 15th doy
ol F8bruory, 1880. tliorewll
be aubmlttld too vm. of tho
poolo of uld E11tom Locot
School Dlotrlct 11 1 Prlmory
Eloctlon to be hold In tho

Notice of E-lon on T111t
Levy In E. . . o of tho Ton ..
· Mill Umltotion
·NOTICE to '*"by glyon
shit In jlu-ooof o Rlloltlon of the Boord of Educotlon of the E11torn locol
lklhool Dlotriat, ..._vlllo.

.

Public Notice

992-6717 " - or
992·6244 GaraiCMI

80 - Mobil• Hom• RepeR
87 - Upho .. tery

48 - fot liMI

Public Nollce

•

.

Ill Court 8L

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
(614) 9.9J-2156
..,....:18th.

'•\

•NEW HOMES •SIDING
•GARAGES
•REMODELING
•GENERAL CONTRACTING

A Great Combination"Quality oncl Reosonablt Prices"

WE GO THI EmA MILl .....
992-611D

SUN'S UP 1ANNING

Good Rot•

T.L.C.
~7Yro.

Potato Soup .... . •1 .30 Baked Chicken .. •4. 75
Baked Ham ....... •4.85 · Chef Salad ........ •3.75

Public Notice

tfn

For Appt. Call

1&amp;- Giin•al H1uling

('

Public NOtice

lcr011 F.- Poot Offlco

0'1• 2nd St. MWIIIportl

83- EJU:IWOtlng
~
14 - Eier:tric:el &amp; llt•frP•tion

I .

When you buy an electric heat pump,
you get more than clean, even heating;
cool summer comfort; and great savings.
You get years of reliability.
A major new study by EPRI shows
that heat pumps have an average service·
life slightly over 19 years. That
means the electric heat pump you
buy today wiD last weD into the
21st century!"
LET US PROVE IT. See why
no other system heats, cools,
and saves as reliably as the
modern energy-efficient
heat pump. Call us today
at 992-3'786.

992·5335 or 915 ·3561

9492~~1~8

81 -· Ham• lmprowmenu
82 - Piumbint • tteatng

43-F•rrnt for Rent
44 - Aplftmtn t fot Alnt

Get Retulft Fttt

Kand J CONSTRUCTION

Scr VICeS

41 - Housea for Atn1.
42: - MobileHomll for Rent

:

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

'IThe Heat Pump•..
Nmeteen yeats ···

i¥£1ii=-$itop

'S API'UANCE
SERVICE ·

891S ~ L ..IIft

937- Buffllo

Cano, 315C per lb.

GREG BAILEY

FREE ESTIMATES

Haven

·l
!

(304) 675-1 ~44

toDAYWABUIIY

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

&amp;76 - Appll Grove
773- MIIon -"

247-Letort Folio

USED APPliANCES

NEW -REPAIR

72- Truckl for Sele
73- .V•n• &amp; 4 "D 's
74-Motorcycl•
715 - loatl &amp; Motors for S1l1
78 - Auto P-.u' Acc•IOfi•
77 --Aulo Rtt:~eir
,
71 - Cimpln; EquiDmtnt
79 - Cimpen &amp; Motor t1cmea

•

B&amp;C P"' lb.;

#1

14 ' ,_,., ........

. .
ROOFING

7, - Au101 fot Sate

23 - Pro. . tion•l Servic•

110.

POMEROY, OHIO: .Rt. 7. B.R.' 143
ALBANY, OHIO: Rt.
B.R. 1"3
HENDERSON: WV.: Rt. 31 Adj . to llderoEqulpmont
NEW HOURI:
POMEROY: 9 o.m.- 7 p.m. 7 Doyo
ALBANY: 10 o.m .-5 p.m. 8 Ooy•. CloNd Sundoy
HENDERSON: 10 e .m.-5 p.m . II DIYL Cl-dlun.-Mon.
PAYING AS
TODAY , MAR . 13. 1990
SCRAP. BAnERIES.
ALTERNATORS, ETC .

lloward L Wrltllel

Tt~nsportatillll
22-Mon.v to loan

IRI·COUNTY RECYCLING

oiniS 3 LOCA'IIONS TO SDYE YOU-.

Call'. ."'"''~ -·

Do

21 - lusln•• Opporhmhv

992 ·5335 or 915·3561
Office

Windows
FREE ESTIMATES

83- li.,. .. lock
IU- H1y &amp; Gr1in
&amp;&amp; - Seed &amp; Fert~illr

11 - Schools • lnttruction
16- Atdio, TV. Cl
17- MisctMtenaous

992·2

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE

· ~wn,..tion .

11 - F1rm lQuipment
&amp;2- Wtnltd ro Buy

1 J - lnsur1nct

•

"WE HAVE HEARING AID$"

lophi1fmtnl Windows

Siippii~S

711 N. 2nd
MIDDLEPORT

. Pick Up.

Jtallliist Guttw

57 - Mueic* lnllrum.,.ts
11 - Fruiu • V•t••bl•
59- for Salt or Tr1dt

&amp; liVI'SiOL k

14-Biu'sm•• TretniftQ

To

..

54 - Misc. MlfChtndilt
61 - luildinQ Supplllli
lt - Pttt for Sllfl
,

Fol 111

·, 1- HtiJ ·Wtnted
12 - S ituetion Wented

18- Warittd

Mastic - C•taintoodS
Vinyl 'tltiiftg

Storm Doors &amp;

i IIIIJilly•lll'll!
~r" v lf'jll,

M11on Co .. WV

Mlif11Cowmy

Gallil County
Ar.. Code614

53- AntiqUII

SEARS

DYEN REPAIR
ALL MAKES
Iring It In Or Wt

INSULATION

11 - WouMhold Qooc:h
152- lponlng Ooodl

2 - ln MtmOfV

runs in p•l*'l· Ctll b:efor t 2 :00p.m

thM

card or Thenks

3 - Annouc:tm en1 1

.,,or, lttl; first d~ . !Cheek

HOME IMPROVEMENT EXPERT

TUESDAY

1-

is doublt pr_ic. of ad co st .

Public

JOHN A. WADE, M.D., Inc•.
EAR, NOSE &amp;,T"ROAT
GENERAL ALLE~GIST ,

J&amp;l

:=

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

PLEASANT VALLEY H:O.SPITAL

D!ty or Night
NO SUNDAY

.42

. .10
' .05 / doy

M"r r.twulr~.l'

..,

~

742-2027

broken Up d.., I Will blch.,ed

"-'!

=
-..,.

ti.OO
t9.00
• 13.00
t1 .30t doy

FREE
ESTIMATES
'.
-··"-IPROFE:SSIONIALJ
INSTALLATION

· .."Your
Connection
To All
Typea Of
Travel" 4-11-t

PH. 949-2101
or 1... 949•216d

Ov'r 15 Wordo
'
..20
.30

14.00

FENCING

(614)

"At •••nabll Prim"

.Roto

Warda
115
1.5
15 '
., 5
t&amp;.;

DIY I
1
3
6
10
Monthly

.t.)) rTIAYEL
PURSUIT

CUSTOM .IUIT
HOMES &amp; qARAGES

RATES ,

. TO PlACE AN AD CAU 992-2156
I&lt;MCJINDllY thru FRIDA{ I A.M. to 5 P.M.

of comfort~~~~
_
.

DAILY SPECIALS
OPEN MONDAY THFtU SATURDAY 8:30A.M. TO 8 :00P.M .

MONDAY

• The .Area's Number ·1 Marketplace

~

Carine/ news

BISSELL
BUILDERS

'

tj

...

NATIONAL GRANGE WEEK- Granp Weewill he celebrated lbriHighoul the country from
Aprli2Z-28, and Meigs County Is no exception. The
Meigs County Commhsloners on Friday slgnl:d a
proclamation declaring Grange Week Ia Meigs
County. Numerous activities will be held
throughout the week as local Grange chapters
celebrate tbelr organization, Granr;e, which was

weigh in.

USIDeSS

Classifie

.~

1

Brenda Templeton wol) ....the ~
,.
.(ruit basket. .
.
u was reported that three ;
members havP reached Krw•;
(KOPS in wai tingl stat us. Col' ~­
"'
lectlng funds were Pearl Knapp, •
Crysta l Smith, and M ~ ry ;;
Tom bllin; ·
,:;
Crystal Smith ha nded ou t.-;&lt;
_ names for new secret pals. . ~~.
Peggy Vining announced a n!!w
weight loss game to be conducted -'i ·
by Shirley Wolfe, Cindy Faulk, !
. Lenn ie Aleshire. Texa nna Well, ""
Dar lene Buc klev:· arid Charlotte ·:.&gt;
Ha nning.
··
'~

: , ·· ·

•

.,..,

Pearl Knapp was the best loser .•
and Shirley Wolfe a nd Lennie :,.
Aleshire werP runners up when •
0hio TOPS 570 met recently, a t •
the Car penters Hall in Pomeroy. ::;
Mrs. Aleshire opened with "'
,
prayer a nd pledge and reported ~
that Nellie Grover was 'Ill. ":
Thirty-five were present for "'

Philathea Society notes 75th·year

: AARON LAUDERMILT

..""
-

·has meeting'

28.'
'

23,1990

TOPS group

J

Alfred UMW meets
"Who WilL Roll the Stone
Away?" wa$ the title of the
program pre$ented by the Allred
United Methodist Women when
that group met recently at the
church.
The program opened with
Martha Elliott reading from
First Corinthians 12, a nd Nina
Robinson from Matthew 16 and

Monday, April 23, 1990

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Page- 6- The Daily Sentinel

tl tex being on oddl·
tlolllltex of1.0 mill to run
for • continuing porlod of
time ot o rete not ox-ding
1.0 milt lOr oech one dollor
ofvoluotlon. which limounto
to ton oontoil0.101 foroech
ono hundrad dolloro of val uation. foro continuing perIod o f t -.
The Poll• for 11id Election
will be ot 1 :30 o'clodt
A.M. ond remoln open untl
7:30 o'clodt P.M .
· By order of the Boord of
Ellatlo~o. of Molgo County,
Ohio.
IEVI4yn Clork. Cholrmon
Jonl M. Frymyor, Director
•Dated the 21 ot of F8b1190.
April I, 11. 23, 30. oltc

.u..v.

Public Notice
Notloo ol Ellatlon on T111t
Levy In E-o of tho Ton
Mitt Umillnlon
NOTICE Ia IIOreby glvon
thotln pu.....,oo of o Rlloltlon of the Board of Coui!IY
Comtnio....... of the
Coullly of Molgo. P..noror.
Ohio. Pl!lood on the 111th
deyof .........ry,1il0. - ·
wflbetullmlttldloovm.of
the peoplo of Meigo County
II 1 Prlmorv Eteotlon to be
held In tho County of Mllgo,
Olllo. otther..,tor..._of
VOIIntl - n . on t'*"ov.
the ellfdh dey of Moy.
1810, the quootlon "'....,_
lntla-.tn-ttlftheton
. . . . . hot...... ""' ......
Ill llf Mtllt County for the

........,NofMIIn•.-;•end
' &amp;don
of . CwiMon

""'"" ....................
w. .....,- ........ .....

. . . . . ' •.loft... ......

IIIII ...
til Ultill.

-

IONII

for

Exp.
Rot•.,-

992-6173

-

.209 Sauth 4th St.
Middl~p~~rt, Oh.

"LOW IICOIII HOllE"

3-211- •90-""

RUTLAND TilE

SALES 'and
SEIYICE

Public Notice

742-3088

Notice of iloctton on Tlllt

•Tire Sale•
•Front End

L8vy In EKA&gt;el$ of the Ton

MHI Umltotlon
NOTICE II h1treby glvon
thet In pu.-oo of.o RHoltlon of the Boord of Town"''P Tru.,_ of the Town·
•hlp of · Oronge, , Tupporo
Ploln•. Ohio, poo•d on tho
fifth doy ol Februory. 1990.
there will be aubmtited to a
vote of tho people of oeld
Orange Town•hlp at o Prl·
mary Eloctlon to be held In
the T-nohlp of Orengo,
Ohio, Melgo County, Ohio,
at the ,.._.e.r piece~ of votIng therein, on Tu•day, the
olghth doy of Moy, 1110:
the quootlon of lovylngo toK,
In ••cllio of the ton mill Hmltotlon, for the benllfit of
Orenge T-nohlp lor the
purpoae of ftrt protect&amp;on.
Sold tox being on eddltlonol tox of 2.0 mtffo to run
for (8) five yeoro.· ot 1 rot•
not ioxcHdlng 2.0 mllto for
...
h .....
doll• oft:~·~:::~
whicll
omounto

Alignmant

•Oil Chenge • Lube
•Brake Work
1

MAIN ST., IIUTI.AND

Now Unta RcL, lutl•dr Ohio
1 Stssion .............................- ........~ ss . so
6 Setsioni..................................... S12.00
12 Stssiorls................- ••••••••••••••••• S20.00
15 Stssi11111................................... S2 5.00
FIRST VISIT fREE - POSSIIl YMORE
LOTIONS -

CaH Susan Colt•an,

I. L HOLLON
TRUCKING
c•STD, OHio

. BISSELL
SIDING
...._ CO.

...

•GRAVEL
•LIMESTONE
•FILL DIRT
•ANYTHING
AT ALL

985-41-

"FrM E11lm111M"

PH. 949-2101
or R01. 949-2160

2

SYIICUSE. 0.0

.

NO SUNDAY

.

!Alton Phto Sllep)

IS NOW OPEN
FOR BUSINESS.
IN STOCK:' oConl•t PDrth
lo•"* oCom•OtY FloWor
V•• •CIIIf Bird . .tht
•Cern.nt Bird Bathl

•'-main llrd htM • Pfua
Frog~. Angll• 1nd

Ot•.
Olh• Y-.1 OrnMIIenU

From Uo &amp; Sue!

aonto lt0.201 for • .,.... ··-•
hundred dollert of
tion for (Ill yNro.
1he ..0111 "tor lllc:t ~IICtlon
wHI be open ot 8:30 o'clod&lt;
A.M. 1nd remain open untM
7.:30 o'clodt P.M.
By ordor of the Boord of
EloCtlono, of Melgo County.
Ohio.
··
,Evelyn Clork. Cholrmon
Jane. M. Frymy-., Olrector
Ootid tho 21ot of Fobruory, 1910.
April 9, 11, 23, 30. 4tc

ma.

•VINYL SIDING
·~LUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

JO'S GIFT SHOP

I

STICKERS

Roger Hysell

Garage

lt. l24, •••• .., Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK

. REf.AIR

Aln Tr ...1••1••
PH. 992-5612

or 992-7121
4-25-tfn

CONNIE'S
OHIO IIYEI
HEllS and .

~EILASTINGS

OPEN:

APRR 1 THRU JUlY 1
HOURS:
ThutT. thru Sun.

COUN'i'IY
MOBILE
HOME PARK
•Mobile Home
PINt
•Mobile Home

Renr.lo
•Lot Rent-1•

992-7479

',_.,......

lt. 3J llwth ef
1-12-'U-Ifn

PubliC NotiCe

HUMPH lEY'S

LEGAL NOTICE
Notice i1 given that RAM
Technologleo. Inc. hoi filed
on oppllc.otlon with tho Pub·
tic Utitltleo Commlooion of
Ohio !CliO No. 90-208-TP,
ACEI lor authority to furnt•h
poglng ..,.lceo In portion•
or ell of Galllo, Jockoon.
lawrence, Meigo,
Pike,
Roll, Scioto, end Vinton
Countkll, Ohio, ond to • tobit.h niteo. ,..utotlono.
ond'rotN governing the fur- ,
nlohlng thlroof. Any lntornted peraon. firm. corporl·
tlon. or ontlty, who ·con ohow
good cou01 why thlo
co&lt;lon ohould not be grilnted
ohould lito with the· Com·
million 1 wrhton otatemeni
detailing the r. .ona on ·or
before Moy 1 1 • 1 990. Unleol the c;ommlooion r•
celvH • written n.temtnt
"to olloot ond on oc·
co-nytng requoot !Or on
oro! holrlng In thlo mottw.
the c•o wUI be docldotl on
the beol$ of offldolvho to be
$Ubmhted by the oppliMt,
Furth• lnlonnlllon _ , be
obtolned by contoctlnt the
Public Utlhllt Commloolon

-II·

of
Ohio, Columbuo,
110 E•t Srtlld
ltroet,
Ohio.
43218·0873.
APRIL 23

(UMAIE

. CONTIOL
HICitlng, Cooling,
Rtf riga ration
Stnlct
RHidential &amp;

Commercial

CALL

19
*SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM aritf RE·
MOVAL ·,
*LIGHT HAULING
*FIREWOOD

IILL SUCI
992-2269

EYINii'JGS

EAGU

SIIAU iiGIIE

-··CIWIII

MWYMNIII&amp;KIO
PIODIC11
......., c.t.r - •c

_. _ l'wtl . .

s.mc..

•--.IIWin.CIMI•
s.w............
HOURI: M· F I · 7
Sot. 8-1: Cloood Sun.

949-2969

r;:~:::=====~

v.w.

PAI1S &amp;

SIIYIU

NEW.USED

PARTS

For Rablalt.

Jette, Golf,
leedeudlua.

.......

01 CHANGE

S169S 41t. Mu.
IIIMII8fl' M

CONYI IIIICI SIOIIIT.

C.stll
Qlll STOP

... . ..

St..... 71 , ••

SITEWORit • ~DADS
CLEARING

NE.,WUND _
ENTERPRISES

DUMP TRUCK
Sand-Stone-Dirt

(614) 667-3271
Grant

A.

•
UNDA
PAINTING &amp; CO.
MWUIIILOI
lllld..
I
FIIEI

''*"*"""""'
VIIY
Ill ..... h

IIIYI

Anll6 ,...

......

1614)

.

915~4110

�... ,. :'""-..,
,..,
.
..
(
\ ..
(.

~

(.

"• .

1,

Announc ement s

I'

YAWNYA

73 Ylna lo 4 WD'I

•

1

EVENING
&amp;:00 (JJ Herdclalle Arid
McCornllclc Q
•

(JJ •

•

(I)

•

'

!Ill

America
(!) Wild America Marty
encounlers many creatures
before linding bear's feeding
ground. Q
'
(!) Aeecititg RainbOw Q ·
18 (!]) Andy Griffith
1D1 World Today
.
. Of He-Man
. ·
rB Clterlea In Clterge
&amp;:051]) Beverly Hlllblll'"
&amp;:30 G (2) Qt NBC Nlghdy Newa ·

~Sporlal.ook

2

I 1 I 1 I.

I

•c
......
()) 8cltolellic SpaN

1-lE SAID llE ONLV SAW I-IER
FOR A SECOND. BUT FOR TI-lE ·
-- REST OF HIS LIFE NOT A
MONTH WENT 8Y WHEN
HE DIDN'l'1li1NK Of llER ...

1

• t...,.;:-R
-TE....:.;w..,.:o:....N~~
3
. 1 I I

.
I

r.

T E A MT
5 16 .
1. .

I.

"You really walked the
canyon?" a~ked the boy who ·
~..........1._~.....-.J.-.L.,_.~ ~ noticed my T·shirt. "Sure did." I
.-------,...;;".., beamed. Hurtin~ rny ego, he .
I N T H E II
added, •........? .
.

I

I ·1' I ' I

Ia

"'

I
I G

·•

Complete tho chu~kl_o quolod
· by t.l lmg •n the m1SSinQ , •ords
L-....L.,....J-..L......:L-1-..J vou develop from step No, 3 b_elow.

.

•

•

•

·•

.no

PRINT NUMBERED

.

.

~ LETTERS IN SQUARES

I I . G &lt;1J ABC NIWI Q
(!)llodyEioclriC
(f) 3-2·1 ContiiCI Q

!Ill • d2l cas NeW• Q

18 (!]) 'l'h-'• Comlilnr
121 Top Card Contestants
combine entertainment trivia
with the luck of the draw.
rB Hangln' In
8:351]) Andy Griffith
7:00 (JJ Sc..-.crow Ia Mrt. King

i

114452124.

A~L

Yonl -111111 le Pold In
AdVInoL DIADUNI: I:DO p.m.
thO . , boloN the 811 II lo Nn.
~ ~~~- • 2:00 , .....

f.,...,.
........ -- .
p.jn......J. '

a:

2:00

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

·

...

-~

t-

poolllono. Coli (t)
. . . , _ E l l . ~IIG.

CompiiiJ,

==="~=
,

Vllglnll, 304-713-6711.

9~ W8nlad to Buy

4i 11P111 ....,_, 18ra1 ot omd
oo~tect~-.

_
Ollloo ................
........... -·l' o
Ia.I Cil 031, Clolllpollo DoilY
Trllouno. 121 'INHI .... ~
fipollo, 011 411131.
POSTAL BEIMCE JOBS.
....., to $4IK. - d a .

Eni!Y

_...., ...

· Rillll ....,_ Ayotlon

a

:'.-l::
.=d~ ~0
.,_
_A..,. 2lhouNpor
.....
":...

- . 1 - - manth. In'

F-neC

To.. T - - .....11moniL
IEioMnl allr, I - · 11M "'I· ft.
1 112 boll!, CAICH, d l o - ,

32 Mobile HomM

tor .....
-

1tn lllli&gt;not 121110, $4,000.

!fii4-TIWI4II.

·1877 14ll70
lk,U.. -

-OJ.
~

.

d.._.., rl•rv-na. 2 poole,
walw, I gorbogo lncludod. SIMI

ot1211.11'1Wf7·7ISO.

.

~

.....

-rJ:2.:T-·-7
-h"""' ........ ~=·
7
At.

__

Junk ..,. with or wtlhoul
1:111 Lony ......., lt4:J1!!4103.

-i:.... ~Ttff(l
"' .

'

--21-.....,...;
. ~-:....•..,...klad....:.,..·AC.,;.,;-_
.........
.

.

c

e

1D (!]) M'A•I!I'H

.·

.

~~&amp;C'

e

· !D&lt;1'A&amp;R Wlnaton Cup
11a G &lt;1J Mac:O,Vtr A
marcy mission to Bangkok
leads to a startling discovery.

,.,.. *•'

...i:.__
bo;OIIIId,-tai
. ..
..

·=:

....,.·

'

1211. 1111 ~.. llolor ........

Trans [l[lr t .&gt; t 10n

W)onl8d to buy form In QoHII ot
- - _,..,, 10 ..,.. or
- - . With or wtlhoul - .
114-7Q.22111.

The Wlip of llldlll

r ,.

11

..... ---....S,

1orloot~lol:4--:

1111 Aooll'rognlll!
¥1tilltl
.... CouftiY,
'"'"
Dulloo
ill -the
HoUOintl , lpoollllof d bo to

~

.. ' 1111.
•••
lllldl 50~, IDIIna. ca. 'I
wotw. Ourwlll R"".!!._'!_ + mH11
oil At. 17. :IOW7t-7W7 ., -

ffiDO'Pflll 1 PftN'IDII and. IIIIIC

_,171.

In pacli8glntl and 180tillollng
FmHA ioano.1alorJ, $11,100 par

l.al lor 1111 or Nnt. 114-111121141.

ll'inge- - " "VII$
' ..
to
--w
i l l initio

bo aviolloblolor • 12 _,.

no.....,=ki!81Nq'd.l11121. '

=

~""J...":r!":"' ~

- -·--- _..--.
...............

....

51

U.C,':,*',IOO *'"'

----~·
·
eoo--..~o~~·~­

Household

3311.

pulor

-

.......
.
"""'
42 Moblla Hom•

oar-

patiO, CIHihrl crafto,
no .... loa. EICIIIonl ln-

r:ome. 104 111 2331 Aa.FIU.

yrou clo
--pl.pll_k_,
and NOf lo . lnOIIIJ
!hftllllllo tho moH Untl - ha..
NOOiilll...

lhll

.

Air _ . . . . . .

110

---prlood- Cor= .- ..,
WNrtpoal 7.000

LAYNI!'I PURNITURI

1,000 btu. oflw 12:ct0 ~
...7., 17&amp;o1177'.

IOU

--111.

- --

--Pl-.

, WE GOT' ANeW 5CI-IOOL.
·61.15 DRIVER 1H IS NIC:JRNIN6-.

for - · upright
'""'~·
.....,, - can
.,. -flll.•

10111.

-"'
..........,,,wEooy Fot8po10Timo
work 01 homo.

f

Hlrlequln - - - . 011
114-441 OM~.
Hat tub $1 ,000.
lloflohon Furniture: - ,
,........ and
........ Clrpot
·Ill ... 00
'
pary..,t. 114-441-7

=

-

rm

(~upp'1,

iiwestig~tion .

Q

(R)Q

~~ L1-t1'~1ock

• Nlllhvllle Now Counlry
music's hOttell stars are
leaturld live.
0 Trapper John, M.D. Story
follows the ·Uvea of the
employees and patients In
the hOspital.
9:30 tlll.
Oe1lgn1nD Wonten
Julia gets her head. stuck In
the Governor's atslrcaae. (R)

10f-17S.nu.

a;· .. ...

Trl......._ ....

LIKE MY

TODAY 1 GOT TO
MEND TH' FENCE,
PATCH TH' ROOF,

an 1111 at PAINT PLUI,

Huaqun,..
· $20. to $10. PAINT PLUS, , _
eon Ave, Polnl PlelunC, a.
171-4084.

, .... l'cllitloo fOO!o..l oyl, AIC, 82

1:#..-·

U.(l'lo

~

. . . . . . .14····

1• T/D:Rca•nt ; .a.n.. ....._

.............
"..
1-Dhi,...,,........, __

USED TO SAY··

"FUST THINtil
·FUST" II

. ,,
i

Plumbing a
iilltlng

ec

'

Q
10:00 (JJ 700 Club With Pat

Robertaon
G (2)
lhennan'• Oeel

e

Oantury Ll!whd. 1.0
!'.!!!.!-~..,
ill
~

1. . -

"""" .......

Shannon - • btg buCica aa ·
he dlilanda a NCUrlty guard.

iConr8d
••rearsCapital
......
that a
ol

84

(J)

·--~-1ltaell
" - " .... - · lf4•m
.

story
hla 1118Y have C!IUIIICI two

deaths;.SI....,

==·~~
--··1
14.

=
=...'"""'
:=..
s:f:.i,
-..
'·

,_blo -

bod.-, I"'" k"-hen, IIUIII

oldfna N. lloln.
fln~n:lni. Will oon•ldar ._,.,.

.1.11.'•

r

thl"' .. dow!! payment, ...
30'o. -.t73-/117 .... 304-411

lor

oc;ri .

.

1171. '

lof..~flKida

1n
yoo'il Hnd 11. The -Astro-GraP/l Match· yo~ may soon llec:o!M InvOlved ln' two •
maker Instantly reveals which signa ere conatructtve partnel'll!lp arrangemenll.
8ld Timet '
romantically perfect tor you. MaN $2 to Each could brtng benefits yoo would not
I!J) Evening Newa
Matchmaker; c/o thle ~per, P.O. be able 10 achieve unaldld.
ONawa
Box 91428, Cleveland, OH 44101·3428. BAGmARtUa (Nov. 23-Dee. 21) Luck
10:05 (I) MOVIE: Uncut Oem lPG) .
· '
GEIIIMI (lley 21,1une Ill) 11 secret am- Will be with you at lhla time II yoo try
(2:00)
.•
&gt;·bltiQII you've t1een nurturing has good your hand at an endeavor you've never
10:301111
GID H11 Ia Hera FaCing
BERNICE ./ chancee 'of t?e~ng ·luHllled In this lime previously attemptld. Succallla poaai·
burnout,
Doug and Reggie
BEDE OSOL "frame. , 11 mey be best to keep ble, be&lt;:au.e one akMied In the fletd may
want
a
break
from their
your lntent10111 to yoorMII lor the· lend a hlllld.
·
pr-n.
. CAPRICORN (Ole. 22-.lan. 11) Your
CANCill (.iurie 21-.lu!J' D) 111 o1 today, popularity II beginning to ucend at thla .
11:00 (JJ Hanlcellle And
lrlendohl~ lllld BOCial cont8CII could lime, lllld there 11 a llkall~ood lhat yoo
llaComalak
be ol greater help to yoo tlien IIIUII.' will become Involved with en lnl-tlr'!ll'
DC2l
• • GCil 8
Oon'l be reluetlnl to expreM your • .,.; new iocta1 group.
DID QINewe
l*lallona with pile who Cllll. .l you.' AQUAIIIUS (,.... . , . . , .t t) Critical
()) Ileal!.. TOIIIgltt
LEO (.luiJ 21-A... Ill) Elevate ycur· conditions •e beginning to IIIII! In ycur ,
(l}Niilawalclli
to fl·
sighll a bit where your - - obllc- · lavor, lllld 10011 ycu mey be
• (!]) AIMillo Hai .
II- are ceincemed. Chlllenliel COUld· • nallzO aatlafiiCiorlly - . 1 lltuetiOna
' IIJIItone!iltN
•
. pro-.ie stimulating al)d enaencter within, thll have .·t..n C-'"11 ycu lruetra·
(!J Mlltltf VICe Sont And
• you a drtve the! has t..n·rather ~ Ilona. Be l)opelul.
. l..oftrl s-.o. . .
,
April At, 11111
' gllh latelY.
·
PIICq (Fell. • 11.-olt 20) Ooala
• Ga1pal ilulll11
· ·
·
•.
J YIIIGO (Aug. ~~'••Ill· Ill) Conditions In pNCIICiated upon rMIIIIIo loundltlona
0 CDMedJ Tonight
f&lt;oowt4idge and expertiN ycu've ac- g-..1 COUld begin to tlke 1 tum lor havabell.-tltln..ual~olbelng .
Qlilred owr the put lew ye-.a C8l1 bel lhe batt• a olnow. Mllntllp e poaltlwl lullllled at tltllllml. 1&lt;.-p 111 open min~~
._.. to your -antage In the )WI' attitude, llllllllllfiiOIInlpouaotta. . .-gantlng edvloe 1Nm dlhlrl. but piiQ
liheltd. WltM you know mike rau more LIIIIA (Sepl.' a.o.t. II) AIIOOIIt• IliON ClldeiiDI 111 your own COUIINI.
·•
¥aluable then~ may rMIIa. ·
, could now be wilting to"- rau put IIIIo AMt (lllnllt 1'1-Apll 111 You're now
(Ajllll• . . , JOt lt'lllmllor ' acuon plana on wlilcll you've bMn Ill·· In • oycte wltere old btlllnm 0111 be
•'
JOUtotWIIIONf*IOIIIIOGIIhll- llng.s-.galltllr~UppQ~t,t«l W .'' ~Gal. dlf, IIIII n. - ·
tlllilllrS 1118tlffiiCI """ ifl _. a 0111- !hey 0111 prollt from your rod..wre •
c1NW11 COUld begin to rMke their
ll'l,.epe111PII) Wyou'Nblendllt'Nu~· :wa11.
.
.
mark. Ptooeed pn t111ty In 8 - ~
w1t11 N1111ta up llnlllltle point In time. ICOIII'IO (Ool. It IIOU, II) Although . ·IIIII doe 1101 iM¥1 enytlllng .Mnglng I
,Know w1tere to· 1oo1c lor
lllld ycu preler dcMng lltlnga on your own, nre.
"

=--"'--''""'"·...--..·-------

Real Estate
31 Home• tor Sail

,

0 Lltny King Uvel
.
iiJ Prime Time W,..tllng

,.=.it~~

•*

_

IAJIN MONEY Alldng bitokol

y.

n:ao

~vll.. 7.'!:""31ir 'r.:'bot~
FR, ' LR, Ill-In - , 2 ..r
......
.... lal, - ·
pump. i tWIWIYI.

-

IARN IIIOHIY lllllllllg llrokel

..,._and Qr~~~;."" IIIMI loalled
on Pualt "-'Road.., 2 -

101 ...

fulltiill1'111111. .,. -

'

THECIR~.

"l

...._,... -.eooo
.._ ......,.

130,000 yr. ~­
OotiHo.
(f) -.aadO Ell. y•

HEUSED"TT~A

LION TAMeR WITH

e

Murphy and Frank compete ,
lor the same tip on a
g_ovarnmant SCJII\dal. (R)~
18 (!]) Allen Nation Geor
and Sikes uncover a Pur II
plot to sabOiagl the election.

Na npo~onco noldod. Coli t•
IIOW4t-7711 E11.11214. ()pan 24
....... Including Sunday.

Dotello. 11)
4IU.

I THINK THISO'Ic WILL
LP6r LONGa;! THAN THE
OTHER ONE::S DtD.

Ful~-woddllll_.
($300~ 11~71411.

1041ot~1840.

3

e

- ......
1411
'

. . . . . ~ 4 .. I yr old,
1:00 All Ill 1:00 PM. 114-241-

Bobylllllorto como to our - . .

use New York's Central
Park,lrom running, bOating,
walking, and ska~ng to
muslcallhe.UOrt, parldea
end~ - (3:00) C
tlJl • d2l MajOr Dad Mac
and Polly argue over a
punishmerrt lor Casey. (R) Q
. . (!]) 21 Jump hftt
Hanson end Hoffa i)o
undercoVer on a drug
plllaring case. (R) Q
I!J) PtlmeNewe
·
(!J Murder, lite WIOie
FOOinOte To MIM'dar
121 Goa~l Jubllal
. . . . D Digital ~ry .
1:051]) MOVIE: Clterfy (PG) (2:~)
1:30 G (2) Qt Working Girl When .
. Tess Is spottld dlillng with
A.J. Traak, rumors bealn. Q
!Ill e .dJ a,_, Mail tries .
to kelp his boil from
• discovering that Sydney is ti ;
girl. Q
' '
1210n Stege
.
9:00 (2)
Hunter A psychic
predicts that McCIIII may be .
a.murderer's next vjctim. Q
II a e &lt;ll China Beach
McMurphy becomes lhe
subject of an official Army
tlJ) IDI!J) Muqih, Brown

inUIIIIgol8dthe olftrtng.

- • lor 2 omlll chlldton, llahl
t101•HM~ng, deyt 0 M0n-Ftl1

..

IIICI.
•

MORK MEEKLE AND

Opan8undayl

lend ,..• .,. Wlrolll...,.., P.O.
Bo1 112, 0.11 1polio, 011 41113t.
EARN IIDNEY Raodlng Bookol
$30!000 yr. lnoomo IIOiontlel.
Dot Ill. 11) -7..000 Ell. Y·

--.

litu, Glboan

Nul-

~~v~..-. ·~· ···- ::.?:'·'b..·*~"=

Jc-"-

:10-

drhrl, ......... 11811:

t':r"' t:.~ao~ -~::....

-.2

BAWRS: RX.rnciAIVS AID
ACCCUJ1"NJl'S. . .
.

'2.......
loll, 2llomoilal
'""""' 1 Gonlono,
~--.....
In
VolONno lido. 21.000 BTU olr

A - - " " ..... 4124, $100.

Goods

.......

.,

A•• ...JI Work .. homo. eom.

"·

FULLED CfF Bill~.

lvlerchand1 se

. . . .. ..._ T - NO and 1111
to t121. tlld1 1 ~ldt SilO to
""- RclnoN t221 to $371.
~ 121 to 1121. IIIMlloa
St., 111ckitpott, Ohlo 41710. An wM:cm,.l141tl 8224.
tiot
ond up to $411. Wood
ar.!loltlona muot bo .-lvod
tolllo
....
ch0110 8218 to 1711.
"' ..., t. Tho Vllllgl of lllcl- CluiiiiJ oltlldcoro In 111J homo. . Route I Alhlan, 1 ocn ::~~ Doaka t14S up to h'/1.
diopOrt II an ...... ompiOJinlnt II-F. wtlh . . . HI. 11~ ..1111 OolllpoHo '
Mmplell
0311.
pullllo wotw, no -olollono; 1400 I up, blink 111111- 1211 up to
.
1311.
.....,
f110
employee or , a ictnl tor
ot baat lfiOina8 lUI• ot $11,
11m
....
lliil
....
OUoolt
Tralllr lot lor ..... 10-'"""
omploJmtnl or
- - of .._ Nllgiaft, color,
Golllpollo on Ill, 141. 11....,... ..., $271 Ia up, Klllll $310. 4
BSit.
Gun CobiMio
- · Ndonol odgln, hondlcap ar
I, I, I 10 gun. Boby - $31 I MI. Bod lNIIIII $IS,
AHYONI CAN APPLY! GuaJan.
OUoolt SIB $31 I ldl!l hmo
R CII!d iS
tao. Good Nledlon of ti 1 ariM
:=.:..-=-~~..=.
Colt t 102 IG 1017 oat. U2101.
h ~ ••nolnd,.to ....
apoci~Cual-lklII doya 111111 11 oaoh with ~ ­
41
Hou
...
for
Rent
A¥011 I An ...._ I lhlrloy own.
. · In .......
......cl - • · 3 nol. out Bullvllll
........ 30WJI.1421.
Rd. Qpon I A.ll. to I P.ll. Man,
thN ... Coill14 4441 0322
AIIATEUR. PHOTOGAAPHEIII
WAHTEOI
A - l a -~_!Ill; Elool.
No
Eu.
1-.t47
11.1111/11\lri.) Coli
ot
- ; MSI-338, 111 s. Unoat....y, N. Aurora, ll80542.
' badl DOll\ 2 "'" blithe. .... A.,...:.,m;~m;
Ainlllliooa c..... Ortnllld Inolio _ . ,
!'«'_.,.. • oon4 Ullorn'lohciol eom. at Rond "
'dl¥1duol
lor
Admloalona
dlolrlaL _,._ . .........-d. Klnaup, Ohio 114-441-7473. • ·
Repr••ll•lve. Some Colltae
Clilt14-247-4111t.
nnuury. Sind reeurne lo
FmanCiill
IM!!fl , _ alllto, INIIr ,llmpo,
lout-om Bualnooa Collogo,
Plontz
8u!Mhlalou, oH 11M .... 304-17S-441e,
3br
1211
Plko, Golllpollo, OH
835011no. pluo .pooll. ......_
4101.
21
Bueln...
_......,..-d.l1~PICKENS FU~NrnJRE
Attamblyl Work It holM. Com'
Opportunity
putu ,.,.., crel11vt mft ..
llouoohuld Mnialtl1111. 112 mi.
- . -Ito. Excollonl lnJorrlcho Rd. Pt.
~
:IIMj ~r~- 2
INOTICEI
.
oalll0f.l75.1410.
•
ooma. 101 ••• rv ·Adl Fll2. OHIO VAWY PUIU8HWtll CO.
.

DOriad. - . . , . _ out• Poull'o Doy Carl c:.dor.
11n1na- and--'.... loll,
c h - . 11-F
may llo .,_,.,... Of mollld to I LOll.ollonloblo,
' • 1:30 p.OI. Aall 2 ....10.
Ill~ F.-d Hollmon, 237 Rico
8llolo, IIIIi •hoof. Drop-Ina

()pan lunclarl

•

ForLIUI

homo,
·~
Hpollo,
Rongo,downtown,
~or,
$271111\o. Utllftloa nal lnOiudld,

'

e=:.

'II:•

Lo¥e1J Unlllm- 111111
-and ftoor 3br opt. In' dulllol

.. \e.."""·_.
.,......

-~~~
._..
an AIIC

'•

=-

11 · He~p wanted

W
'ii, Cenlral Park Look at
the variety ol ways people

~H; . 1 : : n

Wonllld To Rant: I br lr. an
- . muot olllldton I
11-1·1000. 11W7t-

49
llorllyn

........

47 Wanted to Rent

Emplovment Serv 1ces

::..:~CIII

li4

'

I!J) CroMftre
1B Night Court Q
7:351]) Sanlonl And Son
8:00 (JJ MOVIE: Acroll Five
Aprila (2:00)
(2) Q1 My Two Dada
•
Nicolo wins a speclal fantasy
lor herself, her dads and the

#"11M ,I

11110by~U.. tnc.

a

Entertalnntlltt Tonight
II (J) Mame'1 Famly
tlJ) • d2l
Jeopardy! Q

oondlllon. t1tM: 114-7~,
or 1.14-'742-2131.
21 I l1nt1hWind mat• ~ :
n,loiowcue, 1wnlng. (
. . _ ..... mlloago, :104-111' :·
21tll'or 1711-1117.
•
..

Koafll llollllo •. . _ ~
1111., - , Drytr, CA. 111011,
~Pora LIM Court, 114-

lloc-• F~. 114-D:t-

II

ct~AINLY $tfOU/..PN'T

.I

I
both,
~--~
~000. IU 141 1117, It,._
NO

()) Motorwaek IIIUIIrated

~ A !.ITTL.i ¥fl.OCCoLi

--......nd--.... -1114-111-am.
'
1110 141'12, on -~~~
Ill. TOIII-. llnlrolllr,-

- - C. Cnoohlna. Top
polool pold lor -.p -liaciH.
.. I ton. •111¢'111 1: II ,.., motor
ond -oollor 21 o tan. 1'1..

'

·
$WAI.LOW A Tf!tl.LION•
. POLLAft NAjiONA'- l&gt;tfT,

I

Rooms

- . Cloan,

'

1D (!]) Night Court Q
1D1 MlllllyMne
(!J Miami VIce World 01
Trouble Stereo.
121 Mualc Row VIdeo
1B AbiiOII &amp; Co.UOIIO
7:051]) Jeffer..,..l
7:30 G (JJ FamltY Feud

~ - weLt, IF t#f CAN

'

Fumllh~

L.uourr' 11101111 45

-light houo...nrllo~g. Ql.. IIIIIL.IIofld, Prlood to - · 114..- - . WrMIIn Co,. ii&gt;l P.O. 411 ooiO.
Bo~x!m~·~W~.,~Doi~IJ:_~
_ __:· . 1t11
t4ll70 wtlh ....
•·
01141711.
fiiiMID,Ino---

CAl 114lta 1341.

Oft

e

.....,llbhln,ltnll~

....

44

Apartment
"'

torRent
NIIW O'ICAN PU"NIIIIEO APT8
NOW OPIN. ONI AND TWO
lED~ DAYS 304-1734100 N-ral'/loa78,

"Thst movie you rented wuso bad, the TV
just got alc:k."

==.,iiiF...... I.m~~: ~~

r••••
.

I

rornenc.

-·

~

"

.

,,

ore-

'1 ·1.0

Quaker- Femur-Nylon-Hostei-OUTOF
"Diplomacy," says granny, ·pets you out of what tact
would have keot vou OUT O';: .F:. ·:: . . . . . - - - - - - - - - t

..

N011111

.JI

.

(!l SporteCenter
II
D (I) Curront AHalr
. (!) (!) MacNeil Lehror
NewaHour
tlJl 18 1121
Wheel 01

taldna appllcotlona ot
DomlniO.. Pizza. 111 4 t1 •~o.

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity ·

(2) PM Magazine

SCRAM-LETS ANSWEitS

.AK
.AKI64

By Jamet1 Jacoby

s

+QU

The most renowned American
EAST
bridll! ·events are the Vanderbilt and WEST
.QJU2
the Spingold team-of-four cbamploa- .10 54
.Ql03
ships, held respectively during the .Jt7
.QI2
.AK7
spring and summer North American
+K7
+AJ!OS
competltioos. In the late. alllgea the
quality of play Is often disappointing.
SOUTH
Eacb side seema to be In a ruab to pve ·
•• 73
away the championship. Yes, there
•sz
tt06H
are e~uses. Everyone !1811 been play- .·
+&amp;5'42
lag serii!UIIy for 10 days ·Or more. •
"
Screens and bidding boxes are used,
'
Vulnerable: BoUt
slowing the play and adding to the l!lt· )
,Dealer: North
bauatloa. And it Is oaly humiD nature
.
Welt
Norllt l!alt
that players who have advanced so far Satillt
begin to smelt the , _, and tenlion
P...
tatea ita toll. This week we will exam··
Paa
tNT(!)
Paa
ine .deals from the finals of lut sum·
Dbl.
Paa
Paa
mer's Splngotd team-&lt;Jt.four. Even a
Obi.
All pus
beglnoer can U.ke heart from thesr ·
results.
Opening lead: +4
"
In today's deal West bad cue-bid to
invite game after· his partner's overcall. But East lli&amp;ned f){f In two spades, :
and West made the rlaltt dec;lsion to tliree diamonds doubled; a blp jlri~
pass. In the face of all this, North sud· to pay for not allowlnc Eut to play .,
denly came to, life :with two no-trurilp, two spades. In a club eame a klbiiJier ·
the meaning of whlc!l we can only C!lll· migbt view the North action u 1111- ,
jecture. South viewed the bid u ID In· lucky but 1n the finals of a North "
tentloa to compete In a minor suit, and American team cltamplonsltlp, stick- :
Ia juat plaili :
duly bid clubl, moving oa to diamonds 1ng one's neck 1n the wbl!ll doubled. After a mlldefenae, de- poor jlldpnelit.
clarer wu still down 500 points In

...

z•

.

'

,. z•,.

.. J_

CROSSWORD

~"

·"

by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS

38 Finnish
lake
1 Overfill
39 Sicilian
5 .Psyche
9 English
city
nver
40 Female
10 Unsociable
sheep
41 Genesis
12 Geiman
art song
site
13 lndil!n
DOWN
poet
1 Dieter's
• V 1......,_ , An
15 Muslim
dish
es .- Y 1
IWII'
name
2 Spanish
8 Kidding 24 Off
18 Panty·
province 11 E®ing
the ship
14 Welcom- 25 Perfume
hose's
3 Conbane
forming
lng
27 Radiates
17 Author
4 Sccipe
word
30 Byzantine
- Yutang 5 Tllrget of 18 Strap
empress
18 Warning
Voyager 219 Avarice 31 Car style
sign
, 8 Ardor
20 Asia - . 33 Withered
20- julep
7 Ship's
23 G~chl, 38 Maxim
21 Smile
diary
e.g.
37 You get II?
22 American
· playwright
23 Eucharist
plate
25 lnlurlate
28 Tlplnls
great
21Por11co
28 Be rid of
29Joel
Chandler

•••
' I

...

,,...'

.....

...-.

'

..
'• .

32 Sanskrit
school
33 Pqlile ·
titlp
34 Mining,
find
35 Gone
aloft ·
37Wooed

...

..
-~

DAILY CRYFfOQuOU::S- Here's bow lo work It:
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW

.:.; _.
'

'

--...
-

One letter stands for another. In this sample A Is used ~
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letterS, · :
apostrophes; the length and formation of the words are aU • 1
hints. Each day the code letters are different. ·
CRYPIOQOOTEI
"'
4-23
-. '

VCIFNLNIRW
,

QW

TAGG

TAQDAC'. W

Q J U N·l 0 W

KA

. FlO A,
'

N WWRA

QW

..

x q·s

"

K 5 ·

~ ,•

K 5 ....
.I

VCNOJA'W

WIO. - PIVO

FCSFAO ":-

C:rt••••••••s,
IF voU DOPh . -..
YOURSELF, YOU wn.i. BE ADVER-

YNteriiay'e

ADVERTISE
TISED BY YOUR LOVING ENEMIES. HUBBARD

ElBERT

. .'

' ..

�Pea•

Monday. April 23. 1990

Poma'Oy'-Middlaport, Ohio

10-The Daily Sentinel

_......_Local ·news briefs...~-.. .Rising health.. _eo_n_un_u_ed_rr_om....:..pa.:.ge_I_ __
Continued from page 1

Esmpes serious injury in wreck Rodney Clonch, Middleport, escapetflnjury when the vehicle .
he was driving struck a concrete wall at the Intersection of West.
Main aild Locust Streets in Pomeroy early Monday morning.
Pomeroy pollee reported that Clonch was trav!!ling south on
W!!st Main-St. at 1: 19 a.m. when he failed to negotiate the curve
and hit the wall. The vehicle was heavily damaged and towed
from the scene.
Clonch was charged with DWI.
A two-caraccldentat 11:32a.m . SaturdayonEastMalnStreet
resulted In damages to both vehicles but no Injuries.
Pollee reported that Angela McClure, Pomeroy, was
attempting a left turn Into McClure's 31n One when her vehicle
was struck from behind by a car driven by James Carsey
Middleport.
.
.
'
There was heavy damage to the l'E'ar and both the right and
left side panels of the McClure car and modera te damage to t~e
·front end of the of the Carsey vehicle. Carsey was cited for not
·
maintained assured clear distance.
One of the three chUdren In the McClure car, David, a four
. year old, was tak!!n to Veterans Memorial Hospital ,but no
treatment was required, pollee reported.

Two hurt in dune buggy crash·
Two Vinton area residents were Injured In a dune buggy crash
Sunday at 7:35p.m. In .Salem ·Township on S.R, 325, 1.5 miles
north of the Gallla-Melgs County line, according to the
Gallia· Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol.
Charles G. McMillin, 34, and his passenger, Carolyn K.
McMillin, 31, both of S.R. 325, VInton, were taken by the Rutland
EMS to Holzer Medical Center.
Carolyn McMillin was admitted for treatment of a fractured
right fibula, fractured ribs and various bruises and cuts. At last
report she was listed In stable condition. Charles McMillin was
treated and released for multiple bruises and scrapes.. . .
Charles McMillin, driving a homemade dune buggy, was
heading north when he went off! he left side of the road in a slight
right-hand curve before hlttlng an embiiJiklt\ent.
He was charged wltli DWIIn addition to being cited for failure
to yield and not having a valid registration decal.
.
A Shade youth was chargejlln a one-car crash Sunday at 12:30
a .m. In Salisbury Townsshlp on Bradbury Road, .3 of a mile
west of the junction of S.R. 7.
·
David B. Frymer, 17, was charged with DWI after his 1986
Ford Escort hit an embanknlent.
·
·
.
Frymer was heading east wnen he ·failed to negotiate a
left-hand curve. He then went off the right side of the road and
Into an embanknlent.
·

Shaw candidate for Fourth
District of Appeals Court

standing an application for fundIng Is likely to be filed with the
stat,e, although there Is still . a
question as to whether all of the
· above counties still want to
participate In a regional jail. The
comm issioners said the Interested counties are "continuing to
explore all possibilities" and are
to meefln th"e near future with
representatives of a regional jail
facility In Northern Ohio.
At the request of Meigs Prosecuting Attorney Steven L. Story,
the commissioners have approved the sale of approximately
125 acres In Meigs and VInton
Counties which were seized by
law enforcement au thorltles
from Joseph Douglas Nelson lor
drug-related offenses. The property will be advertised for sale by
the prosecutor, and proceeds
from the sale will be paid Into ihe
county's law enforce111ent trust
fund.
The commissioners es tabUshed 10:30a .m. on May 16 for a
viewing of property In Sutton
Township for possible annexation Into Syracuse Village to
facilitate building a senior cit!·
zens' a partment complex. A
public, hearing on the· proposed
annexation will be hekl.1 p.m. ()n
the same date Iii the commlssloriers' office. The request for
viewing and public hearing came
by letter from Mrs. Sidney
Grueser, on behalf of Waters
Edge oi Syracuse, a limited
partnership.
The Commlsslone~s also conducted the following routine
matters.
-Tabled dlsi:usslon on ways to
pay costs Incurred by the Meigs
Clerk of Courts office for cases
filed on ·behalf of the Bureau of
Support, until Clerk of Courts
Larry Spencer can be present for
the meeting. /?
- -:::&lt;F-abled-a' bid for a mixing
trailer (pug mUI) for the county

No big winner

PORTSMOUTH - William K.
and Plpefltters Local577, Labor·
Shaw Jr. has flied as a DemO: ers International Union of North ·
cratlc candidate !n the May 8 America Local No. 83 and the
prltnary for the seat on the International Brotherhood of of
· Fourth District Court of Appeals Electrical Workers Locals 88,575
' to be vac11ted next year by the · and .972.
r~tlrlng Incumbent, Homer E.
A 1973graduateof0hio Onlverslty, where he earni!d an A.B.
' "Pete" Abele of McArthur. .
Shaw, a Portsmouth attorney degree, Shaw received his law
who has served as assistant degree, cum laude, from · the
Scioto County prosecuting attar- · Cleveland-Marshall College of
.ney for the past 11 years, said he · Law at Cleveland·State Unlverhas litigated matters before slty In ' December 1975. He has
federal and state · courts and since been admitted to practice
administrative agencies In five law In Ohio and Kentucky, the
states 1\nd the , District of U.S. Supreme Court and federal
Columbia.
'
district ·. courts In Ohio, West
As assistant prosecutor, Shaw VIrginia and Kentilck:v.
said he has tried civil cases In
Shaw resides In Portsmouth
areas from aggravated murder with his wife. the former Susan
to cMIJrials and appeals.
Snedecor, and his two daughters
Shaw's candb;lacy hils received Rhachel and Sara II. :
'
endorsements from the · Scioto
Tile Fourth Dis trlct Court of
County Democrallc Party., the Appeals hears original actions
Tri-State Buildlng ·and.Construc: and ap{l"als of ~eclslons by
tlon Trades Council, the Ohio county, municipal and common
State Association of Plumbers pleas courts In Adams, Athens
and Plpefltters, Carpenters Lo· Gallla, Highland, Hocking, Jack:
cal No. 437, ·Millwrights Local son, Lawrence, Meigs, PlckaUnion 407, U.S. Steelworkers of way, Pike, Ross; SCioto, Vinton
America Local 2116, Plumbers and Washington counties.

CLEVELAND (UP!) - Saturday 's $10 million Ohio Super
Lotto jackpot went unclaimed
because no one picked the six
numbers chosen In the drawing.
The Ohio Lottery Commission
said Wednesday's grand prize
will be worth ·a t least $14 million.
The six numbers are 5, 8, 10, 16, .
22 and 35.

Seuthen board to meet
,
The Ohio Association of. Public ;
highway department, pend,lng
The
Southern
Local
School
EmplOyees
IOAPSE) 453, ~uth- :
review of the bid by County
Board
will
meei
In
special
ern
Local
School
District, will;
Engineer Philip Roberts and
session
tonight
(Monday)
at
7
meet
at
7
p.m.
Tuesday
at the
JDghway Superlnt~ndent Ted
p.m
.
at
the
high
schaoi.
high
school.
·
.
Warner.
Plannlac
~e~lioa
set
Revival
slated
·
-Approved payment • of an
There
will
be
a
planning
The
Mason-Gallia-Melgs
Cru-:
animal claim to Calvin Hawk,
sesslbn Jor Meigs Courity Church sade for Christ revival will begin~
Tuppers Plains, as recomWomen
United for the May tonight and continue through
mended by Prosecuting Attorney
fellowship
on Friday at 1: ;10 p.m . . · Saturday, AprU 28, at 7 p.m. each.
Steven Story .
·
the
Forest
Run UnltedMetho· evenlng ,at the Carleton Church'
at
-Approved a $100,000 certlfi·
dlst
Chutch.
.
on Kingsbury Road which Is
cation from Auditor William
RaciDe
F
aad
AM
to
meet
County Road 18. There will be.
Wickline to the county's real ·
The
Racine
Lodge
F
and·
AM
special
·singing and preaching'
es tate assessment account.
,will
meet
for
annual
Inspection
each
night.
The . Rev . Clyde
-Discussed with Sheri(!
Tuesday
at
7:
30p.m..
·
Henderson,
:pastor,
Invites the \
James M. Soulsby and Deputy
OAPSE
to
meet
public
to
a
ttend
.
Carl Hysell the purchase of a new
radio system for the sheriffs
department.
continued
1 · ..
' :.
-Tabled a letter from the
pledge of..support.
The three candidates for com-'
Salisbury Township Truste~ re· Sue Malson was mistress o! missioner, Janet Howard, Cecil;
garding the possible addition of
ceremonies and Introduced sev- Gillogly and Bill Quickel spoke;
.4 mUe to the township rQail
eral candidate representatives briefly, as did Oon Mlc)lael·
system.
-:-Accepted bids' from both the . including Caro]yn AndreWs for Mullen, candidate for jUdge or:
Attorney General AnthOny Cele· ·the Meigs County Probate anti:
Asphalt Materials and Ashland
brezze; Michelle Jenkins for JuvenUe Court, and Wflllam !{·, ·
OH Compailles for aggregate
Secretary of State S)jerrod Shaw, Jr., Portsmouth, a candl·
products over the next year, to be
Brown, and Beverly Grimshaw date {or the office of Judge of the
purchased by the county engl. neer at the lowest price for the . from the state auditor's office. Ohio Fourth District Court · of
Also ln.troduced was · 'Melg~ Appeals.
'· ·
purpose.
County Sheriff James Soulsby,
Jane Frymyer spoke on behalf·
-Accepted the 10"111 · bids of
John lhle, vice chairman of the of Ralph Barrett whO Is runnmg·
Asphalt Materials for asphalt
executive committee, and Ohio for the lOth District Central
materials'for the county highway
department for the, month of · Department of Transportation Committeeman' s post. Also
representatives Including James speaking briefly was Lee Wede·
May.
Proff_ltt of the 'Meigs meyer, superintendent of Ca-Accepted the county highDepartment.
rletoit School who asked suppor t
way department's Inventory of
of the new 1.5 mill operating. levy
all equipment valued at $500 or
.,:
which will be on the May 8'
more.
.
primary ballot.
Dally stock prices
Charles Scott provided plano·
(As of 10:38 a.m.)
music during the dinner hQur.
Bryce aad Mark Smith
·
·
•
Sentb Central Ohio
Judgment sought
Clear Monday night, with a low · "' Blunt, Eilts a: Loewl
in ·the mid 50s. Mostly sunny
Am Eleetrlc Power ., ........... 29~
General ·· Motors Acceptance.
AT&amp;T .......... ........... ....... ...... 40')1,
Tuedsay, with highs between 80
Corporatlqn,
Chesapeake~ . Is
and 85.
·
Ashland Oil .. .. ....................35%
seeking
$3,462.31
from Timothy
Extended Forecast
Bob Evans .......................... 12*
Charming Shoppes ......... ...... 8J1 · R. Priddy, · Pomeroy, In the
Wed.aesday th1'811Jh Frtday
Meigs County Court of Common
Fair through tbe period, with
City Holding Co ................. :.14
Pleas.
'dally highs In the 80s and . Federal Mogul ............. .. ...... 17
Goodyear T&amp;R ...................34\7
overnight lows ranging from the
Heck's .... ....................... ...... 2%
· mid 50s to the mid 60s.
Key Centurion , .................... 14
Granted dissolutions
· ON CARPET Cl~ANIN'G
Lands' Erid, .. , ............... ; ..... : 16 ·
WHOLE HOUSE SPE(IAL
Granted dlssoluUons by the
Limited Inc ..., .......... , .... :., .. 40~
7
ON ANY COMiiNAnON OF 5
Meigs County Court of Common
Multimedia Inc . ...... ·........... 7'li'
Pleas are Reldun Ovrebo-Welker Rax Restaurants ................. . 2\7
ROOMS, HAllWAY AND BATH
and Gerald Timney Ovrebo· . Robbl~ &amp; My~rs ................ 15%
·wettter, 'a nd Reldun OvreboShoney s Inc. ......... , ............ 13~
' ONLY
·Welker has been restored to her . Star Bank·............... .'.. .... :.... 19%
ADVANCED CLEANING· •
malden name of Reldun Ovrebo;
Wendy's Int'l.. ................. .. .. 4%
Mark · Parrlson . and Linda J.
Worthington lnd .... ·.. ~ ........... 20\j,
SEIVICE
H
(Asl!land Oil's aecond-quarter
arriSon; and Cathy ·Hart and ~et 1.12/share vs. lo!l8 •.21 after
446-3915
Monty Hart.
ebal.'p.)

•

Hospital news
Veteraas Memorial
Saturday admissions - Helen
Eblin, .Pomeroy; Walton Manley, Reedsville; Nellie Brown,
Pomeroy; and Edna Pickens,
Middleport.
satufilay Discharges - none.
Sunday admissions - Dorothy
•
Roush, Mlddlepcitt.
Sunday discharges -.Willie F.
Blaine, Gladys Short.

Department went ,to College
Rqad for a structure' fire at the
Chris Capehart residence . . The
Middleport Fire Department assisted. Accordlng.to,Jeff Jones , a
spokesman for the Rutland Fire
Department. the ,structure sustained heat, smoke, and water·
damage In the two rooms which
were Involved. There were approximately 15 men on the·scene
and there were no Injuries, Jones
reported. No. other Information
was available.
'!:he Pomeroy unit at 3:54a .m.
went to Railroad Street for
Dorothy Roush who as trans·
ported to Veterans.
The Tuppers Plains unit, at
1:49 p.m. wenttoPlneTree Drive
for Audrey Crites who was taken
to Camden Clark. ·
At 4: 11 p.m. th~ .Middleport
unit 'rent to General H!irtlnger
Parkway for Brad Robinson who
was transported to Veterans.
The Salem Township Fire
Department waS called to Route
325 at 7:35 p.m. on an auto
accident. The 'Rutland emergency units assisted and took
Carolyn McMillian and Charles ·
McMillian to Holzer Medical
Center.
Flnal]y, at 9:29 p.m. on Sunday, the . Racine u·nlt went to
Bas han Road for Margaret John·
son wbo . as transported to
Veterans.

S

Indians drop

12·9 battle

Daily Number
201

to Blue Jays

Pick-4
2457
LGw ton(Jht near 10. Sunay
Wed.aesday. HIJh In-the mid

3

•

•ocks

Vol.40. No.243
Copyrighted 1990

•
•

1 Sect ton, 10 Pages 26 Centa
A Multimedi,. Inc: . Newapaper

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio. Tuesday, April 24. 1990

Planners discuss ·industrial
site
development
.

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Getting that brochure out Is a
Sentinel News Staff
first step In letting Industrialists
Industrial site development In know what Is available and
Meigs County was discussed by · happening In ~lgs County, said
•
William B. Snyder, manager of Snyder.
Economic Development for the
"While Southeastern Ohio is
Columbus-Southern Power Co., not as much of a well-kept secret
at Monday's meeting or the as It once was since the State has
Meigs County Regional Planning been pushing so hard, It still will
Commission.
take lots of preparation here to
The speaker was Introduced by mwke things . happen," the
Leesa Murphy after she an- speaker continued.
nounced that an Industrial broLack of flat landoutofthefiood ·
· chure will be prepared this year plain with water and sewer
with the cost to be underwritten avalla·ble was listed by .the
by the American Electric Power speaker as the primary problem
system.
In gettlr.g Industry Into Meigs
.---------~----~--~

County. " Preparation Is everything In Industrial develop·
ment," he said.
He stressed the Importance of
not "confusing activity with
accomplishment' ' and of being
able to look at loeatlons and
separate "Industrial sites from
corn fields." He said that Is
determined by whether a sewer
system Is readily available to the
location.
"A company will not look at a
site that Is not served by a ·
sewage system,:· )leemphaslied.
·Snyder commended the county
for trying and encoural!e&lt;i offJ.o

.

clals to "keep on keeping on"
since Industrial dev~lopment is a
long-term buslness.-Butheagaln
stressed that "no sewer means
no prospects."
He said that the Hobson area
wouk! be the premiere Industrial
site In Meigs &lt;;ounty If It was
filled in and raised above the
flood plain. Plans are moving
forward by Middleport whiCh
recently Incorporated ·that area
toputlnw~terandsewerservlce.

Commissioner Richard Jones
asked the speaker If the lack of
sewer would rule out development of the Great· Bend area

which Is owned by the. utility and
also asked If that land Is
available. Snyder responded that
the lacd Is not available, that "at
some point in time the utility wlll
probably buDd a plant there... that area Is pure gold to them."
Snyder said that right now he
has nothing In Meigs County with
water and sewer to even show
except the old Pomeroy junior
high school building and the
about 14 acres surrounding lt.
He noted that the competition
for industry Is really Intense and
that the Important thing now Is to .
be ready when an opportunity

comes. Gettlrtg sites 'Identified,
and ruling out those where sewer
systems are not availa ble, and
preparing the broc hure are first
steps, he said.
The good news , accordfng to
Snyder, Is that the utilities, the
railroads, and the Ohio Departmen t of Development are ready
to help.
The speaker who has traveled
to the Far East several times
said that there are foreign
prospects as well as domestic
prospects out there. He again ·
emphasized the lmPQrtance of :
on page
. Continued
.
. 10

Middleport Council· adopts new
•
medical, life r,nsurance program

APRIL SPECIAL

ByCHARLENEHOE~CH

Sentinel News Staff
A new medical and life Insurance program for employees
was adopted by Middleport Village Council at Its Monday night
meeting lilt village hall.
Council adopted a resolu lion
approving participation In the
Ohio Governments Health Benefit Program, through the Buck·
eye Hills-Hocking Valley Development District. The program
will go Into effect on May 1.
T mu"ll F. . 1\nder!ionofBuckeye
}!}}!~ .W~J :With Council I!) explain
r • !IJ.9.bealth care and life aoverage,
~ • a!oat With the converslon.plan
· which Is available to employees
leaving village employment. To·

StJ995 '

•

•

tal cost for the health care for the
18 employees will be $70,428 a.
year. In addition Council ap ..
proved $10.,000 life Insurance on
each oerson to be paid · by the
vlll~_ge at a cost of $669.60 a year.
Chief of Pollee Sid Little met
with Council to discuss sick leave
and accumulated benefits. Cur·
rently .employees are able to
accumulate 120 days. Little
asked for more accumulajlon
time. Council tabled the matter
until tile next meeting.
·
Mayor Fred Hoffman reported
that the agreement on the Appalachia Regional Commission
housing project has been received. The $43,869 grant will be
paid SiO,OOO In advance, he noted,

with the balance to be received asc
reimbursement for bills.
.
Council agreed to appropriate
$55,000 Into the the ARC Housing:
Fund for the year. May()r llof-:
fman noted that the village is·
currently advertising for a per-'
son to flU the job and thar
applications will be In before
next Council meeting. The pro-'
gram Is scheduled to go Into;
operation ·in early May.
A community block grant :
application for $510,000 has been ;
filed, Mayor Hoffman reported. ·
He said that $50,000 from Issue
monies had been designated to
the ·project and $25,000 In funds
for the second year of ARC
Continued on page 10

2: ·

PAMPERS
, GUEST SPEAKER - William
·manal(e!', Economic Development, ColumbusSoulliern Power Co., 'Columbus, talked on
Industrial aile development at Moaday's meetlnc
of the Metp County Regional Plannlug Commls-

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'

"I didn' t know him, but he was
a legend In the party, " said Ohio
Democratic Party Chairman
James Ruvolo. "He ' was a
govermir and senator and very
few have held both titles .. His
electoral success Is rtght up there
with anybody In Ohio's blstbry."
..

-

·~ ~

....

__

I
..:. --~·

PiCiimii

Murphey, who presented
new 1110 Melp
County brochure, and C. E. Blakeslee, executive
director of the Plannlnc Commission.

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.
(UP!) -The shuttle Discovery's
crew rocketed Into a record-high
orbit Tuesday ,arrying the $1.5
billion Hubble Space Telescope
on a quest to answer humanity 's
most profound questions about
the birth and fate ofthe universe.
An hOur and a half after the
ship's picture-perfect blastoff,
Discovery's two 60-foot payload
bay doors were opened, exposing
the lllOSt expensive sate!Ute ever
bunt to the space environment
·for . the first time. The ship's
five-member · crew then was
given formal permission to .press
on with ·the flight.

-...

-~.

.

mark. The problem was quickly
resolved and Discovery triumpliantly thundered away on a
spectacular 8 \!,-minute climb to
a safe preliminary orbit.
"Three, two, one and liftoff of
the space shuttle Discovery with
the Hubble Space Telescope, our
window on the universe," said
NASA launch commentator
George Diller said as the $2
billion spaceplane climbed
through a partly cloud:v, sky.
Shriver and Bolden fired Dis·
"I think our lives are going to · covery's orbital maneuvering
change. Our concept of the rockets 48. minutes Into the
universe, our understanding of
mission to put the spaceplane
our global perspective In the Into a record orbit with a low
environment of the universe as a
point of 358 mites and a high point
''The adventure begins! " said
whole Is just going to be changed of 381, roughly twice as high as ·
all elated Edward Weller, a by this telescope. And It's good to shuttles usually fly, giving the
NASA astronomer who has have such a perfect start to such astronauts a unique .view of the
worked with the sp11ce telescope . an adventure."
Earth below.
project for years. "It's going to ,
Discovery blasted off with a
"It looks like It's still a nice day
revolutionize astronomy."
'
ground,shaking • roar at 8:34 down at the cape," said Hawley
With Discovery sailing along in a.m., three minutes late because as Discovery salleil over Florida
tip-top shape, commander Loren or a minor last-second computer completing Its first orbit. ''It
!lhrlver. 45, co-p!iot Cha.r les glitch at the T·mlnus 31-second
seems like we were just there."
'
'
.
'
.

COLUMl:IUS, Ohio &lt;UPil Gov. -Richard Celeste signed
legislation Monday establishing
a state program of licensing
businesses and Individuals that
. test for radon and treat homes,
offlces and schools to elbhlnate

•

Bolden, 43, Steven Hawley, 38,
Bruce McCandless, 52 , and Kalhryn Sullivan , 38, geared up to
test the shuttle's . 50-foot-long
robot arm, which will be used to
deploy the space telescope Wednesday afternoon.
.
"It was a perfect start to a
great' adventure for scientific
thought for mankind," said Colin
Norman of the Space Telescope
Science Institute and Johns Hopklns University In Baltimore.

GovernOr signs rad__o n licenSing bil.l
CLAIIOL ··

recent months. He died there
Saturday.

slon.

Di.Scovery soars · into space

·8 ''

Continued fro111 page 1

----- ----------- ·

Ohio Lottery

~]

Weather

Lausche~ .. ·
.

from -pag~

Leadership...

EMS responds to · 14 calls
Qnlts of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service responded to 14 calls for assistance
over the weekend.
On Saturday, at 2:04 .a.m. the
.Pomerey unit went to Reedsville
for Don G. Jones who was taken
to St. Joseph Hospital.
The Pomerey unit, at 8: 52
a.m., was called to Wolf Pen
Road for Helen Eblin who was
transported to Veterans MemorIal Hospital.
At 9: 56 a.m. the Pomeroy unit
responed to a call on Htn Street
for Edna Ferguson whO was
taken to Pleasant · Valjey
Hospital.
The Pomeroy unit, at 2: 10
p.m., went to Route 33 for Nellie
Brown who was transported to
Veterans.
At 3:01p.m. the unit responded
to a call on Beech Street lor
Maragret Nunn who was taken to
Pleasant Valley Hospital, and at
4:02 p.m. the unit went to ·
Amedc\ll'e for Ruth McElroy
who was transported to
Veterans·.
Saturday'S final call for assistance came at 11: 20p.m, when the
Tuppers Plains unit went to
Reedsville for Frank Blse who
was taken to Camden Clark
Hospital.
On Sunday, at 12:01 a.m. the
Rutland unit went to Harrisonville for Jeff King who was
transported to Veterans.
At 12:45 a.m. the Rutland Fire

---Meigs announcementS -----1-

ce.nslng "proposal. for several
years • .

The new law will require the
director of health to approve
training courses 'and laboratortes conducting the tests. main·
lt .
•
lain .lists of licensees, receive
Starting July 24, the Ohio complaints from the public,
Department of Health will ad- conduct tnspectlons and coordl·
minister and enforce the llcensnate thl!'- state program with
.11!11 program In accordance with school ndon prlll!rams.
.rules adopted by t)le Public
rhe new law establishes II·
Health Council. .
·• mlted llabiUty for licensed pracRlldoll Is a colorless, odorless tltloners, permits the state attorradloactlve gas which occurs ney general to seek a civil fine of
naturally In the earth; but which up to · $1,000 a day for any
.can . seep through cracks In vlolatton.
,
foundations or cement sllabs,
It also sets criminal penalties
causing potential harm to lnhab- of a maximum six-month· jail
ltal)ts expoaed over long periods term or maximum $1,000 tine for
of lime.
p~:_acllclng without a license,
· The state of Ohio Is concerned ' f!llllng to submit records .· or
about unqualified i:ompanles do-· ~d!Jl&amp; radon-rellited services
log the testing and treatment, bued on radon test results from
and Rep. Joseph Secrest, D· research.
.
Among tho~uempt from the
l'!llnecavllle, 'l'Orked on the II·

licensing requlremepl'are people
tes tlng and treating their own
home or property, those licensed
In other states and those conductIng research.
. The governor alsO signed these
bills, effective July 24:
-Requiring the state to adopt
rules for disposing of construction and demolition debtls;
• - ensuring that 13 state boards
and , commissions have a
member who Is at least 60 years
old;
-establishing' licensing requirements lor nail sal~ and
managing manicurists;
·
-requiring every state agency
with a federally funded employment and training program to
give prlol'lty to veterans;
-closing a llli.blllty loophole In
the child abuae reportlna law and
another loophole In the law
protectltlll 15-year olds from
sexual advances.
\t

'

oJUS11CI!; WRIGHT SPECIAL GUEST Supreme Court .Justice J. Crall Wright was a
special guest at at Wednesday a(Jbt's Llncola Day
dinner of the Melp County Republican Party. His

Pomeroy

man arrested
by sheriff
Michael Gilkey , 19, Cave
Street. Pomeroy, was arrested
. Monday on an aggravated menacing threat charge following
an Incident on Bailey Run Road,
reports ·the Meigs County Sherlfr s Department. According to
the report, he Is charged wltb
striking George VIncent, Rutland, with a tire tool. VIncent
was taken to Veterans Memorial
•Hospital l\11ere he was treated
and released. Gilkey posted bond
for appearance In Meigs County
Court.
Deputies took a report frOm
V~kle Metheney, Wellston, In
which she stated she had acne io
a residence In Meigs County and
dUritlll an altercation, tbe mirror
and lett tall ll1ht were knocked
out of the car she was di1:vlng.
Continued on pap 10
•

llolt for the dlaner waa Melp County Common
Pleas Court Judge Fred w. Crow ID. ·Pictwed
wltb Judce Crow,left, and Supreme Court Jusllce
Wrlcht are Sybil Ebersbach, left and Sara Gibbs.

---Loeal news

briefs-~

Free trash pickup .offered
Lebo nan Township res ldents are being given the opportunity
to have their trash hauled away free of charge over the nexl
week.
·
.
The township trustees advise that any resident can leave
trash which has been properlY packaged at the township garage
before noon on May 2 and It will be hauled to the landfill at no
cost to them .

Trash must be.boxed, bagged
P,omeroy VIllage Council requests that all trash be boxed,
bagged and placed at the curb for pick up. AppUances, tires, and
brush will not be picked up. second ward pickup will be
Wednesday; third ward on Thursday, and fourth ward on •.
Friday.

EMS lws three Monday rolls
Unl~ of the Meigs County EmergenCy M!!dlcal Service
respcl!lded to three calls for assistance on Monday.
At 9:01 a .m .. the Rutland unit was called to Goute 124 for
Continued on page 10
·

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