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                  <text>April29; 1990 .

Pomeroy-Midcleport-GIIIillolil. Ohio Point Pleasant. W.Va.

Page E-8-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Bush drops Japan· and Brazil from unfair practices list ·

.

India for cltatlon under the Super Improvement In the trade bal·
with Japan .•w as $49 bllilon,
WASHINGTON (UP!) -Pres- · concern to U.S. Industry recelvM ... und~r the threat Of retalla·
301 process. Admlnstrallon offl· · ance with' Japan or an end to
nearly half of the $108 billion
!dent Bush dropped Japan and full consideration, " Mosbacher lion," and welcomed Bush's
ctals said the suspect · Indian
bilateral trade disputes."
·
total. The deficit with Japan was
Braztl from the Its! of nations said. "I betteve that was the decision ' 'as the proper one."
By law, the U.S. trade reprepractices Involve trade-related
An administration official said $3.1 billion In F,'ebruary, the
using unfair trade practices to case."'
Investment measures and lnsu·
India remained on the list of latest figure available .
Se!l. Uoyd Bentsen, D·Texas, sentatlve's office had until Man·
muscle Into U.S. markets _ or
ranee market barriers.
nations dealing In unfair practl·
In simple terms , the trade
freeze out American goods and chairman of the Senate Finance day to report whether It had
The complaints against Brazil ces .because "no action was deficit represents the transfer of ·
services, but again cited India Committee, noted there bas been Identified any " prlortty" countaken' • since the original citation wealth from .the United States to
''Hille Improvement" overall In tries that would be targets for . centered on Its Import .lfcensing
for possible retaliation.
last year.
other countries.
In a statement, Bush said the trade deftctt wtth Japan and Intensified talks or possible trade ..practices, ;1nd Bush expressed
confidence that as a res lilt of
For 1989, the u.s. trade de!tclt
Friday he would only Identify said, ''l'n\ a bit of a skeptic as to sanctions under the so-called
recent reforms the problem ·
I11dta as a. country where the whether the recent agreements Super .301 section of the 1988
Trade
and
Competitiveness
Act.
would
be resolved.
trade problems had not Im- wlll make much of a difference."
"
Because
last
year's
Super
301
The
president said he had
· But Sen. · Bob Packwood of
proved, meaning that nation
on
India
rem~ln
carefuUy
assessed "recent prolnvestlgatlons
could face trade sanctions If the Oregon. ranking Republican on
unresolved,
I
have
continued
the
gress"
In
negotlatlons with Jathe committee, supported Bush's
dispute ts not resolved.
as
a
trade
pan,
Including
. the Structural
tdentlftcatlon
of
India
· Bush acted on the recommen- decision to drop Japan from th~
prtottty,"
Bush
.
Impediments
Initiative
aimed at .
llberaltzatlon
dation of U.S. Trade Representa- ltst, saying that citing Tokyo
said
In
a
statement
released
at
opening
Japan's
markets,
and
tive Carla Hilts, who urged tha•t could jeopar;dize the recent
"I
have
decided
recent
Japanese
concessions
on
the
White
House.
Japan not be kept on· the ltst agreements and •'would also add .
not
·to
Identify
any
new
priority
supercomputers,
lumber
pro.
unnecessarily to the detertora·
because or progress tn recent
and
satellites
.
countrtes
or
practices
under
ducts
tlon of U.S. -Japan relations."
negotiations.
Super 301. " ,
.
At the same time, Bush said, "I
Dissenters on Capitol Htll have
At a news conference, Hilts
In. 1989, the administration
am not under any Ill us ton that the
defended the decision to drop . objected to droP.P,.lng.Japan from
identiiiM Japan, Brazil · and
SIJ will lead to tminedtate
Japan from . the list, saying the the ttst, saying that tt was the
admtntstratton Is determined· to pressure of possible sanctions
Continue«) fi.om E -7
foster iree trade through negotia- that led Tokyo to give ground In
····-____:=~--tions in the "Uruguay Round" of recent talkS on Improved access
of the saine species. Insects
-Consider a homemade trap.
talks of the General Agreement to Japanese markets for Amerientering the trap get stuck to Its Coat a yellow piece of stiff
can businesses and on tmpo~ts of
·
' on Tartff and Trade.
sides. Traps are available for · cardboard with a sticky subKeeping Japan on the ttst U.S. high-tech and building
such pests as Japanese beetles, stance such as glycerin or
would be " CO!Inter productive," materials.
~ep. · Richard Gephardt of
cucumber beetles and peach twig . molasses. Bugs that land on the
she. said, adding that "coopera810 EAST STATE ST., JUST OF!= AT. 50
trap can't ny off.
borers.
tion, not confrontation' •ts the key Missouri, the House Democratic
leader, charged Bsuh ts giving
Some traps . simply Indicate
To fight slugs, bury cups of
to improved trade relations.
IN ATHENS OHIO :,~&amp;:::"a!''
there's a pest Infestation. They · beer tn the garden. Slugs like
." We want to build on the · Japan "a free trade furlough."
T!JiiL, Thurs., Fri. Sam IIU 8pm
The administration measures catch only a small number of beer and will fall tn and drown.
goodwill of the Japanese people
Sat.
for oil chang• 9- t
"progress by how many agreepests, but this alerts you to a
-Buy predatory or parasitic
which · we have so carefully
ments with Japan they can problem. that needs controUil!g.
bugs to flghi garden pests. Some
fostered," Hill said.
THE HAPPY HONDA PEOPLE
of these Insects are sold
Commerce · Secretary Robert conclude. I measure progress by Such traps are sold for Insect
bow fattbfutty Japan Uves up to borers of squash, lilac, and peach
commercially.
Mosbacher sali:l the president's
The most eastly recognizable
decision was based on the un- the agreements we •ve rnad e, .. and ash trees.
Many pests are attracted to the
predatory Insects Include ladybanimous recommendation of the Gephardt said.
A statement from the Japanese . color yellow. Yellow sticky traps
ugs and praying mantises. Most
Cabinet-level Economic Polley
Embassy tn Washington said are commercially available to
predatory Insects eat pests at
Council, of which he Is a member.
night, so it may be difficult to see
"My objective. was to ensure Tokyo "has been maintaining the fight aphids, whttentes and leaf
position that It wtll.not
negotiate
miners.
their work.
that allleglttma:te·trade cases of
.
.
The eggs or larvae of · a parasitic Insect feed off an Insect
pest, •eventl!ally ktll)ng. them.
The most popular commercially
ts , the tiny, non-stinging trtcho- ·
gramma wasp. It lays eggs In
those eggs of about 200 different
Insect pests.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) -An
drier tollage.
other's main Insect pests. And
entomology specialist at Ohio
Maps also help you never plant Insects avoid garlic plants.
State University says gardeners
the same crops tn the same place
Many flowers also repel In·
who decide to use fewer or no
tn consecutive years. This redu- sects. They Include petunias,
Strlpped·~lVD
pesticides shollld expect to spend
ces build-up of Insects and marigolds and nasturtium. Remore ttme tending their plants.
disease.
cord which varieties do the best
•'Chemicals are ea~y and effec-Read about your plants. job for you.
tive to use, but a somewhat
-Keep your plants heaalthy.
Informed gardeners know tomaquestionable means of pest conHealthy
plants do the best job of
toes and potatoes are related and
trol." Julie Steele says. ''There's
off
disease and Insects.
fighting
a growing concern with the share similar disease and Insect To keep your plants Itt, keep
problems. Two similar species
health and environmental effects
should
never be substituted for track of how much and what type
of chemical use, but If you stop
each other In consecutive years. of fertilizer you use. This also
using such an effective control,
-Research the most effective helps you avoid overfertilizing
then you have to sl!bstltute time
·
the gaiden.
·a nd labor to get stmUar or better varl!lttes. .of disease-resistant
F:ot
soine
gardeners,
cutting
plants. Planting disease·
·
results. ·
resistant varieties Is one of the out cbemlcals also means no
"Good planning.- trial and
most Important gardening prac- longer using chemical fertilizers.
. error and researching different
tices to reduce the danger of ·. They may consider providing the
methods. will show what works
garden with nutrttional balance
for you. The research part · disease and decrease use of by taking one,summer to grow a
chemicals.
doesn't have to take mucb time.
· ""'Keep track of what yOu plant. cover crop sucb aa haley Vetch.
• It may just mean asking a 'local
List tbe varieties yDu plant and Turning over one season's
garden center or arboretum for
their productivity. Whe!l you growth provides nitrogen and
advice.''
.
plan for next year. look for those organic . matter for the next
:Planning also doesn't have ro
varieties
that nourished and year's garden.
take much time, and can help you
Some gardeners use mulch to
avoid
the
unproductive
ones. ,
significantly reduce the threat
add nutrtttonal balance. Mutch- ·
Also
find
out
about
the
effect
of
from Insects and disease.
planting crops that. offer Insect lng also controls weeds. con· 2 Door .
.
Steele offers these planning
serves moisture and can add
Rad·
Protection
to
other
crops.
2
Door
·
tips:
Factory Llst ......•.... ~·····•··~·-·····'16,484
!shes may keep cucumber bee- organic matter to the soiL
-Map the garden. This will
Factory List........... ~.................'13,203
• Incentive•.••.•. ~.......................- 2,00~
tles from cucumbers, melons and Common organic mulches Inshow you If you.r plants are too
clude garden compost, comare
zucchini.
Asparagus
roots
Incentive...............................- 2,000 ·1st Time Buyer
close together. Properly spaced
posted· cow or horse manure,
toxic
to
toinato
nematodes.
plants and well-aligned rows
1st Time Buyer
. peat and straw.
or College Grad........................- 600
limit disease spread and promote Beans and potatoes repel each
or College Grad ••••••••••••••••••••••••- 600
• Smith's Discount..................~ 1,004

WE, AT
ATHENS HONDA CARS
BELIEVE IN SERVICE
BEFORE AND AFTER THE SALES.
IF YOU ALREADY HAVE A·
·
HONDA AND WANT GREAT SERVIC.E,
COME TO ATHENS HONDA CARS I

;ffe' ren·t
D "JJ'

I

·

I
I
'I

Specilrlist ·says · careful planning
is needed for organic gardening

Some Dealers Advertise
Plain-Jane Can
NOT THESE ••• All 01 These Cars Have
Air Conditioning, 4)1/FM Cassette, ...
Upscale Aluminum Wheels And Tires, And
Automatic Transmlsslons••..Just To Name A Few!
OVB ULT.DfATE GOAL IS YOUR SATlSFACTlONI

t• Pontiac Orand

Panllac Grand Am

Smith's Discount.;.:................- 400

Prix

·youR NET COST•••••:.*II,781

•1o,aoa

YOUR NEt cosT...:...

lncludel bucket Mall, c.-. conlrol,

Hit ~HI• ..ar delogger

Ohio lottery

Reds lose
third player
by injury

Daily Number
594.
Pick-4
7961
Super I.Gtto

4-5-11-25-35-36
Kicker486904

3

•

e
Vol.40, No.247
Copyrig!IIMI 1990

LDw tontrllt In mid 511.
Tllead"J, cloud)'. Hlp ID
lower 781. Chaace of rain 38
percent.

1 loctlon.10 Po.-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday. April 30. 1990

Sesquicentennial kick-off events
big
success
as

By JULIE E. DILLON
The dinner wa,s prepared by
Sentinel Newa Stall ·
members of ttw Ohio Eta Phi
Very successful.
Chapter, Beta Sigma Pht Soror· ·These two words certainly
ity, and Mary Gilmore. Flower
describe the kickoff weekend of
arrangements and decorations
Pomeroy's sesquicentennial · for the dinner were provided by
the Preceptor Beta Beta Cllapcelebration.
·
Tiie weekend began with
ter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority.
FQunder's. Day dinner at Pome- ·
· The dinner was preceded by a
roy Elementary on Saturday
welcome by Mary Gilmore and a
where Steven Newman was the . prayer by Rachael Elberfeld
featurecf speaker.
Downie. Mrs.hDownle's tnvocaNewman, au thor of "World- . · tlon was a German prayer used
.walk," ts listed In the Gulness
bytheJacobElberfeldfamUy;an
Book of World Records as being · early Pomeroy family, foflllany
t~ first person to walk around
years.. .
'
.
tbe world alone,. an.d h~ was
· Bruce Reed, preslden~ of the
awarded the Governor's Awar!i :. Metas ·County Chamber of Com·
In 19117. .
. •
~e~. se~d as master of

ceremonies for the evening and
Mary P()well, ~halrm110 ot tbe ·
sesql,llcentennlal committee,
gave special recognition to the
descendants of Pomeroy's pta· neer families In attendance.
Musical entertainment was provtded by Sweet Mountain Sound.
In bts speech, Newman discussed his travels · around the
•world during the years of 1983 to
1987. He related to the crowd a
story which hapP.,ned In Belpre
durtng the first miles of his
travels.
After traveling from Clncln. natt . to Par~tSrsburg, .W.Va.,
Newman stated he was ready to
, give !!P lle!:JI,III: he "reallY.

really hurt." However, be was
little act of kindness."
less the $100 a ye11r.
. crossing tbe bridge from Belpre
Newma!l said he traveled
Through his experiences Newto ParkersbUrg · a journalism around the world because he man felt that Americans were
student · from . Oblo Uniftrllty wanted to see what the world was sometimes ashamed of their
asked tf she could do a story on all about. Hesaldthat he learned country, and thla, he satd,
blm. Newman agreed and went love Jived as strongly as ever and angered and embarrassed him.
back across tbe bridge Into that there was more love than Newman became certain of his
Belpre where be met that city's hatred out there. He also statzd pride In Amertca while In Frallce
mayor who presented him a key
that everywhere he went, good· after passing by St. James War
to the clty ..Newman said be was
ness reigned over evil. · ,
Cemetery for Americans :
so taken witb thll act of kindness
During his journey Newman Throughout his journey, New.that It gave him the determlna· stated that he stayed with over man c;arrled an American flag
tlon to keep traveling. Newman 400 families and learned many which was attached to his back·
state(!hlssurprtseuponreaching "undeniably valuable lessons." pack, "Clinger, " He went on to
Washington, D.C. and . finding He went on to say that mostofthe say that he saw how little
that bls key to the city of Belpre people he came In contact wl!h freedoms and luxuries other
.was merely a novelty bottle had never methan ·American people of other countries bad. ·
opener. He pointed out, however· . face·to-face but wal)ted jo .very · N~wm11n' s journeys were filled
. mat It wasn't the key which kept mu'Ch. He ' also sata !}lat ,mos.t "wlt.lt diftlcult times .'and strl!ihim going but rather thf11 "one famtltes be stayed with made
Continued on page 6
.

.

.

First in series of election previews.

Do;en II.ouse Democrats,. two:
senators are be~ng challe~e~l'
'

$)19'5

2Door
IC11ory Ust••••••••••••••• ~~ •••••••••••112,001
lrlc:ttl1tl\ltt••••• ;.~·················~········· Jr!i()

1st .Time Buyer
or College Grad........................- 600
Smith's Discount....................- 700

·

.

Space· telescope antenna jammed

Meigs
·brochure
ready for
•
•b
•
'£Strl
utwn
d

,....-,--Local news briefs-

YOUR NET COST.......

,

~·-"r:STIHC. .

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

.

2204 Eastern Ave.
Gallpolls, OH. 45631
. 446-~523 .

Smith ·Buick..,Pontiac

at your St!hhlealer. .

CARTER TRACTOR SALES
..

Woman hurt in one-Car crash

See the lull line of Stlhl
trimmers and ~rush rutters ,

POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO

1900 Eastern Avenue
GalllpoUs, Ohio
(614) 446~22~2

6061.Mahl St.
Pomeroy, OH• 45769
992-2094
.

DB'IdAY8
,._..,.1M

-•

·'

-~ ~

!

'

'

"

'.'

~

'

..

capital Improvements she has whose daughter Rhine replace(!
By LEE LEON,\RD
. UPI $a&amp;eljo~ Reporter
brought to the district.
· him In the House this session.
Also
running
are
VIcki
WheaEight-term Rep. Rocco Co,
COLUMBUS · ' . - In state
tley of Bedford, a studen.t at lonna, D-Brook Park, Is receivlegislative races, a dozen House
Baldwl.n-Wallace College, and
Ing a strong chaltenge from
Democrats are tieing challenged
for renomination and two Incum- Michele Rosa of Bedford Heights. George Caldwell, an official of
Freshman Rep. RlchardHtnlg,
the'UnltedSteelworkersof Amerbent senators are under fire from
D-New
Phtladelpbla,
faces
a
pair
Ica
from 'Brook Park.
within their own party.
House Speaker Vernal Riffe, of well-knOwn opjionents In the . The only Republican lncum0-WheelersbuJ'II, Is. most 'toter· ' 97th District. Also seeking the . bent facing a primary challenge
Democratic nominatiOn are Den- Is veteran Rep. Charles "Red"
eatl!d In protecting !Its 59 Incumnison Mayor Greg DIDonato and Ash. a former scholastic basket·
bents this year, and his major
Dove~
attorney Zachary Space.
ball coach who baa betliJ In poor
c:oncem Is freshman Rep. Su'1reaiftrfn rtMI~ "" ~--~ 1n the ·-t"'tb - lttnll was ·appoliiletl'
summer to replace his father,
Ash emerpcl fi'cm major
Dis trtct of Cuyahotll CountY.
veteran
Rep.
Wtlltam
Hlntg.
·
·
surgery
earner this sprlne and
Bergansky,, . ol Bedford .
In Trumbull County, Rep; June said he was · read)! for the
Helgbts, Is being challenged by
Lucas, D·Mineral Ridge, Is fac·
challenge from RDbert Burwell
three other Democrats, lnclud·
.
SPECIAL PREsENTA'.fiON -Sta&amp;!! Repraencleclarallon from the State of Oblo Ia obaervance
lng
another
challenge
from
DIof
Massillon .
. tng three-term fooner Rep. Letatln Mary A!ml, left, ·and state !lena&amp;or Jan
of Pomero)''l 1150111 blrtbU, al the J.l'ollllder's DQ
ana MarcheSe of Farmdale, who
In the Senate, 16-year veteran
roy Peterson· of Maple Heights.
Michael Loq, rtrht, preaenled Larr, Wehrung,
DlnMr . held Sa&amp;IU'day evening a&amp; Pomet'O)'
Peterson, now.a Maple Heights nearly defeated her In the 1988 Sen. Ben Gaeth, R-Deflance. Is
on behalf of Pomeroy VIDage, a apeclal
Elernentar)'.
·
being challenged by Wapakoneta
school board member, gave up Democratic primary.
Although
the
eounty
party
has.
pharmacist David Acconcta In
bls seat to run unsuccessfully for
made
no
endorsement,
Lucas
·
the
Republtcan primary.
the Senate In 1988. He ts citing his
this
time
enjoys
Riffe's
support,
Acconcla has charged Gaeth
experience, but Bergansky Is
with betraying veterans ·bY sitClllllpalgnlng on e11vironmental wblch was tacking two years ago.
measures she has sponsored, and
elated and optimistic. ... The log this cable and It won't Jet It go
In the same area, Donald ting on a bill that prohibits county
GREENBELT, Md. CUPI) system
as
a
whole
Is
working
real
any further."
Yarab, a senior at Case Western commissioners from · cutting
Although the Hubble Space Telewell,"
said
Oltvler,
who
Is
Engineers Sunday managed to .
Reserve University law student funds used by veterans' service
scope may never be fully operadirecting
the
problem-plagued
from Youngstown, Is challenging commissions.
get the satellite to beam down
tional -because a jammed radio
Gaeth, who sponsored a 1988
two-term Rep. RDbert Hagan.
antenna, officials were confident start-up or the telescope. "So stored data about the antenna's
law
giving county cqinmlsslonalthough
we're
frustrated
we
motion using one of the observaYarab has the endorsement of
the giant observatory would be
ers
the
authortty to · revise the
tory's "low gatn" antennas, even
the Mahonlng County Demoable · to complete Its · 15-year also feel very good a'nd we're
veterans
• budgets, said It Is a
optimistic we'll be back up and tn
cratic organization, but Hagan Is
though tbey are'destgned only to
exploration of tbe universe.
matter
of
fiscal respo_nslblllty;
pretty good shape this time 11ext receive commands.
strong with organized labor by
"We're chipping away at this
that
spending
should have to be
week."
'
virtue of his sponsorship of &lt;1
As many as 75 engineers were
thing,'' said .RDnald Schlagheck,
justified.
The problem l.nvolves pne of
poring over the data at Goddard,
universal health care pian.
director of orbital verification
In the 17th District of southern
the Marshall Space Flight Center
In , Dayton, freshman Rep.
for the telescope pr(lject. ','But the telescope's two "~tgl!-galn
Ohio,
Lawrence County Sheriff
antennas." pataboltc dishes
i,n Hilntsville, Ala., Lockheed
RhlneMcUnfacesfellowDemoIt's (like) building a grand plano.
Daniel
Hteronlmus ts · facing
mounted 011 masts extending Missiles &amp; Space Co. In Sunny·
crats Ysabel Moore and Slnthy
"The builders who build It
former
state
Rep. Cl!llre "Buzz"
from each· stde of the 12-ton
vale, Calli., and elsewhere, to try
The 1990 Meigs County bra- Taylor. Taylorhasrunlnthepast
come out of the woodwork, ·you
Continued on page 10
to solve the problem.
.c hure published by the Meigs against the late C.J. McLin,
get tbe ,plano wire$ on 11, and now telescope. The antennas are
The worst scenario ts that the pounty Regional Planning Com·
you've got the grand master required to IJ;ansmlt tJ\e teleproblem cannot be ftxed,leavtng 1T~Isslon aqd the ,Meigs County
tuner to start tuning It." Schlagh· scope's all-Important science
the telescope with just ol)e Gommtssloner-s Is ready for
eck said. .' 'He's having a difficult data to astronomers ·on the
operational high-gain antenna. · statewlde.dlstrtbution.
ttme, but It's going to play one of ground.
The
antennas
were
designed
to
theSe days."
The brochure highlights many
NASA engineers acknowl- swivel on computer command to
local activities such as deer
the balky ·antenna, 'although the hunting, boating and the areas
edged Sunday that one oft he $1.5 lock onto and track a NASA !lata
relay
satellite,
maintaining
a
best
they can hope for Is for public access on the Ohio
billion telescope's ~rlttcal an ten·
crucial
link
between
ground
movement
through a large River, h.lklng, camping, and
nas, needed to beam scientific
controllers
and
the
satellite
retbough
limited
range. Even so,
data to Earth. was apparently
places of historical significance
gardless
of
Its
orbital
posttton.
Ollvi~r.
hoped
the
telescope· will to vlult, and ts geared to
stuck on a wayward cable and
have more than 15 percent of:lts enco11rage visits to Meigs
But when ground COI!Irollers
may never be completely freed.
planned
capability.
tried
to
point
one
of
the
antennas
'·'We're somewhat frustrated
County.
"Our
long-term
strategy Is to
at
the
relay
satelltte,
,
a
motor
· because we feel that even though
The content of the brochure
find the area ... which' we should
we're going to solve this prob- driving the appendage showed
focuses
on the nAtural beauty of
avoid and thereby ... sttll utilize
lem, a !tnal resolution may not signs of strain, Indicating the
Meigs
County
and Southeastern
that antenna through a majority
restore and probably will not antenna was stuck. Olivier bl!'
of tts area of coverage," Oltvter Ohio.
restore .that antenna to complete lleves one of many nearby cables
Four thousand coptes of the
said.
¢apablllty, although we feel may. be catching a counterbrochure
have been sent to travel
In
etther
case,
,
the
teleacope
that's not a major Impact on the wetg~t on ihe antenna· that keeps
and
tourism
Information centers
will not be able to contact the
mission from a long-term stand· · 11 stable.
In
Ohio
as
well
as to coun tiel In
•'We've Identified a cable that
relay satelllte as often as ortgl·
point," said Jean · Olivier at
Meigs County
states
bordering
nally planned, ltmldng tbe
NASA's Goddard Space Fltght we suspect could be the culprit, "
tncludtna
Kentucky,
West Vlrgt·
he said. "A counter-weight
amount of science data that can
Center.
nla
and
Pennsylvania.
.
be beamed to Earth as II Is
· ·"i\1 the same time, we're very swinging around might be bumpLocal
residents
wllhlngtomall
gathered.
.
Instead, the telescope will copies of the brochure to anYone
store Information on th~ satel· · outside Met&amp;s County may selite's tape recordel'l longer and cure copies at the Meigs County
tranamtt the data less frequently Chamber of Commerce, County
to eqer scientists waltiD&amp; on C4mmlssoners office, tbe Met&amp;s
r,tuseum, or tbe Cooperative
Earth.
A Derby woman was Injured In a one-car wreck Saturday at
Extension
Services office. Those
"My personal feeling Is It will
12: 20 a.m. In Salem Township on T.R. 41, at the junction of C.R.
are
lnteresllld
In quantity
who
result ' still In a very efficient
2, accoi'lltng to the Ga!Ua-.Meigs Post of the State HlsJtway
dl.strlbu
tlon
are
ulted
to contact
• mtsslon, althOUib ... I wnull!n't
~~
.
.
C.
E.
Blakeslee
of
the
Planning
try to tell YOV' It will be as
Kimberly S. Scott, 27, a passengerofLarryE.Scott, 24,alsoof
Commllllon,
B92-230t.
or
~
efficient," OlMer said.
Derby, was taken by tbe,Meigs County EMS to Holzer Medical
Murplu!y
a
.U.X:Iates,
992-2922.
The telescope was placed Into
Center, where she wa8 treated and released for brulaes'.
Tbe brocbllre committee wu
orbit 381 miles aboile Earth
Larry Scott was driving his 19'19 Dodie Omnl wes I on T .R. 41
compOied
of Fred Hoffman,
Wedneeday by the crew of tbe
when at the juncttonofC.R. 2, he swerved toturnrlgbttoC.R.2.
Thereon
John1on,
Richard
~pace 1huttle DIICOWry, wbleh
He slid the car sideways and overturned In a ditch, wbere tbe
JoMI,
IIIII
Blakeslee
of the
landed Sunday at Edwardl Air
car c~ to a rest on Its top.
Nft
- llelp ()():s:*t'I~C==;:.:
Force Baae, Calif., to comp~ a RePJaa1 PluiiiQ Commlllton
Bkh
U.
IIIII' C ott .. .
Tbe tbree were wearing their seat belts, and no one ·was
wllb 8IWoD card ol ~ Am
succestfUl five-day million.
~~
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
II
.......
Tile
wal
peMb'd
Q .... .
thrOWD from the car.
PllolaCriPIIY dolq .moat of the
The
Joll&amp;-awalted
teletcope
Ia
Conulll
Ia-•
ud
tile
Melp
C•
11
....
,
'
"
r;
Larry Scott wa.l cited for failure: to controL
Murplley
expected toft'IOlutloalze hUJIIallo pllalllldiJ*i ud
Oentml
h&amp; PIMUre &amp;a llaftlt wllaiJ •t I .,.... laOitlt, .._.
lty's undentandllll of the blrtll. a~- provldiJII the deContinued on page 10
Vlrlllla, Ka lwJ't.Mil ~lhMI&amp;
.lip, llytit ucl tat.

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• The FS-36 colnes wtth a free pair of protecttve goggles. _
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·
to-handle STIHL trimmer at an
unbehevably low price!
·

26 C...ta

A Multlmodloln.,. - -

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�Monday. Atd30. 1990

Commentary
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 1

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l!!i!m:sJ ....,.._.._.....-............ c::~ •.,. .
~~

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Gener!ll Manager

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

.'

A MEMBER of The United Press lnternatlonal, Inland i&gt;aOy Press
Association and the American Newspaper ~bllsbers Association. ·

than

:LETTERS OF OPINIO!'I are welcome. They should be less
300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
narlle, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be publ\~~· Letters should be tn good iaste, ad,d resslng Issues, not personal!·

Letter deadline for
p~ary election May 1
Deadline for letters on Iocal May 8 primary election issues Is noon
Tuesday May 1. Readers are reminded The Daily Sentinel accepts
letters on election issues, not individual candidates.
·

Celeste opinion varies
.on law ,a nd order bill~
· By LEE LEONARD
.
UPI Statehouse Reporier
' COLUMBUS - Crime, punishment and discipline: It's hard to
know where ()ov. Richard Celeste stands on these ~SUI;!S any more,
,
r
based on his actions of last week.
The governor.signed a tough new drunken-drivh\g law and a blll
making It harder for a suspect in a vlolentfelony to get off the hook by
declaring Insanity. But he also ~etoed a measure that was supposed to
glve s'cllool officials a stronger hand In dealing with rowdies.
·· crttic~ could say ·Celeste is hopelessly inconsistent. His admirers
m mhi S~y ~e IS discerning lind carefully COnsiders ihe ramifications
of each bill before acting·on it.
..
'
. Celeste's signing the drunken driving law was a given. Both he and
the Ohio Department of Highway Safety haveconstaJltly sought to get
drinking drlvers'off the roads.
.
But Sen. Eugene Watts, R-Columbus, authQr of the other two bills,
expressed surprise when the governor called and told him he Wj!i
signing the criminal Insanity bill and vetoing ttie sc'hool dlsclplinf:,
bill. The senator had anticipated the reverse.
OnJ! of Watts' bills narrows the definition of Innocent by reason of
Insanity. No longer will a suspect be able to plead in,sanlty because of
an " lrreslstable Impulse" to conlmlt an act he or she knew was
wrong. •
Celeste signed that bill, meaning more people are likely IQ be put In
jail . .And he signed It over the objection qf Ohio, PubliC Defender .
Ral\dall Dana, ·who warned It could eliminate the defense that a
batterl!d wol)1an may use after killing a spouse or boyfriend who beat ,
her repeatedly.
·
·
·
One would think Celeste would want to u·phold the ;'battered
woman" defense, but In this case, he dldn'i. ;
'
The purpose of Watts's other bill orlglna:l)y was to allow pupil
sus~nslons and expulslonlno be carried lnio a new semester. The
reasoning: an unruly student could act up with a few days left In the
school year, knowing any suspension would expire with the end of
school.
,
Celestl! took a different viewpoint In vetoing the bill. He said If the
· student misses more school at the start of a new semester, he or she
"probably will flunk both of those semesters. The result will be· ·
·
anllU!pr !lroPI&gt;ut statistic."
, ;:w,h~n ,you &amp;\lspend someone lor a .long period of time, you s~nd· a
m!!&amp;Sllge thai school isn't really lq~portant," said the governnor. .
On that point; Celeste's logic Is faulty. When you suspend someone
for a lorig period of time, you send a message.that disrupting others
rfrQm lejlrning,wlll not be tolerated.
,
·
· But. the goverripr's secane! reason for vetoing the bill stands up;
, SPQIISOrs fooliShly added a provision Increasing the penalty for
disorderly condUC\ from a $100 fine to a maximum 3() days In jail and
$250 fine. The Idea was to crack down on young toughs whO hang out
near schoolyards to taunt pupils and offer drugs .
· Problem Is, mo.st disorderly conduct Involves chronic drunks.
Adding the jail term would crowd the jails with drunks and force the
·state to pay for their defense counsel. j ; ..
· ·
·
The lawmakers should have created;new. crime of "schoolyard
harassment" It they wanted increased naltles.
·
In· any event, It appears Watts will h ve the votes to override the
·
1·
· I . . ,
governor's veto.
I

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Berry s World

Pomaroy-Mid!fleport/Ohro
Monday. April 30, 1990

unsung heros Jack Anderson &amp; Dale Van Attt
machine-gun fire with his sea hearing next !all as U.S. same conclusions wtll be drawn
mlautomatic pistol. The truck's
District Judge Harold H. Greene about the leading agency In tbe
battery· explodes and showers
presides over a class-action drug war. .
Martinez with acid.
,
discrimination suit.
DEA was styled I~ the. F~I's
Two hours of gunfire later,
. As the court casr nears, agents . Image when John LaVfll took the
Mexican backups arrive. Tear
face sniper lite from within. helm ln . 1985. La~a. a vete~n
gas Is hu'rled Into the ranch. The There Is a subtle but dlscernll)le . G-man, believed in tile bureau s
traffickers throw· out their wea· · hostlllty toward them from DEA · management style. He basked In
pons and tile out. DEA agents officals.
·
hero worship ,he received In the
march Inside and seize 13 tons of
In 1988, Hispanics active In this ~ake of the J~nuary miniseries,
marijuana.
suit were caricatured as fornlcat·
Dru~. Wars. , The C..marena
The DEA's 270 Hispanic agents
tng rats In hand-drawn cartoon Story -:- a ,.docudrllllla that
are the United States' secret
anonymously rnaUed to southern portrayed Lawn as a eompas.
weapons In the ongoing battle
DEA offices.
slonater no-nonsense leader, who
agalnstCentralandSouthAmerl·
The discrimination suit has pulled out the stops to solve the
can drug cartels. Yet they have
strongprecedents. InNov. .1988, a 1985 tortu.~·murder of Special
been locked out of promotiOns
federaljudg~ In Texas ruled that Agent Enrique "Kikl". Camarand advancement within the
the FBI discriminated agalnst Its ena. Lawn .recently departed the
ungrateful agency.
Hispanic · agents. The judge agency to help run the New York
The most dangerous . under·
called . the FBI's equal employe Yankees.
cover work and the milst mun·
ment . opportunity · program
Ma?y Hispanics . cheered
dane jobs fall to the Hispanic
•'bankrupt."
Lawn s departure. They hope the
agents, according to Insiders.
Despite DEA's recent efforts to new management · team will
After years of sUent suffering the
promote Hispanics Into manage- finally treat them as first-string
plight of Hispanic agents wlll get · ment positions, It Is likely the players.
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"isn't It GREAT! My paren,ts. don,'t 'get' the
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles either/" ; ·

Today in history
. By Unlled Preu IDterJWional
.
Today Is Monday, AprU 30, the 120th day of 1990 with 245 days to
foUow.
The moon Is waxing, moving toward Its first quarter.
The morning stars are Venus, Mars and Saturn. ·
~

~

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JACKSON INJURED - · A frustrated and lnju,red Danny
Jacluloa Is lead off &amp;he field by Reds' Manager Lou Plnelta alter ·
Jaclulon was alruck by a J1111lor Noboa line drive lnth·e first Inning.
Jacksoo, wllo was injured most of 1988, had m..oic only four p~hes
Ia the game. I&amp; II not known when he will pitch again. The Expos
WOD i-3. (UP I)
.

'

STEAUI SECOND - Mitch Webster, of 'cleveland slides Into
·aecolld with • s4oJiim buel"hlle Mhmeso&amp;a shorl&amp;t!)p Greg Gagne
leaps for a wide throw from catcher Brian Harper. Action took
place In the flrsllnntnr of &amp;he rame Sunday. The lndlus won, 6-4.
(UPI)

Hellllloa .................. ...... M II •.J.U ~~~
8M F'rut-ltK... .............. 7 11 ••
7
"lllulla ................ ,, ....... l II .ltl4, 1'-.,
MIII . .Qftf'II ..I!O
C'l~t..alt, Melli~.. -1 .

,Majors
'

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lite~« ,...,,,.~·Niea,.,.,

Who's perfect? Not tobacco haters·_· ___,..R~~he'---r:
}

The city andstateofNewYork,
from which lfied last September,
have elected to fight the battle
against smoking by subjecting
smokers to as much inconven·
lence and social abuse as possl·
ble: In New York City, a smoke•
Is .rnade to feel like a criminal,
and Indeed Is treated as a
criminal In a large variety of
situations: In almost any enclosed public space, for example.
This doesn't have to be the case
- and Isn't, In many civilized
jurisdictions . .. In London last
year, the headw!llter at an.
elegant restaurant nqulred If I
would care for a cigar to top off
my dinner. Actually, I hadoneln
. my pocket, for smoking outside,
but his suggestion amazed me.
"Do you realize," I asked him,
"that I could be arrested in New ·
York City for what you are
suggesting?" "But not h~re,
sir," he persisted genially. I
compromised by lighting my
cigar at my lable, but them
skulked guiltily out the door to ·
continue smoking it on a stroll
through Mayfair.
My adopted state of California

has taken another tack In the
matter of smoking. First, the
legislature obtained the voters'
approval of a 25 cents-a·p'!ck tax
on cigarettes, on the understand•
lng that part of the revenues
would be devoted to an advertls·
IDg .campaign against smoking.
The tax Is expected to generate
$1,470,000,000 - · an Incredible
sum even for - California, but
that's what It says In the
newspapers.
Of this figure, 2 percent, or
$28,000,000, Is. being· devoted by
the California Department of
Health Services · to a 15-month
attack on smoking, through
newspaper, television and radio
ads. The groups targeted In the
ads are th6young and minorities
- the very groups the department says the tobac.co compan·
les themselves are targeting.
The tobacco companies,' lncld·
en tally, speaking through the
Tobacco Institute In Washington,
deny that they are trying to
Induce vulnerable ' youngsters
and minorities to smoke their
weed, and Insist that their ads
•

I'm not sure when theoutllneof ble wearing them, and. others are
the female nreast became somedecidedly more comfortable
thing to be hidden In polite without them.
,
company, but I know It wasn't . · . So It was w'ltha great degree of
earlr In this century,
joy and relief that many ol us
In our family photos from the
greetedthebralesseraotthelate
1920's and 1930's, It's obvious
'60s and .'70s. But another segmany of the women weren't
ment ot the population, those
wearing bras. I've noticed the
whos memories of history didn't
same thing in movies from that
Include the braless years of their
era, as actresses moved about
mothers and grandmothers,
unseltconsclously unbound. But
were extremely uncomfortable
with the new, unfettered fashion
somewhere along the line, before
I reached the age to ha~ . trend. The unbinding signified
worry about It, women began to
something sinister and threaten·
wear brassieres. By the early lng. .. Some of the women woo
'60~s. when I did· have to worry 'followed the new convention
about It, bras were firmly en·
were fired or sent home from
clas~es. ·Some men, probably
trenched as part of every worn·
an's wardrobe.
owing In part to the fact that
. I realize many of you reading
women's bosoms had . been
this belong to the gender that has
tightly covered for much of tlielr
never worn bras, so you'll have to
adult lives, took It as a fret! pass
rely o what we women tell you.
to gawk.
Here's what most of us wUI tel) .
And I'm not sure when the
_you: Bras are not alwayscomfor·
female breast began to be viewed
table. Sometimes they are
as something prlmarUy sex\lal
darned uncomfortable. Whether
Instead of for Its main purpose,
they arecomfortable,qrnotoften
which Is to nourlsll our young. I
depen&amp; upon a 'woman's buUd.
guess we can thank Playboy
.Somewomenaremorecomforta· ' magazine for some of It, but
l

maybe we just caught them at dropped Clnchinau 6-3. Houston
the right time." Leyland said. defeated New York 2·1 In 10
"AI the end of the year, their lnnlnp. San F.r aadaco topped St.
numbers are going to be there." Loula 9-7 and Chicago blanked
Doug Drabek, 4·1, hurled six Los Angeles 4.0.
Braves I, PidDles l
Innings for the victory. Eric
At Atlanta. Jim Presley ripped
Rasmussen, 1·1, was the loeer.
Pittsburgh's Bobby Bonllla hit his first National League homer
his NatiOnal League-leading sev· and Pete Smith scatte~ six
. enth homer of the season In the . hits, helping Atlanta snap a
flve·game loalni streak. Pres• .
ninth.
With the score lleci 1-Un thi! ley's two-run shot .c ame In the
four th. Bonds l)it his fourth home sixth Inning off . starter Pat
Combs, 1·2. Smith, 2·1, struck out
run of the season.
five and walked three to record
The Pirates picked up four
the Braves' first complete game
runs more In the sixth Inning for
an 8-1 lead on a solo shot by Don of the season.
Expclll •• Retll 3
Slaugh! and Jay Bell's three-'run
At Cincinnati, Tim Wallach
homer.
San Diego took a l.Oiead In the and Mike Fitzgerald belted home
second on an RBI slnele by Mark runs and Kevin Gross permitted
Parent. 'l'he Pirates' tied the six hits over 7 1·3 Innings for the
score In the third on a single by Expos. Gross, 2·1, who retired 11
Bonds and a triple · by Gary batters In .a row at one stretch,
struck out four and walked two.
Redus.
·
' 'We just can't get that bighlt," Tim Burke. note bed his sixth
San Diego . Manager · Jack save. Ron Robinson, 0·1. lasted 4
· ·· .
McKeon said. ··'It may take 25 or 2·3 Innings.
Alll'o&amp; !, Mete 1
30 games to get It all together, but
(1U lnnlnp)
we'll be all right. We've just got
At Houston, Ken Caminiti
to get a couple of guys hittlna."
ripped a bases-loaded single with
'Elsewhere In the NL, Atlanta
edged Philadelphia 3-1, Montreal two outs in the lOth Inning to lift

Houston. Eric Yelding beat out
an Infield hit off Julio Machado,
2·1, and later scored on Caminl·
tl's lined shot . Dan11y Darwin,
1·0, picked up thewlriafter &amp;lvina :
up one hit over the flnsl two
Innings.
Glaall t, Cardiull 7
At San Francisco, Rick Reu·
schel led a 15-hlt attack ·with a
pair of singles and di-ove In two
runs. Reuschel, 2·1, hurled 7 2:3
lnnines en route to hla 213lh ,
career victory; third highest '
among active major leaguers. :
He trails only Nolan Ryall j29ll ·
and llllrt Blyleven (m). Steve · ·
Bedrosian pitched 1 1-31nnlngs to
piCk up bis third save. Joe
· Magrane, 0-4, lasted only two
Innings.
·
CtdJe 4, Dodgen t ·
At Los Angeles, Greg Maddux '
tossed a six-hitter ll!ld set a
rnajor-leaeue record by record·
lng seven putouts. Maddux, 3-1,
who dldn;t llltow a Dodger past
first base en route to his first ·
complete eame of the season, got
a three-run homer from Andre
Dawson. Mike Morgan, J.l,
yielded eight hits and three
earned runs to take the loss.

too, " Oakland Manager Tony La mnlngs for the victory arid got
By TOM WITHERS
belted a three-run hOme·run and
Russa said.
·
relJ!!f help from Steve Olin and
UPI Sports Writer
Carlos Martinez added a solo
''They're both so similar. Doug · J!)III!S, who pitched two
Good news for American
shot and iwo-run single to help
They're such competitors. These Innings for his sixth s.ave. In
League bitters: Dave Stewart
the Wlalte Sox complete a sweep
two guys were unbelievable.''
winning their . fourth '!ltralght
has r.un out of April.
of tbelr thr.ee-garne series·. Eric.
Stewart, who hasn't IQSI In , Cleniens,A-1, surr.eddered only gam&amp;, the Indians remained
King; 1·0, gave up eight hits over
four ·hits while battling through baseball's only unbeaten team {II' five Innings .for the win. Wayne
April In three years. ran his
early control problem&amp; to last home. Roy Smith, ().3, was the
record to 5·0 this season and
Edwards finished up for his first
seven Innings. His record ' loser for the Twins who have
extended his April winning.
major-league save. Martinez and
dropped to 2·7 against the Alhlet· · dropped four straight.
streak to 19 games Sunday as the
Sosa both homered off Toronto
lcs and 1·4 lifetime agai!)St
Oakland Aihletlcs edged the
starter Jimmy Key, 2·1.
Brewers 8, Tlpn 1
Stewart.
Boston Red Sox and Roger
Royale I, Raupr1 I
·'It was a great confrontat ion,"
At Detroit, Paul Molitor and
At Kansas City, Mo., Bo
Clemens 1·0. ·
Boston's Ellis Burks said. "Eve- Glenn Braggs each belled hoStewart , whose last April loss
Jackson returned to tbe Kansas
rybody knew It would probably mers and Chris Boslo kept
came In 1987, limited the Red Sox
City lineup and scored twice and
be ~ltchers' game."
Milwaukee starters unbeaten In
to six hits over 7 2·3 Innings,
drove In a ruri, helping the Royals ·
Clemens said ·everybody "just a game that Included a bench: snap a . slll·game losllli stn:a~ .
striking out six and walking four.
knew It would probably be a low clearing brawl. Bosio, 3·0, had a · Kansas City's 6-12 record Is the
Despite winning 20 gallleS In each
run·scoring game like It was. We shutout until the sixth, when he
of the last three seasons, Stewart
team's worst start since 1981:·
couldn't have asked for more gave up a walk and tWo singles .
·Is yet 'to win a Cy Young Award,
Jeff Montgomery. 1·1, pitched
Dan Peiry, 1· 1. took the loss. In
something he Is. not concerned chances. though."
two perfect Innings · for the
The Athletics got their run in
the seventh, ·Detroit reliever
with this year.
.
victory. Mark Davis earned his
the first Inning. Rickey 'Render·
Edwin Nunez threw Inside on
" I'm not thinking about It this
fourth save. Kenny Rogers, 1·1,
year. I thought about It the last son walked, ·advanCed on a Gary Sheffield, who charged the
took the loss In his first major·
pitcher. After a couple mlnu tes of
three years and It never hap· groundout and s&lt;:ai:'ed .on Jose
league start.
pushing and shoving, players left
pened," said' Stewart. "People Ca!'seco's RBI single.
Orioles 5, Mariaen 4
Elsewhere Sunday In the
the field.
,
don't mention my name when It
At Baltimore, Rene Gonzales
comes to the best pitchers In the American League, Cleveland
belted a home run with one out In
AD pia •· Yaukeell S
At New York, Mark Langston
league. But it'll come with time. topped Minnesota 6-4, Milwaukee
the ninth Inning to snap a
ripped
Detroit
6-1,
California
scattered
six hits over six innings six-game Baltimore losing
You can't forget numbers." ·
Stewart escaped Boston jams nipped New York 4·3, Chicago.. as the Angels salvaged the finale
stre11k and a four-game winning
of a three-11ami! series'. Langston streak by the Mariners. Gon·
most of the afternoon with solid pounded Toronto 10-3; Kansas
Improved to 2·1. Mark Eichhorn zales, a .167 hitter. belted a
fielding and closing four Innings City beat Texas ~2 and Balli;
more
edged
Seattle
5-4.
·
allowed
one run in the SJ!Venth delivery from reliever Mille
with Boston runners In scoring
Indians
8,
Twlna
f
and
Byan
Harve;v earned his Jacks0n, 1·1, 420 feet over tiN!
position.
save
despite allowing a left·fleld fence for his first home
second
"I don,'t know. if Clemens was
At Cleveland, Sandy Alomar
ninth-Inning
run.
Dave LaPoint, run of the season. Mark William·
100 percent today, bur his heart score(! two runs and drove In
1·2,
took
the
loss.
was 100 percent and that's what ·another as the Indians remained
son, 1·0, allowed two ·hils over 2
White Sox 10, Blue Jays 3
1·3 Innings for the win.
we see from Stew every time, unbeaten In six horne games.
At Chicago, Sammy Sosa
~reg Swindell, 2·2, pitched 5 2-3

' ...
.._,

. "

e:lsteiN '9o

By ERIK K. LIEF
UPI Spor&amp;a Wrller
Recently for the Pittsburgh
Pirates, home Is where tbe other
team plays.
Sunday's 10.1 thrashing of the
San Diego Padres gave the
Pirates their sixth straight vic·
tory; a 10·1 record on their
current 13-game road trip, and a
sweep of thethree-gameserlesat
Jack Murphy Stadium.
Plttsbugh's latest success on
opponent's t11rf extended San
Diego's losing streak to four
games .
''The bad thing Is we play Uhe ·
Padres) only once here and then
back In Plttsbutgh, then we don't
~ them again for a while,'' said
Bobby Bonds, wlio stroked a
three-run, fourth-inning homer.
During the series; Bonds went
9-for-12 with three homers and
six RBI.
Asked to explain his success,
Bonds said: "It's just this bal·
Ipark. You can't sit there 1,10d try
to analyze It."
·
Plttsjmrgh Manager Jim Ley·
land was not In the mood to rub It
ln.
·
·
"Timing Is everything and

Stewart blanks Boston for fifth victory

SoMe oF THe TIMe, Vou calf F«ee SOHe
oF 'THePe.oPLeaJ.LoF TMe TiMe, B\IT
·You.Cat''T ~aLL. oF Tl4ereofl.€
~ o~ THe 'TiM@..''

are largely designed to persuade
not your friend." Elsewhere. on
already-devoted 1 smokers to
the page, the Industry was
switch to another brand. They' accused of "the selective esplol·
also express regret at the tone of
lation of minorities, the seduc· .
the ads, calling them "cynical" . lions o! the young, the ·selling of ~
and "satirical" In t!lelr deplc·
suicide."
lions of tobacco company execil·
It Is not hard to Imagine the :
lives.
.
Intoxicating sense of virtue and '
The i'.lstitute's spokesman pre·
vengeance that an ad .of that kind :
dieted that !he ads "may amuse
wUl generate In the bre.as ts of :
anti-smoking zealots, but they
rnany Call!ornlans. But one ·
are not going to reduce smok·
Wonders how these same people :
..
,
lng." .,. ·.
would react If one legislator rose \
One may wonder why, if the . til ·propose using · anqther 2 ;
California legislature Is so
percent of those tax revimues to ·
deeply convinced of the ha·rm
launch a:n equally savage attack :
that smoking does, It c!ldD't on the producers ·of marijuana •
simply outlaw it altogether. The or even of cocaine and heroin.' ·.'
answer, obviously, Is that the
It ' hasn't been· done, and I ;
leglsliltors didn't think .they
predict it won't be dohe, because .
could enforce the law If they
tobacco Is the addiction · imd .
passed It - any more than
symbol of middle-class America :
Prohibition could be enforced In
(as the cigarette ads themselves ·
tbe !920s. So, .they took the more clearly demonstrate), whereas :
cautious route of moral suasion.
drugs are the fashionable vjce of .:
';!'he first full-page ad ap- . the new classes associated with· ·
peared, . among other places •. ln wh~t Is sometimes loosely called :
tile California edition of The New
"the Call~ornla lifestyle."
·;
York Times for April 11.
111 accept the claim of these ·
"WARNING: " a boxed slogan
anti-tobacco zealots to superior, ,
read, "The tobacco industry Is virtue when I see them aftacking ·
pot and coke too.
·

!!)at's only part of the puzzle:
P-layboy,just uncovered breasts.
It was something else In our ·
culture that Insisted that even
their outllne was too shocking to
view. Their outline hadn't bo·
thered our grandparents, but
suddenly, bosom shapes were
something to be concealed.
With the shift towardconserva·
tism In the late '70s, many
women who 'had gone without
bras began to wear them again.
Some women followed fashion,
some deCided they wanted the
physical support, some were
afraid they would be thought 111
of. And some, unfortunately,
realized that a members of a
dwindling minority, they, would
be gawked at even more.
Y@lmany otus believed we had
at least turned a cultural corner
during the "natural" era, .that we
as a society bad again begun to
consider women's breasts as
what they are: natural and
functionaL Then we pick up a
newspaper and .read that a
nursing mother was asked to
leave a restaurant, or that a

.

•

Sarah Overst~eet .
· judge found a woman In con·
tempt of court because· she
wasn't wearing a bra.
When Melissa Thurston appeared In a Harrison, Ark., court
earlier this month, she was ·
wearing a hlghnecked sweater
but had no bra on underneath.
.Municipal JUdge Don We•t said
he believed she "was Improperly
' dressed for the courtroom" lJe..
caus«;! ''it was my Impression and ·
!!I!Veral other people's Impression that her breasts were
obviously showing."
There is no dress code that bars·
the outline of breasts In publiC
buUdlngs In America, just a~
there Is not one In West's court.
West willllrobably never under·
stand ~he losult he dealt women
· by finding Thurston too "contemptible'.' for his courtroom. To.
my friend, a 19 year old-exchallge
1 student from France, where 11 1s
customary to sunbathe topless, u
is just another America~~ attitude
that I can't seem to explain
. satisfactorUy.

M

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Southern resen'es lose four diamond battles

Ho•N&amp;H (Ohbale;, 1·11 Ill M•llln•MI

tMarU~~n ,

:!·IJ, l:U p.m.

The Southern reserves of
Coach Bill Hensler have three of
their last four games during the
past week. On Tuesday the
Tornadoes were routed by
Warren Loeal12-2, but after that
loss the locals have turned their
season around with' a double
header sweep of Oak Hill on
Thursday, and In playing the
"Best game of the year" on
Friday beat Warren Local 7·6 1!1
eight innings.
···

Transactions

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,
11.. IFr....et.M..'CI !BarVn. 1-11 111 LoM
.\a pi"" IW'f'l~lucl~ 1-1) ,' 7:15p.m.

Pti.

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II .til

Blc .. e ........................ lt II ..J11

Outlining Puritanism'S changing shape

•

.l

r; You .caM FRee .aLL. ~ THe FeoPL.e

'

]

Red-hot Pirates win sixth straight, l 0-l

,.

..

WASHINGTON :-"_ Hispanic
Americans have· become the
uns11ng. heroes in this country's
. war on drugs . Mor¢ than any
other ~oup, Hlspa,nJ,es are on the
front lines, as the following ·
lnt;ldent from March 1988 In ·
Mexlro Illustrates : .
• Two Me~lcan pollee officers lie
wounded, face dowh in' the dirt,.
as machine· gun fire screams out ·
fro'!' the wlnd~s of.'l• remote
drug ranch near the coastal city
of Mazatlan. Four Drug Enforcement Administration . agentS
(three Hispanics) (lght ilo save
· the Injured officers ·lind arrest .
the 12 heavlly·a~med tra~flckers.
Two agents provide cqver-flre
while the other two use ·lhelr car
as ··.a shield t 0 / ret.r~e the
wounded. The f&lt;lur ag~nts and
remaining MeX,I,c an · 'officers
trade gunfire witli the outlaws.
·Special Agent Joe Martinez Is
pinned behind a truc,k, holding off

DEVOTED TO THE' INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS.MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT · . ·
Publla!ler
·

Page-2-' 1l\8 Deily Sentinel

..

Hisp~ics

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Midcleport. Ohio

I

I

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1• 1

a.e~ •• t .............. ...... lt
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Chesnokov wins
Monte Carlo Open

.
NPW· Vo..._ 4ALI - Traclt'd _.,,...,,
Ubi Pal•• to f 'al~nla for CMitfl..t•r
UIIUIIIrll W_.l . . oa 1UM1 pMdw Rlcll
Moa&amp;riNir.;

Mlllllpd MolllfolfOik• I•
lhf' lain ........ k~~Pt"

MONTE CARLO, Monaco
IAAAI.
t UPll ~ Andrei Chesnokov preDdroll - P1r.d .JoiM M'fK·kr.~~hu• llli
vailed In a furious-paced first set
MUIIfl' al To~IID •I 1111" l";trr•to•l
Lf'IIW tA.AAI: umt'd Tom Gamboa
and went on to rout Thomas
......,..,Tok&gt;to.
Muster 7-5, 6-3, 6-3 Sunday in the
lt....,.('Hy - Plat•l"fllf't.-. .. ...,man
......_II WIIIIP •• •• IWIQ' 4111111hltciiiMI:
final of the$1 million Monte Carlo
•·•••P••tflfldfrTt"l'ey8ltumllf'nlrom
Open.
'
am.••
el lh«' Amm.... M,...laH••
CAu\A ).
The 24·ye{lr-old Soviet won his
.......... - Mf...a pMt·ller Doa Awp.c
.. O.awr ol lllf' Amf'l'k-• .b_.latt.•
most prestigious tournament and
(AAA I; •·allf'd •P pMdtw Bill W"pa•
the top prize of $125,000. ·Ches·
lr..n O.awr.
H..PraJIC'I..-. ~-.-f'tl lllf'
nokov, who had previously dis·
rft lremHII Ill pMt 1w ·nan q.IN-ahrr I')' .
puled Soviet tennis federation
f'eflllll&amp;ll
PO'
s.prlll c...,..,. ....
rules on prize· money, said he
£\'~f'rltOn Walbl ht a t-Jf'~~r t'll lll~•t .
would keep his winnings, but
possibly donate some to charity.
Chesnokov used 'all of his
6·foot·2 frame to cover the
oval at Martinsville Speedway, baseline and forced the Austrian
collecting a short-track record to wear himself down In the long
. exchanges.
purse of $95,980 for the win.
c....." of

Jones a triple and single, Sawy.
ers a double, and singles ' by
Ronnie S~un, Kyle Wickline,·
Joey Hensler, and Michael
Evans.
· Southern had a double header
Saturday with Aleicander away .
Coach Hensler stated, ''These
boys have shown tremendous
Improvement with ·e ach game. :
Every player has been seeing·
some playing time. Withy 19
·players it Is hard to get them all
In bu 1 when they play they have ·
all been doing a great jOb. Ithlnk
these young men wiUmake a big
Influence over the next three
years to help the varsity baseball program and to battle for the
SVAC crown."
Southern's other wins are a 4·1
win over Oak Hill, a 9-6 win over
Alexander, and 9-2 win over Oak
Hill. .

win.

Southern iu now 5·5 overall.
Leading hitters were Keith

The Daily Sentinel
CVINI-)
AIIWII ... ofM 1'1 ........

BACKSTEET VIDEOPomeroy

overy oneraoaa, lololldoy

Publtohed

dlrQIIIII Frk!lly. lU Court St .. PoJ.
meroy, Ollie, by the Ot!to Volley PIIIJ.
Uiblq Compony/MuHtmedlo, Inc.,
PomorQt', Oblo fmt, Ph. 9t2·215l Second cluo pootoco pold ot Pomeroy,
Olllo.

113 .... Second

Is Celebrating It's

1st

Member : United Pr•.. Intorutkml,

lalud DoUy Pr... AIIOClalloiiiDIItbe
Oblo MewiJ&gt;II~ Allodotlon. Noi-.J
Aolvmlllll&amp;
-totlve, Brubom
Nowopoper
. . '133 Tldrd " - ·
Now Yorll,- York10017.

POS'IMAS'tEII: !lead ldlftA c b to 'l1lo DillY -.a, W O&gt;un St., •
Ponllll ~. Oalo.,.

NIGHT
SPECIAL

l1liiCaiPI'ION IU.ftll

, Contor. - · - Jl..
o..w.......................................

One Month ......................................
0.. Ytor ................... ,.............

m.•

IINOU:c:on

ONLY

I

•'

Leading SHS hitters were
·Eddie Sawyers a triple, Todd
Harrison, Keith Jones, and Ro·
bert Kimes a single.
.
On Friday, the SHS Whirlwinds
gathered some revenge on the
Warren Local squad for their
third win In a row. Kyle Wickline
pitched a fine four and two-third

Innings giving up. four runs on
four strikeouts and four walks.
Jeremy DIU came Into -relieve
and pitched three and a .third
Innings to get the win. Dill gave
up two runs, had two strikeouts
and two walks.
'" i ''--"
Southern jumped ouf to a quick
2-0 lead In the Jst Inning and was
ahead 5-0 going Into the fourth.
Warren had four ln the fourth •
the sco.r e 5-4.
Southern went up 6·4, Warren
pulled back to 6•5 and tied In the
seventh Inning 6·6.
With the scored tied 6-6 In the
bottom of the seventh and one out
Nick Adams walked, stole secon·
d,and advanced on a deep fly out ·
by Sawyers. With two out short·
stop Michael Evans came to-bat
for the first time and delivered a
line shot single between short
and third to score-Adams .for the

IUESDIY

Blues edge Hawks
· Two IJM!I!Iber&amp; of the St. Loula
Blues held significantly different
viewpolnls following their cru·
ctal3-2 victory Saturday nilbt In .
Game 6 of the Norris DivisiOn
finals.
,
With tbe victory OW!I' the
Cblcqo IJisc~wki, St. Loul1
tied the wrlel 3-3 and forced tile
clecldbjg lame of the terlel
~~ at Cblc•JO Stadium•

In the second game, Southern
won 6·2, Kyle Wpckllne was the
winner pitcher' and Jeremy Dill
came on in relief to pitch the last
Inning and get the save.

m.... -

Bodine captures NASCAR victory ·
MARTINSVILLE, Va. (UPil
- Pole-sitter Geoff Bodine took
advantage of a quick pit stop with
137 laps remaining Sunday and
went on to win NASCAR's Hanes
Actlvewear 500.
Bodine's Ford beat Rusty
.Wallace out of the pits under
caution on Lap 364 and Wallace
never challeaged again. Bodine
finished with a 4.21-second mar·
gin of victory on the half-mile

Against Oak Hill the first lime
around Southern's Keith Jones
went ihe distance to collect the
win, giving up two hits, walking
none, and fanning eight batters.
Leadil!i hitters for Southern
were Mark Allen a triple and
single, Keith Jones a llouble and
single, Eddie Sawyers a double,
Jeremy Dill a single, and ·Kyle
Wickline a single. ·

a.-Oily) .

'

pollilan.
ahlabn
IOII...S llutW.

..,..,.,,
. ,..
Sony,

POl J1S1

$3 25

110 . . . . . . . . . . . . . , . . . . . . . . .

wMIIdllllaMipr&amp;aa

•

.

.

,."...,.

NOW FEATURING HOMEMADE DINNER ROLL

Pl. fti·I4SI

.

, _ , , II.

fwlw' 1' lucky frllll CIIIIAt• •

-.

SPECIAL MOYIE PRICES
·MAY 1st tllro.... May 31st

. $2 .. .
NEW RELEASES...,....-.......... .00 Plus Tax
IEGULII MOVIES ..............,.,.... 99C Plus Tax
BRENDA CARR. OWNIR; UNDA GIUC:IV, MANAGER
IMPLOYIIt,' L1'1 Glluey. Gent Mllef
OPeN
•'nlull. 10:00-1:00 .
.
Fllday a . . . . ., 10.10: lundly 12··

-

•

niCII

:

.i
''

Dolly ................................... 211 Cttlla
'

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,........ .

.

�By The Bend

The Daily Senti~~~
MondaY; Aprl30, 1990
Paaa 4

Affair in·workpl~ce?
Can't have ·both

Ann

week wilh aoothcr man, I would be
furious, but at this momeni, it seems
lib a logicai10Iulion.
OJ!•Dieli;:.iJ OUL This is 11111111
towDanclall tx'U"'dmafrienda
ofoan.P-.belpmo,Ata.Hoc:lty,
pleuc. - STORM BlUlWINO IN
THBPACJFIC

WOI1IIII wbo hid carried Ill widl bet

OUR MAY SUPER BUY

PANELING

'9~

4' x 8' SHEET

99 ~----~-----------

Exteftllon Cord
COmbination Pack
lnckldes one 50 ft. 16/3
outdoor extenSIOn cord,
and one grounded 8ft.

me if she could spend one night.a·

Dear AliDI.aJMien:Canyoustand
another 1eUu about affairs ill tile
wod:place? I hope 110, because I am
dcspaate for ht.lp,
I read your column eVf:ly day llld
ltWinOd by lbe leaer from the

DURHAM CHERRY

WHEELING
CIINIELDRIIN®

3-oullet lridoor e&gt;ctenslon

charismalic lwin.
~ say somedling t11at might
help my sister. A few monthugo, she
gave birth to triplda. SIJao&amp;ln have
madeherfeelliba!reai.Oae woman

cord. (X.1&amp;9S:..Os.pq

;,

baa for40 ~ (I cOuld 1110 my~ell
sawMdissawlleeJinatlleCIIria&amp;efor
doingtlle881DfJthing,tlllhougbiiiD in
my arly 30s and have been a failhful
DEAR STORM: Welcome 10 lhe duee ill lhe maD 1M ~. "Oh
husband --110 far.) 1..o1tm from your club. AIIOdler man wants to have his my Oo!ll You poor thirigl"
Others have IISketl iatimale ques.reada'scalledlbewomanatramp,tlle cake and eat it, too. SOny, Busttz,
lions
about fcrtilily dlllp, frequency
wife 111 ice cubo and ~ man a you get no green light fiOJo me. A
sleazebeg. None of dlese lilies lit
lluSbend who would ask his wife 10 oftex, CIC. Mellsaa if lhrilled to l)ave
.Wf! ~just Otdina'y people ttapped . OK siteh an anangementls grosSly these darling cbildren, but the ques.
third year the choir has
to area •hrore"""
CHOIR TO .PERFORM - A choll' group, God's
in a diffiCult situation . .
immalureandawifewhOwouldegree lions mab her crazy. What do you
to persent musicals. Destination: Promised Land
Kids, of GallpoUs Cbrllltlan Church Will present
suggest?- DUBLIN, CALIF
"Joyce• and I have been happily . to it il crazy.
Is a chlld's view oftheEJ&lt;odus. The journey beglna
the mulcal, Destination; Promised Land on
married for 14 years. Ann, she is a
DEAR DUB: Your sislu doesn't
If a eoWJSClor is 0111, consider a
at the F1amlng Bush and ends at the Land of Milk
Sunday, May 6, at 7: 30 p.m. at the Bradford
fabulous wife. We have three lovely member of lhe clergy or a trusltXI owe lhoseknuekldteadsany answers.
Cburch of Christ under the direction of Sharon
and Honey.
children, a picture-perfect family. friend. You .-1 to tallt: to someone She should simply smile, say somcSayre with Panney Starcher asslstlng. This Is the .
The Olhcc part of the triangle is my who can mate you lleCI !hal your thing lib "I feel Vf:l'J lucky" - and
medical •mSIII't. "Debbie. • She has rdalionship with Debbie ia a " ' of keep walking.
been with me four years, is divon:ed, dynamite thlaeould blow up lbe lives
Gem oldie Day: This card was
has a young child llld is extremely of IIOYen people. I n:alizc !hal whst phoned in to a t1orist: Thank you for
Mrs. Lavina Brannon, a re· all of Mansfield; Paul, Joy ,
COUNTRY CROSSROADS
competent. Debbie mates it a I suggest wiD be painful, bul the alter· just bcillg you. The year )'Of! v.m
The Country Crossroads 4-H Club met on
tired teacher with the Eastern · Jessica, Bradley, .and J!Wen
pleasure 10 come to wOtt. •
nalive WOIIld be worse. EncOurage Cleo!J!ilra, you were a mess.
March 31, 1990 at the Ruby Pickens home
Local School District was ho· Brannon: Reedsville.
with eight members·· and one advisor
We have fallen in love, and rm DPt Debbie to find another job, out of
It thol Alllll.Atukrt column you
present.
.
,
• no red recently wl th a surprise
Mr. and Mrs. Bern.ard Bran·
sure
bow
long
we
can
keep
'
this
town,
if
possible.
·
.
·
clipped
ytart ago ytUow with !JSt?
Slides on demonstrations were shown
· ·party on her 80th blrthdilJ(. .
non, Mansfield, phoned and .s ang and' they taJJc«l · abOut members dotng; relationship undel. cOntiol. It may · · Dear Ana Linden:.A while back, For 11 copy of her mDIJ fr'iqliently
,
Attending weFe Bob and Nina "Happy Blrtliday" and cards' demonstraUofts and "aboUt projects..- •
sound eruy, but I want them bCIIb. you llad SOllie ldvlte r« a woman requu1ti1 pottJU.IJIIII tnlly.t; uniJ a
The helitlth officers gave a report on the
· · Saunders, Johnathan and De· were read. Sending a card was
heart.
SQmeumes 1~Y wish !hat Joyce who had twins. One lwin wu Jarser ulf-addrtsMd, lollf, bll.li~~ess-size
· leah, Reedsville; Debbie and John Moore, Mansfield, who Is
Katrina Andersoo served refreshmenls.
would
fmd thisleuennclkiclcmc 0111. • and livelier than the olhrl. S~ranp~ MWJWfJ' twla clttck or lftOMJOr~r
The
next•meetlna:
was
held
on
AprU
2L
Mike Holbrook and Ben, Logan; Ill, father of Mrs. Bernard
Members are to decide on a project for
I
am
considering asking my wife on tile st1ect tqlt maldng llOIIIperi· for $4.85 (this iltdwles poslllft and
Eileen and Bill Kirkbride and Brannon.
demonostraflons and a visitor wUI give a
for
permission
to lpCIId one night a sons, and the mother wu beaide ltondliltf)to:Gau, cloAIIIILoittkrs,
talk on safety.
·
Lynn, Robert and Hlithryn Hill,
.
News Rep,oner week wilh Debbie. Frankly, il the herself wilh anxiety lbout what thiS P.O.BO% 11562, C/riCilfo,/11. 60611·
' LUiaot Nfkao
roles were revened and Joyce asked would do to the smaller and less 0562. (In CIJIIOda, send $S .87.)

••

.

2 oz. SEAL OF QUALITY ROOFING .

Il l'• /

us:.

Brannon birthday

Long Bottom news notes

By MELODY ROBERTS
years, 12 year old Brad Daugh·
Stanley and Juanita Wells are · tery won third place out of over
constructing a garage on their 500,000 entries In a Mother's Day
: 'property: AsslsUng them Is card conteSt sponsored by Good
Roger Bissell.
Housekeeping magazine.
Effie· Hauber Is Improving
The prize winning cards may
folloWing surgery. She received a be seen In the May issue of Good
lilly from Faith Gospel Church.
Housekeeping. The young man
Mrs. Phyllis Larkins, Melody won $500 and Kirkbride received
Roberts and Brandon Fitch a camera. The class was also
toured greenhouses Tuesday.
treated to Iurie~ .
Ernestine Hayman Is reported
Kirkbride Is a 1963 graduate of
to be Ill.
Eastern High School and studied
art at Rio Grande College 11nder
Mrs. Eileen (Cricket) Kirk· Ruth P. George. She Is the ·
bride, Mansfield Is an art teacher daughter of Lavina Brannon and
at Eastern Elementary at Lex· the late Harold Brannon of
lngton. One of,her students of live Reedsville.

1'111

Tough, lightwelghl38" panels (36"c:oYer) are easy IDinstal. VMt
side iapsl!dd extra slrength, keep outthO •olerneri·ts. ~In e,.q,11iYe
leakproof drain c:hannol stays snug, weathertigh~ assures
draft frll!) interiors.
38" X 16..............'24

F TRUSSES

.
$ 2
20'..,....................
2 .99
24'. .....................$24.99
28'............
. ;..........$31.99

4-H news reports

.

PTHER.SIZES
AVAI~BUi
.
..
~

24, 1990at the home of Janet Spencer wlth8
members and 2 advisors attending.

They discussed the dates tor meetings,
· judglngs, camps and atten.dancerules: the
election of ortlcers; how much to charge
for dues and to sell candy bars.
A report was gtven by Janet.Spenceron2

finches: that have1ald 6 eggs; the proper

care they require; and the special needs of

birds while feeding their yoong.
Refreshments were served.
The next meeting was held on AprU 21.

Merr\bers ar~ to dedde on projects and
Tom Wolf gave a demonstration.
'
News Reporter
Rlkl Barrlnger
AwmtOME GROUP

TheAwesane Group 4-H Club held their
meeting on March 31. 1990 at the Modern
Woodmm Hall, Burllnaham, wtth eight

members and 2 advls&lt;n attending.
The KfOUP discussed sentng candy ban ·
and what project books each member·

wanted. Refreshments were served.

· The next meetlng was held on Aprll14,
and members wfil get lhett project bOoks.

.

.

News Reporter.
Melissa Ramsburg

MEIGS COUNl'Y lADE
The Meigs County; Jade 4-H Club met
Aprtl6, 1990at the-home ofJanetBolln with

12 members i!Dd one advisor present.
They elected oUicors: President PhyUIS
Clark; VIce Preslclent Mlchetle Miller.
Secretary Vanessa Harless; Tre-asurer
Amanda MuSRr; News Reporter Tammy
Miller: Heoallh and Safety Jeremy Fetty;

Recreation Paul Searles,
Th~ · group dectded to take Outdoor
Copkery t as a club proJect. ·

Mem~rs .o t the Meigs County
a iater hearing was viewed from
Law Enforcement Explorers the closed circuit television In the
Post 230 attended the Ohio probate court room. .
Supreme Court hearing In GalU·
FolloWing the court hearings
poUs on Aprll18.
members participated In a quesPost members Interested In tion and answer session at Davis
law and the judicial system Hall during which time they
attending the educational pro- discussed tbe technical and legal
gram were Scott Brinker, Meigs Issues with counsel for the
Membership Committeeman, plaintiff and defendant In each
Brian Cleland, · P.J. Chadwell, · case.
administrative vice president,
Post members, along With
and Stephanie Walker, secretary adult counselors, Lisa Roush of
from Meigs ·High School; Me· the Meigs County Shetlff's JJe.
lanle Adams, Sherry Bales, Be· partment and Teresa M. Tyson·
thany Bass, treasrer, Joshua Drummer of the Meigs County
Codner, Carleton Drummer, Community Corrections Pro·
Southern Membt!tshlp Commit· gram stopped In Gallipolis for
Ieeman, Michelle Friend, prq. lunch and held an Informal
gram vice president, Mindy organizational meeting. The stu·
Lemley and Greg Weddle, presi- dents then returned to their
dent, from Southern High School. respective classes.
Post members attended · two . The Meigs County Law En·
court sessions. The first hearing forcement Explorers Post meets
was viewed from within the regularly on the first Sunday of
juror's box In the court room and each month at the Meigs County

. The next meeting was held 1\pril 14.
Members are to dedde on lnCfivldual
prolects and discuss Earth Day activities.

Court House. The next meeting Is
scheduled for May 6, at 4 p.m. All
young men and women !lf Meigs ·
County, age 14 to 20 are Invited to
attend. ·
.
Topics to be discussed at the
next meeting Include plans for a
car wash to be held at Chan·cey's
Food Mart In Syracuse; first
reading of post by·laws; plans
and Information on exhibits and
post activities and community
service projects; finalization of
designs and orders for post
t·sh!rts, and discussion regard·
lng attending a meeting 'of the
Explorer's Post from Ravens·
wood, w.v.a.
Members · are remlned that
dues In the amount of $15 are due
and should be paid at the May 6
meeting. Anyone having any
ques dons should call Lisa at the
sheriff's office, 992·3371 or
Teresa at the court house,
992·6439.

SAVE
AI
HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

3/8" x 2lr REBAR........S2.25
1/2" x20' REBAR._.$3,25

/

26'' X 12' ··~--~·.......,.....................·.... ~... $7.67

BV GALVANIZED ..

ROLL

26~'x1 0' ....:............. ~...............~ ..................~. ss.39

_..f" .• -· '\..v .. --

26''x12'·1 ~........ ~·-····················~··-~·················· *7.67

_.

Tammy M:Uler

95
ROOF ·coATING .....~.~.$24

9.99
9.99

8' x I' Sections

.,

&gt;
Shadow ·Box
.....

Fence

sa

PRESSURE ftiEA'fED LUMBER

'
.I ..

SHUftERS

·· Western Pia-Cut

CbooseFrom
Wbfte, Brown,
or BIGelc J'fnisb

S7UDS

8131 ..
EACH

•

.REG.

SIZE

•

l4z35 •••••••••.••••••23.10...........................'15.40
•
14z39••.•••.••..•.•••25.20•••••••..•..••••••••••• •••• 17.lu
14:&amp;43................27 .30••••• : •••••••••, ••••• ; •••••• 18.35
l4z47 ••••••••••.••••'29.10............ ................ t:lQ.lB
14z51 ••.•••••••••••••sa.ss...........................'21.45

14z55...............•sa.eo....:....................... '22.50
14z59...........-. •••ts?.411 ........................... '24.45

.•

14z83-. ..............*S9.45 ........................... t:a&amp;.l5
14d7.................42.90............................~7 51
14z81••••••••••••••••48.SS••••••••••••••••• ~·· .•••••••'34.30

~::-:n

ANDERSEN WIND

WOOD BARIS
a· xs·. . . . . . . . . . . . . . $450
S' X10' ........................5550 .

club meets

Hastings birth

Now you know

A.,,,,,.,, s,,,,

Parade set

Gospel sing

Bart banned from Ohio sthool -

Ceott._

'

A FRIENDLY FACE IS BACK HOME

KOUNTIY KITCHEN
ladn.

.· DAllY. SPECIAlS
•o•AY
IUISDAY

r

•a.7&amp;

· ~------~rr-----------------------'~.-·· ~~

·oo
IL-0...=!!00

REPLACE YOUR
OLD SLIDING
OOOR WITH.THE
ATRIUM DOORI

I

!I

DOD
D

:i

m

ii..oe=~=

•All WOOD
·ENERGY EFFICIEif1'
·READI'·TO-INITALL
.SOLI) BRASS IIDIITICE

·LOCK INCLUDED
The Atrium Door
iaactually•whole
·ay.leao of ld- for .
mlwtdnslhe
beauly
of my home.
Come In 1ouy -lei
ue help you choooe
the idea !hare righl
for your home.

.

. :::

~~==~--~---~
~ -~
, ~--~::~:::::::::::::

I

.

•

tractlng Spring Birds" will be by to tlie residents Christmas fund.
RUTLAND - There \\'Jll be a
,Mrs.
Robert Kennedy and
holiness revival at tile Rutland
"Irises"
by Mrs. Ralph TUrner.
Community Church located one
RACINE - The River Valley
half mile out of Rutland on New
Herbalists will meet Tuesday at
•'
TUESDAY
Lima Road beginning. Monday
6: 30 p.m. at the home of Connie
·' '.
EWINGTONRevival at Pine Hill. The group will tour the herb
through May 6. Rev. 'Elbert
Grove Holiness Church Is Friday garden and greenhouse.
Bar row will be the evangelist and
through March 6, 7:30p.m., with
there will be special singing by
VALENTINE PRINC~ WINNERS- Winners of the recent
Ihe Mann FamUy. Services start. evangelist Jim Brown. The
•. Vale~~tlne Princess contestsponsored by th~ au&gt;dllary oflhe VFW
CHESTER - The Pomeroy
church Is five miles east of Chapter 186 Order of the Eastern
at 7 p.m. nightly.
lleld oa March 17, were from lell, Janice ·Richards, 7-10 group,
VInton on Roseville Road.
Sarah Rolllh, lH~ group and Eltubeth Bryant 16-19 sroup. Not
Star will r.~eet TuesC!ay In Ches·
POMEROY -TheLadlesMon·
pictured Is Jessica Carr 0-6 group. The girls coUected $500 lor the
ter. A white elephant sale will be
POMER~Y - WIC pickup for
day night league at Jaymar Will
audllary . The money was used to purchase new flags. The group
conducted following tbe meeting.
have an organizational meeting May will be Tuesday from 9-11
extends thanks to those who donated. Rose Carr Is auxiliary
on Monday beginning at 5 p.m. at a.m. and 1-3p.m. Make updates
president.
RACINE - The Southern Lothe clubhouse. All teams should are 1\fay 7, 14, and 21.
cal School District Chapter I
he represented and a practice ·
spring meeting will be held at
POMEROY -Residents of Southern High Sc hooi on Tuesday
round will be pJayed.
Amerlcare-Pomeroy are hav· a! 7: 30 p.m. Chapter I parents;
'
LEBANON TOWNSHIP -The lng a flower sale on Tuesday l!nd families are welcome.
Middleport Literary Club' held tramps,' were . forced off their
Lebanon Township Trustees·wlll through Thursday from 9 a m. to
its meeting recently at the land where they had been tenants
3:30p.m. A variety of flowers and
meet Monday at 7: 30 p.m.
HUIIAID'S GIHNHOUSE
Pomeroy Library with Mrs. for years. Spurred by hand bills
plants will be sold and the public
ANGELIA L. HASTINGS
Bernard Fultz, vice president, that stated agricultural workers
20fll
Ill• .
RUTLAND -The Rutland Is welcome. All proceeds will go
presiding In the absence of Mrs. were badly. needed to pick fruit,
Garden Club will meet Monday
George Hackett, Jr., president.
AU IEDDING PUNTS
the Joad family set out !n a
at
7:30p.m. at the home of 1',1rs.
Mrs. Fultz Introduced Mrs. worn·out truck carrying all their
3 PIS $100
Mr. and Mrs. Keith (Becky Ed Nelson. The prqgram ''At·
Everett Hayes who reviewed the worldly goods.
.
lEG. S6,50 Fllds NOW ssso
By Ualted Press International
Kimes) Hastings, Nelsonville,
book Grapes of Wrath by John
They ran Into all kinds of
Fashion historians suggest the
IEDDING GERANIUMS
announce
the birth of their first
~teinbeck. It Is the story of the
tragedies and . trouble along the
facial
veil
seen
at
various
lEG. su NOW $950 .
child, Angella Larle . Has lings,
Joad family of Oklahoma who way, death, floods ,'no food, mean
Urnes
as
a
symbol
of
women's
4 IN. GERANIUMS Reg. Sl.OO
born Feb. 4, at O'BleQess Hospl·
decided to go west seeking work , people and good people. Ma Joad
elegance, Intrigue, or mourning
tal,
Athens.
The
Infant
weighed
.
85c u.- 10 FOR s7so
A
Loyalty
Day
Parade
Is
being
,because of the drought and the was the main strength of the
-"Is a male Invention designed to
19~
eight
pounds
and
measured
:
4
IN.
HARDY MUMS bg: suo·
by
Ollve·Orange
Mem·
dust storms
planned
f!lmlly and she tried her best to
keep women subsetvlent and
Inches
In
length.
orlal
Post
9053
and
the
Auxiliary,
NOW ISc oo.- 10 FOR S75o
keep the family together.
hidden from other males.
Paternal grandparents are Mr. Tuppers Plains.
.
In her review, she stated that
10 INCH HANGING USKETS .
Mrs. Robert F1sl!er, absent
and Mrs. Harry Hastings St.,
The parade Will start at the
the Okles , another name for hostess, provided refreshments.
REG. ss.so NOW $450
Little Hocking. Maternal grand· Tuppers Plains Elementary
REG. '6" NOW S$75
parents are Mr. and Mrs: Carroll School and travel to the VFW
AU SHIU.RY &amp; TREES
Kimes. · Mt. Olive Road, Long Post beglnng at 1: 30 p.m. Lineup ' A Gospel Sing will be held at ,
· Mount Olive Community Church, '
20% Ofl'
Bottom. Maternal great grand· will be at 1 p.m.
Sat
1ltr 11
•--parents are Mr. and Mrs. Hughie
Any group or Individuals wish· · Long Bottom on Saturday, May 5,
H•'AID ! . : t lluo-FREMONT, Ohio (UPI) - An
McCune, Millfield.
told The Toledo Blade
lng to participate are asked to at 7 p.m. featuring New Song
'S ......IIIOUSI
elementary school principal In
newspaper.
Angella was born · on the . contact Rose Carr, audllary .Revival from Ashland, Ky., and
The
Joy
Singers.
Pastor
Law·
SYIACISI,
01110
northwest Ohio has asked stu·
McCune's 57th wedding president at 985-4161 .or contact
The Principal said he knew
. dents not to wearT·shlrts featur· Interest In Bart Is a passing fad,
anniversary .
any VFW member.
. ~~=d~u~ ln~tes the public to
o2!t~~tun. 1•1
0
••
lng featuring Bart, the pad boy of but he Is taking a stand. He said
the popular TV cartoon show
he discussed his concerns with.
"Tile Slmpsons," to school.
·teachers before he made an
The principal at Lutz Elemen·
announcement to students Wed· ·
I.
tary School outside Fremont, Bill nesday asking them to leave
J.R. (Jerry) IIIIEE
Located lcNII 'lhe Str•t p,_ ...._ llaiiOMI . . ., I .
Krumnow, has asked students
their Bart T·shlrts at home.
not to wear the shirts because he
A spokeswoman for "The
GENERAL MANAGII ·
'lhlnl _. Pearl Strwt In
feels they glorify Inadequacy. As
Slmpsons," Anonla Coffman,
an example he cites a T·shlrt
said viewers understand that the
showing Bart With the line
show Is sa lire. ·
OPEN MON. THRU SAT. 1:30 A.M.-1:00 P.M.: lUNDAY I AM-:1 PM
"Underachiever and proud of It,
"We know they are . not the
man."
_.)
,
brightest famUy In America,"
•To be ·proud of being ·an
Coffman said. "They're not me·
Potato Soup ..... •1.30 Baked Chicken .. •4. 7&amp;
Incompetent Is a contradiction of . ant to be. This Is satire."
Baked Hllfl ...... , •4 .86 Chef Salad ........
what we stand for.'.'. Krumnow

~ Literary

ALUMINUM FI~ERGLAS~ .

·26" X14
.
.
. . ~....... sa •90
. . ..............................................
26'.~ X 16'-..:.... ~~~··~······~ .............................. ~. ~ 1.35

Community calendar

News Reporter

38" X 18...........:..'27
38" X 20..............'30
38" X 22..............'33
38" X 24 ..............'36

ROOF &amp; FOU~DATION
$
COATING ......:.................s GAL.........
26''x8' ............... ~ ....................... ~.................... s.5.11 ROOF COATING.........sGAL.......$

WIRIMISB

Meigs Explorers post vis#s court

26'' X 10' .......................................... s6.39

ROOFING.

DREAMER'S

The Dreamer's ·4-H Club m·E4: on March

38" X 8 ................'12
·38" X 1 0 ..............'1 5
38" X 12..............'18
38" X 14..............'21

.

.

6'0x6'8"
API) HARDWARE

BUY NOW
.ANDSAVB

'Ill

SHINBLES
20 Year Warranty

81818sa.
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l-;if.i;::;;; ~=====:;=====::!==~1
84

IUITJ: •

HI•PERFORMANCE GLASS .

Come home to quality.
, ~~EAndersen.
WI'IH
t\LL ITs 11NfRGY.
rel~l·~~~
· lnheatil\g months: Andmen• •White 01
High-Petforlnanee windows are

~~~=~any . Price Includes
How doeS

PRESSURE TREATED SPINDLE.....;J6~'...... ".'1.~9 ;

achieve

.... -

this kind of perfurtnan&lt;;e?
By filling the lqiiiCe ~
the panes witlo Atgon pe-a supe-

_.

20210 .......133.80
24210.....1140.35
28210.....'150.10
30210.....'158.85

Screens
·

.....

28310-...•172.40
30310.....'183.60
2432.......'147.!10
2832...-.'155.30

-

.......

2842. .....'181.55
3042.... ,..1193.80
2846.......1188.90
3048........'201.15

�Page 6-The Dally Santinel

Porrieeov-Midllaport. Ohio

Sesqui ...

••
.nlDGED BY THE PUBLIC) -The public
llel'ved as Judcea for .l be -qalcentenlllal Dower
aad qull&amp; allow •pouilt'ed by lbe Wladlnl Trallll
Gll'dea OUb a&amp; &amp;be ?ome~oy VIDap , Hall on

Sahlrday and Sunday. Plct~d are Mary. KQ
Ro.usb, Ht!len Baer, and Kaihleen Scott. Ov~ 100
people aUellded lbe' show.
·
,

..ax getting thousands of calls
.

~

~bout

chronic · fatigue syndrome

along wltb 47 doctors In Grand
Rapids, 74 In Reno and 86 In
Wichita.
,
· '"'lese are private physicians
who have patients with severe
,fatigue that they don't under·
stand," Gunli said. So far, Gunri
said, 250 patients have been
referred.
The CDC Is working with a
definition of CFS that Involves 11
symptoms and three physical
criteria .that occur over a period
of six months.
They lnclu!le low-grade fever,
sore throat, · swollen lymph
nodes, unexplained generalized
muscle weakness, muscle discomfort or myalgia, prolonged 24
hours or more of generalized
fatigue after mild exercise, gen·
erallzed -headaches, migratory
arthralgia without joblt swelling
or redness, neurophyslcal com·
plaints (such as forgetfulness,
excessive lrrltab!llty, lnabiUty to
concenrate and depression ) and
lbere."
Chronic fatigue syndrome, or sleep disturbance.
CFS. first came to public attenGunn said references In popu·
tion about three years ago when Jar media to CFS as a "yuppie
up to 300 cases of extreme, disease" are "totally
persistent, unexplained fat.lgue , inaccurate."
;
were reported. from Incline VII·
!age, a town.near Reno, Nev.
· Since then, . ou !breaks ·have
been · reported In many other
WASHINCTON &lt;UPil _ :The
parts of the country.
''The kind of fatigue we're mysterious "big animal" that bit
talking about Is not what ydu feel the Bush famUy springer spaniel,
on a Friday afternoon," Gunn Millie, has turned out to be a rat.
pld. " It Is extreme, really
.debilitating fatigue. We got a call
from one woman who said sbe
coqldn' t even carry her baby
across the room."
The ~dliiease Is .not known to be
fatal, b\1 tthere have been reports ·
of ·a.., ·number of suicides by
Ethel Orr, Chesler will be
· .delperate victims, Glinn said,
honored on her 85th birthday on
· Gunn said the CDC's researcb J':ltay 6 with and open house In the
Initially will include patients and~ ; {el~sh!P. room of the Chester
plll'sic;lans In four cities: Reno, 'IJJilt~~ethodlst Church from 1
'Atlanta, Grand Rapids, Mich., - fo'J Jl.rii.
.
and Wichita, Kan .
Tbe event Is being hosled by
· One hundred fifty-four. doctors her daughters, Marilyn New·
lnAtlantawillreferCFSpatlents man, Martha Lee ' and Janel
to the CDC surveiUance network, Grueser and her grandchildren.
ATLANTA (UPil -Prompted
by a fiood of complaints from
-afflicted Americans, the federal
.Center.s for Disease Control I~
'Jaunciilng a $1 tnUIIon Investigation Into a recent!)&lt; ldellt!fled
disease . that leaves Its victims
Weak and utterly exhausted.
: Dr. Walter Gunn of the CDC
,said the federal health agency Is
•settllll up a nationwide surveillance system ·to learn how
widespread the puzzlblg Illness,
·dubbed chronic fatliue syn·
drome, may be.
• • ''We · took a tally to
how
many people were calllng the
.CDC, " · 9unn said In a recent
'InterVIew. · ''The calls are run·
,nblg around a thousand a month
over the past two months from
people who think they have It.
'1f we' re getting a thousand
calls a month, that's slgnlfl·
cant," be added. "We know that
'there's something goblg on out

:see

"It hits all ages and people

from all walks. of life," Gunn
said. "There doesn't seem to,be
any one ~to-economic ·class.
We're not looking at children (In
the studyL but some physl~lans
say they are treali!lll entire
families that have lt." ·
Gunn said the cause of CFS Is
unknown, but that theories
abound. One Is that the Epstein·
Barr virus, which causes deblll·
\atlng mononucleosis, Is In·
volved ,.., Other researchers
suspect that the Immune system
may be affected lnsomewayal)d
that normally dormant' viruses
for some reason become active.'
Gunn said It probably will l!e
late this year ,before researchers
know very much about' the
prevalence ,of the Illness.
"We're also looking at tbe
course of the Illness to see bow
many peo!»lli recover," he said.
' 'Some physicians say the major·
lty recover wit bin five years, but
oth!!rs dlilagree."
CDC has a disease Information
hotllne, 404-332-4555, which people can call for facts about CFS.

. Open house set
for birthday

r~t

Johanna Newman of USA
TOday, outgoing president of the
White House Correspondents As·
soclatlon, said at the assocla·
lion's annual dinner Saturday
night the mystery 'had been
solved.
''The president tells me Millie
was bit ten by a rat ," she
announclld.
Last week, Bush told reporters
"some big animal" had bitten
Millie on the nose, and he led a
groundskeeper to a big bole on
the south lawn where the attack
occurred.
· MIWe sported !i couple of scabs
on her nose, but was riot given ,
special treatment. .

'

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992.·2156
MONDAY th~u FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.

E-•

lith dey of Fellruety, 1190,
..... - ... ilulonlll1lad to •
-ofthe,.....ofuld
o.... , ••......, .... Prf. .
tloo: to ... Mid In

"*' •
tM T-eAIIp

of

a-a..

..._ - .

' Ohio, ...... Cau..y, OloJD.

...thenln.
onT....-.
llllldl _, = · I190,
....... ......
....
.....-.........
............ ..

It .... - - .,._ .. vol• '

1M

of

Olac.. TowiWII&amp;Ip for •
'*
- o f Ire punutlon.
lteldtMIIIInl
_ _...,.. .

a.o.,..
a.o·,..,.,

tlonlltu of
to run
tor (I) live ",._., • • - • • • • •111
'MOll dollilr .. Vlllillllon.
wNoll - -. to _..,
- · lto.IOI for eeoh one

--t:.................. .

hundred doll. . of wlua·

t1on
llle"""' w•a.
..............
30D'......·
A.M. and .............. untl
7 :10o'clociiiP.M.

Meip , Gallia

"*Y• 1110.

April I, 11, 23. 10., .....

APRIL SPECIAL ·
ON

CliP~ CLEANING

WHOLE HOUSE SPECIAL
ON ANY COiaiAliON Of 5
lOOMS, HAllWAY AIID UTH
ONLY

S9995

ADYANCU CI.U.IIG
SDYICE

446·19.15
. SESQUICENTENNIAL QUILT SHOW -Over a hUDclred qullla,
eome aallq11e, ..ne family helrl04IIIUI, olben made only recently
were on dlaplaj at the Pomeroy ~e~qulcentennllll qui!&amp; allow l&amp;apd
SattlrQy at lbe Melp County Senior Cltbea1 Cen&amp;en. The qullla
were a&amp;traellvelf arraapd ID lbe larp adlvl&amp;y ..-n lor e•y
vlewiDI bJ &amp;be numerou loelll relldenta IIIII IMI&amp;-of·lon people
wllo eune &amp;o join In the weekelld celebn&amp;loa. Several -lor
e......, were o'a baad &amp;o •e-tra&amp;e &amp;be art of qalllq. OaFrlday
a team frGm the Dati)' Barn SoldiaeMCen Oblo Cul&amp;ural Arta
Center In Aibeu came to J..ce Ule qallta for tbe flftb liennat
"Patter• W6rlb Repeatlnl'' exhibition tcbeduled for luae Wu!J
•· At till&amp; lime DIOJ:e &amp;11M 'It of Sotdbenl Ohio'• flllee&amp; tradiUenal
q'niiCa
., wUl be on dlaplaJ a&amp; lbe Clll&amp;urlll Ana Cenler. ·

·'
1/

I

JOHN A. WADE, M.D., Inc•.
PLIASAIR YAUIY HOSPITAL

EAR, NOSE &amp; TH.OAT
GE.UL ALLEIGIST

"WE NAVE NEARINI AIQI"

o! M11on

Monthly

7

Announcements

ads - Giveaway and Found ada under 16 words will be

,
•Pfie~~. ot ad fo f 111 caprtalllltlfl is double price of ad cos1
•7 point ~ne type on ly u•d .
·

4 - Gi'lleaw•v
5-H•p py Adl
6-Lost 1nd Found
7- Vard S1le !oaid m 1dvaneet
8-PubUe S1le &amp; AuCtion
9 - Wentld to Buv
·

MONDAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAPER

-

T~URSDAY

- 2 :00P .M. WEDNESDAY

PAPER

-

I=RIDAV PAPER
SUNDAY P.APER

1 3 - !niluranc~

··"""' Meigs Co unty

448 - G•IIipolil
387- Ctl•hire ·
388 - Vinton
245-Rlo Grand e

21 - Busin•s Opportunil y

268 - Guvan Dlit

843 ..... Arlbis Dist.
379-- Walnut

Ari•Code304 ;

992 '---- MiddlepOM

675- Pi . Ple111unt
458-.Laon r

985 - C::h.•t·~

!i1G- AP,ple Gro'lle
773 - M••o n

247- letln Falls

882- New t:tlven

$43 - Portl•n d

949...- Rii:in e
74.2 - RUtltnd
667- CooNHie

,ld§.JMI
"
41 - Houses.for Rent

FEATURED SPEAKER - ·Steven Newman. aulbot . 'o f
•'Worldwalk," was &amp;he leaiured speaker at the Sesquicentennial
FeUDder'a Day Dlnn~ on Saturday night at Pomeroy Elementary.
Over IQO people aitended the event which kicked oft the year long
celebration of Pomeroy's 150th birthday. Newman Is holding a
tattered American nag which be' carried with him throughout his
Journey. ·
·

the largest private home transactions e\oer on Los Angeles's west
side. There's no swimming pool
or tenniS court on the gated
4-acre estate but there are two
houses - a 10,000· square-foot
Mediterranean and a 7,500squar.e-loot English -style .
Sprlllgsteen, who Is expecting a
baby with his former backup
singer Pa&amp;ll Scllllfa, also owns a
New Jersey estete that once
belonged to the late screen star
Gloria 8wan10n, and a small
hOuse In the Hollywood Hills.
With hiS newest ·acquisition, a
real estate source told the Times,
"So ~he working-class hero Is.
now llvlng In· the Beverly Hills

annually,
1

PEAKINTEREST : DanaAs~

brook .. who plays Bol)by Briggs
on "Twin Peaks," couldn't keep
a secret from his g!rllriend - he
told her who killed La lira Palmer
on the ABC hit serle~ . "I have to
·live with her and sleep In the
same bed with her and If I didn't
tell her, I'd be out t'he door, "
Ashbrook told People magazine.
But he's not telling anyone else,
even though he Is bombarded by
people wanting him to reveal the
mys tery. "Everyone Wants to
know .- everyone," he, said,

area...

TAKE THAT, SHAKES·
PEAKE: Jqae Ferrer says WIJ.
· llam8bakespeare Isn't such a hot
writer. "I could never understand Shakespeare." said
Ferrer, who admits he sometimes forget's the bard's lines.
"It made no sense but Shakespeare's all gibberish anyway ."
Ferrer's comments came last
Tuesday at the Actors Fund of
America Retirement Home In .
, Englewood, N.J., as · part of a
celebration of the 426th annlver·
sary of-Shakespeare's birth. Two
years ago the -Actors Fund was
named heir to the estate of l~th
century actor Edwin Forrest
under the condlton that Shakespeare's birthday be celebrated

DEPARTMENT OF .
TRANSPORTATION
Cohrmbuo, Ohio ·
April 20, 1990 '
Contract Saloo Legal Copy
No. 90-482
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
Soolod propo11ls wiN ' be
received at the office of the
Director of the Ohio Department ofTranaportatton. Columbuo. Ohio, ul)ll10 :00 A.
M.. Ohio Stan~rd Time.
Tueodoy. May 22, 1990, for
improvements in:
Meigo Countv.
Ohio,
on MEG-7-110.58), · Stole
Route 7, by rnurfacing with
asphalt concrete:

Project and work length 17,636 faet or 3.34 mile.
Pavement width - 221aet
The Ohio Deportment of
Traneportation hereby noti·
!leo ell bidders that It will af·
firmatively insure than in
any contract 8f11ered into
pursuant to this advertisement, minority buiiness enterprieu will be afforded full

opportunity to submit bids
in rooponi810thioinvitetion
and will not be discriminated
again1t on the grounds of

ra_ce. color, or national origin
In

coneid8ration

for

1n

"

'

of vot-

Ing therein, on Tuudey, the
eighth day of May. 1880;
lhe .queotion of levying otu,
In ex.o811 of the ten mHI Umi-

tafion, lor the banelh of Ea·
tarn ~ocol School Dletricl
for the purpo111 of p111111dlng
for the •m•gency require mente of the achool di1trict

and to reduce the opeeting
deficit.
Said tax ~ing an additio,..l tax of 6 .0 mltlo to run
for C2) two yeara, It 1 rate
not exceeding 6.0 mUio lor
tech one doH• of valuation.
which emounta to fifty cents
1•0.60) for each one hund·
red doll1r1 of valuation,
two 121 yoaro.
The Polto lor 11id Elaction
will be open at 11 :30 o'clock
. A.M: and ren1aln o,.. untH
7:30 o'clock P.M . .
·
By order of the Board of

Electiono, of Mel go County,
.Ohio.
· ·
·
Evely~ Clark, Chairmen
Jane M . frymyer. Director
Oeted the 21st of February, 1990.
''
April 9, 16, 23, 30, 4tc

PubliC: Notice·

"d
1
1
to.
set or open
ng
bid1t,.e in ate
.accordance
with

Chapter 6526 Ohio Raviood
code.
Plano and specifications
ore onfileintheOoportment .
of Transportation and the oflice of the Diolrict· Deputy
right to reject

.bids.

anY

end all

Bernerd B. Hur8t:.
DirectOf

In oxceot ol_theten inlllll,ml·
tatton, for the benefit ·, of

1.---------.
In Memory
jj;:::====~==:;

In loving

83'- EXCIV'Itin'g

of valuation, which amounte

to ten centolt0.10) foruch
one hundred doll8re of v1l·
uation, for I colitlnuing per-

Iod of lim,,
·
The Polio for uid Election
will ~· open at 8:30 o'clocll
A.M . ind remain open until
7 :30 o'clock P.M.
By order of the Boord of ·
Electiono. of Mtiuo County,
Ohio.
" Evelyn Clark. Chairman
Jene M. Frymyer, Dlrectot
Doted the 21it of Fob·
ruory. 1980. ·
April 9, t 6, 23, 30, 4tc

Public: Notlc:e
.,
Notice of Election' on Tax
levy in E - • of tho Ten

Mill Umitatlon
NOTICE le

U4.t P-oy Ohio
AUTO &amp; TRUCK
Rt.

REf.AiR

PLUMBING &amp; HEAliNG
.... leartionl ·
161 North S.Corul
MiddllpDft, Ohio 45760

SAlES &amp; SERVICE

WANT
ADs

We C1rry FishinG SuppU•

Your Phone
Blll1 Hera
I'IIONI

.

.

woRK I
•

510'11 21111 St. M'i111!'1f10111

BISSELL
BUILDERS·
CUSTOM 1UllT
HOMES &amp; :,:RAGES
"A IIIIo...- Pricts"

'
our staff.
You're invited to stop
• in anytime to observe
· the5e exceptional
people at work, ask

NO

SUNDAY

CAllS

-..oi,EnUIOI

OVEN IEPAII

&amp; Painting

ALL MAKES

Bring It In ' Or We
rick Up. ,

KEN'S APPliANCE
SEIVICE

' YilT IUSONAILE
, HAVE IEJEIINCES
AF1116P.M.

992-5335 ar-915·3561
Acroa FNM Poet Office

(614) ' 915..4180
ltforo 6' p.m. II••. .1!1111

217L

questions of
Utem and our
residents, and
_,.iliscovedor

tion of the Eutern Locel
School Diltrict, R...,Mie.
' peuedonho16thday
F~::::~t890, -ewll
I•
to a vote of the
Eularn LoCI!
1t 1 Primary
to
Weld In the
LDCII School Dlo·
Mlluo Countv. Ohio.

111W UIIIMAI &amp; KIO

*LIGHT HAULING

USUII!OWIIS ,

PIONClS

Slrwlce

,_,.,

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

.

I LOVE.

· YOU!

(384) 675-1244

. lETA
I

949-2969
3/ 28 /

/1fn

1·13-tft

-~:

.O.ll CHANGE

· S16 95

up

DI'S AJIPUANCE
SEIVIQ
992-SS.U or 915-3.561
Acroa ,_hit Office

. ,,,

· can eiiD be filled
with pain. , •.
Mlck, no 0111 . wll
ever know- how
much love

you and

mill

' you.

You'H always be a
pen of ow lvel.

Dad, Mom,

JO

GIFl SHOP

Pin..... ,
~=~=~OliO

,.

IS NOW OPEN
FOIM..ISS.

..__,....,,.....

Ill

.

noctc: ee:ao.,...c-

· v- eCior •~d .....

•Com--....

Door.·-

•Fau-llrdlot........
A..... llld
Othtr V•d OmMtc-1

From tli t1: Sa-:~ I

.KOUM'lY kLUI

.-l· ·~r~· 'I Hra ...~
, ... MI

·

II H........ IO

c.!

=:=r· .
-

=-

. . .....14,

-lllalltfarlloolrM
Ctulooo, Clulol - - far
- .. d ........

·~':.."-'"1

JOliN TtAFOID
:;:~-~

CHESTER
QUII STOP.

4-5.'90-1 mo. •

ROOFING

A

1-.
'

~

- ..,m-.-lrripl, ...,... '
Yanl 1a1o

112 Sbdli - .

.... wtga,- ...... lloJ 1-23.

.

._...,.,,_

Yanl
loll ..
lily_
s.wtll,
aa_
N.
ParliDrl
_,

.

--

Yanl - . lily 3 .... 4, t:I01
Main .... 2 ........ • • • •

.
Pomeroy,
Mlddllport '"
&amp; Vlclnaty.r " .,

2-fMIIIr. 1-11'2 ....._ Fiala all
illty-1.,

Rd.

2nd.·

........

·n-

4p.no.WI-, lyplwl..,, AlariIE, Clolhlnfl, · - .
WalohloralgiiO!

210 illulllorrY. -

'

.. ,.,.....,

E l _ ,_lloJ lii.Uncl.

.'

,.....,
..., lril. -1 -

'*

-out·.....
:!lModolr

lld.MAtlnor-

Gutters
Down1pouta
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

mo. '

FREE ESTIMATES

v.w.

949-2168 .

2-l.'to:l .... pd.

PARTS &amp;
SERVICE

on..._ ca ••
old -..llimll-

· - - .... 1,2,1,4. '-11.141, .
Rt.t. ....,..
A-.
IlL
'1'0 ~looroiaw, llld n r.~~~~r 1.

on

...-.

.... c.a _.... lrkhim,

.....,, ..a..;.........

~

Anno uncr mr nl s

NEW 8t USED
PARTS
For Rilbblt.

Jotta, Golf.
Beetle and DUIIJ.
61A·lra:
,•VINYL SIDING
•A~UMINUM SIDING
~
'tBLOWN IN
.
INBULATIOiw

. . -=·--·
............
... ......... lily
li!IIO.'t,l,l.
tiM

ik/;$

BISSELL
SIDING CO..

... .......

4

1 ................ 7

• • • ..... •
.,._,

..,,.. Eetimlll:•"'

PH. 949-2101
or lo1o 949·2160
·NO .SUIIIAY
.

•LIMESTONE
•FlU DIRT
•ANYTHING
·AT ALL

"

Zi1n :lofloo.

a... ' TIIOIII!Or a • -

NEW- IEPAII

T::e:~, till
4-11-1.

dey.-or-.
-

210
~.
· ,.......,
~rr.
May
111.121111.

iioword L Wrltllll

•front End
Algnment
•Oil Change• Lube

Uiin.. ·. ..u.

915-Uso,.

(614)
742-2027

- ~:~~ ·

•Tire81181

St. lts•.71241
CHIS'i'a•' OHIO
'
•

PURSUIT

741·3081

ell'llluiWork

46Jtr S...t c.., ....

. _o_
...._"'"
__
..

IUTLAND
SAUSand
SEIYICE

4 Qt. Max.

n11 HP~II
MOVIE IINTAL
CONVEIIEIKI stOlE ITEMS

"'l TRAVEL.
•

Yanllalo 11Z11 -

M1D:OD LM. . . . . . . . lllftotd

Mastic .:.. c.tatnt..S
vinyl Jlding
,5fantltd Guttw
. Ropia~tmettt Witdows
lliwn 1nllrloti011
St- Doors &amp;
Witdows

· ·· · - -

2

,_._

lornJir, ...........

,.

'

N ._
paM._- ~Ill.
...........
....

111, 1U.

jlsxssr •

t

........ -

""' 114. , , -

...........

Qlril. L.-rll'olla. IIIIo lllotflllf.
Cl- . . . . . . . . .
............. '11111
iiMI ..... _

But when they're all

MOM ,•

,,

90

. BILL SLACK ·
992-2269
'
EVENINGS

HOURI: M·F g.7
~·· 1·5; Cloud lun.

ft!lemoitel; they are

USED APPUANCES

*FIREWOOD

............. Cltal•

you '-1ave 111ft 1hey

446-7JI2

c-t.. · •c

......... s,mc.• .

so VfiY precloue;

'Yiturself the
vety best in
nwsing .
home care.

:a.

*SHRUB -TREE
TRIM ami RE·
MOVAL ·,

Middleport, Ohio

• J&amp;L
INSULATION

Day or Night

pairillnt

tion of the Bo.rd of Educe·

992-2196

992-6244 Garage

FEEE ESTII\liA'rES
''*'
.paindo outit ellor you.
Ill

. ·Mill Umitatlon
• NOTICE lo h..-by given
that In pu.....,nce of a Ruol·

PAT IILL FOlD

Connection

Public: Notice

single member of

,......

or les. 949•216d

IIDGE
SMA.LL ENGINE .
CEft10

We can
.olio ocid btill and rod

St.

"Your

IMitaiCieanup~

El~LE

._

T-11-'19-tfn

eut r.Untors. Wealso
repair Gas Tril,

PH. 949·2801

UNDA'S
PAINnNG &amp; CO.

years ago,
April 30, 19BB.

114 4. '*!.

heater · corn.

· Sun.

Travel"

Btretton.

Notice of Election on Tn

Thurs.

all
For Appt. C
992-6717 Hontt or

4 · 18·' 110- 1 mo.

W:~~~::~~ Tecumoeh,

--:11llwllaoll-.,
lilY 2,1,4; _NoM- 1:00.
at;
wlcloao',all
_ ,ClaM
_,_

r~r

HOURS:

·

HUCK'S CAl WASH

for Homelite.

lnroll, .wing ......... irldllrlip

..
~ - · - . polciCI to
_,I!Atlnor-

SERfiCE
w,
can
and rt·
core rad1atori nnd

Call 992:2772

~F~~~;~us~m=esfsij~rv~l~cei!~~~W.iiijlJ

, P-r:1 Oh
'
'
PARTS AN SERVICE
For Molt 2 .and 4-cyc!e
enuln•
.

- , . . •• Ohio. lloJ ~.....
Ntt:ro. LOla ololollilng.,- . , .

I VIcinity

FREE ESTIMATES

·

'

--~
•
, .'

Pt.P.....nt .

OPEN:
APRil 1 THRU JULY I

4-25-tfn

Dated the 2111 of Fob·
nrary; 1990.
AprH 9. 11. 23. 30, 4tc

2S31,,Wut lltlln.

c_,

Michigan hlo, lluot 111: u, ,
flltl!ll;o; "

atrotltf, ·

(614) 667-3271

OHIO IIYD
HEllS ancl
EVEILAmNGS

Alto Tr •••111101
PH. 992-$682
· or 992-712·1

Jane M . Frymy•. 'Director

DAVE'S SMALL
ENGINE I*'PAII
I

Oonga - : lily 1: 4. ..,.,.
Holpllal to KMr tum 111
to lldwlll, llociMr c. •• 1 ,
tum _rtghl• 3 mHoo; ton on rlgtiL blgna ,._ Ladlaii, _...., ol illzoo, polio _, with
umlnlll, llerM liiiMiarr, ..,...,
..a. HIH and Nell.
, ,\

DUMP TRUCK
Sand-Stone-Din
·

Roger Hy.s,n
Garage ·

ve••·

.

oul211

... . _

Gr•t A. Newland

f----------+-.,....;...-------1
8 • · Se •

RANDOLPH
Who left Ul two

'
ENTERPRISES

purpo1e o maint..,anoa and

PMeed on the 15th
Fabruary,1990, there
eubmiflrtdtoevOtaof

M•mory Of
MICKEY

NiWUND

992•,},l~mo.

o_.io!l
of
Carleton
School ahd Mtiuo tndultrioo
Workohop for poraono whh
montll retardation and de·
velo_..l djubllhieo.
Said tax being an addl·
tlonal taa of t .&amp; mill to nrn
for 131 lllr..
at a rate
not ixceeding 1.15 mille for
each one dollar of valuation,
which amounto lei flltcentolt0.16) for each one
hundred dollo~• of valuation .
for lh- v••ro 13),
,,
The. Pvll1 for oold Etectlon
will be open at 8 :30 o'clock
A .M.· and remain open until
7:,30 o'clock P.M.
By ordet of lhl Board of
Election•. of Moluo County,
.
Ohio.
Evelyn Clark, Chllrmon

c~:~nr:;:•~oM~:i~
c~
of Meig~, Pomerovo

NEW LOOATIOII

DOZER
SITEWOIK • .lOADS
· CLEARING

788 N. 2nd
MIDDLEPOIT

m.

1.0 mlllo for each one dollar

: 1.2 -

w.

SEARS

Public: Notice

for a continuing ' --·'· '
time at 1 rate not exc.adlng

-

~J llllhnr Mh. -

- . . . -- 1 1 1 3 2 - -

INSTALLATION

Mllgo Local Sc~ol l)lltrict the eighth day of May,
qu..tlon of levy·
for the purpou of current 1990,
lng
a
~x. In OXCIII of tho tan
,
ex~n.. .
.
1
Siold tax being an addi· mUI limlllotlon, for the bon~
fit · of M•lr. County for tho
tlonol tax of t ,o mill

levy in Exceu of the Ten ~

,_,..,,

~·-... ·~IPROFESSIOnALI

, 4·1:'90·1 mo, pd.

dedication of every,

992-7479

lt. ·33 lerth et

FREE
ESTIMATES

84 - EI..::tricll &amp; Aetriger•tion
85 - Gen••l H8u ling
86 - Mobile Home Repair
87 - Upholstery

14) 30; 161 7, 2tc

What sets us apart
is the caring illld ·

Rental•
•Lot' R•n\'11

FENCING

' s1 - · Home Improvements ·
8Z - Piumblng 6 HeMing

cal
the P'l"pla
SC~ool of
Olitricl
uld'Meluo
It a Prl·
Lomary Ellction to ba held·ln
tho School Dlotricl of Meiuo
Local, Mtiuo CIMintv. Ohio,
·at the rogular piiCII of vot·
lng lhttraln, on Tueodey, tho
tighth day of May, t980,
thequ•tk)QoflwyingataK.

•Mobile Home

·---·-........ -...
·----- ......
-

billa, Route 141.

Services

forth
oal." "In tho bidding propo.
Etch bidder ohotL be raqulred to file wkh hlo bid •
certified check or cuhler' a
check for an amount equal
to live porcentofhiobid, but·
In no trYinl more than fiftV
thoullnd dollars. or a bond
for ton per cent of his bid.
payable to th• Director.
Bidder mull apply, on the
proper forms, for quolilice·
"tiono at leoot ten dayo prior

will bleubmit... dtoavoteof

....,.

•Mobile Home

a-12·10' 1 mo.

Public Notice

Notice of Election on T•
Levy In E~U:•a of the Ten
MIH Umft,ation

MOBILE
HOME PARK

·LOTIONS ,.... STICKERS

.

L•••

pi~

Child oar lilt to gt~aw. 11..,
ue 01120.
,

Call Su•an Coleman, 742-2778

NOTICE Ia hereby gliten
people ol Mtiuo County
thet in pureuance of 1 Rnol·
1 Primary Eiection tO be
tion of tho Boord of Educe· hole! In 1118 CountY ol Me! go.
tlon of the Moluo Local Qhlo, attherogularplacoo.ol
School Dlotricl, Pomeroy, 'fDllng therein. on Tuadoy.
Ohio, paued on, tho 13th
day ol Ftbru0 ry. 1890, there

The Director morveo the

CARING STAFF
"MAKES THE
DIFFERENCE

7~ - Cimping Equipment
79 7 C•m.pers .a P,Aotor Homes

award.
''MinimUm wage rates for
this proj8ct hove beort pre·
determined u required by
low and are sat forth in tho '
bid propolll."
" The dete Mllor comptetion ofthil work shall be ael

Director .

OUR

77 -'- Auto Repair

, 42 - Mobile Homes for Aent
43 -Fa rms for Aen1
:
44- Aptlrtmtnt tor ReMt
·
46- Furnished Rooms .,.,
41 - Sp•e• lor Rent
47 - W•nted to Rent
o&amp;B -E q t,.~ipmen t for Ren1
49 - For

Public! Notice

.~¥t,.~R~~1~~g

'

SUN'S UP 'INNING .

· Now Lima lei., lutl..cl, Ohio
1 Session ........................................ 13.50
6 Sessions......................."............ s12.00
12 Sessions•••• ~ .............................. 120.00
15 StlliOM•••• ~.............................. S2 5.00
FIRST VISIT FREE - POSSIBLY MORE

e.

31 - Homa for Sale
32 - Mobile Home• for Sale
'
33 - Farm!l tor S1le
34-Busin•s Buildings
3s .:...'Lots &amp; Acr. .g•
.. 3e ..... R. .I Est•~· W.•r:t••d

896- Letart
- 937- 8u1fllo

at the regu .. r

I

72-Truc:lr.s for Ssle
73-Vans 4 vyo·,
74- MotorcVcles
7&amp;- Bc•u &amp; Motors tor S8te
78-AutO ·Pans &amp; Acc•sorl.•

Real Estate

Cet Retulte Fast
NOTICE TO

.

71 - Auios for S•le

22 - Mon-w to Lo•n
23- Ptof.IMORII Stt'Vieet

M•aon Co .. WV

· ' Pomeroy

63-Uv••toCk

Transportation

Area'Code614 .

Commercial

WE GO TIE Eml •u"""
992·68l0

L1v~stuck

. 64""'" Hav. &amp; Gr8in
66-Seed &amp; Fert~iler

17- Misc;ellen ltOUI
1 8 - W1nted To Oo

2 :00P .M. THURSDAY

Service

Raaidential llo

62:_Wanttd to 8uv '

15- Sckooll &amp; ln1truc:tion

2 :0 0 P.M. FA IDAV

lofrigoratioll

...... old-_..""'..

a ,_, MMint -

.,._.,., ancl - ' t - l i l Y
1, a :a. RL u INI•=• RIO
Gnnda, a c."'" ••·

61 - firm Equipment

,

16- Aadio , TV &amp; CB Rep.tr

following telephone exchanges... .
Galli• County

'

14- Busin•• Tr1ining

Classified paf(es: corer the
Are~Code614

'
,,
Fun1 Suppllf!S
6

Heating, Cooling,

A Great Combhiation" Quality and R1G1011oble Prices"

. 69 -Fot $1le or Trade

11 -:; Hetp W•nted
1' 2 7f S~u8hO r'! Wanted

2 :00P .M. TUESDAY

WEONESOAV ,.PAPER

5'?-Music:•llnstrumii11S
5 8 - Fruits &amp; Veg-abll[l

Srrv11:es

QAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
- 11 •00 A.M. SATURDAY ·
- 2 •00 P.M. MONDAY

COPV DEADLINE -

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

. 56-Pets tOr Saht

Empluyu11:nt

•A cl111itied adverti.-ment pl1ced in The Daily Ser\tinelle• ·
cept ....., cl•·sified dispi.Y. Bu1ineu Card and legtl notices )
will aJ1o appeilr in the Pt. Ple•lnt Reg i11e1 •nd ·the Galli
p~1is OtiiY Tribun~, re11chlng O\ler 18.000 hOmes . •

HUMPHREY'S .
CUMATE
CONTROL

GI.G BAILEY

51 - Hou..hold Goo~·
52-Sporting Goodtt
153-Antiquea
54 - Mise : Merch~ndi se
56: - Bu ildinQ Suppli•

3 - Anno ue'ements

fo, errors fitst d.y ad run1 In paper} , C• ll befo1e 2 :00 p."'
dav ah• publiclltibn to m1kl cOrrection.
•Adsthl'l mu st be Plid in actopnce 11e
. Card of Th_..kl
Happy Ads .
In Memoriam
yar,q Sales

Kand J CONSTRUCTION

Merchond 1se

1 - Card of Thanks
2- tn Memory

•sentinel is not responsible for errors 1ftlr first d "". (Check

VILLAGE KEY PRESENTATION -Larry WebrUDI, _left,
Pomeroy Vllla1e Council member, presented a key to the village to
Sleven Newm811 at Saiurd"Y niJhl's Founders Day Dinner as a .
·
.p art ol Pomeroy'e sesqulcetilennll'l eelebrat~on.

"lOW IlK-·

.06 i day

$1 .30/ day

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

209 Sevth •th St.
"' lll.orl, Oh.

.eo

813-. 00 .

Yard8alo

A•t" •re for c:on•c:utfve run1. brok"" updayswill be cti•Oed
' fnr ear:k i11!Y
Mper•t8 ed•
·

coun1ies must be l)t&amp;-

run 3 cllft' llt no eh•ge.

lloi-. of lhilll County.,

DICM till 11ft of Feb-

3
6
10

:~_ec:&gt;ov"'· 1 .50 discount for 1d1 peid in advsnce.

Ohio.

. ...,... ca.n, Chzltil...
, _ M. Frvmr•· .DINator

1

SUNDAY ·

.,._

r

GoojiRitw

Over 16 Words
Rat'e.
'
.20
s4.00
.30
.86. 00_
.42
$9.00

Words
15
15
~ 15
15
15

Days

8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

.

- - of lleailon D11 Tu
Levy In
of the Tan
Mtlllmll8tlon
NOTICE le heNby glwen
lhMinpu-ofafletoiIIDnoftM....,.ofTownllllp Tru- of tM Town...,. of Gran.., Tu.,..•
........ Ohio.....- "" ....

"

' T.L.C.

People in the news ________
~
.

Public Nollce

..

• ·The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

'

BEVERLY HILLS WORKING
ClASS: , Bnce. Sprlnpleea -:
born In the U.S.A.,. moving to
Beverly HIIIJ. The LOs Angeles
Times says tbe rock star bas paid
nearly $14 million for a secluded
estate In Beverly Hills In one of

The Daily Sentinel-Page 7

Classified

ConUnued from page 1
&amp;~e&amp;, he had to escape from
prison In 'I'urkey, he was at·
tacked by balldlta In Th81tand,
aD4 he found 11111 one Christmas
nl&amp;hl that bla father bad died. He
somehow kept aolna and bla tast ·
steps as a "worldwalker' ' were
taken Aprl11, 1987.
He llfieCI the crowd to " dowhat
you do for your country, not
yourself," and be concluded by
aaylq "we are all so blest, we
l tu are. ,,
rea.,.
. ' .
The dinner concluded with the
singing of ''Heart of the Valley'!
wrltien lind composed by ftoler .
Gilmore.
Activities continued Sunday
with an arts and crafts fair and
quilt show at !he senior citizens
center, open bouse for all area
churches and Holly Hill Inn
·which also had a quilt show,
displays at till! Melp County
Public Ubrary, and a Dower and
quilt show by the Winding Trails
Garden Club.
i\pproxlmately 50 people
toured tbe churches and a crowd
of over 300 toured the Holly Hill
Inn and viewed tile quilts.
·
More than 100 people attended
the Dower and quilt show at the
village ball In Pomeroy and the·
publiC voted for their favorite
· arranaements. The winners, In
first, second, and third places
were as follows.
Wlnnblg In "Trip Around the
World" were Addalou Lewis,
Allee Thompson, and Kay
Frederick.
.
·
Addalou Lewis, Kathryn Chap·
..man, and MaycleSeariB were the
• winners .In "Double Wedding
Ring.'~ ,.·' ·
,
Winners In "Rail Fence" were
Allce'l'llompson, JoAnn Francis,
and Addalou Lewla.
In "Dresden Plate'' the
winners were Peggy Crane,
Addalou Lewis, and Allee
Thompson.
.
"Grandma's Flower Garden"
was won by Allee Thompson,
Addalou Lewis, aQd Kay
Frederick.
Winning In ''Oblo Star" were
Peggy Crane and'Addalou Lewjs.
In "Little Red School House"
. the winners were Allee Thj)lllpson, Peggy Crane, and Addalou
Lewla, and In "Lor C.bln" the
winners were Pat Holter, Adda·
lou Lewla, and Allee Thompson.
The next big .weeken!l will
Heritage Weekend on June 8-10.

BJ Unl&amp;ed !'rea InteraadoDal

'Big animal' turns out to be a

•

30. 1990

'
....

.•

'Icc

r:::::~-- .....;:;.:

915·4422

.,......,.=:,....,..~

'

....

�,_
Ppge

• Want Ads
Nlvlf'Wit I \kalkJII
They wtllk AI·"-!
9

LAFF-A-DAY

=-~f:~.l:r

_

•rr••••
-.ma~or
ftDOI
I
)OfBiton.l2.40
1*101110.
__ _

.

Apartment
for Rent

51

xrr•N'

HOUiehold
Gooda

AENT TO OWN
I taJ ww&amp; ....._ IDr rent. C.
Top CluoiMy lrand No!MI
....... NtOo -Incl. loundry
t.ouftiMa'MIIIbll. Cih 11 ..... ~,:'! room ouM• 1101wto.,
-tuaillll,-·
1711 EOH.
lo/4 - .. . . , _ 2 bed&amp;OOhi fum.... apt. AJi t """' •....,.... sttiiii'-, ~
c:oolo . , - nelloble. VI'Ae
=~· hOO - h. • , .. ,
_ .... 111. 14.1, 4 - Open

Wllitld to Buy

el 1 toft.

Monday. ~pril30. 1990

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohip

8-The DaHy Sentinel

2.... _

luln. ..... potvolo both •
Dop • rtf. ...... rod.

11._,_ .

......... AI. 7. T - I p
7. 1:00-4:10
.......,.
""'*
-Col -l..ony ..LMIW 114•tn
p.M. ......,

Pomlloy-Middleport. Ohio

,. ..... ..... .
74

Tele.v ision
Viewing

Moton:ycl..

,....
...,.,,. 4'101 .... 11-

,,.....71.,._

•

MON., APRIL 30

0 four
R«1rr~- letters of
J&lt;rambl«&lt; -.Is

M

CEFTEF
•

I :GO(!} Hai d cIll And
Me Carmlclc t:;1

Amlrlcli

Wild "--ee Look at the
c;olor blue In boll! 1!11 plllnt
&amp;ndlllllllmal " :·J:J .
Clllfllll1 t:;l

(!)

~.

1

pold, 304-t71-

BELIEVE IT .• YOU'VE

SEEN SELECTED FOR JURI( nu....Ju

11

I• .15 I

OHI-MIII
0 Chlltle In Chelgl

n•

I

I

I0

L

I

"

...

I

-'.

SCRAM-liT$ ANSWIIlS

.,

" .E K L E "
1--,lr'-·Tl;..;.;.In&amp;!-· ..:yl"''.:..,.1..::.··-1·

1:05 (]) ll•lfiJ
t•u
8:30 (2) !Ill NIC Nightly ..... .

Employment Scrv1ces

I I:.

Mom, who was trying to
keep up with the newest teen. . . . . k nical terms; admonished me,
;. 'You don't call or write and you
r~------....:..., don't ..·--··1"

OWOfldt_,

COOKIES ..

. ,

R A. V 0 L

•0-=

I'LL 60 IF
THE\f 61VE
AWAV FREE

I XC 0 T

I

eo
e .....
(J) llcholalllc .,.,..
_.,,7W131.

lht
bt-

low to form four slrnple words.

eCII • • e(J) a

month, utlllloo

lAM I

-loy

EVENING

•I

wllhoul

I ,_, un,..,.hod .opt,

• ' "·

••••

TUT Nlt.T C, t1lli
'PIUU. PI¥

CltMO TV L"""' InC Ft Wft\, Til

7.,. •- ·-""" .....
Llll. • t p.rn., ..... 11 p.m.114'40W1U.

The· Ollily Sentinel; P 5 1

CompleJo ·,he chU&lt;kle quoted
--I.L-..L.- ' - ·--'--'-·....J.
by f;JI;ng I• lht ·miJsHI9 words
vou develop from 'step No. 3 below.

.:a:~al:.c Nent:;J

Help Wanted

(!) lady l!lnttc.
(!) 1-2·1 Cenl8ct t:;l

·I. 0• Tine'•
o Clltl ..... ~:~

CompMJ

8 Tap Cenl c:onteat.nta
combl,. enter181nment trivia
with thiiUQ!c of the draw.
itllngln' In
·
8:35 (]) Anc!V Qrtfflll
7;011
I c e - .. Mrl. King

e

w

•·

1 ·00 PM Meg•rN

())• •lportiC•e (J) Cunent Atlelr

NORTH

BRIDOB

+UJ

••u

(!) (!) . . . . . . . . . . .

Nlwallgw
~ • 0 !Ill Wlllll Of

:T:l.

. Wt ' THOfJGHT
'111'1&gt; .
·.

fl'an/C I

/

6Mie'.r .

(t/AJ~

Court t:;l .
1IJ Mlamrvtca A !lullet For
Crockett Sterob.
8 MUIIC Row Vkllo
1D Abbott &amp; Coellllo
7:05 (]) J.a lflrlona

,.

7:3C!

'51'A/lT SMALL ~
W 0 /Z/C UP TO

. r---1

;A.NP ·

e(J) !ll
famttr FIUCI .
Motoo 1111k lihlltralld
e.
EnMitlllr.mtnt Tonlgld
e (I) r.-•o Famttr

eiD !Ill JICJparclrt t:;l
I0 Olii'A"I"H
c:-.ttre
• Night Court t:;l
7:35 ()) , . . . La••• latlbll
I:GO MOVII: Rhlllllrll (2:00)

A lfP •At-11&gt; •
r~tA~FAST.

(J)

elll • ,., Two IIMia Joey

1't-1Av&amp;S A1•3"

. tries to atop the cnarr11g1 of
hla tormerdi'ltrlend. C

Cl ,., Dy ~· ~rot.

. A I I - For

(J) lnclr

lle.on With :.:r,~lvan

•
• e(l)
Mac
lapua Into I COCNI lncl hiS I
bizarre

&amp;Kperterl!)l.

Q

(!) (!) luMvallplcliJIIJ "

lOok at the diversitY of
Sharks lpeeila. 1:1
illl
Malor lJed The
Malor worries about Lt.

eo

Holowaehuk'e quell for
Q]) 21 JUmp . . . .

Penhall goes undlwhln a Neo-Nazl alclnhead
member II murdered. Q

Ol P•lnwN••
11J M""*• the Wroll
Murder In The AlllmOon
•

Clolpll Jubttee

1D MOVIE: Gillin Room 13

.(1:00)

8:30

•

e Cll e Wortclng Qlrl Tass
plana a surprlea party for

8ryn.C
()) ...... National .
.......blct Championship CD

e0

illl

NIWhlrt DICk gall

himself Invited to a card

with nm Conway. Q
!lllt;!n818ga
• t:OO e (II Ill Hunter Hunter
dons a straetorJ::ol uniform
~me

and deftal

• •

.C

• (J) Chlnl 8IIICII

K.C. has a Chance encounter
with an old hlgh-JJChool
aWMthltrt. t:;l.
(!) ~ lnlllde Cloobaahlv'a
. UISA ·With iladdck lmlth
(PI 1) Gorbaehl¥ fs- the
Challlnlll of rewort&lt;lng a

.
.
. WHVv.a.IL.OAW't'BOC'V
WANT TO CA"l'CH
N.A$Y MCNARF~

a-

potltiCif s~attm. t:;l ·

at • o lllurphr 1rown

·

Miles recelvee love letllrs
from
adml..,. Q
• 0 Allan Nation Catlly
nolloas a dramatic change In
I boy ahe kMW on the lhlp.

80
•

WHAR'S

YORE AUNT
LOWEEZ.Y?

~I

IAny King
l'llme Tlml w.............. .
NIIIMII Now Country

music's hotlell Stirs ere

BARNEY

reaturadlve.

1D MOVIE: Saatlancl Vent
lnapaotar (1 :00)

SHE'S TALKIN'
TO ELVINEY ON

1:30 ()) h!lmault '10 llattoedoa
!dillon
illl •
Dlllgnlng
Suzanne 11118 to save her

w-n

o

TH' WATTS
LINE It

maid from deportation. Q
10:00 (J) 700 Club With Pat
Rab1rtun
.
• (II Ill lhlnnon'l Dill
Shlnnarl' NpreMntl an an
tni!lf In • rnoak court trial. Q
•

• ••

(I) c.ptii!Newe

:ASTRO-ORAPH

'

'

t~lng you, can't alford to be today 11 ' self be true.
gullible, etptelllly In your commerc* aAGITT AIIUI (Now. 21-Dec. 21) The
BERNICE
dealings. lnlillt upon -'IVtne help Isn't lilllly to be forthcomlne 11
you're counting on otherl to do thine•
BEDEOSOL · dlldolui'N. ·
CANCIIR ,. . ..21......,. 22) Don't nJn for you todiY 111M you c:1n Milly like
your financial affaire lodiY poedi&amp;ted • CIJ'I Of lor youraelf. Don't be 1 ...,_,
·upon what You 11nilclpllle will be coming CAPRICORN (Dio....,..., 111 Your reI~. The only CMh you·llhould count upon '· oord ltn'tllklly to be too lm.,_..,.
lltha) "!hhCh you h...'ln hand.
. day ,.,cling the manllQim8nt 01 your .
Iter 1, 1118
LIO (.luly Do.... :d) Thtre'a nothing . 1'1110Ur-. In arrwlgemlntl - . you
·
wrong wtth haYing a good opinion ot: ara handllilg tlllngl lor others, you
There Ia a poaelblllty In the·year aheacf yourMII, but ,tod8y Ill the pralll 1or1 might 1111_, '-lkNIIul.
you might h... '*-II QPP.ortunt a. • · your IGhle..mtnll from lhe 111111 AQUAIIIUI (olin. 10-PIIt. 11) Try to
vetopmantt preHQted to yoU one after · of othlrl ralllll' than your own.
. a'IOkl Cllte~JIIIng t~ ""- Q~Mrrtla
the other. 11 you .O'tlot take tll!ll to d• VIIQO (Aug. • IIIII. II) In
have ,_,lttd blcll• you ahcl your
· wtop each propll'ly, their vaiUII could · . tiona with ~ tCJIWY they arellclly 101. mltl hlvt oppotlng 141w1. bell might
eiUclt you.
.
...., ~ from you _.• ....,r ~~~~- • Pdlnt with 1111 other 111111 .
'TAUIIU8 (April'....., 10) Be careful from them, I'ICw• they will keap their· UIUIII ICI!diY.
t~thati'OI!donoredd,....luelto -.bulyoumlahlnot.
' PIICI.CPIIt.IOot uha)Occ lio.l. ., •11111 J!IIIDtlllllnQ dom111lo pro~~.&lt; L-. (...... IHhll. II) Nfto aompt.l ..,.diP INowltl-ofiMIUIInlar- ·
.tem. What JGU W... could tum HInto I celloneooutcl lllllryow . . - . , If ~I matlon ....... of a laDle of "Ill 1111 lor
r'*'"llllre. ~where to look lor ro- poke your Into de\ 11~111 • ~~~~- Todlir thllllwln Judglftlnt
mance nl you'l lind H. The Altto- whiNJGU . . nolimlllld. Tlllrl'lpten.1 ooutdOI:.:hWWIIIPnttJGU.
. Graph M•t1ltlilll&lt; lnatllnlty ,...... ty tor you to !10 In ICeaptng your own 11- . . (
'1Wpf111) T. . with a
Whlelllllanl . . romeniiCIIIy pert.ct tor fWri In ordlt.
1 grain of Ill prapoalll Pllll rledto l/1111
you. Milt 12 to MltChmalcer, cto 111•'· , tcOit:'IO (OIL at lluu. ~ Trying 101 - . , wlln you're ~ 10 gel
MMP Ill"' P.O. 8IIIC t1428,
1111 .. thlngt to .. peapll-'! win . . . IOinellllllfl lor nothinG· 8omlbody
e»i 44101-3428.
·
1JrtM1 todaJ, ~~~::JIIIeom JGU.Ifl/11111 might, but •·ttn•t 1111 io liii'OI!. •
thlnl
•• • • (...,' 21....._ 10) Thl one, - t o .hive
... • . d8y,to
, ._
. own, • . ... .

.

'1

C-.nd,l

~

,,

'I

•'•

"

•u

.lt107

·bad been readinll aboUt
SOilTII
card COml~ltlOIII. So be remembered
•ut
play 1M dlamolld
7
suit II!
,_ to lead a low .
. .AQUS ·
dlamoad from the dummy aad put in
·· ·Jt 72
the q - . Declarer could lben brlilll .
in the lllllt wltbout a lCJtel' wileaeftr ·
Vulnerable: Nellber
Eut bekl a IIDCietoD klnll· Poor WWy.
Dealer: Soulb
He wu able to remember a card COlli· . . . .
Weal Nwlll
'
but be wam't up to -hlnl
I NT
p.. s NT
~,._
an meptlon bued on tile ila let&amp; :
the pertk:ular deal. So lie •liil'n- .
OpeniDC lead: J
my's club ace and played a low ella·
moac1 - ~eYeD, q-.a, .aad Dilll from
. 'West. Wben the uelben failed to diop
the kin&amp;. East bad to pia the .leaiJ. The
queen of bear II quickly. brGupt the aad declarer'• kiD&amp; of lleUu will'!!\! ·•
.defenden four more trlcb to Nl the protected from attaek. Bere'Eut'will::
'contracl
· ·
c:cmr tile lack with tile kiJ11 ud Solllb ·
Declarer does not need all five dla- will wiD tile ace, DCJtiDC the faU of tile
moad tricks to make hil contract. niae from West. Declarer Jbould IbiD
Four trlcb are enougb, provided be · re&amp;urn to dllllim.J,.:r' play anotw dl·
can take tllem without allowtnc East amoad. When
foll0111 wltb tile
to gala lbe lead. Tbe beat way to do aewn, declarer play. tile elibt...,ot. U ·
lbat Is to make lbe wrong play Ia dla· Welt wiDJ tile trick, lbe contract Ia
II)OIIdl. The jllct of diamondJ Jdloulcl safe. But lbere II dl¥1dead for de-·
be led from dummy. It's too bad· if clarv'a virtue - Welt Jbotn oat aa ·
Eut hu a aiDIIeiOD kiD&amp;; but a auble- the aecoad diamond ud· declarw
QIJ!!DI Irick will be glvea up to Well~ makes 10 trieD.

r

.It

+

CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
1 King (Fr.)
4 Wonder
7 Daybraak
8 Pertlnenl
lacts •
10 Lust lor
f 1 Mountain
creal
13 VIva
matador!
14 Oulfll
18 Turmeric
17 Plate
19 Old
charger
20 Poem
21 Instance
22 Terrify
25 Less

ruddy

43 lamb

.. '

.DOWN
1 Glossy
black
2 Have
debts
3 BuH
In
4 Maxim
5 Conflict
8 Unending
7 Alms . 21 Dray
9 Boot
22 Mall
camp ...
, · be11erage
cOrilm&amp;J\1',23 Bugs
10 Fish"
Bunny's
12 Aarln'
treat
lo go
24 Craftsman
15 Anger
25 Way ol
18 Sundered
,...;..;;,..~

- .'
·. ... .....
.

21 Also
30 Out of
the way;'
31 Entrance
32 English
river. ·
37Weep
39This

seed

..
.. ...

....

AXYDLIUAXR
II LONGFELLOW

10:20 (]) MOVIE: iranntpn (PG)

. ..

(2:00)

One 'tetter stands for IIIOlher. In tiU saf111le AIs used 1
for' the three L's, Xfor the tw~ O'i, etc:·St,.le !etten,
apostrophes, the lqth and formation of the wonb are all
hlntl. Each day the code leUen are different.

. world. (0:30) •

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.

.

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27Craggy
hilt
28Table
scrap
29 Stamps
33 Swiss
canton
34 Nonsense!
...,_l--l--.J-35 Wind
Instrument J..r-1--+-38 Puccini

by 0..1 Amaz.

Hoet Jim Valvano ~·• vleooa ·
two callbrlty apona guM~~
each week u Wll •• unique
and h - - tpOI'tlng .
IVIntl from around the

•

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10:30 (J) t.lgMir llde Of 8porta

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38Comblne
40Pllstry
Item
41 Teased
42Pheasant
brood

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Of Other Wortcll
0 I Love t.ucr: Till
VIr'/ flint IIIIIW The ~~~­
before pilot lor 1 Love
Lucy wHI bllllrad nl hOIIaCI

'

EAST
+J1072

Many pti'SOIIIIHill COIKIII

(!) 'MeuM teN:

...

.A.QS

. on 1hl
Of a WUhlngton,
D.C. paper. t:;l
, (ljNa-a.att

Ita"

.•

tJIU

When wrong
's right

a

. danger. t:;1
•

I

•
Grieve- Plain- Em9fld- Frilly- D.ELIVERY
"Mom, if mY wife goes·in.to have the baby on the day
· of the game, would you tape it?" My son quizzed. 'Me
tape a game?" I asked. 'No." he grinned, the DELIV·
EAY!"
r-~·;:__;_
· ----...,.--.

N.IEIP·
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EKVVFHH
H.INFHH
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C.,.t•••ote1 Flli'ENDSHIP 'ts ni£
ONLY CEMENT ntAT Will EVER HOLD ntE'
. WORLD TOGETHER. - WOODROW WILSON

.r._,·.

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... . .

�-Paga 10-Tha Deily Sentinel

.--- Local news briefs...- - , .Arrival of
Continued from page 1
'

EMS has 10 weekend·calls
Squads of the Meigs County George D (Clifford) Colltns from
Emergency Medical Setvlce had the sheriff's office to Veterans
a busy weekend with 10 calls for Memorial Holpsital; at 9:06p.m.
assistance belilg answered.
the Racine unit took Debra
At 12:30 a.m. The Rutland unit Henry from the Old Portland
went to the Briar Ridge Road Road to Debra Henry.
scene or an accident and trans·
On Sunday, 9:02 a.m . the
ported Kimberly Scott and Middleport unit transported
Sherry Powers to the Holzer Hugh Thompson from Zuspan
Medical Center. Also on the HollowRoadtoVeteransMemor·
scene was the Salem Township tal; at 9: 58 p; .m the Middleport
Fire Department.
squad took Shirley Roush .from
Leota Wolfe was taken from the Riverside Apartemnts to
Amerlcare·Pomeroy Health KVeterans; at.10;08 the MiddleCare Center to Veterans Memor· · port squad tranporled' Shirley
tal Hospital by the pomeroy unit · Roush from Rlve~:slde Apatt·
at 3:34 a;m. and 11.10: 48 p.m. the ment In Ml~lepo_\j tQ Veterans;
Pomeroy squall wept to the West . at 10:08. p.m. the Middleport
Main.St. to take Teresa Goode to squad too~ Edna Pickens from
Veterani Memorial Hospital:
her Palmer Stret residence. to
At11:33 a.m. the Racine unit POeasantValleyHospltal,andat
went to McKenzie Ridge for 11: 32 p.m the Middleport unit
Larry Hubbard who wa trans· took Edward Templeton from
ported to Veterans Memorial; at South 5econd Ave. to Veterans
305 p.m. the Pomeroy unit took Memorial Hospital.

50-degree mark. although Chacln·
To tl)e surprise of no one who's natl had upper !'iO readlllllll under
lived In Ohlo for more than a few cloudy skies.
minutes, It ap~ars the arrival of
Tbe clouds were to spread over
the month or May will bring most or the state Monday, and
April·llke weather to the Buck·
lows Monday night were to drop
eye State.
to 45 to 55. Showers are also to
The final week of April saw a
arrive In the evening and spread
string of sunny days with record over much of the state,Tuesday.
and near·record temperatures,
HI gbs Tuesday will be In the 6011
but the National WeatberServlce to low 70s. Wednesday, Tburlday
says highs for the-week ahead - · , and Friday, there will be a
with the exception of Monday chance of showers each day. with
will be mosUy In the OOs, with a
hlgbs ln the- 60s and lows mostly
chance of rain each day.
In t.h e 40s.
·
Monday was to be 'similar to
, !."or farmers, this week's damp.
last week, will) sunny skies and weather pattern will limit oppor'
temperatures i.ll the 70s.
tunltles for getting a lot of spring
But a hint of the coollng trend chores out of the way. The NWS
came overnight, With readings at said rainfall should nota"'ount to
dawn Monday mainly around the much at any point during the

week, but cloudy skies will limit
drying and prospects (Qr much
Improvement In field conditions
are poor.
Light showers Monday night
and Tuesdl!Y will keep spraying
conditlo.ns poor and the chance
for wetting through the last batt
of the week Will continue to cause·
problems for spray lng
operatloliS.
.
With ample sou moisture and .
moderate temperatures, the
spring development of winter
whi!at and forage croi!s should be
fairly KQod. Advance In fruit

--- .

s~':~ion:

lA»uery

s:

Hospital news·

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IJt&amp;lft' ~arlee over lhe .Grea&amp;Laketland~wenor~entorma :
In :J:exaa and Okla..ma. A developlnll ~rm sy'"'"' over lhe ~
Sou*'ern lt«lkles wUJ spread._ from Vlah In~~! the Hlp Plat• ; .
and mixed rain and snow In tbe Central Plalnil.

,

Low lonlghl near 541. iUJh
Wednesday near 60. Chaace of
rain 90 percent lonl&amp;hl and
WWednesday.

7169

Page4

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·

Vol.40. l\lo.248

.

~ntro.l
· By LEE LEONARD
'
UPI statehoue Reporter · ·
COI:.UMBUS- The state Con· . ·
trolltng ·Board Monday approved
eight 111ore school loans worth
more than .'$3 million, and state
school officials predict the sltua·
lion may get worse unless state
school financing Is stabilized.
The largest loan was sought by
Jackson Local School District,
Stark County, $1 million.
'
James vaia Keuren, director of
the Division of &amp;;hool Finance
for the Ohio
of

.

board approves more school loans ·
EducatloQ, said Jl)c){son · lost
$250,000 111 tangible ., personal
property taxes from local Industrl~ closing.
.~
Van Keuren sa'ld Jackson is
attempting to pass a nine·mill
real estate tax levy Ma'y ,8.
,·
The state no longet; loans ·
money to bankrupt school dis·
trlcts. Instead, the Controlling
Board allows districts to seek
local bank loans and guarantees
them If the · district cannot
complete the year without
borrowing~

WASHINGTON (UP!) -Pres· captivity fuelejl si&gt;eculatlon of ·a
!dent Bush expressed rellefTues·
major break In the hostage
day at the release of two sll491ion.
American hostages, but withheld
"Mr. Polhlll said he ·had a
any reciprocal gestures toward private message {rom his cap·
mediators Syria or Iran In tors,' ' said White House press
demal\dlng the freedom of six secrell!ry Marlin Fitzwater.
other U.S. captives In Lebanon.
"The pr~sldent received that
Meeting wlth members of message In private, and lndl·
Congress at the White House, cated he would not discuss the
Bush welcomed the release of . message publicly."
Frank Reed as "joyo11s news.''
Fitzwater said Bush did not
He held put hope Monday that the even tell him what the message
release - the second In eight Involved. Bush has refused to cut
days - marked "a process" any deals wlth the kidnappers
leading to others.
and has said he would not fulfill
But In the face of fresh calls .his offer of unspecified "good·
from Iran and Syria for Bush to will'' until all hostages are free.
The press secretary said Bush,
reward their help with concrete
actions, U.S. officials conunued during hiS telephone conversa·
to Insist there would be no tlori.with Reed. put Polhlll on the
concessions to free the "-merl· line and that the two former
cans still held by pro-Iranian hostages, "exchanged warm
groups In Lebanon.
greetings a11,d wished each other
.E\I!fh- yffe're!l Reed.: 'greetlngs well.' '
·
· ~
from the Anierlcan people" by
Earlier. in a White House
telep.hone Monday while meeting ceremony and wit·h Polhlll at his
with -Robert · Pollllll, whose re· · side. Bush told reporters that all
.lease last week after 312 years of
A!tlerlcans rejoice In the release

.

Another 12 have the first fiV~t"
for. $5,000, ·1'35 have ,the first four:
for $1,000, 1,363 contain the firs t:
three for $l00 and 13.821 have theflrsttwo fot$10.
'

DOW.NG
.
.
MIUIN MUSSER
.

INSURANCE
111 S.Cond St., P....oy
YOI!IIIDEPENDEN1
AGEm SIIVING '
MBGS COIIIY
.SIICI1161 .
'

· RElEASED BY HOSTAGES'- F'l'eed
Jioslace Frank Reed
sendS out klasea as he 1.8 welcomed at lhe U.S. Air Force hospital In
Wl"'!baden, West Germany; (UPI)
'

PRESCRIPTION SHOP

Local news:briefs----.

· OF MIDDLEPORT, OHIO .'
. .

Fire tax levy on ballot Tuesday
Residents In Orange Township will vote on a two mill levy for
fire protection In next Tuesday's primary, election.
·
According to Lindsey Lyons, spokesman for the·flremen, the
fire department will be compll!lely without opera ling funds In
November If the levy does not pass.
.
He explained that In November. 1989 a .8 mill levy expired.
and that In November, 1990, the current one ·mm levy wl!l
expire. This means that unless the two mill levy passes next
week, the department will be completely without operating
funds after November.
.The 2 mill levy will generate $12,690.84, according to figures
obtained from tl)e County Auditor's office.
It takes '$11,500 a ~ear to .operate \he fire d~partment, Lyons .
said, In urging suppor) of the levy at next week's primary .

/ 1-4 KARAT
.

GOLD &amp; STERLING
SILVER SALE!·
.,

.WEDNESDAY,
MAY
2nd
.
9:00 .A.M. • 5:00 P.M.
••

8---

1,

'

c.....o-.

·5 0/ OFF
. . .~· /0 .1:-=.

6

THE WASHER &amp; DRYER SHOWN
BELOW IS PRICED WRONG IN
TODAY'S ·CIRCUUR.
IT SHOULD
. READ ••••

~I

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'

'

'I&lt;.-.:·

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Patrol cit.es Dexter man
'
A Dexter
youth was cited In a two-car crash Monday at 3:25
p.m. in Salisbury Township on C.R. 25, .4 of a mile north of S.R.
7; according to the Gallla-Melgs Post of the State Highway
Patrol.
Richard A. Peyton Jr., 17, of 30985 Bowles Rd. , was cited for
not maintaining assured clear distance after his 1985 Ford
· ·Escort rear·ended a 1974 Olds Omega driven by Billy E . Harless
Jr., 17, of Rutland.
,
, Harless and Peyton were driving south when Harless stopped
in traffic. Peyton, behind Harless, falled ,to stop In time to avoid
hitting Harless' cat.

Plan informational session

.

An Informational session for parents wlll be held at Southern
High School on Wednesday at 7 p.m. in the highschool cafeteria.
The meeting is geared to give parents an opportunity to get
basic information concerning the registration ·of freshmen for
high school clas.ses.
Next year's freshmen class will be the first In thestateofOhlq
to take . the proficiency tests for graduation. Information
regarding these ·.tests wlll be shared at the meeting Wednedsay
evening. Leah Ord, guidance counselor, and Jim Adams,
principal, wur be available to answer questions concerning that
tesUng.
·
·

'$4
' 99 .CASH~

'

CHOOSE FIOM..:_.Ii~~gs, Char•s, Bracelets,
Earrlnas, Chahss, Plul •ch .....
'

·PIESCIIPnON- SHO:P
992-6669
•

217 Ia •• Sacalld

• .....rt,

ow.

feated an Income tax there, and In Huron County Is p~epar l ng to
Will now get.tovoteon a 14 .25·ml!l borrow $133,000. It ·lost an.income
real ests11te tax levy.
tax. by 45 votes In Februar y and
Conotton Valley Union School will try another In November .
Dis trlct in Harrison County faces
New Miami Local School Dis·
a 7.46·mUI emergency school trlct, Butler County,ls'borrowing
levy. If It falls , the district will $368,000. It borrowed $154,000 to ·
have to borrow $139.000.
stay open In 1989.
. Voters in Fairlawn Local
Other district s borrowing moSchool District, Shelby County, , ney are West Llberty·Salem
defeated an Income tax In Febru· School District , Champaign
ary by seven votes. A $67.000 loan County, $362,000, and Green
was approved.
,
Local School District. Summit
South Central School District County ; $836,000.

of both m~n. but that "we've got ·
Syria has been campailioing to
to see every American returned
shed its 'status as a pariah state
and that's the way It's going to
andisseeklngbetterrelatlonsfor
be. "
both reasons of prestige and
Although both Syria and Iran economic benefit .
were listed in a State Depart·
Iran, after It s war with Iraq , is
ment report Monday as nations In dire need of economic assist·
supporting terrorism, Bush . . ance and trade. It wants the
thanked Damascus and Tehran United States to unfrPeze mil·
for their help in securing the lions of dollars In Iranian assets.
release of the two men.
The kidnappers In Lebanon
Pollllll, 55, and Reed, 57, had have stated as their goals the
been held by pro·lranll!n groups . release of a Moslem fundamen·
In Syria·controlled areas . of tal 1St leader kidnapped by Israeli
Lebanon.
commandos, some · 400 other
Bush said he could not explain Arabs held by Israel and 16Shllte
what prompted the kidnapper s to Moslems convicted of terrorist
act , but !'hat. ·'I hope there Is a bombings In Kuwait .
realization that holding people
Asked whether Israel shOuld
againsttheirwllllsnottheway to free the prisoners it ho'lds, Bush
effect political change. "
said . " that is a' matter for others
In Syria, Foreign Minister to determ_ine. I've stated that
Farouk a! Sharaa had expressed holding peopla against their will
hope that th!,url"ases would lead is not a way to facilitate political
to a reciproclil gesture on the change or any other kind of
part of the !Jnltect States.
,
change. "
But Bush indicated thlit . a
As for his own feelings , he said:
·"thank .y&lt;ili .. was all Syria and "All I can say. is Amen _: thank
Iran could expect as long as other you."
·
hostages are held.

'

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.

van Keuren told th~ board the · be on the ballot May 8, and five of
eight loan request~· are the last · those are school district Income
ones fol"'the school year.
taxes.
However, . he told reporters
Van Keuren said 54 school
· later that "We're In for some
districts .,.- almost 10 percent O\
tough times ahead. We've got to
the total - have prepared for
hav~ J some consistent state
loans 'In the last 10 months, and
funding."
·
about two-thirds of them " are .
Van Keuren said school fund · . actually forced to take the money
lng has Increased by 5 percent a
because they cannot pass operat ·
year recently, but four years ago lng levies .
the Increase was only 2.6 percent
Oakwood City School District,
to 3.4 percent. "If we go back to . Montgomery County, may have
that, we're In trouble,': he said.
to bOrrow $458.514 . Voters d e
\
A total of 215 school Issues will

Bush def.nan~ p:ll :- hos-tages be · ~et ~:free

•

~

Two 'share $21 niiOion Ohio Supe.riot~.;·

CLEVELAND (UPI) - The
holders of two tickets drawn In
Saturday's Super Lotto will'
share the $21 million jackpot.
MOre th'a n $U million worth of
tickets were sold between Wed·
nesday and Saturday.
.
,
Tbe Ohto·Lottery-.Commlsslon
said 331 ticket's .have five of the
·numbers for $1,00Q. and 16,885
.
have fow; of. them for $'(5.
Numbers chosen were 4. 5, 11.
25, 35, and i'!li.:
:
· WedneSday's drawhag will be
worth at least $.1 million.
In the Kicker porUon, the
number Is 48690t and $l.fi mllUon
worth of tickets were ~Old.
Ohio Lottery,, offiCials said
there are also two . tickets with
that number, making them worth
$100.000.

1 Section, 10 Pagea 26 Cents
A Muhirnedi•lnc:. Newspaper

Pomeroy· Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, May 1. 1990

Copyrighted 1990

•.
Soulb Cenlral o•to
rain Is 30 percent.
Mostly cloudy ' Mondpy night,
Extended Forecaat
with a low In the mid 50s. Mo~tly
Wedn•ay Uarciqh Friday ::
cloudy Tuesday, with a c!Jance of
A chaliCe of rain each day, wlthr
sbOwers and t~l!nderswrms. and highs In the 60s and lows mostly:
hlgbsln the lower 70s. Cbance of · In the 40s.
.:

.
Integrity, Ability, EJq&gt;erience

.

Pick-4

--....-----Weather-..;._....___.~:

.

INGELS FURNITURE ·
&amp; JEWELRY INC.

•.

WEA~- MAP- The Eul will be c-eraJI)'cioudywllhafew ~
o,w r New EnJiaad while lbe Southeul will - Iota of ·
slllllhllle MbiJh preuare domiDates. A slow movln1 cold froal will ~

Judge Marsball
Court of Appeals

P~IR

•

abo~

ELECT

"""' "'""the-

Daily Number
857

.

.'

·Area deaths----

.

•

Ohio Lottery

'Cincinnati ··
tops Phillies
fer ·13th win

NATIONAL WEATHER FORECAST TO 7 AM EST !5·1·&amp;0

By (,InKed Preu lalerll&amp;tlonal
zanesville: Taml D. Covert, 11,
Three double-fatality crashes Duncan Falls, In one-car accl·.
boosted the 4eath . to 16 In denton Musklngum County road.
accidents on roadways across
Toledo: Pat Warner, 2, CleveOhio during the weekea:ad, the . land, when the car he was riding
Ohio Hlg!Jway .P11trol reported In hit a disabled vehicle ,on
c. Monday.
Interstate 4751n Lucas County.
A patrol spokeswoman said
zanesville: Forrest A. Riley,
there were .four deaths Sunday, 28, CrookSville, In a one-car
nine Saturday and three Friday accident ori Ohio 93 In Muskln·
night. Three pedestr111ns and two gumCounty.
·
motorcyclists were among the
Toledo: Charles Pace, 10,
victims.
Toledo, when struck by an
Tbe pairol c:ounts fatalities eastbound car and thrown Into
resulting from accidents on the
· state's publlc·roadways between the westbowid lane, where he
was struck by another vehicle on
6 p.m. Friday and midnight · ·a city street.
.
. Sunday each weekend.
Port Clinton: Two unidentified
Killed were:
. females In a one-car accl!lent on
Oh!o 53 In Ottawa County.
Friday nl1bt .. ,
,
. Cincinnati: · Joseph E. Frenz,
Suaday.. .
, 43, and Sue Frenz; 39; both ·or
Deftance: David W. Wllllll;·l9,
Ctnclnnail, in two-·vehlcle accl· and- Michelle L. Miller, 16, In a
dent on a Hamilton County road. one-car aecldent on u.s. 42 In
Parma: Mathilda M. Zltson,
Defiance County.
76, Parma, when hit by a car
Columbus: Mary Burns, 32,
while crossing a street In Parma.
Columbus, when the motorcycle
on which she was a passenger .
Saturday
collided with a car on a' city ·

---Meigs announcements· ---

· ...
DOzen

crops will be slower than durln(l:
the recent warm period but the-.·
mild · weather wil\ be favorable ;.
for working with or transportlnJ .:
livestock.
On the early morning weather:
map, a cold front extended from ··
Wisconsin to Arkansas. Weak:
hlgb pressure was over Ohio. :·
Anol)ler high pressure area covered the Central Plains. Tbe.:
front will approach Ohio tonight'·
and be through the state by·
Tuesday momlnl!, The Plains~.
high will begin ·to build east;;
behind the front,
., ·
•.

Sixteen die on Ohio roads

Zanesville: Kevin L. Mitchell,
RobertW.Randall,18,
24, Zan~vllle, when struck by a
vehicle on Interstate 70 In Mus· Parl.s, In a two-car accident on
~ce. l!lllle
Church Women United
. U.S. 30 In Stark County.
ki!Jgum Coluity. ·
•
Church Women united will ' . Peebles: Kelly R. Roberts, 20,,
, T¥·, ~uxlllacy, Qf Veterans
1\femorlal Hospital will have a meetFrldayatnoonattheForest
Peebles. In one·vehlcle accident
rummage sale Thursday, Friday Run United MethOdist Church for
numberi .
on Ohio 73 In Highland Coua:aty.
andSaturdaybeglnnlngeachday the May feilowshlp. Tbose at·
...
.
.
Cleveland: Rick M. Bailey, 39,
at
30 a.m. · In the ·Eagles tendllli ~hould bring a snack Chippewa Lake, when his motor·
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Satur·
building on East Main Street ln . lunch and beverage and dessert cycle crashed on a Cleveland day's · winning Ohio Lottery
Pomeroy.
·
· will be'turnlsbed. numbers:
street.
SorarHy lo meet
Lod&amp;e to qJeei
PJCK-3
Tbe XI Gamma Epsilon Chap.
The ·Pomeroy Lodge 164 will
~.
t~r. Beta Sigma Phi Sorority will . meet. Wednesdl!Y at 7:30p.m. at
P1CK·3 ticket sales totaled
meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the the Mlddleport.Temple. Work In
$1,467,929, with a payoff due of
· senior citizen~ center In Pome- the Master Mason degree, All
Veteran• Memorial
' $251,690.50.
roy. Bring completed necklaces. master masoos urged to attend.
Admitted Saturday - Hester
P!CK-4 ·
Arm. couclllo meec
Goalll!l lln1 .
·
.
Houck, Pomeroy. ·
7961.
· The Middleport Arts Council
There ·.will be a iospel sing
PICK·4 ticket sales totaled
Discharged Saturday - Bur·
will m~tTuesday at7p.m.ln the Saturday at theChrls!lanFellow· ton Dewees.
$284,393, with a .payoff due of .
arts council building · next to ship . Center on Salem Street In
Admitted Sunday, · Hugli D.
$138,800.
Jolulson's · Variety Store. All R!illand on Saturday. at ! ,p.m. Thompson, Middleport; Dennis
Slij,er Lotto ·
Interested .In the council are · Featured singers will be the Musser, Pomeroy; Francis
4, 5, 11, 25, 35 and 36.
Invited to attend. ·;
Shafer Family from Crown City
Broderick, Pomeroy; Edward
Super Lotto ticket sales totaled
VFW A.uxllluJ.Io meet
and Cliosen from Rutland. Pas·
Tempkleton, Middleport..
$11,261,477.
Tbe Tuppers Plains YrW Post ter Robert Musser Invites the · Discharged: none.
Il.lcker
· 9m3 Ladles. Auxiliary will meet public.
486904.
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. Officers Unro. to alae
Freeman sentenced
Klck_er ticket sales totaled
will be Installed.
The Unroe Family wm sing
$1,525,064.
Tr_.lo meet ·
Saturday at 7:30 p.m. at the
In the Meigs County Court of
The Olive Township Trustees Hazel Community Chui'Ch beCommon Pleas, It has been
will. meeq~'rldl!Y at 7:30p.m. at
tween Long Bottom and
ordered that Douglas E. FreeManiage licenses
the ReedsVIlle Fire House.
Portland.
man · be Incarcerated II) the
Orient Correctional Institute for
The following couples ·have
a termofonerear. Freeman Is to
been Issued marriage licenses In
be given credit for· five days
Meigs County Probate Court.
serv8d In the Meigs 'Q:lun ty j all.
Paul Allison·
. ·"'" •Jame&amp; Deniz
Lindsay E. · Holub, 34, Kirk·
He was sentenced for the
T ·
~v·;.
.
land, Wash., and Linda.E . Mills,
unauthorized use· of a vehicle · 41, Galton; and . Erik Joseph ·
Paul W. Allison, 76, 3152 ,,&lt;';James Michael Bent~, Sr., 46,
Dresden Road, Zanesville, died
of Snowball Hill, Syracu~. died which Is a felony of the fourth ~A.anestad, 27, Pomeroy ,and Jane
SundaymornlngatGOodSamarl· Sunday at Veterans Memorial degree.
Ann Karr. 34, At hens.
tan Medical Center.
. • Hospital following . an extended
Born March 23, 1914 In La·
illness.
thrope, he was the son of the late
Born on Feb. 28, 1944 at ·
Harry an\! Sallie Savage Alll.son.
Pomeroy. he was the son of Ethel
He·wasaretlredcoal strlpmlner,
McCloud Bentz, and the late
a member of the Coburn United Michael . Andrew .Bentz. He
Methodist Church; and a
worked as an operator of heavy
member of the Fraternai Order · equipment.
Besldeshlsmotherwhoresldes .
of Eagles .
Mr. Allison Is survived by a· at ~aclne, he Is survived by his
sister, Audrey Torrence; of Ra·
wlf'f, Mary Bentz, Racine; two
.
sons and daughters·l});law,
cine, and several· nieces and
nephews.
-!ames Michael, Jr. and Almena
In addition to his parents he Bentz, Middleport and Dana A.
"'J!ldP
was preceded In death by his · and Debbie Bentz, Fort Knox,
J.B. Ibnlioll, s... ~
wife, Mattie R. Ross Alll.son on
Ky.; two sons, Bryan M. Bentz,
Ripley, W. Va.; John R. Bentz,
March 10, 1989; one brother and
one sister.
Racine; three daugbters; Denlse
Services ·win be held Wednes·
A. Bentz, Middleport, Mlclielle
day at 10 a.m. at the Bolin R. Bentz, Ripley, w. Va.; and
Funeral Home ln Zanesville. · Carolyn C. Bentz, Racine; a
Burial will b!! In Mt.. Herman · brother, John Keith ~ntz, Long
Cemetery In Chesterhill.
Bottom, his grandmother, Hazel
Friends may call at the funeral
l\1cCloud, PomerQy, eight grand·
home on Tuesday from 2-4 p.m.
children, and several nieces and
nephews~ .
and 7·9 p.m..
He \l(as affiliated with the
~
¥ethodlst Church.
WHITE-WESTINGHOUSE
Funeral
se1vlces
will
be'
held
Continued from page 1
WASHER AND DRYER
Tuedsay at 2 p.m. at the Ewing
WAIHER
Ball or Athens for the Republica.
Funeral Home. The Rev, Earl·
DRYER
nominatiOn to challenge fresh·
Fields will officiate and burial
••...." 08P1Clltl
•Sofety' owt button
man Sen. Jan Long, D·
oRegulerw•h
will be In the Chester Cemetery.
. efloguler- dry
Circleville. Retired union agent
• Hot/cOld W.hl
Friends may call at the funeral
~n•p Jty
RlnMC.,.._
·Howard Crabtree of SOuth Point
home Monday from 7 to 9 p.m.
also ls on the ballot but has
Jm 1299
JmS219
withdrawn from campalgtrlng. .
Hleronlmus Is endorsed by the
DiVorce sought
CARRY
Ohio Right to Life ~lety . He
PRICE
.
WHITE
cites his record In law enforce'
.
.ONLY
Sharon C. Roush. Pomeroy, Is
ment and· proposes reducing
seeking a divorce from GregQry
waste and making state govern·
B. Roush In the Meigs County
ment aceountable·.
Court of Common Pleas.
Ball, who Is pro-choice on the
abOrdon l.ssue, cites his prior
experience In the House as a
maJor weapon against LQng and
j
1IIE FIIIICII QIAml
I
an asset tOr the district.'
·•
PI I li ~
106 NO..th.Seclllll Ave.
Middleport, Oh.
In Cleveland, four·tenn veten. '" a...~•sr~as
ran Sen. Charles Butts Is chal·
tiiii1Di lw.y ........, .....
(614) 992.2635
lenged by City CouncUrnan J;)ale
.....
s
...............
w
Miller In the Democratic
T. F,. 100·426·5511
6·9261
primary.

·. ,~,

30. 1990 ,

May brings April-like weather

By United PrMe l•ter•lloul

PQlice probe accidents
Two accidents were Investigated Friday by the Pomeroy
Pollee Department.
Tbe first occurred on the parking lot of the Farmers Bank at
10: 25 a.m . Accord !Jig to the report, Florence Smith, Pomeroy,
started to back from a parking space, realized she was moving
too fast, and apparently as she attempted to hit the brake her
foot sUpped off and hit the gas pedal.
The car shot back and struck the parked vwhlcle. of Betty
Reed, Utde Hocking, pushing It Into a truck owned by Blair
Windon.
·
Tbere were no Injuries In the accident. Da11111ge to the left side
of the Reed car was moderate and there was light damage to the
rear of both the WindOn and Smith vehicles.
'
·
There was no citations.
.
.At 5.p.m, at the Intersection of Spring Avenue and Wolf Drive.
Annette Tucker, Pomeroy, lost control of a car she was driving
which was owned by James Stump.
.
As she pulled from Wolf Drive to go north on Spring, she lost
control of the vehicle. It went off the right side of the road and
struck a utility pole. She was not Injured but there was light
d811111ge to the right front fender and bumper to the car. Tucker
was cited for failure to have her vehicle under control.
no citations,

Monday.~

POmeroy-Midclaport. Ohio

~

FHA petition deadline

May 21

.
'
.
''Athens, . Meigs and VInton County farmers Interested In .

election to the Farm11rs H:ol!le . AdministratiOn county·
committee have until May 21to get their nominating petitions .
signed and turned In," FmHA supervisor David Urwill said
today.
·
One person will be elected for a three-year term to the
three-person committee at the July 2 election.
UrWin said that anyone who hap an Interest In a farm In
Athens, Meigs ·or VInton County as owner, tenant, or
Continued on pace 10

'

.

Saturday ·is · deadline .jor .absentee voting
The Meigs County Board ol
Ele&lt;;llons will be open on SatUr·
dav from 9 a.m . to noon for
abSentee voting, according to
·Jane Frymyer, director. She also
noted that noon on that day, May
5, ls the deadline for absentee
voting.
In a release from Secretary of
State Sherrod Brown, he re·
minded voters that If they plan to
be out of their home counties or
·are-unable to vote In personal the
polls on primary election day,
they must request af)sentee bal·

lots from the county board of
elections by Saturday .
"You may vote by absentee
ballot If you will be absent from
the county on Election Day, If you
are 62 years of age or older, If you
will be hospitalized on Election
Day, or If you have a personal
Illness O( physical dls'\blllty,",
Br9wn said.
Voters are also eligible for
absentee 'ballots If they cannot
vote on Elect ion Day because of
religious beliefs, i:lr If they are In
jail awaiting trail or serving a
misdemeanor sentence.

He reminded residents lhal
they can request absentee ballots
in person or by writing to their
county elections board .
All absentee ballot reques ts
must · Include the name and
voting resid ence, elecilon for
which the ballot Is' requested.
reason for ab,;cnce from polls on
election day, party choice, mall·
lng address to which the ballots
are to be sent, and the signature
of the voter.
Absentee ballots mu s t be received at the board office by 7:30

p.m. on Election Day In order to
be counted. ·
A public test o! the tabulating
equipment will be held on Friday
·at 1 p.J;rJ .. at the Meigs County
Board of Elections office, 108
Mechanic St ., Pomeroy. Ms.
Frymyer Invites any candidate
or concerned citizen to attend the
demonstration and testing
program.
· Regular business meeting of
the Meigs County Bpard of
Elections will be held on May 8 at
6 p.m.

-

.

Fonner Meigs miners. learning new skills
When Mines 1, 2 and :l consoli,
dated many residents or Meigs
and Athens Countll!s were with·
out Jobs.
1
Through the efforts of Trl·
· County Community Action
Agency and JTPA 27, former
miners are learning new skills
through a spwclal program of·
fered at Hocking Technical
'College.
Participants will have employ·
ment upon completion of the

program at salaries comparable
to thpse earned In the mines,
according to Mike Hill, coordinator of Hocking Technical Col·
lege's telecommunications
program.
He said that the students are
halfway through the 10 week
phone Installation program.
"They are learning the skills
necessary to Install phones from
the switch Into the home. to climb
poles, do cable splicing, tele-

phone electronics and general .
Installation practices," Hill said.
He explained tha,t the Installers
wlll be contracted out.
'Since the dlveslflcatlon of
telephone companies, the prac·
lice of contracting services Is
much more commo.n creating a
need for skilled Individuals. In
Florida about 70 percent of all .
Installations are done by In·
stallers who are not regular
phone c~mpany workers." Hill

said.
Providing instruction In the
program at Hocking Tech In
addition to Hill, are three emPloyees of General Telephone Co.
The coordinator said that addl·
tiona! sessions wl)l be offered, ·
the first of which will be held In
July.
Additional Information on the
training program may be obtained by contacting Hill at
Hocking Tech, 1·800·282·4163.

GoverllDr's primary has little suspense
By LEE LEONARD
15 years of public service and his
lion and health care for all
l:JPI Statehouse Reporter
... accomplishments In the areas of
Ohioans.
COLUMBUS- Two-term Ohio
fighting crime and d.rugs, C!)nSu·
Thus far, the only ·concrete
Attorney General Anthony Cele·
mer protection, envlnronmental
proposals he has made are In the
brezze and his running mate,
cleanup and senior citizen
area of environmental
state Sen. Eugene Branstool are
programs.
protection.
The·altorney general has lndl·
In a toxic control Initiative,
the topheavy favorites to win the
Democratic nomination for gov·
cated those Issues will also be his
Celebrezze said he will work with
ernor and lieutenant governor.
priorities as governor, along with
businesses, manufacturers, ciU·
the critical problems of educa·
zen groups and regulators to
They are opposed by the Rev.
MlchaelLord,pastoroftheLove
Cathedral United Christian .,
Church In Cleveland, and Judy
.
Wynn·Pafker, a black certified
The Washington Bureau chief House, Congress, the State De·
publlc ·accountant from
for
Prayda, the most widely read partment and accompanying go.
Ravenna.
Running as write-Ins are Da· .newspaper In the Soviet Union, vernment organlzatlol!@l ·
will speak at the University of
In addition to covering poll tics.
nlel Clofanl of Cleveland Heights
Rio Grande as a part of the he writes feature stories on
and his running mate, Robert
Community Forum Series on . "Lifestyle In America." He has
Galvin of Galloway, ·and Henry
Wednesday. May 2.
visited most of the 50 states
King and his wife, ~a. of
who
serves
as
the
covering
both news events that
Vltaly
Gan,
Lorain.
.
primary
conduit
,
o
f
Information
·
pertain
to
Sovlei·Amerlcan rela·
The winner will meet the
abOut
the
U.S.
for
Pravda's
11
·
!Ions
and
human
Interest stories
Republicans, former Cleveland
mUIIOn
dally
readers,
wlll
speak
that
have
universal
appeal.
Mayor GeOrge Volnovlch and
In
Lylle
Center
gymnasium
at
During
hl.s
presentation,
Gan
Rep. Michael OeWine of Cedar·
7:
30
p.m.
will
present
a
unique
and
first·
ville, who, have no opPQSIIIon In
Gan specializes ln. American • hand report on the political, ·
the GOP primary.
coverlnl the White
·
poUtlcs,
Celebreue, 48, has stressed his

reduce Ohio's production of'toxic
waste by 50 percent In the next
five years.
He' also said he will ·seek
authorltytolssuecleanupbonds,
financed by those responsible for
the pollution, to tackle hundreds
of hazardous waste sites In Ohio.
The.one Issue everyone In Ohio
Continued on page 10

Pravd. a Ch•Jef to speak .at URG

economic and social rainl11catlons of "glasnost" and
'peres troika.''
A Soviet citizen, G'an Is willing
and able to dlsc.uss the changes
that have occurred In the Soviet·
dominated countries of the East·
ern J:lloc.
Gao's assignments have ln·
eluded the Washington Summit
between President Reagan and
Pre101er Gorbachev, American
elections and Supreme Court
decisions.
I

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