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                  <text>Page D-8

Sunday .limes-Sentinel

•

Pomeroy-Middleport Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant. W.Va.

May 20, 1910

Cree~.

Former uses .of Raccoon

By Wendell Tope
bottom. Up stream from the crossing. These were the crou- .
Raccoon Creek Improvement
Northup Dam there was a gravel lng that people who were bonliR"·'
. Committee
bottom where light draft wagons the early t() middle el&amp;hteen ,.
GALLIPOLIS- In many ways
could cross. Often the owners hundreds had to use.
1;
Raccoon Creek has aided In the
would have to unload the cargo,
The first bridges were biiUdlly
settlement and supported Indus·
cross the entire wagon and carry cutting logs and laying them llde '
try In Southeastern Ohio. It had
the load across the stream and by side to make a road bed, the0.:
provided transportation for the re-load.
tying them together with cable. :
The next upstream crossing The cables were then URd to
movement of farm crops, provlded milllon,s of timber trees for
was at the Cora Dam which was a anchor each end and tied the,
the construction or homes lor the ~;ock bottom and would accom· other end to a ~turdy tree. Tbel4a
early settlers and farm buildings
modale heavy traffic. G.a rners ahd more ar:e the stories I , ~
for their farm products and Ford has an excellent bottom of older people tell about how ~f •
shelter for livestock.
hard flat stones all the way folds had to mana11e . o,yllen •
Many of the old farm homeS across. Adamsvllle hap a gravel settling our area and places 'on; .
and out buildings were built from bottom. Vinton was the next West;
\ ·
t
lurnl!er cu tfrom the old oak trees
.
•
,
andotherspeclesthatoncestood
along Its shores. Durlng.the Clvll
· 1.
War, before and alter as wei~ all
along Its enUre length logs were
a1 S
cut and made Into rafts. Then
·
·
,
they were floated down stream,
RIO GRANDE Austin completing this workshop.
'
during periods o! high water to
Powder Co. has made a contribu·
"We have a good number of '
the Ohio River where they, were
tlon to the American Free contributors wlfo sponsor several '
loaded on barges and shipped to Enterprise and Leadership Con- students, such as Austin Powder;.
lumber mtlls, both up and down terence at the University of Rio has done, " said Jerry Gust.~
river. ·
. Grande, allowing four local stu• director of the Loren M. Berry '·
It Is Interesting to know that
dents to attend the annual event. Center for Economic Education.,
often those lumber men wouid
' 'We know , that .high school . "Then there ar.e also 'same '
loose an occ~ional raft, for students from 'VInton, 'Jackson smaller businesses whiCh spoil- ~
Instance, during the war one and other ·nearby counties be- sor one student.
'.
lumber mtll near Cincinnati ne!lt from attending the Amerl"Because the ideals Of lndlvtcj: f
ordered a raft of walnut logs. The can Free Enterprise Workshop ualliberty, dignity and freedom
purpose was to make ·gun stalks and Leadership Conference," are Closely allied to a workln&amp; '
for the rifles to be used by the said Sam Hatle:v of Austin knowledge of the American fr~r
Union Army. One of the rafts Powder. ·'Therefore, we have enterprise system, we appce- .o
sank In a deep pool of water along agreed to sponsor four local · elate and effectively use all~
the shore or opposite shore from students this year."
contributions," Gust added.
the Raccoon Creek County Park.
Now in . its 16th year, the
Austin Powder, wltb headquar- ; .
My Grandfather told me about
American FEW and Leadership ters In Cleveland, operates pr.o- J
it years later when I was In my
Conference exposes high school ductlon and dlstrll;mtton plan til ~n ,
early teens. Once while fishing In
Mudents to concepts and practl· 12 states, including on~ in McAr- .
that area with· some Of my
ces 'of consumer and ' producer thur. Its blasting and e?'!Jlosive : ..
friends, I suggested that we try to
economics in a · free market products are ~~~d In mlnl,ng
!tnd lt. The water was low and
economy. Students obtain.lhree operations t)lroughqut tl\e .t).S. \
very clear. We found what we
overseas. , .
· ..
assumed were severall!)gs on the
.
bottom of the creek In about ten
feet of water. One end was
leaning on the bank, but the
water was too deep to see the
other end. We assumed that .
perhaps that was part of that raft
Confidential Services:
many of the old trees when they
tell Into the water would .go into
Birth Control
particle petrifaction and remain
•
V:
Screening
that way for years.
Cancer Screening
Another service the creek
Pregnancy Testing
rendered for early settlers was
natural crossings. Those old
. wagons In which they traveled
Slidi!lg fee scale. No - refllltd pvict's
of inaliil~ to ...,. '
were very heavy and could not
cross riffles that had a mud
bottom. There was only a very
few spots that provided a cross·
OF SOUTHEAST OHIO . ·
.
lng with a stone or gravel bed for
that purpose I will attempt to
POMEROY;
GAWPOUS:
name the ones that had a stone
236 E. Main St., 2nd ·flaor
414 S.Cond ··~· 2nd Fleer
992-5912
446-0166
1:30 to 5:00 Monday-friday
1:30 to 5:00 Menday-FriHy
Closed Thursday
8:30 to 12 Satw•r , ~
Closad Thun•y
'
_.....,._
Al~J,.!ackson, Chesapillke, AtheM, alllicetiie, ....-., I Mclrtllur

fin~tuning

Cut losses by
COLUMBUS. Ohio tUPil Well-calibrated sprayers and fertilizer spreaders can cut
farmers' :crop production costs
and protect the environment.
''Keeping your equipment finetuned Is critical to cu ttlng production costs and reducing the
r!lk of harming your crop or the
environment,'' says Erda! Ozkan, agricultural engineer at
Ohio State University. "This is
particularly true with the pesticides we may use on the farm."
Higher,pesticide costs and new
chemicals used in lower dose~
make accurate application more.
, Important than ever, Ozkan says.
' And recent studies indiCating the
: damage misapplied chemicals

a $5 cash prlae from the Ohio Valley Publlshlnlf
Co. Leave your name, adtlress and telephone
number with your card or letter. No telephone
· calls will be acceptetl. All contest entries s~ould
be turned In to the newspaper office by f p:m. each
Wednesday. Ia cue ol a . tie, the winner will be
chosen by lottery. Next week, a Meigs County
farm will he leatured by tbe Meigs SoU and w..-er
Conservation District.

sprayer

can do to the environment
-Double-check your sprayer
reemphasize the need for precise . for mechaniCal problems before
use.
you start using II. You won't have
Unfor,tunately, ·sprayer call·
time to do this when Planting Is in
bratlon clinics conducted .in Ohio · full swing.
and elsewhere show that' few
-Run water through the spray
farmers actuai~v calibrate their syste.m to make sure everything
sprayers regularly. Those that
is working properly and spray Is
don't are wasting money, Ozkan
being applied at the proper rate.
says.
-Check the agitator In the
A recent Universlt y of Netank to make sure It's. working
braska report Indicates that the properly.
cost of over-app~ylng (lesticides
-Pay particular attention to
can be $2 per acre to $12 per acre pressure gauges-cheap ones
for chemicals alone. Underapp·
may rust inside and give you
lying pesticides reduces the pest false pressure rea(llng!!.
control and cuts yields.
' County offices of the Ohio
Ozkan offers tips for reducing Cooperative Extension Service
the chance of wasting money on have more l·nformationon adjust·
pesticides: . ·
lng your sprayer properl:r.·

.

New farm legislation would cut prf!grams
''

By CHARLES J. ABBOTT
UPI Farm Editor
WASHINGTON - The House
Agriculture Committee tentatively agreed Th\jrsda~ to reduce
the cost of crop programs by
abollt S9 btlliori o.vet five years,
. partly through ·freezing subsidy ·
rates In new farm legislation.
The ·agreement, reached dur-

lng a closed meeting, also would
lower the cost of a · proposed
soybean marketing J'loan and
allow farmers to plant the cro(ls
of their choice on 20 percent of the
land they normally devote to
wheat, feed grains, cotton, rice
and oUseeds. ·
The $9 biUton reductiOn wo1llll
put tbe cost of the farm program

Reproduction methods ·
By Gall DeGarmo,
Earth Team Volunteer
GALLIPOLIS- The reproduction method chosen for a particular stand of trees is just one part
of a multiple-use management
plan for any given forest. Since
the management plan should be
sl!ectflcally designed for the
' Individual forestlal)d It repres·
• ents so also should the reproduc. lion method.
The first reproduction method
to be defined and discussed ts the
seed-tree method. The seed-tree
method Is the removal of the
, mature timber In one cutting
, except for a small number of
' seed trees left singly or in small
lf'Oilps for the purpose of provld·
lng seed to restock the cleared
area naturally. The trees left
represent only a small portion of
the original sland. Once the new
crop ts established, the trees are
generally removed but may be
left If that serves the best
purpose for the management of
the Individual stand.
By using the seed-tree method,
the resulting stand is even-aged
except for the seed trees which
form an upper story above the
new crop. There are no restrictions on the size of a seed-tree cut
since the area Is not dependent
11pon agjacent trees as a seed
source.
There are certain specific
characteristics of the desirable
seed trees. The trees should be
wlndflrm, most generally those
grown with 'little competition on
deep sotls. The trees have stocky,
t·a perlng boles with Well- '
developed roots systems . The
crowns should be wide and.deep.
The tree' s height Is Important In
that a short tree is Jess susceptable to wind· damage than a tall
tree with equal proportional
crown development. Shallow·
rooted species, such as the
spi')ICes and eastern. white pine
and ,species round on moist or
tbln soUs, are not good candl·
dates for tbe seed· tree method.
: The seed trees should be old
enough . to produce plently or
fertile seed. Seed-trees should
· generally be selected !rpm the
dominant and codoml~ant crown
classes.
The usual nurn ber of seed trees
left per acre varies from two to
ten. The main Idea ts to leave as
many trees tbat ar,e needed to
obtain a uniform distributiOn of
seed. Common sense dictates
that this niethod Is best·used with

wind dlssemblated species.
The advantages of this method
are (l) there Is a seed source on
every a~re, (2) having direct
control over the characteristics
of the seed source, and (3) most
operations can be performed
wlthou t hi nderence from the seed
trees,
The primary disadvantage of
the seed·tree method is the
exposure of the seed source to
greater .risk of premature destruction thus leaving the area
without the Intended seed source,
This method also can result In
erosion and landslides If pro~r
techniques are not used to apply
this method. ·
The seed-tree method has seen
a decline in application In recent
years. There will, however, continue to be
need, in certain
circumstances, for this partlcu·
Jar method whose results wlll be
superior than all the ot·hers.

a

family Plannhtg

•

0

It Makes Sense.•.
q.

..a...

PLANNED PARENTHOOD

close to the budget ''baseltne'' of
how much money is expected to
be available for farm spending.
Rep. Jerry Huckaby, D-La.,
said there was virtually unanimous agreement during the caucus
to adopt the package. Committee
le•a•derila R{lneered the.package
• 1 C two weeki of WOI'It: de"WIIIf to bringing tile cost oUIIe
· tiiD ua~ control.
'fhe package called for fn~ez­
ing crop target prices at their
curtent levels for the next five
years. Subcommittees wanted to
link wheat and feed grain target
prices to Increases in the cost of
production. Other provisions tied
cotton, rice and sugar supports to
the overall inflation rate.

Patterson honored
CHESHIRE - PaulL. Patter·
son, maintenance supervisor a~
the OhloValley Electric Corpora·
lion's Kyger Creek Plant, received his anniversary award for
35 years' service to the cbmpany.
Patterson joined OVEC on May
7, 1955, as a guard In the
personnel department. The foJ.
lowing month he transferred to
the maintenance department,
where he advanced to the posl·tton of· mahitenance mechanic-A
In 1967:
Patterson and his wife, Rose,
reside at Box 63, Rutland.

1

..
-

OVER 75 -NEW BUICKS &amp;
PONTIACS IN STOCK!

SEE US FOR DETAILS!
..

1988 BUICK PARK
4 DR.

AV~.

Local executive's car .._, we sold
'
new. Immaculate inside.and out.

.
Save S4,000 ·from Book Value
'

1987 DODGE
LANCER ·ES
Expect an exceptionally clean local physicians trade loaded with
power equipment, new.tires and
only 29,000 low miles.
'

'

YOUR MORTGAGE
YEARS EARLY

1986 CHEV. CAPRICE
BROUGHAM 4 DR.

AND POSSIBLY SAVE THOUSANDS•
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locks. Senior Citizens trade.

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YOU

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..

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FOR MORE INFORMATION ON THIS UNIQUE SERVICE
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614-992~7066

657 HIGH ST.
.._.. on number of

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MIDDLIPOU, .,_.10

ve•• tne1 bll..celtft
. . on 'IOUI' mor~~ ..•

.

'

CHOOSE FROM "3•• 1990
BUICK SIYLARIS WIIH
ONLY 4 TO 7,000 MUS.
.•

$.9990

2-12-20..~35-4.3

.

clo1udy tonight. lAJw
cloudy

•

•

a1

Pomeroy-Middleport,' Ohio, Monday, May 21, 1990

1 Section. t 0 .

26 Cents

A Multimedi1

Southern seniors told,
'this ·is a .beginning'
By JULIE E. DILLON
lng' lh&lt;it the number one priority also a. sad time because he had to
with the graduating seniors say goodbye to friends and
Sentinel News Staff
~lxty-nlne Southern · High
should be their relationship with teachers.
School seniors received their
God , and that with that priority
To the underclassmen he
diplomas Sunday evening In
set they could become mos t stated that " the las I four years
anything they desired.
combined baccalaureate and
have been a wonderful time for
commencement exercises held
Following the baccalauta at e me. It hasn't always. been easy,
In the Charles W. Hayman , .address, the band performed
but it has taught me tbat It 's
"The Wind Beneath Mv Wings."· really true, that if you work hard,
gymnasium.
It was standing room only for
In his salutatory ;address, you can achieve success." He
the audience of parents, relaChris Murphy ~ tated grafiluatlon went on to say that hai'd jlfl)rk
ttves, friends and faculty when
was a wonderful time but It was
.Continued on page 10, ·
the graduating seniors entered
the gymnasium as the Southern
band, under the dlrectlori of John
Van Reeih. performed the
proCessional. .
·
Rev. Roger Grace, pas tor of
the Racine Untied Methodist
gradu"*es Into the Charles W. Hayman Gymna·
SOUTHERJII PROCESSIONAL - Brad MayChurch, gave the Invocation
nard and Brent Shuler led the processional of 69
slum "' Sunday night's baecalaureate aad
which was followed by the
commencement exercises.
Southern Choir singing "Remember When," under the direction of Roberta Maidens.
During his baccalauraate address, Rev. Grace congratulated
the seniors on completing a step
of
their education and stated that
.
graduation· was not only .an
ending but also a beginning. He
went o.n to say that graduation
was the ending of a specific phase
By CHAJJLENE HOEFLICH . · and confront the challenges of afternoon.
of life and that life ' for the
the future," advised Sen. Jan
After 'c ongratulatl"g the class graduating seniors would never
· Sentinel News Staff
"Always remember yqur Michael Long, speaker at the of 1990 on · their accomplish- be quite the same.
roots, from whence you came. Meigs Hl~h School's 22nd Annual ments, Sen. Long asked them to
Rev. Grace. using the example
and you will be able to under- Baccalaureate and Commence- pause and reflect about the past, of the movie, ' 'Indiana Jones and
stand the present and anticipate , ment Exercises Sunday to contemplate the present •. !lnd the Last Crusade," stated that
to plan for the future.
life Is full ·or choices. He encour"It ts Important for the survi- aged the seniors to make thOse
val of our democracy that we be choices but to "choose wisely."
cognlza!lt of qur.• historical ~e. stressed 1he Jmpilrtl\nce of
'
roo!s"~ coinm'elited the speaker,
'setting priorities and urged the
VALEDICTORY ADDRESS
Kathy lllle polnled out · the
as he called for the graduates to . .students to choose what was most
of
recognizing
success,
no rn..-ter how mlllor, as well
Importance
be mindful of mistakes of pre- Important to them .
as
apprecl..-lng
those
who
give
of
themselves freely In helping
vious generatlops and not repeat
Rev. Grace concluded his
at
Sunday
evening's
baccalaure..-e
and commencement .
others,
their errors.
baccalaureate address by. statSchlidl.
exercises
for
Southern
High
And whtle remembering the
history of democracy, Sen. Long
•
suggested that the graduates
consider their . own personal ·
history, mistakes of a year ago or
five years ago, to acknowledge.
those mistakes and then move on
to becoming a stronger and
better person.
He enco~raged the class to look
beyond today and to know that a •.
better educated population
.
'
means greater employment op' go out anil say, 'I
In
a
rapidly
changing
world,
the wrong turn at the entrance being, you can't
portunities, !!ll translating Into a
"there can be no better place to
when I came . In , ·so we're in have a diploma and the world Is
better standard of living.
take advantage of that change
transitlon." ·
Opportunity · is here, commy oyster.' This Is a commencethan in our own country," U.S.
The senator felt America could ment, the commencement o a
mented Sen. Long, as he urged
benefit from these dramatic lifetime education.''
the graduates to take advantage Sen. John Glenn told 270 graduates of the University of Rio
shifts by becoming more knowlof opportunities offered and to
Following his address, Glenn
Grande during commencement edgeable, particularly In Its received an honqraty degree
reach for their goals. He encour·
educational system and by keep- from· the university and was
aged the class members to Sunday for the class of 1990.
"You can start right here, use
Ing up with the pace of change.
continue t&gt;ri with their education,'
presented for the degree by
11 as the start of the universe, and
"It's a very · competitive Daniel H. Whiteley, M.D., presi"to chart a course for the future
do anything you set your mind to world," Glenn said. "We've lost dent of the university Board of
whtle remembering the past and
doing," Glenn advised the gradu- some of the sense of community Trustees.
llvlng In fhe present."
ates. "Are you scared? And how
and you find you 've moved into
The welcome was extended by
While rain threatened comdo
you
overcome
that
fear?
the world on your own. The point
Norman Randolph Humphreys,
Continued on page 10
Learn everything you can about ·
III president of the senior claus
· AN HONORARY MEMBER - Sen. Jan Michael Loag, a 1970
a subject or situation, study It,
following the processional and
graduate of M,elg!! High School and speaker "' Sunday's Meigs
probe
tt.
invocation by Chrtstoplier MI111gb Sehool baccalaureale, was made an honorary member of the
''Change
is not bad,'' he added.
chael Stewart. Introductions
Meigs High School Chapter of the N..-lonal HoliOJ' Society just
"Change
is
opportunity if you
were by Derek Alan Cremeans,
before comme~einenl ceremonies. Nancy Baker, presldeat ofthe
grab
II
and
run
with II."
senior class treasurer.
N..-lonal
bbn with a gradu..-lon robe and ·
Glenn, now serving his third
stOle
Special music Included
term In the Senate and the first
"Brighton ,Beach" by Wltllam American to orbit the Earth in '
Latham by the Meigs High the ear~v days of the national
School Band, and "Tear Them space program, compared the
Down" by Shaw and Klouse's world condition of the day when
"Song for a Rosston Child" by ' he graduated from college to
the Meigs High.School Chorus.
today's, touching upon the swift
Melanie ,Jane Beegle In her transitions and move toward
valedictory address talked about
democratization within the Sosuccess and failure. She sal!l that
viet Union and the Eastern Bloc
many limes when we are faced
nations.
·
'·'You are graduating Into a
with· a stumbling block, we let
ourselves be defeated - not
vastly different world fr.om the
because we are not strong one i gra(juated Into at New
enough or wise enough to sue- · Concord several decades ago,"
ceed, but because we are not
Glenn said . . The economy has
.
moved toll.oard global intetdeconfident enough to try.
"The fear offatlure often balds
pendence on each country, he
us back when we are capable of .added.
accompltshlng great goals. Sue"Our foreign policy was based
on the threat of 'the Russians are
ceedlng Is having the courage to
challenge ourselves, to stand up . coming, • and it was not without
and try, In .spite ·of others· · reason we spent bllllons and
negative attitudes,'' she' said.
btlllons of dollars to meet that
The need for havlnr faith In
thn!at , It was not an Idle threat,''
oneself was stressed 1bY. tbe
he remarked. "Is It changing?
Yes It is. A few weeks ago I and
valedictorian ~ho talked, abo11t
five other senators sat In the
the difficulty sometimes exll'rlenced In accepting oneself. Sbe
Kremlin, across a table from
President Gorbachev ... 11 was
said that even wben we are
afraid, when we are lonely and
one of the most fascinating
THE FINAL TOUCH - AMIIItlal Trael Bartele wllb pllln1 ber
encounters of my Jtfe.."
discouraged, we must learn to
•
mortarboard jull rllfbl befOre Sunday'• 11rwl *a wu 8bannoa
have faith In our own abilities,' to
Glenn related that as he
OPPOR'nlNrrY AWAITS - Tbel'e II 110 better lime dlaa at
New-. Tbe scene of one paduale belplq an~er with aome
accept our own flaws, and to love
listened to the reforms and araduatlon to seize opportunity, V.S. Sea. lolm Gleaa of Ollla, at
11811 lotleh before the receulonal waa repeated time and alfaln
ourselves · In s!SIIe of our
changes Gorbacbev Is making In podlum,.teld the 2'10 ifradua&amp;llll of lbe Unlvenlty of Blo Graade'a
~ llnlday afteraooa just before lbe ceremllalea started.
Continued on·page 10
Soviet soolety, "I thought I made 114111 Commeneemenl Sunday.

Long tells Meigs graduates

.

.' 'always remember your roots

'

.

27 Meigs Countians receive degree.s

Sen. Glenn urges 'R io Grande
graduates to seize opportunity
.

_

_._..,.. __

-···----

Lo~tery

Daily Number
806
Pick-4
9223
Super Lotto

·Page 4

Aust·n Powder contribution :.
•d Free Enterpr1se.
• event i•

MYSTERY FARM - This week's mystery
farm, re..-ured by the GaiUa Soli and w..-er
Conaervatlon District, Is Joc..-ed somewhere In
· GaiDa County. Individuals wlshbl.lf to partlclp"*e
In the weekly eontest may do 110 by guessing the
farm's owner. Just mall, or drop off your guess to
the GaiUpolla Dally Tribune, 82~ Third Ave.,
(laiUpoUs, Ohio, 45631, or the Dally Sentinel, Ill
Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, U'l88,and you may.win

Ohio

Cardinals
top Reds by
6-2 ·score

··-

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__::_:,•..::.
.....

~-

t,

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

�Monday, May 21, 1990

The -Daily Sentinel

''

•

Page-2-The Deily Selltinel
Ponwoy-MWiaport, Ohio
Monday. May 21, 1990

I

•

Little done ·to help business
Jack Anderson and Dale Van Atta

WASHINGTON - George
panles and universities doing
.-. Bush must decide whether he research on new technology that
.,
,
wants to be remembered as the the Defense Department can use.
DEVOTED TO THE INTE!tESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON ARE.t
president who restored America
· I,.ast year, DARPA had a PA's point of view, the loss of
technological genius to other
economic
·
budgeto!S1.3bllllonandastaffol
to
the
top
of
the
world
~~
~s:m~ ..,.,__;.._...,-,r"T"e!!d•""'
heap, or the president who 160 people. Fields put the money countries represents a serious ·
preserved the sacred ·gap be- · and energy- Into companies that threat to national security.
~v
tween government and business. we~e working on promising mil·
..But the net effect of Congress's
ROBERT ... WINGETT
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
He cannot be both.
ltary applications. Among the action was to make DARPA loolt
Publlaller
· ·
Ge11eral Mua,er
America's most successful l!!ltlatlves that DARPA has too much like a private business
competitors are those who are funded were microchip techno!· enterprise and not enough like a
PAT WHITEHEAD
not afraid to let their govern- ogy; high-definition TV and an hands-off government agency.
Assistant Publlsber/Conlroller
ments subsidize advanced tech·
Industry-government consor·
The lalssez·falre advocates In
nology. Japan didn' t get where It tium called SEMA:rECH that the Bush administration A MEMBER ol The United Press International, Inland Daily Press
.Is today by telling Its private makes semiconductors.
· Budget Director Richard Dar·
Association and the American Newspapa- Publlsbers Association.
businesses they were on their . ~t doesn't take a high· tech whiz man, White }{ouse Chief of Staff
own. It has encouraged and even . to figure out that any research John Sununu and economic ad·
• LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than300
wonls long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed wlih
. funded ground-breaking re· the PentaMQn funds will have viser Michael Boskln - have
name, address and telephone number ..No unsigned letters wUl be pubsearch and development In the · non-military applicationS too, privately and publicly griped
Ushed. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues, notpersonall·
private sector.
and that's where DARPA started a bout DARPA's dabbling In
lies.
·
When Artferlcan· businesses, to stepon toes.
Industry.
.
I,.astNovem~r. Congress may
struggling to compete with Ja·
The Defense Department used
pan,look ·to the U.S. government have unwittingly signed Fields' to be controlled by DARPA
for
help, they get rhetoric and V&lt;&amp;lklng papers. Congress passed. supporters and FieldS fans, but
.
.
margl~tal Incentives. ·
·controversial legislation setting not any mote. With Deputy
And last month, they got a kick - up · a two-year experimental · Secretary Atwood and Underse·
~voter
In the pants. Dr. Craig Fields, the period In ·which DARPA- will cretary of Acquisitions John
Innovative head of the Defense actually be allowed a return on Betti at the helm. the tide has
By LEE LEONARD
UPI StateboUBe Reporter
Advanced Research Projects Its multlmllllon·dollar Invest· . turned against all initiatives that
COLUMBUS- "Mr. Republican," the late Sen. Robert Taft, and
Agency was removed from his ments In research. DARPA gets mltht Involve a crossover with
his father, President Y.:llllam Howard Taft, must be twirling In their
job by Deputy Secretary of appreciation rights and veto commercial ventures.
,graves.
Defense Donald Atwood.
power over decisions concerning
One Intelligence source told
. Their political legacy, Hamilton County Commissioner RoberiTaft
Fields' mistake was that he did the marketing of Innovations that our reporter Paul Zimmerman
·II, actually wants more people to register and vote In Ohio.
his job !IX) well and t~k his It has funded. The point was to that "the Bush people want to go
· • Young Taft Is the Republican -nominee for secretary of state and
mission too seriously. DARPA's · •keep . P.efitagon-f]lnded· gadgets back 20, years" with regards to
I!ISI week, he violated a longstanding GOP tenet by proposing an
mission Is to dole out federal from sllppfng Into the hands of the advances made by DARPA.
accelerated vo(er registration program.
research money to private com· foreign c!'mpetltors. From DAR·
Commerce Secretary Robert
' obvlo!isly Taft chose to Ignore the outlook of former state ·Sen.
:'Fbo!DaS Van .Meter, R·Ashland, who once explained a Republican
l~s at the polls thusly: '.'Too many people voted." ,..
.. ·.
_: 111 1976, Republicans put up such a furious fuss against the
·Democrat-Inspired .elecllon day. voter registration that It was
. repealed by a vote of the people the. following year.
· · .
Now Taft wants to permit registration up to 1~ days before an
election; registration now closes 30 days before the election.
Tall's proposals were especially noteWorthy In view of the fact that
:his opponent, 'Del'locratlc Incumbent Sherrod B~own, has prided
·himself on his ow.n voter registration efforts, boasting that he has
:added'! million Ohioans to the rolls since he took office In 1983.
·
' But Taft pointed out that almost that many have left the rolls at the
county boards of election because they failed to vote and dldn' t bother
to reregiSter.
,
; ''A lot of things ~ave been domrto register voters, but I think more
·
.has to be done," Tall Iolli reporters.
; What gotlntoTaft, anyway, that hewould~ctuallyencouragemass
:quantities of unwashed Ohioans to register and go vote, probably lor
.Democrats? ·
,
·
; Well, times have chanied'. Maybe the pendulum has swung to the
:other side, and the great unregistered population would be more
,receptive to Republican candidates now.

Taft-calls for increased
'

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reg.stratton

Pistons top 8~118, . 86-77, in East opener:

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Mosbacher ought to be In there
slugging for DARPA because of
the potential shot In the arm It
brings to Amerlc'a 's competitiveness. But Mosbacher can't be
counted pn In this battle. For
example, last year he was fully
supportive of an aggressive
government role In the development of hlgh·de!lnltion TV. He
has since been convinced of the
error of his ways anti thinks that
government Intervention, Js not
the cure for competitive malaise.
The executioners In the admln. lstratlon would like the president
to believe that their views follow
the party line, but they are
wrong. Fields was lll/le to attract
strong . bipartisan backing and
Innumerable friends In lnduucy.
The Bush free,market IdealiSts
have Ignored the , re1111ty of
America's fall !rom technologl·
cal leadership. As long as other
governments continue to lund
companies to keep their techno- •
logical edge, the United States ·
cannot sit back and watch.
If for no other reason tban to
maintain a strong national d!'fense, the Bush administration
needs people like Fields to assure
Innovative .tecjmology.
'·

·LOosE BALL- Detroit P18i0111• VInnie Job-• (C) dives tor a
l001e ball In the second quarter after knocklnr the ball lrom
Chicago Balls' Scottie Pippen (L). 'At right Is B.J. Armstrong.
(UPI)
.

B~ins · ~dge
EDMONTON, Alberta (UP!)
-A college kid taught the Boston
Brulnl something about grabbing a lead.
John Byce, a hero In the NCAA
just two months ago, scored a
record-tying goallO seconds Into
the game Sunday night., !Iring the
Bruins back Into the Stanley Cup
llnals with a 2·1 victory over the
· · Edmonton Oilers.
"-I have to go bac:k to school for
at )east two weeks," Byce said.
"Take mY llnals and hopefully
pass them . .r want to gr11duate.
"I didn't expect the NCAA
finals and the Stanley Cup finals
In the same season. Wow!-"
Byce put a rebound past Bill
Ranlord, giving Boston Its first
lead In three games. Greg
Johnston added a first-period
goal, pulling the Bruins within 2-1
In the best-of-seven series and
assuring a · return to Bostort
.
Garden.
''The s.tory of our first two
games was our Inability to score
goals," Boston Coach Mike Mil·
bury said, .., John Byce has been a
noted goal-scorer In college. That
doesn't make him a goal-scorer
In the National Hockey Lj!ague
but It was worth the risk."
''That wa~ special," added
Andy Moog, who shrugged off his
Game 2 collapse with 13 third·
period saves. "It was nice to have
someone In there with a knack for

•·

~. ~~ Wb'll

AA'lfUN!

fUN! FUN!...

Berry's World
•

scoring." ~·

WAR~lNG:

TttE FOLLOWING
PROGQAM IS. GEARED
TO THE LOWESt .

COMMONDEI'lOMI NATOR ...

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THAi'S

M.&amp;.t•
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Leuers to ·editor
··

,Pon't disgrace Old Glory ·

:Dear Editor:
: : As you know, the ti ;s. Supreme
.gourt Is hearing a case whether It
·1s constitutional for people to
iJestroy our !lag. I belleve that ·
:~he High Court ought to support a
'aw stating It Is a crime to
:&lt;Jestroy . or disgrace our great
:tlag. What I am alarmea aoout
~it our community Is the number ,
qf people bringing dishonor to our
'flag. I see fiags .llylng that aie
pided and torn. Also !her~ are
oeople flying flags 24 hours day
)_h at ari&gt; not all purpose flags, and

·there are no lights to light It up at
night. These people are no doubt
gOOd citizens and are flying their
!lag J;~ecause of their love lor this
Nation; but do they know that
what they are doing Is disgracelui to "Old Glory"? I am not
writing this ietter to question
their ~~~triolism, but tQ remind
tltem of their duties and res pons!·
bllltles In flying "Old Glory".
·
Raymo!ld G. Cox
P.O. Box 202
Rutland, OH 4577~

New .Canadian ·report
Connoisseurs of· the ·activities
of secret communists In the Free
World have long been fascinated
by the case of Hebert Norman,
the Canadian ambassador to
Egypt wqo committed suicide In
Cairo In 1957 when his name
surfaced In an Investigation then
being &lt;;gnducted by the U.S.
Senate's Internal Security Sub·
committee. (1 was · associate
counsel to the subcommittee at
the time.)
The subcommittee's Interest In
Norman grew out of his long
association with an American
foreign service . officer named
John K. Emmerson, whose own
record and actlv~l~ , .ad excited
Its attention. The subcommittee
reasoned that Emmerson's close
ties with an Individual as long
and deeply Involved In communism as Herbert Norman were,
In themselves, suggestive.

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Taxes shoul,d be spent at home

:send

It

a'cover-up'_·

--:-_R_us_he;__
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I

At the time, the subcommltte's
American professor at the Unl· ·
Information concerning Norman
verslty of Toronto. Two Conser·
did not Include evidence of
vatlve MPs thereupon launched
espionage, though of course, lrl
a camp;~lgn to Ioree the Canada
view of his long communist
government to disclose what Lt
record, that possibility had to be , .knew about the matter.
kept In mind. But Canadian and
For over a year the (nominally
American liberals, led by Exler·
Conservative) Mulroney governnal Affairs Secretary Lester
ment stonewalled. Then sud·
Pearson, had the gall to try to
denly It reversed course and
des troy the subcommittee by
hired a retired political science
concealing Norman's commuprofessor, Peyton Lyon (who·
nist affiliations and accusing It of
himself had been a member of
''hounding an Innocent man to
the .Canadian foreign service
death." That piece of.effrontery when Norman committed suiqulci\IY collapsed.
·
cide) 1 to review all documents on
During the 1960s and '70s, new
the subject In the government's
Information from Investigators possession. His mandate, which
and defectors convinced 'some made up In clarity whatever It
observers • 'that Norman had lacked In balance, was "fo be
Indeed performed valuable servl· highly unequivocal In putting to
ces for · the Soviet Union. This rest once and lor all allegations
material was eventually .ga- about Norman'."
thered Into a book, "No Sense of
Now Lyon has eagerly obliged.
Evil" by James Barros, an His 31-page report Is a contused

farrago of misstatements of
misrepresentations, culminating ~
In the requested whitewash.
There Is, he declared, ,;not one '
Iota of evidence" suggestingtliat
Norman was · a spy, or "the
slightest evidence" that he was a
Soviet agent of lnfiunce. (This,
despite, to select just Dne of us"
and was "despltely, in the
game.")
There Is much more to be said
about Norman -and also about
the sinister role of his powerful
protector, Lester Pearson. Per·
haps the world wOI learn stlll
more about both. of them when '
the files of the KGB In Moscow
and the recollections of Its
agents, succomb to glasnost.
Meanwlille. the Lyon Report
takes Its place as stUI one more
failed cover· up of one of the
biggest security scandals In
Canadian history.

Battle.of sexes ·enters new round ·.

Twenty years ago a maj orlty of
the Amerclan women polled by
the Rol(lllr Organization said they
'
'
believed most men werethou~ht·
lui and kind.
'
In a recent Roper poll, a
majority of American women
elected Congressmen and Senators
·near Editor:
reported that they think most
will pass a,bill that will require ail
• I would like to say what kllld of taxes paid here stay at home and
men are mean, self-centered and
:people are we voting for here In maybe they will tax foreign goods
lazy.
:America as we have ~n all our and use that tax for Foreign Aid
So what gives? Why In these
-local
unemployment offices and not our tax dollars.
past 20 years, when men and
:alosed and our government say
women were ·suPP\)Sed to be''
So, for all you · taxpayers out
;iinemployment·ls holding stel\dY. there, let's write .our Congressmov!Qg toward equality. both at
: BUt who's to know. People who men and Senators and let them
home and at work, has our
run out of unemployrnebt aren't know we. want our , tax ·dollars . opinion of men plummented?
l'ounled. Qur I!IM!I'nmeilt Cries we · back here at home for jobs and
Sociologists and newspaper co,need new taxes to pay off our na· projects that are needed. So for
lumnists have been opining up li
'{lonal debt bit In the same Week we today America "No NeW Taxes" · storm.
•
mliUons of tax dollars OV· ·until we see just where they are
According to some, the new
poll Indicates that women's ex·
erseas.
going or we wlll all have to vote
pectations have risen, while at
· As ·a taxpayer I, and l am sure . for someone who ,can read the
the same time the media has
rnlli!Dns of others across this great peoples' lips and vote for "no
nation, !eel that taxes we pay new taxes."
portrayed us as being able to
should be spent hl!l'e at lmne on
pursue fast-track careers and
Yours truly,
AmeriCans and on Jobs at home, not
keep
home, husband and child·
Floyd H. Cleland
overseas. I wonder when our Box 144-F, Mlddleport, OH. 4~760
ren orderly and happy. No one

a

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 3

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Moog made 28 stoP-s; raising
Boston's hope of becoming just
the third club ' to win after
opening the finals with two home
losses.
.' ,
1
In snapping their six-game
playoff losing streak to Edmon·
ton, the Bruins proved their
stature as the NHL's best road
team and top defensive . unit.
They con,trol)ed the play until the
third period, when Edmonton
fired 14 shots, one of them Esa
Tlkkanen's goal. ·
Boston can tie the series In
Game 4, 'which Is scheduled for
Tuesday night.
"We were hurt alter Game 2,
emotionally . and physically,"
Moog said. "We said, 'It's
hockey, not llfe •nd death."'
With ·center Dave Poulin sidelined with a knee Injury, Boston
needed the touch Byce showed In ·
the NCAA title game, when his
hat trick led Wisconsin over
Colgate.
His chance came when defenseman Kevin Lowe lost the puck
to Cam Neely, w11o fired a
back·hander off Ranford. Byce
conver.ted the rebound for his
second playoff goal. 1! tied the
recqrd for fastest goal at the start

·- - ·

•

Overstreet ;

----..:..=-- '

''-

can handle that entire load alone,
Kansas· City Times ed'ltorlal
while ho)dlng down Jobli, bring. :
but women still think we should writer Laura Scott put It this
lng up chll~~en and .t ending to the 1
be able to. We're tired, frustrated way: "Women are just a bundle
house. Heck, most of us don't !
and able to run ' a calculator. of. contradictions even to them·
even have time to read the ~),&amp;per
When we add up the time we selves. . .. Brought up to believe . at night. How are we supposed to
spend on home and family and that the one area where we are
find time· to examine our value
compare It to the time our mates more than equal to men Is raising
systems, transcend our back·
spend, we're not only tired and children, we don't share that
grounds and reeonclle our refrustrated; we're good and mad . easily. Raised to think ·that a
sponsibilities and our needs? ·
too.
dirty house rellects on the
I'd love to ·know whilt men.
woman In the home and not the
think of their relationships with
Another Idea about the attitude man, we have a lower tolerance
women, but I haven't seen any l
transformation Is that we were level for the family mess so we
poll results on that. My guess Is' :
all reared In
society· where - pick It up faster. Portrayed by
that If men were honest, th41)' ;
Mom was expected to take care advertising and the mass media
would say they are . jilit as •
of.. everyo~e, ,Including Dad. Old as able to do It all well, we think
confused, and · ma.ybe just as :
habits are hard 'o break, regard· we should be able to do It all
angry. Maybe they even think 1
well."
·If$&amp; o(tbe amount of egalitarian
women are mean and self·
lip ser,vlce. For the most part,
It sounds like a scenario In
centered.
.
I
.Mpm stlll tak~ care of Dad, and which you'd rather not be the
But one thing I'm convinced of 1
many Dads stW · expect to be man or the woman, doesn't It?
Is that we're not doing enough :
taken care of. With all the role But here we lind ourselves,
talking to each other, especially '
changing, women are confused. opposite sexes who have been
In non-threatening waY.s. I c~tn't
And ao are men. We women are reared to fill social ·roles, ex!
·speak for men, but I kilow wbat
&amp;iendlng mixed si[IJI8ls to men peeled to execute perfect fllphappens witb women: We're tqm
about what we think our roles are fiops In both attitude and behavbetween our his tory and . our
and wbat we think their roles are. Ior. And we're supposed to do It
experience.

!

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.T~~ Daily Sentinel
(V8PIIt. . . )
A Dlvloloe ol ll. .lmedlo. lac.
Publilhed. every attemoan, Monday
thrwgh Friday, ll1 Court St., Po·
meroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Publishing Company/Multimedia, Inc.,
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.Ohio.
,
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Oilers

of a Stanley Cup final, set In 1988
by Edmonton's Glenn Anderson.
"It doesn't matter how fast It
comes," Byce said. 'We needed
to get ahead ear Jy."
"We had just a fundamental
breakdown," Edmonton Coach
John Muckier said. "We left
Byce alone.lknowwe'rea better
hockey club than that."
Don Kozak of Los Angeles sei ,
the NHL playoff record In 1977,
scoring six seconds !nto a game
against Boston.
Byce played his first NHL
game In 'Game 6 of Boston's
first-round series against Hartlord. He scored his first goal In
Game 7. Boston's 11th pick In the
1985 entJ'y draft, he scored a
power-play goal, a short-handed
goal, and an empty-net goal In
the NCAA finale.
·
"Hopefully I can win the
Stiinley Cup also," said Byce. ·
Boston -took a 2·0 lead at 15: 04
on Johnston's first' playoff goaL
Randy Burridge won a battle
with Anderson at th.e left boards
and shoveled Into the circle 'for
Johnston's 1!5-footer: '
.
Having taken the lead, Boston
reverted to the style It used In the
first two games. Edmonton did
not even attempt a second-period
shot until the 7: 3D mark and ·
finished with just lour In the
period.
Byce made a mistake at 10: 15
of the second period. Alone In,
front · and wfth 'R anlord at his
mercy, he passed to Neely, who
had no t.lme for a play. But It
didn't matter, because Edmon·
ton mllnaged lew chances at
Moog.
Edmonton llnal.ly got a break
and converted at 5: 54 of the third
period. Wlih the Bruins killing a
penalty, Bobby Carpenter failed
to cut off a centering pass. It
came to Tlkkanen, who onetimed It through Moog's legs.
Ranford kept the Oilers In the
game by denying Garry Galley at
8: 30. He also stopped a breaka·
way with 90 sec;onds left.· But
Moog .gave up nothing alter the
Tl kkanen g9aL ..
"The first goal was Important
to us," Mllbury said. "It was a
great boost psychologically."· ·
It was -also a great boost on the
scoreboard.

Crenshaw
captures
15th win
FORT WORTII, Texas iUPl)
- Ben Crenshaw worries so
much about something bappel)·
.lng tQ his putter .these !Jays t!ult
he carries It with him on
airplanes.
H'e also carries It with him on
the golf course; which was very
bad news for those trying to
chase hln\ at the Colonial' Na·
· tlonal Invitation Sunday.
Upholding his reputation as
one of the world's great putters,
Crenshaw burled his rivals with a
:\0 on the front nine and s urvlved
a scare at the 17th hole to postthe ,
· 15th victory of his career. It was
his fifth will In his native state,
but his first arfywhere In two
years. • .
Crenshaw did not miss a putt of
less than 1~ 'feet In the final
round.
"I don't think anyone could'
have caught Ben the way he
played today," said Nick PriCe,
one of three players tied for
second place three shots back.
"He was swinging slowly and
deliberately, as gOOd as I've ever
seen him.
"And coupled with his putting,
well, he was deadly."
' Crenshaw uses a 2J.year-old
putter he refers to as, •'Uttle
Ben." EarUer this year It was
stolen In the Atlanta airport and
he got It back after It bad
ch&amp;niecl hands a few times only
because It was offered for sale to
an ardent golfer who realized It
was the one Crenshaw had lost.

By IAN LOVE
67-60 lead entering the !Ina!
UPI Sports Wrller
quarter .
All the while, the man Dumars
AUBURN HILLS, Mich. &lt;UP))
- Basketball, played Detroit
was guarding, Michael Jordan,
Pistons style, Is a very simple
was struggling to overcome a
game.
bruised hlp suffered In late In the
You win by stopping the other
opening period .. Jordan scored
team from scoring and finding
just8olhis34polntslnthesecond
the man on your team with the
half as Detroit took control. His
hot hand ,
Injury Is not expected to be a
On Sunday, the Pistons did just
factor In Game 2.
that .
"In the third quarter they
It played crushing defense and
jumped at me to see what! ha!l, "
received 18 third-quarter points
Jordan said. "They didn't do that
from Joe Dumars to beat the
In the fourth quarter, I guess they
ChlcagoBullsiJ6..771ntheopenlng
felt sorry forme."
·
game of the Eastern Conference
Detroit held Chicago scoreless
finals.
from the field for 3:54 of the
"I just got a couple or shots to
fourth period· and stretched Its
fall, and It Is well documented on
lead to 73-60. Chicago's Scottie
this team that. th~ guy who gets
Pippen, playing with nve fouls,
hot gets the ball, . said Dumars,
hit a pair of 3-polnt shots to bring
the Bulls within 7~· 68 with 7:06
who finiShed with 27 points.
Game 2 of tbe best-of-seven · left.
series IS Tuesday nlghtlnAuburn
Chicago mounted one last
Hills. The series then switches to
surge, pulling within 82·75 with
Chicago for games Saturday and
3:36 left , But Dennis Rodman
Monday.
scored off · a steal by lslah
Dumars carried Detroit In the
Thomas with 1: 15 remaining to
put Detroit up 84·77 and seal the
third period, hitting 8 of IO 'shots
from the. floor. Shooting off picks
triumph:
and driving the lane, he ·scored
Detroit which held the Bulls to
the Pistons' first 12 points of the 34 point~ In the second hall,
quarter and 18 of their 28 In the
received 11 points from John
period. He ~':ave the Pistons a
Salley and 10 from Vinnie John·
son. Pippen adde&lt;! 16.

"It was one of those strange
But offense was not the hal·
opening games, " Detroit Coach
!mark of the first two periods,
Chuck Daly said. " You waste a
Detroit converted just 16 of 43:
lot of energy going Into a game
shots (36 .percent) In the· first ·
like this. We struggled of!en- half, while Chicago hit 17 of 43 (40 :
slvely, but not defensively . Joe
percent ) .
·
got II going for us In the second
The Pistons scored just 15
half and balled us out."
points In the second period and :
This was third time the Pistons
managed just S points - all by '
have held a playoff opponent to 77
Dumars - over the last 4: 18.
points. For the game, the Pistons
Detroit made onlY 3 of Its first :
held the Bulls to 38 percent
12 shots but managect a 24-22 lead :
shooting from the field (31 of82) .
behind an 11-4 run over the final ·
And they outrebounded Chicago
3:49 of. the opening period. ·
48·36 ..,
Jordan scored 14 of his 26 ·
"I 'thought It was more of a
first-half points In the opening :
rugby game than basketball,"
,
period.
Chicago Coach Phil Jackson
Detroit was determined not to ·
said. "We played at Detroit's · let history repeat Itself In 1990. :
style and tempo , their kind of
The Pistons have lost to Chicago '
game."
In the opening .game of a playoff
The first half ended, oddly
series each of the last twci years,
enough, wllh a spectacular 3·
Including 1989 when they needed
point sl!ot by Jordan from behind
six games to clinch the Eastern
the top of the key. The All·Star
Conference championship.
guard double-pumped and
"II was important not to let
swished his shot to give Chicago a
Game 1 get away,'! Detroit
43-39 lead.
center Bill Laimbeer said.

PONDEROSit
STEIKBOUSE

BRUINS CELEBRATE - Boston Bruin's Allen Pedersen, Greg
Johnston, Bob Sweeney and Greg Haw&amp;ood celebrate Johaston's
roal which put Boston ahead- ~0 In the first period acllon In the
Stanley Cup final's third rame. Boston held ott to win, !•1: (1:1Pil

Earnhardt Winston winner
I

"

CONCORD, N.C. !UPI) -Dale
Earnhardt led tlie entire distance
Sunday to become the first
two-time winner of NASCAR' s
$800,000 The Winston.
Earnhardt's Chevrolet started
In the pole position and was never
challenged In the 70-lap race at
the 1.5-mlle track. The native or
Kannapolis, N.C., Jed every lap
In the first 50-lap segment and
repeated the feat In the final
20-laps, which were run after a
lO·nilnute break.
.
"We were able to .r un our pace
and do what wr wanted to do,"
said Earnhardt, wllo collected a
record $325,000. "We were a·little
tight In Turns 3 and 4 In that first
segment. I didn't know ·we could
lead flag-to-flag."
Earnhardt drove a 1987 Monte
Carlo that had received a frontsteer snout and a Lumina body,
the same car he drove last month
to victory In· Darlington, S.C.
"We'll probably run It In quite

a lew races this year,"· Earn·
hardt commented.
Continued on page 4

1

WJ7HCOUflOH~OW ·

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plusAil·You·Can·Eat Sundae Bart .
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SHAVER REPAIR
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Din•er &amp; Sundae
Includes potato, garlic toast,
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MAY 22nd
4 TO 7 P.M.

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Dillaer&amp;SuiHI

INCLUDES: CLEANING, OIUNG.
ADJUSTING, GREASING.
'
IAIOIS IUY II DIOPPID OFF· Ill ADVANcE

992-6491
716 North

Includes potato, aarlic toast,
Ponderosa's All¥'ou·Can:Eat
Grand Buffet; plus
AII·You·Can·Eot Sundae Bar.

PONDEROSA® Si:~:!~: ow~

···-··-············

. . . JIVI. .W&amp;Inc.

GALUPOUS
UPPEI IIVU .OlD

S.COIMI
Mlcltlltport,

(Across fro• Alrpertl

Olio

- . - ...

~---·-·-.;.y·

_____. _. ,. ,. ,

�'---

Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

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Pomeroy-Middeport. Ohio

EAST MEIGS - Honor rolls
for the Eastern Local School
Dl•trlct's elementary schools for
the filth six weeks grading period
have been announced.
Students listed on the honor roll
a~:e as follows;
RIVARVIEW ELEMENTARY
' All A's; Stephanie Evans,
third grade.
Overall honor roll: Rebecca
Evans, Connie Pooler, sixth
grade; Qavld Baker, Angle Bissell, fifth grade; Paul Frldenstlne, fourth grade; and Christa
Circle, Julie Hayman, · Wesley
Kanawalsky, third grade.
Academic honor. roll: Heath
Profitt and Heather Rockhold .
1
CHESTER ELEMENTARY
All A's: Jason Mora, third
grade; . Jannlfer Mora, sixth
grade.
Overall Honor Roll: Valerie
Kanr, Melody Lawrence, Jessica
Marcum, Brynn Moss, J e nnifer
Starcher, Aaron Will, Angi
Wolfe, third grade; Kelll Bailey,
" Stefani Bearhs, Brandon Buckley, Renae Pooler, fourth grade;
Meredith Crow, EriC Dillard,

as .Cards defeat 'Reds, 6-2
another in the Cardinals' threerun eighth.
" Dibble had just been out too
long, and I have to take the blame
for that," said Pinlella. " He was
too strong and was overthrowing
and that's why he was wild. He
simply hadn't been getting the
work he needed."
Despite the loss, Cincinnati
Manager Rob Dibble was happy
to see a solid performance from
Danny Jackson, who was recently activated from the disabled list.
"Sure, we lost," said Plnlella.
"But we got another lefthander
in our rotation who's going to win
us some games."
Jackson, 0-l, made his first'
start since AprU 29 after returning from the disabled list last
Thursday . The lefthander allowed slx hits in 6 2-3 Innings.
Jackson was admittedly
nervous.
"It's been such a long time
coming·, with those injuries and
being on the DL, that I really had
the jitters" said Jackson. " I felt
good and "(as happy that I was
able to go seven Innings."
Guerrero drove In two runs but
helped the Reds by committing
two errors, one of which enabled
the Reds to tie the score 2-21n the
siXth.
.
Barry· Larkin struck out but
reached first on .Magrane's wild
pitch. Larkin advanced to third
on Todd Benzinger's double and.
scored when Ro lalido Roomes
grounded out to Guerrero at first.
Benzinger also scored on Guerrero's wild throw to"the plate.
The Cardinals took a 1-0 lead In
the second when Guerrero
walked, took second on a passed
ball and scored on Terry Pendleton's single.
St. Louis made it 2-0 ln the
fourth when Willie McGee tripled
and scored on G1,1errero's sacrifice fly to deep right.

,.

In other NL games, San Diego
downed New York, 3-1, Chicago
bested Houston 5·1, Montreal
edged San Francisco 6-5 In 11
innings; Los Angeles beat Phlladelpllla 6-3 and Atlanta outscored
Pittsburgh 13-11.
Padrell 3 Meta 1 ,,
Roberto Alomar's bad-hop,
two-run ·single in the seventh
Inning broke a tie to give the San
Diego Padres a 3-1 victory over
·
the New York Mets.
Greg Harris, 3-0, got the win
and Craig Lefferts got the final
five outs for his fifth save.
Cubs $, Astros 1
At Houstoh, ShaWn Boskle .
pitched a five-hitter ln bls majorlegue debut and Andre Dawson
homered and drove In three runs
to lead Chicago. Boskle, 1-0, the
Cubs first-round draft pick ln
1986, wbocameupthlsweekfrom
Iowa, struck out stx a.nd walked
one In pitching a .complete game.
Mike Scott, 1-5, took the loss.
Dawson's homer was his National League-leading 13th.
Expos 6, Glanla 5
At San Francisco, Pinch-hitter
Wallace Johnson delivered a
two-run home run to highlight a
three-run 11th Inning to power
MontreaL Johnson's first home
run of the season came off loser
Aflee Hammaker, · 3-3. Blll
Sam pen, 2-0, worked 11-3 hmlngs
for the win. Johnson's homer
came on only hlsl6th at -bat of the
season.
"
Dodgers 8, PhWles 3
;
At Los Angeles, Ramon Mar'
tinez scattered slx hits ilver
seven Innings to send Los Angeles to their fifth win ln the last ' ·
six games. Martinez, 4-2, struck
out eight and walked four to post
·• r
the win. Mike Hartley earned his
first major-league save pitching
two scoreless Innings. Pat
LARKIN SCO~
Reds' Barry Larkin
Combs, 2-4, got the loss. Alfredo
shields bls face as be be81'11 In on CardS' catcher
Griffin's two run single broke a
Tom Papozzl Ia the six~ Inning. Larkin seored
1·1 tie ln the fourth inning~ ·
as Cards' Pedro Guerrero threw the ball to the

'

..

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fhlc ilae IKuldN' ~ -0 1 a1 Nr.w \ 'ork

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dlt·krr i-:n. 7:J5 p.m.
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C'llllfornl.a (81ylt"&lt;'en 1-3) lit flf'\' Phand
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SNittW (Holman '-:ll W Mllwuulu!f'
tHipra 4-1 ), K:35 p. m.

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crdll•

NA.TIONA.L LEAGUE

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Utlca~~ro id New York. nt'*'l
Tc?t~W~ a1 ~to .. nlltllt
.

.

Calendar
SuNIQ Sparts Cahaclar

1'Ut'lld&amp;,y ,Glllnr.M

Sf'.llll.llt&gt; id

Tum

Earnhardt
...
Contlnuecl from page 3
Earnhardt's other victory In
The Winston came In i987. In six
versions of the event, reserved
lor the NASCAR circuit 's 19 most
recent winners, plus the Winston
Open victor, Earnhardt has won
$708,500.
There was only one cau lion
flag in the event .:.. ior debris In
Turns 1 and 2- but since It came
after four laps In the 20-lap
segment, the yellow flag laps
didn't count toward · the final
result. Only green-flag, laps
counted in the final segment.
Since the caution laps didn't
count, Earnhardt's average
speed was 163.001 mph.

St. LouiN tB. Smith 5-3) u.t Atlanta

Dt't roll

E""'

·;

ailempied to -~ from second oa an Infield hit as
Chris Ja!Jies, who !!COred on the play from thlnl,
gels a ground level view. Marbters won 8-7. (UPI)

Scoreboard ...
B~olfRitl'd

·.

~-~

•"

Loti 1'\alfln.,,.............. lll
Saul Dlf'IO ...... .. ...... ...... IM
Sunf'riUit'bwo . .,,, .... .... lil
,\llanta ........................ lt

'

.131 -

Bari; Baly- Tear of Balr
HoekeJ
Sl.l•le)o O.p F'lllll•
· Nocune achf!dllled
lloccer

MISL Pla,tfll

No came ICIINIId

Tea.U

llldl• Weill, caar. -NCAA Dh-1tl. . l
Qlamjlle.WIII

POMEROY- Melanie Beegle,
Meigs High School valedictorian,
was the recipient of the Olilo
Board of Regents $4.000 sc hota rship. In addition ro ,the $4,000
scholarship which Held! Carulhers received fro'!! J he Uni-

verslty of Rio Grande, she also
received the Louis Morhart Scholarshlp of $750. Tammy La vbert
received a $4'.000 scholarship
from the Universil .v of Rio
Grande and the Senior Class
Scholarship of S400.

Additional Meigs · scholarships listed

All proceeds of the Pomeroy
Sesquicentennial Celebration
-wm go toward the construction
and development of park in
Pomeroy.
In addlton to the sale of
souvenler Items the sesquicentennial committee has ·arranged
to have personalized bricks
made which will 'be used In the
construction of· a shelter house
for the park.
·

:.;;;;;~~~

.

'

FamUies or Individuals may
purchase a personalized brick
for $20 and proceeds from the
brick sale will be used solely for
this projecl.

ALL
.•biAIA

Families .. wantl'ng bricks
placad next to one another must
place their orders at the ·same
time and a req ues 1 · should be
made stating which brick goes
beside which brick.

IIYLAifA.H

UIIIIID

AII7JCIII
ti(Jl.

88
'

backstop allowing two ruas to lie the game at 2-2.
The cards then sclned lour runs ln the eighth to
win 6-2. ( UPI)
.

·, Bosio's ·4-hitter ·tops·A's, ·5-2

:,.

Majors

The class. sjXInsored by "the
Middleport Arts Council, will be
held ln council chambers on
.

jj.

., ..

OUT AT HOME - Cory Snycler of Cleveland Is
lagced out by Seattle catcher Seott Bradley In
sixth !Min&amp; acUon of the gune s.•ay. Snyder

TUPPERS PLAINS
ELEMENTARY SCHOOL
All A's: Michelle Caldwell,
Kelll Norris, fourth grade.
Overall hOnor roll: Jessica
Bartram, Jennifer Cline,. Joshua
Hager, Sarah Qouseh!llder, Sart ·
P'ulman. • AHsha Rojas . J .T.
White, third grade; VIcki
Adams , Blllena Buchanan,
Christopher Buchanan, Wwsley
Buckley, Joanna Gumpf,'Jeremy
Kehl, Betsy Sheets, Joey Weeks,
fourth grade; Angela Chaney,
Billy Francis, Tract Heines,
Katy Mantcke, Sean Maxey , Erin
Sexton, Chance Watson, fifth
grade; Jonathan Avis , Michael
Barnett, Brian l'lowen, Jessica
Frederick, Brian Hoffman, MIchael Laughery, sixth grade.
•. A~ad~!IJIC honpr roll: Misty
Lyons,. fourth grade.

bricks available

•

Bunny Kuhl wlll be Instructing
a mtnl-qullt class on Thursday at
6:30p.m. In Middleport.
'

Second Street In Middleport nexr
to Johnson ' s Variety Store.
When the piece block ls fin ished, claus· j&gt;articlpants will
have a wall banging. Tfte pat tern
which will be used is "Best of
All."
The cost for the class is SlO and .
a portable sewing machine Is
needed by each student.
To register for theclassand for
a list of supplies, call Marilyn
Meier at 992-5983 or Sue Baker at
992-7733. .

·v

w..

' .

Quilt class .slated in Middleport

Personalized

Mar ta ' Erecker, flfth grade:
Jessica Karr Nicole Nelson,
Brandl Reeves, Lauren Young,
sixth grade.
Academic honor roll: Jodie
Ihle, third grade; Laura Penhorw~ sixth grade.

The Daily Sentinel Page 5

'. ~~l·

,.') t;,.

..

Ponwoy-Middleport. Ohio

Eastern honor roll

·Magrane regai.-.s old for·nt
CINCINNATI !UPJ) - Jo«;
Magrane Is beginning to show the
form that made him the National
League's wlnningest lefthander
last year.
Magrane, who won 18 games
last year but began the season
with siX straight losses, notched
his second straight win Sunday,
limiting Cincinnati to five hits in
severi Innings in the St. Louis
Cardinals 6-2 victory over the
: : Reds.
Magrane, 2-6, struck ·out six
and . walked just one. Lee Smith
pitched the final two innings.
"I'm throwing the ball a lot
better," Magrane said. •'Today
was the first time this year I've
gotten my breaking ball o.ver.
This Is the third straight time
(catcher Tom) Pagnozzi has
caught me, and he knows what I
do well and what I don't do well."
"Magrane pitched well," said
St. Louis Manager Whitey Herzog, "but we still didn't hit the
bail very well. Dibble's wildness :
, helped us in the eighth inning, "
Leading 3-2 in the seventh
when Terry Pendleton scored on
an RBI -single by PagnozzL The
Cardinals added three runs in the
eighth off Cincinnati reliever
Rob Dibble.
VInce Coleman walked, stole
second and Ozzie Smith reached
when he was hit by a Dibble
pitch: 1\fter Willie McGee struck
· 011t, Pedro ·Guerrero's double'
scored Coleman with Smith hold·
ing third., After 'Pendleton .was
intentionally walked to load the
bases, Dibble walked. pinch! hitter Dave ColUns to force home
• Smith.
Jose Oquendo's sacrl!lce fly
scored pinch-runner Tim Jones
to give the Cardinals a 6-3 lead .
Dibble showed the effects of
not pitching in five,days. Dibble.
. who had not allowed an earned
run in 21 innings prior to Sunday,
walked three batters and hit

•

Monday, May 21. 1990

Ken Schrader finished second
ln hls Chevrolet, just 34hundredths of a · second behind
.Earnhardt, Mark Martin took
third and Bill ElliOtt placed
fourth, both in Fords. Davey
Allison finished fifth, also 'In a
Ford.
Rusly Wallace, the defending
champion, completed only eight
laps before exiting with a blown
engine In his Pontiac.
Elliott was ~cond . when the
race restarted following the
break, but got shuffled
backwards.
"I tried to stay thespeed.of the
pace car, but Dale kept everyone
slowed dOW!) and then he jumped
out," Elliott said. "I got dropkicked. Then I had to play
catch-up and there wasn't
enough lime.
.
"It seems like I can't do
anything right this year."
Dick Trickle, who won the
Wins ton Open race that preceeded The Winston, !lnlshed
sixth ln his Pontiac after starting
20th.

By C.J. HWJJ
UPI Sports Writer
Chris Bosto went back to the
basics and earned himself an 'A'
by.hurling a four-hitter Sunday In
the Milwaukee Brewers 5·2 victory over the Oakland Athletics.
"I really concentrated the last
time I threw on the side ~orking
on my mechaniCs," said · Boslo,
4-2, who notched his third com.ptete game. "I think It really paid
off for me today.
"As far as being comfortable,
that's probably the best I've felt
all year with the exception of the
Texas game with an 11-run lead
(Boslo shutout Texas 11-0 on
April 19) . But as far as mechanIcs, grading your pitches and
overall performance, I'm not
' going to give myself straight As,
bu I I really felt good today and I
really felt comfortable. There's a .
lot of room for Improvement,' but
I'm reallv pleased with the way I
threw."
·
·
Boslo was 3-0 .In five April
starts Wlib a 1.39 ERA. but
entered Sunday's game with a 0-2
record In May and a 4.09 ERA In
three starts.
The only hits off Boslo were
Carney ·Lansford's single ln the
first inning, Walt Weiss's single
ln the sixth, Dave Henderson's
RBI double In the eighth and
Mike Gallego's leadoff single in
the ninth.
Oakland starter Scott Sander'
· ''son, 4-2, allowed five runs and six
hits over slx innings, tying his1
career high with slx walks.
Tony La Russa was ejected for
the first time this season In the
fourth lnitjng. La Russa was
·tossed by home plate umpire Jim
Joyce for arguing ball and strike
calls.
"You can't argue b'\!ls and
strikes," La Russa said. 'If you
make a mistake, you can get
nailed for it. I made a mistake
.and got bounced. ·
"I told the· players umpires
never beat_you, It's always the
other club doing something or·
you not doing ,som,etl)lng. I don't
like doing stupid things and that
was a stupid thing."

tie'ton belted a three-run homer
for the Orioles. Harnisch, 4-1, ·
yielded two bits over seven
Innings before Olson worked the
final two Innings for his ninth
save. Kevin Brown, 5-3, was the
loser.
Toronto 5, CaiUomla I
IJI Toronto, George l3ell drov~
in two runs,, including the goahead nm ln a three-run seventh
inning, helping Toronto snap a
five-game ·losing streak. Fran~
Wills, 3-1, relieved Willie Blair,
making hls first major league
start, and picked up thewln. Tom
Henke earned hls fourth save.
Mark Langston was perfect for 5
1-3 Innings. but dropped to H.
Mariners 8, Cleveland 7
10 lnnlugs
In Cleveland, Edgar Martinez
belted a two-run homer ln the
lOth inning, hls second homer of
. the game, to 11ft Seattle. Mike
Schooler, 1-0, the fifth Seattle
pitcher, earned the victory,
working the final three innings.
Jesse Orosco, 2-2, took the loss .
Tigers 3, White Sox 2
10 Innings
In Chicago, Lloyd Moseby
singled homa Dave Bergman ·
with two out ln the lOth Inning to
lift Detroit to Its sixth straight
win. Edwin Nunez, 1-0, pitched
· two perfect innings in relief for
the win. Mike Henneman got the

final three outs for his lOth save.
Wayne Edwar.ds, 0-2, suffered
the loss.
Royals 4, Yaukees 3
,
10 lanlnp
In New York, Kevin Seltzer's
two-out single scored Jlm Elsen-.
reich In the lOth to lift the Royals .• ·
Don Mattingly's two-run homer;
in the ninth had tied the game for
New York.' Jeff Montgomery.
squandereq· bls fourth save op-'
portunijy of the season
.
.

.

Yvonne K. Richardson, Cabana, will present "Hat Extravaganza" on Sunday at2 p.m. In the
dining room of the Middleport
MasoniC Temple.
•
The event Is sponsored by the
Middleport A,rts Council and
tickets are available at a cost of
$4. Tickets may be purchased at
•Heritage House, Vlddleport Department Store, and the Fabrk

20fll A11lr11Htg '"''' 1•1•
All BEDDING PLANTS
3 PIS SJ04!

IEDDING GERANIUMS
lrG. •12 NOW $950

4 IN. GERANIUMS leg. I 1.00
8Sc u. - 10 FOR 1750
4 IN. HARDY MUMS .... suo

MONDAY .
RACINE - The SOuthern High
School Board of Education will
·. meet Monday · at 7 p.m. at,' the
·
high sc hoot. .

8Sc ea. - 10 FOR SJSD

'

REG. 15.50 NOW $450
REG. S611 NOW S575

POMEROY -The Meigs
Sports Banquet will be held
Monday at 6:30 p.m. at the high
school for baseball, girls softball,
and boys and girls track. Meat
:and rolls, will be provided and
parents are to bring two covered
'dishes , one vegetable ancl one
dessert.
·

All SHRUDIRY I TREES

200fo OFF

Solo (ontinwl lhroughout.Tho

s.a...

HUIIAID:S GIEnHOUSE
SYRACUSE, OHIO

f.

~

Shop ln Pomeroy.
Mrs. Richardson Is known In
Colwnbus for her hat collection.
She became so noted fqr her hats
when she began competing In the
Lilliputian Fashion Show which
Is sponsored by an organlzaton
that benefits crippled children.
Mrs. Richardson Is also active
with the Grant Hospital Women's

Servlce .Board.
Mrs, Richardson bas over 60
hats which range In price from
$300 to $1500, some with real
jewels, and the majority with
flowers and rhll'lestones. She
wears nothing but a Jack McConnel original. McConnel's bats are
featured In Madison's ln downtown New York City.

Community -calendar

REG. suo Flm NOW 1510

10 INCH HANGING IASIETS

18

.Hat show. sponsored by arts council

HUBBARD'S GIEENIOUSE

NOW

rtaz.

YVONNE K. RICHARDSON

992-5776

Ooen Deilv 9-!i· Sun. ,.5

: RUTLAND -The Meigs
• County. Tuberculosis Clinic wlll

•

'

.

be conducting a tuberculin ~kin
testing clinic In · Rutland . on
Monday at the fire house. The
clinic w1ll.be held irom 4:30-6:30
p.m. All community volunteers
ate urged to attend this free
clinic.

·CONTA&amp;
12 HR.

CAI'LE'ISOR

CAI'SIJLES
tffS

'

88
•

town house. All members are
urged to attend. Refreshments
will be served.

ORAL·B
ULTRA
' IOOIHIRUSH

POMEROY -The Ohio Eta
Phi Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority will meet Tuesday-at the
home of Sonya Wolfe for its final
TUESDAY
meeting and Installation of officPOMEROY - Tl\e XI,Gamma
Mu Chapter, Beta -Sigma Phi ers. Members are to meet at the
Sorority will meet Tuesday at 6 · Pomeroy, Parking Lot at 6 p.m.
p.m. at the home of A.R. Knight
WEDNESDAY
In Pomeroy.
POMEROY -Tiie.last day to
HARRISONVILLE -The Har· purchase tickets for the Pomeroy
lisonvllle Senior Citizens wlll Alumni Banquet is Wednesday.
meet Tuesday at 7 p.m.' at the

-011 1411

•

789

.·~------------~~--------------~----~
I·'

,.

YOU

SET YO,UR
PAYMENT SCHEDULE!

DENNIS L. HOCKMAN &amp; ASSOCIATES
-Lft

\'

BOTTlE

People in the news

12PACK

11DZ.
lOmE$

By United Press International
cocaine charges. Lately she bas been trying j&gt;ut
. NOSOTROS MEN OS RICARDO: Rlcardo.Mon- together a comeback as jazz-rock singer.
talban is distancing himself from Nosotros, the
BARBARA ON DEPRESSION: Barbara Bush
group he founded ln 1970 to recognize Latinos In hasn't always been so sunny. The first lady says
the entertainment business. The group Is she went through a spell of depression In 1976, bu I
celebrating Its 20th annlver!lary June 8 with a managed to "shake It off" by concentrating oit
televised show that wlll honor actor Raui .Julla, volunteer work, according to U.S. News &amp; World
.
·
'· · comedian Paul Rodriguez and slpger Gloria · Report.
'" r Est.efan: ·
.
.
'
The depression hll when she and husband
. Now Montalban says t_lle organization is using George returned from his ambasSadorial tour of
'
' his name to promote the show even though he quit · China.
Nosotros In 1988 for unspecified personal reasons._
''I woult:! really !eel like crying a lot ancl I reallY.
The "Fantasy Island" star wrote Nosotros painfully hurt," she told the magazine. "And I
President Mare Allen Trujlllo last week asking would think bad thoughts, I will tell you. It was not
that lt be made clear that he Is Ito longer nice. " Bush says she didn't seek medical help·
associated with the group.
during her six-month bout, but she advises those
Frank Nanoia, who Is producing the awards who feel depressed to do so.
show. denies anyone.has been using Montalban's
CELEBRITY POSTURING: When It comes to
name. "In fact, although I have t.he ulrnost posture, Charlton Heston slands tall. In a poll
respect for,him and I know lie's an acerolemodel. conducted by the Journal of Chiropractic, Heston
I don't think he's a big drawing card," he said . was selected as haVIng lhe inost commani!lng
"He's old-time Hollywood." Rita , Moreno· and posture, while Mel 91bson has the m~t llljlCho,
Jimmy $mils of "L,A. Law'' wlll host the awards Tom Cruise tile sexiest, Mikhail Baryshnlkov the
ahow .
' ,
"· inost agUe and San Francisco 49ers quarter~ack
WARRANT FROM THE PAST: .1udy Carne, Joe Montana the most alhletfc, despite a. back
•Once the super-mod sock-lt-to-11'1e girl of "Laugh Injury that almost ended his career a lew seasons
In'' In the '60s, has been arrested again, this time ago.
.
on an 11-year·old warmnt from Ohto:
As for women, Lynda Carter.was named the
The· New York Dally News says Carne was moat statuesque and Linda Evans was cholen as
!licked up at Kennedy AlrjXIrt arter customs the moat gracefUl. Michelle Pfeiffer's posture was
agents became aware of the outtandlng drug picked 11 the sexiest, Olympic champion Jackie
charges. ~fler "Laugh In," Carne's career sunk Joyner-Kersee as tile most athletic and Jane
amici heroin addlcllon, a near-fatal car crash and Seymour as the moat regal.
!Wo months In jallln England on marijuana ell!!

YOUR ORTGAGE
YEARS EARLY

In oi.her AL games, Milwaukee
AND POSSIBLY SAVE THOUSANDS•
defeated Oakland 5-2; Minnesota
WITHOUT REFINANCING
edged Chicago 5-4; Baltimore
blanked Texas 4-0; Toronto
topped California 5-l; Seattle
nipped Cleveland 8-7 In 10 innings; Detroit shaded Chicago
3-2 ln 10 Innings; ani! Kansas City
1
nipped New York 4-3..
Twl011 5, Red Sox 4
In Boston, Kent Hrbek belted a
two-run homer and added an RBI
FOR MORE INFORMATION ON THIS UNIQUE SERVICE
single, lifting Minnesota. Roy
Smith, 2-4, worked 5 1-3 Innings
for the victoryJ Rick Aguilera
worked 11-il Innings for his 11th
614-992•7066
save. Eric Hetzel suffered the
657 IIGH ST.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
loss and fell to 1-3.
•a.eed an number of r-•• 1nd btl.,ce lift on your mortpge
· Ortolee 4, Texas 0
In Baltimore, Pete Harnisch
~
and Greg Olson combined on a ·
EO•ca. ..._,._
three-hitter and Mickey Tet- . ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _1

'

2UTER

POTATO
CHIPS
'OZ. lAG

99&lt;
• HHi1i EFntmVE lfAY t1 . , . n, 111D • WE IIEifllrlf THE II/IIlT rtl Lllllr IIIJAmiTIU •

-'RITE AID 'DISCOUNT PHARMACY
POMEROY .
306 EAST MAl N STREET

•

•

. PHONE: 992-2586

I

~- ~--~----~----------~----~--~~~~----------~------~-J
"'

349:

HEll'S '

,
'

OKE
·a3&lt;--

••

"·

..

�Monday. May 21 •.1990

Ponwoy-Middleport. Ohio

May 21,1990

Memorial service set for puppeteer Henson
.

NEW YORK (UPI) - Family
Henson died at New · York
members of Muppets creator
Hospital 21 hours after he was
Jim Henson made arrangements
admitted with an advanced stage
for memorial services at the
of ~numonta . Henson had con·
Cathedral of St. John the Divine,
suited a doctor In No~th Carolina
the c;avernous, 5,000 capacity
four days before his death'during
church on Manhattan's Up~r
a bout of the nu, but had not been
West Side.
prescribed antibiotics.
Funeral services were scheDoctors last week said that had
duled to be held at noon Monday
he sought attention earUer for his
for Henson, who died last Wedworsening condition, II might
nesday from bacterial pneumohave heiP!!d save his life.
·nla. He was 53.
A sJ)I)keswoman for Henson
Henson, born Sept. 24, 1936 In
ProduCtions, · the firm Henson
Greenville, Miss., created the
headed until his death, said last
gallery of Muppet creatures that
week that his family had made
populated the widely acClaimed
all arrangements for the service,
television program for children,
and It was not known who would
"Sesame Street." The "Muppet
participate In the ceremony.
Show," which debuted In 1976,
However, the spokeswoman,
widened his audience to adults as
Camilla Campbell, told the Dally
well.
News last week It was Henson's
"Sesame Street " Is curtently
"expressed wlsli'' that ilo one
In reruns, and prOducers have
attending his funeral service_ made no official announ~ement
. would mourn him by wearing on plans for the future o( the
black at the service.
s)low, which began In 1969.

"

Henson - With the help of his
wife and business partner. Jane
Nebel - brought to lite the
Muppet characters, Including
Kermit the Frog, Miss Piggy,
Gonzo, Big Bird, Bert and Ernie
and the ravenous Cookie
Monster.
Henson provided the voice for
several of the characters,-lncludlng Kermit.
·
The show not only Introduced
Henson's characters to preschoolers around the world,
also spawned a vast merchandisIng empire, Introducing 700 new
products from ~oils to T-shlrts ill
1989 alone.
His · " Muppet Show, " which
was televised until 1981 and Is
now In reruns, reaches some 235
million viewers In 100 countries,
With the Soviet Union soon to join. It has won two television Emmys
and other awards.
--'
At the time of his death, ·

1!

accompanied to Pittsburgh by
her mother, Lois . "Susie"
Purcell. ·
''She's tired and frustrated and_
a little scared, since everything
has been going so good for the
past couple months," said the
girl's stepfather, Alan Purcell,
who did not accompany his wife
and stepdaughter from their
White Setd.m~ent , Texas, home.

ea
•, a.-.

~(;~nt frogs a b-ig .bust

The hospital said Jones, who
joked during her last .stay In
Pittsburgh that doctors shoul!l
Install a zipper In her to avoid
future Incisions, would undergo
tests to determine the cause of
her latest liver· ·.trouble.

~at Calaver~.Jump-off

Doctors suspect her body has "
rejected the l)ew liver because an
enzyme count used to monitor
transplant acceptance has been
far above normal for several ·
days, a hospital spokeswoman
said. Her transplanted !leart Is
fine, o!flclals said.
Spokeswoman Sue Catdlll&lt;i
said StOI'Iille may only need a
change In her medications , In-•
eluding FK-506, a new · antireject-Ion drug. The girl also has
been receiving a form of steroids,
the spokeswoman added . ·
Cardillo said ' Stormle would.
receive a third liver transplant
only under a · "worst-case

scenario."

i

Cuban exiles protest
Castro from vessels

t

;!

feared the seaborne ceremony
would spark a confrontation with
Cuban authorities, but It went
unheeded, If not unnoticed, by
Cuban naval au thorllles.
A Cuban vessel was visible on
the horizon. However, It never
approached the contingent of
exiles.
Although only 19 ctaft took part
In the memorial to the dead,
about 15 others had tried to make
the journey before turning back
because of the heavy seas.
Organizers had estimated orlglnal~v that 100 boats would take
part In the Flotilla de Ia Hermandad, or Flodlla of Brotherhood.
For those who made the
ceremony, timed to coincide with
the anniversary of Cuban Independence, It was an emotional

:~ Protesters - ·target·NIH

ex~rlence.

''I feel very moved because we
remembered all of the Cubans
that trying to go outside of Cuba
died In those waters," said
~lberto .Fibla, 61 , a former
political prisoner who s~nt 26
years In jail in Cuba before being ,
released two years ago.
.
' In . 1898, a treaty was signed
that . separated Cuba and Spain,
and on May 20, l!ICT..!, the Republic
of Cuba was born. Cuban President Fidel Castro has controlled
the Island since his guerUla
Insurrection overthrew dictator
Fulgenclo Balls ta on Jan. 1, 1959.
The memorial ceremony Sunday, which began at 12:45 p.m.
under overcast skies, lasted less
than 10 minutes.

•sinlinol

PUASANT VALLEY HOSPITAl

Ell, NOSE &amp; IHIOAI
GENEIAL ALLEIGIST

'

1 - Happy Ada
6-Lost and Found

Happv Ads .
V•d Sel•

-

58 - Fruits. Vtg ..lbla

f .1rr11 SIIIIIJII~S

X.

17-Mi•cell•neous
18 - Wenttd To Do

21 -lustn•• Opportunhy

22- Monw to Loan

23-Prot•lklnal Servic.. ·

telephone exchanges ...
M•son Co .. WV
Artt Code 304

Art11 Code G14

441 - Gtll~polis

367..:Ch•hire
311-Vint~;~n

240-.Aio Gra,..de

216-0uyon•Ditt.
14~ - Arsbia

Oi.._

371-W .. nut

· 982 - Mid.d l.ort
Pom.,oy

.e?I- Pt.

31 - Homn for late
J2.....,Mobttt Homn for Sate
33- Firml ror Slit

Pltd~t

458- lton

34-Busin•sBuildings
,....3&amp;- Lots • Acr•ag•
36~ Real Est•te' Wanted

111-Ch•ter ·'
&amp;7e- Apple Grove
843-Port ..nd
773- Mtson
247-Letert Fellt 882-Nt"~N Haven
148 - Raclnt
. ••1 - L~ttrt
742 - Audand .
937- Butfelo

41-Hou!!!!~

ee7 - CoolvMit

~

_________..;;._____

~r"f

42-Mobile
Homts
for Rtn t
•43..:.
F•rms for
Rent
44-APirtrNnt for Rent
a
46-Futnilhed
"oom1
41-IPICI for Rent
47 - Winrtd 10 Flen1

Livt~:,ltH:k

"

41 - Fotl•••

62 - W•nted to Buy
63-livntocll
84-Hily &amp; Grein

Put!llc Notice
BID SPECIFICATIONS ON
RESURFACING WORK OF
DESIGNATED MEIGS
COUNTY ROADS
BETWEEroi ·C.ERTAIN
TERMINI IN MEIGS
. COUNTY. OHIO
Bid ptopouta for tho ro·
ourfldng - k d•crlherlinwllbereclfvldbytho
'Bo•d at County Commie·
oion•• In the Melfll Court
HouM, Pom-. Olllo untl
noon, tho 30tl! of May,
1110. The bidl will be
opanlld It 1 p.m. on May 30
andrudlloud.
The ,_.a.wHt be 1 per
.ton In , pi- lold p•lc:e for
' IICh project M fol'-a: p. 1
on C-211.o,..otGrovo Roed,
P·2 onC·1Schooll.otoA:C.
L.. P3 on C-1 0 State Farm
Road.' P-4 an C-24 Union
A~• R011d, _P·&amp; on C-17
Cottarlt Road, P-8 on C-78
Chitchrl'a Hilt Road.
Each bidder mult fila 1
10% .,.,rorm..oe bond at
tho limo of tho - g and
the IUCCIIofuf bidder mull
lito 1 100% performance
bond. A tottor •tobillhing
cartlll• Uno of credit. in the
otltlld amount. frum 1 bank.
doing bu-o within the
ocope of Ohio Banking
UWO. wilt be Kcoptod complying with tho bonding
requr-t.

Public Notice

711 N. 2nd

.DDLIPOIT

•Brake Work

lUll ST..

992

Dll_U IU

73-'Ytnl 6 4 WD '1
74-Motorcvcl•

71-loets &amp; Motors for Sale
76-Auto Pans &amp; Ace• tori•
77•- Auto Repair
71- Campine Equipment

79- Campers

115.

1 or3C·10or4C,24or8C17 or 11 C-711."
Bid Spocifteatlona may be
pioked up 1t the Moip
County Enain•' o Office or
tho Molfll Couirty Commlaakmre• Office.

.

Tho Mllfll County com·
mlook•-• ,....,. the right
to accept ar rljoct any or all
bida, or any part -eof.
APPROVED:
PhNip M. Aobfrto. P.E., P.S .
Melp County EnfllnMIIfll County
Commiloionora
Mary Hobo-er, Clerk
(811.4. 21, 2tc
Public NOIICO
ORDINANCE 111187
An Ordinaneo to fix Nilrial and wagoa of the Yiltof Pom..-oy ernptov-.
POLICE:
Chiel .............. $16,883.20
Patrolmen: !Mull hl¥8
achooling) Futt time · Por
Hour:

1 Month thru 8 montho
oo without
.........- ...............11.36
Alter 11 Montho and/ o\'
1021 Houro Thru
12 Montho .............. 6.75
Altar 1 year Thru 6 Yoaro
and/or 1028
Houra... ................... &amp;.98
Alter IS yooro ..... ......... 8.29

No,tlee

Motor Homea

SINCI1161 •

'l:t,ed

1

I priCiOUI

Memory of

IDc&gt;n't""'. I'm only aiHp·
again • -

..
I

.,.

I

r

•

~;~n

May 21.
1979.
GONE BUT NOT
FORGOTTEN
Sadly miiiSad by
hut bond,
Robert E. M-e.

~ ··

.

who PIISHd IWIY

t•

. I&gt;'

'.

MOVAL ·,

"UGHT HAULING
'

"FIR E'tll/00 D

BILl SlACK
992~2269

ALTERi\IATORI.JITC .

14

1·10.'110-dn

Stop In and See

BISSELL -~

DALLAS SAYRE

BUILDERS

AY

CUSTOM IUI.T -

PAT HILl

.~,~!.!r~~.
,

CHIYSlEI-PI.YMOUTH
DODGE

SPECIAL

&lt;:i r~ ·. /1!-

PH. 94.·.1101
or IH. ••t~IHO .

3" S. 1hlrd, Middleport

\

992•6421

I

5·16~'90· 1

Day ot Nigllt, •

mo.

ilo~~~"~~~

Allllotllelll8 .

81 -- Homelmpro\41m'"h
12-Pium~ng • HeMing

83- Eac .. l1in1

Aetr""•ation
14_ Eiec:triC81
·•
81- Gen•ll Hauling

SPOU CAIDS
Buy- Sail
Trade

367-0,111

PUbliC Notice

~OUNTRY

MOBILE ,
HOME PARK
•Mobile Home
P.~·
•Mobila Hoinll
Renlllla
•Lot•Renl'l•

992-7479

lt. 33 Merth of
P-roy, ,

IIEW LOCATIOil
DAVE'S SMALL
ENGINE IEPAIR

OIL CHANGE .
S1695 4Qt.Max.
Tliii.AII
MOVI IINTAI.
COHYU.IKI mill ITIII5

,_...,,Oil.

2531 West ...n,

PARTS AND' SERVICE
For M0112 and 4-cycte
engln•
Stock Plrta for Homlfite,
WHdllter, Tacumaeh,
Brlgfll • Stmton.
PH. 99~1·3'922

CHERn
QUII STOP

St. Itt. 7 &amp; 141

985-3350

DOZER
SITEWORII - RPADS
CLEARING

Roger Hysell
Garage

NEWLAND
ENTERPRISES

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAI!t

\

Grant A. N"d

I. L HOLLON
TRUCKING

For Appt. Call
992-6717 H- or
992 16244 Garaae

4-11-'110-f mo.

MICIOWAVE
OVEN IEPAIR
ALL MADS

Bring It In Or Wt
Pick Up.

KEN'S APPUANCE
SIIVKI
992-5335 ... 915-3561
Acr.ss ,,_ Peit Office
217 I. S.C. P - . y
POIIIIOY, OliO
3161'!10/tln

PUblic NotiCe

•VINYL SIDING
oALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

•.. .._ ....

"Free Elilmetea"

PH. 949·2101
or las. 949·2160
NO SUNDAY

-VCR-STEREOS

SAlES AND SEIYICE
Factory Authari1ad
far

s.,..;c. Cllll•

.:
992-558.9.~' ·.·:
5-11·'!10-1

m~

MAINTENANC:E &amp; IEPAII
1361 Pawolt St. MiM.ort

tAcr .. tr--lhrHtll ...l

•GRAVEL
•LIMESTONE
•FILL DIRT
•ANYTHING
AT ALL

1~::::::::::::::=:~
O'h 2nd s·~ Mltllll·~ ; •

CALL

VCI CUNIC

CHESTa, OHIO

CAl

Sor¥ lea - '" "

Reaidential • , ,
Commercial "w

4-25-tfn

PlUMBING &amp; HEATING

985-4422

Heating, Cooll• .
·lofriteratlon '

Alae Trl••lt~le•
PH. 992·5682
' or 992-7121

DUMPTRUCK ·

16141 667·3271

SAlES &amp; SERVICE

HUMPHIEY'S"
CUMATE ,"•·'
CONTROl •·

lt. U4, P-y Ohio

Sand·Stone-Din

New Logfion:
161 North S.Cand
MHidlopart, Ohla 45"0

I

CNISTD, 'OHIO

,1&gt;

16141 992-7143
SPRINO SPECIAL
CLEAN, LUIE &amp; TEST

)JJ TIAYll

PURSuff
(614)

$1816

.:·'

742-2027 :
..' , b'

"Your

'r=JraU:rmr=i

Connection·
· .:
To An
" .. -

II

Types Of
.
Travel" ;4-1J.-1 ·tM·

SER~ICE
We can repair and rt·
core radiators and
heater cora We can

Anno uncernr I'''

alta acid boll aftd rod
out rltllaton. We olso
repair Gas

T..-.

PAT HILL FOlD
992·2198

Middleport,

.... ,.......
EUM HOME

Sillltr Cltl- nil·
Good Ret•

4

T.L.C.
2'1Yra. Exp.

a lrflndty killona '""' pnlio)'tho

-. -

GIVIIIW!Iy

-44l4lll
-

'·

IJiter • ..lnod., ....

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

a • .,..., - . - . . pltl

209 South 4th St.
Olt.

"lOW

USED APPUANCIS
90HYWABurrY

--,-lllhw....,.

lp

liN'S APPUUCE
SEIYICE
"2·5335 tr915·3561

,_.

...,..

-1'144-.

'..,

• bllw . . . •
.......... 114--141 . . .

·:i!OD
j- '

-ro..~

o....••rau. ·
!.!&gt;nl iiiiNd
IIHI- ~

. . . . , ••••

lutllll'lllfll

GARNET L.
MOORE
to '"'Ito and

8TART£R8,

949-2794
30 Sessions-130
Co. 1111. 21

TRIM anlf RE·

WI' BUY ALL NON FEIIROUI ICIIAP. IATT£!111!1.

POIIIIOYl~O

IIi Mtmory

In Loving

'

St. lt. 331, S 1111•
AboWI ~art. lillie

POMEROY. OHIO: Rt. 7. S.R. 143
ALBANY, OHIO: Rt. 110. S.R. 143
HENDERSON. WV.: Rt. 36Aolj. tDSideraEqulpm.,t
NEW HOURS:
· POMEROY: 9 a.m.·7 p.m. 7 Doyo
II·HE~I~B~~'rcj~1:1010a.m.·llp.m.
a.m.-6 p.m. t1 Dayo. Cloood Sunc~W
IIDooyo.CioltdSun.·Mon.
AS OF TODAY, MAR. 13, 199~
#1 Copper 96¢ per lb.;
Clean Dry Aluminum Ceno, 311¢ per lb.

a.- ..... hilt OHke

2

,.

U7-4035

Serv1r.t~s

~

P.'''""'

.,vat-.

HOURS:
Thura, thfU Sun.
10 a.m.·&amp; p.m.
WHOLESALE-RETAIL

"SHRUB-&amp; TRE,.E

OPPIIS 31.0CA11011S YO SDVI YOII.".

OHIO

•I•

••n

OPEN:
AP. I THRU JULY I

Watch Far ,Signs

NOTICE 1'0
(ui.ldl (.. ZOQ.OOI each.
.
CONTRACTORS
10. One Ferno 30 Cot
STATE OF OHIO
(ultdli11So.OO).
DEPARTMENT OF
11. 1984 E·360 Ford Cut•
TRANSIIORTATION ,
owoy Ch11ola W/480 enCotumbuo."Ohio
.. gine. PS. PB. air. dual go·
May 11 , 1990
aotino tenko 1*800.001 .
Contrac;t S.l11 ugal Copy
AU homo ere ootd
with
No. 90.1101
no guarant... or w1rr11ntiel.
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
ltorno mey be lnapected
Seated pr-•1• will bo prior to bid at tho office ot
recatvld 11 the· office of tho the Moigo County "EMS.
Dlr- of tM Ohio Deport- Mulberry Hllghto, Pomeroy,
mint of Tranaport8tion, Col· Ohio, .during normal worf&lt;umbuo. Ohio, untl 10:00A. ing houri Monday t.,rough
M.. Ohio Stontlord Time. Friday.
Tu11day, Juno IS, 1990, lor
Meigo County
lmprovamenuln:
. Commil8ionara
Melfll County, Ohio, an
• Mory Ho..tett..-. Clor~
MEG-7·(0.00·2.1 1), Stele (51 21, 2B. 2tc
Routll 7, Melgo County, ~V
:!'nuc':!,~~~~ with Mphlft
PubliC Notice
Pro•Joct .,CI Work Length: , _ _..:..,::;:~~~......or 8 .16 mil81.
NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
~=::onwidth:
varioua.
thio project io
STATE OF OHIO
to
Minority
DEPARTMENT OF
Bu-1 Engorprlao tMBEa)
TRANSPORTATION
cortiflo'd 11 M8Eo in •c·
ColumbtJI, Ohio
cordence with Section
May 11. t990
123.1 51 181 121 of the Ohio
Contract
Soloo Leglf Copy
Rovtaed Coda by tho Stoll·
No. 90-672
Eqlltll Employment OpporUNIT PRICE CONTRACT
tunity Coontillltor and qUill ·
Belled propooalo witt be
illld tobidwkh ODOT undor reecelved
the office of the
Chapter 1111211 of the Ohio Director ofettM
Ohio DeportRev-Code.
ment
ofTraneportetion. Col·
'"The date lit 11!1' comple- umbuo. Ohio. unt~ 10:00 A.
tion of thio work ohelt be oat M..
Ohio Standord Time.
forth In tho !lidding propo· Tu..doy.
June 5, 1990. lor
in :
Eech bidder ohlft be re- improvements
A~hent. Weehlngton and
quired to lito with hlo bid 1 Meig1 Countiet, Ohio, on
C81111ild chodo ar a• hler' 1 State Route 1 24; Met ion
chooto for an amount oqutl( 0.00
in Athono County; oocto five par cent of hlo bid, but tion 42.118
In Mlfp County.
In no evant more then fifty 1nd
nctlon
0.00 in .Woohthou•nd dollaro. or 1 bond lngton County,
by guardrail
for 111n par
of hla bid, recon.truction . .
tMv-lllo to tho Director.
Wort length - 20.48
Bidder mull apply, on tho ml•
formo. for qlllliliCI"'The date HI fo• completlln deyo prior
tion of this work shall be as
let lor opening
let fonh in the bidding pro-

......

OHIO IIVE.I
HillS and
EVEILAmNGS

.

-

Til-COUNTY RECYCUNG

CHilli'S

Celt Now To Make
Appolmment

71 - AutOI fOf" S .. e
72-Trucks for S•le

...... 7

Public

1

•oscoum

-

SEARS

OPIIIIIO SOON

Ao 1 pttiroqulaito lor bid· Extrl p1trolmen: Without
ding, only contractor• that
Experience ............ .. 6.35
era -tilled ODOT bidder•
With Exp ................. 6.75
win be conaiderld lor tho r• Oiapatchero: Regular
ourflclng wort.
1 Month thru
The auccaaful cont,.ctor
8 momha ............. 4.04
may be roquir• to lurniah
Allor 8 Montho ........ 4.33
any lib work 11 !Wqulrld by Extra Dilpetch..-......... 4.04
tho Mlfp County Engin-. Motw Peraon: 1 Month
Propoula Ire to be r•
thru 11 montho ......... 4.04
turned on bid formaouppflld
Alter 8 Montho ........ 4.33
by the cont~or, bidding
Altw 12 Montho ...... 4.110
- h projlct .......tety.
STREET:
The
contlfnlng Supoovlaor. o................ 8.25
oKh bid, mull be pllfnly Aaii.Supoovlaor ... ..... .. 6.111
marked, "RESURFAr.tNn
ecoordance with
- 1 Month thru
poNI."
PROJECT- 1 C-28 or 2 C&lt;· i.Aiborors
3 montho ................ 4.04 C::h~_pter 55211 Ohio Rovlaed
Each bidder oholt be reAllor 3 montha ........... 4.33
·Plano and apeollicatlona quired to ftto with hio bid a
certified check or caehier'•
WATER AND SEWER:
2 ' In Mtmory
1 ,. on fifo in th• Doportmont
Aaat. Supt.......... ...... .. 6. 19 ofTranopo!Utlonandtheol· -check for an amount equal
i.Aiborero: 1 Month
flee of tho Dlatrlct D.puty to five par cent of his bid, but
In no event more than fifty
thru 3 montho .........4.04 Director.
Allor 3 Montho........... 4.61
The Dlroctor _, . . _ tho thouund dollars, or a bond
Clork/Bookkaoper: 1 mo. · right to ra]ICI ony and aU lor-ton per cant of hio bid.
payable to tho Director.
t1vu II' montho ..... ..... 4.04 bltll.
Biddero mult apply. on tho
Alter e montho.... .. ..... 4.33
Bernard B. Hum, ora·lonna, lor quatiftcaSenior Analyot ............ 11.08
Director
r-t ten daya prior
SECRETARY TO .
i6)
21.
29.
2tc
date HI lor opening
MAYOR .................. 5.11,9
.::cordance wtth
CEMETERY:
1 Month thru
-~:-':"-::--::-::---- I ~IIIIPtor 1111211 Ohla Reviaod
Public NotiCe
3 montho ................ 4.04
Plana and apecification1
Alter 3 montho .. ...... 4.33
•• on lite in the Deportment
CLERK OF CEMETERY
of Tr1n1portation and the of·
RECORDS ............ 110.00
lice of the Dlatrlct Oeputy
Village Admin·
Di,.ctor.
"'
illrator .. ......... 22,500.00
The Director I'IIOrvft tho
Village ClorV
right to rejltVI eny lnd ell
T-u-........ 10,000.00
IN .MEM()R-IA,M
bida.
Tax AdmlnIERNARO 8. HURST
iotralor ........... 16,000.00
In loving memory of
DIRECTOR
.
Effective
data
of
May
1,
my
wife 1nd
(&amp;) :t1 , 29 2tc
1180. of Ordln.,co 117
ou(
ed mothar,
ohatt be amondod to Uka ol·
TRESSIE STETH.EM,
fiCt
Aprl 21. 1990, 1 1:00
on her blrthdey, who
P.M.
p..HCI•w•y
Richerd Saylor, Mayor
September 23, 19811.
Brenda L. Morrla
C*k/ Tr. ..
"Up In 1 lonoty aomotory
(8)14, 21. 2tc
\
gentt.br-•

YOUI .DIPENDIIO
AGim SIIYIIIG

I

INSTALLATION

•Tire Sale•
•Front End
Alignment
•OH Ct,ange &amp;. Lube

FOREVDIIONZ
tANNING

66-Se4td &amp; Ferttlinr

.

111 Stcllllll St., ....IWO,

PROFE:S SION~'LI

4 / 3 /' 80/ 1 mo.

61 - Ftirm EQuipmem

08 t R, ."••
It•• •F•••·•t • • • • •·,·~-~ Eiql u;pi .,.I.,I "I• IRI•I••t • •~~~=.~.·::,.',~ -HioilmloiRI• I"' I••

COUNTY
APPLIANCES
62 7 3rd An.
Gallipolis

-

59- For S1l1 or Trade

16 - Schooll &amp; Instruction
11 - R•dto, TV&amp;. CB R•p•ir

Classified pages' corer the -

INSURANCE

•

9 - Wiftttd to IYy

1 Z- St1uetion Wanted
13 - ln'surlnce
14 - ButinNt Trainino.

2 :00 , ,M , TUESDAY

M•ip County

Supplia

57-MuliCIIInttn,nO-'fl

S1~rv1r:1~'

- 2 :00P.M. WEDNESDAY
- 2'00 P.M . THURSOAV
- 2 :00P.M . FfHOAY ·

MULLEN MU.R

.........._

115-B~o~Wding

5&amp;- Peu for Sale

fiiiiii iiYI III~Ill

- 11 :00 A .M . SATURDAY
- 2 :00P.M . MONDAY

DOMING CIUIDS

~-

52-Sporting Ooodt
53- Antiques
14-Misc:. Mlfcf'l.,dite

11 - Help Wantt.d

GOOD USED
FIEEZRS
UPIIGIIT Alii c•St
All CONDinONERS

TUESDAY
NIGIT
SPECIAL

Me1chorlllr~t~
51 ..- HouMhold Gooda

7-Y•d Sale fpaid in adv•nc:tf

8-Publlc Sate &amp; Auction

OAV BEFORE PUBLICATION

(304) 675-1244
.I

3 -Annouc.mllf'111
4- Give.wav

'A c1a11ified advtrtiMm.,t placed in The Daily Sentinel lex·
Ct;pt - cl•tified ditpl.,, lutin•• Card and 1-all notice~}
wMI alto appa• In the Pt. "'•••n• ":agister tnd the (i_alli·.
polis Qaily Tribuna. readting ovtr 11,000. homn.

"WE HAVE HEARINI AIDS"

.r

;
il nat responaible tor erron efter first dJ¥ . !Check

Cerd of Thenkt
In Memoriim

olT~onko

2-ln Memory

onty UMd.

'

JOHN A. WADE, M.D.,·Inc.

1- C•d

*Ads 1hll must be Plid in ldpnce 1ft

.

.

Rate
Ov•r 16 Wonll
14.00 . •
.20
16.00
.30
.9.00
.42
113.00
.60
11.30/day
.06/ day .

Atllllltll 11;1· lilt' 11!5

for errors first dav ad runa in p~) - Call befor• 2 :00 p m
d.., aft• public:MiOn to mllke correctlon .

on board the costly observatory. close to r ight on target and In
Routine science observations are better focus than anyone, exnot scheduled to begin for pected. One star, for example,
anomer seven months.
·· clearly showed uP as a . double
When the engineers get done, star' when It · appeared as a
however, the telescope's focus . somewhat lopsided single sian In
i.&gt;tll be seven times sharper,
the ground-based view .
·
yielding stellar Images thaat Will
"How 'bout them apples,"
be 50 times more compact tban Westphal said amid cheers as the
those seen Sunday . But the first two Images were projee)ed\ on
"rough focus" pictures were side by side on a computer
exciting nonetheless.
screen. "Very nice."
The targei for the first -light
"It's the first picture of 10,000
picture
was a 3 billion-year-old
or 20,000 or 30,000 pictures to be
star
cluster
located about 1,500
taken over 15 years," Weller
light
years
from
Earth In the
said. "It's the first photons
Southern
Hemisphere
constella'
coming down from a ' s pacecraft
tlon
Carina.
A
light
year
ls '_ the
that will ultimately make major
distance
light
travels
In
a
year
at
discoveries and ·reshape . our
186:000
mlles
per
second,.
about
vision of the universe. !'
5.8 trillion' miles.
·
As the 12-ton o~rvatory orThe
first
photos
·
we~e.
not
bited 381 ·mlles above Ja,vapura,
Intended
to
generatr.
any
new
New Guinea, the shutter of the
discoveries, and project scient wlde·fleld'camera opened for one
ists worried that IntenSe media
second at 11: 12 a.m. EDT Sunday
scrutiny
had raised publiC ex~c­
to take the first black-and-white
tatlons
for
a more spectacular
picture. That photo and another
photograph.
exposure lasting 30 seconds were
NGC 3532, however, was
stored on magnetic tape and
chosen
for the first-light photos
relayed to the ground ~bo~tt 1:32
simply
because It provided a
p.m .
suitable
field
of stars- pinpoints
. The first digital Image was an
.
of
light
to
test the tele5cop's
underexposed shot of the Milky
focus
.
,
. Way s 5ar clust~r known as NGC
3532 ;-a nondescript group of s'tars' · Over tile next seven months,
tile telesco~·s optical system
visible . from the Southern
will
be precisely aligned, g \vlng
Hemisphere.
the
Instrument 10 times the
But the second 30-second pic·
clarity
of ground-based ob&amp;ervature showed dozens of suns In the
torles
and
alloWing astronomers
star swarm. The star Images
to
peer
d~r Into the universe
were slightly elongated but,
than ever before.
overall, the quality was better
The space telesco~ wa~ dethan expected given th11t englsigned
to operate ·for··at least 15
nefrs have not yet finished
years,
studying
various forms-of
focusing the telesco~·s nearlight
In
the
hope
of
gleaning clues
perfect optical system.
·
to
answer
fundamental
questions
A comparison with a ground- .
about
the
birth
of
the
universe,
Its
based photo of the same stars
current
structure,
Its
age,
size
showed the space telesco~ was
-and perhaps Its ultimate fate.

Hours: I A.M..6 P.M. .

10
Mon1hly ·

- Givii'WIY end Found 161 und• 115 word1 v,ti!lt be
~~:· ••• no ICh•ge. .
·
•
111 cepitell•terl il double price ot ld cost.

. ' "We don't think that way at i~ll
yet," she said.
·
Jones's original Uver and heart
were replaced at Children's
Hoapltal during a hiStoric double
transplant on Valentine's Day
1984, because of a genetiC disorder · that pftlvented her own
liver from processing
chloresterol.
On Feti. 20~ surgeons performed a second liver transplant
to replace one damaged -b y
Ufe·threatenlng hepatitis. Jpnes
returned to Texas In mid-March
and lead surgeon Dr. Aildreaz
Tzakls s;lid then the girl's longterm prognosis was good.

"

3
6

•Iii,.;... 1 .10 discount tor ad• Plid in 1dv1nce.

'\

... 446·169t

Words
16
16
16
16
16
'

.;,_,..

FREE
ESTIMATES

A.t• are tor eanMcutN• runt. brokt n·ul:l dWt w ill btchtrgecf
ten 1ar.h rtw 11 Mllltltl edt .

Space.Jelescope snaps its first. picture·~
James Westphal said. "We were
expecting to see something that
looked pretty much like a
ground· based picture. So the fact
that we're seeing something that
"IS really obviously sharper really
pleases us a whole l)unc h. "
The space: telesro~ was ,
launched frcim the shuttle Dis·
co very AprU 25 and despite early
glitches that threw the lnstr!JInent's activation about 10 days
behind schedule, Westphal said,
"We're really doing great by my
perception."
.
"I'm really Impressed with the
speed at which this thing _Is
coming together," he said. "l'm
just pleased as I can be about lt.
We could do a bunch of ·sclence
right now."
· But the photos beained to the .
. Goddard Space Flight Center
control room Sunday were only to
test the focus of thetelesco~and
the operation of the Wide-field
camera, one of six Instruments

RATES
Days
1

__

FENCING

742-3011

.

PITTSBURGH CUPI) - Stor·
mle Jones, the world's first
heart-liver transplant recipient
six years ago, faced tests Monday to determine ~hether her
body was rej~tlng · a second
~
CONIOLING EACH 0'111ER - Tom 1111d Kelly Wilkens hold
transplanted liver.
~
~ Sud~ afternoila Ia Iron of their business, The Balh.
Jones, 12, told Children's Hoslllowla Hoi Sprlnl, Ark. Tbe couple had lo usher people out
pital o(flclals when she was
~ eftlleblilfaer-Jate Salurd~ Dflht because oftbe ftood Waters that
admitted Sunday, "I feel fine. I
~ • Ill&amp; &amp;lie llula-. (UPI)
.
"
· don't feel shaky or weal(. Can' t
}Ne get this over? I don't want to
· r·~~e here for m;; birthday at the
.
end ophe month (May 31)." .
stormle had the groundbreak·
lng o~ratlon In 1984 and had her
second liver transplant In Febru·
ary at Children's. She was
... " ~
ANGELS CAMP, CalH. (UPI)
in the San Joaquin Valley this
; - Uttle old ·native California
week before settling upon his
I, buutroes embarrassed a group of
winner and said Help Mr. Wizard ·
\ glaat African hoppers In the
would be returned to the wild.
~ ~IDals of the 62nd annual CalaveKoffman s~nt weeks giving
., ru County Fair and Jumping
exhibitions and ap~aring on TV
GREENBELT, Md. (UP!)
: Frog Jubilee.
with the likes of Johnny Carson,
The
historic first photos from the
; Greu Jalsschek' s frog named
which Is the name of one of lhe
Hubble
Space Telescope were In
• Help Mr. Wizard won the contest
big hoppers . Another, named Jay
.
better
focus
than expected, giv~ Sunday With three jumps totaling
Lerio, jumped 7 feet , lO ' inches,.
Ing
elate,d
~!enlists
confidence
i 19 feet, 3 Inches, Three of the . Johnny Car$0n hopped only 7-4 ;s .
the
$1.5
blllloli
observatory
will
l. irl!en 10Uaths entered-by Seattle amid boos from the crowd. The
,
live
up
to
If~
billing
ancl
.revoluanimal Importer Andy Koffman
third was disqualified "when it
tlonize knowledge about the
::;:-•uallfled for the finals but were
came Into contact with Koffman
universe.
, oytjumped by all but three
during Its leaps.
"The launch was like an
~ smaller American frogs .
Koffman took six of the really
'
ap~tlzer,"
said NASA astrono•, "I'm disappointed ," said Kof·
big frogs to the competition but
mer
Edward
Weller. "This Is the
~ fman, who blamed cloudy skies
they were limited to exhibitions
soup
and
salad
and now .we're
~ 81\d tem~ratures that ranged
because they were so large they
getting
to
the
entree."
• from 65 to 75 for his frogs' poor
could not comp~v with a contest
: showing.
rule requiring that all four feet fit
Operating high above Earth's
! "It's been really cold, and my , on an 8-lnch circular l~unchlng
obscuring
atmosphere, the 12-ton
• frogs come from the equa-tor,
pad.
telesco~'s electronic Wide-field
: where It's really warm. They're
But even his "little" threecamera snapped two black-and; a lHtle bit tired and they've been
pounders were still .three times
i undl!f !I little bltofstressbec.a use bigger than most of' the Califor- white plct ures of a MUky Way
star cluster Sunday . and after
:• It Is 8(1 co~ here," he said. "My
nia bullfrogs, and lie had trouble
computer proces~lng, the ,came'•. frqrs llave been a little stressed ~queezlng
their feet onto the pad:
ra's chief scientist said the
out.''
Lee Giud lei, whose frog Rosie
.digital Images were two to three
: : · He vtiwed to return next year to
the Rlbeter set the fair's record
times sharper than expected.
~ .(lie contest Inspired by the Mark
In 1986 at 21 feet 5 ~ Inches, said
"I',m tickled pink with what
·t 'l)valn story ''The Celebrated he did not worry that Koffman's
we've
seen today," astronomer
&gt; Jvmplng Frogs of Calaveras African frogs would break the
County."
·
mark.
~
Jalsschek, a 37-year-old auto
When Koffman first appUed for
: parts techniCian from Concord,
admission to the com~t It ion last
• Calif., said he was never worried January, fair organizers turned
: about competition from the.huge him down, saying the mammoth
: African amphibians, the biggest amphibians might eat other
t1 which were about 3 feet long frogs, escape lnt.o the audience
•
~ ,a,!ld weighed about 15 pounds.
and Injure spectators. ~nd un KEY wEST.' Fla. ctJPI) - A.
~ .. · "They didn't do anything• . ·falrly dominate the contest.
flotlllli of Cuban exlkis sailed
• ·e&amp;!Hornla bullfrogs are domlWhen the dispute garnered
within 21 miles of their homeland
":il8nt at Angels Camp," _said
il)ternatlonal publicity, fair
to symboUze solidarity with
&lt;Jal•llt:k, who won $500. "I promoters reconsidered.
• those living under the regime of
State offiCials also Initially
~·-· CKoflman) will now go
Fidel Castro. and to commemo'back·to Seattle and crawl uridl!r a declared the frogs "amphibia
rate Cubans who died while
- - IIIIy pad. His frogs can jump in non grata" and refused to let
trying to escape to the United
tlie Wild, but, for sure, keeping them enter California because of
States.
~:ihim- lln California) as long as he state laws regulating the import
The Cubans, about 120 In all,
of animals . The state changed Its
:!:::c11il didn't pay Off."
,
lncludE!d veterans of the Ill-fated
.. Jala&amp;ehek; a 19-year veteran of
mind alter Koffman p~omlsed to
1961 Bay of Pigs Invasion. They
prevent them from escaping.
.;.i'.~~ CC?r;J!petl~lon, caught 75 frogs
made the six-hour, 70-mlle jour,jr" ,,;t , ~•t"
'
' .,
ney from Key West, fla., Sunday
In 19 small boats, braving 6- to
8-foot seas to hold · a brief
~ .. t•.
memorial service, and toss a
remembrance wreath Into , the
-,, •. ''BETHESDA, Md. t UPI) minutes someone else dies."
swells.
h
·
- Hundreds of AIDS activists,
The offshore demonstration
_ upset With the government's
Some 76,000 Americans have lfas designed to let !'the world
•., "failure" to produce treatments
died of AIDS and the protesters
•'tor the deadly disease, demon· claim that although the federal know that Cubans In exile have
solidarity with the .C:;ubans on the
- strated Monday outside the Nagovernment has spent $1 bllUon Island who have not obtained
"'tional Institutes of Health, the
and 10 years of tes tlng AIDS freedom, said Pepin Pujol, a
·- country's premier biomedical
drugs, only one drug ~ AZT member of the group the coordi~ research facility .
.
has received app~oval by the nated the flotilla.
·
~ - Park Police said between 800
Food and Drug Admlnlstratlqn.
·
"We
hope
thatthe
world
gets
to
"'' and 1,000 protesto:irs gathered at
know
that
Cuba
remains
the·Jast
; the NIH headquarters In the
But Dr. Anthony Fauci, direc- absolute dictatorship ·1n ' the
'washington, D.C., suburb. The
tor of the National Institute• of Americas. "
demonstrators, who came from · Allergy and Infectious Diseases,
Another partlclpant "said , the
~ ·•a far away as New York,
which leads NIH's AIDS · re· journey would help publicize tbe
·caJHornla, Ohio · and Louisiana,
search effort, disputed the acti- dlvlslon cthe Cuban government)
.;;;were kept away . from the build·
vists ' claims that people Infected that separa'tes the exiles from
.), log by mounted Park PoUce and
with AIDS virus have received their homeland. ·
J:.N'IH pollee.
little help from such tests .
" ·· ''The NIH Is acting as If they
"It Cthe protest) won't change
· were trying to cure the common
"Trials of virtually all antlanything. We're just trying to get
cold rath~ than treating a
retrovlral (anti-AIDS) drugs a message out. This Is our Berlin
.••~adly dlilease," said Charles
with .significant _p romise have Wall."
•-Franchino, a member of New
been or will be conducted by the
The U.S. Coast Guard had
_ YQrk's AIDS Coalition to Unleash
AIDS C! inlcal Trial Group,"
Power or ACT-UP, which Is
Fauci said.
.;.·
leading the protest.
: · .Organizers' said "hundreds" of
William Raub, acting Nlll
· protesters have Indicated they
director, Issued a statement that
. are wiiUng to. be arrested by said, "The tragecty of AIDS fs
. 'f~ral pollee for acts -of civil
keenly felt by sclentls ts at NIH,
.~Gflobedlence. . But, pollee had
and the frustrations of people
_IJI&amp;de no arrests an hour after the
who are Infected by the AIDS
&gt;protest began.
virus and their advocates Is
.-Protesters held signs reading,
understandable. :.. NIH Is whole-"NIH - Negligence, Incompeheartedly committed In the
· teace and Horror" and "Nobody
search ... to ldel)tify and discover
"Is Home," and chanted, "NIH,
the therapies and vaccines that
you can't hide, we charge you will even tualiy defeat this
disease."
· wttb 1enoclde," and "Every 12
- . . .. . .

. :_.......;~;,;._;.,.._

---

IUTLAND na
SAliS and
SEIYICE

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace
TO PLACE AN AD .CAU 992·2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY I A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 ~.M. until NOON SATURDAY .
'
y

-

The Daily Sentinel-Page-?

Business· Services

Classified

Henson was a consultant to Walt
Disney Co., which acquired bls
Henson AsliOCiates Inc.ln 1989 for
a repomct $100 million to $1M
million. He bad been under a
long-term agreement With the
company for producing televl·
slon shows and films excluslvely
1
for Disney.
Henson was Involved In three
films, ' 'The Mup~t . Movie,"
''The Great Mup~t Caper.
which he directed, and "The
Muppets Take Manhattan." He
also provided costume design for
•'Teenage Mutant Ninja Tur·
ties." Due for release later ·this
year Is " The Witches," a feature
film based on the Roald Dahl
chUdren's classic.
Henson Productions · said
anyone who Wishes may make
contributions In Henson's name
to the Henson Foundation In
Manhattan, which suppor\s the
work of emerging artists In ·the
field of pup~try .

Stormie hospitalized with ·liver trouble
.

Ohio

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Daily Sentinel

Yard Sale

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AutO Parts.

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tD Night Court Q
7:35 (I) Malar Ltoague BaMbal

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f

8:00 (1) MOVIE: Forovar (2:00)
&lt;IJ Cl! Nlgllt 0t 100 81ars
Ill A Benefit For The Actors·
Fund. Katharine Hepburn,
James Stewart and Helen
Hayes are chairpersons / Q
(!) lndy 500: A Race For
Heroea .With Tony ,
Bettenhausen &amp; Family
II ail Cl Cll Mec:Oyver A
.survivor o1 Tlananmen
Square asks IQr Mac's
protection. (A) 1;1
(D (f) Skyscroper (PI 3 Of
5) Time-lapse photography
dramatizes l~e skills of the

e

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I

13 Gospel Jubilee
tD Major League BaMball
8:30 (I) Women:o Pro Baach
Volleyball From Phoenix, AZ
.(T)
tlDl
@ Newhart A
.Japanese investor buys out
the town. 1;1
13 On Stage
9:00 a ail e CJJ 'Voices Within:
Llvn Of Trudell ChaN, PI 2
Of 2' ABC MlniNrlea (2:00)
(D (!) lnllldt Gorbachev'a
USSR With H..trlck Smith
(PI 4) ,A look at the mounting
unrest that threatens
·
Gorbachev·s reforms. 1;1
tlDl ... G2l Mu!plly Brow~
Corky gets cold leet as her
wedding date gets closer. Q
ID (}]) Allen Nation Sikes
recognizes the marking ol a
serial murderer he never
caught. (Rl 1;1
!!J Ltorry King Llvel
II) Prtme Time WrosUing
13 NaahvHie Now
9:30 (I) Whltbreod
· Arounci·Tito·Workl Yacl\l '
Race
tlDl tit G2l Dealgnlng Woman
A relaxed weekend at a
heahh spa turns Into the
Qattle ol the bulge. Q
10:00 &lt;1l 700 Club With Pat

e

T1 ill Io DO I t.ll. 011

end

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304~
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JEST GOT HER

'SHUJl ..

WASHEI-DflYER If

YEARS!!

A BRAND"NEW

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May22,1110

111 the early pert ol the year aM8d you
are likely tp fare beller in vent- you
do on Y9ur ·own than In oltuationo where
you arelnvolved with others. In the lat·
ter hall ot the year, thia condition could
.,..... HHII.
,
• • • (..., 21-.luna •) Give priOrity
,both loday end
lp ma\)ars
. thai are~ to you ftnii\Cially'
Yool're on a luCky role and good'tltlnlll
could htttll*llor you. Know whore 10
·look for romanc:e and you'HIIncu. Tho

_,ow

'.· 'I

well.
Astra-Graph Matchmaker Instantly re- BAGinARIUS (NCI¥. 23-0oc. 211 A
veals which oigno are romantically per· pleasant surprise could be In the offing
lect lor you. Mall $2 to Matchmaker. c/o lor you at this time. Two situations IIiat
this newspaper, P.O. Box 91428, Cleve- are already runollng rather well might
begin
to
-show
additional
land, OH 44101-3428.
CANCU (JIIM 21-.luly 22) Conditions improvemonls.' ·
liave taen a constructive turn and peo- .CAPIIICORN (Dec. 22-.lan. 11) What
pie who lgnorad you previously could you cannot do on your own today will
now be read, to cooperate with you on have an excellent chanc:a of being ac·
a project ol Importance. Seek tllelr compllllhad with the right type ol partsupport.
ner. Seek out ellectivo aiHoo.
LEO (.....,. I'J.Aug. II) Thlngl could be AQUAIIIUI (...... 10-FH. 11) End recomlng your way al this time wilhout suha ohoulcl pleae you today, provided
having to put out 100 much effort: How· you don't personally lalla meaaur• to
e-, you -.ould conalder how much dlorupt them. Hold tight and let evenll
more can be accomplllhed II you Open run their natural couraea.
,
· ,PIICEI (i'eb. 211 ll~r:tl 2111 Friends
all tho otopa.
VIJIQO (Ayt. 23-,lepl. 22) You have a are apt to dlacuu thlnga wllh you today
.unique iaculty today lor being able to 1 , about whiCh they
reluctant to lj)e8k
help ottwa 10r1 out their allalrs In a In front ol olitera. Whit you learn can be
manner that could be equally beneilclal applied to lurttw your own interooto.
lor both them and youl'lllt. ·
Nllll lllaroh 11•Aprll tl) Your prosLi811A (lept. 23-0DI. II) SOI'nolhlng ol' · pectalor enlarging your mat«lal b stgnllicanc:o you may accomplllh today ."look very promlalng In ihil lime 1....... II
could produCe dual benellta. The bonut you handle altull'- coorctly, you
portion, howe•, migh1 not be obvlout could end up on the prolli o1c1e ot tho
to you at flrat glanc:e.
'lodger.
ICOIIPIO (Oot. M ~·· ~ This II ar ·;TAOIIUI I"PP:: ...., 211) Todlty you
,.gooddaytopu1 ... fiilltlllngtoueh41on .lhOUid be able .to pertorm,.ry ftllln 1
.., olg;Nnent YQII'WI ~ Mg0ilatlng 1 dfttlopmenta IMI ~ulro imlglnatlve.
·:loriOIMtlme. Miherolaparttylntllur- ' touehel. ~lalthlnyourkllu,-"
rangemeoot, both perilla wiM c1o very !My . .
lilted by amclalel.

n

.

(1) Slirter Magazine (0:30)
(DNa-watch
(!) Local H-o, GlObal
Chango (PI 3 Of 4)
Development is not merely
an economic process with

spcial elfec:tB.

Jl"""l.'""""

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.

2)

......

HOme

ca

!!J Malor Dad l'he
Major bids a fond lareweU to
his friends at the base. (PI 2
012)
18(!]) "l1 Jump Stroot
Penhall loses the trust of his
new rookie partner. 1;1
cr11 PrimaNawo
·
I!J Murder, $he WO"Qta Death
Stalks The Big Top (PI 1 01

rtdraai'IILNI on :

81

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by f1llmg '"' the m11SIMQ wotds

you develop from ,st•p No. 3 below.

IN

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I' I' II I' I' r I
II I Il I )

...

Siskal and Ebert host their
lirsl network special.
Included will be an interview
with Clint Eastwood and
Kathleen Turner. Q ·
• ll]) N- Twilight Zone
@ E~enl~ Newa
10:20 (5) MOVIE: The Beaotmaoter
(PG) (2:30)

..

NORTH

BRIDGE

lree two families held
hostage 'by ·three young
Cubans .
.. 13 Muaic Row v~
aJ Abbott And Cootollo
7:05 (5) Jetfe;IOIII
1:30 G (I) Family Feud .
(I) l'o1ot01WIIk liluatraiH
0 ail E - l n - Tonlgllt
D (J) Maml'a Famly

Evl~m;- •

~~ i O~~

•·

.

(JJ Curronl Affair

0 Miami VII:• Tubbs tries to

a_uWe
-Johrwon
· -motor.
'rr.okorllalor
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hD i:
Elealrto Tlelllnt ..... .... '
Trolllt end H - c
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NewoHour
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Boats l Motora
for Sale

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6:35 &lt;il Ancly Ortiiith
'7:00 &lt;Il Scarecrow I Mrs. King

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SCUJALITS ANSWERS
' f"·l8 ·
Safety - Thank-M!'!)'_ - Reject HEART RATE
"Isn't 11 'rice that Dad s danced evel}' dance with
you?" I asked Mom. Shrugging she explained, "He
missed his filness class and needs to sustain his ,,......,
HEART RATE."
...-·~----__.;..;-_::_.,...~·---.

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Q21 Hengln' In .

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Block IIOIMI Now • 4711 milia, ;
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111112 2801

VISMIASTEIICARD.

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do
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(D llody Electric

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Employment Services

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Apiutmant
torRent

1IG Mandl CUMalll C81101

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aJ Charloo In Charge

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(!) World Today
II) He-Man

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TRV' TO IMA61NE
WI-IAT '!'OUR DREAM
61R.L WOULD

..... 1117 - . •

2 tlr. tum.'lll or unfllm'lll.

1

SI-IE DI-lAVE ROUND
EARS LIKE TWO COOKIES,
6)6 EVES UKE TWO
MORE COOKIES ANI?
A NOSE LIKE A
COOKIE ..

DO VOV EVER

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H.UROTA ' I

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CI!News
(I) Scholaotic Spor1a
Americ:e
·
(D Wild Amellca Examine
various species ol seals and
sea lions on the Pacific
Coast. C
·
(f) Reading Rainbow Q

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Publlo Auallon: 'linton Caunty,
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McCormlcll 1;1
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low to form four si mple WOt"ds.

EVENING

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MON., MAY 21
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PubliC Sale
&amp;Auction

Help wanted

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Viewing .

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ALL Yord - - h Pold In
- -:2:00
the ..., ....... lo to
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Frtdly. _ , odlllon • 2:00
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21. 1990

Monday.

Pomeroy"- Midcleport, Ohio

.QJ

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.K 10S32

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.AJ94

Getting. a foot
in the door

WEST

EAST

.AI0984

.Ke532

:~

By James Jaroby. '

.'

:~: ~ 4

Tbe path lo brid&amp;e glory is strewn , • AKJ 10 9 3
•• 2
)Nith the s!!Jy mi$takes of bapl~ op- ·
SOUTH
poru:nts. . That takes nothing away
• 7
from the skill of Dr. Charles Robinson,
• AJ 8
who' brought in hve diamonds doubled
• K Q 10 6 ~ 2
in today·s deal to win the Senior Swiss
• Q7•
Team event In the North American
Vulnerable: East-West
Championships last March. Forget
Dealer: South
that the opponeniS rould make five
spades without a tremor; forget also S..w
~~ . Norw
that as defenders they could take the 1 •
2•
lint three tricks to but the contract. 3 •
3+
4•
Instead follow declarer Robinson's
~~~pass Pass Pass
play after West and Easl collaborated
to hit him see daylicht
Opening lead: • K
After the diagramed auction, WeSt
led the king of clubs. He then cashed
and returned to dummy with :
the ace of spades, on which East, per- one rJ.s
iriore diamood. The kiD&amp; aud live
haps foolishly, played the six-spot. of hearts were now winDers, aud South.,
West then continued with another sbed two clubs to make Ills doubled'
spade, and declarer ruffed a!l East contrac:t.
played the king. Declarer now played
Robinloo's play was well·iudaedking of diamonds and another dia· West
was an experienced player, w11o :
mond to dummy. Next came the 10 of would hardly come !lack II! at the
hearts, covered by East's queen. and three-level in spades without a ~
·. taken by the ace. Declarer returned to distributlonalliand, 10 it was r!Dt to ·
dummy and played a low taeart. When play him for singletons iD boti ...6~.
East followed low, the eigbl was in· suliS. Too bad for East-Well that espeserted. Declarer cashed the jack of rienced West failed to bid live ~des. ·
'·

CROSSWORD
.
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
2 Plato's ·
markel1 Unscathed
place
5 Slilchea
9Gaze
3 Reminder ;
10 So long,
lip
4 Lamprey
amigo
12 Christmas 5 Kansas
13 Missive
city
·6 German
15 Macaw.
river
16 Douglas
7 Intellect
t7 Bikini
8 Accept
part
11 Placid
t8 "A - in
14 Honey
the Sun·.
badger
(1961 film) 16 Hit upon
20 Fruit
19 Oregon
decay
eily
21 Zcila novel 20 Tasteless
22 Maginol
23 Reprimand
25 Jury list
26 Resiliency
27 Go under
28 Utah city
29 Jewelry
piece
32 Ninny
33 Average
34 And not
35 Adolescent
37 Russian
river
36 Corrupl
39 Watched ·
40 Rockfish
4t Erase
DOWN
1.Sub's
device

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Yesterday's Anawer
23 Ermine
24 Girdle
25 Break·
water
27 Ancienl
Greek city
30 Literary
work

31 Do
business
33 Film
dlreclor
36 Never
(Ger.)
37 Actor

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~ally

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DAILY CRYPI'OQl)OI ES- Hert'l how le wert It:

!1121

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10:30 (I) Lighter Side Of Spona
(0:30)
(D Loca' Heroes, GlObal
Change (PI 1 Of 4) People ol
develOping nations define
their own problems and
solvelhom.
•[I) lanny Hill Show
8 C-'&lt; ChoN
11:00 (J) Hanlcaltle And

a

McCorntlcll

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lho gets a P!Oiiie or her
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Dwtgllt Yoakl"1 and Garth
Brooks IlOna with·Roy
Rogara and bala Evana Invite
1'1081 Lorianne Crook Into
.
lhelr ilomle.
'1:30.(J) Cl! .... Of car® Ill taC11111f

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apostrophes, lhe lfl18th and formaUon of lhe words are aU
hints. Eac~day lhe code letters are dlffem.t. .
CIIYPI'OQUOTE8

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oDe letter stands for another. In this sample A Ia tilled

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(I) S•sellll Tonilh1
• ([D ArMnio Hall ·

0 Mtantl vtca Gina's

AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW

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IZAHGGHG .A . - R . M . IZ· ZSRZN
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BE AT REST AND SOAR ON HIGH AMONG THE
BLEST. -ANNE BRADSTREET
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Page-10- lhe Daily Sentinel

-Local news

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Long.... ....:C::.::o:::n~ll,::nu::e::.::d:.;f:.:.ro;;:m;;;.:P;,:a::ge.:...1_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..;.;:

briefs-~

mistakes.
life. Until nqw tllJS book bas been ~
She talked about dreams. pro- greatly !nfiuenced by our .,
tected and nurtured, putting teachers, family and friends. But:
foundatiOns under those dreams, today another chapter IJeilnS, a z
and the obstacles encountered In chapter yet unwritten; anc!'start-.,
achieving those dreams. In con- !ng today you are !he sole author~
elusion Miss Beegle quoted of the rest of thiS book."
'
, Brooker T.Washington, " SueThe salutaton.,n ll!ferred t oll&gt;
cess Is to be measU1'ed not so Robert Frost's pqem of two ?
much hy the position that one has . paths, one sho\vlna evidence of;.
, reached In life as by the obstacles , ·much .use. an!i one, ~ traveled,.
he has overcome while trying ,to and challenged,hla C!&amp;S&amp;f!Uites to~
succeed."
lind t,be right P!llh. ·
-~
Salutatorian Waller Edward · · ~nton Taylor, principal, pres-{
Crooks In his address challenged en ted the 148 seniors and dlplo-~
his classmates. to ''make your mas were given by Robert E ..•
ownbookabestseUer.''Hespoke·. Barton, president of the Meigs!
of graduation as a p!vot,al point In , Lo.c al l!oard ·of Education. The.:
, the life of the class and detailed class roll was read by KeltY:'
the experlences of , the pas I 13, , LouAnn Douglas, secretary &lt;~'}
years, of the hard work, cl~terml- lbe 5;en1or clllSS·
!
. nation and perseverance which ,' The recessional ·followed th~
led to .a high school diploma.
Meigs High School's alma mater,~
"Life Is like a bOok," com- ,"Maroon and Gold" played by.,.
men ted Crooks, " and each chap- .the.band.
·
·Z
ter of the book is a ~rt of your , 1: · . .
.
.
•• ; ·

Lorotion chflnged for event ·
The location for vlewl,ng the family pictures taken recently at
the Middleport Elementary School, a project of the PTO, bas
been changed. Vlewlngwlll be held Tuesday through Thursday
at the Middleport Arts and Crafts building on North Second St.
I

i

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Census WfJfkers test Tuesday ·
.
·•

'

A 30-mlnute test to'r census workers will be given at 10a.m and
1 p.m. Tuesday at \}le Community Action Agency In Cheshire.
The largest. number of jobs;to be filled are for census, takers .
Successful applicants will work In an area close to their homes.
The jobs lastfrOm two to e ight weeks, the hours arenexlble a'nd .
. the pay is $6 an hour plus 24 cents per mile.

Sen. John Glenn...
CQntlnued from page 1
.
. .
mencement throughout 'he day, Ritchie, ReedsVIlle; Terrie Anne
'

the 'Yeather held long enough for . Starcher, Racine.
College cit Educa&amp;lcin, Health
tile two-nour event to be held on.
: the campus green ·In front of · Wid ,Phylllcal Eduea&amp;lon - Alan
Allen Hall. Music wa.S provided Lee Crisp, Racine; ·Cheryl .DO'by the University Sympliontd reen Haltey,.Middleport; Sherry
Band', under the direction ·. oC I.;ynn ·He.nsler, Racine; Joyce
David Phillips, a.nd voc'al selec- Diane Roush Otto, Pomeroy;
tions were prese.n ted by "th1f Laura Marie s8tser, Middleport; .
Grande Chorale under the super· · Jennifer Joelle Shuler, Dexter;
vision of David Faber, Ph.D. Car9l Ann Smith, Middleport;
Jenifer Circle-Potter, a graduate Robyn L. Venoy Wayland, Pomefrom . Oak Hill, sang th~ . seniOr r.oy; Ral~ H.. Werry. Pomeroy,
solo, "If Only You Believe" by
College of Mathema&amp;lcs and
· Robert J . G!elas. .
· ··
Natural Science.- Kenneth Sean ' .
Presentation or diplomas to the Grueser, Racine; Judith Carol
bachelor's and assoclat~ degree McCarthy; Mlddle!Jort.
graduates was made by Dr. Paul
Eme1'8011 E. Evaaa College of
C. Hayes, the unlverslt.y presi- Business Man&amp;lienJeat- Jeffrey
dent, and the name of each Lee Nel!l. Middleport..
graduate was announced by Ray .
College of TechHiogy - Jef,
Boggs, Pli:D., vice president for frey Stewart Frank, Racine.
· academic affairs.
.
. · Associate of Arts Degree,
·The· ceremony closed with · a College of General !i&amp;ndles and
tlie graduates from Ll~al. Arts ..,. Kimberly Lynn
welcome
Judy JohnsOn Burdell, pre,sldent '(lent, Pomeroy; Max E . Hill Jr. ,
of the Rjo Grande Alumni Associ- Racine.
, . .
.
ation, and a benediction from the
, Asso&lt;llate of Applied lluslness ..
Rev . Paul F- White, campus Dep-ee, Business :Mana1ement
chapl!\ln. Graduates then joined · .~ Angela Diane Garten, Long
·
·
in the traditional Circle ·on the Bottom, ·
Asiioctate of Applied lluslilesa
Green and sang the alma mater,
"The Red and White."
t)ep-ee, Secretarial Sclel!lle EarUer in the day, graduates Donna Mae Tillis, Middleport.
attended the Baccalaureate and
Associate of Applied Science
Founders Day ' Tribute, ' con- Pegree. Holzer College of Nun-ducted in tlie Christensen Thea- lag - Sherry Renee Cooper,
tre of the Fine and Pel'formlng Middleport; Judy Lynn Davis,
Arts Center. During his sermon,
Langsville; Cheryl Lynne LeWhite urged the graduates to hew, Pomeroy; Kellee J . Nease,
adopt a positive outlook on life Racine; DOnlta April Pooler,
· ·· after college, not only in their Pomeroy; Cheryl ,Darlene Sta,
everyday affairs &lt;but In their pleton, Pomeroy,
. . Assoolate · of Applied Science
personal relatlonslil!lll.
Meigs County graduateS' re~gree,
Medical Laboratory
ceiVIng their diplomas were: ·
Technology - Bol!nle ~nn Hag' · ICoUeJe of General !i&amp;ndles and gerty, Pomeroy; Darla 'K. WIUI· · Uberal Arts - Allee Louise amson, Pomeroy.

EMS -respontls

..
· THE PR()CESSI.,NAL - The commencement procl!llllional .of
·the lt8 Melp Hlp Scbool-lon was led hy Melanie Jane Bee~rle,
valedictorian and Walter Edward Croob, salutatorian: &amp;tb Mlu
Beepe and.
iavl! addiessea as ,. part ofthe commencement

C.:.Ou

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to 12 calls

'

Units of the Meigs County
Tlie Rutland unit transported".
· Emergency Medical Service reAnn. Sprague · at 10: 0:! fronl.'l:
sponded to 12 calls for assistance
Sheets Road to Veterans.
~
on Saturday and Sunday.
At 10: 04,p .m. the romeroyunl~
At 3:06a.m. on Satlirday, the . respondedtoacallonGoldRid~
Pomeroy unit was called to. the . ROad for Charles Harper whO:'!
.Pomeroy Pollee '(lepartmenf.for
was taken to Holzer Medlcalt
Betty Man~ln who was taken to
Center. .
··
' .
· ·
Vete,rans Memorial Hospital,
On Sunday a:t 12:56 a.m. tb~
·and at 6:44a.m . tlte unit went to
.Rullarid 'unit' transported Terry;
· Country Mobile Home Park fdr
Hut(o11 to Veterans.
'~
James Burt. At ·12: 06 p.m. the
At 1:55 p.m. the Syracuse u.njt:;l ·
unit was called to East Main
Went to Second' Street on at
Street for Harold Burt who was · structure fire ·call. .
~
·transported to Veterans. ·
The 'final call for assistance£
The Syracuse -unit, at 12:58 . came at . 2:p4 p,.m. wheq · _t~11
.p.m., transported to . Sliannon · . Raclne·unlt was called to County~
Dennis to Veterans.
·
· Road 35 for ·Lllllan Proffitt who•
'
· ·At 4: 02 p.m. · the Chester Fire
was taken
to Holzer·.
, "
Department responded to a call
~
on Scout Camp Road for a brush · ·
flte.
'
.
.
.
. .,
At 6:54 p.m. the Rutland unit
Mr. aiid" Mrs. Le; oy Watso.;f
was calted to Meigs Mine No. 2' will celebrate their 50th weddlngt
n1v ·
J
3' f
2-41&lt;
· for Glenn ~oore; Jeff Hunter,
., Dwayne Mal!Ollan, and Darrell
~nm: :f~~~e~~w~~~ ha~f:!: th~
Osler who were transported to
Syracuse Church of the::
O'Bieness Hospital In Athens. , Nazarene.
.
.,_~
The l\lldd!eport unit, ~~ 8: ~7
The couple was married June~
. p.m ., went to Mill Street for Doy
5, 1940. The event will be 'hos~
· Nltz who was taken .to Veterans.
by the coupre's , chlklrel! · an)'l~
g~acdchlldren.
·
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;vent tJile 3

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Hoi3pibd news
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. Reooivrs schQiarships ,

. Veterans Memoi-tal

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a

e. .
t.

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Southern...

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'1 990

THE LASTDECADE ·OF.THE TWENTIETH -CENtURY

!ire

gift

-wm.

W ·th
ea , er ·•

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__. ---· '-··- ____ ___,.·--------- ---·-·· ..
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Meigs

athletes
honored

Daily Number
053
Piek-4
.3522

Youi Barik#t~..;

Fs· Farmers Bank

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Partly cloudy tonl&amp;'ht.
In ll!ld 40s. Pardy

••

en tne
1 So.ction, 10 Pogeo

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. Tuesday, May 22, 1990

26 Cento

I

A Muhlmedia Inc.

I

1

_.__i

SatUrday admissions~ · Larry .
Chris Stewart, 1990 gradual(;
SALUTA'l'ORV ADDRESS - Cbrlll Murphy stressed · th~
lmportanee of hard work and achieVIng a good educatl\)11_during
Patterson, Racine; Tina Jacobs,
of .Meigs ijlgl,l Sch001, was the:'
hili salutatory· addrellil at Southem High School's·.baccalaureate ., Pomeroy. ' ,
.
·
recipient of the Parker Lo~~g~~
and· commencement exercises on Sunday even,lng~
Saturday .dischar-ges - .Roger
Scholarship of $700. The scholar{
ship was prese11ted at Thurs:J&gt;
.
.
·
•
At!Jey, .f!rlalf Chr~tman .
.
day,'s award ceremony held a~
continued from flagel ' .
.
..,. c:
• sundliy,\a'\)llll~slons - Terry
Coy -Green
the high school. Stewart al ~
years, Mary Agne5 Hlte Richard·
Anna Sprague,
does
pay , off. · He encouraged · the .1990 gra dua 1es_ ex11e d the. . . 'Hutron,
Dexter. Rutland,
, ,
.
received
the Rodd Harris~
son,
two
sons,
William
HUe
Coy B. Green', 75, Rt. 3 Albany,
participation . In sports but st11ge as well as another chap!ef.
, Sunday discharges_ None.
Paul
Isaac
RiScholarship
of $750.
=
Richardson
and
died early Sunday morning at
,. .
,,.
·
stressed also the Importance of . of their lives. . .
chardson,
beth
of
the
home;
two
Veterans · Administration Medl·
good grades and a good educa·
daughers,, Mrs. Oris C; (Linda
,cal Center In Ch!llcothe. .
tlon. He stated "sports ;ue great
·'
Born In Gaiena, Mr. Green was Sue) SeabOlt of Wasl)!ngton, W.
and I 'encourage anyone who
Va.;
and
Annetta
May
Richard·
the son of late Howard and Susie
wants to to participate, but
·Holt ·Green. He was . self· son, Coolville; two granddaugh- sports, whhout'gOod grades, will
'•
I
employed as a carpenter, .a~d ters, EmUy Suzanne Seabolt and
not get you Into college, or get ·
Aimee
Rochelle
Seabolt,
both
of
wa:s an 'i'rmy ,veter~n of World
you a good job."
.
·
War:U, a member of'the Albany Washington, W. Va. Also survlv- ,
concluded
his
address
Murphy
VFW .9893, and a member · of . Jng are one sister, Mrs. Gene by giving special thanks to his
(Bernice. Arnoid of Beverly, ·
McArthur OAV.
.
parents ·for all o! their support In
.several
nieces and nephews.
Mr. Green Is survived by· his .
his
high school en!leavors, and
wife, Grace Ho;!ss .!,::reen; one son, Including David L. Cogar of New
for
teaching
him to do the best he
Coy Burton Green Jr;, with the Marshfield, and several cousins
can
at
whatever
·h e attempts.
U.S. Navy In tl!e Philippines; two lncludlilg two with whoin he was
Kathy
lhre
deliver-ed
the vale- ·
step-sons, Albert ·and GeOrge . raised, Thomas L.· (Jack) Rl·
dlctory
address
and
used
two ·
Hess, both of Albany; two step- chardson. Cecil D. Richardson, ·staitzas Cram the poem, ." Now/ ''
daughters, Mrs. Tom !Pan Jr. both of Coolville.
by Charles R. Skinner. as the
In addition to his parents he
Hackett. Columbus; and Mrs.
basts,
.
was preceded In death by his first
Steve (Susan) Cole, Kilbourne;
Miss
Jhle
stressed
the
lmpor·
12 ., grandchildren. five great wife, Norma Jean Coga~ RIlance of taking advantage of the
grandchildren, two . brothers, chardson In 1951, their tnfant
here
and now, stat111g thal"lf we
Frank of Mesa; Ar,lz,; and d!lughter, Norma S,h aron Rl·
hesitate
today, then tomorrow
Howard, of Akron;· two sisters, . chardson also In 1951, a stepmay
be
too
late." She weni on to
Helen ~riCe, Columbus; and mother, Helen Kincaid Richardsay
that
"we
must ·celebrate
son In' 196E! . .
Rizpah Rees, Delaware. ·
everything
we,
have accomp- ,
Services will .b e held at 1 p.m.
In addition to his parents, Mr.
llshed
beCause
what
we have
Green was preceded In death by Wednesday at the Coolville
part
In
who we.:
done
plays
a
big
Grace Brethern Ctiurch with the
six brothers and two sisters. · '
are
today."
Services will be held Wednes- Pastor •George Horner and the
Sill' stated that each person has '
day at' 2ip.m. at the Blgoily, Rev. RoberiW. Markley, and the
the
chance at su~cess each day
Jordan Funeral Home In Albany Rev. Joe Bush officiating. Burial
that SJICcess does not II!WBYS
and
with ReV ; Arthur Crabtree offl· · wlU be . In , the Troy Baptist
mea.n
the accomplishment of
elating. ' Burial will be In tli~ Cemetery near· Frost where
something
major. She noted that
School.Lot Cemetery where there military graveside rites will be
can
be something. as
success
wlll be military graveside servi- held. The body willlleJn state at
small
as··
doing
a job ·well ·or
ces by theAibanyVFW Post9893. the church for one hol!r prior to
simply
helping
•
someone feel
· ,
Friends may call ai the funera~ ser.vices Wednesday,
hett!'r
about
themselves:
"
Friends may can at the Wblte·
hOme on Tuesday from 6-'9 p.m. ·
Miss
Ih,le
noted
that
the
word
Blower Fulleral Home after 7
"now" has the elusive quality
.
'
.
t
p.m today, aU day Tuesday •a nd
W~ L. Rieh;u:dson
can not be captun!d or saved
that
a.m.
'Thuruday.
Ma·
·until
11:30
LET YOUI;t BANK FOR LIF:E START YQUR F~MILVTAADITI~N with a
William Lewis Richardson, 64,
and that the only· way' to truly
sonic
memorial
services
are
1990 American Eagle Fhie Dollar Gold Coin or a 1990 Unc~rculated, ...
5401 Ohio Route 144, Coolville,
experience now Is by liVIng life to ·
direct descend~l!l of one of . scheduled for 7 p.m Tuesday at
the
fullest.
She
urged
her
fellow
.
:. .
,
• Bank Set.
. Athens County's f.lrst famllles, the funeral home.
'
•'..
~
.
graduates to "grasp each mo-.
The 1990 American Eagle Five Dollar Coin containS: 1/10 ounce C)f r;u~•
died Sunday at his home follow - · .John Morris
·ment tO!lay so when you look .
ing an extended Illness.
gold. It has been praised for its "extraordinary beauty" with the sqarlde
John Morrts, 79, or Pomeroy,
bac~ on . your yesterdays-..you
1
Born on a farm near Frost, he died Sunday ·night at the Holzer \ ·• won t be filled with regrets.
of pure gold and beautiful American Eagle stamp. . ·
-:
•
.
was the son of , Wade Allee Medical Center In Gallipolis. ,
· She noted the_ lm~rtance of
··The Uncirculated Bank Set contains a · mint conc:lltlon 1990 penny.
Richardson and Ethel May ·Lake
Born on Dec. 31, 1910 In Floyd
apflreclatlng people and e1(pressRichardson.' Following his moth· . County, Ky .. he was the son of
nickel, dime. quarter. and one-half .dollar.
.•
lng emotion towards those whO
er's death In 1930, he was raised Alexandra Morris and Quincy
have given so. much of them:
on the original !all'!IIY homestead Morris: ,
Both come in a decoTative US Eagle Box. Actual coina
contained in a ·
·
:o;lves . She concluded by stating
along the Hocking River by his
clear display caise to protect them from the wear of t1me. · · .. .
,
. He Is survived by his wife
nowlsthetlmetofac.ewhatls~o ·
'
.
•
I
· •f
·
f
grandmother, Annis i\nnetta Nellie Morris · Pomeroy two
come eagerly and with great
· An excellent gift for graduation I ·
. , .·
. ··
.
· . ·. · .· ·
Browning Richardson. He was a daughters, Gw~nda Swan, Pomehope lor the future.''
.
1943 graduate of , the old roy and Vlrlgn!a Bowles GlenOr
as
a
for
baby.shOwers.
birthdays.
wedd1ng
ann~nes.
aod
more. ·.
Following the valedictory adCarthage-T~oy High School In
Ot. keep them in your own· collection as a plec' of history representing ..
mo~t; 11 grandchildren, 20 greatdress; James Adams, principal,
Coolville, and had attended grandchildren, two brothers,
recognized the seniors w~o re1990.
•
.
co llege.
Leonard.. Morris of M~kin and
ce!ved awards at Friday s aslie was aU. S. Navy veteran of Arthur Morris of Indiana.
Stop in The. Famiers Bank ~nd ·savings Company in Pomeroy or Tupper8
sembly held at the high school.
World War II, having served
Bobby Ord, superintendent,
Services ,will be held' at 1 p.m.
Plains and ask us about these and ot.h er speeial purchased.
.
. ••'
aboard the USS. Celeno In' the Wednesday at . the Free
j)resented the cli\SS, and Gary
We wantto be your Bank, For Ufe.
'
·
South · Pacific. In 1985 he retired Baptist Church In Oak Hill. The
Evans, member of the Board of
•
from Dupont Washington Works Rev. Charles Harrison will offlEducation, presented the dlplo, where he had been employed for clate and burial will be held In the
mas to the graduates·.
36 years as an electrician.
C.M. cemetery at Oak HID. .
Following the be,nedlctlon by
He also· operated a small
Friends
may
call
at
the
Rejolc~ev.
Grave, the band perfo':t;"ed ·
1etectrlcal business for several
tng Life Church at Middleport, 2
Pomp and Circumstance as .
t,.
years and was an avid trout
fisherman . He was a member of . to.8 p.m. on Tuesday. There will
• '1 Member FDIC
tile. American Legion, the Cool- be calllng hours at the Free Will
·, '
•'
"
ville' Masonic . Lodge, the Na- Baptist Church In Oak HID from
·. ·
&amp; Savings.Company
'Soulb Cenlral Ohio
. ;,'
tional Rifle Association,' · at- 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Wednesay.
Partly
cloudy
Monday
night,
Funeral
arrangements
are
being
••
tended tpe Grace Brethern
992-2136
bandied by the Kuhner-LeWis with a low between 45 and 50.
667-3161
Church In Coolville.
Partly
cloudy
Tuesday,
w!tti
Fune~al Home at Oak ijlll.
·
·.
Pomeroy,
O~io
Tup,pen Plaips, Ohio
He Is survlved ·by his wife of 35
highs near 70.

--Area deaths--

Lottery

Pomeroy .CoUncil.to
off~rs ·free parking.
for Heritage visitors
~

t

to

,,

Monday.~ 2'i. 19M

'

.

.

I

I.
!

By JULIE E. DILLON
this time which are tryjng rodo willbenofurrhernighrworkdone
Sentinel News Staff
. justthat.
.
by ·the s.treet crew . These new •
Pomeroy ' Village Council
Bates stated that interactive
hours will take affect Friday:
members were enco~:~rageq . to . video would be a joint venture
Councll member Betty Baronattend Heritage Wee.kend testivJ.. between the phone companies
lck ~tated her concern with the
ties June 8-10 by Mary Powell. · and cable television companies. house on· Brick Street that had
chairman oflhePomeroy Sesqul- He went on to say that the project· burned recently and when that
centennial Committee, at Mon- would provide consumers with
property would be cleaned up. I'
day night 's regular meeting of such s.e rvices as on-screen con- She stated also that she had .
the council.
suiting with physicians or hospl- received complaints from MuiMrs. Powell, along with Roger tals and direct hook-up to college ·· berry Heights residents regard·
and Mary Gilmore, requested. classrooms. He stressed that
lng the pavement of their road·
permission to free the parking these &lt;1-re just. ii few of the
way. She went on to say that the
meters on that weekend, which services which could be provided residents are dissatisfied wfth
was grapted. and ·· to make by Interactive video.
. the way tile road was paved, t~at
·
arrangements
for
daily
trash
·
Bates
urged
the
members.
o!·
· u. was not completed, and that
DONA110N -Mary
for
the
Melp
County
PUblic
Library.
'
l'l.!!
tape
removal
from
the
vlllage
for
that
council
to
write
to
their
congress·
they want It restored to . Its
Powell, left, chairman of the,Pomeroy Sesqulcen- . was donated to the ~e~qulcentenntal commlt.tee
· ·
·
1 h
,
·
'
·
weekend.
men
seeking
the
passage
o
t
e
previous
state.
·
· .·
. tennlai Committee, presented a video of the book,
bY
·
B
rooks
Shoe
Outlet
of
NelsonVIlle
•.
,·
..
;.
.
.
Mrs.
Powell
stressed
the
im.
b!ll
In
the
Senate
w!llch
would
·
Bruce
Reed,
councfl
memb@r,
, "Worldwalk" by &amp;even Newman to Ruth Powers
' · '
I·
portance of keeping the commun- · open-up the Interactive video st&lt;tted that he had recelvi!&lt;J
.lty clean for that weekend markat:' Bates has been showing
several complaints regarding
becauseoftheamountofpeople thelnforinatlvevideotovar!QUS
BeechGroveCemeteryandt!lat ,
from out of 1he area that w,lll groups to make the public aware . something should be done J;e·
"
.,
' .
'
attend the festivities . She •s tated of what ls.faklng place with the gardlng the upkeep of It.
·
th&amp;t extra trash containers will . possible service.
Council member Thomas
beprovidedbytheMelgsCOui)IX
ArequestwasmadebyBrenda WerrynotedthatW!lUsQUIRoad
·
...• ·
.
·, .. '
, .
. .
,
·
. .
; .
.
·.
DepartmentofLitterControlbut . l\1oqls, v!llageclerk,totransfer . needs repalrad because there- j
•
•
that pickup of the garbage would $30,000 from the general fund to , cent rains haire caused the road
By C~RLENE HOEFIJICH .
The board ,voted not to renew 'for ~tudehis will be May 24,
have to be arranged.
the street fund to maintain a
to wash-out. Werrywentontosay 1
Substitute teachers and non-. tlie c;cmtra,cts of th,e paraApproval was give'!-' by . 'the
Mrs. Powell .also reques.ted necessary balance In the street. thill It basically needs graded as
-certified personnel were hired professiOnal coaching staff. J.D. . hoard to hire a half-day·teacher
asslstanc.e and lnformiltlon from ful!d i!Ccouni. Upon discussion by
well as ditched.
and the calendar for the 1990-91 • :axadbury,' .assls,tant foot!J;~ll . for the' Chapter .I readlnfl councll .on matters of electrical . council, !We requested $30,000
L-arry w·ellrung, .council
school year adopted at· ,MonilaY · coach; Tammy Chapman, aS$1St· ·progral!'l. "
•
.· . and water · hookup fo,r . vendors was amehded .to $35,()()(): Mrs.
member, presented a request
night's meeting of Ihe Southern , a11t softball ~oach; Sco~t WickThe agreement wjth the J;:du• who will . ser lip bcoths on · Mor.rls noted that the transfer from Dgnald May, Martin Street,
Local Board of Education held at
line. junior htgh football, Tonya
catlonal Technical -Services to · · Harltage ~eekend.
·
was needed . because of street
to abandon a section of that road
the high school. - . ·
··
Hunter, Junior high volleyball;
provide education;~! television
. A pr9pdsal 'presented by Gil-' repairs and the use of salt during which rutis through his. property
Substllute teachers hired were .Ronnie Quillen, reserve bl!sketprograms was renewed for next
more was accepted·by council to the winter months.
because he wants to landscape.
Pomeroy , Mayor Richard
Council agreed that May would
Lucille Haggerty, Linda Fisher, ball coach; Jim Caldwell, re- year at a cost of $545.05. The close a portion of Second Street
hoard also voted to subscribe to
and all ~f . Court Street for Seyler and council voiced tlle!r
have to. haveltsurveyed.b~tthey
.
· Jane Manuel, Leda Kraeuter, serve basketball coach_;. J'1ecky
Barbara Lawrence. Mike Ed·
Mallory, junior high clieerlead·
the Specla)ityTechnlcal Publish·
Heritage Weekend festivities. overall dissatisfaction with the did not see any problems with
ers, Icc., a service providing The i;lf&lt;lpcised plan also will close street repa,!rs that have taken
May landscaping the property.
wards, E.lleen Buck, Lee Lee, !ng advisor; and David Deem,
Information on the rules and
a section of the middle parking place' within the village. Mayor . Wehrung also. stated that the
Vinas Lee, Tammy Chapman, assistant marching band.
Debbie Davis, Steve Deaver,
The re~lgnatlon of Alan C~lsp
regu~tlons for toxic substances
lot on the riVer where the Seyler noted that lhe street crew
pollee department needs to en- ·
Carolyn Robinson, Helen Maag,
as girls junior high basketball ln Ohio. The cost Is $203.75.
concession · vendors wilt' be has been trying to repair the ' force the malntalnence and upBrian Zirkle Rose 'Ann Jenkins, coach.was accepted by the board.
Next m~tlng was set for June located.
streets without the proper equipkeep of yards .and homes ·by
Nathan :Robinette, 'valerie Han·
The-board approved the 1990-91
11. Attending were Denny Evans,
· Gt.Jmore stressed that the plan . ment and that council should
property owners In the village.
vice president; Gary Willford, will not only centralize the check Into possibly having reIn final matters, the· need for
stlne, ' Robin Pitzer, Shirley school calendar. Teachers will
McDonald carol Smith. Lois report on Aug. 24 with schpol to
Scott Wolfe and Susie Gruaser, activities butlt'alsowlllallowfor pairs done 'bY an outside certain drivers who are emstart for students on Aug. 27. The , hoard members; Bohhy Ord, tlghtilr control of traffic.
company.
.
ployed with the·village to obtain ',1
Ihle, Ralph Werry, Nancy Basye,
Jennie Manuel, Betty Hutchln~
last day of the year for teachers
superintendent, and Dennie Hill;
The section of Second Street
Upon discussion, council chauffeur's licenses was dis- l
son Victoria Peavley, Ann Sis·. willbeMay28,wh!lethelastday
treasurer.
,
that will be ·closed, approx!- agreed to change the working cussed. Itwas.agreedbycounc!l .
son, Judith Crooks, Karen Lyons,
· · ·
·
·
mately 250feet, will run from the hours of the stre¢1 crew to8a,m.
to reimburse the drivers for the 1
Dean~a Apllng, Darla Kenpedy.
w
, v
end of Mulberry Avenue to the
to 4:30p.m, whiCh would allow cost of the test, upon successful
Nina Bias, Cindy Allen, and
'J
•,• J
alleyoftheMeigsCOuntyJa!l. All the mayor and members of comjlletion,wh!chwouldprovlde
,.
~
actlvl!les of the sesquicentennial council to check the progress of
them with the chauffeur's
Bernadette Anderson.
Substitute ' bus drivers emcommittee Will take place In
the street crew's work. It was
license.
ployed · were Max Hill, Jr., Carl
•
these araas. With this new plan also agreed by council that there
,
Robinson, James O'Brien, Don
for street andparklnglotclosure,
Smith, c. T. Chapman. Corinda
JERUSALEM (UPil - A tlon· by a tl)ree'-judge District the upper and lower Pomeroy
Theiss. ~arl Wilson, and Betty , former Nazi SS guard's·ldentif!- Court panel. ·
parking lot will remain open and
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) bent Democrat Mary Ellen With·
·
cation of John Demjanjuk as the
Demjanjuk was ·sentenced to the boat launching ramp also will
Wilson.
row
hOlding la 45 percent to 31
The
Columbus
Dispatch
Poll
Hired as substitute cooks were
sadistic death camp guard "Ivan ' · death In 1988 for herding thou- not be affected. '
published
Tuesday
showed
Reper
cent
lead over Republican l
Barbara Chapman, Krista
the Terrible" was flawed . and sands of Jews Into gas chambers . In ·other· matters, 9ary 'Bates,.
publiCan
Paul
Pfeifer
and
DemoIn the stale
Judith
Brachman
Smith, Donna Wolfe, Jangt Ma- carried no legal welght,.bemja,n- at the Trebllnka death camp In GTE Telephone Company, atcrat
Lee
Fisher
are
even
In
their
treasurer's
race.
Twenty-four
cue!, Allee Williams. C01roJHood,
juk's defense lawyer told Israel's Nazi'occupled Poland and then tended· the meellng and prespercent
of
the
respondents
were
race
for
Ohio
at.torney
general
.
Orsle Ngrrts, and Shirley
Supreme Court Monday.
.operating ,the engine that · pro- .ented a short program on · the
Each
candidate
received
42
undecided.
Schultz.
· Attorney Yoram Sheftel spent duced the gas.
subject of Interactive video.:'
percent of the vote In the mall ·
Pfeifer and Fisher are seektn
Subs tltute custod!a~s em- most of the fifth day of his client's
According to Bates', lnteracpoll
or
i,789
registered
Ohio
to replace Anthony Celebrezze,
ptoyed were Donna Wolfe, Sh!r- appeal disputing the testimony of
Sheftel told the five-judge live video Is a market which the
voters, conducted May 12-17. The
the Democratic nominee for
ley Schultz, Mary S~91th. Patty
Otto Horn, whose Identification Supreme Court hearing the auto- telephone companies are trying
remaining
16
percent
of
the
governor, who has been attorney
Bro\Yn, Krista Smith, Janet
of Demjanjuk as "Ivan the malic appeal that Horn, 83 at the to open. He went· on to say that
respondents were undecided.
general since 1983.
Manuel. Al!ca Williams, Carol Terrlble" was a key factor In the time of the trial, failed to Identify there are bills In the Senate at
The
poll
also
showed
locum·
Hood, and Melinda Smith.
Ukrainian native's 1988 convic- Demjanjuk as Ivan when first
presented with a group of eight '
photos by Investigators. On)y
after lrlore, than one view! rig and
prodding by Investigators was
.
Horn able to Identify Demjanjuk,
.
,
,
and then based solely .. on his

,sOu' t.her·n
. · L:
· · l., · Board, .h.•re.
'" ' ,.s·' ·
·o.· ca
~

· · o·n ne·l :. a·d.a·v·.'ts
· ""91 'calen
· da, r '
.P ers

r

.

1

DemJ"a·nliuk' Ia' 'e r' dt"sputes. ' '
· · N8Zl·•
.id entif"tcation by IOntter·

'Poll shows Pfeifer, Fisher are e;ven

I

Beat of the bend

"Gone w·.••th ,.he w·m·d'
t' he'm·e of EHS prom'·.. .

"roundlace,"Sheftelsald.
"There are hundreds of millions of people with round faces
lly BOll HOEFLICH
of the foods served enhanced the on this earth,': Sheftel told .the
. With Nancy Larkins serving as
,
theme ·and were homemade by . justiCes.
advisor, Eastern
School Barbara Arnold. Nancy's sister, · Horn; an . SS guard at Trebstudents used
who serves as dietary superVIsor l!nka, also told Investigators that
"Gone With the
at Overbrotlk ·· Center In ''Ivan · the Terrible" had black
Wind" as the
Middleport. ·
hair, while Demjanjuk had '!Jaht
theme for . their
Adults on hand for the evening .hair. the defense lawyer said In
annuaL junior·
as chaperones and helpers I,Vere contending Horn's testimony
senior prom FriIn costume. A lock-In followed the carried no.. lqal weight.
prom , and entertainment. ·and
day nlgltt.
For the most part, the justices
games were provided students llstenedJmpaulvelydui:JngSbef, ·
While selection of that
wasn't really staytna. all night. Nancy, In her tel's arguments Monday,ln conunusual slnceGWTW does live on Southerll. Mammy costume, was trast to ihe preVIous session
·and our lnteres~ Is renewed as we generous In extelidlnglnvltilllorts Thursday when they questioned
watch It annually on· television, for breakfast at 6 a.m. on Sheftel for using sarcasm wl)en
referring to the &lt;!reams of death
the unusual part Is that just about Saturday morning.
-~
camp ~urvlvors.
100 percent of the decorations to
ca~i'y out the theme were hand- .
Lona·time Meigs County 'Fair
Despite lncoll81atencle~~ln Wit·
made b)( the students.
Board member, Wallace Brad· DeSII!B' testimony ~iirlng · the
Nancy provided the Ideas and ford, has resigned from the board trial, Sheftel said Monday, Ute
the students did the work. A arid as treasurer.
l~r court failed to give his
· I' ·u nderstand Wally Ia goJna tQ , client the benefit of the doubt
replica of an advertisement for
the movie that was uaed near the have to undergo some suraery · when witness accounta conentrance to tile auditorium which this summer and decided to back fllcted. Ratber, the court dl..-ehad been turned Into the Deep away from the board ._ and .1 garded lnconsb!tencles when It
South ·at another _time was knowithadtobewtthreluctarice. · wo~lcl ha~ been, to the defend,
Interesting. And, by tbe way, aU
Continued on page 10
ant s advantaJe, be

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