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                  <text>Ohio

Zimmer,
Robinson
ejected

Daily Number
828

Pick-4

..

Pages

Chance of rain today 90
percent. Clearln~ ton~ht.
Low In mid .408. Wednesday,
· mostlY sunny. Hl~h In lower

9552

3~4
•

70s.

•

,.

Vot.40. No.287
Copyrighted 1990 ·

2 Sections. 12 Pag.. 25 Cents
A Muhimedia Inc. Newspaper

• Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, May 29; 1990

·Memorial Day ev.e nts
held inside Monday
By JULIE E. DILLON
graves of the war dead. He stated
Sentinel News Staff
that the tradition dates back to
Memorial Day activities the Civil War and that In 1868
throughout Meigs County were orders were Issued by John A.
disrupted Monday due to the Logan that all Grand Army Posts
heavy rains which hit the region would decorate the graves of the
and continued all day.
war dead.
The rain, however, did not stop
Gabel stated that all who have
the American Legion Drew died · for their country died to
Webster Post 39, which held Its protect Its freedom and that if
services ·1n the auditorium of called upon, marty people would
Pomeroy Village Hall.
. l!o the same.l
The opening ceremonies were
He urged the crowd to reconducted by Joe Struble and member those who died, as well
singing of the "Star Spangled
Banner" was led by Lois Burt.
Iva Powell gave the Memorial
Day prayer and Post Commander Dick Vaughan welcomed the standing room only
crowd.
Following the recognition of
Gold Star Mothers and those who
By United Press International
had lost loved ones in the wars,
Americans observed the Mem-'
Mlck Williams·. past com· orlal Day holiday with a comb!·
mander, presented Hugh Custer nation of solemnity and celebrawith a special award. ·
tion, attending beach parties and
Custer was presented the barbecues while taking time to
award for his work in promoting honor the nation's war dead at
Americanism In everything that cemeteries and monuments
he does.
across the country. ·
Gerrl Miller, auxiliary presi- . Millions paid homage to U.S.
dent of Drew Webster Post 39, · soldle~s killed In action, attend·
Introduced the poppy royalty for ing simple hometown services or
the year, and read two poems.
ceremonies from the stark wall
"Freedom Is Not Free," and
of the Vietnam Veterans Memor''Flanders Field." During th!i'
ial· in Washington, D.C., to the
reading of " Flanders Field"
Presidio of San Francisco.
poppies were given to each
At Arlington National Ceq~e­
person In the auditorium.
tery In Virginia, a wreath-laying
·. F~ank Vaughan, past com,
ceremony was scheduled Monma~der , jl nt~~uc~4 , tlie guest
da&gt;: at 1)\e ~omb of' the Unspeaker, Tom dlirel.'New Knoxk'rlowns, followed by a Memorial
ville, who Is Past National Vice
Day service at the Memorial
Commander and a member of
Amphitheater:
Washington Post 444. He is a
White House military repreveteran of the U.S. Marine Corps
sentatives laid · wreaths at the
who served on active duty during
memorial to ,unknown soldiers
the Korean War.
from the Civil War; as well as the
During his speech Gabel noted
Spanish American War Memorthe l~portance of decorating the
Ial and the Confederate

as those who never returned
home, as they were and that ' 'this
country is better off because of
them." He stated that the war
dead did not choose to die
because only God makes that
decision, but that those people
represent the freedom of the
people of the United States.
The ceremony closed with
prayer by the chaplain and the
playing of taps by Stephanie
Price. ~cho bugler was Shane
Hatfield.

Americans pause _
to honor war dead··

SPECIAL AWARD- Mlck Wiliams, on stage,
past commarider of American Legion Drew
. Webster Post 39, presented a special award to

Hugb Custer for his promotion of Americanism In
all tbat he does, durin~ a Memorial Day service
beld at Village Hall on Monday. ·

Gallia man
killed in
accident
.
'

A GllUIP!lli!! area . man was
... . . .&lt;ftif.'.·~~ rriO'toro/rl~ ~It- •
·~a,\i'Atay at 8: 35 p .m ,' ln Green
To~shlp on S.R.141. just east of
rilllepi:lst 20, according to the
GalUa-Melgs Post of the State:
Highway Patrol.
John C. Johnson, 36, PSR,
GalUpolis, was pronounced dead
at the scene by Dr. Edward
Berklch, Gallla County Coroner,
after he and his passenger,
Debra L. McCormick, 31, PSR,
Gallipolis, were thrown from a
1965 Harley-Davidson Electra·
Glide.
Johnson was riding east when
he lost control In a left-handed
curve. He then slid oft the right
s\(le of the road over an embank·
ment, at which point he and
McCbmiiek were thrown from
the motorcycle. According to
Berklch, ''the bike landed on top
of him," breaking his neck.
McCormick was taken by prl·
vate vehicle to Holzer Medical
Center. where she was treated
and released for a bruise to the
right shoulder. She suffered no
other injuries, even though
neither she nor Johnson was
wearing a helmet.
Johnson is· the second indlvid·
ual to die on Gallla County
highways In 1989.
·
The body was taken to McCoyMoore Funeral Home In Gallipo·
I lis, where funeral arrangements
·
will be handled.

'

By United Press International
At least one .dozen· people,
including three burned to death
In a two-car crash In Cleveland,
were ·killed In ·ohio traffic accidents during the 78-hour Memor·
lal Day holiday weekend.
Cleveland authorities said a
car going the wrong way on
Interstate 90 collided with
another vehcile, then broke into
flames, killing the three occu-'
pari ts of the two cars. The victims
had not been identified by Tuesday morning.
The count showed five deaths
Saturday, three Sunday and four
Monday. The Highway Patrol
said two motorcyclists and one
' pedestrian were among the vic·
tims, and one person was killed in
a car-train crash.
·
Victims of ·accidents between
Friday evehlhg and Mo.nday
midnight lnci\U)ed:
FridaY night
. NOfle:
It
Satu.,.ay
Akron: Ronald t. Schlegel, 40,
Akron, kUled when his car
crashed on an Akron.4treet.
Toledo: Delores Harrison, 47,
Toledo, kUled when her car,
going the wrong way on Inter·
state ·75 In Toledo, crashed ·Into
Continued on page 8

Memorial.
At the poignant memorial to
those who died In Vietnam. tens
of thousands filed silently past
the black stone wall Inscribed
with the names of the fallen, ·
placing flowers, leaving notes
and shedding .tears for those
known and unKnown to them.
" Missing you doesn't get eas,l.er," sa.Id one note signed "Di",
and left Sunday to honor Arm:,!:
enlisted man Thomas M. Fltzpa ~
trick. who was killed in 1969 at
age 21.
"Some days the pain is worse .
than wh!!n I firs t lost you, " the
note said. "There's a part of me
that died with you in Vietnam." ·
\Yhlle many attended public
ereiti'oriles, others attended private commemorations In quiet
corners of the land where people
placed flowers and flags on the
final resting places of their loved
ones.
President Bush. o.n holiday at
his retreat In Kennebunkport •.
Continued on page 8

Flash floods force hundreds ·of
SEO residents from their homes
GUEST SPEAKER - Thonlas Gabel, New Knoxville, was the
guest speak~r for tbe Memorial Day service of the American
Legion Drew Webster Post 39 on Monday. Gabel stressed the ·
Importance of remembering the war dead and what the deaths of
those people mean to Americans.

Ohio River to get
SUDlDler cleaning

SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (UPI) Illinois volunteers plan to make a
clean sweep of the Ohio River
banks as part of a six-state effort
aimed at keeping 981 miles of
river edges pristine and litter·
free.
The one-day clean-up June 16,
· called the "Ohio River Sweep,"
will combine the efforts of
volunteers In st~tes along the
rlver,lnciuding Il)diana, Illinois,
Kentucky. Pennsylvania, Ohio
and West Virginia. The states
. fund the Ohio River Valley Water
Sanitation Commission (OR·
SANCO), wl)lch controls poilu·
lion In the area and Is coordlnat·
lng the clean-up activities.
"The water quality has lm·
proved so much over the years
the last thing we want Is a
shoreline cluttered with debris,"
·said Jeanne Ison, ORSANCO
project director.
Ison said about 8,000 volunteers throughout the states have
committed to lend a hand In the · ·
sa·nltation move and the commission hopes 4,000 more will turn
out. In return, volunteers will get
special T-shlrts to mark the
occasion.
However, the recent deluge of
rainfall ih Southern Illinois and
other a.r eas have caused the river
to rise and. flood, covering the
· riverbanks. Ison satd the river Is
normallY up In the spring but she
expects levels to fall before
cleaning day.

Christina Hickman, a spokeswoman for the Illinois Environ·
mental ;Protection Agency. said
the barrage of rainfall has left
some areas in the six-county
region bordering the riVer
inaccessible.
In addition to high water
levels, recruitment of volunteers
in Gallatin. Hardin, Pope, Massac, Pulaski and Alexander counties has been slow, Hickman
said. she had hoped to rouse the
assistance of hundreds of volun· ·
leers but Illinois has no large
cities along the river.
"We'.re asking volunteers to
come along In their old clothes
and pick up trash," Hickman
said.
Garbage bags and gloves will
be provided, she said.
The entire clean-up operation
Is being funded through corporate sponsors who receive free
promotion. The national sponsor-,
Ashland Oil of Ashland, Ky., put
up $50,000 and other chemical
companies signed on as state
sponsors with $5,000 contrlbu·
lions. ORSANCO Is working with
state environmental depart·
ments to synchronize the river
sweep.
A pilot cleaning projec' last
year along a 150-mlle stretch of.
river between Cincinnati and
Ashland, Ky., generated so much·
state Interest the project was
expanded, Ison said.

Heavy rains over the weekend
resulted not only in the closing of
several roa(js, but two major
·slips, Ted Warner, superintendent of the Meigs County Highway
Department reported thIs
morning.
Most ofthe ·county roads were
expected to be open by afternoon,
Warner said. The State Highway
Department reported that State
Route 681 between Darwin and
Albany, and State Route 124 at
Langsville are closed because of
high water.
In Pomeroy the Ohio River was
moving into the dip on the lower
parking lot.
A mll!or slip occurred on
WelshtdWi) Hill, Warner reported. A rock retaining wall
built there during the 1930's went
completely out closing the road
· temporarily. While the road Is
now passable, Warner said that
plans are to close It as a
p.:otectlve measure in the event
of more slippage.
A big washout on County Road
·37 on Barewallow Ridge occurred but that road remains
open, according to Warner.
By Untted Press International
Hundreds of people'in southern
and southeastern Ohio were
forced out of their homes late
Monday and early Tuesday because of high water caused by as
much as 31nehes of rain.
Most of .the evacuations were
reported In the Murray City area
of Hocking County and between
Corning and Shawnee In Perry
County.
·
High water also was reported
In , southern Ohio counties
through which the Scioto River
flows.
Raln that llegan early Monday
afternoon wu beginning to let up
Tuesday morning, but a flood
watch wasatillln effect for much
fo the central, southeast and
south central parts of the state.
Residents along Ohio 155 near
Hemlock, Perry County, were
taken from their homes Monday
night after floods forced the hijlf

highway to close. They went to
shelters opened at nearby
school$.
"We're thankful it's no! rain·
lng now," dlsas ter services •
worker Dorothy · Sidwell said
Tuesday morning as she prepared to check on the evacuees
and see how much damage was
done.
In Hocking County. about 70
people were evacuated In the
Murray City area. While most
sought refuge with friends and
relatives on' higher ground, a bout
25 spent the night at the munlci-

•

pal building.
"There's a kitchen in the
municipal building and they have
faCilities to cook," said Kris
Gabriel, the county's emergency
management director. ' 'They
needed things they could warl!l
up, like coffee and hot dogs,
things to keep them gping." ·
He said that the people may get
back to their homes sometime
Tuesday to start the cleanup
process.
In Piketon, the Scioto River
was 2 feet above the 16-foot flood
Continued on page 8

Lee W. McComas, 83,
retired ed·ucator, dies
Prominent Middleport Educator Lee W. McComas, 83, Middleport, died Saturday afternoon at
the Holzer Medical Center folIowinll an extended Illness.
Mr. McComas was superln·
tendent of the Middleport Exempted VIllage Schools from 1941
to 1!165. Six years prior to that, he
was principal at Middleport High
School. After his retirement In
1965, _he served as clerk to the
Board of Education of the
consolidated Meigs Local School
District for several years.
Born on Nov. 21, 1906, In
Carpenter, he was the son of the
late James and Mary Tewksberry McComas. He was edu:cated In Meigs County schools
, , and received degrees from Ohio
Untver;slty and Ohio State Unl·
·verllty. He began his teaching
career In 1926 · and taught In
several Meigs County elemen·tary achools. At the Pearl Street
SciiCIOI he was a teaching princl·
pal and from there he went to
Mkldleport High School.
Mr. McComas was active In
numerous church, ~mmunlty
and civic affairs. He belonged to
the Heath United Methodist
Church and through the years
· held many leadership positions
--- -~

there, serving on church boards,
as a teacher and lay leader, an !I
superintendent of the Sunday
school.
For many years he was a
trustee of the Middleport Library
Board and active in the development of that fa'cillty In the
community. He was a past
· Continued on page 8

LEE W. MCCOMAS

�.·

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

,

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

Ai:h
.
Blml9 ........__.._..,.., ~c:l oo=o
~.,

ROBERT L. WINGETJ'

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

Publls~r

.,

PAT WHITEHEAD ' .
Assistant Publlsher/ Controll_er

A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS-OF OPINION are welcome. They sliould be less thanJOO
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
· name. address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personall-

, ties.

·

'

.

WASHINGTON- Iran used its
, magnanimous release of an
American hostage to draw attention from another heinous act the assasstna tion of one a!the ~op
opponents of the Iranian government living In exile In Switzer' ,
land.
. .
The Incident proves once again
that no movement Is made on the
hostages without bloody strings
attached.
this time, Iranian President .
Hashemi Rafsanjani won praise
In Washington and elsewhere for
his "moderating" Influence in
securing the release of fubert
Polhlll. At the same time, Raf·
sanjanl's agents were gunning
down a well- regarded diplomat
In Switzerland.

t'

Polhlll was released Aprll 22
. after 39 months in captivity. In a
written statement, President
Bush thanked Iran and Syria for
contributing to the release.
Two days later,. Rafsanjanl's top human rjghts critic In EQrope, Iranian exUe Kazirn Rajavl
was in his car near his horne in
Coppet on Lake Geneva when
another car blocked him on the
road. Two assassins fatally shot
him at close range, one with a
submachlne gun.
The brazen assassination
barely received notice in Europe
and America, It was crowded out
of thes headlines by the release of
Polhlll and promises of freedom
for a second hostage. And that
was exactly the way the Rafsan·

and Dale VanAtta

janl regime wanted It, according
to our Intelligence sources.
Not coincidentally, Rajavi was
the brother of Massoud Rajavl,
the leader of the People's Moja·
hedln, the chief opposition group
to the regimes of the Ayatollah
Khornelnl and Rafsanjanl
Kazen R11-l avi was an opposl·
lion Ieder in his own right. The
56-year-old professor had been
an opponent of the Shah of Iran
and l(ved In France and Switzer·
land while the shah was in power.
When Lhomelnl overthrew the
Shah in 1979, Raj a vi was welcomed home and became Iran's
first ambassador to the European headquarters of the United
Nations in Geneva. _
Less than a year later he

lt~&gt;

'

:Q uayle's visit a
GOP political coup
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
: COLUMBUS- They fought the battle of the Mahontng Valley again
Republicans seemed to win the skirmish from a public
:telatlons standpoint, but the local politicians and the people of the
·valley won nothing.
Republican gubernatorial nominee George Volnovich scored a
coup by getting Vice President Dan Quayle to go to Youngstown and
: meet with area mayors.
- ~ Many of the mayors, Democrats, were appreciative of the chance
:+o talk with the vice president about the needs of their communities,
· Qven If the event was a political charade for the Volnovich campaign.
• That's what it was called, correctly, by Democratic State
: chairman James Ruvolo, Democratic gubernatorial nominee
-Anthony Celebrezze and Ohio Senate Minority Leader Harry Meshel,
who hangs his hat in Youngstown and has seen the Pled Piper come to
. visit many times before.
:· Half the eight Democratic mayors scheduled to attend the meeting
\"ere convinced to stay away.
Not all Democrats approved of that tactic. "If I'm being used In a
: political way, then use me," Invited Mayor Patrick Ungaro of
:Youngstown, the host of the meeting.
·. " If this is the kind of politics we need for this area, then let's have
-it, " agreed Mayor Joseph Parise of Niles, also a Democrat .
· The mayors met fo~ 50 minutes - longer than planned - with
Quayle and Votnovich behind closed doors In a room off Youngstown
City Council chambers.
· When they emerged, they had nothing In hand except assurances
• ihat the vice president understood their complaints and needs, and a
promise that Voino':ich would , If elected, assign a development
·official to the Mahontng Valley .
- The attending mayors were satisfied that "lines of cornrnunlca·
· (ion" were opened with the Bush administration. But Parise, when
· asked, said he knew Quayle 'fOUidn' t be answering the phone if the
Niles mayor should chance to call.
: "It's a good feeling to know they have a handle on our problems," he
·
: said.
Quayle talked about a strategy and a spirit of cooperation, a "new
relationship" between local governments and the Bush adrninistra·
·
"lion. but no Infusion of dollars.
"The problem solvers are right here," said the vice president.
: _ For Volrrovich, the meeting was a symbol of a partnership between
. the federal, state and local governments to " put a plan lp place to turn
fhis area around." He said the area has been neglected.
.· And noon is when both hands are on twelve.
: - Jimmy Carter went to the Mahoning Valley In 1976 and promised to
·bail it out. Four years later, they hated Jimmy Carter In Youngstown.
; Ronald Reagan made a television commercial In front of an
: abandoned steel mill and·got elected. In eight years, he never did
anything for the valley either.
: There have been plenty of " plans" to turn the Youngstown area
around. A public-private partnership has been at work for years, with
-some success, and the administration of Gov. Richard Celeste has
-Chipped in with a variety of loans and grants for business ventures.
: So for the Bush-Quayle administration to showup after16 months In
-office is cosmetic rather than substantive.
: Brian Berry, executive director of the Ohio Republican Party, gave
th~ best assessment of the significance of the Quayle visit.
·-: "We are preparing the environment for a big victory," he said.

Ias t week.

: A thought for the day: President John F. Kennedy s.aid. "There Is
: always inequity in life."-

:~ B_erry's·
...

World

....

~

·HEY. MOM,

I~

FOUND A

TUR1\.E~
-JS--

11 OKA.Y
If 1 KEEP,.,_·HlM?
-

oQ '

..

SUMMIT 'TWO

1990 Oy NEA . Inc

'

Ads for gym shoes court trouble

Sarah Overstreet

.
,

I've worn Nlke running shoes
for many years, but that's about
to stop -at least for a while. ·
In response to critics who .say
ads for Nike' s $125 Air Jordan
gym shoes target poor Inner-city
youths who steal and even kill for
them, here's what Nlke representative Liz Dolan had to say:
"If there's a problem In the
inner city, It's haplessness. It's
really not about shoes. Crime as
an issue existed long before now
and, unfortunately, will exist
long after shoes. To say this Is a
problem created by shoes is
wrong."
When Nlke convinces me a
highschool kid needs $125 gym
shoes, I might reconsider· and
buy that pair of $110 Nlke Air
Stab running shoes I've had. my
eye on, because they really do
feel better than any of the others
I've Tried on. But to say they
have not responsibility In the
gym-shoe wars Is patent callousness. Consider:
Nlke pays Michael Jordan and
Bo Jackson to hawk their shoes.

Magic Johnson sells for Con- never convince me that a kid
verse, Akeern Olajuwon for L.A- needs a $125 pair of shoes to play
.Gear, Dominique Wflklns and sporis welf. Perhaps -no one will
Doc Rivers for Reebok. These convince me I don't need a pair of
are top black · athletes who . $110 shoes to absorb the shock I
represent the only dream many feel in my lower back. But then, .
of these kids have for their I'm an adult with years of buying .
futures. To be able to emulate experience. I started with fairly
thern,ln whatever way they can, Inexpensive running shoes and
gtves these powerless kids a have since logged many miles In
sense of self-esteem and status. shoes of varying qualities and
Some of· these shoes sell for ·prices. I know Why f want the
alrnost$200. Recent InterVIews of product I want.
Inner-city youths turned up a few
But to most of these kids, the
kids who said they had as many single most Important selling
as 24 pairs. Some of the kids have point of highpriced athletic
part-time jobs just to pay for shoes Is that their heroes wear
their shoe wardrobes; others get · them. That's all that matters help from parents' and some kids not whether they are overpriced;
turn to crime or to·stealing other not how mulch their paraents
·
have to sacrifice to help buy
kids' shoes.
"It's like: 'I can't have ihern,
them; and In some cases, not
so he can't have them either, "' even bow-they get them.
16-year-old Jivon McRae exWhen representatives like Liz
pialned to a ·reporteF for .·t he •.•);)olen- say there are. many
Gannett News Service. "It's the problems in the inner city and It's
price of the shoes. The more the wrong to blame them on shoes,
cost, the more you want them."
they're not just whistling "Sweet
Shoe manufacturers may
Georgia Brown." But If they
don't think this Is a problem

exacerbated by ads urging
ghetto kids to lust after- · theft'
shoes, they are either deceiving
themselves or too greedy to care.
If athletic shoe companies do
care about the situation they're
fueling, they can sit down with
black community ·leaders and
wotk on arriving at some solu·
lions. If they're sincere when
they say that they're only trying
to produce high-quality shoes,
they would have nothing to lose
by corning right out and saying,
"Hey, an athlete needs the right
shoes. These are the right sbo"es..
But you only need one pair.
Turning to crime is the only thing
that can stand between you,and
the spot where I'm standing right
now. Want to kill your dreams?
Steal a pair of shoes."
A.s for the lost revenue, they
can shift some of their advertls·
lng focus from black teen-agers
to middle-aged would-be athletes
like me, wbo can afford the
shoes. Or are Inner-city kids just
too ripe for the picking to resist?

Don't
let
government
fund
the
· •
·
· ·
·

The National Endowment for
the Arts Insists It has the rjght,
and perhaps even the obligation,
to fund exhibitions containing
homoerotic and sacrilegious photograph If they possess artllstlc
merit. The debate has now rolled
forward to a point where a
decision must be made, one way
·
or the other.
The NEA, supported (astonishIngly) by President Bush,_and, of
course, by the art world generally, rejects any limitations
whatever on Its latitude In this
matter. Congress, however, has
passed a law Imposing various
restrictions In the direction of
what the solons consider good
taste.
Critics of the Mapplethorpe
and Serrano Photographs that
brought on the dispute are
careful to Insist that, despite
Mr.Bush's careless assertion to
the contrary, they are not trying
to "censor" public exhibitions of
the photographs. They are
merely opposed to funding those
exhibitions with money obtained
from American taxpayers, the
great majority of whom dllsapprove of such pictures and
certainly don't tegard them as
''art."

&lt;:'?; © . ~
5-()

,

resigned In disgust over Khomelnis human r!ghts abuses. He
stayed In exrle In SWitzerland
where . he became · ther chief
advocate of Khomelni's victims.
He tirelessly fought for therlgbts
of the Imprisoned and tortured In
Iran and spoke about their-cause
Internationally, including a
speech in Washington In 1985.
Rajavl had plenty to talk
about. Kbomelnl brutally retalIated with torture and murder
against anyone who opposed him
or who did not adhere strictly to
his brand of Moslem fundamentalism_.
Rafsanjanl has carried on the
tradition, while stU! managing to
wear the label of "moderate" lri
the International community.
In 1985, ·. after the United
Nations issued one particularly
weak-willed report about the
slate of human rights In Iran,
Rajavi said, "We're writing the
history of human rights with our
blood, and we feel deceived by
this report."
He was again "deceived" this
year when another U.N. human
rights observer went to Iran and
carne back with milquetoast
conclusions. This time the United
Nations -was suckered by a rare
invitation from Iran for an
on- site visit before writing the
report. Th~ observer Jl1iSsed
blatant abuses.
Evidently, Rajavl had critic· ·
ized Iran one too many times.
Nine eyewitnesses, all members
of thes Iranian opposition, say
thery heard the ranlan arnbassa·
dor the United Nations, Slroos
Nasser! tell Rajavi to his face
that Iran would send an assassination squad to "Liquidate"
Rajavi.
That's not the kind of talk that
one normally hears from civIlized diplomats at the United
Nations.
But then Iran Is not a Civilized
nation.

But now comes Kathleeen M.
Sulluvan, a professor of law at
Harvard, wllth an argument that
underrnlneseven that contention.
In an article on the op-ed page of
The New York Times, she Insists
that the taxpayers have no
constltutulnal nght to support

'

works of art that they approve
and withhold support from
othesrs that they dlsaprove.
"The Supreme Court has long
since rejected that plea." she
asserts. "Rather, the court has
held, the First Amendment applies whether the _government is
wielding Its checkbook or Its
badge."
Professor Sullivan doesn' t cite
her authority for this melodious
proposition, and it's a safe bet
that, whatever It ls,it doesn't
dispose of the present Issue quite
so tidily as she sugest. But her
augurnent is an Ingenious one
nonetheless, and relatively new,
as far as I am aware, In the
context ofthe NEA controversy.
What Sullllvan Is saying is that
the Frist Amendment, that dependable old workhorse,can be
Invoked to defend federal fundIng of the Mapptethorpe and
Serrano photographs on ther
thesory that to refuse federal
funding of the Mapplethorpe and
Serrano photographs on the
theory that to refuse federal
financial support to them, while
giving It to others, would violate,
or at least inhibit, their freedom
of speech.
I was looking . forward to
Sulllvan's discussion of "qual·
lty" and "aesthetic excellence"
as they apply to Mapptethorpe' s
photoeraph of one man urinating
In another's mouth, but unfortunately just at that point she ran
out of space (or, just possibly,
Ingenuity). ·

But her general line of argurnent was enough to convince me
that the only sensible solution to
the problem presented by the
NEA Is to abolish the organiza!ion altogether. Thewholeldeaof
government funding the arts has
always been suspect, from the
standpoint of both government
and the arts. Less than 20 years
Into the experiment, we are
beginning to see why.
Let the federal government put
up the dough to finance an
exhibition of Grandma Moses'
safer canvases, and here comes

~~

.
·
Wlllwm Rusher

Professor Sullivan -protesting
that It wUl violate Andres Serrano's rights under the First ,
Amendment If we don't also
finance the exhibition of his
photograph of a crucifix
immersed In a glass of his urine.
Enough already! Get the government out of the business of
supporting artists where It has
no expertise anyw'ay, and let the
Serranos and Mapplethorpes of
the world support themselves
with the money ofthose (they are
legion) who really enjoy their
work.

In the pace car foDowlnl the Sunday race. (UPI)

Wallace 600 winner
lace in the closing laps.
.
CONCORD, N.C. (UP!) "If
we'd
had
;mother
lap,
I
Rusty Wallace held off Bill
might
have
gotten
him,"
said
Elliott In a , one-lap charge
Elliott, who carne from one-lap
Sunday at Charlotte Motor
down
for the seeo.rid-pl11ce finish.
Speedway to win his first Coca"Youdoall-youcan,
butwenever
,Cola 600.'
.
had
enough
m(jrnenturn.
We kept
It was the first win this season
workiiJg
an(i
changstruggling,
for the defel)dlng NASCAR Win-.
ing
thmgs,
but
I
couldn't
catch
ston Cup champion, the 17th of
him.
his Winston Cup career, and his
Martin, driving a Ford, placed
second at the 1.5-mlle track.
third
for his sixth top-five finish
"This is a wonderful - win,"
In
10
races this season. Michael
Wallace said.
Waltrip
finished fourth In a
The last-lap duel between
Pontiac
and
Ernie Irvan carne
Wallace and Elliott was set up
from
two
laps
down to claim fifth
·when the engine in Rick Wilson's
In
an
Oldsmobile.
Oldsmobile blew on lap 396 of the
Wallace led four times for 306
400-lap race. Wallace slipped In
laps,
including the 'final 91. The
Wilson's 0 t1 in turn four as he
Fenton,
Mo., native won $151,000,
raced towards th~ caution flag"
a
CMS
record and the lOth.
which was !llsplayed on lap 397.
highest first-place purse paid fov
Elliott attempted-to capitalize on
a Winston Cup race.
·
Wallace's slip and grab the lead
The 33-yea:r:old .Wallace averbut failed.
aged 137.650 mph In the race
''I got in the oil there and I ha.d
slowed by 11 caution flags for 48
to take a good ride from the
laps. There were 151ead changes
·bottorn.of the·frack up to the top. I
.
among 10 drivers.
drove .. right In that oil," said
Dale Earnhardt, who was
Wallace, ·.who had no radio
favored to win the !!Vent, had
c;ornrnunicallori'wlth his crew.
problems early In the race when
Track workers rushed to clean
he
cut a right rear tire In turn two
up the spllled oil and the green
and
his Chevrolet hit the wall.
flag carne back with one lap left .
"There
was no warning," 1sald
· :N allace . was .quick on the
Earnhardt, who had a chance to
' restart, just as he had been
move one step closer 1 to a Sl
throughOut the race-. On the
million bonus' with a victory in
restarts, Wallace would execute
the event. "There must have'
a drag-race-type burnout In turns
been some debris on the track.
three and four to clean the rubber
It's Nit one of thpse things that
buildup off his tires so they would
happens ln racing."
grab the track when the green
Earnhardt was seventh when
·flag dropjled. The procedure
the
incident, which •· also sent
worked as it had all day and
Bobby
Hamilton into the second
Wallace pulled ahead of Elliott's
turn
wall,
occurred. '
Ford as they entered turn one.
'The
Richard
Childress' crew
The Dawsonville. Ga., driver
ma!)e
extensive
repairs to Earnmade a bid for tile lead in turn
hardt's
Chevrolet
In an effort to
· four but fell short by less than a
,
return
him
to
the
race.
Tile crew
second.
•
used
the
cable
on
the
tow
truck to
"I had a good strong car all day
straighten
oul
the
bent
front
long, " Wallace said a bout his
suspension.
Pontiac. "I felt like I hilda rocket .·
In the ta!lplj;le, and my er~w did a
fabulous job. . ·
"I knew all .I had to do (on that
filial lap) was stay .cool and keep '
the car low on the race track. ·,
When I hit turn three, all I could
AMERICAN lEAGUE
do was hope for the best because I
1 Eul
knew It would be sUck with the oil
· Teun
W L Pd. Gil
Tarv.to -········· --......... .11 n .112 dry. I tiptoed through it a11d did
Mllwaulr.ee ...... ............ .tt It .Ill
%
· some mirror driving.
Bolto• .................. ..... ,.J:t tl .SII I
DII!'Yf'lud •••\ ...••.....••....%1 U ..t811 t
•'The oil dry' gathered at the
llalltmllft'. ................. . .%1 U .UI .t
bottom of the track where I
DetmM ... .................... ..a n -•• s
New Yark •......•.•.....•.. .•J'I · ts . ..fQ 1%
wanted to enter. I had to try to go
I
w..,
throUgh the middle of the stuff."
Oaldud ..•••..........••.....11 IS .118 Qkqo .......................llf 15 .8J&amp; 3
Elllott, whc;l posted his best
MID~nGt&amp; 1 ~ ..................!8 18 .1111 .. 4
C•llfOI'III&amp; I................. .. U !4 ... ,, 1 \.t
finish this season, said he
S...nlf ......... ................!! !IS ..fiR ttl
couldn't do anything with Wal·
kUMa CKy ................. IR !II .41t It

to•

Mo .. ., s;orbTnnad••
By Uallrd Pft!4fi ln~r-loMI

- A.cll\'ald detlpMed
biller SUI Hom from dl .. hltd IIIII;
oplklnrd DNII buemai:l Da\'ld Sepl io
S.Cbtalrr ol tile lllfrMIIOBLi ~que
(AMI•
C!lluae IAL) - okilnled ntfll'hter

Dave QallalbH' frcm llw diM hlell llat:
ottJO•d olldlfl*" ltodaq M:t!Cra)' IG
BlrmlaPun ol the lo.ther•

Dlle:ap I, New l'oril 1
lloll&amp;o•4.Teuel

(AA).
f

. 'IWIIIItr Game.

Published everv afternoon, Monday

thrwlh Frki,.Y, 111 Court Sl.; Po·
merqy. oblo. by the Obto Valley PublllldnJ Compuy!Multbnedla, Inc.,
PQm..-qy, Ohio f:l769, Ph. 992-~ll6. Se-

cond cl111 poatage patd at Pomeroy,

•Ohio.

•

BUll..._. ('IUe. W) at Mlaanota
(.!\liAr ... H),I:IS p.m.

Olllo lfewsrs:
· er Alsaolatloo. National
1!1,

' i'Os'IMAsTER:
Send · - c~~.....
to The Dally Sentinel, Ill Court St ,
Pomerqy, Oblo 151119.

•e

c.... Le..- cAM).
.... _ . - ...... ft..........
o..nelter ear-•• ...,.._ n ,.,

1-t).l:a,.m.

ORrell (T . . . . J-J) M Kan- CltJ

One Month ....... .................... .. ....16-10 ·
One Year ................................. $'12.110
BINGLE OOI'Y
,
PIIICI:
lllllly .................. .......... ....... 25 Cents
Subocrlbe&lt;s not desiring to pay the car·
· rl8' may remit In advance cllrect to
The Dill)' Sentinel OD a3, 6Ml2 month
bulL Credit will btpvencarrloroch

-

11p aubocrlptlo• by mall pennltted In

ar., wbere home carrier wrvtce II
avaDablt. ·

- - · -&amp;..-0117 Slt.:U
13 WHiri ..................................
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52Weob .................................. $7UI

. . . . . . . . C..otl7

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112 ...... ................... ...............

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To...to (Weill 1-1) II OaklaH t8tewartl-l),ll:hp.m.
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Q.w.... (Farrell J-1) II Callfol'lllla
(Mc.(:•MIII-1), II: II J.m.

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save.
Royals 3, Tl1en Z- At Kansas
City, Mo., Bret Saber hagen won
his third conS!!cutive complete
game to lead Kansas City to lis
third straight victory. Saberha·
gen, 4-3, hasn't lost since May 1
and has surrendered just four
runs over his last three starts.
Brian DuBois, 2·3, took the loss.
Mariners 4, Brewers S• - At
Seattle, Darnell Coles delivered
a two-run, pinch-hit single
through a drawn-In Infield, helping the Mariners snap a fourgame slide. With the victory,
Seattle Improved Its horne record
to 9-14. Milwaukee has dropped
the first six games of an 11-garne
road. trip. li:.r ik Hanson, 5-3, was
the winner .
White sOx t,;Yaakees 1 - At
Chicago, light-hitting Robin 'o{entura drove In the winning run
witb a two-out single In the
seventh Inning,

Moa.,IMII'alte.. lt....,,lll r.eiiLalle

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(AM.).

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,..,.lll&amp;t..io1111Qf1'; rec:llldo..nllfer
lillie Ml-.rJfnmP.....b: ofSIIePadlc

NATIONAL LEAGUE

Team
W
Plii ..... IIJII ... ;...............J1
. . . . . . . . ............... .1-1
llt-.II .................... .Jt
Nw Yon. ................... .Jt

~

Qlnp (NL) -Plated plkMr Mile
...,.., oa tile IH.,- ll ... bltll 1111:
re«",.Wplelter KnrlalluiR .... Ipfrom
lo-.aiiNAmerkMAIIII.:Iaii. . IAMI .
....... - Wllwll llldldW l&amp;ne
Dnl-. rn.
114• ,.__. 11at
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Mltnllllfeat.lloeM&amp;Ie, ai&amp;N
Dtw!lud aJ CllJhnla. alpt

StiiiiiCIIIPTION MTI!tl

Lr..-

.........t;aaa-.etHIIIIIIII•M•k

New Yon (WtU N) at • Cldcap

(JieDtwefl J·l), 8: II p.m.
...... IOemt•t.I))MTexb( .....

(~-U),I:Ap.m.

Membe&lt;: United Pre&lt;' Intemattonal,
Inland Datty Preso Aaoclatlolland the

........,

BaiUmo~

Clnelud J, c.JV.I'IIIat,JI,I•III•p
a .... CltJI, ORrell !

TonMIIot,O...._.t

A Dlvllloll ol Multbnoolla, bo.

resenrattve, Branham
733. Tblrd Avenue,
New York, New York 10017.
.

On this date in history:
In 1453, Constantinople (now Istanbul), the capital of the Byzantine
Empire, was captured by the Turks.
In 1790, Rhode Island became the last of the orlgtnall3 states to'
ratify the American Constitution.
In 1953, Sir Edmund Hillary of New Zealand and Tenzlng Norgay of
Nepal ~~!!came the first men to reach the top of Mount Everest.
In 19'17, a flash fire swept through a nightclub in Southgate, Ky.,
killing 162 people and injurtnll ~o

.. 8•06epaJ PbU..Wiflla.nll{llt
!M·
at Rollll..., alpt

Suide &amp;. Mllwuhe I

(\JSPS·I - )

"I smile a little bit when
someone callS me a rookie, but I
went through orientation and I
did the required things,"·
Cheever said.
Cheever drove a 1989 Penske
chassis powered by a Chevrolet
engine, the same motor that
swept the top six spots In the.
race. He was the fastest rookiequalifier at 217.926 mph. Cheev-:
er's finish was the best by any
driver without a 1990 chassis.
Staying In ·one place for a
month proved difficult · for--.
Cheever, whQ, as a Formula One
driver, usually carne to a race
course on a Thursday and would·
be done the same weekend.
·
"(Ifeel) likelwasworkedover'
In an alley with four baseball
bats," he said. "The.week before
the race was the most difficult.
·For some reason, this race gets
away with things others don,'!.
But if It didn't, it wouldn't be
what It Is."
Other rookies performed well
during the grueling month of
practice, qualifying and preparations for the race. Toronto's Scott
Goodyear, 30, .drove a 1989
Lola-Judd to lOth place, the
highest Indy finish ever by a
Canadian. Dean Hall, 32, Olyrn'
pic Valley, Calif., finished 17th in
a Lola-Cosworth. Goodyear won
$146,970 while Hall received
$134,306.

.

. Molll.,.aaw..
Mla•u I, a.atlnlo~ t

The Daily Sentinel

row start, moved past Mario ·
Andretti by $30,699 In total
Indy-car winnings and increased
his lead atop the Indy 500 career
money list.
•
Stan Fox received the smallest
check of the 33 drivers, taking
$108,021 for finishing fast.
Cheever was dropped from
seventh to eighth place in the 74th
Indy race by an official scorer's
change Monday . But the native of
Phoenix retairied the highest
finish among the three rookies In
Sunday's race.
,
.
" It's a· great honor," he safd.
"We accomplished what we set
out to accomplish this month. I'm
very proud. We thought we were
seventh but It's noblgdeal. We'll
go on from here. "
Scott Brayton, who moved (liiSt
Cheever after the chanee. received $196,448 but his money for
placing ahead of Cheever was
only $6,362 more than the rookie
received for eighth place. Corporate awards boosted Brayton's
·final total ahead-of Chej!ver's by
almost $24,000.
Cheever spent nine seasons in
Formula One but never won a
race, finishing as high as second
In Canada Iii 1983 and Detroit In
1982. Cheever, 32, had been the
only U.S. driver in the program
be1ore jumping to Indy-car racIng this season. He raced on his
first oval course just last month.

•

he's going to hit anything you
By ~RIK K. LIEF .
throw at him, espelally a guy like
UPI Sports Writer
Kirby Puckett knew.sooner or l;'uc-k ett. He's just a tremendous
.
later that lie would regain the ·player."
Gene Larkin and Gary Gaetti
hitting form that made him the
provided solo shots for the Twins,
league'.s best' hitter last season.
That tfrne carne Monday after- who have won five straight.
Juan Berenguer, 4-0, picked up
noon when Puckett slugged two
home runs, the second being a the victory fn relief and John
three-run shot In the seventh. Candelaria worked the ninth for
Inning, to lift the Minnesota his second save . Price, 0-2, took
the loss.
Twins to a 6-4 victory over the
The Orioles took a 1-0 lead In
Baltimore Orioles.
the first when Joe Orsulak tripled
"I'm seeing the ball a lot better
now," Puckett said. "Sooner or and scored on a· sacrifice fly by
Cal.Ripken.
later, I knew I was going tostart
Puckett evened the score In the
to hit. I've worked too hard for it
first with his seventh . homer of
not to."
.
the year.
The 1989 batting champion,
In the second Inning the Orioles
whQ spent the afternoon pretendtook a 2-1 lead on Randy
Ing to be a horne run king, didn' t
'M illigan's first horner.
change his hitting approach even
The Orioles extended their lead
though It produced tremendous
in the third. After Phll Bradley
results.
"I was just trying to hit the walked with one out, Orsulak
reached on a, fielder's choiCe and
ball, I wasn't trying to get a home
David West yielded two straig!lt
run," the ~ll-Star outfielder said.
With the Orioles leading 4-2 In walks t9 load the l!ases. Orsuiak
then scored easily from third
the seventh and after Junior
Ortiz and Dan Gladden reached when West unleashed a wild
pitch.
base, Puckett ripped a 2-2 pitch
,
.
hom ~llever Joe Price over the
Rene Gonzales' RBI groundout
fence 'tor his eighth homer of the in the fourth pushed the Orioles'
year.
. lead to 4-1.
''That's why (Puckett) is
Larkin closed the·de'flclt to 4-2
called one of. the Impact players In the fourth on his third homer of
In the game. When he swings the the season.
Gaetti capped the scoring with
bat, something's going to
happen," Twins manager Torn · his sixth of the year in the eighth
Inning.
Kelly said.
In other -AL games, Cleveland
Baitirnore manager Frank Robinson said Price was playing the topped California . 3-0 in 10 inpercentages when he offered the nings, Kansas City edged Detroit
breaking ball to Puckett, a 3-2, Seattle nipped Milwaukee
4-3, Chicago clipped New York
·fastball hitter.
"It's not always the type of 2-1, Boston beat Texas 4·3 and
pitch that Is going to get a batter Toronto shaded Oakland 1-0.
out," Rollinson said. "Any pitch
Indians 3; Angels 0 (10 Ina.) but
sometimes,
At
Anaheim, Call!., Brook Jacwill' get a guy out,
..
..
Oby singled horne the. game's
first run with one out In the lOth
Inning and Cory Snyder followed
with a two-run homer, helping
Cleveland snap California's
seven-game
winning streak. Jim
SM II•• (Be. . H) M Plil. .ddJIIIa
Abbott, 2-4, allowed just two
(a.fti1HJ,1=••·'"·
I
su rru..ue. ia.bl-• ... , a1
Infield singles through nine InOk~~tiBiu.aMipM),II:ISp.m .
nings before Candy Maldonado's
81. I.e* (,..._r -t-t) at • • • •
(fkiiMwlllrl·I),I:Up.m.
single
began .the rally. CeciUo
We-.eiiiiQ GUMS
Su Fruci&amp;C9 at Cldca&amp;•
Guante, 2-2,' earned the victory
l.GII All .... al Plt&amp;aiiiii'Jh
and Doug Jones pitched h~ 16th
· Medn.t .. Alknta

Tf"'ltiL!I ........... ............... 18 t1 .411 IS

Advertlllnl

By United Press International
Today Is Tuesday, May 29, the 149th day of 1990 with 216 to follow.
The moon Is waxing, moving toward Its first quarter.
The morning stars·are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Saturn.
The evening star Is Juplte~.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Gemini. They include
King Charles II of England In 1630; p;itrlot Patrick Henry in 1736;
Ebenezer But.terlck, inventor of the tissue paper dress pattern, in
1826; ·English .novelist G.K. Chesterton In 1874; movie composer
Erich Wolfgang Korngold in 1897; entertainer Bob Hope In 1900 (age
87): and John F. Kennedy, 35th president of the United States, lnl917.

record. prize at Indy

Puckett's homers
push Twins to 64
victory over Orioles

WINS INDY $00 - Arle Luyrndyk ol Holland grins as be gives ·

the thumbs-up while wearlnsthe lndtanapolls 1100 victor's laurels,

Newspapc

Today in history

r~eives

The Daily Sentinel-Page 3

his winnings in every previous
By 11M SLATER
oval
race.
.
• UPI Sporie Writer
:Eddie
Cheever,
a
veteran
of
INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) - Arle
Formula
One
racing
making
his
Luyendyk received a recob!
Indianapolis 500 winner's cbeck Indy debut, was named the
of $1,090,9t0 Monday night during race's Rookie o! the Year.
a victory banquet awards cerem- Luyendyk Is the first former
ony that also made Rick Mears Rookie oft he Year to win the race
the top money winner In Indy -car since 1978 co-Rookie of the Year
Rick Mears won the following
history.
The total prize money awarded year. He Is the firstsoloRookleof
was a record $6,325,803 that the Year to win since Mark
Included a record $5 million from Donohue won in 1972, three years
the Indianapolis Motor Speed- after his I.ndy d.ebut.
Bobby Rahal earned $488,566
way. This was the 15th straight
for
finishing seCond while poleyear for a reeord purse and the
sitter
Fltlpaldl, who led 128laps,
second time the winner became
received
$592,874. .The two-time
an Instant millionaire. Emerson
Formula
One champiOn from
Fltlpaldl won $1,001,604 last year
Brazil
earned
$138,300of his total
from a total purse of $5,723,725.
taking
the
pOle position In
for
Luyendyk wQn the fastest
qualifying.
Indy-car race in history with an
Mears took $201,610 for finishaverage speed of 185.984 mph in .
ing
fifth, · boosting his career
his Lola-Chevrolet. He had
earnings
In 15 Indy-car seasons
earned only $515,588 In five
to
a
record
$7,187,539. Mears,
previous starts on thttlegendary
who
.
made
a
record lOth front·
2 ~-mile ov!lt His I11dy check
Monday was about $70,000 shy of

]ack . Anderso~

Iran's good will gestures

~~--~--------------------------~.
i
- '
.

Luyendyk

P*-2-The Daily Seldin~
Pomaoy-Middlepori. Ohio
"T:uaaday, 'May 29, 1990

.

.

Porueroy-Middleport. Ohio

.. ~
. ~ '" "" ·-;. .

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel

Tuautav. May 29, 1990

Tt•••...,.

'

Before clearing gutters, repairing a roof, or
painting, make sure your ladder is totally
clear of all power lines. Always look up
before moving your ladder. You'll find more
life-saving facts in our free safety booklet.
Call us. 992·3786.

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�'

1990

Tua1day, May 29, 1990

Pittsburgh rally ends LA win streak, 6-S ·
By MIKE TULLY
Ul'l National Baseball -Writer
U the Pittsburgh Pirates wind
up winning the National League
East, they will remember what
happened on Memorial Day.
Jose Lind stroked a two-run,
bases· loaded single with two out
in the ninth Inning and Don
Slaugh!. scored on a throwing
· error by right fielder .Hubie
Brooks, capping a five-run rally
that lifted the Pittsburgh Pirates
to a 6-5 victory over the Los
Angeles Dodgers.
·
Making the victory all the
better was tlie fact· that the
Pirates felt Dodger starter Tim
Blecher threw behind SJaught,
who once required six hours of·
surgery when he was hit In the
·face by a pitch.
Slaugbt cabnly took first base,
but BobbY Bonilla led a benchesclearing argument around the .
mQund, and home pJate umpire
Mark Hlrschheck issued the
mandatory warning.
"It was oneofthe mostexcltlng

--Peopkinthe~s·---------------------- Quir~

and Ken Caminiti added a
comebacks I've seen Iii all my
''I juat ·cab't ,believe lt . . I
two-run homer, handlnaSt. Louis'
years here," said four-year vete- absolutely can't believe it," LoS
Ita fourth straight loss. Dave,
ran Bob Kipper, one of four Angeles manager Tom Lasorda
Smith pitched one and one-third
Pirate pitchers used In the game. fumed. "We had that game In our
!Mings to record his 11lnth save.'
"I think they think I'm a hands."
head-hunter," Belcher · said.
Bill Landrum, 1·0, pitched the .. Greg Mathews, 0-5, was the loser:.
''One pitch gets away from me,
EXJICIII 4, Brav~ I - At,
ninth for the victory.
Atlanta,
Mike Fitzgerald belted a'
and now I'm a head·hl,lnter.
In other games, Chicago
That's not right."
twot1111
homer and Andres Gadowned San Francisco 5-1, Houslarraga
added a solo shot
With the Pirates trailing 5-1,
ton defeated St. Louis 5·1, Mo11t·
leedlna
Montrejl
In · a game.
Wally Backman opened with a
real topped Atlanta H. and san
two
hours
ilnd nine
delayed
single ott reliever Pat Perry and
Diego ~&gt;Utlasted Plliladelphla 9-5.
minutes
by
rain.
Expos
starter;
advanced on a double by Jay
New York at Cincinnati was
allowed
one
_
h
it over:
Dennis
fl9yd
Bell. Backman scored on a wlld
.
rained out.
three
lnnlnp
before
.
s
llffering
a:
pitch, Bell moving to third. Andy
Cubs S, Giants I - At Chicago,
strained hlp frexor while batting:
· Van Slyke walked and · Bell Jerome Walton hit a. two-run
In the t~frd. He will miss at least:
scored on a forceout by Bonma,
triple and a sacrifice Oy, helpln&amp;
one
start. Kevin Gross, 6-3,:
making the score 5-3. One out
the Cubs overcome a call In
allowed
five hits over six Innings. ,
later, Sid Bream singled BonDla
which crew chief Harzy Wende\'
to third.
Padtes
I, . PhUBes · 5 - At
stedt took a home run·from Ryne
After Jay Howell, 1-3, replaced Sandberg bY overruJing third·
Philadelphia, Tony, Gwynn
Perry. Gary Redus ran for
base ump Bill Hohn. · ·Mike singled home pinch-runner Joey
Bream. Slaugh! followed with a
Harkey, 5-1, went five Innings . Cora In the ninth, snapp!Jtg a tie'
walk to load the bases. Lind then · _before lellvlng with a stitt right
and giving San Diego lts fourth
slnglecJ to right. tying the score.
·
victory in Its last five ganies. •
shoulder.
On the play, Brooks. fielded the
Mark
Grant, 1-0, was the.winner. :
Altroe 5, Cardinal• 1 - At
ball and threw past home,
Parrett,
2·3, took the loss.
Jeff
Houston, Bill · Gullickson, 3·3,
allowing Slaugh! to score and
Padres
st~ter
Bruce Hurst!leld ,
notched his 100th NL victory,
snapping Los Angeles' five-game Alex Trevino.drove In two runs
thePhlls.hltless for six lnnlitgs. ;
winning streak.
·
'

BJ United Preuln&amp;eru&amp;lonal
QUEASY MOI'iEY: Heavywelaht boxer Evander Bo!JIIeld Is
offering fellow pug Ills ts Baler Douglu and Mille T71011 easy
money; easy, that Is, If they can sit through a horror movie.
"Blood Salvage," which Holylleld helped finance and In which
he makes an appearance, tells the story of a South Georgia au to
mecbanlc. The erease monkey also moonlights as a dealer In
transplanted organa, which be extracts from, shall we say,
unwilling donors. In newspaper ads for the movie, whlcb opened
Friday In Atlanta, Holyfield says: ''This movie Is so scary that
I'm willing to donate $10,000 to the charity ottheir choice If Mike
Tyson an~ Buster Douglas have the guts to sit through an entire
screentna on their own! Are you man enough?"
· DR. HOPE AND DR; HOPE: Bob Rope and his wife, Dolores,
received their fourth dual honorary doctorates .over the
weeltelld. Hope, who turns 87 Tuesday, and his wife, 81, were ·
awarded · hOnorary doctor of humane letters degrees at the
University of San Diego's commencement. The comedian, who
has received more than 50 honorary degrees, joked about his
age, tel)lng the graduates, "Cicero said, 'A room without books
Is Uke a body without a soul.' I'll never forget when he told me
that.'' On a more serious note, Hope spoke of the fall of
communism In Eastern Europe and tbe destruction of the
Berlin Wall. "This Is one of the few-times In history the world
looks like It's ready to meet you halfway," Hope told.the grads.
"This frag)le thing called peace Is now 111 your llands.I kDow_you
will cherish it."
ROU~ CALLS!: The former family-doctor-to-the-nation,
ex·Surgeon General C. Everett Koop, says he'd like to see

Jordan paces Bulls to 108-101
triumph
.

I..evi _cops Atlanta. meet

them, " Jackson said.
stretch that bridged the first and
Dumars, who scored 15 points
second quarters. Detroit conin the period, brought.tlie Pistons
verted just 11 Of 36 shots from the
within 67-64 with 2: 18left, nailing · field (31 percent) and turned the
a wide-open 3-polnter.
ball over 14 times, leading to 15
''The key for us was to get l'(lOre points for Chicago.
aggressive," safd Dumars. "But
Chicago turned a 12-12 tie with
lt took too much out of us makiilg 5: 56 left in the open lng period Into
that ruri. "·
a 28-16 lead at the end of the
The Bulls PlaYed their best half quarter. Ohlcago converted 8 of ·
of the series In building a 51-35 Its last 10 shots in the (&gt;erlod;
lead at Intermission. The 35 while the Pistons were 4 of 16
points · scored by the · Pistons from the field 'tor the first 12
marked tllelr secorid-lowest out- minutes.
.
put ever in the playoffs. They
The Bulls, who were ' able to
were held to 34 points by Chicago push the ball against Detroit In ·
In the conference finals last year. the first half, a tempo much more
"Our firSt half defense was favorable to their dribble-and·
outstanding," Jackson . said. shoot game, . built the.Jr biggest
' 'They took the step up tG"'wln."
lead of the half at 51-33 with 36.8
The Bulls held Detroit score; seconds left on a basket by ,
less from the field for . an 8: 32 Jordan.
::

·'We held off the pressure In the
second half.'' Jordan said . "We
showed our maturity and poise,
which we have to do against
Detroit.''
Jordan, who scored 47 pOints In
Chicago's Game 3 triumph, "also
had four steals.
·
Detroit's Isiah Tllomas and
John S&amp;lley each scored 4 points
in an 8-0 run t.hat brought Detroli
. within 97-92 with 1: 17 remaining.
A 3-point basket · by . Vinnie
Johnson with 38.3 seconds left
brought the Pistons within 103·99.
TIJe Bulls also received '17
points from John Paxson and 14
from Scottie Pippen. Detroltwas
led by Thomas with 26 points and
Joe Dumars with 24.
"Pax was hitting some key
sl)ots there at the end," Jordan
said. ·'When John is hitting, they
have to take the double-team off
me and stick with him." '
Detroit whittled !lD 18-point
third-period deficit to 71-68 heading into the fins:! period. Jordan ·
sankapairoffreethrowstoopen
the second half, giving the Bulls a
53-35 lead. But the Pistons used·a
16-5 run, fueled by 10 free throws, ·
to move within 62-54 with 5:·06Jeft
In the third.
· "I told the guys before the
game they get six fouls In the
NBA and to use every one of

BOSTON (UPI) -The family
of John Fitzgerald Kennedy ,
including his two children, prepared Tuesday to unveil an 8-foot
bronze statue of the slain presl·
dent on the 73rd anniversary of
hb birth.
·
Caroline Kennedy Schlossberg
and John F . l&lt;ennedy Jr.- planned
to unveil the memorial to their
. father .In ceremonies at the
Statehouse overlooking · historic
Boston Common.
The statue was sculpted· by
Concord artist Isabel Mcilvain.
The ceremony Is part of a
birthday celebration that will

MALDEN, Mass. tUPI) -The inside the nearby Malden High
city of Malden arranged a simple School.
welcome home Tuesday for freed
Malden Mayor James Conway
has kept the welcome "very
hostage Frank Reed, with a
parade through the downtown simple'' &lt;~t the request of Reed's ·
business district to a City Hall family. Reed was expected to
reception. ·
address the reception.
Reed, rele&amp;S!!d after 44 months
Reed, 57, was released Apri130
as a captive inLebanon, arrived
after 44 months of captivity. He
planned to return to a hospital
home Sunday for an emotional
near Washington on Wednesday
reunion with his 91-year-old
mother and other family to continue his recuperation.
members and fl'.lends.
Reed said he had weighed just
The city arranged a short 133'poullds, down from 185, when
noontime parade 'I'llesday ~own he was released !rom. captivity,
Pleasant Street to City Hall, a and said be had been "severely
busy busl.ness district lined will) 'malnourished'' during his
! yellow ribbons and balloons and
ordeal:
flags from Monday's Memorial
"What we've been doing, basi·
Day celebration.
cally, as far as my health goes, is
The procession will be led by . trying to do some medical
the Malden High School band and ·sleuthing; trying to find out some
features a re~ditlon of the song, · things, why 1 am so severely
"Tie a YellowRibbon.''Incaseof anemic," be said.
rain, the reception was to be held
Reed saw his mother on

Effective June 4, 1990.
MANLEY'S RECYCLE CENTER
will _be .111oving to Us new location
at 503 Mill Street (former RoJal
Crown Bottling Building) across ro111
the new A~~~erican Legion Hall in
•
Middleport.·
'

'

..

.

•

•

=-.....--,.,:r:J"

tl"'ln ~m i ~&gt;ICl n nnd

mon:.

s...

Price

•:
. Cycling
.Adriano Baffi of Italy won the
11th stage of the Tour of Italy
Cycle race, edging out the field in
llle final mass sprint of the
~1-kilometer stage from Cuneo
fO. Lodi, near Milan. Compatriot
Gianni Bugno retained the lead in
the overall standings.
Football
Representatives from the U.S.,
Mexico, Australia and New Zea·
land Will attend the initial organ!·
zational meetlng of the National
Spring Football League. June 1 in
Las Vegas, Nev. The meeting
will determine which cities will
be granted franchises for the 1991
season beginning in February.

Ciown' shooting
victim dies
1

Menv irnpaunt fntum

D&amp;M PIZZA. &amp; SUBS

c~ stand.rd including

• 3.0-liter v~ fngir1e
• Alf conclillonlng

• Tinrtd slu

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla.
(UP!) - A woman shot at
point-blank range by a gunman
dressed as a clown died of her
Injuries, Palm Beach County
deputies said Tuesday.
. Marlene Warren, 40, died Monday night at Palms WestHospltal
In Loxahatchee. She had been In
critical condition since the shoot·
lng Saturday. ·
Sheriff's . deputies said they
were loves tigailng several leads
but would not elaborate.
· Thegunmanworeaclown .sult,
a red fuzzy wig a11d a wblte mask
with a red bulb nose and big red
smile. When Warren answered
the door of her home, he handed
her a basltet of flowers and
balloons then opened fire, aboot·
Ina her In the mouth.
There was no llldtcauon of a
motive.

•CTui~ comrol

IN SYRACUSE

Sports briefs

'
PROVIDENCE,
R.I. (UPI) ·Former Surgeon General C.
Everett Koop told · graduating
medical students the U.S. system
'of health care has become a
.moral and economic "burden"
·on society and needs "profound
·change.' '
: Koop, speaking Monday at
Brown Unlvers)ty, said Ameri·
:cans are ''deep~y disturbed a bout
the state of their health care
~system.''
·.
.
·
· Part of the problem, he said, Is
'that some medical technology
has advanced so rapidly that
. people expecl "miracles" In
areas such as AIDS treatment
.when, In reality, progress
.a gainst disease comes far
slower.
But he said there Is also
concern that the cost of m,e dlcal
care continues to rise without a
proportional improvell)ent In the
quality of care, and that "m~re
and more money" Is being spent

Plymouth Sundance
:\icch· t;quiPf".\J, 111'ith
• Dm'tl'·~ n1r bar:
• -+: ~and3rd fe:Uul\'!o.
fbrul~r oprrnn f\'Kka~
mdude.
• Au condnlllflirlJ!
• \-sp..'l.-d ~um mM i(

r-----------------------.
ST.ART.lNG MAY 29,- 1990

unless there was a
: ·'It was dark. but that wasn't a

• Rt. wincbw ddio5rer
• Tilr ~nc •nd ~·

ANNOUNCES A NEW
SUMMER LUNCH MEIIU .

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FEATURING PIER 19 FISH, BAI·B·QUE,
HAMBURGER, PIZZA POCKET, .'
CLUB.SANDWICH, SEASONED TWISTY FliES
AND MEXICAN SALAD.

WATCH FOR DAILY LUNCH SPECIALS
LUNCH HOURS·
TUESDAY·fRIDAY 11:00·1:30
lEG. HOURS: SUN.-THIU 4·11
FRI. &amp; SAT. 4-12; CLOSED MONDAY

.
,(

"'

For Jacqueline Kennedy Onas·
sis and Sen . Edward M.
Kennedy, D-Mass., the600-pound
bronze sculpture represents the
fruition of desires to celebrate his
birth and not dweH on his death, a
longtime aide says.
''The Kennedy .family tries to
do things on May 29th, to get
people away from November
22nd, that tragic day In Dallas."
said Dave Powers, the pres!·
dent's right-band man and museum curafor at the John F.
Kennedy Memorial Library
overlooking Boston Harbor.
"President Kennedy's birthday was always a happy time,"

says Powers. He recalled how
Rose Kennedy, always held a
birthday open house lor her son
at the family compound in
,
Hyannisport.
T.he family matriarch, whose
100th birthday is in July, wlll not
attend the ceremonies. ·
The statue represents the first
formal Statehouse tribute to the
man who .walked Its marbled
corridors with his grandfather,
John "Honey Fitz" Fitzgerald,
and who delivered his historic
"City on the Hill" speech under
its Golden Dome 11 day s before
his 1961 inaugural.

By United P~ess lnternallonal
Universal Studios annoying
some aelgbbors
ORLANDO, Fla. (UPI) -The
bright lights and big sounds of
Universal Studios Florida may
be a beacon for diversion-hungry
tourists, bu I they have raised the
ire of some nearby residents who
would like to get some sleep.
The $630-mllllon theme park,
which holds Its grand opening
June 7, is also a working movie,
televls_ion ·and commercial oper·
atlo.n, and its late-night activities
- lights, explosions and gun·
shots - are driving some people
to distraction.
•'It's already terrifying," Audrey Crabtree, who lives a halfmile from the attraction, told the
Orlando Sentinel. "We hear
things blowing up. It's so bright
the lake (across the street from
her home) does n 'I get dark
anymore. ,., The newspaper said
Monday that others have complained a!J9ut jackhammers operating s&lt;i close to their homes
that walls vibrated and cracked.
The neighbors said they're tired
of the hassles and want some
relief,
Easter said than done.
Local officials say the park is
not breaking any laws - the
noises, for example, are not loud
enough or long-lasting enough to
constitute a violation of the city's
noise ordinance. In fact, they
say, the 444-acre attraction is
quieter than living near a rowdy
bar or an ah'port.
· Another problem for residents
is that they are not sure who can

help. They ltve In the unincorporated part of the county. while
the park is Inside Orlando's cit:9'
limits.
"We are caught between a tock
and a hard phice," said Carolyn
Hagans, a board member of the
.Southwest Orange County Homeowners Association. " Univer·
sal bas shown a real willingness
to work with us, but there's reall!L
nothing anyone can do."
•
A Universal official, however,
said park officials are_t rylng to
keep the distractions down after
lOp.m.
Angler lands !&amp;-Inch piranha :
SPOKANE , Wash. (UPI) - A
Romanian immlgran t whd
learned to fish just two weeks ago
was stunned over the Memorial
Day weekend to land a snapping,
16-lnch piranha in a Washington
lake.
"It's moutll was moving opeQ
and closed, open and closed very
fast," said 19-year-old Mike
Pavel. ·'There were lots of
teeih."
Pavel, who recently lmml·
grated to · the· Spokane Valley
from Romania, said he caught
the fish Sunday on Clear Lake
with a marshmallow and a
worm .
Officials from the Washington
Wildlife Department confirmed
the fish was a piranha, which
usually lives in South America.
The fish probably came from
someone' s aquarium .
Pavel said that after Iandini&lt;
the piranha, he killed the fisll
with a piece of Wood.
.

TUESDAY
NIGHT
SPECIAL

Sunday for tne first time since he
left Boston In 1982.
"I say rejoice, give thanks.
He's back," said Leota Sprague,
who was in a wheelchair to greet
her son at Logan International
AirpOrt. "Ifeel as good as can be.
I'm just so thankful for the day,
for the-sunshine."
·Reed used the Memorial Day
weekend celebration to again
remember "mates" who he says
are. not faring well in captivity.
''This weekend, we are memori'illlzing the dead that fought for
our country. Let us hope that one
day we don't have to have a day
·o memorialize the hostages that
are dead, or will die," Reed said.
"Let's not forget that there are
still six Americans .still in captivIty, and the news Is not good &lt;!S
far as I'm concerned. The
hostages are not well. "
His attorney, Bob Woolf, who

represen ts a number of professional sports figures, said Reed
has received num erousoffer s for
his story, and as an artlc11late
educator definitely plans a book
a bout his experiences .
Reed was kidnapped in West
Beirut on Sept. 9, 1986. He had
moved to Lebanon in 197? and
worked at the University of
Beirut before founding the Lebanese International School. He
converted to Islam to marry his
Syrlan-borD" wlle, Fahtimeh.

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ISihisHow\bu~el

PayABank's

Koop asks new doctors to
';reform health care system

:an

~&lt;fa;.~~~rn.

Include bestowing the first John
F. Kennedy Profile in Courage
Award on former Alabama Rep. ·
Carl A. Elliott, who was turned
out of office In 1964 because of his
civil rights adVOCIICY.
The award Includes a trophy
designed by Edwin SQhlossberg
-: Caroline's husband - and
crafted by Tiffany &amp; Co. In the
shape of a ship's bell-con, plus a
$25,000 stipend.
From .Its perch on the Statehouse's west portico, the statue
shows Kennedy In a familiar pose
- in full stride with one hand in
his sultcoat pocket.

in the news

City welcomes home ·free4 hostage Reed

. - NOTICE

-.

medicine practiced again the old-fashioned way, with a human
touch. Koop urged Brown University's med school grads
Monday to otter free care to patients who need It, saying he was
"extraordinarily happy" as a young doctor although he was
paid by only 60 percent of his patients. " In our scientific.
progress, · something may have been lost, something very
Important," Koop said. "We need to restore that older
'doctor-patient' relationship and, with It, the doctor must
reassume his or her position of respect for ethics, morality and
Integrity and needs to get away from the consumer-provider
mentality."
DO-IT-YOURSELF CHOJ"PER REPAIR: A.d. Foyt may
have found himself a new line of work: helicopter mechanic .
The veteran race car driver - grounded by a faulty chopper
Saturday In Terre Haute, Ind.- rolled up his sleeves, borrowed
some tools and fixed the battery problem himself. Foyt, who
had been In Terre Haute to receive an hOnorary doctorate In
engineering at Rose-Hulnwn Institute o( Technology, was back
in Indianapolis In plenty oftlme ·for Sunday's ruililingofthe Indy
500. The four-time Indy champ finished sixth.
HEY, MEATHEAD: "Heat of the Night" star and
J
co-executive producer Carroll O'Connor doesn't make it easy on
those who work for him and with him. O'Coimor can be every bit
as warm and affable as his former character, Archie BunkerI.e., not very- and he Insists on complete cont,rol. He told TV
Guide during one recent shooting In Covington, Ga., that he has
to keep a tight rein on the show 's directors. ' 'They don't even
think of subtlety," 0 ' Connor said. "Hold them what to do. They
didn't do it. I feel as If I am talking io children."

Family unveils JFK statue.on 73rd birthday

'

By IAN LOVE
UI'ISports Writer
CHICAGO - Michael Jordan
scored 42 points Monday and did
even more damage with his
passing.
Jordan r(?corded 9 assists and
led a free-throw parade In the
fourth quarter that allowed the
Chica!l'o Bulls to record a 108-101
•
trit1niPh In Game 4 of the Eastern
Conference finals. The best-ofseven series Is tied 2·2 with each
team having won twice at home.
Jordan's assists left Detroit
with few options on guarding
him. He nailed jumpers, slipped
,, .
Into the lane If single- teamed and
!..,..;.,..~ f'(~~...,
began tomovetheballtotheopen
.ZIMMER E.IECTED IIIBII&amp;«er Don'lllmmer ..ppears to
man when double-teamed.
: be telllllg umpire Harry Wendelstedt "read my lips" as he
"Jordan. rulf'!l again," said
coati.- to arpe after belac thrown out of tbe game In the lourth , Detroit Coach Chuck Daly. "If he
lnnllle on Monday. Zimmer was pleading the Cubs' cause after the
continues to do this the next three
umpire crew reversed a called homerun to a foul ball hit by Ryne
games we are In trouble. He is
Sandberg. Chicago beat San Francisco H. (UPI) ·
·
doing more ·than scoring, he Is
.
.
finding the open man. We will
have to re-evaluate hilw we are
guarding him."
. The Bulls can take·their first
lead of the series with a victory in
MARIETTA, Ga. !UP!) &gt;factor," Mlze , said . . "If . it h~d
Game 5 at The Palace in Auburn
Sure· he'll take the paycheck, but been, 1 could have told them to
Hills, Mich. The series then
Wayne Levi found greater sat is- stop. I have no bad feeling about
to Chlcago'Stadlum for
swttclies
faction by posting his first finishing. It was th~ tiling to do.·:
Game6, wheretheBullsare7-0in
;tournamentvlctoryinflveyears.
Clearwater had the most to
the playoffs this season.
· "Winning tournaments, not gain if the final round had been
"We adjusted and are reading
:money, iS what It's all about.'' rained out. It they hadn't been
their defense well," said Chicago
:Levi Insisted Sunday after cap- able to resume play sunday.
Coach Phil Jackson, ·
·turing the Atlanta Golf Classic PGA offl~lals would have deJordan, who-scored 19.points In
'for his first PGA Tour victory dared the Classic a 54-hole event
since the 1985 Classic. For the and third-round leader Clear- the final periOd, sank a jumper
and a pair of free throws at the·
win. Levi, a 37-year-old New :Yorker, earned $1So,OOO to raise :~~~~r. would have been , the
slart of the quarter as ·the Bulls
built their lead to 75-68. He then
·his 13-year career take to $2.6
"I have no problem with
'6 points In a 9-0 run that
scored
million. "To beat all these great starting play again, •· said Clearplayers is )Jetter than the$180,000 water. who got $74,667 for his gave the Bulls an 89-76lead with .
5:43 left.
I got."
. - Levi's latest victorv _ In second-place tie. "I'd rather end
The Bulls held off a Detroit run
• which. racing' darkness after a it like this tha.n have it handed to by converting 11 of 14 free throws
• s1
me In the locker room. I had mv
. x-hour rain delay, he closed chances arte~ we started agaln ..l· In the final minute. The Pistons
: l!!ilh a birdie to. nip Larry Mlze, missed from 12 feet at No. 9 and twice cut the deficit to 4 points In
·:J{eith Clearwater and Nlck.Price' from six feet at No. 10, so I can't the last 40 seconds, but Chicago's
free throw-shooting held steady
by a single stroke - was complain ... ·
·
Jtelped bythe factthat a lot of the
Clearwater held a 2-shot lead to seal the triumph. ·
"great" players weren't on hand.
Sports briefs .
: Eight of this year's top 10 money when play was suspended . .But
· winners_ No. 6 Jodie Mudd and Mize went ahead at No. 14 when
: No. ! Rol/ert Garpez were ·the he made his fOurth birdie of a
.
five -hole span .. Levi, down by 3
.
.
!"'lscellany
-exceptions - and most of the earlier in the round. moved into a
Mike Pavel. who learned to fish
)op-name foreigners did not play tie with birdies at 14 and 15with a
just two weeks ago. landed. a
j n the Classic.
.
snapping, 16-inch piranha in a
• That 's not to say Levi, who has pair of 12-foot putts - then won
Washington state lake over the
·. won nine Tour events, wouldn't when hls approach shot at the par
5 final hole left him a 3'h footer
Memorial Day weekend. Pavel,
. have won even i( more "big for 8 birdie.
19,
said he caught the fish Sunday
: lljlmes" had been presen r. His
on Clear Lake with a marshmai· 13-under-par 27 5 was -three shots
"I couldn't see the ball in the
low and a worm. Officials frGm
:_!letter than last year's winning dark," Lev! said of his 102-yard
shot that Sf'! up that winning
the Washington Wildlife Depart-: score by former U.S. Open birdie. "But when I heard the
ment
confirmed the· fish was a
Champ Scan Simpson.
·
piranha. which usuallv lives In
•. I,e\•i and 'the other IC'aders crowd start to yell~ I knew· it was
close to the hole .
South America.
·
: eould have used a flas.hl!ght to
"Standing on the -t ee at 18, 1
·
Road Running
.·finish the round.
said if I could birdie the hole I
Rosa Mota of Portugal won a
· lie still had 11 holes ro·gowhen . could win. But 1 couldn't take ll record fifth women's title in the
jJrav was suspended at 12:05 p.m.
chance of putting the_ball in the Boulder 10-kilometer race at
:EDT Sundar as a band of
water', so I laid up. I was 103 Boulder. Co., and Martin Pitavo
tjlunderstorm~ moved · into the
ya~ds from the hole and took a
Of Mex~co took the men's event.
nonhwes t Atlanta area · After
good. hard swing with my sand Mora, 31, who won her third
several earller: attempts to reswedge. sure enough. it stopped. 1 Boston marathon this year and
.!JU't were aborted by additional
hit It perfect.
the 1988 Olympic marathon. was
~ather threats, play resumed at
"I could see the flag , but 1 timed In 33.14. Pitayo, 30, who
6:~5 p.m. , leaving doubt · the
couldn't tell in the darkness. But returned ·to racing last year after
we play by yardage, not let our a two-year Injury break, finished
roond could be completed before
~arkness.
, eyes fool us. I was trying ro win. I just two seconds off the record
·• No one blamed darkness for • didn ' t want to come back Mon- with a time of 28.48
tpe final outcome. The last few ' . day for a playoff."
sroups, which included Levi and
·
·
-the trio of runnerups. were given
llfeoptlononeach 'o fthelasttwo
iloles to continue or wait until
'
~nday morning. No one wanted

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

~

-PAT HILL CHRYSLER 'PLY-MOUTH DODGE

99

~-~?

t

, ~92·'!1~ w

"'"'H

... .- .

..liPOI1,~0HIO'

•

to serve "fewer and fewer he said.
peo'ple."
1
''Ten years from now, I think
"The health care system In the class of 1990 will be doing one
America today Is a terrible of two things," Koop said.
moral burden for society to bear, "Either you will be working to
in that It is not responsive at all to free us from a hastily Imposed
some 12 to 15percent of our fellow national health service or you
citizens," Koop said.
will be practicing medicine In a .
"And it Is a terrible economic way that Is very different than ·
burden for soCiety to beljr In that that of today, butit will be part of
the system satisfies Its own the best-system of medical care
uncontrolled needs at the ex - in the world."
pense of almost every other . While government is working
sector of ,o\merlcap society.
on solutions to problems in the
''The system has to be · health care system, Koop urged
changed," he said. "Not just graduates to do their part by
little changes here and there. We offering free care to some
need to bring about profound patients.
"In ihe early years of my
change across the board In the
way we make medical health pract.lce, before there was Medicare available to all our caid or Medicare, I found myself
citizens.''
to be extraordinarily lucky It I
In working toward change, got paid for as much as 60 percent
Koop urged graduates to shun the of whatl did," he said. "Butl was
idea of nationalized health care, extraordinarily happy in . my
tor which he said there Is a practice."
Koop also urged graduates to
"growing Infatuation" in the
think
of their profession as an
United States. Such systems
have not worked satisfactorily in "art" of dealing with patients as
other countries and will lead to much as a "science of
an ''erosion of quality, productlv· medicine/·
ity, Innovation and .creativity."

JANtT'&amp; HAIQ-CO-QOUND
Is Pleased To Announce

··

'

(JOHN~N) BIQD
of New Haven
.

CAQOLYN

Has Joined The &amp;taff

Come In For A Haircut With Carolyn
And Get '2.00
Thru June 15/

JAID:r'~

,,
....

I 1

·'

I

I'

HAIR.COQOUND

wv
./

,,

.

'

�•

Tua,day, May 29, 1990

Poin.oy-Middleport. Ohio

Paga 6-The Oaily Sentinel

Middleport alumni gather for reunion

'

.

Five scholarships were
awarded, special recognition
was given to a 1942 graduate, and
plans were approved for · the
McComas-Moore SchOlarship
Program at Saturday night's
Middleport High School Alumni
banquet.
Held In the Meigs Junior High
School auditorium, the banquet
was attended by more than 350
Middleport ijlgh School graduates and guests. Bill Diles was
· master of ceremonies, Judy
Arnold. co-president with J{aren
Pooler, extended · the welcome.
the invocatio n was given by
Michael Gerlach, and Franklin
Guinther led In slnglng "The
Orange and the Black" . Music
was by George Hall at the organ.
The program book was dedicated to 1942 MHS graduate
Kenneth McElhinney and he was
presented with a plaque by DUes
who related McElhinney's musical contributions through the
· years.
. A drummer, heplayedwiththe
"Klein Rat s", '.'Margaret and .
her Merrymen" and '.'The Five
Saints" o'wir a period of many
years. During his years at MHS,
he was a &lt;;lrummer In the h'igh
school band. Although retired, .
he remains active In the com·
munlty and
the Middleport
Church of Christ.
Presented Susan G. Park Scholarships· of $600 each were Jon
Wayne Ohlinger, a graduate of
Zanesvllle High School; Walter
Edward Crooks aild Held! Ca·
ruthers, graduates of Meigs High
•School; and Nancy Joy RUey, a
Marietta High School graduate.
Miss Caruthers also received the
Crawford, Gray, Lewis
Scholarship.
Ohlinger is the son of Terry W.
' Ohlinger and Coleen Wllson
Ohinger, both 1962 graduates of
Middleport High School. He
plans to attend Ohio University
where he is enrolled In the
business administration
.program.
Son -of Edward Crooks; 1959
graduate, and Judith Sauer
Crooks,· 1961 graduate, Crooks
has been accepted In the honors
program at Ohio State University and Is enrolled lri pre-med.
Miss Caruthers, daughter of
Diane Van Cooney Lynch, 1965
MHS grad, and Robert Caruth·
ers, 1966, is enrolled In the
nursing program at the Unlver·
slty of Rio Grande.
Nancy Joy Riley is the daughter of Don Riley and Joy Boggs, a
1965 graduate . of Middleport
High. She will be at tending Ohio
State University in the fall and
·plans to major in either engineer·
lng or business.
· Since the program was started
81 students have received scho·

larshlps. There is cunienlly
$37,043 In the fund with the
accured Interest being awarded
In scholarships each year.
Appointed to the scholarship
committee lor 1991 were Nancy
Roller Cale and Judy Sauer
Crooks. They will work with
Jeanette Crooks who remains on
the committee.

Maxin~ Bennett, Columlms; .Cha-

rles Btlidbury, Middleport; Alan
Bradford, Alexandria, Va.; Charles L. Brooks, Mansfield; Mar·
tha Kauff Collins, Venice Fla.;
Martha Robinson Cunningham,
Lima ; Charles Entsminger,
South Charleston; Marion Fu·
gate, Athens; Michael Hackett,
Ft. Myers, Fla.; Ge.ne Harrison
Columbus; Mary Jean Harrison,
A new scholarship hono ~lng
Florida; Betty Koehler, Ga]llpotwo outstanding Middleport edu·
lis; Dorothy Long, Middleport;
cators, L,W. McComas, who died
Dorotha Z. Neutzllng, Pomeroy:
Saturday, and · Nan Moore,
William H. Richman, Cha)a·
alumni ·of MHS and longtime
nooga, Tenn.; Denver Rice.
teacher, was established by the Middleport; Dick Roush, Des
alumni. Contributions are cur- Moines, Iowa; Wlliam G. Sut~r.
rently being accepted by Ms.
Balnwell, S. C.; Evelyn Kma:pp
Arnold and Ms. Pooler. Plans are
Vogelsong, Wheelersburg; Dolor the first scholarship from that
rothy Stew,.rt White, Roscamfund to be awarded to a gradual·
mon, MI.; Rosalie Rice French.
lng senior In 1991.
Worthington; Nine Triplett Had.Ms. Pooler and Ms. Arnold will dox. Roena Johnson, Columbus;
serve for another year as coLois Balley McElhinney, Middlepresidents. Other 1991 officers
port; Jean Russell, Reynolds, .
elected were Carol King Brewer
burg; Goldie Gilmore, Middle·
and Jerry Vanlnwagen. co-vice port; Sarah J. Fisher, Pomeroy.
presidents; Cheryl Fife Roush,
1942, Nelle Bahr, Middleport;
secretary, and Joseph A. Young,
Pauley Kincaid Beaver, Middletreasurer. · Kathy McElhinney
town; Henry Clalworthy, Ken·
was named , decorating
neth McElhinney, Barbara
chairman.
Hackett Mullen, Middleport; Ro·
Rwunlon classes recognized
bert Mitch, Wheeling, W. Va .;
included 1965, 1960, 1955, 1950,
Joseph Young, Pomeroy.
1945, 1940, 1935, 1930, 1925. 1920,
1943, WilHam Guthrie, Middleand 1915. Rodney Downing of the
port, Miriam Hickman, Greeley,
class of 1915 was the oldest
Nev.; Patricia DeVal Kloes,
alumni attending and was pres· Bidwell; Mary Seines Mitch,
ented a floral centerpiece. Also Wheeling, W. Va.; Marjorie
recognized and given a flower
Diles Mitchell, Athens; Opal M.
arrangement for special assist·
Priddy, Pt. Pleasant; Nancy
ance to the association was Ruth
Fisher Terrell, Oak Ridge,
Arnold, class of 1926.
Tenn ; ; Margaret Milhoan
Other alumni attending were: . Weber, Middleport; Rowena
1924, Farle Kennedy, -Warren Young, Pomeroy .
Middleport.
1944, Jeanne Young Bradbury,
1927, Katherine Swanson.
Mary Lou Boggs, VIrginia Win·
1928, Ralph Graves, Pomeroy . ston Stallworth, Middleport;
1930, Chapelle Talbott, Barnes- John Mayer, Grove City; Jane
ville, Mary E. Wingett,
Sauer Wicker, Gahanna.
Svracuse.
1945, Harry Clark, Miners·1932, Harold Lohse, Pomeroy.
ville; Robert Franklin Guinther,
1933, Franklin Blackstone; En· Columbus; Martha Roller Gress,
glewood; I. R. Neal, Middleport.
Robert Owen Tewksbary, Mid1934, Maxine Gaskill, Middledleport; Wanda Koehler Haines,
port; Elizabeth Lohse, Pomeroy . Groveport; Mary Mourn lng
• 1935, Wallace Bradford, CoolPrice, Bloomington, Ind.; Mar·
ville; Mildred Long, Middleport; .· tha Ohlinger Vennarl, Pomeroy.
William Reynolds, Kalamazoo,
1946, Richard Bailey, Doris
Mich; Wilma Hill Johnson.
Balley, Middleport; Alfred Scar1936, Lois Bush. Columbus;
berry, Gallipolis.
Clifford Cunningham, Lima;
1947, Vlrlgnia Wise Betz, HI·
Katherine Jean Lama Moore,
liard, Robert Fisher, Middleport,
Middleport , and John R. Stevens,
John Fultz, Middleport; John R.
Richmond, Va.
Kauff,
Pt. Pleasant; Gil Ker1937, Lawrence ·Bradford, · wood, .Columbus;
Nona Nelson,
Grave City; Frances P . Killmar. Pomeroy; Mildred Bailey, Bid·
Hilton Head, S. C. ; Howard W. well, Dorothy Scott Walker,
Russell, Middleport; Paul W.
GalUpolls.
Smith, Mansfield.
1948: Marilyn Knopp Fultz,
1936, Bet IY Hammer, Colum- Joan Gllmore Tzwksbary,
bus; Harold· Hubbard, ·Harold E.
.
Kauff, Mary Hackett Pickens. Middleport.
1949, Katherine Bachtel DalMiddleport.
las, Agoura Hills, Calif.; Dave
1939, Yolanda Taylor Bass,
Dile, Racine; Marge Mitchell,
1940, Jim Rickman, Columbus;
Atlien·s , Hazel Hawkins
Betty J . Allensworth, Groveport;
Guinther. Columbus; Joyce

Pomeroy alumni gather, two scholarships given

.

Miller, Beatglce Murray Ste·
wart, Middleport; Harold Moore,
Rosemary Fisher Moore, Wor·
thlngton, Pa.; Jane Custer
Sayre, Hilliard; Frank White,
Davison. Mich.
1950, Grace Abbott, Pomeroy;
Norma Jean Custer, Middleport;
Emma Jane Buell Dossecl, Johnston City, Tenn. ; Noami Over·
ture Durst, Gallipolis; John
Gothard, Malvern, Pa. ; Donna
R. Russell Hayth, Lancaster;
Fred Ho!(man. Pauline Hof·
fman, Middleport; Pat Kennedy
Kuhn, GaiUpoUs; George Nash,
Pomeroy; Bob Richards, Pontiac, Mich.; Raymond L. Wal·
bum, Middleport; Caria Owens
Winebrenner, Letart, W. va.;
Mary Gilmore Bre wer ,
Middleport.
'
1951, · Don Payne, Dayton;
Betty Ashley Snow, Shade; Roscoe Wise, Middleport; John ·
Ward, Illinois.
,
1952, Nancy Beaver, Middleport; Doris Coleman, Jackson;
Harold Hinkle, Columbus; Carol
Bachtel Tannehill, Middleport.
· 1953, Robert Byer, Middleport,
Paddy Jo Lambert Doolittle,
Berea; Frank Estep, Shirley .•
Eastep, Dayton; Arlene Bowles
King, Bronx, N.Y.; Lois Smith
Rosenbaum, Danville, Calif;
Mary Bradley Stanton, Marietta,
William H. Turner.
1954, Jeanette Cunningham,
Cassandra Moore, Huntington,
W.Va.; Donna Wells Jones,
Laura Rowley Harrison, Pomeroy, Charles Winebrenner, Newb4ry, Pa.; Barb&lt;jra Bowles
Setzer, Columbus.
1955, Phyllis I . . Ebersbach,
Orchard Lake, MI. ; Sheila Hubbard, . Lancaster; Nancy Ra·
wllngs Johnson, Delaware, Pa.;
Fred Lewis, Cleves; Jacqueline
Rice Scully, W. Pittsburg, Calif. ;
James Puckett, Gall Hovatter,
Gary Wayland, Sharon Riley
Ashley, Ruby Vaughan, Dick
Vaughan, Middleport.
1S56, Ernestine Asbury Ash.
craft, Belpre; Nancy Roller
Cale, James G. Mourning, Mid·
dleport, Janies H. Van Cooney,
Columbus; Cherole Blake
Burdette, La Verne, Call!.;
1957, James F. Bowles, Point
Pleasant, W.Va.; Barbara Murray, Pomeroy, Ed Kitchen, Gall
Hovatter, Middleport.
1958. Judy Arnold, Jeanette
Crooks Thomas, Charlotte Wll·
llord, Middleport.
1959, John C. Bacon. Jr.,
Indianapolis, Ind.; Richard H.
Roller, Belpre; Herschel J.
Knapp, Swllna.
·
1960, Judy Gregg Barrows,
Athens; Carter E"rench, l&lt;lsslmmee, Fla.;, Barbara Stiles Fry,
Pomeroy; .Jerry Fry, Montgomer-y, Fla.; Loretta Hanning
Roller, Belpre; Karen Walker

Sl0;1n, Pomeroy ; Phyllis Hilbert Barb~ra Hoffner McMahon, OrTownsley, Goshen; Dennis G. lando, Fla.; Keith Morgan, WarWalburn, · Bwver~v; Marianne saw, MI.; Marty J. Nicholson,
Woodgerd, Columbus.
·
Tampa. Fla. ; Mary Walburn ; ·
1961, Judy Crooks, Middleport. Taylor, Dave Walburn, Fostoria; ~1962, John Case, West Jeffer· Jerry Van Inwagen, Pomeroy; ;:.
son, Karen Roush Nease and Roger Roush, Hilliard; M. ChrisChuck Nease. Middleport; Bev- tine Williams, GalUpolls; Su- •
erly Perrin Dixon, Don Roush, zanne Bradbury Wolfe, Racine; ,
Middleport.
Joy Boggs, Marietta; Jon Cun1963, Arland King, Pomeory.
ningham, Batavia; and · John
1964, Carolyn Nicholson· Blake.
French, Clnda Lou Sauer Harris,
1967, Patricia Kay Logan, ·
Middleport.
Middleport; Margie Harris
1965, David P. Casci, Florida; Blake, Middleport; Kathy McEJ.
Celesta Coates, Paul Gerard, hlnney Hood, Karen Faulk
Diane Van Cooney .Lynch. Mid·· Pooler, Mike Gerlach, Debbie
dleport; Jerry Davis, GalliROlis; Gerlach, Middleport.
Martha Fowler King, Pollleroy; . . 1968, Candace Bahr ' Pope,
Tommy Lyons, 'Lapeer, MI., • Bidwell.

PASS (Parents Advocacy for
Special Students) met recently to
talk about self-esteem and learnIng differences.
The group discussed skills In
bulldi!Ji self-esteem and then
viewed a fUm . describing techniques for dealing with children
with learning differences.
Next meeting . will be held

FORTESCUE, N.J. iUPI) canceled because Of fears the Cruise Lines . They cheered as
:The Coast Guard refloated ' a anchor couJd·rtp the hull, Pl!nC· the ferry docked at Lewes, Del.,
cruise ship mired for twodaysln lure the bottom tanks and spew six hours later.
the sands of the Delaware Bay fuel into the bay.
The passengers were taken off
early Tue~dav after its s8s
Petty Officer David Oney, a- the ship as both a.safetyprecaupasSengers were !errl~ ashore Coast Guard spokesman, said the tion and lor their convenience,
and Its fuel tanks emptied, late-night transfer of the fuel into Coast Guard and Regency Line
.officials said.
tanks tucked In the Inner reaches officials said.
.
· Coast · Guard spokesman of the ship was difficult because
Some passengers told a local
James Weakley said the 642-loot It had become cold and thick radio station they were given
M.V. Regent Star " popped up" sitting In the bottom tanks.
little ll]lormatlon about thesltuaby 2 a.m. after an approximate
The ship ran aground with 1,306 lion b~ cruise ship operators.
hourlong, high· tide effort to free passe·ngers and crew .aboard
It from the sandy bay floor, · about 1 a.m. Sunday after the
where It grounded early Sunday . Bahamlan-registered Regent
"It's afloat, and now we're Star suffered a small lire In the
'trying to get It to Big Stone Beach engine room that cut power to the
JERSEY CITY, N,J. (UPI)anchorage, and to assess what If ship's engines and its steering.
The arrest Monday of four men ,
any damage there Is," - said
The ship, owned by Regency who were drinking In public Weakley . He said there had been Cruise Lines, then drifted Into the and a television news report of
no Immediate reports of sand In 22 feet of water about 5 the Incident - sparked a bottlepollu tlon.
miles off Fortescue. No OJle was and rock-throwing melee In front
The vessel was to be guided to Injured In the grounding, olfl· of a pollee precinct.
the lower Delaware Bay near clals said.
One of the suspects was Injured
Slaughter Beach, Del. ·
The 885 passengers left the ship when he tripped and hit his head
Earlier plans to refloat the
around 4:15p.m. and boarded the during a chase by pollee, au thor!·
24,000-ton cruise ship, which had
Cape May-Lewes ferry, which ties said.
settled on Its own anchor, were
was chartered by Regency
Roger Jones, an aide to Mayor

l

Walters, Toldeo; Mary Foster
Yost, Syracuse.
,
1947,MIIdredKaptinaPhUlips,
Frank Vaughan, Horace Abbott,
Pomeroy; Dick Rosenba11m,
Danville, Calif.; Kenny Nease,
Minersville.
1948, Jean Bryant Werry, "
:James F. Will, Pomeroy; June
Whaley van vranken, Norfolk,
va.; Bill Knight, Point Pleasant.
1949, Joan Conway Va11ghan,
John Werry, Ann Foster Cottrill,
Pomeroy.
1950, Joyce Phillips Grimm,
Columbus.; Bob Parker, Waverly, John Boyd , Oak Iilli; Roger
Grueser., Logan; John Watson,
Canal Winchester; Verna Osbofl1e Snowden, Bidwell; Gene
KRISTEN lUNG
Yeauger, Enon; George
1156: Harold ·Brown, Carolyn
Paulsen, Ashland; BetleThomas Brown
Charles, Ron .Bearhs,
Grant, Crooksville; Martha Pomeroy;
Dave Boney, Lillie
Weed O'Neil, Amanda; Joyce Hocking; Mary
Wise,
Fischer Mills, Pomeroy; Robert Middleport; BobJ . Scott
Hill,
West
Still, Dayton; Bonnie Eichinger Junction.
Kelly, Pembroke l;'ines, Fla.;
1957, Linda Stockton Watson,
Eugene Hawkins, Middleport;
Canal
Winchester; Ted M. BeeEmmogene Edwards Congo,
gle,
Wortltlngton;
April Shasteen
Sryacuse; John Dlll, Melvindale, Smnh. June O'Brien
Eichinger ..
Mich.; Rich Jones, Pat Burnside
Danny
.
Morris,
Brenda
Thomas, Richard Russell, Ro· ·Morris, v. Leroy Sauters.Strauss
Jerry
bert Burton, Helen Grueser Fields, Pomeroy; Mike Ohlin·
Blackston, Nora Riggs Eason, all
Albany; Earlene Bum·
of Pomeroy; Donna Stanley ger,
gardner, Mason: W. Va .; James
Grueser, BernardGrueser, Tren- Baker, Fort Worth, Texas , Pat
ton; and Betty Genbelmer
Neutzling, Marion.
Knight, Point Pleasant.
1960, Norma Roush Baker,
1951, Shirley Hysell Sopher, Sharon
Douglas Swindell, Bar·
Pomeroy.
bara
Eskew
Fields, Gary Moore,
1952, Daniel West, Dover.
Jack Welker, . Janice Teaford
Sarah Stowe Nelglzr, Racine;
Lawson, VIncent Knight, Phil
Mary Stace Powell, sue Jean Harrison, Mary Burnside Houda·
Raub, Phyllis Meier May , and .shell, Joyce Sauters, Pomeroy;
John Foster, Pomero:y.
Karen M. Smith, Gahanna;
1953, Barbara Still James,
Linda Crow Beegle, WorthingMarlene Moore Wilson, Pometon; Mary Amberger Chancey,
roy; Ted Scott, Westland, Mich .
Syracuse; Janet Rummel Leffie,
· 1954, Lela Grueser Erwin,
Minersville; Reva Rea Bunce,
Athens; Rosalie Story, PomeMiddleport; -Fred Brown, Florroy; William F. Story, Athens. . Ida; Ernest Hall, Grove City;
i955 Harley Mossman, Mon· Ellen Young Thoma, Rutland ;
towa Falls, N.HY.; John Henry John Brvant, Orlando. Fla.;
Russell Holcomb Kansas;
Becky Grueser Baker, Fort
Roger Hines. Nelson~lle; Nancy Worth, Texas; Mark Grueser.
Jacobs Hanold, Columbus; Tom Shade; Janice Thnokams Get-'
Smith, Janet Heines Grueser, . ties, Jackson; Charles Kitchen.
Don Grueser, Paul Eichinger, Mason, W. Va.; Myrna Maag
Harley E. Johnston, Doris Well Groves, Pickerington.
Snowden, Marlene Brown Hems1961, Paula Sayre Welker,
ley, Shirley Hunnel Young, Janet Norman Price, Pomeroy; Mike
Bo~ers Venoy, Pomeroy; Ray
Roberts, Akron .
Shasteen, Gaithersburg, Md.;
1962, Mike Werry, Belpre;
Gordon Winebrenner, Syracuse;
An.tta Russell Neutzling, Allee
.Dorothy Smith Yost, Racine;
'Casto Hilton. Parkersburg.
NancyBlaettnarLee, Columbus;
1963, Judy Wehrung Werry,
Rita Beegle Fisher, Hebron; Jo Pomeroy.
Snowden West, Dover; Ivan R.
1964, Tom Ebersbach, GroveShumate, Mansfield; Cynthia port; Louanna Leonard, ColumThOmpkins Bayllf, Cridersville;
bus; Danny Smith, South Point,
Marilyn Grueser Quinn, McCon· Yvonne Beat Young, Don Mayer,
nelsville; Bill Hysell, Columbus;
Pomeroy.
Edna Grueser Herbert, Anti·
1965, Sara K. Morarlty Davis,
verp, Ohio; Eugene Story, Ma- Marathon, Fla.; Mickey M;enrysville; Bridget Rusche! , chlnl, Trenton, MI; James F.
Columbus.
Bash, Jr., Zanesville; Carla Will

'

214

.....,

on aaa• St.

992·6617

•24-Hour Sililed &amp;l'ltennediale care ~
•Priwta &amp; Semi-Privata Room&amp; • •
•lherlpeutc Dietl .
•.
•AaliiUrantlljle oeni-selectiY8 "'"""
-Full time dietitiln
•Phyllicion In locililt doily
·Speech~

•Phyticll Theraw will hll limo physicalflerapatl
-Aacnollonel Aclivilioo
·Aeligiaul Slrvicol
•Mtdicano II lie lid-VA Approwd

446-7112

'P~~ - ~
Gallipolis, Ohio

''These poor gentlemen were
heavily drinking," said Jones.
"One of the officers was hit, and
the other pushed down."

,,

,,

20#• At~lrentrg $"1'' $1t.
AU liDDING PLANTS

3 PIS SJOO
lEG. 16.50 Flats NOW ISJO
liDDING GERANIUMS
lEG. IU NOW $950

4 IN. GERANIUMS Reg. Sl.OO
8Sc EA. - 10 FOR S7!0
4 IN. HAIDY MUMS R11. suo
NOW 8Sc ea.- 10 FOR $750
I 0 INCH HANGING IASICETS
REG. SS.SO NOW S45°
REG. $671 NOW S57S
AU SHIU.IY &amp; lUES

200fo OfF
Sale cant;... n.. 11 "' '"'' s.....
HIIIAID'S GIEENHOUSE
0

Sl'IACUSI, OliO
H!-5776

n Dell 9, 6· Sun, 1·6

Save this week on styles that you'D' enjoy all summer
long! Shown is jutt a 81U11ple of the terrific saVings
you'll &amp;nd on shoes for the entirf family at Picway!
'

In eon&amp;ent, eoaveDieat
In format and very
affordable.

RNER\.~

HUUAID'S GIEENHOUSE

REG. 6.99-12.99

churches, apartmell&amp;l,
drug stores. SlmpUfted

Ia.. ranee ~·laet

Werry, Belpre; Robert Emler,
Messa, Arizona; Louise A. Diehl,
Jr., North Ridgeville; Susanna
Arnold Fitzgerald, Olathe, Kan.
sas; Barry and Susan Boyer,
Malta; Charles Baxter, Parkersburg, W. Va.; Janice Wehrung
Kilker, Mentor on the Lake;
Brenda . Potts Hopfer, Centerville; Linda L. Moore Madara,
Erie, Pa.; Phyllis Kasper Smith.
South Point ; _Bob Smith, San
Ramon , Calif.; Linda F. Gheen,
Pomeroy; Jean Phelps Cleland,
Chrisney, Ind.; Mary Handley
Michael, Minerva; Florence
Schrimsher Jernigan, Hilliard ;
Donna Hauck Carr, Pomeroy;
Jonnle Sue Thompson KlMey,
Richmond, Va.; Marvin J . Gil·
more Walworth, Wise; Kay
Wyatt· Proffitt, Racine; Linda
Darnell · Mayer , Pomeroy;
Ruella Welts Crow, Robert Crow,
Sryacuse;' John Anderson, Joan
Hewetson Anderson. Pomeroy ;
Tom McGowan. ·
1968, Jane Qulvey, Guy Sargent, Pomeroy _

99_ 99

retail stores, offices,

- ~AN ;1;;.\

EMU..Y BUMGARDNER

SUPER SUMMER SAVINGS
FOR THE FAMILY

It's the SERIES ONE
BusineA PoUcy•••
packaged protection lor

Dome-Like Atmosphere

Chartered buses walilng near
the pier carried passengers !o
Philadelphia, the cruise ships
original destination, and to air·
ports in Newark, Baltimore,
Washington, D.C., and on Long
Island, said .Ann Burguleres, a
spokeswoman for the cruise line.
Crew members were being left
aboard because of limited ferry
space and because they were
needed to operate the ship.

Gerald McCann, said the lncl·
dent began Monday afternoon
when a woman flagged down two
pollee officers on to11t1ne patrol,
complaining about verbal abuse
from four men who were gathered .at the comer.

Jay Casey, Apple Grove, W.Va.
1938, Theda Martin Clark,
Lancaster; VIrginia Devol
Yohnke, Oregon; Milton Houda·
shelt. GallipoliS; Zlba Mldldff.
Pomeroy.
1939, James E. Ginther, Waynesville; Thomas A. Smith,
Columbus.
,
1940, Harold Hellman, Bellefontaine; John Walker, Canton;
Sister Grace Graber, South Ca:
rollna; Cahrles A Dye, Newark,
Annabel Lewis Houdashelt, Gal· .
llpolls; Mary Yost Hamm, Racine; Lawrence Leonard, Pomeroy! Delmar Hamm, ·South
Webster; Robert Harbrect • Worthlngton; Maxine Russell Ray •
MetalrU, La.; Ann Strauss Levo,
Mequon, Wise.; Flora M. Carr
Williams, Portsmouth; Leona
Prlode Dorman, Danville, Ky.;
Charles L. Pickett, Dania, Fla.;
Dorothy Robson Winebrenner •
Syracuse; Mary Karr Bowen,
Pomeroy; Vera Hepp Buchanan,
Pomeroy; Norma Wetzel Jewell.
Pauline Clark _Mltzelfeld , Lexington, S.C. ; Ada Warner ~ease
and Art Nease, Pomeroy, Iramae Burton Reinhart, Loogootee, Ind.;Kathryn Hol!Jies Crow:
Sryacu,se, Harriett Evans CAr
man, Pomeroy; Carolyn Smith,
Pomeroy; Mary Goodwin Bar·
tels, Sttevensville, Mich.; Bll.l
King, Don Mullen, Middleport,
Margaret McCallum Harbrect •
Worthington; Robert and Edythe
Jay" Columbus, . and Evelyn
Gilmore, Pomeroy.
.
1943, Marjorl_e Reuter Leo
nard, Pomeroy, Belva Young
Glaze, ,Homer Hysell, Marvin .
Burt, Mary Wlgglngs Bentz,
. Mary Grueser Russell, all of
Pomeroy, and Jack Matson,
Columbus.
1944, Mary McCallum Leonard, Sarah &lt;:;enhelmer White.
Columbus; Robert Hysell, Syracuse. Lois Neutz\ing Burt, Ha·
rold H. Blackston, Pomeroy.
194_5, James Conde, Pom~roy;
Earline King Bare, Dublin, Ha·
rold Hysell, Lawrenceville, Ga.:
Charles J. White, Columbus,
Patrick . Wood, William and
Lousle Radford, Louise_Gilmore,
Harry E. Schwab, Llo.~d :lafk·
wood, all ol Pomeroy,. ve yn
Grueser Hollon, Racine, Agne~
Bentz Rose, Little Hocking, Ed
gaj and Bet-ty Vale.
.
1946, Howard Mullen,

Thursday at 7: 30 at the Health
Department, 200 East Main St.,
Jackson. A feature o.f that
·meeting which Is open to the
publiC will be a film entitled
"Coping Skills for Parents of a.
. Learning Difference Child."

ONAL~W

·

Arrests spark melee at station

to Marla Skinner Foster, Pomeroy, class of 1922, and Virgie
Bryson Myers, Canton, class of
1924, the oldest graduates
attending.
Other graduates recognized
and the classes In which they
graduated were:
1925, LuciUe Jividen Swackhammer, New Haven; Kathleen
Bailey Scout!, Racine; Erma
Hood Thompson, Hinton, W.Va.
1926, George Baer, Racine.
1927, Nonga Fleming Roberts,
Pomeroy ,
1929. Maidne Jenkinson Russell, &lt;;rooksville; James H. Eisel·
stein, Pomeroy; Loretta Meier
BeeglE&gt;, Cecil Hellman, Pomeroy; Helen Gr:ueser, Maag,
i'omeroy; Martha Brown Greenaway, West Palm Beach, Fla.
1930, Geroge . and Phyllis
Skinner, Pomeroy; VIctor and
Allee Morris Brown, Pomeroy·
1932, Harlan Wehrung, Aileen
Rae Wehrung, Oscar Qualls, and
VIrginia Smith Hellman, all of
Pomeroy.
1933, Fred W. Crow, Sryacuse;
C~therlne Raub Welsh and
Louise Bearhs Hartung,
f~meroy. ··
·
.
1934, Tomas Bowen, Pomeroy, ·
Wilhelmine Smith Maier, Westerville; Doris Whaley Grueser.
Racine; Otho Keenan, Orient;
Rachel Elberfeld Downie, Ra·
cine; Sarah Williamson Gibbs,
Pomeroy; VIctor Hysell, Racine.
.1935, Dora Swank Crispin,
Westerville; Thomas D. Clark,
Lancaster; Geneva Webster Ha·
ney, Fi'ndlay, VIrgil R. Hamm,
Racine; VIrginia Arnold Blazewicz, Pomeroy; Chester Roush
Columbu~; Evelyn Roush Seelig~
Westerville; Ruth Gloeckner
Moore, Ruty Baer, Ed Baer,
Pomeroy; William Gruseser.
Middleport, Mildred Stevens,
Scott Depot, W.Va .
1936, Mildred Hellman Ihle,
Racine; Jeanne Heines Lelt·
wiler, Columbus; Jean Clark
Coates, Syracuse; Wgnes S~tton
Dixon, Pomeroy; Elizabeth Wll·
IIams Roberts, Syracuse.
1937, William Winebrenner,
Syracuse; Porothy Smith Yost,
Racine; · Allegra Wood .Will, Ru·
(land; Sylvia Hellman Midkiff,
Pomeroy; Margaret Thomas
Bailey ; Pomeroy; Paul Carmi·
chael, Wouth Webster, Leo
Vaughan, Pomeroy, and Beuna

Bush awaiting
Iowa report

Bay for the second dQ. Tile Coast Guard evacuaied most of the
1,300 passen11ers late Monday. (UPI)

Guard refloats. hard-luck cruise ship

By CHARLENE HOEFUCH ·
Seatloel staff writer
Almost 400 ·Pomeroy High
School graduates and guests
attendedthe72ndannualreunlon
of the Pomeroy Alumni Assocatlon held Saturday night In the
Meigs High School cafelerla .
Balloons , streamers and
panther replicas lit the purple
and white color-S of PHS deeprated the cafeteria for the
banquet emceed by Charles
Kitchen, alumni president.
Highlights of the banquet in·
eluded awarding·of two scholar·
ships and the collection of more
than $600 to be added to the fund,
the recognition of classes, and
several special presentations.
Awarded the$600BobRoberts'
Scholarships were Kristen M.
King, Meigs High School gradu·
. ate and Emily Bumgardner, who
will graduate next week from
Wahama High School. King,
daughter of Judy Spencer and
Gene Paul King, Pomeroy, plans
to attend Ohio University to
major In physical therapy. Bumgardner, whOse parents are
Earlene Renshaw and Larry
Bumgardner, Mason, will be
attending Marshall University as
a speech pathology major.
There were special presenta·
tlons made' to Wilhelmina Smith
Malr, Westerville, the oldest
class president attending, and
Shirley Hysell Sopher, Pomeroy ,
. the oldest prom queen.
.
Lynn Buchanan Kitchen was
made an honorary Pomeroy
panther: AprliShasteenan.dTom
Smith were congratulated on the
birth of their first grandchild
alumni reunion day and presentedwlthaPomeniyt-shlrt,and
FfedW Crowwasthewlnnerofa
ses ulc~ntennial stone jar.
Elecied officers lor 1991 were
Yvonne Youn
president·
Donna Morris a~d Mary Wis~.
i e residents· Judy ·werry
~~ret~ry-treas~rer. Named t~
the executive committee · were
RobertBurton,JoanneWilllams,
Frank Vaughan, Marlene Brown
Hemsley Added to the advisory
commltt~e were Earlene Bumgardner and Charles Kitchen.
TheRev. John Bryant gave the
Invocation with Lois- Neutzling
Burt leading in the "Purple and
, White".
·
Special recognition was \ tven

Parents' group meeting held

KENNEBUNKPORT, Maine
(UP!) -President Bush said he
Is awaiting a report on the
reopened Investigation into the
explosion last year aboard the
USS Iowa, and that If Clayton
Hartwig Is shown to be Innocent
of any bla.me, the dead seaman's
family deserves an apology.
Bush said Monday he cannot
reach any conclusions until he
sees all the facts, but said,
"Clear~v. I'm Interested." It was
his first comment on the matter
since Investigators reported new
evidencE&gt; to Congress Friday.
Sandia National Laboratories,
hired by Congress to look Into the
tragedy, challenged the Navy's
conclusion that the April 1989
blast thjlt kllled Hartwig and 46
other sailors was probably an act
of suicidal sabotage by Harlwlg,
a gunner's mate 2nd.class from
Cleveland.
The explosion occurred in the
reondltioned World War !I battleship while gun crews were firing
the 16-lnch guns In the No. 2
turret.

OUT TO SEA -Tugboats work aloag side lhe cruise ship the
Regent Star which sat mired oa the 111ndy bottom of the Delaware

Ohio

•

ALUMNI ROYALTY- Scott lUll and Jane Ann
WIUiams were named the 1990 Souther.n Alumni

!llo ExcU~He Canvaa
Oxford in white.
Ughtweight. -comfortable.
Women'11izes 5-11.

the banquet. Participating In the coronailon
ceremony was Joyce Quillen, right, an alwnnl
officer.

King and Queen at Saiurday night's reunion. The
two were selected by vole of the ~umnl attending

Sprints• Canvu Slip-On .
in white. Popular summer
style at an unbeatable
·
price! Men's sizes 7-12.
Reg. 6.99

499

9~ ·

Racine Southern alumni meet
Selection of an alumni king and
queen, awarding of a scholar·
ship, and a humorous talk by a
graduate qow serving as a
municipal judge highlighted the
1990 Racine Southern Alumni
Banquet staged Saturday night
at Southern High School. ·
"Precious Memories" was the
theme of the banquet attended by
nearly 400 alumni and guests.
The purple and gold colors of t.he
school were used in decorating
the Charles W. Hayman Gymna·
slum where the banquet and
dance were held.
Speaker Barbara Roush Wat·
son, a graduate of the class of
1954, now serving as mqnlclpal
judge in Portage County, related
amusing Incidents of "er expe·
rlences on the bench.
She was appointed to that
·SHERI ROUSH
position by Gov. Richard Celeste
Pape.
to fill an unexpired term In
Other candidates ser\llng as a
January, 1989 and Is now serving
court
for the king and queen were
a full term to which she was
Jason
Quillen, Hank Cleland,
elected last November. Prior to
BradMaynard,
Amy Harrison,
that, the daughter of Mary and
and
Tammy
Boggess,
and Sarah
Edson Roush, had been an
Wiles.
Pam.Diddle
presented
the
attorney In private practice and
candidates.
a!) assistant prosecuting
Recipient of the Paul Carna·
attorney.
Scott Hill, son of Roger and han Scholarlihlp was Sheri
Jane Ann Hill, and Jane Ann Roush, daughter of Daniel Roush
Williams, daughter of Jack and of Portland. The scbolarshlp this
Judy Williams. were selected by year Is $500. Sheri will be
alumni vote as the 1990 SOuthern attending the University of Rio
Alumni King and Queen. Partici- • Grande thll fall and plans to
pating In the coronation ceremo- study accounting and com~uter
. nles were Bobbl Hlh and Lisa science, At Southern she has

twice been honored at the school
district's academic banquets and
In her sophomore year was one of
the honorees at the Meigs 'County
Academic Banquet .
Larry Circle, president, extended the welcome to the alumni
and was join~ by Joyce Quillen
to conduct the business meeting.
Each of the classes was presen ted and recogn_lzed. ·
Officers for 1991 elected were
Pam Diddle, . president; Bobbl
Hill, first vice president; Lisa
Pape, second vice president;
Sharon Pyles Ihle, third vice
president, and Joyce Quillen,
secretary-treasurer.
Hostesses were Opal Miller
Diddle, Shirley Pyles Evans,
Beverly Stobart Cummins, Clau·
dla Shields Roush, and Sharon·
Pyles Ihle. ·
"Crossover" played for the
dance following the banquet.

Santa Monka•
Leather Sandal in
white with bucldeil.
Girls' sizes 8'1:1-3.

499
Reg. 7.99

Ruu Around&amp;• Ileadetl

Tbona With multi-color

By Ualled Press International
President Bush, commenting
Monday on his upcoming summit
with · Soviet leader Mikhail
·
Gorbachev:
"I go to the summit with open
arms to welcome the president of
the Soviet Union. But we must
stand firm on our principles
wben we discuss world peace ...
theslabmt.v-ofEuropeorthetate ·
that
not yet around
free." the world
of
theare
countries

•'

499

SALIINDS JUNE 3

0P1N NIGRT8
AND SUJIIDAYS
OPI!N MIIMORIAL DAY

SHOES

0110 11m PLAIA- UPPEI II. 7, GIWPOUS, OH.

..,

.;~;.;.;.;_~------------------------

• ....
.
.,•

-- ·,.

straps, white beads.
· Woml!ll'l llises Il-l 0.
Reg. 6.99

Quote of the Day

.. ____

-

�Page 8-The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, May 29, 1990

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Americans...

Tu8aday, May 29, 1990

Ohio

NATIONAL WEATHER FORECAST TO 1 AM EDT 5-30.110

continued. from page 1

Maine, attended a service Sunday honoring the town's war
dead and expressed hope that
this week's summit In Washington with Soviet President Mikhail
Gorbachev will help produce a
"world at peace."
Standing beside a stone memorial to Army Spec. 5 Terry
Drown, a local resident killed In
Vietnam, Bush sang and prayed
with about 150 people,
' 'Everybody, regardless of
theJ,r faith or l)ackground, aspires to see a world at peace,'' the
president said before leaving the
service.
' 'That Is what this little service
Is about, and certainly tliat Is
what this summit coming up with
Gorbachev Is about," he said.

. But while Memorial Day was a
tltne of remembrance and reflection for many, It was also a time
of barbecues, picnics and other
outings.
The party atmosphere was
evident Saturday at the Indianapolls Motor Speedway, where
hundreds of thousands gathered
In .the stands and the always
wild-and-crazy Infield ·for the
74th Indianapolis 500. A large
proportion even took time out
from the festivities to watch the

ra.c e.

-~

'

EMS has 16 weekend calls

Ooys
,

,

,...,a- 'tile tor •••• efter iir.ll d~. ICIIKk

TUEIOAY PAPER

WEONIIDAV PAPER

THURSDAY PAPER

.

.;.........;........_;,..Area deaths--

-

2 :00P.M . MONDAY

-

2 :00P.M . TUESDAY

Classified pa~es· cot:er the
telephone exchanges... ·
Area Cocle 304

••6-Gelilpohs

992-Middi ..OM

,3aa~)'int01"1

•••-c·h..wr

84)-,on .. nd

175-Pt . Plenant
4&amp;1(-Leon
676-Appll Grovt~
773-Me•on '

247-Ltten Fells

112-New Knen

ai7~Ch•hite

Pomtrov

, 24&amp;-'AtO Grande

216-G•won D11t

143-Arebtl Dllt
379-WIInDt

IAD-Aaetne

195-Latan

742-Aut'-'d

937_:8ufi,IIC

667-CoohriUe

Flash ...

..

Pomeroy Police probe two ·mishaps

· Gallia •.. ·

Announcements

DOWNING .(HILDS

MULLEN MUSSER

INSURANCE

t ..

Introducing
The Homesaver Account
from Central Trust

news

iee W. McComas ..,

JOHN A. WADE, M.D., Inc.
PLEASANT VALLEY

,

'EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT .
GENERAL ALLERGIST

~--~~~-""'"""""._

"WE HArE NEAR.INI.AID!"

I

(304) 675-1244

'

&gt;

j

&lt;,

•

•

· Pl.!b!lc NotiCe

tQ tho Director.
,.,poy0bie
Bidders
mustoppty, on tho
p ' - formo. for quollflca·
.lions' at lo11t tan doyi prior
to tho dmo oat for opening
blcto in accordance wbh
Chopter 11621 Ohio Rwlsed
Coda.
'
Plana and IPICiflcationo
aro on flt«iil tho Deptrtmont
of Tranoportation and 11M ofllc:e of 11M District Deputy.
Director.
The Direc1:or r111rne thl
right to reject
and Ill
bicto. BERNARD 8. HURST
DtMCTOR
15) 21. 28 2tc

any

~

I IVI~Sllii:k

11-Feun lquipm••
&amp;2-WIIdtct to Buv

14-luttnws Tra1ntng

OPEN MON.-SAT. 10 to 5
STUWROWEIS: Dwwf
&amp; Tal1 PMIPAS GlASS:
Pink &amp; White; FUSOIIA,
IASIETS, IIIIlS an4
MOlE.

.

t6-Seed • Fa"ihier

21-luten•• Opton.,ni'lv
22-Mon., to Loen
23~Prot-....,..l iervical

7\ -A.,tOI for Sell
72-Trt.telilt tar Sele
73-'V'tnl 6 4 vvo ·a

Rr&lt;JI f-slole
31 -HOf7'tt for Sale

.

Servtces
81-·Homalmprowm-'t•
82-P•Umo.nv • Me•ms
1-'-E•ectrioal &amp; Rft...,atlon
1&amp;-G.n..tl Heullng

16-Mobilt ttorne

17 -UptiOIIterv

1-.:==========t

0M;Me·NH
Look Who'l

t.ov. Yell
Tony • Debbie
'

Travel" 4-18-1 mo.

HOURS: M· F 9-7
Sot . 9-6; Cloood Sun.

SITfWORk • ~ADS

PLUMBING &amp; u., • ,...,..,
Ntw

Location:

CLEARING

'--'-

Sholto fo&lt; lrollon
Cl•lll. Cktllo -~~~ fo&lt;

•E-Ioog,~.r::-'
Pl~uea-.
•
JOHN TEAFORD -

46317 Scout C..p ....
a..t;r.Ohlo
4-1-'10-1 ....
•

•

AUTO &amp; TRUCK

247-4035

We can repoir cind rt·
awe rodlotors and
heater COrft. We can
aho acid boil and rod
out radiators. We olso

NICE COUNTRY BUILDING
LOTS are hard to find but we
have 8 bea~tilul lru jlsl warting for yoo~ Smallest ~ .94
acre and largest is 1.54 acre.
Electric on each srte and T.P.C.
water taps available Secluded, beautiful views 10
mins. ~om Pomeroy, and 15
mtns. to Alttens. NO' TRAILERS. Starting at $6.500.00.
POMEROY- 5 acres vacant
ground on top ol a hill near
town. Greal location for
house or trailer. $3,900.00.
MtDDLEPORJ - Central air
woold be nice th~ summer
and having a 5 room home in
excellent con!ilion witt let voo
sil back in cool comlort. Rear
dedt wrth gas gril, equipped
k~chen, sllirage
buitdin&amp;
Good location. $33,000.00.

lSD APPliANCES
90 DAY WUIAIIJ'f
WASHER$-$100 up
DIYER$-$&amp;9 op
REFRIGEIIA10R$-$100 op ,
RAIIGES--Gas-EhKc--1125 up
Fl£1l(l$-$125 up
ltCRD DV£1$-$79 •P

lEN'S APPUANCE

SEIVICE
992·5335 or 915·3561
lcrass · F,... ,_. CIHico

•VINYL &amp; !DING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

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

CALL
992-5589

992·2196

Middleport, Ohio

5-11-'9().1 mo.

1-13-llc

"Free Ettlmttas"

949-2168
.
2-1-'911-lmo. p«.
*SHRUB ~-&amp;

MakH

'l'REE

MAINTENANCE &amp; IEPAM . .
1361 Powolt St. lli .....,t
tAa•lr--llorlltll ..l

PH. 949·2101
or Res. 949•2160

(6141 992·7143 '

SNIIII SPECIAL

Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CAllS

EVENINGS

CLEAN, LUIE &amp;TEST
$)8"

4-16-16-11"

OPEN: MON.-FRI.
10 A.M.-I P.M .
Or By Appointment

FENCING

MICIOWIVE
OVEN IEPAII

Nil SUNDA T CAW
' • 4-11-R-1111

YCI CUNIC

"At Rea~lt Prices"

BILL SLACK
992-2269

PH. 949·2101
or Res. 949-2160

MIDDLEPOIT

CUSTOM IUIT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

*LIGHT HAULING
*FIREWOOD

Fast

.

BISSELL
BUILDERS

TRIM ancl REMOVAL·.

3-21-'IO'tfn

•

Residential &amp;
Commercial ·

'

POMEROY - 2 bedroom.
I ~ story home with carpel,
built-in bookshelves, patio
and rear balcony, with .view
ot the river. l 1h car g;wage.
$27,500.00.

.

Heating, Cooling,
Refrigeration
S.rwice

PAT HILL FOlD

FREE ESTIMATES

Middlapert, Oh.
"LOW IIICOIIi 110111"

HUMPHREY'S
CLIMATE
·coNTROL

repoir Gas Tanks.

Factory Authtriud
Stn!ct (tnt• Far 111ost

1-1-1 mo.

FREE
ESTIMATES

coumy
·( 'MOilLE
HOME PAIK

::;:~;:;t~:~OFESSinNALI
;;;;
INSTALLATION

AU MADS
Bring It In Or We
Pick Up.

SEARS

lEN'S APPUANCE
SEIVICE

781 N. 2ml

MIDDUI'ORT

992·5335 or 915·3561

~t:t·

•Lot&gt;R.n~a

992-7479

316/'10/lfn

lt. :IS Nertll •I

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DALLAS SAYRE

I. L
TRUCKING

AT

CHEmR;OHIO

PAT HILL

•GRAVEL
•LIMESTONE
•FILL DIRT

CHIYSLEI.ft. YMOUTH

, ....roy, Olllo

1-12-'11-lfa

FOIEYRIIONZ
lAN.NG

OPEIIItiO SOON

DODGE

Call Now To Mtkt
AppolntrMnt

399 S. Third, Mkldltptrt

•ANYTHING

949-2794
SPECIAL

992-6421 '

~I

5-16-'90-1 mo.

985-4422

30 Stslions-'30
Co. Rd. 21

·Til-COUNTY RECYCLING

Watch F• Signs

RACINE, OHIO

OffiiS 3 LOCAYICINS TO SDVI YOU-•

5-17-'90-1 ....

110.

POMEROY, OHIO: Rt. 7 • ·I.R. 143
ALBANY, OHIO: Rt.
I.R. 143
HENDERSON, WV.: Rt. 31 Adj. to SldartEqulpmtnt
·
NfNHOURS:
POMEROY: 8 e.m.-7 p.m. 7 Dtyo
ALIIANY: 10 a.m.·l p.m. I DoyL Clotod l•n""t
10a.m.-lp.m.IO..,t.CioatdSun.-Mon.

Our Salts Ylllumt IIIIa
._ Good and We Still
Han luytn Loolllnt
,For Maip (..ty ,
Proptrty. •
IF YOU WANT TO SBl,
CAU ClElAND IIAI.n
TODATIII.
HENRY £. CLELAND.

.

•Mobil• Hom•'
Aen•t•
,

POMIIIOT, OliO

POMEROY - Older 2.slory
home, gorgeous woodwork,'
· fireplace, nice k~chen cabinet&amp;. 3 bedrooms, equipped
kitchen, central air, garage
and storage. $39,900.00.

•Moblle.Hom•

.

992-2

lcr.oa ,,... Past Offk•
217 L Soc~ '-•Y

AT ALL

-

209 Sovth 4th St.

4-25-tfn

SER~ICE .

SALES AND SERVICE

1-IS-'911-1111

l24J Pomeroy Ohio

'/3/'10/1 mo .

Painting

IUfLAND

Good Rat•
T.L.C .

Alto Tria•wlt~lea
PH. 992-5682
' or 992-7121

St. lt. 331, 5 1111•
lllowt Letart, Ohio

Gutter Cleaning

n.,

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

REP AI~

WHOLESALE-RETAIL

Downspouts

MIDDLEPORT GDOO
STREET - This nice l'h
storv home features 3-4
bedrooms, modern kilchen
w~h dinin~ bar all storms
and many other 1eatures. lnctudes trailer tot Call lor appointment
REDUCED
$24,700.00.

APRI I THIU JUlY I

Rt.

10 a.m.-6 p.m.

Gutters

992-2259
MIDDLEPORT - 2 storv
home that shows the work
that has been done! Nice
k~chen, 3 bedrooms. dining
room. attic area and much
more. $18,500.00.

Roger HyJell
Garage

HOURS:
Thurt. thru Sun.

NEW- REPAIR

POMEROY', 0 .

CONNIE'S
OHIO IIVEI
HEllS and ·
EVERLASTINGS
OPEN:

ROOFING

IIAIN

.

Sand-Stone-Dirt
(614) 667-3271
Grw A. N~•~tc!

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

'

-

•Oil Change Ia Lube
•Qralce Work

DUMPTRUCK ·

•CiubAapak,
•New Grips:

ilowartl L Writ_.

E . N\l;,,&amp;.&amp;.llti

•Tire Seles
•Front End
Alignment

NEWLAND
'
EN1EIPIISES

SALES &amp; SERVICE

12 Hrt ..... e9CJ
.

c

Real Estate General

742-3088

DOZER

eon ordMiaMer.

toll-"
the ••m of
I·a::fu(lo hal1iby oppropr~
atod into the Arta Council
lund for 1990.
SEC. tt. ·That thio ordi·
nor&gt;ce to heroby dectaroct' to
bo on emergency In ihat
fundi oro n - • r v lo pay
tho ongoing ex pen- of this
proglllm In • timely manner.
SEC. Ill. This OrdinMic&lt;l
oholl toke ·ettoct tnd be In
fo1'C41 from and titer April
23, 1 990.
Pu11d tho 23rd doy of
April, 1990.
ATTEST: Jon P . Buck, Clark
·Diowey M. Horton.
Praaidant of Council
!61 21. 28, 2tc

.IUTUND niE
SALES and
SEIVICE

949-2969
3/ 21 / 10/ ltn

Middl.,t, C!hio 45768 ,

&lt;""1.
-~ G~,!,~~~-~~
'
8 Hro ....... l41

PAYING AS OF TODAY, MAR. 13, 199.
,
,, Copper 850 per lb.;
Clttn Dry Aluminum Cent, 3110 per lb.

Announcemer'ls

4

Glvelway

WE IIUY ALL NON fiiiiiOUI ICII&amp;P, IATTIRIEI.
ALTERNATqRI, pc ,

ITAII'11!111.

·.

992-6191
Jun Trussall ... 949-2660
Mit Hupp........ 949-2257
Jo Hill ............ 915-4466
Office.............. t92·2259

• ' Thlrty.thrH_ •
Mell- Hubbard
Imboden

-.

A"'''

- Public Notice

IN THE CO~MON PLEAS
COURT OF MEIGS
COUNTY,' OHIO' .
Case No. 83-CV' 2
JAMES W. SUT,TLE, e1 at.,
Ptolntlffs, • . •

"S...-:=

241 '

4-9- '90. 1 mo.

r::a~~t tfll

13-bc:••••nt

Public Notice

J

PIODUm

GUS$ Clll1llllG SIIYICI
Senko Cat• • IDC
lyo11 Porh .... S.triao,
. . . . ., Iiden, Chol11
Stnn,W..... ton.

985-3350

KOU,.TRY KLUB

4\-Moutes tor Atnl
42-Mobile Hom .. tor Rent
•3-flitm• tor Rent
"-Apenment tor Ren1
•&amp;-FurMhed Aoom1
41-Space tor A•nt
t\7-WantH to Rtftt
t\1~-EQU'Itfft'"t tor RtrH
·~-For l.••e

The family of Fronk .8 ,
tHoc~l Wllsllfl, Sr. wllh
to tho•k oil thii&lt; frlencto
ond nolghboro who ·M M
do •--- · food ·o nd
oar ' ......... t.
'
.....,_. duririg lho , _ . t
loll of our fatMr ond
lu....nd. Spectol thonk
you to PMtor Jom• leddon, Or. Mirk Brawn.
and the
Com•llone
Closo of tho Mldcloport
l'lrltleptilt Cllurch.
ttato, lonny,

USIDIIOWBS
. . UIDUN &amp; 1010

161 lloirth Secand

1;1§111)11

Public Notice

Mox.

Connection~

77-Auto Atpa~r
·
11-Camp1ng Equ1pm.,n
-7 9-Cempin II Mo1or Mama

33-Ferms tor Stle
34-&amp;ut~n•• Buitelrnos
36,....Lats &amp; Aere-oe
36-Real tJtate WMttd

EAGLE IIDGE
SMALL ENGINE
CEml

CHESTEI
QUII STOP

"Your

74-Motorcyc:l•
76-floala &amp; Motors tor lata
76-Auto Part~ 6 Acc•sori•

32-Mobilt Momn tor $ale

1-tl-'!0-lMo.pd.

CIIISTD, OHIO

742-2027

f.-til bt.

511

367-0588

. MOYIE'IOOAL
(ONY. .NU sro.E tHMS

St. Its. 7 I

(614)

lOWE
POWUWASH
SEIVICE

Buy - Sell
Trade .

GREASE JOB &amp;
OIL CHANGE .
Qt.
nlf IEPAII

PUISUIT

14- May &amp; Grain

O'h 2.. St~
For Appt. Cal
992·6717 "-or
992·6244

S169S 4

TIA~EL

-t)J

13-Lwn•ock

11 - S~ols lo lnstructton
11-R. .o. TV. CB A•eir
17-MtScellen.oua
18-Wentad To Do

30 Cot IIIOO.Ool.
9. T- Forno 30 Cots
Iuotdl
1*200.00) ooch. '
STATE OF OHIO
10.·. Ono Ferno 30' Cot
DEPA!ITMEN'r OF
Juotd)(150.00). .
TRANSPORTATION
11. 1984 E-350 Ford CutCotumblll, Ohio•
away Chosoil W/480 anVI,
". ·
Moy 11, 1990
w.·H. BERDINE, et al., ·• · gine, PS, Pl. ttr, dual goContract Sot• Legal Copy
sollna tank• (UOO.OO).
Dafendanto.
No. 80-101
AM lbmlo oraootd •Is with
LEGAL NOTICE
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
AaSh-ofMaigoCounty. no guerent... or warrentiel.
S . - propoMII will bo
roctllved ot tho office of tho Ohio, t .,_...,. oller lor oat am 1tom1 may bo inopoctod
Director of tho Ohio Depart- . 10:00 A.M: on June 22. prior to bid et tho office of
t880, on tho frmt stapa of tho Meigs County EMS.
ment of Tronoportotion, Cotlho
Maigo CoUnty CoUrt- Mulberry HolghtL Pam...,.,,
um...,t, Ohio, untl 10:00 A.
houM. Pom.-oy, Ohio, tho Ohio. during normal workM., Ohio Stondtrd T'une.
T... doy, June 6, 1990, for OIL GAS. AND OTHER MI- ing hours Monday through
NERALS UNDERLYING THE Friday.
improvemen'' in:
Molgo County
Molgi County, Ohio, on FOLLOWING DESCRIBED
Commluionoro
REAL
ESTATE:
MEG- 7-(0.00-2 . ~ 1), State
Mary Hobotottor, Clerk
Situated in Meigs County,
Rouuo 7, Moigt County, by
(6!.21.
28. 2tc
Township
of
Lebanon.
State
rosurfaoing wbh ospholt
of Ohio, being in Section 26.
cone,.... ·
Project and Work Length: Town 3. Rongo 1 1 of tho
-Public Notice
Ohio Company's Purch•e.
32.472 feet or 6. t 5 mitas.
Pavement widlh: various. known 11 the Henry Ours
ORDINANCE
Bidding on· thlt project ii Farm. and being all of the
NO. 1228-90
r•tricted
to
Minority south holf of the oouthoul
An Ordlnonc:e to ootabtlsh
Business EngerpriM (MBEs.) quaner of S•Ciion 26: ~;~ve
16 acres an ARC Houting Fund ond
certified n
MtiEo In ac- and excepting
Appropriating Funds
cordMce with Section which wa1 deeded to Wm.
Ours by Henry Outs, Jan·
Therefore.
1~3- 1111 !8)(21 of tho Ohio
Be ' it ordtllned by the
Rnilld Ceda by tho Stata uory 30, 1899. Volume 811.
Equal Etrljiloyment Oppor- Pagoo 372-373, and con- Council of tho Vlflogo of
lalntng 6&amp; acres. more or Middleport. u follow"
l~nfW ~oordlnator and qual·
'
SEC. t: . Thot on ARC
lllod to bidwbhODilTunder IHI.
REFERENCE DEED: Vo- Houling Fund i1 hereby ••·
Cheptar 111125 .ot iho O~o
l•me ·239, Page 187. Moigo tabllsflld within the Village
R.. lsod Coda.
Treuury.
··'The date •e.t for comple· County Deed Records.
SEC. II: Thot oil granl
tion of thia work aholt be oet ; Said oH. gao and other mlappraiSed et funda receiv.ed for thi1 proforth in -t ho bidding propo- • ne,.ls was
$2.000.00.
ject and 111 program incomti
111." ·
Sale of said oil. gu and dorivod from thla project
Eoch bidder .oholl be r• •
other minerels t~ be for not shalt be dopoabed In thit
quirod to file with his bid •
1
cortifiod choick oi cMhior'o !no than two-thirds of tho fund.
SEC. Ill: That oil oxpen. check for an. amounl equal aforesaid appraised value.
Said 11to is subject to ap- related to thla projoct ahlll
to five par cent of his bid. but
proval by the Common Pleas be poid from thlt fund.
in no event more than fifty
SEC. IV: Thot for tho
thou'•nd dollars. or a bond Court, Meig1 County, Ohio.
TERMS OF SALE
col.,dar · veer 1990; there
for uon per cant of his bid.
Ten percent 110%1 of the it . hereby opproprioted
peyable to the Director. '
Bidder must apply, on tho amount of such accepted· 111.000 In thla fund for tho
proper forms. for qualifica· bid. but in no event MsthM operation of this projoct.
SEC . V: Thot this orditions .t teat ten deys prior ., .ooo.oo. Tho bolonee of
10 lhe dete ut for opening the purch11e price shall be nance i1 hereby decl•red to
end payable to the Sher· be 1n emlf'gency in that
bi• in accordance with due
Chapter 66211 Ohio Rovitod iff o.f Meigs County, Ohio grant funda are now IVIil!!fl·
within thirty (30) days from bte for this project ond must
Coda.
Plans , and . specifiCations the date of confirmation of bo expended · In a timely
manner for the operation ot
oro on flla' ln tho Doport'l'en1 sale.
JAMES M. SOULSBY. thil project.
of Tronopo&lt;llltion ond tho ofSHERIFF OF MEIGS
SEC .. VI: • Thit OrdiMn·co
flee ot tho Diotrict Deputy
COUNTY; OHIO ' shell toke effect ond be In
DireCtor.
fore- from and after April
The Director .r fterveil t~ APPROVED:
23. 1990.
right t.o reject any and ell Palriek H . O'Brien
ATTORNEY FOR.
PASSED tho 23rd day of
bicto.
PLAINTifFS
AprH, i990.
Bernard B. Hurst,
ATTEST: Jon P. B•ck. Clark
Direetor fS) 22, 29: (81 5 3tc
Dewey' M . Horton,
(51 21. 29. 2tc
PubliC Notice
Prnldont of Council
1~1 21 .. 28, 2tc
PubliC Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
sealed bids will be rePublic Notice
ceived in the office of the
NOTICE TO
Meig1
County
CommiSsion~
CONTRACTORS
ore. Third Floor of tho CourtORDINANCE
STATE OF OHIO
houll, Pomeroy, Ohio until
NO. 1227-90
DEPARTMENT OF
12 noon on June 6. 1990,
An Ordinance to
TRANSPORTATION
for tho following surpluo
Appropriate Fundt for the
· Cotum""•· Ohio
equipment now in the poeArts Council Fund for
Moy 11. 1990
1890.
Contract Saloo Logol Copy IIISion of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Ser·
Be it ordained by the
. No. 90-~72
Vicet .
Council of lhe Villege of
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
Bldt wilt bo opened at 2 p.
Sooloct 'propooato will bo
reeceived 1t the office of the 'm at the seme lo~:~rtion on
Director of the Ohio D~part· the ' above dete. Person•
ment of Transportation. Col· wishing to bid' may bid on on
um...,t, Ohio, until 10:00 A. lnclivi&lt;klol item 01 on tho totol
M.. Ohio Standard Time.' amount. Each bid iii 10 be
Tundoy. June 6. 1990, for plocod in o aNied envelope
,...rked "BID &lt;JN SURPLUS
improvemenll in :
Athens. Wuhinglon and EQUIPMENT", Bicto must
Meigs Counties, Ohio, on specify Whet item is being
·
State Route 124: 't eet'ion bid for. ·
The eauiument ia •• fol0.00 in Athono County: ·ooction 42.58 in Miiga County. I-o: Minimum bictoocc:opt·
· and taction 0.00 In Wath· abl• are in br1ck~1 :
1. Federet PA 170 Siren
ington County, by guerdrail
(8100.00).
reconstructiOn. ,' .
2. MotOfoll Slran.tt30.00I .
Woik length - 20.48
3 . Federal Twlno011ic Light
mlltl
·
'1
·
"The date 181: ·for comple- Bar 1"211.001.
4
.
Motorola
2
Channel
Lo
Happy Ada
tion of this - k shill be ••
5
_ _ _...,:;.:;.::._.;..;;~-oat forth in tho bidding pro- Band (1300.001.
1. Motorola 4 Channel HI
poNt."
Each biddar oholl bo re- Band 11310.001.
8. VenMr 500 Watt Inverquired to tHe wilh hia bid e
cortlllod chock or c111Mar'o ter 11210.001 .
7 . Uoed Studded Snow
c:hedl ·fbr an •mount equal
'· ,to live per cent ofhlollld, but n,.. 121 (t20.00J.
B. Reoondltionad Forno
In no nent more lhM fifty
tltou•nd cloll•t. ' or e bond
per cant of hlo bid.
C&amp;rd of Thl'*for -

coNN~~f~i8R~

l'auli11' 1 Hillttwttn
Rutland ond Rt. 554

Farm Sttppill'\

'

1 2-ah.,.••n Wanuia

M11on Co .. WV

Area COde .e14

V•t•*•

18-fruits •
18-For lilt 'or Trade

· 1 3-lnaut~nce

2 :00P.M . FRIDAV

Meigs County

GREENHOUSE

.6l4·742·27n

Si'rVICI~'.

2 :00P.M . WEDNESDAY
~ 2 :00P.M . ntURSOAY

-

Stl•

17-Mulicall~•t"'"'.,.'•

llliplllyllll~lll

-

F'RIOAV PAPER
SUNDAY PAP'ER

------Weather------

•

••-Mife. MatchlftCiill
15-Builchne Supph•

11-HtiP Went ad

Units of the Meigs County Lindeman was transpor,ted to
' IN REMEMBRANCE- A wreath was placed on tbe river at the
Emergency Medical Service re- Veterans, and William Lindelevee In Pomeroy on Monday In remembrance of those who died at
sponded to 16 calls for asslstaQce man refused treatment.
sea to protect their country. This ceremony was conducted by the
over Memorial Day weekend.
The Racine unit went to Main
American Legion Drew Webster Post 39. Tbe rain may have
Wednesday, mostly sunny.
On Saturday at 3:43 a.m. the and Tyree at 1:36 p.m. for Tom
South Central Ohio
cancelled the parlldes, cookouts, and other activities, built did not
Rutland unit was called to Dexter Hill who was taken to Veterans.
Today, periods of rain, possi- High In the lower 70s.
cancel the spirit of Amerlcail l.egton members througbo!ll the
Road lot Paul McDaniels, wlw
E"tended Forecast
bly heavy at times. High In the
At 3:44 p,m. the Pomeroy unit
county.
Thursday
throu~th Saturday
was taken to Veterans Memorial responded to a call on Union
mid 60s. Northerly winds 10 to 20
Fair
Thursday
and Saturday,
Hospital.
mph
an(l
occasionally
·
gusty.
Avenue for Mary Eblin who was
chance
of
showers
Friday . Lows
At 7: 51 a.m. the Pomeroy unit taken to Veterans.
Chance of rain Is 90 percent.
In
the
40s
Thursday,
50s Friday
went to Peacock Avenue for
Tonight, clearing with lows 45
At 4: 31 p.m. the Middleport
and
mid
50s
to
low
60s
Saturday .
VIrginia
Burford
who
was
transto
50.
Northerly
winds
diminishunit went to Overbrook for Sylvia
the Guysville Order of the
Highs
ported
to
Veterans.
In
the
70s.
Ing to Jess than 10 mph.
Boyd who was traQsported to
Eastern Star, and the Meigs
County Beegle Club. He was an
The Racine unit, at 8:42a.m., Veterans, and at 4:55 p.m . the
honorary member of the Nemewas called to Bucktown Road lor unit wenthto Bone Hollow for
Continued from page 1
sis Temple of Parkersburg,
Cortney Jones who was taken to Nellie McCloud who was taken to
------------~~--------------------Holzer.
Holzer Medical Center.
W.Va. He was an associate
stage Tuesday morning and was Ontario and • through Lake Erie
The Tuppers Plains unit, at
member of the Marietta Beegle
The Middleport unit, at 10: 16
expected to crest early Wednes- during the predawn hOurs but
Club and the Columbus Beegle
a.m., responded to a call at 7:41 p.m., went to Pine Tree
day at 26 feeL The water flowed very little moisture was assoClub. He retired after 40 year~ of . General Hartinger Park In which Drive for Myrtle Kraft who was
over the banks onto the low-lying c!aied with the front.
service with the International
James Justis was treated bui not taken to St. Joseph's Hospital.
fields.
·Drier air was moving south
Association ·of Heat and Frost
On Monday at 9:22a.m. Columtransported.
In Enterprise, the Hocklilg
immediately behind the front
Insulators and Asbes.tos ·
On Sunday at 1:36 a.m. t'he bia first responder and the · River was 1 foot under the 12-foot
and ahead of high pressure. This
Workers, Local 80, Huntington,
Racine Fir~ . Depariment was Rutland unit went to Route 143
flood stage and was expected to was to establish a clearing trend
W.Va. ·
.
called to Route 124 to provide for Pearl Estep who was trans&lt;/.:~,_,.$!.; :t~ I&gt;~.,~ .....~
crest Tuesday afternoon, 3 'feet over northwest Ohio by late
Mr. Newman is survived by his
traffic control due to a rock slide. ported to Veterans, and later to
above flood stage.
morning and gradually spread
Holzer.
wife, Margaret Thompson NewThere were no injuries.
Pickaway County sheriff's depstatewide through the evening.
The Syracuse unit, at 2:50
man, three slster~.,Ollle Wilson ,
At 4:43 a.m. thl' Olive Town·
uties notified residents east of
· High pressure will be building
McComb, Miss.; Hazel Butscher
ship Fire Department was p.m., responded to Route 124 for
Circleville early Tuesday when
across the state later Tuesday
and Bernice Carcara, both of
alerted to a call at Little Forked Helen Williams who was taken to
the Hargus River began to flow
and Tuesday night, with the cold
Osyaka, Miss.; two brothers,
Creek for a search and rescue of Veterans.
over Its banks and near the
front dying out over Ohio In the
Roy and Bernell Newman, Baton
At 6:40 p.m. the Middleport
a capsized boat. The owner of the
homes. Deputies told residents· afternoon. The drier air will also
Rouge, La.
unit was called to Park Street for . they may have to leave their
boat was located.
be a little cooler. Afternoon highs
In addition to his parents he
The Pomeroy unit, at lO a.m .. Adam Hicks who was treated but
for the next couple of days will
homes.
was preceded In ·death by five
Mary Craig
went to Cheste~ Road o.n a motor not transported.
The rain began to taper off a bit
likely range from the mkl-60s to
sisters and two brothers.
vehicle accident in which I;&gt;onald
after
m!dnJght,
and
was
ex
the low 70s, but some warming Is
· Mary Elizabeth Craig, 94, of
Services will be held Thursday
pected
to
end
over
all
the
state
by
expected
after midweek.
Point PI\!8SIU!t, died Friday, May
at 1 p.m. at White Funeral Home
early
afternoon.
A
weak
cold
On
Wednesday
, highs again .
25, 1990 ' at Pleasant Valley
In Coolville with Rev. Roger
front
was
dropping
south
out
of
will
be
·ln
the
mid-60s
to low .70s. ·
~ospital Sbe was a retired cook for
The Pomeroy Police Depart- 9:57a.m. on Chester Road Route
Falrtax officiating. Burial will be
Thursday and Saturday wll' be
Jbe Mason County Jail, where she In the Torch Baptist Church ment lnvestigat!'d two accidents 7. According to the report,
fair , while more rain Is forecast
worked for over 50 years. She was
which occurred Sunday.
Cemetery.
William Lindeman, · Hopkinsfor
Friday . Highs will be In the
4 member of the fanner First BapThe first accident occurred at ville, Ky., was driving a 1982
Friends may call at the funeral
70s each day, whlll' lows will be in
Continued from page 1 .
tist Church on V18Dd Street in Point
home on Wednesday from 2-4
Porsche south on Route 7. He h!t
the 40s Thursday, the 50s Friday
Pleasant.
p.m. and 7-9 p.m. with Masonic
the wall and ended up in the another car.
and the mid-50s to low 60s
Born November 24, 1895 in
Columbus: David Henderson
services to be held at 7 p.m.
middle of the road. His vehicle
Saturday.
Mission Conference
Point Pleasant, she was a daughter Charles Edwards
sustained· heavy damage to the II, 23, Columbus, killed when his
For farmers, pan evaporation
The Victory Baptist Church front end and rear quarter on the car crashed In the construction
of the late Jonas and Lorenc
should
amougt to over two-tenths
Charles
Edwards,
82,
of
Midwill have a mission conference passenger-side. He was cited for area at Interstates 70 and 71 In
~romweU. She was also preceded
of
an
inch
Wednesday and fields
dleport,
died
Tuesday
morning
at
downtown Columbus.
Wednesday through Sunday at 7 failure to control.
in deadl by her husband, Sylvester
may
become
suitable lor tillage
the
Holzer
Medical
Center.
ArGallipolis: John C. Johnson, 37,
p.m. nightly. There will be
Craig, in 1950; lwo sons, .Sidney
'!'he
second.
accident
occurred
'
or
plan
ling
operations
by the
lpld William Eugene Craig, Sr.; rangements will be announced s!'veral different missionaries at 9:11p.m. Sunday on West Main Galllpolls, killed when his motorweekend where showers ar!'
by the Rawlings-Coats-Fisher and special singing. Rev. James ·
tbree sisters and one brother.
Street In front of Adolph's Dairy cycle failed to negotiate a curve
lightest.
Ji'uneral
Home.
E . Keesee Invites the public.
on on Ohio 141.
• She is survived by two daughters
Valley. Accorijlng to the report.
Prospects for making hay are
Woodsfield: David C. HufIce cream
and son&amp;&lt;in-laws, Laurena and
Christopher Eugene Thomas,
Henrietta
Boothe
moderate
to good In the norlhwTh!' Trinity Church of Pome-. New Haven, W.Va., was In the fman, 20, Woodsfield, kliled when
Claude Thqmpson and Nettie and
.
est.
Curing
rates will improve a
roy Is taking orders for home- turning lane for the bridge but his car collideil with another on
~gar Baxton, all of Columbus,
Henrietta Ihle Boothe, 72, of
good
deal
Wednesday
as relative
made lcecream. Flavors availa- made a light turn and struck a
Ohio Route 78 in Monroe County .
0H; three sons, Gilbert, Sr., of Gai- Pomeroy, died Sunday at the
humltles
fall
to
around
40 perSunday
ble are chocolate, van!l!a, peach, . 1989 Ford Escort drlv!'n by David
IOpolis, Marvin "Rabbit" or Holzer Medical Center.
cent.
Fair
skies
Thursday
should
Chlllicothl': Rodney Preston,
lemon, pineapple. strawberry, Harrts, Rock Springs Road,
l'omeroy and Donald "Bumper" of
Daughter of the late Henry and
provide
continued
good
curing
25, Waverly, kil!ed In a one-car
banana, and butterscotch, Cost Is PO!l)eroy, who was going through
Middlepon; three daughters-in- Sarah Findling !hie, Mrs. Booth
weather
although
there
Is a
$2 per quart. The annual ic!' the light. Thomas' 1980 Pontiac
accident on Ohio 41 In Ross
laws, Hazel Craig of Parkersburg, was a reitred self-employed
chance
for
a
shower
Friday.
cream social will be held·June 7, sustained light damage ' to the County .
Charlorte Craig on Gallipolis and managing cosmetologist with
. Lebanon: Virginia M. Witt, 31,
8, and 9. Order by calling passenger side door. Harris'
'=onnie Craig of Pomeroy; 24 over 50 years of service in her
Lebanon,
k!lled when her car
992-3777,
992-3222,
or
992.5480.
. grandchildren;
22
greatprofession. She was a member of
vehicle was no! damaged. ThoReunion
collided
with
a train at a' crossing
grandchildren and one great-great- the Trinity Church, Pomeroy, the
mas was cited lor assured clear
wpU
be·
In
Warren
County.
The
See
family
reunion
. ~dchild.
.
distance.
DAV 'Auxiliary, American Leheld June 30, at Route 2, Greer
'&lt; Zanesville: James Queen, 30,
; Funeral services will be held at 1 gion Auxiliary; and Cnester·
Road, in West Virginia at the
Rushville, k!lled when he walked
p,m. Thursilay, May 31, 1990 at Council, Daughters.of America.
Into
the path 9f a vehicle on U.S,
home
or
the
late
Earl
See.
Those
Cww-Hussell Funeral Home wilh
She Is survived by her husDivorce granted
22
In
Musklngum County.
attending
should
contact
Bonnie
the Rev. Grover Turner officiating. band. Olin D. Boothe, whom she
'
Pickens at 675-4092 by June 20.
Monday
''
Eulogy . will be done by the Rev. married on July 19, 1947. Also
A final decree of divorce has
Cleveland: Three people
Gilbert Craig, Jr.. Burial will follow s urviving are iwo sons, Dennis
b!'!'n Issued In the Meigs County
Olllces closed
burned
to death after a two-car
ib the Lone Oak Cemetery, Point lhle Boothe of Pomeroy, and
111 Second St., PCIIIIII'oy
Court of Common Pleas to James
The Meigs Soil and Water
crash
on Interstate 90 In
~easam.
Cody Rae Boothe of Mercerville;
B.
White
a,nd
Barbara
K
White.
Conservation District ha s
YOUI INDEPENDEJII
Cleveland.
- Visiting hours will be held at the a &lt;jaughter, Reva J. Sawyers of
changed moving dates and will .
Pataskala : Janet M. Doran, 38,
AGENTS SEIVING
funeral home on Wednesday from Upper Marlboro, Md., two grandbe open the remainder of this MarTiage li~nses
Canonburg,
Pa .. kiUed when the
~-9p.m.
children, one brother, Henry D'.
MEIGS COUNTY
week. Offices will be closed June
motocycle she was riding on
!hie, Columbus; three sisters,
4 and 5. The office will open at Its
Marriage licenses have been
SINCE 1868
struck a car on Interstate 70 In
Christine Beegle, Pomeroy ,
new location at 33101 Hiland Issued In the Meigs County
R. New.man
Licking
County.
Leasly Hysell, Ravenna, and
Road on June 6.
Probate Court to Dana Otis
:C. 'R: iSliml Newman. 65. Martha Bartom, Columbus, and
· Eynon, 21, Raciue, and Carrie
'torcli1 died 'Monday morning at · ·several nieces and'nephews. •
Anne DeBartoU, 18, Hocklngs. '
Besides her parents, she was
Jlis residence follOWing an exville, Ky.; and Charles Raymond
preceded In death by four sisters,
t ended Illness.
Wolfe, 22, Racine, and Elizabeth
Dally stock prices
• Born in , Gjllsburg, Miss., he Bertha Custer, Emma Wayland.
Mae Lyons, 18, Biloxi, Miss.
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
was the • son·• of the late Ells Rosa Genheirner, and Effie ShanBryce
and Mark Smith
non,
two
brothers,
Homer
and
Newman ;and Etta Brabham
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl
Elmer.
~ewma1J , , He was a member qf
Ho~pital
There will be no visiting hours
t~Je Coolville Masonic Lodge 337.
Am Electric Power ........ .. .. .28¥,
thl' Aladdin Shrine Temple In or service. Interment will follow
Veterans Memorial
AT&amp;T ................................ .41}~
cremation.
In
lieu
of
flowers,
Columbus, the Belpre Shrine
SATURDAY ADMISSIONSClub, the AthPns Commandary memortal donations may be Ashland 0!1 .... ......... ... ..... .. .39* Pauline Cunningham, Mason,
Bob Evans .. ........ ................ 13Y, W.Va .; Katherine Weaver,
No. 15. the Ancient Accepted made to the Trinity Church of
Charming ShQppes .... .......... 103;l Pomeroy.
Scotlsh.Rite Valley in Columbus, Pomeroy. _
.
Cay. Holding Co .... :.............. 14¥.
SATURDAY DISCHARGESFederal Mogul... .... ... .......... 21')8 Derek Cremeans, Sadie Trussell;
_c_o_nt_in_ue_d_f_:ro.:.:m~p.:.:a;::.ge:..;l:__ _ Goodyear
T&amp;R ..... .... .... ...... 34% Timothy Davidson.
Heck's
...
.....
.. .. ,.. , .. .. .. ..... . :.... 3Y,
p{-esident of the MiddleportMcComas. St . Charles, Mo.; a
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS.- VIrKey
Centurion
...... .... .... .... .. 14% gie Burtoi-d, Pomeroy; Glorta
Pomeroy Rotary Club. a past
daughter and son-In-law, Dianne
Lands' End ................. ... .. ... l6% Decker, Long Bottom; Mary M.
master and 50 vear member of
and Floyd Reynolds, Middleport,
Limited Inc ............ ... ...... ... 49')8 Eblin, Pomeroy.
the Middleport· Masonic Lodge,
eight grandchildren, three great·
Multimedia lnc ............ ....... 81~
F:&amp;AM. a past worthy patron and
grandchildren, eight stepSuiltt money ror :a downp:a"mem: on a home e:amcd on ~r Homes:l¥n".A~ar•
SUNDAY DISCHARGES
Rax Restaurants .. ... ..... .... .. .. 2Y, -None.
50 year member of Evangeline
· is :a dillkWI chon:. Tbxs 'N~Y' we Ue3ll'!ed loan lllnJm.:auon r'ee 1po111u:l on yow lalia
grandch!ldren, and five stepRobbins &amp; Myers .............. .. 17~
Chapter 186, Order oft he Eastern
1M c.n.nt Tn&amp;Sc Homcsaver .\a:ount
'""hidle•er 2m0Uni1S less.
great -grandchildren.
MONDAY ADMISSIONS
Shoney's
Inc
.............
...
.......
14')8
Star, a member of the Meigs
He was preceded In earth by
-Thomas Hill, Racine; Melissa
Our bonus 11 &amp;Ja11ned 10 ~··e you .._
Widt a Homn:1ver ,J,ccouru. :'ou ..:.:&amp;n ~vc
Star Bank .............. ........... .. 20¥, Griffin, Coolville.
County Council on Aging, and a
his first wife, Julia, a brother and
t&gt;Jtlr.l mcenu~e you rna~ nefti to befin 11¥-·
for a dowftp;yment 1n .v~y 3rnoun1. Jl :~ny
Wendy's Inn .................... .. .. 5*
past chairman of the Meigs
iii I r'or your home. !t can be use2 ro llllp .
a grandson.
MONDAY DISCHARGES - . You'll e2r11 ;a com,e~uive r;11e on :mur
Worthington Ind ................. 23¥, None.
County Easter Seal Committee.
"''Itt 1tl1hose otner com :woctllld widl
Funeral services will · be held
. gyblp m1 before lont you II hllve tnc.
buym1 :~.home .
!I'J r. McComas served on the
Thursday at 2 p.m at the Meigs
down,•ymeru you nftd.
C..ommunlty Action · Agency
Junior High School (the former
So rfyou·re dre:~mm~ or' owntnc a,.._
Board, was secretary of the
· 8ea of aJI. when you 're n::1uy 10 buy. JJ'jU
someU~. come to Ct:nuul Tn1Sl and blpl
Middleport High School) auditoSoutheastern Ohio Athletic
. you·ftnance your convenuon:al montt~ie !o:u1 to ma.ke that dream :a reality. The Calllll
rium with the Rev. Sonny Zuniga
throuth Cerur.tl Trust. ·.ve wr!l ~tve ~mu an
Trust Homes:aver .".cr:ount- rhe heR WIY' to
t..eague lor many years, and was
officiating. Burial will be in the
llttra boftuJ .. cq!':.~lto the mtere~t you \'I!
butld your oownp:~ymeru.•• ;'.:qcer.
HOSPITA~
on the Meigs County Regional
Riverview Cemetery.
Planning · Commission. In 1976,
Masonic and Eastern Star
...,....,,., _ _ ,n,..
.f .. _ .. _ _ ..,_,._,....,,.. _ . . , . , _ , , _ _ _,,_,,,_,....,..c.... .,_
he was selected by the Southeast- services will be held in conjunc....,._ _ _ _ ":""'"' ·r-cPft&lt;l&lt;__,.,,r..,.,,.,. _ _ _.,....- ....- -.. --c-.,.-.
ern Ohio Regional Council as
tpn with the funeral service on
"Man of the Year" lor Meigs
Thursday. Friends may call
CENTRAL TRUST
County.
Tuesday and Wednesday, 2 to 4
97 North S.Ciind An.
Middltport
He Is survived by his wife,
and 7 to 9 p.m ., at the Rawlings-·~..992·66·1
992-3007
Beulah Starkey McComas, MidCoats-Fisher Funeral Home In
dleport; a son and daughter-ln- Middleport.
i\ PNC BANK
. law, Edward and Mary Ann

Stocks

53~Am-

1&amp;-~sfor

SIDEUNES
SPOit CAIDS

.01 / dov

&amp;1-HouMttol• G. . .

7-V•d Stla IIMid en advance!
a-Pubhc 51111 &amp; Auctfon
1-Wilt'ltld 10 luy

Heppy Ad•
Y11d 511•

DAV IEI=O"E LIIUB(ICATIO'N
-11 :00 A .M . SATURDAY

.42

12-1_,.,_

1-Mappy . . .

...,.,....,..nt pl.ced'" The Deily Sentmel ,...

COP'\' DEADLINE MONbAY ~APER

Business Services

.eo

Mt:r t:tld Itil: '.I'

6-L.OSI lAd FounG

cept -:- cl•lifild dtlptay, lutin•• C.rd end 11911 n01icfl1
Wll IIID epp.., in th• 11:\ . .. l.... nt A.... ter 8nd 1hl .Galli·
PGUJ Dally Tribun.. ,.,chinv DVIt' 11.000 ttamts.

WEATHER MAP -Low pressure will brfugmore rainy weatber
over the New England States,.High pressure will bring fair sides
over the Oblo Valley. A llllgerlng frontal boundary will llrlng
Isolated thunderstorms over Florida. Low pressure over tbe
Rockies will br'lng showery weather to the Northern Plains with
thunderstorms to the south. The Southwest will continue to be hot
and another frontal boundary will move over lhe Nortbwes.t with
rain and showers.

-~

19.00
t13 .00
11 .30 / GIV

11
11

1-C.clof Th.,..ks
2-tn Memory
3-Annoucem.ntl
4-GW..way

.., et'fon fWM • ., ed t'Uf'll in P. .\ . CIIIINfOM 2 :00 o .m
IIW Itt• CMAIIICMIIOn to m•• corree1ton.
• Ads tim muA b'! lllid in •ctvence .,,

•A ei•tthlld

•~oo

Allltllll rr u· 1111' 11 t ·

••ul

.C.rd ~f T"..,"In Mlmor~~m

Ovtr 1&amp; Worcto
•
.20

tftr ·~ """' •• ....,. . . .....

poid
.
•Re_.,. 1 .10 [llrlcoum tor ••• ..-ld tn •dll•r'lc•
•fret eds - Qft'....,.y end FOtlnct ICII Und• 1 i wGrdl will b•
3 CIWI at no att•gt.
·,
·~"•. "' eci fof' lA
1•1•• ta dOuble piol ot •d CCRI.
.
. IYPI Ofttv WIU .
: - ~
11 ftiM

R111
14.00

Ret• are tor contlcutittl ruftl . bfat~en uDG...,a wit! De d'l-.ed

.._ Outllid• Me,,.. o.lh• or Mu~tn ~Ymtll rnu• be pte-

•SO.•iftli

1&amp;

&amp;
10
Monthly

y

•

Words
1&amp;
11

3

I A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

,OUCIEG

.. _ -

Memorial Day - now marked
Inmost states on the .I ast Monday
In May, but Iii some on the
traditional date of May 30 began as Decoration Day, a time
lor the graves of Civil War dead
to be strewn with flowers .

RATES ,

TO I'LACE AN AD CALL 992·21 56
MONDAY thru FRIDAY ,I A.M. to S P.M.

114

ll-tl-'10-..

I and J

2 llolhor - . I ltln- !ong
.. ~•• - · olol, 1104-i71-47'14. •
2 "TPI• I I lilt-. to

g......,.IIWIHia.

GIIG lAlLEY
•NEW HOME&amp;- •SIDING
•GARAGES
•RENODEUNG
.OI!NERAL CONTRACTING

We tlee4 Lletl•t•l

A Grt~~t C•

A'

''•tlon-

. . . .ty IIMI hosonalllt l'ricu'.,
WI GO Til EIIU 81.....

992-6810

-·-

·~ --~

r

.

OIIG

.
'•

�'

Page-10- The Daily Sentinel·
4

· LAFF-A-DAY

Giveaway

42

Mobile

HomN

51

Goods

=-=-· •.. .
....---·-

GAll

Yri .....

IOd" tb. • tWilord Butt,

pi'\CIII:

wolfhlna

ean~ana~y,

·- - .

...... e...cue 'lOP

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

at....,..ltomalor-an

bull ............ ap-

Lolli: -

A'PL~

2llr ............... lllo Clrondl,

Lolli: Blue molol F1oh lacklo
box.
·114-'llt2·127f.
- Lonaovlllo
and
Rutland.
•

,.. Ct.w ..... Dr..ltt

IT Wllll

••

-

Town

" - lola

lor ...,, Old

C•MP~rouncf,

104-1~

Slltl.

.

f ·:l'

~~"

,.,... atnpda'g .. CaH U.
t.aaln. 114-.24&amp;-11311 daya, or

"I'm looking, for an inexpensive original masterpiece."

loB-115715 ....1....

IIC2l

--tot

-2.

Hiring nunlng
o11
ahlfla. Rlv. .wDOd C.. Certlot.
lfl IOoS. -

:m.MI:i

1NEtD HELP I

1t88 doublo wldo 28•11, full
deck on beck. 2 01r garage
OU1bulldlng, ..nlrol olr, 1. ere

Trliller, 2 bId 0011•, OIIH 304I'IH'IN.

44

1-10 • •
-·
.- . . .ChoiJ
lllltllii.l'lilo:JII
•

noao

PT • $1,0110 mo., FT • SI,OIIO
mo., oooy phono - . no
l - I n g . 11+m-7728 Ell.
Jl.2.

lmi"Mddlte .-1n0 lftllabttlor

3

=:::J

.....

tor
ovoryonal
--.~onna

135 W. ROdnoy Hill, Wll- Ad.

June1,2.H.

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; vk:lriHy
:Yard BaiL ml UnCafn Avo.
·1:110 1111 4:60 - Y and Wod-

liM - L - '
wlh U •
....-, ...pan·
limo R.N. pcollon and parlollmo
L.P.N.'L Conlaal lho 111Nctor ol
Nunl~ Plrw.,. C.rw Cent•,
170 PIMa .... ,Drtv, GIIMpatil,
Cillo, 114-148-7112. E.O.E.
Et.RN IIOIIEY Roodlng Baolcol
$30,04;M)Iyr lnc.::;..,.=oentlal.
now hlrlna (1)
Ell.
Y·1011t.
llldnlahl ,..all L~N, 11 hour
wool&lt;,lFCIIIR, IJ4-44&amp;-7141.

Pomeroy,
MlddlepOn

Hood mollvatod aoll-llotl lor
rapkl
aJ:panalon
P«+•n.
Quality lor bon- and
1an1 oomln@. Sataa and
ma::f.11nent. Fu~tNini
. For
1n1
ow, coli
II

&amp; VICinHy

Now 1aldna ........,..... 1or

._ , , . . . , 21 and :10.

••col·

-

Poon• oy I
-

==·

llai•PaHa. Domlna'o

.

~-~~M,OIIO
17,200..
.

-~•

VOI.IR TEST PAPERS, SilL

.,.

POSt

&amp; Auction

SE

IlL
RVICE .lallo. Solory
10 ""'· Nat........,~":=
Ex!.141112.
· Call (1)

-=

aanl-, 3 or 4br homo,

Junll

_,.. wtlh

ot

w•ttout

mol0&lt;0. Call Lony Uvely 114-

3111303

I.Ulit( QI.A~'·'
lii·IQl!

E........

"'I AI. lidO INII• wlh M•30
oddMion on 1110x200 ft lal, CA,
m, ...... _.,., I dry«, oat.
dloll, 1 aor · - u:I,IOO.

·=-·
OlD.

:104~

aftor

...... ---1M .... 1111.
IEAIITIFUL APARTIIENTB AT
BUDGET~~ AT

oiACK-

814-441-01102IEII1.A-1

2311 hoy ........ 1 hoy and .....

UTATES. 111 '11kl1pn Pike

lt6ln $1t2/rno. Willi ID ahoa I
....... Cd~14 t4t 811, IOH.
Camplaloly

tumlohod, amoll

ao; a

- . .....blo 1or ,

=.otr"" I

R.-,

Fumlohod Apl, upolalro, 1br, 'oil
Ullllloo plikl, - . . . Ave, 114441.4JII23.
Fumlahod A•.
.. S220, Utlllloa
Pl!d-1br, 701 Fourth, O..Upollt,
11t-441 ttll •ftw7p.n\.
F~
Entcloncy, flU,
UIIINioo Paid, 7V1 P - Avo,
O.Hipotle, 111 ttl 1411, 1 tter
7p.'"·

=:.':l'IIO~

-=

~.
Halpolnt Ralrlainllor, •711;
Rolllgarolar, 171; Rofrtgol:alor,
211!,. lroo, . $110;
A.,...alor,· ldr, Stl;
...,..• . . , _... -hoJ..~i· !Jij- 4' 1t"lllailwlth oland, I
K....,., Qryw, tJI; ~ IMiil laltara, UIOJ,~••""
Dryer, til; am.a Chell F,...,,
, . ....., a&amp;;·- ...
pori·
llkO MIO, fiiiO; ~lla !Iango,
'*~
4'....
•
40 Inch, whfto, Sll; Ciao RanQoo,
JO Inch, Acfftcala,
AM In ,
-l.!lare111,
_ -...Sllaaao
ANI'lelt:
-.
151 Upper
RIM"'-d;.,.....

::J

:.:7311.==-------SWAIN ·

AIJCTION I I'URNITIIRL 12
Olive ... Gollpallo.-. Uood
luml~n, -·WOOl.,. I
WOIII-L 1-111.

21113.

Wlnlod: Pan~lmo ba,_r lor
BA lrallot. 1.....,..23711 bot·
prlvato club. E~&lt;. IOOitllng
US p.m.
oond. - - nlghlo only. UmHod Ollor. Facwy lo you,
Stnd rMUrne to Clli 033 Gal·
lhlolla Dolly r - . 125 Thin! MxlO, I or 3 bod,_,, -ado
carplt Md a.bln.ee.
tllb
A¥onuo, QOIIIpollo, 0H 41131.
bolh with altyllahl, 'llnyJ aldrt·
lng. $13,1110. 1'11!0-72t-4041.
18 wanted to Do

·-171·- .....

--.u...---= .,,_,
-

...

.... 111 Ult'lt11.
11,1110.
-·-·
on at PAINT PWI,
Huoquvorno Trim-. Sove
ID tiJO, MINT PWS, JIIOII-

m.

oion Ava,
l'll-40fof.

-

work. 11~ 441 1411.

.....

.

•·-2..=,!!,._,,...,.,._
'aimiio Jnci*d: -.1
Furnished

oH..

In o.l-11,

Dl-. -

mining pollution.
(AI

~ t2,tl00.,

28 ft. _,.... lrol... - lalnod, aaad GorlcfiiiDII,..fltiOO.'

11+'JIIa.all'o rl14-•Dlltl ,.., Compcur ,...,.,
Full
lno,
brook
blno,
lull
ltno,
_ _ __, ...r

•

Serv1ces

........, ....... D12a

n r

.mall

r~llllll. ,.,., ta • •

"*""'Y

~ymaru

on

!
'
1

on

63

Plcnla ·I - and lour - .

--.

-

aholra. 1111:11 ...-

•

uv-ock
-·

lluii.20 monlho old,

~ · ...._ . . _
-aln
Cow,~-·

alhor- ~-lor-· I
Whlrlpaat lraotfrM17 cubic loot 2474iU.
relrlgoralar, cloan, $1110. 114-441·
Pluo alu lonnal woddlna JOWl!.
0111.
w/long • - • ohopal Jongl~
lraln nock llnO, lacy I
53
Antiques '
Buy « ooll. RlverlM Antlquoo,
1124 E. Moln Bl,.., Poma:%
Haura: II.T•W• 10:00 1.m. to 8:
ll;'l'&gt;J!.undoy. 1:00 loi:IIO
, p.m.
,,._,_DB.

.......... :104-m-4211.

• ·•

·.u-~..:,paw:.:.;:;..:at;::.:.,__,;;.:;.:..;..:;;.:;.....
,...._k. ;

.

bloak 1M - .. F'" . . ,

· I I - • Phona

Haylllne. -

up; LldiF. ...... arinder miJW. AM

plano.... .....,,
.. 1110«1..71111 anyiiN.

Improvements

llnj.

••

golta.l14 2111 1314.

u-fn a ..- a1 n·
oa11an1 -lily. Haw raglalrollon
llual - Ia -lato,

· ·~
OO(pi\nlry, - aalttar
ooll111111oo.
Mltcll.
\.

311 Mill

In lanHh otaa .., •Ieiiia
1
alhor brando. aalla, a11o:

- lor ..... C a l l '
'
Uood ........
• -~·- ,. _. t""•
llailor &amp;pan- 114- _ , . , - . maro1 bay wtlh
..z-7717.
..... S ,_.old, all111ftl17.

tiOIII
li.aniiiiMOr.
Aaallng, MIO/I!Ipolr1 aiding~

Ron'o TV .......,

VEAL FARII FO~ SALE or wtlh apllon ·lo buy. 114-24155458. '

34

..,..,

paint-, loyo, or onllro
.... aollioOI -1215-3271, or

Ill!~~~~~185il4~.;c;;iiiri;;;;--

55

Building .

Suppl'-•

-

.....,_ Quorlor
chld..,_,IM3'
U JIJI..._.,
84 Hay &amp; Grsln
30 ao- miDd hoy RUIO, Ylfl.
~·n•lllll.

qAVE ME

HI$

ROCK

NO

I&lt;IDDIN6~

NOT REALLY. .. HE GAVE Me
A BUNCH OF 6TONE.6 AND
SOMe 6T'AL.E. BUNS.

v.ow! ARe 'IOU
LLCICY.'

:Z: ;

llrllllng. '

11011 _... canap'rW..,..
Pump_aoill.......,

a

, _ MO.QaiHa
EV.V.lii1'EIIPIUIIU,

~Tri

CcL -

Jaa-.OH-

01 F. Cn11k Rd. Pllta. • • ,
~-and
114Rwnadlllna_;

· 'Business
Buildings

7i

Autos for sale .

~.

Malllll · Home

. . ..... work.

A••_......,..,......,\
,

J

IT'S SUCH A

tlulrl.ii':..,..,. lib rtence. :
IMurinll .......
.

82

Plumbing

PliRTY
DAY !I

I

&amp;

(l)

Calllr'IP~u-.g

. 1111111 -lila

- a n d Phi
QcNp 1 , ObiD "i

11t ... 3111

a

Forum

irn aa

CICIJ

o a

v.n. c.®,

N.IUto. .W, Cl, TV, ... .....,,

114 1414411.

RalldtN...
or 0011..-:D
...
...,....,
__
or .........
,.

1d 111 L1 'rn,

'tl .....

-'m:.-,._.7_,.,._
a
-~ SOWll-1711.

85 Gensrsl Hauling

Wllor Haullr&amp; IIDG or
liOIIO .L ................. I

W..

Real Estate

lpoara,~Gf.t15.1428.

::=,

d.__

- · \'au poy UIHlloa. Dopooll
Required. 1M Ill ~.

=.;!'

1 0

ACROSS ·
1 Plucky
· 5 Ostenta·
tlon
9 Old oath
10 Opposite
11 Admire
12 Play
reveille

.

•'

/.

~

,_

don·u

42 Unearthly
43 Southwest
wind

DOWN

1 Frosty
2 Nimble
3 Eddie

14 Asian
Cantor
river
song
16 "Now We
4 Nigerian
- Six"
city
16 Samuel's
5 He played
mentor
"Zorro•
17 Cozy room 6 Palm laal
18 Homecoming 1 Under·
(abbr.)
estimate
19 Kook
8 Musical
20 Indiana
piece
. city
10 Fencing
22 Mining
move
lind
23 Deer
2.5Roman
highway
26 Pallid
27 Legend
29 Philippine

·peon

Yesterday's Answer
13 Saltpeter 28 To this day
15 Swiss
30 Kissinger
river
~r luce
21 Soma
32 N .H . city
22 Turned
33 Diamond
on
. flaw
23 Without 36 Comparacure
live
24 Generally
suffix
27 Inedible 31 Spanish

.. '

...-

.

..

•

30 Gardening

••

uncle
37Wolflsh
39Czech
river
40Wary

DAILY CRVPTOQUOTE!l- Here'• how to werk It:

a an s~~ga

@ HHI· Streal Bluet

12:00 ()) MOYiE: ilia Cimarron Kid
(2:00) •

II
I11J ~"rn.c:-'
~
NIWIHIOht

1121

AXYDLIIAAXR

II LONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In this sample A Is used
' for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Sinale letters,
apostrophes the length and f011111Uon of the worcb are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different. ·
CRYPI'OQOOTE

.'

i5·29

eO 'WI~' CU L.all

... ,

I

:C'.£nt Tonight

DUA

LABLYA

NFA

DUA

BVYl

FAYCNVGA

QBF

DUA

BQ

BHF

Night VInnie a mother falls In
love with Don Aiu.epo. (R)
(Time May Vary) Iii ..
0 Clime I10fY Tagla's

JHFA

8

LFAJAFTNDCBV

DrHmStereo.

Nnhvlle Now Country
rnuelc'a hotteet 1tare are
leatured liVe.
12:311. (J) Ill Late Night With

a -.

YCRAFDI.-DUBEN.I WAQQAF.IBV
YHt....,'e ~••tea WE SHAU. NOT, I
BELIEVE, BE OBLIGATED TO ALTER OUR POLICY
OF WATCHFUL WAmNG. -WOODROW WllSOI"! . ·

Dlvlcl L.atlennln

•c.a •rM \llln t.ova

ernttneopy
a1 Magnum, P.l.

...

If·

41 Please

form)
36 Saul's

· t~~~e'r:
I!JIIporta Tonight

. ..,_.·I

"The way she wished us luck waa about aa
comforting aa the sight of drill bitlfon a
dentist's table."

+A 9 8 2
• A J 10 9

by IHOMAS JOSEPH

;~· Stereo. ~

u...

,or.

SOU'rll

CROSSWORD

early years and his personal

ro:".l:: :fllirch

tJH
+KJIOT62

The Bridge World magazine is mak·
• Q64
· ing a get-acquainted offer to readers·
+A9
of this column. U you use the word
Vulnerable: Neither
"Jacoby" with your order to 39 West
Dealer: South
94th St., New York, NY !0025, you can
receive six back issues of the maga· · S..lll
Wnr
Norlll
Eu1
zine for $5 postpaid. (Back iasues are 1•
Pass 2+
Pa.oi
Pass
3.
Pass
usually $3 each.) Today's deal is taken 2NT
All pass
3 NT
from a back Issue of Bridge World.
In a team-of-four matcb, botb tables
Opening lead: t 2
reacbed three no-trump. Of course,
had the bidding been one no-trump three no-~rump, Wes~ would have led a Lf-irs-t--:pl-a)'l-:.:-n-g-a-:l:-o-w-c"'lu-:b""7'to-:-du-mm-~y's
heart ami ~here would be no story, but . queen. When West showed out, Solith
the match took place some years ago knew tbere was no luture iii the club
in England, the land then and now of suit, but he also realiJed that West wils
weak po-trumps, alid eacb declarer likely to bave five hearts. ACCOJ'dioCly
opened with one heart. So at both Ia· be took tbe flnt-round llneue in
bles the lead was a diamond. One de- hfoJOrbl uainst West and made nine
clarer worked on bearts Immediately, 'triclut.
.
playing dummy's king and then a low
What if a spade bad been led orlli·
heart. He was defeated.
nally? Declarer should hold up twice,
The other player, Scottish expert win tbe third spade and play the same
Victor Silverstone, saw no harm in way.
-'
--·-

(l) Sl811n E•am ne Stalin's

your material
CC!Ukl '
~=~T::21 .Apr1111) s-hlng
lhOW a marked l r n p r - t In the yew today and_, mlgltt ha.. • pol olpOict . very _ , might develOp today that
~
~ ~ ' : , . .~ at u;;;
'l1tel' might y(eld you some- could b81rtaii'UIMIItalln helping yo11 luiwell.
.
didn't earn.
1111 . , atnll,"lotla obiCIIVe. What Iran·
•
1111 (liar 21...-..., Changat
(0111. IW!ow. 21)
,lplrw wont hong around loo long .
.,. ,._1111 contempllllriU 111111 ,.,.. ,.,.. k._ ......, well 11 alto • DOOdl T.AUIIUa (Aprll»&gt;lllr •1 Dan Cupkt
belle.- Will enhanaa.., maltt ~~~- · • friend 01 a , . _ . aouk1 be ot rea~1 . ..,., 11eg1n to t~~~a a -~n~·~··ty"n•
r11y appear IO be on ...... tmpll I* It• I anlllartOI to J1111 at PI II II. Ute Jllll't kNe lh daper1ment, II Of "'
'
lng 111ern u qutdcly u poatble. Clemlnl. • . pal• an lnterrnedllry.
cllllly H thlngll)avert t
. trutyourulflo a bfrtltdaygllt, Senclfor r IAOITT~ (Now. 21 Deo.21)81tu• you lately where romance

·
2 bldiOOIR Jumllhed. t1C)O,
. . . . . NIJO, - ullllllao, :111411141100 or 171-1111.. ·
2 Ill homo In Porlot

AVON I AN - a I lllltl1al'

c n••••,..... ... ·

....

By Jame• ••&lt;'1lliY

11:3081])

c-.

.5

.1083~

a Ton~ht Show
eac-..

your Astra-Graph predictions for the tlonsthat have pronoUnced elements of
year ahead by mailing $1.25 to Astro- ch8nce could work oullo your edvan·
Graph. c/o thiS newspaper, P.O. Box tagetoday,especlallythosethalpertaln
91428. Cleveland, OH 44101-3428. Be 10 your career or finances.
sure lo state your zodiac algn. .
CAPRICOAH (Dec. ·22......,. 11) Today
BERNICE
CANCER (.111M 21......, 22) Trust your you are Mkely to be even more charlojudgment today, even II you haw to malic than usual. Members ol the oppoBEDEOSOL
make anap dectolona under praosure. site gendet' will find your demeanor apYour fll'lllhaughta could be ~· sound ·pealing. Th- of your own aex will
as you"d make alter a lengthy.. admire you u well.
deliberation.
' AQUAIIIUI
20-Ftb. 11) Lady
LIO (Julr 21-Aue. 22) Financial trends ·Luck COUld be 1111111ng on
today, eocontinue to run In your favor and there's peclally - e your
I
are
a strong polllbtlll)l you might deriVe concerned. People you'll be
material benlllllloday from aomethlng · with might do nice things lor you
' on Impulse. •
.
totally out of left fteld.
VIRGO (Aug. D-lePI. 22) SOCial con· r· . PIICEI (Ftb.20 "omUO) Don'lleave
tacll you malce al thlt time could h.,. decision mailing up to others today. H·
· • gre1ter llgnlllconoe thon UIUal, '""""J 'peclally In your lnvol-'1 with
Marl0,1110
' thoUgh- o1 them may be of brtell· lrlenda. The judgments you're capable
, of making will be COI\ItrUCtl\18 lor all
Conditione lhat h.,. an· lfllct upon dur811an. AI . . _.h cultivating.

EAST
+Q 104

WEST
+KJ53

(comb.

body of a man who
disappeared two years ago
vanishes . Stereo.
12!1 Church StrHt Statton
11:20 (I) MOYIE: Run Silent, Run
Deep (2:00)

AS'l'RO.QRAPH

+QU43

.Q87S3

II) Miami VIce The newfound

I

5-Zi-M

35 Within

Newa
(l) For The Lovo Of Ben
18 \lll Arnnlo Holt

.

'

31 Eisenhower
34 Nigerian
...._+--+--1--

IDi Moneyllne

1N4 Chow Luauarv

I I' I I I I· I

need

181!D New TwNight Zone
121 Crook &amp; Chaae
11:00 (l) Scarecrow &amp; Mre. King

Heating

1177 ~LTD Hill- ......
13110. SDW7WI4I.
.

.

121 NaohviUe Now
9:30 ()) Billy Graham Special
C1 C111 a (I) Coach Christine
must work to gel Hayden 's
forgiveness alter a goof. (A)
Stereo . I;!
10:00 (l) 700 Club Wllh Pat
Roberloon ·
Ill]) a Midnight Caller
Jack struggles with lhe moral
issues of euthanasia. (A) Q
Oil
(I) thirtysomething
Melanie and Ellyn sign up
with a video dating service.
(R) Stereo. I;!
(l) Newawaldl
.
()) Moyera: The Public Mind
(PI 4 Of 4) America' s political
culture relies on Images to
escape the truth. Stereo. !;!
IDi Evening Ne\va .
I 0:30 (!) Major League a. .aball

2414. ,

--- _.,..doll--..

ou~

KEVIN

:AND FI.O\.L &lt;Xll..L.ECTION ~Y.

....,. , •PIIIiarlce np:n W¥
llalary ., ...... -

.

(2:00)

MQRK MEEKLE AND

-'"',::a•

~OIIIo . . . . .

(2:30)

cracks about Jackie's lates1
career goal. !A) Stereo. I;!
(l) (!) Fron~lne A
neighborhood in Dallas
struggles to combat drugs
and violence, 1;1
till Ill \121 NBA Baoketball
II)) L.arry King Llvel
II) Monte Carlo (PI 1 Of 2)

-moti Will~

Hoe

pop::.
~..: ~1:..~ . =·-==1=•::•·:......,....,.-=--~
-7MO. ,;.
PurHrod ~n lulla, 114-

u~~~~~N~~~E lEITERS

JAMES ·
JACOBY

Roseanne makes unwise

-7n-MIO. . ,

WATIRIIROOPINCI
I
u.-.cl- lllilllnla _.... :
... "-1 ,.._ ••• f\1......,., I
Froa Call 1· '
·~ .... Dr lilghl• •

R-

'

ratters are trapped by a
whirlpool. (R) I;!
II) Murder, She Wrote Stage
Struck
Q1 Church Stroet Station
@ Ma)orLeague aa ..ball
8:05 (l) MOVIE: Tho Guna Of
Navarone (2 :31)
8:30 Cl Clll Iii (I) The Wonder
Years Kevin faces a romantic
dilemma. (A) Stereo. 1;1
121 On Stage
9:00 Ill]) a In The Heot Of
The Night Gillespie and VIrgil
investigate the death of a
beauty contestant. (R) 1:;1
Ill C111 a (I) Aooeanno

haQ, ·
t27IIO;
- .,-,ao..,..
-w~plawa,
ion Gulli aultlvol.... .:Ca=l,.::!l14-4tl-403:(::..::::..::=-,-..,.....,--·

UIIIO. Qil1lar will llnanao, 114-

a

IDi PrtmeNewo ;&gt;o
Ill \121 Reoc:ue: 811 Two

'~

Fuly -.Jnod. aaad - i o n,

•em

6

tAK9

till amy Qiaham C:rutade
CD \lll MOVIE: Marathon Man

~~-,.._ ":,1100. ·~.
21 .. -

PRINT NUMBERED lETTERS tN
THESE SQUARES

NORTH

to graduate early or stay with

.llm'a ,Fa""c!""::'i.:'li,"' ;........:....-H_o_m_e_....,.__
. . . 011111
1
j
.
81

'"'"P.""
.
:!J!.·R_. far...,·,...., or monlh.
'::':7
.. . -.Gollla Halal. op~.....,cao;rh~pa~kl~.~~;;.l Wooollu....,, goad oond, m.
•
111110.
qulnc,
3Q4.773444o.
·
~

130 OCN farm, Salem 'IWp.
llolao County, Ohio ,... bodroom houlie, bun. out Slooplna , _ wnh _,,.,
bulldlnoa,- ... and-·· a Aloo tNior · All hoall-upa.
acre~ - dll1ble,
tllnber 1nd
aftOr 1:110 p.m., :104·173.......1 rlaiOL SM,IIIO.OO. COil Call
114-HI·M dayo; •-·2501 Htl,llaoonWV.
ovonlngo.

AVON • AI ...... Call llarllyn
W.ver lOt 112 2111

:mini--

0
.

+H
•Kn

. Tony longer. (R) Stereo. I;!
(l) ()) Nova .Nova reports on
the 100-year-old legacy of
...WHICH LiiJWES ME ALL

-- _,_.....
-·7-Coli-··

- . . . ,. -

PIANO POR IALI. Wanlod:

. . .

l.odv 'pnllarNd. 114~46-71:11 ·~

Fanns for sale

404
rolla, hoy
aorlllllol,.,,
- -~.
131110; a.

ilow - . t 7 I

T11r1 TOMtl a .. ApMJMnte.
IJoaani 211r, 2 - · ,,.. oq. ft. 1
112 Nih. CNCH, ..,, utw,

balh, fiSO/rna,

33

::.7.....211. I1W7It:

1883 TOJG'• llalpllln Mal~
........ Eaoyonpa,lawml-

·::-:i':~o::-=110 , ''"d"'"

IDr rani.
t:l21 moroh. Dopooft. roqutred.
I'M 182 2211 atWI p.m.

45

'pq'Of&amp;

Inside. 114 41U'IOI

a nearby funeral

a

a

lfll 3111.,
""""""'
.llh - on
oampor,
total¥
,...._.,.,.

t...,.. a 1.........,.. luy,

1

, __ - far ....
EIR T- Sor'llco, I!JIIPing,
trtmmlng, ,,.. removal. Fru •
t,_oo.lnaludoo ........ l 'la"!n

a

must overcome his dislike of

iO, 10.
:::::t Nalluiowllli,

1 - - Trw&amp;
or 1 yoar

of

My son and his friends were writing 111 the dust covering my coffee tables. My son advised , "It's okay to
write hera, but don't PUT the DATE." .
·

I]) PM Megozlne

a young. brash client. (R) I;!
Cl
Cl (I) WhO.' I The
eo..? Sam decides whether

AcceiiOI'III

campers &amp; •
, Motor Horiiu

=~=="~~

In CIIY, CA, au11ablo, 1, I
Aolo..... I dopaoll, 114-'
0331.

One t

.....-

aondHI""'
.,._
!I1Wail:
···--.-=~·
~
78 4utoParta&amp; 3 ~

.

Rooms

'AIRLiNE JOBS' ·
$18,5110 ID $10,1100 pot 'yoar. Call

1pultypo10--.l-

':fJ:•

Employment Scrv1ces
Help Wanted

-...

112 mi.
W¥,

~lyhmllahodllobltiHome

(18,.-,.

11

___ ,......,,_

- 1 .... ......
1 - paid. GoOd TOcallon.

the lot

..

SCRAM-I.m ANSWERS
r -u"
Entail- Prime- Fjord- Uplift-:-f'U'f the DATE

(PI 2 Of 2) Slereo.
Ql Muolc Row VIdeo
@ AbbOtt And Coatello
7:05 (I) Jelle,.ona
7:30 II C2l Family Feud
(!) Major League Ba.. blll
a Oil Enterlalnment Tonight
Cl (I) Mama'• Fomlly
till Ill \121
Jeopardy! g
CD \lll M•A•s•H
II)) Croaollre
0 Night Coull
. 7:35 (I) Sanford And Son
1:00 (l) Bonanza
Ill]) Ill Ma~ock Matlock

Suppllf",

,\ l1Vi";!ot'k

·

A
V

II) Miami VIce Prodigal Son

'

Gncloae llvlng. 1 1M 2 Mel-

11117 SchuHz mobllo homo.
14x70. llktl new, many eKtl'll.
May bo oold alono • an nleo
lal lfl Raolno. IM-14•

,

a

Farm

·

CD \lll Night Court!;!
1!11 Moneyllne

·'

Motors
for sale

11841. ·

YISAIIIASTERCARD.

.

e !12) CBS Newe 1;1

FortuneC

·

here:
Complete lhe chuckle quoted
by filling in the (nisslng words
L......L......L......L-.J...--11-.J you develop from step No. 3 beloW.

SpartaCentlf
(I) Current Affair
(l) ()) MacNeil Lehrer
Newettour
1111 18 !12)
WIIHI Of

~

·

5

\lll Three'• Company

Ill Oil

1111;

75 Bolts &amp;

,
_ apano1RIMrllao
Ylllaal
llaand
Apwll-o In 111-oarl. F"""
.... Colt IM-It:l-7711. EOH.
Nlaa 211r apl, porch lown I
prtvato d~-Y. ~ ulllhloa
pold. lfl Rio Qrendo. 114-388-

U.S. CHARGE G&amp;arantood.
R•rdl- al . Credft Rallna.·
Call 1-.827·1081 Eli!.
U25,t4.

i(Jl

:

XR1110, IUD. aond,
.,••• 1117. ,

Y-:l"b..~~a,-dulrobl.i ~:

Mobile Homes
for8ale
'

~~~Yill.A%?

ICX.,....
211G, t2,100;
KX
121,
1'M41N17'1,

MW Woftllla . ., Ill
· 010
" I relrtg., fuel ol
tumace,
~ turnlce, mutt
oollll~.
HOuM For Sale, 2 • .,.., Will
Columb!a; 3 bodraoma, now
- · -.. -~.
·-·
tumaco,N:Z ,DIIO.~
In OolllpOIIo, WoH malnlalnod,
lui ~- fl-'••
privata drift. I'M 211 1151.
LEt.SE WITH OPTION. Lorge
~-lly ~-- ~
3
·
,...
~ - • Oft
KNL
Faw lo olll bod-. lvur
flropla- lngniUnd pool. llany
mN'oliM-Me.n10 or 114-IQ.
:11254.
0no at lho and 1011ouo

MI~GRGDY.

'

WilY DO f IIA'I' CRUD

su

WMAf 'ltlU
'"'f RIR.

a......,

Haltov Dnldaon
oollllt.l~-

taid~,

,__,_...,Company
wanted to Buy

AAAHH! 'IIIE:11€'fl CRUD

i

_.;.D:...;A::;_.!:L~Y!...!;E~D::.,.--11 think you--·-

QITopCard
@ Hangln'ln
8:35 (ll Andy Griffith
7:00 (l) Scarecrow &amp; M,., King

1:4ZII. . Ip.nt.

"'1:

--Ia

9

Mhlcl, I

till

e

no

home. •Just sit here and cry,"
. - - ' - - - - - - - , he directed. "and people will
·

Cl Cll ABC Hewol;l

()) 3·2·1 Conlacll;!

O.... j 304..75-4281, Soriowf
lnqUl,_ only.
l'ol' •
Paaolblo -

Public Ylnlan County,
, _ Wl-110, QH, Sol Jurie
llh at 1:110p.m. lliiOroo, maro
or loae, 2 olory, 311r. 10 ft. Sol~
lha .,.-.,,
alovo,
1lntorn•kMS
.....: day
al
tor
a~1121.
Rick

now baaldi)O
-· n·
Dlfience
rn1111M die
dfflrwnc•.
llconaod 01110, Kllftllllllly; WOOl
VIrginia, 304-7"1S-.f7U. ·

1 1

.r1 I I I' I

were

so~!m~~~rked in

BAJ T0

(l) Body Electric

· -·"' ...,..
....
114-u-.

- . 2 112 bolho, .... (w.
MM, a1 • Nu e·+ wlndoWI.
Got ·
- lluol . Mil,
3IM-I7J.30:IO
or~-

·

· In llldfiJ'

1 bedroom •

houM wlhAI 11111 ment.
Ta,_ .... poym-. 15,0110

32

Sale

There

~ SporloLook

aa

3br,

575-71187.

Public

I
I I I I' I
.I "I· I" I I I? C
HOGUD

a

'

R""'-ct lor quick - · 3 bod_
, houoa Horlh llaln 14.
128,0110. 104-451 1111 or -

a

~~~-·

t111

~

Apartmll1t
for Rent

3 - - houao, llnlollod
-~~~ wHh 41h bod.....,
wMh wood bumar,

Goad_,_,...,.-..
.....-.
-~~~...
-pol••-·
.loya,
....... 1-,
wtlh
fuii.IIIM
ion.
•Mille.

ea eCil

II I

2

I

Reading RolnbOw 1;1
18 \lll t.ndy Qrllfllfl
1Di World Today
II) He·Man
aJ Charlet In Charge
8:05 &lt;Ii llevorlly HlllbHIIea
1:30 II C2l
NBC Nightly News

11LL 5ET THE TEACIIER
f.lAS Fli'N CORRECTIN6

'' IN 1066,NAPOLEON CROSSED
TI-lE MISSISSIPPI RIVER '' ·

I

arou"'
:4:.":A4rlot, PB,OOO
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31 Homes for sale
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made with the Coast Guard.

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Juno~ 2, " ' 11.2 mnoo OUI141. 3
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TUES.. MAY 29

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chacolalo cola;, Soturday E-.
log, Ewlnaton, Ohio • -· PO
roward.I1HIII052.
lllnlalure Otoy PaodiO, loot May
18th, vlcln:f of Camp. Conley.
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304..711-1010.

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Viewing

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LA'INI .. "'IIIITUM

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Lost&amp; Found

Ohio

Hol•lhOid

for Rent

6

Tuesday, May 29. 1990

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

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•

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..

ULIIIIID
COHill liD

ROOF TRUSSES
20'.......................$22.99
24'.......~...............$24.99
28'.......................$31.99
WITH 4/12 PITCH AND 12" OVERHANG

OTHER SIZES AVAILABLE

set8 AL

li
'

Ohio LOttery

Henderson

Daily Number

record

148
Pie!k-4
8567

26'' X 10' ..............................................S6.60
26'' X 12~ .......:......................................*7.90
'

WORK PRODUCTS

WIRE

'M:I"'r-4 •1)'••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••~••••••· ••~•••••••'7,,90

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'

llOU.

511 l1f

Vol.40, No.218
Copyrighted 1190

AI

iiOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

3/8" x20' REBAR........•2.25
1/2" x20' REBAR ••.•3.25 .

AD .

•

·~~=10 '43•

WELD WI!IE IIESH

CIM!' lonl&amp;fd. Low Ia fh.,
'l'lland117, aaaay. m..a. Ia mid

Page4

.

2 Sedlono. 14 Pogoo 26 C.nto
A Multimedia Inc. New_.,,

. Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Wednesday, May 30. 1990

Middlewrt Council to buy new ladder truck ·.
.

~)

. 'By CIIA,RLENE HOEFLlCH

90 LB. MINERAL SURFACE

WHEILIIO CRIIIILDRAII®

ROLLED ROOFING
•Gl:een •Brown •White
o·gg
•Black -Green &amp; White

$1

levi~ In effect. now will be

It will take the fke truck out of
expiring before the truck Is
service for about three weeks .
·Seattnet News Staff
The 6Jcl of $357 ,'667 from the dellvered and those Will have to
Special recognition was given
Sutphen CorJ)Qratlon, Columbus, be pui on the ballot for renewal. to former Middleport Super In·
for a rtew· ladder truck for the Mayor Fred Hoffman noted that tendent of Schools Lee w. McCoMiddleport Fire Department a pre-application for funding Is mas who died Saturday. A
was accepted by Middleport being filed with the Farmers resolution In tribute to Mr.
VIllage Council at Tuesday Home Administration.
McComas for his · contributions '
night's meeting.
In addition •to the bid price, to the community as a neighbor,
Jeff Darst, fire chief, met with
Darst .said that other equipment friend lind educator was lntrocowicll and·made the recommen·
and radio costs on the new truck dliCed by Councilman Paul Gewill be approximately $25,1100.
rard and passed by Council. In
dation for accepttni the Sutphen
. bid. It was the,llnly one received.
According
to
the
fire
chief,
the
trjbute to him the flag will fly at .
1
He noted that It will take from 10 truck's ladder has a . 67 Copt half-staff on Thursday.
work(ng height , and a 56-foot
· &lt;;ouncll also passed a. resoluto 13 months for the company to
built the truck.
horizontal reach .. from twin tlon certifying that the vlllage
A pumper and a rescue vehicle . platforms. ·
., · will · be responsible for 'cost
be sold, Darst said. He aJso
overrun on the proposed Ohio
Indicated that no new levy wlll.be
Cou~cll alsO approved a cab River hank erosion project near
requlredtoflnancethepurchase, conversional acostof$11,500for the lagoon. The $772.000 project
although the current two fire one of the trucks. Darst said I bat cost will be funded through the u.

...

2 oz•.SEAL OF QUALITY ROOFING

wlll

S.. Corp$ of Engineers In the
amount of $500,000 and the
village has filed an application
with the OhiO Department of
Development for the remaining
$272.000. That money has not yet
been approved, the mayor
reported.
Mayor Hoffman reported that
RDn McDade of Columbus South·
ern Power had checked about the
llghtlni at the boat dock and
recommended Installation of
three floqdllghts. There will be no
Installation cost to the village.
· Atthe request of Gary Bates of.
General Telephone, Council will
view a video .;oncernlng how the
telephone company hopes to
become · tnvolved In cable
television,

. Council . decided to request
additional Information before
making a decision on a request
from Ohio Bell to lay fiber optic
cable along several streets In the
v!llage. Mayor Hoffman reported that the company would
like to c6me Into the village on
Brownell, go along Seventh, out
Grant, and over Powell to the
lower part of the villaae. It was
noted that the cable would be
burled 42 Inches In the ground by
a forced system which would
require no digging.
A second reading was given to
an ordinance authoriZing the sale
of a small parcel of land behind
the building on Race Street
occupied by the Department of
Human Resources. The sale will

facilitate a planned expansion of
.the structure.
'
Also given a second reading
was the pay ordinance which
permits employees to accumu·
late an unlimited number of days
In sick leave with 50 percent of
the accrued days up to a
maximum of 60 days payable on
retirement.
The mayor announced that an
Informal meet.l ng with Roger
Manley, Middleport trash
hau.ler, has been set for 7 p.m.
Thursday. He also noted that one
. pollee car has been replaced with
a · 1987 Chevrolet purchased for
$3,700. The 1986 Ford . ~ar will lie
advertised for sale,
· A sjleclal Issue 2 fund was set ·
Continued on page 6
•·

.

'•'

Two _girls apparently drown
in swollen creek at .Chillicothe.
•.

•

SBUftERS

$4
=:w=== .
•30 YEAR WARRANTY

95

Blend, Blllll Sienna Blend

~EORGJA

,10

Tough,lighlwli~l38' panels (38' cover) .....

inalllll.
sldelapladd eJ&lt;Iraatrenglh, keep out the elements. klexcluaivool
leakproof drain chtw~nel stays snug, weathel1iljh~ assureo

draft flee inl8ri011.

Choos11 FI'OIII
White, Brown,
or Blacll Finish

g·

SQ.

•

38"x8............•.•.*12
38" ·x 10 •••.•••••••••••1-5
38" 1112..............118
38". 14...............21

REG.
14z3S•••••••.•••••• ~"23.10 ........... ~ ...............'115.40

'

38" X 16.................
,
....~4
38"118~ ........•...•'27
38" x 20•.••.••.•••.••'30
.38" • 22... _..,;....'33
38" • 24... - ..........36

SlZE

WREELIIO CHAIIELDRAII®

14z39••••••••••••••• ~.20••••••••• .'................·•'17.15

Rm • TAN • WHilE

38x8........."......s13 .20
38x10..............$16.50 38x14...............$23.10
38x12..............$19.'80 . 38x16..............$26.40

PAW'IC

SHIIDLD
20 Year Warranty

81889 ,..

-· 8' x I' Sacllans

..· ~·-.::: ·_ Shadow Box

•III.Aat .... DM •IIAUAOWN
•GaaN. W&amp;li&amp; •CHUih"'UT REND •COPPDWOOD

'

'

.. .

~

·. :~~.:' l ._ . ~

SLIDIII Dill

SYSTEMS

For All Aerfeultural
and Colnna•eqal Nuds

""""$22,60

., l

~- I
~

I

HEAVY RAINS CAUSE LANDSLIDE,.;. Heavy
ralafall $lie · past several days resulted Ia a
landslk!e oa the Sutton Towashlp Welshtown HID
ROad. WbUe cloe'ed r~ ala'na bave been (II aced at
the bottom of the hiD IUI!I on the entrance to that
.ro,ad from Minersville Bill, II 18 p!IS&amp;able.
According to Melp Hlgllway Supt. Ted Warner,
lbe slippage Involved a 2S foot stralghl drop which

Roof Coatlng ...........~.!-!~lu .....s24.95.
SGAL
Roof &amp; Foundation Coating ...•9.99
Roof Coating ........~.S!~iu ...........sg,gg

=w

I

•

Aluminum Fiberglass

QN~i • ·AH..

10'.,.,.,)28,25

s

Fence

12'...,.,..$33,90

B· &amp; E probed today
by sheriffs deputies '

WHITE • HI-PERFORMANCE GLASS
Come home to quality. 1/A;k:~r
HIGH-PERfoRMANCE

GLASS CUTs COSTS

WITH ALL ITS ENERGY.
In heating months, Andernen'
High·Perfonnancewindowsare
33'l'o more energy effiCient than any
ordinary double-pane window.
How does Andersen achieve
this kind of performance?
By filling the space between
the panes with Argon gas-a supe8be

.....

2021 0•--•'133.80
24210...,.•140.35
28210.....•150.10
30210.....•159.95

RlJBBER BACKED

CARPftiiG

-

•White Only

I

Price Includes
Screens
..............

2831 D-n,f172.40
30310.....'183.60
2432.......'147.50
2832.......•1~.30:

2842.un•'181.55
3042.......'193.80
2846.......•188.90
3046........'201.15

' Pressure ,.._led · .·

Picnic 7abla..~~.~~~...848

s&amp;•,4.1'' 11.
By Bot Stuff

Dnlvarullandla

toilet Bawl and ~,._k
WBiiZ
ONJ.Y

PRICES 1N EFFECT NOW THRU JUNE 9, 1990
e-A.. n.

~I.W

.

i

,.

By United Press International
Two teenage girls apparently
· drown Tuesday . when a swift
current swept the girls from a
rain-swollen creek near their
Chillicothe homes. A Ross
County Sheriff Departroen t s po. kesman said early Wednesday
morning that Its divers had not
yet recovered the bodies, and
woUJcl resume their oearch at
dawn.
Authorities have not released
th~ Victims' Identities·. , ,
A Chllll~~e . ~~~~IQ . stal\1111
reported thilt the l~ and 16-~lit·
old Uitloto High School ninth
·graders were riding 'a moped on
Polk Hollow Road near Paint
Creek Tuesday afternbon when
they stopped to wade through the
water. A' Ross County deputy
said the water had risen 12-feet,
covering much of the roadway
along the creek.
Gov. Richard Ce Jeste surveyed
an aerial view of the flood
damage In southern and sou·
tbeastern Ohio Tuesday, and Is
then tapers oH aacl•contlnues for llilother 40 to 50 . expected Wednesday to declare a
state of emergency for Athens,
feet down onto the property of VIc Brown. Several
Hocking, Lawrence and Perry
large tl'tles wel'tl taken down when the sUp
counties,
occurred. There IS some concern that trash
This would clear the way for
blocktd the culvert which usually carries off the
water and that was a contributing factor In the · state, and possibly fed~ral assisttandalde. The Deparlrneal of Natural Resources
ance for the flood-damaged area,
has been c&amp;lled In lo belp evaluate the situation.
said Stacie qtlg, public lnforma-

I

'

•

'

'

.
Deputies of the Meigs County
Sherlff'sDepartmentarelnvestigating a reported breaking and
eilterlng which occurred sorpetime between Monday ~at 6 p.m.
and Tuesday at 5 p.m. ·
.
According to tbe repprt the
bouselsownedbyEdAderer,Mt.
Union Road, Pomeroy. Aderer
reported to the department that
some tools were taken from the·
bouse.
On Monday the department
was notified of a missing horse.
According to the report, Jimmy
Hayes, Homer Hill, reported that
a black mare, a Tennessee
WalldngHorse,h&amp;dbeenmlsslng
from his pro(l4lrty since May 23.
Anyone spotting the horse, descrlbed as bla'Ck wltb white socks
and a white star, Is asked to
contact the sherlfrs office or
~at 742-2777.
On Saturday evening the ·departtnent received a call from
· Mrs. Unda Montgomery, Bucktown, that ber son's bicycle had
been sl(llen from near the Letart
Falls School. The report stated
tbat the bllte was found In a ftre
near an old packing house.
James G. Japes, 39, ChesterbiU, was stopped oil a routine
traffic mafter and wheri 'the
dlsjlatcher ran his driver's lnformatlon through a computer It
was learned that Janet was
wailted In Wasblnaton Colmty on
an Indictment warrant ciW'alnr
him wltb felony 'fleeiDg and
eluding 111 oftlcer.
A bearlna Wfll! held In Meigs
CQunty Court on Tuesday and
Janes was l'l!leued to Wuhtna·
till oUJity deputlea to be returned
to Martel ta to face cbargea In tbe
Wuhtngto11 'County Common

r,eueourt.

Greg Huffman, Racine, was
arrested at the Racine High
School alumni dance for dlsorderly manner. according to Sheriff James M. So\!lsby. He also
was arrested on 11n assault
warrant which had been filed
earlier. He was jailed, but later
released on hqnd pending hearlng In the Meigs County Court.
Sheriff Soillsby reported· that
Saturday moritJng the department received a call from a
MlnersYtlle resident · that the
driver of a car bad Just stopped
'a nd advised that some Juveniles
werj! . at the Mlnersvllle Ceme·
tery and that damage had been
done.
Deputies responded and 10:
cared four subJects who were
taken to the sheriff's oUJce for
questioning. The subJects were
released a·rter questioning.
· Sheriff Soulsby stated that all
. of the flags, American and also
fire department flags, had been
pulled from the graves and the
sticks broken. There were a
nuinber of flowers also removed
and thrown about. 'S hel'lff
Soulsby reports that lnvestip·
tonneedtotalktothecouplethlt
asked· the resident to phone tlie
department. The department
needs to know what was actually
Witnessed.

MeLin faees
dng charge
DAYTON, Oblo (UPI)- The
soli of the late state Rep. C.J.
McLin Jr. Is on trial ill Montgomery County Common Pleu
Court on a charge of aaravated
~alne tra(tl~ .

lion officer for the state Emer·
gency Management Agency ..
Hundreds of J)e!lple In southern
and southeastern Ohio were
forced ou! of their homes late
Monday and early Tuesday because of high water caused by as
much as 3 Inches .of rain.
Some of the worst damage
occurred In Athens County where
residents in Glouater and Trum·
ble were still been unable to get
back Into their homes by
Tuesday .evening, •GJJg sajd,
.es~UPIIlillll~ 1,000 to 2,000'
may have been displaced because of the flooding.
·
Many evacua!Ions were also
reported In the Murray City area
of Hocking County and between
Coming and Shawnee In Perry
County.
Hlgb water also was reported
In southern Ohio counties
through which the Scioto River
flows.
Rain that began early Monday
afternoon was beginning to Jet up
Tuesday morning, but a flood
watch was still in effect for much
or the central, southeast and
south central parts of the state.
Residents along Ohio 155 near
Hemlock, Perry County, were
ta1&lt;en from their homes Monday
night after floods forced the h111y
highway to close. They went to

'

shelters opened at near~
schools.
·:
"We're thankful It's not rilln·
ing now," disaster services
worker Doroihy Sidwell saijl
Tuesday morning as she prepared to check .on the evaeueois
and see how much damage w(s
done.
:•
In Hocking County, about 10
Jle!lple were ev.a cuated In t~e
Murray City area. While mQst
sought refuge with friends and
relatives on hl.her ~OWiji. about
2~1\.!', ~~ht at th~ munlcl-·
pa
lilg.
"There's a kitchen In the
municipal building and they have
facilities to cook," said Krls
Gabriel, the county's emergency
management director. "They
needed thiJigs they could warm
up, like coffee and bot dogs,
things to keep them going. "
He said that the people may get
back to their homes sometime ·
Tuesday to start the cleanup
process.
In Piketon, the Scioto River
was 2 feet above the 16-foot flood
stage Tuesday morning and was
expected to crest early Wednes·
day at 26 feet. The lvl!ler flowed
over the banks onto the low-Jylilg
fields.
.
In Enterprise, the Hocking
Continued on page 5

.Tarr named ·Kyger Cree·k plant manager
Nonllan H. Tarr has been Institute of Technology with a
promoted to manager of the Ohio bachelor's degree In electrical
Valley Electric Corp. Kyger engineering, Tarr also com- '
Creek plant, effective June 1, pleted a Management Developaccording to Ralph D. Dunlevy, ment Program sponsored by
American Electric Power Ser. OVEC president.
Tarr Is succeeding Raymond vice Corp. at the University of
·
H.· Blowers Jr., who Is retiring. Michigan . ·
Concurrent with Tarr's promo- . He and his wife, Anne, live at
tlon, Ralph E . Amburgey, main· 354 Debby Drive, Gallipolis.
. tenance superintendent, Is being They are the ·parents of one
promoted to assistant plant man- daughter, Mrs. Glenda Hatcher
ager arid Jeffrey P. Goebel, plant of Austin, Texas, lind two sons,
engineer-maintenance, Is being Karl of Brqckton, Mass., and
promoted to maintenance Stephen of Rlva, Md.
Amburgey Joined the Kyger
Superln tenden t.
Creek
· plant In l.9$i as a test
Tarr joined OVEC at Its Clifty
engineer,
arid In 1971 was proCreek plant In Madison , Ind., In
moted
to production
1966 a&amp; a test engineer. In 1970 he
superintendent-maintenance.
In.·
was promoted to staff englneer·
1
~86
he
was
promote~
to
mainte·prodllctlon and environmental.
.
He promoted to chief of produc· nance superintendent.
Amburgey
Is
a
graduate
of
tlon and envlroliJI)ental engineer·
Tennesllet!
Technological
Unilng In 1981 and In 191!6 be was
promoted to assistant plant man· versity with a bachelor's dtlfet!
In mecbanlcal englaeerlna. He
ager at Kyger Cieek.
A graduate of the ~ndlana also completed a Manaaement

Development P1 ~r.tm spon- promoted to maintenance supersored by AEP at Ohio State visor and In 1966, · to results
University.
engineer.
He and his wife, Carla, two
The following year he was
sons, Kevin and Steven, and promoted to staff engineerdaughter, Klndra, reside at 906 production at the Piketon office,
Mossman Circle, Poblt Pleasant. and In 1970 he was promoted to
Goebel joined the Kyger Creek ' assistant plant manager at
plant In 1984 as an associate Kyger Creek. In 1986, he was
engineer In the Performance promoted to plan I manager.
Department, and a year later he
A registered professional engiwas promoted to performance neer In Ohio, Blowers graduated
engineer. In 1986 he was pro- from West VIrginia University
moted to maintenance engineer with a bachelor's degree In
In the Maintenance Department mining engineering. He also
and In 1988, to senior mainte- completed an AEP-sponsored
nance engllleer.
Management DeveiQPment PrO.
He was promoted to plant gram at tlie University of Michiengineer-maintenance In 1989. A gan. He IS a native of New Boston
graduate of Ohio University with and served In the U.S. Army In
a l!achelor's qegree In mecbanl· 1943-46. He Is a member of the
cal engineering, he resides at 520 Kiwanis LOdge In Gallipolis. '
Sprlna Valley Drive, Gallipolis.
He and his wife, VIrginia, Jive
Blowers Is retiring after 35~ · at 545 Hilda Drive, Gallipolis;
years with OVEC. He bepn btl and are the parents of one son,
career at Kyger Creek In 19M as Steve of Rocky River.
a test engineer. In 1960 he was

-.

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