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/

Monday, Mlly 13, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

..

. West Virginia man dies shortly after calling PPEMS
Dl;patbiitlll
A sheriff ' s
department
spokesman said Forest Jones,
Leon, phoned the PPEMS at
aPixoxilllllliely 1 a.m., telling them
he was bleeding. When squad

A Leon, W.VL, man died shortly after telephoning the Point
Pleasant Rescue SqUid early Sunday morning and telling them he
was bleeding profusely, according
to the Mason County Sheriff's

--Area, deaths-AIIie Evans

Allie Lee Evans, 60, of 126
Howard SL, New Haven, W. Va.,
.died Saturday, May 11, 1991, in
Holzer Medical Center, Gallipolis.
A retired Kaiser Aluminum and
Chemical Corporation supervisor,
Mr. Evans was born January 7,
1931, son of the late Allie and
Margie L. Hill Evans.
He is survived by his wife,
Arlene A. Dodrill Evllils and two
daughters, Diana L. Farley, New
Haven and Angela L, Parker,
Pomeroy; two grandchildren,
Gabriel C. and Beth H. Farley and
one brother Thomas R. Evans,
Cieveland. '
He was a Korean Conflict ver.eran, having secved in the U.S. Navy
on the U.S. Hornet Mr. Evans was
a member of the Smith-~nter ·
Post No.l40, American Leg~on in
New Haven and a member of the
Stewart-Johnson Post No. 9926,
Veterans of Foreign Wars, Mason,
W.Va.
Private services will be held
I :30 p.m. Tuesday at the Foglesong
Funeral with Rev. Charles Gille~ie and Rev. Frank Spradling officiating. Burial will be in Suqrise
Memorial Gardens.
. Friends may call at at the
Foglesong Funeral Home on Thes'day from 11 a.m. until! p.m.
In lieu of flowers, the family
requests contributions foc the New
Haven Emergency Squad.

PASSES OUT FAVORS- Karen Roush costumed IS 1
chicken circulated at Sunday's open bouse at Vetei'lns Memorial Hospital and its Skilled Nursing Facility wltb a buket containing a variety of favors for guests. Hugs, such as the one sbe .'
is giving here to 4Gna K8rr, a resident of the SkiDetl Nursiag 1
Facility, were also 110ong the things given out by the costumed
chicken during the afternoon.

---Local briefs-· ---.
Police cite driver after wreck

John W. Brown, Main St., Rutland, was charged with failure to
yield following an accident on West Main Street. Pomeroy, Saturday at 3:47p.m.
Accordin~ to Pomeroy Police, Brown was traveling nlrthbound
on West Main and was attempting a turn into the Dairy VaUey when
he pulled into the path of a southbound vehicle driven by Douglas
· W. Beaver, Flatwoods Road, Pomeroy.
Both vehicles had light front end damage. There were no
injuries.

I'

Board meeting changed
Dissolutions, divorces processed
An action for dissolution of marriage has been filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court by Scott Earl Trussell and Carol
Denise Trussell. both of Long Bottom; by Barbara L. Knapp,
Pomeroy, and by Kail L. Knapp of Langsville.
·
A divorce action has been filed by Janet E. Miller, Rutland, and
John L, Miller, also of Rutland.
A divorce has been granted to Arlene Russell, from William
Eugene Russell; and to James Mills from Linda Lou Mills. A dissolution has been granted to Otis Ray Vanmatre and Kimberly Marlene Vanmatre.

Personal injury case filed
A civil case alleging personal injury has been filed in Meigs
. County Common Pleas COurt by Tina Slater of Dexter against Jack
Cleland of Rutland. The suit requests judgment in an amount in
excess of $25,000.

EMS responds to 15 calls

he was the son ~t the late Clem
West and Mae Shane West. He
worked with the U. S. Corps of
Engineers, Pittsburgh Districl
Mr. West is survived by a t.other, Lee West, Southi!lgton, Ohio,
and a sister, Helen Smith, Con•
neaut, along with several nieces
.and nephews. Besides his parents
he was preceded in death by four
brothecs, Warren•.Fred, Harry and
Glenn, and two s•sters, Laura and
Edna, along wid! two oilier sisters
who died in inf~cy. .
Funeral services will be held .
Wednesd&amp;y at 1 p.m. at die Lewt
Falls Chapel. Ken Bakec will officiate and 6urial will be in the Lewt
Falls Cemetery. Friends may call at
the Ewing Funeral Home Tuesday
from 2to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.

.Forest Jones
Forest Jones, Leon, W.Va., died
Sunday, May 12, 1991. ·
He was born Oct. 15, 1950, in
Fairdale, W.Va., Forest Jones, son
of Helen McKinney Haskett of
Beards Fork, W.Va., and the late
Boyd M. Jones. He was a mechanic.
The funeral will be Thursday,
11. a.m., at Wilcoxen Funeral
Home. There will be no calling
hours.

'

A Bidwell man was shot and
killed early Monday mornin$ following an altercation outside a
home in Rio Grande.
.
Char&amp;f! are pending !lgainst a
15-year-old male after Bnan Mink:,
32, was shot around 2:45 a.m.
Monday near a home on Gamer's
FordRoad.
.
According to Gallia County
Sheriff Dennis Salisbury, the
shooting occurred during an fight.
"Several people were involved
in an argument and the Ouvenile)
male confronted Mink, and the
shooting took place," Salisbury

Margaret M. Blankenship, 60, '
of Route 2 in Albany. died Saturday, May 11, 1991, from injuries
sustained in an accident in West
Hamlin, W.Va.
S~e was born in Logan County,
W.Va., the daughter of the late
Norwood Ferren, and Alta MuUins
Ferrell of Pomeroy, who survives.
She was a former nursing aide
and cook at Russell's Nursing
Home in Albany. She was also a
bomemaker. She was a membec of
Albany vFw Post 9893.
She is survived by her husband.
Zenis Blankenship; three sons.:
Stewart (Belly) Blankenship,
Pomeroy, Rol&gt;ert (SteUa) Blankenship, Shade, and John (Paula)
Blankenship of Alliany; one daughter, Mrs. John (Palricia) Stewart,
Belleville, Mich.; eight mhdchlldren; one brother, Donafd FerreU,
Lyburn, W.Va.; three sisters~
Frances Reed, Salem, N.J., Clara
Brechemin, St. Petersburg, Fla.,
and Betty Packo, Ypsilanti, Mich.
Besides hec fathec, she was preceded in death by bee son, Donald
(Quincy) Blankenship.
Services will be Wednesday at 2
p.m. at Bigony-Jordan Funeral
Home in Albany with Rev. David
A. Curfman officiatin(!:. Burial will
be in Wells Cemetery m Pageville.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 2 to 4 p.m. and 7 to 9
p.m. on Tuesday,

Wednesday, mostly sunny.

•

e
Vol. 42, No. 7
Copyrighted , 1181

1 !lecllon, 10 PIIJH 25 cento
A Mulllmedlll Inc. Newap11per

. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tueaday, May 14, 1991

.

PUCO assesses scrubber study; vote delayed
inst811ing scrubbers, to enable its
Gavin
plant to meet a federal Clean
AsSQ~:ilited Press
Air Act deadline in January 1995.
COLUMBUS - The Public
The PUCO was expecJed 10
Utilities Commission of Ohio is issue its assessment of AEP's
adding its comments to die debate report today.
over whether a Gallia County
The .plant, between Gallipolis
power plant should switch from and Pomeroy, burns about 6 milOhio's high-sulfur coal to cleaner . lion tons of coal a year from a
coal from other states.
Meigs County mine where 1,258
American Electric Power Co. jobs may be at stake.
submitted a report to the PUCO in
Ohio's coal industry, the Ohio
· January and later added more dats Office of the Conslimers' Counsel
supporting a switch, instead of Jllld others diS)Juted AEP's study,
By ROBERT E. MILLER

......

...

helping prompt the PUCO review.
But it also let~ utilities use nonMeanwhile, the Ohio House Ohio coal if they can ·show it is
said a vote on a bill to help utilities their least-cost compliance option.
comply with the federal act. would
AEP has not taken a position on.
not come today. as previously the bill but favors the lal'lguage sayannounced.
ing compliance decisions must
Kent Carson, aide of Speaker reflecttheleastexpensiveoptibn.
Vern Riffe Jr., D-Wheelersburg,
Luke Feck. AEP vice president,
indicated the House may act later indicated Monday that AEP
this week. He gave no reason for • believes the bill, as written, goes
the delay.
100 far in trying to sway manageThe bill has tax and other incen- ment decisions.
.
tives for scrubbecs or other equip"We don' t think the (public
ment that reduces.sulfur emiSSions. ·utilities) commission should micro- .

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

manage utilities and the Legislature
seems to be ·putting them in a posilion to do that, •• Peck said.
In January, AEP estima~ !he
cost of scrubbers at $800 million
and said the cost of equipment
changes needed to bum low-sulfur
coal from other states would be
$200 million.
At the time, AEP said i_t c?uld
not fully account for emisstons
credits from the federal government that scrubbers could earn,
possibly worth hundreds of mil-

lions of dollars.
Since then, AEP has e~~ated a
sav!"gs of ilbout.$300 millIIlii over
a f1~e-year penod, althou~h the
Legislature ~as heard estimates
from the coalmdu~try and others of
morethan$~million.
.
IJ! late Ap!ll, AEP up~ated Its
ongmal findmgs with bids rrom
western and some eastern coal ~
ducer~ of low-sulfur coal. It sa•ll
th~ bids were lower than earlier
esbmates ~ soengthened the case
· for non-Ohto cosl.

Middleport Council takes first step
toward mandat~ry trash pick~:~-p
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Stair
. Middleport Village Council toOk
the first step toward mandatory
trash pickup at Monday night's reg. ular meeting 8l village hal[
·
The only bid for the service in
response to advertisin~ came from
Manley's Trash Servtce, Middlepol'\. Cou~cil voted to accept the
bid "contingent on completion of
details" to be worked Olll by Mayor
Fred Hoffman with Rogec Manley,

It was decided that once manda·
tory pickup is instituted, the service
will be billed to the customer by
the village with the charge to be
added to the monthly water and ·
sewer bill.
·'
Manley's bid showed a charge
tO the village of $9 a customer per
month with everything including
appliances and old furniture, but
not tires, removed without a limit
on the amount; or $8.50 a month
for trash only. The agreement will
also provide for trash to be

removed by the service from vii!age parks.
Council was in a~ment that
the higher charge with everything
· to be picked up would be the most
satisfactory. Since the village
would have the responsibility of
administering the new village service and the cost of billing, household charges were set at.$10 per
month with a $2 reduction for
senior citizens and handicapped
individuals. This will provide a
Continued on page 3

Authorities prepare charges
against cockfighting__group
computer seized in the Vinton
Authorities hope the computer
McARTHUR, Ohio (AP) Vinton County authorities are County r!lid Saturday night is will lead to cockfight promoters
· preparing char~es against a cock- believed to contain the membership nationwide.
The owner of an Arbaugh farm
fighting organization as pan of a list for the cockfighting organizacrackdown in which about 400 tion United Gamefowl Breeders in Vinton County was arrested darpeople have been charged or cited, Association.
Continued on page 3
.
a court offtcial said.
are Thomasina Wlllte, Anthony Tolliver,
ART FAIR WINNBRS- These primaryClerk Regina Brewster said
Nathan Marcinko, IUid Cory Wbltlateb. Second
aged students at Riverview School were IIWII'dabout2S people showed up in Vinrow, left to rl1ht, are. Matt Putman, Jenny
ed honors at lbe sc:hool's Sdt111:e and Art Pair
ton County Court Monday to lay
Mayle, CIISSie ROlle and Laraine LIW110n.
on Monday. Pictured, front row, left to right,
claim to roosters and cockfighting
equipment seized in a weekend
raid.
'
RAVENSWOOD,
W.Va. (AP) Board said it will issue an unfair
Ms. Brewster said they were
claiming the items as a cockfight- - The United Steelworkers of labor practice complaint unless
ing organization . She said ~he America said Monday a federal Ravenswood Aluminum furnishes
county prosecutor was prepanng agency found merit in one of,the safety studies the union needs for
charges against die group. None of charges of unfair labor practices contract negotiations, said Jim
the union brought against Bowen, director of United Steelthe items seized was relessed
Ravenswood
Aluminum Cocp.
workers District 23.
Vinton County authorities said
About
1,700
union
members
at
"I'm calling on the company
249 people who were caught
Ravenswood
Aluminum's
Jackson
.tod!!Y to make lhe best or a bad sit-.
watching a cockfight each posted
$180 bond, for a·total of $44,820. County plant have been off the job nation and get back to the bargainAn additional42 people were given since Nov. I in a contraCt dispute. ing ta~le before the NLRB drops
Dr. Nick Robinson stated at the
By Sentinel News Staff
The company says the workers are the othec shoe," Bowen said. ·
By JOHN CHALFANT
citations. .
meeting, "but the Senate will preAccording to a statement on the
Sandy Rowland, director of the on strike. and the union says they
Associated Press Writer
Discussion on lobbying the sent us some problems."
USW A Hotline Monday, the
Great Lakes office of the Humane are locked out
Specially-printed posk:ards have
Ohio Senate to encourage passage
The National Labor Relations
Continued on page 3
COLUMBUS- An $8.9 mil- Society of ~ United StateS; said a
of Senate Bill 143 highlighted been delivered to the chamber lion contract to install a computerMonday night's meeting of the office and members were encour- ized motor vehicle titling system in
Meigs County Chamber of Com- aged by Robinson to address and Ohio's 88 counties has been
merce, held at Overbrook Center in mail the cards to all membecs of the approved by the Stste Controlling
Middleport.
Ohio Senate in an attempt 10 lobby Board.
The bill, a companion to a bill their support for the bill. (The
Conuollers also OK'd restrucexpected to go before the Ohio cards, a Senate mailing list and a turing a $5 million loan guarantee
House of Representstives on Tues- synopsis of the legislation are to help the ·Dayton Arcade Centre
day, offers tax credits and incen- available at the chambec office on office tower avoid foceclosure. But
tives to power plants using Ohio East Main Su-eet or at The Daily the board turned down a Con· Semintl office on Court Street. sumers' Counsel request for. a
~.
. Among other incentive r.ovi- They are free or charae.)
$75,000 study of whether convertsions, the proposed legis ation
In addition to die mail cam- ing the Zimmer power plant from a
includes tax credits of $1 per ton of paign, members of the chamber nuclear to coal facility was prudenL
Ohio coal for power plants current- were urged to join a team who will
The Department of AdminisbBly ·using the coal or at plants where travel to the Ohio Senate to meet
Ohio coal will be burned berore with key Senate members prior to tive Services won approval Mon1995 . The tax credits would be the Senate vote on the bill. CtDTent- day for an $~.9 million. co.ntract
reflected in a loss to the Slate's gen- ly, the bill is expected to be voted with Motorola Inc., of Cmcmnab, .
to provide machinery, training and
eral ICvenue fund only, in an effort upon in the Senate on May 25.
New chamber members were · maintenance to implement the
tO protect local ICvenue.
"We're confident that the bouse introduced and welcomed by Automated Title Processing System .
bill will pass," Chamber President
Coatlnued on paRe 3
Equipment will be installed at
clerk of court offices in each county . Common pleas court clerks
issue titles for motor vehicles.
Backers said the ststewide system
would standardize title issuance
and reduce fraud.
Mowrola was one of eighi venMark A. Parsons, 29. of Antiquity has been charged with petty
dors
who sought the contracL The
thert following the May J theft of a mandolin from the Norman Mildepartment said it did not seek
liron residence at Annquity. The mandolin, which hacl been sold,
competitive bids because of the
was recovered on Saturday evening.
complexity or the projc:ct. .
Panons. ciiii'Cntly in iail m a bench warrant roc raiiiiRlto pay an
Controllers rejected a .request
old rme, will appear in Meigs· County Court on Wednesday on the
from Consumecs' Council William
petty theft ~barge .
Spratley to spend up to $75,000 to
MONDAY Cit_ASH....., n11- tile ~eene
jured. Wlllte nl d tralmeDI for 1111 ltiJIIrles. '
review whether utilities that own
Moaday
1ftenooa
na
Old
State
Route
33
folCatoa•s pl11ea1er Tere~a Jeffen, 2!1, of
the Zimmer plant liCI!f Cincinnati
lowln&amp;
1
two-car
acddeat
tb1t
ID.Jared
tllree.
PomtrOJ, -ll'llilpOrttd to Veteriaa Melllorlacted prudently in switching from
According
to
a
report
from
tbe
G11Ua·Melas
111 HOIJIItallly die Mtlil Coual)' EMS. Sbe nuclear to coal powec without purpost or tile State HIJ!::y Patrol, M1rJorle
liter b'ulfernd to SL ....,h'l Hct1pltal wllere
The Meigs County Sheriff's Qejabllllllt investigated a two-car
suing other options.
Caton,
43,
pallid
out
Melp
Ca.Dty
ltOIId
· Legislarors questioned the need
accident on Hendecson Road in Orange Township Monday afttt"'' Jeported Ia flir cadltloa. Wblte'l )1111l!l Ia ber Mereaey Bobcat (forevoancl), and
Rnaer, Cnl&amp;lllea, 31, fl
treated
for the study .in part because of a
noon.
.
trawled lato . . patll ol a m.bil aar. ne -at Veteraas and later reltllt , 1 llospltal
1985 seulement among the ConAccording to Sheriff James M. Soulsby, Andi'ea Doerfer of
ond car (hiCIIII'oaDd), a Cadillac driYeiil by
spokawomn aid hadiJ. CIIOD wu died tor
sumers' Counsel, the Public UtiliDutchtoWn Road collided with a 1981 Volkswagen Rabbit driven by
Lather White, 51, wu anable to stop In time
rauun to yield from 1110p lip. (OVP plioto by
. ·cies Commission of Ohio and the
Continued on page 3
.
aad
struck
C1ton'•
velllcle.
Catoa
wu
anlnDan lflrrll)
·
utilities.

.

NLRB may issue unfair labor

practice complaint, union says

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DOWNTOWN POMROY

Board OKs
statewide
system.

~-Local briefs--_,
Parsons charged with petty theft

No one hurt in 2-car accitfent

ANDERSON'S

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Wolff T•nntnl Bed That 8et1 The Standard
ll'or The Twnn'nl lndubyl
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Chamber urges
$enate to pass tax .
incentives bill
,

\

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•I

Clear tonight. Low in 60s.
High in upper 80s.

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·page4

VETERANS MEMORIAL
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS Peggy Hatfield, Rutland; Margaret
Casto. Lakin, W.VL; and Lois Terrell, Pomeroy.
·
SATURDAY DISCHARGESIrene RusseU, Iva Gruesec and Fern
Smith.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS
Barbara Harris. Middleport.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES
None.

Weather

,

!

...

Hospita:l news

said. "He had one known gunshot
wound in the chest area."
The juvenile has been released
into his patents custody, he said.
Chief Deputy Carlos Wood, Oli1lia
County Prosecutor Brent Saunden
and Gallia County Coroner Edward
Berkich were also at the scene. The
Gallia County EMS was called to ..
the home where Mink was pronounced dead 8l the scene.
Mink •s body was transported 10
the Franklin County Morgue by
Willis Funeral· Home, Gallipolis,
and will remain there foc an autopsy.

'

•

Units of the Meigs County
The Tuppers Plains Fire DepartEmergency Medica! Service ment, at 12:25 p.m., was called to
responded to 15 calls for assistance the Vincent Hawk residence on a
over the weekend.
struCture rue. The unit returned to
On Saturday at 10:16 a.m . the its station at2:15 p.m.
Tuppers Plains unit transported
At 2:50 p.m. the Racine unit
Vincent McComb from the ststion transported Steven Rigley from the J. Dale West
to St. Joseph's Hospital.
fair grounds to Veterans.
At I :14 p.m. the Syracuse unit
The Middleport unit went to
J. Dale West, 89, of Route 3,
went to Route 681 East for Mildred Zuspan Hollow Road at 3:59 p.m. Racine, died Monday, May 13,
Ziegler who was taken to Veterans for Hugh Thompson who was
~~I at Vetenms Memorial Hpspi- .
Memorial Hospital.
transported to VeleranS.
The Racine unit, at 2:10 p.m.,
The Rutla)ld unit, at 4:58 p.m.,
Born June 14. 1901 at Racine,
was called to the Meigs County went to Meigs Mine No. 2 for
Fair Grounds for Jeff Lyons who David Neutzling who was taken to Hospital news
was treated but not banspocted and Veterans, and at 6:20p.m. the unit
Holzer Medical Center
at 3 p.m. the unit tteated but did transported Melvin Levessee from
Dischar~:~es
May 10 - Evelyn
transport Ryan Dressel at the fair Jividen Hollow Road to Veterans.
Austin,
Sadie
Carr,
Chelsea Gooch,
groundS.
Finally, at 9:32p.m. on Sunday
Patricia
Jones,
Cindy
Long, KenThe Middleport unit, at 4:38 the Racine unit was called to
neth
Osborne,
Hazel
Reed,
Mr. and
p.m .. responded to a structure rue Fourth and Pearl for Joyce Grady
Mrs.
Randy
Searls
and
son,
1811)es
at the Kelly Stone residence in who was taken to Holzer Medical
Snyder, Heather Sparks, Beulah
Cheshire. The unit returned to .the Center.
'Thomas, Effie Walters and Cathy
station at5 :43 p.m.
While.
· At. 7:24 p.m. the Tuppers Plains
Births May 10 - Mr. and Mrs.
unit responed to the Baum AddiBrian Waugh, daughter, Oak Hill.
tion for Stacy Davis who was taken
South Centr1l Ohio
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wooldridge,
to St. Josep!l.
Tonight,
partly cloudy with a daughter, Vinton.
At 8:48 p.m. the Rutland unit
Discharaes May 11 - Mrs.
went to Route 124 for Ernest slight chance of showers and thunWilliams who was transported to . derstorms early . Low 60-65. William Keefer and son, Mary
Chance of rain 30 percent. Tues- Lambert, Tiffany Metzler, Mrs.
Veterans, and at 10:16 p.m. the
Pomeroy unit transported Rose day, mostly sunny. High in the 'Irvin Saunders and daughter,
mid-80s.
·
Heather Sparks, Janice Stewart,
Carr from Metcalf Road to VeterWednesday
through
Friday:
and
Mrs. Otis Young and son.
ans.
on
Wednesday
and
ThursFair
Discharaes
May U - Jess
On Sunday at 8:04 a.m. the
day.
Chance
of
showers
or
thunderBibbey
,
Leo
Bush,
Mrs. Brian
Middleport unit went to Coal Street
storms
Friday.
Highs
in
the
upper
Waugh
and
daughter,
and Mrs.
for Barbara Harris who was taken
70s
or
the
80s.
Lows
in
upper
50s
Robert
Wooldridge
and
daughter.
to Veterans.
to mid-60s.
~eigs announcements
Sorority to meet for picnic
The Xi Gamma Mu Chapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority will meet
Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the home of
A.R. Knight in Pomeroy for its end
of the year picnic. ,
Democrall to meet
The Meigs County Democratic
Executive Committee will meet
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the Carpenter's Hall in Pomeroy.
Homem1kers to meet
The Third Wedneday Homeniaker's Club wiD leave the municTANNING BED OPEN TO THE PUBLIC
pel building in Syracuse at 9 a.m.
011 Wedneday for the annual spring
call Us For Tfme Reservation!
trip.

Lodge to meet ·
The Racine Lodge No. 461 F &amp;.
AM will meet Tuesday at 7:30p.m.
Work in the fellow Craft·degree. All
master masons are invited to
allelld.

St. Louis ·
edges Reds;
Braves win

W.VL, and the late Boyd M. Jones.
He was a mechanic.
The funeral will be Thursday,
·n a.m., at Wilcoxen Funeral
Home. There will be no calling·
hours.

Bidwell man ' killed~ in
Rio ,G rande shooting

Ohio Lottery

Margaret Blankenship

·

The regular monthly meeting of the Meigs County )3oard of Education has been changed from Tuesday to Monday (tonight) at 7
p.m. at the board office in Pomeroy.

1

.

members arrived, they found
Jones' had an injury to the bridge
of his nose. A .3 57 Magnum was
reportedly laying next to the vic-·
tim, however tbe spokesman said
the deparbnent does not feel the
injury was a result of a wound from
thegun.
.
Jones was a hemophiliac, the
spokesman srated, and at this time,
he is believe,d to have died from
natural causes. His body was sent
tO'Charleston for autopsy.
The incident is still under investigation.
Dr. Breton L. Morgan, Mason
County coronec, was reportedly on
the scene, but could not be reached
for comment this mCB'IIing.
Born OcL 1.5, 19.50, in Fairdale,
W.Va., Jone~ was a son of Helen
McKinney Haskett of Beards Forte.

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�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
•

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
UlC..rtSI...et
Pomeror, Olllo
DEVOTED TO TBE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGB-MASON AREA

.

· .MU.TIMEDIA.NC
ROBERT L. WINGE'J.T
l'llbllaller

CHARLENE BOEn.mH
Geaeral Maaacer ·

PAT WHITEHEAD
Aul8taat PubllahBr/Controller
A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Dally Pres~ Asso·
• elatiOn and the American Newspaper Publlsbers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. Tbey should be less than 300
words long; All letters are subJect to editing and must be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be pub. llshed. Letters should be In good taste. addressing issues, notpersonali·

lies.

Letters to the editor
.ne. Editor:

This U. S. ~terans Association

is attempting to locale all missing
members or its World Wts II personnel. .
To date, we have loclled more
than 3,700, but !here are Sliii over
1;200 sli!l unaccounled for. ·
We need your help before it is
too late! WiU you publish one or
their names in )'ilur local paper? It
is our hope that a relative, friend,

'neighbor; or school chum will see
his name and get in !OuCh with us.
Hisiwneis:
Gerald B. Robinson T/Sgt., 570
Squadron gunner, top turrcL Last
known address, between 1944 lllld
the 19S0s, RL i, Cheshire.
(If deceased please let me know
next or kin and date deceased.)
Sincerely,
John F. Quinn
Da1a Manager/Sec. 390 B.G.V.A.

Page-2-nie Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport; Ohio
1\Jesday, May 14, 199~

Anti-Selnitism
still
found
in
Austria
rows.

· VIENNA, Ausuia - Two anec- clean, on all
dotal pieces or evidence speak vo(,
. A local sculptor's piece depiCt·
wnes about Austria's commibnent i11g that stooped humiliation was
to renounce the ugly anti-Semitism completed for the SOth anniversary
of its pasL
of the annexation or "Anschluss."
- . A sculptor was obliaed to put Vandals soon smeared it with painL
~ wire on top of a dOwntown Viennese and tourists would lise it
Vienna memorial to Jews who suf• as a park bench, a ttash receplacle
fered in Austria in Wodd War II. or a t"trc plug (or dogs.
.
The barbed wire is supposed to
The sculptor came up with what
keep the Viennese from defacing he must have thought was a sensithestilwe.
tive solution. He put bronzed
- . Austrian high-school chil- barbed wire along the back of the
dren play stomach· turning video bent-over street scrubber, so no one
gsmes, including one in which the would be tempted to sit on him .
player is a Nazi concentration The sculptor reasoned, "Barbed
camp commandant ltilling and tor- wire is the crown of thorns for the
turing Jews to earn points.
. Jews.'' Never mind that the stable
Half a million Austrians cheered of a persecuted Jew is now wearing
when their native son, Adolf Hitler, · a symbol that has' come to be assotriumphantly entered Vienna in · ciated more with Jesus Christ than
"1938 and annexed Austria to the with Jewish history.
Third Reich. The echQCs of that
The Viennese Jewish communi- .
ty had hoPed for better treaunent,
cheer are still beard.
There have been subtle attempts but didn't necessarily expect iL
to still it, like the sculpture of the
Not all the bigots are holdovers
Jewish slave. Jew.s who were not from Hitler's glory days. The
murdered or sent to concentration underground videO game industry
camps became slaves in Vienna, in ~ustria carries more than 100
the capital city, where their most racast games. One of the most
menial task was to ~rub the streets heinous is "KZ Manager." KZ is

the old abbreviation Germans used
for concenll'81ion camps: The hero
of this game is the commandant of
the Treblinlca death camp. His goal
is to gas as many prisoners as possible, make money from their
labor. steal their gold fillings and
tum their skin into JampShades.
Hitler, a native Austrian from
the provinces, hung around in
Vienna as a would-be artist and
architect when he was young. It
was a time of incredible Jewish
success in the arts and other intellectual pursuits, and Hitler was
bothered. "I began to see Jews,"
he wrote, "and the more I saw, the
more sharply they became distinguished in my eyes from the reat of
humanity.... Gradually, I began to
hate them.' ~
The current Auslrian Chancellor
Fmnz Vranitl,ky believes that Austrians ,have not sufficiently con·
fronted their past. Their unwillingness to do that was reflected in
their knee-jerk election of Kurt
Waldheim as president when he
was exposed for lying about his
assignment with a German aimy
unit that engaged in war crimes

Appreciates support
Dear Editor:

I would lilce to thank all of those
people who voted for the tax levy

for Soulhem Local Schools. What
better way can one spend his or her

money th8n to educate a child?
Sincerely,
Linda Evans
Racine, Oliio 45nJ

Again, many thanks
Dear Editor:

j

: We 1t'Ould like to thimk all of
the people, who &amp;pin supported us
in the election. rWe have been
known to always, vote no on our
school levy's. But when we felt
that the board made the right cuts,
xou can see the Portland power
oamc alive again. We go out and
explained to the people door to
!loot. the facts of the school and
sure feelit did help.
: Portland docsn 't seem to be
~ of very much, but when we
need the support of the people it
sjlcms like we really get it. We

passed the levy 117 for the 72
~L That seems to us lilce pretty good support. Also, we were
called and thanlccd by the Superintendent, Bob Ord for our hard work
in getting the levy passed. We
awreciated this very much. Someomes a simple ''Thank You" means
more than anything. Again, Portland people we are very well
pleased aboUt how well you supported us in passing the levy.
Thank you,
Jane Lawrence
PamRichtsd

-nstitute could become drug,
alcohol treatment center
By tERRY KINNEY
Associated Press Writer
CINCINNATI - Protests that accompanied the closing or the Rollman Psychiatric InstibJ~. have subsided, but the fate of the facility is still
unlrnown.
Two compeling plans are being advanced to convert the Conner state
hospital into a drug and alcobol treatment center.
The Ohio Department of Mental Health closed Rollman last Septem·
ber, merging it with the Pauline Warfield Lewis Center. Officials said it
was unnec! 'ry to operate two psychiatric hospitals within seven miles
of each other.
~ "An increase in the number and scope of community-based mental
heaith progJIIIIS in the greater Cincinnati uea has enabled consumers of
mental health services to live in the community and receive the services
they need wilbout being hospitalized,'' the department said in announcing
the closing.
·
.
Mental health experts, social ~ police and employees at the two
hospitals resisled the merger, saying it would put many helpless people on
the streets.
. They picketed the institule and mounted an intense media campaign,
but ultimately about 100 patients were dischuged and Rollman was
closed.
Sen. William Bowen, D-Cincinnati, has inlroduced a bill in the Senate
to give Rollman to the University of Cincinnati, which would -operate it as
a drug and alcohol treatment center for paying and indigent clients.
: ·If the Legislature rejec:lll Bowen's proposal, city Councilman Dwight
TlllefY. said he will try to g'et the city to talce it over. Tillery said he
doesn t care who runs the clinic, as long as it functions.
: "Another group is trying to get control of the clinic. They want the
city to take it over, then lease it back for $1 a year," he said Tuesday.
•;But it canes down to doUars and cenlll. If the city could avoid that kind
of debt it Would do so...
Edward Rilthy, who nms a homeless shelter in neighboring Clermont
County, was active in the movement to Stop the state from closing RoDman. He and a coalitioo of advocates for the homeless and indigent want
10 open it as a free clinic.
.
1
Rilthy said the thought a 120-bed operation could be.fwuled through
government lflllllll and 6y renting excess offiCe space 10 private businesses. althoup he could povide no cost estimates.
·
ExtenBIVe renovation would be needed
' "Pan of the deal would be that the state would appmpiiate $6 million
to the university to fix it up." Tillery said. "No one from the state has
said it would be willing to do that for the city.
. "I don't want to get caught up in a power struggle for the instibltion
and overwhelm what really ihoul(l be done, which is to have a facility to
serve the poor.'·'
.
'. Tillery said be has been assured by Bowen that the measure has a good
chance of being approved this session
.· "Dis is an important issue to me. If Sen. Bowen has the wherewithal
to lllllke it happen, that would be fine. I just want to find a way to deal
with the overwhelming number of drug and alcohol abusers," Tillery
said.
.
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PA.

IMansfield I sao I·

By Jack Anderson
and Dale VanAtta

IColumbus I saoI

during World' War D.
.
Foremost Nazi hunter Simon
Wisenthal, 83, has made his home
in Vienna. He estimates that Austrian Naiis, not including Hitler,
were responsible foc the deaths of 3
million Jews. But that is seldom
discussed, or denounced in public
in Austria. An old joke describes
the political flexibility of the Austrians who rewrote history and
"managed to tum Adolf Hitler into
a German and Ludwi~ Van
Beethoven irito an Austrian. '
HEART PALPITATIONSPresident Bush's recent hospitalization for an irregular heartbeat
forced the Republican National
Committee·into near cardiac arresL
The GOP leaders know how weak
they would be without Bush. When
Bush leaves the White House, •
either br. choice or because his
health fails him, Republicans aren't
sure who they will tum to. With a
healthy and popular Bush, they
have a shoo-in candidate in 1992.
But the bench is very thin. As long
as Dan Quayle is in the bull pen
and expecting to be Bush's successor, the Republican leadership feels
that its hands are tied, and that frustrates thusc who want to pave the
way for life after Bush.
MINI-EDITORIAL - When
you enjoy America's great outdoors this year, remember this: ·
Most of the 456 wildlife refuges in
the country have been overrun by
tourists, boaters, hunters, trappers,
prospectors, miners, loggers, farmers and ranchers who are spreading
pollution and threatening wildlife.
Americans love their country, and
it looks like they will love it to
death if Congress doesn't mandate
more restraint when it comes to
some national treasures. Given the
track record of Congress and the
· current administration on environmental issues, it looks like the job
will be left to individual Americans
who must show more sensitivity
toward Mother Nature. If we can't
abide the thought of Ja~ese corporations taking over the concessions in Yellowstone, then we
should not tolerate an American.
who abuses what is left of the
wilderness.

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W, VA.

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COLUMBUS -This past week
the General Assembly returned to a
flurry of activity in both the House
and the Senate. Of course, the
major headline activity was the
revision of the State Budget proposal by the House Finance Com.
'.
mattee.
In earlier reportS, I summarized
Governor Voinovich's Executive
Budget proposal by reporting that it
contained reductions in funding
items that typically have benefited
Southerrt Ohio and the 17th Senate
District. Those cutbacks included
the elimination of the Options for
Elders program: the removal of
funding for the CCC Camps; the
cutback of General Assistance
funds thereby placing the lion ' s
share or the responsibility on county government; and the minimal
siBte funding effort for our public
schools.
After conducting numerous

hearings, the House FiDIIllce Coin- punishment policies. If such a poli.
mince. unveiled a budget that cy authorizing corporal punishment
restored funds to those particular in that school is not adopted, then
programs and provided an addition- such a disciplinuy m\l85ure is proal S120 million to the Education hibited. This same bill has been
BudgeL
·
passed by ,the Senate for the last
' Needless to say, this brings wei· two sessions of the General Assemcome relief to those affected. How- bly, yet has failed to receive House
ever, caution must he added to that approval. S.B. 86 now must make
initial relief, since !he budget biD its way to the full Senate for con·
still must wind its wa): through the sideration before any potential conHouse and the Senate over the sideration by the House.
course of the next six weeks before
Another bill receiving a favori! makes its way to the Governor's able recommendation by the Senate
desk. During this time, of course, I Education Committee is S.B. 52.
wiD continue to keep you infonned This bill would require school disof the Budget's progress.
·
tricts to adopt minimum academic
In other acuvities, the Senate standards for sbldents to achieve
Education Committee recommend- before being entitled to participate
ed once again, favorable considera- in extra curricular activities. The
tion of legislation dealing with bill sometimes referred to as "No
"Corporal punishment and No pass, pass, no play" emphasized the acano play." The "Corporal Punish- demic performances or students by
ment" Bill, S.B. 86, requires all restricting that student's ability to
school districts to adopt corporal participate in extra curricular activ·

~:.S.. i~ 8 t!e~~ ~

for other kinds of dru/ki~s
Rep. Henry Waxman o-:!!'lif ·
says the dru lords can'
. ·•
be "a
~etunes
Now hear the g(,oo
f
Dr. Roy Vagelos· Therenern rom
be a new drug ui shrink ~lar~
prostates, eliminating m:ch
surgery Coming later · the '90s
will be dru (I
m ·
ma, many &amp;.::r':'*'~·
sion hepatitis ch. kr,
~imec's and ihe ~.::;;. ~td: .
By 1995 there should be dru
halt me AroS virus.
a g to

greed/bunch ..

Vagelos knows whereof he
speaks. He is a physician, biochemist, researcher and now cbief
of Men:k, an incredibly successful
company already worlting on many
of those drugs.
So are Merck's competitors, big
and small, pouring ever-bigger
buckets of cash into research and
development. Drug companies
spent S2 billion on R&amp;D in 1980.
They spend $9 billion now. R&amp;D
as a pen:en~ of sales has gone from
1~ _llerCent 10 1980 to 17 pen:cnt in
19!10- compared to 3 percent for
allU.S. industry.
. .
Why so much acuvuy? ~ell, of
CQurse, they ~ humanttanans all.
(Not a total JOke by any means.)
There are now increcbblc new biotechnology ~hniqucs available.
l'&gt;h, also: A btg new. ~ can gme.~ more than $1 billion doUars m
aa.es. Per year.
. ~SO, in 199(), therharmaceu~acalmdustry's tota return to
~vestors was 19 peicent, twice as
bigh as the nearest competitor (bcverages).
The PMA says that without big

profits there can't be new drugs
and that it costs $220 million ui
develop big drugs some of whiclt
don't pan out. An apparently
promising drug for Parkinson's
also produced testicults cancer in
laboratory rats. A few $220 million
hits can drive a company out of the·
game.
Other partS of the medical cstablishmcnt are also doing their thing;
with prices, profits, products ~- bag h~ bea)clilll. A magnetac resonance unager (MRI) can cost
$3 million dolltss. MRI pictures
cost_a _petiemabout$?OO.Butdiag~bCIIIIS now see sp~ crass ~boos that are breathtaking. Hospilai
coslll ue soaring. So are doctors'
fees.
The politicians mutter two
words, "health inflatioq." Indeed,
the share of the GNP going to all
forms of health care has gone from
6 percent in 1965 to I2 percent in
1990,anditisrising.
Because health care is so expensive, ~calth insurance is IJ!Ore
expcnstve and some corporanons
have cut back on benefits. Some

On this date:
In 1643, Louis XIV became IGng of France at age four upon the death
of his father, Louis
In 1787, delegates began plhering in Philadelphia for a convention to
d!aw up the U.S. Caistitutioa.
·
In 1796, Englilb physician Edward Jc:niaa- administered the first vaccination
against smallpox to an eight-yeu-old
boy. . · .
'
.
.

xm.

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'f

How do you keep the golden
goose and see to it that folks can
afford the golden eggs?
Perhaps we should swt b_Y reexamining the pllrue "health infla.
lion.'' Inflation is when you pay
more for a similts product or service. But what's now new, is not

•

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Most of nation
•
remains warm

Continued trom p~~~t1

NLRB. in Washington will decide
the following questions: Did the
.company unlawfully implement the
final offer? Did the company
unlawfully hire rqJlacement work·
By Tile Aasodllted Preis
There were thunderslams Mon- ers foc bargaining union members?
Thunderstorms continued today day niJbl in the South and Mid- Is an injunction warranted against
in the Southeast, while rain fell west, with hail and higb winda in the company?
over puts of New Englllld and the many areas.
Tbe statement added if the
In northwest Nebraska today, answer is yes to the first or second
001dlem Rockies.
Most of the nation cast or the residcots !f9laced broken windows, question, the replacement workers
Rockies remained warm and seuched for missing cattle and would be out and the union would
humid, with scattertd aevcre thun- assessed their losses after floods get their jobs back. If the NLRB
derstorms. In the West, cool air tbat caused at Icaat $3 million in , getS an injunction against the com·
brought clouds and showers. espc- damage.
pany, the union could get back to
.cially in the moufltains. Warm, dry
' Flood waters on Friday night work faster.
weather was forecast for lower ele- damaged homes, ravaged the land
RAC issued a statement Tuesvations.
.and tore up roads. Oile man was day momi!13 siBling they were opti·
'
Showers and thunderstorms COl)· killed. .
mistic about the recent actions the
tinued today over West Texas and
Heavier rainfall Moaday . regional NLRB has taken on the
along a slow moving cold front evening included 2 inches at USWA's charge.
curving through the central Plains Springfield, Mo. and Daytona
"We applaud the regional
region, the upper Mississippi Val- Beach, Fla. and 1.!1 inches in Cocoa NLRB office in giving this mauer
Icy and north to the Great Lake&amp; Beach, Fla. and DetroiL
such diligent consideration," said
region.
'

.Judge O'Brien processes 40
cases in Meigs County Court
•

•

•

1

••

Oonald W. Worlledge, president ~­
RAC . "As we have said man~
times, the process one must follow
in a labor dispute in long and complex, and it should also be thorough."
. •
According to the statement, the-.
company had agreed to give tl!e :·
union a copy of the Slfery report m.,
question after the union signed a
confidentiality agreement. The
statement said after lmgthy delays
by the union, the union did evenwally execute a confidentiality a~­
ment 1111d the report was fumasbed .
to 'the union.
.
During the Interim time, the ·
union filed a charge with the
·NLRB on the issue, the statement
said, "Since we have already fu~·
nished the union with a copy of this
report, this is really a moot issue,"
Worllcdge said.

- - -·Area deaths-Donald B. Mink
,

Donald _Brian ~ink, 32, of
Route 2, Btdwell, ~aed Monday,
May 13, 1~91, at Rio Grande. ~
was the assiStalit ma~er at Gallia
Auto
HeSales. 1977' graduate f Gal· .
.
was a .
o
ha Academy Htgh School, whe~e
he was a three-year letterman m
football. He was vo~ m?St "&amp;!uable player and captatn has seruor
year.
He was a 1982_ gra_duate of
M-orehead State. Umversaty whe!l'
he was a four-yeu letterman m
football.
.
H: was born Jan. 15, 195?, !n
Galhpolls ~o Don !'nd Marjorae
Sa~Mi~,ofBidwell. .
.
. Besades has puents, he as ~ur·
vaved by one son: Jason P. Mmk,

Sunny

Pl. Cloudy' Cloudy

P~~t

A th

Bar!ing, Ark., '!ne brother and .sistcr·tn-law: Davtd and Debra Minlc,
Gallipolis, one nephew; Dustin .
Mink, Gallipolis, and maternal ;
grandmother Goldie Saunders:
PatrioL
·
He was preceded in death by .
paterna.1 gran dtparents Estell
. aqd
Opal Mink, and maternal grandfather Robert saunders, Sr.
Funeral services will be held I
p.m. Wednesday at Willis Funeral :
Home with the Revs. CJ. Lemley,
Ron Hammond, and Alfred Holley :
officiating. Burial will be at RifeCemete-rY. Friends may call at the.;
funeral home 6-9 p.m. Tuesd3y. ·
Pallbc;arers will be Jim Rose, ..
Don Price, Bill Justice, Dennis Sal- 1
isbury, Tim Davis, Kent Shawver:
Mike Wood, John McGuire and.
Chuck Hill.
·
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•n•es...

Two thefts probed by

·

EMS units answers eight calls

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Chamber.

Hospital news

similar. Merck's prostate drug
didn't exist earlier.
Health inflation is not all bad. ;
An increasingly affluent nation · '
ought to re-order priorities, allow- '
ing people to live longer, healthier '
lives. What should we use our ·
added affluence for? Cosmetics?
But how can everyone share the
blessings of modem medicine?
The government can try to do it,
.b~t it dOesn't work well.
Or we can mandate an expansion. '!r Am_erican-style private
medicme paad for through private
health-cue insurance, typically
provided by employers. Such new
mandates may cause further "infla- .
lion" when companies pass along :
costs to consumers. But the result ·:
can be better bcalth for more peo- •
pie at more reasonable costs.
•'
Rep. Waxman, chainnan of the ~
House Subcommittee on Health ;
~nd the Environment, plans 10
mtroduce moderate legislation .
along thme lines shonly. He hopes
to get cooperation and leadership
from the White House.
~t could w~ if - and only if
- n keeps alive the one key miracle ingredient. that has engendered
the new drugs llld new procedures:
proliL
(C)l99I . NEWSPAPER
EN'IERPRISE ASSN.
•
Ben Wauenberg, a senior fellow
at the American Enterprise Insti·
tute, was a jtuest speaker ai the
Pbarmaccuttcal Manufacturer's
..
Association in ScOUSdale, Ariz.

CAR CARE

BEND AREA

rdemiK&gt;r: The A.uoelaled Press, In·

land Daily Press At10Ciat1on and the
Ohio Newspaper A11oclatlon. National
· Adv~rtlstne- Representative, flranham
'"""" ·NE'Wspaper SaiH, 733 Third Jtv•nut,
Nl'W York, New York 10017.
POSTMASTER: Send addrets chanRft
to Th• Dally Sentinel, 111 Court St..
Pomeroy. Ohio 457119. .
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lllollh__.loU
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26 Weeki ....... ....... .. ........ .. ........ Nlll
52 WeeiU ...... .... .. .... ... .. ..... ... .... ,II4.76
Olllllle •elp Coal7
13 Wfel&lt;s ., ..... .... .... .. ............. .... IU-40
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\

Stocks
Am Ele Power ..................28 114
Ashland Oil ......................33
AT&amp;T ...............................36
Bob Evans ....................... .18 ·
&lt;lwminl Shop................. 16 518
City Holiling .....................13 314
Federal Motlul................... l7 1/4

OoociYear 1'0 .................23.

Key Centurion ..................12 314
l.alldl. Erv! .......................21
Limiled Inc.......................26 118
Multinledillnc.................27 1.18

Rax Rea11U1811t ..................7/8

llobbini&amp;Myen ...............26 3/4
Sboney~s Inc.................... .17 318
srar Bantt ..........................21 3/4
w~

Int'L.................... .9 3JB

Worthington Ind...............23 3/4
Slllet , , . , on tiN 10:30 ILIII.
fiiOIII I"'~Mifl, EIIIJ
M41Mwl of
Ill. llob
B-, W1u,r n-tiiPitlllldL

GOSPEL
JUBILEE

FRONT END
ALIGNMENT

MASON COUNTY
FAIRGROUNDS

BRAKES

...... ,..,.....,._
...........
.........,.....,,rti...,s
FIOIII 01 IIAI

.._. """ IJeari...

.........
$1695 S6200

•I pul •lfw cylitllltr

Rt. 62 North ,

of Point Pleasant

JUNE 1ST AND 2ND, 1991

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•INDOOR STAGE and SEATING AREA
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SERVING THE AREA 25 YEARS

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.----Local briefs... _ __,

ities, such as sports or clubs, if the_
student is not performing at the
Board's expected level of academic
achievement. Many schools already ,
have such a policy. Nevertheless, if ,
approved by the General Assem- ·
bly, this bill would require all Ohio .
school districts to adopt minimum ;
academic sllllldards. Like S.B. 86,
this bill now must be approved by ,
the full Senate as well as the House
of Representatives before becom•. ·
ing law.
·
·
:
Over the course or the next few :
weeks, I am certain there will be ,·
even greater activity on not only ,
these bills but several others.including the State Budget. As ,
always, I welcome your comments ,
on these issues. Please feel free to
contact me by calling at (614) 4668156 or writing to me State Senator ·
Jan Michael Long, C/o Ohio Senate
- Statehouse, Columbus, OH
43215.
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Ice

Middleport...

Profit is not a bitter piii_·____B_en_m_att_en_be--=-rg
SC&lt;?TTSDALE, Aiiz. -They
were~ l talking much a_bout the
receSSion h~ at the meeung of the
~harma~euucal Manufacturer's
SS:~~odusn(P~)- The phanna~
~ try IS the_ most prof-.
•table business ID Amenca. There is
=d news and bad news about
.
The bad . ne~ IS ~ the_ corpo.
~te prospenty IS denved, m part.
whkhSC:: ;:su.me~ dru~pnces,
very high Sen e~e .dtoPr veB,
Ark call ·the · ava
r.or, •

Union...

Meigs County Court Judge Middlepo~. failed to YJe!d· ~30 and
~Vfs~A.•..,•""'~IId--Prr;,;;.,.~G;,;;fll'hl&lt;;sNo~~~-;...;;;;;;~..,;;;-...;;;;;o.l~oioi,8~,-A•ccu-.oi
.
~w~
..
-.d•,.,•
.
"nc.
Patrick
H. O'Brien processed 4.0 costs, expu:cd. ~perator s license,
11
1
cases last week.
three days 10 Jail, suspended, $75
Fined were: Dennis Wise Mid- and costs; Cathy R. Barnes,
Contiaued from
1
dleport, expired registratio~. $10 Pomeroy, seat belt violation, costs;
and costs; David Coppick, Port- Dean E. Follrod, Pomeroy, speed,
· $400 overage in collections per proviljing for 25 cent 1111 hour pay land, equipment misuse, $5 and $24 and costs; Daniel R. Thoma,
month fo~ administration costs: mcreases for employc:Q effective costs; James A. Curtis, Cheshire, Lincolnton, NC, OWl, $350 and
according to Mayor Hoffman.
June I was given at the meeting. unsafe vehicle, $5 and costs; Den· costs, three days in jail, operator's
The !hree year contract will con- Councilman Paul Gerard voted nis Wise, Middleport, expired reg- license suspended for 90 days,
tain the right to renegotiate the ser- against the ordinance pending clari- isaation, $10 and costs; David W. failed to dim headlights, costs only;
vice chuge should landfill· costs
fication in executive session of sev- Coppock, Portland, tires, $5 and Jerry T. St. Clair, Long Bottom,
rise.
erai points.
costs; Terry A. Mays, Pomeroy, failure to display front tag, $10 and
Ro~r Dean and Vernon LiUic OWl, $400 and costs, 30 days m
costs; Walter Arnold, Langsville,
·Bids on the mgineering services met wath Council to discusa village jail, o~te year probation, opellllor's seat belt violation, costs only; Tony
· for the Pearl Street reconstruction services to the Jfobsoil tsea now license suspended for one yeu, Lee Bulther, Waverly, speed, $23
projec:t between Laurelaod General that the area has been annexed to alcohol assessment; Paul R. Stllin- and costs; Josepli S. Morgan,
Hartinger Parkway were opened at theviUage.
meiz, DWI, $350 and coSts, three Pomeroy, scat belt, costs; Patricia
the meeting. Awarding the bid on
Mayor Hoffman advised that days in jail, operator's license sus- A. Morgan, Pomeroy, seat belt,
the project was tabled until the next ·Floyd Browne Assoc~ is in the pended for 90 days; Gregory R. coslll; William Gloyd, Jr., Olestcr,
meeting pending clarification on proceu or prelimintsy engineering Dickess, Ironton, speed, $23 and assured clear distance; Bobby C.
several items or the bids.
on W8ICl and sewer aervice and it is costs; H. Catherine Schuctzman, Pierce, Radcliffe, falsification,
Conlinu~ from page 1
Tripleu Engineering bid $8,000 anticipated that it will talce six to
$100 and costs, 30 days in jail, susRobertS. Burke of Alfred Road in Coolville.
The vehicle, a 1991 Oaevrolct Goo, collided in the curve of the
plus a construction supervision eight months for the preliminary
pendcd, one year probation; Wanda
nanow township road. Heavy damage was reported to both cus, and
chuge, SBA Coosulllmts, Inc. of planning to be completed. The
U . On
L. Riftle, Racine, domestic viano injuries were reported.
•
Jackson bid $12,500, and. Floyd mayor said that 1"t 15
·
'ble that 8
lence; Jenna Amott, Racine, speed•
$18 ,947 .
JlOSSl
Colltiaued
f'l'om
page
1
ing,
$23
and
costs;
Gregory
M.
Brawn Assoctates,
60 percent 8f811l on the construeThe village has , received lion cost can be obtained through , ing the raid on a charge of carrying Eben, Pomeroy, seat bell violation,
d~puties
$80,000 in Issue 2 monies on the the Fanners Home Administration.
a concealed weapon, a 9mm piStol. costs; Luther White, Pomeflly, seatThe Meigs County Sberifrs Department is investigating two
$127.000 projec:L
Dean and Little also asked about Ernest Ray Johnson, 57, was being belt, costs; Stephen K. Thomas,
'
theft
incidents.
. A single bid was opeaed for road upgrading and paving and held in the county jail on $15,000 Gallipolis, scat belt violation, costs;
According
to a report from the department, Lois Wolfe of Apple
removal of the former Nicholson strcetligblll. Mayor Hoffman told bond.
George C. Oldaker. Hartford,
Grovc-Oorcas
Road reported on Monday that a four day old calf
house adjacent to Middleport Vii· _them _that street lights will be
In Scioto County, authorities W.Va.. speed, $21 and,costs; Patri,
was
missing
from
her property.
!age Hall. The bid came from installed soon and that the paving cited 94 people and arrested seven cia A. Rickman, Pomeroy, speed,
Eaton Construction Company of Circleville, doing work on State
Chtsles Rife of Rutland. Mayor ·will be done when workers are in others in raids Saturday night.
$23 and costs, scat belt violation,
Hoffman was authorized to enter town on other projec:ts.
.
Dispatcher Debby Tackett said $30 and costs; Robert Holliday.
Route 7, reported that a threesinch portable pump. two 18 inch ripe
wrenches.and a 12 inch crescent wrench were Stolen from one o the
into an agreement ~ith Rife to
Council Member Judy Crooks 1~ Cantrell, 40, held a cockfight Rutland, speed, $26 and costs;
company trucks parked on Collins Road and State Route 7.
remove the house once certain reported on planned projec:lll of the at has Minford-area fum and was Patricia Baer, Pomeroy, failure to ·
areas of the bid are clarified.
newly appoinled Community Beau· jailed on a misdemeanor count of stop, $10 and costs, scat belt violaIt was ·reported that Clean-up tification Committee.
cockfighting. He was released Sun- tion, costs only; Richard Sycko,
day.
.
Albany, speed, $24 and costs;
Week was a success in the village
The mayor's "report showed
Officials scheduled 8 news con- Larry A. Rtder, Middleport. failure
· Meigs EMS squads made eight runs over the past 24 hours:
with Manley's Trasb Service pick~i~~
·!!;Jr;:r~~
· ferenee in Columbus this afternoon to yield, $30 and costs; driving
At 10:12 a.m., Middleport squad went to SIBte Route 554 for
1oads
1 P"CC!orer allllCktolalloaofda andto2n3s
mfla·
g::S
f
__
..
.
the
.nn."
,
to
discuss
the
investigation
and
to
under
suspension,
30
days
in
jail,
Peart'
Coleman, wbo'was taiCen to Holzer Medical Center. Atll:l3 •.
.
1
163
0
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•.._e,
· show items confiscated from the suspended to three, $100 and costs,
a.m., Rutland squad was sent to Main Strccl. Joseph McDonald wai .going to the landfill.
Attending were Mayor Hoff- raids. The Ohio Department of one year probation; Minis R.
transported to Veterans.
.
. Wort on the Middleport levee,
man, Clerk-Treasurer Jon Buck, Agriculture was the lead investigat- Boggess 1 Racine, failed to stof.
Ar
I
:06
p.m.,
Pomeroy
units
went
to
Peach
fork
Road for a cu ;
according to Mayor Hoffman, is
Attending were Mayor Hoff- · ing agency.
. after accadent, thtec days in jai,
accidenL Luther Wbite refused treatment. Teresa Jeffers and Greg
expected to begin sometime in
man, Clerk-Treasurer Jon Buck,
Cockftghting involves fitting suspended, $75 and costs; Donald
Eblin were talcen l!&gt; Veterans, while Brittany and SBnlh Jeffers were
June. A $1,000 donation from
and Council members Jack Satter- roosters' legs with needle-sharp Lindeman, Chester, driving under
treated but not tranSIJ(lrled. At2:26 p.m., Racine squad went to State
Bernard Fultz on the project was
field, William Walters, Horton, gaffs up to 4 inches long and pit- suspension, 30 days in jail suspendRoute 338 for David Taylor, who was talren to Holzer. At 5:47p.m.,
acknowledged.
.
James Clatworthy, Crooks and Ger- tinllthem against each other in a ed to three, $100 and costs, one
Tum:rs Plains squad was talcm to State Route 7 for Oeot:gie HamPlans for construction of a stage · ard.
fight to the death.
. year probation, seat belt violation,
rick. Hamrick was transported to Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital.
at Diles Park slibmitted by the Midcosts only; James Hawley,
At 6:07 p.m., Middleport unit was sent to Overbrook Center. Bill
clleport Community Association
Continued from Pll!!t 1
Pomeroy, insecure load, costs only;
Watson
was taken to Veterans. At 7:52p.m., Racine squad went to
were displayed at the meetinJ.
· •••-;;.;.;==;.;;;;.::=L.C:O'-'--------. David P. Smith, Pomeroy, drivinl! .
Bucktown Road for Margaret Elias, who was sent to Veterans. At
under suspension, lh,ree days in jaal
. Councilman Dewey Horton wd Robinson. 1bose new members are and programs.
10:18 p.m., Middleport_squad went to Oliver Street. Julia Boyles
that he had talked with Bob
Beneficial Finance, Best Office
Meigs County currently shares a suspended if valid license within
was transported to Holzer. .
· ..
.
Gilmore, president, about the pro- :Machines, Frederick "Fritz" · JSEC program with Gallia County, 30 days, $75 and costs; Ricky Fraject which is currendy without suf. Goebel, Yorlt lllgcl, Offtee Service but Stowers urged chamber mem· ley, Pomeroy. DWI, $350 and
fteieThentfAssocUndin~. . had.
72 and Supply, , Dick Owen, Sr., bers to consider the implem.entation costs, three days in jail, 90 days
IBbon
sent out
Eleanor Thomas, and Tripp lett of a program in Meigs County.
liceusc suspended, upon cJUOllment ·
pledge forms to Middlepon busi- Engineering
and completion in RTP school,
~&gt;PRING VAllEY CIN£MA
44b 4524
nesscs, Hono~ l'epprted, and only
Robmso~ also encouraged the , In other action, chamber mem- S!50 of ftne and jail time will be
Veterans Memorial Hospital
five had . .lded as of yes~y. current membership to recruit new bers:
suspended; alcohol assessment, left
TUESDAY ADMISSIONS Horto.n sai~ that the Assoctation ·_ chamber members, emphasizing
. ·Amended the bylaws of the , of center, $20 and costs; Barry Burwell McKinney. MiddlepOrt;
V.: 85 ~mted wttb the response the recent ~wth of the chamber chamber to add a member and a Chapman, Rutland, making false Carl Findling, Reedsville; Kenneth
alarms, $100 and coslll, 30 days in Clark, Racine; and Ora Lee Ellis,
smce It had been hoped that the membershtp and the increase in tourism director;
stage could be c~nstructed before chamber activities as incentives for
_ Approved the appoinbnent of jail suspended, two years proba- Lakin, W.Va.
the July 4 celcbrab.on. •
.
new membership.
lion; William Swan, Middleport, no
TUESDAY DISCHARGES ~orton suggested, dtsi?Iaymg
Walter S,towers of the Ohio Joan May as a member of the operator's license, $75 and costs, None.
copaes of t~e plans m wmdo_ws Bureau of Employment Services' Chamber Board of Directors as 8 sax mpnths in jail suspended to
d~wntown m the ho~ of gettt~g )SEC (Job Service Employer Com- representative from Rutland;
three days, falsification, six mooths
~vatc suppoct and Will confer With mittees) program presented a brief
in jail suspended to three days,
Holzer Medical Center
Gilmore about that.
talk on the program to those attend- Approved the appoinunent of concurrent with license charge,
Discharges, May 13 • Mary
OTIIER BUSINESS
ing last night's meeting
MarY Powell as the Board or Direc- costs; Sandra Phillips, Albany.
The first reading of an ordinllllce
The ]SEC program was tor's Tourism Director and appoint- reckless pperation, $100 and costs, Berkley, Joan Bowen, Wayne
described as an outreach program ed Todd King, currently servmg as $400 to law enforcement trust BullS, John Hillman, Sharon Meadfor the private sector and public the board's representative from fund; John Meade, Columbus, ows, J. Paul Mossman, Cole Simp- '
agencies. Consisting of local Syracuse, to till Powell's place as a hunting without permission, $100 son and Leo Smith.
The Daily Sen.inel
employers who volunteer to work Pomeroy delegate.
and costs, restiblllon.
with
OBES
Job
Service
staff,
the
Set
a
board
meeting
on
Forfeiting bond was Furl Slade,
(U8P81U• • )
JSEC
programs
ue
intended
to
Wednesday
at
8:30
a.m
.
at
the
Columbus,
aiding and assisting
A Dlvlll• of Multimedia, l•e.
secure employer support for the request or Executive Director Eliz- another in hunting on lands of
Published every afternooo, Monday
OBES · Job Service, identify abeth Schaad.
another without permission, $60.
through Friday, Ill Courl St .• Po·
employment-related communitv
meroy. Ohio,- by rhe Ohio Valley Publishing COmpany/Multbnedta, Inc ..
nec4s and to recommend ways to
Quality Service Before, During and
Pomeroy. Ohlol5'169. Ph. 992·2156. Se·
meet
them, and to act as a sounding
cond class poetage paid at Pomeroy,
Ohio.
board for OBES proposed policies
After the Sale.
Shown r..rorm. · Rllin Flunlea Snow

Legislative highlights ----'-:---Se_n._:_Ja_nM_._Lo-=:..ng

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·
ay ID IStory.__...___-:------------------- ~=~~'T::~~~~:~a

• , Tile Alloclaled Prell
: Today il n-Jay, May 14, the 134th day or 1991. There are 231 days
left in die year.
.
.
· Today's HlJhllihtlll Hiltll'y:
·
· On May t4. 1~. 111e -;:cldent state or 1.srae1 W&amp;S proclaimed in
Tel Aviv as Britisll rule lDint came to an end. The United Slates
immediatdy recop.ilecl the new Jewish Slate. . ·

conditions 1111d bigh temper11ures

The Dally Sentinel-Peg~

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By R.B. FALLSJ1tOM
AP Spol11 Writer
. ST. LOUIS (AP) - The SL Louis Cardinals ale
hoping lbe real KCII Hill biS finally arrived.
: : .. He's starting to come IIOUJid." Canlinals man• a~er Joe Tone said after Hill allowed two bits in
e1ght innings in a 1..() victory over lbe Cincinnati
Reds on Monday night. "That"s what' s really
inside.··
Hill (3-2) entered lbe season with a 12-22 career
record and 4~2. eamec;t run avera$e, but be ·s bad
moments of brilliance, like a three-bit shutout !jpinot
~ Los Angeles in 1989. Monday was anolbc:r of those
• momCDIS as he WOII a duel against Reds IIX)kie leftbander Chris Hammond. .
"It was one of tbose nights," Hill ssid. " I pitched
a great game tonight and I'm looting forward to
. . next start. If I can get ahead of lbe bitt.ers I can pitch
• :my game."
• - Tbst's beCII a big if, considering Hill biS walked
: ;153 in 326 and one-lbird career innings and enlmJd
: 1be game 0-3 wilh a S.l8 ERA in bis career ~jpinst
Cincinnati. But be bad almost no problems, giving liP
• only singles to Jeff Reed in lbe lbird and eighlh. He
: struck Olit six and walked two and didn't allow a run·: ncr to reach !bird.
"
• "He kept us guessing all night,' ; Cincinnati's
Herm Winningham said.
·
·
. Before working lbe longest stint of any Canlinals
'pi":ber ~ season •. Hill Jw.ln 't lasled more !han six
' UIJII!Igs m any of bis fim SIX S1811S. But be bad beCII
effective in two of bis previous tJuee SlariS, giving liP
tluee earned I1JJlS in 12 innings lpinst Montreal and
Cincinnati.
. "He's starting to put diem together,' ' Torre said.
"Tbst's lbe sign of maturity and lbe developing of a
'good pitcher." .
: Lee.Sm.ilh worted lbe ninlh for bis 11th save in
• ·12 ll(liXlrtWlities, and Oaie Smith's bloop single in
• tJ!e e1ghch ·was the game-winner as lbe CarilinaiS won
: a series opener for the ninth time out of 11 tries.
• Tbe Card,inals also got the defensive play of the
game from left fielder Rex Hudler, whose spec:laeular
· diving catch on a drive into lbe gap by Winningham
in the third prevenled two runs from 9COJ'ing.
: The catch came with two ouiS. and two men on
~ )lnd provided the only early excilemmt in 1be gsme.
; "I got a good look at it, they showed the replay so
• many limes,''. Winningham said. "I tbink Hudler's
: catch was the gsme. ''
,
: Hudler wasn't done. He made a good ruMing
·•:i:alch of a drive by Hal Morris to lead off the fourlh,
~ dived bead-fust into fii'Sl base ahead of Morris'
-tag for an infield bit in lbe eighth.
. "I smelled it right out of the 1m, and that's where
: you get those hits, out of the box,'' Hudler said.
: ''The minute I saw bim take a step to the right for the
ball I said, 'It's a f0011'8CC and you've got to beat bim
Hud, you've got to beat bim.'
·
"IIUIIIed the crowd on again. I love it, it's just so
much fun to play."
.
•. Tbe hit came after pinch hittet Beman! Gilkey led
• qff the eighth with a ground-rule double off Randy
: Myers (0-1) and set the Slllge for Smith's game-win; rier. It wasn't pretty, but Smith's pop fly to sbaliow
:.center fell between second baseman Luis Quinones
·)lid center fiClder Eric Davis.
-• Hammmd held the ~s to four bits in seven
innings. He struck out tJuee IIIII waited two. But be
hurt himself when be missed a bunt sip after Reed's
leadoff single in the eigbtb and lined out to cenrer.
·- "I think I'm going to take some money from
tiim," Reels 11111111ger Lou Piniella said. "It's the fim
time all year I've done tbal, but he can't miss a bunt
sign in that situation."
.
Elsewhere, it was San Diego S, New York 2;
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TUesday, May 14, 1991

pushes St.
over Cincy

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San Diego s Benes, a non-w1nner since last
the New York Meu S-2, getting relief
help from SteveR"""""" and Craig Lclferts.lt was
bis fim win in 14 starts. including seven losses and
silt no-decisions.
Daniels, in bed with the flu for nearly ttuee days,
recovered jll$l enough to play for.the Dodgers against
Montreal. His two-nm shot Off Oil Can Boyd capped
a fo..--run siltth inning dial P'OIIelled Los Angeles to
an 8-3 victory tbat Cllded die Sxpos' six-game winning streak. .
.
l'lldres 5, Mets l - Benes refused to bend in tho
face of bis long 11011-winning streak.. He did, hOwever, tire in the SCYCDth, when Howard Jobnsoti bad a
twO-run homer to make it 3-2.
But Benito Santiago clinched it with a two-run
shot in lbe eighth.
"He's.bad a lot of misfortune,'' Padres manager
G~ Riddocb said of Benes (14).
•
' The happiest part is ~ we won the game that I
threw in. It was like every fifth day we lost lbe game ·
and it Jlidn ' t matter bow lbe pitchers threw or how
the hitters bit,'' Benes said.
HONORING GRIMM - A large group of
Tony GW)'M bad a two-run homer, bis fim since
Meigs Countians, along with a total or over SO
July IS.
former OVA players, reunited Wednesday to
Dodaers 8, Expos 3 - At Los Angeles, the
honor Bert Grimm, chrter member and
Dodgers scored four times in both the siltth and
founder of tile leagne.·PictUred are Grimm, sureighth innings. Daniels was aided by Chris Gwynn,
rounded by (L·R) Bob Dnckwortb, Billy Joe
Tony's brother, who had a three-run homer, and
Eddie Murray with a two-run double. ·
"I'm still sick. but I played with it,' • Daniels saicl
of hal(ing the flu. "My body's aching and my stom·
ach's still messed up, but I got tired of sitting at
home. They asked me if I'm OK and I said no, but
I'll give it a shot anyway. And it worlced out pretty
well far me! •
·
And for Ramon Martinez (6-i), who won his fifth
in a row. He left in rho eighth..when Montreal got all
its runs, including a solo shot by Delino DeSiiidds.
Pblllles 3, Glaats l - At San Francisco, the
Phillies blew a 2-0 lead wilh two outs in the ninth,
then came back to win on Jolm Kruk' s homer in the
II !h. They!ve won 13 of 18 against the Giants since
1989.
Kruk's homer was an opposite-fiCid shot to· left
off Rod Beck (0·1). The Giants tied it off reliever
·Mitch Williams on Steve Decltet's homer and Matt
WilliaJns' run-scoring double.
"I felt tonif!lt when we came back that all the bad
stuff is over, • .said Giants manager Roger Craig,
whose team is 10-21, lbe worst record in the majors.
"One key bit ~done tcy play, and we lose. It's
been like this for tJuee weeks now. ·I feel bad for the ·
guys, because lhey're battling their butts otT."
Giants alugger Kevin Miu:hell sustained a severe
ankle sprain while trying to steal second base in the
second inning. He is expected to miss at least tJuee
games.
Braves 5, Cobs 3 - At ChiCago, Tom Glavine
pitched his third complete game, doubled home a
run, stole a base and hid three sacrifices. Terry
Pendleton homered and Dave Justice added a tworun sinslc in lbe eighth for hot Atlanta.
The victory was lhe Braves' third straight and
13th in their last 19 games as they suried to lbe top
of the NL WCSL The Cubs lost their tbin1 in a row.
Glavine (5-2) allowed eight bits, struck out five
and walked none. Andre Dawson bit a two-run .
homer with two outs in the ninth off Glavilie.
~ beat

Spencer, Tom Wolfe, Paui .Beegle, Aaron Wolfe
and Jim Vennari. In the &amp;ecOnd row 1re Lloyd
(Dlnty) Moore, Willy Guinther (for Gay
Guinther), Elmer Houdasllelt, Bob Grimm,
Hilton Wqlfe, Jr., Dave DOes and-Fred Crow.

;: •

By LEE LINDER

Assodated Press Writer

' • PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Dar: : ren Daulton worked out with the
· . • .Philadelphia Pbillies on Monday
:• : for the fim time since an accidenta
: ;week ago destroyed LeMy Dyk: :Stra 's car and put both players in
• :the bos!&gt;ilal.
: .: · •'When you take a look at the
&lt;• car, we could have checked out
. : very wily... Daulton said quielly
: ~ as be tried his band • catching, bit. ling and runoin' in hopes he can
• -rejoin lbe team m a week or two.
:·:"I say my Jllllyers now at nighL"
• • Daulton suffered a broken bone
: :W. his left eye, plus bumps and
: bruises. Dykstta broke his coUar.: bone, tbree ribs and a cheekbone
•
•

and also pwl\:tured a lung. He will
be out at least two months, but
knows it could have been a lot

worse.

"It's scary to lhink about what
could have, maybe should have,
happened. I could have been
killed, .. Dykstra said.
Both players were released from
Btyn Mawr Hospital last week. still
sore from the pre-dawn crash on
May 6. Both were heading home
from a batchelor party for teammale Jolm Kruk.
·
·:I'm not doing anylhing lha!'s
hurting me, and I won't," Daulton
said about his limbering up. "If
I:m not ready ne~tt Monday, I
won't get off'' the disabled liSL ,
The catcher said be was still

S co rc board

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NATIONAL LEAGUE
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AMERICAN LEAGUE

Pomeroy

Middleport, Ohio

' 'What happened was because
of poor judgment on my pan," he
said. "I not only hurt myself. I hurt
the team. I hurt Darren Daulton. I
hurt my family. I burt the fans. I
hurt everyone. They all took a fall
because of me.'.
Dykstra faces a criminal charge
of driving while intolticaled.
"I wish I could change what
ha~pened, but I can't," Dykstra
said. "All I can do is try to be betterfrom now on."
·
I

. As to lh~ accident i*lf, Dykstra
Slid be can t say much beol!!se of
th~ lep cbarg~ be races. Daulton

said hiS recollection is fuzzy.
"I remember seeing a tree in
front of us, and we were slcidding
on the right side, my side, and that
was lbe last I remember," be said.
"l remember sillinl! in the back
seat of the car on the way to the
hoWital," Dykstra said. "I turned
to Darren. He had mud all over
him, he was covered with it. And I
said, 'Are you Ill rigbl'l I think my
shoulder is brol&lt;CII.' But my lefs
were what J.- COIICellled with.'
He said that in the hospital he
kept moVing his toes to make 1111re
bis legs were OK, and !hoy viere.
Daulton · said Dykstra was
speedibe\.e: be drove aronnd the
curve
skidding otT rho I'IJid·
but he didn't know how faot the
was moving.
·
.
"I think the speed limit is 25 or
3S miles per hoUr in dial area and
we were fOing above tho speed
limit. 'Jbat I wllal tho police lllid in
cbecking our slcid marts," be said.

cai

EXERCISING RUN PREVENTION is what
California backstop Lance Parrish (right) is
doing against ·the Indians' Albert Belle at the
plate ln tbe fiftb lnnlnJI of Monday night's game

ing toquiL" ·
The Pistons didn ' t quit when
raced with a 2·1 deficit against
B!istoo. Mark Aguirre scored 34
points as ibe Pistons, ~ying without injured guard Isiab Thomas,
outrebounded the Celtics S0-30,
including 1S-3 off the offensive
boards. 'The Pistons won despite
shooting only 44 pen:ent from the
field. while the Celtics shot SO percent.

postseason.
.
" Tbe opportunity is there to put

these guys away. They have to feel
ther are in a bole and they have tQ
fee that they have to dig their way
out. We have to have the killer
instinct,'' said Micbael Jordan,
who skipped a light drill Monday
because of tendinitis in bis tnee:
The 76en' cam&amp;!:t filled with
doubt. Their sw,
es BIJ'kley,
apparently is on the verge of asking
10 be traded.
"I don't think we can win it,"
Barkley said. "We have ion mucb
uncenainty. I'm not capable of carrying a team right now and dominating a game because of my knee,
back, mr =der· ankle...
.
The
split at home, then
swept a pair at Oakland. They've
shut down Chris Mullin smce
Mullin scored 41 points in Game 2.
"James bas been unbelievable,' \
Mullin said of James Wditby, who
guarded bim in lbe next two games
and held the~ forward
to a total of 22 points. "He's been
everywhere on defense, like Dennis

. IZAAK WALTON WINNER - Kyle Davis, an Eastern High
School graduate, claimed first place in the Izaak Walton "Big
Whitetail Buck" contest, scoring 121 718 points for his 11-point
buck. He bested 83 entries to claim the $145.25 grand prize.

SLIPS PAST EDWARDS - Bostoa forward Kevill McHale (32)
slips past Detroit forward James Edwards tor two points during
M011clay nlgllt's NBA playoff game In Auburn Hills, Mich., wblcb
the Pistons won 104-97 to even tbe best-of-seven series at 1-l. (AP) ·

Bobby Brown issued the suspension Monday, two days after Belle
threw a ball that bit ~tator Jeff
P11lar of Cle~eland m the c~es~. ·
Belle can contmue to play until hJS
a~ is heard.
.
.
The Southern Tornadoes of
Pillat; had been bec,khng Belle Coach Mick WinebreMer rolled to pitcher's battle.
about hu problems w1th alcohol. a 5..() shUtout over the Kyger Creek · Baer meanwhile Oined with a
no-hitter unti.l Me Clain's single
Belle spent ~ ~ w~ks in an alco- BobcatS Friday to adyance to the late
in the game.
hobsm rehabllllallon program last Division IV sectional fmals at East·
Southern
hitters were Andy
summer.
em on Thursday.
Baer
(single,
double),Todd
Grind. "I regre! that I los!. my spirit~­
Andy Baer, who was recently staff (two singles), Michael KinIIY for an mstance, Belle sud, named as the."District Player of me·
reading from a prepared statement Year" and selected to the all-state caid, Jeremy DiU and Jamie Anderafter the .. sus11ension was fiiStteam, was lbe winning pitcher. son (each singles), and Ronnie
ann.o~~ced. It will not happen 'rbe S-9 senior bad IS Ks, no walks Spaun (double).
Southern travels to Eastern
agam.
and surrendered one hit - a single Thursday for the sectional finals
by Richie McClain.
with the Eagles, with the winner
4
Marc Villanueva suffered the a4vancing to the district tournaloss despite a good outing. He ment in Athens.
'because be was 66 plate appear- the Red So~t 4-3 in the lOth.
three, walked two and gave Score bJ Innings
. ances shy of the ·required miniRyan's fu-st game at Arlington fanned
up
seven
bits.
Kyger Creek 000 000 0 - 0-1-2
mum. "Everybody bas said nega- Stadium since his record seventh
Southern
plated one run in the Southern
001 004 " - S-7..()
tive lhinP- about me,,saying I can no-hitter was supposed to be a celeWP-Baer
.
bit but I m not a great leadoff bit- bration. Instead, it turned into a third and four in the sixth to secure
the
win
and
brealc
open
a
close
1-0
LP- Villanueva
·
ter. This year, I want to prove to night of concern.
Ryan bad allowed only one bit,
eve1'!:'t that I can do everylhing
any
ff man can. I can get on struck out four .and walked three
base, and I can steal bases."
·
when he left after fanning Pete
, The Angels scored twice in the lncaviglia to sWt the fifth inning.
"I felt like I would take a
fust against Charles Nagy on Dave
Winfield's RBI triple and a sacri· chance where I'd tear it and I'd be
By TRUDY TYNAN
· inductees.
fice fly by Dave Parker. Winf~eld's looking at a two monlhs recovery
While Knight's temper tantrums
Associated
Press Writer
RBI gave him 1,538 in his career, period," be said. "I'd rather miss
Indiana University head coach · have made headlines, his sideline
passing Joe DiMaggio for 25th on another start than miss an extended
Bob Knight, whose succ.esses and skills have brought him every
period of time.''
lhe all-time list
.
California made it 4-1 in the
John Barfield (1..()) relieved and excesses have illuminated the honor a college coach can win "second on· RBI singles by .Polonia retire9 seven straight batters for lhe game, went gently into the Basket· NCAA titles in 1976, 1981 and
.
1987, the NIT crown in 1979, the
andJoyner. ·
victory. John Cerutti (0-1) started · ball Hall of Fame.
The Indians .scored a run in ·me in place of Frank Tanana, who had . Tbe gruffness was replaced with gold medal at the 1984 Olympics
humility and his thoughtS were of and five Coach of the Year
rust on Albert Belle's bases-loaded, a pulled hamstring.
others Monday in this city where pl119,ues.
double-play grounder, and !hey li!:d
· · White Soli 4, Red Sox 3
basketball began a century ago. .
' At one time, maybe 95 percent
it 4-4 with three in the third on
· Clemens gave up two runs on
"More than anylhinJl else, when · of the coaches from high school
Belle's two-run double and Carlos four
hits in the fust three innings. · a coach is honored, 11 is a team through college played the motion
Baerga's RBI single.
But
after
the. power delay, he .shut honor," Knight said. "For all the offmse as he refined it," said Hall
Polonia hit a run-scoring infield out the White
single in the fourth, but Baerga five innings. Sox on one hit for people of all m1teams, most of all of Pamer Pete Newell in his inlrlh
the ulayers, I m very apprecia- duction.
answered with anolber RBI single
Reardon was perfect on 13 tive.f'
.
But Knight preferred to think of
in the fifth, tying it S-5 shortly straight
save
chances,
including
I0
himself
as simply a IQCbcr.
Also
inducled
Were
point
guard
before rain forced the delay.
this
season.
Merullo,
batting
for
Nate
"Tiny"
Archibald
and
two
"The
rewards in coaching are
"I bad a liule trouble finding a
Scott
f1etcher,
bit
bis
second
home
big
men
Dave
Cowens,
who
not
tied
to
ivins and losses and
groove," Nagy said. "I thought my
run
on
a
1-2
pitch.
played
most
of
his
pro
career
wilh
championships,'' said Knight.
fastball was good tonighL I hung
In lhe lOth against Jeff Gray (I· the Boston Celtics, and Han): Gal- "They are watching a former playsome slideJS. Winfreld jumped all
3), Robin Ventura singled with one latin, who sllllml for tbe New York er coaching a team to a nauonal
. over one in the fust iMing. I made out,
pinch runner Joey Cora stole Knicks during the late 1940s and . championship. A player like Mike
some stupid pitches in the second second
and Kark.ovice singled with 1950s. .
Krzyzewsk1 at Dulce, who I
inning.••
two
outs.
Bobby Thigpen (2..()) was
Former NBA commissioner coached at Army,
The loss was lhe Indians' fifth
.
Larry O'Brien, who died last
"It's seeing a ·player .go from
in the last six games. They are 2-8 the win~er.
Yankees
6,
Athletics
3
September, Boris Stankovic, head basketball intO somethmg else,'' he
at home.
Sanderson stopped his for- of the International Basketball Fed- continued. "To articulate on televiIn other games, Texas beat merScott
team
sent Oakland slump- eration, and the late Larry Fleisher, sion Md through radio the game of
Detroit 8-1, Chicago edged Boston ing out of and
New
York.
who founded the NBA Players basketball, concisely and accurate4-3. New York beat Oakland 6-3,
The
Athletics
had won 16 . Association, were the other ly as Quinn Buckner bas done."
Toronto topped Kansas City 4·2 straight gsmes against
the Yankees
and Califoml8 defealed Cleveland
before
losing
three
times
in a four9-S.
game
series.
Jose
Canseco
had a
Ryan Injures shoulder;
rough
night,
geuing
into
a
nose-toClemens still 6..()
nose confrontation with a fan who
Two ours from a possible victo- taunted
the star about his ·visit to
- ·- ry, Nolan Ryan blew out his shoul- Madonna's
aparlll1entlast week. .
der. One strike from a sure victory,
Sanderson
(4-1) won 17 games · ' WINTI;RSVILLE, Ohio (AP) . Francis led his team ln virtually
Jeff Resrdon blew it for Roger for Oakland last
season. He gave. . - To catch the.eye of Divis1on 1 every category ,- most goals. 10;
Clemens.
up
tJuee
runs
on
seven
hits in seven college athletic recruiters, a high most assists, 3; most points, 13;
Ryan left Monday night's swt innings against the Athletics
. school usually must have a tradi- most consecutive games scoring a
against Detroit in the fifth inning, Lee Gucucrman got his fllllt saveand
.
lion of success.
goal, 6: and most games with ·a
walking off the mound with a
Hensley
Meulens
and
Roberto
Wintersville High School's soc- goal, 8.
suained muscle in the back of his Kelly homered for New York:. Curt
cer
program doesn't have a tradi"I never had to worry about
right shoulder.
Young
(
1-1)
started
in
place
of
tion
but
it
does
have
Greg
Francis.
Greg,'
' Wise said. "He took care
The Texas Rangers won easily Dave SteWart. who went on the disFrancis
received
a
Division
I
of
himself.''
without Ryan, beating Detroit 8·1.
list last week for the first scholarship when he signed a letter
Twenty-seven Division III colJlut the injury may have blown a abled
lime
in
his
career.
of
intent
to
play
far
lhe
University
leges
recruited Francis, including.
chance at a marquee matchup SunBloe
Jays
4, Royals l
of
Deo:oiL
nine
in
Ohio, but he turned lhem all
day night in Teus: Ryari vs.
Todd Stottlemyre won his fifth
"I'm
excited
and
honored,''
·
down.
'
Clemens.
consecutive
decision
and
Joe
Caner
Francis
said.
"I'
ve
always
bad
intentions
of
"I'll know within the next 48 hit his fifth home run in Toronto's
up
in
an
area
playing
Division
I,''
Francis
said.
Francis
grew
houri what we're dealing with,"
at borne.
whe.re soccer talces a back seat to
Deo:oit called in mid-March and
Ryan said. "I only hope' to miss victory
The Blue Jays have won five of football and basketball. His high Francis jumped at lhe opponunity
one start at the belL" .
games. Kansas City had won school didn't even have a soccer to visit the school and sign. He
Either way, Clemens will go six
threo in a row, matching its longest program until hii senior season.
wanted 10 attend a larger school to
into rho pmo undefeated. But he's Slre8k of rho IWOII.
Francis
spent
much
of
Win
study
pre-medicine. Francis would
still 6-0, rather 7-0, because of
Stoitlomyro (~·0) gave u·p six tersville's fll1tliOCCer season filling like to become a veterinarian.
Reardon.
hits in eiaht and .one-third innin¥s. various positions on a ream fuD of
Francis bas played soccer since
Cl-ns endured an early 'S9· Duane
Ward closed for his maJOr fresbmm and sophomores.
his pre-teen years and bas sllllml at
lllinule power ~ at BOIIon and league-leading 12th save.
sure there were some &lt;liffi· every level he has played. Last
left afiCr olgbt inmnp with a 3-2 · ftoberto Alomar hit a two-run cult"I'm
times
for him this year," Win- summer, he 118Veled 10 Europe with
lead. Willi twO OUII and tWo strilces double in the third inning and
tersville
soccer
coach Mike Wise an American soccer club that
in tho ointll, pinch blttor Matt Carter bit a solo homer off Storm said.
.
toured Austria, Germany and Italy.
~ boalereil otT Reardon to lie
Davis (24) in the fifth.
DeSI&gt;ite his utility-player role,
~ llld rho Cbiclao While S011 bear

.AL contests...

Southern blanks KC S-0

(Con~~Page )

Indiana's Knight inducted
into Basketball Hall of Fame

in Cleveland, which the Angels won. 9·5. Belle
tried to score from second b~ on a slagle by
Chris James. (AP)

Angels hand Indians 9-5 loss
By CHUCK MELVIN
AP Sports Writer
CLEVELAND (AP) - After
the way they let ·Chuck Finley
down at the end o( last season, the
California Angels figure !hey owe
him a few easy wins this year.
"It's about time we repaid him
for all the !·to-nothings and gutwrenchers he pitched last year,"
manager Doug Rader said after lhe
Angels beat the Oeveland Indians
9·5 Monday night, making Finley
the American League's second sixgame winner. .
Boston's Roger Clemens was
the fii'Sl to reach silt wins this year.
Finley went 18-9 last season,
failing to get 20 wins because he
lost his final three decisions by

force in lbe scnes, averaging 19.3 · Rodinan."
poinis, 10.3 rebounds and 10
Rodman was named the
assists. But be bas a 8p'ained right ·league's top defensive player on
big toe.
.
Monday.
"I can run, but for a guy like me
" I'm no Rodman, but in rho 20who relies on jumping ability and odd years I' ve been playing this
explosiveness, it takes away a lot game, I should have picked up
of that and kind of changes my something about defense," said
game a little bit," be said. "But Worthy, who scored 36 points io
anything I can do to just get out the Lllters' llS-112 win in Game 3
there on the floor, believe me, I'm and 16 more in Game 4. "DefCDSC
going to do iL"
isn't bard. It's iuat effort and refus- .
The Bulls e~tpect to do it eliminate. the Silters - af Chicago
Stadium, where they are 4..() in the

· · CLEVELAND (AP) - Cleve·
land Indians ootlielder Albert Belle
is appealing his one-week suspension for bittin~ a fan with a base· .
ball because 1t is too .severe, his
lawyer says.
"To me; it's clearly excessive.
Not to say that it's entirely justitied, what Albert did, but obviousiy
tbere were mitigating circumstances here " Am Tellc:m Belle's
attorney, said fro111 Los Angeles.
" My hope would be that fans
wolild understand that all players
deserve to be treated humanely."
American League president

experiencing "a little blurred
vision to my left" and "I'm still a
little sore." Both, he said, were to
be e~tpecled on his fim day at the
stadium.
Dykstra, a plaster cast protecting
his collarbone and bandages
wrapped around his chest, spoke
priyately with tlie Philadefpbia
Da1ly News and admitted he
"screwed up big-time" in recalling
the crash tbM occurred on a curve
in Philadelphia's weotem suburbs
just .five minutes from Dalton' s
home.

By Tile AIIOCiatecl Prtsi
Three NBA ravontcs are acting
just like it and have reached the
tbreabold of the~ iiCillifinals.
The Trail B
, Lakers and
Bulls hold 3-1 series leads mtering
toaight. All are at home, Portland
against Utah, Los Angeles facing
Golden State and Chicago talting
on Philadelphia.
Only four teams have come
back from 3-1 deficiiS. Boston did
it !jpinst ~Pbia in 1968; the ·
Lak:ers against Phoeni~t in 1970;
Washington against San Antonio in
1979; and Boston against Philadelphia in 1981.
The other Sefies is tied 2-2,
thanks to Detroit's 104-97 victory
over Boston Monday night. The
Celtics are at home !jpinst the Pistons on Wednesday.
Portland, which bad 'the NBA 's
best record this season (63 -19),
were 0-3 on lbe road before edging
Utah 104-101 in Game 4. 'the
Blazers are 5..() at home in the playoffs, lOot only five times at Memorial Coliseum in the regular season
and haven't lost to the Jazz there
· since last April.
. Of course, Blazers head coach
'Rick Adelman takes noching for
granled.
.
.
"If you think that, you're going
to be in big trouble," he said ·of
Portland bein~ in commanding
position. "Urah s lbe type of team
that always responds. n we don't
come oot and play our best game,
they lulve every capability of beating us.··
The Jazz could benefit froin
, Clyde Drexler's health woes .
: Dre~tler has been a dominating

AL president suspends
Belle for one week

•

•

1\leaday, May 14,1991

Detroit posts 104-97 win over Boston

:mM.ended ·Daulton works out with
{Phillies for first time since wreck
•

i.

.. - - - -- -·

Both of tbcJI1 got bact tbe good vibes Monday
night in 1-di~ their IBaniS 10 vicby.

~

l

- ~-

touch.

....

'

-·-

Philadelphia 3, San Francilco 2; Los Angeles 8,
Monlreal3; and Al1anta S, Chicago 3.
Beee1, Daielllllack it f - - Andy Benes bad
farJUibl bow to win. Kat Daoiels bad lost tbe RBI

.mr

'

-- - -- ... ·-·-· - - - --··-t - · ..·--···-

Po.Mrov Middleport, Ohio

.-··
..

r

·- -

4 The "Dally SenUnel

·_ ~_Hill's two-hitter
:~Louis to f-0 win

,

_-

scores of 3-2, 4-0 and :i-1. He won inning 10 make it 8-5.
two games by scores of 1-0.
Gaetti hit another RBI single in
"I guess it all evens out," Fin- the eighth.
.
ley sajd. "I pitched a lot of Close
Scott Bailes and Jeff Robinson
games last_.~Year. But you need to finished up for the Anl!els, with
win a fe\\1 like this. I know (Cy Robinson earning bis second save .
Young-winner) Bob Welch had a
Po Ionia's five hits m•tched a
few like this last year."
career high he eslablished in 1988.
Finley (6·1) allowed five runs . He raised his average 10 .357,
and 10 hits in five innings, and the putting him among the league's
game was tied 5-5 when an SO- leade.rs but leaving him seven
minute rain delay ended his night.
points behind teammate Wally
W~en play resumed in the top of Joyner. Joyner had three· hits,
the s1xth, the Angels immediately extending his hitting streak. to nine
scored.throo runs off reliever Steve games and bis average to .364.
Olin (2-3). Luis Polonia, who had
''I might have a chance to win a
five hits, hit an RBI triple and con- batting title someday, :• said Polotinued home on a wild relay by . nia, whose .335 average last year
shons10p Felilt Fennin. Gary Gaetti didn '1 qualify for the AL title
added an RBI single later in the
(See AL on Pap 5)

-

Francis looking to play Division
I soccer at University of Detroit

· PROUD HUNTER - Ryan Buckley, aa eJabtll·grade student at
Eastern High School and son of Bill and Twlla Buckley, Is pictured
with bit &amp;ecOnd-place deer shortly after It was shot. Buckley place~ ·
seeond In the annuallzaak Walton contest.

NI,CE-LOOKING MOUNT - BID Spaun, who competed In the
Izaak Walton "Big Wbltetall Buck" contest, Is sbown boldlna his
fourth-place mount, which bas 1 nice rack and rack spread. Spaun .
was a close fourth, as only a few points separaled the top con· :
tenders.

\

•

�Page

6

~ Dally Sentinel

and snakes aklng the trail.
The spring rqioaal meeting of
Ohio Associalion of Garden Clubs,
held 81 Salisbury School recendy,
was auended by Maurita Miller,
Macel Banon, Pauline Ridcaour.
Maida Mora, Pat Holla', Bette Lou
Dean, wbo introduced the morning
sjJeaker, Mike Duhl, district conservalionist for the soil conscrvalion service, and Maye Mora, elevalional leader. Duhl spoke on Obio
trees and of how valuable they arc
to the environment Ohio trees arc
primarily oaks, hickories, ash
maple, elms and some native or
planted pines. An informative
hand-out was ''Tips on Ohio Tree
IdenlifJCBiion" by David F. Bema.
foresrer-soil conservation service.

"A Tribu1e to Spring" was Mrs.
Mora's devotional theme, a read·
ing, "The White Mapolia Tree"
honored Arbor and lilr1b Day.
A workshop wu held receally
81 the home of Edna Wood ID make
small decorative flU u 8e8110nal
decorations for the grape-vine
wreaths takc.n to Overbrook at
Christmas. Working on this club
project were Eleanor Knif.n. Bette
Lou Dean. Pat Holter, Maida Mcra.
Clarice Xrau~. the boslese, Mrs.
Wood, and paa, Olarlolle Elbcr·
feld and Manila Slruble.
The June S meetiilg will be at
the home of Macel BariDo llld will
include a dernons111tion "Tum of
the Century • Rose Topiary" by Pat
Holrer.
·

Racine Grange guests at Rock Springs ,
The Rock Springs· Grange was ·
host to the Racine Grange when
they met recently.
Dorothy Smith;' master of
Racine. was iniroduced and spoke ·
briefly.
Barbara Fry gave instructions on
the contests and reponed tluU she
had tun!ed.in 48 pair of eyeglasses
to Pomona Grange to be taken to
Deputies Conference.
Opal Grueser, legislative chairman, gave a repon on the legislative conference she attended at
Ftiendly HHis Camp. Education
and the environment were some of

the topics discussed.

Bunny Kuhl, deaf activities
chairman, reported_that she gave a
sign language program at Star
Grange.
Members will meet Thursday to
mow and clean at the spring site.
It was reponed that Frederick
Goeglein is ill.
·
Emma Adams, lecturer for
Racine Grange presented the program with readings "Born Before
1945" by Dorothy Smith; "Who
Am I?" by Emma Adams; "How io
Be a Good Wife" by Debbie Harris; "How to be a Good Husband"

by Charles Yost; "Flower Sack
Underwear" by Anita Yost; a sldt
by Mary Eastenlay and Anita y 0$1;
"Reminiscing" by Dorothy Smith;
"A Little Mixed Up" bv Hillary
Hanis; "Mother's Apron" by Debbie Harris; "Remember" by Emma
Adams; all members partic~p~ted in
a song contest; "It Takes Time to
Create a Mother" by Emma
Adams.
,
Refreshments were served following the meetinj!. .
;Jbe Rock Spnngs Grange will
visit Hemlock Grove Grange on
Saturday.

.1\IHday, May 14, 1991

.Community calendar

Chester Garden Club take May tours
- The May meeting of Chester
Garden Club included a tour of
Harris farms new cut flower facility and green house. Eleven memben and guest. Rose Mary Keller,
enjoyed a guided tour of the growing areas including the new germination building, where controlled
atmospheric conditions hasten
growth by two wcclcs. Each member was gi'vcn a potted tuberous
begonia with her purchase. Dinner·
at Ravenswood completed the evening.
·
The tour to Wahkeena Nature
Preserve was attended -by Bette
Lou Dean, Pauline Ridenour, Maurita Miller, Shelia Curtis, Gladys
Cummings and her grandson, Breyden Haptonstall. Two highlights
were the Lady Slipper Orchid areas

1\leadal, May 14, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, OhiO

Commualty Calndar Item~
ap)ICI!' two daJIIMfore u event
and the clay of tllat eveat. Items
mlllt be received weD In adVIIIICt
to 8S8Ure publication In tlae cal·
endar.

formance by lhe Rio Grande University Grande Clonic oo Tueaday
at 1p.m. The J?Ublic is invi led and a
free will offermg will be taken.
POMEROY • Pomeroy Nursing

and RehabiliiiWon Center will host

TUESDAY
RACINE • Racine Lodge No.
461 F &amp; AM will meet Tuesday 81
7:30 p.m. Work in tile fellow Craft
degree. AU master masons invited
to 81tend.
LONG BOTTOM • Mt. Olive
Community Chun:h iJ! Lon11 Bottom will have revival tiiiOUgb Sun- ·
day at 7 p.m. P~tor Lawrence
Bush invites the )l!lbliC. ·
POMEROY • The Ohio Eta Phi
Chaprer, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority
will meet Tuesday • 7 p.m. at tile
Meigs Cow!ty Poblii: Liblary.
POMEROY • The Pomeroy
Flame Fellowship will meet Tues·
day at 7 p.m. Speaker will be Gary
Hines of the New Life Convenant
Church of God in Chester. The
public is invited.
POMEROY • The Meigs Coun·.
ty Board of Hc8Jth will meet Tues·
day at 4:30 Jl.m. at the Meigs
County Multi-PUrpose Building.

a minister's luncheon on Tuesday
at noon to honor all ministers wbo
speak at the facility.

Names in the news·--~hiatric-:-.
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) Amy Grant says having her single
"Baby Baby" at lhe top of the pop
charts for two weeks doesn't get
the lalllldry done.
"After it went No. 1, I said,
'Wh~t. and I don't wake up to
clean l,aundry'l This doesn't magically clean the bowie?" • the singer
said.
"There's one level that's so
exhilarating, and at the same time,
day-to-day life is CKacdy the same.
And I wouldn't want it to be any ·
other way really," the mother of
two said.
"Baby Baby" is the rust single
from her album "Heart in

A formal Bnglish tea will ~e
served. Mn. ROnald Reynolds will
review "The Wind at Moning."
RoD call will be ua hislorical dream
unfulfilled.
MIDDLEPORT - The MiddleCouncil will host a mop ,
doll cl8Ss on Wednesday from 10
a.m. to 7 p.m.
port Arts

HARRISONVILLE • 11ie Har·
risonviue Senior Citizens will hold
SYRACUSE • The Third
a blood pre5SW'C clinic on Tuesday Wednesday Homemakm Club will
from 10 a.m. ro noon. A potluck for leave the municipal buildiJI..&amp;. in
members will be held after the clin~ Syracuse on W~y 81 ~m.
ic. All members are urged to for the annual spnng mp.
,
auend.
.
..
.
THURSDAY
RACINE- The Southern Local
School District elementary bands
RACINE • The Racine AnJeri •
wiij ~t their annual -concen on can Legion Post 602 will meet
'Tuesday at7:30 p.m. in the South- ·Thursday at 7:30 p.m. Refresh·
ern High School gymn. The public . ments will be served after the meetis invited. The band is under the ing.
directioo of Thomas Walrm.
M-G-M AREA - Support group • .
POMEROY • The_Xi Gamma meeting for members of the comMu ChaPICJ', Bela Sigma Phi Soror· . munity affected by domestic vioity will meet Tuesday 81 7 p.m. at lence will be held Thursday from.f.
the home of A.R. Knight in 5-7 p.m. sponsored by Serenity ~ ·
Pomeroy for the end-of-year pic- House. Call Crisisline and ask for ~
nic.
Serenity House .
•

Motion.••
The former gospel star said she

knew the song would be a smash
the fii'St lime she heard the music
by Keith Thomas. She wrote the
lyrics.
"You can just hear a
sometimes and know,

(AP) - Actor

.

; By DEBORAH HASTINGS
television. t~ey were already Grammer, ex-"Rifleman" Chuck
AP Television Writer
known to radio audiences across · .Connors and Vegas crooner Robert
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Some- the country who tuned in national Goulet.
times when television runs out of network broadcasts. ·
Their humor runs a gamut from
ideas. it turns on the radio.
Radio doesn't function that way sweet to sophomoric. On V&amp;Ien· The Golden Age of Television anymore. It is basically a local tine's Day, the pair convinced
was filled with radio legends- medium now. And in the cut-throat Goulet to serenade downtown L.A.
tUrned· TV stars, including Lucille competitiveness of 1990s televi- from a helicoprer.
Ball, Jack Benny, Milton Berle and sion, more than three-fourths of an .Thompson and Phelps' TV
Bob Hope.
new shows fail.
show is cumntly in production and
Times have changed Today ·we
Thompson and Phelps know will debut this summer or fall. Shot
have Mark and Brian.
this. They hope it doesn't happen to in documentary ·style, the series
~ Mark Thompson and Brian them.
chronicles the duo experiencing a
Phelps host the No. I morning
''There is a pretty big failure different wild and crazy thing each
radio show in Los Angeles. Their rate," Phelps saJd during a recent ~.
.
'
ac!,vertisements are plastmd across break in taping "The Adventures .
So far they have become circus
' ci'Y bllSCS and billboards. Their on- of Mark and Brian." "If we try It, lllpeze anists (son of) and sung
ai{ antics are frequent subjects of tool, and if it fails, OK.' We just
with the Temp1alions (sort of).
·
warer-coo.ler chatter.
don't want the radio show to fail." · Elsewhere in television ...
In Southern California, that is.
Thompson chimed in, "If we do
DON'T . HAVE A. KOALA
In the rest of the country, most peo- ·'fail, at least we tried SOillelhing dif. · BEAR, MAN - Twentieth Centuplehaveneverhcardofthem.
ferent, We didn't go down doing ry Fox Film Corp. ·and "SimpNow NBC has giveri them their the same thing that everybody else sons" creator Mau Groening sucown, prime-time television show.
is doing."
·
cessfully sued an Australian pubThompson and Phelps are not
For the past four years, Phelps lisher thu distributed a magazine
the only local disc jockeys to be and Thompson have been filling devOied to the animated TV f1111ily.
given a network series in recent the 6 a.m. to 10 a.m. weekday slot The plaintiffs said the ma~:ne
years. They are, however, the · on' KLOS-FM. They are a local was not approved by Fox or
nnewest recipients and though radio . phenomenon ~nd count amon1 . ing. ~ a SCJliiBIC, out of court setcomedians once srepped in10 televi- their fans NBC ~ntertainment Jrisa· tlement, a publisher of tecn-a$e
sion with great success, few do so dent Warren Littlefield, outgoing magazines also qreed 10 SlOp disnow.
NBC enlertaiQment group president tributing an Ausllllian publication
~ The reasons arc fairly simple. In Brandon Tanikoff, actress Dana that contained unauthorized reprothe 1940s and 19S0s, when Ball . Delany, "Cheers" star Kelsey ductions of "The Simpsons" clan.
~d Benny brought their talents to
y"~ • •

~·-:·&lt;~;".~·

.. J'

Aicc Baldwin said "The Marrying
Man" wai the biggest blunder of

POMEROY • The Meigs Coun- ~
ty Democralic Bxeculive Commit· !
tee will meet Thursday at 7:30p.m. l
81 the Carpenter's Hall in Pomeroy. ,
'.

his career, and he blames Disney
for the movie's failure.
"A Disney movie is c~, and
looks cheap, .. Baldwin said 1ft this
week's Entertainment Weekly
mllpZine. '

a foe of mandlitory helmet laws,
saying such laws infringe on ~
dom of choice. He wasn't wea'lllg
a helmet when he slammed head
rust into a curb.
"He now wears a helmet all the
time and so docs liis 19-year-old
son, Jake.~' said Busey~s publicist,

He said the studio refused to
IDake promised changes .in the Neil Paul Bloch.
Simon script
"Disney is about a bunch of
guys who took the real creative
beauty of a lefindary studio and in
10 minutes stnp-mined the (stuffm- .
gs) out of it and lined their own
pockets," Baldwin said.
· "'The Manying Man' was the
biggest mistake of my career," he

,tion.

LOS ANOBLES (AP) -

'

and played ceAterfield this year at .
Kentucky Christian College
received All-Region Honorable ,
Mention. Snyder and Chris Srewart
helped KCC Knights to an 11-9

record. The Knights beat Grace and
then were be8len by Indiana Wes-

leyan aitd Spring Arbor·Michigan ·
in the regionals to end their season.

•

,

Card of Thanks

H•PPV Ads

In .,emoriam

YiWd Salus

•

Cicadas: if you can't beat 'em, eat 'em

.

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)
- Tlie cicadas that emerge every
17,years are tq!Uisive to some people, but Douj!lass Miller finds the
big, brown msects with big red

eyes appetizing,
-"My daugiiter bftiught her date

here for supper before the ~rom·
and I served them as hors d ocu•
vres," Miller said. "And they ate
them.
"It's a wonderful way to get
pqtfn."
,
He ayslhey tas1e like shrimp.
Cicadas usually live underGRAND PRAIRIE, Texas (AP)
ground In a larvae-like nymph - A seventh.grader briefly held a
·Slip and CllleriC every J,7 years to
teacher hostap Monday
•
m•. This is the year in western two shots at an a'8i""M
and
the
ICbool
was
C¥ICUIIed
w
w• Vlqicia IIIII J*U of eu1em
police D'l JCiMCd with die boy.
JCenlllt:y IIIII ....
T Ohio.
The student freed the Jack100
7'111i iplay lep • I)Piphi n
Middle
School teacher about an
tiqd ot.bard on lhe.IIOIIIacb lin·

'

· Armed student holds teacher hostage

a

.

'

l,.

hour after he entered the adminis·
trative offkc area with a gun, said
Katherine Oates of the Grand
Prairie Independent School Dis-

lricL

Hunclrcds of IIUdents were evacuated to a II)'IIIIIUium at a nearby
high achool, she Slid.

LOS ANOBLES (AP) - Gary
Buaey, who was nearly·ldlled two
years ago wben be tumbled from
his momytlc, hu done a helmet
IU1'II8lOUIIII, Dying it' a time for llilcers to 111e their heads.
"MOll imponandy u an adult
you should let an example for ifOIII'
chlldren by wearing a helmet HeJ.
mell should be mandatory,'' the
46-year-old actor taid Monday
from Australia, where be's vaca·tioning.

NOW OPEN FOR THE
SPRINI SEASON
Complete line l!f V9tablt
allll lhdlfhlg Plantt.
llootnlng and Folage
llanghtg BaRth, Fruit Gild
FloWII'lag , .........
Azaleas, llhail•~•llllrons and

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

Hullbard's Gr1anhouH
SYRACUSE. OHIO

882-15778
Open Dally 9-51 Sin. 1-S

cvhO- you are not chlrgod for
your flrll ec..-t. thet•a al*:tlve

.,

Immediately. too. T.....'l no thrM
y-waltlngperlodtDquallfy,once
you own 1 M1d11J1t policy.

.,

912

388 Vinton

985
843
247
949 ·
742
66 7

379 Walnut

$6.00
$9.00
. $13.00
$1.30/day

.30

Announceme111s
1 Card ol Th.nb
2 In Memory
3 Annoucemen\1

.42
.60
.05/ day

4

GN8M'VI'f

5 H1ppy Ads

6 lasi and FoUnd
1

Y«d Sale (plid tn actv•ncel

8

Public Sale &amp; Aut::1Klon

Mason Co , WV
, Area Code 304

Middlapon
Pom1roy

Ch•ler
Ponlancl
Letart Falls
Rac~ne

Rull.,d
CooiYill~

St•r V II:&gt;JS
H.. p Want lid
Si1uation W.nted
Insurance
Busln•• Tr-'t11ng
Schools &amp; lnsuucuon
16 Radio. TV &amp; CB AftPIIIf
17 Miscellan..aus
1~ w..1ted To Do

11
12
1J
14
1&amp;

Pt Plea.nl
Leon

676
458
S76
882
895

New H1ven
Let•t
Bulll•o

937

4~

21
22

23

Suainas t&gt;pponun•tv
Mon~ to ~oan
P,of•MOnlll Ser\IICft

72 THICkS for Sitle

Furnished Rooms

13

V~tns&amp;4WO ' s

7~

Mota~cycl•

75
76
17
78
79

Bu11ts&amp; Motors for Sale
Auto Parts &amp; ACCDISOflllilo
Auto Repair
Camp~ng Eqmpnurni
Campers • Motor Honws

Serv1ces

HouMhold Goods

52 - Sporting Gooch
53 Antiques

81
82

Mile. Merchandtle
Building Suppli•

83

56
67
58

Pets tor S1le
Musical Instruments
fru1t1 &amp; Vegt:ltabl•

59

For S.te 01

Tro~de

l

71 - Autos to• hht

Merr.hilmilse

· ,56

._,,y

Transporlal ion

HOUMI for Rent
Mobile Homes for Rurlt

46 SpiCe lor Rent
47 Wanted to Rent
48 EqutPment tor Rum
49 For leaaa

51

I

hrm Equrpmunt

62 Wanted to
63 Liveuock
64 Hay &amp; Grain
65 Sued &amp; hrt1l11er

43 hrms tor A4mt.
44 A~rlm~t tor Aunt

54

Apple G•ove

773 Ma1on

61

l;di)l'l
~1

Su~Jil\ies

I&gt; L1veslock

31 · Hon'" lor Sele
32 Mobii•Homntor Sal~
33 folfrma tor Sale
Jl Busin•• Buildingt.
35 lots • Acreage' ·
36 R ..l E1t1t1 w.,ted

9 WIM"It.-d1o 8uv

flllploylnt:lll

Fann

Real Eslale

84
86
86
87

·

Home lnlprowemenh
Plumbing &amp; He•rnu
h.CIIIIIing '
~ledric .. &amp; RttlugBft~t•on
G•meral Haulmy
Mobile Humv Rvpau
Upholstorv

.•
·"

Business Services
t:teAUIIt

SIGNS

by tldc HtDhfll¥

~9"frby
~UALITY
Poinl

The pnce has been reduced to
$81,900 and owner financ1ng of up
lo 80% of purchase amount may be
possibl~ lor qualifying person to
buy very mce large home on 3\S
acres in Racine. 4 BR, 3 baths; 2
garages, rented 1 BR apt. Property
includes 4,800 sq. ft. farm bldg.
and mobile home.

CARPENTER SERVICE
-fnHMft •
-G,__,.

Jd'tlcMI

- 1 - end Plumblnll
~--WD,.

-lloottne

........
-~-···-

Call 614-992-7104 for Appt.

(FIIEE ESTIMATEII

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992•621 s

,_.,,Ohio

11-14.'90 lfn

20 YEARI EX,,/PR!E 111:

Clllllew for ...

Ual'rin

741-2J60

Til-COUNTY
SANnAnON
742-26811

the

110 JOI 1DO SMAll.

c:::lasslftedsl

Fll&amp; ESTWATES

CIDAI
CONSTIUaiON
992-6641 ar

PubliC NotiCe
1G1PPI7PIFN142018

Public NotiCe
I

PUBLIC NOTICE
The Termo of the Nil ere
INe-y, May 16, en
h.
1991, II 10:00 A.M. the
The Home Netlonel lank
Hllmtl Notional lenk wHI of.
r.-v•• .... right to reject
fer for oale 11 Public Auction
any
or all bldo. The Home
thla followinG :
Natlonel . _ _
.. the
1987 FORb TAURUS ~ righa to , _ . eny of the
,Dr. Sedan 1 FAIPII3UX .
- · nemt1d vahlcleo from
HA223112
thenle II anytime.
1988 GMC Convoralon Van .(41
7, s. 8. 10. , 2. 13. 14.
~GDEG21HIJ41107021 7tc
1985 CHEV. Camero Z21.

5

111111

MIUSTIIIS

Happy Ads

247-4035

s. •. "'·
...... Oia.

52100

·'•

4112/'11/1

ROGAN ~ l
ER
!~,

.......
41C•••I•te

luuruce Services :.

COIISIIUC110N

•

etiewl11 II

••

•''•

•

lelllldllltltl

•

•'
'

lep"81rtll..f
We Len Wei,

•••· ... ;.-.II

...t&amp;Utti1011

LM.

------~ 'l

r

s..,acua•••

"It', ICat• to
Bt17''

GOlF LESSONS •• S10 ea.
·
6 lor SSS
NEW GRIPS ••••• - ...... 14
lroktn Cl•• Repaired
TIOI'IIIES • PlAQUES
IADGES

JOIN 'IIAFOID
s-t c.., IlL, a.•••

4/3/t 110.

'· '

\

nnms-s us .,

205 N. S«ond Strut
II\IODliPOIT, OHIO 45760

Office 614·992-2116
HOME 614-992-5692
DOmE

LANDCLEARING'.

•cao OVIIIS-$19 .,

WATER and SEWER
UNES

KEN'S APPliANCE
SERVKE

DIIW TIUCIS
AYAUilE

992-5335 • 915-3561

FREE ESTIMATES

Acron From P'olt OHko
POMPOY, OHO
10130fll tin

992-7458
4-21·11· t mo. pd.

t------:---..
."
WHALEJ;S
AUTO PAITS
Specializing ill

Cuttolll Fr-• l~palr
NEW. USED PARTS

FOil

ALL MAKES •

I\40DELS

992·7013
or 992-5553
01 YOU Fill
1-IG0-141-0070
OAIWij, OHIO
l/11'91/1 mo.

- - ··· --- .

SPEEDY VAC

Owner &amp; Operator

Quality
Sweeper
Repair

614-992-6820

698-6591

Complete Grooming
For All Breeds

EMILEE MERINAR .
Pontll'oy,

'We Need

BACKHOE WORK.
HOME liTES,

.,

...

·

•VINYL SIDING
. •ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION ·

•
•

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
••• . _ lllllt

•
•

"FrH Ealmotea"

Pl. 949-2101
or les. 949-2160

·'•

NO SUNDAY CAUS

•·•· '90·1 ....

3·tt·tln

•

•RHaonlble Rot•
oOuitlhy Work
•FrH Eatlmetea
•Cerget Hoa Fpt Dry

nme

•High Glon on Tile
Floor Flnleh

MillE mm, o. ...
II. 1, lutlaaaall, OH.

3·14.'91-tln

Howard

i. Wrltenl

ROOFING

MICROWAVE
OVEN UPAII
AUIIADS
lrfllllt .. OrWt
Plcll lp.

KEN'S APPUANCE
SIIYICI
992·5335 or
915·1561

Acreu p,.. ,... Office
211 r; ~~noaa~ st.
,.....,, 011111
311/10/tln

LINDA''$
PAINTING

Guttare

l•torler • l1ttrlor
F-ISMIRS
Tokt the plin out of

Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

painting.
lt1 mt .. it for you.
VIIY BASOIIULI

FREE ESTIMATES

HIVIIIfi-CIS
(6141 915-4110

NEW -IEPAII

949·2168

SHIUI &amp; TilE
111M and
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........1.....

915·4473
667·6179

USED RAIIOAD TIES

---

IAIIIIIS-O...Ioc.-$12~

BULLDOZER and

Slit

BILL SLACK

Jl.'tolla

mo . pd.

WASIIIIS-$100 .,
IIYIS-$6t.,
llfiiiiUTOIS-$100.,

GROOM
ROOM

4·1·11-1 MO. pd.

•ssm &amp; IUID

817/ '81/1

COUmY CLUI

co••·s

N- Open For Sprln1l
OHirb l'lenlo ............
•E..toatlngo
Craftero. Grow vou own
dried mtllrlalo.
Open Thun. thru Set.
10..1; Sun. 12·11

After 5 p.m.

HOWARD BROS.
. EXCAVATING

to oar wuu•rr

THE

742-2451
01110 IIYR JailS

992-6434

ISED APPUMCIS

THI

IIOIIPIJI\IIIn •
CAIPIT CUAIIIS
Olld nu fLOOI CAll

•Roofing
•Siding
•Peinting

Bead

PROFESSIONAL
SUNROOF
INSUUnON
Contact
STEVE WHITE

4·23· t mo. pd.

Home· Repelrs

Happy Ads

'.

. . . . . . . . . lr.....

eR•mod•llng and

3

.•'

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

1111 I UWII CAR

SEPnC TANK PUiifiNG
PORT·A-JOHN RENTAL

YOUNG'S

.,•

992-8887

441 G..tlipalis
317 Ch•tWe
246 Rio Gro~nde
261 Guyan Ois1.
643 Arabia Diu

Call uo thlo car ln..,ence •
brMidhrolltlh for - · drlv••·
t

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY

.20

Meigs Countv
Ata'a Code 614

···-

PRICE REDUCED -'-PARTIAL OWNER
FINANCING AVAILABLE! .

y-•

cicadas into omelets, tacos, salads
and in stir fry dishes. His cicada
horsd'oeuvn:s are made by dipping l:,
them in egg batter and deep-frying
them.
lte also suggests sprinkling
baked.. sugarcoated cicadas over ice · li~ movie, "Our sons," wm
be broadca11 May 19 on ABC.
cream.

.

84 .00

:fullowiiiJ{ i '''''l'h'i'"' t•xdwrrgt'L.
G•U11 COt.tnty
Arh Cod• 814

2 .00 PM . TUESDAY
Z.OO p
z ·. OO

THIS l"xl"
BULLETIN BOARD
SPACE AVAILABLE
AT $5.00 PER DAY

~

"She is complicated and she's graduates are. needed. lnf0111)8UOn
:judiced " she said of her char· may be submitted to Klnr Willford
prettr Lualine Barnes "She rejects who can be contacted at 742-2103
O-wn 1011, disowns him. It shows or the Birchfield Funeral Home,
you.the futility of it and how you7f4'"'2-,_2...
33_3._ _ _ _ __;,,
never have 11 chance 10 make up tbe

ing," said Miller, who WOib in the
en10mology llbo11101y of die U.S.
Department of Agriculture in
Beltsville, Md.
''The best ones are die ones that
come out at nlaht becanse they've
just come out fX their shells.''
Miller has experimented IOISing

o,..r 16 WQids

R•t•

Cla.~.~ifit•tl I'"~'''·~ t•m•t•r tl11•

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

MCGS to meet .

.

JI!II••••••••••

Raeillleii'iianii.. . . . . . .

. • The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

..

BULLETIN- BOARD

'

·

are

.~::::SU:N:O:A:Y:PA:P:ER==·~===z=a=O=P=M=·=FR=I=DA:Y:=::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~'~ :

don for pancreatic cam:er says it
••
isn 'I fair to speculate about how
••
lollfl the actor hu 10 live.
•
'It angers me to .have people
The Meigs County Genealogical •
establishing a prognosis for
Society will meet Sunday at 2 p.m. -~
JULIE ANDREWS
Michael, people who have never
at the Meigs Musewn.
seen him ·and are unfamiliar with
his treatment." said Dr. Cary Pre· · - M ·
·
sant "It also angers Michael. He's
ezgs announce
ments
expreased that 10 me.''
Presant, chairman of the Los
Guest speaker
Kenneth Hoffman, son of Uoyd ;.•'
Angeles Oncologic lllstiblle 81 St
Rev. Eddie Buffmgton GallipoHoffman, Pomeroy, WIIS recendy ~
Vincent Medical Center, !old a lis, will be the guest speaker at the
selected nunc ot the year for Chil- r,
news conference that the specula- 'Naomi Baptist Chun:h m·Pomeroy
dren's Hospital in Columbus.
~
lion had been published. He didn't. on Sunday at II a.m. Rev. S.J.
The selection was made be the ~
cite specific examples.
.
. Jackson invites the public to attend.
staff physician~ for the hospital and "
"I don't think that you can esubased on clinical perfonnanee, pro- ~
mate how long an individual is
Smo!'I8Sbord planned
fessional leadership and interac- •
going to live and I think it's unfair
The Long Bottom Community
lions with staff and patients. Over ~
to tell a patient, 'You're going to Association will host a smorgas700 nursers are eligible to be ::
live this long or that long,"' Pre- bord dinner on Saturdar at 5 p.m.
selected for the award.
~
sant said.
.
at the community buildiiiJI. Cost ,iN
Hoffman, a registered nurse in :•
Landon, 54, who h8S pancreatic $5 for adults and children under 12,
the ~rgency trauma department, ·' .
cimccr, is receiving an experimen- $2.50.
is
a 197S grad1181e of Meigs High ~
Menu includes ham, chicktal thempy called DaunoXome. The en, noodles,
dressing and other
School and a 1990 holiors graduate ·
treatment involves in~ting micro- enlreeS and desserts.
Public
is
invitof
ColumbUs Conununity College. ;
scopic fat bubbles With anti-cancer
ed.
He
hu been employed by the hos- •
drugs and administering them Intrapital
for one year.
·
venously into the pdient
Inrormation
needed
'
The doctor said Llmdon 's nunor
The Southern High School Oass
had neither grown nor shrunk since
of 1981 is seeking information on
the novel treatment began May 2.
4tlftrl
...Landon, who starred in televi- one of its graduares, William "Bill"
Morris.
Anyone
having
any
inforsion's "Bonanza," "Litde House
4ttlrfl .,•••
on the Prairie" and "Highway to mation on Morris should contact
Heaven," was diagnosed with_Can· Tammy Chapman 81949-2963.
There lllauld be opeal~ - lnour·
1nce for more m11ture ufer ilrlv.....
cer in early April.
AppUeatlons available
Nowtherwlo: .
' RADNOR, Pa. (AP) _ Julie
Carleton College Scholarship
•
It'a State Auto Compenlea' Medal·
Andrews said she isn't af,aid of her applications .are now available for
lot Auto policy.
new television movie role as the S'yracuse residents. Applications
If yau have had no vlolatlono or ol·
mother of a gay man dying of ~Y be picked~ at the J~ Lisle
end
fault acclclento for'th,..
AIDS.
residenFceurlh,12~ , hurch.St m Syrabc·
are at le11t 25 yMroold. ~·could
Ann-Margret co·stars as the cnse:
er m.~rma~on may
be quallfted to become 1 Medal lot ''
mother of the man's lover.
·
obtatned by calhng L1sle at 992-policy holder. enjoying opiOial, rw· ·•:
duced
ret...
,.,
. "I want this movie to helc reach . SOil.
.,
And If you are mlddl•aoed 1411·
kids to be m&lt;n careful and et parR 1.... Ia ed
eun vu p an
1141. you'll set the blggoot rita
DIS kno that -~ey can't turn .....ir
e
w
u•
'""
'Ill M · Hi h S )lool Class f
brMkofall,
•r
backs on~ they love,'' ~~ · 1982 ~s pi:nin: itsciOtli reuni~n
Whet' I more, a1 a MedalIll poll•
Andrews llald m the May 18 ISSUC next year Names and addresses ·of
ofTVOuide. '

Drama Desk aWIId.

42

OAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
11 :00 A.M . SATURDAY

.. HillAY PAPER

ilion eoolel', CllarUe Sbutblln, Muon, W. Va.,
a crock pot; Areal Brlddes, Middleport, an Iced
tea pot; Clara Wile, Shade, a tabletop gril~ and
Betty Sayre, Raclae, dustbuster sweeper. Wla- .
ners may pick up tbelr prizes at the hospital
lobby.

PRIZES AWARDED • Scott Laeas, A.c!mlalatntor at Veterau Memorial H•pltal, uslsted
by Administrative Aaslstant Doris lhle, Is pictured selectlna wlnaers of door prizes being
aWIIrded as a part Ot tile
annual open
llouse
durlna
Week, May

'I

PER
2
.
0
0
PM.
MONDAY
WEDNESOAV
PAPER
WEDNESDAY
THURSDAY PAPER
P.M
M
THUASOAV

MONDAY PAPER
p
TUESDAY A

.,,.,.,,.4 ,.4 ,.,..

Mlc1aelle Buckley, Rlkl Barrln1er, Marvin
Edwards and Martie Holter. Tblrd row, left to
riabt, are Jonathan Douglas, David Baker,
Robert Harrll, Dnld Sobieski, Adam L.
McDaniel, and Tim Epling.

"Six Degrees of Separation" is
about a con artist who dupes severa1 wealthy New Yorkers. Among
its competition was Neil Simon's
"Lost in Yonkers," which won the
Pulitzer Prize and on Sunday won a

Ratn ..-o ,.,.. cOnMcutNe ,una. broken updily_s wtll be thll'ged
tor elth d&amp;¥ as. nparate ads,

'

COPV DEAOI.INE

•

Stepbaille Evau. Sec:oad row, left to rlabt, are

·. ·

w1U 06 tsu oappur 111 thtt Pt Piuaaam RV1t•stur and lhtt G.U•
poll~ Oa•IV Tr1bunu. machmg Ovtlr 18.000 hornn,

Hoffffian is honored

. SCIENCE FAIR HONOREES. These
rourth, nnh and sixth 1raders at Riverview
Scbool were recognized at Riverview's Sc:leilce
and Art Fair on Moaday.l&gt;tctured, kncellJII, are
Jerrrey Kimes, Wesley Kanawalsky, and

6

10
Monthly

• A cl;asdted t~dvt!rtllttlnetlt plac11tl m lhe Da•IV Stml•nt!l_ltUl ·
t!rpl
clitS!IUhud d1splory , Businuss Card ••nd legit~ nollcdl

"Case of the Cosmic Comet" ~
and Dr. Seuss' "Cat in the Hat" •
will be shown 81 lbe Meigs County· ~
Public Library in Pomeroy on Sat- :
urday 81 2 p.m. llld 81 the Middle- :
port Library on t.~OIIda~ .111 7..p.m. J
for all area children.
'

A

3

• Rect!lll't! S. 60 di5Counl for 11df p1id 1n advance.
"Free ads
Giveaway and Found ads under 1 &amp; wotds wtll be
·run 3 d._,s at no ch•ge.
,
·
'Pt•c;tt ot o~d for all co~pilo~llethus is doublu pr1ce oi.Jd cost .
•7 pomt lme type only used
,
'Sentinel ""ol , .. pon•ible tor errors ilf1trr fnlil ~.V - tCh•ck
tor en on first d-v old runt "' p~ur) . Call belore 2 .00 p .nt.
dil'f iiUur publ•cilllion to mo~ktt correct•qJ'
• Ads that must be patd m adv~mcu ar-'

•

doctor who's trc8ling Michael Lan-

.

pa.d.

Movies to. be shown .•••

(

1

ClOSED SUNDAy

POLICIES

It lias been reported that
Leonard Bass, Syracuse, is critically ill and is confined to Camden
c~ Memorial Hospital in Parkersburg, W.Va. Cards may be sent
to him in Room 303A,. He has been
confined 10 the hospital since April
26.
.

Baldwin called Disney Studios
Chairman Jeffre~!!.tzertberg "the
y."
· eighth dwarfBaldwin and Kim Basinger, his
co-star in the comedy, are "a couple of irresponsible actors,"
Katzenberg said without elabora-

l

_

Words
15
16
16
15
16

Days

' • A'd s outsidu Me1g1, Gallia or MuU" Counti• mu11 bu. pre ·

Bass hospitalized

added.

Own."

•

RATES

TO PlACE AN AD CAll 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 ,,M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

'.

urban Culver City, Busey remained

NEW YORK (AP) - John
Guare's "Six Degrees of Sepaulion" was named tile best play of
the 1990-91 thcarer season by the
New YOlk Drama Critics' Clrele.
"Our Country's Good" by Timberlake Wertenblktr was picked as
best foreign plar,. ancl "The Will
Rogers Follies, • a Ziegfeld-like
song-aad-dance extravaganza
directed by Tommy Tunc, won as
best musical.
A special citation Monday went
to Eileen Atlcins for her porlllyal
of virginia Woolf in the onewoman show "A Room of One's

BANGOR, Maine (AP) - A
26-year-old man hu pleaded inDocent to charges he broke into the
home of horror writer Stephen
King. •
Erik Keene of San Antonio also
pleaded innocent by reason of
Insanity Monday to a charae of let·
rorizing King's wife, Tabiilta.
· Keene was arrested April 20
after he broke a window and
entered King's Bangor home carrying a phony bomb, police said.
Defense attorney Mark Perry
said Keene believes King's best
seller "Misery" was based on
Keene's aunt, a baby-killer serving
a 99-year sentence.
Perry said Keene told,.him he
had written a sequel and had been
!rying unsuccessf= to persuade
King to help get it lished.
Keene was ordered to undergo a

Classifie

-People in the news- ~~~~:~~~c;:~~:ion ~
'ffo longer the
Golden
Age
of
television
LoS ANGELES
Afier the 1988 accident in subJoey Snyder, who batted 357 :.
•

~is fit to stand

when it's u unique u this one/'
Grant said.

ll-11.

•

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - The MiddlePOMEROY- The Meigs Coun- '))Ort Li~erary Club will meet
ty 'Senior Citizens will host a pa:- Wedneday at 1:30 p.J:II. Mrs.

to---:-determine~.
trial.

-evaluati:--..-.on

Georp Hackett will be the hostess.

992-2269
1·11·10-lfn

4-23· 1 mo. pd.

BISSELL
8UILDEIS
CUSTOM llaT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At 1-lllltle Pricta"
PIL 949·2101
or ••· 949·2160
DGy II' Nltht

.

NO SUNDAY CAW

STEWART'S
GUNS &amp; SUPPLIES

il Mlilll''"

..IY ISIU •IIADI

UPHOLSTDY

OPEN
Tundey thru Saturday

211·111. Stc...tl

Mltltlltptrt
Hand Tufting
Cultom Drapea

10:00 am-11:00 pm

2'/t MI. oufli•
lutl•d on lhll!l

614·992-2321
We lay Willi WI Do.

u-111.5·10· 11-1111.

·we Do What 10.11-1
wa a..,.
...
•Room Addition•
oGeregea
· oKitchena • letha
•VInyl Siding
•R•torotlon
•Repair Work
•Lend-ping •G,.dlng

J&amp;L
•
INSULATION .
•VInvl Sldlno
..
•Rtplecement
Wlndowa
•Roofing
•lnautatlon

JAMES UISIE

742-2421

36 Yeon Eaperleeoe

.....--~--r ··

992-2172 or
742-2251

539 Bryan Place
Middleport. Ohio
tH4·Hn

•

All COHDIIIONEIS • IIAT PUMPS and
. F...NACES
. FOR. MOM!
. .&amp;..DOUilEWIDE
. . . . ... .HOMES
.
MO.LE HOME

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

L L. MASH

. ....

BENNETT'S ·":::t::a'

CAIPENTIY
992-5526

Loc41ted 0• S.Hord Sdtoel ltl. aft lt. 1•1

PO.IOY, OHIO ·
f-11·11·1••·

16141446·9416 ... 1·100-171·5967

APPALACHIAN
WATEI
HAULING

WE DO

POOlS,

ROOFING

AND IVEinHING UNDERNEATH

CISTERNS, ETC.
1,625 GAL.-135-$45
lt. 1, ... 71·1
IUJLMD,
OliO 45171·9616

ISTIIIABS

614·70·1tt4

4·21·11 . 1 .... ,..,

7
(

\

..•

I

"

�'

llJIIdly, May 14,1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

44

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100 ,.... olcl. 11+111'
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ro-

2101 Uncoln An,
10:00 tHt4:00,

. Pomeroy,
Middleport
a VIcinity

·

Busl .._.....,
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· a. AUction

.........

IUillon ......_ U:na•alt
-VIrginia,

-77W111.

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4 It - , "';,t'1::a"fu'l"'""
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con- 1111 moc111 .... oo
down peymeM. 304o42N330.

• dlpr ttmot-.114-1112·7110.
p.m. 1,.._ IIDI.
I1SAII PLUS CARPET I
CLUNEAS.
Wonted To 1uJ: Junll Woo UPIIOLI1EAY
Prompl jW DI III'Dilll urvlca.
W. honor 11 mup:a11cll curwith
· Colli
1MrJ or
UniJ.IIIIM
11103
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olllmliloo• .,..._...., or 114lQml.

Ttwtllaa Pllatoart~ 10 VHS
Tapo. QuiiJiy YIGIII. Slllollollan
ouo..,.old. With or Wllllullo.
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Coli IM IMIII2, Leo"
........ tf No .......... TMnll
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.,.o:.t::.,'""' 238 Uncoln

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32 Mobile Homes

for Sill
IIDOAEIATII

:;::L-~eon/:..=
Solootton F101t1 Which To
c-.
R .. nolng Anldoblo.
Coli 1-e11.m.1220.
14x70 2 BA, 2 ~••torv• living
100111, tumloxc.
concl., torvo cov•ed
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WELL, TllERE ME THESE
T~REE BROTHERS, SEE, AND...

::"tr:::c\r:-:c ':'!, :1: --:..a::.

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pono, ootoo. Clli
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MJ:y 15,1111
Tl1e year ahead coYid, be an extremely
active one tor you. thanks to several
· new Interests you've nevor been Involved in prevloully, New P:~ and
nl:w :aces are In the oiling.
rd
TAURUI (Aprl :zo.MIIJ2DI Taka aha
tajllc at your buclgel today; you oh~
Ia able to lind ware to trim II 10 you II
be able to aavo 11!01'8 then you hevl

been. laurYs, treat yoyrseld to a birth· day gift. Send do(Taurys' Astro·Graph
predic11ons for the year ahead by mailing S1.25 plus a long, self-addressed, ·
stamped e.nvetope to Astio -Graph, c/o
this newspper, P.O. Box 91428, Cleve·
land. OH 44101·3428 . Be syre to state
your zodiac sign.
OEMitll (MJ:y 21-J- 20) Personal
matters should not be delegated to surrogates today. You'll be much more ef·
fecllve at handling these critical
endeavors .
·
CANCEA (June 21-.IUIJ 22) This could
be the lime to bring In a second party to
accomplish a foot yll\,.ve boon unable
10 do on yoyr own. This moons, however,that you myat be prepared to share
dividends.
LEO (July 2:1-Aug. 22) You may lind
youraetttn a very unique poslllon today,
bringing two ynretated I actions togeth·
er tor something that COYid be mytuatly
beMIICial to all.
VIRGO (Aug. 2:1-lept. 22) In order to
achieve an ob)letlve you YSYally reach bJ rota. you mey hove to put a slightly
dlttorent spin on your tac:llcs today. Be
Imaginative.
LIBIIA &amp;lept. 2:1-0ct. 23) Your greatest
uoo: at this tlme Is your popularity.
Friends will -be In a mood to do thinga
tor you thai thor wouldn't even think ol
dOlnQ tor others.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. ·22) Two re·
warding developments, each oi which
pertains to an involvement with a differen I individual, could YneKpec;ledly oc·
cur today. You should be able to benelli
from both .
·IAGinAAIUS (HOY. 23·Doc. 21) You
shouldn't have much difficulty today
finding a solution to a pJoblem thad's
been vexing you. Your. prior frustrations
may have come from having to choose
between too many good 8/lSWers.
CAPRICOR!I (Dec. 22·Jan. 11) A nYmber of Important tasks tllal you've been
putting ott coYid be attended to ~oday
- iiyouapplyyourself. lf.theseareyour
ptioriiles, prodYCt!YIIy may amaze )I.OU .
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob. 11) Try to dl·
vide your lime equally between two val·
ued trlerrds today. each ot whom are
bidding for your companionship. Being
considerate will avoid hYrting !eellngs.
PIICEI (Feb. 20-Morch 20) Somelimes. our bead resYIIS are adlair:ad by
gelling oul of our own way. This could
be tnJB for you today. let events rYn
their course.
A'AIEI (118n:h 21·Aprli 11) This is a
good day to tocYs your eHorts on negleeled phone calls or le!ll!rs. Thera' s a
llrong posalblity that someone with
whom you lhould communicate has exciting news lor you.

I.

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Vulnerable; Both
Dealer: South
South ,
1t

West

North.
3t

Pass

Ea~t

All pass

Opening )ead: • K
.

the ace of spades; otherwise declarer
would have won the first trick. So he
assumed the two was a count signal.
showing an odd number of spades. He
continued with a low spade, hoping to
cash three tricks in the suit. The COIL·
tract could no longer be defeated. De·
clarer ruffed the third spade, drew
trumps and ran tbe club!'.
The second West trusted his partner
and recognized a discouraging signal
when he saw one. At trick two, he
switched to the nine of hearts. East
won with the jack and led'a low sp.ide
to his partner's queen. Another heart
through the king gave the defenders
the first live tricks.
@ 1111, N€W8PAPER ENTE~IIE AliN.

.

CllD Ill

Anawer to

3S Bridge ot San
Lull36 Ended

1 Ell' a cousin
6 Woman
atumber
12 Antenna
38 Trip
13 Non- .
40 Harvard's
p!oiessionat
rival
14 Flush
41 Decimal unit
15 Publishing
· 42 W. Coaol coil.
blunders
46 Row
16 Stopped
48 Mark17 Seasoning
49 Soil tell hat
18 -and nights
52 Woo taught .
t9 Roman
53 Not oo tight
bronze
54 Edgtl
20 L"lle Caron
55 lmpoaa a Ia•
rote
on
24 Cut
56 Places
26 Proceed
(2 wda.)
DOWN
27 t2, Roman
30 Goodnight,
1 Aclre11 - .
Davia
32 Nocturnal
2 Donkey
bird
3 Moll elderly
33 Curtain pole
4 Filling
34 Boxer lllke
reward
5 Sea eaglo

.-

Prev~ou•

Puzzle

6 Pet poato
7 Nobleman
8 Evergreen
thrub
9 MDa' group
10 Map
abbreviation

Q

c::.

82

• 87

+9 B 5
SOVTH

I!))Newa
ID Nowewatch
9 Mleml Ytco Stereg..
Q!l On Stoge
Q!M-yldno
® Scarecrow ond Mrs. King

~-~YAM IHTIAPIIi. . .
.locitoon, OH 1 - . • .

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72 Tr\lcka for Sale

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IEVANI,
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THEY'RE EATIN' OUT
TONIGHT. CALEB

JET
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CNN Evening Nowa
®700Ciub
10:30 Q!l Crook and Cl:ooe
@ MaJor League laaaball
10:45 (f) MOVIE: AUce SwHt Alice
(2:00)

.BARNEY

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racism.

Cunto ._.,_ntoc
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wort:.
Aoollrlg,'
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tllnat•l Rat.w
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ACROSS

8

WHAR'S YORE
FAMILY, SNUFFY?

EAST

WEST
+KQ7 6

II

10:00 (}) D II)) Shannon'• Dati
Shannon defends a woman
who is charged in a
hit·and-run. Stereo. C
(jJ CllD thlllyaomell:tng
OvertaKing clients' demands
stress Michael to the
breaking point. Stereo. Q
ID Vtainam: A Tata.:olon
lolotJ
(!) The •toa Americans.
Asian-Americans and
Afro-Americans tell stories of

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.AND A HALF "r"E6Q5.. .

PHILLIP
ALDER

The World.Almanac Crossword Puzzle

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PICI(EHS I'UAHITURE

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55

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requires efficient signaling. The de·
fenders are allowed to exchange inlor·
mation, not by pulling smoke rings
from cigarettes: but by the sequence
in which they play their cards.
When your partner leads an honor,
normally you shOuld give an attitude
signal, showing whether you would
like him to continue leading the suit.
However, if the attitU&lt;je is known, a
key honor being in the dummy, third
hand should usually signal count. This
will tell the opening leader how many
tricks to expect nom the suit. Every
hand must be treated on ,its merits,
though.
Today's hand was played in a team
game. The three-diamond response
was the modern limit' raise, showing
10-12 points and four or five trumps.
· Both Wests \ed the king of spades
an~ both Easts dropped the two. Now
the paths diverged. The first West
worked out that his partner must have

® MOVIE: Roid on Rommel
(2:00)
· 8:30 (jJ (J)II Who'o the Booo?
Jonathan borrows Tony's
Jeep and retYrns it with a
scratch. (R) Sterao. Q
II]) D Mojor Luglle
la-11
Q!l ct:urch Slreat StoUon
9:00 (jJ ()) D Roaaanna An
IINIXpecled development
places Dan an~ Roseanne in
a dilemma. Stereo. 1;1
1D (!) FronUine r:;J
1!11 112llll MOYIE: 'Crocodlta
Dundee II' CBS TuoiCIIy
Movlot (PG) (2:00) Sterao. 1;1
il) WWF Pflme time
Wrealllng In
Q!l Naollviile Now
8 Lany King Uvel .
9:30(j) (J)fll STAT Rumors hll
the hospital saying Or .

Panl l ' ~:

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As we saw yesterday, good defense

tot is found dloating
lace-down. Stereo. r;a
II]) 18 Baaabltii"l Dl'81Lm •
Teem L"" Brock. Roy
Campanella, Duke Snl~er.
Roberto Clemente an~ other
National Leagye players are
interviewed.
il) Mulder. She Wrote
Stereo. Q
Q!l On llitge

~t4-ll

+J84

By Phillip Alder

crash sets a man on fire; a

Acceuo!'les· ,_;_
c.._ .._.. ,.,

NORTH

BRIDGE .

The
right
'
priority '

a

1171 01c1o

f'·t3

Writer - Humus ..; ~ron - Nicely - COMPUTER
"'That new secretary ts dumb," my co-worker sighed.
' I found correction fluid on the display screen of her
COMPUTER."

(jJ CllD Dlnouure The
tamily laesa a crisis wt:en
Robbie suggests.Grandma
move·in. (R) Sterao. t;1
ID (!) Novo The History and
Future ot Blimps, Zeppelins,
Cyclocranes an~ Others
Stereo.
:mJ I!JID Raacua: 81 1 A car

.£x.0..nt Cio:dllan, Auno v.,j
Wold. Low llouis. ""'""
Alduo oted, s ' - 1. All&amp;;
tral 111,0011. 1114-411 41118, 114:3'1Nl110.
'·
AutO

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS

Major'\.ugue
lo-U
.

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UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

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7:05 (f) H8JIPY Doya
.
.
7:30 (2i D II)) Jaop~rdyl 1;1
(!) Nlaltt Court t;l
(jJ I!JID Ent-INnent
Tonight Slerao. Q
(I)IIIJ Momo'a Family
:mJ Wheal of Fortuna r;a
II]) 18 M"A"S"H
all Bo I Star
@ Major Leogua Baaabltll
8 Cronflre
7:35 (I) S8nford and Sort
8:00 ()) D II)) MOYIE: •p...,.
Maoon: Tla CaM of ll:a
Glotu Cotltn' HIC Mowle of
ll:a WHII (2:00) Sterao. Q

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61 Fann Equipment

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11:30())D G)) Tonight Show
Stereo.
(!) Ctrcie of Foar
ID Adam Sn:llh'o Monor
World
(I) 1J N~hUine Q
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AfllniC! Hold

Stereo.
a.
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Hight Stereo. 1;1

Q!1 Church Street StaUon

8 Sporto Tonight
11:35 (jJ CiiHra Q
12:00 ()) 11 Into lila Night Stereo.
OTI:e E..,.azor
,Q!I Hlthvldlo Now
8 NewoHialtt
® MOYIE: Relet OIL Rommel
(2:00)

12:05 (jJ Nlgltilinl Q
12:30 ()) D GJI Lall Night With
Dtvidltttannln
(!) MOVIE: TtNpldo Alley
(2:00)
II§) II) 11 P8r1J Mac:hlne
With Hta Pnplu
112J
Hold Copy
12:3&amp; (jJ Love Connactton .
1U51J) MOVIE; Tla Stringer
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(2:00)

XIX.JXOWP

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IIIGHTI
PTPPDDO.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: '"Since a politiCian he 11 ourpr!IICI otlllrl , believe him. " ,

I

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bel- what ho llyl,
Ch.,.. de Gaulle.
14

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•

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�•
:

The

Sentinel

' Ohio

SslutinJ
Ovetbtook Centet
I\IATIO

Nursing Home
•

WEEK MAY 12 -1 8 , 1991

&gt;

Pick 4:6961

Cards : K·H, Q-C
.- Q-D;S-S

PageS

Pome10g Nuflinl 8r .Rehsbilitsfion Cenfet
Du1in1 Nations/ Nu11in1 ·Home Wee~
• &gt;

Pick3:148

to GAHS3-2

&gt;.

s~nd

AL

Ohio Lottery

Meigs loses
sectional final

Low tonight in 60s•
Thursday, sunny, high

near 90.

•

&gt;

Val. 42, No. 8
. Copyrighted 11191

' Ohio, Wednesday, May 15, 1991
Pomeroy..Middleport,

2 S.Cdon" 11 Pogee 25 cento
A lfuiU.-Io lno. Newapoper

Teacher accused of abusing Meigs ·student

Msg 12·18,. 1991

. By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Mrs. Reed sai~ thB! he~ ~n told
Sentinel News Staff
her that the leammg disabibty class
·
t~er hadass!gned him to deten·
An allegation that a Meigs bon. She srud hiS father had always
Junior School teacher physically told him that if he ever felt an
. abused a disabled student was action was unfair that he should
made by the student's parent at · tak~ it to \'Je prin~ipal. ·
.
Tuesday night's meeting of the ·
He di~ that, Mrs. _Reed SBid,
Meigs Local Board of Education.
but the pnncipal told him that the
In open session, Christine Reed "delention woul~ have to stand."
Mrs. Reed SBid that her son told
related the story of the alleged
abuse of ber son. ·
her that when he returned to his
_She said that on May 10 her son class, the teacher ordered him back
returned home "so emotionally ' out mto the hallway.
Already in the hall was another
. upset that he ~as trembling.''

'

· student !:'~o reportedly _was. there .
because Videos were bemg shown
m the ciii$SrOOI!l and that his p~ents prefer that he not watcli televtsian or movies unless they are educational.''
It was then 1 accordi~g to Mrs.
Reed whose mformauon came
from her son, that the teacher
alleged!'( ''put one hand ?,n his (~e
name o her son) throat :..oo·srud
that her son told her that the teacher was upset because he had gone
to the principal concerning the
detention.

Mrs. Reed 5!'id that "there were
no marks on hts (the name of her
son) neck." .
.
"He descnbed to me 1t was the
web between the thumb and forefinger that applied the pressure to
his throat. The teacher, ~cording
to ~hat th_e s~nt told his mother,
adVIsed hun never to go over top
o_f him ~,' ne~ ~do anything
lilce that to hun agam.
Mrs. Reed said that her son told
her that he kept repeating "yes,
yes," and that after some more
stateme,nts from the teacher,

"everything started to go black.';
Mrs. Reed continuing with what
her son told her,' saying that he said
he felt "weird like in outer space"
She said that he told her he was so
afraid that he could not see for a
few seconds, and that he thought he
was going to pass out
After the incident the teacher
and the student ret~rned to ·the
classroom to watch the movie.
Mrs. Reed said tfiat she request·
ed th'e principal to question the
other student who was in the hall
and
and heard the entire inci-

saw

dent
.
The parent saJd that she believes
things happened jus! as her son
related them to her and that the
Other child has agreed to answer
any questions concerning the matter. Mrs. Reed concluded by asking
the board to take appropriate
acuon.
After listening_ to Mrs. Reed's
comments, Supenntendent James
C111p0nter asked her .if she pl,anned
tp pursue the abuse allegation
through Children's Services. Mrs.
Continued on page li

AEP to comply with
PUCO
order·
a

By ROBERT E. MILLER
Associated Press Writer _
COLUMBUS - Amencan
Electric Power Co. says it will
comply with an order by state regulators for an expanded ~tudy _o f
options that ':"ould ~ring its G~vin
power plant m Gallm County mto
co_mpliance with the federal Clean

said the report concluded that
reduction in sulfur dioxide emispreliminary AEP study was too sions required by the act
nanow and that there may be little
The PUCO said the method
difference in cOSIS.
used in AEP's study was inapproAEP is requited by law to use priate because it did not project far
the leasl-cost _option or the PUCO enough into the future.
can deny the utility the right to
One assumption ·the PUCO
recover compliance costs from cus- inade was that scrubbers at Gavin
tamers.
.
would qualify for enough emisAir Act
Glazer said the AEP study was sions al)owances to make· overall
Gerald Maloney, AEP's execu- flawed because it was not tied to a costs about the same as importing
tive vice president, responded systemwide plan. The PUCO set a coal from other states.
Tuesday after a staff report of the deadline of May 31 for AEP to forPlants that exceed their allotted
Public Utilities Commission of · mulate such a plan.
reduction levels may trade or sell
Ohio. Scrubber technology - as
Maloney said the company will their allowances to others in .the
well as a switch to low-sulfur coal comply but that the timetable is . same system. AEP is the pareni
from other states - should remain light and that some data on emis- company of eight utilities in Ohio,
as a viable option, the report said.
sions allowances is not yet avail- Indiana, Michigan, Kentucky, VirScrqbbers are anti-pollution able.
ginia, West Virginia and Tenequipment that would be installed
AEP said it has to decide on nessee.
at ·the plant to allow the c:f'any Gavin by the summer so it-can
Maloney attributed the differ10 'use Qhio 's high-sulfur
and - . otder scJUbbers or other equipment. ences between the AEP and ~CO
. still meet new federal regulations. · The company must meet a January fmdings to the fact that rued anaNICQ Ch•ir,aen Craia rn... 1995 deedline for the fil'lt ftlajOr ·
over
and AEP

.

'

Pomeroy .Nttrsing and
.
Rehabilitation Center

'

992-6606

992-6472

36759 Rocksprings Rd. • Pomeroy, Ohio

333 Page Street • Middleport, Ohio

'

•

This _Page Sponsored By These Many Fine Businesses .

Hospital
scene of
'disaster'

· EXAMINED - Love Batey, who wUI be a nursing stndenl at
. Meigs High School next fall, was one or seven persons lnjnred
when an "explosion" occurred Tuesday afternoon at Veterans
Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy as a.part or the anuual lrl-eounty
simulated dlSIISter. Kllftllna 'l"lh Batey ill Kim Shamblin, head or
the hospital's RadloloiiY Department, where the seven patients
were taken until transferred to other treatment areas.

;

ANDERSON'S
FUINRUIE, APPLIANCES, TV'S, FLOOI COVEtiNG
992·3671

-

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

~THE

GRAVELY

SYSTEM

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SAUS &amp; SERVICE
992-1975
POIIIIOT, OliO

K &amp; C JEWELERS
BAUM LUMBER CO.
91$-3301

CHESTER, OHIO

INGELS FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

992-2635

DOWNING-CHILDS-MULLEN-MUSSER
INSURANCE AGENCY 992-2975

.

EWING FUNERAL HOME

POMEROY, OHIO

QUALRY PRINT SHOP
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

992·3345

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

992·5627

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY
POMEROY, OHIO

992-2556

HOME NATIONAL BANK
····2210
IACINI, OliO

-··
FDIC

992-6333
SYIICISE, OlftO ·

VALLEY LUMBER CO.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

SWISHER-LOHSE PHARMACY
POMROY, OHIO

991-2955
•

I

,

POMEROY, OHIO

FABRIC SHOP
992-2284

POMEIOY, OHIO

~Farmers Bank

L:!J &amp; Savings Company .

.....
• .. \bur Bankpi~...
-

992-6611

992-2121

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
992·2104

BliNK ONE ~HENS.

LOCKER 219 /heritage house -

POMEIOY, OHIO -

992-3714 .

Whatever it takes:

PO-OY, OHIO

FRUTH PHARMACY
992·6491

BANKEONE

&gt;

&gt;

•

H2-2136
,_lOY, OliO
667-3161

TUPPEIS PUINS, 01101
Mombtr F.D.I.C.

BROGAN-WARNER INSURANCE
992~6687

POMEIOY, OHIO

PRESCRIPTION SHOP
992-6669

MIDDLEPORT I OHIO

STATE FARM INSURANCE
MilE SWIGD

992·6685

MIDDLEPORT, 01110

(ROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT
992-5432

POMROY, OHIO

SUGAR RUN MILLS
MIDDLEPOIT, OHIO

992·2115

POMROY, OHIO

Rought to face Reed, Wehrung
in November for mayor's post·
Ellen J. Rought will face Republican Bruce Reed and Independent
candidate Larry Wehrung for the
office of Pomeroy mayor i_n
November.
Althoul!h a Republican, Rought
filed her petition in May and will
JUn as an Independent.
Rought states !hat she~ previously worked with council under
Mayor Clarence Andrews as
Clert/l'reas~J~U for 16 months: She
also handled the HUD Grant for the
Kerr's Run sewer project along
with ocher duties of that office. She
states that she is familiar with the
village·finances and the functions
of the village council.
·
For the past seven years, Rought
has been a police dispatcher for the
Pomeroy Police Department under
lhe cWTent mayor, Richard Seyler.
Additionally, sbe had the opporContinued on page 6

INJURY TREATMENT· Durlaatlle trl•
county simulated dlaltlr at Vetera01 Memorial
Hoepltal Tunday afterD- Wbere a uplollon

House committee warned 1
·or constitutional problems
ELLEN ROUGtrr

----.-Local briefs-woman hurt in accident
. A Pomeroy woman suffered minor injuries Monday after the car
she was riding in was struck by a tractor-trailer on State Route 124.
Josie P. Morton, 34, of Spnng Avenue, was not treated for her
injuries following the accident in Rutland Township. According to a
report from the Gallia-Meigs post of the State Highway Patrol,
Morton was westbound when she stopped to make a left turn. The
tractor-trailer behind her, driven by Pearl E. Hutchinson, 52, of
Wellston, was unable to stop in lime and rear,ended Morton's vehicle.
Hutchinson was not injured. He was cited for failure to maintain
an assured clear dislallce. ·
·

Youth cited after crash
A Middleport youth was cited for failun: to.maintain an assured
clear distance following an accident on State Route Tl'uesday.
Jay C. Crcme~~~s, 16, ofBJ:Oidway Street, was cited after he rearended a second car in Salisbury Township. According to a report
from the Gallia-Meigs post of the'State Highway Patrol, Cremeans
·was northbound when the car in front of him, drivo.n by Gloria J.
Compston. 41, Middleport. stopped in traffiC. Cremeans was unable
·
Colltinutd on paae 6

'

over 10.
The first I0 years is the time
during which the company can
most accurately predict its ac1ual
costs, Maloney said.
Maloney said AEP does no1
know how federal regulators will
handle the transfer of allowances
from an AEP plant in one jurisdic-·
lion to an AEP plant in another
state.
·
The decision concerning Gavin
may have to be made before the
company knows how many emissions allowances it wiU receive and
what they will be, worth, Maloney
said
Even before the PUCO report
was issued, House Speaker Vern
Riffe Jr. sera~ plans for a Tuesday vote on a bill that would offer
tax breaks to utilities burning Ohio
coal .
Continued on page 8

By ROBERT E. MILLER
A!l!Kit:iated Press Writer
COLUMBUS- A House com'
mittee has been warned of possible
constitutional problems with a law
requiring woinen seeking an abortion to be told of rillka and alternalives 24 houn in advance.
The warnings carne Tuesday
from Attorney General Lee Fisher
and others, including Marcy
Wilder, staff attorney for 1he
National Abortion Rights Action
League in Washington, D.C.
About two dozen witnesses t_eslified as the civil and commercial
Jaw committee concluded public
hearings. The bill requires clinics
and their doctors to provide specified information or face criminal
'
'
penalties.
Rep. Robert Hickey, D-Daytoo,
chairman, said the bill will not be
voted until next month, following a
two-week House recess that begms

Thunday.

Rep. Jerome Luebben, DCincinnati, ia sponaor of the bill
which has more than ·!10 co-sponsors in the 99-mombor House.
Luebbers was author of a 1986
Ohio statute that requires minors
seeking 111 abortion to notify at
least oae parcnL
\
However, its opponenll were
out in full force Thursday as,

numerous pro-choice Jroups' and
individuals repeated c!Bims that the
bill is an unnecessary duplication
of Ohio's informed consent law
and a violation of women's rights.
They also said the bill is similar
to laws in other states, including
Pennsylvania, that have been out·
l!lwed by the U,S. SupmneCoun.
Jack Gregg Haught, deputy
attorney general, described Fisher
as an interested party but ·said he
wanted to provide information on
the possibility of legal challenges
and their cost.

Supreme Court, in a 1983 decision
tharovenurned llll· Akron abortion
ordinance, re~ted provisions simi·
lar to the bill's 24-hour waiting
period and a requitement that doctors provide s~ified information.
· He also. SOld that if enacted and
challenged, the cost of defending
the law would bC about $400,000 if
the defense is successful and could
total tnore than $1 million if unsuccessful. Haught said the estimate
was based on the auomey general's
de,ense of previous Ohio abortion
laws.
.

Haught pointed out that the U.S.

-Board to contin·ue safety belt
education center next year
The Meigs County Board of
Education voted to continue the
safetyb elt education center ·for the
1991-1992 school )'CIII' when members ~in rcauJar llllion ~Y

e'l'elllllg.

A conllliCt was enleled mro with
Eric Chambers to conduct the Seat
Belt Education Cenror.
In other action at the meetmg,
Jhe board voted to modify the
a~ns for the Early Childhood
1111 to cover lhe COlt ol
insurlnce.
Meigs Health Services - Dr.

•

Doua Hunter lllld Dr. Mark Brown
- wore approved to conduct the
school bus -driver phylk:als for the
1991-1992 school year.
Meryl
Houdashelt
was
employed by the bOitd for 21 per
week tor elaht weeb as an inlb'UCIOr for the Adult Basic Education
program, and a budgel for the ABE
JOBS proaram was adop,ted. funded by the Meigs County Department of HWIIIII Services.
The board also approved textbook adoptions for mathematics
and science programs.

Veterans Memorial Hospital in
Pomeroy was the scene of an
"explosion" on Tuesday afternoon
when the annual tri-county simulated disaster was held.
Pomeroy and· Middleport ·fire
departments received the warning
of the explosion and flre at Veter:
ans Memorial and dispatched flre
fighting vehicles and an emergency
unil to the hospital where command posts were established.
The explosion occurred in the
lower level of the hospital where,
coincidentally, nursing students
from Meigs High School were
touring the facility.
Seven students were injured and
one fatality was reco.rded. T~e
injured were moved from the lower
level of the hosrital structure by
various hospita emplo'yees who
used sheets and cotS to transfer the
'wounded into special
set up
as trealment centers. Patients of the
hospitals' Skilled Nursing Facility extended care - were evacuated
from the hospital to the patio as a
part of the simulated disaster.

areas

Man dies from
gunshot wound
A Pomeroy man is dead following an apparent self·inflicled gunsHot wound to the abdomen Tuesday.
William J. "Joey" Reiunire,. 23,
of Old Chester Road, died at Veterans Memorial Hospital on Tuesday
morning.
•
According to Pomeroy Police
Chief Gerald Rought, the depart•
ment responded to the R'eitmire.
residence at II :14 a.m., after a call
reponing a gunshot wound. Upon
arrival, Rought said Wednesday
morning, Reitmirc was found on a
hillside behind his residence with a
gunShot wound to the lbdomen.
Relunlre was pronounced dead.
after his arrival at Vercrans Memo"
rial.
Rought ·said it was later determined that the wound was selfinfiicted, 111d no foul play is being
suspected. Meigs County Coroner
Douglas Hunter was on the BCene,
as were agents of the Meigs County
Pro~ecuting Attorney •s offJCe, the.'
sheriff's office 8lld Pomeroy Squad·.
I, which transported Reitmire to••
the hospital.
•

.•

'

•

.I

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