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Page-10- lhe Daily Sentinel

-Local news

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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

briefs-~

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

Lorotion chflnged for event ·
The location for vlewl,ng the family pictures taken recently at
the Middleport Elementary School, a project of the PTO, bas
been changed. Vlewlngwlll be held Tuesday through Thursday
at the Middleport Arts and Crafts building on North Second St.
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Census WfJfkers test Tuesday ·
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A 30-mlnute test to'r census workers will be given at 10a.m and
1 p.m. Tuesday at \}le Community Action Agency In Cheshire.
The largest. number of jobs;to be filled are for census, takers .
Successful applicants will work In an area close to their homes.
The jobs lastfrOm two to e ight weeks, the hours arenexlble a'nd .
. the pay is $6 an hour plus 24 cents per mile.

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

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

EMS -respontls

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

C.:.Ou

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to 12 calls

'

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

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Hoi3pibd news
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. Reooivrs schQiarships ,

. Veterans Memoi-tal

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a

e. .
t.

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Southern...

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'1 990

THE LASTDECADE ·OF.THE TWENTIETH -CENtURY

!ire

gift

-wm.

W ·th
ea , er ·•

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

athletes
honored

Daily Number
053
Piek-4
.3522

Youi Barik#t~..;

Fs· Farmers Bank

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

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en tne
1 So.ction, 10 Pogeo

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

26 Cento

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A Muhlmedia Inc.

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_.__i

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

--Area deaths--

Lottery

Pomeroy .CoUncil.to
off~rs ·free parking.
for Heritage visitors
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Monday.~ 2'i. 19M

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

,sOu' t.her·n
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'" ' ,.s·' ·
·o.· ca
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· · o·n ne·l :. a·d.a·v·.'ts
· ""91 'calen
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DemJ"a·nliuk' Ia' 'e r' dt"sputes. ' '
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.id entif"tcation by IOntter·

'Poll shows Pfeifer, Fisher are e;ven

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Beat of the bend

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

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

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Commentary
The Daily Sent_inel
111 C..rt Street
Pomeroy, 0111o

DEVOTED TO

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'f!E D!TEBE8T8 OF 'l'BE QGS.MASON ~

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ROBERT L. WlNGETr
Publlabet

CHARLENE HOEn.JCH
Geaeral Maaqer .

PAT WHITEHEAD
AMIII&amp;u&amp; Publlllher/CoatroUer

United~~

A MEMBER or The
International, Inland Dally PreSs
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Alsoclatlon.

'
LETTERSOFOPINI()N
are welcome. They should be lessthanJOO
words long. All leiters are aubfect to ediUnl aad muot be slaned with
name, address and telephone number. No UDJ!aned !etten will be published. Letters should be In good taste, address!D• Issues not personal!·
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Lucy, Charli~
and the deficit
By·ARNOLD SAWISLAK
tJPI 8eQior Editor
WASHINGTON - Democratic fans of "Peanuts" may see a
parallel between th~ "budget summit" now going on In Washington
and the classic CharUe Brown-Lucy place-kicking epiSode.
The budget negotlatlona hi!Ve brought the Democrats who control
the House .,_nd the Senate to the table opposite President Bush and
. Republican congressional leaders In an effort to . control the
· oDCe-more rising federal deficit.
A slmUar effort fell apart last year, but Bush, who previously
refused to even talk about Increasing taxes to reduce government red
Ink, cleared-the way lor negotiations this year by agreeing to open the
discussion to all Ideas.
It Is possible that media and poUtlcal Washington jumped to the
conclusion that by consenting to negotiations with "no preconditions' •
Bush was relenting on his long-held "read my lips, no new taxes· •
position.
In any case, that was the message for the first couple of days after
the budget summit Idea was floated, and the Democrats appeared
ready and willing to sit down with Bush to work out a way, ·probably
with a combination of spending cuts and tax Increases, to bring the
deflc1I down to the $61 l!llllon required by the Grainm-Rudman law.
But then White House chief of st.aff John Sununu let slip that "no
preconditions" meant the Democrats were free to propose taxes and
Bush was free to reject them , which was likely.
At that point, the Democrats were ready to call the whole thing off,
bu I Bush called House Speaker Thomas Foley, and according to
reports, disavowed the Sununu statement.
'
Next, a large number of Republican members of Congress
announced that If the president really was softening his opposition to
tax Increases, the world should know they were not. They vowed to
take no part in a deal that would raise taxes, and Sen. Phil Gramm,
0 -Texas, one of the appointed GOP summit participants, left a
meeting saying he wasn't about to bring up ~axes as a solution to the
deficit problem.
· "They !Democrats) can walt till Jesus comes back lf"they want to
watt for me to raise lbem," Gramm said.
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.Chairman James Sasser. 0-Tenn., of the Senate Budget Committee
said he hoped '. Bush would help eliminate the "partisan smell"
surrounding the flrst .stages of the negotiallons, reporting there was
"a measurable level of distrust" at the beginning.
BuSh said at a news conference he believed the suspicion !&lt;'vel had
been lowered, but at .the same time be steadfastly refused to say
publicly what he would be for or against in the way of deficit -reducing
measutes.
·
Nor did he seem enchanted by the Democrats' demand that he put
forward the administration proposal to cut the deficit before they
offer their Ideas.
·
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Back to the comic strip mentioned above.
Every fall, ''Peanuts'' fans look for a sequence In which Charlie ts
getting ready to kiCk a football being teed up by Lucy. Charlie runs up
to the ball, but Lucy pulls it away just as he swings his foot and tharlle
. does a spectacular pralfl\11, ending up on his back, seeing stars. This
·
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happens every year.
And what does this have to do with the budget summit? Simple. The
Democrats are worried that they are playing the part of •Charlie
Btown and George Bush Is Lucy .
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-roday ·in history
• · :·
By tlnlled Preas International
·:Today Is Tuesday, May 22, the 142nd day of 1990 with 223 to follow .
. :The moon Is waning, moving toward its new phase.
;.The morning stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Saturn.
• The evening star is Jupiter. ·
:~Those born on this date are under the sign of Gemini. They, Include
~erman composer Richard Wagner In 1813; Arthur Conan Doyle,
or,eator of Sher)ock Holmes, In 1859; French slngerCharlesAznavour
lj) 1924 (age 66,); composer Peter Nero In 1934 (age 56); and actors
Laurence Olivier in 1907, Richard Benjamin In 1938 (age 52) and Paul
~Infield In 1941 (age 49).
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: -on this date In history:
. In 334 B.C., Alexander the Great defeated Persian King Darius III
10· Granic us, .Turkey.

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Berry's World
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CAUSE OF
DfATK?

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WEAR\NG A
PAlR OF $175
ATHLETIC
SHOEsr

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. Tuesday, M!f 22, 1990
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lack Anderson
l and Dale VanAtta
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WASHINGTON - The ·u.s.
government Is about to hang a
fledgling democracy out to dry In
the hot Caribbean sun.
Haiti has losttrackofthecoups
that have driven Its chaotic
government · ID recent years.
With each coup, new hopes for
democracy are raised and then '
dubed again. ·
,
The most recent coup came In
March when President Prosper
Avril was overthrown. Now, If
the State Deparlment and Congresscontlnuetobalkonsendlng •
aid to Haiti at this ,critical
juncture, the nat~n wUl be
puahed further back from the
brink of democracy.
Alvin Adams, the U.S. ambassador to Halt~ can take much of
the credit for getting Haiti to that
brink; Five months ago, Adams
arrived In Haiti arid gave a
Sfll!ech of Creole at the airport.
He told the assembled throng

that " the loaded donkey cannot '
stop or It will collapse," mean'tng
that Haiti must go forward with
democracy . The Haitians
I Cheered.
· .
' Now they have taken to calling
Adams "BOurlk c;:haje, " the
loaded donkey.
·.
Adams' appelil )¥as lost on
AvrU, who trted to have hlm·sent
back to the ·united States. As It
.turned out, Adams has outlasted
AvrU.
The new president, Ertha
Pucai-TrouUiot, vowed to hold
free elections as soon as pois lble.
But Haiti has found It lmpos,slble
to organize an election when Its
economy Is In a shambles.
In the meantime, Congress and
the State Qepartment arl! quibbUng over how.niuch to give Haiti
In Its hour of need. Supporters of
Haiti say the country needs $30
mUllan. Oppone,n ts say $10 million will do. ,
.
· No one Is following th"e debate

E''l'n' ~ttto ~ 'l4'ffi S'f""·Tii~••
ltULMc ·
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N.l.

more closely tha n Adams. He
ttnows Haiti Is walking a Ugh·
t rppe with no help from the
outside. Haitian hardliners who
supported AvrU and " Baby Doc"
Duvaller before · him, have
rattled the government. They are
reportedly responsible . for .a
recent hijacking and airplane
tire at Port Au .Prince Airport.
The terrorist strikes effectively
cut Haiti off from the outsl!le
world, as airlines cut sclleduled
service to Haiti.
At a . recent meeting with
Pascal· Trouutet, Adams trled·to
urge the timid novice to get a grip
on her gover nment. But she
wanted to know who would
protect her and her family from
her enemies. She Js a widow who
- ll~es with ber ·14· yell~ · old
daughter.
Adams ' reputation Is still
golden In Haiti, but the longer It
takes for help to anlve from the
United States, the more hollow

his calls for democracy will
sound.
~dams uses the pulpit better
than any of hts predecessors In
Haiti. One of his first speecheS
was In City Solell, a slum. In
j:Unbroken Creole, Adams told the
poor Haitians how Important
democracy Is for them . .
A key Haitian source told our
associate Jim Lynch that It was
the first time many Haitians
were convinced that the United
States was on their side. Amerl·
ca's unwise backing of the
des potlc Dulav Uer regimes had
lett Haltalns In doubt, and had
helped to turn Haiti .lrito the
poorest · nation In the Western ·
Hemls_pbere.
Adams Is 11 seasoned troubleshooter who has the respect of the
State Department. He can be
tossed Into the worst of circum·
stances and turn the situation
around. But this time he can't do
It alorie.

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JASEBALL HONOREES - Members of the
Melp baleball &amp;earn recelvlaJ awards Monday ·
nl&amp;ht were - Kevla-Taylor•AII-TVC Honorable
Mention; Terry Reuter AII-TVC Ro~ble

. AWTVC TRACK HONOREES - ·Members of
' lbe prlll &amp;racll team recelvlnr AII-TVC honors &amp;his .
yea1\ are, aea&amp;ed left to rl&amp;ht .- MISsy Nelson,'
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Mentloa; J - Wright, MVP, leadlnr hiller 8lld
Flrst Team AII-TVC; Ed Crooks, defellllve award
·aad Honorable · Mention Ali-TVC, · and Chris
Slewart 110 Pereent Awl!l'd. Abseat r Mike
Wails, offeMive award.

BoDy Williams, . NIIIIey . Baker and Katrina
Turner. &amp;audlq,le.l l to rlgbt- Jeanlle~ Taylor,
. M!U')"Cremealis, ·ud Amy Wagner. Absent
Bonaea DaviS, TVC
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BOYS TRACK HONOREES- Boys track team
mem~ of MRS receMaJawards Moaday night .
. were - Kart Ena:llah, Moe&amp; Polala and All TVC;

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Mal&amp; Haynes, MO.t Polall, J:l'leld Evenla; Steve
Caraulhers, Mosllmproved F1eld Evenla.

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SOFl'BALL HONOREES · ~ Varsity soflball
team members recelvlar awards Monday nigh&amp;
were - Trlcla Baer Ali·TVC; Kim Osborne

All·TVC, Tara Gerlach, Flrst Year Award, ·and
Chrissy Weav.er, AII·TVC Academic award.

Meigs boosters ·honor_spring
sports -athletes
Monday
'night
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Lobbyists perfonn essential functions
Lobbyists wield a great deal of officials must be reported as General Assembly that dlstrib·
lnflilence In the General Assemwell. Current law -also says no utes state money , subject to the
bly. Just come to Columbus on one can knowingly fall to register lobbying law.
any daY we are In session and the or file.
• requires legislative agents,
halls of the Capitol are likely to
Oile of · the biggest problems or lobbyists, to file a legislative
be filled with people representing
with the law as It Is now written, action statement witb JCARR
groups w~o want something from
however, Is that there Is no lndl~atlng their position Pn each
lawmakers.
· provision for what cons'tltutes a Item . of leglslatloil or ·matter
~uch, If not most, of tills
late filing, and there &lt;i Is no before the Controlllng 'Board on
activity Is welcome. WithOut penalty. This Invites less scrupu- which they lobby.
lobbyists, we as legislators would
lous lobbyists to cut.corners with
• requires executive agency
be less well Informed about many the law.
·
lobbyists to register and file
of the problems facing our
·This situation needs to be expenditure and financial trandistricts. Lobbyists perform an changed. The Ohio House last" saction statements with JCARR
essential function to the demoJuly passed reform legislation, and to maintain receipts for all
cratic process.
·
H.B. 538, tightening the current records that are reported.
It is essential, however, that
laws on lobbyist registration.
• generally prohibits payment
lobbyists' activities get more .When the Ohio Senate recon- to an executive agency lobbyist
scrutiny from the public. Current venes for Its summer · session from hlngtng on the outcome of
law requires lobbyists and their next month, I expect lobbying an _executive agency decision.
employers to register with the reform to be high on the agenda.
"Passage of this bill won't make
Joint Comll\lttee on Agency
H.B. 538, . which has. been the lobbying system perfect.
Review (JCARR) within 10 days reviewed the, past several Disclosure would still be far too
of being engaged by their emmonths by a .Senate task force, · complicated a process, since
ployers for lobbying activities.
would make sever.al important lobbyist registration and reportLobbyists and employers. every changes In state law.
Ing requirements are only part of
six months must report total
It would:·
the picture. Citizens stili would
spending used to Influence legis• make persons who lobby have to go to the Secretary of
lation. Financial transactions before the state Controlling State's office to look up cam·
Involving lobbyists and public
Board, a bipartisan arm of the palgn finance reports, to the

Sen. ]an Long
House or Senate ethics committees to look up financial disclosure statements and to the Ohio
Ethics Commlss.ton to look up
candidates' arid members ·of
boards and commissions' per·
sonal financial disclosure statements before they could get the
full picture.
However, passage of H. B. 538,
when 'combined with H.B. 539,
campaign finance reform legislation, would significantly lm·
prove the current system. We
must erase the perception that
lobbyists can buy passage of
ieglslatlon either through cam·
palgn contributions · or gifts.
That's not .the way system Is
supposed to work, and I Intend to
.continue to do ·au I can to change
the prevailing philosophy 'that
you have to pay to be a player In
the legislative system.
If you have questions on this or
any other matter, please don't
hesitate to contact me, Sen. Jan
Michael Long, at the Statehouse,
or by calling me at (614) 466-8156.

Still the heavyW~ight . champ_·---=B=en:....:.:.~-=at.::.:::.:..ten:.::.::be~rg
ton be ·ress Important, Tysonwise, because communism
collapsed, o~ ' was whipped, or
both? Old .Joe Montana become
less .Important when the 49ers
won the Super Bowl? Did Dwight
Eisenhower, or America, be· .
come Irrelevant when World War
II was won?
There Is journalistic myopia In
it. The coverage of Lithuania Is In
significant measure an American and Washington story because It Is allQut the collapse of
the Soviet Empire, and process
that. can lead . to a second
A-merican Century. Hirosblpta
and VIetnam were American
stories, even though ihe cameras
were far a way. ·
There Is governmental myopia
about lt. Broder quotes pollll·
clans saying that Washington Is
politically grldlocked. With the
tax-and-budget Snore Summit In
motion for tbe 173rd time, that Is
bard to rebut, except frontally. '
There Is a yearning for the bad
old daya:
I
HENDRIK HERTZBERG
(The New Republic): People are
talktna about how It doesn't
matter anymore, looking back

Big troilble In Washington. It statesman Clark Clifford; liberal
waa nut-shelled ·recently on historian Arthur Schlesinger Jr.,
Al!C's "Nightllne,'' Here are and editors of The New Republic
excerpts:
··
magazine.
··
.TED KOPPEL: As foreign
Tliey dl~vered that this ye,
news continues to dominate the ar' s Washington news is jlistllke
. headlines and the airwaves, the last years (Brinkley), th8t the
question Is becoming more per- age of superpowers Is ovpr and
·slltent: Is Washington becoming the government doesn't spend
less Important?
enough (Schlesinger), that the
DAVID BRODER: (The Wa· thrUis are gone (Morton Konshlniton Post): This Is a city dracte, The New Republic), tbat
which bas accustomed Itself to Washington Is In decline because
thinking of Itself u the center of America Is the biggest debtor
the political universe .... It's a bit nation, that Congress doeslh
of a shock to recognize that we' re play enough of a role (! ) and
no longer there.
there are too many murders
JEFF GREENFIELD (ABC):
(Clifford).
That sense .was crystallized by
The television cameras, notes
David Broder, perhaps the single · Broder, have gone overseas.
moat lnDU~~ntlai jou~tst In That Is one Indicator that WaWaablnito.n, In a receni 'p()Jumn shington's claim to· being the
' that became, literally, tbe1alk of "most Important city In the
the IO'Wll. .
• · ,,
world" may now be "as dented as
. DAVID BRODER: It
aa If Mike Tyson ' s heavyweight
somebody had said, " Ob, uie crown.' '
·
emperor. really does have no
Wrong. Waahlngton did not
clllthea." Sometimes you '&amp;et the lose the heavywelaht cbarnplonblgeat reaction by statbig the sblp of the world. It won lt.
obYioua.
,
1
There Is •some topsy-turvy
Among the notable&amp; endorsing lo lc to the shrinkingthe Waahlngton·ln· Retreat
thesis. Can Waahlng·
tbeme are David Brinkley, elder
)

was

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The Daily Sentinel Page- 3

Pomeroy- Middlepon, Ohio

., .

c,....':.j.....;__ ~-..:.:_~~.J&lt;J -.M:...: ;.;.~.~~;~,"~·..._._c._~';.._:
- '"---~ r., . . . . : ...:;..l:~..!_,:~·.J. ~.,_ • ;;,_;, -~ i.i• ! ~:. ~

'

l

Jl'·

L

with great nostalgia at things like
Wa.tergate . Remember
Watergate?
Y;up. Watergate was Washington as the politics and morality
capital of America. Journalists
and liberals loved it. We haven't ·
been close to such a rich scandal
since Iran-contra pooped out.
But Washington Is moving
beyond proerams, politics and
scandal. It IS the tapltal of tbe
wbole United States, reflecting
Ap!erlca's flaws and America's
•
flowering.
It Is no accident that Washing. '
ton Is growing rapidly, a burgeoning center of International
trade, with hlg!t-tech .wonder
suburbs, home to most of Amerl·
ca's business and tr.ade associations, still the news capital of the
world, shaping telecommunlca- ·
lions at the Federal Communlca- ,
lions Commission and the future
size and composhloa of America
via a new Immigration law.
All that and more Dowsin large
part from the fact that Wuhlnrton Is the caphal of the natton '
that won the heavyweight title, It ,
remains the most Important
place In the world.

Regional 'meet thiS week after
placing foul'th in the 100 meters
In the ·district . English also set a
new school record this year In the
long jump and was the tvc
champion in the 400 meter dash.
Girls Track Coach !:;ardon
Fisher presented awards to this
year's girls track team. This
year's team placed fourth at
Federal Hocking, second in the
Meigs Invitational, third· In the
TVC and fourth In the district.
Members of the team Introduced were Nancy Baker, Kyla
Sellers, Mary Cremeans, Ronnea
DaviS, Kelly · Doidge, Deanna
Haggy, Jodi Imboden, Missy
Nelson, ·Amy Rouse, Elizabeth
Dowlne, -Missy Neutzllng, Jennifer Taylor, Katrina Turner,
Amy Wagner, Holly Williams,
Heather Pauley and Mary
Grueser.
Also . Introduced were scorekeepers Betll Roush, Kelly Sal·
terfleld, Mary Stein and Amy
Searles.
TVC Champions on this year's
team Included Katrina Turner,
Mary Creme11ns, ~lssy Nelson.
and Amy Wagner In lhl' 1600
meter relay; Ronnea Davis,
Jennifer Taylor, Holly Williams
and Amy Wagner In the 400 meter
relay; Jennifer Taylor In the 300
meter hurdles and Ronne a Davlu
·
In
the long jump, 100 meter dash, .
The Daily Sentinel
and 200 meter dash.
(USPS JU... )
DaviS was selected the TVC
A Dlvloloto of Md-a, ~a c.
Most Valuable Performer this
year.
Published every afternOCil, Monday
tlu&lt;OU&amp;h Friday. Ill Court St .. Po·
Team members taking part in
meroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Pob·
the
regional meet this week will
Ushlng Compa!\y / Multlmedla. IDC;,
be
Ronnea
Davis In the long jump
.Pomeroy, Ohio 45ft!~, Ph. 992-2156. Second dass postaa:e-pald at Pom.eroy•
and 100 meters; Jennifer Taylor
Qhlo.
In the 300 meter and 100 meter
Memb~: ~nlled Preo.slnt;,.natlonal.' · hurdles; Amy,Wagnef In thl' 800
Inland Dall)f..PreuAuoelatton and tlw
meter and 1600 meter relays;
Ohio Mewspa{fb'!.IIOclatlon. National
Missy
Nelson and Mary CreAdvertlllnl
011i!otlve, Branham
Newspaper Sa fl, 733 Third Avenue.
means In the the 1600 meter
N!"" York, New York 10017.
relay; HoUy Williams In the 800
meter relay and Katrina Turner
PC6'J'MASTER: Send adcftu ch•BI!I
to The .Dolly Sentinel, Ill 0&gt;1111 St.,
In the 800 mete~; dash, 800 meter ,
Pomeroy, Cillo~relay and the 1600 meter relay.
Coach Fisher also gave awards
8VJIII(;RJPTJON BATES
IIJ earn.. or Mol..- Rotole
to Deanna Haggy, Most ImOne Week ...................................$UO
proved In the Field Events, Most
ODe M011th .................................$6.10
Oar Year ...... ... ...................... :.m,ao
Improvecl Running Events,. KaSINGLE COPY
.trlna '1)1\:!)er; Most Points Field '
PBICI£ . .
.
Events, Nancy Baker and Most
Dolly ............. ,.•..•. ............... 2!1Centa
Points In Runalng Events1 JenI .
Subscriber• not desJrtna tbpay the carnifer Taylor. Most Points overall
rier may remit In adVance dlred: to
award went to Rggnnea Davis.
The Dolly Sentinel on a3, forU montll
bull. crtdlt wUI 11o !llYn carr!.,. each
Tammy Wrl&amp;ht Introduced
members of the reserve soJtball
No IUIIIcrlptloJII .I&gt;Y '1'111 JIOI'IIIll&lt;d 1ft
tel!m.1bts,yea_r'a telm -llqllhed
anu where bome c•rter llrvlc!t 11
the seaaon with a 6-6 record and
avaDable.
. 5-2 In the TVC.
Team members are Abby
--pC..IIr
make,
Love Batey, Yevette
13WHIII .................................. IU.:U
21Wftb ............. ..................... au&amp;
Youna. Carrie Bartels, Candy
52 w..... ................ ...... . ........•~us
Harmon, Anna Chapman, Vema
O.llldeJih!pf....,
•
Competon.
Lorena Oller, Wendy
13Wotb .............. :.... .. .. .:......... -.ao
21W- ............. ..................... tl0.30
Calrk, Jennifer Chasteen, Allison
Qyi'- .....................:......... ... m..o
Gannaw:ay,, !\~W .Johnson.

The :Meigs Athletic Boosters
sponsored their annual ·spring
Sports Banquet M:onday night at
Meigs High School.
Boys track · coach Cliff
Kennedy lntrodu~ed members of
the boys )rack team. This year's
team finished second ·out of 12
t~ams In the Meigs Invltationa.l
and fifth out of 9 In the 'i'vC .
Team members Include David
Buchanan, Derek c;remeans,
Jim Ours t, ~an Kennedy, Tony
Miller, Todd Smith, Pa11l Sharp, :
Ryan · Lemley, , Fr8!1k .Blake,
Chris Sloan, . Robby Wyatt, Nathan Baloy, Steve Martlil, Aaron
Sheets, Mike VanMeter, Nathan ·
Biown, P.J&lt; .Chadwell, Mike
Cremeans. Larry Faw, Mike
Pl\llllp, Tony Six, Phil Smith,
Micah Bunch, John Haggy, Matt
Haynes, Stacey Shank, Steve
Caruthers, Kurt EngUsh, ,and
Shane Phillips.·
Special awards went to Davit!
Buchanan for Most Improved
R11nnlng Events, Most Improved
Field Events; Steve ·caruthers,
Most Points •Scored . Field
. Events; Matt Haynes, Most
Pol!lts ,Scored Running Events,
Kurt English; Most Points Over·
all, Kurt English.
.
English will take part I~ the

.......

.

Mallllol---

Mist! King, Ginger Findley,
Mary Compston, Brooke Coates
and Bobby Vance. Coach Wright
gave awards to Candy HarmonMost Spirted. Verna CompstonHighest Batting Average, Ginger
Findley -- Jelensive Award,
Yvette Young and Carrie
Bartels-Most Improved and Love
Batey- Best All Around Plaqer.
John Arnott head softball
coach Introduced members of
this ye_a r's 9-11 varsity team.
Introduced were Trlcla Baer
Kerl Black, Kelly Douglas, Shailnon Newsome, Heather Havill ter, Tara Humphreys, Lucy
Wlne~renner, Missy Sisson , Kim
Osborne, Tara Gerlach, Marsha
Klng, Nikki Meier, Chrissy
Weaver. ·. Kathy Lambert.
Kristen Stanley and manager
Mike Parkar. Coach Arnott pres·
en ted an award to Tara Gerlach
for tile first year ~layer that
contributed the most to the team.
All-TVC Awards went to Trlcla
Baer, Kim Osborne and Kelly
Douglas.
Reserve baseball coach Terry
Adams Introduced members of
this year's team that went 10·3
and 9-1 In the Tvc:
·
· Team members jnclude Gary
Adams, Bill Glaze, Tim Hall,
Shawn Hamon, James Johnson ,
Kevin Lavbert, Chuch Mash, Joe
McElroy, Tim Peterson, Jim
Pullins, Kyle Simpson, Mark
Stanley. Mike Vance, Mlka
Welsh 11nd Tim Mayes,
This year 's varsity was
coached by first year head coach
Zane Beegle, the Marauders
finished with a record of 12-7-2
overall and 11-5 In the TVC good
enough for third place.
Members of this year's team
were Dennis Boothe, Ed Crooks,
Keith Hagen, Racdy Hawley,
'Continued on page 4 .

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RESERVE Girls softball players ' recel;,.lll,
awards Mood_, niJhl ~ llle . Melp A&amp;bleUc
banquet were- Ginger Findley defensive award;
Verna Ccimpsllln, leadlq hiller; Yvette Young,

mOll IJ1Iproved aad CaadJ.HarmOn ap,U award. '
Aileen&amp; - Carrie Bai&amp;ets, Mosl Improved and ··
Love Batey, beat all around pJaYer. ·
·;

Steitz dead at 69
I

.

EAST LONGMEADOW, Mass.
(UPI) - Ed Steltz, the foremost
expert on basketba)l rules and
the father of college basketball's
three-point shot, died Monday at
his home. He was 69.
Steltz coUapsed and died O)lt·
side hiS home while he went to get
the morning newspaper, said .a
spokesman for Springfield Col·
lege, wher!! he was a lonstlme
faculty member and. director of
athletics, emeritus.

0 PELLS
Sale Enda June 2

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slx hits over six and one-third
Innings, striking out two and
walking one.
Clnclnnatl relievers Norm
Charlton. Rob Dibble and Randy
Myers combined with Rljo on a
seven-hitter. Myers pltehed the
ninth Inning for his eighth save.
Greg Maddux, 4·3, missed his
third attempt at hls 50th major
league victory, glvlng up siX hits
and four r11ns over seven Innings,
But at least Maddux g'ot to
return to a warm · a'!d cozy
clubhouse before the: game was
over.
Reds shortstop Barry Larkin,
who committed one ·error, also
left the game early. He was
pulled In the ninth when hls right
elbow lll!:htened.

"I couldn' t get It loose," Larkin
said. "It started getdng colder·
and colder.lt was bone chllllng."
In other NL games, Atlanta
nipped St. Louis 6-5, Houston
edged Pittsburgh 3-2 In 11 In··
nlngs, Philadelphia downed San
Francisco 5-2 and New York
trounced Los Angeles 12-3.
BraYes 8, Cardinals 5 - At,
Atlanta, Jim Presley doubled
home Ron Gant with one out ln
the ninth Inning, glvlng Atlanta
the victory. Atlanta had gone ln
front .5-4 In the sixth on solo
homers by Dale Murphy, Ernie
Whitt and plnch·hltter Francisco
Cabrera. Reliever Joe Boever,
1-2, earned the win and Scott
Terry, 0-3, took the loss.
Aatroe 3, Plra&amp;es 2 (lllnn.) -

At Houston, Ertc Anthony's homer wllh one out In the 11th
Inning off Ted Power gave the
Astros the wln. Anthony
slammed hls third homer of the
season to make a winner of Juan
Agosto, 2·1, who pitched two
lnrtlngs of ,one-hit shutout ball.
The Pirates led 2-0on Jose Lind's
two-out bases-loaded double in
the fourth. Franklin Stubbs hit
·his (lfth homer of the year for
l{ouston. .
PhUUes 5, Glanla Z - At San
Francisco, Len Dykstra raised
hls batdng average to over .400
with three hits and Randy Ready
and Dlckle Thon· drove In two
runs apiece to lead Phlladelphla .
PhlUies ' starter Terry Mulholland, 3-1, allowed two runs on

eight hits and one walk while
striking out three over five and
two-third Innings against hls
former team. Roger McDowell
gained his lOth save. Matt
Wllllams hlt hls eighth homer of
the season and drove ln lioth
Giants runs:
Meta 1-2, Dodgen .3 - At Los
Angeles; Kevin McReynolds'
grandslamhomerunhlghlighted
an eight-run outburst in th~ third
Inning and the New York Mets
coasted. Dwight Gooden evened
his record at ~-3. Mike Morgan,
5·3, took thelqssforLosAngeles.
Darryl Strawberry opened the
homer barrage In the second
Inning with a solo blast, his fifth.
Daryl Boston hlt a two-run shot to
cap the Inning.

Jennifer Taylor of Meigs High
School, and Mica Jones of Southern High School have been
selected as delegates to Buckeye
Girls State by the American
Legion Auxiliary of Drew Webs· ·
ter Post 39, Pomeroy.
Girls State ls the annual
workshop In democracy con- ·
dueled by the American Legion
Auxiliary and this year wlll be
held In June at Ashland College.
Miss Taylor Is being cosponsored by·the Farmers Bank
and savings Co., and Miss Jones
by Bank One of Pomeroy .

.

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I was losing out on something."
ronto 4-1, Chicago clipped New
But Gleaton, whose team wenr York 6-5, Boston bounced Texas
through a 1-9 stretch earlier this 4-2, Minnesota dropped Baltiyear, acknowledged that the more 7-3, California clubbed
Royals' fate could certainly Cleveland 5-3, Detroit pounded
change.
Kansas City 11-6 and Seattle sank
"It's stlll ·early though. They Milwaukee 9-4.
could do something. We've had
Athletics f, Blue Jays 1
that streak too. It 's tough when
At Toronto, Bob Welch allowed
· you're losing. That stretch we just one run ln 7 2-3 Innings and
·had early has helped us - we Jose Canseco slugged a three-run
know what it's llke to lose," he homer to lead Oakland to only
sal d.
their third victory in their 'last
Jeff Robinson went 5 1-3 nine games. The Blue Jays have
Innings to raise hls record to 4-3. lost six of seven. Welch, 5-2,
scattered five hits and struck out
1 "My hat's off to all these guys"
·Gleaton said, remarking on the seven and Dennis Eckersley
leadership of the team. "A couple notched his lOth save. Todd
of them kept us fired up- Tony Stottlel)'lyre, 4-5, pitched eight
Phillips, Lloyd Moseby, Cecil innl.J,Igs but suffered tile loss.
Fielder and Jack (Morris) spoke
White Sox 8, Yaakees 5
up a couple of times in meetings · At New York, Carlton Fisk
we had. That was special to me.'' belted a three-run home run, the
Whitaker;s fifth home run of 338th of hls career, In the seventh
the season followed a bases· Inning to help Chicago snap Us
loaded sacrifice fly by Alan three-game lpsing streak. Four
Trammell and gave Detroit a 6-2 Chicago pitchers combine~ to
lead. Fielder walked and Moseby llmlt the Yankees to slx hits.
foUowed. with his sixth home run Scott Radlnsky, 3-0,' earned the
of the season to make the score victory and Bobby Thigpen
notched his 11th save. Lee
8-2.
'
Royals starter Tom Gordcm, Guetterman, 2-2, took the loss for
1·2, walked four and hit one ln 1 New York.
Red Sox 4, Rangers Z
..
1-3 Innings of wor,k.
At Boston, Wade Boggs's. two·
"The key factor ln this game
was walks," Kansas City Man- run single capped a three-run
ager John Wathan said. "Espe- seven.th Inning and llfted Boston,
cially ln this ball park, you can't sending Texas to their 12th defeat
afford to walk people. BecauSe of In their last 15 games. Mike
the constant threat of the long Boddlcker, 6-3, who won hls fifth
straight start, pitched eight
ball here.
"He does that too often," Innings and allowed two runs and
Wathan said. "He gets ln trouble three hits: Jeff R.eardon earned
with bases on balls. It's hard on his third save. Gary Mielke, 0-1,
your defense. You walk guys, you suffered the loss.
, Twlu 7, Orioles 3
get yourself ln trouble.
. At Baltimore, Kent . Hrbek
The Royals have lost H
straight games in Tiger Stadium drove In two runs with hls eighth
homer and a double to power
over three seasons.
Elsewhere ln the. American Minnesota. Mike Guthrie, 1-0,
League, Oakland downed To· earned the win by pitching
three-hit relief for 4 1-3 Innings.
Bob Milackl, 1·3, took the loss for
the Orioles. The Twins have won
14 of their last 18 games and nine
of their last 11 on the road.
Angels' 5, ladlans 3
At Cleveland, Johnny Ray's
Lo11 Ml(f'le!l at ClllclliO
.
bases-loaded double powered a
su Dte10 at Mo alrt'al, "'-"
SIUI Fra~tellk'CI at S&amp;. Lo!*t, •IIIII
three-run second Inning, lifting
PltWM..-11 a1 R••• ellfll
California. Bert Blyleven, 2-3,
Mo..tay SportM Tran•dlolf'
pitched 5 2-3 Innings for the
victory
and Mark Eichhorn
•ttlrno"" OriDift - Sene flrll hlllll'm.e Sam Hor• &amp;. ftochalf!r of l~f
notched
hls eighth save. Jeff
lllttr-.lio.t l.eJIPI' (A~ I on a !1-da,y
Shaw, 1-1, suffered the loss.
~MbllkaiiDn lllli'li_.,apnfJ
Calllonla - Plufll .borWvp Kr•t
Mariners 9, Brewers 4
Alwllrr110aon 15-clla.v ••• hlfod liM . rl"t nNII ~..
lh',. IO M._, ft: rH:allfoll AMI'W.op G ... y
At 'Milwaukee, Henry Cotto
DIKartiiQ from Edmo... on of lhf' Padftt·
rapped a tie-breaking Rill single
Coa~l lriiCIM' !1\AA 1.
l'l~t'land OpGotEd p..,h« .Jp(f
and the Seattle Mariners sent 11
Sha"' lo folorJdo Sprtft!Pi ollh~ PadOt:
men to the plate ln an eight -run
C.oa11l l.toa,;ut" tA \AI ud eaiJtll lup
pktlu."'' RIHI•S.ann lrMnf'lliUon-r\kroa
ninth inning. Milwaukee reliever
nl lhf' Ea~~•nn Ll'qve (A,\),
Dan
Plesac, 0-2, allowed seven
N'f'W l'orlt IALJ - Rel'allf'd Dtlon
Sandf'r,. from thl' CohmhuH fllppPr!'
runs
and seven hits In 1 1-3
1..\t\,\ 1: optlonf'd P't«"he.- Alu MIIIK to
Innings. Bryan Clark, 1-0, who
fo11rnbu11.
TeJIIl'\ - Plat HI pllt'l\tor Nolan Ry~tn on
worked 1 2-3 innings for the
ttll' l~DR.Y diu bled lbt , rftmadlwt- to
'
victory, earned hlsflrstwln since
MIU' Ill.
Torotjo - Aslllll'll'd t'akhH Gr@~
Sept.
10,
1985.
Myf'rll to Triii~· A Synl~1111t ol thf'

Scoreboard ...
Majors
B, UnHfodFI'fll'A .. .,_.~. .
AMEKI£' AN LEAGVIE
E~t

Tt'lUl1

Mllaaukl' ~

" ' L Pet.

... ,.,, .........~1 U M

Rn•tnn. .... : .... , ........21
Torolllle .................. .!I
nf'wiMd ...............1!
Dt't roK ....................... Ill
laUimoft' •.••.... ..•....... .11

II .Ui
II . US
Ill

.3M

'l! Ul
! ! .-1!1
Nt " \'on .................... u '!I .-6111

-

Gl
ll.t
2 ~1

3

51t
I I,:
":

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· , Oakl:uad •. •.. :•.. ,..... .......U ' ' .501 fhl e a~ro ............ ..... ..... .21 13 .ill!
::• ~
Mlllnf'"&lt;":l. ........... .......:!I II .SIJII -1
~I'I•UIP .... ,.... , ..... .......28 lfl .501
61"1
1'P11: a!oi ............ ........... 11 !:;! .Ui lt 11
('aiHornb .
. ....... JI !3 .ua 10
Kan!'IU." C'it)i ....... :. ... U !:J .;!II HI ',
Mo ... ,, Rettult"
Olllr.lan~l -1. Thronto I
,.
fhlca~~!fiG. ~f'W \ 'orkl
Bo~on

t

Tf'71:a;~!

Mlnnf'~~oola

7. Billtlniol"l' :t

Califon! a ii,

nM"~I&amp;nd

3

DrinK II, K11n-." Cllwi
St&gt;atllr II, Mllww.ke~ I
1\ll"scll\\' Gamt:o~
,
S(':&amp;Uir l ·IDM~~ooa It) r.U !\tllwiUIArt'

cKnudlinn

..
,.
'

'!· I ) ,:! : ~

p.m.

Oakland (\oun1 1-IJ a1 Toronto IK~y
-1-! ), -1 35pm
Clllca~~:o (P~noJ: 3-Jl ut Nl'w \ ' ork
(l.aPolnt 2·3) , 7· 3t p. m.
Tnu (\\'Itt 1-5) 111 &amp;.11ton CKIPcller C).

n1. 7 Up m
Mlnnf'Mota (Tapanl S-!) al IJaHimore
!BaiWd 1·51. ; :35 p.m
(allfernia !Finw,.· 5-2 ) .ll.i Cl~land
!C11ndloUI H), ; :35 p.m.
KUI*IN City IDohion D-3) aJ Dflmlt
! Morri!i :!·il , 7:3i p.m .
"' r~ay

GanN"M

KanMIII-I City at Bo!llon, nl~
fhl~11.,0 ;£1 Baltlmert', nldll
1'1lu " at Df't roll, nl.:hl
s - Yorlt at MlaDPMata. nlahl
Mll~uuktorlll Oakland, nll:hl
C'lf' u•htnd at St&gt; aUir, niJI:IM
TororMo at rllllfornla. nlr;hl

""·'

\\
........ 2.1
Phlladrtpilhl .... .... ......21
)lonarul .................. .!0
Sl'~ \ ' orlt ................... 111
( hlc ll-1:0 .................. .... 111
St Lolllti .................... 1;
l'ttl~u 11'11 ...... .

ii QI

11 1

Ill Uli

:t

IS .Ui
:!8 -Ill

t• t

u .u;

s

&amp;

"''"

8 :a.1 W ~~o Anph'll , ......... It 11 .5811
11 1i
San DltKU - ........... Ill 19 .-1~ 9
Atlan14 .. ... . ......... U 'U U1 II ~
San Fra11C'I8Co ......... U 2:3 .3" 12:'~
Houllton . .......... J'" . U 'U .3il!l 131~
Morday Re.~(jt~~o
Alillnta I, Sl . Loulet 5
(:lnri•Nlll-1, CIIICIIO J
HouMoe3, PHIIIMlrwtl%,llllallllt1
Phlladelfhla 5, 8• Fraal'llleO !l
New York 1%, l.o!' Ana:elew S
C lncln~l ...................2&amp;

Tuf'lld 1Q' GaiiM!II
Clain•l (8rownl .. J..l) at Chkal{o
(Bit'lf'Cll WI, t :!lp,m .
Phlladelpllla (Howtll ~ · 3) at Sat~

Frand.co tHammallws-3) ,3: Up.m .
SN Vortl (OjNa ..Z) at Lo~~o An ... ll!fl
t Wf'IIIPla... h1) , -I · G$p.m.
San Dlf'p (Whlt•n J.Zl at Moll&amp;rwoal
(Gardner 1·2:), ~ : 35 p.m.
Sl: . IAIIIs (Df'LHIII :1-2) M AUtonta
(LIIU ...~~ot 'Z·H . i: p.m.
Plll!lbuJIIa ( Heaton 1-1) at Holllllon
· tSchatardrr Hl.II: Sip.m.
•
M ed~ 8.)' GameM

•t

-"'lit&amp;

Opt&gt;rat~-

Collf'p
Car.-p Mello• -

Hartford -

N'anwd Mark ~ hmiiM

Momea'11 llf'IWI bMirl!tb ..l coa('lt, .
Kl•pPolnl -An-ncP.dO.t!~IP"·
tlo!M of mf'n'N IIOC:Cf'r c:08.ch IHtll Hojptn
aad WOftiE'II'" Volleyball coatll Tom
Harrl..,l.
Ml~~olli11Mippl- AniiOiinted lh II hallt'hlll
coach .Jallp GlhbM hall ftfiiiJIII'd aM will
ht'COffl4' 11• IUIIIi"Lilal alhletlt• dlrt&gt;«-101'.
North farallra - Name• Jor 1.'\arul•

Football

Dallwl - Rf'll('bfo41 1n1 :a~:noemenl whh
Odf'fl!lh'r tlll'klf' Mark 'l'ul_.l.
Klln'*l City - Slpd r\DINnR hack

Barry " 'orf.

Horwraclhl"
l'lufway Park- Nanwd Sl•nn Ford

Auoda&amp;e VIet Pmldf'nl .

Tllnda,y Sporb Calendar
Baaketball
NBA f.onfeft'nct Flral1
EMien Confel'f'Dl!to
Chlca«&lt; at DetroM,II p.m.

.......

H••MI - Frank T a&amp;e VI. AniGine
Byrd, It, 1uper mlddlewellhts: JamN
Plpp11 u. Rltky Alvarez, 10,
fea&amp;llerwel......_

-·... .

C'Jclinl

Bar&amp;. Italy - Tciur of Italy

Staalr,r O.p Fiala
• ..... at EdmatU., I! II p.m.

.,.,.

MI8L PlaJoffli
EMterw Dlmiow FI•IA
Ku. . City at llalllmOft', '7; U, p.m.

W.ter• Dtvt.klw ,.,_..

D1l .... al !lu DlefO, It: II p.m.

Te....

.

IJMIIuWel .. , Call. -NCAADIV ...ORI
Champlo..Wpo

WeiPIIfUIIJ
larajf!'VCI, \'qotlavla -

World Ol~plo..tll~

Oakland interest
in Raide1'8. falling

llilUIH'd Toft,\'

Wll!lf'll bMbthd COil{' h.
ClneiMd Stall! - Named .Jolm Kon!'laniiHIIIathletll' tU~or .

Troy Statil"- An1t0111k'ecl thf' rt'!!ilpa·
tkln of h•hall t'. .t:h fhaM' Riddl ~.
f'fff't.ih·f' Aul:t~fl Sh1t.

I. Pel . GB
15 'IL'\ "

lh~.tor..Ckl•l Lf'IIPt' (.\.t.AI lor a tlklay
ml'dil!al n.&gt;taahlllt.aalon.
laskf'lball
•Neo- .J•r..y
llHd promow-d to
Sf'nM.r Vltf' l"ftltldf'nt ol Ba•Wtball

WORN!D'.'I l'OIJI')'haiJ C:NCtl.

SUION,\L LE.\Gl'E

Tram

_..,,

M'olllfn'!l

' OAKLAND, Calif. (UPI) ·:rhe majority of Oakland voters
who have no Interest in bringing
the Natlonal Football League
Raiders back from Los Angeles
has risen slightly- to 63 percent
- pollsters said Monday.
A new Tribune-Gallup Poll said
ihe number of voters who don't
care ~bout negotiating a new
Raider contract went up 4
percent ln a May 10-14 poll from
last February's 59 percent.
1 The Increase Is not considered
a slgnlflcant change, John Zeglarskl, a Gallup ana_lyst, said.

TUESDAY
, POMEROY - The XI Gamma
Mu Chapter, Beta Sigma Phl
Sorority wlll meet Tuesday at 6
p:m. at tile home of A.R. Knight
In Pomeroy.
. HA!UUSONVILLE -The Harrlsonvllle Senior Citizens ,wlll
,meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the
town house. All members are
urged to attend. Refreshments
· wlll be served.
-POMEROY -The Ohio Eta
Phi Cl)apter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority wlll meet Tuesday at the
home of Sonya Wolfe for Us final
meeting and Installation of officers. Members are to meet at the
Pomeroy Parking Lot at 6 p.m.
WEDN'l:SDAY
POMEROY -The last day to
·purchase tickets lor the Pomeroy
Alumni Banquet Is Wednesday.
WILKERSON SCORES - Cllbil' Curtis Wilkerson seores from third when Reds' relief pitcher
Norm Charlton (31) threw a wild pltcb In the
seventh Ianing of the ~~rame, la&amp;e Monda:v. Ca&amp;cher_

Joe Oliver could not-retrieve the ball-ln lime to
enable Charlton to tag Wilkerson. Claclnn.-l bell&amp;
the Cubs 4-3. (UPI)

RACINE -The Wildwood
Garden Club wlll meet Wednes·
·day at 1 p.m. ·at the home of
Conrile Hill. Bring glass for
recycling.

Portland outlasts Phoenix, 100-98

Meigs ...__-;;;c.::on;;.;'::!n:.:ue:;d:.:f::.ro.::m::..::p~ag:::e:...:3:__ _ _ _ __
Eric Heck, Kevin Musser, Terry
McGuJre, Jeremy Phalln, Terry
Reuter. Chris Stewart, Kevin
Taylor, Mike Walls, Brian
Warner, and Jason Wright : Spe·
clal awards- Defensive AwardEd Crooks, Offensive AwardMike Walls, Highest average a-:~d
MVP-Jason Wright, Most WinsJeremy Phalin and 110 percent
Hustle Award-Cbrls Stewart.
Jason wright was named first
team ALL·TVC, receiving Ho- .
·norable Mention honors were Ed
Crooks, Kevin Taylor, Jeremy
Phalln and Terry Reuter.
4

'

Miss Taylor. daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Fenton Taylor of Hysell
Run, Pomeroy, Is a member of
4-H, on the yearbook staff, active
in HUGU and Teenage Institute,
student council, vice president of
her junior class, and active ln
volleyball, basketball and track.
Miss Jones ls secretarytreasurer of her class at Southern, a member of the National
Honor Society, an O.U. Governor's Scholar, ln the choir, and
plays severa) sports Including
basketball and volleyball.
Selected as alternates ~ere

Community calendar.' ·

PORTLAND, Ore. · (.UPI) · - •
Wearyafterataxlngseven-game
series against San Antonio, the
Portland Trail Blazers dld the
logical thing In the closing
seconds Monday night. They
turned to a guy who has hardly
played the last two weeks.
Kevin Duckworth, who missed
most of the Spurs' serieS after
breaking a bone in hls right hand
In the opening round, sank a
tie-breaking jumper with 17.3
seconds left to give Portland a
100-98 victory over the Phoenix
SunslntheopeneroftheWestern
Conference final.
"We've run that play a zllllon
times," said Duckworth, who
returned for Game 7 Saturday
and played once again Monday
night with ."a fiberglass cast.
"We've won a lot of games that
way."
Asked If he were tired, the
burly 7-foot center said: "Hell, I
haven't been tired. I've been off
for 2 1-2 weeks."
After Duckworth's basket, reserve Danny Y.oung blocked
Mike McGee's potential tying
jumper, and Portland had a
victory over its well-rested
opponents.
The Suns, offfor six days since
completing a surprising ellmlna·
tlon of the Lakers, lost for the
18th straight time at Memorial
Coliseum
dating tothey
the have
1984
playoffs. Overall,
dropped 13 of their last 17
meetings with Portland.
"I didn't like the way we
executed ln practice before we
left," said Phoenix (:oach Cotton
Fitzsimmons, whose team s,hot
only 41 percent from the floor .
"And I didn't like the way we
executed tonight.
''They forced us on the perlme·
ter. We didn't get Inside as much
as we would have liked."
The Blazers, 7-0 ln the postseason at home, are home again for
Game 2 of the best-o(-seven
serieS Wednesday night .
With the score 98-98, Dati
Majerle of Phoenix pressured
Clyde Drexler Into throwing a
P\ISS behind Duckworth. Majerle
came up with: the ball with 48
seconds left.
But Kevin Johnson m lssed a
twlsdng.layup on the other end,

· and Duckworth took Terry Por·
ter's pass and canned an eightfoot jumper from the right flank
lor the winning points..
·bu
."I felt no pressure,"
ckworth said. "If I misSed lt !would
have been mad."
Phoenix called timeout and
Inserted McGee Into the game for
the first t!me.l:fe took a shotfrom
the baseline, · but Young, who
entered during the timeout,
came over to deflect It with about
five seconds remaining .to seal
the triumph.
· Drexler had 20 .polnts and 10
rebounds and Kersey. who
missed eight of his first nine
shots.' flnlshed with 19 points and
11 rebounds. Buck Williams
added 16 points and Duckworth
contrl~ted 12 for Portland.
Tom Chambers scored 29
points and Johnson added 20 for
the Suns. Johnson scored only 8
points In the last three quarters
while making 2 ol hls last 12
shots.
With three minutes left,
Drexler swooped inside to put
back Kersey's miss for a 98-93
lead. But Jeff Hornacek scored
on a drive for Phoenix and was
fouled at the 1:52 mark. He
missed the free throw, but
Chambers followed with a lefthanded layup in the lane, was
fouled and made hls foul shot to

ALL BEDDING p

3 PIS SJ~

REG. f6.SO Flail NOW fJM

BEDDING GERANIUMS '
181. •12 NOW S9SD
4 IN. GERANIUMS leg. Sl.OQ
85c EA. - 10 fOI SJIO
4 IN. HARDY MUMS 111. fl.OO
NOW 85c oa. _ 10 FOR S7JO
10 IICH HANGING IASICm
REG. 15.50 NOW $450
lEG. 1675 NOW S57S
AU SHIUDERY &amp; niRS
20IIfo OFF
Sate Contiouos Thr.......,..fht S..on

.W.,.ymenc yo• neeu.
lla:ot aU. when yau re re:~u.v to Ouv1.uld

'Mhtcnever:unoun115

tess.

Our t:x!ftu 1s Lles•lfled 10 g•v~ you lha
tlltn utcenuve you mav need 10 betlnll'l••1 IIH' your horne. !t ~be UHCt1a hetp
wnh ~l' tnosa otner costs' :WOCwed wtlb
buy•nlll home.
So trY~ re

Ol'll~mm1 or oWn1111.1 hornw

somcu;y. ..:ome 10 C.:nnJ Truu :and btlia
,_ tiMaee yout eonvenuon:~~t mon1Jtt~ 10211 10 mi!Ce lhll dream :1. ~luv The C.... ·
dlrlllll Ccmr=l TNsl. ·. : 'VIII :tvr.: :mu ~ ~~
Tn111 Homeuver Account· rhe 0esc way to
a n IICinul .. ea,~l !O tnc ln!Crest 'IOU ve
• ...,. _ _ _ .. J11fl

:w.------.-_.. .,. ,,___.,.. ._c-,_..,
IN lid \'OUr CIOWflpayment... :3.Sicr

... - ..... -·................. _ _ _ _ · - · - - -....... ,_.__c_r...

~---~-r-·--""' ·--.-

CENTRAL TRUST
97 North S.COIId ht.
__ ,_.
' 992-6661 - 9'12·3007

-

~~~:; /tri~~~leaacclde~~~~~:is

the grand.son ol Mr . and Mrs.
Tom Hayman.
Clayton Johnson was hospital-

HUIIAID'
S GIEE. .OUSE

Smftl money for~ dawao:tyiTif:nt on :1 home ~on vour tfomesl'ftT A.ttounr ar1bl
il :a ditlicuit dlare. Thats whv we ~ntJfiCd
l=noniiiDtlon fee 1po1nts' on J"OUf kiM
Widla Homn:~.ver \ccount .IOU .::~n s.tve
b l dDwn,ayment 1n 3ftY ~ount Jt ?IIY
- . Yau II cam .1 ccmpenuve r:ur.: on :rour

By Melody Roberts
Brittany LeAnn Hauber, age 4,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Rick
Hauber, recently won fourth
place ln the Miss Sunburst
Contest in Parkersburg, W.Va.
She received a free $200 entry
lrito the Iriternatlonal Pageant to
be held In Atlanta as well as a
trophy. Her younger sister, Au tumn, also . won a trophy for
. Ipa.tlon .m her age group.
par.hc
Mrs. Elizabeth Balsoo. Indianapolls, Ind., called on her
parents. Mr. ana Mrs. Ellll
Thurston.
Tyler Winebrenner, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Greg Winebrenner, was
' 1 ht
tl h it I!zed

LA

SYIACUSE, OHIO ·
992-5776

.-\ Pf'4C 13A NK

Mitldltport

•

;·'The Daily Sentinel

"
,.

.

'

Tue1day, May 22, 1990
Page 6

Thursday at 6: 30 p.m. In the
council chambers. Call Marilyn
Meier at 992-5983 or Sue Baker at
992·7733.
RUTLAND - The Women's
Fellowship of Meigs · County
Churches of Christ wlll meet
Thursday at 7:30p.m. a) the Zion
Church.
POMEROY '-The Pomeroy
Group of AA and AlAnon wlll
meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at
Sacred Heart Catholic Church.
Call 1 · 800-333 · 5051 for
Information.
i

I

.

REEDSVILLE- The Eastern
Local School District Board of
Education wlll meet In regular
session on Thuruday at 7:30p.m.
in the high school cafeteria.
POMEROY - Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority wlll meet Thursday at
the home of Clarice Krautter at
6:30p.m.

Joins co,mpany
Mary Sue Michael of Minerva,
a native of Pomeroy and graduate of Pomeroy High School, has
joined Babcock and Wllcox as
suj)ervisor of the Corporate Information Center at the Alllacce
Research Center.
'she holds a bachelor's degree
In education from Ohio University and a master's degree' In
library science from Kent State
Universit y.

Kelly Smith and Missy Nelson,
both students at Meigs. Daughter
of Cathy Morris, Middleport,'
Kelly ls active ln the French
Club, ,Teenage Institute, and
HUGS, and was secretary of her
sophOmore class. She ls active In
basketball, softball and
voUeyball.
•
Missy ls the daughter of Mr .
and Mru: Donald Nelson, Middleport. She Is on the girls varsity
cross country team, plays .basketball and track, Is on the
yearbook staff, the newspaper
staff,.and active In HUGS and the
Teenage Institute, the French
Club and Is · on the student '
council.

Pool opening
The Middleport Munlclp;il Pool
wlll open Saturday at noon and

MICAJONES ·

' '

.
.'
, A buUetln was read from
Maxine Barnes, eighth district
president, -stating . that the
summer convention woUld be
held June 9 at the Drew .Webster
Post Home ln Pomeroy, at the
recent · meeting of the Lewis
Manely Auxlllary Unit 263 met at
Dales ln Gallipolis w,lth Dorothy
Casey as hostess. . .
The delegate for the conventi~n ls Mrs. Cauey and the
alternate Is Margaret Bowles,
pre~ !dent.
,
A letter was received from the
St. Mary's unit asking for endorsement of La Donna Dierlnl(er for
department treasurer.
It was decided to retain the

-

'

.,.,

• "t • t

Poppy Days in Middleport
same officers for anoth er year.
They are Mrs. Bowles, presl· wer-e held May !&amp;and 19 .
Mrs. Richards reported from
dent; Lgrenne Goggins, first-yke
president; · Edith Ross, second the Flrlng Line and Mrs . Hampvice president; ., Florence ' Ri· ton •reported from the National
chards, secretary; Lula Hamp- Legislative Bulletin concerning
ton , treasurer; Annet1e 1Peppers , the F'lag Protection Act ·ol 1989.
chaplain; Tomiko ,-- L.ewls, They stated' that the only thing
serg!"~nt-at-1,1rms;· and Mrs, Ga• , which •would save the act would .
be ·• a constitutional amendment
sey. histqrian. ,
, ,
Chairmen for the year are.Mrs. or.' n '' 'ofe, from the public . They
Richards, children ancl youth; . also ,stated this would save the
Annette · Johnson: ·cQmmunlty flag• from·.malicious burning or
service; Vlrglnla Staqworth , for· other forms of desecration.
The meeting closed with reelgn relations and education;
Tomlko Lewis, veterans affairs:• ·marks by the president. •
· The• next meeting will be hela
Mrs . Bowles, Amerlcanism; ,and
Mrs . Hampton. national security . at the home of Ada Franklin,
Point Pleasant . W.Va .
and leglslat_lve. .
. • ~.
~~d

·• ··.··

Oies.r~t ~~neil m~tt~~·:t~ . /:: '_
an~versaty

f;,'J\f~rilbl!rs,.'ai

tfm~"·wer,e'

all. swimmers will be admitted
free.
Regular dally open hours at the
pool will be noon to 5 p.m. The
price scheduled will be $2 for
adults, $1.50 for students, a lid $1
for pre-schoolers.. with no charge
for those children under three
years of age.
Individual se;1son passes will
be $25 each and famlly passes,
$100.

p..., ~ne

C.ll'm'c
1-1

·,
The Middleport Rzcreatlon Departrnent will offer two free
tennis clinics on Saturday, June
2.
The 11 a.m. clinic Is being
conducted primarily , for beginners and for t11ose who have
no!' played very much tennis.
while the second session to begin
at 12:30 p.m. wlll·be for the more
experienced • tennis •players.
Randy Weston willbethelnst1110tor . Tennis lessons w!ll be ava!la·
ble .to,• those .-who may . be

,'";!.: ;~~~.,,- :

The 56th.
of Ches- during her bl; thday celebration ' i
· that
Mellis sa Ann Barker, daUghter
ter Council 323 Daugh\e~s of at the Chester United Methodist Beftlla" Smlth. · et.emma Vale, .of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Barket',
Amerl~a was observed recently Church. ·
Fern c;.hrlsty." Cfrpha t&gt;l115gra,·e, , ' R.aclne, graduated with a bacheat the lodge hall.
,
It was -reported that Greta· · E~~le. Warner, Elizabeth Hayes, ' lor of science degree In special
Beulah Maxey,cQuncllor. pre- · Riffle. a' ~ember, and Susan ' Ida -. Knl!!)lt,. H;ittie Frederick, .,education from the School of
sided at the meeting · with 32 Wolf, a granddaughter 'of Helen .Vtrgl~ Ollner, Elizabeth ·Biddle, .Education at Bob ~ones·
MIDDLEPORT -There wlll members -and three visitors Wolf. received' scholarships from An~ ,Tullle, Mabel Van )\1ater,
University.
be a special meetlnjl Thursday at
present.
the National Cduncll Board.
Ad~le Hawk_ Dena Sorden, Le- ··
The university conferred
7 p.m. for all Meigs County trash
Charter members recognized
· Thl' charter members were , till! Wood. LilY Christy, Mlldred •-- n!"arly 700 graduate and underhaulers at ' ihe former Royal were Elizabeth Hayes. Zelda escorted Into the hall by the color Baum, Edna McElro;.- . Glennre graduate degrees and certlfl·,
Crown Bottling building on Mill Weber, and Ada Bissell. Two bearers alid· 12 guards. •all &lt;Haye,, Zelda . Weber.. Cl~ra
~ates of-completion llpoD ,the63rd
Str(\et next to the American other members ar, e Ada Morris,
1
•!"
11
Esther
.
Shork',
Carl
C)msty.
Hartle
El.sel·
.
graduating
class. The
'auniaal
.. ,
carry ng ,.,.er can ags.
' ., l
C t Frede~lck Pearl '
.
.
~
Legion building. All trash haul- Alnerlcare
Nursing Center, and Smtih · was seated with . her s ,e ~ ;-. ur
', •
convocation was helil Saturday;
ers are urged to atte_nd.
Ethel Arbaugh, Tuppers Plains.
mother Elizabeth Haves ·'Doris H~yes, Nelle Bing, Francls:.r:
~~Y 5, at 9 a.m. ln the 7,000 seat
Flag bearers escorted Sadie Koenl 'with her sis'ter-in-ll!w, r~.; Katie We!Jer .. Ad• M . s·, I:ounder's ~inorlal ~pliltoTrussell to tbe altar and Erma ·· Zelda gWeber arllil Ma.; McPeek 'Evelyn Ga_ut;.. and Helen Eisel- rlum on the univerSity &lt;:ampu•. '
Cleland, deputy state councilor, with her slst~r ..Athi 'B!ssell-: •
stein. The mee~t,ng that . night
Bob Joll8 uriNj!rslty II
presented her with a 50 year pln .
Helen' Wolfe: pianist, played closl!'d at 2 a.m.
, · d.. fundamental Cb_rullan, Uber~
lzed recently for surgery.
Mrs. Cleland read a poem to. her and san , 'Fo'r You .. Poems , 1'1Je charter tnembe~s an · arts · unlvetslty ,that. bas !lit
Word has been received of the and complimented her for . her were rea~'bv JoAnn Ba.urn, Beftv ' thel'li escor!s Sadie jrussell:and annual ' enrolln1ent' o( approxl· ·
death o~ Mrs. Betty Adams Camp work through the _years. Mrs.
Roush , and ·Marcia Keller. Each it he three VISitors were seated at
mat ely 5,000students from every _
Ruckman, Baltimore. She vl· Trussell ·spoke briefly. zana
charter member spoke br.leflv .
,a special table with. a blue cover,
state In the union and 40 foreign
sited Long Bottom often to see Gainer, a patient ;1t Amerlcare,
Mrs. Oeland gave a the lodge :flowers . candles and a decorated
countries and territories. The
her brother, Clyde !Bud) Adams, also will receive a 50 .year pln. ,·
lilstorv slilce Its beginning . on cake made by JoAnn Baum.
, ~nlverslty offers over 100 underbeforE; his death In 1988.
Mrs. Cleland reported on the May i 4, 1934 In the basement of 1 Cake, lee cream. tea and coffee graduate majors and more than·
Robert Larkins and 'J immy ral'y at New Philadelphia
the. old school . building that were _served by the kitchen
65 graduate majors.
:
Starcher received awards at a
'
d , th hill! Ch sler The commottee. Helen Wolf served as
recent car show held at ' the recently. ·
stan son e
n e. ·
. pianist for the meeting.
Pomeroy Fire Station and spanChester · Council wlll partie!late Theodorus -Councl1- •No. 17 ·
H ppv Birthdav was sung to
sored by the Blg Bend Car pate In the
•
Vemorlal
Day
proPomeroy,
Instituted
the
CChes~r
G
Ch 1 c
Council
i o ldai e ·.Frederick· . It was re1
0
1
Cruisers Club.
·
\ gram a
es er erne ery n
Th 1· t Eliz beth Darst was •ported th_a(,Opal Holl~n was sick
Missy Wells Morris was ho- ., Monday. For members who
e ae
~
.
' AttendmgwereDortsGrueser,
nored .recently , with a layette cannot march, meet at the district deputy at . that time, Zsther Smith, Dorothy Ritchie.
shower at theFullGospelChurch cemetery at for the program.
Mary Hazel Floyd, Portsmouth. Ellz beth Haves Inzy Newell,
In Long Bottom. She Is the
Ethel Orr thanked members was the state councilor, and A~a The:::Oa White. Ikonnle Landers,
i
Helen Wolk Eva ,Robson, Betty
daughter ol Frank and Shirley for their cards, gifts and visits M~rrls was the state organizer.
Leland and Brenda Brown,'
Wells.
' Roush. Genevieve Ward, Iva
Lafayette, Ind. ; announce the
1
To place new notes, call ·
Powell. Mae McPeek, Ada Bls· birth of a daughter, Kristen.
'
•
Melody Roberts at 985-4275 or
1
OCa
sell, MarjoriE' Fetty, Alta Sal- Nicole. April 28, at Home Hospl· &gt;
write to P .O. Box7, Long,Bottom,
,
,lard . JoAnn Baum, Marcia ral . , Lakayette. The Infant
45743.
The Eastern · Local, Meigs services for preschool hand!- Keller, Zelda Weber, Doris Ko· weighed seven pounds, two oun- '
I.pcal, and Southern Local~chool capped children.
, . .
enig, Jgan . Frederick, Sadie ces and 'was 20 lnchd long.
;
Districts are 'presently partlcl·
Proposed activities as a result Trusseli, Belly Young, Mary K.
Mr. ail!!' Mrs(•BroWn have a·
patJ.Ilg 'lnanSEO-~ERRCconsoll-, of the grant funding are to assist Holter, Sandra While·, Goldl.e son, Matthew, age t.,.o. Maternal :
Fenton Art Glass in William- dated appUcallon for early c)llld- , In coordlnation.ol earlv lnterven- Frederick. Ruth Smith, Ethel grandparents ara Clyda Fields, ;
stown. W.Va. was given. Those
hood grant funds.
·
· tlon services and ,to as~ist In the Orr, Lora Damewood, Faye Hartford, W. Va. and the late •
going were Rosemary Lyons.
The grant funds are made expansion of earlq l,nterv~ntlon , Kirkhart, Erma·Cleland, Beulah .Gerald Fields . Paternal grand-1
Elizabeth Slaveil, Ruth Ebersbavailable under the provisions of services .
,
,
:
IMaxey. Guests were .Nathan parents are Leland and Mary l
Further information may be Bl!lgs, Belle Biggs, and Bet.ty Brown, Middleport . Maternal
ach, Pooch Brewer. Betty Den· Pu.bllc Law 99-457, 1986 amendnev. Betty Gllkey, and Mary ments to the Education of the obtained by contacting Joyce ,Sptlncer. fro Guiding Star Coun· great-grandparents are Ralph ;
Beth Brewer. a guest.
Handicapped Act, as an lncen- Thoren, Southern Loc'al, at "949 icll NQ. 124, Syracuse.
and Vlrglnla Mlller, West Colum. ·
The regular June meeting wlll live to expand and . imp~!)\1e ' 2669. ·.
'
bla, W. Va.
·
'
'
'
... ''· ....
be a potluck picnic on June 21 at
the home of Rosemary Lyons.
· Refreshments were served by
Betty Gilkey to the following
.' '
members, Lllllan Demoskey,
.
~
... ·.
Elizabeth Murray., · 'Yvonne '
Linda
Jones
was
h'onoPed
resets us apart
Ruth Ebersbach, Pooch Brewer,
Young ,&lt; ·and Tlieresa' Kemledy &lt;~
cently
with
a
baby
shower
·at
the
is the caring and
Elizabeth Uearls, Elizabeth
·Sending gifts wer~ sa·dte •earl. 1
municipal building In Pomeroy. ·
Slaven, Betty Denney, · Rosem·
dedication of
. Mickey Mouse theme ·was Vary Etta Burnside, ·Yvonne'
ary Lyons, and Nora Jordan.
Flowers;
Laura
F1owe~s.
Debbie
carried out In the decorations;
single member of
cake, plates, napkins, and cups.' Grafe, ·Frances 'Eskew Alpha
our staff.
,
Pink and blue candles In cfystal Baney, Goldie Frederldk, and
Diane Jones. · · · " '
·
daughters. The theme was candelabra flanked the cake.
You're invited to stop '
ser,
v
ed
by
Refreshments
were
The
door
prlze'·
was
wqh'
bY
' '
"Showers of Blessings.'' The
in ~ to observe :.
social room was decorated with Suzan Thoma, Gall Thoma, and Charlotte Ell'leifeld . ··'Games·
Kay
·
Koehler
to
Grace
Thoma,
these exceptional
were
played
and
priz~s
were
woil.
umbrellas and flowers. Mrs.
'
Helen
Shain,
Carmen
Shultz,
by
Kathy
Fl
fe
and
Kay
Koehler.
people
at
work,
ask
Trudy Andrews was the speaker.
Ellen Tboma, ·Cheryl Thoma,
Betsy Houdashelt assls ted In
There was special music and a
questions of
Ruby
Burnside,
Jolly
Hysell,
opening
the gifts. r·• ·
''· '··
skU, and flowers were given to
Julie Dlllon, Charlotte Elberfeld,
Serving as •hostes5es were' Ptif'
them and our
special mothers as a part of the
' .
De
Moss,
June
Kalatta,
Esther
Thoma,
Mar:V
·
Houdashelt,
and
residents, and
program.
. ,,
Bonnie Landers. Opal ,Eichinger, Marcia King.'
•·
· · ' ,
Refreshments were served by
~
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' discover for •
the hostess.
yotu'Self the
•
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TUPPARS PLAINS -The
Tuppers Plains VFW Post 9053
wlll meet 'fhursday at 8 p.m.
Officers wlll be installed and a
potluck meal wlll follow.

Long Bottom news notes ·

20111 11lr11H1g $,111 $1/1

You Can Build Your Downpayment
\l:couru

MIJ;lDLEPORT'- A mlnlquilt
class wlll be conducted by the
Middleport Arts Council with
Bunny · Kuhl lnstructpng on

HUUAID'S GIHNHOiiSE

Introducing
The Homesaver Account
from Central·Trust

IM~Tnasc Homcs:~ver

'l11URSDAY
RACINE- The Racine Amerl·
can Legion Auxiliary wlll meet
Thursday at 7:30 lp.m. at the
legion home. Refreshments wlll
be served between 6:30-7 p.m.

Kersey , playing · with a
spralited right thumb, shed much
of the the bandage around hls
hand at halftime, and sank six of
seven attempts , for 13 palllts ln
the third ~rlod. Drexler added
10, and Portland led 84·80 entering the ·faurth quarter.
,
"I think we still )lad a lot of
energy," he said. "When you get.
to this point, emotions and
adrenalln take over. I don't think
you really -ever get tired.':

rttll!e~it~9~8~-9~8~w~i~th~6~9~s:ec:o:n~d:s~to:p~l~ay:·:...::O::•:n:D:•:I:t=9·:6:·:s:u:":·:1:-6=~

IIYiap :MMl beiaft: loftt you II have •he'

Gordon Fisher Introduced
members of the All·TVC Aca·
demlc team. Frank .Blake and
Robby Wyatt-l;:loys Track. Ed
Crooks and Eric Jieck-Baseball.
Trlcla Baer, Kelly Douglas, Tara
.Gerlach, and Chrissy Weaver·
Softball. Nancy Baker, JennUer
Taylor, Missy Nel10n and Amy
Waener·Girls Track.
·
Master or ceremonies was
booster president Jim Souls by,
Meigs Local board member
Robert Barton gave the lnvova·
lion and 'benediction.

---·

Two more named to-Girls State

Tigers make it seven in row;
Indians bow to Angels, 5-3
By ERIK K.LIEF
UPI Sports Writer
So far neither the Kansas City
Royals or the Detroit Tigers are
living up to their pre-season
expectations.
The Tigers, who ended up on
.. the short side of 103 ballgames
last year and were not expected
to Improve upon that mark this
season, won their seventh
straight game Monday night, a
11-6 decision over the rudderless
Royals.
.
Detroit tallied eight times in
the second Inning on just three
hits, highlighted by a three-run
home run by Lou Whitaker that
sent Kansas City to Its sixth loss
In Its last nine games.
Although Detroit made some
off-season moves, picking up
players like Cecil Fielder and
.Llyod Moseby, they weren't
expected to threaten the hierarchy of the AL East.
In contrast, Kansas City captured some high-priced pitching ·
- Cy Young award-winner Mark
Davis and 19-game winner Storm
Davis - making them a strong
favorite to capture the division
-IItle.
Thus far, however, those expectations haven't exactly
panned out.
·
Although not atop the division,
the Tigers are streaking while
the Royals are struggling, and
dead last in the west.
Jerry Don Gleaton, acquired
from the Royals i!l spring trainIng for a minor league pitcher,
wen_! !lie final 3· 2-3 to earn hls
first Detroit save and first since
he saved three for Kansas Ciiyin
1988.
.
"With those guys they ac·
quired over the winter, I was
happy to be a part of lt ," Gleaton
said. "When I left there. I thought

....-.-...

By The Bend·

Reds sun'ive five errors to post 4-3 victory over Cubs
"We pick each other up,'' Reds
By UnUed Press lnterna&amp;lonal
Not even ley winds and frozen second baseman Ron Oes ter
hands could cool the Red -hottest - said. "The Infielders pick each
other up and the pitchers pick the
team ln baseball.
Jose· Rljo survived five errors rest of the. team up."
" We're second ln the league ln
by his teammates and Todd
Benzinger drove in two r uns to fielding but you wouldn't know lt
boost the Cincinnati Reds to a 4-3 tonight, " Plnlella sal d. "It was a
victory over the Chicago Cubs in good ballgame even though we
blustery Wrigley Field . The booted the ball a c9uple times.
'game time t,e mperature was 51 You don't expect to win with five
degrees and 20 mph winds · errors."
The Reds have come to expect
whipped off Lake Michigan.
"It was the coldest game we've to win just about every night .
played ln," Reds manager Lou They have won six of their last
eight and Monday night ImPlnlella said.
Numb hands accounted for proved to 26-9 overall and 14-3 on
seven errors. between the two the road. Both their overall and
·teams but the Reds pulled away records are the best in the
together to overcome their majors.
Rljo, 3-1, gave up three runs on
mistakes.

----------- -..._

Tuesday, May 22, 1990

Pomwoy-Middeport. Ohio

Page 4-The D811y Sentinel

--""·- ~·--

B'trt•h
announced .

(h"ldhood Grant recetVed'l

~
A luncheon at Dale's Ill Galllpo·
lls was announcpd, for June 7 at
the rect!nt meeting of the Busy
Bee Class of the Middleport First
Baptist Church held at the
church with "Pooch" Brewer
, presiding
• The opening prayer was
t given by Elizabeth Slaven an,d
• roll call was answered with
members repeating a bible
verse.
Devotions were by BettY, Gli·
key, entitled "Who Needs pod"
and "When I Crow Old." 1
A report on a recent thp to

Jones .baby ,: shower.h~kk:.:,.

OUR
CARING STAFF

Evangeline Missionary meets

Ellaen Bowers conducted the
' missionary program at the recent meeting of the Evangeline
Missionary Group of t~e ~orneroy Churc'h of Christ h,eld at the
home of Pat Thoma.
Janet Van6y had· devotion and
Sherr! Might, acting president,
conducted th~ meeting. · . · .
; · Eileen Bowers reported ..on the
mother-daughter banq~t which
; was attended by 55 l)'lOthers and

' Ladles Ministries Is sponsor!~~&amp;
: the Gallla C:Ounty 4rtaand Crafts ·
• Show at the Gallla County Junior
Fairgrounds on Route 35 across
: frol)'l Holzer Medical Cenler on·
• June 2 from lOa.m. to6p.m. and
: June 3 from noon to 5 p.m.
• Over 60 craft exhibitors from
Ohio, Wast Vlllllnla, and Ken·

""'

'

· What

every '

'

.· .J•tAKES THE .
·_DIFFERENCE.

; Craft show s1ate&lt;i .at Gallipolis.
'
• The Rodney Cburch of God tucky· WIU be
unique and

.

}}y

C'laJ J meets
Bee
.

BusJ~1J

'
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a

~~tlllng

hanilcrafted Items. •
Refreshments wlll be sold and
parking and admission lllree to
the publiC, Door prlzel wlU be
awarded throu&amp;hout both days.
Some exhibitors booths are
sWI available. For. bttorinatlon
call 245-5363 or M6-947l.

Stop In And Check ·out the ·S11vings
· Found on Men' s_V,ear..
'MEN'S POLO S"IRTS, V..:NECI T•SHIRTS
COLORED POCIO ·y·SHIRTS .and .$0CIS

IACINE•·DEPARTMENT 5101.:.:.

3. 11•1

····1110

·UCIII,

MAITlltCARD - VISA - GOLDEN BUCKEYI

\I

•o
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very best in

''
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nunitlg

home~
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.!

�: - Pie•

8 1he o.ly Suti1ll

Ponwov-Midclip-At. Ohio

.

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Tundef', Mtly 22. 1890

. ' MemOTJai,
_; _, -Day u;eekend------.........._From ice cream -to moqnshine, ItS
IIJ SANDRA L LATIMER
Ualled Preu .Jaleraa&amp;lonal
'

I
I

Sunday.
·saturday and Sunday at the
May Is also National Historic Fairfield County Fairgrounds In
Preservation Month and many Lancaster.
Ohioans get an earty jump on activities are scheduled,
-Ohio ·camera ColleCtors Sosummer this weekend, celellrat- Including:
clety Show and Sale Saturday
lng Indian heritage, Ice cream
-Dressmaking, Mllllne!'¥ and llncfSUnday In Columbus.
and moonsb!Jie.
Ladles' Accessories Display, · -White Houae Alltlqlll!l Show
The Feast of the Flowering Roscoe VIllage, Coshocton, Mondq at lbe Hawken Scboolln
Mdon, Friday through Sunday In through M(lnday.
Gates'Mlllii Cuyaqa County.
ChWicothe, Is an authentic In·
-Wallklng Tour ·of Ohio State
.- AnUque Car Show and Padian pow wow, complemented lly Unlverslty Saturday evening.
rad.e May 29, Mount VIctory,
a frontier mollntalnmen rendez-Pancake . Breakfa~t and Hardin County'
Vou.ti In· ChWicothe, the state's Hotel Lakeside Open Hou.s e Sun·
. -~t1e . Day Friday• at
first capital.
day In Lakeside.
·
"Our .House" Museum In
· • '· Utica, home of the Velvet ,lee
- QuUt "Show _In Town Hall In Galllpojla.
.
; · Cream Co., holds the Old· Port Washington, Tuscawaras
-Farm Horse Show·Saturday
• Fashioned . Ice Cream Festival County.
·
and !iUitdaY at tbe Bob Evans
-Saturday through Monday.
Other events this week:
Farm near fUo Grande, Callla
In New Straitsville, the Perry
-Natlonal Rib Cook-off CqUllly. ' ·'
·
. , County community celebrates througll Monday at North. Coast
, '..:4Bailoonfest, hot air balloons
: • . with the Moonshine Festival, Harbor·In Cleveland.
·
_raclng1 from Coney Island In
through Monday, with country
-Ohio Valley Pow Wow Frl- ct~t.l Saturday thr.!lllllh
'
music, moonslilne. pie and a day through Sun!lay at Chief Mil~.
·
: , moonshine still ,lllsplay.
·
Logan's Gap Campground In
-DJmler cruites are .offeted
The Deercreek pam -Days Ripley, Brown County.
.
each·· Saturdq tllroqh Sept. 30
·
Festival thro~~ghSilnday In WIIU·
-Rock, RhYthm 'n Bll!es Frl· aOOIIrcf the Valle)'. ~ ~tern·
: ·, · amsport, Ptcllaway County, fea· -day throughSundaylndowntown wlieeler In Marietta.
·.' ··
. · tures five parades and lots · of Toledo. . • .
Oa llle Ohio lil.titorieal Soolety
: " entertainment.
·
·
· ·
-Musklngtim Valley - Trad.e sch"ule:
- - · The Presidential Steam Train Days Friday through Monday In
-Pullllcwalksl!llhetheCedar
• . ExcuniOil, With actors portray- Relnersvllle, Morgan County.
, BQg Nature Preserve•. Cham~ . lng the seven · presidents from
.:-Walleye F.estival Friday palgn CoUllty, Sall!l'day and
; ' 'OhiO travels from Orrville to through Sunday at Waterworks Sunday.
, .
' : ·Fremont, stopping at 'the Hayes Park In Port Clinton, Ottawa
On lhe Ohio Department of
: ~ .l'relldendal Center In Fremont County.
Natural a-ces achedule:
~ , • Saturday and Sundl)y. Tours of
-Carden Day Saturday at the
-A ·· Walleye Hunt In the
, · the center are offered.
Zoar VIllage State Memorial In weswrn basin of Lake Erie
A Taste of ClnciMatl Saturday Zoar, Tuscarawas County. '
through July 29. ·
, throueh Sunday In the downtown
-Rendezvous at lh!' Lake, b
· -Tours of the Marblehead
·• • -area features the specialties of Revolutionary War encamP' Lighthouse, East· Harbor Stale
~
ClnciM&amp;tl area restaurants.
ment, Saturday through Sunday Park, Saturday.
: _: Marcon, a science fiction con- at Lake Milton. Mahonlng
•
Bleyele Tours:
~
veation, Will , be ,held Friday Co)lnty.
.
'-Sal\q'd!IY: 4tll Tour · De
· • thtoueh Sunday at the Hyatt .
,-Civil War Encampment Sal; . Feast, 23·, 62· and liKI'mUe rides
:.. ···fteaency In downtown Columbus. urday and Sunday, Century-V!J; ' frOJn Chillicothe, ·CAll 614-773~ _ The Cherry Blossom Festival
lage In Burton, Ceauga County.
0077 for Information.
· will be held Saturday and Sunday
-Logan Hills Festival Sunday
-Sunday: Mall · Pouch Barn
~n downtown Barllerton.
and Monday In ZaaesOeld, Logan Tour, &amp;O miles out of Woodsfield.
• Dul~lmer Days are observed County.
•· · ·
614472-1910.
•. Saturday and Sunday at the Lake
-The Spring Wine Festival at
-June17-23: The second Great
. Park' PavillOa near .RoiiCOe VIIthe Hafle VIneyards In Spring• Ohio Bicycle Adventure leaves
. ·- lqe .ill Coschoton. Also· In the field Saturday through Monday OberUn. Entry deadline Sunday.
;·. .. reltored canal town Is the Canal
Introduces the 1989 wines. "'
1·800-BUCKEYE.
'
~: .QuUtera .Show Fridq tf~r?ueh
-Mid-America Antique Show
-!-.June 2: Heart of Ohio Tallwinds Around Marlon at LOw
,.
Elevation, 31-, 62- and 100-mUe
f-ides throURh MarloQ County:
•
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r.

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TED TURNER, JANE FONDA
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Peopk in the news _
By Unhed Preas lnlernatlonal
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•

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••

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' TED AND JANE ~·· NEWS:' Cable News Network
celebrated Its lOth anniversary ~lth SundaY night ga1a that ,
filled the CNN Center In Atlanta but the main -attractions were
CNN boss Ted Turaer and his girlfriend, Jaae Fenda. The party
was held In conjunction wjth the Natlonill Cable Television ·
Association and gawking cable Industry execlitlves and their
spouses thrust cocktail napkins and business cards at Fonda for t •
her to autograph. A .longtime Turner friend described the
relationship as "very serious" and Fonda and Turner weren't
shy abo.ut expressing their affection. While a highlight tape of
· CNN's first 10 years was shown on a giant monitor, Fonda
wrapped her aqns around Turner's waist and rested her chin on
his ~boulder. He responded by caressing her hand: ·
., .
COMIC A~T OVER COMMERCIALIZATION: The creator of
the sYJICilcated comic,strip "Calvin and Hbbbes" Is ~!sting the
riches that WOI!ld come his way from marketing his characters.
WIDiam,WatlerBOaiJ, speaking at Sunday's.commencement at'
his alma mater, . Kenyon College, says he doesn't want to
commerclallze ·them, clespite the wishes of Universal Press
Syndicate to turn .them Into ''TV hucksters." "We've been •·
fighting for over three years now," said Watterson. a 1980
graduate of,Kenyon. Watterson would stand to-make a 'mint If
his CaiYin, the ssge 6-year-old. and his stuffed tiger Hobbes are
turned Into toys, but he says artistic principle comes before
comll!erclallzallon. "Sooner or later, we are all as.ked . to ,_
compromise ourselves and the things we care about," he told
the graduates. ·'There arl' no good ~ays to sell yourself out.'.' '
· BIRDS HO!: Actress Jane Alexander Is a bird-watching
enthusiast and was awed by the heavy-duty birders she joined at
the World Series of Birding In New ~er!;ey during the.w'oiekem;h ;
Alexander's Gone Birding! Conseh:at101i Fund team flnls)led . ~
18th, spoiling 168specles In various Garden State tooat(o~ ~24''
hours,. "f was with real experts," she said, "Jt Is llki!;worltlil/
with superbathletes. We llterallywalke!1 Into one place and In 10 ·
seconds they, had !'Jiactly what they wanted."
; · ,
CADILlAC PAINT JOB: The legen,dary C:adillac Ranch
outside Amarillo, Texas, has been.refurbished. The 10 Cadlllacs
"'7 planted II) Ihe ground radiator Urst along Inters tale 40 allfan
artistic statement- were painted fial gray In Janllai'y'alj part
of a commercial for Lincoln Town1 Cars. Bul ' the rjllnch's
caretaker, Slaaley Marsh 3 1he prefers "3!' to ''In") ·didn't like
the new color. "The cars are supposecJ to be cheer~ and they
looked dull, like It was an undercoat," Marsh said: So he had
them painted bright pink. "It had nothing to do with any oft hose
rock 'n' roD songs about Pink Cadlllilcs," .Marsh told Texas
Monthly magazine. "I did It for my y.1fe on Valentine's Day "
Mar~ SSY!! he preferred (he battered and bashed ccihdltion. the
cars were In be(ore they were cleaned up for the commercial.
"All that grafltd and vandalism gave them a real patina like
those Cbl~ vases lh!IIIIICi'ease In value with each crack;" be
. .:
sajd. '11 ~people Jove their monuments."
'· OLIMJ'SBS: Actms Aapla Laalbury has received her flrlt
coUeae degree, an honorary doctor11te of humane letters from
Boa!On University. "I never went to college," th_e star of
television's "M11rder, She Wrote" said after receiving her
degtee SUnday. "!left achool at 12 for acting classes and-l've
been In the theatre ever since" ... Ed Koela has managed to keep
busy since being voted out as mayor n! New York. He has four
appearances ~ the next couple of weeka In Chlcaao: Monday,
Tuesday and June 4 and 5, all for JewiSh United Fund cllnliers.

a

•

Museum of Art Collection." through 'Sunday, and May 30
through June 3; "The Romance through June 1-3. 614-898-1109. -"You're A Good Man, Char·
of the Jal Mahal." throUgh June
24; "l:lke a One-Eyed Cal," lie Brown" at the ShoWboat
Majestic In ClnciM&amp;tl th~ough
throueh July 1; . . ,
·
...:At the Akron Art Museum : June 3. 513·381-6700.
-"Treasure Island" ai the
"Selected Works from the Fred·
erick R. Weisman Art Founda. Dayton · Playhouse June ;1-3.
513-227-0144.
tion," through.June 10.
.
-At the Taft MuseuQ'I In
-"Woman In Mind'' at the
ClnciMatl: "The Palllter Wll· Vern· Riffe cente!'· for Govern!tam Wegman." through June 24. ment and the Atts, Columbus,
r -At ·the ClnciM&amp;tl Art Mil· . ·May ·29 thro~~gh Jupe 1~ : ·614-644·
seum: Treasures from the 8425 . .
Tllmbs of China, through July 1.
-The Alchemedlans II, Bob
-At the Columbus Museum of Berky and Michael Moschen,
Art: "Art of Amlnab Robinson' ' Thursday, Wright State Univerand "Art of WIUiam Hawkins, sity. 513-1173-2900.
both through July 1.
-May Festival at Music Hall
· -At the Wexnei' Center for the In Cincinnati Friday and s&amp;tur;
24.
VIsual Arts In Columbus: "Arlin day. 513-621-1919.
-At the Butler ·Institute of
Euope and America··- the 1960
-May Chorus Concert Friday
Anier'Jcan Art In Yoqstown:
and 19'!fls," through Aua. 5.
with the -Columbus Symphony
"Cowboys, Indians and All that
..,.At the Can tOll Art lnsdtute: Chorus, Ohio Theatre, Colum•
J111z." a display for ·children,
Ohio Designer Craftsmen Best of bus. 914-224:3888: ·
thrqh Sunday. · 1'
1990,1through Aug. l2. ,
--:-Balletme! Repertoire ,Per·
-AI the Western Reserve
-At the Johnsonformance May 31. through June 2,
Historical Society In Cleveland:
Humrlckhouse Muiseum at Ros· · Ohio Theatre, Columbus. 614-224·
"Founders: Cleveland's Jewish . coe VUiage tn' Cpshoclon: "Lay- , 1672.
Community · Before the Civil · erlsts:' Level to•Level" through
-Angel Romer9 performs
War," through Sulljlay: "The Sept. 3.
With the Clnclilnatl.Pops Orches·
Year l,n Review," a samplmg Qf
-At the Cleveland Children's tra June 1-3, Musjc Hall, Cincinrecent Jlfts to tbe museum.
-Museum: "Art of the Ordinary," nati. 513-381-3300:
, .
thrqh Aug. 1; -"Just Another
through Sept. 9.
-Beach Boys perform May 31,
Pretty Dress." throup Sept. 2.
-:-AI the Hoover Historical Cooper Stadium,' Columbus. 800.'
-At the Cleveland Museum of
Center In North Canton: '·'War 25-7337.
Art:· "May ShOW for 1990,"
Years at Hoover: World War II
-Ballet Western Reserve per·
lhrDI!gh Sunday;· "Four centurRemembered," a _yearlOng pro- forms "Walk on Wick" _Saturday
lel o( Italian Pr'lnts" and "The
gram. A victory garden Is at the Butler Museum of Amerl·
Birth and Flowering of British
planned for the summer. Several c~n Art; "Moving Imales Con·
Romantic Art," both -through
USO dances are planned. For a cert" May 30, Stambaugh AudltoJuly 22.
.
_
.
schedule: 216-499-0287.
rum, both In Youngstown.
;-At Miami University In Ox·
On llle theatricill schedule:
216-759·3091.
'
ford:-· "High Tectt-High Touch:
· -"George.M" Is at La Come- · . -Dayton · Philharmonic ConComputer Graphics lllPrlnt-makdi8 Dlimer Tlle!ltreat Sprijtgboro cert Band at Picnic Pops'concert .
lngl '~ through SUnday; an exhibit
through J:uty 15. Call513-746-4554 June 2, Cox Arboretum In Dayof Eastern European-and Central
for reservations.
· ton. 513-434-9005.
American art obJects and a folk
-"Fiinsbep" at the Cincinnati
-Barbershop mu~c at the
art collection, both through Aug.
Playhouse In the Park through Pops at the· Lima Locomotive
10.
June 3. 513-421·3888.
Works June 3. 419-224-6873.
;
-'At· the Columbus Cultural
-· 'Br~dway Bound," by Nell
-Steve Relcli ·and ~uslclans 1
Arls Center: contemporary
Simon. at the Weathervane Com- June 2, Wexner Center In Columquilts of Clare Murray of Canton,
munity Playhouse, Akron. bus. 614-292-2354.
throueb May 30.
Thursdays through Sundays
-At Rlverbend in 'ctnciMatl:
-At the Toledo Museum of
through June 11. 216-836-2323.
Don HenleY, May 25; Aerosmlth
Art: "A Page In Time: Trea·
-"A Fool ·for Love" at the and Joan Jett, May 30. 513·232·
sured ' Books from the ·Toledo
.
Otterbein ColleR:e Theatre 6220.

'

' I

TEMPI:E. Texas cUP!) ·The girl first had only a simple oflOOto 101. and It will spike .... It central Texas, appeared· at a
.Doctors were searching for the sore throat. But when she arrived fluctuates -1!1 a matter of minutes, news conference with his mother
cause of a mystery ailment that at Jundt's clinic · she 'had a so does the rasl) and Joint pain," Monday.
;
may have atnlcled dozens of persistently high fever.·and joint said Charlene ~. a spokeswoHis mother, Linda Sha~p. $Bid
Texas children with l)lgh fevers, pain had confined her to a man for the Scott &amp; White Clinic. her son had a fever for sev~n
a welt-like rash and temporary Wheelchair I She COuld ROt Walk,
"CJundO would go In to'·see a· weeks and four days and his
but crippling joint pain.
or even stand l!p to slide herself patient that had had excruciating temperature re_ac;hed 105.9 deThe Illness has drawn the onto an examining table. The girl .pain In the right hlp joint, and the grees. He was admitted to
attention of state .and federal also had a welt-like rash on her next day It would be· In the left Darnell Army Community Hospipublic hea!lh authorities who are body.
. hlp."·
~ ·.
tal on March 16, then referred to
w.or~l!lg to IdentifY lis~~~use and
.The patient, "'_ltose fever per· While Jundt was try!ng to ~he Temple hospital.
.. ,,
precisely define.Its symptoms.
s(Sted at least two weeks and at
understand the cases; three more ' Jeff Taylor of the state Health
. .''It's something strange. :• said limes rose to'IN:twee!l 103and 105 Palestlrie children with the Department sent out leiters
DD•.Jeffrey W. Jundt·, an arthritis degree&amp;: underwel)l a battery of · symptoms wete refer~, to him. asking other doetors If they had
specialist at the Scott &amp; White t~ts that did not provide an
Jundt sought help from,· ·the · seen the disease. He has received
Clinic lrl Temple .\ In central answer.
Texas Department of Health, more than 50 reports of cases that
Texas. "It could he a virus; 11
The· tests determined on~v
which then turned to th~ federal physicians say may he similar to
CO)IId be ,lick-borne. But we what the glfl did iiot have: Lyme Centers for DiSease Co!ltrOI (n those reported by Jundt, lnc;ludhaven'tldentlfled itln the labora· disease or any other common
Atlanta.
t
lng 24 calls from t.he Houston
tory. It may hi! a mutant."
tlck.·bome disease for which he
Five of the seven ·children area, where !leWS 'reports of the
Dr. Dennis Perrotta, director could test, rheumatic fever,
Jundt has seen were haspltal- aliment first surfaced.
.
of epldemlolOJY ai the Texas strep, rheumatoid arthritis,
lzed. Three £&amp;me from Pal!!' tine _ · Most 9f ibe reports are from
De~rtment of Health, said, "It
~ancer, measles or a host of other
and one each . from C11m.eron, rural are(IS, Taylor said, and
looks like a lot of other Illnesses. ~lseases ·or possible drug
Copperas Cove, Fairfield-. and most are In children ages 2 to 15.
but npt any particular one.''
reactions.
.
Temple~ ali In the sa me general
Robert Coates sllice has · re. If th'e ,dlsea~. 1s c11used by a
Two more patients, boys, ages
area ol eastern and central turned to school ·and feell! fine
contagl011s virus, II would lie '10 and 12, were referred to Jundt
Texas. Four of the chlldren ,are except for . ~caslonal reeuiren·
expected to Infect famtiy with similar 'symptoms.
.white and three are black.
ces of the rash, Jundt's first
members and school friends
. One was Robert Goates, a'
Recovering patient Michael · patient Is doing w~!l on rell\lar
victims, but that has not hap- seventh-grader who had been , Sliarp, ·an 11-year,old sJX:,Ih: dqses or aspirin, whlle~arp and
pened, Perrotta said. In one case, a!Ung for three weeks. "He'd
grader from Copperas Cove In another boy are on antibiotics . .
the Illness affected one . twin take a two· to three-hour nap In
•
' ''
4
while the other twin remained the afternoon and then go to bed.
h~althy.
.
early," said the boy's father,
"It's either something new or
Bobby Dale Coates. "He never
manifestation of something did that before. One Ume I had to
•
we've seen ' before, :· Perrotta physicallY help him· out of bed.
:;
said. · ·
·
This was a 12-year-old boy;" ·
The mystery began In early
The arthritis problem reported
.
'
March when a doctor In Pales- lly the patients moved from jOIIJI
'
~
tine, In eastern Texas, asked to Joint, and tl)e rash wlixed and
PHILADELPHIA CUP!) - -\ granted to a female
Jundt 'to _, examlne one· of his wa·ned so swiftly th.at Ju~tdl had
. ·' ·, · • ••· i.J
federal appeals court has ruled\ \ employee.
patients, an 11-year-old gltl, who trouble shoi:Y\ng the' welts , to
that a man Is entitled to unpaid I The ' Board of Education 'and
had what looked like an unusual dermatologists even when 'they ' child-care .leave If his employer ·the · Plttsburih Federation ·of
form of arthritis. ''He 5ald It was were In the hospital and arrive(!
offers the same fringe benefit to 'Teachers Schafer's union ""ere
like 'nothing he had Pver seen at the bedside qill.ckly. ·
defendanis In the orfglnai suit.
· female workers-;
befor~." Jundt said',
The 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of .But the appeals court dismissed
"Tiie child. usually has a fever
'
'
Appeals made the ruling In the 'the uniOn as a defendant because ·
case of Gerald Schafer. a special Schafer did not name It' In his
education teacher In the Pitts- complaint.
•·
burgh school district who flied a
Schafer claimed sex dlsCHmlsex dlscr_lmlnatlon suit.
.
nation after he was denied an
"It's one of the (lrst (cases) In unpaldone-yearleaveofabsence
Gorb,c.II~V.·'I(odka bJ,Jboards- was cialllni,, J.believe, several the nation" to deal with the Issue, during the i9BJ.82 school yej!r to
sa!d Edward Feinstein, Schaf· care for his newborn son. ,t.
· friends," panama's pollee chief,
comlna dewn In Minnesota
er
s attorney.
_
The school board allowed
ST, PA'-!1;.. Mlno. iUPil Col. , Eduardo Herrera Hassan,
Mlkl)lill .qorbachev won't . see said Monday In an Interview on
The court ruling_Issued MaJ(17 Schafer to take a three-month
and made public Monday found unpaid emergency leave, llli' he
lillllioards witb.hlS piCI\U'e 'and a RPC television.
bottle of vodka when,,lte vlsl,ts
the Ptttsb1Jrgh Board of Public said hewasforcedtoreslgnwhen
Herrera declined to name any
Educ,
a tloll violated federal that eXpired In December 1981.
Minnesota Ju11e ~; · , ·.
'
of the people Involved or to say
Schafer In June 1982 asked the
JC?l!nson Brother~. Inc., dls~lb­ how many callS were made, ·but standards that forbid a facility
utor- of · Karkov Vodka, al)· expressed some concern o\:er that recelvesJederal funds from board to reconsider Its deelslon
nounced Monday that the adver- Noriep's motives.
discriminating on the basis of so he could return to work In
t~ments, erected long before
Septemller 1982, but the bOard
"He Is calling.... There Is 10me sex.
The court ruled Schafer was again deliled his request.
fhe 1 Soviet leader'S viS (I Wa'S purpose behlnnd this," he Sllld.
annolinc:ed, will · be reni~:~Yecl
Tile, unresolved Issue ; of
Noriega, tbe mWtary . ruler denied his request for an unpaid
leave
befo~ the visit.
of
absence
under
his
whether
Schafer was forced to
who was ouated during the U.S.
Tile. big signs show Gorbachev Invasion In December, Is await· union's collective bargaining res(Jn was returned to i.J.s.
holdlllg a bollle of vodka with the lng trtal on drug-ll'afflc,klng agreement even though such a District £&lt;!)1rt In Pltlsburgh·for
.re(luest routinely would haye conalderlitlon:
_,
'-'
ml!•sage, "The f'arty~s OVer."
'
_
· charaes I!! Mlam~
C9v. Rudy Perpich has said he
Herrera iald that according to
was not worried about the slana, U.S. Jaw, the dePQied·ruler h8l
but other state oUiclals feared the,rlibt to make telephone c;:alls
tlte)-' eould he em_b~rasllng and because he has not been ·con·
might lnault GorJjachev.
viCted of any crbbe.
.,
.
' ...
Meanwhile, Norieaa defense
said In Miami .
, Norleppbe- home frem ~1 . la~ri.John_
1PANAMA CITY, -Panama Monday that the
sowrnCUPI) - _AIIIIougblanplahJnaln meftt Will· loan Nortep 'ttie
a Miami jaU, ouited Panaman- •nioaey for 'btl detente, alicl . he
ian slrllapnaJl _Manuel Antonio will rwpay It from 11M! mWJons of
l!lorleaa appears. to have taken doDara tbe aovernment has sethe ,fl!lephoae a~rtlserr)eat, lzed frorn bin.
'rftea1:11.011tal,ld touchlameone'' , , : · If eoolltcltedoftlittfederal dri!K
In hNJ"t.
..
'
' cllarJes l\lorl
face a

of

Bide~.

ROCKVILLE, Md. CUP!) -A receive a free vislr to a contra- In the Unlted States," said Dr .
government reaeiucher called ceptlve expert.
Sidney Wolfe, director of P.ubllc
for ilghter restrictions on tbe use
The company said It plans to Citizen Health Research Group,
of a prescription acne drug by Improve -the label warnings In a consumer group.
women of c.hlldbearing age, several ways, Including clearly
Robert Armstrong, a spokessaying Accutane Is causing far urging women to undergo preg- man for Hollman-La Roelle.
more birth clefects than Its nancy tests before taking the . acknowledged there probablY.
· maker has acknowledged.
dr~~g. The company also plans to
were more than three babies
Despite... strong warnings to make It easier for patients to born wlthAccutane-related birth
avoid using the drug during return unused pardons of the defects In 1989. But he said the
total Is far lower than Graham's
preg'aancy; babies are probably drug.
estimate.
Jlelng born with birth defects
Oakley, Graham and others
"We. feei this Is an Important
caused by the drug because sa)d they, believed many of the
women either Ignore the warn- deformlil!!S ltave not been re- drug with significant benefits to
lngs Or their birth control me- ported and that some women
the patient.
It is wh()
successful
In
patients
have not
tltods fall, the researchers said chose abortion over the chance of treating
' ,
giving birth to a chltd with responded to any other thera- ·
Monday.
pies,'.' Armstrong said.
· .. David Graham, an epidemlolo- defects.
'
Arms.trong argued that ''this Is
gist at the Food and Drug
Graham based his estimates
not
the same as thalidomide. In
Administration, and Dr. Godfrey on the assumption that even with
that
case people didn't know
Oakley Jr. , a birth defects expert the best birth control available,
with the Centers for. Disease · three out of 100 sexually active what they were getting into. With
Control In Atlanta, estimated women would become pregnant this drug people know,;'
Armstrong was referring to
Accutane could .cause anywhere during any year because contralabels
ql) the drug, approved in
from 33 to 227 birth defects per ceptlon Is not · 100 percent
1982, warning women against
year.
effective.
. The drug's maker, Hoffmann- · "If you seriously want to limit using the substance during pregLa Roche of Nutley, N.J., has pregnancy exposure, you just · nancy. The warnings recently
received only three reports In can't give .t.hls drug to women," were made stronger after re1989 of birth defects related to use Graham· said.
ports :Surfaced of blr.th defeets .
linked
to the drug's use.
of
the
drug,
which
also
Is
known
OakleY,
who
did
not
urge
an
·
•
Graham, who said he believed
as lsotretlnoln.
outright ban .blJt called fot
The pair .testified before a · stricter controls by thedrug,sald the dangers of the drug warmeeting of two Food and Drug the birth defects caused by ranted a ,complete ban on Its use
Admln,lstratlon advisory com- Accutane "are at least as severe by women of child-bearing age,
mlttees, Which recommended as and occur as often as exposure said between 1,200 to 3,600 of the
Hoffman-La Roche take further to those caused by thalldonllde estimated 65,000women who took
steps to ensure women under- and rubella I German measles) ,'' the drug In 1989 probably became
stand the danger and undergo
Tballdoinlde was an anti- pregnant.
preglllncy tests before takll)g morning .sickness drug popular .. Graham also said current
.
In the late 1950s and early '60s labels on the drug seem to
the dr-ug.
The panel also urg!!(l Hoffman· that caused thousands of severe encourage women to get an
La ·Roche to make It easier for defects , before Its use was abortion If they become pregnant, which would have preWOJ:Den to return unused portions stopped.
.
vented
more birth .defects from
of the drug and that doctors
. "This Is clearly" the worst
emphasize to patients that the · epidemic of preventable serious oc~urrlng from the drug's use ..
company will pay for them to birth defects we have ever seen

·•

··
'
.,
·,

.

..

"'p

u.s.

'NA{

' Helapboai!clllllmi!toblapallla

l&gt;aaama City, .
· ··
''Yes, u 11 true lhat Norega

Would

max~m.:m=-of141~araln
prison and $1.1 'mUllan ·In fines.
...
·
1

Find what yo~ need for the pri~
'· you wa.nt to pay i~ the .GI~ssifi~

'

NEW YORK !UP!) - More musical tributes, remembered a · ever Imagined," and then sang
than 5,000 mourners packed the gentle man whose boundless "Tum the World Around" as the
.Cathedral of St. John the Divine enthusiasm proved cont,glous.
butterflies danced above the
to pay trlbuie to Jim Henson, and
Frank Oz, who provided the heads of the crowd.
.t he emotional service often cap· voice for Bert on "Sesame
By the end of the 2 ~-hOur
lured the playful spirit of the Street." remembered watchllig service, performers sang a
master pu·ppeteer It sought ·to Henson. the voice of Bert's Muppet medley, and althpugh
honor .
sidekick, Ernie, "laugh until he .they wore street clothes, their
The creator of the Muppets cried."
volc~s were In character. They
·
family, and tile voice of Kermit
"I loved blm," Oz said ~ his concluded by waving hand-beJel
the Frog; died suddenly last week voice breaking.
Muppets In thl' air. The congreat the age of 53, 21 years after ·
"Muppets" writer Jerry Juhl. gallon cheered Its appreciation.
Kermit, Big Bird, Bertand Ernie a friend since 1961, remembered
Mourners flied out as the Dirty
and the ravenous Cookie Monstl'r Henson saying a silly pun was '' a Dozen Brass Band played •'Whe_n
made their tl'levlslon debuts.
· terrible joke, but It's worthy of .the Saints Coml' Marching In,"
'-'Please watch out for each
which was chosen specifically by
us."
other and love and forgive
"That's how I'll always re- Henson for ihe occasion,
everybody. It's a good life. enjoy
member Jim, balanced ·effortHenson. born Sept. 24. 1936, In
It," a- letter written by Henson
lessly and quite gracelully be- Greenville. Miss.. brought the
and read by one of his sons,
tween the sacred and the silly," mupf)et characters to life with
Brian, urged.
Juhl said.
.
the help of his wife and bl!slness
· 'MOurner-s folloWed his specific
At another point, Qenson's partner-.
request that they not wear black widow, Jane, Introduced.the f,lve
"Sesame Strel'l" Is ·-now in ·
at Monday's memorial ser-vice- , Henson children: Heather, Lisa, reruns, and producers have
and one · man turned up In a
Sheryl, Brian a11d Jolin. She . made no official announcement
Kermll·hued green suit.
added thai Henson had slild he on plans for the future of the
Others wore green sashes In didn't 'know what was In store , show, which began in 1969.
their hair and buttonholes, and
after death. but' that '" he had
The show Introduced Henson's
waved hundreds of multicolored
charaeters to preschoolers
great plans."
styrofoam butterflies distributed
The emotional high point of the around the world, and spawned a
before the service began.
service came when Big Bird. the vast merchandising empire, InAn old green coat emblazoned affable avian from "Sl!same · troduclng 700 new products from
with a frog-shaped piece of Street" sang Kermit's signature · dolls to T-shlrts In 1989 alone.
scarlet cloth greeted mourners tune. "It's Not Easy Being
The "Muppet Show" was teleas tl)ey entered the chq-rch, and Green."
vised until 1981 and Iii now In
symbolized the coat of Henson's
Big Bird added In a breaking reruns: reaching some 235 milmother, from which he was said
voice. ·'Thank you. Kernilt .''
lion viewers In 100coun.t rles, with
to have cut the original material
Singer Harry Belafonte said the Soviet Union soon ,to join. It
to make Kermit .
Henson "showed·me there was In has won two television Emmys
Friends and colleagues, their fact a ~ater humanity than I'd and otlier awards .
reminiscences Interspersed with

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EVENINGS

As-ofAhltllc-y,
Ohio, I heNbv offlr fDr • • M
10:00 A.M. on June 22.
1990. on t1ta front steps of
tlta Mllig&amp; County (:GunOhki, lite
OIL GAB, AND OTHER MI-

"LOW IIIC- 1Ciflt•

a-H-'IIDotln

.,
I

Art rwuncr Ill[' nl •

3

Stop In and Set

ilc-.

Of SALE

ptiOtlll

DALUS
SAYlE
'
AT

PAT HILL
CHIYSUI ....YIIOUTH

lOIII
399 s. ftllrtt. •~•••••rt

110%1

of tho

992·6421

5-11·'10-1 mo.

I

FENC-

ol
aholl be

N!Mtct

FREE

ESnMATES

ltGtMShor•

INSTALLAnON

SEARS

JAMU M. SOULIIY,
IHIRIFF OF MilOS
COUNTY. OHIO
API'IIOVID:
htrlclt H. O'Brian
AnGIINeY FOR

. . . . . . . . 11111 . . . .

"-W-tollant

711 .. 1.. "
ILINII

992·2

PlAINTIFFS

ill 22. 28: Cll113tc
. :,

...•..

.....

~

I '

-

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.

,.

.
'

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,., 0111 ' - : • ...

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. _................, .... "...
.,_,.,

z~r~an~~~y kttt.,.t~~at~ tho
-

'i;==============::;~.I~DIIb

County. Ohio
......... thirty 1301 ..,• .._
. . . . . . of cOntltmtition of
Iff of

...

i

992-6173

NERALS UNDERLYING THE
FOLLOWING DESCI't I BED
REAL ESTATE:
811.-d in Meigo County,

dueMII

.,

'

•

1

209 South .th $t;
Milllll.,..., Clh. '

'-•· -oy.

"'e:J:rlot

. ._

..

AUTO &amp; TRUCK

.,,000.00. Tht
lite

,

•• _,......... lloorftt

. ..,.

lEN'S APPUANCE

R. L HOLLON
TIUCIING
c•sna, o•o

lt. l24_, , _ . , tlhia

'

Your Phone
Billa Her•
.IISIII!Ia PIIDIII

Roger Hysell
Gatage

- n t of tuch _.......
bilL but tnno...,.. loaoth•

•42-MolilaltotM&amp;Ior
1- - - '"' !lent Rent

••• .....1.. flit

IICIO OV£1$-$7hp

C6141 HJ-77~14

TER

&amp;71-Pt. Pl. .ent

···-"···

90 lAY WAIIAII'IT

WASHII$-SIOO MP
DIYEI$-IM "'
,
IEFIIGEU101$-$100 tP ,
IM&amp;IS--1a-Doc.-SUS-•p
FIEEZEI$-$125" · .

SALES &amp; SERVICE

992-7479
••·
n North
ot ,_,.,,
Ohio

tM

Arn Codt 304

137-luft!IO

W1i C...., flt!Mg Suppll•

....,... :=Common

ti I' t ' I ',I t I I'

742-"utleftd

•Mobile Home
Ren•t•
•LDt•RIIIIlf'll

..~!'-·

· two-tltlrda.......
of the
""'-'tlllflllll\laad
laid Nl• It tulll- to liP·
Plea
Court.
County, Oltlo.

23-Pro•liaMI ltrvicta

247-LIUn Fill•

16111arth ......
" 'll1p I, Dltla 45760

lait of llld oil. 11• Md
other mi.,.. to M tor not

71

22-MOnfl' to LOift

Mpon Co .. WV

112 ~-H­
IH-IAIIn

•MobHo Home

u.ooo.oo.

fr 111.p11rl !lrr ll l

·7·--·o.-

USED APPUANCES

PL.-NG &amp; IIEATWG

REFERENCE DEED: Valu.... 231, Poga 187, Mtlgo
County DMd "-nni.
. laid ol. v• Mid other mi- ' • - ap...- at

U-W-dtoluy

, , _....,Oft

CALL

.........

CO.
UNTIY
•
MOBILE ,
. HOME PAIK

......

F.n "'if':rllt''

I I'

13- Livntock
' 14-Hev • Gt1ht
11-&amp;eed &amp; Flf11iltf

fol.Jtou:ing tel~phone exchan{les ...

•••-c".....

~ji~f1;i~!iiii

uary 30, 1 811, Volume 16.
372-373. and containlns II
mora pr

81-Ferm l!quipment

141-Pon-

Reaidential •
Commercial ,

To All
Typet Of
Travel" .. ,._,

NO SUNDA f

P....

r-. I IVI'\II•I.k

Clauificd pa~es· cot·er fhe

•58-leon•

S.rwlce

"Your
Connection

PI 949 2101
•
•
or hs. 949•2160
Day or

1

lleatiftt, Cooling,
lefriglratioit

which w11 to Wm.
Ours by Henry Oure. Jan-

I

DAY 8EFO,..t! PUBLICATION
-11 •00 A.M . SATURDAY
- 2 100 P.M . MONDAY
- 2 :00 fi .M . TUEaDAY
- 2 •00 P.M . WIONUDAY
- 2 •00 PM . THURSDAY
- 2 :00P .M "'IDAY

Pom•oy

Prius"

of Ohio, being In hction Zl,
Town 3. RMgo 1 1 ef tho
Ohio co,_ny's Purch-.
known .. tho Hanry Duro
Farm, and being all of tho
ooutlt h.tf of tho - •
quanat of Section 21: Md uceptlng
1I - •

Mt'r 1.IL!1Hl! '.t'
1-C.doiTh.,kl

•*

112-M--n

(614)
742-2027

CUMATE
COiiTIOL

Townlhlp of Lobanon. State

•A clallifild adVen ........'lt plac:td iri The Daily Sentinel (P·
cept ~ clattti• displev. lusln•• C.rd end leg II noti~l
•IN tpp. . in tha ~ . Ple•ant Rttftttr. 1nd lht Gall•·
polis Daily Tribune. reeching over 11.000 ttom•.

Arfl c.... 11 •

.30 .

19.00

•d•

M.... C0umy

Sit S. fewth Awa.

Dafan-to.
LEGAL NOTICE

mutt be P'e·

J)lid.
•Racei'lle 1.50 dftco~o~nt for
peid in •dv•nce,
.
•free Mtt - Qiv..w•y and Found •ds unCI• 1 5 wordt w1ll be
run 3 d••at no ch•ge.
.
•~~?toe of H for ell c..,".. l•tt•u t. doubt I P'ice of ad coat.
•7 point: lint type only uMd.
,·
•Stntlntl is nOI 1fftpoMiblt for trrondtr first dlf. fCh«:k
fer ~ron tirtt d~ 1d rwnt in patMt) . C1II1Mfare 2:00 p,m
dl¥ att• pub-liclhOn to mlk• correction.
•Ads that mutt be JNfd tn 1ctpnce Ire
Cltd ot Thanks
H1ppy Adt
In ,.._moritm
Y11d 511•

COitV DEADLINE MONDAY PAPER ,
TUEIOAY PAPER
MONUDAY PAPE~
THURSDAY PAPER
FRIDAY ~APER
SUNDAY PAPER

"At lnnn

ot)l 'TRAVEL
~
PURSUIT

W. H. BERDINE. tl at ..

ov,r
1s words
'.
.20

Rete
14.00
16.00

16

8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
aUuide Meig~ . Gallia or M110n cowm••

CUSTOM IUI.T

HOMES &amp;:UGES

lOWE
POWEIWASN
SUYICE .

VI.

•

Words

MONDAY thru FRIDAY I A.M. to 5 P.M.

BISSELL·
BUILDEIS

Plaintiffs.

• ·The ·Area'i Number 1 Marketplace

.

'

'

Thousands pay tribute to Jim Henson
'

leave for child -care

QUirks in ·the news

The Dally

Acne
drug
blamed
for
·birth
defects
-

Court grai)\ltS · father

a

22,1990

•

~ors see~ir:tg -cause of rpystery· illness '

'

-. ~

•
614-382-9423.
-June 2-3: Marietta River
Rendezvous, 7~mlle ride along
the Musklngum River between
Marietta and ZanesVIlle. 614-3731784. '
'
'
-June 3: Banilnarama, 50-, 62·
and 100-mUe tours throi!Kh
Warren County. 513-899-2027.
-June 3: Troy Stnwberry
Festival Metric, 20-, 31· and
62-mlle rides around Troy. 513339-m4.
..
' Speelal Exhlblll: '
-AI the Center of Science and
lncluatry In columbus: "What
Makes Music? th~oueh Sept. 3.
-At the Columbus .Cultural
Arts Center: Visual Dis Unctions:
Student Art Exhibit through June

. T•

....

i:=~,=r-·

...........

=·~~.
--.......

.._~

�Page 8-lhe Daily Sentinel

Tu11dey, May zz. 1980

Pomeroy-Middlepott. Ohio

--- _
--.... . --

LAFF-A-DAY

Glweway

33 Ferma for s.1e

71 Truclla

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

for.... . .
-·.

t.··-..:r..~~~~~~-· ·

==·J!t*'dt,a;"'tt..~:::

I ·"

. 1:00 (II Hardca- A!ld

~QGWGI

·=

35 Lot8 &amp; Acr-ae

.

~1-on::c=::'
of
........,....
For-:1 ..,.~ii!MIIniP.
.,... Woodrullfl!l., Ill 114-1241811.

,

I

I

T~INK I VE

SEEN I-lAD!

........

Ill

8:30 •

Glllllpol'-

21

36

ANI Eatate

Wlntid

loooo or ,..._,

__
-==· '

FortuUMI C

--...
Buy: 'wit-· 110-..
:w!l)l_.

lfJ Mllml Vice Zito and
Sw"ek turn up the heat on a
stolen merchandise dealer.
12!1 MusiC Row 1/lcleo
@ Abbott And Coote?lo
7:05 (1) 'Jilfleroona
7:30 8 (}) Family Feud
(I) M1jor League 1111-1

buiii'IIII' ,_ lnlori"niUon on

-

l~cc11 liON, coli

'llllllleillno

... ... ""·

llon..f~.. 1·

41 HousH for Rent

• I.UIIIIng
oyot_...,_, awiordlng dooioo-

............
;--"-.=-~~~-ill ":!':-'~·IIJIIoo~~
·~
o!llp In ""'""' -

Public sa~e
&amp;Auction

8

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42 Mobile Hall!•

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....... Ill'. Por ...... a ,FF, sttan Into. · ...._11• •• ara.

=
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'

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.........., •Ida. lnlrY lowil .., .,.
Col (1) . . . . . , _
hllp-.... _

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c.. ... ~..... p

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Urilon A'll., Pamen:ty.

~No.,................

For-uy.

In
-ZIII. .... -

1- milo
. 114-1112-

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .,I

44' ' Apartment
tor Rant

=··
-::z:::rt..-:.
...... - ..... on
1

...........

~ • •DID:

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:Ill
~

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IAIPH IIIIOt?l\' '

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1117 wiM

'

$1.25to A~tro-Graph! cio this newapa· IAGITTANUI (Now. 23-0ec. 21) Your
per, P.O. Box 91428, Clelleland, OH ftnanclll aHIIIfa llhau?d work out rather
4410 1· 3428. Ba aura to tlate ~our zodl· wePI tor ojou today, provided you uae
sign. .
-·
, priCtlell ·llld prudent procedureo. Re-.
CANC:EII ~~- 21...,., 22) A social al· tlirnt wtH be generated along traditional
!lance in, Willert• you ,ara ·pt'auntly ·en· n-. no? tram.QIIIIblel.
gaged cou7d btlgln po like on g.-~ . CAJIIIICOIIII (Dec. ~~Wan. 11) SomaImportance u oiiOdiy. Tills may tum "thing CCIIIIIIIIalted In whiCh you are
out to be a vllulble end blnd)ng pr.-tly ltWoiVed can be sorted outt9
re?atlonllllp.
Y1lf' adftnlalle. H will taka aome ,_.
LIO (.....,a-Aug. 2Z) With proPaf sup- g~llln. ~. thatllhould begin
port tod4y 1n Ullgnment th1P ltpuld today.
· .
. ·
normally bU·"bOOOUitaak could turn AdUAIIIUI ,. . . Peb.11) You might
Into 11M thalia rel81fvely lllmple: ·T hll no? gat _,n,lneryou want today, but
right Illy Ia anenllal.
when lite boltllm line 11 tallied. you
YPROO lAIII· D-lept. 22) A deiiCIIe ' llhoulciCIIITIIJoutonthopluatldellltlte
matter thlt hu .aerlouo ramifications ladger. Bagratalut, no? grMdy.
can be handled ellactlvely todly, ll you · • f'IICII (fiell, II-Mifcfj 10) A lrlend
taka thlngo a step at 1 tlma. Don'! puall mlghiCCIIIIIIIO you tor advk:e today, 10
,youi'1MIII or any ot the other J)lrlleo .~try to make time. What 11111 peraon
wanll to diiCUU Ia ot lmrnantle
lnvotvael.
LIMA (lap?. D-Oct. D) CtYangee Import-.
could take pllce today that wiN be lnl· .AJIIII (.....,11·Aprll1t) Racognlllon
tlally ICrMnad lrom yow view, yet .w hit .. tor •Job wePI doMia wtthln achlellabla
traneplru wiH make II polalble lot you r~ngtttoclay. AillcllCiwtadgrnen? lor your
to llnallla to your adVInlage - b i n g elforll c:ould come In ?he torm ot oomthat'a ~left hanging.
·
penutlon
epedal type o5 perk.
ICORPIO (Oct. 14o416¥. 22) ProjeCts In .TAUIIU8 (April • !C
10) ConcenwltiCh you and your mila are lnvOI'oled · tratatodey on way~ to lurther your I*·
.co?leCIIvely have exc;ellent dlln- ol . 101111 M~blllonl anc1 lnltreatl. Conauccndlng In tl1?1tlme lreme. However.
tlructlva clallberatlon on your 1*1 wtn
both wtll be required ·to put forth equal ,_n 1n finding tha rlglltlormula.

ae

BERNICJ!; ·

BEDEQSOL

··

•

••iiill•lllliiili!-1..
'
'
'bJr

(D

l'IH.olo~....

'"IJII;UIIUG\J'
·

.Mar 23, 117171

lt'IICII '·

~·

Several oocret ambitions and desires
you've bean unable to lulllll In the put
could bec:ome reelltleo In the year
• ahaad . Don't give up on your dr..,..
QIMINI (May 11-.IUtta 21) Secrecy e"'
hances your polllblltlellor ~cna 1odly reQ8U'dlng a matter 111a111 01 Ml'lllua
llgntflcanCe. Share your thougltll and
oblec:tlvel only with person• directly lh·
volvad. Gemini, ?reel youraa7t to 1 birth·
day gill. 8end lor your Astro-GriPft pr•
dictions lor the yWu" aiiMd by mailing

or-

···•· ..
~.,

I

J

'

North.SOUlb

·~., \

I ::

1 Role for
1 Moved \
Liz ·
slowly
·.·
2 SoHiary
· Taylor
5 Solicitude
person
.' .•.
.9 Highway 3 Gluttonlze
""'
10 Downright 4 Poem
12 Being
5 Greek
(Sp .) .
Island
13 Declaim
8 Jeanne d'
. "··~
1"4 Feni:lng
...
dummy
7 Munch
15 Slipper
27 "Palnl
15 Convened after
18 Stable
Your- ·
• w
16 Lair
midnight 21 Pakistan
(1969111m)
• 17 Praise
. 8 Begin
province 211 Homeless
'19 Three
10 Mountain 22 Blemished 28 Pronged
(ll.t
crest
23 Cadence 34 BrazHian
•
...
20 Cabbage 11 Basic
24 Taller
lree
21 Photo
precept 25 - mignon 35 Greek leiter
22 Withered
23 Claim
24 Baseball's
. Musial
...-. . .
25 Done with
28 Cry of
. ....
surprlsB
.....,
27 Lucille
musical
. ..
30- Grande
31 Hgt.
~2 Samuel's

'

..

llll

Mljor l.ellgll8 Baoaball'a

...

...·.
"-.. ..
...
·~

...
...

...

......
_

. ~

... ...
.
. '• If

m~ntor

33 Infuriate
35Biack
36 Tyranl
37 Sound

-~

quaHty
38James
Oi' Jimmy
39Chopped

DAILY CRYP'I'OQtiOI'ES- Here'• ilrowlo nrllll:

w e Bal? 01 cer-.
(]) lportaCintar

I==~~
.
.~.!:,?
Nlglll Wilen

CBI Lata

el'l
armaments deals go sour,
VInnie MIS up nereotlca deal.

121 On Slllge

•

0 HllltrHI lluea
12100 ()) -.ov11: T1le Far Hortaoni
(2:001

w-·•

Cll
co••a• Tarinle
NCAA Dlvlllon I
Cllllmplonllhip ~

~~~=ilillttTGI8glit

·=-~
0

iiJ .......
Clime ltarJ Seize The
Time Ste1'80.

121Nath¥118-Country
mullc'sllottestat•ra'-turad Mve.

effort.

Vulnerable:

Dealer: North

11:30 •

r

. •

.

I

York Meta VI Boston Red
Sox
,(IJ lnllde ~v'l UIIR ~
With Hadllck 8mlth (PI 4) A
look at the mounting unreal
that threatens Gorbaehev'a
reforms. Q
·
·
1811]) ArHniO Hall
IIJ) MonayiiUMI
tiJI Ml1ml Ylce A smug,
candy-chOmping mobster
feels confident of 11 mistrial.
Stereo.
.aD ChUICh SII'HI Sllllart
@' Camacly Tonight

IIIII " '

•Kst

~

a Mr1. King

rn a a iUl
., !121 .e Haw• .

I•

+au

.QIOt2
t KJ

·~

11:00 (II Sc1recrow

"".
...
•. .

••

by THOMAS JOSE;H
' ACROSS DOWN

GrMIOIP GIPMI1986: Nrtt

.;;;r;.;
•
..... ...

IUif - . .. a•
........
..--.c.n
... _ ............ Pllnt.• ·•m
~

Ell08\lllklt

• Q7 52

CROSSWORD \

a. Announced

=-·
i

OHOH If
SHE, FOUND
MY FUZZY
, SPIDER!!

®

a•-...
"""1111......
-··
......... ....
1M
11:1il'll,
~-

.AKIIU

i£'

Q

.,......_ To,..

Nlltl

.

llii:

10:00 CIJ 700 Club With PBI
Robartaon
Dill II CIJ thlrtyaomethlng
Minnesota Brandt attempts a
hostile takeover of DAA. Q
(IJ Newawetch
(!) Moyera: T1le Public Mind
(PI 3 01 4) How candidate•
use visual images to
.
manipulate voters. Stereo. Q
II) II] New Twilight Zone
IIJ) Evening News
·
10:20 (1) MOVIE: Red Sonjl (PG131
(2:00)
10:30 Cll Baaeban Tonight
(IJ Forum
.
• 0 Benny Hill Sllow
aD Crook • ChaM

-Jpn'S&amp;Grllllllr
, ..... ltonoollllll
.....

JIM!'-lllafii!IMotMooll
. . DIIJTII
.... II ·
:aMI.
.

. +u

Well Nortlo
How easy it is to make light of the SHill
It
problems that occur at the 6ridae Ia· 1 NT
Paa Paa
ble' What seems so easy when one is 2 •
Paa 3•
carefully looking at all four bandl can 4 •
All filii
.
be very difficult when the hands held
by partner and declarer are con·
pPeninglead: • J
cealed. That does not excuse the miJ·
take made by West in today's deal, but
,
please view it with a little com· as wen: No such luck. South w.~
p~:~· a double stopper in hear!S, jack of diamonds •lid played 1 · io'l
South first bid one no-trump after 'f!de. Welt followed klw; the ,lid wu
East's overcall. When East penisted P yed from d.ummylnd Eat look~
with two hearts, South then bid two ace. That did it for the clef-. W..11•
spades, obviously showing a four-card subsequent ljllde was played toward:
suit and maximum values for the pre- the Q- 8· 2• welt could wfn the kllll. but•
no more tricks were ~ for J:ut.'
vious one no-trump bid. North raised West
•
to three an~ So~th bid four, certain
Tt.e contract (•Ill if Welt. IJ'IIII'tba' '
f~om.North s raUie tha? North held a. spade king wben abe lllitldlnt
smgl~ton heart. That set the stage for second heart ia pllyed, raffiCIID
_
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my Liter •he!' ~t willllbe
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won the km1 and retur~ a low dil· , my m ruff apill 1nc1 Welt
himond. He bll~ tbat West would hold \ally taUs the aetun:. trick withe: ,. .
the diamond k1ng, and maybe the jack of
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sUc:cessful date, L.ulher asks

WHAT'S MY
· WASHTUB DOIN'
IN TH' HOUSE
UPSIDE DOWN?

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· . a woman to marry him. (R)

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Tua1day. May 22. 1990

10-lhe Daily Sentinel

Local news briefs-- Ohio temperatures cool; cloudy skies ·continue
.

EMS responds ·to four rolls

Units of . the Meigs County Emergency Me.dlcal Service
responded to lour calls lor assiStance on Monday .
' At 12:32 a.m . the Tuppers Plains unit was called to Route 248
for Doris Deeter who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital,
and at 8:18a.m. the unit went to the Arbaugh addition for Don .
Arbaugh who was transported to St. Joseph's HospitaL
The Rutland unit , at 8:50a.m., responded to a call on Hysell
Run Road for Guy ~rlddy who was ta ken to Veterans, and 111
7:U p.m, the unit went to Meigs Mine No.2 lor Terry Ward who
was transported to Holzer Medical Center.

Law)'er says court eiTed in Sinks case
DAYTON, Ohio (UPI) - A a new triaL
Sinks was found guilty last
Jai.-yer for a !flan ·convicted of
ltrangllng hls wife and bu rylng year of beating and strangling
his w.lfe, Judy , and burying her
her body ln the Dayton Dally
News bulldlng says the defend- body In a utility room at the
newspaper, where they both
ant dld not have ·a fair triaL
worked. He was sentenced to 15
Theodore Sinks' attorney, Denyears to Jl!e ln prison.
nis Bailey, argued Monday beTed Millspaugh, assistant
fore tile 2nd Ohio District Court of
Appeals that a surprise witness • prosecuting attorney, told the
court the errors were without
and Ineffective representation
merit and asked that the trial
are two of six errors that worked
court's verdict stand.
unfairly against Sinks. Bailey
wants the appeals court to opler

VA says vet's home too expensive
XENIA, Ohio ~UP!) - The
Veterans Administration says a
nw;tng horne where a dtsabled
veteran has lived for 17 years ls
too expensive.
Michael Quire, 43, a quadrlpleJIC, staged protests outside
the 'federal building II) Dayton
from his motorized wheelchair ln
an effort to remain at the Xenia
Hospitality Home East. But the
VA said Mollday It cannot pay the
home's $91-a-day rate, and told
Quire· lie wlil have to leave by

Friday.
Sue" Patterson, VA spokeswoman, ·s aid the home's ra.tes are
much higher than the $74 to $78
charged by slmUar · residential
care facUlties. Because of recent
budget cuts, the VA can no longer
afford the Xenia home's ~ales,
she said.
Quire .can move to any VA approved - home In Urbana ,
Springfield.. Fairborn or the
Veterans j\dmlnlstrat\on home
ln Dayton, .Patterson said.

-Area deaths---Ehnar L Thomas

Elenor L. Thomas, 68, 425
I..E!wls Drive, died Monday, May
21, 1990 at University Hospital,
Columbus. .
Sbe was bom May 11, 1922 at
.Red House, W.Va., daughter of
tbe late Joseph A. and Etta
Hurley Lulll.ai"t.
Sbe was a graduate of Rio
Grande High School, a member
of Grace United Methodist
· Chui'Cb JJ~d the Debrah Circle.
Sbe Is survived by her husband, Eldon Thomas, whom she
marrted Feb. 22, 1947 ln Cattles-

bura, Ky.

·

. ' Allo surviving ls one son, Kern
Tbom.a s of Lakewood, "Ohio; o•e
daUIIitE:~. Meg Thomas of Galll_polla; fow- sisters, Mary J .

'.

Phllllps, Margaret J. :;luUlvan
and Mrs. William 1Barbara)
Smeltzer, all of Gallipolis, and
Mrs. Charles (Irene) Weaver of
New Haven, · W.Va.; and two
granddaughters.
She was preceded ln death by
one ·son, Joseph In 1973 and one
sister, Marie Glassburn.
Funeral services will be conducted 11 a.m. Thursday at
McCoy-Moore Funeral Home,
Wether holt Chapel with Rev. Joe
Hefner o((Jclatlng. ijurlal wlll'be
In the Tyn Rhos Cemetery, Rio
Grande.
Friends may call the funeral
home Wednesday from 2 to4 p.m.
and 7 to 9 p.m.
In Ueu of flowers, contrlbullons
rnay- be made
. to the. Heart Fund.

·~

ByVnl&amp;ed PI'Malnter....loaal .
Tuesday was another cool day ·
across Ohio, with the sunshine
that had been promised for
Monday due to Arrive later In the
day.
Llght rain fell though the early
morning over the southern counties, while the rest of the state
was cloudy. At dawn, tempera·
lures were mostly In the upper
40s, except 50 In the southern part .
or the state.
Tuesday morning's cloudy .
skles were to give way to partly

cloudy conclltlons later ln the
afternoon, with high temperallll'I!S slightly a"bove Monday,
reachlq 60 to 65, except along
Lake Erie.
'
T·be partly cloudy skies will
remain through Wednesday ,
with lows Tuesday night ln the
low to mld-40s and highs Wednes·
day In the 60s.
,
Looking ahead through Satur·
day ·, the Buckeye State will see a
warming trend. It will be fair
Thursday and l"rlday, with a
chance of shower~-~nd thunder-

·.'Gon"e ···------~--~~---------Continued. from page 1
He has been Mr. Meigs Falr for
years and turned In a fantastic
performance, to_say the least. A
cog like Wally will certainly be
miSsed. Board member, Barbara Fry, has been named to fUI
the treasurer's post untll the next
election.

experience now's your opportunIty. It will cost you $20, but your
name will be placed on a brick
which will be used In the
construction of a shelter house at
the mlnl park on Court St. ¥our
name on the brick - you might
want to buy two- they're small
- wlll show to posterity that you
supported the project and could
· serve to let folk$ one day know
that you and Kilroy Were here.
The shelter house project ls the
baby of the Pomeroy Sesquicentennial Committee and years
ahead wlll be a blt of a memorial
to this year's observance.
Deadl1ne for getting your brick
or bricks for the project Is June
30. Contact Mary Powell at 204 E.
Main St ., In Pomeroy, If you'd
llke to participate.

Ohio Lottery

Cubs

~

outlast

'

stormsSaturday.J-ttghswlllbe"ln In some ~treas Thursday and
the mld·60s and 70s Thursday and Friday. Transplanted tomatoes
Friday and ln the 70s to low 80s may receive rainfall from .thun·
Saturday. Lows will be In the derstorms this weekend with a
mld·40s to mid-50s Thursday and frontal system moving Into the
Friday and In the 50s Saturday.
Midwest.
Drying potential was to be
The slx-to-10-day outlook for
moderate Tuesday In the .north, Sunday throughThursdayofnext
but was expected to be limited In week lndlcat"es temperatures t9
the south because of clouds. . average near normal over the
.Conditions· will Improve across . north~rh and western parts of
the entire state for drying wet Ohio, but below normal over the
fields Wednesday. Planting of . southeast. Rainfall is expected to
corn and soybeans may resume average aliove normal, lndlcatln some areas by the middle or lng potential delays In fieldwork:
later parts of the week.
First .c uttings of alfalfa made
Tuesday or Wednesday may. not
Lottery numbers
have enoUgh time to cure before
rain chances Increase this wee"CLEVELAND (UP!) - Monkend. Morning dew will be
day's winning Ohio Lottery
moderate the next few days
numbers:
across the state.
PJCK-3
High pressure will bring fair
053.
weather for fieldwork to resume
PICK-3 ticket sales total~
$1,21~.167 . 00, with a payoff due of
$344,692.- 50.
.
PICK-4
,• 3522.
Soulh Central Ohio
PICK-4 tiCket sales totaled
Partly cloudy Tuesday night, . $241,607.50, with a payoff due of
with a low ln the mid 40s. Partly
$104,200.00.
.
cloudy Wednesday, wlih highs ln
the upper 60s .'
·
· Seeks divorce
Extended Forecast
Thursday tbrcough Saturday
An action for divorce has been
Fair Thursday and Friday ,
flied and another granted ln the
with a chance of showers and
Meigs County Common Pleas
thunderstQrms on Saturday .
Court. Mary Uribe, Pomeroy h.as
Highs will range from the mld 60s
to the 70s Thursday ·a nd Friday, . flied for divorce from Jerry L.
Uribe, Missouri, while Paullne
and from the 70s to the)ow 80s
Gay
Labonte has been granted a
Saturday. Overnight lows will be
divorce
from Clell Labonte, Sr.
In the 40s Thursday . morning,
range from the mid 40s to the mid
50s ea&lt;ly Friday, ahd In the 50s
Saturday morning.

Daily Number
488

Reds, 2-1

Pi~k-4

1812

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Page 3
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Voi.40, No.284

•

thuslastlcally sign" the new bill
COLUMBUS, Ohio ~UPI ) He said. gun clubs and sports"the moment It reaches my
The Ohio House Elections and
men's organizations ln townships
desk."
Townships Committee late Tuesare ln jeopardy unless the
Because of poor attendance,
day approved legislation giving
res trlct ton Is made. .
townships limited self-governing
the new btU passed out of the
Luebbers predicted that If the·
13-member committee with a
powers, and sent the measure to
bill clears the House, the samebare majoruy of seven votes.
the Uoor for a vote Wednesdayamendment will be offered In the
At !lrst It failed, as Rep.
The House reconvenes for a
Senate.
Raymond Sines, R-Perry,
one-clay session at 11 a.m., and ls
Luebbers sald he was ''Inbalked. Sines trled to amend the
expected to forward th~ bill to the
sulted' ' by the restrictive amendblll to ·require a unanlrrlous vOte . ment made by Sen. Gary SuhaSenate, where the controversial
·Issue of gul) control may be · o! township trustees to regulate dolnlk, It-Parma Helgbts. ''I still
firearms. No one wan ted to . feel today th'at township officials;
Injected.
second the amendment.
-Gov . Richard Celeste vetoed a
are verycapableof handling any ·
After a brief private meeting, · lssqe that comes before them," ·
nearly-Identical township homeSines re-offered hls amendment . he said .
rule "blll earlier this month after
It was defeated, 6-2, and the blli
the Senate Inserted an am·endLuebbers said he had "nothing:
was· then voted out, 7-1, with
menl forbidding townships to
to lose" by trying to pass the blll
Sines voting ln favor of It.
regulate. firearms .
again; If Celeste vetoes lt he can
Rep. Jerome Luebbers, D'.'This ls strictly a gun control always try an override. He said
piece of legislation now," said time Is not Important. Townships
Clnclnnatl, elected to try to pass
the blll again without the fireTom Addis of the Legislative would have to vote for home rule,
Wildlife Fund. "The governor, and either way, it would be too
arms provision rather than overmade It that way with his veto." late for them to get the Issue on :
ride the governor's veto. Celeste
.Addis said be. will attempt to the ballotthls year.
·
hbnself . encouraged that approach In a Jetter to all House . reinsert the prohibition agalns.t
In (he Senate Ways an!l Means
townships regulating firearms.
members, saying he would "enContinued on page 8

Stocks

Meigs board hires personnel .
Substitute teachers, bus drivers, cooks, custodian~. and secretaries were accepted t or employment at Tuesday evening's
meeting o! the Ml&gt;lgs Local
$chool District_
Employed as substitute
teach~~~ for the 1990-91 school

' ' year were•

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FIFTH· IN STATE - TIK!se Middleport Junior
-Hlp School physical selence studenls placed llllh
ln llle state aad · 60th ln the 438 schools
· parllelpathig In lhe nation In lhe National Science
Ol)'mpald. Th~ composite ~ore was 441 out ol a
possible 500. II marked !he-second tbne In recent·
yelll'll for -the Middleport school to place In the
state and national compelltlon. In 1988, the
· Mlddlepor.t science students of Rusty Bookman

...

look a first In the stale and an elghlh In lhe nation.
Cerllflcates were presenled to the studenls oa the
selence team at · an awards day program
Wednesday alternoon. Pictured are, fr9nl row,
left to right - Tracy Fife, Danlelle Gray, Lori
Burnem, and Marlo While. Second row - Brad
Anderson, Tom Cremeaas and Jason Wllherell.
Third row- Andrea McDonald and Steven SmUhRear - Matt Clark.

SyTacuse police recover stolen car
••• •
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La~e County authorities were
doing reclamation work on Ntnotlfled, but declined to extradite chols Road In Rutland T9wnshlp.
the suspect, the report stated.
reported when workers. went to
The car's owner, brother of the work on Monday morning they
suspect, was notified by .Lake found the gasoline had been
County authorities and he ls taken from their dump trucks.
expeCted to come to Meigs
On Sunday morning at 12: 16
County to recover his vehicle.
a.m., Raymond G Cox, Hatchet
In other matters, Frank Porter Pass, Texas, was traveling west
II, Racine, reported Tuesday on Route 124 when his vehicle
morning that sometime during was passed by a motorcycle
the ·past two days, unknown operated by Terry Hutton, Beech
subjectsenteredhlssons'garden Grove Road. According to the
patch and stole approximately 20 report, Hutton'S cycle struck the
·
truck on the left rear and Putton
bushels of broccoli.
Qn Monday, 9 P-J!l-, Deldra left the scene. Hutton was located
Cross, Vance Road, Rutland, was later by deputies and was cltedto
west bound on Route 124 when . Meigs County Court for hlisklp,
her vehicle was struck by a large no valid ·operator's license, and
piece of tire that ~ad been lying falluretocontrol".Hls1S78Harley
ori the highway- According to the I)avldson motorcycle sustained
report the piece of tire was moderate damage as did Cox's.
thrown up by another passing 1990 Mltsublsl!l tr.uck. .
ve,hlcle. Crols' 1988 ford trilck . On Sunday evening at 6 p.m.,
SU$talned light damage. .
· deputies took a report of an
A contractor from CETM, Inc., accident In Columbia Township.
According to the report, Jacqueline Jeffers, Woodyard Road,
Albany, was ba~klng from a
prlvaie drive and struck a
hur~
PaSSing vehicle driven by Robert
S. McCail, Albaity. Both vehicles
Three northeast Meigs "residents wer~ Injured In a car-truck
wreck Tu!'sday at 3: 30 p.m. In Olive Township on Arbaugh
sustained light damage. There
street , acco rdl ng tot he oallla-Meigs p ost of the State Highway
were no citations or Injuries .
Saturday evening,. Wllllarn LPatrot
Marks, 21, Pomeroy, was
charged with fleeing and drlvlng
Richard L. Deem, 18, of TupPf"rs Plains, was taken by private
. car to Veterans Memorial HospitaL One of his passengers,
under su•""nslon. According to
Jennifer L. Deem, also of Tuppers Plains, was taken by the
,...
v
1
Bo h
ed d 1
the report, deputl~ were atj
M
C
EMS
t
t
o eerans. t were treat an reeased
temp"•wtos.topMarksforaloud
. egs oun y
for bruises.
•Noe
One of Richard Deem's other pas$i!ngers - Michelle n.
exbauat .when he fled ln a 1980
Laughery, 16, of Reedsville- was taken by the Meigs County.
Chevrolel two door. When Marks
EMS to Camden-Clark Hospital in Parkersburg, W.Va., where
fumed of( Rgute 692 onto Gibson
she was treated and released.
· Road'llt lOit control of his vehicle
Neither RIChard Deem,.nor bls passengers were wearing seat
ln tl!egravel and his vehiCle spun
•
around and went Into the ditch.
belts, according to the report. .
Richard Deem, driving a 1985 Mazda GLC, was traveling east
The drf\oer waa not lqjured but
Continued on page s
hi$ vtlllele sustained light
'-----~-----.;...;...":"'"_ _ _ _ __.. . damate:

The Syracuse . Pollee Department recovered a stolen vehicle
from FlOrida Tuesday evening.
According to the sheriff's report, a 1978 Chevrolet vim,
• reported stolen from Lake
County, Florldll, on Siuiday, was .
stop~ by Syracuse Po)lceChie!
James CDJIIIOII.Y on Route 124
near D &amp; M Pizza. ' When Carl
Hysell, dispatcher, ran the regis·
tratlon through the National
Crbne ' Information Center, he
discovered the vehicle was stolen
and sent a deputy an~ Pomeroy
pollee cruiser to Syracuse. .Con.nolly was out of the cPUlser and
· dld not Know the vehicle was
stolen . . . . 1
.
_ The dr)ver ., Traer Kllnkow,
· Lady Lake, Fla., was taken· Into
. custody and c~arged · with drtv.· lng under !he· lnOuen.c e ·and
having an open container. In the
vel!lde.

• £:S
LocaI news bne

•

Three

Here'sagreatwaytosavealittJ.ebitof~andmoneyeverymonth.It'scalledBlueMax."WithBlueMax,youwon'tever ·
. h:M: toW?rryabout a bank chipping ~at your morn:rwith servjce charges. By simply keeping $2,500 or more in a

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A Multimecb Inc. Now-•

Township home rule
bill moves forward ·

Weather

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Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio. Wednesday, May 23, 1990

Copyrighted 1890

And dear Mary Webster writes
that she Is very happy In her new
home ln North Pakota. .
Mary says the peOple ate
. friendly - and with Mary how
could they be otherwise? - and
there are many planned acllvltles at Riverview Place, a
location for active retired people.
Continuing, Mary reports that
lhEJre are people living there
from all over the country and of
course, the really good thing
about the location for Mary ls
I
--Dtd you know that 17 Meigs
that she Is slx mUes from her
Counttans recently were aboard
daughter,. Diane ·Meyer, and
the· Mississippi Queen for a
family .
week-long .trip. I'm green with
Although Mary has ]lved In
envy, They "were on the Queen In
North . -Dakota for · 10 months,
she's stU! getting first class mall conjunction with Bank · One's
forwarded to her from the Senior Champ program. Maxine
Middleport Post Office but that · Griffith of Pomeroy who plan§, MatTiage license!!
Dally stock prices
will only continue for another and handles all of the trip ln the
(As or 10:311 a.m.)
program brought by a great
couple of months. Mary' states
Bryce and Mark Smjth
Three marriage liCenses have
picture of the local group on been Issued ln the Meigs County of Blunt, Elllll &amp;. Loewl
that she tried to notlty everyone
board the boat.
of her address change but still
Probate Court. Issued licenses
Maxine, however, made the were · Terry Lee George, 35,
gets the forwarded mall from
Am Electric Power ............. 29%
mistake of bringing along a lot of - Rutland, and Vonda Annetta, -A._T&amp;T ··- ·· -· ··- · .................... 43%
individuals ln Meigs and GalUa
literature about the Delta Queen George, 19, Pomeroy; Rodney L.
Counties.
·
Ashland Ol! .: .................... 38~
and
tile Mississippi Queen to- Grlffln, 56, Tampa, F1a., al\d
So here Is Mary's address ln
Bob Evans .. ......... ....... ...... 12%
gether with Information Ol\ tours Sandra F. Brooks, 44, Tampa,
case you would like to get in touch.
Charming Shoppes ............ .... .11
thai are offered ln conjunction ' Fla.; and Jamie Lee .Wolfe, -20,
Mrs. Mary A. Webster, 5220 City Holding Co, ............ : ..... H~
12th Street South,' Apt_ 105, • with the boat trip~. I've been ·so Raclrie, 11nd Kimberly Kay
Federal Mogul- ................... 21~
engrossed with the Information
Fargo, North Dakota, 58104. Now
Goodyear T&amp;.R ................... 35~
that I've neglected to· make Ryan, ~~· Syracuse.
do put that away so that I can
Heck's, .... :. ·--·-'· ..... _............. 2%
arrangements to get t·he photo In
call you to · pick It up 'when I
Key Centurion -·· ·-· --- -- ··· ·- ··- ----14
the newspaper so that you, too, Hospital ~ews
finally get around to dropping
Lands' End·--··--··- ··--··-·· ····--16%
can see the happy group. Must
Mary a line.
-...-&gt;
Limited Inc ...... :................ .47¥,
·put that, down ln my things to do
'Veterans Memorial
Multimedia Inc ..... .. .. ........ 81~
list- my,. how It grows.
Monday admissions - Carol Rax Restaurants .......... ...... .. 2%
You may have had yOur name
Wines, Shade; Guy Priddy, Robbins &amp; Myers ...... ... ...... .. l7
engraved on some j!'welry. Or
I'VE' heard of stormy weather,
Pomeroy; Ronald Erb. Mason,
you might have had your name.
Shoney's Inc ·-·-···--·--······---14%,,
but this Is getting ridiculous, You
placed on a shirt, a lie, a hat or
W.Va.
Star Bank ................. :...•..... 20\i"_
keep smiling, anyways.
Inside your coat, but on a brick?
' Monday discharges - Natlte Wendy's IntL·-··· ---- -··-· ··-- ·--· 5%
Well, If you haven-'t had the
Zigler.
Worthington lnd .............. 23:V,

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ClotiiiJ lonJcht. Low near
Hlp ftunday near 71.
Chance of rain 40 percent
tonlglll ud M percent Tbu.,._
day,

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Bernadette Anderson, Deanna
Apllng, Nancy Basye, Nina Btps,
Valerie Black, Judith Browning,
M~ry Canaday, Tammy. Chapman, Sham;lra Cobb, Larry Coon,
Judith Crooks , Deborah Davis,
James Dlehlo,I Llnda Dye, MIchael Edwards, Rick Edwards,
Marslta Egleston, Karen Faceroyer, Linda Fisher, Lucille
Haggerty, Carol Hare, Blll Hoi·
comb, Paula Horton, L&lt;lls Iple,
Rose Ann Jenkins, ChriS Judge,
David Kaufman, Kalre Kennedy,

Weather
stays cool
in Ohio
By Ul)lted Press internallonal '
The cool weather continues In
Ohio, but at least we're getting a
brief respite from what's been a
very rainy spring.
The state had clear skies
overnight with winds generally ·
light and variable. With clear
skies and calm winds the temperatures dropped Into the 40s with
some readings In the 30s In the
northeast part of the state.
Youngstown reported 37 degrees early Wednesday momlng,
but there were Jlkely even cooler
readings ln low-lying areas.
It was to remain dry Wednesday, but scattered showers and
thunderstorms were expected
Wednesday night and ThursdayClouds were to be on the
lriCrease, but for most of the day
there was to be lots of sunshine,
wuh highs In the middle to upper
60s.
Wednesday night and Thursday wlll be mostly cloudy , with a
chance of showers and thunderstorms. Lows wlll be In the
middle and upper 40s and highs
Thursday again ln the middle to
upper 60s.
Looking aheJ!d through Sun- .
day, there will be a chance of
showers each day. Highs will be
ln the tnld-60s to mid-70s Friday,
ln the 70s -to low 80s saturday and
ln the 60s 19 low 70s Sunday- Lows _
will be mostly In the mld-40s am!
50«.
The Increasing chance of rain
threatens to further delay tiel&lt;!. work over parts of the state,
especially In the south. Rainfall
amowus through Thursday, bowever, are forecast to average less
than 0.25 Inch. Thunderstorms
should become more numerous
somllf!me tbll weekend ahead ot
a low pressure system and a cold
front
Dryllll{ potential forcul1mrbay
Continued on page 8

.

Barbara Lawrence, Vinas Lee, Barry Crueser, Charles Leach.
Henrv Lewis, Betty Ann Lo!tls , and Charles Hysell.
Substitute secretaries hired
Beverly Lucas, Helen Maag,
Linda Mancini, Jenny Manuel, were Brenda Hysell, Lilly
Brent Marshall, Uhlrley McDo- Kennedy, Naomi Findley,
nald, Debbie McGuire, George Wanda Gardener, Cathy Lane,
McLean, Ina Meadows, Michael Marilyn Meier, and Melba
Mlller, Michelle Mallory, Kat- Shreve.
Substltute bus drivers whOse
hleen Parker, • Matgaret :Pa·r- contractswere
not renewed were
sons, ,S teve Patterson, Victoria
Donna
Bentley,
Denver Cotterill,
Peavley, Kathleen Payton, Max
Danny
Grueser,
Terry LauderPierce, Robyn Pitzer, Mary
mUt,
Vernon
Little,
Carl Muncy,
' Powell, Robin Prentice. James
Robert
Ramsburg,
Rgger
Smith,
Pyle, Charles Riley, Lori Rit Lisa
Thc!mton,
Larry
Tucker,
chie, Jozle Roberts, Carolyn
Robinson. Artis Salyer, Gayle Betty Wilson, and Carl Wilson.
Salyer, Ann Sisson, Mar,y B. Custodial contracts not renewed
Slaven, Jeanne Slawter, Carol were Jonathan Dunn, Doug Jen Smith, Linda Smith, Gregory kins, Steve Lane, David Lewis,
Spees, Deanna Spriggs , Paul · and Don Roush. The contract of
Stumbo, Sandra Walker, Terry VIcki Smltb, secretary, was not
Wayland, Elizabeth Webster, "renewed.
In -other personnel matters the
Ralph Werry, Helen Williams,
Kay Wilson, May Young, and board ~pled the resignation of
· sabra Ash for retirement and for
Bryap ;l:irkle.
Eniployed as substitute aides Leo Morris as bus driver;
were Donna Grueser, Judy Eb- granted .dock days lot Unda
lin, Connie Jones, Josla Mortlln, Morris for March 30, Aprilll and
Carolyn Nicholson, Tracey 12, all halt days, and for Joe
O'Dell, Karen Pooler, Janet Anthony for May 16 half day and
an additional half day.
· Simpson, and Dinah Stewart.
The board· employed Roland
. Substitute bus drivers hired
were Terry Powell, Deborah Eastman as a substitute bus
Grueser, Debra Burns, Carl driver for the 1990-91 school year,
and Kathryn Doldg~ as high
Morris, Tim Fry, Kay Ward,
school
cheerleader advisor for
James Vanaman, Kathy John1990-il.
son, Cynthia McMillan, and
Marjorte Blaie was granted a
Donna Stacayweeks extended service for
four
Substitute cooks employed
the
1989-90
school year; and one
were Shelby Davis; Lela Haggy .
year's
leave-of
absence to Kim
Delma Karr, Edrkless Karr, Eva
Oliphant
for
the
1990-91 school
Milliron, Dottie Scarberry, Kelly
year.
Hawkins, Pamela Howard, MarMike Staggs war. granted pervel Petry, Ethel Shank, Anita
lly lhe board loconduct a .
mission
VanCooney, Betty Williams, and
football
camp at Meigs High
Edna Davis.
·
Schol
on
July
9-13.
Substitute custodians emQn
filial
matters
the Harrisonployed were Jack King, Gerald
ville
sbllb
grade
tleld
trip was
Pullins Sr., Richard Thomas ,
approved
for
June
11-14.
Sam Morrison, Andy Batey,
•

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