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                  <text>By
The
Bend
..

Sentin~l ~

The Daily
·

Monday, June 28, 1993

Wimbledon

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. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .,..... --N·a·mes t·n the news-- .
Page-10

·. ~--,_-..,,..,... ~-·:t.~~, ..,..,-~..,.,.~·.w-~·~-_.._.,

Community Calendar
Community Cateadar items
appear two days before an event
and tbe day ol that eveat.llems
must be received well in advauce
to assure pubUcatlon In the calendar.

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - Meigs County
Republican Women meeting 7:30
p.m. at the Meigs County Public
Library. New members encouraged
to auend. For more information,
contact Patty Pickens at 985-4231
or Niese! Gerard at 992-6736.

!

AID

Foo d/D r1n
•k

COKE &amp;.
S2f9
DIET
COKE
lUI. 120Z.OII
COKE &amp;
$259
DIET COKE
COKE &amp;
DIET COKE
IIIII
HERR'S
CHIPS
I OZ.lS!IIlTRI

:J~CH

.

69•

STYROCUP

BEACH
LOAFER
CHAIR

STYROFOAM CUPS
120Z.

69•

BONUS
PKG. OF28

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-AID

: Vol. 44, NO, 43
• MultiiMIIalno.

ByJIMFREEMAN
Seatinel News Staff
A payroll deduction savings
· progrsm and appointment of members 10 a committee to discuss a
proposed joint wala' supply system
were among the items discussed by
,the Middleport Village Council ·
during its regular meeting Monday
night.
Council approved Bllowing village employees aa:css to the Ohio
Public Employees ·eompensation .
,Program. · .
• Rily Hardy, area program repre•sentauve, described the program as
,a voluntary payroll deduction sa~-

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I~
I
I ~&amp;Quality I
I
I
I As ~;As $1, $2, $31

""""""

$20fl:

RACINE - Southern Local
Bosrd of Education will meet MOD·
day at 7 p.m. at the high school.

I

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J~:I

•

999

AID

Serv1ces

Rim AID PHAIIIIACY
ACC.JIIf08r MAJOR
PRIISCIIII'TION 1/JC •••

Rrr. AID Acc.P78 ALL
IIAMII'ACJ"'IIMR'S

1. .7G-3MI

unemploym~nt

benefits, from a
week!): ave~e of 374,000 in April
to 390,000 m May.
-A dec~ease in the prices of
r&amp;IV materials, indicating a soften-

ing_o~~~

in business delivery times, also signaling weaker
demand.
Four of the indicators we~e posi·
tive. ln on:b', from most positive to
least positive, they were:
·
-An increase in the inflationadjusted money supply.
-A gain in orders and contracts
for new commercial buildings and
business equipment.
-A rise in )&gt;uilding permits.

4 49

~OR CAPlETS

4.70Z.
STAND-UP 1\JI!E

Chief of the Middleport Volunteer Fire Department Kenny Byer
reports that he has received various complaints that someone is
soliciting ads for the departmenL He said no one is currently collecting money for the department and if contacted by this person
one should get as much information as possible and contact the
Middleport Police Departm~nL

~ 'j&amp;'

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"""""'

t=coarfi&amp;

Photos fleeded for postcards
The Meigs County Plu1c District is looking for a few good pho-

tos.

KODAK
OOLDPLUS
3GMM
FILM
400 SPEE&gt;-24
EXP. OR

EDGE
SHAVE GEL

419

CORRECTOL
TABLETS

70Z.

.

According to Director Mary Powell, the district needs photos for
Meigs County postcards which will be usied to ~otc the county.
Needed are photos of the river, villages, hiStoriC sites and other
photos of interest coliccrning Meigs County, Powell said. P!Jotos
must be sharp, color negatives to be reproduced.
For more information, contact the Meigs County Park District at
992-2239 or send pi¥Jtos and negatives to the office at 200 E. Second Street, Pomeroy, OH, 45769. Place your name and phone nlllll·
ba on the back of the photos, Powell said.

30'S

100 SPEED-36 EXP.

Two injured in wreck
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CORTAID

CAIAMOA ~

3•

OINTMENT ..........1~-1~

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MYCELEX·7
CREAM,...
4!; GM. OR ,_.
INSERTS
7'5

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MFQ. awl -400
!!'"""'"'"!!!'!c.::!~~--

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'

A Racine man and his passcng« sustained minor injuries Mon·
day
afternoon when they struck another vehicle from bellind, the
•
GaDia-Meiis Post of the State Highwa_y Pattol nljJOiled.
Driver Shelby J. Pickens, 25,"31467 Pille OtOve Road, and pas·
senger Scott A. Ours, 22, Hone Cave Road, Racine, were tranJpcrted by Me!ss County Emergency Medical Service to Veterans
· · Meroorial Holpilll where they were ~ llld released.
Ac:cordlng to the ac:c:idenl repon, Pickens was Wlbound on State
R'!'JJe 338 in Letart Townsldp whtln he slruCt from behind 1 vehicle
driven by Charles B. Myen, 20, Ravenswood, W.Va., who had
reponedly stopped fcxo a lamb In the road
Piclcens was cited for failure to maintain an assured ,clear distance ahead and no IIeBI belL Both vehicles sus rained heavy, dis·
abling dam8ae and were lOwed fnm the scene.

•

COCIPON8.

.
(

"oods. .

ries-An
fcxo COIIjiUIIIU
increase m new clilims fer

Fire department not soliciting

Oilrqpxl now thrnutd&gt; july 18, 1&lt;})3,

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ue but at a modest rate. ·
In May, six of the index's forward-looking indicators fell . In
order of their effect on the index,
from largest to smallest, they were:
-A drop iii con.sumer confidence - the fourth in five months
- as measured by a University of
Michigan survey.
·
-A decline in the inflationadjusted backlog of unfilled ordas
at factories for big-ticket durable
goods such as cars and com_puters,
a si~ that the cunent workforce is
havmg little trouble keeping up
with oolers.
-A fall in new orders to facto-

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
' government's chief economic forecasting gauge fell 0.3 percent m
, May, continuing a seesaw pauern
that signals uneven growth ahesd.
The drop followed a 0.2 percent
gain in April, a I percent plunge in
· Marcb, i 0.4 percent increase in
February, a 0.3 percent ~line !n
January and a 1.7 percent Jump m
December. the Commerce Department said today.
"I'ts ... sl uggJ"sh stuff,m
. short,"
said economist David C. Munro of
High Frequency Economics in New
York.
Meanwhile, the government said
SijlWIIIllly_that sales of new homes
·plun'gea2l per-Cent iii~£y, the
biggest droP m 13 years, to a sea·
·sonally adjusted annual rate of
571-,000. The plummet virtually
erased April's 21.9 percent jump
and was· double the decline anticipated by economists.
The Index of Leading Indicators
is designed to predict economic
activity six to nine months in
advance. Economists take three
consecutive movements in one
direction as a good, although far
from foolproof, barometer of future
activity.
The recent behavior of the index
fits with most analysts' expectation
thlit economic growth, aflet racing
ahead in the fourth quarter and
faDing back in the fnt, will contin-

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I\OI)AI.J.'X: 1M UCtwoed " k.ndllk

113 W. 2nd St.
...._..,, oH. m•
omc-112-6471

.Leading index falls
.0.3 percent in May

A group trying to organize a volunteer fue dcpanment in Bedford Township is mcetinJ tonight to vote on bylaws for the group.
The Bedford TOWRBbip Volunteer Fire Department Commiuee is
meeting at 7:30 at the Modem Woodsmen building in Bedford,
according to Secretary Angie Bricldes.
Bricides said all township residents are invited to attend the .
meeting. Also, accordiiJ$ to Brickles, the committee is planning a
benefit for July 17 featunng area entertainers.
·

TOOTHPASTE

. : ,I

ton, along with Hoffman and Pilblic Affairs Board Member Tom
Anderson, were appointed to a
committee to invesugate the feasi·
bility of a joint MiddleportPomeror water supply system.
Bruce F1sher and Councilwoman
Judy Crooks were appointed as
commiuee alternates.
Horton explained that a joint
water suppl~stem would have a
better likeli
of receiving funding than two separate syStemS.
Discuss callle franchise
Council also approved transferring its cable television franchise
from Rifkin CCG to Rifkin Income

'

$1~:I
On ,;

ings program for Ohio public
employees. The savings are not
taxed until they are withdrawn, he
Sliid.
In order for the payroll deduc·
tions to talce place, the village was
required to approve participation in
the program. Vi~ employees are
not required to participate in the
program, he said. ·
Mayor Fred Hoffman indicated
that he would set up a meeting
bj:tween Hardy and village employees. Hardy discussed the program
last week with Pomeroy village
council members.
Council President Dewey Hor-

Bedford Township group to meet

COLGATE

AMultimedia Inc. 1\WMIPIII' er

;M iddleport Council approves savings .progr,a m

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

ADVIL
,,
IBUPROFEN

I Section. 10 PagM 25 cenlll

Ohio, Tuesday, June 29, 1993

··

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I .
Savit¥ I

Pomert;~y-Middleport,

0

Photo Center

$~1II

JEFF WARNER

•

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.99
.99

J

Low lonlgbtln 601, pu1ly
cloudy. Weclnnday cloUdy Hiab

~

IIOZ.UL11/l

MONDAY
POMEROY - The Meigs County Veterans Service Commisison
will meet Monday at 7:30 p.m. in
the Veterans Service Office in
·Pomeroy.

SYRACUSE · Infant and preschooler aquatic program at Lon·
don Pool 7-8 p.m. through July 9.
For more information, call 992·
9909. $15 fee.

LEISUREWAY

PAPER PLATES

0946

.'

PRICES EFFECTIVE JUNE 21THRU JUlY 4: 1993.

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Pick 4:
ln8GL

Funding, loan system among OVAL topics

The dauahter of Clyde and M.
RIO GRANDE - Karen E. Morris, a 1993 graduate of Eastern Angela Mmis, Long Bortom, MorHil!h School, lias been awarded the ris plans to major in Medical !.abo·
Uruversity of Rio Grande Trustees ratory Technology.
Scholarship and the Racine Home
National Bank Scholarship to
attend Rio Grande.
Morris was selected for the Rio
Grande Trustees Scholarship based
on her leadership skills, academic
talent and othet factors. The schol·
arship will be directed toward ·
tuition over a four year period.
The Racine Home National
Bank Scholarship is awarded based
on academic promise and fmancial
need.
In school, Morris was active in
band, the yearbook staff and baskelball. In addition, she was a
Regional scholar, an All-Amercian
scholar, a member of the Bowling
Green Honors Band and the Kent
Honor Band.
KAREN MORRIS

417

PageS

People in
the news

Karen Morris awarded
scholarship to attend URG

Pick 3:

action
resumes

-----~~----.....-.---~--~---"!"!'-~----~-----,;_.._-- _
NEW YORK (AP) - 1ulia the book as "interpretive biogra- "This is a common side effect of
Roberts finally made it 10 the altar, plly," telling The N'ew York Times the surgery.' '
The senator underwent brain
marrying singer Lyle Lovett in a last week that McGinniss "was not
S1,11'gery
two weeks ago to ~emove
intending
to
write
a
book
that
has
ceremony in Indiana over the
ISO
pages
of
footnotes."
the 2·inch benign tumor.
weekend, her publicist says.
Kennedy spokeswoman Pamela ·
The 25-year-old actress, wbo
MOBILE, Ala. (AP) - Rebecca
called' off her marriage to Kiefer HuJhes wd much of the hook is
Jones won America's Junior Miss
Sutherland just hours before the ficuon.
contest, along with ihe accompanynuptials two yesrs ago, met Lovett,
35, while the two were filming
LOS ANGELES (AP)- Syd~ ing $30,000 college scholarship.
1992's "The Player." It was, the ney Pollack says he was intimidat- · "I am incredibly happy and
fmt marriage for both.
ed by the idea of bringing John honored to represent these young
Actress Susan Sarandon and ' Grisham's best-selling legal thriller women," the 18-year-old from
Calhoun, Ga., said Saturday after
actor Tim Robbins were among the ''The Firm" to the screen.
guests at the wedding Sunday in
"I enjoyed the book enormous· winning the title.
She plans to attend Duke Uni·
Marion, Ind. Their 4-year-old son, ly, but I was petrified when I read
Jack Henry, was the ring bearer. it," Pollack 'said. "The~e was no versity this fall to study law or
Actor Barry Tubb accompanied way that I could see to make the communications.
The program began in 1958 and
Roberts' down the aisle.
book work on film."
,
Roberts took a three'llav break
Pollack, director of such thrillers was renamed America's Young
from filming John Grishamrs '~The as "Absence of Malice'' and Woman of the Year in 1989, but
Pelican Brief" in Washington, "Three Days of the Condor," said ~eturned to its original name earlier
D.C., spokeswoman Nancy Stitzer. olot changes were the kev to the this week. Program directors cited
name recognition as the reason for
Seltzer said ·
fll.m version of "The Firm.''
Lovett is on a national tour and
One of the changes was to give the swirch.
performed with his Large Band Abigail, the wife of hotshOt lawyer
Sundar night in Noblesville, Ind., Mitch McDcere, played by Tom
an Indianapolis suburb.
Cruise, a more active role in the
story. Abigail is played by Jeanne
BOSTON (AP) -· Joe McGin- Tripplehorn, who appeared ·in
niss sars he regrets letting his pub- "Basic lnstincL"
lisher mclude a disclaimer in his
"People will go crazy saying,
new biography of U.S. Sen. 'Why did you change this?' " Pol·
· RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil (AP)
Edward Kennedy that some of the lack told the Daily News of Los
EARTH DAY PARTICIPANTS ·In obser·
Sonia Circle and Margie Lawson, advisors,
Michael Jackson is coming
dialo4ue and internal monologues Angeles. "Well, film's a whole -down
vance or Earth Day the Buhan Beamers 4-H
Tommy McKay, Jeromy Raymond, Jeremy
to Rio in October, and the
were 'created by the author"
different vocabulary. I can't get pop megastar
Club plc:ked up tra.sh along County Road 28.
jackson, and Suzy McKay, advisor, fourth row,
will be giving away
McGinniss acknowledged that inside people's heads the way a
Partlclpldblgln the Earth Day pro]ect were, left
Dutchle McKay and Michael Lamon. Other
to poor cbil·
thousands
of
tickets
some references to Kennedy's novclistcan." .
to right, front, fara MJchaels aud Laraine Lawmembers of the club are Jeffrey Circle a!ld
dren;
.
thoughts in "The Last Brother"
"The Firm" opens nationally
son, sec:GDd row, Amber Hayes, Kelly Osborne,
Adam Mc:Danlel.
His agent, Marcel Avram, told
were "inferred," or that he wrote on Wednesday.
Suzy Milhoan ,and Christa Circle, third row,
the
daily newspaper Jornal do
what be "sensed Teddy must have
Brasil
the contract was signed
been feeling.''
PHILADELPHIA (AP) - U.S. Friday.that
Jackson's
stage: Maracana
But McGinniss told the Boston Sen. Arlen Specter is out of the Stadium, the world's
largest soccer
Sunday Globe: "That falls well hospital where he spent two nights
stadium.
The Board o( Trustees of the Ohio so that requests for items, regional library system in Ohio. It within the realm of legitimate bio- ·for treatment of a reaction to niedi·
It was there that Frsnk Sinatra,
Ohio Valley Area Libraries photocopies, or reference materials serves the citizens and libraries· of ~ical licence. You can certain- cation following surgery to remove then Paul McCartney, set records
(OVAL) held their regular meeting not available in their local libraries Athens, Hocking, Jackson, ly mfer a thought process from a tumor from his slrull.
·The Pennsylvania Republican for the largest crowd at a perfor·
at System Headquarters in Well· will be prt!Vided by OU.
Lawrence, Meigs, Pike, Ross, behavior."
of a single artist Mo~e than
McGinniss, who silid he can cite was admitted to the Hospital of the mance
ston on Thursday, June 17.
Rox1e Underwood, repn:senting Scioto, and Vinton Counties with
187,000
people saw McCartney
The areas of discussion were the Jackson City Library and chair programs of services developed by a source for every quotation University of Pennsylvania on Fri- perform at Rio's showcase sports
attributed to Kennedy in the biog- , day for a reaction to antibiotics. He
fundinJ. a loan system iii conjunci- . of the Personnel Committee, those libraries.
; complex.
ton with Ohio University, and brought recommendations from
Wanda Eblin serves on the raphy, said he will insist that the was ~eleased Sunday.
Nether the speci.fic date nor
"He was OK, but he was run·
employee relations.
that committee for Board approval. OVAL BOatd as a representative of disclaimer be removed.
Jackson's
fee was rell!ased. Tickets
Simon &amp; Schuster President and ning a fever,'' said Shanin Specter,
Underwood stated the committee the Meigs County Public Ubrary.
will
cost
$8 to $30.
publisher Carolyn R,eidy defendCd who visited his father Saturday.
•
Director Eric S. Anderson had conducted the, annual perfor·
reported that the Ohio Senate had mancc reviews of Director Andermaintained funding restored by the son and Clerk-Treasurer Re$ina
Ohio House. The conference com- Ghcaring. Both employees rece1ved
mittee is in the process of review- above average evaluations. Also
ing the state budget, but because approved were changes in language
OVAL had support in both the . in personnel procedures and a 3%
House and the Senate Anclenon is across the board salary increase for
optimistic funding will be main- regular employees.
tained at 1992 levels.
.
The Board approved the
· The Board app:tMd renewal of
Resource Library Agreement with th~ contr~ct for building cleaning
Alden Library at Ohio University. With Opumum Cleaning Services
This program ~vides back up ser- of Jackson.
vice to the c1tizens of Southern
OVAL· is the only swe' funded

Ohio Lottery

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Edltor'l DOte: Nam-. ~p~~IDd acldreal are printed • they
1ppcar OD Olllc:lllrtpora, · ·

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Partners L;P. A representative for donate gift certificates. Organizathe cable c~mpany~ Danny Elias, tions seeking donations are directed
~xplained the change is primarily
to a distribution site to receive the
m name only:
gift certificates - an envelope of
During discussion, Elias pointed either five or I0.
out that the OOIPJIIIRY is planning to
We need a distributor who is not
upgrade its cable service in the ares a member of our association, Doowith fiber optic liries and may offer ley said, indicating that the organi·
more premium channels in the zation would like to start the pro·
fubWne.
.
,gram by AugusL
Tom Dooley, representing the
In addition, Dooley presented ,
Middleport Community Associa· council with ils July 4 schedule
tion, addressed council concerning which includes a boat pllr&amp;de on the
centralized dislribution of dona- Ohio River.
tions of gift certificates and other
Other action
items from Middleport merchants.
In other action, council authoUnder the proposeg distribution rized Hoffman to advertise bids for
system, participating merchants the Park Street Issue 2 paving pro-

jcct if spproved.
In addition, council discussed
inviting Congressman Ted Strickland to spend a day in the village.
Hoffman ·said he would attempt
to set up a day with Molly Varner,
Strickland's regional field rep~e­
sentative.
Councilman Paul Gerard said it
would give village officials an
opportunity to get to know Strickland better while givjng Strickland
a fmt-hand view of the ares.
Atte.nding were Hoffman and
council members Crooks, Horton,
Gerard, Jim Clatworthy and Jack
Satterfield and Clerk(freasurer
Terri Hockman. ~

Missing West Virginia
pastor found in Portland
A West Virginia minister miss· trooper tapped on the window and
"We honestly don't have one
ing for two days was found alive in Hudson jum~ up, Lyons said.
shred o_f evidence of anything,"
Lyons wd an empty container Brenda. Hudson said before her
a park on the banks of the Ohio
of piUs was next to Hudson on the l!usband was found. "I wish 1
River, authorities said.
could say I thought this or that He
The Rev. Basil R. Hudson, 52, seaL
li wasn •t clear if Hudson had left intending to meet me at church
of Barboursville, pastor of the 26th
.Street Baptist ChiD'Ch, disappeared ingested them or if he had tried to and he didn't show up."
Nothing was missing from the
Saturday after he was seen travel- asphyxiiltc hililself, Lyons said.
"He
seemed
to
be
shaking,
church or Hudson's office, Scaring east on U.S. 60 near Barberry said.
,boursville, said Cabell County though," Lyons said.
Hudson was taken to Veterans
Hudson was not the type to go
(W.Va.) Sheriff's Lt. Larry
Memorial
Hospital in Pomeroy, somewhere without telling people,
Stephens. He was. to meet his wife
Lyons said. But hospital nursing Scarberry said.
at church, she said.
REV. BASIL HUDSON
supervisor
Sue Zirlde this morning
"If he's going to be 12 minutes
Hudson was found Monday
refused
to
say
whether HudsQn was !ate, h!:'s, on lbe pbone to I~ you
.ni&amp;ht .i!J.his ~-~~~Y .trying
·
·
know. ThiS is very out of character
to commit swcide, police said The "tieing treated. ·
.
.
·
A
telephone
message
left
at for him," Scarberry said. ,
·
· .
· park is across .the river from
Hudson's
home
late
Monday
was
More
than
2,000
Hiers
were
dis·
Ravenswood.
W.Va.
·
tributed to shopping malls, gas sta·
A hoSe .connecting the tail pipe not immediately returiJed.
"The family's on their way u,e tions, restaurants and convenience
.
b
· to the passenger compartment of
the truck was taped ·in place, but there now,. but they won't know if stores in western West Virginia,
•
·
the truck's motor was not running, it's him until they get there," said eastern Kentucky and southeastern
said Sgt. Harry L~0:, the Meigs Harry Scatbetry, associate pastor at Ohio, Scarberry said.
1cnl
the church.
The Hudsons, who have tieen
County Sheriff's
,
•
Family, friends, parishioners married for 32 years, have two
Two boaters on the river saw
Hudson's vehicle and alerted and police searched Monday for grown children. Hudson had never
,
disappeared or left town without
authorities,
Lyons said. A state Hudson.
CHARLESTON. W.Va. (AP)
telling his wife, Mrs. Hudson said.
- The Bituminous Coal Operators
Association said it has filed unfair
labor practice charges against the
Uilited Mine Workers and a com·
P!IDY that withdrew from the assoelation.
I\ bout 70 union members at
Homer City Coal Processing Corp.
in Indiana County, Pa., had been on
strike until last week, when parent
company CLI Corp. of Pittsburgh
"' ....... .
..·""'
decided to leave the association.
CLI signed an interim agree·
ment with the UMW, which has
members on strike in six states.
The agreement is at the center of
the coal association's complaint.
"The union and CLI unlawfully
have attempted to execute a contract that does not bind Homer Oty
to the final agreement BCOA and
the UMWA negotiate," association
spokesman Tom Hoffman said
Monday. "That is cltirly an unfair
labor practice under the law."
The interim agreement requires
CLI 10 sign an agreement between
' '
the union and the association if one
is negotiated by Feb. 1, 1994.
"We think it's very unlikely,
barger play in the children's pool at the London
GETTING COOLED OFF· Rebecca and
very remote that the union and
Pool
in Syracuse Monday arterDOOD.
Michael
Owen
or
Pomeroy
and
Amber
Will·
BCOA won't negotiate an agreeContinued on p&amp;Rf 3

·'·Be·o~· fll·e.s
char·oes

~gaznst

·unzon

Man killed
'
in wreck

Rival hospitals.to help state-owned rehab center

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Three competing health care sys·
.
tems would be asked to work
together to run a Cleveland rehabil·
itation center for Injured workers
under a new contract OK' d by a
A McDermott man was killed legislative panel.
and another was injured in a twoThe state Controlling Board
vehicle accident this morning on approved a one-year, $353 ,976
State Route 7 ncar Addison, the contract Monday between the Obio
Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Bureau of Workers' Compensation
Highway I'Birol~eported.
and Ohio SIBle University.
Paul J. Shaffer, 21, McDermott,
An arrangement originally pro·
was kiUed when his vehicle appar- posed by the bureau providod for
ently went left of center and struck Ohio State to work only with the
head on a vehicle driven by Delton Cleveland Clinic in providing proW. Fowler, 49, 3l.WO Salser Road, • feuional arid Ulchnlcal aervicei fer
Racine.
the W.O. Walker Rehabilitation
Fowler was transported by Gal· Center.
lia County Emergency Medical
But it was changed under an
Service to Holzer Medical Center. agreement backed by Gov. George
At press time he was still being Voinovich and approvod by con·
treated and a condition was not trollers to aJao reqUire inwlvement
available. Sharrer's body was of The MetroHealth System and
turned over to Willis Funeral Univenity Hl!lfitals in Cleveland.
Home.
Tbc mulu-par.ty contract,
Both vehicles sustained heavy, reached without involvement of lhe
disabling damage and were towed bureau, .comea lglinlt a backdrop
ftom the IICCIIC.
of legislation lppiiMid by the Sen·
The accident is still under inves· ate and peadlng In ihe House to
ligation.
require sale of the Walker Center.

Oeboni Batta, the bureau's pub- white elephant. That seems to be
lie affairs officer, acknowledged the driving force," Ms. Balta said.
the center has not been used to its
She said the point of the
potential.
bureau's proposed contract with
"For a number of years, many Ohio State was to improve utiliza.
employers have felt that it was a
Continued on page 3

L.B. Foster Co. buys Midwest Steel
L.B Foster Company recently
announced the completion of the
porchase of the rail-related assets
of Midwest Corporation including
the Pomeroy planL
L.B. Fosttr Company, located in
Pittsburgh, Pa. is a manufacturet,
fabricator and distributor of'construction rail and blbular products,
The aquisition of Midwest Is
another step in L.B. Foster's
announced plil of improving business through fold-in acquisitions
serving special mllltcts.
1bc cornp111y is in the proocss
of expanding tbe product line
through new teprCSCntation agieC·
menu and acquisition. as well as
throuah plant exiJIIISions or addi·
tions fn key rnarkela.
~west Steel~ and

distributes rail, trackwork and
accessories and is a mlliCJr factcr in
its specialized markets. 1broughout
its 40 plus )'ears, Midwest has
focused its effons on liaht rail and
related products whicll 11e used
extensively in mining operations
and Other industty.
.
Midwest conducts the manufacturing, engineering and wllebouaing of li'ht trlckwork and IICCCIsorias at 1ts plant in Puneroy. Mid·
WCSI also has sales and Wlnlbousing facilities relaled liD its dislrlbu.
tion business in a number of locations thoughout the COIIItry. ,
FOSIIir plans to opa•lbe IIICt·
work ciperstiona a the ~dwelt
Division of L.B. Foal« and iiQnd.
idate the remainln' dialribulioll
locations 1t its exisang
facililiee.
,.

-m.

�Tueeday, June 29, 1993

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
DI:VOTED TO THB INTBRE8T8 OJ' THB IIIEIGS-IIASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Publisher

MARGAREJ' LEHEW
cOntroller

· LEI lEKS OF OPINION are welcome. They sbould be leas than 300
wOlds. All lettas are subject to editing and must be signed with nome,
address and telephone number. No unsigned lellen will be publisbed. Leuen
sbould be in good taste, addreuing issues, not penonalities.

Workers' Comp reforms
could emerge this week

WASHINGTON {NEA) - In
the year 2005, bow many major
regional wars should the United
States be prepared to fight and win
simultaneously? That multibilliondollar question is Central to deciding the size and the makeup ofU.S;
11111\ed forces as we enter the new
century. It is proving a controver·
sial and difficult question to
answer.
After the breakup of the Soviet
Union, and based on the Desert
Storm experience in Kuwait, civil·
ian and military plaqners in the
p
·
entagon an d t he B us h Wb Jte
House asked this question: What
potential threats to the United
StaleS continue to exist, and exactly
what contingencies do we want our
military to be able to handle 10 to
15 years down the road?
The consensus was that an allout world war was hif.hly ..-"'--ly,
UIUIM'
and therefore we no onger
had to
spend tens of billion annually in
anticipation of World War III.
However, the world was still full of
hot spotS wbere signif1C81ll regional
conflicts could break out at any
time. The planners believed the
United States must be ready to han·
die these.

DeSert Storm was taken as the
model. After considerable soul·
searching, it was decided that the
United States needed to be ready to

Robert]. Wagman
simultaneously fight and win two
Desert Storms in far-distant loca· tions .. This was called the "winwin .. scenario, and .work was
begun on designing a •force-structure
plan and
to ~
the Concept of
fighung,
wmning,
two Desert
nfl
th
Storm-type co icts at e same
time.
Pesert Storm took approximal.e·
ly half our arm.ed forces to fight.
Thus, fighting and winning two
such conflicts at the same time
means our fighting strength must
be maintained 81 ...-r--annnw;mately its
current level. However, planned
future growth could be eliminated,
while war-fighting strategies would
have to change.
The Navy is a good example. As
pan of the Reagan defense buildup,
the United States had been planni111 creating a 600-ship Navy built

By ROBERT E. MILLER
Aasoclated Press Writer
COLUMBUS -Gov. George Voinovich soon may get some of the
reforms he. has been pursuing for more than two years in Ohio's woJte~'
compensabon system.
But he still faces roadblocks in the House, where Democrats claim the ~ij~~;----::--------~---:--;~
reforms he wants are weighted in favor of employers at the expense of I'
injured wodl:ers whose benefits would be cut.
~
•
r
A bill that IYillpS a long list .of changes into the House-approved, two- ~-~
· year budget of the Bureau of Workers' Compensation was passed by the
Senate last week apd returned to the House for further consideratlon.
Voinovich has described Obio's workers' insurance program as a killer
of jobs in Ohio, mostly because of what he calls excessive employer JRmiums that drive away and repel businesses.
He said the reforms are among the best in the nation.
·
Among other things, he Slid they will SllCed benefits to workers, eliminate huge backlogs of cases and save millions of dollars with the use of
managed health care, designed to eliminate waste in medica care and
treatmenL
Voinovich said the biD is balanced. "It's good for Ohio workers, good
for Ohio businesses and good for Ohio's ability to compete in the global
marketplace," he added in a statemenL
·
House Speaker Vem Riffe, D·Wheelersburg,. talc:es another view of the
legislation. He has asked the House to reject the Senate version and send
the proposal to a joint conference commi~ for more work.
The House is expected to go along With Riffe's request Tuesday. That
would not allow much time to resolve the problems. The bureau's $632
million budget faces a Wednesday midnight deadline.
But Riffe said,""! think the bill can be worked oul soon in a conference
committee." He said the proposal is not balanced, and that il goes too far
to help employers and not far enough to help injured wa:kers.
Riffe's concerns are similar to those of Senate Democrats, wbo voted
against the bill unanimously.
They pointed to a provision that requires reductions in benefits to
retirees who receive workers compensation in an amount equal to their
pensions or Social Security checks. ·
Alsci singled out as anti-worker was language setting a one-year statute
.
of limitations on lawsuits against employers resulting from workplace L.::~~=::.;.
accidents.
Although the biD speeds the the claims process and provides for the
immediate paymeny of benefits in some cases, it also requires the injured
worker to pay the money back if his or her claim is later denied.

around 14 iurcraft-carrier battle
groups and 100 attack and tactical
nuclear submarines. Under the win·
win strategy, growth plans were
scaled back to a 420·4!50 ship
Navy, built around 12 carrier bailie
groups and a stiD-classlfied number
?t~~arirtes, estimated at about
.
Th e new strategy also necessi·
tated a shift in the .makeup of the
various uniformed services. Rapid
deployment, quick response and
mobility became the watchwords.
So, as the nation went to the ~lis
last November, the Pen~on mitiated a ground-up re-exammation of
each service, geared to developing
a new "roles and mission" state- '
ment for each. This re-examination
is, in the words of Joint Chiefs
Chairman Gen. Colin PaweD, "a
balancing act of some complexity."
.
Powell says the service chiefs
are involved in " creating an integrated plan, which is an aggressive
effort to cut our overhead while
preserving our1force structure."
· Their initial efforts made it clear
that while the new military could '
envision a very different mix of
forces, it would not come up with

. ··-aNP I roUND

"''Ll c ·iJn
J:u.,-,.lt'C!
l"rt ~ ·
~F;c;T Pl:aN!

Workers Compensation

Letters to the editor
Dear Editor,
We would like to take this
opportunity to publicly thank
everyone who helped in any way to
make the opening of London Pool a
possibility this year.
As many of you know , this is
our 17th season. With time, things
start to fall apan. We have gone in
the red for the past several years
and there has been no money for
the upkeep. Things were repaired
as however they could be.
But with help and support from
so many, the pool is opened lind
looking good. We have a,pool
manager who is very conscientious
of the money, both what is taken in
and what is spenL

·.

We would like to thank all who
took pan in our craft day ~e in
May. Thanlcs to all who donated to
the village's craft tables, also
thanks to all wh'o bought from
these tables. Thanks to the fire ·
depanment for the proceeds from
the chicken barbeque.
Thanks to all the businesses and
private donations which gave us
money ul? front to make the necessary repaus.
And last, but not least, thanks to
all the volunteers who donated
thc;ir time and efforts to get the
pool ready to open on time.
James E. Pape. mayor
Syracuse

KKK draws attention to prejudice
would be shootin'. What ·about
freedom of speech.
Ku Klux Kllln Coming. This is
just adding insult to injury.
Supreme are they? Not to me. Only
Jesus is supreme. We are all created equal but we don't get equal
rights here in Pomeroy. As far as
prosperity and unity, it's a long
way off for the bla~k people. I
can't see by looking in the mirror
reflections of the pastootil this present day. Whosoever will. not Stand
up for what they believe in, let
them fall. We black people pay
taxes, but what we hav11 is "taxa·
lion without representation."
Blacks - Pomeroy village, 0;
court house, 0; police department,
0; sheriff's offiCe, 0; post offLee, 0:
library, 0, and on and on and on.
When things change it must
change for all, but for some people
the more things dlange the more it
stays the same. So why don't the
Kll Klux Klan show their true col·
ors? Insteild they hide themselves
for the cowards they are.
I don't want people to smile in
my face and stab me in the back
because what goes around comes
around and there's no one afraid of
the Ku Klux Klan though we are
small in numbers. He who stands
and goes away will live to fight
another day.
Barbara James
Pomeroy
Thought for Today: "These are times in which a Genius would wish to
live. It is not in the still calm of life, or the repose of a pacific stadon, that
great cbaracters are formed .... Great necessilies call out greal virtues." Abigail Adams, American fmt lady (1744-1818).
Dear Editor, ""
Well, finally they have lit my
frre and I'm going to put the pedal
to the metal and the niuy to the
gritty. I have been biting my
tongue about this white supremist
group since the last time I read
about their intended journey here.
Bravo for Mayor Reed and the
sheriff's depanment (or taking a
stand but the black people all know
this hate racist group ·hates the
black race, blows up black churches and kills little black children ~
Some blacks don't speak out and
stand silently bY., but this doesn't
mean they aren t thinking about it
or talking 10 others, but there has
been prejudice in Pomeroy for centuries, all the federal dollars pouring into this community, and not
one black person can get a job
although there is ~ to be
cenain percentage hired when federal funded money is received.
If Mayor Reed and the sheriff's
department don't condone this,
what effort has been made to stop
it? Has anyone notified the Ku
Klux Klan that they would prefer
them not coming to our commooity1I think
. our mayor, po lice depallment and sheriff's· department
could stop this. If this was a black
hate group·coming, could they stop
it? You're darn tooten or there

a

•

~

"r"Jj~ •1lt
~ R PI

Aecu-Weather• forecaat for daytime

By The Associated Press
Panly cloudy skies will continue
for most of the state tonight and
Wednesday. Clouds will increase
across sOuthern Ohio Wednesday,
and there will be a slight chance of
showers and thunderstorms.
Afternoon highs will be in the
70s across the north and lower 80s
in souther Ohio Wednesday. Thai
is 5 to 10 degrees below normal.
Lows 10night will be from 55
degrees in the north to 65 in the
extreme south.
The record high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 100 in 1934. The record
low was 48 in 1923,
· Sunset today will be at 9:04
p.m. Sunrise Wednesday will be 111
6:06am.
Around tbe nation

During Defense Secretary Les
Aspin' s time as chairman of the
House Armed Services Committee,
he had been on the periphery of the
Pentagon's reassessment. He
believed then lbat military planners
were not cutting enough, although
his counterpart in the Senate, Sen.
Sam Nunn, D·Ga., was a strong
proponent of win-win.
Aspin began his review with the
question: Whr, not a "win" sttate·
gy instead of 'win-win." He asked
why should the United States be
prepared to fight more than one
maJOr regional conflict at a time.
The chances of two flash points
going up at the same lime are
remote. Yes, said Aspin, the military should be prepared to fight a
Desert Storm and go into Somalia
at the same time but not to fight
two Desert S - in two pans of
the word a1 the same momenL
The outcry from the uniformed
services was immediate. Pro-military legislators on Capitol Hill,
including Nunn, said they w~ul.d
fight ~h cutbacks. Now Aspm IS

~~annga ~t!~~n:a~ f:~fi~;

~

•

proposed strategy has split
the uniformed services, and all
sons of new rifts are developing in
the Pentagon. The debate is far
from over.
Robert Wagman is a syndical·
ed writer for Newspaper Enter·
prise Aasociation.

'~eform'?

When the tem1 "reform" is used affordable levels of premiums for called Workers Compensation
these days in the Obio Senate, one employers.
reform bill was ramrodded through
· must view the apptOIICh with raised
When this does . not occur, the Ohio Senate. UnfortunatelY.,
eyebrows and extreme caution. employers and the injured employ. while some provisions of the bill ·
True reform is good because it
may have great merit, such as
brings about change for the better.
placement of a small business repUnfortunately, .the ''reform" which
resentative on the wa:kers compen·
w~ have seen recently, particularly
sation board, it contained many
wnh respect to workers compensaother provisions which had nothing
tion, is change, (.)ll!y for the sake of ee alike, are frustrated and angered. to do with improvement of the prochange. By no means should the Thus, change must be made to cess. On the contrar):, it had a lot to
Legislature qse this approach as a eliminate these problems. In fact, do with hurting the already injured
standard for change.
almost twenty years ago, there was worker, with still no guarantees of
Clearly, workers compensation a cry for computerization of the lower premiums for the employer.
is an un:a that needs constant atten- system to expedite the process.
In fact, the bill also folded into
tion and revision to smooth the pro. Now, almost two decades later I it the Workers Compensation
cess. The goal of wodters compen- am still perplexed as to why high multi-million dollar budgets, which
sation is to duly compensate teChnology has not been employed were separate bills in their own
injured workers in a timely fashion; on a massive scale to this huge right. Once again, the Senate
rehabilitate them for a prompt bureaucracy.
majority party has attempted to
return to work; and maintam
Nevertheless, this week a SO· avoid the legislative process. By

Sen.]an M. Long

placing the senate b'ill into the
already House-passed Workers
Compensation budget, the House
of Representatives now has no
opportunity to hold public hemngs
on this major piece of legislation.
As I commented in. a previous
column covering the state bud$el,
this is not the way legislation
should be considered. Workers
Compensation must be improved,
but the side door approach is not
themethod.
·
As always, if you have any
questions ·or comments on this or
any other issue, pi~ conll!Ct my
office. My addreas 1s Ohio Senate
Statehouse, Rooni 134, Columbus'
Ohio, 43266-0604 and my phone
number is, (614) 466-8156.

Get these irritating things off my.chest
.

.

It is my solenin duty as a certified crank to call your altention to
some things that ought to be irritating you to a fare-thee-well. I will
begin with some everyday items.
Did you lcnow, for example, that
NASA's newest space toilet excuse me, "Improved Waste Col·
lection System" - cost $30 million to develop? Think of it this
way: After it has been used a thousand times, we'll only be paying
$30,000 per flush.
Did you know there is a conspir·
acy afoot to make Americans
dumber? Consider: Dan Quayle is
writing a memoir, and the Fedenil
Communications Commission is
mandating that cable companies
carry the Home Shoppill8 Network.
It can probably be proved mathe·

matically that it is "impossible to of documents for former Attorney expense of savers, particularly
read the former,QI .wllll:b the latter General Richard Thornburgh's per- senior citizens, and no· one Is
without significant loss of brain ·sonal collection; the ' Catholic screaming about it. The banking
cells.
Church's tardy admission, 3S9 industry racked up a record $32 bilyears after it formally condemned lion in eamin~ last year, yet they
Galileo, that the earth does in fact persist in pa)'llll piddling interest
revolve around the sun; a Federal rates on savmgs accounts, money
Highway Administration study martel accounts and certificates of
which shows that one in every deposit. Millions of retired folks
Some things have been lllllloy- ·three of the lumbering, weaving, depend on interest income for their
ing me so much lately that I got out smoke-belching trucks on the high· survival, and the banks are gouging
the old Curmudge..().Meter, a high- way has safety defects.
them. Why? Because all too man~
tech device tnat calculates in
And these particularly outra- bankers are heardess, rapacious
OLMs (Outrage Level Measure- geous items:
creeps, that's why.
..
ments) precisely how obnoxious,
- A Washington Times inter· . - The way the left· wing civil
ridiculous, absurd or asinine some- view with former lounge rights community hilS fallen in
thing is. A few of the events that singer/Penthouse model Gennifer behind Uni Guinier and mindlesstri ered high readings inCluded:
F1owers in which she allowed that ly IDarcbed lockstep behind her as
~ General Accounting OffiCe Bill
Clinton had botl:hed the nomi- she wails that because her nomina·
n:port that the Justice Department IWion of Lani Guinier as his assis- tion was pulled she was denied a
spent $29,233 copying thousands tant attorney general for c'ivil forum to expound on h~r ideas.
rights. "What I heard him lillY is Two things come to mind: I&gt; She
absurd," she said. "Bill is way in was dumped because her Ideas
over his head. ... I don't think the were anti·democratic, if not subpresidency is a learning ground." versive; and 2) she's been on net·
The outrage is not wbllt she said, work news shows, "Nightline,"
By Tile Alloclated l'l'ftll
but lbat the Times deemed the story the op-ed page of Thl: Washington
Today is Tuesday,June 29, the 180th day of 1993. There are 185 days worthy of .!3 paragraphs.
Post and numerous other soapbclJtleft in the year.
· ·
- The utter mess that the bun· es, and what the hell are those if
Today's Hilhlilht in History: .
(
notfonlns?
~lers 81 the Resolution TIUst Corp.
On June 2CJ, 1?67, the British Parliament approved the Townshend u making of the saving•and-loan
I ClllpCCiaUy liked the "open letRevenue Acts,. which im~ impon duties on glass, lead, paint, ~ cleanup. They've paid contractors ter" to the American people that
and tea=hi
· to Amenca. Colonisas biuerly prole8led the Acts, which $3S an hour to copy documents. ex-beavy:\Nelgbt champ and conwere
in 1770.
Onis~
.
. . The ICCOU1Iling fiTms they've been victed rapist Mike Tyson issued
from prison about Ouinier: "As
In 1776, the Virginia state constiiUtion was adopted, and Patticll: Henry using CIIIJIOl 6nd recorda ·to jullify one wbo bas been dlrough this type'
$83 million or the $254 million
made governor.
of WUd West jUilice, I blow bow itt
In 1941, Polish stateaman, pianist lind composer Ignace Jan l'llderews- they Jllid Ylrious law firms in 1990 foeiJ 10 be denied a chlnce to ade-'
and 1991. Cause for dilmay? Ah
ki died in New Yort al age 80.
friends, you don't know tbe quately tell your side of a situa-:
In 1946, British authoritiel mested more than 2,700 Jews in Palestine bureaucratic mind-sat. Top RTC uon..
l
•
I
in an attempt to stamp oat allcled tetrorilm.
The Curmudje..().Metcr blew a'
offlcials rewarded thernaelves with
In 1949, the government of South Afr!Q enacted a ban againlt racial· $1
plbt on that one. ·
i
million
worth
of
bonuses
in
ly-mixed llllllriuea.
·
1992.
Jllltpll Spear II • IJIIdlcatedl
In 19S4, the Atomic Energy Commisaion voted against re-Jnstatinl Dr.
.writer far Newtpaper Eaterprlle ·
The
fact
that
banks
have
J. Robert Oppenheimer's access to classified infortlllllion.
.
been gelling filthy rich at the "-1811011.

Joseph Spear ·

Today in history

.

..

.

I;

,,

PA.

IND.

81"

•

cepe.

called "win-hold·win."
This strategy suggesJS thal the
United States should 1le prepared to
fight one ~ regional war while
being able to hold the line in a second until the first is concluded and
U.S. fon:es can twn their full lUten·
lion to the second Such a sttatep
will require the retention of a sJg·
nificant force structure, but siill
considerably .less then a1 presenL A
win·hold-win strategy will yield
some measure .of a peace dividend,
although not as large a one as many

__..:____::;::::__..I

Village appreciates support

Cloudy skies, lower temperatures forecast

MICH.

the kinds of budget reduction that
had been predicted. The new military might be changed, but it would
be almost as costly as the old
So when the Clinton adminislrlilion came into power, it decided 10
go back to square one and to reexamine the basic win-wirt con-

W. VA.

Sunny

Pi c - , Cloudy .

018113 Accu--lhot. Inc.

------Weather·----Soutii·Ceatral Oblo
, Tonight, pertly cloudy. Low 6().
&gt;65. W~nesday, variable cloudiness With a slight chance of showers or thunderstorms. High in the
low 80s. Chance of rain is 30 percenL
. Exteacled fOI'eealt: .

Tllundlly tllrou1b Saturday:
Thursday, chance of thunderstorms. Lows in the 60s. Highs in
the 80s. Friday, chance of thunder·
storms. Lows in the mid-60s and
low 70s. Highs in the mid-80S to
lciw·90s. Saturday, chance of thun•
derstorms. Lows in the mid·60s
and lOw 70s. Highs in the 80s.

- -'-Area deaths-John A. King

Roger Lightfoot

John A. Kina. 81, RL I, Letart, ··
ROJer Emmett Lightfoot, 52, of
W.Va., died Monday, June 28, M!Jrnstown •. Tenn. formerly of
· 1993 at his home
Middleport, died Saturday June 26,
He was 11om 00 Dec. l, 1911 in 1993 after a truck accident in
· Graham Station, W.VL to the late Roanoke, Va.
.
Quincy Lee King and Estells May
He '!as a truck driver for Yel(Grimm) King.
. .
l~w Freight and a member of MorA retired coal miner, he was a ~wn ~esleyan &lt;;llun:h.
member of the United Mine Wort&gt;urvtvors are ~IS Wife, N_ancy;
e Assoc' • 1 a1 · Mad'
father, Emmeu Ughtfoot, Middle·
rs
IIUOII oc m
ISOII, port; daughters and sons-in-law,
wy~. He was also a member of Belina and Troy Kitsos, Melissa
F1111Vtew Bible ~urch:
and Kent Patterson and Michelle
.sonAlso precedmg h1m was one and .Randy Sible·, sisters• Charlotte
· Survivors · cl d h'
·r
Van Meter and Wanda Oxley;
.
. IR ,u e IS WI e, brother, Robert Burdette and three
Mary
K. (Lewis)
one &lt;laugh· grandch'ldre
· pr.....,... 1n.
ter
(Stella
M
'Letart)
1 n. He IS
. dson, o:~~er (Edw~oL
by his mother Beatrice Lightseveral rueces
Services will be at 11:30 a.m.
The
will be Thursda
Thursday at Cypress Wesleyan
1 pni Bl ~Funeral ~ Church, 377 Alton Darby Creek
wv
Re
. ROI!CI, Columbus, with Rev. Ira C.
m
• · L
. v~. ~ , Gardner. officiating. Interment aa
Roach ~ J~~;~DCS LeWis WID offiCI· · Alton Cemetery in Columbus. ·
ate. Bunal will be at Zerkle CemeFriends may visit at the
teryF. ·.
Schoedinget HilliOp Chapel, 3030
r1ends may call the funeral w. Broad SL, Columbus, from 2 to
home '!Vednesday from 6 ~ 9 p.m. 4 and 7 10 9 p.m. Wednesday and
In lieu of fl~!'"· ~lions can at the chwch from 10:30 to 11 :30
be made to FaJTVJCW Bible Cbwch a m Thursday
.. Building Fund, Rt. I, Letart, W.Va.
. .
.
· 252S3.
Richard Riggleman
Richard E. Riggleman, 60, of
Middleport died Monday June 28,
1993 at Ucking Memorial Hospital
in Newark.
1
Born in Newark to the laiC WilMeigs County Emergency Ser· ford Riggleman and the late Lucille
.vices ·responded to three calls for Jiuff Shaner he was a consttuction
wodter,
·assistance Monday.
· Units responding were 5:33 . Surviviors are his wife, Violet
. Racine to State Route 338 for assiS· Napper·Riggleman, Middleport;
tance in a automobile accident sons, Jecry Gilkey and Christopher
where Shelby Picliens and Scou Gilltey, both of Pomeroy; son and
' ·Ours 'were transported to Veterans friend, Michael Gilkey and Laurie
. Memorial Hospital and Jeffrey Hoffer, Newark; step-son Jeffrey
Coon arid Chlirles Meyers refused C&amp;Sto, Columbus; step-daughter
· treatment; 8:25 Racine to State aiJd son·in·law Judy and Thomas
'Route 338 for Basil Hudson wbo Batey, Pomeroy; a Sisler and broth·
was transpated to VMH and 9:55 er-in·law, Laura and Charles
Syracuse to Broadway Street for Roberts, Sr., Newark; sisters,
,Jnez Hill who was transported to Ernestine Walters, Hebron and
Holzer Medical Cenltl'.
Sherry Shaner, Buckeye Lake; a

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AAA. .Ad

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fune:;..

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·.·.Squads respond
to three calls

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Lottery numbers

ers, John Riggleman, Newark and
Pick 3 Numbers
William McFarland, Newark; six '
4-1-7
grandchildren and several neices
· · (four, one, seven)
and ·nephews. He is preceded in
·Pick 4 Numbers
death by his parents and one sister.
0..94-6
Services will be at I
Thurs(zero, nine, four, six)
day at Fisher Funera Home in
Middleport with the Rev. W.Uliam
·,·_ _ _ _ _ _ _;._..;,··;.;-;;:-~
· - · Justis officiating. Burial will be at

y.m.

B~=~C::::.~ ·at the funeral

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS

au._,

home Wednesday from 2 to 4 and 7

l'labllh,..!:,~~!'•'7 ~· · Monday

~~y";;~&lt;~ ~8&amp;.~~~
()'""pony!MulU...U. Inc., l'uoiWIGJ,
Ohio

Ohio 45768, Ph.

to 9 p.m.
·

BCO

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poltap•JHdd ·~ Po:uwroy',

Second •1Ohto.

Continued from Pllli! 1
ment
by
that dme, and if they don't
Melllb)ir: The - . l e d Preu. ....t 11M
Ohio Ne...poper -.u..,, Na~mol • we think it's unlikely they'll ever
Mverdol1111 lle_..,tadve. Branham
sign an agreement," said CLI Sec·
Newapeper S..1M, 733 Third Avenue, ·
retary-Treasurer BiD Stein. ·
. NewY...~. New Ycd lj)OI7.
"We think we were well within
POSTMASTER: Send addrea eharcu 1o
our legal justirations to withdraw
The llaily Sentinel, til Court St.,
l'uol101oy; 0Hio4576D.
.
from the BCOA," Stein said
Union spokesman Jim Orossfeld
IJUJI8CIJPTION L\TU
Breu.l• 01' ~~~- . _. .
in
WashinJton,
D.C., Slid CLI and .
One
1.60
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keepi"g
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"Tbe onlr t~ clear is the
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PaJC&amp;
increuinpy ~te tone of the
'0.0)&lt; ............................................215 ConiO
•
•
BCOA's pubhc statements,"
8uboqibon not doolri,. io pay llw ...n.
Grossfeld said.
.. mlf nrrd&amp;. in adVIIIKII diNH lo Tha
Dally I!Ontinel on a lhno, ol• or 12
The auociation e.lier filed an
-lh
·
Cn.dll
"'"
bo ..... tarrier 1· unfair labor prKtice chlrge apinst
oaehwook.
another company that withdrew
·No -~~~~- b1 """' pannll1ed In
from lhe poup, AMAX Coli Co.
lnAI wheie home CII.ITlar ..me. it
•••il•ble.
Tbat complaint and the com·
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•
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Labor board
oman Ann
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,_

The Daily Sentinel-Page 3

OHIO Weather
Wednesday, June 341

How militarily prepared must U.S. be?

111 COUrt Stleet
Pomeroy, Ohio

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

Page--2-Tlie Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
TUesday, July 29, 1993

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

~th~:·~lions S::.

.-una.

Ei.84 ·

JH

' )/J

The bloated Mississippi rose
ever higher this morning, a day
after new s~s dumped as much
as 5 inches of rain on Wisconsin,
Minnesota and Iowa. Scattered
showers lingered over the North·
easL

The high water from recent tor-

rential rains has halted commercial
traffic on the river from S.L Paul,
Minn., to St. Louis and killed at
least one person.
The river was crestil)g just south
of Minneapolis, but men flooding
was expected farther south. .
Thunderstorms with heavy rain
and large hail were $C8ttered Mon·
day from Texas to New England
and from the Pacific Northwest to
the northern Plains.
Funnel clouds were sighted in
southwestem Ohio. Wind gusted to

70 mph near Greeneville, Obio, and
caused scallered damage in Indiana, the National Weather Service
said.
A fierce windstorm ripped the
roof off a condominium complex in
Ypsilanti, Mich., injuring four people. Forecasters who hadn't yet
learned how to use new high-teCh
radar equipment failed to pick up
the high·speed wind rotabon in a
Storm they were tracking.
Winds over the central United
States were expected to produce
extremely hot weather over the
southern Plains.
.
Heavy rain, strong winds and
hail were forecast today in the
northern Plains as a jet stream disturbance over the Rockies poshed
east tbward the Dakotas. Tornadoes
were also possible.

Farther south, moist air from the
Gulf of Mexico was expected to
collide with a stationary front
across the central Mississippi and
Ohio valleys, spawning storms
from Missouri to Tennessee.
Two spOts hit 118 degrees on
Monday, the high for the nation:
Coolidge, Ariz., and Death Valley,
Calif.
. Highs today were expected to be
in the 70s and 80s across the northem half, except for a crescent in the
60s from northern Idaho across
North Dakota into th~ nortbern
Great Lakes..
Ninties were forecast across the
southern half, with the mercury
expected to reach above 100 in the
Southwest

Analysts say attack temporary
setback for Iraqi intelligence
WASHINGTON (AP)- The his intelligence officials, not the
Iraqi security compound hit by U.S. readily replaceable buildings and
missiles was the nerve center of offices in which they work, the
Saddarn H~in's intelligence net- analysts said.
work, but analysts say they doubt
"You knock down their buildthal Saddam 's ability to-carry out ings, they just rebuild," said David
terrorism suffered more than a tern· Kay, who headed a United Nations
. )lOilll}' selhJCk.
special commission that inspected
The headquarters wing of what Iraq's nuclear program after the
the Defense bepanment calls the 1991 Gulf War.
Iraqi Intelligence Service was
"The strength of any intelliheavily damaged in the nighttime . gence operation isn't in a building,
attack by ship-laimched Tomahawk it's in the people," said Kay, who
cruise missiles. Auxiliary buildings was shadowed by Iraqi security
with comJlllle.f. record-keeping and forces during his seven weeks in
commuDications equipment also ltaq in 1991.
were damaged, according to Pen• O.s. officials said they launched
tagon estimales.
the attack at 2 a.m. Baghdad time
, But the walled compound in because the fewest number of peodowntown Baghdad is only one ple woul!l be expected to be wcnpan of a far-flung lracJ,i inte~igence ing in the compound lben.
network that reaches mto virtually
President Clinton said Monday
·e~ town and village in Iraq.
his natiOI)al security aides had con· The key to Saddam's ability to cluded lhat the missile attack "did
use his intelligeill:e system in plan· 111 fact cripPle 1be Iraqi intelligence
ning and exeeuting terrorist acts is capacity.' .
the knowledge and experience of

Private analr,sts siid they
believed "cripple ' was too strong
a clwacterizatioo.
Anthony Cordesman, a leading
specialist in Iraqi and Middle.East·
em military affain, said the BltaCk
"would not have serioosly inhibited" Saddam 's ability to use his
intelligence services to carry out
terrorist acts.
Cordesman said the Iraqi intelli·
gence service targeted by Qinton
has regional centers throughout
Iraq, has underground facilities in
other pans of Baghdad and is not
fully dependent on the computer
equipment damaged or destroyed in
the attaclc. It is not rnmaruy a military intelligence service, he said.
Cordesman and other analysts
said Saddam bas rou$hly a half
do1en different intelligence services performing similar - somelimes overlapping and sometimes
changing - security and domestic
and foreign inlelligence functions.

Rival... .
Rahall seeks united
front
.
for regional airport

Continued froin page I

.

lion.

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) southern West Virginia. Among the
- Rep. Nick Rahal! said Hunting- companies that wiD be represented
ton and Charleston officials must are USAir, Delta Airlines, Trans
present a united front in support·of World Airlines, Federal Express,
a proposed reJiOnal airport for it to United Parcel Service and Emery
become II' reality.
·• ·
'
Worldwide. • ·· .
,·' ..,
• Air industry rernsentatives wUl
"This is a gateway to our eco•
be here this week to discuss the air- nomic jX'Ogi'CSS, because the key to
port. Rahall, D-W.Va., said the economic development is a good
,cilies must agree on the project in infrastructure," Huntington Mater
'order to expect federal helll for the Bobby Nelson said.
·airport, which also would serve
Nelson said a regional airpon is
Parkersburg.
necessary for the state.
Without cooperation, there will
"Our infrastructure is old," he
be no airport, he said.
said. "We are limited in our rail
' "Then we're dead ducks before and air service. We have 10 make
we've even 'had a chance, and I these ltinds of investments if we're
think that's unfair 10 the people," going to be anything as a 814le in
l&gt;oho11 said.
the future."
·"";;; conference Friday is intend- ,
But Charlestol) Mayor Kent Hall
ed to inform industry officials believes the new airport would not
a!¥&gt;"1 air transportation plans for be worth the cost.

Meigs announcements ·
. VBS set
Vacation Bible School will be
held at HemlQ!:k Grove Christian
Church July 5-9 from 6:30·8:30
p.m. This year's theme is "Of All
His Crealures Great and Small
Jesus Love You Most of All.''
Classes for ages two through high
school. There will be crafts,
singing, recreation and refresh ments nightly. The closing program
wiD be July 11 at 7 p.m. All children \Velcome.
Dance planned
There will be a dance 111 the Rut·
land American Legion Hall Saturday from 9 a.m. to I a.m. wilh
music by Pure County Band. Public
invited.

be 40 classes. Call Pete Scott at
992·3885 for information.
Event announced
The Rutland Volunteer Fire
Department will hold a celebrity
auction in conjunction wilh the
annual ox roast on Monday at 8
p.m. Items will be available from
Garth Brooks, Alan Jackson,
Brooks and Dunn, Pam Tillis,
Sawyer Brown, Aaron Tippon,
Billy ·Dean, Billy Ray Cyrus, For·
rester Sisters, Bellamy Brothers,
Ricky Van Shel10n, Clint Black,
Tracy .Lawrence, John Michael
Montgomery, McBride and the
Ride, Charlie Daniels, Wayne
Newton, Joe Diffie, Jerry Jeff
Walker, Mickey Gilley, Martina
McBride and Michael White.

Horse sbow set
An open horse fun show wiD be
Tractor puD set
held .Saturday at 6 ·p.m. at the
The Scipio Volunteer Fire
Meigs County Fair Grounds in Department will hold a traclor pull
Pomeroy sponsored by the Meigs Monday in conjunction with the
County 4-H Horse Committee. Call . Rutlan4 Ox RoasL Weigh-in is at
Pete Scott at 992-3885 foc infoima- noon with pull 111 I p.m. Classes for
tion. .. "
children, 800; and for adult, 900,
1,000, and 1,100. There is a SO per,
Point.show set
cent payback.
SEOHA Point Horse Show will
be Sunday at the Meigs County
Practice set
Fairgrounds in Pomeroy. The COD·
Practice for 1be Marauder band
test starts at I 0 a.m. and there will will resume Wednesday from 9
am. to noon at Meigs High School.

----Livestock report--COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) ~
Direct livestock prices and receipts
at selected buying points Tuesday
by the Ohio Department of Agriculture: 1
Barrows and gilts: mostly 7S
cents to 1.00 lower; demand liii!JL
U.S. 1·3, 230-260 lbs., country
points, 4!5.2!5-46.2!5; plants 46.75·
47.7!5, a few 48.2!5.
· Sorted U.S. 1·2, 230-260 lbs.,
country~ &gt;46.2!547.000
Receipts ~= 5,900. Esti·
milled receipts
.,a,ooo.
Pricel fftim The Pniducen Uve·
IIOCk Aalocillian:

Cattle: uneven, 2.00 lower to
1.00 higller.
Slaughter steers: choice 71.25·
77.00; select 60.00.. 7250. ·
Slaughter heifers: choice 70.00..
76.00; select !58.00.7250.
Cows: steady 10 2.00 lower; all
cows 62.25 and down.
Bulls: steady; aD bulls 74.2!5 and
down.
Sheep and lambs: steady 111 2.00
lower; choice woola 34.00.!52. 7S;
choice clips 49.50·52. 75; feeder
lambs SO.OO and down; lplslleep
33.00 and down.

Tlie

intelligence service Com·
pound that was struck in the U.S.
Bltack is well-known by ordinary
Iraqis in Baghdad, Kay said. as the
place suspected dissidl"llts or others
believed to be disloyal to Saddam
are taken foc interrogation.
! 'In the early days of my time
there some Iraqis would say to us,
'We wish you had hit this site Jwd.
er, "' during the Gulf War air campaign - reflecting their loBlhing of
Saddam 's smothering system of
internal control, Kay said.
The intelligence headquarters
compoood was struck by missiles
during the Gulf War, but Saddam
rebuilt iL
Clinton said he targeted the
headquarters building because it
was responsible for plotting the
alleged effort 10 assassinate Presi·
dent Bush in Kuwait last April. Iraq
denies any link to 1be assassination
attempt, which was foiled.

Rutland ox
roast Monday

Ohio Stale already manages the
bureau's J. Leonard Camera Rehabilitation Cmltl' in Columbus, and
controllers on Monday renewed
that arrangement at a cost of
$266,476 in the budget year starting July I, and $279,550 the followi!lg year.
Voinovich said leaders of the
three Cleveland hospitals agreed
Friday to work together with the.
bureau to improve the Walker Cen·

The Rutland Volunteer Fire
Department Will hold its annual ox
roast on Monday.
The day will begin with a
parade at 9:30 a.m. w!th line-up at
9 a.m. at Depot Street m Rutland.
Events taking place will include
music by Dee and Dallas, kids'
·games, other games. A garden trac·
tor puD wiD be held at noon and a
celebrity auction wiD talc:e place at
8 p.m. with fireworks atlO p.m.
lei.
Food will be served all day
"That should be interesting. I'm
including
beef sandwiches, hot
not sure who's going to decide
dogs,
sloppy
joes, ice cream, snow
whether or not they're together,"
cones,
cotton
candy and JIOilCOID.
Ms. Bana said.
Further
information
on any of
The Controlling Board, com·
may
be
obtained
by
these
events
posed of six legislatorS and a Iql!Ccontacting
the
Rutland
Fire
Departsentative of Voinovich, acts on
spending requests from govern- ment or an auxiliary member.
·The Rutland Volunteer Fire
ment agencies.
will hold a celebrity .
Depanment
In other action Monday, the
auction
in
conjunction
with the
board:
-Approved a $1.3 million annual ox roast on Monday at 8
extension of state tourism advertis- p.m. Items will be available from
ing contracts that otherwise would Garth arooks, Alan Jackson,
expire during the year's busiest Brooks and Dunn, Pam Tillis,
Sawyer Brown, Aaron Tippon;
travel season.
-Approved a $4.S million loan Billy Dean, Billy Ray Cyrus, For·
to Controlled Power Limited Part- resler Sisters, Bellamy Brothers,
nership of Canton. The company Ricky Van Shelton, Clint Black,
manufactures electrical power con- Tracy Lawrence, John Michael
trols. Sen. Scou Oelslager, R-Can· Montgomery, McBride and the
ton, said the seven·year loan at 3 Ride, Charlie Daniels, Wayne
Newton, Joe Diffie, Jerry Jeff
~cent interest would retain 289
Walker,
Mickey Gilley, Martina
jobs and create 220 jobs.
McBride
and
'Michael White.
-Agreed to let the state use its
The
Scipio
Volunteer Fire
bond-issuing power to raise $7.5
Deparunmt
will
hold
a tractor pull
million for the Checkfree Corp.,
·
in
conjunction
with
the
Ox Roast.
Westerville, a supplier of elec;tronic
Weigh-in
is
at
n~
with
pull at I
payment and collection process ser·
p.m.
Classes
for
children,
1!00;
and
vices for consumers and businessfor
adult,
900,
1,000,
and
1,100.
es. The company will use the
money to buy a new building, There is a SO percent payback.
retaining 262 jobs and creating 19S
over the neJtt three years.
-Approved a $900,000 loan to
Song WiJun Industrial Co., Ashtab- VETERANS MEMORIAL
ula, to help finance a buyout of the MONDAY ADMISSIONS
Vygen C~. in a .project that will Jacob Kennedy, Pomeroy
retain 117 jobs. Song Woun manu- MONDAY ADMISSIONS
factures polyvinyl chloride and Burt Metz, Portsmouth; Dorothy
Douglas, Pomoroy
other chemical products.
~OLZER MEDICAL CENTER
June 2!1 dlscharaes • Terry
Fields, Ruth Smith, Jennifer Allen,
Rose J,.awson, Mary Via, Bonnie
Am Ele Power....................37 1/2 Lawson and Donald Wal1on.
Ashland Oil... .....................26
June 2!1 births - Mr. and Mrs.
AT&amp;T.................................62 3/4 Donald Zerlde, daughter, Hanrool,
Blink One. .................. :....:..S6 1/2 w~ Va.
Bob Evans .. ~ ......................17 3/4
Cbarmill8 Shop. ................. l3 1/2
Chmp Industries................. l3 3/4
SPRING VAllfY CINEMA ...,,
City Holdina. .....................2!5 1/2
446 4514
'
Federal MoRul... ................21 1/8
&lt;kxxlye. nR ..................41 .5,41
Lands End.......................... 27 518
Umi&amp;ed Inc:....................... 21 s,t
Multimedia Inc .................. 34 1/4
Point Bancorp. ................... l4
Rax ROIIIBWIIIL ................. .1/32
Reliance Electric. ................l8 7/8
ROObins4.Myers •••..•.••••••••. 16
Shoney's lnc...................... l8 3t'8
s.. Blllk ........................... 36 1/2,
Ini'l......... ,............. .l4 314
w RlfOiliOO................30 1}4
Stoc• reportll are tile 10:30
a.w. qaotea pro\lided lly
Kewper Secnltlea, lu., o
GeWfDII

Hospital news

Stocks

w=

�j .

Sports

Tuesday, June 29,1993

The Daily Sentinel

At Wimbledon,

Tuesday, June 29, 1993

Pag&amp;-4

Players finish holiday's fourth round

In AL affairs,

By STEPHEN WILSON
WIMBLEDON, England (AP)
- Tennis fans couldn •t have asked
for a better quarterfinal matchup:
Pete Sampras vs. Andre Agassi top seed vs. defending champion,
btg server vs. great returner
suaight-laced Californian vs. flashy
Las Vegan.
The match up was determined
Monday as all the men •s and
women's fourth-round matches
were completed. The men's quarterfinals will be held Wednesday;
the women's were held today.
Agassi, gettin$ sharper with
each mateh, rode hiS sefV!ce return
to a 7-5, 7-6 (9-7), 7-6 (10-8) Centre Court victory over hard-hitting
Richard Krajicek - then delighled
the fans by bowing, blowing kisses
and tossing his shirt into the stands.
Sampras' victory came under
much different conditions . He
overcame a rowdy crowd on court
14 to beat local favorite Andrew
Foster 6-1, 6-2, 7-6 (8-6), and

Indians blank White Sox 2-0
for fourth consecutive victory
By·CHUCK MELVIN
During each game of the fourCLEVELAND (AP) -Four game winning suealc - one away
wins in a row, seven wins in eight from their season high - the Indigames. Not the kinds of streaks ans have had key hits in the eighth
normally associated with the or ninth inning. The streak has
puDed them out of last place in the
Cleveland Indians.
"We just want to creep up on AL East.
On Monday, No. 7 hitter Alvaro
people. We don't look all the way
to the top," Wayne Kirby said Espinoza and No. 8 Felix Fermin
Monday night after his catch of hit consecutive RBI singles in the
Frank Thomas' drive to the right- eighth inning for the game's only
field fence preserved a 2-0 victory runs.
Kirby then helped nail it down,
over the ChiCago White Sox.

SaUle 4, Minne.ot~ 1
K.lnu1 City 4, Teu.2

-Dhillon
W L Pel.

Jlhi)adelphil ... __.Sl
SL Lwia . ... ...... ..44

24
30
l6
)7

680
S95

Toalcht's games
GB
6.5

~ ................39
PilllbiiiJ)I ..............!7
ao..1o. .................3S 31

S20
.500
.479

12 '
135
IS

Florida .•.....•... 34

40

4S9

16.5

New YooL .........21

52

.218

29

w...... tM.won
San FnnCIICO ....... J:l
Atlanta ... . . ... ... . 42
t...Anpl&lt;o ......... 39
lloullao ............... 31
CJNCINNATI ........ l6
s .. Dicao ............. 29
Colondo ..... .....26

26

.662

14
35
lS

.5:r7

40

.5S3

.l21

-

8S

lOS
II

.474

14.5

47

.312

2LS

41

.3ll

23.5 ·

Monday's scons
P!UibwJh 9. ~ s (10 .... )
Sc Louill. PbiladclphU 1
OU..ao4.s.. Dicao3(11 inn.)
lAO

Toalcht's games
New York (Tanana 4-7) at Flonda
(Bowea 4-l), 7.3S p.m.
PitubutJb (Wapcr 3-3) at Montreal
(Na~olz 3-5), 7:35p.m.

Hounon (Drabek 6-7) at CINCINNATI (BrowniDl4-3), 7 3l p.m.
Colorado ( uffin 3-3} l l Atlanta
(Smolla6-7~ 7.40p.m.

~ (Riva'l 7-3) at SL Louil:
(Anlclll6-:l). 1:35 p.m.
.

Chicap (Mcqan 4-1) at San Dicao

(Womll~).lOoOS_pm.

Sua Fnneiaco {Burkett 11-2) at U.
Anpl&lt;o (llashiHr UJ. I !loll p.m.

Wednesday's games
(Gu~m~.n 6-6)
(Whiloh- ~~ 4&lt;15 p.m.

Pittlbuilh (Nullc 2-2) at MonLrul

(&lt;luotinm (0-2). 7:3fp.m.
H~X~Illlrl (Swuulcll 6-1) at CINCIN-

NATI (Rljo6-2), 7 35l'm.

Colcndo (Blair 3-)) at Atlanta (Avery
1-2), 7&gt;10 p.m,
PhilldUphia (Onlcne 9-1) 11 Sl Lww
(Oobamo H).l:35_p.m.
Sin Pnacilco O{il::tertOn 1· 1) 11 l..ol
An.... (AIIacio 6-4). lllo3S p.m.

--

AMERICAN LEAGUE
T-

W L

New Yodt ........... .. 33
B -...............40 35
&amp; -................... 37 31

Pel.

.610
.573

......•. 31

Gl
3

.S71

3

l33
.493

6

CLI!VELAND ....... 34 41 .447

Mil..-

9
Ill

43 .419 l4.S

w.-trn DtvWo.
Cbic:IJ0..................39 34 .S34
KaMM Cily ..........31 l6 .514
Califonuo .. _ ...•.. 37 l6 .SIJ7
.417

l.l

j
3

,.......... '" ........ 37 39
T. . . , ................33 .00

.-152

6

01

.•31

7.S

-..., ............31

Suulc (Lc11y 6-3) at Mi nnclot a
(&lt;hmdodo0.2),8,0S pm
K1n111 Chy (Appter 9 - 4) 11 Tc111
(Pivlilr: 3-4), 8:35 p.m.
Califonu• (l...ai1ptM 9-2) 1t Oakland
(Outin&amp; 1-4). 10&lt;15 p.m

41 .• 14
Monday's scores

()ok1and ................19

a.EVELAND 2, OU..&amp;o 0
New Yodt I, Dou.i&amp; 2
r...... 7.BII,.._2

TAKING A SEAT at the ballpark isn't what
Kansas City ·fU"st sacker Wally Joyner (left) bad
in mind in the first inning of Monday night's
American League game against tbe bust Tnas

Wednesday's games
Devoi.t (Welll 9-l)
bot! +7), 1 f"'·

ll

ll

in 1977; and Geroge Brett hit .390
For instance, in 1988, G$rraga
in 1980. In the NL, Stan Musial hit · had 29 homers and 153 strike outs;
of sports:
.376 in 1948; and Tony Gwynn hit in 19'89, 23 homers and ISS strike
• Will Andres Galarraga hit .400 .370 in 19S7.
outs; in 1990. 20 homers and 169
"Sometimes, you get two hits strike outs.
this season?
The "Big Cat" says he's giving and your average comes down,"
Galarraga says things began 10
it a shot
says Galarraga "I feel like I have change last season. He was traded
"I'm uying to do my best," to get three or four hits every day." to the St. Louis Cardinals, where
says Galarraga, whose sensational
A .400 hitter must average at Don Baylor WIIS the battin~t coach.
hilling has made him an instant star least two hits in every five at bats. Now Baylor is his manager with
for the expansion Colorado Rock- It's not enough to go twa;for-six the Colorado Rockies.
ies. He's really been chewing up (.333) or even one-for-three with a
"We've been working together
National League pitching for the wane (.333). .
since last year," says Galarraga.
"I hit .300 two years in a row," "It's not only about mechanics. He
past few months.
Like his American League says Galarraga, 32, who knows the helps me mentally, too."
counterpart, John Olerud of the score.
.
Galarraga missed much of the
Toronto Blue Jays, Galarraga
He did that for the Monueal first half of 1992 after being hit on
knows that hitting .400 in the Expos in 1987 (.305) and 1988 !he wrist by a piteh. With Baylor's
spring is somethinjl. Doing it all (.302).
help, he hit .296 after the All-Star
summer long and mto the fall is
Those were his top marks in an break.
something else.
eight-year major-league career.
' :Baylor told me I have to play
• How did Andres Galarraga, game by game, using all !he field,
Not since Ted Williams batted
.406 in 1941 has anybody done it who began this year with a lifetime making contact better," says
for an entire season. Why not? average of .267, tum into such a Galarraga. "That's when I started
Mueh has changed in half a centbry hot hitter?
to open my leg a little bit to feel
'"Believe me, I'm kind of sur- more comfortable and use the
or so. Night games. Relief pitching.
Coast-to-coast travel. You name it. prised myself, too," he says.
whole field."
Galarraga, who is 6-fout-3 and
"I think it's not impossible to
The Big Cat was the first free
hit .400," says Galarraga, '"but it's weighs 235 pounds, is a right-hand- agent of 1992 to switch teams.
ed batter who had been known as a Thanks to Baylor, he signed with
. something really difficult."
Since 1941, few batters have free swinger. He buik a reputation the Rockies just before the expanwith the Montreal Expos (1985-91) sion draft.
challenged the mark.
In ·the AL, Rod Carew hit .388 for being an impatient slugger.
During the off-season, Galarraga played baseball in his native

Raogers, which the Royals won 4-2. Joyner
ended up on bls behind after fielding a wide
throw from shortstop Greg Gagne, 'Which failed
to nail the Rangers' Gary Redus. (AP)
'

F

Pirates, Cardinals, Cubs,, Dodgers
capture wins in limited NL action
you."
By The Associated Press
Starter Rhea! Cormier (5-4)
It's been a great month f(JT Lee
allowed
one run on five hits in 6
Smilh and the St. Louis Cardinals.
1/3
innings
for the victory. He also
.
Smith saved his 15th game of
drove
in
a
run
with a single.
June, setting a major league record
Phillies
staner
Danny Jackson
for most saves in one month, as St.
(7
-4)
allowed
three
runs and six
Louis moved closer to first-place
Philadelphia with a 3-1 victory hits in 6 113 innings.
Elsewhere in the NL it was Los
Monday nighL
Smith has saved each of the Angeles 4, San Francisco 0; PittsCardinals' last nine victories and burgh 9. Montreal S in 10 innings;
and Chicago 4. San Diego 3 in 11
leads the major leagues with 29.
"We've got a long way to go," innings.
Dodgers 4, Gianls 0
Smith said. "If we win one more of
Dave
Hansen's pinch-hit grand
the next three we're OK. If you're
slam,
his
fU"St homer of the season,
10 or 12 back a the halfway lx&gt;int,
with
two
outs
in the bottom of the
that would be real tough to come
ninth
off
Mike
Jackson (4-2) lifled
back from. I want to be in there for
Los
Angeles
over
San Francisco at
these games."
Dodger
Stadium.
The Cardinals, .19-6 in June,
moved within 6 1{2 games of the · Mike-Piazza walked to open the
Phillies. The teams have three ninth and Eric Karros followed
games left this week at Busch Sta- with a single. Cory Snyder's sacrifice moved the runners up before
dium.
"We came in here pumped up, I Eric Davis was intentionally
don 'I have to tell them what the walked to load the bases. After
series means," manager Joe Torre pinch-hitler Lenny Harris lined out
said. "We just came off an 8-2 to shortstop, Hansen homeredJ."ust
road trip and now you're playing inside the foul pole in right ftel .
Pedro Martinez (4-2) worked
the club that's right in front of

one inning for the victory.
Pirates 9, Expos S (10 inn.)
Lonnie Smith's bases-loaded
walk sparked Pittsburgh's four-run
1Oth inning as the f:irates beat
Montreal at Ol)'lllpic ~tadi~. The
win was the Puates' mnth m theu
last II games after losing seven
suai~hL

Pittsburgh tied the score with
two outs in the ninth on Orlando
Merced's RBI single off reliever
John Wetll:land.
·
Winner Tim Wakefield (4-7)
pitched two scorless innings and
Stan Belinda got the final three
outs. Tim Scott (2-1) was the loser.
Cubs 4, Padres 3
Candy ~donado's .run-scoring
single in the II th off Roger Mason
(0-7) lifted Chicago past San Diego
at Jack Murphy Stadium. It was the
Padres' second straight 11-inning
loss, and !heir 12th loss in their last
16 games.
Paul Asscnmacher (2-1) worked
the I Oth for the win and former
Padre Randy Myers pitched a
scoreless II th for his 23rd save.

New Yadr: (Ab-

C11iforru1 (Sprinaer 0-2) at Oakland
(Do""' 2-2), 3 p m
Chicaao (Alv1rcz. 7-3) at CLEVELAND (P. Abboll 0.1 ). 7:0S p.m.
Toronto (Stcwan 3-2) 1t Balumore
(VIlomucl• 2-7). 7:35p.m.
Mil•aukee (Miranda 0-1) at Boston
(DuwUo 6-7p ,35 pm,
Seattle (Johnson 9-4) 11 Minnetota
(l!nc:UM 4-I).I,OS pJII.
X..na11 City (Oudner 4-4) at Tcx11
(Bolwlon :z.1~ a,3s p.m

- * Transactions • BasebaU

Amerlun Luau~

BALTIMORE ORJOLES Purchucd
the contnct m AnthMy Telford, pil.chCZ',
hom Rocheltcr or the latcmltlonal
Lucue. Op1ioned John O' Donoahuc,

NokCI, catcher, on the lS~ day d.iublcd
u.t., JCUOacuve 10 June 21. Rccallcd Ocr·
aid Williuns, oulftelder, !rom Columbus
ol.lhe ln&amp;anlllimal leiJUe.

SEATfLE MARINERS. Plocod Rioh
DeLucia, puchcr, on \he IS-day clilablcd
lut. Recalled Milr.c Hampton, pitcher, .
frmt Jacbonvillc d. the Swthcrn League.
Nallonal Luau~
ClllCAGO CUBS: Achnted StcYc
Bucchde., lhi.Jd baleman,.rrom the 15-dly
dinblcd lilt Optioned Tommy ShiddJ,
infielder, to Jowa oflhc Ameac:an Auoci·
ation.
COLORADO ROCKIES: Cla1mcd
Scott Sc:nlCC. pitcher, off wuven from
the CINONNATI Rock
PHII.JJ)m.PHIA PHILI..l£S: Acuvated Dave Hallinl, thUd tu.nan, from lhe
15-dt.y dLisbled lilt. Optioned Joe Millea&amp;, infielder, lO Scranton-Wilke~ Barre
of the lmemltlooal Leapc..
SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS : ReciUed SteYe Scanonc, in£1eldcr, from •
Phoenbt of1hcl'1cif,. Colli LooJU~

Celebrate July 4th with savings on Pool, Patio and Lawn groups from
Lifestyle Furniture. We have five lines to choose from at up to 50% Off
our regular retail priceesl

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Hockey

Nl-.,llloder '-"&lt;

NEW JERSEY DEVIL! : Named

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WASHINGTON CAPITALS , Rc·
lcuod Rod Llnpay; dden&amp;em~n.

THANKS!!

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Group lncludu 42~ round gllas top tabla and 4
arm dining ehal111 In aasortad eolo111. ,
~eg. $650.00
SALE

.,
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Phyllis Arthur, Bend Area Coordinator

oCa1e Sets
(Cuehlon nol plotundJ

REG. $311&amp;=lE

A special thanks to all who helped to
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WB APPBBCIAD TOITf

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•Asaorted Colors
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•Park Benches
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eAdftstable Gal.. Lo....

j

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•Mason Junior Fire Department
•Sons of the American Legion • New Haven
•Peoples' Bank
•Pomeroy Pizza Hut
oCitlzens' Bank
• Middleport Domino's Pizza
•New Haven Jaycees •VIllage Pizza • New Haven
•Indiana &amp; Michigan Electric Company
-Middleport Subway • New Haven Supermarket
•Town of New Haven and Employees
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AND TO ALL WHO GAVE OF THEIR TIMEII

the court three times during
changeovers in the final set to rub
Sampras' shoulder with ointment.
Sampras also took an anti-inflamrn~pill.

"Ill ice it and take the proper
precautions," he said. "I have a
day off Tuesday, so I should be in
pretty good shape by Wednesday."
Agassi, the eighth seed, came to
Wimbledon having played just one
match in two months because of an
injured wrist. Now that he's progressed to the quarterfinals, he said
he is feeling good about his .
chances of defending his title.
'"With my style of game, now
my chances increase to win it
tremendously. more than other
~uys, because I feel it starts favortnll me apin with the bounces,•• he
S8ld. '"Let's face iL Pete and Krajiceck and Boris and Edberg,
they're used to playing the serve·
and voDeyers all week. They come
out and play me and they have to
scramble around. •'

,

By HOWARD SINER
Today's questions in the; world

SOX, Wmcd

at San Dicao

New Yor:k (Sabc:rh.lam 3-1) at Aorida
(AnDIIn&gt;nJ l-1). 7:35 p m

y..-., .. ... ...........47 30
DelroiL.. ..............0 32

Chlcaf.o (Bolton 0-3) It CLEVELAND (C m 2· 3). HIS ~.m
Detroit (Leiter 6-4) at New York
(Kamioniecki 2-1 ). BO p.m.
Toronto (Hent1en 10-2) It Ballimorc
(McDonald 4-6~ 7:35p.m.
Milwnkce (Navarro 5-4) 11 B01.too
(Sdc 1-0), 7:35pm.

ll

An&amp;cla 4. San l'nncilco 0

Chicaao

CHICAGO WHITE

Cadtm Fiat. ctu:h•.

cheering when he inade mistakes.
After closing out the matcb by winning the third-set tiebreaker with a
service winner, Sampras slammed
the ball high into the crowd. gave a
brusque handshake to Foster and
mouthed what court-side pholographcrs said was an obscenity to the
spectators.
Sampras, grilled by the British
press after the match, denied
swearing at the fans, recalling his
words as such: "Thank you very
much and God bless you, basta Ia
vista, see you later."
He did admit that the crowd got
him riled.
'"When the crowd is as vocal as
they were, it kind of builds up
inside of you,'' Sampras said.
Sampras also had his shoulder
to worry about. An inflamed tendon in his right shoulder, which
nearly forced him to withdraw
before the tournament, acted up
again during the warmup.
Trainer Bill Norris came onto

Rockies' Galarraga pushing for .400 mark

NEW YORK YANKEES: Piocod Man

NATIONAL LEAGUE
T..,.

pitctier, to Roct.ter.

stormed off with a few words for
the spectators, setting off a row
over nacdy what he said.
Six of the top eight men's seeds
advanced. The other quarterfinal
matchups feature an all-German
duel between former champions
Boris Becker and Michael Stich,
Jim Courier against Todd Manin,
and Stefan Edherg against Cedric
Pioline.
Today's women's matchups
were highlishted by defending
champion Steffi Graf against Jennifer Cajiriati. In the other matches,
Martina Navratilova faced Natalia
Zvereva, Gabriela Sabatini played
Jana Novotna and Helena Sukova
was up against Conchita Martinez.
Sampras showed an unusual display of emotion in his match
agamst Foster, a wild-card enuy
who was the last Briton left in the
tournamenL
Sampras appeared annoyed by
the partisan crowd's soccer-style
behavior, including their habit of

Sports Probe

f296t5

•LOVESW GLIDER

.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Ohio State junior Chris Nelloms
has a problem more common to
marquee entenainers than world-

AL gameS

ee

SALE

•240

00

better team with (Mike) LaValliere
and (Rick) Wrona. Carlton's been
great for the White Sox, the city of
Chicago and all of baseball. But
· it's a decision that had to be
Fisk hit .189 with one home run
and four RBis in 25 games this
• year. He threw out only one of 23
: runners attempting to steal.
"I think it's very obvious, at
least from the outside looking in,
· that the White Sox kept him around
· so he could break that record,"
Cleveland manager Mike Hargrove
said.
The White Sox recalled righthanded pitcher Rod Bolton from
Triple-A Nashville to take Fisk's
. spot on the rosll:r.
· In other games, New York
downed Detroit 8-2, Toronto beat
Baltimore 7·2, Boston beat Milwaukee 4-3, Kansas City beat
Texas 4-2 and Seattle beat Minnesota4-1.
Yankees 8, Tigers 2
The Detroit Tigers aren't prov. ing to be a very good road show.
Monday's night's 8-2 loss to the
New York Yankees was the Tigers'
seventh straight defeat - all on the
road. The tigers. who dropped
three games behind AL East-leading Toronto, are in a suctch that
has them playing 20 of 24 on the
· road.

, "I'm not worrying about it for
•only one reason - it wouldn't do
any good," Tigers manager Sparky
·Anderson said.
Jimmy Key (10-2) won his sixth
straight decision, pitching four-hit
"ball for 7 213 innings and striking
•OUteighL
. "Every team is going to have a
good Slrealc. Every team is going to
.have a bad streak," Key said.

To Prior Sale
FREE DEUVERY
EASY CREDIT
TERMS
OPEN DAILY

By JAIME ARON
ARUNOTON, Texas (AP)Jose Canaeco haa a tom elbow ligament and could be finished for the

season.
'

8-5

COIIII OF liD &amp; OU¥1 m1m

FRIDAYN

U'''NUS 446·3045

ball.

"When I came to spring uainsays Galarraga, "I felt somethmg great coming - like a big
yenr or something. I had a great
feeling."
'
• What is Andres Galarraga •s
new philosophy of hitting?
"The'first thing I try to do is
make hard contact everywhere in
the field," he says. "I know I've
got power. When I go up to home
plate, I'm not thinking about hitting
home runs. I'm just trying to make
hard contact.
Galarraga says: "The most
important thing right now is when
I've got a man on second or third
base 10 drive him in."
He adds: "I feel conifonable at
home plate and I'm hitting the ball
through the middle. Wheil you're
thinking to the middle, then all the
balls jump to the left or the right
better.''
• What is he keeping in mind?
""Don't be too excited," says
Galanaga. "Just relax. Try to use
all the field. Find the ball I can
in~;·

hit•'

Wolfe's auto racing review
By SCOIT WOLFE
Se!!tinel Correspoadent
The Muskingum County Speedway near Zanesville will host the
All-Star Outlaw Super Sprints
Wednesday for a $3,000 to win,
30-lap extravaganza.
The event wiU serve as a warmup for next Tuesday's Ohio Sprint
Speed week stop at the speedway.
That series begins at Millstream
(Findlay) Sunday, move.~ to Buckeye Speedway (Orcville) Monday,
Muskingum County. Attica Raceway Park on Wednesday, Sharon
Speedway at Hartford on Thursday,
Fremont Speedway Friday, and to
the high-banks of the famed Eldora
Speedway Saturday.
Admission at Wednesday
night's show at Muskingum County are $12 for Adult grandstand
seating, $10 for Seniors. Children
6-12$5, and under 5 free. Pit Passes are $8.
Muskingum County Speedway
is owned and operated by Ronnie
Moran, father of STARS Late
Model Champion Donnie Moran. It
is a nest-class facility.
MCS is located six miles north
of Zanesville on SR60.

Delmas Goff outdistanced
Pomeroy's Todd Smith to claim the
V-8 Pure Stock feature at Vinton
County
Raceway Sunday aftermined to get up, just like I was
noon. Ben Flora claimed the Fourwhen I got shoL •'
Taken off the track on a stretch- Cylinder feature, whle Rick Bishop
er. Nelloms insisted on running th~ claimed the Road Hogs Pure Street
next weekend at the Big Ten feature.
· Heat winners in the V-8 Pure
Championships after doctors diagnosed his collapse as a severe ease Stock division were Todd Smilh,
of anxiety brought on by the Pomeroy, Delmas Goff ' of
Langsville, Rocky Davidson of
approach of the meet.
"I saw Chris collapse, and a Wilksville, and Rick Blake of
million things went through my
mind," Ohio State coach Russ
Rogers said. "At first, it didn't
matter to me if the doctors cleared
him or not. I wasn't going to put
this 'uy's life in jeoP,&amp;rdY to risk
The rtrst-ever Big "E" Basketwinrung a track meet. '
baD Camp at Eastern High School
Convinced by Nelloms' own was a huge success ill many ways,
pleas to compete, Rogers turned the according to camp organizer Scott
S-foot-9, 155-pound sprinter louse Wolfe, girls' varsity basketball
on the Big Ten rleld and reaped the coach at Eastern.
same startling results that accompaBesides a guest speaker each
nied Nellom •s recovery from his day. participants were instructed in
two gunshot wounds.
various aspects of the game of basEight months after that setback, ketball and the fundamentals of the
Nelloms led Ohio State and the Big game. Each day players participatTen indoor championship and won ed in various competitions and
the NCAA indoor tide in the 200.
five-on-five scrimmages.
This time, Nelloms won the 100
Helping with the camP.s were
and 200 at the Big Ten, ran a leg on Dennis Eichinger, Joe Batley and
Ohio Stall:'s victorious 400-meter David Gaul. Guest speakers were
relay team and was chosen the Howie Caldwell of Southern, Jay
meet's top athlete for the second Rees of Alexander, Ron Logan of
straight year.
Meigs and Kent Wolfe of Logan
Two weeks later, at the NCAA Elm at CircleviUe.
Championships, Nelloms became
The Defensive Form champions
the rlCSt Buckeye track athlete since were the following : grades 3-4,
Robcn Wright in 1942 to make Brad Brannon, rU"St place; Jonathan
AU-American in two events, win- Will, Jonathan Duffy; grades S-6,
ning the 200 and pulling out a Steve Weeks, first place; Matt
come-from-behind victory in the Caldwell, Josh Broderick; and 7-8,
4x400 relay with a blazing anchor Joey Weeks, winner. and Juli Hayleg.
man.

Dr. · [rank Jobe examined
Canseco 1 right elbow Monday and
confumed team docton • diagnosis
of a tom ulnlr collateral ligamcnL
A third opinion wiU come later this
week from Dr. James Andrews in
BirminJiiam, Ala.
Jobe and team orthopedic surgeon Dr. John Conway have recommended surgery that WOtJld end

seasi&gt;n.

Reedsville.
Hear winners in the Four-Cylinder division were Joe Smith, Tony
Roush of Reedsville, and Charles
Reigel of WeDston. Bob Bailey of
Reedsville, claimed the second heat
over Delben Roush of Reedsville
and Flora.
Bryan ·Seagraves claimed the
first Road Hog heat over Alva Sullivan, and Brian Adkins. Rick
Bishop claimed the second heat
over Ben CotteriD of Pomeroy, and
Chris Bickle of Vinton.
In the V-8's Todd Smith and
Goff baUicd side-by-side, wheel-towheel throughout the race with
Goff taking the win. Davidson
claimed third and Blake fourth.
Bert Flora defeated the father
and son team of Tony and Delben
Roush of Reedsville, who placed
second and third, while Joe Smith
claimed founh and Brian Bailey
fifth.
Rick Bishop claimed the firstever Road Hog event over Ben
Cotterill of Pomeroy. Leroy Dunaway, Jeff Dunaway, and Brian
Adkins followed.
The ladies' Powder Puff event
was claimed by Lenora Murray of
Oak Hill, followed by Vera Harden, Tina Cotterill, Pomeroy, Sharon
Muncy, Jennifer Gilben, and Sue
Johnson.
On Sunday, July 4, Vinton wiU
host a double-points Mid-Season
Championship Race with a bigger
pay-off in aU divisions.
Gates open at II a.m. and racing
starts at I p.m. Admission is $5
with 10 and under free, while pit
passes are $10 and drivers' fees
$15.

Big 'E' Basketball Camp
tabbed success in several ways

Marlins hire Perezfiorfi1iont o•«:Jce
'JJ •·

:Canseco's elbow injury may
·sideline him for rest of season

YOU JIAV.I TO S.U 01111 PATIO IBI,BCTJON TO B.BUBVB mt
Allltama Subject

'
but it will always amaze me," said
Roben Smith, Nelloms' teammare
on Ohio State's 'NCAA championship 4x400 meter relay team
three weeks ago.
"I've witched him run since we
were
freshmen in high school and
__
I've seen everything he's over"Maybe this is their bad sueak .come. For him to be where his is,
right now."
with aU that's gone against him, is
Mike Moore (5-S) was tagged pretty unbelievable," said Smith,
for seven runs and seven hits in 3 the former Ohio State running back
1/3 innings. Detroit starters have drafted this spring by the Minnesogiven up 37 earned runs in 37 ta Vikings.
NeDoms is trying to win a berth
innings during the skid.
on
the United States team for the
"'Tonight, it didn't mauer what I
World
Track &amp;: Field Champidid out there," Moore said. "They,
onships in August
hit everything I threw. •'
Nothing seems out of reach, parJim Leyritz had a sacrifice fly
ticularly
for an athlete who was
that put the Yankees ahead I-0 in
shot
near
his home in suburban
the second, and Bernie Williams
Dayton
on
Aug. 2 and again collined a two-run double in the third.
lapsed
on
the
Ohio Stadium track
Mattingly hit an RBI single during
May21.
a four-run fourth inning, putting the '
- NeDoms was a victim of a driveYankees ahead 7-1. He hit his fifth
by
shooting by an unknown
home run of the season in the sixth.
assailant while he was joggins in
the early morning in Trotwood.
Blue Jays 7, Orioles 2 ,
The
shooting remains a mystery
John Olerud drove in four runs
to match his career-high for visit- and police say they have no suspects.
ing Toronto.
"I haven't reallr been able to
Roberto Alomar went 4 for 5
fully
enjoy everythmg that's hapand scored three runs for the Blue
pened
to me in the last year
Jays. Todd Stottlemyre (5-5)
because
of all the adversities I've
improved to 8-0 against !he Oribeen
through,"
said Nelloms,
oles, allowing two runs in six
whose
20.22
seconds
at the Big
innings. AI Leiter finished for his
Ten
meet
is
the
second-fastest
time
first career save.
200
in
the
world
this
year
at
Rick Sutcliffe (8-3) gave up
meters.
seven runs and eight hits in 6 2/3
"When I collapsed, I thought I
innings.
was having a hean attack. I thought
it was all over, but I was deterRed Sox 4, Brewers 3
Scott Cooper hit a two-run single in the ninth at Fenway Park.
Kevin. Reimer's 11th home run
of the year put Milwaukee ahead 3CINCINNATI (AP)- Cincin2 ip the eighth. But Mike Green- nati Reds players, whose lackluster
well singled off Jesse Orosco in the performance cost Tony Perez his
ninth, Andre Dawson doubled off job as manager May 24, are
Doug Henry (0-2) and Mo Vat.ghn pleased that the Florida Marlins
was walked intentionally, loading have given Perez a new lease on
the bases. Ernest Riles Struck out baseball life.
and Cooper sin~led on a 3-2 pitch.
"I am so happy for him," pitchGreg Hams (3-2) pitched a er Jose Rijo said. "They picked a
scoreless ninth.
good man. Anybody who worts for
him should be proud. You don't
realize what you've got until you
lose it."
"I'm just glad he's back in
baseball,' outfielder Bobby Kelly
said.
Canseco's
''This is the same opera1ion
Some of the Reds players still
Tommy John had in 1974," said have Perez's uniform number, 24,
Conway. ~fcrrlng to tlic procedure written on their caps and shoes for
that involves trans~lantlng a liga- inspiration.
ment from Canseco s wrist into the
The Marlins on Sunday hired
Perez, 51, as dir~tor of internaelbow area.
''As a non-pitcher, he would be tional ~lations and special assistant
able to come back quicker. lt varies to general manager Dave Domfrom player to player. Some take browski.
seven month&amp; to come back, ·some
Perez begins in the job July 19.
He and wife Pituka are moving to
as long as a year."
Texas jenera! manager Tom Miami from Cincinnati, the city
Grieve sal a decision will be made where he starred on the Big Red
about a week or 10 days after Machine teams in the mid-1970s
Canseco viJill Andrew~.
and was rlred as Reds manqer in

class sprinters like himself. His act
is gelling hard to top.
"Nothing Chns does that is
spectacular will ever surprise me,

e_&lt;:. . c. :. .on. :. .tin. :. .u:.:.ed;_fro: .: : m:.:P.: !ag~e. : 4&gt;:_

•

CCuohlon not pictured)
REG. S320.00

Venezuela, where he practiced his
new open stance and a patient
brand of hitting. He says he saw a
lot of breaking pitches in winter

RETURNS VOLLEY -American Andre Agassi returns a volley
to Richard Krajicek during their rourlb-rouod singles mateb on
Wimbledon's Center Court Monday, wblcb Agassi won 7-S, 1-' (97), 1-' (10,8) to move into tbe quarterfmals. (AP)

Nelloms' deeds on track getting harder to surpass·

: made.'"

BOltOn 4, Milw1utoc 3

- * Baseball * -

banging into the fence to catch
Thomas' fly for the second out of
the ninth inning. Robin Ventura
ended it by lining to lert, stranding
runners at rU"St and second.
Eric Plunk, the third reliever
used by Cleveland in the inning,
got his seventh save.
Starter Jose Mesa (7-S), who
was aided by a brisk wind blowing
in from center field, pitehed eight
scoreless innings, allowing eight
hits.
Chicago's George Bell gave him
two scares, hitting a ball to the
warning track in left with the bases
loaded in the third and sending a
ball into the upper deck, barely
foul, in the fifth.
" When he hit the ball with the
bases loaded, I thought it was out,"
Mesa said. "But the wind was
blowing in, and Albert (Belle)
made a good catch. The second
ball, I thought was fair, but the
umpire said it was foul, and I said,
'Thank you very much." •
Rookie Jason Bere (3-2) lost for
the first time since May 27, yielding two runs and seven hits, walking seven and striking out five for
his first complete game in seven
career starts.
"I don't think he can pitch
much better lhan that," White Sox
manager Gene Lamont said. "Sure,
he was a little wild, but when you
throw that hard, you're going to
have that once in a while. I thought
he was still throwing good at the
end. All the hits were just wellplaced."
Carlos Baerga led off the Cleveland eighth with a single, only the
founh hit off Bere to that point
Paul Sorrento singled Baerga to
second, and Espinoza then drove in
a run by fighting off an inside pitch
for a single to lert. Fermin followed
with an RBI grounder up the middle.
"It doesn't take a shot to win a
game." Bere said. "Basically. I
thought I mixed it up pretty well.
Most outings. if I keep the other
team to three or less, the chances of
winning with olir offense are pretty
good."
Before the game, the White Sox
released 45-year-old catcher Carlton Fisk. Last week, Fisk caught
the 2,226th game in his career, surpassing 'Bob Boone for the majorleague record.
In all, Fisk appeared in 2,499
gajlles w.i!h the White Sox and
Boston Red Sox.
"It wasn't easy to do," Lamont
said. "We all just decided we're a
(See AL on Page S)

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The camp's "Best Listener"
award went to Tiffany Hensley.
May after a 20-24 start to his rook- The 0-U-T Champion was Jeremy
ie managerial season. He had previ- Connolly. grades 3-4,. Brad Ke~s
ously been a Reds coach for six . in grades S-6 and Juh Hayman m
years.
grades 7-8.
.
.
The Cuban-born Perez is popu. Brad Brannon ~!aim~ .the dribJar in Miami, with its substantial blmg re~y champ1011sh1p m ~
Cuban populace. The Marlins are 3-4, wh1l~ Chad Nelson cl11med
hoping he ·will help market the grades 5-6, and Tonc1a Dav1s,
team throughout the Caribbean grades 7-8.
~gion
Brannon was the free throw
voinbrowski called Perez about shoo tin~ champion. while Josh
a job the day after Reds general Will clwmed the honors in grades
m1Jl8&amp;Cf Jim Bowden fired him.
5-6 and Billy Schultz for ~ 7•'It IUily made me feel better, •• 8. Second place honors respecuvePerez said
ly went to Wes Shaffer, Joe Brown
He expCcg to feel strange work- and Josh Reed ..
ing in a baseball job in street
Bra!inon.clatmed the Hot Shot
clothes instead of a uniform.
chajnplonshlp over Jeremy Connol• 'I've been in uniform a long ly, gqKies 3-:"; Jl~C Brown defeated
time,'' he said. "I think it's best J~h _Broderi\* m grades 5-6, 111d
for me to get off the field for a Tnc1a _Davis deleated Corey
while."
Yonktr m ~ 7-8. .
"I knew it wasn't going to be
hi the g1rls vamty camp,
·
Michellc Schultz claimed the H-Qlo~g bef~re he got a JOb, but I R-S-E c~!'ahip over Jessicl
0uea and Nicole
behcve he I PI to be I manaaet Radford.
in _the big Jeaaues afaln," Reds Nebon. Martie Holler claimed the
reliever Rob Dibble wd.
free thro cbam ionsb"
"'Hopefully he'D be on the field
w
p 1p over .,.ara
SOOJI," Rijo
"He can help CD!'go 111d Jcsstca Karr, and ~
more on the field than in an claimed the HOI Shot championship
olfJCC. ••
over Congo, Schultz IIKI Nelson.

uicl.

Radford claimed the Defensive
Form Championship over Nelson,
Beth Bay and~ Eastman.
Karr claimed the Dribbling
Relay Championship over Nelson
and Bea Lisle. Radford claimed
the Ovcrall Dribbling Form Championship, while Eastman won the
"Best Dribbling Speed Form"
award.

By
Dave
Grate

of
R1tlald
funlt1re
Cl•alfled ad: ·w..ted - blight
young employM to think up nroaaona for ..talng pile••·"

•••

PoiiUclana are gretll .:robata.
They c1111 atraddle the fwl0111111d
keep their •r• to the ground 81
lh•aametlme.

• ••

To be auccea.tul, look for wortc
llfl8r yau'valound •lob.
·

•••

H•lth lnaurance today Ia like
w•llng • hoapllal gown, You
only think you'ro fully covered.

•••

Remember the ha11e. He makea
progrMa only whiHI he ellcka
hi• neck out.

•••

Have AHappr 111111 Safe

Halday Weekettl. le c•elwlll

•••

...,n.. ...r

..... TINB•TIIn

c - • ., •

..........,•.,.,.
7 SIIOWIOOIIS

11 WAIEIICIUfiS

Rt.124 ..........
742·2211

.

�,.

June 29, 1993

Ohio

TUesday, June 29,1993

Space station kept alive with
.House vote, White House lobbying

FORMAL AGREEMENT • Prince
Andrew and his Wire Sarah, sllown in this 1988
rue photo, announced Monday .tbey have
I&lt;J!.IIl\,;n

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MOGADISHU, Somalia (AP)
-The body of a Pakistani soldier

killed in gunbattles with Somalis
was brought to a local hospital,
bringing to two the number of
pe acekeepers slain in the latest
clashes with militiamen, U.N. offi·
cials said today.
Three other Pakistanis .remained
hospitalized following Monday's
five-hour battle on 21 October
Road. a thoroughfare that has
become·a virtual war zone between
soldiers and loyalists of warlord
Mohamed Filmlh Aidid, said U.N.
military .spokesman MaJ'. David
Stockwell.
U.S. aod Italian helicopters and
Italian tanks IJIId armored personnel
carriers were deployed after Pakistani soldiers approaching a compound suspected of Shousing
weapons were fired on, tockwell
said. Gunmen in two adjacent com"
pounds fired fust with small anns,
then be
· machi
gan usmg
ne guns and
rocket-propelled grenades. ·
A U.S. Cobra Jtelicopter let
loose wilh a barrage of machinegun fire and killed at least two

Somali ~unmen, Stockwell said.
Somalis 10 the area said a woman
· also was killed by the helicopter
fue.
The compound belongs to
Osman Alto, on. e of the coun'"''s.
WJ ·
wealthiest businessmen and a chief
financial backer of .Aidid. The
United Nations says his auro repair
shops and spare-parts stomge sites
are actually used for constructing
weapons used by Aidid's follow;
. ers.
.
U.N. forces shelled several of''
lhe alleged weapons sites in raids
earl' th's
1 month b 1 Stock ell
. 1er
• U
. w
said they had not previously
searched the compound targeted
Monday: .
.
The mc1dent was the second
such battle in 1 o da alo 21
. . w
ys . ng .
OctoJ:1er Road and was a Sign of lhe
grO\ymg anger ll.?war~ U.N. troop~,
particularlr ~akistan1s and Amencans b Aidid sup rte
'· ~
po rs.
A1d1d supponers . blame the
Umted States and P~s~ for the
de;~ths of several CIVlhans smce
June 5 when 24 Paki tani soldiers
'
s
·
died in gunbattles an~ lhe United

•
·
I
•
t
P' 0 I.J·ce ·say.man ·c. a·IIDS ·. 0
have killed '17 prostitutes

MINEOLA, N.Y . (AP)- A
man who was pulled over with a
decomposed coqJSC in the back of
his pickup told polite he killed 17
prosu.'tutcs and dumped all but the
latest victilll in three Northeastern
states. investigators say.
Joel Riflrin, a 34:-year-old unemployed landscaper was to be
arraigned today on one count of
murder as investigators tried to
match details of his grisly confession wilh unsolved slayings during
. the last two OJ three years.
Rifkin told police he was on his
way to dump his lat.est victim abolll
3 ~'lll. Monday when two lfOOpers
flagged him down for driving without license plates and running a
stop sign. He led lhe uoopers on a
four-mile chase - speeds never
exceeded 50 mph - until he
rammed his beige pickup into a
light pole.
The troopers smelled a rank
odor frOJD the back of the truck and
found the body of a woman
wrapped in a tarpaulin.
".1 killed.her. She was a prostitut.e," Riflrin was quoted by police
as sayin~. ·
Rlfkm said he picked up the

woman in New . York City on
Thursday night; strangled her and
hid the body for three days before
IQading it j nto his truck, police
said:
During the next six ho!lrS,
Rilkin confessed to a string of murders, recounting how he would frut
have sex with his victims, then
strangle or suffocate them, then
dump or bury their bodies, sometimes on Long Island but also as far
away as Connecticut, New Jersey
and upstate New York, authorities
said.
The motive for lhe slayings was
not immediarely known.
State Police Capt. Walter
Heesch sa'd Rifkin gave approximate dates and locations for the
slayings.
·
Rifkin has been linked to the
slaying of another woman whose
body was found on a highway in
So.uthampton on May 9, Heesch
said.
Neither she nor the woman in
Rifkin's truck has been identified.
A New York City detective,
who spoke on condition of
anonym1ty, said Rilldn appeared to
lrnow about one of two prostillltes

'

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.
Nations began a series of attacks on
Aidid targets.
On Sunday, two American soldiers and a Pakistani were shot and
wounded on 21 October Road,
where makeshift rOadblocks are set
un daily by Somalis. .The. Paltista·
r who have !heir headquarters on
ms,
lhe street, often must stop patrols to
clear lhe roadblocks, leaving themselvesopentoattack.
Twenty-seven Pakistani soldiers
have died since fighting erupted
'June 5 in a series of ambushes the .
United Nations blamed on Aidid.
Aidid
remains at Iar~e. despite .a
U.N. order to arrest him, and his
supporters have been issuing regular statements vowing to fight his
detention.
.
Ab ·
1 ·
.
out 300 peop e gathered
Monday for an anti-U.N. prorest at
a square.!hat has become a regular .
rally site. Signs at the peaceful
the .
ga noll accused the United States
and Umted Nations of genocide,
and. a leaflet being handed out
chumed U.N. intervention was an
Am ·
1o
cncan P Y to co1onize Somalia
and replace Islarit with Christianity.

CLUB
6:45 P·l1'· .
Special £arly Bird
5100 Payoff
Thia ad good for 1
FREE· card. ·
Lie. No. 0051·32 .

· To place an ad

Call992.;2156
.

Mo.N. thru FRI. 8A.lii.-5P.M. • SAT.B-12
CLOSED SUNDAY

POLICIES
• Ado '-lolde doe ouaty :rour ad 1'11111 . . ., be prepalol

• a...,;.. diocouat for w paid Ia ad._. .

.......

• 1 poilll liM ~oat, ....d

CRIME SCENE • Alt.orltlet dlscu.. the
alllle Ill nortllwat OkiUoma (:lty where
dle .bodln of a woman and four children were

COOgreslllllllin N&lt;lvenlber.

,

'

RATES ·
Days · Words Rate · Over 15 Words
$4.00
$6.00
$9.00
$13.00
$1.30/day

].
3

15
15
6:
15
10
15
Monthly '. 15
PubliC Notice

$.30

$ .42
$ .60
$.05/day

7:00 P.M. to 7:30 P.M. a
public meeting on the
Budae·t 1nd Revenue
Sherlng tor the
11M
for the VIllage of Pomeroy,
Ohio will be held at tha
Clerk'a OlftCII. ·
KllhVIIa"w.ttvelll,
• tlerli
!'omoroy, Ohio 45711

Y••

(6)29, 11c

'I'
I

Free Eatlmatea,

Low Coata.
Work Guaranteed

614• 949' 29ll or,
614·593•5010

BU~NESB

BUILDINGS! W, Mlln St. Pomeroy~
t 800 lsq.ft with 4 bedroom apartment upstalre
$33,000 ALSO: Commercial building 360 eq. ft. w~h 1
bedi'OIIm apartment upatalra $17,000. Great location.
Pun:haM MPfrala or together... MAKE AN OFFERI

,
•
;

•
'

LAND CLEARING
WATER a SEWER
UNES
BASEMENTS &amp;
• &gt;HOME SITES ,

·

H~UUNG: Llmeatone,
Dirt, Gravel and COal
LICENSED ond BONDED•

PH. 614-99~~5591

12·5-tfn

hcime wMh 3 bad rooms,
hardlllo'ocllcalll6t flooring, newly painted walla, newar
kitchen &amp; bath, luU baaement, llrepl-. new elec:tric
heal P\'mpiCA. 549,900 Make an cilforl

Reasonable Rates
Dependable
Service

J&amp;L INSULATION

214 EAST MAIN

1% ~ home In Pomeroy on two Iota 50 x 100 each
3 bed.rooma, 10me dacklng. Owner wants to eelll
ASKING $18,800
'

POMEROY.,.

992-6687
,

WE WANT TO LIST YOUR HOME!

•

Parts attd S.rv~
Mowen • Cllall Saws
WH!Ieaters
.

AulhOrlacl: Brlgge &amp;
Strtlltoll MTD, Ryan,
I.D.C. Repair Centar
PICKUP .nd DEUVERY

-• .
I

"

New Homes • VInyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
·COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTlAL
. · FREE ESTIMATES .

Fr88 Elltlmlltes

614·992·7643

Replac!Jment

(No Sunday (allsl

2112192/tfn

Roof)ng
Clill ua tot
Special Prlcea on
· Siding and Windowa

.

992·2772
Jame• K-ee. owner
5120183

TRIMMING and
TREE &amp; STUMP REMOVAL

HAULING ·.

Creek Road ·
Middleport, o•io

Form..-1~ of a.n•s•

SEWER PROBLEMS

614·742·2138

CALL614·992·7878

614·992·7144

INSURED

Ill

i BISSELL &amp;

ROOFING

..CONSTRUCTION

- NEW - REPAIR

Lice1sed, l1sured a1d londed
Call 614-992·7878

eGar•••
eC·~··
Reiilodellog
Stoll &amp; Co111111are

Gutters

5/17113

MORRIS
GARAGE DOOR SERVICE

FIEIISTIIIATIS

985·4473
667·6179

Life • Medicare • Cance~ • Fire • Health
• Accident • Annuity, IRA • Mortgage

SNOD8WS'

UNOLIIIIY
UCINI,OIIO

~He!Ptac You To
~o...rYour

949·2104

614-7.2·HH'

ID·-···•"

Rocky R. Hupp, D.c.u. •Agent
Box 189
· Middleport, Ohio 45760
(614) 843·5264

256·6640

Tanks, Leach Llnes
Repair &amp; Installation

..........

Howard L Wrllesel

TN• hr111c•
FlEE

LIMESTONE,
.GUVEL &amp; COAL
Reaso1able
Rates
JOE N. SAYRE
SAYRE 'I'DIII

AMERICAN' GENEUL LIFE and
ACCIDENT INSUUNCE COMPANY

~

'

'

DO IT YOURSELF

WAYNE
DALTON

Hour• M· M-F W Slit.
CIONCI8unct.Y

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC •.

Windows
Vinyl Siding

3·16-93-dn .

OWNER: JtH Wldt•lll•

WALIIR ALUY

SEE NEAL FOR THE DEAL!
1304) 773·5533
ASK FOR CHRIS

CAll 992·6123

949-2168

992-3470
UCINE
MOWER CLINIC

. •iddleport,
Pomeroy, Racine,
Rutland, Mason

FREE ESTIMATES

•

II~PORT~ 2 story tram.•

.CARE ·
ArtiS

Painting

36970 Ball Run Road
Pomeroy, Ohio
GRAVEL, SAND,
LIMESTONE, TOP SOIL
&amp; FILL DIRT

SA 124 towards Rutland 98.99 acraa with two ol.dei
hom... LCD water, 2 Nptlca, ,free gas w~h royak16a,
SR acc:eu. Nice laying land ...great loc:~tlonl
$105,DOP
'

'

'I

SE~~Q:TEM~

SERVICE

..DDLEPOAT· 1% story home with 4 bedrooma,
)Jrgelront•porch, 75 x 100 lot. Faces Ohio RIVer has
a ~autHui view. ASKING $32,000
·

I
I

~

Inside and Out

BULLDOZING

205-7SI115"11ger PIW XlU AWL
205-75R14':, llger PIW lml RWL
21S.75R15" Fir"- OWL
235-75R15" Fir"- OWL
-CALL FOR PRICING*EXHAUST SALE NOW IN PROGRESS' . , _

•

Call 614·992· -..
6637

EXCAVAnNG
(614)
667·6628

I

I

'• I

Roof

Chester, Oh. 45720
985-3406

ORIGINAL EQUIPMENT REPLACEMENT nRES

p_.oy,OIIIo

.SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE
.

D. A. BOSTON

'

I

992-6.215

Stone

Dpwnspouts
Gutter Cleaning

•

'.;1!1
.....
~
1Muranceco,...•itlee

from Fouodatioo to

36358 SA 7

c.

:;jj'

IIIPROVEME

'

and Plumbillli

'

DAVIDSON'S
.PLUMBING

5-24-1

I

"

\

•BACKHOE
·•TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

can be.

CUSTOM SADDLES, ,
LEATHER REPAIR
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR .

CARPENTER

985·4181

Real Est-'• Gene,.!

Let us tell you jusl ,
how much yotJt' savings

.

.
'

sm:.~:=~~Oh. 457Rll~~~·~

Public Notice

i

'.

Shade River Saddle Shop ·

667..(oohllle

YOUNG'S

Galllpolla

614·446·0736
Nur

(former Mason Lanas)
3rd &amp; Pomeroy Streets
Mason, wv
(304) 773-5585
* SUMMER HOURS*
Sun.·Thur 5-10 pm
Fri-Sat 5·11 pm
CLOSED WEDNESDAY

m•r, ,.

C:'g:'io

e'l ,

Mldd~Ohio

t ~~i:::\~~ &amp;Services
Exterior

• The· Are·a's

Special
'

RODGERS E-1 RIDE .

614-882-61.63
510 N. 2nd Ave.

ENTERPRISES

77S-M882-NewRuea
.. 895-Lotul
937-Bafl'olo

SprineTi~r~e

WtAisoHa.,.

· a 12
p. . . . . v...

NOllcE TO BIDDERS
origin, au; age, handicap,
a..Ject ·propoaala will be political alflllilltl.o,n or .
St. Rt. 7
received : by Melp Local bellela. •
Ckeslllre,
SchoOl Djatrlol, In the • e
The OWner r..ervaa the
of the rr--, 320 Eaat ·right to reject .any or oil
Main Slreel, Pomoroy,,Ohio, propoeille llild to waive •Y
45781, , until 12:00 Noon, lnlorm•lltlee or lrregu·
EST, July 21, 1tlt3, -ld 111en larltloa In the propoa•l•
Read
publlaly opened anCI reecl roc=~S LOCAL ScHoOL
~ ELEMENTARY
·
DISTRICT ·
the
SCHOOL UFT &amp;TAllON
Jane Fry, Treaau,_
AND SEWER LINE ,
(6) 29; (7) 4,1t, 18, 4tc .'
Classtneds%
Tlie propoeed work 1- - - - , - - - -.:..
·' __,
'
Include• eewerage lilt
PubliC Notice
et•tlon, .. nltary · eewer 1--------:lorae mllln,IIIICI...-• ll'IP·
. Copl• of DriiWinp 1nd
PUBUC NOT!CE
ConlnlOI docum•ta may be
Sealed blda will be
obt8Jnecl or wolllld •t,1!1• received In the olftCII olthe
luporlnlllldlnfe Olflce, Cterk; Pomeroy llunlolpel
.....,. _!.oall School Dlelrlc~ Building, 120 Eaet Main
. •LIGHT HAULIN~
320 El!-•t Main SlrHt, Stree~ Pomoroy, OH. 45781
HOW'
•
RD
UNLIMITED ONE
•FIREWOOD
p-;,Ohlo.A$12.00f• for the Pomeroy Volu"
. EXCAVATING
willie NqUired for ..,hIll Fire Dlplrtmenlfor a new
MONTH TANNING ·
·BILL SLACK
of driWinp 1nd
Contract
ll'uck.
b · BULLDOZER, BACKHOE
~- 1r
...e lireSpeclflutlone
$25.00
dooum111....-·
om u•
-~ TRACKHOE WORK
992·2269
· ebova olfloee. Cllecka 111111 plaked lip 11 the C erk'e
-~ ''VAl' ... LE.
WOLFE BED/
~- _....._~
.
....•• to , ...,.,. Olflae. Bide may ba
,. ......,.
FACE TANNER
USED RAILROAD
-Locll
,_
-... eubmiHed uniH 10:00 A.M•
SEPnc SYSTEMS,·
Sc ·
DtelrloL
'
Prop01ale muel. be EST July I, 1113. The
HOME SITES and ·
·FOREVER
'"-~
11
p
I
VIII'r•..,..
tha
right
to
TRAILER
SITES,
eubml- on e rDJIGIII
-.LANDCLEARING, .
BRONZE
Forma obnlllned In the reject lily or Ill bide. ··
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
Tlckervlllt Rd.
Con1r101 daoum011ta.
BrlloiJ. Reed, Mayor
LIMESTONE·
TRUCKING
IEaah bkleheH aontlln the
Kal!ly Hyaal~ Clerk
•
' Roclltt
tult .name ef· wwy pereon (I) 21; (7) 8, 2tc
FIIEE ESTIMATES
949·2826
ln..,.lld In the ume, 011d 1--:----:::--:-:--.---'992·3838
r!~~1~1ng
· mlilt be accompanied by a
PubliC Notice
6/111'9211
5-17-93-1
bid guar•ty
In the form
of
either
a blcl ou~~~~~ntY
bond
,., . . - -..........-:-:":""...., II~======~
I~
for. the full amount ol tl1e
NOncE OF
••
R&amp;C EXC•uiiiNG
bid pureu1nt to Ch•r,tar
PUBUC HEARING
J&amp;T HOME
'"'
38904 Leading
oaehlera cheall, or caah
·
t to Chi"'- 1305 of
Rewla~-Code in
the anoount of ten perc111t
(10%) of th' bid.
The .aucce11ful bidder
muet be an ' Equal
Employm•nt Opportunity
Employlll' which prohibita
dl-lmllllllon becauae of
r-, o~ aolor, national

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LITCHFIELD, Conn. (AP) This plcturelque \11~ in Western
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many well-preserved Colonial

992..111d6iporlf

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t'"

DAY BEFORE PUBUCATION
I:00 p.m. Satur.-y
I :00 p.m. Monday
I :00 p.m. Tuesday
1:00 p.m. Wednesday
100 p.m. Thunoday
1:00 p.m. Friday

Prices Start••• at

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and Aluminum Siding
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•

It wu lhe birthplace of Elhan
Allen, Henry Ward Beecher and
Haniet Beecher S!Qwe. ·
Judge T&amp;J!Plng Reeve, a local '
lawyer, established America's lint
law school here 'in 1784. Ill stu·
denta Included Aaron Burr and
John C. Calhoun.

.

· Yard Sol..
• A cta.lt.d a d • - • plooed ia lbe Gallipo!ia Doily
TrihuM (aoepl Ctu.ltood Dioploy, ho..,_ Cud or Lop!
No-) wW oloo oppOor iD lllo Poial Pleuoal . . . . . . ud
doe Doily S..llDel, roocbi111 • - 18,000 be-

I

homes.

.

Ia ~ria•

~~

}

·

• S..tla&lt;il .. - ....,....... for onon alrar r..... day (obeck
for..,....llnld.yad nuu ia,..por). C.UbefoN 2:00 P·•·
d.y oflor ,.WioolioD lA oooke - t l o a
• Ado ........... paid .. ad·- ... ,
·Cud of Tlllaab
Happy Ado

native plan to ·create two, black
majority districts was rcjec~ ·and
"these ones were created 10 ~~
incumbents " said Hunter.
·
In 16 states, most of then\ in the
Soulh, the Justice Dcputm~\ must
approve redistricting plans. The
Bush Justice Department •had
ordered North ·carolina to create
two black majority districts, rejecting a state plan lhat had just one.
Now, with the North Carolina
case ordered to trial and additional
court challenges likelr, the job of
representing the government will
fall to Clinton's Justice IlePartn!ent
- still without a civil ri~hts chief
after the withdrawal of hiS.COI;ltroversial nominee for the job.
f

c•--7 ud row.~ ado uador
1s...-n~owm be .
.

• Price of ad f01r .U eopiiolleuen io doul&gt;le price of.od -

.

That and the North Carolina
seats were amontl two-dozen
"minority-majority' districts created as a result of the congressional
rea~onment that followed ,lhe
1990 Census. Others cited Mmday
as potentials for challenses because
of lhe ruling were new districts in
Aorida, Texas, New YOl1c and New
Jersey.
•',There is no questiQII there is a
framework in there for more challenges and you'll see that," said
Aorida stare Rep. Peter Rudy Wlillace, who helped draft that state's
new map.
Before the Voting Rights Act
was passed nearly three decades
ago, there were fewer than 300
black elected officials in the United
States; there now are nearly 8,000.
"There are many more minorities in positions of power than
would be the case without the Voting Rights Act, particularly in
Southern states," said EmOJy Uni·
vcrsity political scientist Merle
Black.
The law was strengthened in
1982, with states ta!tin• the cue
from Justice Depsrtment m~erJnta·
tion that ''if a minority-maJOrity
district could be created, then the
state had an oblil{ation to do so,"
said Black, even if it meant drawing rambling districts.
In many cases, however, the ,
wandering lines are drawn not
because lhey are the only way to
create a minority-majority district
but because legislators are unwilling to carve up incumbC:nts' districts. In North Carolina, an alter·

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

• Ft. Ado•

blacks usually did not.
Dan Quayle j!Ol a job writing
. press . releases in the Indiana
National Guard, far froln Vietnam.
. AI Gore, against the war but worried .about his father's Senate
career, enlisted and went off to the
·war. B1' II c linton 'loyed with
RO TC , protested t heawar,
s .nt
two years at Oxford,
the
morality of the draft,
war. and
hisownactionstoavoidboth.
' Then came the lottny: No more
deferments. No place to hide. And
no need to hide if you were lucky.
The first numbers were chasen
in 1970. That's when Bill Carrick,
2
·
now 4 and a Democratic J::litical
~~~ul:f:td~r~~~~=;: i'::':! .
ded
• C l
Ia
crow ·room 1il o umb , S.C.
They waited for their birlh da
, tes to
b
II d
f h h
he pu e out o td~ at, .and if
t e1rs was picke somewbere .
above about the llOth round, Carrick recalls, they probably wouldn't
be drafted
: ·
· •
·
• 'There was an ' enoriJIOUS
amount of tension and anxiety,"
Carrick remembers. "The nMDle
~.. r:-:o:
who got low numbers looted like
· they'd just been hit with•a twO:.by·
ensured !flat ~~~into the Vietna,m four...
,
War,whltemuldle-classboyshada
Hisownwas279.
way
out; working cl~s whites and
1'
.

~

'

COPY DEADLINE
Monday Paper
Tllllday Paper
Wednesday Paper .
Thunoday Paper
Frl.-y Paper
Sun.-y Paper

2 Froat Struts e Laltor'
e 4 wlloeiAiiJ••••

614-446-8568 :"11

. IN POMEROY

Supreme Court casts legal
.d~ubts into minority empowerme.nt

found slain on Coney Island in
Brooklyn in 1992.
.
Rilkin lived with his molhei and
sister in lhe Long Island communiWASHINGTON (AP) - The
Supreme
Court has !brown into
ty .of East ¥~dow in a tree· lined
neighborhood of $250,000 homes. confusion the standards for applyHis lare adopted 'father had been a ing the Voting Rights Act, lhe
member of the school board.
landmark civil rights l!IW blacks
Owen Smith, president of credit for major gains in Congress
.
Friends of Planting Fields Arbore· and state legislatures.
In a 5-4 ruling Monday, the hi~h
tum - a public garden on Long
court said a North Carolina redisIsland's North Shore - told the
tricting plan •'bears an uncomfort·
Daily News of New York that
able resemblance to political
Rifldn had been an intern there but
apartheid." The justices ordered a
just "drifted off" after about a
lower court to hear an appeal by
month.
white voters who said lhe ·state's
"He just didn't connect to his
colleagues, and !here was none of · congressional districts amounted to
''racial gerrymandering. •'
the love of nature that marks so
Civil rights groups were quiet
many of our inrems," Smith said
to criticize the ruling, saying the
A neighbor, Jon Julien, said lhat
coun appeared int.ent on weakening
his son graduated from. high school
the 1965 Voting Rights Act, which
wilh Rifkin in 1977 and that he did
was designed to protect minority
not believe Rifkin ever moved
voters
against discrimination ·and
awa~ from home.
under-represenation.
' I never heard anything bad
"The court suggests it is no
about him," J111ien said.
longer important to be concerned
about issues such as. minority rep·
A male swan is called a cob; a resentation," said Sonia Jarvu,
· female is called a pen ; and a baby executive director of the Nation&amp;!
swan is a cygnet.
&lt;;oalitinn on Black Voter particiJ&gt;!tuon.
·"What the court is saying is,
'We just don't care what black voters • preferenceS" are, we are not
· interested in full participation for
African-Americans," said auomey
Dayna Cunninghalll of the NAACP
Legai ·Defense fund.
In the North Carolina case, five
white voters challen41ed lhe new,
worm-shaped 121h DISlrict, which
stretches 160 miles hu41ging the
lhin line of an int.erstate highway.
The district is so narrow at one
point that drivers in nonhbound
Ianes are in the 121h District but
drivers in the southbound lanes are
in lllOiher district.
"The North Carolina lith District is so bizarre it is simply i
quaniUIII leap Into uslincss,' said
Bob Hunter, an~ who ape·
cializcs in electioillaw with PilliOn,
Bosgs &amp;. Blow. "Most other
minority districts mn 't this ugly.'~
· One pendins redistricting chal·
lenge lhat could be affected is in
Louisiana's new 41h Congressional
District, which lllaket tluouah 28
.discovered dead on Monday. Tbe caue of the
pariahet 111d elected • ~ T!lack
deatbJ is unknown. (AP)
··
·

Remodeling IIIII Repllr
Painilng, Explrienctd
Free Ead1111ie1

. EAGLES·

WASHiNGTON (AP) - Ten
The Selective Service System
college students crammed into a ·was born in controversy during
dormitory room, opened their World Wat ll, ttaumatiud tcen-a~e
beers, tiD1led on the television and music lovers by drafting Elvis m
waited tensely to learn whether lhe 1950s and went on to become
their lives Would be interrupted by the target of anti-war outrage in the
military service and, perhaps, 1960s and 1970s.
·
·death.
· · "Greetings
. ••.• the dreaded
. letter
.That was the scene more lhan would be'"n.
. . .· g," if an
.,. or "Greeun
two decades ago in a room at the errant computer was on the job.
University of Soulh Carolina, and· And thus would another young
at countless campuses across the American learn his country wanted
country the day the first m-.rt lot· his services.
tecy numbers were drawn. ·
·
Hearyweight boxing champion
Atlhe lime it was hard to imag· Muhammad Ali sought and ultiine a world without the. Selective . mately won a religious exemption
Service System,,and draft registta· during the Vielllam era. but it took
tion,· and the lillie cards lhat y·oung him five years and a .supreme
men ..had to carry at all times to Court ruling to get it. Campuses
indicate they were available to were ablaze with burning draft
serve the~r
' coun...u.
cards. Draft offices themselves
-,
But the House, in a frenzy of were torched.
frugality, voted 207-202 Monday .
Professors weighed civil disobeto get n.d of lhe."elective Service dience- giving evPrvbody A's so
."
f$ .
h
ld , d -,
d b
System for a savings o 20 mil- I ey wou n t rop out an e
lion. That leaves to the Senale the drafted. "Tbere were people that
last word on .ending or extending , . did it," said political' scientist Nelan em.
·
son Po. lsby, a Berkele.y professor
,
f
h did
.
There s betn no dra Uince w 0
not.
·
S~etimes thcsys!Mt wa5 more
1973, and in 1975 registration
requirements ended. But registra- selecuve than other umes: Student
u·on was rel'nstated 1.n 1980 aod lhe defermen.ts and doctor's notes
system now has cOmputerized data
onsomel4millionmenaged18to
25. ·

Will

EVERY THURSDAY

ics of the station suggested that and Urban Development depana'*ntces may have been urged by ments, plus Independent qencies
lhe White House to just skip lhe such as the Envfronmental Protec·
· v()je.
tion Agency and the: National
' .'When you're up against the Aeronautics and Space AdministraWhite House, the NASA adlllinis· tion.
.
. · trators, the aerospace indUSiry, it's
Space station opponenis said the
tough," said Rep. Tilll Roemer, D· government alreidy has $pent $9
Ind., who tried 10 scrip out $1.2 bil· billion, and NASA has yet to pnr·
lion for the project, leaving about duce hardware ready to fly. The
$900,000 10 shut it down.
should be gi!ing td deficit
"It was rank-and·file against the money
reduction or domestic programs,
lea00'$hip," said Rep. Christopher they said, and they warned the proShays, R-Conn., aoother opponent. ject ultimately could cost a5 mtich
•'It was a tank·arid·flle rebellion as $1!)0 biUion.
lhat illmost won.''
· "The price tag is out of Ibis ·
Vice President AI Gore worked world," said Rep. Oirolyn Mallhe phones much of the day and oney, D-N.Y. "One hundred bilinvited a Slll4ll group of undccideds lion for an orbiting . m~rel for four
to lhe White House as he pushed aslrollauts, when we spend a fmc.
for a scaled-down version of the lion of that im affordable housing
space .station lhat President Clinton here on Earth."
,
backed earlier this month. Clinton
But supportetS urged .!heir col·
had made calls over the weekend.
leagues to look to t~ fqture, ~nd
Vote-switchcrs who sided wilh keep Ameri~;~~ on lhe fOI't!;fi'Ont of
killing the space s~ last week, . space exploration.
·
but voted to save it on Monday,
Killing the project will "waste
· included Reps. Ed Pastor, D-Ariz.; more money than theY would have
Cleo Fields, D-La.; Matthew Mar· ever dreamt of saving,'' said Rep.
· !inez, D-Calif.; Bob Clement, D· Jerry Lewis, R-Calif. "Ib the
Tenn.; andJamesMoran,D-Va
. meantime; we will have cut off a
The overall bill spends $88 hil- very SiiiJiiflCIIJII piece of America's
lion for the year starting Oct. I fOJ visipn rill' wr tomorrow .••
the Veterans' Affairs and Housing
'·

Second Pakistani body · . Selective Service System's
found following gunbattles days may be nu~bered

I

•

reaclied a rormal separation !lgreeme11t. The two
have lived apart since March, 1992 without
beinJilellally separated. (AP) .

WAS~INGTON (AP) - Tile
House beat bact the second bid to
ldll the space station within a week,
a defeat for critics of the costly
project who said last-ditch White
House arm-twisting proved too
much to overcome.
The House voted 220-196 late
Monday to maintain $2.1 billion in
funding next year for the NASA
project. The voce C8llle just a week
· after House opponents who
ridiculed its expense and scientific
value missed acutdiilg the program
by a one-VOte margin. .
The ovemll spending biD, set for
final passage today in lhe House,
wilithen go to lhe Senate, where
lhe space station has enjoyed more
support !han in the House. House
opponents said lhey' d try. again
next year.
·
Monday •s vote marl{ in was
more comfortable for stauon sup·
. porters who capitalize!! on the
absence. of about 20 lawmakers
who hadn't made it back from a
weekend at home. A majority of
· lhe missing had voted against the
space station last week.
· But both sides said an intense
lobbying effort by the White House
and Democratic House leaders put
the station over th¢ top. Some crit-

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WAYNE
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�•
The

1993

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

-'llll-1111aftl.1
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2bdnft.. full

3GOII, ....................Ex!.
..

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;IIMII, alau to

2111.

- . llrgo van!, $11,000 or
- · 114-112·?187, 1141124327.

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131-

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ACROSS

lu~. goad

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locollon, -

child, no

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58 Hunled
111 Hr. H9mont
112 -leland
114 LeHtrl Of

18 II defeattd

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21 Fled •
22 Rain hard
24 Zero
28 NeQIIiVII

SOUTH

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115 lire. llxon
66 Surfeited
67 011, limo

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31 leon'• kin
33 Football oro.

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3 Big 101
4 v.......
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DOWN

34 Actor -

Paclno
. 35 Ventilate

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: North

1 2,001 ,
Rom on

'

Soallo

2 NT

Weool

Norlh

Pass

Pass
3NT

Opening lead:

BARNEY
GLORY BE I! THEY'RE
BACI&lt; ON SPI!AKIN'
AIN'T THAT
ELVINEY AN'
TERMS!!

YOU
SHIF'LESS
SKONK !!

HARK!!
LUKEY?

YOU
GOSSIPY
OL'
HEN!!

Ano-lo Pre•IM• ,._.,.

37 Part of circle

1 SpMcl me•
-•(8bbr.)

PHILLIP

""'"""
J. ••I( '

...... 1210 wtlhoul oloctllc, -

' l1droom Howe. Full ....,.
-.1 24x44, 2 C.r Guogo,
Abow Ground Poal, 11 Acr•
IR 110 Vlnlan, Olllo, 114-311-

ea.

NEA Cro••word Puzzle

BRIDGE

2 bodroom,
..... - ·
llndhiU
Rd. 30W75-3134.

31 Homu for Sale

EXOTIC LADIB LNE 1 - MS

The

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

Announcement•

3

28,1893

n.-day,

Sentinel

Eut

Pass
All pass

+ 10

duck, but
do it smoothry
By PbUIIp Alder
Oliver Wendell Holmes claimed
that many ideas grow better when . l.o..-1transplanted Into another mind. Sometimes, though, J thought In one mind
cloan't need to be transplanted; it will
be readily apparent to the
of the
other parl And If tbls
at' the
bridge table, It is usually
to tbe party of the original thought as in this deal. It was declared _b;.Y.P..,,
1 !...+-+Australia's best female no1
Barbara Travis,
To me, that South band looks a
thin for a two-no-trump
partner cannot respond to
opening, it is unlikely there will be a
good game available.

2 1_,11111 """" Holr-.1 Kll1ano
To Good - . 114-44~-~IIZt,
.,. 1111310. .

Oli, NO! TI-lE
WORLD 15 COMIN6

10 AN END!
I ALWA'I'5 KNEW
IT WOULD
END Ti-115 WAY!

1

.......... -

... -

plllo ~ bod, -

'I
• .-lond.-.2
304-7JWMI.

.._TV.

-

--..

SWAIN

=-

AUCTION ' I FURNITURL 12

Ollwii.,GIIUpollo.-1.-

tuma-. • iW~it

.

!IPIMI· 001

:::..~:..'1:~:-.-.:: .

plano "" ....
Tw•-=--IM
1.0

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.

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locally.

w....'r: Dnw, Rolt ......tor.
Color .v. ,......,, Iii c...

· ca~or,
Ill owo..,

Mullcal
1n11rumente

S1

Frultll &amp;
Vegetable8

MO!orcyc... .

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

.......... IDOTX ........ IIOI

- --.--11111 -

... III I

8lu
114-

Fc11111 Sttp[ll"''

1\. Li',e'itock

81 Fann Equipment

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

'110 For ..... 114-

'::~:t:~' S~1l4llA-l&amp;£~s·

--2W4oit. I,,_

........
75

ao.t• &amp; IIDion
for Sale

I

I R ........ HoiL I P. II h Up,

L.Ml;

duaai.Ce

Lab,

~

1,300

IMie,

35 Loti &amp; Acreage

8

Lool: GormM ~. Wool
ColUmbia- 304-171-a481.

&amp; Auction
Rick PM,_Aucllon eamp.'riJ,

Rtonrdl

eecurtty d•ll c11, no pllta; I'M--

.- - . Jr3GU7i-2331.

Public Sale

tuH time auctioneer, oomplllle

oucllon
-VIrginia,
Uconood
IIII,Ohlo I Wool
304-

n.1718.

~I

eoriM.

VHI ........ 100

AI A111 ~nable PrieM.

Cllll14 ... 1110.

Smolllumlohod lftlclonoy, Polnl

wo-.

=~·=:xa~~~snuatlon
Wented

Yard Sale

on RorbUm Rd,
IUIOI'\IIble I'MtrlctiOfw, county
..... lnfonMt*- Milled 1M\ ,..
- ; 10M71-1211, ploooo no

·--Til-.
....
.......... -..... -·
---

lur Standing Tlmbor1 Plno,
Rd, VInton, Popoowood, . . . . Tim114,
,__ For llano, 1-6. Kldo 112·7311.
Clothoo ~ 01r1o Slz• ,.,.
toni ANI Up, Pole-.! To loll Dooonitod .,.._.,., olllompo,
1·2 on

Hoot-

a

• . 1o1, 2nc1, :Jnt s 1111oo Soulh on
Roulo 7, t1 Po: Sol 01 Noollko
Chino SISO.
3 F1111IIY Yard Solo: 1ol, 2nd,
:Jrd, 4 lllloo OUI Bullvllll Plko,
Wood C.Ofto, Lolo Of llloc

l-1
3 Foomltv: Thurodoiy, FflcloJ, 2 114
lillie faol or P - ·On llloto
MC, Ckollolng, BmaU AP.
pUonooo.

onllquo h.rnlturo, moll paucll

,.......__,

.,~

gonorol

=.a::.

-

..- . Po!nllng,

Gutloro

a..... Llglol Hauling,

Yonl Work Wlnclowo Wuhod

•Commerlcal,
..._1................... , 'Steve:

36

62 W8111ed to Buy

7t

AutoPana&amp;

J 1 D'o Aulo Porto onc1 - -

tho doJ loofrlro lho -.1 II 10 non.
SUndoJ odltlan • 2:00 p.m.

.lunk coro, ""' c-Ion, 114M2·1113.

Top Prlcoo Paid: All Old U.S.
Eall,. 0orogo !Yord Solo, IM1 Colno, Gold Rlllll!! 11- Colno,
lllllo flo!lia 14t, July 111, 2nc1, Gold Colno. II.U. Coin Bloop,
111 looond A - Golllflollo.
:Jrd,l A.ll . ~~.

p.IIL .....,.,,

Wilnl-.1 lo buy: -

-·~

-

IIIIo Poull'o Doiy Care Contor 1
• - Wool OtitiC On Jocbon
Plko 11-F I A.ll • .a:so P,ll. H
- , and '-111- II Tho
t1 eo..... For .,_ Chllol'o
Care. Col Uo Por A V1o11. llillnl

41 Houlal for Rent
2 ~ od.- - I n - - .
MW1J 111n d lod, . _ . , •
rwlo. , . . - . --~~llpon.

•

IT-rw 114 4. 1227. clooolorw Ago 114-441- 2 IMoaoon - i l Prlvolo, I
iii22~4~.;:Ei~~~~~~ IIU•
, _ -lp
uo,
1101. ~~
Nlco._, 114-171-2184

1

1131C--· -poo

I WON'TREAOTHIS

THATW/It5

.AN5IM:R SCME':

oNe ALOUD... THE

GIUICK .. . I

VIEWERS.

Pl&lt;EliY I&lt;OJSII.

J

)

m::.TIMETO

-Cor-

- ~E~

~IL..~Q.JR

·--with-..
AIIO' troll or -

IU'I, Muon WY.

.

.

.

.

L..L-L..L-L..J........J
A

the chuckle quo•ed
by ftlltng 1n the miSSi ng words

.

you

develop from s!ep No. 3 below.

PRINT NUMBERED ,

t;;r LETTERS IN SQUARES

.

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS .

Bodice · Lousy - Human • Poetic - SECOND

Prof

'

koomo-...

'anal Off1a. lull•:

-up,

e-

1111'0

building, 1117 lloln . - . Polnl
P l - . l..oonl 1111 30W7i3111.

-=lor,0-.. . .

47 Wentad to Rent
Wonlod 10
Polnl -

Tt :111 '&gt;Jl 011.11 IOil
IIi

.... to ...
-~ ...,.. WI fMIIOOin
good

a

-Int•.,...

or 4 , . - ,
_, poy 130C11mo. H11111111•.,.

. ,....,.

lnoludod
- · Coli
.
. bllIn nn
I and I

tMw oouoh I

toe a

··-7101.

·,

MWIII'

-~,"!':'"' oul of .............

ooll

···-

-~~~~~···crlllid. 21- olr 001111. ••oo-

..._ - -

llld. 114 441 . . .

71

·n

..

-- ... ,. A

AutOI tor Sale

emlll'll::

,_,

alftt•

.......,

........._ ..,.

-/

aooo 010,"' •••••·
addressed. stamped envelope lo Aslro· '
Graph, c/o lhis newspaper. P Q _ Box 4465,
New York, N.Y. 10163. Be sure to slate
your zodiac sign.
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) There will be
enough tor you lo do loday jusl taking care
BERNICE
your own affairs wilhoul uying lo manage
BEDEOSOL ol
lhings tor olhers. Operale wilhin your limitstions.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) Bolh you and
your male are a pi 10 have very del lnit~
ideas ol how you 'll wanl certain lhings done
today. Unlortunalely, your concep~ mighl
conflict
LIBRA ~llpl. 23-0cl. 23) This mighl 1101 be
one at your more productive days and It
may be oven lees eo il you have to lake
Wedr•lday, ....... 30, 1113
care
ot Iaska or asslgnmenls you lhlnk ol
Venturaa
e.-'IOrs you persor18lly ere·
dislasietul.
ala Of direcl Nlvt very good chances lor
II ICC"' in the year ahood. Tllore is a pol· SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nclv. 22) II you caler to .
your impulsive whims loday you could be
tibllily you mlghlloocome involved in
vary extravagant and waalelul. Keap in
aJ limull8nloully.
mind
lhal whal you lhink you ~ow need
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Persont who
does
nothowlo
be inslanlly gratified .
oro performing work or service lor you
SAGITTARIIJI
~Nclv.
23-Dec. 21) "anyon&lt;l
lodly mual meaaure up 10 your tlandeodl
is
able
1o
perceive
lhe
olhef fellow's poinl ot
and ~. and noiiO lloelra. YOII're
view
is
usually
you
_
Todly,
hciwevar, you
lhe guy/9111 who il paytng lho bill. C..r,
mighl be 10 tocuoad on your own lnllresl
IIUI you,..H IO 1 blllhdly gill. Send lor
you'll1101 be cognizant olltoe requlremerna
your Allro·Graph prtdiciiOnllor llle year·
o1 olhlrs .
• ...
aNiad by mailing $1.25 and 1 long, 1011-

Hounhold
Goods

10 Cu. R. Kolvlnootor F,._r I
12 01. Raoolor, 114-11111331.

40aol groo ...... 131.
l'oftlng ........,. 130. 24" • 20"
vanllllil, llle&amp; Willie ...,.,~
PD. Cala,.... Ollie trim, ••
tilllo ~VInal oldlng I

trtooo.

•

or

-r·

Electrical &amp;
RllfllgeiMIGft

n

t

'·'

,.

'

/~

. ~Dec. 22.Ja~. 19) H~rboring
grudges could produce all sorts ol avood·
able complicaloons today, so lum lhe
cheek and lei bygones be bygones ,· and
begin anew.
.
AQUARIUS ~J1n. 20.Feb. 19) Today
mighl Qel involved once again wilh ioir&gt;e·l
one you like bul with whom colllecli1vely
things never work out 100 wen tor either
you financially. Be wary.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Morch 20) There is a
tina today between being properly as..ortiv•el
or unnecessarily aggressive . It mighl
hard lor you lo di81inguish wtoere one
and lhe olhtr begins.
ARIES (llorch 21•Aprll 11) Persons
are usually helpful lei you mighl nol
around when you need lhom lhe
today. Raly .upon your1ell end nol
a&amp;llllanco lhll may not loo forthcoming.
TAURUS (April »MMy 20) Complicallons
could occur Ieday it you become loo
involved in alrllnd'l cooolidOortlllllflaino or ij
..elaha begino lo probe Into yours. Each
should kMP the olhlr 81 onn'alonglh.
QEIIHI (May 21.June 20) Guard agalnal
lncllnallont lowanll being loo 1111-HMnQ
loday. You miglll _ . . . , INI wloat you
111 oullo ·do, bul you couklltllt Ill ally -.
you'll be needing a bil doWn lho lint.

I

'

'

,

"I must be getting old," one bachelor lold his friend ,
•after painting lhe lown red, I have to wait before giving
it the SECOND coat.·
. .

Willlri~Fum~l14-

311'lll31.

July 1ol, 2nd, 3rd,
Ollllrno.

I

_

Mobile HOlM Lal For Rent,

Tlo&lt;ndor.
:i:1ol, .... ..,
_,. R
, 11- Wllh

•

CNLY
MAILED IT
YEelEROI&lt;Y.

.I, 1s_ I I I 1 0 ·~ompl••·

~Q-O_M_U_S_E_--.

46 Space for Rant

"R.
1111 2111,
no Lata

-·

OUR LANGUAGE AD·VICE: A
tiiDely Ad -Vice Award goes to the
printer of a wall calendar. After the .
months of "February" and "March,"
the calendar lists the days of "Aprl."
Although the printer deserves credit
for remembering the first R in FEB·
RUARY, a vowel is definitely missing
from that calendar's spelling of
APRIL. &amp;ways be sure to check your
writing for missing letters, or else you
may produce a calendar in which the
month of "May" becomes the month

Housewife to electrician, "I
want a switch to connect with
my husbands work room · so
when dinner is ready I can
make all his equipment ....

of "My."

Merchand ise

stand, BciOU, lpH, aathlng,

0

OUR LANGUAGE

· All hooh-4ipo.
p.m., 304·'1n-

AB'l'RO·GRAPH

II,

~!

MORTY

'Acceaorlu

••••
••••

® .._ .....AJIIIIINILIIU,I I MIN.

Ia II rtCuu •an.AIIriP.M.

· ROQms

Coli oftor 2:00

lO ~D Q!H.Ttll.L'(
"'-'&lt;~t~EN~, NOT

,_ VIII YIMIM . ., .......

or monlh.
II ronl·-Gollll
Holol.

CluoiHiod Buyor II Loold!19 For
Nlco Fonn Wllhln 10 IIIII llidlua
01 Golllpollo. , _ Rooponcl

~D

!ft.~'=

-...o frlr
~:~1:2' $120/ono.
•
11180.

Real Estate
wanted

Jot•-•'•

...
_o'171'614(
IMoylng ,....
_
.... a trucio.

fotdoY. _ , odblon • 2:00

317-7111"Atw 4p.m.

--

I

By Jeffrey McQuain
Anger or re~entment is DUDGEON
( "DUD-jun"): "The insult left him in
high dudgeon." Lock up this noun's
spelling; change the first N of DUNGEON to D for DUDGEON.

- · CouniJ ..... •
.......
12,510. 304-571-

Wllh ~. Locollon •
Price. RIIJICIMI To: CLA211, clo
Goo- Porloblo IIWIIIIIII don, Galli- !lolly Tribuna, 125
houl ,... - .· to tho m u juol Thlnl A_,uo, Golllpollo, OH
Don, Junll HI Soli Uo Your Non- . ~~-.;;~&lt;711-~l-i;tt5l~.a;;j,;;;:-t.t,;;: 41131.
Wortdng lllal« Appl..,....
Color
TV'o
RolrigoroiC1111,
T- ....loa, l~mFrwQ VCR·., ll:ara..v.. ~ I IWIIOVI!I. tNM, Mrubli,
Rentals
Air
llonoro, Ouhar Ampoo, loodioo. ..,,_.., 1104 sse
Eoc. 114-2J6.1ZII.
S3lf" or -~D-73JW.

::::. Rlwrlno Anllq-, Ru•
poolooi.,
do opo

ALL- -lluol lo Paid In

u-. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.iil.

EAR TAU IERVICE. 1'~
TrlruM .. Trw Retu:ell.
Tikonnlni. Froo Eollmolool I

'iOIJ ~t&gt;!

~

OOPP..Y~~

Labolar-.lrollorol....,.

Gallipolis
&amp; Vlelnky

eur rve: ~ /l'lf OOAA.TERr-----. 1¥-.YN.N~ .mT UIC£.

'fOl.R e:5TIM'IED

Olngll-1rwU...

18 Wanted to Do

. ...

...~

· 1~ ~~A f'ICOlll.£,"'

_
.. .
_
1
•_
t &amp;6
It _
4 a!,
._
...._

-r.

olructlon

.

AA..~e:. ['\,€ (.}U.€1&gt; '1'00

N
l - oGo
__
_G
_
_~__ ....

11 AcrooiiiL V_, Lond Wollr PI•-J..!!IIIhloo pold, h llloc Anllblo, ~ C..ok 304-e75-'nlll.
RoM, ti4,DGO Nogalllblo, 114lpeclouo 2 bodroom 111_1111, cor4441-01528.
IIOII!'Vo rongo
rwlngOnlllll,
..... For ..... lomllj llmooPhoro, on olo
24hour corolar -.y Appnnc. 114 WOIIIIn In hlr home· room, Localod On Qoorgoo Crook manop. EOH. - - m e or
II¥
Lourtoncl Aplo,
- · Golllpollo, 1"14-~112 After I P.ll.
llh It, Mew Haven, WV.
Lalli I ....... tor homo con- 45
Furnished

12

7

ono bodroom
" ' " "ttOII
'12211/mo.
Inc,._ uiiHioo,

1 .... lola, 111 .2. Aolon. Clydo 112-11211:

Lool: flmolo 9L llemOrd. block,
lin ond - . . 1yr. old,
~---. 114-

Lool: Rod /Whllo T.... Col Lool
Vlolnlly 01 Pulon Rd, Pllooo
Call .............,.7. .,. ttl 1011

'

BORN LOSER

Loo1 Bock and Tin Hound
orouncl Prl= I Rldp Rd.H
loUncl oolll
121

I

Westthough
didn't here
want itto:~nsr.·~!k:ar. ~i~:~
lead,
' ULY
CYMU
ZYPDM
GW
xz
have defeated the contract.
she selected the club 10. East won
N 8 W Y
PDY
ULY
GI'I'M
I
the tting and returned a club to du1n·l
my's ace .
L P R' '¥
NY W U.
ZGT
J P I ' U
Declarer could now count seven o
tricks: one spade, two hearts, one
ALPU'M ·
FGIY.'
AGDDZ \ PCGTU
mond (once the ace had cbee:
a;nesslfull
lodged) aod three clubs. A .,0
.,..
IMSIFYD)
YDIIY
PIHDYAM -.
SJtade finesse would bring tbe total
PREVIOUS
SOLUTION:
"If
ever
did
lhU1
OUI
lhe Twine, I'd loki off
to nine, so Travis ran the spade quE:en.
my
clol,_
and
run
nok-.1
on
lhl!
_
_..
Spatlly
-·
West decided to duck, but onl•• after I
a momentary pause. It was aU
help Travis needed. She cashed
two club tricks, West discarding a
14ito4 ~. CIAY l. I'OU.AN
diamond. The diamond ting .went
RearroP'Igt ~tters of the
the ace; West returned a diamond.
four Krambled words beTravis now exited with the ace and
tow to form four words.
other spade. West cashed the d\a~!~~
but then she had to ;;;
the heart queen Into ~··•th':;,t
tenace.
U declarer takes a finesse that he
likely to repeat, it is often a good
.. to duck. But you must duck without a
flicker.

...

�•

By The _Bend
' .

~

The Daily Sentinel

HEATHER EAGLE

Racine girl wins title
The Precious Miss and Mister
Pageant was ~eld ~ecently at the
City Parle Pavilion m Parkersburg,
W.Va. ,
.
Heather Eagle entered her age
division and now holds the title of
Precious Miss Queen 1993. She
also went on to compete in the
overall category for prettiest hair,
eyes, smile, best dressed and personality: She won the prettiest hair
category.
She is the daughter of Philip and
Sherry Eagle, Racine.

Party held

1.

A welcome home party was
held recently for Brent and Brian
. Houdashelt at the home of Greg
and Linda Grover.
Attending were La Deana and
Kayla Grover, Myrtle Grover,
Andy , Nellie and Karen Grover,
Randy, Genia and Cody HyseU, Pat
Humphrey, Joe, Jamie, Kandis and
Joe Humphrey, Gene Jr., Bridgett
and Blake Humphrey , Bob and
Loraine Venoy, Tony, Lisa, Jake
and Josh Venoy, Robyn Wayland,
Marion; Bob and Marcia
Houdashell, Butch and Brandi
Grover, Letart, W.Va., Todd
Grover, Terri Lynn Yeauger and
Evan, Tracie Collin s, Ronnie,
Brenda, Zach and Chelsie Arms.

Reds

1\.letday, June 29, '1 993

•

Page-10

Star·,Garden
Club has meet
EsteUa Atkins and Ruby Diehl .
wem llostesse' for the 'recent' meet·
ing of Star Garden Club.
For devotions Mrs. Aikins read
"A Perfect Day," "'The Best Place
10 Live" and ''The Voice of 8 Holy
Man." Twelve members and one
guest answered roll call with 8 tip
on the care of roses.
Pauline Atkins, Neva Nicholson
and Allegra Will attended open
house at the Chester Garden Club.
Belly Dean showed prize slides of
a Carousel of AmeriFlora.
Star members who lid: flower$
to church or lodge meetings during
the past monlh were Neva Nichol·
son, Margie Rife, Martha Chapman
and Wanetta Radelrin.
Mrs. Chapman reported 011 sunflowers. They are attraCtive yellow
flowers and provide food for birds
and after roasting are nutritious ·
snacks. Contrary 10 popular belief
the sunflower does not tum its face
to the east in the morning and to
the west in the evening.
Estella Atkins read about t'he
mocking bird. She noted that dur·
ing the entire mating season the
mocking bird will master 400 dif·
ferent songs. He also imitates
squirrels, frogs, crickets, sirens,
bells and home alarms. How he
decides which tune to sing next still
remains his personal secreL
Members displayed a show of
different flower arrangements.
Those who placed fli'St in the vari·
ous categones were table arrangement first, Neva Nicholson; verti·
cal mass first, Sharon Jewell;
arrangement for' television, fust,
Pauline Atkins; mass wrangement,
first, Wanetta Radekin, and roses,
first, Martha Chapman.
.
The hint for.the day was "If you
want a lot of blossoms on old fash·
ioned rose bushes, cut the shrubs
back two or t'hree feet each spring
and thin out the old canes.
The hostess served mfreshments
. at the close of the meeting.

Ohio Lottery

blank

Couple should go to party together
Dear ADD l..pden: A year un,
I married a. widower wliose
according to my husband and
everyone olae, - "perfect.'
Its been t'hree yan Iince 'Mona'
died. ' Frank" became extremely
attached to his wife's parents
following her death. They were not
p~ when he married me. Now,
the greatest obStacle .10 our
happiness is Frank's continued
closeness to Mona's family.
Yestelday we received an invita·
tion to his former father-in-law's
birthday party. Only SO people w=
invited -·Ill rdativea. When I asked
. Frank if he planned to go, he
replied, "I wouldn't miss iL'
I feel hurL It seems to me that
Frank should not attend this 'family
reuni011." He needs IIi let go of his
past so we can get build a life
together. The party will onlx,.~emind
him of his loss, wilh everyone
sympathizing with him instead of
mjoicing over his marriage to me.
Should I insist that Frank not'go?
Sl!ould I go with him? I need your
guidance because I'm too upset to
think .straight. •• PLAYING
SECOND FIDDLE TO A GHOST
IN CALIFORNIA ·
DEAR CALIFORNIA: You are
treading on dangerous ground
when you try IQ discourage Fnmlc
from honoring Mona's memory
in whatever way he chooses; Cpt it
oul

rio, Ann
L andefS

~-..

~\

. •'

FATHER AND SON- Mac Stewart, left, eDjoyecl breakfast
wlt'h his rather, Lawrence, at the Fat'hen' Day Breakfast Buffet
held receDtly at Overbrook. CeDter in MlddleporL LawreDce Is a
patieDt lit the ceDter.
/

New officers installed
New officers were installed
when the Reedsville Nazarene
Wornens Society met recently with
Carol Kanawalsky as hostess and
. Robin and Tami Putman as cohosteSses.
.
Cathy Masters presided at the
meeting which opened with prayer
by KayeJeu.
Plans were made for a church
dinner and while elephant sale with
proceeds (lOin(! to help p11rchase
playgroun4 eqwpmenl
·
Birthdays were recognized for
June.
There were 73 shut-in calls
reported and cards were signed for
the sick and shut-in . .

Devoti011s were given by JaneUe
Sargent, "Catch the Vision." ·
Those attending were Evelyn
Barr, Kate Ladd, Kaye Jett, Lucy
Robens, Dian Bias, Janelle Sar·
gent, Barb Swartz, Sue Suttle, Barb
Masters, Wendy Wilfong, Linda
Putman. Sue Douglas, Lisa Put·
man, Judy Elkins, Marlene pgomin,
Cathf Masters, Robin Putman,
Caro Kanawalsky, Tatni Putman
and guests, Vicki Milhone and
Joyce Kanawalsky.
The next meeting will be at the
church with Gloria Decker as host·
ess and ChristY Hensley and Eve·
lyn Barr as co-hostesses.

Carolyn Nicholson hosts meet

.

Rose Reynolds
observes 90th
birthday

I'
I·
I•

'· .VoL oM; NO. 44

:: • r

TUESDAY
SYRACUSE - Infant and pre·
schooler aquatic program at London Pool 7-8 p.m. through July 9.
For more 'information, call 992·
9909. $15 fee.
BURLINGHAM· The Bedford
Township Volunteer Fire Depart·
ment Comniittee will meet Tuesday
at 7:30 p.m. at the Burlingham
Modern Woodmen Hall. Commit·
tee by-laws wiD be Voted on. Public welcome.
WEDNESDAY
.
POMEROY • Meigs County

I.

1 ' ' lon.14 . . . . - • -

A,.IIi ecl•l110.th .,.,.,

'

'HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)

The llllion•• laqelt COil opera·
totJ ll.'f they wiD not change their

.-

negollatina stance despite the
. defecdoll of sevaal c;ompEiea thai
. siped teplllle deals wilh the Ullit·

. ecfMinc wcnen.

. The UMW IIII•IIIIIIUIIIIIIIII:Cdil:ed Tuesday
. tllll Ohio-billed Alllerlcan Electric
: Power Co. had ~ from the
~ Bituminous Coll'Opetalora Auoc:i·
atioll and lillled an interim IPCI'WIIt with die union. AEP - the
third cotnpll\y to drop out of the

auocillicn and the feu1h 10 sign a

sep.ue ..,eement.

The aareement covers 1,400

WOlken In Ohio, Utllh, IUinois and

• 'Today' a orchestrated media
event was brought to you by the
UMWA in hopes lhlt someone will
believe !hat IIIOihet BCOA member has suddenly walked into the
Age of ~t,'' said Hoff.
IDIII, alao spolteaman for CONSOL
lllc. of Upper St. Clair, Pa.
The coaiiiiOCiation has never
released iu me111berahip list,
althoup off~~:ials aid at the start
of talks last yar that it repreaenled
.abOut a 'dozen of the nation's
largest poducers.
·
·
Based on lhlt number, a thild of
its membershi,P. has signed sepuar.e
agreemenu wtth the union.
The union began its Slrike Mlly
I 0 over job security and has
expanded 11 seven! times. It says it
hlis 14,000 members on strike
against five companies in West
v~ Illinois, 1rm.na, Pennsyl-

West Viqinia, the UMW ~.
"They have plowed no new
grouild In labor·~ rela·
tiona. ~ have deveklped no aew
. relalionlhip with the UMW A. In aD
Ohio and Kentucky.
likelih90d, they have merely
AEP, baled in l.ancallcr, Ohio,
· apeed 10 abide by 'rhatever ~­
. uact BCOA ultilutdy ncJOtilles is the nation's 24th lqest coal
· with the uni011,'' said Thomas F. producer and one of the luaeat
HoffiiiiR, spokesman for the coal electric utility holding corpora-

I'\ I)
H
\
'

Richard Trumka.
The apeement "clearly demon·
. . _ ~·s conunitment to work
wilh the UMWA to addJess the job

security needs of coal miners,' '
Trumlra said "In starlt conbast to
some operaton, AEP has demon·
lll8ted aood faith and a real wiD·
ingneas 10 address the issueS.'.
Three other companies also
have signed interim agree.ments
with the union since the strike
began. They are: AMAX Inc. of
Iftdianapolis, the nation's third·
largest coal producer; Freeman
Energy Corp.-Freeman United Coal
Corp. of Marion, lll.; and W ~ ..
a small coal processing plant in
1-bner City, Pa.
·

GED RECIPIENTS· Plctarecl are GED

rec:lplenls rec:oplzecl at tile auaal recopltloa
dlnDer of the Adult Balle ud Uteracy Edaca·

tioa proaram at Melp HIP Sehoul 011 MOIIday
evening. L-r, are: lroDI, Roberta Smltll, Cllar·
lotte Wamsley, Mary H:Ysell, Kathy EvaDs,

·Twenty-seven receive GED awards ·

van..,

Twenty-seven people we1e pre·
sented their GED's at the Adult
Buic and Literacy Education annual recognitiOil dinner at Meigs High
.
·School
on Monday evening. The
. i'uocildon.
tiona.
.
dinner
was
sponsored by the Mid·
The coal uaoeia&amp;ion coatenda
'The aJ.l:eement with AEP ends
dleport·Pomeroy
Rotary Club and
' thl~~~e~m n11 viollle fedenllllbor the p051Jbility of a strike against
Jhe
Meigs
County
Board or Educa·
-~........
...,.,. ....
the utility, said UMW PreSident
' lion.
Gradualel receiving plaques and
certificates were Mary Hysell,
Paula Budce, James Stewart, Max·
'
inc Thomas, Delwon Laudennilt,
II
Nancy Phillips, Debra Boring, Ruth
A Racine man injuled in a two-vehicle accident Tuesday mornShuler, Donna Warnecke, Pamela
. iiiJ il in llllble COIIdilion today at Holzer Medical Center.
Gheen, Robertll J. Smith, Charlotle
Delt.oa W. Fowler, 49, 31440 Salser ROlli, Racine, was admitted
,
WASHINGTON
(AP)
Sen.
Wamsley, Rebecca E. Wilson,
to the '-! itll's inrelllive en unit fer multiple trauma, a hospilal
Howard
Metzenbau111
draped
an
Dorothy Robbins, Belinda Bailey,
tllil-ma.
·
arm across his front-row seat and William Johnson, Shaula Lauder·
Fowler - lnjtnd on Stale Roilte 7 near Addi1011 when a velii.
sat back, smiling, while senator milt, Carolyn Schuler, Richard
cle lktwn ~ Pl!ul J. Shaffer, :U. McDernlOlt. went.left of center ·
after
senator talked about how Cook, Mitziann Klaiber, Dreama
and llniCt
llilll head
on. Shllfer was killed in the .:cident, which is
__._
.
•
•
they'D
miss him al'ter he !etires.
. Cremeans. Sherry Henlman, Kathy
sliD ~~~~·
Then he met privately with Sen- Evans, Patricia Grimm, Brenda
ate Majority Leader George Peuie, Catherine Cox and Rhonda
MitcheU, posed for photographers DePue.
outside
the Capitol, and foisted pic·
Receiving recognition for 200
A ReedaviiJe Wli&amp;l'a vehicle sulllli!Jed li,..t dania&amp;e Tuesday
tures
of
his
grandchildren
on
a
..
hours
of service wem Mary HyseU,
e=illen it ltniCk. a pd rail, the Olilha-Meigs l'ost of the
tongue-tied
tourist
from
Win1o,
Amanda
Lemley, Cathy IUrt, GloStllO
Pllvl1""*1ed.
.
Ky.
·
·
ria
Bradshaw,
Pamela Gheen, DarK. SiJadock.: !11913 Rye Rold, was uthbOdnd on Stale
"N.e
you
looting
at?"
he
lene
Dunaway,
Diana K. Roberts,
ROlle 7 ftlll • lost COIIIJul 011 wet JI8WliiiCIII and . . off the
Slid, Sla'ing past the cameru to 6- David Rose, Viclrey Banett, Robert
~ n.l. The JWro1 listed unsafe speed u the conyear-old Chryln Chapman, standing Boling, Wilma Boling, Rodney
ROTARY RECOGNIZED· JMI Riebel, riallt, aaperllilniwith
her
f1111ily
(ew
feet
away.
Hart,
Dennis
Pmons,
Pamela
Per·
deat
of Melp C-ty Sdtoola, p..-111 ce; H11c11te or~
No iilludea- n!pOfred and no citations were issued. The vehi·
to
Ge~e
.JUaa or the Mlddleport·Poaei'OJ Rotary Clall wtJ II co"What's
your
name?
I'm
sons,
Marsha
Siders,
Carl
Smith
cle Wll!clrhen
the ICCliC.
·
SJIOIIIOI'ecl tlie Adalt Bask od Literacy EdllcalioD uaaal recopl- .
Howard."
Jr., .00 Carolyn Stewart.
Metzcnbaum, l).()bio, had just
CertifJCates for 300 hours aucn- 11011 dlnllel' held at Meip Hll:ll SOnol oa Moadly eftiiiJi&amp;.
announced his intention to step dance were presented to Debra
down afler he completes bis thin! Amott, Robert Arnou, Susan
Tw vohlcla reponed cJanutpl followinl thunclerstorms
term, and was luxuriating in .the Lyons, Paul Pullins and Ruth ·Randy Friend, Doris Starcher Hill, Ruth Sellers, Tina Searles,
that aruc:t the c:ounty Monday aflanool•. No lnju!iel were reported.
moment.
Pullins.
Meip CJlllllty Sheriff James M. SouiJby reported diM Lane
Maxine Thomu, Debra Boring: Lisa Thomas, Dorothy Robbins,
"Every
member
leavi11g
the
Reco1nized for 100 hours of Ruth ,Shuler, Donna Warnecke, Belinda
Danloll of Rail IS wu callbould on Stale Route 143 lfOIIIIII 4:SO
Bailey,
Mickey
. · Senate OIJiht to feelu good as I do attendance were James Stewart. Randy~. Roberts J. Smith, Char· Schwartiger, James Jones, Pamela
p.m. Monday MdiiJUCII: a limb tllll had flllen 01110 the fOIId!o'ay.
· at this moment," he saiil.
Burtina Klein, Kendall Lemley, lotte Wlllllle~:.:=ca E. Wibon, Arnott;. Thomas Arnott, Linda
Acconllnl 10 the report, die front tirea 011 ·Daniels' 1984 OkJsmo..
His
retimment
will
end
a
2().
Ellie
Lemley , Shannon Pierce, Bmlda Ball,
bile CUIIaa were blown out, one rim was bent lllld die fenders wm
Ev1111, Debbie
LODtiauecl OD pa(le 3
dlmlllpd.
.
chapter of ~itics and
·
A 1992 Dodp Colt owed by Carolyn RobiniOII, Racine, was
dalnaaed by allrle limb fallinll'rum a tree.
Danlqe was listed u
10 the left·fmlt, hood, wind·
Metzenblum told coUeagues his
lh~ anjl roof. No one was In the vehicle It the time.
.
% ApP'Oved the 1993·94 manSouthern Local School Board medicine card and a valid CPR
intentions
at a morning caucqa
'
card
by
the
stan
or
the
season.
bership
In the Ohio High School
Tuesday Md tlien made a public hired Gordon Fisher as high school
%
Approved
the
contract
AthletiC
Association for Southern
_ , o n the S..te floor. princiJIII Monday niabt duriJII the between the Southern Local Board Local High
School and Junior
Deputies of the Meip ~~ Dep.r;Jnent are invesli·
"II'S lime to tum the flllll pqes hoard s regolar monthly meeting.
Fisher was hired for three yean of Educatio• and WashinJton High.
of lhla chaDiet of my life and begili
% Approved membenhip in die
or
203
clays and wiD be paid about County Board or EMaiOII for the
glli&amp;,y~c=."7:n!. reporteclrec:;::C..~ing that six
another,'' he said.
1993-~
ICbool
year.
This
contract
coalition
for Rural and An-lsclii·
$46,000
aanually
plus
benefits,
raiiJ !Ibn fronl 11er rail fence durina the niJht and busted in
"My repeii.C few, my IIICIIIOprovidel the buic services for the . an Schools which PJOvide$ in-serwhlc;h
II
the
same
pay
u
the
for·
riea are ueasured •.my health I•
diaic:l's special educlllion IIUdenll vice for IUJ)erliiiDIIdenta.
principal.
. . the~hamblia, Ponland, reported Monday .that someo.ne
1reat and my love for the cause merFisher
throuah die SOitheufem Ohio Spe% APPIOved the employment or
Ieplaccl
retired
Principii
enteJCCI Ilia houle, lll'lled on the Wiler oil hll hat water iank and
- II undiminished,'' he said. "I J1111e1 Adams lnd actina~ncipal cial liducation Reaional Resource the Ohio School Board's fteFciat·
pulled die water line louie under the aillk, flbodillc the . . .
baYe voted my c:ooacienee, lpllten BobOnl.
Center. The COli is $812.10 a $.86 in1 services for the upeoming
my mind lnd foualil on the aide I
per student.
nejlOtionations with the teacher's
Ia
other~ the bolnl:
helieYeiS 10 be riahL ..
..
Ellablilbed
a
half time math
11&gt; Approved Barbara Beegle, uruon .
He said he wanted to spend teachiDI position for the junior Donlld Duddina. Miclllela Kuca11&gt; Discussed the employment of
l'odd
Of, reponed late Friday nilht that more lime with Ilia wife, Sblrley, . . whicll will be f\lilded through
enleled 111
paJC and IIOie tools from his tool box.
ma and Carla Shuler 10 .-:h - · personnel for coaching vacancies.
::::: clau~tm an.~ "110ven
Aa lsivesliplion 11y the Meip County Sherirra Deplnment is
I and will make ftir llillller mer school during June and July
11&gt; Discussed hiring a hllf-time
1993.
They
will
WJt
three
hattn
mlllh
teacher at the blgh lchooiiO
lulcl
and
help
jNepalt
1111condlaJlaa.
Mil.
denis for the math seclioll of the per day for 16 days at $50 a day. help students PIS' the ninth plde
~ fa wad 10 IPIIIIdlna They will be !eiMdiatiaa lllldellll profK:ieilcy teat. It was ~
time Wldlller ... lliJiid of 46 yea'S ninth
telL
..
Tricia
Wolle
u
the
that failed the ninth arade prof'· ihat the half time math leliclw at
IIIII bei11J able 10 platllheir ltldal junior
volleylllll
coD
for
tile
ciency
leal. The COli ofthe- • die junior hiP be combilied with
life.
1993-94
acbool
year
01
lite
c:cnlischool
II
Jllld by the Rani D-· the half time pocition at the hiall
DUMONT. Iowa (AP')- The ll1 yem of Iowa nconllreepinl.
"I Clll mab dllel with fri•dl tlon that lhe llal a Cllmlit 1P0f11 , IIJIIion Project.
(Continued oa Paae 3)
111Uai4ea . . u " ' u the bollotl! Mole Jilin feU r-elay lliJhlllllhe and now we cu keep it," *he
· lalld Ill Dlleti Miller's field.
ow of a vi* by AJdculllft 5ec:Je.. said,
"It' a llhnted IJC•IIIIIP 10 &amp;arJ Mite lapJ to waaerloued
. MeiHnbauiR, 76, Ia a f~er
liM• It c.'t . .,.. 111111 Willer, ,_, Ia Iowa. MiiiiUOtl. Siiinll labor lawyer and aniOII lobbyist
Cllilof-rMidn•lnlmwiiO N
iatlllland
thina we c:an liw wilh,'' llid Sen.
liMe lllelt •liMe 10 plait hi 1
'I'M ftM 4'51 ... '*- blamed .... a
COLUMBUS, Ohio CAP) ..:...The House ~oual die . . .
fotcl behind
the law
llln dllt lull sn'W the ror thllle tr at lW cblldreD In nqulriDa ·day notice of plant Lawmabn who IIIII a $30,8 bil· Ben Blpy, o.coJumbus, a nlll e budget by • 72·
while lthw, Qoodellllamea Minneaota. AD 11-yur-okllirl
lion 1tate budpt to Gov. 0ecqe of a conference committee that Senate piSied lt.32-1.
_.
_. •u t IJsqe
drownod Noaday while wacllna c:~ other Democratl ran from Volnovich aaiiJ it's the beat they worked out the package. "It's
Voiriovich wu ::J::i~ID lip
01 die ...._., r r bll n1 way _. uc.ter,llllla 4-,-r-olll SL tho word "llbenl,'' Mellal. . . c:an do, u walt ewe! •ed 10 r-s ~the peop1C of Ohio can the bill to~if.':.J
... 1ft
"-St. .... Wiiiii.,IO SL 1AIItls. Paul boy droned Friday w~lle embiiCed ~inliq . . . . . . .. lW otlien IIebe a JniiSnlaht dial- IMwla
tWG-JIIr ~ ptikid ...... •
1911 , _
..... wllollllptd line.
LaWJIIUera coasltlered three Tllulda7.
Tile .... ..... ....... ..... . ft
Redwood ltMr cllael De ••u,
clecta.......,l ae IJl .. I ..
c kltl_,..,
. . . 1M • Did ........... ill /L,..S. ,
"It'I 5 fait budieL It's lOme· 111 lrtbllla• '11 I):

,..---.Local briefs----.
Accident viCtim sttlble

---Names in the news----

M et zen b aum

Won ''t·run £-or·
re -e·lecti•on

..,..__.lllld

Pickett, best known for the song
"In the Midnight Hour," will be
sentenced SepL 24.
In 1992, Pickett's vehicle struck
and injured Pepe Ruiz.
The singer was charged with
aggravated assault. He pleaded
guilty to a lesser charge of assault.
The singer is also due in coun
July 7 on charges be was drunk
when he drove across the lawn of
his neighbor, Englewood Mayor
Donald Aronson, in 1991.

.....

Patrol probes accident

:e,:,:'. .

NEW YORK (AP) - The publisher of a biography about Sen.
EdWatd KeMedy is withdrawing a
disclaimer that says author Joe
McGinniss made up some of the
characters' thoughts and dialogue.
Sim011 &amp; Schuster president and
publisher Clrolyn Reidy said Mon·
day that all the dialogue in the
soon-to-be-released book has
sources. However, she said McGinniss took "biographer's. license" to
discus, what some people might
have been thinking at certain
poiilts.
"The Last Brother" includes
long monologues from the senator,
even though he mfused to be interviewed for the book.
Last week, Reidy defended the
disclaimer, but on Mondar she
changed her mind after Ml:Gmniss
insisted it be removed. The book
could be out by mid-August, Reidy
said.
•
·
...

a

rm.

.Vehicles diunaged by storm

'f:
a.~~rambu!K:~:!

moaersre

Southern Local hires new principal .

Deputies probe vandalism

Pomeroy man reports theft

r:t;.t;:n

,t:;..::!-..ld • -

Midwest fields inundated

=

••W' *

..me

t b. . . . .

l
&gt;

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, June 30, 1993

1na.

[UMW announces
!interim pact with
Ohio~based AEP

:J.

'

•

'( ----------------~----------------------------------~-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------­

Community Calendar ·
CommoDity CaleDdar items
appear two days belon an evnt
and the day or that evnt.Items
must be rec:elvecl well In advance
to IISSure pubUcation ID the calelldar.

•

,.

fleas.

News briefs

10.25-30-32-34

I'

PEKIN, Ill. (AP) - A court materials in Pekin. Who knows together Lincoln's career as a
clerk drew a folder from a base- how much material we'll findT " country lawyer. They have visired
ment vault containing 20 brittle said WiUiam Beard, assistant editor 42 counties, digging through every
documents handwritten or signed of the Lincoln Legal Papers, a pro- available file from 183610 1861.
by Abraham Lincoln, giving schol· ject of the lllinois Historic Preser·
''When we first started this proars their biggest cache yet in a · vation Agency.
ject, skeptics told us we wouldn't
The documents include jury find anr original Lincoln docu .
county-by-county search of his
homestate.
·
instructions, indictments, affidavits men ts,' Beard said. "The Pekin
Clerk Pam Gardner on Monday and
discovery makes 75 we've found.
I verified as originals by Lin- That's an incredible number."
found the long:hidden !older
marked "Re: Lmcoln " m the coln scholars, they would be worth
He said the group has 49 coOn·
thousands. Beard said originals ties left to search and hopes 10 find
TazeweU County Courthouse.
"I showed the researchers the with Lincoln' s signature routinely 100,000 do!:uments related to Lin·
documents ... and
about had' a sen for at least $20,000, while Lin· coln' s legal career. The group has
bean attack," she . .
coin letters !lave sold for nearly found 55,000 so far.
The find added to historians' $750,000.
The Peoria area is prime hunting
Previously, the largest collection ground for the Lincoln scholars
discovery in the courthouse last
week of 14 of Lincoln's legal of documents signed or written by because it was part or a 15-county
papers. That had been the single Lincoln was a cache of 12 found in judicial circpit that Lincoln rode
largest cache ever found.
Clinton in DeWitt County, Beard twice a year, working on legal mat·
"And we've only scratc)led the said:
ters by day and politics at night.
Lincoln
Legal
Papers · Taze~ell County was part of the
tip of the iceberil hem. We've only
· gone through I 0 percent of the researchers are trying to piece CU'CWt.

'

BuckeyeS:

'

ada, send $4.45.)

·•

Plek 4:
9008

Page6

I'
there
0 ther husbands
Rl
sure
are
who have written about the same
problem. What do you teU them? ••
PITTSBURGH
DEAR PITTS: I tell them to put
on an invisible vinyl raincoat and
let it all slide off.
Chronic naggers will not change. ·
Almoat llways. the nagging has lesS
10 do wit'h the inadequacies of
others than discontentment with
themsel
Once this·15 ..• A - - A

You and Fnmlc should go to the
party together. Be cordial and
fricmDy, and make Fnmlc proud of
ves.
uaU&lt;Oowuu,
you. This will be an enormous life becomes a lot more pleasanL
Try iL You'lllike iL
challenge, but you can meet it with
Dear Ann LaDders: A friend of
dignity and ·grace if you make the mine who is oonsidered a pretty dim
effort.
bulb (she ClDI!s almolt every senlmec
Dear Ana Landen: I have been . with "you know") can Sit down and
married for 43 years and have four
children. I hope you can save my work out a crossword puzzle in
marriage.
~~D0J:in:.~ome? •• ·'
Ilove my wife very much, but I'm
DEAR BAFF: Practice makes for
about ready to give up. She is
fi ·
eros rds
forever •nttamng
me
about
something
pro
Clency.
swo at are
......,.
and people who wort
themgames;
!cam
•• my shoeS ~ shining, my tie is the tricks of the trade. Its as simple
wrong, my socks don't match, my as that.
hair is too long (or too short), I slurp
An alcohol problem? How CCJII you
my IOUp, I'm driving too fast or too help yovself or som110ne you love?
slow, I need to lose weight, I laugh "Aicolroli.rm: How to Recognize It,
too loud. There's no end to it. ·
Hqw to Deal With It, How tu ColiShe nags R)e constantly and does quer It" wiU give ""U the Q/I$Wtr&amp;.
the same to our children. I'm sure s
,_
that's whv two of the kids ran off , end 0 self-addressed, lollg • busi·
'
·ness-me envelope and a check or
and got married.
money order for $3.65 (this illclwles
.Not long ago, I had a heart attack, posrage and handlillg) to: Alcohol,
and my wife really. helped in my c/o AM l..aJuhrs, P.O. Box 11562 ,
!Wlvery. If not for her nagging, Chicago, fU. 60611.()562. (ln Cilll·
Ann, she'd be the perfect wife.

MIAMI (AP) - · Roy Black, the
HOLLYWOOD (AP) - Tom
lawyer who won the acquittal of
Cruise made a good impression several of them, in fact - as he William Kennedy Smith on rape
sank his feet and hands into wet charges, is dating one of the jurors
concrete at Mann's Chinese The· in the case.
.Black said his mlationship with
ater.
Cruise on Monday became the Lea HaUer began a year after the
173rd celebrity to leave his mark 1991 trial when the two "bumped
outside the theater on Hollywood into each other."
Black, 48, and Haller have been
Boulevard.
Cruise, accompanied by wife, an item ever since.
Nicole Kidman, posed fer pictures
"We catainly had no romantic
and signed autographs for many in interest during the trial,'' he said
the crowd of hundreds.
Black knew plenty about the 39The event coincided with the year-old owner of a cosmetics
release this week of Cruise's movie company. Before the trial, she
"The Firm," based on the John fil!ed out a detailed juror questionGrisham novel about a law 1fUlll 118U'e.
that is a front for the mob.
HACKENSACK, NJ. (AP)RADNOR, Pa. (AP) - Marie! Wilson Pickett pleaded guilty tb
Hemingway says she's not sure her reduced c~w¥es m a drunken driv·
grandfather Brnest Hemingway ing accident m which he hit an 85would have approved of her career. year-old pedestrian.
"It's a good thing he's not
Under the plea bargain, prosecualive,'' she said in the July 3 issue tors will IWlmmend about a year
of TV Guide. "He hated Holly- in jail, alcohol rehabilitation and
wood. He felt the movie industry community service for the 51-yearbastardized and misrepresented his old rhydtm and blues Star.
wort.''
The former star of ABC's canceled "Civil Wars'' also had some
advice for screenwriters interested
in adapting Hemingway's hooks: ·Like a Rock
NORFOLK, Va. (AP) "Throw out the book and use the .
George
Henry Thomas, born in
story. You can,'t do what he did
Virginia
in 1816, was a Union
with dialogue. What he wrote was
Army
officer
in the Civil War.
not meant to be spoken."
An
1840
graduate of West
The 31-year-old actress a~
in "Stark in Love,'' an Aug. 14 Point, Thomas led the ";:~:f the
tly at
installment of "The Hidden Cumberland and fought
the
battles
of
Chattanooga
and
Room" anthology series on the
Nashville.
Lifetime cable network.
·
In the battle of Chickamauga,
his
courage and leadership saved
NEW YORK (AP) - His last .
the
Union Army from defeat and
day on the job at NBC, David Let·
won
him the title "The Rock of
terman got a nice raise - in rat·
Chlckam&amp;uga."
ings.
·
~died in 1870.
Friday's "Late Night" finale,
with Bruce Springsteen and Torn
Trault B1 Rail
Hanks, got roughly double Letter·
NEW YORK (AP) - Street·
man's usual mllence, ICCUding to
Clll,
once a common sight in many
preliminary A.C. N~ Co. ligAmeriam
cities, oriJinatDd ._ in
ures releued Monday.
1831.
In 29 mark.elltept ! II" tina SO.7
Raila for the tint horte-drawn
penlCIIt of aD TV hamel, I..eaiman
"str~t-rallway"
ran from the
got 1 7.4 radn1 and a 27 share.
Bowery
10
Harlenl.
Each rating point equall 472,108
Bxperimeatal steam and cablehouseholds. 'The share Ia the perpowered
111 utcan were followed
centage of TV sell In UIC that are
by
electric
models. In 1888, the
tuned to a J)ll1lcullr lhow.
firu
successful
electri&lt;; streetcu
Nation81 figures will be releued
syStem
operated
in
Riehm~, Va.
Thursday.
RUTI.AND • Rutland Township
Leuerman'a new CBS show~ Soon almost fNfll'J IJqC city had a
network of linea.
Trustees meet Thursday at 6:15
At 28.2 miUion acre·feet, Nevada's mieres Aut. 30. "La~,:t,ht"
Inlllilrllln IIJeetCin alao linked
p.m. with regular meeting It 6:30 Lake Mead, formed by Hoover Dam, reru11.1 will air on NBC
the
towns
and cities, unlil the growth
summer.
·
p.m. Public invited.
I• the largest man-made reservoir in
or
automobile
ttavel in the 193011.
the United States.

737

Houston

Tazewell County Courthouse
produces Lincoln papers .bonanza

Hostesses for the June meeting lace table covers given to the
of the Bradford Church of Christ church. A thank you note was
Lydia COWJCil was.Carolyn Nichol· received t'rQn1 Charlie Murray for
son.
the sunshine basket presented to
. May, •
Jariice Felty otJeRed the meeting him m
with prayer and prayer request.
Several activities of the church
Officers reports were given. Devo- were plamed.
· ·
.
tions were given by Carolyn
Game balls were purchased and
Nicholson from James and delivered to the Ohio Valley ChrisMatthew on the power of positive . tian Camp.
witness.
The BradfQfd Ladies hosted the
A thank you note was sent to Woman's Fellowship 011 Thursday.
Mr. and Mrs. Lawmnce Eblin for The theme for ihe evening was
weddings.
The family picnic and swim
party will be held at the home or
Mr. and Mrs. Couch. Chicken will
be supplied by the council. Everyone is to bring covered dishes,
lawn chairs and table service.
The sunshine basket for June
The 90th birthday of Rose will be $iven to Ruby Hysell.
Karhla Stump had the closing
Reynolds was celebrated recently
prayer.
with an open house at the Middle·
Refreshments· were served to
port Church of Christ.
The celebration was planned Karlita and Hannah Stump, Kim
and given by several nieces and a Willford, Jane Hysell, Becky and
neP.hcw: Mary Powell, Pomeroy; Bethany Amberger, Madeline
Mila Raymond, Portland; Cbarl.otte Painter, Charlotte Hanning, Cherie
Roseberry, Franklin, W.Va.,; and . Williamson, Suzie Will, Gerri
Lightfoot, Janice Fetty, Diane
George Stacc, Findley.
A large birthday cake and yel· Bing, Paula Pickens, Nancy Morris
low rosebud corsage were present· and Carolyn Nicholson.
ed to Ms. Reynolds.
Decorations were provided by
Sabra Morrison Ash. Variegated
.... .._,. _.... •:
. "
butterflies and sueamers graced the
serving table along with crystal
candlesticks, yellow candles and a
lace 1ablecloth.
Birthday cake, mints, nuts,
punch and coffee were served.
Cake was served by Mary Bowen,
punch by Lynn Taylor and coffee
by Gwyn Horton.
·
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Jim Roseberry, Franklin, W.Va.,
Mr. and Mrs. George Philip Stace,
Findley, Mr. and Mrs. George E.
Conroy Jr., Tallmedge, V~l Edgat
Reynolds, Leigh Acres, Fla., Lynn
Taylor, Naples, Fla., Gwynn Horton , Carrollton , Texas , Mr. and
Mrs. Val E. Reynolds Jr. and
Justin, Morgantown, W.Va., Mila
Raymond and Jeremy and Gerald
HONORED • Bett1 Bar·
and Mary Powell.
nett wu selec:tecl as employee
or the IDontll at Pomeroy
NursiDI and Rehabilitation
Center. She Is an aide Ia the
dietary department aad was
selected by co-workers ror her
friendly, pleasant and eooper·
Republican Women meeting 7:30
alive attitude. She bas beeD
p.m. at the Meigs Coun(y Public
emplo:Yecl tor 4 Vl )Uri and
Library. New members eru:omaged
prevlousiJ worked ID tile
to attend. For more information,
bouaekeeDinf!tJ*UIIent. She
contaCt Patty Pickens at 985-4231
and her hus d, Roaer, aDd
or Niese! Gerard at 992-6736.
aon, :r..c, On oa BaBey Ru
Road.
POMEROY • Wildwood Gar·
den Club will meet Wednesday at
7:30 p.m. at the home of Heidi
Sobering Myllt
Elberfeld
The name of the gem amethyst is
THURSDAY
comprised of two Greek wonll mean·
POMEROY • The Pomeroy ing "not to be drunk." In olden times,
Group or AA and AI·Anon will it was beUeved that the stone would
meet ThUrsday at 7 p.m. at s~ keep the wearer sober through a night
Heart Catholic Church. Call 992- of revelry. In fact, goblets were often
5763 for information.
made or amethyst for that purpose.

Pick 3: ·

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=1ciency

Lawmakers pass state budget
VI..

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