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Ohio Lottery

Sampras
•
WIDS

Pick 3:

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Pick4:

Wimbledon ·

5683 .
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PageS

10.25-28-~-47

"''

Low 1onlgbt around 70.

Humid Tueoday. lfl&amp;b near 95 •

•
· Vol: 44, NO. 47 .
Multimedia Inc.

•
-·

1 Station. 10 P..- 35 ....,111
AMuldmedlalnc. Newapi!Mf

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, July 5, 1993
,.

PAGE SIXTEEN

Middleport celebrates _F ourth
with Red, White and Boom

'

JULY, 1993

. RIVER CURRENTS FOR SENIOR CmzENS

By JULm E. DILLON
Sentinel Ne..,s Staff

a special plaque was presented for
best marching uniL . ·
Following · the
parade ,
"Red, White and Boom" was the ceremonies were held at Dave
theme of the annual Fourth of JUly Diles Park where. Middleport
Mayor Fred Hoffman welcomed
festi~ities in Middlepon on SIJIK!ay
'the crowd. He extended
evenrng.
.
A parade ticked off the evening appreciation to Tom Dooley and
complete with fire engines, the Middleport Community
twirlers, walking units, floats, Association, the Middleport Arts
bicycles, a band and horses. Parade Council and the Middleport Fire
winners were: Satin and Lace, best Department for their efforts in
walking unit; American Legion organizing the events.
Feeney Bennett Post No. 128, best · State Senator Jan Michael Long,
fl031; Jessica Cale, best lk:comted who also served a parade· marshal,
bicycle Jessica Smith and J .0. spoke briefly at the park saying he
Smith, best decorated four-wheeler; was delighted to be back in his
.
Lisa and Cassandra Smith, best home town of Middlepon.
Senator
Long
presented
a
special
equestrian unit; and to the
outiotanding Meigs Marching Band, certificate of recognition from the

.

.•

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vicious ambitions· against the
Iraqis," Babil said
The U.N. decision to with&lt;lraw
the 1!1anJ prompted fears of military
strikes to force Iraqi compliance
with U.N. Security Council
resolutions aimed at eliminating
Baghdad's offensive capabilities
following the 1991 Gulf War.
Residents of this city of 4 million
people began stocking meat and
vegetables.
•'The last American ·atlllek came
as a surprise, this time we want to
be· prepared," an Iraqi resident,
Mohammed Mohsin, remarked as
he·bought apples from a street
vendor.

Group.warns the U.S. not to·harm cleric

$12,495
4 Door

August 199o.
BAGHDAD, !raq (AP) - U.N. Associated Press.
Smidovich,
a
Russian,
was
"We are not defying the United
weapoii'S expens pulled o'ul today
followed
by
Iraqi
secret
service
Nations,"
Rashid al-Rafai, Imq's
in a new slandoff with President
Saddam Hussein's government agents as he checked out of a hotel ambassador in Tokyo told the
over its refusal to allow the and headed with his two assistants British Broadcasting Corp. today.
THE 'ROCKETS' RED GLARE' • Pictured bere are tbe
The government-controlled
installation of surveillance camems · to the airport to board a special
fireworks seen over Racine Sunday nigbt during Independence
U.N. plane bound for New York.
media lashed out at the United
at missile Jesting sites.
Day celebrations. Tbe 'rockets' red 11are' was composed of m11ny
"I am very disappoinled, feeling Nations and its decision to
"There is no chan~e in the Iraqi
dif':erent colors as those In attendance saw blues, greens, golds and
stand, so-l am prepanng 10 leave," very bad that I have to leave withdraw Smidovich's team.
"It is a dirty trick ," said the
wbltes explode and fall from tbe sky In showers of light. (OVP
Nilcita Smidovich, the leader of the because the Iraqis are not willing to
photo by Jim Freeman)
·
daily newspaper Babil in a front·
3;member team, told ' The accept the cameras," he said.
Baghdad doesn't oppose page editorial. The newspaper is
installing the cameras, -butwants- -pqbHshtd by Saddam's eldest son,
assurances ·that compliance with Odai.
.
the monitoring program would 1ea4
"The United 'States is using the
to lifting U.N. sanctions imposed United Nations as an umbreHa to
more than $5,000 this year, said after Iraq invaded Kuwait in carry out its conspiracies and
High temperatures didn't prevent members out of the parade.
Republican mayoral candidate Dan DeRossett, chief of the
Ohioans from enjoying the pamdes,
coQkouts and fireworks long Michael Turner and De'an Spencer Comm\IIMty Fire District:
associated with Independence Day. Lovelace,
a
Democratic The association had to borrow from
Temperatures statewide hovered commission candidate, had sued its general fund to cover pan of its,
·
·around 90 .through much of the ·the city Thursday. They said the · fireworks expenses, he sauL
"The Islamic Jihad Movement
The
30-minu_te
display
has
JERUSALEM (AP) - A radical
day, the National Weather Service city ' s policy.. was discriminatory
warns
the United States from
attracted
thousands
of
people
Muslim
group
today
warned
it
and violated their constitutional
said.
harming
the life of Sheik Omar
to
the
vjllage
about
30
would
retaliate
against
Americans
annually
Muggy weather prompted right of free speech.
miles
west
of
Akron.
•
Abdel-Rahman,"
another slogan
if an Egyptian cleric detained in the
A fireworks display in Spencer
Cincinnati's health department to
said.
Nat evetjone was able to spend United States in connection with a
issue a health alert warnil)g the was possibly the last event of its
"If the Sheik is harmed our
the day relaxing. Tammy series of terrorist incidents is
kind m ·
elderly and ·inflflll to stay indoors.
response will be the lddnappin$ oC
the northern Ohio village. ·
• 0 'Donnell, 2S, a secretary at a harmed or deponed
. In Dayton, all mayoral and City
"The Islamic Jihad warns the Americans and to strike agamst
The
Spencer
Firemen's Cleveland law firm, spent part of
Commission candidates were
invited' to participate in the city's Association, which h~ sponso(ed the holiday working. The firm United States against handing American injerests in the region,''
.downtown parade. U.S. District the event for about ·30 years, needed someone to file and type Sheik Abdel-Rahman to the another slogan read
Since the beginning of lhe 1987
Egyptian regime," said a slogan
Judge Walter Rice on Friday issued decided it wouldn't raise money for and answer telephones.
"I don't mind working," she freshly spray-painted on a wall in
an order preventing the city from future fireworks displays after
said. ''I only have to work till 2 Gaza City in the Israeli-occupied
keeping political opponents of the Sunday's show,
Gaza Strip.
(p.m.),
so that's OK."
The
display
cost
the
association
. incumbent mayor and ·commission

Ohioans enjoy-Ind·e pendence Day

1993
Cutlass
Ciera

1992 Lumina
Euro

the direction of Debbie Gerlach
performed several patriotic and
religious selections,
A new event was featured at the
celebration during which decorated
boats paraded past Daye Diles Padt
to the hundreds of on-lookers along
the shore of the beautiful Ohio
River. Of the approximately two
dozen boats, Dick Rupe's pontoon
boat v.as selected as the winner for
the best decorated uniL
The evening concluded wi.h a
spectacular performance by the
ever-popular Shady River
Shufflers, under the drrection of
Paulette Harrison and Jodi Glass,
and of course a sizable display of
fireworks by the fire depanmenL

{Jnited Nations team leaves Iraq

1993
Delta 88

•

Ohio Senate to Bob Gilmore for his
efforts in "making Middleport a
stronger c;ommunity. "
Senator Long spoke about the
advancement of the country since
its independence and stated that
democracy and freedom have
remained the smite.
He urged everyone 10 'think about
the people who drafted the
Declaration of Independence and
he read excerpts from the crucially
important
document.
He
recognized those who have
Sacrificed to secure the libeny and
freedom of the country.
Following -Senator Long's
address, a choral group from the
Middlepon Church of Christ, under

.

uprising
against
Israel's
occupation, organizers have used
grafttti to communicate their
political positions.
The warnings appeared on walls
of the United Nations refugee
agency and other places where
foreigners worl::.
The blind SS-year-old sheik was
detained Friday in New York.
.

"-..,

Fire. guts 17 buildings

Haitian~

skeptical that accord
will lead to Aristide's return

GANTHIER , Haiti (AP) Long-suffering and skeptical
Haitians reserved judgrnent Sunday
on the U.N .-mediated accord to
bring back ousted President Jean·
Bertrand Aristide and restore
democmcy by Oct. 30.
Many feared the army, which has ·
systematically repressed Haitians
following Aristide's overthrow,
would not honor their commitment
to allow him back,
The morning after foreign
diplomats applauded Aristide's
signing of the pact in New York
late. Saturday, the streets of Port·
au-Prince, the capital, were quiet.
Roman Catholic M.asses were
restrained, even in the sttongholds
of lhe priest who became Haiti's
first democratically elected
president.
· Army commander Lt. Gen. Raoul
Cedras pledged to do his share to
bring peace. "Politics is not the
military's affair," 1.t. Gen. Cedms
told Hailiaris in a nationwide radio
address late Saturday, rebroadcast
several times Sunday.
But outside the peach-colored St.
Peter' s Church in the poor farm
town of Ganthier, halfway between
Pon-au-Prince and the Dominican
Republic border, few Haitians were
ready to celebrate.
In the past week, troops have
stepped up a campatgn of
intimidation of foreigners,
journalists and U.N. peacekeepers.
Police headed co slums of the
capilal on several nights last week,
• fmng gunshOts to enforce a curfew.
•'When r see Aristide,.I'll believe
it." said Johnny Lovanslcy, leaning
on his den tell copper-brown bus.
"But he must come back quicldy.
We must lift the embargo."

Lovan sky, wearing a sweat·
stained stnped shirt and pants,
appeared worn-out and much older
than his 20 years. He said lhe past
week has been a struggle to find
fuel for his bus, and he has begun
coasting down hills to try to save
gas : Fuel has been cut off by a
worldwide oil embargo imposed on
the poverty-stricken Caribbean
island nation June 23.
When asked' if he thought the
U.N. peace plan could bring
change to this land without
violence, Lovansky shook his head
slowly, " I don't think so."
In his radio addreSs, Cedras said.
he regretted that he was unable to
get the embargo lifted immediately,
but added: "Sanctions will be
lifted if we all play our roles."
Cedras, who committed the
military to the U.N. plan, must
resign and watch as the man he
helped overthrow, Aristide, is
brou~ht back to power.
.Wunesses to the late-night
signing in New York were
euphoric over the promise to
peacefully restore an elected
president to the post from which he
was ousted.
The accord starts a phased
process in which foreign aid l'{ould
be channeled to the hemisphere's
poorest .natioo, the embargo lifted,
the military command changed Bl!d
democracy brou!W buck.
"If I were a Haitian, today is the
day I would go out and get drunk,''
said Lawrence Pezzullo, President
Clinton's envoy for Haili.
,
But in Ganthier, about the
biggest treat Haitians allowed
themselves were peMy SDOW-&lt;:anes
sold from cans with names such as
"The Life of'Job."

Clinton pledges $1.2
•
k
billion dzsaster pac age
ELDRIDGE, Iowa (AP) .President Clinton has offered tl!e
Midwest a $1.2 billion package of ·
flood-relief assistance, saying the
high water along the Mississippi
River is "as bad ~it gets."
Clinton, tounng M . flood·
ravaged area Sunda~ et with
about 100 farmers huddled under a
tent on a farm just outside
Eldridge. He offered sympathy for
those affected and said he would
back up the sympathy with more
federal money.
"We're trying to be responsive
and to be helpful,'' lhe president
said.
Before leaving Washington,
Clinton said he authorized the
release of $100 million in federal
disaster funds. He also said he
would use another $297 million
that's available.
· And Congress will be asked to
approve another $850 million on an
emergency basis, something
lawmakers are almost certain to
endorse, Clinton said.
"I don't think we' re going to
·have any trouble getting it,"
Clinton said.
.
In addition, Clinton said he
would move to give flood victims
more time to seek disaster aid and
pledged a "long-term reform" of
the nation's system of · crop
insurance.
,
While cities along the swollen
Mississippi have · suffered
enormous damage, millions of
acres of farmland also have been
flooded and officials are projecting
heavy crop losses. .
In Iowa alone, officials have
projected the IIJSS at $750 million.

Clinton, heading for an economic
summit in Japan, spent three hotirs
in the re~n where the MissiSsipPi
is expenencing its worst flooding
.in nearly 30 years.
"I've seen a lot of this in my life
and this is as bad as it gets, ''
Clititon said.
.
The disaster aid package Clinton
said he would seek is designed to
provide flood victims the same
level of relief given victims of
Hurricane Andrew.
Agriculture Secretary Mike Espy
accompanied Clinton to his hourlong meeting with farmers. Dressed
in jeans and a flannel shin, Clinton
perched on a hay bale, occasionall~
chewing on a piece of straw.
He told the crowS! that his history
~s the governor of a small, rural
state makes him a sympathetic
listener.
"I'm going to be very sensitive
to people lilre you," he said
Clinton said Congress would be
given a choice of either directly
appropriating the money or finding
spending cuts elsewhere in the
budget.
While Clinton got a generally
warm reception, 23-year-old Steve
.Loussaret of nearby Long Grove
had a testy exchange with the
president over financing the
disaster program and tax increases
in Clinton's economic package.
"In my opinion, we're taxed.
enough the way it is right now,"
Loussaret told CliiiiOn. "I'd just as
soon be able to spend
money
the way I want to spend iL '
Clinton said his economic
program relied mainly on spending
cuts and-taxes on the w~thy.

mr,

. CLEVELAND (AP) - A blaze
that firefighters said was
intentionally set destroyed 17
buildings on Sunday.
The fire began in the former
Woolen Mill factory complex just
east of downtown, battalion Fire
Chief William Wolohan said
Firefighters found several areas
inside the buildink that had been
intentionally ignited , fire
depanment spokesman Jonathan
Parries said. .
Barrels of a petroleum-based
hazardous substance were stored in
t~e building, Parries said. He did
nol know the name of the substance
or how much was stored.

Authorities decided to. let the
substance burn rather than risk
having contaminated water enter
the city's sewer sy~tem, Parries
said.
Th~ building was desttoyed. Also
guued were a pizza shop, a vacant
bar, a check-cashing business, a
doctor's office and a furniture
store, Parries said. About 30 homes
on two nearby streets were briefly
evacuated, Parries said. A damage
estimate was not yet available
Parries said.
'
One firefighter was treated for
exhaustion and smoke inhalation at
a hospilal and relea5e!L

TRACTOR DRIVER .... Jacob Hunter, son of Dr. and Mrs• .
Douglas Hunter, Racine, steers an antique John Deere tractor
uader the watcbful1uldance of his grandfather, Ron Salser,
during the Racine Bourtb of July parade. Salser described the
youager Hunter•as a "John Deere man.'' (Sentinel photo by Jim
Freeman)
· ·
j;

�'
Monday, July 5, 1~

c.· ... -

o.

mmen.t.ary

~~t~~:o~~~:~ ~:-·
Monday, July 5, 1993

'

~~------------------~--------------------~--------------------------------------------------------------------~--~------~~--------:

The Daily Sentmel
111 Court 'treet
Pomti'O)', Ohio

DltVOTED TO 11IE Jlii'I1UIE8T8 OF 11IE IIEIG8-IIA80lf AREA
•

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
CHAJtLENE HOEFLICH

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

General Ma~~~~ger

woro'":~~!te&lt;;; ~~f:t ": ;;~::~J1:~.:~ul~i::J01,!;:":.:

address and telephone number. Nn unsigned letters will be published. Letters
__
•_bo_uld
__be_in....;.good--tas-"-·-~---"-in.;.g_iJS......
__· _oo_tpeno;..._n_lli_·u._
·
..

Clinton strongest among weak leaders .!

AIIAPNcnAq1]'11s '
- By TERENCE lfUNT
AP Wlllte Roue CorrfiPODdeat
WASHINGTON (AP)
.
President Clinton heads for his first
economic summit'in a suange
position: He'll be lhe strongest of
. any of the seven leaders in Tokyo
yet he's under a cloud of doubts
about his global leadership l!nd
resolve.
· European leaders complain about
U.S. indecision over former
Yugoslavia. Asian nations · are
nervous
about
America's
willin~ness to maintain a

· ~lf:.
mg mililary presence in lhe
Allies criticize Washington for

-'·--------....1.· sending
out confusing signa,ls on
trade policies. .

Big decisions.made behind
closed statehouse doors
By JOHN .CHALFANT
Associated Press Writer

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - ~gislatjve action on the record-high
$30.8 billion stale budget and some other costly items demonstrated the
degree tD which government decisions are made behind closed doors.
There was nothing illegal about last wee~ s confidential deliberations,
but some l~gislators complained about the process.
The stale Controllin~ Bolrd set lhe privacy tnne at a Monday meeting in
which it was considenng a $4.5 million loan to a Canton company to help
filljiiiCC an expansion project.
As soon as Rep. Joseph Koziwa, D-Lorain, raised a question about the
company's fmancial history, the board voted to meet in executive session.
A hearing room full of stale agency representatives, reporters and others
was emptied as the Ohio Department of Development made ·its case for
approving the 7-year loan of public mon~y at 3 percent interest
Then the board, made up of six legislators and a representative of Gov.
George Voinovich, resume4 the public portion of its meeting and
approved the loan w1thout debate.
-On :r'uesday, the House rejected the Senate version of a proposed $633
million budget for lhe Ohio Bureau of Wodcers' Compensation, sending
the bill to a conference committee.
Rep. Joan Lawrence, R-Galena, tried tD offer a motion for the House to
tell its conferees to insist that the panel's meetings be open.
House Speaker Vem Riffe, D-Wheelersburg, prompUy ruled her motion
out of order, and said the Ohio Constitution permits meetings to be closed
with a two-thirds vote of members.
As it turned out, the conference committee did meet in public. But there
was little doubt that the real. ~@ining over disputed ref~s was taking
place elsewhere _among leg~slanve leaders, the governor s office, labor
and indusuy.
No agreement was reached, and the House and Senate passed a 20-day
imerim budget for the ernployer,financed system that provides benefits
and rehabilitation to workers injuied on the job.
·
Most secrecy was reserved for lhe House-Senate conference committee
that spent almost two weeks in private negotiations to resolve differences
in the state's two-year bUdget.
The six-member committee met in a hearing room that was off,limits to
other legislators, lobbyists, reporters and the public. A few people milled
about in the hallway waiting to buttonhole one legislator or anOther who
occasionally emerged.
After each chamber approved the budget, Voinovich signed it at 4:25
a.m. Thursday and thanked legislators and staff members who participated
in the process.
..
The private meetings came lhree months after the House passed a bill
that would require legislative committees, including conference panels, to
meet in public. The bill is pending in the Senate.
·
Rep. Randall Gardner, R-Bowling Green, was frustrated .lhat doors
· remamed closed despite the earlier House vote.
•
"I am not opposed to the governor and people that are business leaders
and labor leaders and. key legislator~ meeting to try to work out
-differences," Gardner Silld.
' .
He objected to committees that meet in private to raise taxes, impose
regulations or conduct other business.
.
·
"I'm concerned about a budget committee ... sign on the door that says,
'Citizens and legislators stay out until we're done.' That's inappropriate,"
Gardner said.

Berry's World
~ha.n\lyqu far nat

multln,S ·

. Yet in SO!Jie areas. Clinton and
the allies have common ground.
They all have sickly economies and
they're all politically shaky.
''What we will have in Tokyo is
a meeting of the world's strongest
countries and perhaps lhe world's
weakest leaders,'' said Michael
Mandelbaum, a foreign policy
specialist at the nonprofit Council
on Foreign Relations.

Despite Clinton' s problems at secn:taryofslateforeronomlcand
hOIIIC, "In IIII!'!Y ways he _is in lhe b~ affairs. .
.
strongest pos1bon domesncally' of
''These countnes, wh1le they
any of lhe ~rs whom he ~be may no~ like certain things that we
meeting at the summit," do, umversally want to see the
Mandelbaum said.
United States play a leadership
The murky background f&lt;?r role,", Hormats. said'. ','The G-7
Clinton's debut in econom•c doesn t ~ork without. It &lt;and !he
summitry with the leaders of . global political system IS not gomg
BritaiD France, Germany, Canada. to work without it"
Japan ~d lilly leaves little !'OOm . Despi_te th~ dpub~s and _his ·
for major accomplishments. The m~xpenence 10 fomgn affair~.
uncerlainty is complicated by lhe Chnton..[IJs some cards up hJS
coll~se ofJapan's government .
slee-:e.
.. .
.
Clmton's advisers see lhe summ1t
Clinton can boast that he d1d
largely as an opPortunity·for him to what Ronald Reagan and George

disapprove of the way he's :
h~ndhng the ~co~omy. !tnd his :
disapp10val ratmg IS lhe highest of :
any president i~ t!Je po~t- 'Yorl_a •
w.- D era ata sunilar pomt m his t
·administration.
'
Cli!lton real!&gt;: ,acknowl~dg~s
q~sbons abo . h~ · !eadership.. I ~
think a lot of s IS JUSt a funcbon
of economic difficulties and new
players who don't ~ly kno_w each
other ~ghly y~t, he S81d. .
.:
Amencans officials are keepmg , ,
summit expectations lo.w.
. ' :f
"Annual .~:conom1c summllS !
usually don't bring big surprises," ,

commiunent thatlhe United SlateS
will remain a PIICific power.
To articulate his policies, Clinton
wiD make lhree major speeches: A
summit curtain-raiser Monday in
San Francisco, an address on trade
in Tokyo on Tpesday and a speech
on se~urity issues Saturday 'in
South Korea. · ·
.
"This summit -if it's about
anything at all, it's about American
leadership,'' said Robert Hormats,
vice chatrman of Goldman Sachs
International and a former assistant

leverage to press other countnes to
coordiilate their policies 10 increase
bade and produce new jobs.
. Also, the United Sta1Cs' economy
1s growing faster than that of any
summit nation possibly except
Canada. And only Japan ll'&amp;s a
lowec unemployment rate.
But those rankings have not
heipe(l Clinton much.
Even after the House and Senate
approved his $500-billion .deficitreduction package, polls show that
a · majority of Americans

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KY.

South-Central Oblo .
Monday, hot and humld-wltb
hazy sunshine. Hish in lhe mid90s. Soulhwest winds S to 15 mph.
Monday -niiJ!t, mostly clear. Low

""

5o, HoW'S
TlfaT BilL CLiNToN

I

· Weather

EDITORS NOTE: J'erence
Huat has covered the White
Houe in the Reagan, Bus.b and
Clinton administrations.

...

.

.-.... ,

'•

70 lO 15. Tuesday, partly lunnr,
continued hot and humid. High m
the mid-90s.
Wedae~day tlJroaall Friday: ·
A chance of thunclentOrtns each
day. Lows 65 to 15. Highs in the
mid 80s 10 mid 90s.

Thunderstorms may
provide some relief
drinking plenty ofliquids.
.
By The Associated Preu
The
rain
should
cool
things
down
Hot and humid weather will
continue over Ohio on Tuesday a little for awhile, the NWS Slid.
Tonight will be warm, muggy
with increasing chances of
and
generally clear. Lows will be
thunderstorms, forecasters said .
70-75.
Highs will be around 95, but with
The record-high temperature for
the high humidity will feel more
this dare at lhe "Columbus weather
like 105. .
The National Weather Service station. was 97 dearees in 1911
advised people -' especially the while the record low was 49 in
elderly - to be careful to avoid 1972. Sunset tonight will be at 9:04
heat stress or heat stroke by p.m. and sunrise Tuesday at 6:09
limiting suenuous activities"lllld a.m .

Thunderstorms rip through Ohio
Thunderstorms ripped through
In Gnaddenhutton, uees were
east-cenual Ohio on Sunday, ·uprooted, power lines were doWII(ld
claiming the life of a man in and lin office trailer was knocked
HOlmes County wbo was Struck by over, said a Tuscarawas County
lighbting, the sheriff's department · Sheriff's Department dispatche•r
said.
.
who declined to give her name.
No other information on the . No injuries were reported, she~
death was immediately available," 'said.
•
· "~
silid a dispatcher who declined to
Gnaddenhutton is about 16 miles
give her name.
south of Canton.

'J;"

Haitians must play roles well fo~ Democracy t~ work;
according to. Cedras, is to defend
An AP News Analysis
and develop the country. Army
By DAVID BEARD
critics say that would be a dramatic
Associated Press Writer
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (AP) change front . its . present
- Democracy can come to Haiti preoccupation with oppressing the
"if we all. play our roles," army poor, profiting from drugs and
commander Raoul Cedras declares. contraband and getting kickbacks
The fraterllal message - and his from stare-nm entelprises.
The role of politicians would be
acceptance with exiled President
Jean-Bertrand Aristide of a U.N. to inspire democracy-loving
peace plan - have so far failed to Haitians to peaceful participation,
mspire much confidence in a silch as the votes for a new
counuy that has lcnown ·nothing bU:l constitution in 1987 and president
discord since the popular Jl(esident 'in December 1990. Haiti also ·bas
was overthrown in a bloody 1991 seen "people power" turn into
lynch mobs that !tilled.members of
mililary eoup.
Traditional enemies, the people the dreaded Tonton Macoute
and the military, have little faith in militia after lhe faD of the Duvalier
each other. The U.N. document family dictatorship in 1986.
The failure qf Aristide and
providing
for
Aristide's
reinstatement Oct 30 must fly in a Cedras to meet face-to-face
country that has an old saying: throughout the U.N.-brokered talks
"Constitutions are made of paper, in New York last week wasn't a
good sign for lhe new spirit lhe two
bayonets are made of steel.''
The "role" of the military, profess. Neither were:

-Their opposlllon to an
international police force lhat could
offer some protection a~ainst
continued military repressiOn or
retaliatory attacks.
- . Stepped-up army intimidation'
over the past week of journalists,
foreigners and U.N. human rights
observers.. Freedoms of assembly
and expression remain restricted,
the U.N. observer force said in a
weekend slalement
-Continuation of de facto
curfews and police gunfire in the
pro-Aristide Cite Solei! slum in lhe
.capital, as well as explosions from
a !!Cries of small bombs throughoui
the capital dUring the daytime on
Thursday. .
-Ann-Aristide chan.ts by .about
200 people, mostly plaincldlhes._
soldiers, outside army headquarlers
when Cedras returned home
Saturday and met powerful Police
Chief Josel!h Michel Francois,

whose troops led the coup. Later
.lhat night, at about the· same time "'
Aristide was signing the document "·
in New York, a power blackout '':
plunged the enure capital into ·~·.
darkness for two hours.
'""
Even Cedras and one · of -•·'
Aristide's most popular supporters,'
lhe Rev. Gerard Jean-Juste, have ~ : '
expressed concern about violence '·"';
during the transition.
:S
"I won't sland for the army to be · ::
monkeyed wilh," Cedras said in A'~
his nationwide add~ess late ·:;"
Saturday that focused on a need for ' !
tolerance and peace.
·")
Jean-Juste, who ·says a '
nationwide "Let's Save Haiti" ";

media campaign is needed to :·.i ;
preach tolerance and constructive --· ·
thinking, adds: "But repression ' .
must cease. We cannot preach the "·:
message when the army represses "":
the people."
·
::.:
.

'"'"

•
.,. ..
..

..

IIIH

abonion - even among people on send to the president to build.
sessions are reserved for••!•
the same side.
But the legislative procesS is, in- skullduggery, like lhe. pay raise~·
Is this any way to run a railroad? fact, much more like a multi-party senators gave themselves a few·::;'
It may be the only way, u.nless labor negotiation, where none of years ago. But (rom Mitchell's ••
reformers can fmd a way not only the sides agrees exactly on what the standpoint, keeping the Senate late" ••
to change the House and Senate problem is, who should do what . actually prevented further·'·'
rules, but human nature as well. ·
pan of the work, or what the final alteration ·of a legislative program -~
An idealized vi.ew of Congress product should look like.
·
that his chamber had already"""
would have it confront a problem,
All too often, holding out until twisted far from what th.e president"" ''
.
, ;,
such as heallh care, much the way the last minute is rewarded with a requested.
concession.
So
everyone
holds
out.
Norm
Ornstein,
a
political:
~~
an architecture flllll would address
·
As
a
result,
House
and
Senate
scientist
pushing
for
congressional'~'
'
the task of building a skysCraper. It
leaders
often
find
lhe
only
way
reform,
said
the
congressional"'")
would assess the situation, divvy
up th!' work, and then put it all they can end a debate is through schedule should be made more 7
IDgether into a set of blueprints to exhaustion.
·
rational - · but not because he:x:&gt;
The House was the victim last doesn't think House and Senate:'""
week, but much more often it's lhe members should have to wort late. •""'
Senate, where the rules ~ive leaders · . ''It's not Just the late nights per ·
little leverage over mdividual - -te,-"- he sa1d. "Every politicl8n· ·: ,;
at a faShion show 'in Paris.
-'
senators.
wants to play the end game :'~'
In 1947, Larry. Doby signed a contract with lhe Cleveland Indians,
"In the Senate, no one knows Everybody negotiating plays ihe":"''
becoming the ArneriCI11 League's fii'St black player.
·
ho~ l~ng a bill will take,:• said end game. You delay and delay and ·
In 1948, Britain's ~ational Health Service Act, which provides gov- MaJOf!ty Leader George ~tchell, delay until the last possible ....:
ernment-financed medical and dental care, went into effect
_ D-Maine, who kept lhe Senate past moment when you think you're' •
' In 1975, the Cape Verde Islands officially became independent after 3 ~.m. recently to pa~s Presidenr going 10 have mWmum leverage." • .
500 years of Portoguese rule.
·
. ·
Clmton s defjcll-red\ICUon plan.
As a result, •'som~'!:fs Utat
'
In 1978, a Soviet Soyuz spacecraft touched down safely in Soviet . "When we got going;' : he absolutely should Jet
don't,-. ·
)Cazakhstan wilh its two-member crew, including the first Polish $pace recalled,
told any- ~ator. who and things that shouldn't get; :.~
uaveler, Major Miroslaw Hermaszewski.
as~ed .f!le• we·~ staymg unul we pe•'Cd, do,"
.
•
1 ..•::
In 1984, lhe U.S.Suprenie Court weakened the 70-year-old exclusion- firush.
.
. It's possible now, though, that a···
ary rule, deciding that evidence seized with defective court warrants could
Why not )USt come back lhe next public: worried about a weak •'"
be used against defendants in criminal trials.
·
. day and finish?_
·
ec~nomy, a huge national debt,-~
In 1991, a worldwide fmancial scandal erupted as regulators in eight
cnme and a host of unanswered ..:t.
countries shut down the Bank of Cfediland Commerce International.
"We would have had a whole needS, is expecti!JI more. ·
• ~;
Ten Y.~
Harry James, the swing-G'I blndleader and trumpet new raft of amendments that
Under preuure from advocates ,:
player, died m
Vegas, Nev., at age 67.
·
people would have had overnight of term ~Its, and with lhe bigest ' 1 ;
Five yean ago: Attom~y Gener.l Edwin Meese III announced he to pbll,'' Mitdlell explained.
·· . congress•onal freshman class in ,J ..:
would resign. saying he had been COII!{'lelely vindicated by an indepen·
Many in the public probably decades, there may be changes in
dent prosecutor's 14-month probe into his official conduct
suspect Congress' late-ni~ht liow the legislative ra1iroad is run.

Today in history_ _ _--:""':'~~------

•:1

?!';

' /

Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service
res_ponded to theae calls for
•SSJstaJW over !be weekend. .
Saturday:
7:39
p.m.,
Middleport, Norlh Fourlh, Ken
.Mohler, Veterans; 7:46 p.m. ·
Middleport, South Third, Frank
Sinith, Veterans.
.
Saaday: 11:36 a.m., Pomeror,
Scout Camp Road, Oold1e
Krac~omberger, St•• Joaepb
Hospital; 12:04 p.m. Middleport,
West Main, Charles Eskew,
Veterans; 12:18 p.m., Sara
McDowell, Veterans; 4:51 p.m.,
Chester Fire DepartiJielit, Route
248, uee fire, Baum LumJ?er
property; 5:54 p.m. RIICine, Route
331r, Clifford Hill, dead 01) arrival;
6:43 p.m., Syracuse, Third Street,
Patrick Snider, VeteranS: 8:44p.m.,
Middleport, C.incol!J Heights,
Willanf Boyer, Veterans; 10:32
p.m., Tuppers Plains, Coolville
Road, Charles Blake, Camden
Clark Hospital; 11:11 p.m. Racine,
Trouble Creek Road, Cyrstal
Sellers, Veterans.
Moada_y: 3:43 Lm. Middleport,
Beech Street, Nancy Swaltz,
treated bUt not tnuisported •

MicH.

IToltda Jw I

somelhing's wrong.''
:
. The main issues in Tokyo l!l'e •
leftovers from previous suJnmits: •· l
coordinating economic growth, ...,
opening markets for trade and :.::,..
supporting reform in Russia.
Assistance for Boris Yeltsin is high ,;,
on Clinton's ~enda.
~

~

By STEVEN KOMAROW
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - With a
backlog of bills and the July 4
recess ahead, the House pushed
deep into the night The next night,
it pushed again. By Wednesday,
the third night, its members were at
'each · others' throats, almost
literally.
Speaker Thomas S. Foley-had to
take to the floor to quell the
sh?uting matches and calm fmgerpomnng members unable to control
their emotions on the issue of

•

-

~~~g':~~~/'Zsia~~d~:e~ ~::~b~~!n~~~~ ~~~~ ;~~~lt~e~~aL~?~ds~~~:~ ·1

Late night work in Congress doesn't always work

I

The Dally SenUnel .Page

Ohio

Area
·deaths
R. Clifford Hill

· R: Clifford Hill, 78, of Racine,
· died Sunday, July 4, 1993 at his
home.
He was born 011 Sept 22, 1914 at
Letart Falls to the late Albert Hill
Sr. and Eliza (Millcr) Hill.
A retired farmer, he was active in
Several Masonic orders.
Also preceding him in dealb were
five brothen and two sisters.
Survivors include his wife,
Pauline (Thein) Hill, one 1011 (Max
Hill of Racine), feu grandehildrell,
one ~eat-1randchifd, one sister.
(MarJorie Roush of :Racine) and
follf brothers ·(Dallas, Harry and
.. John Hill, all of Racine, and Dale
Hill of Franklin, N.C.). '
The funeral. will be Wednesday at
1 p.m. at Ewing Funeral Home.
Burial will be at Letart Falls
Cemetery.
·
Friends may call the funeral
home Tuesday f'rom 7 to 9 p.m.

Goldie Mae Holman

BOAT PARADE- Several boats participated
In a boat parade held Saaday evnl•l I~

The situation at a South Carolina
radioactive waste dump that
accepts Ohio's nucleai ttash could
be an example of what's ahead for
Ohio as it chooses a site for its own
dump.
.
The Chem-Nuclear Systems Inc.
disposal site in Barnwell, S.C., is
scheduled to close by 1995, forcing .
Ohio to fmd anolher burial' place
for low-level radioactive waste
from 57 sites, including lhe Perry
nuclear power plant, the University ·
of Cincinnati and the Cleveland
Clinic.
Ohio is looking for a place where
its own waste and waste from
India'ha, Iowa, Wisconsin,
Minnesota and Missouri can be L
Those states are part or a
compact created by a 1980 federal
m.andale. The compact also
included Michigan, which
originally was to build the dump
for the slltes. Ohio became the
dump site in 1991 after Michigjlll
was ousted. from the group ~se
it hadn't decided where to pot the
dump.
.
· The federal law requires that ihe
. frrst dump in a multistale compact
be built in lhe state generating the
· most radioactive waste in the

group.

Memben of a commlulon
advilinglhe Ohio Legislature about
how to choose a aispoaal sile
vtsitcd Barnwell last week and
heard about ·radioactlve water
leaking into the ground and olher
pollution prohleniS.
The, panel also was told that
Chem'-Nuclear has been a sood
neighbor and has provided aleady,
well-payiJIII jobs.
"At certain times, I Wfl
encoura1ed. Then I would ace
things to discourage me," said
William Potvin, a radioloaical

Hospital news
VeterauMemorlal
SATlJRDAY ADMISSIONSBrian Hayes, Pomeroy: T!molhy
Knotts, Pomeroy.
.
SATURDAY DISCHARGE·
Viola Tllcker.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS _ Renee Rusitell, Racine: Kennelh
. Mohlct, Midd1eporL ..
SUNDAY 'OISCHARGBS •
Timothy Knous and William

Middleport for tile "Red, Wlllte a•d Boom"
celebratloa. Dlclr. R1pe WOil lor best decorated
aaiL
·

Farmers say climate harsh for to_bacco growers

tobacco.t'

government buildings, lhealers and
restaurants.
But nol many people are upset
about a threat to the $5 I billion-ayear IObacco indusuy, said antismoking activist Abron Leichtman.
"Smoking costs our nation more
than $100 billion annually in direct
heallh costs, work lost and early
deaths," said Leichunan, pesident
of Citizens Against Tobacco
Smolre.
He acknowledged that people .
who own small tobacco farms
shouldn't be conrused with.

Since a U.S. surgeon general's
report in 1964 linked lung cancer
a11d smoking, scores of medical
studies have said tobacco is a
health hazard and associated it with
iUnesses ranging from heart disease
to leukemia.
The percentage of Americans
who smoke droppe~ from 40
~ent. in 1964 to about 26 ~~
m 1991, then rose slil!htly last year.
This year's U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency report
classifying secondhand tobacco
smoke as harmful resulted in
smpldng bans in offJCCS, factories,

y. fanners are caught
between a rock and a hard place,"
he said. The government pay
tobicco farmers not to grow lheir
product. he said.
Ripley houses the Ohio Tobacco
Museum and is lhe heart of Ohio's
tobacco counuy. Brown County
sells about 7 million pounds of
tobacco a year at about $1.80 a
pound. That makes tobacco the
most im!l0fi8Dt crop in lhe county.
In Indiana, i:onsumers bought 12
millio. n pounds at an average of
about S 1.80 a .pound at the

RIPLEY, Ohio {AI') - · Inereiaed
anti-smoking efforts are causing
tobacco fanners in the tri-state area
surrol!nding Ibis soulhw~st Ohio
community to worry about !heir
livelihoods.
·
"It seems like we're 4etting
attacked from all sides, ' said
Henry West, a fourth-generation
~rower in Pai.nt Lick, Ky.'
'Sometimes, it seems a little·
discouraging. ,; I don·~ thtnk
people stop and consider · the
economic effect of. destroying

Goldie Mae Holman, 67, of
RIICine, died Monday, July 5, 1993
I
at Parkview Nursing Home· ,
She wiS ldn ·on Oct. 24, 1926 in
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) Ripley, W.Va. to the. ~ Cbarles Geraldine Richilrdson remembers
Snyder and Alma (Hemzman) vividly the day a frightened
Snyder.
youngster at the school where she
She was a member of Mt. Moriah teaches eighth grade dropped a gun
Church of God.
f'rom under his coat
• Also preceding her in dealb were
The SIICramento, Calif., leBCher
one sister and one brother.
had been standing on a school
Survivors include her husband, balcony when she heard a
Earl Holman: one dau~hter (Rela commotion. She saw the child
physicist and one of 13 members o~ · Travis of Jackson, M1Ch.), lhree " break and run from an assistant
a commission preparing .a nuclear sons (Roger Lee · Holman of principal. She saw the weapon fall
waste dump site-selection plan for . Rutiand, WiJlijllll Earl Holman of to the ground.
Ohio.
.
.
' Atlanta, Ga. and Joseph W.
"I didn '•t even think;" said
"ThiS is not a technical problem. Holman of Columbus), 14 Richardson, a delegate to the
It's a social and political problem. grandchildren, four great- National Education Association
A lot of states have tried and none grandchildren, four sisters (Lucille Convention San Francisco. "I
Lawson of Racine, Jane Teaford of just grabbed him and I talked to
of them are sited ,yet,'' he said.
Potvin said lhe odds lire against Pomeroy, Evelyn Manuel of Letart hiin." ·
Ohio.'going through the process Falls and Francis Rowe of
No one was injurejl. and the boy
Pomeroy) and one brother (Harry told Ricbardson he hild brought the
quickly ancl'smoothly.
Carolyn Monk of Sylvania, eo- (Pete) Snyder of Delaware, Ohio.
gun to school for protection from
The funeral will be Wcdnesday at olher students who had threatened
chairman of the statewide
environmental group Don''t Waste 3 p.m. at Ewing Funeral Home. him. He was frightened, she said.
Burial will be at Letart Falls . Some teachers say that becauSe
Ohio,llid lhe doesn't think there's
anyplace in Ohio where it would be CemeterY.
.
of a growing number of such
Friends may call the funeral incidents in the nation's schools,
·safe to store the waste. "Low
home Tuesday from 2 to 4 p.m. and they fear for the safety of !heir
·level-waste sounds innocent, built
from 7 to 9 p.m.
contains dlngerous materials," she
students, their colleagues and
said.
.
themselves.
Deborah Vivalo, executive Brian E. Wolfe
"I worry about it because we're
director of the Council for
all in this together,'' said Josephine
Brian E. Wolfe, 20, of Racine, Smith, an elementary school
Responsible Waste Solutions, a
died
on Sunday, July 4, 1993 at his tescher from IberviUe Plirish, La. .
Columbus-based OIJanizadon that
represmts lhe state's 57 poclucers home.
A farmer who attended the
of such waste, said the material
which would be dumped has a very Syracuse Mission , he was born on
April 14, I 973 in Gallipolis to
loW radiation risk.
"It's not hilh-levcl wasle and to Blaine Rigas and Barbara Reinhllrt,
call it anytltina elae il unfair," she who survive.
Preceding him in death were his
said. ''It can be safely. managed
MILWAUKEE (AP)- An Ohio
stepfather, Paul Lewis Sr .. and
and controlled.'~
Chem-Nuclear uses a disposal g~an_dparents Raymond and man who said he was lhe -lock
in a group of teen-age witches has
method 11 Barnwell called shlllow· V~r&amp;~D~B Wolfe.
land burial. .
Other survivor• include three been charged in Milwaukee County
The wute is aealed in 10-foot- :sillm (Cjndy Bwke, Linda Lewis with sexually assauldng three girls.
As many as six girls, some of
hiBh concrete containers which :and Allee Lewis, all of Racine),
have walla' about 12 inches thick. two brothers (Paul Lewil Jr. and lhem runaways, might have been
Dozens of the containers are ;Jerry Lewis, both of Racine), two victims of the 35-year-old man,
said Detectives Howard Sobczyk
slicked inside concrete vaults at
and
Patricia Kraus.
,
at
1
lhe bottom of clay trenches which
The
man,
whOle
hometown
was
are IOPPOd by layera of clay, aand p.m. at EwinJ Funeral Horne. The
and a"p'lutic liner to cover .the top · Rev. Mike · Thompson will not avail~ble, · also is accused .of
of the buried vau1L . .
officiate. Burial will be at Letart persuading a IS-year-old girl to
]:aJla
Cemetery.
steal $40,000 from her mother to
Doborah Lon, a mmber of lhe
Friends may call ·the funeral ·finance a cult As her reward, she
Ohio Green• envirollmental poop
who accompanied. commiulon home Wodneaday from 610 9 p.m. was selected ''high ~riestess," a
criminal complaint aard.
membera on the trip.llid abe's sdl1
skelltica1 aboal the plan.
.
The others were =~~ed roles
auch 11 prostitute or · -5obezyk"l knOw tho llilfilstry feels . iald.
c:onlidont." MI. Lon llllid.
• 'There were candles, seances,
alto know that dllnp happen that
rituals," Sob.czyk said. "They
they 'CIII'l predict or eoni!Ol''
would have to be naked and have
A Syracuse man died .Sunday sex witll him in order to get
eve~ of an apparent aelf· involved with lhe magic,"
· Kleker
inOi
IJIIJJihot WOIIId, tho Meigs Tbo man, formerly of
S-0-9-2-9-9
County Sheriff'• Department Milwaukee, was charged Friday
(five, ~.nine, ·two, nine, nine)
with tine COUDIS of IIOCOIKI-degree
Plc:k 3 Numben
~ E. Wolfe, 20, died at sexual assault of a child, two
6-2-6
approximately 6:52 p.m. The body counts of sexual intm:ourse with a
(s~. two, six)
wil ~ 10 Ewlna Funeral child age 16 or older, and one ·
Plc:k 4 N11111llera
,
Hl)lne. Sheriff' a de~ and' tho count of thoft.
S-6-8·3
county coroner ln¥ilaliaatod the
The chArpa c.-ry r penalty of 41
(five. aix, eigh!. tine)
aceno.
1/l years in prison.
. ·

industry~~·~Admit

Madison market in 1991, lhe latest
year for which statistics are
available.
Tobacco is Kentucky's largest
cash crop and puts Sl billion into
the commonwealth's CCOIIOIIIy.
Nationwide, one IICre of tobacco
genmres 560,000 in taxe11.
Third-generation farmer Benny
Garland of Vevay, Ind., traveled to
l!ldianapolis on June 14 to help
fight an additional 18-cent-a-paek
slate tax 011 cigarettes.
"Tobacco fanners are a diffe~a~t
breed of people," he said. "My
mama used to say, 'You have to
. take lhe cards dealt you in life and
play lhe game.' But it's not fair
when someone holds all the aces
and trump cards.''
·
The indusuy is doing well and
cutting costs by importing more
foreign tobacco and exporting more
c~. Officials say.
'The tobacco companies have to
s~ buying more American leaf,"
said Ken~ucky state ReP,. Pete
Worthington, D-Ewing. • If lhey
.don't, we'll all go down the tubes
together. t •

.

Teachers worried about violence

c

.Soutft Carolina site example
·or what Ohio may race

Kennedy.

3

EMS responds
to 12 calls
•
. •

OHIO Weather

!

I' ll

By Tbe Associated PreSs
Today is Monday, July 5, the 186th day of 1993. There are 179 days
left in the year.
.
Today's Highlight in History:
.
. On July 5; 1935, President Flllnldin D. Roosevelt s~ed into law the
. National Labor Relations Act, which provided for a Nanonal Labor Relations Board and authorized labor to organize for the purpose of collective
bargaining. ·
··
On this date:
In' 1801, American naval hero David G. Farragut was born in
Knoxville, Tenil.
In 1810, showman Phineas T. Barnum was born in Bethel, Conn.
In 1811, Venezuela became .the first South American country to
declare independence from Spa!n.
In 1830,1he French occupied lhe North African city of Algiers.
In -1865, Willian1 Booth founded the Salvation Army in London. .
ln 1940, durin~ World War II, diplomatic relations were broken
between Britain and the Vichy government in France.
In 1946, the bikini swimsuit, ~igned by Louis Reard made its debut

Pom~--Middleport,

-"=•

in

The rising incidence of school
violence prompted Education
Secretary Richard Riley to
announce last month that the
Clinton administration would ask
Congress to approve a $175 million
grant program to help school
districts buy metal detectors, hire
security guards and train students
in the art of conflict resolution.
Under ·lhe administration's plan,
some school districts with a histOry
of violence could receive up to $3
million each over two years.
·A survey by the Bureau of
Justice Statisti,cs in 1991 showed
that about 3 million incidents of
theft or violence occurred on or
near school grounds every day.
The survey showed that 20
percent of students carried a
weapon on a regular basis and 6
percent of hiJh school seniors were
tluJ:atei!Cj! With a weapon 11 school.
Eight percent of public school
leBChers were physically threalened
by students and 2 percent were
actually attack!ld. it found.
Last Friday, seven sixth-graders
in Columbus, Ga., were sentenced
to 48 hours of community service
and placed on indefinite JXi,bation
after school officials uncovered
thei,r plan to 'pOison their leBCher' s

Man ·charged with
assaulting girls in ritual
The man' was not identified
because two of lhe alleged victims
are his daughters.
.
Assistant District Attorney Jorge
Gomez issue lhe complaint, which
said the man began the sexual
rituals in 1990.
The man '*hes blact magic and
persuaded lhe girls to submil to his
sexual advances to learn his
secrets, Sobczyk said.

n~ =~Thursday

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA ,..,,
446 4~,Z4

'
(USPS 21J.tft)
·

Pllblllllod '"''' - . . .•• MoodoJ llwoqb
Friday, Ill Cowl St., Po._y, Olllo by die
OIUo Vlolloy PllblloiWis Co-y.Mu-

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The Daily Sentinel

t0017.

Shooting death
' B".i1 reported
_Lottery numbers

,,

iced tea and trip her down some
slairs becanse lhey thought she was
too suict. They also brought a .
handgim and a lmife to school.
The issue of violence is so
prominent in the minds of leBChers
that three resolutions calling for
stronger measures to combat it
were introduced at the NEA
convention.
:'It'.~ al~ays in the _back C?f '!JY
mind, said Jerry S..Cobb, a Jun•or .
high school social studies teacher
from Ferriday, La. "You worry
that the kids might dislike the
tescher and do something violent.
You never know . what might
happen."
"It turns the whole school upside ·
down," said Richardson of
SacmmentD.
Teachers say acts of violence in
th~ community also affect the
.aunosphere of the classroom.
"I had one student who was in a
foul mood, and I found out lhat a
drive-by shooting had occurred at
the house next door to hers and lhe
bullets went into her bedroom,"
said Bill Renton, a middle school
English and language aris leaeher
frorg..San Antonio, Texas.
-.A(ichardson said she talks to her
pupils about how to avoid .violence
and how to control their own
tempers.
"I Uy in my little way in my
classroom to educate the kids about
this," she said. "I uy to talk to
them ~bout ·human beings, abOut
life.''

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�•

•

,•

Sports

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•,

Monday, July 5, 1993

rhe Daily Sentinel
.

'

Drysd~ledead at 56

'

'ml::::

We haven't played very ~ood."
Tom Brownilll (6-3) piu:bed just
W!'ll enough to .win his second
slrlight start. He wasn't nearly as
effective as in his last win- 7 '113
shulout innings - but his luck was
pretty sood. The Pirates j&gt;arely
missed a couple of game-breaking
doubles _ they were a foot or so
foul - and _wound up stranding
five runners in the first three
innings.
·
·
•'We had a Jot of chances, • •
Leyland said "We couldn't get tile .
big hit, and then we couldn' t lteep
them in the ballpark."
Browning has complained about
manaJer Davey Johnson limiting
his mnings. There was no
complaint when Johnson relieved

him after. six .innings on a 90depee lfternoorl.
"I was down in the tunnel and
Davey said, 'That's it,' "
Browning said. ','1 was probably
runnin2 a lillie low on fuel at that
poinl'Y
.
Jerry Spradlin pitched the las!
three innings, giving up a sacrifice ,
fly ~ Lorlnie Smith in the ninlh, to
sethisflfSisavc.
In other games, Atlanta edged
Florida 4-3, Philadelphia topped
San Diego 8-4, San Francisco 6cat
New York 10-8 , Los Angeles
~created Montreal I -0 in · 11
mnmgs, HOUSIOII stopped Sl Louis
9-4 and Colorado beat Chicago 3-1.
. Braftl 4, MarliDS J
·
Deion Sanders was dancins off

third base, tr-ying to draw Matt
Turner's a~~cnuon.
Sanders got more than a look
from the rooltie pitcher. He got a
ballt call.in the ninth inninJ Sunday
that gave the Atlanta Braves a 4-3
victory over the Florida Marlins.
"I thinlt it was a reoible caliiO
end a game lilte that," Turner said.
"I Slepped off on my ICft fOOl He
said I broke my shoulder toward
the plate. I don't ltn.ow if·he was
too hot and tired behind the plate
and wanted to get the game over
with."
.
The balk was called by plate
111!1pirc Ed Rapuano.
Crew chief Harry Wendelstedt,
speaking for the umpires, said,
(See NL on Page 5)

stiU hasn'l It;s been a rough week
with Campy dyi_ng and now
Drysdale. But Don wouldn't want
us to mourn over him, he'd want us
to goon."
.
Ironically, Drysdale died in a city
where he once played as 1 minor
leaguer and later besan his bi~J­
Farner.
·
"I thinlt be was a lillie bit above Ieaguc broadcasting career. Th1s
a competillll'," John·ROICboro said season Wa5 his sixth as a member
Sqnday. "He was Jdnd of a wairior pf the Dodgers broadcast telllll.
"We played bcre, he was my
out there, a fighter. He went out to
destroy you any way he could. And r~mmate, I took him unde! my
when he.was in the lineup, we had wmg,'' Dodsers mana1cr Tom ·
another good bat.
· Lasorda recalled Sunday.
That was in I9Sfwben Drysdale,
"I don't think too many people
liked to hit against him. If at age 19, played for the Montreal
· .
somebody ltnoclted down one of Royals, a Dodgers farm club.
"On the field, he was as mean as
our players, Drysdale wOiild try to
get two-'for-one, at least. He was a · a snake," Lasorda said. "Off the
very nice guy off the field, but field, he was as nice a guy as you'd
when he put that uniform on and want to mecl"
Known as a fierce competitor
got on the mound, he was all
with
a sidearm delivery that made
business.
"He · kept the hitter a, little him particularly tough on right-intimidated at all times. I thinlt the handed hillerS, Drysdale was 209· intimidation factor helped malte 166 with a 2.95 ERA in 14 seasons
him a sreat _Pitcher• definitely. It with the Dodgers from 1956-69. He
was lilte pUlling teeth to bat against was elected to baseball's Hall of
Fame in 1984. ·
him!'
Older fans certainly remember
Roseboro·could hardl;t believe
some
of the sreat confrontations
his former batiCrymate eli¢, just a
between
Drysdale and Hall of
week after Hall of Fame catcher
hitters
such as Hanlt Aaron;
Fame
Ror Campanella passed away.
·
Willie
Mays,
Franlt Robinson and
• It. s been a bad w~lt·,"
'
Willie
McCovcy.
' Roseboro said. "I saw Don at
•
IT'S MINE! - America's Pete Sampru basks In the (llow of
Drysdale !lolds the major league
Campy's· funeral on Wednesday.
DRYS~ALE DEAD - D0!1 (Tbe B1a D) Dryadlle, lllowll at . .
wianiog his first Wimbledon title Sunday after beliting Jim Courier
Here he is, 6-foot-6, in his loud record for career hit batsmen Baseball Hall of Fame-lndadiOI Ia 1914, '11'11 fonnd dead It 1111
7-6 (7-J), 7-6 (8-6), 3-6, 6-J Ia tbe rtrst aU-Amerlcaa mea's final
154.
clothes, as happy as ever." ,
home Saturday. Drysdale, wllose pltcblaa prowCIII put the Lui
siace 1984. (AP)
Perhaps Drysdale's most
News of Drysdale's death of an
Angeles Dodgers among the Natloaal Lelpe's elite In the 19601 Md
apparent heart attack in his impressive achievement was a
him into the record booki ror CtiiiRc:atlve scoreless lnnlnp pllcbed
Montreal hotel room on Saturday string of 58 shutout inninss in
for almost 30 ye~s, was 56. (AP)
· · .
· was a shock to a lot of people. 1968, a major league rcco{d that
After all, he appeared lhe picture of lasted 20 years until broken by
(ContinucdfromPI!Be4)
perfect health at age S6, and there current Dodgers pitcher Ore!
,
were no outward indications of any Hershiser, I
. Dodam 1, Expoe o
Drysdale
set
his
record
J·ust
a brcalt the bands and step off the
problems.
'fwo
~g. errors bY shortstop
before abruptly retiring at age rubber, it's a baiL"
' . By STEVE WILSTEIN
American man to win WimbiCdo!l . Sandy Koufax, who !CB1Dcd with yMilte
Lansmg
and a paned bill by
33 during the 1969 season. He quit
"Once the hands come IOgethel,
WIMBLEDON, England (AP)- since Connors in 1974 1 lost eight Drysdale to maltc up one of the because
Tim Laltcr enabled Los Anaeles 10
of
a
sore
arm.
you
can
only
throw
home
or
to
a
Even Princess Diana bounced on points on serve in the first set, best-ever 1-2 starung pitchins
In addition to his wife, Ann base," he said "You see this sort ·score in the 11th in~!:,f, a1ainst
punches in big-league history,
the edge of her seat, clapping IDCiuding ·the tiebreaker.
•
Me- a Hall of F8111C' baslmball of ba11t every now and then. It's not Montreal at Olympic S um.
wildly for Pete Sampras as he
Courier craclted a service winner found out about Drysdale's death pl!iy';;' at UCLA, Drysdale is . uilusuil."
.
. . Cory Snyder singled witlt one oat
scorched the sun-baited coun with for a 6-5 lead and set point in the while waiCbing the DodJCB•Expos survived by sons. Don Jr. and
Sanders went 3-for-3, including a against Jeff Shaw (l-!1) and
aces and dived acrobatically for liebrealter, with Sampras to serve. game on television m nearby Darren, and daughter Drew as well leadoff triple in the bottom of the Lansing threw away consecutive
Sampras nearly blew the set with a Anaheim, where he appeared at a as a daughter, Kelly, from a ninth. A pair of intentional wallts grounders,.loadins the bases. With
-voUeys.
"Maybe she has a crush on me," tentative forehand volley that card show over the weeltend
Eric Davis at the plate, Lalter let a
"At first, I didn't want to belitve previo~JS marriage. Drysdale died loaded the bases with one out
Sampras 'joked ai"ICr capturing his drifted to the baseline for a winner.
on Kelly's 34th birthday.
•
As Turner (l-2) was preparins to ~~~ from Jeff F~scro get_past
first Wimbledon championship
Sampras took that opportunity to it," KoufaJt told reporters Sunday.
Funeral
services
were
pending.
malte
his first pitch to Ron Oant. he
Sunday;7-6 (7-3), 7-6 (8-6)1 3-6, 6., go ahesd 7-6 in the tiebrealter with ·"It's taken a 'while to set in and it
Dodgers starter Tom Candiotti
seemed to start, then stop his
3, asamst ~im Courier. .
a service winner, then closed it out
gave
up only two hits in seven
motion. Sanders, whO 'was lrylllg tQ
. Sampras, branded PUblic Enemy with a running forehand crosseoun
innings.
He struck 0111 six; wallted
rattle Turner, trotted home with the
No. l earlier in the tournament for . that Courier got to easily but .;
none
and
did not allow a runner
winnins run.
·
.
past
frrst
base.
Expos staner Chris
an O!ltburst at hostile fans after be' netted.
:
"When he went to his windup, I
beat a Brit, won the crowd's
·courier got his fust brealt point
Nabholz
gave
up
five hits in eight
was trying to do just that,'' Sanders
respect with his quiet grace under against Sa,mpras in the second
innings.
He
struck
out six a11d
said.
pressure in the all-American fmal.
game of the third set, passing him
·
While Turner disputed the . wallted none.
He also dispelled doubts about with a backhand after a double
Aatios !1, Cardinals 4
the
same
group
of
pros
he
decision,
both
managers
said
they
By TERRY KINNEY
who is No. I in men's tennis, fault at deuce. Sampras then
Eddie Taubensee homered twice
MASON, Ohio (AP)- Now that eschewed wh,ile ·winning the 1976 saw something odd out on the · in a game for the fust time in bis
winning the . sport's ' .. most su_ffer~ h~s frrst break of service
Open·and the 1979 Madrid mound.
.
prestigious title, earning $450,000, w1th hts f1fth double fault of tile Simon Hobday, a former cattle German
career as Houston asain heat St.
Open.
"I
guess
it
was
a
ballt,"
Florida's
farnter and car saiCS11)811 in Zambia,
and widening the points gap in the milCh.
.
· "To be able to beat Lee Trevino Rene Lachemann said. • 'From Louis at the Astrodome.
computer ranltings over No . 2 , But Sampras slapped one winner has won .his first American golf and whoever else is playing is what I saw here (TV replays), it . Drabek (7-8) .save up eight hits
.
off a runnms forehand by Courier · tourname~t, he's Jdcldng, himself marvelous,'' Hobday said. "I've looked like he moved his legs."
Couher..
in his sixth complete game of the
Tw&lt;i weeks ago, Samrras .that licked the net cord and tricldcd for not trymg the U.S. tour 25 yi:ars , got bragging rights f&lt;?r all .wcCit.
"It looked lilte he moved a linle season, one more than the entire
ago.
worried he might have to pul out over.' .
staff had ~~ear. He
"When I, was younger and my They won't want to be m the loclter · bit," Atlanta's Bobby Cox said. Houston
before his fustmau:h because of an
Sampras served two aces in his
suuclt
out
nine and w
none. ·
room when I set in there, because "He was in trouble though, facing
inflamed tendon in his right next $BD'e and one to take it to 3-3, time came to come over here and I'm going to abuse them · Ronnie Gant with the bases
Taubensee hit a two-run homer
-shoulder. He suffered _pain on and winnmg .both .games at love. But play - I was playing in Europe o(f Rene Arocha (6·3). in the
loaded."
off ever since, but triuners nursed Courier held service and broke him I chicltened out,'' said Hobday, unbelievably."
Hobday's win was a popular one.
Milte Stanton (4-2) pitched one second inning and his fifth borne
him through the tournament with again with a baclthand pass to go who .shot a S-under-par 66 SUllday
"I'm surprised he hasn't won inning for the victory. Marlins . run of the season, a solo drive in
'
pills, massage, ice and all manner ahead S-3. Courier then served out 10 wm the $850,000 Kroger Senior
rooltie Rob Natal got his fustlhree thefuurlh. ·
. " · G'I
b e fore thIS,
of high-tech treatment
the set at love, ending it with his Classic:
sa1d 1 bert, the hits in the majors, and homered off
.Rockies J, Cubs 1
He had stayed in Europe because · defending champion, who had John Smoltz.
And when it came down to the seventh ace.
Parrett
made the most of a
Jeff
PbiUies B, Plldres 4
final, Sampras showed no sign of _ . Sampras opened and closed the he didn't see any future in playing seven birdies and shared the lead
rare start, pitching Colorado past
weakness.
f1rst game of the fourth set with ·against the likes of Jack Nicltlaus until he bogeyed No. 16, missing a ·
Lenny Dykstra had three hits, Chicago at Mile High SU\dium.
and
Tom
Watson
week
al"ter
weclt.
2-fooiCr.for par.
three runs and two RB!s and Ben
Sampras served 22 aces, with ·a aces. Through the fust five games
Parrett (3-2) took a one-hit
"Over the years I thoufhl. 'Hang
"He's a character. That's the Rivets won his fifth suaight start, shutout into the seventh inning but
peale speed of 123 mph, and faced of that set, neither player lost more
on, you made a mistake. So when thing about the Senior Tour. We're
only two break points the entire than tWo points on'Servc.
not a bunch of clones. We all have . leadin~ Philadelphia past visiting left with two outs al"ter a pair of
maiCh, losing both in the third set
Then, after Courier punched a the Senior Tour came up again, I fun " ·
singles scored a run. Darren
·
San Otego.
against the savage, baseline forehand just wide across the coun, didn't even hesitate. I was here lilte
Hobdav said he would ·call .home
Riv~.ra (9-?) allow~ s~ hits and Holmes g01 his sixth save.
pummeling of Courier. .
Sampras moved inside the baseline a shot. I just plain chicltcned out to Pretoria, South Africa, to let his
Parrett struclt out five and wallted
thr~ runs .m seven IDDIDgs. He
In seven matches, including to pounce on a second serve and the fust time.''
one
in tlie longest outing of his
family Jtnow thai he had on _ • , struck out SIX and walltcd four..
Payday.
career.
,
victories over former champions put pressure on Courier, who then
final!
w
Dykstra
led
off
the
game
w•th
a
Hobda)l has won more than $1 ·
Boris Becker and Andre Agassi, mishit a forehand long to malte it
y.
single off Tim Worrell (0·2) and
Andres
Gatarraga
went
2-for-4
S110pras served l08 .aces- eight 15-40. Courier saved one break million smcc 1991, when he joined
raising
his
league-leading
averag~
scored
on
Milt
Thompson's
triple.
"No one will believe me when I . Dykstra added a two-run single in to .402. He doubled and scored the
more than he served when he won point, but lost the next when the Senior Tour. In rerrospect, even
his only other Grand Slam Iitle, the Sampras drove a deep forehand the thought of facing the re~lars phone them," he said. "They'll the second inning and doubled to first run in the fourth on Charlie
thinlt I'm lyins."
U.S. Open, in 1990 at the age of that Courier could only bounce on the PGA Tour is less dauntmg.
Hayes' single off Milte Morp1 (5start a three-run rally in the six\h.
"After you'd played witli them a
Then he was set to celebrate his
19.
back 10 the net from 15 feet behind
9).
Giants 10, Mets 8
few times in Europe ... lltnew they fmt Win, especially al"ter blowins
Darren
Lewis hit a two-run single
·Sampras kept one of the best the baseline.
returners in the game on 'the
Sampras wliacked his 22nd ace to were good, but they weren't miles so many chances. Hobday figures
--Sports briefs-that
broke
an eighth-inning tie.
he choked in at leasl 10
defensive on Centre Coun, where take a 40-love lead in the next ahead,'' Hobday said.
Mark
Carreon
and
Mike
Soccer
Hobday won the Zambian. tournaments in 1991, six last year• Benjamin hit home runs for the
the temperature soared to 105 game, and two points later held to Amateur
GU~YAQ~. Ec:uador (AP) five successive times, had and already four this year.
Giants, and Royce Clayton had Gabnel Baustuta sscored his
degrees.
5-3.
·"I've snatched defeat from the
"The difference was Pete serve4
There was one more moment of two wins on the European tour
four hits. Lewis' sinl!le off Mike second goal with 16 minutes left as
a lot biggu on his second serve," tension when Courier won the fust between 1969 and 1986 and four jaws of victory hundreds of times,''
Maddux (0-6) made 11 9-7. Mike Argentina beat Mexico 2-1 on
Courier said, "and I wasn't able 10 point on Sampras' final service victories on the South African lOur. Hobday said. ·~1 led two weeks ago
Jackson (S-2) was the winner and Sunday for its second straiglit Iitle
"The biggest check I ever won at Minneapolis going into the final
handle i~ as well as he was able to game. Both players were at the net, was
Rod Beck got his 24th save.
in the America Cup. .
.
$8,000 in the old days,'' round and I never holed a putt
handle my second serve.
when Sampras finally yielded on a
outside two feet.
went by me
It was the first all-American diving forehand half-voUey into the Hobday said.
Sunday's win was worth lilte a herd of tunics.'
tqen's final since John McEnroe net.
Hobday suspected he had blown
heat Jimmy Connors in 1984, and
Sampras closed out the match at $127,500. He finished the 54 holes
· the f~ between Americans on the 40-30 with a backhand volley in 11-under 202, one stroke better another one Saturday when he
Fourth of July since Connors beat crosscourt that Courier chased than defending champion Gibby double-bogeyed the par-4 No.3.
"I thousht. 'Here we go again.
McEnroe in 1982.
down only to bock ioto the net Gilbert, Bob Reith and Milte Hill.
At 52, Hobday relishes beating You ~ot on the leader board, now
Sampras, at 21 the youngest with his backhand.
it's ume to ~et off it,"' Hobday
·said.
"It's bite leprosy to be up
o__,;_(C_on--tin_ued_fro_m_Pas;::_e_:4)_.....,...._ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
there.''
Baltimore's (inal ~0 batters at Dawson singled in front of Mo closer SICVc Farr 10 taltc the lead.
Big Bend Health and Fitness proudly
Dem\is Eckersley got his 18th
Hobday said he wasn't bothered
Comiskey Park.
- Vaushn' s 12th home run of the
save
in
relief
of
Shawn
Hillegas
(3by the mu~gy, 9S-degree weather
Raines' triple off Ben McDonald season.
announces the expansion cif our weight con6).
.
or soft fa1rways on the Grizzly
(4-_8) .scored Ozzie Guillen, an,d
~oyals 3, Blue ,Jaysl
Wade Boggs hit his second Course at the Jaclt Nicldaus Splirts
trol classes to a full service •. year round,
Raines came home on Joey Cora s · George Brett's 6S2ild career
squeeze bunt, giving Rod Bolton double and a combirled seven-billet homer as a Yankee, a three-run Center, which remained soggy
weight control program.
(1-4) his fust major league victory. by Chris Haney. (S-1) and three shot, and Rickey Henderson and Sunday following four straight
Dave Henderson hit their lOth days of drenching rains.
'
•
Roberto Hernandez pitched the relievers carried Kansas City.
He was in a three-way tie with
ninth for his 15th save.
Brett's double in the fourth off homers of the season for the A's.
We are happy to announce the addition of
Cal Riplten's lOth homer,in the Todd Stottlemyre (5-6) moved him
Gilben and Reith as be. walltcd up
an experienced weight control counaelor,first accounted for Baltunore s run. past Honus Wagner and into fifth --Sports briefs- No. 18. He sank a 25-foot birdie
putt "that looked liltc a mile.. to
R~ Sox 6, Mar~:De~ 0
place on the career list. It also
wanda Serey, to our staff.
Auto raclna
·
Roo~•e Paul q~trlll pttched a started a two-run ·rally as Gary .
DAYTONA
BEACfl,
Fla. (AP) take the lead, then sweated out the
two•hltter for hts ftrst btg league Gaetti doubled Brett home and ~ Dale Earnhardt held off SICrling finish as Reith try to .force a
shutOU! . and ·~omplete gam~ ~ scored on preg Gagne's single.
.
'
For appointment or more information call:
Marlin and Ken Schrader in a playoff.
Reith had dropped out of the lead
ou~~~:uebng no-~uc~~e_nger Chns
_J err Mo~tgontery pitched the dfamatic final lap at Daytona
Bos10 and leadins v111Ung Boston moth for hts league-leading 25th International Speedway to win when he bogeyed No. 14, driving
992·3967
to its fourth strwght victory and save.
·
alonsside a gully and having to
Saturday's PepSi 400. . ·
Taking Appointments July 6
llth in 12 games.
.
Athletics 7, Yaakeet 6
off his shoes and socks to
Earnhardt's Chevrolet Lumina take
, Quantrill (4-5) allowed only a
Rickey Henderson's sacrifiCe fly crossed the finish line about two wade inlli ankle-deep water to play
. .
smgle by Jay Buhner and a double capped a five-run rally in the eighth car lengths ahead of Marlin's Ford his second shot.
·
by Mac.lte~ Sasser, both in t~e inning.
Thunderbird for his S7th career · He had 1 chance to retaltc the
second mmng. He struck out SIX
New York led 6-2 entering the victory and fourth of the season. lead on No. 18 but had 10 stand on
and wallted three.
eighth, but the A's got five suaight Earnhardt leads Dale Jarrett by 2S I rocks edging a 1a1tc 10 hit his third
87 Mill St.
Middleport, Ohio
Bosio (2-4) held the Red Sox singles off Bobby Munoz (2·1) · points in the overall standing• at shot, which rolled to the back of
Mlck _Davenport - Owner
· hitless until the seventh, when followed by a bases-loaded walk the halfway point of the 30-race the ~. and left his birdie puU a
Mike Greenwell and Andre and two sacrifice flies i _gai_nst season,
footiO the left.

By JOHN NADEL ..
LOS ANGELES· (AP) - . The
man \Vho caught most of Don
Drysdale's pitches for the Brooldyn
and Los Angeles Dodgers believes
intimidation h~ malte the man
known as the ' Big D" a Hall of

Four-homer ·offense helps-R-eds record 7-2 victory over Pirates
CINcrJfJiJ:E(AP)KAy
·Pirates, either. Theit pitcbinJ staff -Toliver.
- PiiChers has wilted in the last week.
"Wagner was rolling rigbt along,
sweating in the heal ~ails flying
The Pinlies have given up at least and then he just got some balls
over th~ f~nee. ~he ':-ineinnati five runs in each of their last eight up," Oliver said. "Hal's homer
Reds w_m rul a~IID wnh another games, the main mason they've lost g~ve ~ some breathing roOm. and
Flori~ve ~·
~thatoftheir last se';,en. The only win !lUn&amp;S Just sort of elicited in.
·
'
. '
$pllll was 1"' 9 over the Reds
, " It's nice to 1iit some home runs.
10
The Red_s' offense hasn~t ~n on Fri~y nighl
It lakes the pressure orr your
thiS gQOCI Since !hey sWtcd playmg
Theu pitchers have spent the piiChing Staff. And it ta1tcs a lot of
for real. They hit follr more homers weekend. throwing batting practice. wind OQt of the other team
Sunday in a 7-2 victory over the Inthefirstfourgamesoftheii .five- knowing it has to score a lot of
beleaguered Pittsburgh Pirates, game series that concludes today, runs."
•
giving them nine homers mthe last the Reds have a two-homer, a
That's become a daily -burden for
~!~s~ spnn
' g training," Hal , gt~:.-homer and a four -homer · the Pirates.
·
"It wears on anybody, sure,''
' Morris said. "Everyone is hitting.
Barry Larkin, Hal Morris, Joe manager Jim Leyland said. "Last
This team definitely can score runs Oliver and Reggie Sanders sent wcCit, we had a good combination
in a h~rrdoesny
· W,e hav~ spec~. and bsallds intTho"fhfic outhrtfield stands going. This weelt.it's not a good
po;u, t,
t ·surpnse ~c. h
~nl : · e( us)t ee were off cOmbination - not a whole Jot' of
oesn t rea 11Y surprue "t e
u
agncr 3-5 • the last offFred hitting, not a whole lot of pitchins.

·· Pomeroy--Middleport, Ohio .

Hall of Famer Don

Monday, July
5, 1993
. Pag1
4

In NL action,

'

!., •• '

.

,.

Sanipras ca·p tures
Wimbledon crown

.
RUNDOWN TIME come~ for Calirorala's
Luis Poloaia (right), who Is chased back to lint
base by Clevelaad secoad baseman Carlos

ti;'~ !bird. innln(l or ~nnday;s pme aplnst the
VISIIinl Pittsburgh Pirates, who reo 7-2. _(AP).

GOOD POKE, BARRY! -,-Cincinnati third
coacb Bobby Valentine (left) c011gratulates
Barry Larltin after the latter's two-nm homer In
b~

lnAL affairs,

ScorciJoai. (I
'· ·4 14; 1

Su"day'socores

.;..[. ~ Rasebal!r-~ ;-

Minne~CU

NATIONAL LEAGUE
T-

21
34
31
40
43
...
55

.659
.575

7

.573
.Sl2

.532
,494
,371

52 .350
Saturday's scores

ca~om~o ................:za

Today's cames

17
21.5

a.EVI!U.Nil (Abbocl 0-1 '"d Cult

3·3) a1 Oakland (Downt 2-2 and
C1o1. YCQII1 1.()), ~:OS p.m.
Chic110 (Alnra 7-4) al Toronto
(Hal- 11-2), HS p.m.
BoloDnoro (V.-.ct• 3-7) "Konlu
Cily (A~9-4), &amp;,]5 p.m.
. Oebvit (Wd.b 9·1) It Minn~ (Er·
icUon 4-9~ I~ pm.
·
New Yolk (Kamimiecki 1-2)" Seattle
(Jalwan 10-4), 10~ p.m.
·

7
10.5
10.5
135
23

23

San Dicto 6, Ploiladclphio 4
New YOlk 6, SUI Francilco 3

(W. . . . . 4-13),1~p.m.
BIJiimore (Moyer 4-3)
(Ganm« 4-l), I :!S p.m.

Sunday's s&lt;ores
A...... 4, Florida 3
Lo1 An&amp;elel l,M&lt;»ual 0 (II inn.)
San francil.ro 10, Ne- Y art 8
CINONNA117, Plu.buoah 2
9, S&lt;. Laui14
Colondo 3, Ooil:IJIO I
Ploilad&lt;lphill, San Diet• 4

Tuaday'spmes
San Fn.nciloo (Hickcrsm l - 1) at Mon·
.,.., (lloaa&gt;Jidd 2-4).
p.m.
.... An&amp;elel (Aiucio (&gt;4) " Philadel·
phi• (S&lt;hillinll-4), H5 pm.
San Diqo (Broeail 2-3) New Yoci.
(Good"' 7-1). HO ~m.

,,Js

•t

CINONNA 11 (Rijo 6.-4) at C!Uca&amp;o
(Gwm"' H),I 'OS p.m. ·
Pi.tuburah (Cook• 5-4} at Houaton .
(HamiM:h 7-5), B:M p.m.
.
Allanta (Olavine 10·3) at St. Louis
(Tewklbury 9-6), U5 p.m.
Florid• (Houah 4-1) at Colon do
(lt.eyrK*I5...4), 9:05p.m.
.
.

New Ycd ..............~ 36

.561

a.........................4t

39

.513

6

CU!VELANIL .... 38 43
Milwa\lkee .........., .. Jl -46

.469
.&lt;411

9.5
13..5

2
3-'
4-'

B-9.0U..,06
&amp;.nil Chy 3, TendO 2

-6,SoouloS

C1I!VJIUND5,Colilamia 3

LAND, 20; Palmer, Texu, 11; 0 .
Vauctm. Milwaaker., II; Carter, Toronto

...

National League leaden

RUNS : Dykstra , Philadelphia, 76;
Bmcil, San Fnnciaoo, 60; Kruk, Philadd·
phio, 59: BiJiio. """"""· 54: Doul1011,

l&gt;hiloddphio, 54: Joy Bell. Pl"'""'&amp;h· 52:

Cclanan, New Yc:d, 52
RBJ : MtU Williaml, San Franciaeo.
64; Doul.... ""''•delphi•. 62; O.lom&amp;•.
. Colorado. 61; Boodl, s..n Fr~DCiJco, 60;.
Gftce, CIUcaJO, 56: lncavi&amp;Jio. Pllilodd·
pbio, 53: Piuu, Loo Anada, 52: Boa·
wdl, llowt.CD, 52.
HITS , Kelly, CINCINNATI, 102;
Otlunl•· Co\ondo, 101; Jefferies, St .
Louil, 100; t..otin; CINCINNATI, 100;
BaJwell, Houlon, 97; Grace, Chicaao.
97: Bulk&lt;, Lol A!,&gt;Jelel, 96.
DOUBLES: BachetlC, Colondo, lS;
Gr•ee. Chie~ao, 14; Dybtn, Philadcl·

phia, 24: G.wnp, Colonclo. 23: Gilkey,
~l t..uio, 22: C«dao, MonbOOJ, 21: Bia·
HOUlton, 21; Kruk, Philadelphia, 21;

po,

Bond&amp;, SUI Franciac:o, 21 ; Owynn, San
Di•o.21.
TRIPLES : CtnUla, Co1o.rtdo, I;
Mo,ondini. 'Philodclploia. 6: D. IAwil. San
Franciaco. 6; CoWman, New YO!:k. 6: E.
YOU!'Io Colorado, S; Ma.rtin, Pil_QbutJh.

f••

" ' Bonilla, New Yarlr:, 11; McGriff, San
Dieao. 11; Juaice. Ad.uU. 17; GMt. At""'"· 17: s-, OU...o. 16.
'
STOLEN BASES: Colemtn, New
Yolk, 36; D. Lowil, San FnM'iloo.- 29;
Cur, Fl&lt;&gt;rido, 21: ll&lt;oba1o, CINCINNATI.
2A; Dc.Shioldt, Monucal, 23; E. Dav~.
Loo~.23: E.

YOUDJ.Colondo,Z2:

9·1, .900, 1.99: Balk... Stn·l'nac:U"'· 12-l. .157, 3.10: A~, A~ 9-2,
.Ill, 2.71: T. Onoonc, PloiJodolo&gt;hio 9·2.
1011,

3
3

3.5

4.1'

. 6.$1

.Ill, 3.34; Okvioo, Allulo, 1~3,'.769.
2.69: Rivon, PhUod•lploio. 9·3, .750,
4.03; llanmood, Plariolo, lo-4.,714, 3,71.
STaiKI!OOTS' Smollo, Atloolo. 112:
llijo, CINCINNATI, 106; B••· San
l&gt;icoo. !I'J; 0 . - . . A....... 97; lbr·
nioclo, lloillton, 93: T. Ch-,l'bilodd·

pllioo.l9: Cuodiaai,Lol ....... 17.
SAVES' Leo Smillo, Sl. Loaia.lS: My•· 0oJaao. :IS: Bodo. S.. P....a-, 24:
Hat'Yef, Floridt, 2A; Mitch Willi&amp;mt,
PbiWiel~, 23; !canton, Atlanta, 21 ;

w~-.···

'

STOLEN BASES' Cunio. c.Jif...U.,
34; Lol\oa, CI.EVI!LAND, 33: R, Henclenon. Oololmd. :U; R. ........,, r ......_
26: L. lohnaon, Chic:aao, 24; Polonia
c.Jifomio, 23: While, T..-o, 19.
'
PITCIUNG (9 decirioaa): HenlJ.cn

BATfiNG:"n..un;aa,.Col011do, .402;

Men:ed, Pitttburp, .364; Bonds, San
F,..cioco, .349: 1W&lt;. Pbilodelphio, .345:
Jefl'cnc:., SL LoW, .334: Gnce; .Chlcaao.
.331: McGee, Son Foancioco, lll.

...

_notoiE' RUNS' Flcldor, Deotoi• 22:
GDll'ey lo, Sooalo, 21: T-.lloaoio.
11; Oon:a'" Tau, ». Belle. CLEVE-

'

·
·pbio,
22.· ,.. l.opio, 22: Dib.... l'llilodel.
l'ffCIIINO (9 - ): ltilo, lloul·

We.teraiMwiiiDn

Teu• 11, Dctroil 5
Mi.lwa\*:ee 3, ~ 1
Ooldon4 S, Nc• Yml&lt;4

w-.r-

n l.wu City

HOME Jt.UNS: Matt WilUtma, San
, , Francilco. 21: Bon4k, San
cit co, 21;

GB

a-.

em.,

20.

5: Finloy, u......, 5.

AMERICAN LEAGUE

SaturdaY's soores

. ~OVBLES : Olcnt~, Toronto; 34;
While, T..-, 2A: M. V•ulhn.
11;
TorOillD, 21; Pah.er, Tau
20; Odffcy Jr, Suulo, 2fr. And..... u~:
dmore. 20; Dcwnnu, ibhimcn.
TRIPIJ!S : Hu.ln, Tu.u, 7; Lolt011,
CU!VI!IAND, 7; Coyl•. Dotooio. 7: L.
Jolullon, Chica&amp;o,}; _M cRae, Kana&amp;~
IllY, ,, , _ CUM!L\NI) S· Con

lond (Wddo 6-6). 1M5 p.m.
Bonon (Darwin 7-7) at Caliromia
(Mnlcy 9-6), l&lt;kOl p.m.

,,40

.436

Loftoc, CLEVELAND, 9S; Bae~a•:
CU!VI!U.Nil. 95: Clrilrey lr, Saule, 95:
R.. Alcmar, TOCOBIO. 94.

New York (Abbott S-7 ) n Setttlc

Today's cames

Minnc:IGU •••."..........34 44

r....,., 101; Mcho,ltanlu Cioy, 91:

(llonoon ~. 10~J&gt;m.
CLEVELAND (K.nmer 3·2) at Oak·

St. Louis (O.bome 6-l) at H~uton
(Swindell6-7). 1:35 p.m.
PillllNl'Jh (NeoaJe 2-3) "CINCIN,
~ATI (Belcl&gt;" 6-5), 2~ pm.
San Francisco (Bwkccl 12-l) It Mm.... !(ludine&gt;' 1·2). 7,35 pm.
Lot Anacle• (Henhiu:r 6-7) at
PhiJadelphU (Gnome 9-2), 7,35 p.m.
San Dieao (Whitehurst 2·5) at New
v.m (Sdu&gt;ud&lt; H), p.m.
Florida (Annatrona S"-9) at Atlanta
(A"tll 9·2), 7:40p.m.
ChiC:IJO (Harkey S·2) at Colorado
(Blair 3-S), 9:05p.m.
•

Chica1o....:........... Al · 33 ..519
KonouCity ......... .Al 31 .519
c.ur..,;, ............... 38 41 .411
Tu:• .....................31 41 . .481
S..ulo .....................39 43 ,476
OUiond .................35 41 .461

kce, 63; C1r1cr, Toronto, 63; Baera•

aJNEI.AND, 62.
•
urrs, 01onoo1. TCiftlltO, 112: Molil«

ChiCIJO (McDowell 12-5) at Tormlo
(s......, 3 ·3), 7:35p.m.
.,.:
Detroit (Doben.y 7-4) •~ncJ0\1
(B..U 5·5),1~ pm .
·
Texu (Lci.brtndt 7-4) at Milwaukee

Monuul 6, LoiAnp 4
Ho.lMn 6, SL Louia 0
Colondo 5, OUclao 4

66: Olenad, Tama.10, 6S; Bdk,

aJNEI.AND, 6S; G. Vaup, Mil••u-

Tuesday's&amp;ames

AdiJIUI II, Flmda 2

Doaoi&lt; ...................... 37 .543
Bahim&lt;n ..........c....43 31 .S!l

LI'RRil\,

Boston (Sele 1-0) 11 Cdi!omia
(Sprinact0-3), IO:OS p.m.

CJNCINNATI 5, Pltu""'&amp;h 3

EukroDt.W.
Ta111
W L PtL
Toronto ................ ..48 34 .SIS

RUNS , Motiuw,T...-..65:~~.

TQroato, 64: R. Alomar, Toroa.to, 59;
Lotloa. CLI!VI!lAND, S7: Fuolder, Detroit, S6; BaeraaoCLEVELAND, 55;
Ol&lt;nd. r ........ Sl; Orift"ey /r, S..tole,
SI;Pilmoioo,T...,,SI.
,..~1' Pioldc, Douol• 72: Tculeton,

Taus (Bohanan 3·1) at Mll•aukee
(Minoda 0-1 ).l.~ ~=

WeAemDiwllbl
San Francilco ....... ~ 28 .6S9

Atlanta ...................47 35
HOUI\Cin .........- ...••.42 37
............ ...........42 37
CINCINNATI ........41 42
... oqo ..............!l 51

~. a.JlVELAND, \319; Wh,ilaier,
Dell.a, .319: Hupu, Mi
Ola,31!1.

6, Seallla 0
KaMa City 31Tcnmo 1
OaklaM 7, Niw Yado 6
· c.Jif...U. 7, Cl.EVEUoND 6 (II inn.)

.531 105
14
15.5

.417
.469
.450
.304

O'Neill, N.., Yado, .326; llamillon, Milwa\\koc, .315.: Gouala:, Tcua, .322;

-

W. LPct.GI

~ ,,. , ,. ,., ,34

BAmNo, Ot...d, T01011to, .401:

4, Mil,rautcc l

au...,3.Bol0m... l

EollonDt-

Sct..uil ............... -"6
,.......~.......... ,,,.,43
Cloicaao ................. 31
PU!oboqh .............. !!
Florido ...................36
New YcD ..............24

·Amerbn Leqise'Jeaden

Teuol,Odooil6

•

Toronto, 11·2, .146, 3.02; Key, Ne.,;
Yaol:, 10-2. .133. l.33: ~ c.lifor·
IDI, 9-2. .111,'2.10; Widcnwt, New Ycd.,
1-2, .100, 4.31: W'!", DoooU• 9-3•.7SO,
3.21: SUicliffe, Bollim..._ 1-3 7'11 4 96·
R. ,...._ s..u~e, 10-4..714: :ul: • •
STIUKEOliTS: R. loluuon, s.,ulc.
157; Lanpton, C11ifomia 107· Peru:
New Yod: , 100; Htnaon.' .sutlte, 99~

qemena, Boaton, 91; Appiet, K•n•••
C1t1, 9S; Cone, ltu111 Cily 95· Key
NRYCII!r:,9S.
' '
'
SAVES: MOII.tpmc:r)', Kansaa City
2:l: a-, llollim&lt;ilo. 23: Aauil&lt;n. ~
23; D. Wud. Ton111to, 22: Fur,
New Yook, II; lluuell. -....II· Eck·
mloy, Ookl ..d. II.
'

- • Transactions • B-baU

.

A-Lape

BALTIMORE ORJOU!S ' Rcc•Ued
Paul c.n:,. outllddor fr&lt;m m
tbe lntemat.ion.t u.P.. Sent Aalhany

Tcllord, ~c,10 RochCIIW,
CALII'ORNIA ANGELS, Pb&lt;od Kd·

ly Orubet, infidda, on th&amp; JS· d•y dis·
abW lilt. ActivaiOd Dmtioo Eaalcy in·
field«,- .... 15-do 4iAblod lilt. ' •

SEATTLE W.il'INERS : Plo•e4

I?••ya• H_,.,. oa lite 1 S· day dWblcd

lilt. Pwdwod llle .....,., m Bnd Hoi·
.....
- · from Colpty o{ .... Paoilie
Couol.e.po.

NllllouiLooaoo
CINCINNATI REDS ' Pl•ocd John

~;"piocbc&lt;, ..,

ihO ll·doy dinbled

MC!NTRI!AL EXPOS, Plo.... Kon
llill, '"""'"'' an lbc 15-day dloobW lilt.
..._.., 1-. 26. Aodvlted r -1
pilcMr, foan llle 15_..,y oliPblod

:J:."•

-· . . . , . .,

PHILADEIPHlA PIDLLIES, .Piocod

=.d~
w•. R...u.IJ.. Mill-in·

fielder, &amp;ora Scruion-Wilk•·Barn of
the ••..,etionall.eape. Acd.v.... W•

Ch"Dbedata, "'tlfWiilr. fnlllllhl: 15-UJ
dialblld Ha. Pmprtd Jtll Ma.&amp;o, ial'i~Y~r.forn rip

Sl\N lliBOOPADRESOT...W . _

M.. oa, piic:b'\1 to 1M Plllladllpllia
-/orTim
.........
SAN PltANCIICO GIANTS; l'looool

--G(. . . .

hlf---.--)~~
liiL
a...u.t Jim Koliee•n u.IIWr

a.oitt_:

.

Baerga In the first iDIIIDg or Suaday Dllht's
game in Anaheim, Calif~ where the Aagels won
7-6 Ia 11 inninp. (AP)

.

Hobday claims Kroger
Senior Classic title·

.

An_gels top Tribe in 11 frames
to end India~s' winning streak
ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) - The has come out of six games with a
Cleveland Indians. ~fused to run lead. The California bullpen has
out of outs. Ultimately, though,. bJo,wn . five of the save
they ran out of relief piu:hers.
opportunities.
Cleveland's eight-game winning
Butcher was recalled from ·the
strealt - its loosest since winning Padfic Coast League club on June
10 straight in 1986 ~came to an 25 and was malting his fourtl\
end when Matt Young walked IPJ&gt;earaDCC·
_
· Torey Lovui1o on five pitches with
'Butcher was outstanding, • •
the bases loaded in the 11th innins Angels manager Buck Rodgers
Sunday nightiO give the California said. "We've been looltins for a
Aligels a 7-6 victory.
· short man, and he might heil"
Indians manager Mike Hargrove
!n other. ga!lleS Sunday,
said Young was his only option.
Mimnesota slipped past Milwaukee
"I didn't even coosider anybody .. 4-'3, Texas outscored Detroit 8-6
else," Hargrove sam· • "Eric Plunlt c hicaso beat Ballimore 3-1 •,
had piu:hed 1\VO days in a row. I Boston blanlted Seanlc 6-0 Kansas
couldn't bum out the bullpen.
Cioty swept Toronto 3'-1 and
The Indians play a doubleheader Oakland rallied past New Yark 7-6.
· at Oaldand today, forcing Hargrove
TwillS 4, Bftwers 3
to lake his chances with Young (1Dave Winfield, baseball's oldest
6), who found trouble immediately ev·~day ,Player at 41, is not ready
afiCr Ulldng over at the start of the tOJ.OI. n h1s, contemporaries on the
lith,
·
0 I' -lliDCrS tour.
"You can't walk him in that
Wmfield hit a ~run homer to
situation.-I couldn't afford to even give Minnesota the lead and robbed
!fY 10 be fme," Young said. "I was Robin Yount of an extra-base hit
JUSt trymg 10 throw the ball down ~ ith a ~-saving, leaping caiCh in
themiddlcwithgoodstuff."
. r1ght f1eld ~)lnday, leading the
Polonia began the inning with an Twins lb a 4-3 victory over the
infield single and took second on ll&lt;lllwaukee BrewCIS.
Chad Curtis' sacrifice bunt.
Winfield became the oldest
Intending to pitch around Tim position player in basebali when
Salmon, Young inslead hit him on 4·S·year-old catcher Carlton Fisk
the ankle with his fli'St pitch. Stan was released by the Chicago While
Javier followed with a single to Sox on June 28. Only Nolan Ryan
load the bases.
of Texas, 46, and Charlie Hough of
Lovullo then drew his wallt to Florida. 4S, are older.
end the Angels six-game losing
"Regardless of his age, 1 always
strealt. .
. lilted the way he's hustled" said
The An~els appeared to be Milwaukee manager Phil G1111er
winners a Iuiie earlier, holdlns a 6- . who is 44. "I've played againsi
3 lead entering the ninth behind ace him in the National Leasuc and
Marie Langston.
'Watched him now for a couple of
"We ballled our butts off 10 ltecp :yws. He plays the game the way
the slrcalt going," Hargrove said. ~ supposed to be played. I've
"It just didn't happen."
1never seen him loaf."
The Indians went after Langston
in the ninth.
·
Winfield, ~ his 21~1 big-league
On his · first pitch, Carlos season, continued h1s climb up
Martinez singled. On his second baseball's career lists. His ·homer
piiCh, Glenallen Hill sinsJed
off J~ie Navaro (S-5) was No.
Steve Frey replaced Langston. 442, tying D~ve Kingman for 19th
On Frey's first pitch, Alnro P!&amp;cc. and h1s first three-hit P!"e
Espinoza singled to make it 6-4. SIOCC May 17 gave him 2,931 m his
Ensuin~J singles by Felix Fermin
and Julltor Ortiz made it 6-6.
'·'The_way· we're playing now,
c.very ume we talte the field we
feel we '11 give our best . . . 'said
Fermin, the light-hitting shortstop
who drove in three runs. "The
eight-game strealc is already in the
past. We 'II try to win and start
another strcalc. •• ..
After Frey: liad managed 10 end
the ninth without further damage,
Mike Butcher ·(1-0) kept the
lndiads quiet for two Innings.
Suitt 112
. BuiCher.'s worlt migl\1 have been
the most signifiCIIIt event for the
Ancels on 1 nilht their bnllpen
aga·m betrayea ~ston. In
314!675~ 1244
addition to his 9-2
' Langston .

career, moving

him into a lie with
Jake Becldey for 23rd place.
.
• "He's incredible," Milwaqlcee'S"
Darryl Hamilton said. "The guy's
oyer ~ :md he's out there jumping,
di vmg.
Brian Harper drove in
MiPnesota's other two runs with a
sacrifice fly and a single, and EddiC
GWJrt!aOO J!Uidc it stand up 10 post
hts fust big-league win in five
starts since his contract was
purchased from Class AA
Nashville on June 8.
Guardado (1-2) allowed two runs
and six hits, including Greg
Vaughn's 18th homer, in seven
innings. Rick Aguilera escaped a
jam in the eighth and allowed a nin
in the ninth - his first in 1S
appearances - to earn his 23rd
save.
Rangers 8, Tigers 6
Julio Franco homered and
singled to drive in three runs as .
Texas built an 8-31ead and held on
Roser Pavlilt (4-4) allowed ~
runs In 6 1(3 innings. Tom Henlte
allowed three runs. in the ninth
before striking out pinch-hitter
Olad Kreuter with the bases loaded
to end the game •
Mark Leiter (6·5) gave up five
runs.
·
White Sox J, Orioles 1
Tim Raines' sixth-inning triple
droye home the go-ahead tun and
Ch1cago' s pitchers retired
(See AL on Page .5)

,·, ,

·r

.

'

Opening July 6th

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

*NEW*

111 SecaH St., .P011eroy
YOUR INDEPENDENt
AGENIS SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1161

.

John· A. Wade; M.D.

Big Bend Health and Fitness

Valier Drive
Pt. Pleasant, WV.
for "'PP'· or lnfor•atlon

''

Weight C-ontrol c·enter

AL contests ..

INSUUNCE

I
','

Ther

-Co•plete Medlcai/Surglml Care
For Ear, Nose &amp; Tliroat

Call

.NL action •..

I
'I

,,

i
'

'-

�--

By The Bend
.
Independence Day celebration captured

·-

Monday, July 5, 1993

Pomeroy-Midd leport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

--------------------------~~-------r--~--------~~

•The Area's ·Number 1
Marketplace

. Monday, July 5, 1993.

,

RATES
Words Rate, Over 15 Words
15
• $ 4.00
s .20

Days
1
3 .
6

an ad.

To place

J..

MoN. thru FRI. 8A.M.-5P.M. - SAT.B-12
CLOSED SUNDAY
POLICIES
• AcU outlide tbe couty JOur ad nuu ••• .. prepaid
• ReellliYe dilteouai lor ad. paid ia adYaDCe.
• Fno Ado: Ci..away ucl Fouad ada uooHr 15 ..,,. willt..
ru.a 3 clay• at DO d.arp.
.
• Price ol ad for aD capitallou.nla daulo price of ad eoot
• 7 poiol'liao typo ooly uood
• S.o&amp;;ael il DOt ..,poDOil&gt;lo lor ono,. ol,..llrot.day (....k ·
for error. rll'al clay ad I'Wt
Call WoN 2:06 , ••.
day ofoer publlcalioa 10 .,Uo ......,....
• Ad. that ...... be paid ia -.~.,a.c.
Card of
Happy Ado
Ia M-orlaa
Yard Soleo
• A cluaifood ado~l plooed b. lloo Gollipolio Doily
Tribuao (ucepl Clauif'oed Dioplay, BuoiA- Card or~
Nollceo) will oloo oppoar 1D lloo Polat Plouut a.p... ucl
... Doily S..liaol, ....loi..
18,000 - -

FIRST·PLACE FLOAT· The Cub. Scout
Motto, wlllcll !Deludes tbe words ''tor .God and
country" provided tbe perfect tbeme tor tbe Cub

Scout Pack 241'1 flnt·place llolt In tbe Raclae
Fourth or July parade.

. '

446-Gallpolla
3674vHn
388-VIato.
245-lllo Groacle

.....: '

GET RES1JLTS • J'Mn

882- Naw

· 2- I• M-wy
3- AODOUC...all
4- Ci- - y
:&gt;- Boppy Ado
6- Lo.1 ud Fowod

a •.,.

895-Letooi
937-RaJrolo

Auclioa

9- Wulld 10

Fro• Fouadatlon

Buy

Public Notice
PUBUC NOTICE
Racine Village 1DU
Budget may. be viewed at
tho M!!Yoi'o OHica, dally,
, from i :OO A.M. unlll 1:00
P.M. beginning July I and
through the 12th, axcepUng
Saturday and Sunday. Tho
public hurlng on the
Budget will ba held at tho
Council Chambero July 12
at7:00 P.M.
Carolyn L. Powell, Clork
(7) 5, 1tc

Public Notice
PUBUC NOTICE
On June .s; 19113, at
. approxlmltely 6:00 A.M.,
the M/V A.A . V•lll
accidentally dlechll'ged an
unknown quanllly of
numbor 2 dlealll fuel at mile
poot237.5 ollhe Ohio Rlvor.
tho affected areao Include
mile 237.5 to mila 242.5 of
the Ohio River. Campbell
Tra~oportatl.on .Comp1ny,

Call 614·992· 6637
St. Rt. 7
c•es•ire,.~H.

Public Notice
Inc. lo the owner of Ute MIV
A.A. Veolal, which lo tha
dulgnaled oource of tha
oplll purouanl 1o II!• Oil
Pollution Act of 111110.
Claim• 1rlolng out of lhla
oplll may be oubmlttad to
C1mp_bell Trano.,-tlon
Company, Inc., P. 0. Box
12c, Ch•rlorol, Pa. 1so22,
Attn.: Don Grimm ·or by
Cllling Campbell Tra....
portation company •t 14121
483· 6556 from 1:00 AM to
4:30 PM, Monday throug~
F•:c:-Y·,-;,; any raaaon
Campbell Tra...,.-tlon
Company, Inc. Ialli 1o act on
your claim within 110 daya,
then you may aubmlt It lo:
Unllad Slatu Cout Guard
National Pollution Fund•
C.nlllr, 420D Wlloon Blvd.,
Sulle 1000, Arlington, VA
22203-1804.
(71 5, 6, 7, 8, II, 12, 13, 14,
15,.16, 11, 20, 21, 22, 23, 28,
27, 2a, 211, 30; (I) 2; 3, 4,
,s, 6, 8, 10, 11, 12, 13, 3otc

l .:SHRUB &amp; fREE

CARPENTER SERVIQ

j:::~":=on~
•1!11 Plumbing

~ftntrlca I

'""""'

GREEN-UP
RECLAMATION

9

-lnlaPralolnrti&amp;~Exterior

I:

SERVICE

. TRIM and

D·:I/Ct

\ · : REMOVAL
1 i •LIGHT HAULIN~ ·
• ·
•FIR. EWOOD
.
!.
BILl SLACK

· (FREE TIMATESI
V ( YOUNG Ill
• 99~ 2_ .,
6,.. 15
Pomeroy; Ohio
,
-.-----9-·1..
0·;.;92...;.
·tfn...,ti

992·2269
·

,!(,.

!LirkfHw Work

c..;I'Jl!l(

Sy•.f,

Ill'•

Dt1V1'\'.;,r· 1 .
1111,:

HI IIIII ',Ill •,

i·

S\'• rfrtriJ ,Q,. Llrr, h rrq

It I 'I. Ht

!I)!

JV._d

Phone Evening•

COLLINS
ENTERPRISES
I•P11inti1no Services
Interior &amp; Exterior
Paint Mobile Hon1esl
and Aluminum Siding
IU•Power Washing
flEE ESTIMATES
50734 Bigley
Rtl.
Botto11, Oh. 45743 I

985·4181

614·985·337 3

i

. ,

USED RAILROAD TIES
~=;:::;::::::;:$~
·
'·
12·30.92-Iflt j, ,_..............._.....,=il
·.--· . . _ ..
11
R&amp;C EIClYAnNG
LAWN
..-......_H""o""w'"'l_R_D_...-.,..1~1
BULLDOZING
RACINE ·
Mlddl.port,
PONDS
MOWER CLINIC
EXCAVATING .
·SEPTICc:USTEMS .
PomeroJ, Raclae,
WAlKER AllEY
: BULLDOZER, BACKHOE
LAND
AAING
Rutland, Masoa
Parts and Sefvke
Md TRACKHOE WORK
WATER &amp;SEWER
Mowers • Chain Saws
:
AVAILABLE.
. ·"LINES
Areas
SEPTIC SYSTEMS1
Weedeaters
.~SEMENTS&amp;
·
HOME SITES and
Au11\orlzed: Brlggo &amp;
CALL 992·6123
f HOMESJTES
TRAILER SITES,
Str,lton MTD, Ryan, · • IMUUNG: Limeatone,
Reasonable Rates
LANDCLEARING,
· J.D.C. Repair Center
Dirt, Gravlll and Coal
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
PICKUP and DEUVERY
LICENSED and BONDED
Dependable
LIMESTONE-TRUCKING
Hours 96- M-F 9-3 Sat.
PH.
614-992-5591
Service
FR u E~n MAt Es.
Cloaed Sunday
.
12-5-tfn
9 92
949·2104 .
. .. • .. ... _ .. -~~1 ~o. • I'------4.;;;12;;;;6/l;..::f::.:ln
J&amp;L IN$ULATION
•DOZERS
WICK'S HAULING
Free Estimates
LIMESTONE,
Replacement
•BACKHO~
SERVICE
GUYEL &amp; COAL
t.
Windows
•TRACK LOADER
36970 Ball Run Road
Reason a• I•
VInyl Siding
· ·T~UCKING
Pomeroy, Ohio
Rooting
Rates
Call
us tor
GRAVEl. SAND,
D. A. BOSTON
JOE N. SAYRE
Special
Prices on
LIMESTONE, TOP SOIL
Siding
and
Window.
SAYRE
.
TRUCKING
EXCAVAnNG
&amp; FILL DIRT
1

1

383 8

HAULING

.

1

Read

•

the
£1asslfteds!
VISIT CUT SHORT - Altho.&amp;b aa early afternoon
thuaderstorm raUed to dampeD tbe aplrlts of thole eelebnt1D1 tbe
Fourth or July Ia Radue,lt did cut sbort tbe villi of Grant Medk:al
Center's LlfeFiigbt bellcopter. (Seutlnel photo by Jim Freemaa)
LITTLE
Thoene, dauahter
· Nancy and Dale Thoene,
Pomeror, and a m.e mber or
tbe twlrlmg group Ruffles and
Flourishes, proudly parades
- dowa Second Avenue during
. tbe Middleport Fourth ot July
parade oo Sunday evening.

Real Estate. General.

I

Your foundation·

Dli've Diles Park on Sunday evening. Several
hundred people attended the festivities. The
group Is pictured here as iUeads the crowd In
sln(llng "My Country Tis ot Thee."

.

Could your family manage lo
about Nationwide's allot cUM
Iii. inturance that's designed 1o
pay olf your mortgage and/01'
olher outslanding locins in lhe
- . t ol )'OUr death.
•

OFFICE: 992~2259
Possible building ait!l8· 1.9+ acre on Success Rd.
nice laying ground TPC water available $8,500 1 .5
acre lot l~ated at Riggs Crest nice location with TPC
water ava1lable $7,501)
·
Texaa Rd. - 23 acre farm wRh two story frame home
3·4 bedrooms; B.G. heat, TPC water plus wei some
fenced land moSI pasture and tillable, Includes barn,
sheds, lru~ trees. $75,000
•
Rutalnd One floor frame home on secondary street
w~h little traffic. includes 2 bedrooma, bath, garage,
garden area and fruit trees. $19,900
.

Jeff Warner·
113W.2nd

Pomeroy, Oh. 45769
992·5479
1-800-742-3aea . . NA110NWIDE

\

.
PENNEY BENNETT MARCHES American Leaton ,_., Btlllltll 1'1111 No. 121,
Middleport, ltlld the p•ade tlaroup tbe ltreell

J

•

OWNER: JeH Wlcbnham
5/10/93

,.

or Middleport on Sunda7 tTtalni durlaa the
annual FOIII'OI of July celebniiOD.

I(JINIU~t_!

3-4-93· 1- mo . .

Racln• Cozy homi 1989 sectional "like .new" 24 X
40 with 3 bedrooma, 2 full baths, ·appliances, bar-&amp;
many cabinets in kitchen, electric heat pump with
central air, nidi lot of 72 X72. ASKING $35,500

.

Country Setting- Modern home! It's all you'd ever
want! 3 bedroom conter!llorary, 2 baths, .aun porch,
fireplace , applianci!B, decking, swimming/fishing
pond, 60+ &lt;acres with nice cabin tucked beneath the
trees in the woods, plus storage shed. Must seal
$98,000
COME ON IN AND SEE WHAT WE 1-IAVEI
HENRY E. CLELAND.................................,892-8181
TRACY BRINAGER .............. ...................... 1148-2438
SHERRI HART. .............................................742·2357
KATHY CLELAND.........................................882-8111

OFFICE;.............................:.........................892·22511

Tum your clutter into cash,
Srll it tir :; easy way••. by ghone,
no need to ~ave your home.
Place your cltissified ad today!
15 words or less; 3 days,
3 gagers, $5.40
paid in advance,
I
1
2.

li/20/83

DAVIDSON'S
PLUMBING

ONE
MONTH TANNING

.I
:;;;od'1111
38904 Lea

WOLFE BED/
FACE TANNER
FOREVER
BRONZE
Tac..rwllla Rd.

t!~~~plng

CnekRoatl
Middle~ort, Ohio

614·9 2·7144
tla

'

3.
4.
. 5.

33- Fa~ lor Salo

u...a..-~

.3:&gt;- Loll a Ao,_,.

.... w....a

u.- lor a••

a-

a....

48- MoWio
for
~F.... IorR-A-tlorRoet
~F..,.Jo~R46-SpaooforRat
47- w..~~e~ 1o a..
48- Equl,...t for Real
48-Fori-.

\II:HLII

\~111&gt;1 ·

51- HOIIIOioold Gooc1o
5:1- s,....... Gooclo
53-Aaliq54-. Mioo. Mor,:hoadiao
5:&gt;- BulldiDf ,SoppUeo

...

I.....

Wa•wdtoBuJ
U..tock

Hay A Croia
S..t 4 Ferlilinr

•

Au.,. lor Solo
Truclu lor S.lo
V. . 441VD'o
Mo&amp;oreyclee
lloo11 a Mo10n lor Solo

1·.

A"to Par11 4 Aoce...ri&lt;-J

;

Auto Repair

:

c..,..

Equip....

~

.~1-:ll\IU:-'

.'

po

,•

Plu.biof4BealiDc
E.........
•·

Eloclrical4 Refris-•lio~ iio
Geaeral BauJiac
:
MobUo Bo•o Repair
"'

•'

$25.00

CUSTOM SADDLES,
LEATHER REPAIR
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR
Chester, Oh. 45720 ·
985-340.6

36358 SR 7

"

3/8/tln

MORRIS
GARAGE DOOR SERVICE
DO IT YOURSELF WAYNE
&amp; CONTRACTOR . DALTON
. SPECIAL
Steel Wood Grained Textured Raised
Panel Garage Doors Complete With ·
Track, Lock, Spring and Hardware.
.
WHILE THEY LAST! ·

WAYNE
DALTON

T••••
8x7 ........... $175
Sizes Only!

9x7 ••••••••••• $1
16x7 ••••••••• $
•
You Won't ..........
AMERICAN GENEUL

LIFE and

ACCIDENT INSURANCE COMPANY

Life • Medicare.• Cancer • Fire • Health
• Accidenl • Annuity, IRA • Mortgage

Rocky R. Hupp, D.c.u. •Agent
Box 189

Middleport, Ohio 45760
(614) 843·5264

ORIGINAL EQUIPMENT REPLACEMENT TIRES
205-75R15" Tlg. Paw XTM RWL
205-75R14" Tlg. Paw XTM RWL
215-75R15" Flrootone OWL
235-75Rf5" Flrootano OWL
-' CALL FOR PRICING· ' EXHAUST SALE NOW IN PROGRESS'

t/211/83

SEE NEAL FOR THE DEAL!
(304) 773-5533
ASK FOR CHRIS

BISS~LL

BUILDERS, INC.

Raclna • ·

·
New Homes • Vinyl Siding
. · New Garages • Replacement Windows
. 949·2826
11-17-e3-1 mo.
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE .ESTIMATES
: 'ISSELL &amp;
'614·992·7643
. .C ONSIRUCnOii
(No Sunday Callsl
•New Homes
2112192/tfn
. ae;a,.... ' ,.
.Complete ,
·
RtiiiOdeli•g
'CIRPUIIR
Stolt &amp; Ct1111tare
D. GEARY'S
WORI
. FlEE ESTIMATES "
BODY SHOP
Remodeling and Repair
985·4473
r,so
PAG F STRF F l
Painting, Experienced
MII)I)Lf POflT. 011
667·6179 .
Free Eetimatee
~.00 s 00
614-446-8568 :""
!.11 1 1
p(j
111•1

6
7.

8.
9.
10
11.
12 '
13.
14
15

992-2772

James Keesee, owner

4-11-93-tfn

CA&amp;H?H

.financial security.
pay )'OUr home mortgage wilhout
you? For peace ol mind, call us

DECORATED BICYCLE- A contelt tor belt decorated
· blqclel and tour-wlleelen was held tbu ·) 'till' durln1 Mlddlepott•1
F•rlh of July celebration, "Red, White and Boom.' ' Hen, Narity
Neue, daaabter or Ray and _Patt7 Plc:keu, paradn by on her
, decorated bllce.
.

992·3470

for com'

614·742·2138

(614) '
¥7·6628

Want to:
PIN down EXTRA

:·wJ~itn•tY

CHORAL GROUP PERFORMS - A choral
group from the Middleport Church of Christ,
under the direction of Debbie Gerlach,
jlerformed several selectlou durilla actlvltlea at

_

~

·Shade River Saddle Shop

CONTUCTdRS
FREE ESTIMATES
All work guaranteed.

(former Maspn Lanes)
3rd &amp; Pomeroy Streets
Low Cost
Mason, wv
lniiae and Out
Inside, Outside, Top
(304) n3;5585
Free Eotlmatea,
Lo'{i Coati.
to Bottom
' SUMMER HOURS'
.
·
Sun.-Thur 5·10 pm
Wo'rk ~uaranteed
PH.
742•2217
Fri·Sat5-11 pm
614·949·2911 or
W0-1 mo. pd. i CLOSED WEDNESDAY
. 614·593t5010
.
5-24-1 mo. ~----------~ ·

Roof

SIZED LIMESTOrtE
FOR SALE

YOUNG'S

MIDDLEPORT FESTIVAL QUEEN . ·Amy Rouse the 1992
Middleport Festival Queen makes a naal appearance in tbe July
rourtb parade.
'

11- Holp~~

1:1- s;........ w ·
.13-1--14- Buol- 'l'nlaiDf
15-- Sclooolo a l111truclioa
16- lladlo, TV a CB llepoir
17- Miocolluooouo
13- Wulld To De

7- LiNI ud Fowod
3- Public Solo A

J&amp;THOME
lft'PROVEMENTS .

QualiiJ
Stone Co.

Free Estimates
Call 446·2845

REBA 7?? • Reba Mdntyre (a.k.a. Debbie Evaul made a spetlal
apJ!earance to sin&amp; "Take It Back" in Middleport oa Sunday
evening durin1 a performance by the Shady River Shumers, Tbe
ever-popular cloggiq lfOUp performed a variety of routines to I
very enthusiastic crowd.

3:1- Mobilo u - for Solo

41-

RIVER VALlEY

taJAlMAR

DAY BEFORE

. YOUNG'S CHAIN
LINK FENCING

"/m11,)1fow, J

$1.30/day

...

I \1:\1 &gt;l 1'1'1 II ."
,\II\ I.&gt;TO Lk

.. s

$13:00

.

~

Upholnory

'

Qteetl.

$ .42
:.60
$.05/day

==-==--~-_____, ~ R..J ~:o

675-1'1. P I 458 L.oa
5 76-Apple Grooe
773-M-•

992-lllddloport/
Po..or
9a"G , r
1143-Pordaad
241-Lot.oi FaD.
949-Racboe
. 742-R•IIood
667-Cool.m.

:is...c.,... Diot.
64ii-AralU Dlot.
s79-'IVol.;., .

PUBLICATION

~s}ivb\

$9.00

Rates are for co~tive runs, broken up davo will be
,.
charged for each day as separate ads.

. BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE

_t\id~'

$.30

Pellfor S.Ia
t ..tnuneaLI
r ,..;,..4 V...tohleo
For S.lo or 'l'rada
M111._.

RtJLLETIN BOARD
4:30 P. M.

HERITAGE QUEEN BEGINS REIGN· Jaime Counts, tbe 1993
Herlla&amp;e Qu~a ci'OWIIed by the Pomeroy MerchRDts As.wclatioo
begilu her reipat the holiday parade.

1:00p.m.·S.turday
1:00 p.m. Monday
1:00 p.m. Tueoclay
1:00 p.m. Wedneoday
100p.m. Thunday
1:00 p.m. Friday

$6.00

. Gallla County Melp Count)' M11110n Co., W¥
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304

0-

"Red, While and Boom" celeliradon on Sunday
evenlna. A portkm ot tbe lfOIIP II pictured here
as tbey clo&amp; and jump to "Miclai&amp;ht Train."

nnPV DEADLINE •

15
15
15
15

10
Monthly

Clauified page• Cotler the
folloWing telephone esclaonge1•••

ill,.,...,.

n...u

.
DAY BEPORE PUBUCATION

Monday Paper ,
T.-dayPaper
Wedneoday Paper .
Thunday Paper
Friday p.opc
Sunday Paper

Call992-2156
.

SHUFFLERS P~RM • The Sbady River •
Shutnen, under the direction ot Paulette .
Harrlloa aad Jodi Glau, performed several
,outstandln1 numbers durin_&amp;the Middleport

.

,

PIQI 6

'

The Da lly Sentlnei-Pa ge-7

Howard L Wrlllesel

. ROOFING

NEW- REPAl~
Gutters
· Downspguts
Gutter Cleaning
Palntlqg
FREE ESTIMATES

•

•

-~

LINDA'S
PAINTING
INTERIOR
FREE ESTIMATES
Take the pain out of
painting. Let me do it
tor you.
VERY REASONABLE
HAVE REFERENCES

SNODGUSS'
UPHOLSTERY

UCINE,ONIO

"Helpla1 You To
Recover Your

949·2168

614·985·4180 .

~-1 &amp;-!13-lfn

.

'

6/1.019311

'

mo.

8
EVERY THURSDAY
. EAGLES
. CLUB
· · IN POMEROY
6:45p.m.
Special £•rly Bird
$100 Payoff
Thia ad goad for 1
·FREE card.
Lie. No. 0051-32

•

�'

8 The Dally Sentinel

Page

SNAFU® by Brute Beattie

..

/.1.1 \110 U'l(C lllPil h

FlnJilCial

Announcements
CALL YOUR DAlE NOW11lllln., -

ACROSS

_,.;;;u;;j,

......lonol

01i

Two • I •room ..... 1121WD "

9t&gt;I&gt;ANI . .

PHILLIP

1t~ A1' c~ ~~~

ALDER

23

t'\1&gt;'~ &amp;liifiN

_,,...,._

Profuslonal

~2

Food CC&gt;OJ&gt;. Natural Fooda

~d"f!li~H '

Mobile Homes
c

'

t:&gt;E'.GL!Itz.t.t&gt;
A tJo · r~~&lt;A

torRent

AI

WI Iuiie PriMa. For Into Cell
114-2116-MOO.

.OIRLSIII UVEIII 24 HRI iOAYIII

TOAK OHi QN OHil 1 - :Ill
2112 Ext. .,.,.,..... ll!uol

Ben

lo II Yra. . PYacoH C..pony,

eoa.e31.otl5.

CA~f~1..,

-wllhfiiCIIIIIyau"-ond ... dtl · , - - - .
NOT 10 11M
il)e ,
IIIB4 10• ....... 11:001111 w
d
""' hl.. ln¥011Tpl0d '
lhollllorlng.
.

Services

131-a.·

'

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

OHIO VALLEY PUIUSHIHO CO.
NCGtmiMndl thM ~ do buel-

Aeeutta Call 1.101).- 'II Ext. .
3001, "-" Por MiniM, ll!uol Be
11 Yoorw, PrvooH C..pony-

j
!

71

INOIICII

11119J tz,H ....
be w Yll. old,

Pllr-

Houu lor Rent

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-9

Opportunny

PR~LL~.

·Gifted

~1

KIT 'N' CARLYLE~ by Larry 't'richt

Monday, July 5,'1993

BUilnnt

3

•.o:l20 oxt.

Monday, July 5, 1993

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

y_. a .......,. On

.,.._13

NORTH

-t-oNe·

Your

+J92
"1062
tA10873

EEKANDMEEK .

-Rlfl..-lng.
-Call.
-814-251-1400
Without
ForDolatl..

+Q6

NO CI:XJ6T

EAST

AetXJf IT...

+10 8 3

"QJD:t
+42
• 10 9 8 2

Llva 24 Houta A ~ T•• To
Beautiful Cllrtellll. 281-2ell2
Be 181371,
Yrw, SUI
P~ll Co. 102-831Ext.
Por llln. IIUOI
0115.

SOUTH

"I already know what's in New Guinea. 'National
Geographic' should explore behind our fridge."

·~

"K ~ 4
tKQJ96
+AK73

r~~~;:~;:~~~::r-==========1
AI! real Plate act.t81tlslng In
lhlt nowopapariii!Ubjoct1o
111e FederBIFalrHoU.-.gACI
of 1968 which makeS k llogal
to advenlse •any preference;
Umlla!lon or clscr1millllllon
baSed on race, eoloi-, relglon,
sex tamiNal status or national
origin, or any Intention to
make arrt sUch prelerence,
~~ ~~lion or dlserimlnallon.· ·

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Sou1h
YI'IIAFURNI11JRE ·
114 Hll'lll Orl1t ttl 4421
'tO·DAYIWIIAICAIH

July 111~1 11h, 7th. I A.M.-? Sloto
Roulll M1, Block l Whlto Trallllr
Boofdo 01 Jumbo. Couch' And
Choir, s...tng Mochl"!.• :Bun~ Employment Services
Blda, No lloftro-. """hlng,
Pf.. Sl- Tool Loll Of Olhor
MYRTLE BEACH RAMADA: Sluff.
W ed
OcMn Fronl 1 Br., Lux. Cond.!&gt;J
11 Help ant
This newspopor lYIII no1
110 Pool, Slupe 4. To I. """ Jutlth1 fl.ol, 1102 Vonco Rood, ~· ---=--=----­
woo~&lt;, Call owner, 50UI1-381l
ChChlkf~1c
CololhooDo·}l T~~·~ 21 •AVOH' ALL AREASI Shira your
know'&gt;g~ acoepl
'1 - ...,.
•• - time with u.. You'll Jova the
a&lt;Nenlsemenls tor real eslale
OHIO'S CONNECTION ALlER· ChUd'1 Scoot.,, Wild Ell•, compeny. 1..aoo.m-e356.
'Mlleh ts In violation oltha
NATIVE 1--~ $2.ao. Mlle. tto.. II hokl ftiiM, Rain
Aa par Anlale g Tnrwftrw and
, min te+loll .II!Mtyllo .dolellno Dolo July 7th.
law. Our readers are hereby
moot 100'o of
In Wlll0111 Volfoy Million TMft Vacancl•, S~tet{on 8, . Potting,
Informed 1hal aH ~lingS
of the Negol:lat~ Agr.ment
~ro- todly. CCI ,
FL
Slora, OUII'IKh Of WI- Vol· latwa.n tfie MLTA 1nd the
advertised In lhla newspaper
Rtd\oce 11lo l fut wl Oole11 toy llloalon Churoh. Downtown 801rd of Education, thl M-'a•
, are avaJiable on an equal
To-. ond E-Yip "WII.ar Plllll". Vfnlon on 150, 114-318-8033. f,.ocll School Dtelrlct Ill pooling
oppon~nnv basio.
~ Suncfly I
llondoy, tha following vacancln for lt1
Avolio"'-" ot Fruth Drug.
.
Clothing, HouaohOid Koma, Ngular t ..cfilng ataff: Chapter I
THE GAY, CONNECTION 1·- Fumhure, Top I Crtfta, Etc.
11111111 llolgo High SChool (Now
'1'10.3337 12.50-mln. 1&amp;. moot
Poalllon-. lla1h cortltlco11on ,..
Real Estate
100'e at •KIIJng men In JOUr
qulrod), ChlfiiW I llath 1111algl
Pt.
Pleasant
"" tonlghl. """ phonlt'o. CCI
B~FL.
\
JuniorC41r1lflcollon
Hlah (Nowraqulrod)
Poa"lon1nd•· - - - - - - - - - llath
&amp; Vlclnlfy
Junior
High
T11cha~
Engllah
Divorced, White mile, 52, .-ka
112 milo put v, AI 2, 4111 trwUor -otlc:ollon wllh Alidina 31 Homes for Sale
componlonohlp wHli, - · on ~Qhfi pool .rohovoh Wllno11 nlldotlon or Elomonlary oor:
1horl « tall flcly, Who Ilk• Chulllll,
- n hill. Clolhlnfl, tHicllllon wHh Roodlna valid•·
oamplna, fill· morflll.lo, · ond
2 hall bed.. 2 ltlndi, lion.
country mualc. Socllll d~nklr a lop,
I chalf'li'c .,_trlc .tov1,
1mour. Coli 10:00AII Ull 2:00 ,couch
. , _ . , 11n k.flnlcu, ~o~o Alllml&gt;flng &amp; clorteal jobo
PM, we•k•MI8 enytlme 304!&gt;I m~,;o_:'ll ·cno.y Luv truck, avallabte now, tor Information
675-2181.
lind S1 pl .. SASE to KPII11815
'71 ~
July10,
lllllm. 2 - · July lllh- P. Home81Ud, N.E., Allanct,
Giveaway
4
Ohlo44GO'I.
2211 Jotforoon Avo, July Slh I
2 bile Ieiner. 1pprox 12 WU Old, llh, moving 1rom 11'11' to AVON I All ·A-o I Shl~oy
IMler box lrllinrtd, 304.at54348.
1m111 apt S.utlful glr n ware, Spoara, 304-1175-1429.
picturoo, pono, dlohoo, 8e r..dy to mNt the Chall1n91
2 otorr hoUH, Pomeroy, mUOI •-·
radkt
lou oll building mllo~olo ond IVIrythlng
of employment •• a N"'rH AI 1 ·
rou -.ttd lmoglno. or
flxturM,
P.O.
Box
2111,
lllimo Holtth Aldo In 111
SyracuM.
weeki. Train to mNt lht ,.. 3 bodloon1, 1 112 both~ ottochtd
qulrwmon1o lot' ll.oto cortlflco- prago, 113 Ill bon · nd, ~.::f:,
PomBroy,
4 killona- 2 whH• &amp; block bobllon. UmHtd orirollmont IIUOI Conrey, •-nell lncl

. Myrtle lloach . ,.,_, llatll On
. a-h. 1 .a 2 RmJ!· Clean
Roomo, HBO.
/Sol50
Wookly. CIU 1103-23UII2.

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: East

5I

.BARNEY

OR IWIT-2.QWII jNO DIPOIIIT)

t+
3+

l GOT TO GO CHOP .
DON'T SAY
SOME WOOD, THAT WORD
·PAW
IN MY HOUSE!!

llobllll Homo Fat Or Solo:
3 Btdroonoo,1 -.On 114 Aorw
Hud App. 114-2tlfl 1141, Aftw 4
P.ll.

GOOD

USED

..............!.
APPLIAIICII

. . ·-'IHII.
.

55

--n...

WOULD.BE A MUCH
BETTER WORLD IF DOGS
.._ .,,.~LD FLV, TOO ..

Hondo CR121R 1100, 114-378-

In--·

Vlni
"'""'"'
~-

PEANUTS

454 LTD, 111ft

-..L.3!00 - · Hu now, 114-

SUpplies .

Appllonooo, 111

-kl

1111

Building

1·

Block, brick, ......_ 27111.
.
tlnl
.
.
c:w..·
1
Rio
.
OH
Colli
114Holllon""'*-·,75 Boats .. Motofl
24W121.
Trwno........._
bolh
304-771-11424-5:00 Pll.
lor Sale
58 PatorSafe
.. LA'INE'I PURIITURI

1!122. I -

-Dollv.ry.

out lulonrltfl Rd.

AND OVERHEAD, A SKtf
FILLED WITI-l 0065

• -• ...

. ~:~
~~

..... twniii--liNnlll
Hour'l: lion Ill, N. 814-MI-

Comp'rts

•

I MA61NE A WARM
SUMMER N16J.lT...

a ...,.. .,.,.u.....

talte, 2 ~ack, 1$14..gg2·22'11.

B1by bod wHh moHr-, 304575-2049.

Middleport
&amp; Vlclnlfy

,.ol..•r In 1dvan~. Clua 111111

304-87&amp;-ll:ltJ.

llolahl"ff ...... Sill ' Couch,
Very NICe, Uke ~· ~ TM

ColOr, MOO 010, I

4

7110.
llotlohon Co1'11111, At. 7· N. 81i0
Co!llll 150,
Vinyl In
k $UI Ytf.

--,,:12

July 11th. Coli ,_ 1-eoo.e37-

IIOI. Tho Adult Educotlon Con·

tor1 , Trf.County Vocollonll
A11 Y•d Salol lo Pokf In Scnoo~,
N.a.onvme.
Advo~. Oaocllno: 1:00Drn tho
cfly boforo tho od 11 to run, BIJSfNESS $ERVICES.OFF1CER
Female c.llco kltttn, to good Sundly tdttlon· 1:OOpm Friday,
home. 304.e75-7571.
llonday tdHion 10:00o.m.
Frwo Pupploo, 111 lomolo, 814- Soturdly.

AI

Alii J D NORTH PROOIICI114-

-1HS For Tho Onfr -/Tklfl
/1111.9 · lhampoo •Aual

'*

Conlilfte DURBUNI fCfl.
LMII ..._..,, 11a1hp 1 cb' •

AVIIIollleO-T.C:.

malo

6

...

iluOi -

...... '

oom~at~- -~

'IIIlA" euu:atd'. _ ~

~~~~:llator
·a

Lowranoe FWI
,. Peas tad
1v ..._, o.w-, Fill
Lite Partl i ·~unarlle. 1111
One YNr ~ IHJIIWDII
llolglo, 814-4-46'
•

F,11m Supp l1 0'
&amp; L1ve stock

Routo 7, SoutN, 81":288·

mont - 701 lll.h,
~~~Jtllld
iiiGiiiQ.
Fourth,
OotllfiGIIo,
11t 418 tt11Ati•1P.M.

61 Fann Equipment
Hay with ~ I polnl - .
..... big~ pi~~·=

::1:!.. ..4.'111

For Salo On Lind Conlroat: 3
Btdroom Ronch S!Yio 1 Both,
LA, KH, FRL UR, Wllh lQ. Deck
On Bock, ~llldmore lloiod, Off
150, 3 111111 From HIIC, 114-24&amp;-

.9509.·

Fum- EntcloncY ....,
UtiiKIM Paid, 'ShiN lll.h, 507
- - Oalllpollo, 114 448 4411
Allar 'IP.II.
Oracl0uo lvlng. 1 ond 2 bodroom oport- II~

=-•

Rancllllylo home, 3 bodroomo,
1AndlfHn
both, llllchtd
· - air,
wlndowli,
centl'lll
FOOior 81, lluon. 304:7'13-8110.
Wont to trwdl 3brJ 2 beth brick
lftOf'll

1111 OIIC Truck 414, '-11Hoo,
Eacolonl Cond~ 12 Fl.

Slororafl' Wl1h noy lWith
Trlllor;
IS fl.
lonlll llatO&lt;,
-·
18 HP
Evtn.....
Dopth FIM« a Trwllor; Approx.

63

IT

AccaesorJes
4 11.1'. - h -R IS'
on flvo lull ........_ rhno lor
1211. ~7'111.

--

711. truck · - · 1111 -

~D I~M.'(

HQ.YW.IIIE.~

~!

nfl£

MORTY MEEKLEAND WINmROP
DO 'rOU 6EUE.'vl:
SURE. AND r 6ELI~VE

Clnpera&amp;
Motor Homes
'

INl'HE.'~

I

-J
. . . , -In-·

FAIRY'?

IN e.At-J"DD. CL.AU6 Al;D 1l-E
E;AS!CR BUI-INY, 'RX&gt;.

•
I BeLI~VE IN ANYTl-llNG
TH.A:r TLjRUS J.IE: A PROF IT.

~1'11

tQDO.

llr
. . 010. 114o441-17Q · - 7,

.......

neer At.

....... F ,1'1•

Qongi upt

...--·~---·
-·""' __ ..,..__
•

t111111ff11 -

....... 0..

Tr;msporl,.t 1011

air

in law as "almOst a dirty word."

'

twtn.:

nar t . .

iit1o1n1 s-. 114-!

... :1111

Wl¥w

Jb 111

a..

•14,•

~

a 1 - 1• P4fl en.. 414
Cll
i!lllh. 11,0011
, ... ltcfLBIIopo
i, ~
DiAif

AM I I - lllldr To Go
I1WII-1711. _

,100,

living room 10117 room odell·

tlon, 2br., 2 b.ih, tx30 DUrabuln
corpor1/ownlna,
·zrr old

hllitpump, kltChon opptlonoll,

18

Wanted to Do
E&amp;R ·TREE SERVICE. Topping,

Trimming, TrH Removal, Hedge
Trimming. Fr" Ettlmaltll 614·

, \

\ I'

45

1DN Holly Parfl 14'172' 3. llodroomo, 2 Balho, UtiiHy Room,
AC, Eloclrlc, 114-251-1821 After
S:OOP.II.

367-7157 Aftor 4p.m.

35 Lots &amp; Acreage·

Gtntl'll Malnttnanee, J'alntlng 1

1 ocrw lolo, AI ;_Aohlon. Clydo

Yard Work Windows Waehea

Gutttrl Cleaned Ught Hauling,
Commtrtcal, Retldlintlal, Sttva:

614-445-11158.

Furnished
Rooms

-

Trwno Am,

"'~ 71,000

.............
-~··.. 81
wllh . . . . . . - . llla.IM'L

Home
Improvements
ICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 1

ASTRO-GRAPH

Bowen, Jr 3~m-2331.

ApproxlmlloiY 1 ooN, iaiL 4rio
mllll out Neighborhood Hood.
8H Ul 3431 for . mar. lnforma.
lion.
lo1l . . . . . . lor home con-.
otrucllon on Ra~ Rd,

rwaeonabt. rwtrlaiiOM; aaunty
wetar, lnfonnltktn rnallld on ,..
qUill, 304.e71-1313, pfoo11 no

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL
47 Wanted to Rent

alnglo -lrollorw.

36

Real Estate
Wanted

4J831,

Renta ls
EleCtr1CII i.
RetrlgarMion

Out there, ominously mo111ng toward Ita destiny,
was a truck with Reuben's nama on 11.

.

'

2br.
houoo,
In
·~ dooooft
'
.......
_
...........
»1-&amp;78-

:1424.

.

'

'

.....,..,.,._
. . . . . - ..=
Raalllaa....

llnlir
-

•

u

uulll .. ,

Uun 11 d '
llellrlcll; W'I'GIIIM,.
.

1

Your

are romantically perfect lor you.

efforts a'nd energies are likely to be

and a long, self-addressed, stamped enve·

focused on your material int6rests today.

lope to Malchmaker. c/o lhis newspaper,
P.O. Box 4465, New York , N.Y. 10163.
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) An imponant one·
lo-one relalionship requires laclful lreal·
menl today. In order lo appease lhis indi·
vidual , you mlghl have to make conces-

Your chances lor personal gain look good,
bul your chances lor having fun while doing
so don't.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 2o-Feb. 19) Asson your·
sell loday In sl1ua1ions lhal require you 10
do so, but. by lhe same Ioken. don'l manip·

sions you wouldn't make for others.

ulate or push others around where it isn't

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept, 22) You r sell·
esleem could sulter if you do no1 ulilize

called tor.
PISCES (Feb. 20:March 20) Today you

your time in productive and constructive

may feel it is necessary to make some type

ways today, Olhers mighl fle able 10 coast
and gel away with il, bul no1 you.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) An endeavor in
which you're involved wi1h others could
faro better i1 you took a more active leaderTuuday, July 6, 1,993
ship role. The people fronling this opera1ion
aren't as t~nled as you are.
.
Success in your pannersh1p arrangements SCORPid"' (Oct. 2"-Nov. 22) You are sllll·
are slrong poasibllilies lor lhe year ahead. in an excellenl cycle lor being a lonunate
These alliances will take lime lo develop, linisher. Visualize lhe 1ype of ioQ,nom line
so be palienl, because lhey could eventu· . you want end work lowards it wilh all dili·
·ally be very wonhwhile.
gence.
.
·
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Your abililies SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) You
lo research: probe or delect are very Sharp could be a bll restlessloday menially as
1oday. Th is is a good llmelo invesligale sil· well as physically. Try 10 lind an arrange- "
uations where you leal deprived of accu· mont where you can gain new knowledge

ol small, bul signilicanl sacrifice lor someone you lo~e . He/she mighl never
whal you did because you won't loll.
ARIES (March .21-Aprll 19) Grealer
progress can be made loday in areas ot
recent interes1s lhan wllh endeavors ol
long slanding. Pullhe old on back burners
and push tho now up front
,
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) II you are
properly motiYal&amp;d loday you're capable ol
outstanding accomplishments, but If the
urge to achieve lsn'l lfl!oro, lhis .could jusl
be' an ordinary day.
GEMINI (lloy 21-Juno 20) Try to spend
lime today wilh friends who share ~our ·
phl~ophical beliote. Each can be helpful

rate information. Kn6w where to look lor ·

to the o.ther In elevating hislher ·asplratlons. ·

ODlr
'Birthday

IIIIo P-'1 Doy Coro Con1or 1
Block Will Of HIIC On Jackoon Quoll111d Buyor II ..-1"11 Fol
Pfkl 11-F I A.M. ·8:30 P.ll. II Nice Farm Within 10 IIIII Ridlue
QuoiHy And Exporionc:o 11 Tho 01 ' Oalllpoflo. P - R•pand
11 e-m For Your Chlld'o wtlll D crlptton, LooaiiOn · •
Care. Call Ut For A Vlth. lnt.nt Price. A np ~ ncl To: CLA 271, olo
Galli- Dilly Trlbuno, 825
!Toddlerw 114-44M22l: ohooflno .~hool Ago 114-446- Thlnl AvM.., OIIUpolll, OH
1224.

L.J 1.1 U U Lilr.J l:l

u uLJ r..u.m L:.J ('] wu u

l1 LJL:Jt!.l (!) mm u u
IJijrJ rJL:.JU [jrJL:.J
l..:llJUl.ot LJUI.i.l L'J(']I]~
LJLm I.!JrJU ULJ..:.
Li!ILJ UrJLJl1LJl1Lil l.!lO
LJUU UrJU UUIJ
UI..J('J('J LJLJrJ Lillr.Jl!IU
LJUIJ t.:J..:JLJ LJU~
lJLJUU(!]l.:.J rJUL:.J l.!lU
lJUll LJ(!JLJULJLJLJL.JU
rJIII•l

[1[•]1 1 l:t[•lrti:J

Chlrtlld .
4 Smtllatove
5 Before Sept.
8 Troln rio.
7 Slow
cretlure
a ~ven (poet.)
9 Cooltd IIVI
10 Native of

Gllagow

H Of- 1'8fna

t6 Uko (lUff.)
18 BolwMn liT
and liN
21 IIIIIWy 11ttbMIIIIIIInt
(2 Y!dl.)
2~- golllry
23 S.verol
24 Arrow polooil
25Umb
26 Droit ogcy.
28YII
211 Actor Ron 30 ,Scondlnovttn·

+Q

In the proper use of language &lt;as well .
as in life), the best advice is "Never
assume anything."

Atra-..:=5-...
_,_,t_lk
'11111

1113 14xl8 wl 1124 uponclo

·
' dfYII',
ter, f\5,000
OBO. ...
304~

tj 1.i.1 t!J

Allpass

By Jeffrey McQuain
In law, DECEDENT is somebody
who has died ("the decedent's
estate"). Learning to pronounce the
noun DECEDENT "dee-SEE-dent," of
course, won't kill you.
Q. Can words be dangerous? What
would you say is the most dangerous
in the language?
A. Words can be used dangerously,
especially if somebody thinks IN·
FLAMMABLE is the opposite of
FLAMMABLE. Probably the most
dangerous word is the verb ASSUME,
which gets people into all kinds of
trouble. Judge Joseph A. Wapner, a
champion of good English on "The
I P1,oolle's Court," has referred to that

Air, caaw
-.
..... ' OWwi
-·
MIG
• Convtatlon
lolfd Oak - · 4 K.W. Oan.,

cond., ..O¥.,
relrlger~tor,
UI"KKerpemlng,
10m. furniture. IIUIIl move. 304175-7151.

By GARY LARSON

41Ught-B Direction
fllther
12 Yoor [Sp.)
42 En8HIII
13 Rottto
IChOOI
14 Evory
431nooct
15 Window
45 Actorlillde
VIQOdl
17 - Lllldlrt - 46 Including
18 Whirlwind
· 47 Trf mlnuo ono
20 Actre..
48 ColltcUon
. Cltlrt
48
Ctrtoonlat
21 Holp
ChtriM22 Conaumod
52 Thfo (Sp:)
23 IIIBRitudt
54WIMperoo~~
25 Bt lick
56
26 Sponlth llr. . 57 Sorrow
lllklllell
27 Number
brlaM .
28 Airline tbbr.
58
Vorve
20 Short IWOfd
59 loin
32 llyllll
33 etaahln8
lnatrumtnts
35 A continent
1 Drlvtrt' org.
(tbbr.)
Compo.. pt.
2
3&amp;1Jncanny
Bocomo
3
38 Actr111
·oltctrlcolly

capital

33 1011,ROIMn
34 111)1' org.
37 Decoy
30 Vtry .t lrly
(2 !lldl.)
41 11181'ICII
42 Conclullon
43 Not yll up
44 Unit"
45 -opjlle.
dly
48 Artbltn
lllport
48 Romtn
bronze
4911otfillii
llldtr
50 A Stooge
51 Obllm
53 Brond ntmt
(abbr.)
55- Poclno

or a situation where you can utilize some-

romance and you'llliod il. The Astra-Graph · lhong you recenlly learned.

'·

'

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Celebrity ClpMr ctyptogram. .,. CI'Mted from QUOtlttonl by fwnoua peOpe, p..w II"'CC PfMint.
Eec::h lettw In IM dpMr ltMCII for 11101'*. T«My'l t:/W; C equMi U.

0
WVODYVA
ROC

PVDOCHV

w vv

GVHHUZ

WVHW

YOAK
HYV

(MBWDYVA)

· XBJVH

TBAHW,

OTWVAIOAK.'
JVAZUZ

wy v

~

GOI .

PREiiiOUs'sou.iTION: "When you get 'lait.W. iromi&gt;eor&gt;le
you've affected positively, .that's great." - Gene Sl!lket.

whose

carMrt

+--...

THAT DAILY C./I'II
'UIIUI ~~

I SLAGYS

OUR LANGUAGE

~l.l~TEb

FOR '(UJ/5...
WH~ TilE
fi~N.J..'( WIIE-':J
TO mEA&lt;HJM. ...

1:00PM.

1111 Knox mobil homo, Incl.-

THE FAR SIDE

~
~

East
Pass
Pass

One of the most prestigious pair
.events in the world is held in London
each Janua~y. sponsored by The Sunday Times and now also by the Macallan Malt Whisky company. The 1993
winners were the Americans Bobby
Levin and Gaylor Kasle (pronounced
"castle"). This was a remarkable
toachievement, as they had
gether only once before. It
biggest victory. Levin won the
da Bowl, the world team
ship, in 1981 when only 23 years
.
· In second place were two more
Americans, Jeff Meckstroth and
Rodwell. Third were the present
French World Team Olympiad champions, Herve Mouiel and Alain Levy.
Levin made a lhoughtful ·play on to·
day's deal from the tournament.
Kasle led the spade queen, which experts ofteii do when holding a suit
headed by the A·K·Q . It is "normal"
for East to signal with the three, showing an odd number .of spades. Then,
knowing that South will ruff the second spade, West becomes worried
about heart losers being discarded on
club winners. His. natura•! reaction
to cash the heart ace. However, as
can see, here that has fatal consequences fo~ the defense.
Feeling · confident that a heart
switch wouldn't help, Levin signaled
with the spade 10 at trick one, feigning
a doubleton . So Kasle continued with
the spade ace. He was surprised when
declarer ruffed, but he was grateful
later. South was able to discard only
one of dummy's hearts on his clubs.
Eventually, he had to lead a heart to·
ward his king, but West had the ace
and the contract went one down. '

60TAA ·

PR£11\1~

N~a. 2 '• nom

~~

I Fll-lD OUT
TllEY'VE

I FAITI!FOU.'( .
I~

304-

21 fl. , _ 11171

10155 good condHion, hlvo to

FI&lt;:.UR~!

-

1111: Holl\for . _..
...
..___Good
-ion..
114 ...

. lor Sele

window

Auto Parts&amp;

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yollow ond whlla Beoalo,
Drug A - And llontol
tomllo, hoo crootod IAII, 9 Wanted to Buy
Ho..h Servlcoo
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I
414 Socond Avonuo; P.O. Box
1 opotd lronanlo 1ot S..ro
514
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5 bodi&lt;IOIII brick homo, 1 112
bath, electric heM and air,
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18' lllik 1Wifn Trf Hill, 140 lip,

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3 8 - - corto
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"'
I

Two old timers sat on a
bench watching a busy inter• 1 1 1 , section. Af!Br awhile one old
timer shook his head and said
..,
,
"Cars are driven in two
'
R A WN 0 0
speeds ... lawful and -----."

I

~...:L:,..:.I..;O::....::U...T~--1 ~.~.

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you

Complele !he chuckle Quoted
by f./ling in the m•uing words

develop from step No. 3 below .

PAINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES
LETTERS

SCRAM.J.ETS ANSWERS
Jf M•r~rcy • 'ff'!rek • Entity · ACCIDENT

WB$ driving too fast for his wife's comFimirlv she yelled; "You drive as thouah you're
late for an ACCIDENT!"
:r

�.

Page

1o-i'he Dally Sentinel

By Ed Petenoo,
Sodal SeellriiJ
muager Ill Athens

Here are some tips for you from
Social Seeurity...
•
If you work at a job where you
make $20 or more per month in
cash tips, that' income is cOvered by
Social Seeurity. That means you
and your employer .-e required to
pay Social Security 811d Medicare
taxes on this income. And reponing
tips and ·other income now will
mean more Social Security tie11efits
for you and your family laler when
you retire, become djsabled, or die.
When r,ou earn tips, you milst
keep a daily record of the tips you
receive. This includes tips received
in cash directly ftom customers or
from other employees and tips
added to a credit card charge. If
your tip income totals $20 or more
JD a month , you are required to
repon the amount to your employ·
er. Your employer is responsible
for reporting the correct tip and
wage information to the Soci~l
Security Administration and the
Inte'llal Revenue Service (IRS).
All employees who earn tips are

I

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Tirs from social security
•

'

affected by these rules. This
includes workers in food and bev·
erag.e establishments, hotel
employees, cab· drivers, hair·
~. etc.
·
To make sure that you receive
credit for all your earnings, you
should request a free earnings
/ statement (rom SOcial Security at
least every three years. When you
get your statement, check it to be
sure it's right If you fmd an error,
call t.l!e special toll-free number
listed on the form to get your
record corrected.
To get a statemen~request!orm,
all .you have to 'do is contact the
Athens Social Security office
(phone 592-4448) or call our toll·
free number: 1·800-772· 1213. Ask
for the "Request For Personal
Earnings And Benefit Estimate
. Stalement (Form 7004).
' For more information about
paying taxes oil tips, call the IRS
toll-free telephone number, 1-800·
829-3676, and ask for Publication
531, Reporting Tip Income, and
Publication 1244; ·Employee's
Daily Record of Tips arid Report to
Employer.

Monday, July 5, 1993

POWsgather after 20years
By GEORGE ESPER
.
AP Special Correspoodeot
COLORADO SPRINGS, -colo.
(AP) - This was nol'your typical
high ~ool or college reUnion but
a gathenng ~f men bomid l!lgether
forever~y history.
Amencan pnsoners fro.m. the
V1etnam War celebrated theJr 20th
year of fr~dom, embracio&amp; tl!eir
col!lrades-.m-arms. and salu.ung
therr fallen m.a movmg mem~
Th~ reumon en.ded with a
dazzling f~reworks display Sul!day
mght and the 178 POWs and their
families scattered across the
country today .to n:sume li~es that
now seem so distant from VIetnam.
!.hey ~ave .retired from the.
military, m theJr 50s and 60s now, ·
the years transforming their bair
from black to. white. Ther. are .
commer~l&amp;l pilots, test pilots,
chaplains , doctors, real estate
brokers.
. · a real
Sorne, like Quincy Conms,
estate broker ftom Charlotte, N.C.;.,,_
h~ve started ~ew lives.with new ·
w1ves •. theu fust mamages also
casualues of the war.

--Names in the news--

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) discussed differenCes between mm Williams on Sunday in one of
Garth Brooks, manager of a arid Stage. 1
,
Arkansas' two real Evening
cowboy boot store four years ago,
Israel radio quoted De Niro as Shades.
has become the biggest selling telling the president "movies are
Some 200 guests packed the tiny
recording artist· of the decade in closer to real life."
Methodist church in this Sl)arp
this cciuntry.
County community of 397. About
arooks' "No Fences" and
BOSTON (AP)- John Williams 100 Evening Shade residents
Hammer's "Please Hammer Don't conducted 'his last Independence wailed outside in 90-degree heat to
Hurt ·'Em" rank as the best-selling Day concert .for the Boston Pops, greet the newlyweds.
.
albums this decade: Each sold 10 but his name won't be forgotten at
Actress Bonnie Franklin of "One
million copies, accordin~ to the a well-known riverside band sheD. · Day at a Time" fame was maid of
Recordin~ Industry Association of
In a surj&gt;rise tribute, Williams' honpr.
America 10 Washington, D.C.
Williams has appealed on "As
name was added Sunday to the list
Brooks' Ropin' the Windu is . of emihent composers wrapped the World Turns," arid "Cheers."
the third bestseller since 1990 with around the Hatch Shell, whi~h sits
This Evening Shade is about 120
9 million copies sold.
on the Charles River.
miles northeast of Little Rock.
ld:is newest album, "The Chase,"
Williams was open-mouthed and Another, smaller Evening Shade,
• has sold 5 million copies, giving a~ed joyous when the plaque which has no lisred population, is
him a total of 24 million albums wuh his name was unveiled on about 120 miles southwest of Little
sold this decade.
stage.
Rock.
Rounding out lhe top five
"I will hold the orchestra arid the
bestsellers this decade were, people of Boston very close to my
PHILADELPHIA (AP) "Soundtrack: The Body~uard," heart," Williams told the crowl\, President Clinton wished Gov.
which sold 8 million cop1es, lmd placing his hand OVC!' his heart.
Robert P. Casey and U.S . Sen.
Vanilla Ice's "To the Extreme,"
Williams, 61, has become a Arlen Specter speedy .recoveries
which sold 7 million copies.
Boston fixture after 13 yeats with during his holiday visit.
the Pops. His more than 70 film
Casey underwent a heart-liver
JERUSALEM (AP) - Robert scores
include
"JFK," . transplant June 14, the same day
De Niro, in Israel to promote his ''Superman,'' ''Close Encounters Specter underwent s~rgery to
· new film "This Boy's Life,'' was of the Third Kind" and "Star remove a benign brain tumor.
splashed across newspaper fropt Wars.''
Clinton telephoned them on
pages and even met with Israeli
Williams, wbo succeeded Arthur Sunday.
·
President Ezer Weizman.
Fiedler as conductor in 1980, will
Specter "promised me he would
De Niro is a guest of the lOth step down when the Pops season be back to work soon," Clinton
Annual Jerusalem Film Festival.
ends in December.
told the crowd gathered at
In his latest movie, De Niro, 49,
Independence Hall for the
plays a simple-minded, sadistic
EVENING SHAbE, Ark. (AP) presentation of the Liberty Medal
stepfather. The story is based on - It was a match made in to Souih African leaders F.W. de
the autobiography of writer Tobias Hollywood, but finalized in Klerk and Nelson Mandela
Wolff.
Arkansas when Charlie Dell, who
"He·dld not promise me a vote,
While meeting with De Niro, pl~ys Nub Oliver on TV'.s how,ever,'' Clinton said of the
Weizmao remini~ced about his - "Evening Shade," got married.
Republican, who' is recovering at
days as a fighter pilot arid the two · Dell married actress Jennifer home in Philadelphia.
11

" No matter the time span
between get ~?F~ers, th~ bond is
always there, swd Collins, wllo
turned 62 on July 4.
·
When he ~m ved a! ~la_rk A.i r
Force Base 1.n the Ph1hppmes m
1973 af~ bemg held a POW {or 7
}(2 years, ~ officer handed ~ a
pear John letter from hiS wife.
He unsuccessfully ran . for
Con$ress a.s a Rep!l~hcJ!n
cand1~ate wh•.le he w~ hvm¥ . m
Georgia and h1s ·entry mto pohucs
br~ke up his second IIUJI!!ag~. .
The good Lord sa1d I'm JUSt
g~ing tole~ you ~uddle ,through all
thiS, then I m gomg to ~ve f?U d!e
one r.ou need to be With, saJd
Colhns, the W1ll Rogers of the
POW8·
•
••
."S~ that's Cathenne," he Sllld.of
his wife of 12 years. _Doug Burns, 58, a f&lt;;&gt;rmer Navy
p1lot who was held pnsoner for 6
1/2 years, also had a lonely
homecoming from ViAtnam B 1
~.
· u
h~.• too, started over With a ne~
w1fe and a 15-year-old .son or theJr
~wn. He has thr~e chJldren from
IS prevml!S marrtage. .
"My (fust) w1fe d1dn' t know

.

whether" I was dead or alive for
four years," Burns said. "She iust
met somebody else. She 'was 31
. years old when I was shot down
It's just very difficult for a w with three children at that age not
knowin~ whether her husban~ ' s
-ever gomg to come home to not
potentially meet somebody else
We're good friends with them." ·
For Burns, now a civilian test ·
pilot living in Costa Mesa, Calif.,
the reunion brought him together
again \l(,itli.some of the other POWs
he hadn't seen since the returned
home in 1973.
Y
"We had a chance to bring our
families together for the first
time," he said. "It's been a nice
experience to have the children be
able to get together. They had
'never met each other before. When
we came home most of them
weren't born. Now we've got a
s
..:
·
bl' h'
econu 11enerauon esta JS mg
contact w•th one another."
Many of the POWs, their wives
and their children wept through the
. memorial service at the U.S. Air
Force Academy cadet chapel
•

especially when they joined in
singil)g "America the Beautiful."
It was written a century ago by
Katharine Lee Bates, a teacher
whose visit to nearby Pikes Peak
inspired the words:

· Many of the POWs and their
families toured Pikes Peak on
Saturday.
"It WIIS just awesome to see what
is here and what God had creared
and where we all fit into this,''
Collins said. ·
.
'• America is beautiful. Tills is the
lOOth anniversary of that (the
song), my birthday, the birthday of
our country, and the 20th
anniver~ary of the POW return.
Hell, I had more than I could put
on my plale today."

Toilet seat war is
lack of consideration
.

.

.

fierce bone or contention.

Ann '
Landers

Ohio LQttery
Re~s,

Pick 3:

Indians win

Pick 4:

~ndy, this is considered a
femtnist issue - one more example
of man's everlasting oppresaioo of
womeo. Actually, it Is an antiftlllinist issue. It implies that womeo
are weak, neurocic · m:lllnl who
Iacll: the physical llmlgdt to move a
toilet seal from the up posilioa to
the down position.
I don't recall when !last sat on a
toilet without checking to make sure
that the seat was down, but rm
c:enain I was'never 11)*1 if I had to
make the small adjustmenL Why all
the static? •• BETHESDA
DEAR BETH: It doesn't take
much physical strength to put a
toilet seat down. It's the 1ac11: of
consideration for others that is
irksome. Real class is bow people
beha¥e when nobody is looking.
· Wht11 plaMillg 11 weddiNg, wl!o

GAN
.
DEAR MICHIGAN What
you
describe comes close 10 :maritaliBJlC.
If John won't go for counseling, 1
suggest that you go alone. Your
husband's treatment goes beyorid
lack or considenJiion- it is 111ir.l.
No woman should put up with iL
Delli' Alia Laaden: All of a
snddeo, 1 have noticed that a new
front has been opened in the wbetween the sexes •• namely• the
batde of the toilet seat.
Wives are threatening to divorce {J(l'jS for what? Wllo siDIIds where?
husbands for leavintl the toilet Ileal 'The AM Landers Guikfor BrideT'
. rv_e asked.John to go for counsel- up. young women .-e ditching their IIIJS all the IIIISWer&amp;. Said II lt/fmg several limes over the years, ~ fiiiOCCS owr this laue. Women in 11/Jdressed,lollg, b!Uineu-slu ave~ n:fuses. Are there ~r men like coed donns are organizing class- lope 111111 11 check. or mottey order
this out .there, or do I have the only · action suits After deaJdes of silence for $3.65 (this iiiCl/ldes postllge 1111/l
one? •• WONDSRING IN MICHl· this matter' suddenly has become ~ hllndlillg)

345

9971
Buckeye·s:
1-8-19-23-24

Page4

. .. .

" 0 beautifur for spacious skies,
"For amber waves of grain,
•'For purple mountain majesties
"Above the fruircd plain!
"America! America! ,
" God !!led his grace on thee
"And crown thy good with
brotherhood
"From sea to shining sea."

.

Dear AlUI l.anders: You claim
that sensitive, intelligent women can
make their ICJUial needs known to
men - llld, IS a last Je80it, joint
counseling should be considered.
This may be true for 110111e people,
but you have never met my bnsbaod,
"Jolm."I've told him sewn! hundred
times that o~~ee is enough, twice is
uncomfortable IUid anything more
than that is downrigiJt painful. He
pays DO lttentioa.
I ha¥e said, "No! Stop, you are
hurtina met• But he ignores my
protestations as if I were a
,_;h•Je he had paid for.
,
..I've 8llempted to involve Jolm in
my fantasies, most of which include
vac8tion spots, romantic plat:es IUid
soft music, but he is completely
unresponsive. He has suggested
sewnl fantasies that he thinks would
be "eliciting." The most recent was
that I buy some cheap unilerwear
arid let him np' it off me.

•

Hot ud bumld. Low t011ipt
OI'OIIDd 70. Hlgb Wedllealay 90.

e·
Vol. 44, NO. 41

1 Sec11on. 10 Pagee 35 oen18
AMultlmaclalnc. Newapapw

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, July 6, 1993

Mul!lmoclalnc.

Rutland celebrates Fourth with ox roast
.

.

The village of Q.utland celebrared summer and accompanied by his
the Fourth of July a day late but brother, Roger, mingled with area
with plenty of gusto and, of course, residents while waiting to sample
plenty of delicious ox-roast one of the village's renowned ox
sandwicheS:
·
roast sandwiches.
The celebration started with a 59·
Following the,parade were events
unit parade which included floats, including a garden tractor pull and
horses, marching bands, fire trucks, pie and cake judging. In addition,
emergency and law enforcement kids' games and other games,
vehicles along with l(Ucks of the including a dunking booth, were
W.Va. Army National Guard, available.
baton twirlers and cloggers
Dee and Dallas provided musical
First and second-place winners entertainment throughout the day
were, respectively by category: for the several hundred people
- Religious float - Freewill Baptist present Sheela Delayn also took to
· Church and Rutland Church of the stage where she sang a blend or
Christ; Non-religious float - By original material along with other
the Way Store and Rutland popular songs.
Friendly Gard'e ners Club;
Following their performance,
Marching unit- Shady River Delayn said she will perform at the
Shufflers and Satin and Lace; Meil(s County Fair on Saturday,
Antique car - Butch Meier and' Aug . 22, at 8 p.m. as a special
Frank Case; Horse - Paul guest of Pure Country.
McDaniel arid Daniel Young; Semi
Afterwards , a pie and cake
-Chris Napper and Mary Napper. auction was held to sell entries into
Congressman Ted Strickland (D- the pie and cake contest. In
Lucasville) was present during the addition, a celebrity auction was
parade and used the event as an held with items frOm Gai'th Brooks,
opportunity to meet several of his Alan Jru:kson, Pam Tillis and other
constituents. Strickland, visiting country and western celebrities.
The evening waS concluded at 1.0
while Congress recesses for the
.
p.m. with frreworks.
.

CEUijliTY AUCTION- Part of Monday's Rutland Ox
Roast celebration included a celebrity auction of items from
famous country and western performers. Here, auctioneer Keith

Flooding Mississip,pi
PERUQUE, Mo. (AP) - People small rapids still showed at several
fled farm homes Monday as the spots as the river poured over the
relentless force of the Mississippi structure's remains, rushing farther
. .
River punched a hole through out or its bed.
another levee, this one about four . A lillie downriver, wh~re the
miles inland of the river's usual also-swollen Missouri River flows
bank.
.
into the Mississippi, volunteers
· More rain Upstream threatened to slapped sandbags atop levees
prolong the inundation. Additional protecting West Alton, which lies
storms were forecast at least between the two rivetS.
Upstream, the Mississippi
through lhe end of the week.
A part of the levee at 'Peruque appeared to have cresred at 22 feet
was breached about 4:30 am. and in Davenpon, Iowa, site of some of
II rural homes had to be the worst damage to dale along the
evl)cuated . At midday· Monday, river. That level was unchanged

spread~

from Sunday and half a foot short
of the record set in a 1965 flood.
More evacuations were underway
in Illinois.
The levee
in Peruque
(pronounced peh-rook'), north of
StLouis, is about four miles across
pancake-flat land from where the
river usually runs, and residents a
mile beyond that were taking
precautions. Some packed
sandbags arourid the foundations of
their houses and others tried to seal
their homes with cardboard and
. plastic.

Molden sells a shirt belonlllng to a member of The Mavericks.
(SeJJIIDel photo by Jim Freeman)
·

after levee breaks

Greg and Sue Lister were trying
to decide whether to evacuate t,he
70 dogs from a kennel they operate
about a mile from the levee.
"You can't wait until it's right
there ·before you do something,"
swaidGreg. . .
They had •b een working since
4:·30 a.m., along with about 30
helpers, including 'several strangers
who drove in and volunteered, to
protect their home. It took two
truck loads of sand and about4 ,000
sandbags to build a wall 3 feet
high.
South of St. Louis; an apartment

complex was evacuated in Jim Edgar ordered out 150
Barnhart. In Crystal City, water National Guard,members to bolster
lapped at the back of, the post , flood-fighting efforts on his side of
office, said SgL Chris Pigg with the the river.
.
.
. '
Jefferson County Sheriff's
As much as 6 anches of ram agam
Department.
Monc!ay brought out n.ash-flood
Missouri Gov . Mel Carnahan alerts for small streams urwestem
ordered additional National Gwd Iowa arid northweslem IlliDOis. Up
troops to help, with 30 soldiers to to 4 inches fell in northeast l?~a.
serve in Hannibal and Clarksville where Jones County authonues
and 25 more to watch dikes and evacuated homes in tlie tiny town
levees in the eJ&lt;treme northeast part of Langworthy early Monday after
'
a creek surged out of its banks.
of the state.
The bulging Mississippi has
Nearly one-thi~d of the 6,000
broken levees in Winfield, Mo., residents of Madison, S.D., were
and near Gulfport, Ill.Illinois Gov. forced out of their homes over the
weekend by flooding.

Clinton, Miyazawa look for progress
Dillon
may
go
to
trial
in
deaths
on framework for trade agreement

GRANGE COMPETES • Star Junior Grange
competed recently in the Ohio State Grange
district ritualistic contest in Ragerville,
Tuscarawas County. The. t'am performed a sb:-·
minute drill under tbe direction or Linda
Montgomery, leader. The team received a score

of 95 out o(lOO and received third place hooon.
Keith Ashley was pianist. Pictured are: first
row, K,Yie White and Joshua Slater: Second
row, Michael Macomber, Emily Ashley, Autumn
Slater and Chelsea Montgomery. Third row,
. Eric Montgomery, Rachael Ashley and Peggy
Smith.
r

ALL
2&amp; 3 PIECE
LIVING RO.OM SUITES
REDUCED!
Save
1200 to 1600

ALL
I;JEDROO
. SUITES
REDUCED!

TOKYO (AP) - As world
leaders gathered for their annual
economic summit today, President
·Clinton and Japanese Prime
.Minister Kiichi Miyazawa
expressed optimism about
concluding a broad' trade agreement
that would resolve a contentious
dispute between the world's two
biggest economies.
Both Clinton and Miyazawa said
progress was being made in last·
minute talks aimed at forging a
broad framework agreement that
the Unired States believes will help
reduce America's $50 billion trade .

deficit with Japan.
This -is Clinton's debut at the
annual gathering of capitalism's
premier club - the Group of
Seven - whicb opens three days
of formal discussions on
Wednesday.
.
There were extremely low
expectations for any results from
this year's summit, given the host
of economic problems facing the
global economy and the weak
standing of the participants.
However, a U.S.-Japan trade
deal, or even significant progress
toward one, could change the tone

of the gathering.
"The negotiations have not been
free of difficulty but some
significant progress has been
made," Clinton said at a joint news
con.ference following talks with
Mixazawa.
.
• Both of us are detennined that a
proper framework must be put in
place," Miyazawa told reporters.
Even if the two sides do reach
agreement, Miyazawa is facing
elections in two weeks that very
well could end his party's 38-year
grip on - power, leaving the
Continued on Page 3

Desert tradition preserves fruit, indian culture
•
By GEORGE GARTIES
Associated Press Writer
SAGUARO
NATIONAL
MONUMENT, Ariz. (AP) - The
Tohono O'odham Indian woman
squints in the morning's bright
sunlight, looking for red in the
cluster of fruit that crowns a tall
saguaro cacrus.
. Stret.c;hing up with a 25-foot
stick, she knocks ripe fruit to the&lt;
ground in a harvest that will fill her
larder with jam and help preserve a
culture that evolved around
survival in an inhospitable desert.
Stella Tucker - a full-blooded
O'odham despite her urban Tucson
address and the ring of Chicago in
her name - is one of the few
members other tribe who still
camps in the desert for three weeks
eacb summer to reap the fruit of
Arizona's signature cactus.
As most Americans are preparing
for Independence Day picnics,
she's gathering material for a sort
of tribal New Year's' ceremony to
ensure the summer rains will
continue to nourish the Son or an
Desert.
"I love this," Tucker said.
"When I come out here I get a
blood rush."
The saguaro harvest generaily
starts in late June and lasts only a
few weeks. It ends with the onset
of the desen monsoon season, a

time of sporadic downpours and the edge of Tucson, sleeping in a
spectacular lightning shows in the lean-to.
southern Arizona desert.
·
With the help of relatives, she
The harvest marked the stan of picks fruit in the relative cool of
the year for traditional O'odham, the morning and evening. In the
said Donald Baht, an Arizona State triple-digit heat of the day, she
University anthropologist Some of tends a battered pot over a wood
the fruit was fermented by holy fire, cooking saguaro ·pulp down
men in a four-day ceremony that · into jam or syrup.
climaxed with an entire village
If she 's lucky enough to be
sharing copious amounts of sweet invited to a wine feast' on the
red wine and tistening to speeches reservation, she'll contribute some
intended to call down the rains.
syrup to be made into wine, Ramon
The tradition coexists with the said
Roman Catholicism embraced by
The syrup, drizzled on muffins,
most O'odham . Tucker's sister, tortillas or Indian fry}read, looks
Anna Gomez, takes a pinch of and tastas lilce a thin molassas with'
saguaro pulp and makes the sign of a hint of fruit or fig.
It's getting to be a rare treat.
the cross before her first taste.
"Tbe culbire is kind or dying down
"For luck," sht said.
The "wine feasts" are getting because nobody does it any more,''
rarer on the Tohono O'odham Tacker said.
Her nieces don'tlilce to abandon
reservation, as are the stormirrigated patches of com, tepary TV and friends for the ri¥0rs of
beans and squash that once fed the camp. Her oldest daaghter Just ~ot
tribe, said Tucker's cousin, Helen a college de!!fCC in fashion deSign
and is workmg in New York and
Ramon.
Ramon, a teacher, sometimes another daughter in her 20s isn't
brings children to the saguai'o camp much interested in cactus.
But she has hope for her 12-year·
in her quest to keep tradition alive
among the 12,000 O'odham who old.
"My youngest daughter, she's
inhabit a 75-by-100 mile
real
interested. She's been 'doing
reservuion along the Mexican
this
since
she was 3," Tucker said.
border.
The
girl
isn't around this
Tucker will spend two or three
~oming,
though.
~he's gone to the .
in her camp in this park on

weeks

CII'CUS.

. .

ALL ·
ROCKER
RECLINERS &amp;
WALL RECLINERS
REDUCED!

Save

to'200

ALL
LLOYD
OUTDOOR
FURNITURE
AT CLOSEOUT
PRICES!

he discussed a plea arrangement
with investigators Friday, but he
also said a deal remains unsettled
between his attorneys and
Continued On Page 3'

·Virginia law may have impact
onfirearms-sales in Ohio ·
COLUMBUS , Ohio (AP) Federal agents say the lack of ·
statewide
restrictions
on
purchasing guns could make Ohio
more appeali!lg as a source of.
illegal weapons. But gun control
opponents disagree.
Ohio is a lilcely place for buying
weapons because Virginia, which
used to lack restrictions, enacted
limits last week, the agents say.
The new Virginia law restricts
handgun purchases to one a month
per person and requires an instant
buyer background check by
telephone.
·
Federal officials believe Virginia
was the source of 30 percent of
New York's illegal weapons in·
1991.
"When one place dries up, the
slack is going to be picked up by
the nearest state,' said John
O'Brien, spokesman for the New
York office of the U.S. Bureau of

Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms.
"Obviously, it's going to have an
impact on Ohio," he told The
Columbus Dispatch in a story
published Monday.
"Your average drug dealer, he
likes new guns in the box, just like
an avid collector. They want
reliable guns and that means
buying them from gun shops," said
Don Mapley, agent in charge of the
bureau's Columbus office.
Frank Fecke, a lobbyist for the
Ohio Rifle and Pistol Association,
the Ohio affiliate of the National
Ri(le Association, disagreed.
"Most of the guns involved in
criminal activities don't go through
controllable sources. They come
from the black market," he said.
"I don't think any of those laws
do any good," Fecke added. He
advocates stiffer penalties for
criminals as a deterrent.
·

Drug dealers in l!&lt;ew York sell
cocaine in Columbus for cash, buy
cheap handguns and sell them i'n
New York for a profit, federal
ag~nts said.
.
A gun that will sell for $50 here
will sell for $300, $400 in New
York, so there's a large profit
margin," A1F Agent Larry Ford
told a federal magistrate during a
hearing in November.
Agents said would-be handgun
buyers in New York City must wait
months and undergo an extensive
background check.
·
ATF records show that 106 'of
1,532 handguns that New York
City police traced in 1991 were
bought in Ohio. Ohio was third
behind Virginia and Florida as a
source state at the time.
Florida almost stopped being a
source in October 1991 after it
enacted a mandatory three-day wait
for fu:earms purchases.
·

State police say coal
.. trucks burned

. Alt.
ALL
1993 ZENITH TV's
AT
CLOSEOUT PRICES!

A man charged with killing three be facing trial on the three
outdoorsmen in eastern Ohio won't aggravared murder charges against
say whether he is involved in a plea h1m.
·arrangement.
Meanwhile,
Thomas Lee Dillon told· The
published reports indicate he may Associated Press on Monday that

GIBSON &amp;
· · KELVINATOR
REFRIGERATORS
REDUCED!
TO PERFORM AT FAIR- Slteela Delaya,
Meigs County native nd rising star, will
perform at the Meigs County Fair this year as a
special auest ~ Pore Cooatry wblcb Is already
sebeduled to appear. Charles Williamson, lead
signer and rhythm RUltar player for Pure

Country said 't be band will take the stage
Saturday, Aug. 22, at 8 p.m. as "Pure County
and Thea Some." Here, Sheela Delayn (Then
Some), secood from left~ chats It up with Riel\
Asbbura, slaaer aad lead guitarist for Pure
Country, public relations agebt Roger Stiles and
Wllliai,DSOD, rlaht.

to lie down in his office for 30
WHARTON, W.Va. (AP) Two coal trucks were set on fire minutes, said Cpl. K.T. Quinlan of
and a third was damaged by thugs South Charleston.
Authorities were called about 25
who overpowered a security gJianl,
minutes
later and firefighters put.
state.police said. It wasn't known if
out
the
blaze,
he said.
the incident was relaied to the coal
Two
tractor
trailer cabs were
strike.
.
burned
and
glass
was broken on a
No one was injured or charged,
third,
he
said.
police said.
The cabs were set ablaze with
· ·A security guard at Berry
Trucking's garage told police up to lighter fluid, Whaley said. Police
20 "people entered company · found two empty l_ighter fluid
prope,rty _early Monday, said containers in the cabs, he said.
Berry Trucking is near Eastern
dispatcher Lance Whaley 10 South
Associated
Coal
Corp.'s
Charleston. 'He would DOt release
strikebound
Colony
Bay
Mine.
The
guard's name.
company
has
transported
supplies
Police did not know if the men
to the mine; during the United Mine
had weapons, he said.
Worker's
strike against companies
Two masked men told the' guard

·~

'

belonging to the Bituminous Coal
Operator's Association, officials
said.
Eastern Associated spokesman
Patrick Gallagher said damage was
estimated at $300,000. ·
.
UMW spokesman Jim Grossfeld
in Washmgton, D.C., did not
immediately return a telephone
message seeking comment
The UMW says about 14,000
miners are on strike in West
Virginia, Illinois, Indiana,
Pennsylvania, Ohio and {(entucky.
The strike began May ·10, after a
60-day con\!11Ct extension with the
coal association expired.
·
Charleston-based
Eastern
Associated is a subsidiary of ·
.PeabOdy Holding Co. of St Louis.

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