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                  <text>Poineroy~lddlei)Ort, Ohio

Page 10-The Dally Sentinel

Tueadlly, June 11,.1991

Scenes from Heritage Weekend in Pomeroy

Ohio Lottery

Reds trip
Expos for 3rd
straight win

Pick3:365
P-ick 4: 3875
Cards : 5·H, Q·C
7-D; 8-S

near 85 •

Page4

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" Vol. 42, No. 27
CaPrrlahted f•i

tOS t-fiOH

N·

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June1

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:~. fi(U1lO'( · lft.JTL.NI), ottO
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...

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ma•y Herltaae Weekead \'~alton at the Meip
Couty Mueum. Here they learned allollt rag
basket maldq from demoDStrator, Juae Ashley,

MAKING RAG BASKETS ·- Lt. Col.
Edward MD BI'OWII, bls wife, the former Dottie
WUcoxea or RadDe, aad their SOD, Ted, visiting
here f'rom Georgia where Lt. Col. BrOWD is sta·
tioned with the U. S. Air Force, were amODR the

Letart Falls.

·

MEIGS BAND • The Melaa Hlah School
MarcbiDR Baad, ucler the dlndloa of Toney
. Dlnpu, performed In the Herltqe Parade 0!1

PREPARING POR RIVER SWEEP Kenny Wlallu, director of the Melp County
Litter Cotitrol PI'CJII'Im, aad other helpers are
pictured baa2ibg the blllner in Pomeroy lor the
Third Annual 'Oblo River Sweep to be beld Sat-

:O~io
.

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••

)

C){

~ t ~

•

ENTERTAINERS ·The C011ntry KID Band
entertabled with a variety, of country aad blae
grass music: Sunday afternooa at the Melt&amp;
.Museum's Herltaae Weekend celebration. b t6e

aroup IJ'om Jackson are J. C. Sbup on tbe
d1111111, JICk Sbarp, baa, Evelyn Sharp, vocalist,
and WIIUe Sbarp, lelld pltar, I to r.

Yesteryear essay winners
Mick Barr, fifth 8rade student at COOICSilUIIS and their parents in the
Salisbury Elementary, is the Meigs fall.
Winners are:
County winner of tbe Yesteryear
essay COIIIest.
.
Salisbury: Mick Barr, also counFifth grade studatts who partici- ty winner; second, Shera PatiCI'SOn ..
Bradbury: filS!, Jenny Hayman;
pated in the Meip County Retired
Senior Volunteer Yesteryear pro- second, Angela Baum.
Racine: l'U'St, Nichole }{ill; secgram, beld at the Meigs County
Museum in April, ~~ written ond, Amanda Theiss.
Rutland: first, A.J. Vaughan;
reports about tbeu work project
and lheir visil to the museum. Stu- second, Tabitha Powell.
Rejoicing Life: fii'St, Aaron Pandents were encouraged to write and
express, in their own words, their gio, second, Sleven Rice.
Tuppen' Plains: f1ts1, Michelle
feelings and personal experiences
Caldwell;
second, Abe Rach.
of their YeSICryear day.
Cbester: first, Leigh Ann CanThe essays have been judged
and wi11ners selected. The essays terbury; second, Todd Marcum.
Letart Falls: first, 1conifer
wiU be on display at the museum
throughout the summer. A recep- Roush; second, Wesley Hall.
tion will be beld for tbe winning

by the Pomeroy Mercbiats .•IIIOdatioli. Post 39
also was awarded a trophy for Best Walkiag
Unit.
·

LEADING THE PARADE· The AlllerlciD
Leglo• Drew Webster Post No. 39 led the Heritqe Parade Ia Pomeroy on Saturday sponsored

June 16th

Malee Dad's Yardwork =

Easier
Ia Pumeroy on Saturday. The band wis awiii'Cl·
eel a trophy ror Best Marchiq Unit.

EASTERN "BAND - Tbe Easter• HIRh
School Marcbla1 Ba•d, uDder tbe dlrectloa of
WUIIIID 111111, marched In the Heritaae Plradr

BEST
YOUTH
AUTHENTIC COSTUMEAsbley ROICb was 8 winDer ID
the HerltaJil! Costume Contest
on Saturday In the categOry or
best youtb autheatlc: costume.
Tbe costume Is OWIIed by Barbara Betzlaa aad dates from
the 1800's.

wnH A

STIHL

Lightweight ond dependable. S~hltrimmers ore
greot lor cutting places
)'OUr mower can't reach.
Got ~e .at a great price
.

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I

7:ob,l:ll Mllf
SAT/SUI MTtlllU
J :OII,l: l5

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7:81,1:20 DULY
SAT/51M "'TUIUI
l :IG ,l :IO

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FORMATION DANCE TEAM PER·
FORMS • Tile OIJJo State Ullhanlt7 I'Drmation
DAce Teaa pel1-ed a •amber ol bal room
dUCe steps oa Satanlay ~ • a part or
't

~erltqe Weelend rmlvltles of tile Po•eroy
ercUnll Aaoc:ild011. Members ol tile dance
tea• •e Cbril Jellra, Sllelley Hornikel Stacy
Coli, Tom Mako and Du R....
'

:::J

FULL LINE OF BlUSH CUnEI$ IN STOCK
AT

(11'&lt;'

\tiCk!~~

~ 'Huos'or~
HAWK

.

be cleaned. "In so many ways, we
all enjoy the benefits which lhe
river provides; bere is our cbance
The Third An~ual Ohio River to join hands and give something in
Sweep, organized by the Ohio return in cleaning up 1he ri"ver
River·,Valley Water Sanitation front, promoting recreation and
Commission (ORSANCO), in . improving water quality," says
cooperation with Environmental Wiggins.
.
Prolection Asencies, the U.S. . · Wig~!. states that over 300
.Corps ell!ngineen and the Divi- · pe~
.Wady vcilunteere&lt;\
s100 of Litter Preventioo, 1!11d RC~~:y-, tbeir time on SalurdaY. but that
. cling will take plaee Salurday more volunteerS are sull needed.
morning.
ThQ!!C- wining to belp are asked to
!be · ~w~ will encompass the
call 992-6360. AJatn !his yeat I·
enure leilgth of the river fnim Pitts- · . shirts will be given to theBe volimburgh, Pa:., to Cairo, IU. which is .a teering in the clean-up work. Trash
total distance of 981 miles.
bags and gloves will ~ provided
Kenny Wiggins, director of the and there wi11 1 of course, be adult
Meigs Cou~ty Litter C~Urol Pro- supetvision for participating youth
~· explains that Me1gs County
in the areas cleaned.
1s_bordeted by 57 miles ~fthe Ohio
Clean-up siiCS have been selectRiv~r, the banks of which need to
ed in Middlepon, Pomeroy, Syra-

POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO
600 E. MAIN

992-2094

POMEROY

cuse, Racine, Long Bonom and
Forked Run State Park area. VolunteerS will be notified of their work
sites. In Middleport, workers
should repon to Diles Park on d!e
riVerfront near Family DoUar stOre.
In Pomeroy, report to the stage area
on the upper parking lot. In Racine,
the meeting place is the shelter
ho~ee..at tbe Old Ferry, La)ldbig .
Keith Wood wiU~lJ!IJ~as
at l'ortM l.tllli 'SH M 1$upet\'l,:
son will be at each sile afiCr 8:30
!J.m. on Saturday.
V()lunteers should wear old
clothes and shoes or boots, lona
pants or jeans and gloves, if avaifable. Group "Jiiadei'S should brina
cold drinking water for their group.
Clean-up activities shollld conclude by noon and refresbmenls
will be provided for all worken.

7u

By JULIE E. DILLON
Seatinei News Staff
An addition was approved for
an Occupation Work Adjustmenl
(OWA) unit at Meigs Junior High
School and the implementation of a
grads program at Meigs High
School by the Meigs Local Board
of Education at its regular meeting
Tuesday evening.
James Carpenter, superintendent, reported .that the work program at the junior high will benefil
students who are posSibly ai risk of
dropping out of school. Participants
• in the program would work for an
· hour a day, for approximately $1
per hour, under the supervision of a
·. program coordinalor. Carpenter
· stated if work within the business
district .o f the ViUage of Middleport was unobtainable then participants would work around the
_school grounds.
Board mem~ Robert Snowden
: stressed his feelings that a $1 an

~

hour OWA participl!Jit ~ould not
replace someone currently worlcing
for the distric~ such as a cook or
custodian, and Board member
Larry Rope voiced his opinion that
the program should not take the
place of the educational process.
The grads program, to be implemented at the high school, will
benefit sludents,in the area of family living and child development.
Carpenter reported that th•s program, which would operate in the
home economics depurunent, has
received approval from the state
and would cost the Meigs Local
School District nothing.
·
In other matters the board
accepted the resignation of Rebecca Zurcher as head teaeher at Middleport Elementary.
The board voted, four to one
with Snowden in disagreement, to
employ Oary Walker IS EMIS
Coordinator for the 1991-92 school
Continued on page 3

A Cheshire man was cited for failure to yield Tuesday following
a two-car acc1dent on Slate Route 7.
Harry T. ~ysell. 68~ was cited following the accident in Salisbury Township. According to a report from the Gallia-Meigs post of
the Swe Highway l'alrol, Hysell was northbound and was aaempting to get to the end of a line of lraff'JC that was in the southbound
lane. flyseU llltmpled to make a U·tum from the benn of the northbound lane, and struck a passing car, driven by Tommy H
MeGI'Ilh, 38, of Racine. The crash did light damage to both vehi:
c~.
.
Neither driver was .injured. Hysell's ~assenger, Gertrude E.
Hysell, 68, or Chesh1re, and McGrath s passenger Tina D
McGrath,l8,ofRacine,wercnotinjured.
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Deputies probe B &amp; E
A breaking and entering at the residence of Ishmael and Shirley
Smitb on State Route 32!1 west ol Danvilla is under investigation by
the Meif! County Sheriff'a DepebiJent and the BCI.
Shenff James M. Soullby reported that when Mr. and Mn.
Smitb recumed home from vecl'ion Monday night they found IICVCoiidnlied OD ~· 3
. .

.,

PIKETON, Ohio (AP) - Striking union workers blocked
entrances to the Portsmouth
Gaseous Diffusion Plant early
today, despile a court order limiting
the number of pickets, a union official said.
The workers, members of Local
3·689 of the Oil, Chemical and
Atomic Workers Union, went on
slrike Tuesday at the uranium
enrichment plant in this southern
Ohio cily. The union represents
1,()70 workers at the planL
Union spokesman Don Crufan
said the temporary restraining order
obtained by the plant's manager,
Mallin Marietta EnerRY Syltenls,

a

had not been served ·to union official. He said the pickets would
remain until the aulhoritics had
done so.
.
Union members began picketing
the plant Tuesday afternoon and
used vehicles to block all roads into
plant. officials said
Martin Marietta received a temporary res1.raining order from CO!I'mon Pleas 1udge Gordon Bevms
thai would allow people to enter
and leave the plant. The order, in•
effect until June 25, also limits to
four the number of pickets ·allowed
at each of six gates oil the 3,800acre site.
Crufan said Pike County Sheriff

Lan'y Travis brought the·ordcr to

tbe union's meeting hall Monday
night.
Travis " threw the injunction on
tbe ground and left because there
was no (ofricial) here 10 acoept it,"
Crufan said . "He served the
injunction on the b\IQding."
~. Travis was not in his ocnce
early today, sheriff's dispatcher
John Harris said. Harris did not
know when Travis would be available for com mcnL
Inside the plant, managen and
supervisors had taken over for
unton workers to keep it operating,
Martin Marielta spokesman Tim
Con tlnued 011 pqe 3

GUEST SPEAKER • Tom
Reuter, Pomeroy Postmaster,
spoke at Tuesday'• -dllg or
tbe Melp County Chamber ~
Commerce on tbe United
States Postal Servke,ltl devel·
· opment and Its servlce1. The
meeting was conducted it tbe
Pomeroy Nurs1D1 and Reba·
bilitation Center.

Bates, Sisson

new chamber
directors
By JULIE E. DILLON
Seatlael New~ Starr
Ernie Sisson and Gary Bates
were named to the Board of Directon for the Meip County Clamber
of Commerce at liS regular monlhly
meeting on . Tuesday at the
PomerQy Nursin1 and Rehabilita·
. lion Cenler.
Sisson· will represent the community ol Syracuae and Bat.el wUI
1epa Jeilt the Chester area. Meigs
County Cb1mber of Commeree
President Dr. Nick Robinson
reported tbete are 16 board positionslvailable.
Elizabeth Scblad, Meil8 County
Economic Development l&gt;irector'
Condaued 011 pqe 3

ENERGY PLANT STRIKE • Memben of
Loeall-619 of the 011, Chemical and Atoalc
Workers ••loa called a atrlke a1alut Mardi
Marietta Eaeru S:nteml at the Porttmoutb

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•••

Ohio for n:view and approval. The
plans must include cost estirnates.
with a comparison of COSIS of aliefnative alfllpliance plans considered
by the company. In each case, utilities must show that they chose the
least-cost option.
The bill requires the PUCO to
review the "continued approJ1riale·ness" of each plan withm 30
months, and it says the commission
will deem th~; ·enactment of an
approved compliance plan a pru- ·
dent management action for utility
mte-maldng purposes.
It says that if a utility's compliance plan calls for a switch to a
fuel olher than Ohio coal, the utility must submit to the PUCO an
analysis of job and other losses that
would resufL The PUCO then must
identify tbe statewide economic
impact but is not required to
approve or reject a plan on the
basis of that information.
In addition, the bill includes an .
accelerated perm it process for
locating .and opeta!ing facilities to
dispose of solid waste generated by
scrubbers, and prohibiiS local gOY•
emments from imposing regulations on such facilities.
The bill authorizes the Ohio Air
Quality Development Authority to
assist utilities with bond issue
fmancing for scrub~s and facilities that bandlc solid wastes generated by clean-air plants.
Ney said all the utilities ~Jared
·themselves neutral on the bill but
that it hu the endorsement or the
United Mine Wo~ers, the Ohio ·
Manufacturers Association, the
Ohio Office ·or the C()llsumers'
Counsel and the administration of
Gov. George Voinovich.
Sen. Eugene Watts, R-Columbus, cast tbe only vote against the
bill but did not speak against iL

Piketon workers ignore court
order, block entrance to plant

Meigs board approves
additional OWA unit

Man cited in crash

\PRING VWf\ CINfMA
14G

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---Local briefs--...;..

$12995

•led·

ardayiiiOI'JIIna. Cleu-ap lltel llan bee•
eel Ia Middleport, Pomeroy, Syracuse, Rae IDe,
Loa1 Bottom ud Forked Raa S. . Park IU'ea.
Over 300 people have volunteered to help out
with the river bank cleaD-up PJ"'OI''DD·

River Sweep. Saturday

· By JULR E. DILLON
Sentlnel"NeWII Staff

I

towns," he said. "For the lald-off
miners and those other spin-off
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A jobs losses. there are no otber ecobill desi~ to belp Ohio's coal- nomic opportunities. There are no
fired uttlities comply with tbe other industrial bases to rely upon
Clean Air Act while protecting 10 pick up the slack."
A similar bill has had extensive
Ohio's coal industry has cleared
hearings
in the House. That bill's
the Senate.
Sen. Robert Ney, R-Barnesville, sponsor, Rep. Jerry Krupinski, Dwbose bill went to the House on SteubenviUe, said he supports most
Tuesday by a vote of 32-1' and oth- of the Sena1e bill and cxpccu it to
. ers called it a !eBSOI\Able response be the vehicle for filjal considerato a problem that Washin~ton tion.
Ney said he hopes the proposal
unfair!~ ~t the Stale in a btd to
will
be enacted before July 1.
·stop ac1d ram.
.
Under the federal act, Ohio's
The bill provides incenqves for
utilities to continue to bum Ohio's electric utilities are required to
high-sulfur coal. These include tax make signifiCant reductions in sulbreaks for the installation of scrub- fur emissions by Jan. I, 1995.
But American Electric Power
~ technology to reduce the sulfur
Co., owner of the Gavin power
coo'tent of smokestaCk emissions.
Ney said the government used plant in Gallia County, said 11 must
fedeJ'al money to bail out the sav- decide this summer wllether to
ings and loan industry, calling it a install scrubbers or swileh to lownational problem, while forcing sulfur coal from other states to
Ohio and a few other states to • comply wjth the acL
finance acid rain abatement themThe Gavin decision could cost
the jobs of I,258 miners at a mine
selves.
"The White House, the U.S. in Meigs County. AEP has conflouse and the U.S..Seilate has cho-. ducted studies indicating a switch"
sen to be cruel to Ohio," said Ney. to non-Ohio coal would be cheaper
His sentiments were echoed. by than installing scrubbers at a price
it estimated at $800 million.
.members of both parties.
Ney said lhe jobs of 7,000 Ohio
AEP spokesman Michael
miners are at stake, along with Mahoney said Tuesday that the
thos~ of support industries and . decision is pending and the compabusinesses that push the total to ny has no position OQ the bill.
Ney's measure provides a ercdlt
(!11,000 in the coal fields of south'easl .Ohio. That pan of the state against Ohio's gross
wt.
already ,is·'reeling· with poverty and The credit would te $1
ton of
Ohio- ooill used, not to exceed 20
• unemploYrriCrii. · "' ··· .,,
··
percent
of costs or" the installation
Sen. fan Michael Long, D-Cirand
use
of scrubbers - if the utiliclevillo, told tbe Sena1e that the
economic impacl on ·the solitheast ty's generating fuel is 90 percent
Ohio area would be devastating if Ohio coal or 80 percent if mixed
with another fuel.
· ·
the legislation did not pass.
The credits also would apply to
"Quite frankly, ir the mines
close, the potelltial is very real for plants that already have scrubbers.
It requires electric utilities to
many of tliese (southeastern Ohio)
commu11itles to become ghost submit compliance plans to the
Public Utilities Commission of
From staff aa4 wire reporiS

Saturday Ia Pomeroy for Heritage Weekend.
~;t~o received a tropby for Best

I

2A''""::d~'
Ptl~
21 ,.,_.
oenta
Muld
lno.
Pkw

1991 · ·

Long-studied coal bill
clears Ohio Senate

MARCHI NO BAND

".

Low tonight in 60s.
Chance of rain 20 per.
cent. High Thursday

..

.

G•eta Dllbliil Plut Tv 'IJ aonlq lifter
a 1eeolld alteiDpt to J•IHtart CODirlct talb
falltd. Some ~ tile l,tSO - b i n bJocl:ed tile
eatranc:e to tbe plant a• part or the atrlkl•l
activities. (AP)

.'

�•
Wednesday, June 12, 1991

·Commentary

P~~ge 2

The D811y BenUnel
Pomeroy..:Uiddleport, Ohio
Wednaday, June 12,1991

Cooler air expected to move into Ohio

1borsday; June 13
.Accu-Weather- forecast for daytime conditions and high teanperatutes
MICH.

The Daily Sent~nel
Ill CIHII1 street

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON ARE A

ROBERT J., WINGETf
Puhllsber

.

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

General

Mana~er

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publlsher/ Conlroller

..,''
,· .
'

A MEMBER of The Associated P ress, Inland Dally P ress Asso·
ela tion and t he Ame rican News paper Publishe rs Association.

'
LEITERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be le ss than300

words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No un signed letters will be pub·
llshed. Letters should be In gnod taste, a ddressing Issues, not personal!·
ties.

·· Health insurance a hot issue

..

ByWALTERR.MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
' · WASIDNG10N - One of these elecbon years, national health insur·, ance is going 10.become an issue that can swing votes - but lhe White
House seems to be wagering that it won't be 1992.
The administration is handling health care with a siUdy and silence,
' excepl for President Bush's proposal to control spiraling medical mlllprac. Lice costs ~ seeking 10 limit damll$e awards.
Bush wtll discuss his domesuc agenda in a White House address
Wednesday night, but an administration health care proposal is not
'expecled to be part of it
'
.
.
Democrats are pushing legislation 10 overhaul the whole system; while
formulas vary, the objective is universal health insurance covemge. There
. ' are S!llllC Republican proposals along similar lines.
• The measures come with titles that sound more lilce political slogans
· ' than laws: Health USA, Americare, Medicore, Health Care for All Americans. That may be.appropriate on a subject that has been under political
· debale for decades.
It's been the topic of more lalk than action, aod may be again.
• But let health care costs and needs continue unanswered, sar.s Demo• •'cratic Sen. John D. Rockefeller IV of West Virginia, and it will lead to
· · economic collapse.
.
-• At current escalating mtes, Rockefeller said, the $765 billion that will
· •.. be spent on health care this year will become $2 trillion in the year 2000.
!. • Rockefeller is exploring a bid for the Democmt,ic presidentiltl nomina,. · Lion, and h.ealth care is one of his issues. That amounts to a test case on
the kiild of complex problem that is hard 10 handle in the shorthand of a
· political campaign,
.
There's no question about the n~ to do something. The questions are
· · what and when and how 10 pay for 1t w1th the government deep 1D the red
•. · and constrained by the spending limits of the 1990 budget deal, ceilings
that last past the 1992 election.
The administration is considering health care proposals, but the topic is
not high on the priority list.
·
That yields the subject to the DemocraiS, for whom it is not new business. They're been at 11 since Harry S. Truman's time. The Medicare progmm of health insurance for the elderly was a Truman administnltion proposal, but Lyndon B. Johnson was president before the bill became law,
20 years later. Truman also favored broader national health insurance, ·
whiCh didn't stand a chance in his lime.
i &gt;· •
'fhere have been Republican initiatives 100. Richard M. Nixon proposed a national health insurance plan in 1971, with employers and workers to Share the cost of basic coverage and the government to insure the
poor. Democratic critics ~s~ 10 gaps and limits in the Nixon plan; Sen.
Edward M. Kennedy of
husetts called it a formula for ''poorhouse
medicine."
But a debate once cenlered on health care for the needy now involves a
problem that is n:aching the middle class, as health costs and insurance
. mtes soar, and employers cut back benefits or coverage.
And Kennedy is now co-sponsoring a plan that shares some feaiUres
: . with that old Nixon proposal.
.
An estimated 34 million to 37 million Americans have no health insur, ·ance; more than 60 million are under-insured against the costs of major
: ·illness. The health care ex~ses of large U.S. businesses increased by
: nearly 22 percent in 1990. Health care costs equal more than 12 percent of
the gross national product.
Proposals for change range from government health insurance to cover
: every American 10 voluntary systems·with incentives 10 business to pro, vide health co,verage for their employees.
·
Senate Democratic leaders have proposed what Sen. George J.
: Mitchell, 0-Maine., called a compromise, to guarantee coverage by
· requiring that employers provide insurance or pay an extra payroll tax to
; finance government health insurance.
That plan also would include medical cost controls, and government
health insurance for the needy, a1 an estimated cost of $6 billion, with no
: · immediate proposal for raising the money.
• · nun's one problem; another lies in Republican, coll"servative and small
: ' business opposition to the mandatory provision 10 insure or be wed.
: . Still, afJer all the years of talk about health costs and insurance, something is going 10 happen, perhaps not immediately, but soon.
,
The American Medical Association, a bastion of opposition to govern' ment involvement in health care in Truman's era and ton¥ after, now
: favors reform 10 guarantee that all Americans can get care. 'An aura of
; • inevitability is upon US,'' said an editorial in the AMA Journal.
"For millions of Americans .. , health care is the pocketbook issue,"
said Rockefeller.

.'
,

EDITOR'S NOTE - Waller R. Mears. vice president aod columnist
· for The Associaled Press, has reported on Washington and national politits for more than 2S years.

..

Today in history
By The Associated Press
Today is Wednesday, June 12, the 163rd day or 1991. There are 202
days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On June 12, 1§39, the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum
; was dcdicaled in Cooperstown, N.Y. - one hundred years 10 the day on
• whidl Abner Doubleday supposedly invented the sport. (Most sports histOrians doubt, however, that Doubleday truly invented baseball).
On this dale:
In 1665, England in51811ed a municipal J!OVernment in New York, formerly the DuiCh seulemenl of New Am~ .
In 1776, Virginia's colonial legislature became the ftrSt to adopt a Bill
of Rights.
In 1838, the Iowa Territory was organized.
In 1898, Philippine nationalists declared indepenclence from Spain.
In 1937, the Soviet Union executed eight army leaders as a purge
l.lllder Josef Stalin continued.
In 1963, civil rights leadts Medgar Evers was fatally shot in front of
his h9me in JaclcsOn, Miss.
In 1963, one of Hollywood's costliest litilures, "Cleopatra," staning
Elizabeth Taylor, Richard Burton and Rex Harrison, premitsed in New
· York.
. In 1~7. the. U.S. Supi'CIIIC Court struck down state laws JrOhibiting

mlen'IICial marnages.

In 1971, 20 years ago, Tricia Nix,on and Edward F. Cox wen: manied
in a ceremony in the While Houle Rose Garden.
In 1978, David Berkowitz Wll aentcneed to 25 years 10 life in prison
for each of the six "Son or Sam" .44-caliber.killings that had terrified
New Yorkers.
In 1979, 26-year-old cyclist Brylll Allen flew the man-powaed Gossamer Albatross 8CI'OS$ the English Ollnnel.

•
IToledo I 7a•l

Walesa·'s views fluctuate, maybe rightfully so
By Jack Anderson
and Dale VanAtta

power, l8d now biJ followers ~~e members is cOnsidered wge. The
myriad of opinioos held by those
stil ttylns to fipre him OUL
It doesn't help that Walesa parties is a confusing prelude to
make&amp; overnight shifts on issues. parliamentary elections this Call.
Poles joke dun Walesa states his
Walesa himself, oooe a hero, is IOilet. He could have, well, went on
opinion thusly: "I aln for it. I am no longer a known quantity to describing how, how - there are
totally for it. In fact, I'm against Poles. lfe has felt the sting of things that are not allowed. One
iLu
betrayal and criticism. A best-sell- ouaht to b8ve some ~lea." ·
His chanses of bean are under· ing book in. Poland tf!:Z.r is · We poin!Cd 10 Ktnki 's replacestandable in a country that is just "Wodz,.. which means "
ment. AIO'ej Drzycimllti, who was
•"
learning about democracy. One It is an unflattering portrait of sitting in the room, and asked
Western diplomat said Walesa's Walesa by his· former press aide Walesa if the new aide would write
tendency to flip-flop is a nawral Jacek Kurski . The Walesa that a book too. Drzycimski sbock his
result of his 8llempll0 be the presi- Kurski saw was a peay tyrant 10 his head quickly llld smiled tblnly.
dent of aU Poles wilboul capturing staff and friends, a temperamental
Walesa c~ in, "I'm trying
the loyalty of lilY factiou or JIOUII. prima donna who wouJcl brook no not to J!O to the 10ilet at the same
Walesa thinks there are too opposition in his inner ciicle.
time he does...
manY. factions to please, and the
"You know, this is not very
ON-THE HIGH WIRE- The
prohferation of parties is not an wteful," Walesa said. "Wher~ hardliners' grip on die Soviet sysentirely wdcome side of democra- would we end up if someone who tem has weakened during the past
cy. "This is the IJliSedy of lhe new works witb you goes around IIK'Oth. The refOIIIIfll have cutmasystem," he ·said. "There are so spreading all this confidential neuvered the hardliners on the
many people who are not able 10 information? Yet this is what he political front. Mikhail Gorbachev
choose between these panies. Poles did." Kurski wasn't fired, Walesa ts trying 10 keep his balance on the
are overcome with Choices.''
reminded us. He quit by choice, high Wile and is now lcalling away
There are 70 registered political and in Walesa's mind that is even from the hardliners and IOW8rd the
parties in Poland and 74 more wait- more reason for a former aide 10 reformers. A new democracy
mg in line to be regislered. Some of keep biJ mouth shuL
movement is shaping up ..ong the
them· are called "couch partie~"
·"He should behave in a loyal reformers who once surrounded
because all of their members will manner. After all, we don't talk Golbachev bpi were driven out by
fll on one couch. In this nation of about everything. Well, you know, the hardlinerS. The IIIOIIt celebrated
40 million. a puty with only 5,000 a few times we went together 10 the member of the new movement is
former Foreign Minister Eduard
Schevardnadze, who"'lesigned in
JliOI.CSl of the way biJ government
was edging away from ielona. The
iMP!?e$$11/e,
hardliners· still conttol the KGB
and the Red Anily, and the Commt~nist Party, ·so -they cannot be

WARSAW, Poland - Lech
Walesa, the charismatic leader who
was once reluctant to be president
of Poland, now says he likes the
power, but not the lifestyle of the
PfCSidency. He isn't used 10 having
people second-guess him. .
In a wide-ranging interview
with us at the Belvedere Palace, he
said, on as nice a day as it was, he
would Jove to go fishing or "meet
some nice girls." But heads -of
state don't do that if they want to
keep their jobs. Walesa has many
people in his entourage telling him
what he should not do. "In the
evening, I can' t go out because
they are looking after me. They say
it would be the end of my career,
you see. So that everything I like is
not for me. Which means that I've
got 10 like what I have. I must do it
in the best way I can and wait for
the best results - wait until they
kick me out because it was done
well or it was done poorly."
Self-deprecation is not something Walesa does well, but he
emplors the trait, and some others,
when 11 suits him. The old communist regime had trouble reading this
mercurial man before he took

VeRY

MiKJo4an••

'\...

'

' .

·'

'.

,,
..

MINI-liDI10RIAL - Manuel
Noriega can tate IKJ!IIC: comfort in
his Fluida jail c:eD blowing that, if
he ever lOCI 10 lrial, that trial is
litely 10 humiliate the fedenl ~­
emmenL Embaaassing revelations
have surfaced recentfy including
the fact that the While House and

:/

~~~srf.rn'g0::: ~~ee~~ ~u=
Court case, Wards Cove versus
A10nio.ln that case the Hip Court
set new sumdards for su1ts challenging hiring or promotion practices that are apparently fair but
have what the coun leriiiCd a dispara1e impact," resulting it) lhe hirmg of a disproportionate share of
members of one race o~~er another.
The Coun in that decision main. f4ined _plaintiffs hlld 10 identify the
speciftc personnel practices that
caused the disparate impact 1 that
the employer bad no need for dte
practice. The Cowt. in effect, said
a practice with a discriminatory
effect could be justified if it ICI'Ves
in a signiflC8llt way an employer's
legitimate employment goals.
A number of concerned civil
rights advocaies felt the ruling
made it next to impossible for a
plaintiff to -successfully .porsue a
discriminatioo case of thu naUD'C.
To ease the burden of the plaintiff
in bringing such suits 10 successful
conclusion, the Majority Leadershifs. bill, as pass.ed, s~ys that
platnUffs challengmg dtsparate
tmpaCt practices need ooly to cite a
specific practice or practices, ~
make a "diligent effort" 10 estabhsh

'
''

Cong. Clarence Miller

evidence iii this regard. nnce a
'"disparate impact" is indicated, the
burden of proof shifts to th:
employer on the grounds that the
employer is in the best position to
know why a practice is necessary.
Furthermore, employers must
prove that the practice has a"~nificant and manifest relationshtp
to the requirements for effective
job performance."
The Bush substitute which was
defeated, though similar in thrust,
differs principally in what it would
require !'Je _employer t_o P!Ove in
order 10 Justify the pracuce m questi!)n. The Bush substitute would ·
give greater latitude to the employer when demonstnlting the "business necessiiy" of a particular ·
employment practice by requiring
that the challenged pn!!:tic:e "has a
manifiest relationship to the
employment in qlJCS!ion or !hat the
defendant's legitimate employment
goals are significantly served by,
even if they do not require, the
challenged practice.
The President is splitting hairs
some say; but in my judgment not
really. By amending the wording
with respect 10 the conditions that

must exist 10 justify the practice,
the President's bill would have
made ii much Jess likely that businesses would feel compelled to
"hire by the numbers" to avoid the
possibili17 of costly liligation.
To ·gam more support for their
bill and in an attempt 10 ease the
concerns of those dlat perceived
their bill as a "quota bill" the
House Majority Leadership incorporated a provision which"they
con~nd will specifically prohibit
the use of hiring qUObls. Critics of
the language, myself included, conlend it is liale more than a smoke
screen; that in reality this language
will do liUie 10 dissmllle employeJS
from practicing defCilsive hiring
because they still would face the
P-ospects of an impossible defense
1f they did otherwiSe, along with
exorbttant legal costs. If this bill
were Io become law, employers
would be faced with a no-win situation; they would be liable if their
hiring decisions dn not reflect "lhe
numbers" and open 10 revase dis- ·
crimination suits if they do. It is a
classic "Catcb 22" situation and
. one thai could have been largely
avoided by the Bush substitute.

DemQcrats demolition der b Y---=B:..=.;;en~·Wi;,.:;:,; 'at ; .: .; .en=-:be~rg
Today's clicbe is ••a year and a
half is a long time in politics.''
True. But never in recent times has
one party been in worse shape !han
the Democrats now. (Do not let
tears fall on this. page; it makes
newsprint hard 10 recycle.)
The latest chapters of Democratic self-destruction are so aazy they
could not pass muster as political
fiction submiu.ed to a literary qent.
("Harry, see, there's this polilical
pany: everything's wodr:ing against
them; they pick the worst issues
they can find. they brag about it;
Harry! Harry, ae you listening?")
Consider how Democrats dealt
with their plague issues, defense
and race.
Democrats were ecstatic when
the Cold War ended; soft-ondefense couldl)'t harm them again.
When the Gulf War vote was
taken, they could have nailed that
home. But wiih polls showing
Americans 2-to-1 in favor .of a
"Yes" vote, 60 patent of House
Democrats and IK) percent of Senate Democrals voced •'No.' '
Democrats bad two ratiooales,
which give a flavor of their makebelieve dtinkinJ. They sanctimonized, ''it was a vote of con science." True. Don't they get it?
That's what American voters think:·

LibenJI Democrats )lave a llifferent ing him say, • 'Have I told you
kind of conscience.
about this sensational" new tape
DemOCIBIS said '"sanctions will recorder I just got?"
work." That was mildly clefensible
Democratic lefting has taken its
- then, But Democrats now say, toll. In 1980, voters were 53 per"We'll never know if sanctions (;!:nt 10 34 percent pro-Democratic
would have worked." What? After - Democrats plus 19. By 1984 it
a pulverizing war, with sanctions was plus 8. In May 1991 the
.slill on, with Saddam Hussein still Republicans were plus I. Among
in power - Democrats still think young people Republicans are now
sanctions could have worked?
18 percent ahead. (Looking forAnd there is race. Incredibly, ward: Old people die before young
last year Democrats believed a civil ones.)
rights bill would help them. They
Then there is George Bush. He
said, "Bush wants black votes, his is both moderate and conservative
veto will hun him with blacks."
- and 70 percent of Americans
Now Democrats say, endlessly, regard themselves as one or the
"George Bush wants to replay other. His approval rating is now
Willie Horton!" Don't they get it? about 75 pen:enl. Is he still highThanks to a Massachusetts law flying from the Gulf? No mauer.
Michael i&gt;ukakis thought was He was running at 65 perc:ent
keen, imprisoned murderer Horton . before the war, and SO percent is
(life-sentence -no-chance-for- ~ as a winner for 111 incwnparole) was granted weekend fur- benL
lough, and committed rape and
W111t more? Thanks 10 a 4 A.M.
assault The '"Willie HonOIIIssue" ~ deal between Dukakisonians
may have been deJna&amp;oguery and and Jease-itcS in 1988, there will be
racist. but it's potency was u a near-total piOp01'lional JepiCitilltasymbol of derwtes mindlea lib- tion in the Democratic delegate
eralism.
.
selection process in 1992. PropoaUnbelievable. Democrats bring timalism advances the intaells of
up Willie Hollon! That's like hav- elureme-wingers. Just the ticket for
ing a geopolitical diacussion with a pany that has lost five of the last
Richaril Nixoo and s~ly .hear- six prcsidcoJiial elections.

or

,,

Implausibly foolish? Democrats
arnmgecl for !heir 1992 con-lion
to be held in, and televised from,
New York -America's model
Democratic city.
What about Con~s? Outside
factors combined With Democratic
wrong-headedness can change the
terrain.
Census-driven redistricting
gives additional congressional
vouss 10 conservative regions of the
South and West. Term-limitation
laws are hot, and likely to help
Republicans. In 1992. there wUI be
21 contested Democratic Senate
sealS vs. only 15 Republican ones. A biJ!: Bush win could yield a
Republican Senate. The House
could cnc1 up dominaled by a coalition of Republicans and Southern
Demomts.
And hardly anyol)e seems to
care. VoteiS app~re~~dy have come
to believe dtat there are times when
blaming the victim is the right
jlll!lmenL
-(C)I991
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.
Ben Watlenberll, a senior fellow
at the American Bntaprise Institute, is author of "The Fint Universal Nation," publilhed by The
F~et Press.

,.

Continued from page 1
era! items missing including a number of guns, jewelry, and old
coins. There was evidence of forced entry through a rear window of
the home, Sheriff Soulsby said.
.
The sheriff also reported that over Memorial Day weekend ·
another residence, that of Mr. and Mrs. Dean Harris, also on State
Route 325 but east of !;&gt;anville, hll&lt;) been entered. He asks that anyone having seen any suspect vehicles in the vicinity of either residence, contact his office.
General Telephone Co. reported to the sheriff's offtee that 532
feet of telephone cable and some copper wire bad bee!! stolen from
a work site on County Route 55 near the Appalachian Highway. It
was reported that optic fiber line had also been cut. ·
Ridgeview Carry Out reported that someone attempted 10 enter
the establishment either late Saturday or early Sunday morning. The
ouiSide door was damaged and a glass pane was broken out on the
inside door. Entry, however, was not gained, the sheriff reported.

.EM~

Civil Rights Bill a 'Catch 22' situation
~!fr:,s J!ec~i~~~
Bill passed by the U.S. House of
Representatives this past week
have ttied 10 characterize the President's actions as an attempt to
""Willie Hortonize" the issue of
civil rights by labeling dtis legislaLion as a q1101a bill.
Knowing of the President's
longstanding suppon for lhe cause
of civil rights, I take strong exceplion to this attempt to challenge the
motives of President Bush with
respect 10 this legislation. As most
of you are aW~R, the House Majority Leadership's bill that was
passed by the House, as well as the
Bush substitute, which was defeated, are attempts 10 reverse, in part,
the effects of a series of Supreme
Court decisions that have had a
detrimental impact on the options
of individuals to seek redress
through the couns from alleged
acts of discrimination.
The main difference between
the two bills that were considered
deals with the treatment on the
Je~tal standard required to determme whether there was in fact
prejudicial behavior .practiced in
the hiring, firing or promotion of
employees. This aspect of the two

W, VA.

.Local briefs... -~

Cll'-OUL

t~e Central lnlelligence Agency
supponed both sides during the
Falklaods War. While openly backing the British, the U.S. govern. ment arranged for Noriega 10 sell
BJ'IIIS ·to Argentina. If this was a
Third World dictatorship, then
Noriega and his embarrassing
secrets would simply disappear.
But in the Uniled States, we have a
justice system with due process
.that will allow the federal government 10 drag jts heels for yean and
then find some way of avoiding
Noriega's ttiaJ aiiDgether.
Copyright, 1991, United Feaiure
Syndicate, Inc.

•I Columbus! 81." I

.

makes fire run Tuesday

A fire call and nine calls for emergency assistance were .
answered Tuesday afternoon by units of the Meigs County Emerg!:IICy Medical Service.
Syracuse f~remen were called to Rustic Hills at 6:29 p.m. for a
gas grill fire at the Swisher residence. There were no personal
injuries in the fll'e and damage was confmed to the grill.
At 12:26 p.m. the Middlepon squad went 10 State Route 7 for
Mabel Smiih who was transported to the Holzer Medical Center; a1
2:21 p.m. the Rutland unit took Mike Ryan from Meigs Mine 32 10
Veterans Memorial HoSJ)ital; and at 3:23 p.m. the Rutland squad
responded 10 a call for Ronald Fry, State Route 124, who was also
talten IQ Veterans Memorial.
At 3:53 p.m. the Middlepon went 10 338 Williams St. for Madeline Moore, transporting her 10 the Holzer Medical Center; at 4:36
the Rutland squad went back to the Meigs Mine for Jerry Blaclc talting him 10 Holzer for treatment; and at 4:38 p.m. the Middlepon
unit went to Murray Hill Road and treated but did not transport Ann
Gouron.
·
At6:58 p.m. the Pomeroy squad took Angie NiiZ from her home
at 104 Martin Street to Veterans far treatment; a1 8:51 p.m. Jennifer
Sellers was talten from the Racine squad headquarteJ:S 10 Veterans
Memorial, and at 9:04 p.m. the Syracuse squad went 10 College
Street for George Holman who was taken to Holzer.
Wednesday at 7:33 a.m. the Syracuse squad was called to 45602
Morning Star Road for Clarence Grueser who was dead on arrival.

l ' ~------------------------------------------~

:'Striking...

Continued from page 1

'· Matchett said. About 400 people
remained inside the plant early
today, he said.
Matchett said he understood,that
'• authorities would attempt to
' · enforce the court order later this
morning.
The uni on, which represents
' production , service and maintenance workers, walked out Tuesday in a contract dispute after
,. negotiations between the company
and the union broke off Monday.
"Until we have free access and
' people arc able to come and ~o ,
there proba bly won't be anythmg
scheduled," Matchett said on the
" prospects for new talks.
John Kn&lt;luff, president of the
'' local, said iss ues involved seniority, ovenime and safety.
IGiaurr criticized the company's
•· plan to keep the plant open.
"The company's intentions to
operate this plant with us gone is
absolutely ludicrous. It is a powder
• box full of contamination, radiation
• , waiting to go off,'' Knauff said.
Matchett said safety was not in
:;, , jeopardy and that operations would
.. continue 24 hours a day.
,,
The contract between the com:. pany and union expired May 2.
Knauff said the company would
c• not budge on the issues.
o
"We've been working for 41

By Tbe AIIOCiated ,.._
The last of the rain is to move
out or Ohio toniabt, seuina the

stage for at least three days of
sunny and Jlielandy cool weather.
Lower h11111idity will also be a

Federal jury to return
verdict in Smith case

IMansfield I a1 •l•

'

The Dally Sentlnei-P-c~e 3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

days without a contract. It was long
enough. They don't w111t 10 meeL
They don't want to do anything,"
Knauff said.
Matchett said the company
wanted more control over job
movement within the plant, an
issue tied 10 seniority rights.
•"That was talten by lhe union 10
be a blatant take-away," he said.
Matchett said the wage offer
was not at issue. Members in May
rejected a three-year contract offer
tluJI included an annual 2.5 percent
wage increase as well as a cost-ofliving adjustment. The average
base hourly rate is $10.32.
Matchett said the plant has
2,600 workers, including the striking union. He said unionized security guards continued IQ work.
The plant in Pike County, about
70 miles south of Columbus, repro- ·
cesses fuel for civilian nuclear
reac10rs and the military.
Martin Marietta has operated the
plant for the Department of Energy
since 1987.
The last strike at the plant
occurred in 1979, when the operation was managed by Goodyear
Atomic Corp, Members of the
union were out for eight months,
but management maintained production without interruption.

'.

..--Area deaths-rol Taylor.
~ · Daren Taylor
Services will be held Friday at
!
II
a.m. at dte Annstrong Funeral
I'
Darell Taylor, 82, Magnolia,
Home
in Seville. Burial will be in
"· died Tuesday, June II, 1991 in
Seville.
1 • Can10n, Ohio.
Friends may call at the funetal
He was born in Ravenswood,
home
on Thursday from 6-9 p.m.
'· W.Va.
''
He is survived by his wife, Eliz.-a beth Taylor, three daughters,
"· ·Mary Striker, Norwalk; Patricia
Spencer, Magnolia; and Donna
Soutll Cntral Olllo
· · McCollum, Anderson, Ala.; a stepTonight, partly cloudy. Low in
•.· son, Robert Shilling, Ashland; a the low 60s. Chance of !lin 20 perr · brother, Robert T7,!d:y Mallet cent. Tbunday, mostly s11111y. Hlp
Ducct.' ' 'Creek; tine lilten,
er, Wtllfield t:eallr; Naomi 1amiExladed foriCMt
: · . son, Lodl; aod Cany Frazier, South
Fr1c1a7 tlli'OIIIh SIIIICiay:
Carolina.
Fair on Friday and Saturday. A
He was preceded in death by his chance or showers and .thunder.first wife, Lelah; a daughter, storms Sunday. Hish• in the 80s.
·,·Norma; a step--1011, John; and four Lows 55-65 Friday and in the 60s
• brothen, Beryl, Earl, Carl and CarSBIUrday and Sunday.

Weather

_.,,

A federal jury was 10 reiUrD 10
court today and begin cleliborations
in the bribery ttiaJ of former housing official Carl Smith, according
to a repon in today's CharleSIOn
Gazette.
· · The jury left to go .home Tuesday eveoin~ lis1ening 10 final
arguments
defense and prosecution lawyers, along with instructions from U.S. District Judge John
Copenhaver.
~mith is the formts Sl8lll director of the U.S. Department of
Housing and Urban DevelopnenL
He is accused of accetJ!inJ. $50,000
in cash and goods tn 1987 and
1988 from Gallipolis developer
Maurice Toler while Toler was
working on the Lemma Village
aparllllents in Nitro.
Goods included a truck, .farm
combine, $5.000 cash and Jallodeiing work performed on his Mason
County fannhouse.
Assistant U.S. AUoritey Mary
Fein!!eri said in closing arguments
that SIDlth demanded the .-yments ·
in exchange for allowing Toler to
receive HUD construction payments while the apartment complex
was being builL
FeinberJI said Tolts, the government's chief witness, was truthful

during the lrial when he testified
that Smith m.asterminded the
bribery scheme, the Gazette stated.
Toler has agreed to plead guilty
to felony charges in connection
with the building pro).ecl.
·
U.S, Auorney Mike Carey said
the government had proved Smith
accepted the cash, goods, and
bribes. ''The defendant never paid a
dime for the truck, the combine and
the $5,000 check,"
said.
Dina Mohler, Smith s auomey,
attacked Toler and biJ offiCe manJI8Cr Donald Browning, according
to the Charleston newspaper, saying they were accusing Smith to
curry favor with the U.S. attorney's .

Carer

.

Off~.

She staled thef filed false fman. cia! statements wtth HUD. inflating
their cost estimate, that had nothing
10 do with Smidt. Mohler implicated Smith was Toler's ticket to
lenient treatment from prosecUIOrs.
Mohler added all the documents
don't add up to bribery.
Smith is charged .with bribery,
two counts of Ill&lt; fraud, making a
false government document and
perjury. If found guilty of all
counts, he could receive up 10 28
years in P.rison and fmes IOtaling
$1.25 mtllion, according to the
Gazette.

lJtztes..• __~c~on~u~nu~~~nM~m~p~~~~~-----------in an update on tiKi American EJec.
tric Powet situllion with the Clean
Air Act, reponed dtat she has been
in COIISI8Dt contact widt Stale Representative Mary Abel and that
Rep. Abel reels everythin1 has
been done that can be done in
terms of lobbying the necessary
government officials and other parlies involved.
Ms. Schaad reported on the
recent visit of the Department of
Development to Meigs County .
Senior officials from the OffJCC of
Industrial Development were in the
area to review sites for possible
industrial developmclitllld are cur·
rently reviewing sile books and
conducting funher research.
Ms. Schaad is implementing a
fiv&amp;-week ""Take Charge" progrllll
for tl\e Chamber which calls for
volunteers who will provide two
hours or their time on a weekly
basis 10 establish a means of idenufying where Meigs County is and
whele it is going. Ms. Schaad stated that the key to economic devclopment is to create a workable
plan. She feels at this time tbe
Chamber and the county has no
such plan but that the '"Take
Charge" program would serve as
that plan.
Ms. Schaad also reponed that
the Village of Racine' has conttibuted $250 10 the general fund for the
Meigs County Chamber of Commerce in support of its programs.
Chamber members were
reminded of the concession booth
they will be servhig during the
Soap Box Derby on June 22 and 23
in Middleport. Volunteers are
needed 10 work in the booth where
pizza, hot dogs and pop
be
served. Tho,se assisting wit)) the
serving of food must have a skin
test completed before that lime.
Tom Reuter, postmaster of the
Pomeroy Post Office, presenled ·a
program on the United States
Postal Service. He urged everyone
to ihink or the .-rival of each piece
of mail as both an ordinary and
extraordinarv evenL He stated it is
ordinary as it happens daily but that

feature of the new weadt!lr pattern,

The l't'JCOrll high temporature fot
this date 11 the Columbus weather
TempcraiWCS IDIIiaht ~~e J,itely station was 94 degrees in 1954.
to drop iniO the SO. under cJearinl The l't'JCOrlllow was 43 in 1980.
skies. Then, on Thursday, highs
Sunrise this morning was at
will be in the upper 70s and fow 6:02 a.m. Sunset will be at 9:00
80s,
p.m.
The nearly perfect weather is to
continue into Saturday, when tem- · Around tbe natioll:
peratures and the relative humidity
Rain continued across much of
readings will start rising apin.
the nation early today after damagThe next chance for run will be ing thunderstorms battered the
Saturday night or Sunday.
NortheasL

forecaster'S said.

Middleport Court news
Ten were fmed and three others pension.
forfeited. bonds in the court of MidJeffrey D. Basham, COQiville,
dleponMayorFredHoffmanTues- $19 fine only, speeding; Timothy
day nighL ·
W. Wright, Langsville, $10 and
Fined were Oerald Conkle, Bid- costs for runoing a stop sign;
well, $425 and costs and three days Charles R. Stewart, Middleport,
in jail on 1 charJe of physical con- $25 and costs, disorde.rly manner;
'trol of a motor vehicle while under Jimmy Harris, Middleport, $50 and
the influence of alcohol or drugs, costs, open container; Carl R.
and $100 and .costs for driving Davidson, Pomeroy, $50 and costs,
under suspension: Claude B. Eblin, open container, and $25 and costs,
Pomeroy, $10 and costs for failure consuming alcohol under age 21;
to control his vehicle, and $1(10 and and Dean WhittingtOll, Middlepon,
costs, leaving the scene of an acci, . SIQO and cos~ and five days in jail,
dent; Earl D. Pickens,' PoqlCloy, amuJL
$100 and costs, driving under sus- '
Forfeiting bonds were Leslie L.
pension; Ricky A. Laudermilt, Whittinston, Middleport, $53,
$100 and costs, driving under sus~ speeding; Robert L. Birchfield,
$60, expired regisuation; Johnny
Ratliff, Middlepon, $460, pbysical
conttol of a motor vehicfe while
under the influence of alcohol or
Continued from page 1
drugs, and $210, driving under susyear.
.
The board voted unanimously 10 pension.
enter into membership with
ETSEO (educational television) for Pomeroy Court news
·the 1991-92 school year at a 1;0st of

Meigs ...

it is alSo extraoiilinary because of
all the work necessary 10 insure its
efficiency. Reuter called postal
wcxters dedicated people as many
of them go far beyond what is
expec!Cd and necessary.
Speaking on the 1970 act of
Congress which establisbed the
United States Postal Service,
Reuter pointed. out that Conp-ess
wanted a universal postal semc:e at
affordable rates that would bind the
nation IOgether. Another require·
ment of the 1970 act was that the
postal service would not operate 10
make a profit. Reuter stated that
over the laat 10 years the United
States ·Postal Service has almost
perfectly broken even.
Reuter also reported on
aManc:ements in technology in the
postal system which have gone
from manual to mechanized to
- au10mal.ed. A goal of the postalservice,·by the year. 1995, is to have at
least 95 percent of all mail handled
with bar codes. Bar. codes allow
mail to be sorted automatically at
about 30,000 pieces per hour.
Reuter concluded his presentstion by stating the Uniled States
Postal service handles 40 percent
of the world's mail with the lowest
rates in lhe world.

$1,~60.70.

The board, with a no vote froi!l
Five were fined and six others
Snowden, entered iniO membership forfeited bonds in the court of
widt the Ohio High School Athletic . Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler
Association for the 1991-92 school Tuesday nighL
year.
Fined were Bryan Williams,
Permission was granted. 10 allow Bidwell, $47 and costs, speeding;
Angie Dill and Jody Fowler to Claude Eblin, West Collilllbia, W.
graduale early and !he board gave VL, $43 and costs, left of cenler,
authorization 10 file the VI-B flow and $375 and costs, DUI; Claude
lhru application.
·
Reed, Ewington, $63 and cos~.
The treasurer, Jane Fry, was driving under suspension; ChrisiOauthorioted by the board to adver- pher Rayburn, Pomeroy, $113 and
tise for bids for the following for costS', public· intoxication; and
the 1991-92 school year: fleet Chatles Stewart, Pomeroy, $~13 ·
insurance, gasoline and oil prod- and costs on each of two charges of
ucts, tires and tubes, fire extin- menacin~ threats.
·
guisher repair and boiler insurance.·
Forfetting bonds were Jonathan
Roben Barton. board president, Dunn, Pomeroy, $46, speeding;
stated he would lilce to see bids for . Deanna Coats, Columbus, $49,
the above mentioned items 10 come speeding; Charles Johnson, Midfrom within Meigs County and the dleport, $46, speeding; Todd
distticL Snowden stated dtat he felt Evans, Middleport, $47, speeding;
the services should be provided Sylvia Wolfe, Racine, $4l, f.Uwe
from whomever could do it the to yield; and Charlotte Hart,
least expensively.
Pomeroy, $43, left of center.
Finally, the board approved a
request from the Village of Rutland
The Daily Sentinel
10 widen a present easement in that
village near lhe Rutland Civic Cen(U8P81Ut..)
ter and former Rutland High
A Dlvilla. of Multimedia, Inc.
School.
·
.
Published every afternoon. Monday
Present at the meeting were
lhr&lt;Migh Friday, 111 Court Sl ., Po·
Superintendent James Carpenter,
meroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Vallf')' PuiJ.
treasurer, Jane Fry , board presiIIJhlllg Company/ Multlmedla, Inc.,
Pomoroy, Ohio 457611. Ph, !1112·2156. Sedent, Roben Barton, and members,
cond tlau poltqe paid at Pomeroy,
Jeff Werry, Robert Snowden,
Ohio.
Richard Vaughan and Larry Rupe. ·

Stocks
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ERNIE SJSSONS

Meigs announcements

HOl-ZER MEDICAL CENTER
Dischar~es, June II - Betty
Boone, Eddie Dearth, Aaron Dennison, Mrs. Roger F_ry and SO!J,
lleverly OeaJea, Ana HicU, Helen
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Stilley, MirY 1"*1L limy

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Tuesday Discharge: Keith ·
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Cost is $10 for the entire day. To
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The Daily ·Sentinel}

:Spprts

Hit batsman forces in .pivotal
run in Tribe's 5-4 win over Jays

~

Page 4 Tt!e Dally Slndnet
Page 4

With Charlton off the disabled list,

" That was a helluva game for City 11, Baltimore O: CDetroit S,
Greg," Wells said. "That was a Oakland I; California 4, Milwaubattle of the big boys, two big kee 3; and Boston 8, Se:We S.
dudes out there, two left-handed
· Ra111en :Z, Willie Sox 0
throwers."
Chicago White Sox manager
Jim Acker (1-4), the third of JeffTorborg- having caught a
Toronto's four pill:hers, 10011: the no-hitter by Sandy Koufax loss. He gave up a sinlle by Brook knows an ace wben be sees one.
Jacoby, a bunt sinale by Chris Still, he can't believe lhe results
James and a sacrific:e bel'01e Day- when he sees no-hit king Nolan
ley replaced him in the 12th.
. Ryan Mless dian his best. ·
Shawn Hillegas (2-0) JOI the
"He never ceases to amaze
thell•la~ 2-1.
·
win, pi!Cbing 'two hitless mnings me," Torborg said after Ryan shut
, "I Willi t Jonklng 10 get hiL But and strilring out~.
out the White Sox 2-0 Tuesday
W.C•n 111r11 it," Cole aaid.
Wells fed 1-0 ~oing 'into the nighL "I've Beell him sharper, and
• Dayley entend the orame with ei.hth, but with two outs, Joel I've seen him throw harder. But
IICOndld and thlid and
Skinner topped a ball that rolled look at the lineacore."
~=~tely walked
dead halfway 10 third bue for an
It would show that Ryan pitched
Anrocl &lt;MI four pildles, loading tbe infield single. Cole, runnina Cor a six-hitter, which to Torborg' s
basel.
Skinner, stole second, then tried to way of thinking wasn't too bad for
"I just dofinittlv wanted to steal third. Third baseman Ed the While Sox.
make sure he didn1t drive the Sprague broke for the bag, and
"Last~. Ryan had one pme
ball," Dayley said. "I was just Jerry Browne singled throulh the where we got only one hit and he
~careful. I didn't want theiiiiO resultina hole, scoring Cole with sttuck out 16,'' Torbora said.
si;ore 1 run when first base was the~ run.
' 'And in a 10-inning game, we got
~."
'
I've
got
shutout-itis,'
•
said
~bits
and be struck out 15. So I
0
, Toronto man!lier Cito GasiOn, Wells, who's never pitched a · guess we're getting beller."
however, w!llq't happy with the shuiOUI. "So close, but so far. You . For once, a shuiOut should not
walk.
·
can be cruisin&amp; along and then even have been contemplated.
"We're tryinlto Jet him out. some misfortune happens, like Ryan didn't have command of any
The other IU)' (Cole) IS a .300 hit- Skinner's ball. Then Sprague of his pitches wbilc warming up.
ter," OMton aaid.
moves on Browne's grounder. If he
"I don't like going out there
Because Dayley throws le£t- slBys where he was, the ball game's with that ll:ind of wKIIlup, but you
handed and Cole bats left-handed, over."
.
.
can'tlet it affect your approach to
Cole made sure he crowded the · Toronto scored 1ts run m the !he game " Ryan said
platc, · ~cularly when the count third on Roberto Alomar' s RBI
He dldn't. He went out and
w.ent to 2-2.
'
grounclout, after Manny Lee led off struck out 10 for his 6lst career
, "I like to stand in there close with a double and took third on . shutout as the Texas Rangers ended ·
against lefties because there is a Glenallen Hill's. singl~. Alomar, an eight-game losing streak, .
rendency to bail out,'! Cole said. ''I however, was h1tless m four atRyan sttu8Jied in the ftrst
was just tryin110 slay alive. It was bats; ending his IS-game streak. .
inning, giving up a leadoff single 10
on me so quick, and I was so
The Blue Jays' Joe Carter, play- Tim "Raines and hitting Frank
focused on •rina alive. I'll take ing at Cle-v:eland Stadi!Jm for the Thomas. In only one other innina
iL"
fJ!St lime s~ ~ Indians l!aded did he allow two runners on bue.
. · Dayley's mistake ended 12 him 10 San Diego m 1989, hit two
Neither Ryan (44) nor ChicaiOniapofbrillilntpiiChinl oa both Ion&amp; flies that mi&amp;b~ have been · go's Alex Fernaiufez (2-6) bad
. siclel. Clewll!id's Oreg Swindell home runs t.be last ume he was allowed a run Wltil the sixth inning,
Went 1o inninp, allowing one run ~ But dunng the off-season, the when the Rangers scored twice on
and aeven hits, walkin&amp; one and Indians moved the fences back as Mike Stanley's RBI sinJie and a
striking out seven. He lowered his much as IS feet.
bases-loaded walk 10 Mario Diaz.
RRA to 2.2l,ICICOild in the Ameri"They told me they ~oved the
Red Sox 11, Mariners 5
· can League behind Scott Erick- fenc:es back, but I had no Idea what
·Ellis Burks homered twice for
153
it meant," Carter said. "Wow, three RBis and Jack Clark hit a
~T~ronto's David Wells lasted that's unbelievable. It's a joke. two-run shoi.
ei&amp;ht innings, pving up a run and That's ridiculo.us out there . It' s · Danny Darwin (3-3) allowed
four hits, walking one and striking grea~ for the pnchers. You play four runs on seven hits before Ieavout six: He lowered his ERA to regular depth, took back, and ing in the sixtli inning. Jeff Rear1.46. Duane Wud followed him, you've got 75 Y~ 10 run." . · don pitched the ninth for his 16th
piicllinl three scoreless innings and
Else~ here m the A~encan save, ·
;porkin&amp; out of jams in the ninth Lea&amp;ue. 1t was Texas 2, ChiCago O:
The Red Sox 10ok a 3-0 lead
llld lOlii.
Minnesota S, New York 3; KanSM against ScQu B~ (2-S) in~
~
rust on Wade Boggs run-ICOnnJ
doublefollowedbyCiark'shomer.
.
Twllll5, Yankees 3 .
.
be
jiven
by
suest
speakers
and
Minnesota.
geaing a bases-load·
• 11le flm IIIIIUII Eastern Eagles
films.
ed
single
from
Kent Hrbek in the
loothall Camp will be held for
·
Students
should
bring
football
eiJhlh
inning,
rallied
to extend its
grades S-9 during the week or July
shoes,
tennis
shoes,
gym
shorts,
wmnin~
slreBk
to
10
sames.
, '
15·19 from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m . at
shirts,and
socks.
Kevm
Tapani
(4-6)
won
his
sec~ Hi&amp;b School.
Each
camper
will
receive
a
Tond
straight
start
despite
auowing
• The camp will be open 10 both
remdentJ llld non-residents of the shirt, and certificate of allendance home runs 10 Mel Hall and Robeno
!!astern Local School District. To as well as a sii'Ong basic knowledge Kelly. Rick Aguilera pitched a perfeet ninth for ·his 17th save.
liecuro an application or for m01e of the game.
Royall 11, Orioles 0
information please contact the
Kansas City had 16 hits, includEastern Atblelic: Booster Club, in
'
ing a ~-run double by Carmelo
eM. of head vusity football coach
Martinez, as the Royals ·scored six
Randy Churilla, Eastern Hi11h
(Continued from Page 4)
runs.
in their biggest inning of the
S.chool, 38900 S.R, 7, Reedsville GIDUSier for ·a 4:30 twinbill on to- ·
season.
OH4S772.
day. Meip will play single gatnes
Terry Shumpert had his second
· The entry fee for the camp is at Meigs High School qainst Winhomer
to ignire the third inning $20 which should be made payable field and McArthur, with both
the
Royals'
biggest since scoring
19 the EHS Alhlolic Booater Club. games saaning at 6 p,m. on Thursseven
runs
against
New York on
Refer to a future edition of The day and Frid1y. before hosting
July
4.
All
the
runs
were
charged 10
Daily Sentinel of Sunday-Times Chillicothe in a 1 p.m. twinbill on
Jose
Mesa
(4-7).
Senlinel for 111 applicalion or send Saturday.
Mark Gubiza (2-3) allowed four
the following Information and entry
hits,
walked two and struck out
to Churilla: name, grade, age. · Pickerington vi. Meip
three
in
six innings. .
hOme, adctreu, hocne phone, emer- Score by iDnlnp-ftnt pme
5, Atllletk:l1
Tigers
pncy phone and 1hirt size along Pickerington 130 311 S --14-10-1
Bill
Gullickson
retired 17 of 18
with a parental/accident release Meigs
000 300 0 .,.;. 4- 3-0 Alhletics in one stretch, and Micknotice. The applicBti&amp;n deadlille is
WP-Foil
ey Teuleton drove in two runs.
JUly l,
LP-Stewan
Gullickson (7-3) allowed Jose
; Highlights of the camp will be
Score
lly
lull'~ second game
Canseco
's fourth-inning homer
non:C01118cl drilling. form and flex- Pickerington 1 000 2 - 5- 7-0
after retiring 10 strail!ht. Mter the
ibility running techniques, and Meigs
300 800 x -11-15-3 homer, Canseco's tOih, Gullickson
mOVCIIICII! skills, prop:er stance .and
WP-Phalin
put down the next seven A's.
a&amp;an-up, matrucuon 1n centenng,
LP-Redman
· Aagels 4, B1 ewea s 3
.
puling. ldl:tlng, Cltc:bing and line
Ron
Tingley
had
a
two-run
doutoclmiques. Cainpen wlll be chaln. Lancaster
ble and scored the winning run on
. lenged to raise your expeclllions. in Melp
Score by bmlnp-llrst pme
slumping
Luis Polonia's single in
play, conduct and sportsmanShip, Meigs · 100 101 4 -- 7-10-2
support
of
Marie Langston .
Ud instruction in the !Dental and l.anciSter 010 200 0- 3- 44
Langston
(8-2) WOn for the ICY•
pbysical aspKIJ of the pme will
WP-Wril!ht
enlh time in eight decisions, auowLP-Kautfman
ing seven hits - including homers
Score by lanlnp«eond 1ame
by Danre Bic:hette and Pliul Molitor
Lancasrer 000 110 0- 2- 3-0 - over seven and two-third
Meigs
000 000 0- 0- 2-0 innings while striking out a season:
WP- Armstrong
high nine.
LP-Baer

int.en:sts and theirs in mind ••
The third-place Reds have won
~ saaight and lrail Los Angeles
by four games' in the NL West.
Having a healthy Charlton gives
them some hope.
Last season, he was 12-9 and
struck 0U1 117 in IS4 and one-third
innings while working as a starter
and a reliever.
.
"l figured at fiCSt all I'd Deed to
do was miss one start and I could
ccme lleck," Charl10n said. "But it
tumed out to be good. It gave me a

chance to work things out on the
sideline and to do some running,
and I came back stronger.''
Chril Sabo paced the Reds'
attack with two RBis and pair of
doubles.
Cincinnati scored two runs in
tbe fourth inning off Chris Nabholz

In the majors...

T-"'· 12;

Deoroit

Hew Yam

Mil-

BATTING-T. Ow)'M. , S1n Dieao ,

J...wil, .337; Wdlee. s.n Ftandlco, .323;
~tgiD, Houtoa, .311; 0 . Smfth, St .
Lluil, .311.
. RUNI-T. -....;.., s.,. J&gt;ie&amp;o, 43;
B~ 1M"""'*· 40; lleShiold&lt;, Man·
traal, 31; Colem.n, New Yolk, 31: Julico, Atluuo,37; S..• a. OUcoao, 37.
111--J•lioo. Allaasa, 47: w. Clad!:,
S. F - - . 43; w.ontr, Son Dieao,
42; O'Neill, Cincinnoti, 41; T. Gwynn,
S..Di... 40.
HITS-T, OwJDn, Saa OitJO, 86;

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1M Aqelol, 10.2, .133, 2.6S; OIIYina,
Adalia, 10.2, .133, 2.:1S; Smlloy, Pit11·
bwtll,l-2. .100, 3.34.
~ N..,Yod&lt;, 82;
Ooodoot, New Yod&lt;, 71; Olovioo. Allonto,
71; 0 . Maddn, Cbicaao, 68; Rljo,
CincUoolli. 61.
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SAVBS-Dibttlo, Clncin01ti, IS; Leo
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IAmNo-&lt;:. Jtllk•, loltlmon,
.341; I. Mot .
. . . . .146: ·
Mil.-. .341; - · Olllllfld, .:no;
•Jo,.., CaUtaiiU, .329; D. I....__,
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- . ~ 42; WidoW, Coli!•

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LOS ANGELES RAMS-.'i•l"od Ver·
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TRJPLIII-Iolollw, Mil••-· 6;

Nllloul-.y '-to
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CALOARY FLAMBS- Tndod Brion
MlcLellaa, left win&amp;. to lhe Deuoi.t Red
Winp for Ml1c Habichcid, ttntcr.
NEW YORK ISLANDERS-Sianod
Chril Taylor, 011'11«.

Scioto Downs results
COWMBUS, OIDO - Sci,.. Dowao
.-1t1 fer ~1.1- 1 1 . Weolher,IO
and c:kudy. Trace.. fut.
Pint -1,4410 CloiminJ Poce..l".l''' .
AI (Crooo.) 7.60, 4 .10, 3.60; WhU6~1
Demoh Cl'aut) 9.20. 4.0&amp;, SlOp·
perC (luodco) 2.10: T'.,..l :59-25.
. Aloo llocod·lfoil Aod IIIiA, 0 K H...,
Popu.liat, Fat Man. A V't Cuh Flo,

Ryno's Choice, Tatlly R - • Trilec·
11 (I :4-S)' $212.00. · Porfecto (1-4)
1121.10.

s-.1 lla..S2,000 C1oimina Trot. loo
c..tleo (lloltoo) 12.10, 4.40, 4 .20; lote
Coy (Cnllo) 3.20, 3.20; SUI's Skippor
ca-!6.40;

-·)'loud

n-2:02.

. . Aloo llocod-!.ody

Acdon,

Beck ~ llol Xitifa, Sopor Nod, AisJo.
(4-3) $40.:10.
Third Rtco-$1,100 Cbimina Pac:e.
Slllty N Spoclll a - ) 7.2n, 4.10, 4.40;
Apantare (Holland) 5,00, 3.10; Good
Momiq: Cindy (Edwatdl) 4.00; Ti.zno..

2:03-IS.

Sweot Diatnctian (Crou) 7 .40; Tirfte..

LA. Lit• at OGaao. 9 p..m., if noc-

SI:I.S.OO.
Fifth Jbco.SI ,4410 ooimin1 Poco. Eo·

con Lid ()liU&lt;o) 7.20, 110.3.00: T~

::2.,,Jun~l6

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LA. Lalr.en at Cbic.p, 1 p.m., if nee-

loo 0 CT••bortl 6.10,

4.20; Copum A

(llollond) 4.00; T-2.'1J0.35.

Allo llaood-Miood_y, Crumb Snotcber,
Wbo'o ToWn, OB'S Firi&lt;Choico, FJunin.
Rood, Looooomo Cowboy. lot Hilt

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Transactions

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B-baU
Marifton utdlcr, Cor threa aamea Far

dwJial T.,.. Raapn ........ Bobby
v.-..dwinaaa-Juoo 1.

Dooiol--

BALTIMOIIE ORIOLBS- Sijnod
Al• Odlol, lbonaop, lrMI Chria Lemp
OlldCLBVEU.Ro lm&gt;IANS- ReCIIUod
Miko Yaok. pltcbor. 1D11 loll' Mon10, in·

aow., r.om Colon~ rtlhe Po·
6

Coull.oapo.
&amp;he emmet
of MUle Atmt.o. outfielder, from Col·
aroda Sfrialo. lleoipated Slllio Vlldoz,

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pitdw, r.. 1
Oodoaed Tumor
Ward, outl'iel er, aad E'd Taubenaee,

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Dooot1-

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Bw (Sleek) $ .40; f"...,.J :59.

Abo Rac:od·Pbanl.oma Roc.kllll, Banjo
BIDIIy, I A - ·
Llroy, loluy's
Dilmood,1-. - · Trifect~ (4-Z.
I) $163.40. l'afcl (4-2) $44.10.
Scwen.th Rlco-SI ,600 C.im!J:11 Pace.
Thill EUao ~) 1.20, uo. 4.00;
C110'1 T111 (Fooa) 4.60, 3.60: PM LIM
Susio (l'&lt;o
Timo-2.~S.
Allo llaoed· . o Tho Wind, lllalin&amp;

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'fl:·60:

Twootop, Molhon Warry,1oll"o Moria,
Holnaesteldtwoatep, Falconi Lad:y.
SCIItdtod·Joobio. :lltd Holf Twill
Trif- (2-4-6) 15.$15.10. Trifect1 (2.+
6)$$04.60.
EiJb.th R•ce·S%.400 Conditioa Trot.
CryotA'I Moaim (AI«) s.oo, l .60, 2.40;
Th- - - (llolload) 15.20, 4.60;
Dawn'a Call (B•uy Jr.) 3,40; iii'M-2~
3~ .
Abo Jlacod.Oom It !livid, Stob,
. Wishful_ lAdy, Foraet Tho Plowers,

-

Scntcbod·Madonl.ody. , . , _
{2:6) 166.60. '
Niot.h laH-$1,100 Codil.ion Pac• .

Antericu A,uocialioe. Slaaed. Bryan

IB'S - (Aior) U .l50, 4AO, 2.10; TN
81.. (Feul) 2.150, 2.10; Sltippor
(lolillor) 7.40; ,.._2.'01).3.1".
Ako Raoed·Wreck•, J~m~~ Powon,
Hobb7"1 Eacort. o Miu 8011., Moaher
Hlt)over, Locked In St)'lo, Seven Hun;
(l-10:4-3) $2.0I4.20.(Z.

RoberuJ.outfielder: 8Uly ·setton and
Polllak uoddiUI, pildlen; uul Chulot

Hondlod $214,111. At- :1,426.

~Tirl:tll.uas-sipod tm1

lbyw, ~- _..., caleha;

ual_jt_Jftl'n..lii.,.rtNfe.

TEXAS lAHOIIIS--OuuiiiKed Brie
NoiW. pilllhtr, u. Oklahoma City of lhc

. s..- •••lltollh Nopellu,lnf'wlden.

Dole.,...

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I~ $1,$11.:10. - - (J.IO) 134.20.

his fourth complete game of the
season when play was delsyed S7

minutes by rain. John Franco
relieved when the game resumed
and got the last two outs on four
pitches for his 13th save.
Charlie Leibrandt feii10.S-S. ·
. CarcUaalllO, Padre~ 4 ·
Milt Thompson hit a two-run
homer and Gerald Perry added a
solo shot in the sixth inning off
rookie Jose Melendez to pOwer visiting SL Louis past San Diego.
Fred McGriff got the Padres
close for awhile when he hit a
three-run homer in the bottom of
the sixth. McGriff leads ·the NL
with 14 homers.
St. Louis starter Ken Hill (6-3)
got !~Je yi~tory despite allowing 10
hits m Silt mliUigs.
GiaJits8, Cubs 6
Jose Uribe scored the tiebrealr:ing run on a passed ball in the lOth
inning and pinch-hitter Mike
Kingery singled in another to Jill
San Francisco over Chicago at
Wrigley Field. The Giants have
won seven or 10.
. Dave Smith dropped to 0-3 ,
while Kelly Downs (34) got the
victory with relief help from Dave
Righetti.

:.U:

IN FULL STRIDE - Montreal's SpiJte Oweo (11) Is Ia filii ' ·
stride, bat It does blm,ao good, as Reds lint 1111cker Todd Beazbqer · :~
makes tile catell for tile out at first base In the secoad laaJaa of . ,
Tuesday alpt'l pme In Montreal's Olympic Stadium, wlllc:ll the
Reds woa 6·1. (AP)
'

Astros 1, Phillie&amp; 0

Pinch-hiuer Ken Oberkfell drew
a bases-loaded walk from Roger
McDowell (3-2) with one out in
11th inning to lift Houston over
Philadelphia at the Astrodome. AI
Osuna (~-2) pitched one inning for
the victory.

Meigs Legion squad
splits weekend ·twin bills

Glavine has
solid chance
of making
All-Star team
By TOM SALADINO
AP Sports Writer
ATLANTA (AP) - Tom
Glavine, who has pitched like an
AU-SlBr in becoming the National
League's first 10-,ame winner,
likes his chancea o being picked
for the summer classic:.
"I don't see how he can miss,"
said Atlanta Braves manager
Bobby Cox. "I don't see how he
can pitch any better. He's quicker
than in the Past. sttonger and has a
great chan!!eup. He's up among lhe
leaders in JUSt about ~very caiCgo. .
ry.'' .
On Sunday, Olavine (10-2) won
his eighlh straight game and is one
of tluee 10-JaDIC willners this season. California's Chuck F'mley (102) and Los Angeles' Ramon Martinez (10-2) &amp;RI the others.
Glavine, with a 2.35 ERA, also
leads the NL in coml;llete games
with five and is third m strikeouts
with 7Un 88 innings. He says he's
already thinking about making his
firSt AII-StBr team in his fourth season with the Braves.
"Each time I win game, it
increases my chances of making
the team.~· he said. "But I'm uying
hard not to put too much pressure
on myself. All I have to do is keep
doing whll I'm doin' and the
opportunity to make u will be
there."
Glavine, 10-12 last season with
a 4.28 ERA, credits much of his
success this year to a return to the
changeup he used in 1989 when he
was 14-8 with a 3.68 ERA.
Last year, he experimented with
a different grip. But he disregarded
it late in !he season, won four or his
last five decisions and worked on
the changeup again in spring training.
"I won those four without the
changeup and decided I would go
back to the one I used in 1989
· again," said Glavine, who has a
43-43 lifetime record. "I starled
this year piiChing the way I can
pitch and have put everything
together. It's not a Duke."
. "He can throw any one of his
four pill:hes for a strike anytime,"
said Cox. "When you do that,
there's no wa'l you can't win."
And Glavme has. His last loss
was May 3, a S-3 decision 10 the
Chicago Cubs.

a

.

The Meigs-American Legion
basebllll team Sla'ICd out die season
slow, but after last weekend the local team is showing signs of
putting it together.
. Meigs swted out the season
with a 1-7 record, but this past
weekend split doubleheaden wilh
two of the powen in the 8th District Legion League. On Satul;day
Meigs lost to Pickerington 14-3 in
the fiCSt Jllllle before turning the IBbles and defeating the Fairfield
Countians 11-S in the nightcap. On
Sundsy afternoon Meigs defeated
Lancaster 7-3 before losing the
nighleap in a heartbreaker 2-0. All
games will count in the league
standings.
In !he fiCSt-JIIIIIe loss at Pickerington, .the hosts opened up a 7-0
lead and plated five big runs in the
seventh en lOUie 10 the win.
Pickerington pounded out 10
hits off of three Meigs pitchers.
Chris Stew~ was the loser, and
Tim Bissell and Mike Vance also
saw mound aclion for Meigs.
Meigs was limiled 10 only four
hits by winning pitcher Fox. Jeff
Durst led Meigs at the plate with
two doubles, and Jason Wright and
Terry McGuire added a single
each.
In the nightcap, Meigs scored
eight runs in the third inning and ·
pounded out IS hits en route to a
11-S win. Stewart had lhe big bat
for Meigs in the third wilh a threerun double. Andy Baer and Matt
Finlaw had three hits each for
Meigs, including a double by Finlaw. Randy Coni and Stewan had
a single and a double each and
Durst a triple for Meip.
Jeremy Phalin scattered seven
hits in pic= up the win in a
roure-gomg
ormanee.

Andy Bate slammed a three-run
home run in the top or the seventh
inning 10 brealc a 3-3 tie and Meigs
went on to post a 7•3 win in the
.opener of Sunday's twin bill
against Lancaster. In the nightcap,
Lancasaer plared single runs in the

___ ..._.

lin, lhadlklp; 0..• MantaomerY and
......... fT7ff 'dm;
Dcmllrilh

ana

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---·-bo-.ond

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... w- .... Ntdlolu • .,........,,

C. ~· oulfitld•: MichHl Daniel
Allla,oo-1-Sim«~~

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Meigs, now 3-9 liverall aDd 34 in the lea~ue, will travel to
(See LEGION flD Pap 5)
, ~:

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plate wltll the winning run ill tile 12tb Inning of
Tuesday night's 1ame aaalnst the visiting
Toronto Blue Jays, wbo lost 2·1. (AP)

CELEBRATES WIN -Iadlans piDcb ruaner Carlos Baer1a (9) gives teammate Ed
Taubensee. a bilh ftve after Baerga CI'OfiSe5 the

J

I

'

Federal court discards Reynolds'
suit against The Athletic Congress
CINCINNATI (AP) - A f«!deral appeals court says sprinrer ButCh
Reynolds wiD have to explore other
avenues to overturn his Suspension
for a positive steroid te&amp;L
The 6th U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals on Tuesday threw out his
lawsuit against tbe nationalaoverning body of track and field, saying
the federal courts l!lck jurisdiction
at this point.
Reynolds, the 1988 Olympic silver medalist and the world record
holder at 400 merers, is challenging
The Alhletlc Congress' suspension
based on a positive teSt for steriods
following a meet last Aqust in
Monte Carlo.
Reynolds, 26, has denied us!ng
steroids, and said the suspension
resulted from a mixu~~ng
procedures at a ~b
· .
The 6th Circuit said Reynolds
has not exhausted all of tbe adltlin·
istrative remedies provided by

TAC, so the federal courts don't
have jurisdiction.
The appeals couit ruling came
one day after arbitrator Richard
Gombart in Columbus, Ohio, remporarilylifred TAC's suspension 10
allow Reynolds to compete in· the
Mobil national championships in
New York beginning Wednesday. .
Reynolds has said the tempo~
permission to compete made h1m
confident he would become e}igible
to run in the 1992 Olympics.
•'I will be in Barcelona in 1992
to represent tbe United States in lhe
Olympics," Reynolds said.
Gombart found that the suspen·
sion was improper because there
was convincmg evidence that two
urine samples that allegedly came .
from Reynolds did not come from
the same man.
.
..
Following Monday's dec1S1on
by the arbitrator, Reynolds' ,attorney , Greg Lashutka, said 'he was

confident the ruling would hold up
through further proceedings before
TAC and the International Amareur
Athletic Federation, the world goveming body for lhe sport. .
Reynolds said of the ruling,
" I'm breathless. But I definitely
had faith (in God) and He is the
one who gave us this victory."
Reynolds set the 400 world
record of 43.29 seconds in 1988,
when he also won a silver in the
event and a gold in lhe 1.600-meter
relay at the Seoul Olympics. ·
Th~ U.S: team for t~e world
c~mptonsh1ps at To~yo !D Augu~t
wil! be de1erm1~ed ~~ thiS week s
ns!lonal champ1onsh1ps. Reynolds
welcomed lhe chanc~ to run, but
ackn~wl~ged that h1s chance of
mak~ng 1t to .the world champlon~1ps was .sbm.
I hav~n t done any track work
at all ·- JUSt we1gh~s and a httle
(See REYNOLDS on Page 6)

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Special of. the Week!

MOPn'RI!Al. liXPOI-IWIIHd Rick
Wahler, pitcla•. Recalled Doua Pian,
piwat.r, flam .......,..,_ ~ tho Arnm·

1114

I

hits.

I

' -~---; Mo•Mor- ·

..... i,E·~ • , ", b~.'i.!t

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third and fourth innings and behind • ,:
the t\110 hit pitching of Chad Arm- l &lt;
strong posted a 2-0 win.
l._1
Baer led the local team to the ., :
win in the first game with three 1 :
hits, including the home run.Terry '
Reuter, McGuire, Wright and Eric ' '
Heck had two hits each, including a ' ··
triple by Wright.
Wright picked up the win for ·1 '
Meigs, going all the way on afour- ' ·
hitter.
'·'.
In the nightcap, Lancaster · ·
scored runs on a wild pi!Ch and a .,
squeeze play and behind the pildl- · •·
ing of Armstrong made the runs ·
sland in posting the win.
•:·
Baer was the losing piiCher for )' ·
Meigs despite pitching an CRJtstanding game. Baer lind McGuire com- ' ,
bined to pitch a duee hiller. W~t · had a pau of singles for: the Me1gs• ~ ·

aNCINNATI REDI-Siped Jo•eph

....... ..._ eo..loi O'Neill,
mo., H;W;j...._1.... Whio .... -

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rrte~ar, 1. . 14

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Alao Race4-L.ad Sp1n, Launlano,
VmeUAa Bliltd, illlbllylo Oul, Alllley
Ashley , Pit7 P•rt)'. Perfeett (1 -4)

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2

DENVER

Alto Raced·Cunwat C, BortiN Silt.
Wicter Cloud, U R Tilloy, Goldie Sti4om.
Bay Dwtaway, Tfalf lllall&amp; Trifecll (7-3-

AL-Su.=!:~allc, Seattle

s.n PIIDCiiDo (I..W..- 3-:4) at Olioa•

~ UJ,

NaUonal BaketNU Allodlllon

,...,. rerr-

(llal-of-M\'eD)

Today'• cam•

.

t

NBAFinals

: St. Loa 10, Soa Dl..4

~

1

,_.._

l'riUJ,)-7

WatDMIIon

Soa-1. .
Clo0ianai6,-

s.. Di..,,4.
HOME RUNS-IolcOriff, Son Dieao,
14; O'Neill. Cacianoli, 13;New

10. 14; ,.,... Now Yod&lt;, 13; Loll'orll,
Son Dieao.J3.

, Deoroitll ' - IO:GJ p.m.

.,\llltlll

au.:.ao.
110.
•
Jo., St. Loulo, II; Bonil·

. PWlaMiphia, "; Canclaelc. HOUlton, 4; M.
~n. St LouU, 4; T. F~mandez,

cr-· J.Sl•- &lt;Mooa

1

~~o~&amp;JTI::a

Lou.i•,

. TRIPC.£5-:...T. 0w)'nll., S•n Oieao. 8;
Poldw, Son PnnciroO, 6; Colanon. New
• Yadt, 5; L. tlnnzo]U. Houoton. 4; X:.W,,

(Aillb!I•IDT)

-~).2).1·

Atlutll, M ; Jou, St.

ADRES

Basketball

McOee, San Fru~ciaco, 14; T. Owyan,

~-··-'
Tad8)''•1•m01

~Z.2),

lllltill.

. s..a-14. .

Deoroit5, OUliM I
Colifamil4; M i l - l

Deoroit

65,

Pittabu.~Jb:,

T_.2,0ioqo0

7-4~ l:U PJ1!.

SAN D1EOO

Aokcd
waivcn an Marty Bama., tnfie:lder.

5-....J, LOI Aaae11a. 72; T. Fcm1ndet,
~~ Diep. 66; J.kaec, San FnncUc:o.

l1,
US;' Julic:o, AUantt, IS;
lolcll.,...
•.
N• Yod&lt;, U; L. Oonulu.
Houston, 14; O ' Neill, Cincinn•li, 14;

1'uelld8J'I ICOI'II
u
r·.S,NtwYGil3
Kenlu a., 11, ••Js' .o

TLOUIS CARDINALS-Siped
sa.. llubor, ....-.... llllpd him,.
1...... CityrtlhoA~Mio• lMpo.

·363; Somuoi,IMAnl.._, .340; 1 - SL

...... :10 l2 A29
7 ~·
........ 22 l3 :10 , .364 91/2

CloooiiDII

toa·Wilt•· Bane of the International

Natlolllll League

EMIDiviiiOD
W L I'd.
01
·'--·-· 30 . 26 .536
....... l1 'II .534
.......... 21 29 .491 21/2
...... l5 26 A72 ll/2

T-.

T-. t.:lllca&amp;o. 12; l&lt;ff

llUIOiil, T-.1:1.·

AMERICAN LEAGUE

a....,

(24) to take a 2-1 lead and added
four runs in the fifth.
"Charllon had beuer pop on the
ball than be did before he was
out," lteds manager Lou Piniella
said. "He pi!Ched as well liS anybody could be expected to after
coming back." ·
Elsewhere in the NL it was New
York 2, Atlanlll 1; San Francisco 8,
Chicago 6 in 10 innin$s; Houston
1, Philadelphia 0 in 11 mnings: and
St. Louis 10, San Diego 4. Los
Angeles at Pittsburgh was postponed by rain.
Mets :Z, Braves 1
Frank Viola gave up one run .on
four hits in eight and one-thud
innings and Kevin McReynolds hit
a two-run homer as New York beat
Atlanlll at Shea Stadium.
Viola was twO outs away from

I

17 CRUCE MILVIN
AI'S.... Writer
CLBV.LAND (AP) - Alex
Cole Hftt IBW 1 pme end this
way ..,_., Ill wllc:n you've lost
lhepavlllalllwillamw,youtake
wbllJOUC8JIIL
TOIOIII011 1m Dayley hit Cole
in the 111ct witll a bases-loaded .
pitcllia die 12th innina Tuesday
nlallt, fan:lnallome tbe winning
rJ!Illl tile CWiellnd Indians beat

Cincinnati han.ds Montreal 6-lloss
By Tile ~fated Prell
Any chance the Cincinnali Reds
have of repealing 11 world cbampions depends a kit on Nmn Charlton's heallh.
.
· The Reds need pitching and
struggled II'OUIId .!if)() while Charl.ton was on the disabled lilt. He
returned Tuesday ni1ht and gave
up one run on five bits in six
innings !IS the Reds beat Montreal
6-1 at Olympic Slldiuin.
CblriiDO 13-S); disabled~ 26
wilh tr.nclinids in his left
der,
Sll'IICk out four and walked none in
winning for the first time since
May 14. Ted Power and Kip Gross
fmishcd for the Reds.
"I guess they did know what
was.besl for me.' said Charlton. "I
didn't want to go on the DL, but I
realize now the club had my best

-·

l

·'
.~ -·

.. -- ..
.~

'•

I•
.'••
•

••
•

'I
•

•

'l

�Sentinel

Bulls one win away from first NBA title
By HOWARD ULMAN
AP SPCII'II Writer
INGLEWOOD, Calif. (AP) Micbee! Jonlan's loac wait sbould
end tmiPL
.
When he was a freshman, has
Nonh Carolina team won the
NCAA title •.Two yean later, his
. U.S. Olympte ~won. a gold
m~. Then lhe. wan.- m yeln
, wnhoutachampiollsllip-bepn.
.. · "I - spoiled." he said. but "I
•. W1S able 10 be pelienl" becN"tJ he
,, saw the Cbic:IIIO BuDs Jl'ogresslng
.thrcJua.h thoee ,.._ .
, Pa1ience wu a quality he need. f!d ihc past ~ days.
A 97-82 W1l1 Sunday over Los
~geles pvc .the BU!b a 3-1 lead
an ibe NBA Finals. Smce ihen, the
-feeling has grown lhat the beaerecl
.l..akers have lillie ciBice to survive
·...:.: tonight's _fifth game of the best-of,._: seven senes.
,.. • Jordan is holding his feelinp in.
~;
"I'm nervous and every now
""'~: and lhen I get. chill. ~~?~thinking
~-;:- about the sllultJO~,
h~ told
' ~ reJ!Orters Tuesday, but I m not
~: 81J!Dg to let you guys see ihaL .I'm
.,.;·. 801!'~ to be really cool about II ...
·- ·-: until
II aclllllly biDDens.
::;
"Then
1 think ilie inside and the
-- •
ide . In ..... .....
..
OUIS
are 80, I~~ ""'same.
An NBA title 11 one mthe few
ihlnp_JOidan didn't,achicve as he
~w. mto !'isJccibell s best player.
wmrung his secon~ most valuable
play~r a war~ thts season .. The
Bulls. franc~JSe also .has Wilted a
l!"lli.UI!'C as II cl~ an on the f!l'Sl ·
btle ·~ !IS 25-year history. .
Ch~o. head coac~. 1'1:'11 .J~kso~ d~n t sen~ a . wt'! tt for
Michael . urge mollv81111g hts club.
"I thmk everybody wants to

win it as badly as Micblel does,"
he said. "We know our chanceS BR:
8fC1L Wc'Je just not F,oing to ceJe..
brale until it happens. '
It seems almost inevitable that it
wiD.
No ·team has won a Finals after
trailing 3-L The Bulls have been
smooth on offense~ smothering
on defense, oo~ng the Lakers
99.8 to 89.3 pomts per game and
outsbooting tltem 52.5 percent to
43.3.
·Los Angeles has lost ihree
straight pmes and been dominated
and dectmated In two of ihem. It
may have to rely on its weak bench
if injured starters James Worihy
and Byron Scott can't play tonighL
"The momenllll!l in this sport is
.so hard to counteract," Jackson
said. • 'As matchups and game
plans !levclop, situations come
about where you know how you
can stop them and you know how
to sco~e."
"AU season long when we were
expected to win ball games, we
come out and we focus and we win
it," Jordan said.
But the Lakers who won five of
·
t~e last 11 NBA' titles,
haven •t
lllVeR up.
.
"Wc'Je not going wilh the mass
hystma," Los ~ held coach
Mike Dunleavy saJd. "We have to
come back, dig down and block
evetyihing ouL
"I'm 1IQt willing to concede."
Dunlesvy, 37, scrimmaged wiih
his players Tuesday because only
nine of them practiced.
Magic Johnson res!lld and Warlhy 'ot lre8lment on the left anldc
Stnl1l he sustained in the Western

Conference fmals and aggravated
Sunday. Scott nuned ihe right
shoulder he bruised when he
slipped on wet spolin die founh
quarter Sunday. He said he was
told the injury_, at least a week
to heal.
"I'm planning on not having"

a

W~t;tbYand~punleavy,~d.
I .have~ t gtven UJ! •. L~s

Angeles tramer Gary Vint satd.

He Plows he has a ch10ce to

make history, but events seem to be
con'J::!!ng against him, taunting
him · a ~tmare of puu,s ihat
linger on ihc lip of evesy hole.
'rltis revamped course does not
suit his lldventuroul style. His head
is clogged from a cold. His spirit is
low lliet a few~ outings. And
the record book shows no one has
won the Masters and U.S. Open in
the same year since Jack Nicklaus
in 1972. No one has ever won all
foil' Gnnd Slam titles in a single

1orme~

.

4

'

w~ os to do. But they can't come
back here (to protest) without a
permiL" he said.
Senator Eugene Watts, RColumbus. said h~: didn' t agree
wilh the demonstraton.
"I JRfer long-term solutions to
problems and the General Assistance progrfm is short-term . It
should be totally abolished,'' he
said.
The Senate was expected to vote
on Voinovich's proposed $26.8 billion budget today.
In the House, the Democrats
proposed a revised $27.r billion
budget that would restore $202

millfon in welfare cuts proposed by
Voinovich. Under the Democratic
budget, benefits would be reduced
from $128 10 $100, with a _provision added under which rec1pients
who find jobs could keep a larger
percentage of their income, wiihout
having it deducted from their benefits.

saJed;a~~i~i':h~:m~~~~~

were entitle!l to protest, "I think
ihey hurt lheir own cause. I lhink
they just reinforce the way some
people feel about welfare - · that
lhey work and pay ~&amp;Xes and other
·people should. too." ·

/\

~by this stort-up rnoal:
•1/ 2 gallon warm tea
•1 teaspoon whiskey
•I tablespoon liquid soap
•1 tablespoon h;&lt;lrogen

Blood testing of athletes may
' get approval for Olympics
By STEPHEN WILSON
AP Sports Writer
BIRMINGHAM, England (AP)
- Blood lliunples are lllccly to be
used in testing aihletes for druP. at
futnre Olympics, ihe Games top
anti-doping official says.
Despite sensitive moral and
legal questions, blood tests offer
the best way to identify banned
substances which evade detection
in urine samples, Prince Alexandre
de Merode, chainnan of the IOC's
medical commission, said Tuesday.
De Merode presented a report
on the issue to the IOC Executive
Board and said he expects it will
receive ftnal approval by ihe IOC
next year.
.
"I believe everybody is interested in doing this because ihcy realize ihe difficulty and necessity of
detecting new drugs," he said.
"Taldng blood is probably ihe only
way to have a good tesL''
.
De Merode said blood tests
would supplement urine samples,
not replace them.
"It will be a complementary
test, a second check," he said.

1,

peroxide
•1 teaspoon vitamin B-1

Pkg.5.97
pkg.

IOC spokeswoman Michele
Verdier said bloOd tests would not
be implemented until after lhe 1992
Barcelona ·Olympics. The earliest
they could be used would be at lhe
1994 Winter Games in Lillebammer, Norway.
The issue was farst raised at lhe
IOC's Execntive Board meeting in
Barcelona in April.
At the time, officials n:&gt;ted that
blood testin~ could raise legal,
moral and Jeligious problems, and
might even violate laws on human
rights and civil libenies in some
countties.
But l(eba Mbaye, an executive
board member and former judge on
the International Court of Justice,
said lhose problems could be over~
come.
Verdier said Mbaye "had a
rather positive attitude on the C)lhical and judicial questions.''
"There has been much progress
since Barcelona," she added.
Meanwhile, Mbaye will continue to study all ramifications of
blood tests before the IOC makes
its fmal decision.
,.

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WELFARE PROTEST ·A group or demon·
strators protested proposed budget cuts ror the
state welf'are prOIJ'&amp;m sit on the lobby noor at

MAMOGRAPHY
ULTRASOUND
OB/GYN
Tltof'HY WINNERS - These members or the Saturday After.
noaa
Bowllua Lea1ue received trophies 11 a party •eld
recently their honor at Pomeroy Bowlln1 Lanes. Sbowa with
their trophies are (liCit necessarily In order) Belhaay Bo~~hrlssy
Williams, Amy Cloaeh (Hiah Game-Girls), Adam WI
(Hlp
Game-Bo:ra), Amber Slaven, Kristina Grate (Most Improved), Chad
Dodson, Cathy Morris (Youth Leape Coach) aad KeviD Loan. •
Also rec:elvlns trophies were Jay P. Fisher, Stephanie Stewart, Matt
and Ty Ault, aud Kyle Werry.
·

992-2188
446-5381

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'

cans, mostly security personnel,
Jemained at the 130,000-acre base.
Punongbayan said Tuesday that
Clark, one of the biggest U.S. bases
overseas, was in ihe path of the
volcanic flow from Mount
Pinatubo during its last major eruption, in 1380.
The Pentagon, which is trying to
negotiate a new contract with
Manila for the base, said it caa
work around the tempmuy loss or
Clark.
.
.
The Americans who fled Clark
with a few belongings on Monday
moved in with saifors and their
families at Subic Bay naval base,
50 miles to the soulhwesL
Although the Air Force left
Clark, Philippine authorities have
not ordered a general evacuation of
Angeles, a city of more than
300,000 people adjacent lhe base.
A:bout 19,000 Filipinos had earlier been evacuated from three
provinces near .the volcano's slopes
and were housed in about 25
makeshift evacuation centers outside lhe ,projected danger zone.

•

Reptolds appeal•.. _(~Co~n=tin=ued=.::from=.:.:Pas::ae::.:5:L.l- - - "He's never had any hesrinp in
TAC,'' Cava said. "Ycstaday, an
emergency arbitration panel
cleared him for ibis meet.
"If he weJe to finiSh in a qn•lifying position for the world championships, and if at any point in his
TAC appeals process he is clehcd,
TAC would join Reynolds and ask
the IAAF to lift ihe suspension.
''If lhey would, Reynolds would
he on lhe U.S. team."

the Ohio Statehouse Tuesday. The demonstra·
tors blocked the north entrance to the buildiDI.
(AP)

MANILA, Philippines (AP) - . of Vulcanology and Seismology.
"We have signs that the volcano
Mount Pinatubo erupted wilh ihrec
· ihundering explosions today, shoot- is preparing_ for anoiher one ....
ing a giant plume of ash more ihan This could only be lhe beginning.''
Punongbar.an warned people
12 miles high and sending molten
rock and super-healed gas cascad- wilhin a 12-mtle rsdius of Pinatubo
to flee.
ing into ihrec rivers.
"The smoke is vesy ihick like a
Thousands of residents of ihc
dark
mushroom in the sky,'' Gus ·
.• nearby city of Ang~le~ jammed
Abelj!as.
a ~eporter for ABS-CBN
~ outgomg roads, pamckmg at the
televtsion,
Sllid in a broadcast from
; roar of the initial eruption, which
Botolan,
near
ihe vok:ano's west-' sent a huge gray-greenish mushem
slopes.
"It's
jost like what we
• 100m cloud bursting from the volsaw in Hiroshima.''
':. cano.
, . Hundreds of Americans fled · Other reporters described panic
't Clark Air. Base, which is 10 miles as people scampered for safety
: cast of lhe volcano and was home wilh lheir belongings and livestock
,.. to 15,000 American military per- over roads slippery wiih ash fall.
s, soMcl and ihcir families until most
President Corazon Aquino visitwere evacuated MO!iday.
ed refugee centers near Angeles
;
· The base did not appear ihreat- briefly today before returning to
: coed by volcanic flow and there Manila for independence day celeweJe no imrnediare reports of casu- brations.
alties. But scientists warned of
Moments after the first explo'• more, possibly larger eruptions sion, sirens wailed at Clark Air
' from ihe 4,795-foot volcano, which Base, and 600 of lhe 1,500 Ameri• was dormant for six i:enturies until cans n:maining theJe fled eastward
' it began spewing steam in Apri I.
to safety. Air Force spokesman LL ·
An Associated Press photogra- Col, Ron Rand said 900 Ameri: pher who circled the volcano in an
• airplane said an aerial gunnery
•
range at Clark was covered with
ash, as were mountains in lhe Zam.:. bales range, n01mally lush, green
trOpical peaks that now looked like
• the Alps in winter.
~
Today's eruptions 11egan at 8:40
~ a.m. with a tremendous blast ihat
J sent a mushroom cloud skyward. It
, was followed by a second exP_Io• sion a few minures later and a lhird,
~ smaller blast atll:49 a.m.
; · . the huge plume could be seen
l in Manila, 60 miles to the south.
~ and reporters at ihe scene said it
• blocked out the sun. The cloud
drifted westward into the South
' China Sea.
'
Seismologists said searing gas,
ash and molten rock raced at great
• speed down the mountain's western
' and norihem slopes and into lhe
Marella, Maraunot and O' Donnell
' rivers. They said lhe volcano had
• plenty of built-up magma and even
more severe eruptions could come

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Volcano refl,pts in Philippines;
residents evacuate city of Angeles

'

Bale ball

LET FATHER KNOW
HE'S BEST.·
Come see bur selection of Father's Day
cards. Both humorous and traditional.

..

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WASHDS, DIYERS,
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·

627 3rd '"·• Gaii,.U•
PH. 446·1699
HOUIS: I A.M.·6 P.M.

~ayorsaysgunlaw

is unconstitutional

:. ;... 400,158.
~ ~i Chicago second baseman Ryne
' "': •Sancllcr8 leads aU NL players with

•

...

758,341 votes. Other leaders by
position are first baseman Will
Clark' of Sin Francisco, catcher
Benito Sudqo of San Diego,
••, ' lhorUiop Ozzie Smith of SL Louis
and thlid buemlll Chris Sabo of

'

Ciltdnnad.

:

:J:r

any llllution to the budpt ~!em
but I know that I need theu (govemment) ~p. •'
The demonstrators beg10 ihcir
protest IIOUlld 1 p.m. Tuesday I!Jd
stayed until a Senate education
commiuee hearing C!lded at around
12:20 Lm. Wednesday when State
Highway Patrol officers turned off
all the lights and dragt~cd nine
protesters out of lhe building. .
Capt. Paul RaP!J of the State
Highway Patrol saad lhe demonstrsiOrs did not have a Jequlred per,
mit to stage the rally.
"We dido 't arrest anyone today
beCause we know lhat's whatlhey

~~.:-··

Sports briefs

NEW YORK (AP) .,:_ Seattle
- eall:ber Dave Valle drew a three.: 11m1 IUipeDiiOD for charginl
TelW maniF. Bobby Valentine
lflllr beina bit~
in I game
June 1. V'llle
dlo sospenlioa impolod bY AmllrAI League
presidellt Bobby Browa and will
c:ontinuc to play pendina a hearing.

. .
.
Linda Jones, SO, of CIIIClDnati,
said she joined ibe rally because
she's scared about her future. Ms.
Jones, an adult edtnti011 program
student at Camp WIJblnstOn Communlty Center, said she receives
$148 a monih tom General Assistancc and $105 in food stamps '
every monih.
.
"If the proposed cuts push
ihroogh, I won't have anyihing by
August," she said. "I can't offer

-thrive In bright. ~
tpels. Plont """"ond then""""'·

-

NEW YORK (AP) - Darryl
~
Strawberry of Los Angeles moved
~
past San . Francisco's Kevin
~
Mitchell to take the lead among
~
National League outfielders in bal1
lotlng for the AU-Star Game. 10 be
•·
played July 9 at Toronto. Strawber~ • ry hu received 438,570 votes,
-!;-' compared to Mitchell's total of

tance JIICJiiam.

.

Hazeltine National will penalize
Woosnam and any other player
who has 1 rendency to stray from
the middle·of the fairways or muff
approach shots. The rough is five
inches tall and the fairways are
long and narrow, like gJeCD carpet

"Augos!l favors long bitters.
,
This one demands nothing but
~
accuracy,'' said Curtis Strange.
:
Weeping willows. lindens,
~
bbdles, silver maples, blue spruce,
.
season.
bullmlut and oiher lovely, sweet~
WOOIIIIIII'S response to all that sounding trees have grown up and
:
,Tuesday, two days before the start
character to a course that was
; '!lf the 9lst U.S. championship, was given
badly, ihough not unfairly
• :10 go out after a praeuce round and- maligned when it last hosted ihc
:
bash dozens or balls as hard as he Open in 1970.
.
:'
could.
None of lhc gale-force winds
:: ·
"Whoever's going to be driving ihat blew through here 21 yesrs ago
t .. the ball I~ and straight is going have been feb lately. In fact, the air
10 do well,' said lhe chunky liUle Tuesday was hot, m~ and still: ,
•. ·: Welshman, who worries more
But ihe greens Jematn tmiCher• -- about ihe direction of his drives ous 811d unf9rgiving. Shaved low
than their distance. "At the and baked hard by the sun after
, moment, my confidence is not very recent rains, putts skidded during
high, and I ihlnk I'm a confidence practice as if lhey weJe rolling on
player."
g1ass instead or grass.
Most of the pundits are over.-- _ looking him in Ibis tournament.
• tllou&amp;h the fans mob him at every
:
bole as if he were a cute rock star
'
instead of a· bard-smoking, beer,.
drinldng, snooker-playing BriL
!
Tbe bot players aro Billy
~
Andrade and Corey Pavin. Greg
;
Nolmln says he has the fll'C in his
:
beUy Ill win again. Seve Ballesteros
•
is coming tiact strong. Defending
~
champion Hale Irwin looks as iT
:1 · he'• ready to give it another run.
;.
Nick Faldo is al:;;; ihreat and
amateur Phil Mic
, a SIIIOOlh·
• •hittinllleft-h8nder, is sbo_wing the
·, .... pronuse of a fUIIU'C c:hamp1011.
Woosnam figures those are the
favorites, too, but he's not quite

Highway Patrol official said they
would .not be allowed inside as a
group wiihoot a permit.
No one was arrested in Tuesday's protest
About 30 people staged a sitprolieSL
down. that blocked tlte north
The demonstrators, mostly entrance to the Statehouse as the
members of lhe CinciMati Coali- Senate f10811cc committee WI'IIIJIJed
• lion for the Homeless, said lhey up discussion on ihc JIIOI)DIIcdbiadWOuld continue iheir protest at lhe get by Gov. George Voinovicl).
Stateh()IISC later today. But a State · Voinovich wants to abolish ihe
$300 million-a-year Clenetal Aisis-

·~ , )\

giving up on himself.
"Obviously it's in lhe back of
my mind to try to go for lhe Grand
Slam, but I'm a little bit disappointed ihat I'm not playing too
well," he said. "I'm a little upset
because I've really been looking
forward to coming here and play·
ing good. Things could change
around tomorrow. I'm an inspirational player. If I start hitting lhe
ball well tomorrow all the way
around, it oould help change ihings
~

. COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) Nme people demonstrating against
popoeod cuts in the state's General
Assistance welfare program were
. forcibly removed from the State• hQUSe early today after a daylong

•

as

monihsago.

Demonstrators opposed to welfare budget reductions

" No decision will be made on
either of lhem until game time."
Both will be subpar if !hey play
and Scott has hilda pocr series, hit:
ling just S of 18 shots and scoring
18 points while averaging 35 mioutes per pme.
A.C. Green would start In Worthy's spot, while Terry Te!lgle,
whose shooting touch has gone
cold,wouldfillinforScou.

Woosnam not grinning
he enters U.S. Open

By STEVE WILSI'EIN
AP Sports Writer
CHASKA, Minn. (AP) - Ian
Wooanam's Maslen grin is a grimace of frustration as he pursues
the elusive Grand Slam in the
~heat of the U.S. Open.
He stalks ihe slender fairways
and slippery greens of Hazeltine
National with trepidation, not lhe
cocky swagger ihat ~haractcrizcd
his gait at Augusta National two

the Dally SenUnel Page 7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

wednesday, June 12, 1991

Ohio

'

....................
frllndly .... Ice

o,.. w.............. .

58.88 35.88 2.77can

Bleck 1!: Decker

electrlc trimmer

and edger. Savings!
GE600

r

Pomeroy. OH ,

•

'.

'

,'I

•
•

Watering
with
2-gallon capacity.

Black
" Decker
trllniMr with 12"

swath and bump feed .
82312

Hand Spra,..- ... 99~
~32 1-~

21.94

E·Z Cart is a must for ·
the serious gardener.
Now specially-priced.

CDnltnCI . . P l fl .

On Sale Wed., June 12 Thru Sat., June 15

QiltinfJ:

·. .. 1:00 o.m, 10 1:00 p.m.
lund-r 10:00 • .m. to 4:00p.m. ,
PREICR.TIONI
PH . 992· 2955
-

E. Mlln

CLEVELAND (AP) - A bill
before the Ohio Legislature that
would pre-empt mun!cipal g~n
control is unconstuuuonal, sa1d
Mayor Michael R. White.
White said Tuesday that he
would inslruct police to ignore the
bill ifit 'bceomCS law. . , . .
By prohibidns mun•c•pahues
from enacliiiJI laws ~egulating ihe
sale, possesston and ~lion
of firearms and ammunation. ih.c
bill violates the Home Rule provision of the Ohio Constitution,
White Slid.
.
The mayor also said he- concerned that lhe ....opoecd law would
elimlnale ciliel
eoa10d' •
trol laws, lncludins C
tell-yeii'-Did law requlrlq licelllin&amp; of handgua owllllrl illd pro·
hibitlng tho sale of assau1t

VOLCANO ERVPTS ·TIIIck ..... 11 !I nto •It , _ till
crater of Moaat PIMtubo Ia aortllwat nlllpphlel lollowlq
~ trapdoa Wedaaday. No -Ides llan lleea rlpel'talf.

Available At Your Local Kmart Garden Centers
I

weapon&amp;.
~

\

..

�The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend
•

Wedii8Sday, June 12, 1891
'

• -·
·-·

.Page 8

Community calendar
Community Calendar Items on Wednesday. Questions regardappear two days before 11 evat ing the Federal Govemrnent.should
md tbe day Ill that evellt. Ite111 be addressed to the Ieptm1tative.
m.st be received well Ia ad'VIIIce
.
THURSDAY
to assure pabllc:ltloa In tbe cal·
GALLIPOLIS·
The Diabetes
endar.
Support Group will meet Thursday
in the French 500 Room at Holzer
WEDNESDAY
REBDSVR.LB • "Jesus and You Medical Center. Denise Phelps, ET
at Camp Can;Do" will be tho Nurse, will speak on the topic of
tbcrne for Riverview Community skin care.
Vacation Bible School through FriMIDDLEPORT - Evangeline
day at Rivemew School. Claues
Chapter
No. 172, OES, Middleport,
begin at 6:30 p.m. and continue
will
hold
its annual inspection on
until 9 p.m. AU qcs, including
Thursday
at 7:30 p.m. Deputy
adults, are welcome to attend.
grand matron Beuy Schenkel will
ROCK SPRINGS - Rock be the inspecting officer. Officen
Springs United Methodist Chun:h · wear chapter dresses. Members
will hold Vacation Bible School bring simdwiches, relish plate or
through Friday ero.n 9:30 a.m. to fruit salad.

Stock Up on Dad's Favorites r~J:j;:]ii:~r=---~---:=---~~:_

Holly Farms Fresh

Whole•

·

I

nOQI\.

;POMEROY • Enrerprise United
Methodist Church will hold Vacation Bible School through Friday
from 9 am. to II :30 a.m.

WINNER NAMED· Derek MIDer, Rallllld, wu tbe winDer of
tbe "GbOit'' mOYie coatest held by Vaupu's Cardinal, Middle. port. Here Mlcbl KIDg, video liWII!er, preaeolll tbe prize, 1 smiD
. juke box, to tbe wilmer.

Overnight
trial
ride
.slated
.

Jumbo

I

)'II

11

t

(

ride. at Bob Evans Fann on Saturday and Sunday beginning at 4
p.m. and ending at I p.m. on Sunday for all scouts in the Black Diamond Girl Scout Council.
FoUowing the trail ride will be
an evening a~ound the ~ampfire
and tent' campmg. Any prl who is
at least four feet ten inclies is eligi· attend.
ble to aaend and no previous riding
For more information, contact
expenence is nece!!S811'·
the Girl Scout Service Center, toll·
The fee for the ouung is $52.5() . free 811-800-9264685.

POMEROY - Laurel Cliff Free
Methodist Church will hold Vaca·
· tion Bible School through Friday
from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. Classes will
be offered for a~es four through 16.
Mrs. Russell is the former Linda The program will be on June 16 at
Mr. and Mrs. F1oyd T. Chapman
·
Lou
Smith, dau~hter of Mr. and 7 p.m. The theme is "Jesus and
(Kenda Russell), Pickerington,
Mrs.
Roy 0. Smtih. Rock Springs You at Camp Can-Do."
~,Yere Memoria). weekend guesiS of
Road,
Pomeroy. She attended her
· Pearl L. RusseD, Racine.
25th
class
reunion at Meigs High
They altended the 30th alwimi
REEDSVILLE - Success
School.
She
was a guest of her Church of Christ will hold Vaca·
banquet at Southern High School. .
Mr. and Mrs. Karl Russell and mother, Lucretia Kasper Smith, tion Bible School at Tuppers Plains
dallf!hter, Melissa Lynn, Manhat· who celebrated her 50th class Elementary School through Friday
ten, Kansas, attended their 25th reunion at Meigs High School.
from 9 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. with
reunion.
classes ror nurseiJ' through sixth
grade .. TransporlBilon is available
by.- calllng Roben White at 6!6·
1077 or Joe Holkinll at 667-6973.

Several attend area reunions

Enjoy These
F1avorful ·
Tomatoes

.Hot House
l

Man shot while_shielding
kids may never walk again

,, .

'

StoUffer's

•

Macaroni and ·
Cheese EntreeA!:Z·

•

By CHRIS TORCHIA
Associated Press Writer
BOSTON (AP) - Morlan
O'Bryan scrambled for cover when
thRe teen-agers with guns rounded
his street comer and sbKied shooting.
But when he saw two neighborhood kids running unwittingly into
the line of f~re. he thought of his
own children, raised himself from
the ground and ran to shield them.
That's when a 9mm bullet
caught him in the spine.
Now O'Bryan, a 33-year-old
warehouse wodccr whose five chi!·
dren range from 118C 2 to 11, is at
Uni~ty Hospital. Doctors say he
may never walk 118ain.
' But O'Bryan says he'd do it
again.
"I was glad to be there for
somebody's kids," said O'Bryan.

I

Limit 1 Ctn. Pleaae, Per Family With A~y Other ~dlllonal Purchase (excluding

Cheerios.
-----·-

lte11111 prohibited by law)

.

.

r------------~-Dad's
10" Size • 72 oz.

'RNIIDW!tOI.E GRAIN Qllr CSIEAL

Mega Gallon
.
ream
Ce

Gourmet

.

.

Pie
Great With Apple Pie,
Vanilla, Neapolitan

Limit 1 Ctn. Pleue, Per FamUy With Coupon Any Other Additional Purchaae

(exdudlng Item• prohiblled by Jaw)

( oe102;"

~~~ ·

:: General Mills
'

I

!Cheerios :!x•

Pleue. ~ r..u, Wltb ea.,on .....
AU1116aal l'llrdwo leu..,~, ltnu problblted b)' law)
Vllld din Sudaf, J - II, I I ·

Limit 1 Box

99i

,I
I
I

ut Butter
Skippy~~~~ or
18 oz. Jar

69
.

.

Kraft

Grape Jelly

Limit 1 Jar
Pleue, Fer FlaU, Wltb
Aay Otber A"""'Mal
l'ludlue lnthl"lae
ltnu ......•ll diiJiaw)

2 lb. Jar

HEMLOCK GROVE • The
Hemlock Grove Christian Church
will hold Vacation Bible School
from 6:30 to 8:30p.m. through Friday. This year's theme is "Jesus
and Y011 at Camp Can-Do". Class·
es will be beld for ages two
through hil!h school. The closing
program will be held June 16 at 7
p.m. All children are invited to
attend.

which includes transportation,
ho* renllil, trail guide service, late
evening meal and breakfast If pl'Qviding your own transportation, the
fee would be $47.50.
The trail ride is sponsored by
Black Diamond Girl Scout Council
and girls who are not currently registered with a ttoop are welcome to

There will be an overnight trail

Fresh .Ripe 15 Size

Fresb

HEMLOCK GROVE - Vacation
Bible School will be held at Hem·
lock Grove United Mcthodfst
Church throllf!h Friday from 6:30
p;m. to 8:30p.m. each evening.

'.'I can't live with seeing somebody
else's kids die."
He believes the bullet he took
woUld 'have hil the head of 9-yearold !llebuUa StePhen, who was fleeing with her 6-year·old brother,
Joseph.
The shooting began April 25
while O'Bryan and a dozen other
residents were enjoying a warm
evening outside their homes in
Capen Green, a subdivision in
Boston's Dorchester section. A
group of teen-agen chased another
band around the corner and ~
rue, felling O'Brr.an as he shtelded
his neighbor's chtldml.
"I didn't have any fear. I knew
that God would look over me either
way," O'Bryan said in a recent
interview from his hospital room.
O'Beyan broughl his family to
Boston i!l 1984 from the Viq!in
Islands in search of a steady JOb

.

POMEROY - The Pomeroy
United Methodist; SL Paul Lulber·
and good pay. Wilh Lhe help of a an ilnd Trinity Congregational
first-time homebuyers • progi'IJII, Churches will hOld a joint Vacation
O'Bryan and his wife, Loudalia, Bible School from June 10 through
bought an $89,000 home three June 14 aJ Trinity Ch..ch, located
weeks before the shooting.
at Second and Lynn Streets. Class"The third week, I see my es will be. offered for children 118ed
dream about to go up in smoke," three through sixth ~ and all
O'Bryan said. "Everything was
going so good, I was going shop· f.~i:"G:i·:al.:ngs.: ~~i~
ping, and then here comes the will be held from 9 a.m. to 11:30
nightmare."
p.m. Call 992-3172 for informaNow he divides his days lifting lion.
weights, doing upper body aerobics
and attending counseling sessions.
POMEROY · Revival is in
· The bullet injured the lower part pro~ through w~ ~the
of O'Bryan's spinal cord, leaving Believers Fellowship Mmtstty
him with little movement in his Chun:h, Kinasbury Road. Evange·
list is Sister Joy Sizemore lnd lliere
legs.
"Miracles can har,pen," said are special singers nightly. Rev.
Dr. Joshua Kaufman. '(But) look- Margaret Robinson invites the pubing statistically, from experience, lic.
chances of him walking again are
' - A representative
POMEROY
very, very small."
Susan Stephen, molher of the from Congressman Clarence
children O'Bryan shielded, has said Miller's office will conduct an
that all she can do now is to 1ry to open door session from 11 to I
help O'Bryan hold on to his home. p.m. at the coui1house in Pomm&gt;y
She has Slal1ed a fund, now totaling
about $30;000, to help O'Bryan. ·
O'Bryan's act turned him into a
local celebrity. pn:::rtin~ media
NEW YORK (AP) - Here are
attention and hospi visits from
the
prime-time TV ratings as com·
Mayor Raymond Aynn and Cardipiled
by the A.C. Nielsen Co. for
nal Bernard Law of Boston's ArchJune
3-9.
diocese. But he shuns the hero
1. (X) "NBA Finals Game 2,"
label.
NBC,
16.1, 15.0 million homes.
"I do something because I do it
2.
(X)
"NBA Finals Game 3."
from my heart," he said "I don't
NBC,
15.7,14.6
million homes.
do
it to get some kind of recogni• ..
3.
(3)
"Roseanne,"
ABC. lS.S,
11on.
14.4
million
homes.
O'Bryan failed to get a good
4. (X) "NBA Finals Game 4,"
look at the shooter, wbo has not
NBC,
15.2, 14.2 million homes.
been caught.
5. (I) "Cheers," NBC, 15.0.
But even the teen-118er who ftred
the bullet gets sympathy from
O'Bryan, who urged Law to pray
'
. for the youth.

POMEROY· There will be .a
dinner at the Meigs Counly Senior
Center on Thursday with serving
from 5-6:30 p.m. The cost for the
meal is $3 with a menu of baked
chicken breast. homemade noodles,
mashed potatoes, cole slaw, biscuit
and bevefliC. Pie will be available
for 75 cents. Following dinner,

~::h~te~l~~~~:~\fa~

FUTURE LEADER • Dilllla Jeffers, (left), Holzer COnic: of West
Virllnla Supervilqr, Ia pictured presentlnt • d01111tloli to Becky '
Zuspab, presldeut of tbe Wabama Putun Bullllless Leaders of
Allletlcan.
·
•

Future Business Leaders :
~~~~~.=tans. Thepubli~~ of America to compete

Ward. A free will offering will be

TIJPPERS PLAINS • The Tuppers Plains VFW Post No. 9053
will meet Thursday at 8 p.m. at the
hall.
ROCK SPRINGS • The Rock
Springs Grange will meet Thursday
at 8 p.m. at the hall.
FRIDAY
TIJPPERS PLAINS - There will
be a round and square dance at the

Tuppers Plains VFW Building on
Friday froni 8-11:30 p.m. The
building is air conditioned, refresh·
rnents will be served and the public
is inviled to attend
POMEROY • The Pomeroy
Senior Citizens Dance Club will
have a dance Friday from 8-11 p.m.
wilh music by the Happy Hollow
Boys of Athens. Those attending
bring SlljiCks for the snack table.
The public is inviled to auend.

The Wahama Chapter or Future Wahama FBLA chapter has grown
Business Leaders of America from 17 to 83 mcmben, has won
(FBLA), will be sending four sm- numerous regional awards, and has
dents and one advisor 10 the finished in the top 15 percent of'
National Lcadenhip Conftm~CC in national competition each year.
Anaheim, Calif., June 29-July S.
Thele future community leaders .
Menily Lieving and Beclty ~- and business people expect to
pan wiD be attending the confer- excel. This national conference will
ence sessions for officers, while help them Jearn. If any other ~·
Stanley Cook and Andrea Jeffet;S nizations are interesled in joinmg·
will be in national competition. HolzUClinic with a conlribution to:
HOf!1er Preece is lhe ac:com)lllllying defray e1::•· contact William:
advisor.
Miller or
, FBLA advisors or:
In its 10 years of existence, the Wahama High Schoolat773-5539. ~

David Ruffin pallbearer Eddie ,
Kendricks arrested after funeral :

The singer was notified befo..O
DETROIT (AP) - Singer
the
funeral that sberifr s deputie&amp;
Eddie Kendricks was arrested aftu
had
a warrant for his arrest for
the funeral of former fellow Tempalleged
non'nAyment of $26,000,:
tation David Ruffin and charged
Mouradian
said.
:
with non-payment of child suppM,
. Kendricks and his former wife;·
authorities said Tuesday.
Kendricks, a mernber of the · Patricia, divorced in 1975 in
RIPLEY - The Liberty. Moun· original -Temptations, was 1 paD· Deaoit He was ordered to pay her
taineen will perform at tliC Sble- ' bearer in Moriday's serVIce II New $25,000 plus child support for their
son.
Bethel Baptist Church.
land in Ripley, W.Va. on Friday.

SATURDAY
LONG BOTTOM · 'There wiD
be a hymn sing at the Mt. Olive
Community Church in Long Bot• ·
tom on Saturday at 7 p.m. with
Russell Spencer and the Southern
HiD Gospel Singers! 1be public is
invited to attend.
DANVILLE - Weekend services
at the Danville Church of Christ
will be held Saturday at 7:30 p.m.
and Sunday at 10:30 a.m. and 6
p.m. Denver Hill, Foster, W.Va.,
will be lhe speaker. The public is
inrited
. .
wn.KnSvn.LE - There will be
a Father's !?•:t _Breakfast at the
Wilkesville Pytllian Hall on Satur·
day from 8- H am. Price is $3 and
includes sausage and pancakes.
Public is invited.
JACKSON • The Liberty Moun·
taineers will perform al the Skateland in Ripley, W.Va on Saturday.

Dr. Susan Bishop Casto
Family Practice Physician
Pediatrics .and Adult Medicine

· 606 Professional Circle
Ravenswood

ACCEPTING NEW PATIENTS

List of week's television ratings

Cat freed after being sealed
in roof of mobile home
roof, said mitnager Peter Thorton.

OLD TOWN. Maine (AP) - A
feisty feline should be fine after
apparently spending a month
trapped between the ceiling and
roof of a new mobile home that
W:,.~ from !he Soudl 10 New

When the cat couldn't be coaxed
from its hiding place, park emrloy·
ee Perry Eager ICillOYed viny sid·
ing and cut through plywood to
lure it to a ttap bailed with food.
E
..
.
On Monday, Thornton took the
A vct«&lt;narian says he can't fig· cat to veterinarian Rooald Lott,
ure out how the cat survived.
who said he could not explain how
The home, manufactured in the animal lasted so long without
Tennessee, arrived at Sunrise food or water. The cal, apparently 6
Mobile Home Park about three months old, was in poor shape
wcekleao.
·
when ir wu found but II expected
Somcpne looking inside tbe to survive. ·
home Sunday beard a cry from
Thornton said condensation
above, IIIII put emp~ discov, above !he ceiling may have provld-

=

=~ r:':J·J!:l =~

--·

.I

-

1 ~

'

for an appointment
Sometftine (jooa's .f1lfways Coating ~t

I MASON FAMILY

RESTAURANT

See Us For ..... .

'

FINE WEARING
APPAREL

'

MuntlwJI rrdurJ

'

'

o 0

I I u "'

/u .1 I' rrr

MONDAY· Turkey Club, French Fries l Soup
TUESPAY • Beans &amp; Cornbread
WEPNESPAY • Phllly Sandwich, French Fries
lSoup
JHUBSPAY • Grilled Ham &amp;ChHse, French Fires
Soup&amp; Salad
FBIPAY • Liver &amp; Onions, Choice of Potatoes,
SOUD l Salad Bar

For That
Special Father!

BAHR CL

'IVIIIIDAT

Open 9:30·6:00 Mon.-Sat.

•••on, oN.

I• '

I

HO/UESTYI.F JC',\'('ll Sl'J-.'Clt\1&lt;.,

~

~

Call 273-8199

14.0 rnillion homes.
6. (8) "Designing Women,"
CBS, 14.2, 13.2 million homes.
7. (6) "Mwphy Brown," CBS,
14.0,13.0 million homes.
8. (15) "Coach," ABC, 13.2,
12.3 million homes.
9. (19) "In The Heat of the
Night," NBC, 12.4, 11.5 million
homes.
·
9. (2) ''60 Minutes," CBS,
12.4, 11.5 million homes.

ed
: ·bt easier for the cat
now. Thor1on says he'll adopt iL

the ceiling tiles and the peaked

•

•

•I·

�JUIW12, 1991

PofneroY-IIIddleport, Ohio

HOUSE
MASTER BLEND

·· COFFEE

STORE HOURS
Monday-)hq, Sun~ay
8 AM-10 PM

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

'

•.

22 oz. BonL£

$ 69 SUNSHINE
Ch.uck Roast ••••• !~. 1
DOG
FRESH PORK BUTT
. .
. . $ 39
FOOD
1
Steaks/Roasts •• :~. . .
20 LB. BAG
COLBY LONGHORN .
$ 189
Cheese ...................
. BLACK HAWK
-- ·
$
ZESTA
Rath Bacon ••••••• :~·.

•·
••

•'
•.•

•.
•

•

•

·••'
•'

•••
•.
••
•
•

.

..••
••
•••

$ 69
- Round Steak •••• ~... 2 ·
.•.
...,.
$
9
9
.... USDA CHOICE BEEF . .
. ..
••
•

..
••

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF BOrTOM

·cRACKERS

•
•• •

•••

POUND BOX

1
Round
Steak
••••••••
--·
$1
'3
9·aologn·a •••••••••••••••
1 ...
$1
29
Sandw.1ch Spr.ead ••• ~
.,

lB

:· .

,..,
,. .,
,. .

•

!•.

lo'

ECKRICH

jo.l. :

fu',

"·
"·

·,

.

lB.

I

I'

.

I:·
••
•,

•1

,

....
;.•

HOMEMADE •

.

.

TEA

lB

•••

'•'

,~~=..
••
·: ~

••
...·-·
..
.•.
rI

'

•
•• •

·'-• •.
'·••

.
.
.
•99&lt;
·Tomatoes •••••••••• :~••
FLAVORITE •

.

2°/o M1lk ••••••••~A:~: ••

$ ·159

5
9
(.
'Large Eggs ••••••~o:~"···

. GRADE A

UnLE DEBBIE INDIVIDUAL

.

$

Snack Cakes •••••• 61· 1
2 LITER BOTTLES

(

FLAVORITE

Ice Cream ......·~::~ .. $119
CHEF BOY-AR-DEE

DIET RITE
OR

R. C. COLA
24 PAK 12 OZ. CANS

99 .

TOILET TISSUE
12 ROLl

PIG.

$299

o.IOIIIyAtPtw..tS.,..v-.

C1Mt1 Jutio 9 tin Jutio IS, 1991
Linllt I Ptr c.t-

STARKIST TUNA .

'·:.~z.

2/ $1

GeM CWy At ,_.., S.W Vth!
......... 'lllru ..... ll, 1991
lilllt 2 ,., C..'-w

CREAMEnE NOODLES
10 oz.
PKG.

3f$1

GeM o.ly At ,_.,, S.,.. VII¥
GeM Noll 9 tllrv Mil IS, 1991
1111111 J ,.,

Curl•••

SURF DETERGENT
136 oz.
o.~

$4 99v•
s..
c.m-

o.1y At ,_.,,
GNIJII.. t tin ._15, 1991
lilllt 1 ,.,

Doc~

.

10 LB. PKG.

1

(.

$1490

flOW TIIIU SAT,. JUNE 15

t

... Medical exams stolen
m Wisconsin College

.CHUCK.

-r ...........

10 Ll PIG.

MILWAUKEE (AP)- Copiea
of a national medical cenilk:Con
exam
fRJm the Medical
· Colle~ Wilconlin, p10111pling
the sc
10 cJIICd the 1e1t there
today
and =::!lc.f:~ the
tell JialiOjiW
The-,~ II the finlllllp
to certif'y lt1ldDMI 10 become doc·
ton. lJ beinl sift~~ dlnJushout the

WOI8.,.

$1690
'

By DANIEL Q. HANEY
anti-virallhat prol~ the live~ or
BOSTONAPScleAP)DCe WScrlter .
~c~i!!.~wing proglell&amp;ion
(
ienltSIS say
they have developed a genetically
Using a vaccine after infection
en~ vaccine that appears to
was suggested four yean aao by
hold the AIDS virus in checlt.
Dr. Jonas Sallt, who developecl the
The researchers reported in
first polio vaccine. Some QperLS
Thursday's New EnBiand Journal
were skeptical.
of Me&lt;lic:ine lhat levels of T cells
" I am very pleased about lhis,"
- disease•fighting white blood · Sallt said. " It's always nice 10 see
cells that ordinarily are destroyed
som~e else pick up an idea and
by the virus - have remained sta·
jXOvide some verification dlat there
ble during more than two yean of
IS liOIIIC merit to Ibis. At lhe beginlmltment in some people teeelving
ning, it was believed, well, no1
lhe experimental vaccine.
wcwthy of any atlmtion."
Scienlisls say illeptesents a new
Salk and colleaguea have
approach to fighting infection.
testing a vaccine llllllle from · ed
Until now, vaccines have been used
AIDS virus. So far it has been
10 Wild olf infeclion. But in the !atBlof·~~!_60, peop.le in early 118101 ·
est approach, doctols used a vacuu.........
cine to beef up lhe body's virusRedfield's Sllldy used a different
fighting powers after infection.
vaccine - a ~ of lhe virus'
I:;;J,.::;kinit;~ryor':~mhin!sgi~usg, outer coat manh blled. ~ inThsect
cells
througfound
gene1hat
sp1this
ICing.
taean:hers
- ;..e
I
uman body' s immune
r-·
system controls HIV," said Dr.
could induce the bod.y 10 produce
Robert R. Redfi~d, a researcher 81
AIDS virus•lighling 111dbQilies lhat
Walter Reed Army Institute of · lbe whole virus did not.
Research in Rockville, Md. .He
In the lest tube, at 1cas1, some or
directed the testing of the viccinc
on 30 infected volunteers and wrote Downtown is buZzin&amp;IDIIil
the report.
beekeeper capiUI'el wild swann
"It obviously gains in inttigue
BANGOR, Maine (AP) - A
because not only is it safe, but it
swarm of 9.000 honeybees enaustappears to be associated wilh shon- ed lhe limb of a small tree on a
term stabilization ofT cells."
downtoWn street, and police corAZT, the only approved AIDS
doned off lhe area for nearly two
drug in the United States, is an
hours while a beekeeper removed
lhem.
·
The bees were discovered Mon.
day on a tree in fronthof a ~~~k
Banner" at a Baltimore Orioles. pllfking lot and may ave .....,n
game.
!here ovtmighl, said James YOWig,
When Charles s•·m·berg, direc· a forensic chemist and part·lime
"'
. beekeeper. They apparently had
lot of Oriole productions, saw lhe
been e~
· .__ a........., hive.
.
h 111 h "W0 ulcln't 1-1
uuou -~~
episode, e oug I.
. "T ere must be a hive some•
be. g~ for our ~all club, !fhtch where up there in one of those
pndes
tlSCifon
being
open-minded,
to . .te
th. man
to sing
81 one of buildings, and it's . a big one,"
bee
IRVI ?~ .
Young said after luiin' lhe
s
our games
into a small box con••;nono· honeyTaylor, 38, a n81i~e of ,Oalve- comb.
-·
ston. Texas. who hves m Los
Angeles, said he'll be "thrilled and
honored" to sing at the July 1
e a . st lhe Detroit T;oers.
SWUnl~lhe "L.A. Law'..,..charactet he won't be experimenting .
•.. The g is self-explanatory "
h 'd 'T\just going 10 sing the
e Sill • . mtf,
ci th •
sthatong...strmgh orwardly an
~5
Taylor's credits include a~ances on 1V's "Twin Peaks ' and ·
.. ,._,,_,_
"
mauuwo.

tft:l

-u..

the antibodla IJipe8f able 10 lrill a
wide l'IIIJC of distantly related
AIDS viru1ea. Whether it does the
same !bing inside the body, howev«, is llllknown.
The vaccine does appear to protect T cells. Over 10 IDOilths,levels
of these ce1Is remained stable in the
19 people who initially responded
to the vaccine, while lhey fell 7
percent in those wlio failed to

~pie getting booSIC1' va~­

cines every four months, levels
have remained lhe same for up til
27 montbs of foUow up.
At New England Medical Center in Boston, Dr. Sheldon Wolff
said of the rcaults, "I'm impressed
wilh ii. Sbould everybody be getting it? We absolutely can't say
that. But it certainly is worthy of
IIIOI'C study...
In u accompanying editorial in
the journal, Dr. Anthony S. Fauci.
head of the National Institute of
Allergy and Infectious Diseases,
said the new approach may work in
a variety disCIBes, ''particularly
viral infecdons for which effective
and-viral thenpy does 110t exisL••
SPRING vA: I FV WifMA
446 4'•14

country Ulday, llicl Janet Canon,
~ COlllsel for the National
of H'£•11 Bllltllblen.
Tho teat wu canceled only at
the Medic:al Colleae site, she said,
bul rcnlll throughout the country
could be invalidated if investiga- ·
lion shows lhe ICSll were distribut·
ed 0111 of ll8le. .

.--·""

o,.. ·-· tlw lit.
CLOIID IUNDAYS

HUlBARD'S

GREENHOUSE
nuc-. 0110
ttiJ776

..

SPECIALS ..••

RADNOR, Pa. (AP)- Baseball
star Lenny Dykstra waived a for·
mal hearing Tuesday on a drUIIkcn
driving charge and po~ted a. S1
bond 'lfter a lodge set his ll'fll&amp;ll•
ment for July 2S.
·
The l'hlladelphia Phillies out·
fielder suffaed a broken right col·
,_..___ ud ....... .._.__ribs in an
.... ""'""
uu"" .,...,..,.,
accident on May 6. Teammate Dar·
ren Daulton also was injured when
Dykstra •s car crashed into two
trees in subwban Philadelphil.
Dykstra, who wu chaiied with
driving under the influence of alcohoi and speeding, had I ri~ to I
hearing Tuesday, during which cvidence against him would be pre·
sented•
But Dykstra waived the hearing,
said his attorney, Francis Lord,
who wilh Dykstra and two !15si~tant
district attorneys went mto the
judge's private offiCe for a threeminute meeting.
Afterward, all sides declined to
talk to reporters.

WEDNESDAY: R-t Plll'k and Sawrkraul
THIIISDAY: Chicken ltaliana
FRIDAY I SATIIIDAY: lreiltd Alaskan Pallotk,I.I.Q.
libs, Prime Rib, liMp frild •tt•rfly Shrimp
•SERVING LUNCH: TuHday thru Friday

11 :00 a.m.-2:00p.m.
· Wednttdlly • Thul8dly - I p.m.-8 p.m.
Friday • Saturday- I p.m.-10 p.m .
CLOSED SUNDAY • MONDAY

FIA1UIED DAlY SPECIAlS
Crrry Out Awailctltla

Nil AI, tlliltiH"
Falher'• Day Gifl Certificales
and Cookie Bouquet•

GILMORE'S'
112 East Main
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RESERVATIONS ACCEPTED

REJOICING LIFE
CllllftiNICIOOL
GRADES: Kfnder1arten thr11 6th Crade
ITATB IUOin'I:UD
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TlJITION JI'EEf
GRADES J THROUGH 61 .J,JOO per ~ear

PER MONTH BASIS;
$JIO per lltlident • lint ehlld ollaadiJ'
. . . ucond child ollandiJ' • :&amp;0"- on tuiUon
•ss third child olla~ • so"- on

r

KINDERGARTENI$60 per ltUdent ·per Tear
PER MONTH BASIS1
. . . per ltUdent • D~ chUd oiiiUIIIIJ'

AU FUIS OF
BIDDING PLANTS
NOW$300 EA.

1~GING$JOO

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DINNER

!;

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GROUND
BEEF
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R. C. Products •••••• 79 · frozen P·lzza •••••••••
7.6-7.a oz.
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CHARMIN

Medicine

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Scientists: AIDS vaccine
appears to hold virus in check

p eo1 n l e,l•n fh
. e. newS-

=

lB.

.•••• •.

~
=
J
~

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

•

Ann
L d
an ers

who feel unloved because lheir of that ·sad Siaterbood or lhe
wives are no longer- inlelested in sex. Overworted ud UII8JIIRclaled. I
'"
!f Y?Uf wife:s life is anylhing like !hank you.
mlDC II goes like this: I~ up 116
Dear Au ....den: I . . . wilh
a.m., get myself ready for wort, see "Too Much lbneworli: in 0man1.•
ANN l.ANDIUIS
1hat the !rids eat a good brellkfast My ll-yeat-old has houri more
"1111,
and-1hcmofftoschooi.M couch
_ . , ,,....
•Y
homework than hiJ brother IIICI
~ 1J r · "
polaiO gets up whenever he feels like sister had • his ap. We lived in
it and goes to work. He's home another stale while biJ two .a.~ ...__........ __ ....... ....
-....
,..,...,...,...,.,.,. .. so 11 "'Y
around S 30
6
l:
: or :00, picks up the wm growing up ud I'm coavinccd can 1eam what wu at one time
"' remote control and heads for lhe. lhat part of lhe problem Is lhe Ja&amp;bt during IIChool hours. We ~
~ recliner. I head for lhe ldtchen 10 fiX sweet deal that le8chcws get here in unable to llford a private IICbool,
dinner, serve it and then clean up. I California.
but I'm COIIJiclcrinJ reaching our 1011
then straighten up lhe house, spend
My .mothell taUiht grade a:hoOI 11 home ~·IIC I 1111e111 ro be cloing
Ill time wilh the !rids, start a load of for 20 yean. She co""ted her it anyway. rm with you, ()uuud.laundry. bathe the children and put O\YII clasS papers, c1i4 playground ANOTHER FED UP MOM IN
them in bed. Finally. I am able to sit duty and lunchroom supervision, . ORANOEVALE, CALIF.
down.
prepared ~pon cards, auended
DEAR ORANCiEVALE: I am not
While folding the laundry I tty to teacher WOibhops and llld perent close enough 10 the .California
engage my husband in conversation conferences after school houn.
public school system 10 respopd
and all I get back is a grunL He
My son has cles- for about four' inldiJaeN!y, but you c:an be sure I
~ doesn't even take his eyes off howu day. The rest or the time irs . will recei¥Ca 11111 of mail from RIIIIY
l: 1he 1V when I speak to him. Aftet some social or fun activity. N. often who are. Meanwhile, leaCh your
~. bed
a while, I give up and go to as three days out of the month !here child at home if you want to, but he
• disgusted, too tired to be an- is no school bec•nse of a "teacher will miss an imporlllnt J1111 of his
gry.
. worltshoP" or "teacher prep" day, educ•ion _ leariling .Iii Jet along
i: Wilh a life like this, sex becomes ell!., CIC. During .,,.,..,.1 c:oafc:renccs, with Dlh«
.
children.
,
· ·
.--·
nolhmg more than one of those . there is no school for an entire
When pltwting a wtdding. who
chores 1hat is tolerated blxause I was week. Lunchroom and playground pays for wltot? ll'ho stands where?
brought up 10 believe it was my duty. supervision is done by paren1 vol- 'The AM l.iwlers Guide for Brides"
I am not a demanding woman. All unteers because the teachers have it · has alltlw IJII.I'WUS. Selld a ~lf-od·
I want is a kind word, a little in their contraciS that they don't have dressed, lo/11. bll&amp;iMss-sizurMlope
" conversation, some small sign of to do this sort of thing. Parepcs are tllld a check or morwy ordtr for
~~. recognition that I am human and asked to volunteer to be class "SpeD- $3.65 (litis iiiCIIUks postage alld
mayhe a litde help around the house ing Mom" or "Malh Dad" and cor- 1ralldlillg) to: Brides, c/o AM Lall·
in lhe evening.
m:t the papers for those classes. If des, P.O. Box 11562, Chicago, /II.
;
I hcpe all you coui:h potatoes out you divided teachers' annual saia- 60611-0562. (In Canada, send
,. there will take this letter personally. .ries by the nwnber of hours !hey $4.45.)
You just might .rediscover the girl actually work, they are malting over
=. you used to date.- WORKED TO S3o an,hour....Not bad •• wilh 1hree
DEA1H IN FLORIDA
monlhs vacabOn.
Y
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) Country singer Kalhy Mattea has
::
~ sidelined for two weeks wilh
::;
ed · ocal cords
a
10 fl
I&gt;'
Ohio University
am
v ·
' ·
,.
spokeswoman said Tuesday.
k&lt;
• College of Osteopathic Medicine
Mattea 31 had .bleakfast Tues·
day with' fa~s duri~ Fan Fair
~
· .. b ut WI'11 m e no .more
acuvlUes
cublic liiJPC8IIIIICeS on lhe adVIce of
d t
'o an Ellen
:'i•
~or ~dr, spo ..esw m
'd Mattea has tempo,.
• Sill
•
•
f
:::
rary swellmg and m!Wnmauon o
•
J h C W If 0 0
her vocal cords due to. her recent
!:
.o n · o , · ·
heavy schedule thatmc.lude~ a
:;
Associate Professor
Europe~n .tour and.medta bhtz.
"'
of Family Medicine
Pryor Sllld m a statement.
l
Doctors recommended two
·:
weeks of vocal rest to let the
"'
"'
Question: My wife was having have emou'onalt1'es with her lhat swe.llin$ .subside and avoid more
~ difficulty during labor with our · are as strong as yours. The doc!DfS sen=u:'·':hits include "Ei~rhteen
flfst child, and the doc10r decided are ttained to perform a C-seclion,
:v. nd
~
•'ncluding
melhods
of
dealing
wilh
Wheels
and
a
Dozen
Roses
a
! lhat a Caesarean section was neces"Where've You Been," for which
1 sary. A gynecological surgeon any problems which could develop. she won a Grammy. She was host
~ came to help with the operalion, They have become so comfortable
.
A d
f
~ and as they were getting ready for at dealing wilh lhis life-andcileath ocf the AMme~•caAn cda . emNyBoC
• the surgery alld washing their situation lhat they no longer have
ountry · USIC war 5 on
~- -hands, they were joking wilh each lhe trembling and shalring you feel. last sping.
other. This behavior made me con- That doesn' t mean lhat they don't
NEW YORK (AP) _Katherine
"* cemed !hat the doctors were not take lheir responsibilities seriously; Couric, co-anchor of NBC's
~. taking my wife •s condition serious· lhough. They are confi.de~ll in their "T'-"- .. ho
h bel
~ ly. Everything went fme - I have abilities - and lhat IS JUSI what · """ma11y bandsw, f~!115. ~on newongss
0 "'CVISI
as who have
a beautiful daughter and a heallhY You Want. Sl'nce they don't have to
women
worked hard out:;o wife, but I'm still uncomfortable personal affection for the patienl, in the field and eschew glamor.
..! with the doctors' behavior. What they are able to use sound medical
"We're really nonnal women
~ do you lhink?
judgment without emotions playing without that son of froufrou glam'i
Answer: Your wife's doctors a key role.
our edge,' • Couric, 34, 10ld Glamhave a difficult job. They are
This objectivity, by lhe way, is our magazine in its July issue. The
responsible for her care as well as lost when a doctor treats a member former NBC Pentagon correspon·
the health of the baby. It takes of his or her own family . That's dent officially replaced Deborah
; years of residency training after why, in general, it's not a good NorviUe 2 l/2 monlhs ago.
~ medical sc~oolto prepare for lhese idea for a male doctor to deliver his
"I've: declared the '90s the
.. situations. Since your wife and new own child
decade of lhe plain chick.••
:; baby are fme, I can asswne lhat all
The doctors' light-beaned conWhen NBC uked her to grow
~ this training was wonh the effon.
versation was a sign lhatlhey are her hair longer for her new job, .
~ The dad's role in lh~ delivery comfortable wilh lheir responsibili- Couric said she told lhe network,
ll' room is to be supporuve of h1s
ties and can lake a few moments IQ "'I don't want to look like every·
:;" wife, just as it was in the labor renew their working relationship. one else on TV. This is me, and
!: room. The doctor's responsibility This often involves hwnor, which also it's easy.'"
:;: to mom and baby are unchanged, you perceived as being inappropri•'There is still a lot of sexism in
.. butlhe doctor must consider the ate for lhe moment. It is unfonu· television and everywhere else,''
~~ emotional needs of dad, as well. nate lhat you heard or witnessed she said. "What can you do? ...
This is fairly easy to accommodate this because of the way it emotion· Unfortunately, television is run by
when all goes as planned. The dif- ally distressed you, but it was a white males, and we need to get a
:: ficulty your wife exP:rienced with good sign. Her doctors were lot more women in the executive
labor made a change m plans nee· relaxed, confident and ready to ranks making decisions. And a lot
"§ essary. Once lhe doctor detennined work as a team.
more minorities. we've got a long
that a C-section was required,
. Q~estlon: Should I tallc 10 m.Y way to go.''
.
!or meeting your emotional needs
~1fe s doctor about lhe way 1h1s
Couric and her husband, Jay
lli became relatively less important in ~lluabon made me feel?
Monahan, an attorney in Wubingcomparison to the needs of your
Answer: Cerwnly you should ton are expecting lheir flfst child
I wife and baby.
talk I!! your doctor. If you don't ask • thi~ month. After her maternity
We humans deal with Slross in a quesuons and express your con- leave, Couric and her baby wi!l
,. variety of ways. Things that are ter· ~s, you. may always_ harbor ~me shuttle from New York to Wash·
;il rifying cause us to tremble and . b1uer feelmg abou~ this ex~nence ington weekends.
''It's going to be pretty crazy, ••
: shake and nm from lhe threat if we -:- an~ you cenat~ly _do~ t need
: •can. Less severe stress causes a fast tnat. 1. II bet your wife 1sn t unhap- she admiiS.
"' heanbeal, sweaty palms and pacmg py wuh her care - she was the
die floor. I'm sure you bad a fast focus of attentioo. It would be ideal
(AP) - Actor
heartbeat and trembling hands to be able to meet dad's emotional RonBALTIMORE
Taylor
played
1 JOIPCI singer
when you were with your wife dur- needs with every delivery, but
on
"L.A.
Law"
who
landed in
: ing labor. The announcement that thafs a difficult task, particularly
court
for
his
IIIICOIIVCIItional
rendi·
• all was not going as planned proba- when things aren't going as lion or the national anthem before
a
:; hly made you quiver all over and smoothly as planned. Now that
baseball
g~e.
.
::; ''worried to the bone." Then to.see mom and baby are fine, I'm sure
Now his appearance on the pop• your wife's doctors behavmg m a that your family doctor can take a
ular
seriCI! has landed him another
; casual, even P.layful m~~er must few minutes 10 help you feel better
job
singing "The Star-Spangled
have seemed like they didn t care.
about the expclrience, too.
•
1can assure you that her doctors
"Family Medicine" is a weelcly
~ cared -and even worried -about column. To submit questions, write
FINAL
:1 your wife's and bab(s heallh. B_ut to John C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio Uni" their display of emobOns was dif· versity College of Osteopathic
CLEARANCE
; ferent than yours because of lhe~ Medicine, Grosvenor Hall, Alhens,
SALE
~ training and because they don t Ohio 45701.

=

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! : Wednesday, June 12 1991

1991-92 Book .,...
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�Page

12-The Dally SenUnel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, June12, 1111

Columbia's astronauts peer into
English professor teaches Holocaust :;·
.: rotating dome as testing continues
believe cllan&amp;a in.lhe system c::1111e
lpiCC motim SJsic~Jm:·r:s~.......
Tho ailmcnl "is botherDDC and

BOWLING GREEN, Olio (AP)
- While ~~~~ay collep 11ot r~s
lament lhe lllllhy 101111 lllldellta
dilplay • IIICW --. • !aaJish
prot , ._ fomla way 10 IIWikea bis Jqlila' _.. lllll8e _ladins 1Dd writiq about lhe bolo-

his been

Cllllt.

•

J!lled in 1be 1es1, in which an &amp;111'0-

By LAURA TOLLEY
~:J'reM WrMer
SPACE CENTER. Houston
(AP) - Columbia crew membcn
popped in coatact leaaes mmed
with stubursts ll!d SIIRd into a
mating dome Oec+ec! widl coknd
dou .to be!fe~ ~I;SUOIIID!S
get sick to
IIQQIICbs m ..,.:e. ·
:
The experiment took place
Tuesdar. lhe seventh day of the
shuttle s nine-day biomedical ·
· reii'AIItli miaion.
:
Several crew mcmbeB panici·

naut sticks his head inside the
dome and then uses·a joystick to
iDdicetc die perceived velocity and
=~ ?!._IILrandom set of dots
""'"'"'
A CIIIICll offered a close-up of
biologist Millie Hugbes-Fulford's
twitching ~'~!Pi':
Tho test IS aimed at !111dentanding the workings of the neuroveatibular system - the brain,
nerves, eyes and·inpcr ear- in 111e
weigbtle~ of SJIIICC. Scientista

a~ of coacau bod!

iD lhe U.S. IIlii in lhe Soviet programs for a number of yean. It
affects Dlln m. SO~ rA lbc
crew members," satd Lawrence
Young, the experiment's principal
invNr:1fA'~_,.._ ..._ as--·•·'
...,......,.. u"' ~health confidential and will not say
whetbci any of the seven Columbia
crew membcn have been ill.

Thomas Klein of Bowlins
GreeD Sllle University baa pubJisbad 1 Jllir m+lllooll!&amp;ies by bis
JWoom•l.ilcnbft •••t. Tho

boob haw l!lniCIIId en 1••• rrom
holoeaast IDtbors,lncladiaa Elie
W"ICSCI, a Nobel Prize wilmer.

"It's lhe lllllllpll ~ I've
seen in 25 yean of tcaeb1n1 , ••
Klein aald about bit studenu'

· --------------------------------------~~~==~======

'Welt. "It'a like lookiq • 1be sun
direttly. It's lli•alllfas 10 lheir
IIIOIIIIIIIIIC."
Klein deliiDed die c:oune three .
_..' ~~~void 11e Mw in
,_.._110
boloc=:= ...,""""""
"Milly of lhe ..... • n cariou allout lhe holocaust because
IIIey haw never been IIIU&amp;bt much
about it," Klein llid. "One IIUCient
. aked, 'I've bean! of that, is it a
Jewishbollday?'"
In bit course, stuclenu read
boob about the holocaust - the
!)'StaDIIic deiaUClioll m 6 mi1lioo ·
· .tillrOpeiD Jews by Nazi Germlny
dariDI Warld War n. Moet of lhe
llilab _.. wtiD:u by people who

surrived lbe ordeal. .
•~'
Tho lllldenll WI'OIIC papen lbout ·
the boob llld IHlJl -~~ tbeir feel· ';
inp on the subject.
·
.
All# two yean of telehiq llle ~
coune, Klein discovered his atu- ·l
dents' respona to bokx:lut w.e ,
"untypically pe~ionare:• He laid •l
lbll was rdieslling llet:•nae lie IIIII ;
ocher professors are tired of stu- ;·
den!S who are "COIIIIbe, indl.fl'ct· ::
cntiUidculturaJlyillillnle."
-;
"The class aaracu llle best 1111· &gt;
dents and demands paasionate •;
re&amp;J.IOnSes and clelll' thinking," :
Klem said. "I was sauclt by how •
SlrOII&amp;Ihe writing was and I wanted
to preserve it."
·

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. '

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· TO PlACE AN AD CAll 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY I A.M. to S P.M.

I A.M. until NOON SATU~DAY

.'

••

FOR SALE
1968 CADILLAC 4 DR. Hl
Possible Demo Derby Car or
lor parts or scrap.-$75.00

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10 am to 6 ~m

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2

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· ' Our memortea of ope·

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viCe.
You
1 VfiiY ape·
,,
clal friencl to me and
~

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••

•

U.S. GRADE A

I ;Holly Farms

California
Peaches

.42

Jl .30t dov

8

A81; PI.JM;Hf

althoutfl you ara
,..... you•n n1111•
be illreotten.

992-6215
--·!· ... , ····-- -

Wlndowl
•Roofing

•lnaulatlort

JAIIIS msn
992-:1772 or
742-2251

531 Bryan

Middleport

IITIIIOI • bi.OI
FREE I!ITIMATEI
Tab the plin out of
plinth••

Ltt

1111

915~4110
1·10·'11· 1 mo.

(614)

·· POMEROY

•F,.. Eetimatae
•Car~ Hs•. fait Dry

BOWLING

tHigh OloH on Tile

Time

1-LB. PKG. BUN SIZE MEAT

••
••

Kahn's
M_eat Wieners
GET ONE

FRANKS

'•

•'

OR

We Need

SIGNS ·.
by tla lf!Ditlti£1(

\

P~t~~ - 67~9~ · .

Howard L Wrltt11l

MICIOWIYE
OYIN BPAII

NEW- REPAIR

lrlftl It hi Or We
PldiUp.

liN'S APPUANCI
. SEIYICI
992-5335 or
915-3561

Acnu f.-l'llt Dffke
217 I. StcHtl St.
PCNIIIOT, DltiD

I &lt;:
•

949·2168

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Ground Chuck

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SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING

992-2259
608 EAST MAIN

'

Colgate
Toothpaste

j
~
1I

U·oz. TuM

I
j

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0

..

CAfiFIINE FREE DIET COKE.

Is' n

Diet Coke or
Coca Cola Claaic
1ZN1Z...C.

10/30119

POMEROY, OHIO

STEWART'S
GUliS I SUPPLIES
•BUY ISIU lftADI
OPEN
Tuudoy thru Soturday
10 :00 •m· 5:00 pm

•FIREWOOD
BILL SLACK
992-2269

742-2421
2 1/J Mi. outtlda

lutland on New
u- 111.

1·1

W. H. MOBILE
HOME PARIS
..
St. Rt.

l.ocl11d on eo. Rd. 32 (felt lldp ld),
7 north of P0111troy or Co. Rd. 28 (llillan Rd.) eul
of Racine. Olllo appro•. 7 miles to Co. Rd. ~2. Watch
for sips. Tllis auction is to sattle .liM dtvorce of
.111111 &amp; Celia llilty.
IIOLD"
.
"HOUSE
Tlble &amp;1 dilirs, Mt•ica; chin• csbinet. llex~o: two pc. Dl~

'l

992-5335 .. 915-3561
Acron f.- Post Offkt
POMDOY, OHO

USED RAUOAD nES

•••

I

KEN'S APPliANCE
SERVICE

Pellllt'oy,

LUNCH
MASON . 773·5785
ADMINISTRATOR: L W. MCUIIIL
TERMS: cash pr Check with J.D •

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•110 OVIIIS-$n op

614-992-6820

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RMGES-Gtt-llt&lt;.-$12~ up •

F•mts-sns .,

Owner &amp; Operator

,.

Big
Cola

WASIIaS-SIOO op
DRYIS- $69 vp .
.FIIGEUTOIS-$ 100 op

EMILEE MERINAR

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tO DAY WAUIII!n

GROOM
ROOM

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USED APPUANCES

.

Real Estate General

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CUSTOM GOLF
CLUBS
Repair, Trophies,
Signagt
JOHII T. TEAFORD

3/li/90/tln

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·£f•

•I
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6 FOI $55

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

Real Eltate General

'

ACADEMIC
AWARDS
GOLF USSOIIS

ROOFING

ALl lUIS

RICK PilliON
IDftiDNCO •
Rlelr p...,...,, Auetfeaeer
UCENSED AND BDNDED IN OHIO, KY I WV 1M

lS.OZ.

205 N. S..otMI Str•t
.-LEPOIT, 01110 45760
Office 614·992·2116
IICIME 6 I 4-992-5692
DOTTIE S•

.

Complete. Grooming
For All lrlltls

Not RMponalble For Aocldanta or Lo•• of Propeny

Tonilla Chips .

Tuil'N~:~Rc;;IT'

· F.ioor Finiah
. MilE lEWIS. owIf. I, totlantl. OH.

AIJCJ10N CONDUCTED BY

PubliC Ia'&amp;Auction

J, ~

1·4·'11·1 mo.

ctuatl11e

. ~~~~~

915-4473
667-6179

INIIIPIIIDINY

992-3432 or
992-2403

HA Vl IERIIHClS

Stop &amp; Compare
frH Estllnat••

CAIPIT CIIAIIIS .
allll TRI FlOOI CARl
•Raaoonabla RatH
•Quality Work

310 ltnt 2nd St.

VfiY IEASONAIL£

.._......

992·6641 or
691·6164

Fri., Sat. 7:30 p.m .

de it far you.

•New • - •
eGaraps
•Cotaplete

CEDAR
CONStRUCTION

I'OOlTvtDIO MACHINE
Open Tues., Thurs.,

PAINTING

BISSELl I BUllE
COIISTIUCTIOII

FUllY IIISURED
FREE ESTIMAT~S

ROWL ·

'S

POINT P1&amp;A8ANT
TilE li:IITATB OP TilE LATB
D.APII1f&amp; J1CDAN1a. WILl. B&amp; BOLD
HOUSEHOLD I ANllQUES: 3 pc. cherTY posiBr boGroom
auilt, 1w1cy Olk bulle~ beaUtiful cherTy finish bookeat,.flal ·
wall cupboard, mahogany bool&lt;case, mahogany cablllet
MWing m41chine, Ot1k dllk, me181 toys, Marx jeep, SIIUCIDr
gnodlr, .,... '"*·Highland House aota peech &amp; while, peach
color chair; AmeriCan Drew ~nd tables, Kroehlar 2 pc. twon
bedroom auilt m.pie; KII,;.,.IDr refrigerator; 18,000 BTU
Ama1na air concilii&gt;Mr as new, maple tabtt and leur
chairs; chlat; blade and wNIB pol1able TV, Maylag wuhtr
and dr)w, mtlll CliblnetandWIIdrobe. pe~rend tablea,large
Mtofchlna, twDo.kMWing ...-hiltn, Gqmdle1bttrty111 "'ri
lnMUWJiooel dPGk eleyl dod'? Whirlpool 5,000 BTU air
conclllonar, Hylpud child's wlllllbarTOW, IDdcler •tr:o~ler
(melll), Amry helmet, old Lila and ~lc magamea,
1edlllotldlableand benc:hes; G.E.allreD, p!CIUret, niC81ampa,
Jim 11eem bolll81' COllUm&amp; i-eiry; cookware; Con canister
sWMJ*; bolla ~. all size mMk bontes, Spring Hill,
Kannedy, Daily Huntington, Kaneing, Royal, plus .much
m01a; collaelionoflnauiiiDrGmen, Brawn, and Claar, Big end
Small; 3 HP lewnmower, old tools, broad,&amp;lCe, aaw, hay hoQks,
aaaws null, bolla, drils, oabnlsaw, Ellac:kand Decksrhedge
lrimme;.; flies, rulat, and .toola. breatdrllls, pipe wrnnchto;
creaoent wrenches; molora, boxes ol pipe fillings; buc~;
levels, Remington cha!n saw; electric; lawn cart; small v1se,
grinder; pipe dlesal, soldering irons, WOOd and alum1num
ladders; w.c1 ealar; shovels; rakes; saYIIIIII Cllllnlng Blue
Jill; - ' drop COidl, air cornpreuor. lans, old Coka
bolttaa, CoM Ioliis, dehumidifier, plY a much more.

'91·1 mo.

•Remodeling and.
Home Repllrs
•Roofing
•Siding
•Painting

DOZ£R and
BACKHOE
WORK
(614)
. 696-1006
•
6-&amp;·'91

•Raplac:.~ant

ADDITION

992-7130

.

·108 JONES
EICAYAnNG

J&amp;L
INSULATION
•VInyl Siding

&amp; Auction

FREE ESTIMATES

11·14-'90 tfn

.01/doy

Public Ia'-

PH. 949-2101
....... 949-2860
· O.y or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS

l'o1111r11y, Ohio

No SIINDA T CAUS

.eo

"At 1•-.n•lll• Prices"

V. C. YOUNG Ill

PH. 949.2101
....... 949-:1160

.20
.. 30

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16

U. IMDE A lillY FAnlll CUJ.UP '"'FR-YED- OR

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· SMAll
WANT ADS
PPa&lt;'

·w hole Fry

••

ll·

;·

w.,.

s

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SEPTK TAfll PUIIIING
I'OIIT -A-JOilN RDITAL

whekMwyou.
Your friend.

•
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••

lii.COUIITY
Sl1111'lnDII

DM!IIy miMed by all

•••

iI

ci•l tlmea no- one

can put •under.
Moat of all I miN our
IIP""ili tlllko and all
. . . your motherly ld·

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Businellll Services

friend• m•y d•
era• In numben,

••

J••

1n Mllnory
IN LOVING ·
MEMORY OF
RUBY STEWART
Thouth our eroup of

••

Word•

t13.oo

LOCATBD AT IS

Call 992· 7~3

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16

16

SATURDAY
JUNE 15, 1991
10:00 A.M.

I

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$9.00

.

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15

Over

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

•
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8

BULLETIN BOARD'
.

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Rete
84.00
$6.00

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Woods
16
16

lw.h ti~W 11

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3

-~

CUSTOM llllT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

Pill .....

-1-·E-Ior .
fFREE ESTIMATES I

" Free E.tlrnet•"

"•t•
•r• tor conMcultv. tun s htolten up d-vs wiU bechaiged
tnr
• cb .

•

!i

Days

Monthly

•

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-1- ....

... ._ ....

RATES

10

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---Can-. -...

_ ....._ •J"tlcMt

BISSELL

SPECIALIZING
IN CONCRETE
•Sidewalks
•Patios
•Driveways
•Slabs
,
10'- DISCOUNT TO '
SINIOR ClnZENS

· BISSELL
BUILDERS

CAIPENTIR SERVICE

SIDING CO.

..

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YOUNG'S

•VINYL BIDING
•ALUMINUM S!PINO
•BLOWI'f IN
INSULATION ,

bedroom suilt, 5 pc. Broyhill twm bedroom suite, 4 pc. Broy·
hill queen bedroom suite s11rs refr1pr1tor wllce m1ker,
Zlnitll color lV, VCR, 3 pt. Broyh~l llblt set, recliner, 2 pc.
fivinl room •.uill. ceuch, SNrs 111sher &amp; dryer, GE &amp; Seers
chill deep frttzers, rollewey bed, miSC. d!SheS. pots &amp; pens
&amp; smeliepplitn~TIACI'OI &amp; EqUII'."
240 IH tractor 518H Wheelhorse ridina mower 18 hp w/48"
dec~. 2 pt. 5• brush hoi, 7' pun type brush hog,,plow, cult,
disk &amp; snow blower lor Ariens &amp; etc.
"AUTO &amp; TRUCKS"
1971 T Bird 1979 Honcho, 1961 CJ5 Jeep, 1978 JIO
pt •kup ·J978 'cJ 7 1979 Cherokee, " lots of Jtep pertt
• '
'
"IISC."
340 !IIOW IIIGbilt. 2l"I.Jwn loy, 121 Home!~• Xll2 &amp; 410
lllmllill chlin uws, Sters 220 •• COIIIpriUII, tamc:ordtr.
11 11 rt111t111 of HolM lntlrior d-lllons. lllll"l!HV"
2 &amp; ~ '-' to 1111 tiPI pilyll, 3 hp Iiiier, 1. pl.
Sh; VK fin lslll 11 wood slltiYili&amp;. amstma 10' tree &amp;
decorlliolis. sit child's Crall &amp;Wofld balks, W~-.r. stv·
1111 foot llcktrs. blnjo, 2 11 1. Wliilt llountllft ICt creem
treeMI, priSturt Clll•ws, elum.llllder, lumber. stepfaddw,
lots ollift CuE 01 COlLECTors

ntiS"

Pitcher . ice weter. BIKk Smith tools. white ladder btck
cheirs. brown chllr hbrery llble, b(tss tlble lamps &amp;etc.
' "REAl ESTATE"
.
5Bil4 101 ·11 nch houee w/luH blstmenl, T.P. weter, septiC
y1ltlll centrellir/tleelrie hill· elsowooclburnon,lfUIRICI,
~ bedrioms. IIIIth, 1w11 kHchlft, dinlnaroom &amp;11V1Rft.u'-:
on 97Kres, more or lesswlfermlllti~!'1!'"'Rid!"' Rd ·
The real estlte IS loclted at 4:rw• """'' II ··
~0~· Bottom. Ohio. Is not to be sold for less then two-tlmdsol
~ velue, JO% down 011 dey o1 auction. Baiii!CI ond
dHd.

ESI'ATETO

OilERS. JAIES
'DAN SMITH
AUCTIONEER

.._-

.·

-lJ.il

ID

............. . ......
••• 1&gt;

•·'

206 NORTH SECOND AVE.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
DOTTIE.S. TU.RNER. BROKER
IlDDLE PORT- North Second- Ever dreamed ol ownin.l
yoor OWN BUSINESS?- Here's your chence. Ablr thetiS
Willi equipped and stocked. A05 liquor lic111se. H~ 2epert·
ments (furnished) and I sleep1ng r.oom. Buyma bulldlnr. b~·
sines&amp; end license.
All FOR JUST S5UCIO •

IIIDDlEI'OIT- Pearl StrHt- Anice 2 story home wfth 3
bedrooms, 1\1 baths, vinyl sidmg, new windows, lull bne·
lllllrt. House it on 1 GOOD Street.
»t.toO

PORTLAND - One floor, 2 bedroom, I bath w~h full base·
ment, garaae end mllll shed sitting on I+ acre. ~LL THIS
AND FREE GAS FOR $29,500.

EASY UYIII- In this 4 yur old 14160 Sunnybrook mobile
ho1111 11 hts ~calhedr11 ceiling tor dlmensi011and eleundry
room ·wHh shetvtl for storage, e«~uipped .~itchll!, two bed·
room end 111 blths. It is bP.Iutiful and 1n new crt rt 1Gn.
Price wn $14,000.
·
IIOW 12 •500

POIEIOY- 2.story home IIIith 51ols and 1 car prage. 2·3
bedrooms, .some hardwood ftoors end firepiKe. A NICE
HOME FOR $14,500.

IJDOUI'OIT - bee Street - MANY .POSSIBipTIES l~r
this Comftllrciel building Nice loolun1 bile~ bUIIdlnl thetiS
set up as 1 hole!, but could be chan pel to aboot anylh•wa.
Hes 6 rooms wijh 6 baths, plus a larae storan ~;;

1

IIJTWID- ST. RT.l2'- Building lot Bia 2 ecre lot that
isiMIIIId hiS elol at tr0111111. Public weter end IIK!nc:
lfllllllll.
.
.
JUST 17.000

.........

RAlWOI11 RU1 - lh Otillt Ute - Sit 011

Tftl: Cllll

Dill

of 11M

perc11ee end fill the PtKefulness- Tlus 130 Krt ferm witll
1q1 beltollls. a 2 story house wHh 3-4 bedrooms. bern,

............ ly

.=

==

allier eutbuildinp, and tree ps. Could be 'li~ f;M,IDO

lillian F111 Aullra,

lA JlffEII..........................................
ili&amp;Al'f ........................................ tlf.ll71

J... D1 N A. Cox

11119 IU1CIID ........................................... H7-1421
SIIIIYL
........................................... .

Parts or
Accessories...
SEE US FIRST!
992-5100
IT. 33 Win OF

• ....l.,.rt
Hand Tufting
Cullom Drapes

2U•Ne.Secend ·

36 Year• Experlenee

614-992-2321

.w•••, Whtlt w. Da .
W• Do Whtlt Wo loy.
10·19·1 1110 •

•Remodeling snd
Home Repairs
•Roofing

EXCAVATING

inside' but all the comlorts of t~n on the outside. ONLY
$20,000.

lAUREl CUFF - Sectionel Only -:- NO LAND - . Athree
year old 24x52 home that has a fam•ly room w1th • fireplece.
3 bedrooms, 2 baths, cathedral ceiling, skylight, extra •nsula·
tion, heat pump 1nd more extrn.
130.000.

UPHOLSIDY

HOWARD .

EVEI1 IAII'S DIEAII - A 35 ft. Housebott - There's
nolhin_a more plelsureble than cruising up and down t~e
Ohio River in your own yacht Sleeps 9, hes manne rad1o,
end 1 tri·ule bolt trailer. looks li~e NEW! To see &amp;ive us •
cell.
$21.11®

btdt- helM is almost in the middle of two bends o1 the
. beeutlfuiDhio River. Ills new carpelinl throuahout.lmmed·
..- p 1111111 n ll!d comtS with aM fur;t~ SEE $2I,OOO

,..... 1 u..~teaon

lllp C.. c.•DI-127

{._./~

LDIIIIOT101- Flllllltic River vi'ew- This one story, 3

Gllltll1741144
..... 111

=::.=:::•"

OFFICE 992·2888
HOME 992-61192

'' Mllil•'"'

If you're in nHd
of Mabile Home

BULLDOZER and
BACKHOE WORK,
HOME SITES,
LANOCLEARINO,
WATER and SEWER
LINES

•t•r,u_:;;'ie~t:~.
sCountry
tory feeling 011
roomsiiifiiii.:
full bmment
IIIODd

4·21·11· 1 - ·

1 2·,1 ·10·1111

.

AIID EYDYTHING UNDDIIEATH
I

TROMM BUILDERS

FIR ESTIMATES

•20 Y•ra Experience
•Quality Homes and
Cuttom Remodeling

for:"'*'

742-232.
1/ ZZ / tftl

Now

HOW LDII8 HAS YOUR iiGUSE HEI 011 THE MARKEn
LDIII EIIOUIII fOI 'filii TO H DISCOUIIMEDf LOIIG Ell·
011111 F011VU TO IIIRDII WIIIT IS WIONif LOIIG EN·
01111 FOR 1VU 111 TAll ACI'. .!
1JIUCAIIA
SMALL ADIUI1Im DRIRIIPI_. At;,_,, 1011

I tHAI/

.!!"

I • • • • • • • • • ,. • •

992-6641 or
691-6164

ROOFING

WE DO .

LETAIT - ._ll Rd.- Mobile home sill,!"e me lend·
caped
homt or buildlna site. AUIIEAT DEAL AT
$3,500.
.

Ml·leto
Ml 4411
141-I.Qt
·2·2211

CEDAR
CONSIRUCIION

992-7451

POIEROY- LOH HOLLOW- Approx. 113 acres olwoods
&amp; meedows. Older 4 room home, bern &amp; sheds. ASKING
$45,000.

HENRY E. CLELAND .............. 112·1111

NO JOB TOO SMALL
FREE ESTIMATES

FRI!E ESTIMATES

IIDDI.EI'OIT- REDUCED - Nice s"rter home, 3 bed·
roo1111, 1 bath. Some remodeling hiS betn completed. Atth•s
price you cen finish ~any wey roo went. $16,000.

JIAN TRUIIILL ...................
JO HILL ...... ~ ...................... ....
TIIACV IRINAGER ................
OFFICE ..•.......•.•.•......

•Painting

TIUCIIING AYAilAILE

RUTLAID- Lookina tor some lend to ferm on? Build on?
. Hunt on? STOP LOOKI"G! THIS IS IT! With 119.89 acres of
farm IJnd end 100 ~eres oflimber you can do what.you want!
Property elso hes en older home and some bUJidmgs. ASK·
lNG $36,000.

lAIC£ A IIIRLI OF DlmiiRCE. DOn • DIICDIIIMlD.IIVE UU CALL AID IIIWHATS1'UfEIY Ill lUI1m. YOU'U I'AY Ill ROTMIIIO nu YIIU Ill IUUlm

•Siding

\

All CONDI1IONEIS • ..AT PU•s alii
FUINAas FOI MOllE &amp; DOUilEWIDl HOMES
•

•

.
.....
BENNEn'S ~=•'
•

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•

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•••••

•

0

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0

.

Ltwtu,. 011 Sefftrll khuul N. tH lt. 1•1
(61•1 "'"'416 or I·ID41-IlrJ•II. .7

•

0

�June 12, 1991

Ohio
SNAFU~

lly Bl'lllle Beattie

44

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

AUtOS fOr Sale

71

Apartment
tor Rent

1. . R8 COlO-. loocfocf

, .June 1 1991

Wtd

Tlle Dally Sentlnel-f'ege 15

_Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

BORN LOSER

Television
Viewing

.:000

mllao, 11.111. 304-t71-Zilii. !
1111 '""' Z.ZI, $1,300 or O.I.D.,
111111 Undor WorTi ntyl 114-1461177:

M . WED.. JUNE 12

•

~

·I

.r

l :tiO CJl • (ll Ill. S 1D.
Dlltwa
·
....,_,
illony
flo.QolniOd
AI 1100 Down
l
Tob Over PiymontL Froo lot
Up I DoiiYOrv. Col 1!1ooo Homo
CMI01 AI, 1414.772-IZII.

•

!='·=::

15-';,
ID lnlltle 1loe

SO VOU KNOW JUST
WMAT I'M THINKING ~OH?
'

'

. I 1 I

r

Tow

IBWorldTocley
11])0urHouM

VET ..• I'D RATHER
WAIT VNiiL IT COMES

l SUPPOSE I{OU
CAN READ M'&lt; MIND•.

_,T_u'TI'M...,.A_G~~
1
1

..

· ~-~~:;:~·~
r1.:::;::
H I RE E F

1:30 (J) • . D NIC Piewa ~
tJ) AbbOtt and Coetelo
Cll
41C ..... 1;1
(7)
A-.tca SleriiO. 1;1

I1.

&amp;•

1!)3-2-1

-"~~
~
1 ,j

-rrK_I.,.._.R1""8
5 1 1

1:06 (I) SIWitchld

IN PAPERBACK'

I' .

J
Corporate president to
underlings, • Don1 pay
attention to what your crhlcs
say.
There wilt never be a
statue erected --- -···.•

IG

......,,;pi...;,.l.....,l;o.'.;;,.·I....,_1....-1

Cvmplott tho chucldo quot.ol
- -1.-..t..-1..__._.._~. ...,.,
by fllline In tloe milling
you develop from ...., No. 3 below.

a - ...

IJil ID • t;aa Nria 1;1

llll. Andy Clllfftllt

-d•

OUIIC'-

llodom clowntown,-t IR, · -

P.lotololtohon. CA.I14-44Ut31.
Avo tum!111. -

ground floor opt.ldoollor -

·

1215. pluo olio. U""'olro fur-

~=

33 Fannstor Sal~
1 milo oH 144, huntoro porlciH,

-""* .. -

l'O of tond, aood w...r
plpio In houoo, guffno on tond,
gOod Umbor on tond, ...

Will llobpll
-orlftlno.Ha
.. ~ ~-· Cort Oolnor Coolville,
114
· ··
Will build
polio ........ docko

· lldrtlng.
Pill .. ,;;;~
oldlnaor t1'1111or
1M:
241-AIZ

II

Lost&amp; Found

T--. ,_,Loot: tay.- I C

'lob.
Ell11f

14/lr 2t...S.3213

In -On A
Loytng
IARN MONEY lloocNna . .. - , . Jlalontlol.
. c.l11t 311 • • .
Dolollo. (1) 1 0 1 - .... y.

Yard Sale

7

I

Business
Buildings

EARN aoG/1100 PER WEEK
RUCIINO lOOKS AT HOME. Will do llollplttlng In my homo
CALL~~- DT. Bllll.
ln llftdllpcwt, f1.B;·hr••,.....
1121.
lam llonoyl Wo troln,

_,....,_ .......,....., ....
1010.

=
....

~
...~~~:,:. L~= ~
~--- Nouoo -, _

-3

1'001111,

:l.':."'-"":..:,~p:!:'"i.r':

:==. ~--

F:n.H1c1al

doy,

.

=... . . ..

::It

-·

35 Lots&amp; Acreage
OCJNtO ovoltablo lor
new home conetrvc:llon on
Roybum Rood. Povocf rood,

.Loll I

.......

~

..-lono.

,.. . .b..

Corn!~~*

rnro-.

.
-11,
. 1··
I lOtte,
- C11r1oi
llldgo

...

Hair lllytlot nooclool, - h rwot·

.

. ::i:..-..

•.. .
•~· ·

112 ...
. . ,...
Out
Clwllltood.
~ :W I tloro, lottlw, ....,...,

...._ a·

.,

LM•

u..

'' " --EochOoyl ·
• - ...... 11·11, l:oo.I:OOf lolor
Rood, Clottooo.
· Loll
'
Adull
3 CilAnd

w-

. -por.

-·

llng-ldo tnllaro, pia-.
2 loto ot 1111111 llonoorlal
Vo1011no oc~&lt;~nloli.1loo voun ond
m.=~
lncludocl. 304-

w.ls IJ

3-4 Acroo Ovortoolllng Your
Dwr! Bcoit Dock. All 'Utllhloo

1211.
·LD'II FOR SALE In Oolllpollo
,..,.,. Will ......... chy

--

:::-.,..-=:;~

. .......
_, ,_ ' ......,.
Dooro,Oni-Tiib

• ......

t4tlo,

lito.

Fumlton,

Clothoo Alii-, ..... 4 of T - On:honl Hill
- . I II.. 011 RL T.

t-1

lftl,

fl&amp;......

CALL~

~ulnd'.

LQUI8 BY IIIAIL
lip to 11,000 ....., lotlalllctlan

Goo·lllltood...,_olorvlco.
I 100 11111127 ...11!00.

Real Estat&lt;'

I - - . 2110 -lloln
a, Pollit - . 304-4111 IBIS.

42 Mobile Homes .
for Rent
141~ S bodroono In Autlond
c::t'do11211.00 pluo d-", no
::-:::=-:p'-'11-":o~,114-;_;,111;.:::.2·;:;20;.:,111:.:··...,..=
14xl'O mobllo homo Sond HID

Roecf, ~·
2 IMra•• lilobflll ~ Lower
Thlnl A - Prtvoto I'Orlolng,
Wltor F-..ct, SZ!0/1110, Pluo
Ulllltloo. llopcol And R...._
Roqulrod. _ , 114-411-Sl'tt
AIIor lp.m.

c..-

3 IR lllltor, IIIII
1210Jmo. ..00 clop.
0414.

Rd.

814-311~

llolllo- Far Ront, phono
111 ttl 010101446-132'1.

44

Apartment
tor Rent

! 1011_,. Unlurnlolood Apart.
mont.

l!lnoo Ro"'-"tor, Dl•

poool, o.~-lclocl-

.....!11. Go
Rat. ane• 1
f- Foundoilon 'With
Eoch eroot -uior
Vlluo. U..llod Tlnoo. " - h Chy
""'-• OoHipollo, OH
114 4tl litO,

n.100

2111,

:il

Roomo tor ront · - o r month.

at~1580.
.. $1201mo. oo111a Hotot.
114
Stooping roOm. wHh COlliling.
Aloo tr1ller -·All --11po.
Coli oltor 2:00 p.m., 304·7lS-

Wollf,

Pold, Dopotlt
Flnt Avenue,

A-. 114-441-2511.

2

ladioom Al*ttMrtt. 331

Second Aven•, 114-441-4807.

2br Aporlmont for Ront. In

CNwn City. 114-2111 Uts.

fur.
n-. Utllllao Pold, 12110/mo.

II l.oc'* 111-. 3 -

~1.-1-1340, 114-

BEAUTIFUL APARTIIEHT11 AT
IUDCIIT PRICES Kr JACKSON
UTATEI 531 Jocuon Plu
StiZinoo. Wolk to oloop ·i
movlao. COli 814-441-21118. EOH.
Comptototy lurnlohocl omoll
houoo lor 1 or 2 - o. No
S225 ptuo utll~iio. 814-+11-

=·

_
UIIYI. Wlntnale IIMtl,
7051

I'M
_
-441-

46 Space for Rent
~.o~~,_!_Wntolo,

114--·111711.

porto, ootoo.

con

Household .

qoocts

tm· E.II.T.W
- . IO:OO
• - ·o.no.
Pomeror.
to 1:110
P:'!',_!undor. 1 :oo to e:oo p.m.

8......o2531.

Yoo1 Old, 171; EntortU~M. $50; Wood Choot, t YNr
114~&amp;-aooO...

•

after
.

!!polo,""

·

Full otzo -

bod tnmo. $75.

GOOD UIII:'D APPLIANCES
Woohell, dry«~, rofl1gontoro,

C...-··

LAYNE'S FUANnuRE

-mao.

homo

~~FrMtR FrM, lee
11Aa~r11NIIDI',
•-,.. co, ··-; olrigOlltor,
2dr, whne, Frotl FrM, 115:
Eloct~c RonJl'l, 30 Inch, Wlolo,
$15; Electric -,~til,_
Clolcl, 1110; Hotpoiril , . . _ l
Dryor lot, $110 Eoch~=·­
Wo-. IN· AN
. With
Guorontooi ilcoggo ApplloncM,
814-441-7.118.
,

IMIDIIa.
l
..,...,, · - 1 womoocf.
.-.114.......1354. .

::.:;~....:·:;.;.'-:0
'-

---:-:=

Corn
lei
· Lo marw · 1

·

1

1llr Ford Aoro Stot, ' XL, ·

"- uu-. ,,._...,34 ottor

4 Cloonnot PA Haocf SIOD. DOD

...... -

,ap:;:.m:;;·; __ _ _ _ _ _~

-

"!!!'' $200
Eoch, Notarlablo. 1,.....,.11141.

Wont to bUy trumpot, 304-f75'-553=1·- - - - - - - -

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

58

.

-~bbogo, you ..,. .z~
- 1 ~-·d
·~~~

011

'*""1142 '",.......

=. ~..~-:.=:·· J~.

Fiull .... v.a" ..... PI d - . l Apploo.
.
Drnollorlo lfdlng lawn - . •
QJ; In jjood - l a n.
~,~r·11 Slmp!lr r;

'Itlo-.

&amp;1 F.ann Equipment

fox Pill C... llow, t211b. pull
with olghto, qui- I
ond -lng tlpo. iilo fir,.; ond

-

Allee CloolliiDll tl hp, Rld!ng

· ,Hao: · 42 Inch llowtng
Ooc~. Hao ........ llloci

_ . . , . Aolotltor, Air ..,o:

Litton ...._ . . . lloolofoi.Ono

114 31111DL .

with _ . . . . oholl, boot;, 1100. lltm. 114-441-0011.

0.11 Allo Ctootm...,. troctor
wlh hont onc1 · _ , runo
grwo~ muot oo1112000. Obo·l14113-7ll'O bolw•• f-7 pm

woru
~. fBODnn.IIWIUtOI.
~-dry•.~

17 ft. Searl ca..._ plua utrll.
$250. 814-441-7710 ohor 5pm.• .
1114 ct,rlo Croft COvoller, 32 h,
duol213 Chovy ongi~• (120 hro
after · rebu~t),
eltape · &amp;, .
rwlrta-or ·110.., 2 olnb,
hMcf. Kohl't.r ganat'ltor. Drive
on trailer wMfi fronl roU••·
lloko olflr gottlng out of boot·
lng, 304..75-jllll oftor 5:00 Pll.
5 hp liqot nootor wHII3 Jl'll. goo
tank,~~.

:!t":-t:~!2.... tu!'
: ·r o
--.........
louaM!, ... oond,
~.$110. .
.
hontiiF 2ooll00. 304-1031.

t-

-ca.;.......""""' lh:::,..._

w- '

. ...

PICJ 'NIWT 10 £STA6UsH
A F~E. ~(STATE

Parts &amp;
Accessories

. St25.

lp.m.

BASEMENT.

OII'IIII,Fllnde.

I

,.

WY 1-lOi

-··--·

Downotolro Furnlohocf Aport·
mont. Wotor Pold, POO/mc. U75
~. No P..._ 11 COdor

Farris

ONCE

'tO.IR.HE'.AD

CONTAINED•••

""""""~n

"""""v ~'""""""'· ••

QIJ Larry ICing U¥11
1:30 (J) • IJJ 0.. John May Be
Pre-Empted by NBA Finals
Stereo. C
(I) Ill. T1tltd Annual
lntemiiDIIII Roell -Awanla
Phil Colllnl, Nell Young and
Z.Z.Top appear; honors lor
top IOftiiW'Itor, laad
vocalists, favorite newcomer
and other catagorlll are

•

'

y..,. &amp;xporlonco On Oklor '
_ . , Homoo. RoOm Addftlono,

t:DLL.t:T ANY
GOOD GOSSIP

CAN I GO MAKE
A ULL.t:T CALL
TO ELVtNEY, PAW?

OFF IN TH'

FLATLANDS?

w.

awarded . (1 :30) Stereo. 1;1
10:00
Ill Quantum Laap
May Be Pre-Em_pted by NBA

FinalS Stereo. 1;1

kl'A

1121 • ... Hotint Stereo.

RObln.Gn

11:00(1). (I) Ill. ®

Dlltwa

(J) lllgltl Court ...
(!) ........,

,•

'&gt;

',.

ASTRO-GRAPH
BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

M-4.1!: ....

IIDI.Oo lot; 7 po. Codor
Bocfrvom Suno, IIII.OO.OPEN:
llondoy Thru loturcloy, lo.m. to Floh Tonl, 2413 ....- . Avo.
ttp.m., Buncloy 12 Noon Till Point P-nt, ,.,...,.._,,
Sil.m., I llllao 011 Routo 7 On '"" Uno
lloli. .......
lfouto 141 In Cont~.

Sot,

Plumbing &amp;
Heetl(la

-·---..piN.
T.........

•l \

· C0rt01'0 Plultoblng

ondHootlno ·

Fourth olfd Pioo
Oolllpol~ Ohio

.............
84

'

Electr_li:al&amp;
Rtfrlgftton '

ie11••

•

..., n a1116al

ACROSS
1 1051 , Roman
4 SlrOfll"

42 Conclm!ng
(2 wds.l
43 Laat q-n of

emllfll~g

o Genua or
rodonla·

Spain

12 Olympic org.
13 Siarta14 Not won
15 Worll

44 Pardon

47 Franch coin

50 H.lr•a
54 WrlHan

togetho•

POWii

17 lira. Peron
18 Adcl on

of a

debt

19 Actor Robe•l

21 FHIIIaal
25

A•- to Provlouo Puulo

40- r ...tunr
41 0111101111 0
acto

Speed•••

.... (tsbbr.l
28 Bun
211 The 0111 hart
33 - dt Franca

34 Author

Ganlnar
351!iqMI

3UYJM1ol

55 Makoup
511 Autl). Uma
10 Playwright
Clifford61-oiLa
Manehi
82 Elctamlliqn

83Braad-

mllklng
lngrtdlent
84 881111Marle

2 Dtwlng bird

31maga

4 Band
5 Pottle

contr~etlon

DOWfll

qtSIIIIIty

e-- fault
(owarmuchl

I Mlno!al

7 ProHI on

the

10:35 fil MOVIE: Conan
. . . . . . {~) (2:40)

VI'RA FURNITURE

~-r Clooot,
- · 1221· Carnploto ........

The World Almanac•Crossword Puzzle

10:30111 CniOit and Cflaoo

WM - o. l..-3151:

s

•

Ill World Nawt
100 Clttll Willi Pat

I '.

0011: Toblo With. 4 .,._

PaS!

II])

Aorotlon llotoro, ropolrod. -

Cholro, ' 114t.OO~nliY . Plno
Dlnotto Wllh
h Mol
Chol'ro, 1111.00; llolcl!i"' 2
Door Hltoh 1341' Or . ..00
Sot; Oo~ Toblo, Uxiz WMII e
Bow
Boc•
Chilli

Eoll

~-StarTrek

l ,....'" mcooro In otoclo, RON
EVANS, JACKSoll, OH. 1 -

111111,..
LIVING AOOII: · 6 Choir,
1111.00;. - ...... _ - 1141.04!;
Bwlvoillolikor, ..._ ; Cotlao •
IAciR To-. UI.OO lot.DININQ

.

Nor,.

2t

+

callllqo
38 Latgt

(J)Ntwa
(!) (f) Tmela 1;1

•

-or W
Ccottaao tor tent, lumlohod, AJC, UZI.OO.IEDIIOOII:
corpoi'Laood .......,.._ no room suno {8 pc.l, 1341.00; 4

~. Plaoooi1t,

i ·=~the

llll
Fatmen Jake's aHalr could
blow hla cover. (RI Stereo. 1;1
9 MOVIE: 8waet l'ollon ·
(2:001 Stereo. C
aD Nathvtlle N6w Stereo.

E5YA~R
SAO&lt; THA-T

MISERY
16 HAVING

1

1IN Oranlda, 4*, PS, PI, &amp;400, F~otlon Y4qrll, Rooting,
8'14-441-1115, 814-441-1244 /&lt;llor Wli'oclowo
l Siding. F- e..
Bp.m.
UmatHI RtfetenCN, No Job To
Big Or Smollllt4-441-G221.
TREE BEiMCE. T~
·Trl-lng, Troo Romovol,
'
Trimming. Froo Eotlmotool I
~7-mT.
:
JET ·
II:IMIH.

West
Pass
Pass

When you are in a contract that
All pa_u
seems to be plain sa iling, don't beOpening lead: Q
come overconfident and take your
ha~d off the tiller. There may be a
storm brewing, with choppy . water ' - - - - - -- - - - - - - '
just around the next headla~d .
If you would like to see how good a
sea captain you are, cover the East·
West cards at1d plan the play In four
spades. 'West leads the club queen and
continues with tire dub jack and a ing a heart, he returned his last trump.
When the diamonds failed to break 3-3,
third club.
declarer
had to loae a· heart trick and
West's third club lead was an error.
his
contract.
He should have realized East bad the
Declarer had a good Idea; but be put
club 10 - otherwise declarer would
it
Into effect one trick too late. If he
have covered the club jack with dum·
my's king. If West had switched to a had led the spade jack at trick four (or ·
heart. declarer would have to do some croued to the diamond queen and ft.
nessed the spade jack), he would have
good guessing to make his contract.
made
his pme. Say East wins with
Afteuuffing the third club, declar·
lbe
queen
asid -retUI1Sia·1pacle. Dlelar·
er cashed the spade'ace and continued
er
wlna
in
band, cashes the A·K of dia·
with the spade jack, not the king. He
did this to establish dummy's 10 as a~ monds, ruffs a diamond, leads a trump
entry, In case the diamonds broke bad· to dummy's 10, and cashes the last two
winnen.
ly. But it didn 't work. East won with diamond
@ 1111, •waPAPIJIINTI_.II AIIN,
the spade queen, but Instead of return·

Ill. DoGgie IIOWMI',

M.D. Doogle'a dutlel cauM
him to lear the 1081 of his
~lh- ~)s-. 1;1

,.,.,

A.....

Vulnerable: Bolb
Dealer: South

By Pbllllp Alder

. ILl

:.

'

+n

IW~Y· .

(I)

Froo ootlmatDL COl ootlocl I ·
.114-ZI7-, cloy or nlghi.
Autos for Srle
·-mont Wot""*'llng.
· YW luoi body good,
.COU .,........141 oltoi 5 or Curtla Home lmprovemenle:

&amp;.·

llullwfnkla Bullwl~kle ..., a
rObbery commlitecl by the
nation's most dangerous
criminal, who kills aU thoee
who witness his crimes.

1:00 CJl. D Nigllt Court May
Be Pre-Empted by NBA
Finals C

Uiicl.nd- Nlollmo guojontoo.'-"'-.... rum-.

194
+i.t062

• ~3

When the water
is rough

0 MajOr LHgtll SoaeitiH

81 ,
Home
polrw; r.glo·Improvements
•
Umot~oln
• WATERPROOFIW-1

.Q98 3
• J 10 8 7
+QJ93

cookll drive. and she rune

'

Services

EAST
IQH
.KJ1Q6

tekeslfllllill' from Alison's

(l-\1(~1

•

Transportation

IJil ID • Roellr end

~ ~~. . Famly,..., Steve

FfCU

..

'

mNeaftli ou.natty B
(f) llelllh OUarlariJ

night telling ghost atorlea. IPI

• 814-44e-2289
oltor

• -·1111

DoJI-.

'"'""· =a..-.,..
..........

Kevin redlacover1 Christmas
alter he spots Cutlip_ plarlng
Santa. IRI Stereo. Q

FI'Qitl Knoxvilftl, Tenn. (l)
8:30 (I) til • O.ow~'ll Pallia The
SiaWra spend HallOween

\"

ooH

(2:001

Cll Ill. The Wonder Yoe,.

II]) MOYII: Waco (2:00)

campers&amp; ,
Motor Homa.s

Lt-loln -

l'reddle

1:111 (I) Cllllt Of 1M Cflampf-

1181 Ford Robull Cl Tronoml•

Uood, ·$10:
·......., Und Twin 8ocf Wllh BoX
ltH'In!ll • 11onrooo. tiO; unon
lllctow*'o, 1-llont Condhlon,

Myaletlea Slereo. C

(J) MOVIE: Rotax,

,

SOUTH
+AKJH3
.A7Z

.:t:.:...

~uto

olon,

IB~IIN

MOVIE: North llltore
(2:00)
9 Munter, IIIJ Wrote
·111 Falla and Ftltlvala:
Iouth C.tollna a- Fair
Chorley Pride perlorma at
llilltale lair In Columbia,
S.C. ; Mike Snider spotlights
other lair IVantl. (I :001 ·
Stereo.
ID Mitior League e11abel

•

ALDER

WEST

12

7:35 (I) lob Newlwt
1:00 (J) • 1JJ Unsolved

til .

....•

PHILLIP

f:•••t Hila (0:30)

(PG)

to l i p - ....... 304-812·~ .

76

Tonight Stereo. 1;1
Ill.,._•• l'ainlly
® WIIMI Of FGIIuno 1;1
llll. M"A'I'H
. . . a liar Stereo.
Mljar La~gtte Sooebllll'a

(0:30)

Wont to buy good Mining 7.5 to

,.. $UOO. Loodor 1om;

814-441-3151
Yl"ro Fu..Sot• ' Chl!lr, tl1.10 Week;
Rocllnor, U .47 -k. Swlvoi
Rocqr, $3.13 Woo~.l~n~ 8ocf
Complolo 18.41 -to, • er-r
Chill, 13.21 WoM; -or Sodroom &amp;uno, 7 pc:, Sti.B1 Wook.
lnctudoo Boddlng.Country Plno 56 Pets tor Sale
Dlnono W~h lonch 6 4 Cholro,
110.115 Wook.OPEN: llondoy
Pot
-~
ThN Sotunloy, llo.m. to lp.no., limo
, _ Doollr. ;Jutto
Bundoy 12 N- Till lp.oo. 4
Colt 111 Ill 0231,1'
lllloo 011 Route 7 en· Routt 141, 113·
122~
In Centenary.
. f"
SWAIN
AUCTION I FURNITURE. 13
01.. St., Oolllpollo. 6 Uood

•

Walt klpl, 304-

&amp;71-M70. .

Rocondftlorloil_...ll, Dry«~:
Gillrllilood ...... MrYicolor Ttft!il _Doz~,., 1230, naw
tllnomloolon. I.Gwtlnlo onglno,
oil nlloo, · Tho Woohor
Dtr•
lloofpo. 114-441-1!114.
~
,:'tori.
wry . Boocl.
....
....... ,, RockCriither

Building

ALLEY OOP

!

17 ft. 110, I~ ·
b6orcllooil-boonl. Phono :JD4.

..... 114 ~ 1031.

55

fNiflflONMfNT ~

Gtuotroh

boonl, au~n~

WATER WILLI DRILLED: loot
ret aar nblrt Mnlaa. fM.UI..mi
r

$OM#ONt IN146/liTif/G ;
MOfYEY fflOM THE
li:

rooo .....
15 •· Abor!tluo,
51. hp ,Yo homo, ll lb

6'13-441'0,

w- • Clooiry.
Soooonocf I plonocf. Aloo. .,..

Uwd Pwt11• 111 pizza oven
1100.00 ...... ~

T'HAN ff'ltfi/ZONME-NT ..
W/4,•1 '.1 THE /,A~T
T1Mf )t'LJ HIA/lP Of ~~

1

17 ft. 110, In·
boorcllout-boonl. Phono 304.

Lumbor:

-nlngl.

TOPIC:

Gluolron

- n g _ . ond . .11.
olzo I, $100. now $121. :J04.I7I.
4137.

........

: .-~~--~--~~----------------------~
of c,OIJ~f .t TlltN/C t'IE{i!E'P'TY ~
joNIGI'IT1
t$ ~0/tE tftllpo/ZTANT ~

:_n,:;r~, ~=~~:t,::
,

trolling mat~,

11

-. .

1185 Hondo Y-30 llogno, 7,100
mllao, llko ,_ St.-. 304-112·
21148
1
'
1110 HD unro Clooolc, 111,500 or
o.a•o.,--o
•- -"~n 3 'ooo ' Ill'·
~o,
Still Undor -ronty; 1118 HD,
Juot Rootorod.l14.z&lt;ts-un
Hondo 1112 XR 200, 'Eocollont
Condhlon, 114-211-1141.

175-ttlll.

!.o!lo .-....,. aoo...w110.
•·~""'
. - IIuooouch
yoorw .....
llo
- tm
i O.

..

3355.

W~roller,

cond, S71114-1fl2.2101.

,._

•

NORTH
f.il-10
110 e~
.54
IAKQ62
+K•I

BRIDGE

waii E-e.,_.

i

·
·
1184 Hoiler Sportotor, tow
miiNg~ , exc cond, 304-882·

. tor Sale · ·

Trolio, YHock Uno, With Locii 6
Soquonco, Aoldng Prlco: $275.
114-441-7140.
.

7:30~uc=ll'dJII;I

I

•

75 Boats&amp; Motors '

&amp; l IV('S!OCk

9~1;1
ID
~
.

i

211-1173.

:IDI..

JI.LC.:: Aflelr ...

ID ScaNaniW 1nd Mra. King
7:06 (I) The ...,...,..

.

~

SCil•.M LITS ANSWIIS
, .,
Female - Mixer - Belle - Temper - EXAMPLE
Granny totd the new mom, • The greatest single
factor in raising children is parental EXAMPLE.'

Ill

Yol
.

2041
Dunrovln FIVII .F-: J,.. ott
Concroto 1 p1oo11o ..,ila ..,.., ::...~~~n:.:: :::'J:~

11-, 111111 ChoDOI Longlh

..

~k

Loodod, 1111000 "mlloo. Eocoitont

1117 8-10 lluor, Tohco, Loodoo',

, noppor John N. HIII1 J:t!l~!t Folio,

.od~~aor ~:'~

~oo . roo

CondHionlo7,100. 114.::JII8!11032.

Muslcrl .
Jnatruments

S1

~~
NawNiawQ

WW. I DO '!IO"'E. (i ~~

~~:S1 =ca~vanva" ..~~9· .

c

lloctrlc Ouh011: _

Suppllet

RENT20WN

rat..,..
bloc~
Iori.- Vot

~Ji,~'P

town
mowor, llluo ,_, 814-112·l:IH.
SobJ - . high choir, .-ng, -~otrclw
play~J:.'-olzo tv1 112,
•
11a 4
,_. Dokoto Homo
8011
suln en vour Lot. 127.111 olid
up. 1.....,..731 t.
.
tlhp Jolon Dooll rldlna

Hours: lion-Sot, t-5. 114-44 110. lf4417o0416,
0322, 3 mltoo out Butoolllla Rd.
F-DIImry.
PICKENS FURNITURE
Now/Uoocl
Houooholcl lumlolilng. 112 mi. lllool plpo _ , lor cumil, ott
Jorrlcho Rd. Pt. PI-nt, WY, liz•, Dill from 1:00 to 1:00 Pll.
Cottogovitto, wv :1114471...01.
coli 304-175·1410.
TrooclmiUIIIf' of UnolltM"'t 11,100
Rolrl~or Sldo X Sldo, ...
,
. ..
'
'18-2121
· Avocodo,
Ql"-t,
$115;

lumhon, ....,.,.,

•

iii I DrMm Of oleannle

s -10 111uor, 5
Looking! 18,500.

CheVy

....., m. Dunlop 74 Motorcycles
Hlah
Goln
. _ _ umo ..... h_:!l. ~,....,,..-,...:,,..,.::...,.....,.:.,..._,,.,.,..
1113 Honcli Qoldwlng 114-112·

r;.::;·R..:"Ill~ a!tr:~:,::; CondiTon, Rorwir
COII_I-.,..,

Comploto

~'•

tw

54 Miscellaneous
xo..n:hancflle
..,.

Hot .... - ·· 10 Jl'll.

1 Yoor Old Solid Ook Dining
A - Bu~o, lnctudoo Pia ·a.hi,
2 Solid Wood lor I l l -, 1 Y•r
Old, $50 Eocll; 1 Floor Lomp, 1
Otd, 1100,

'

luY or ool. R....... Antlquoo,

o,_

Merchandr se
51

'

..
==
.
B

73 . Vans &amp; 4 WD's

liiiilini'"niiitiinit;-j;~~

lrf.Ooior l

Antiques

-o:

Pets for Srle

11oot1 And 1oo pu- AKC Chomplan
lloodllno, tlnytoy,lt4-117-3104.

l.:
ftl::'t':."rr!'
~ 1
53

=

56

For Sola: Full Fig-. Pluo 8lzo
W-ng Goom, {Appool llzo:
24-21) Doocrlptlon, Ylctorlon

5151, lloocn WY.

114-ZII-II2S2.

Phone:
·

114 1411711 Ahrlp.m.

22 Money to Loan

=:::Wo~·:_rorJ4

8 t .m. to IS p.m, Mon •..aat.
441-lt'!1 • 827 3td. Avo. Glfo

I l1dr: a Houle, Eclal or
T-, In !=IIJ, Counlry (~moo.
....... 1221iiloo, Pluo Utllltloo,
w.tor Pold, Dollcol 1

JOOOiat.~4.

FurniShed
·Rooms

45

G.'*

41 Houses tor Rent

a
~II

Now ICICIOPIIng oppt!cotlano ,.,
_ a.••montL ~-·-• Houo111
-..... •
......lng Opp., olr ·· laundry
room,"tr1oh pickup,·to otaroo I Khoolo. 301·7lSWI.

Admlrol lroozor, 25 cu. ft. $50.
114 ue osn.
County Appllonco Inc.
uoocf opplloncoo, T.V. aoto. ODM

Rentals

aop In Tho -

~114·Q~

4p.m.

'

UU111 ARAliA IIAIIY.,. _ , Tlourodor • FtWor. AI KUWAIT
IIAIN: Hiring 117,100 • S1IO,OOO
• """""" On II. II. K._ lilly,
aM•• And Adul Clothlri..

'::;.1.;::,
11
Hot SUIIUto "" Chi-,
Poto,

I!CIO Down, St1tlmo. 114-251·

Soo-.
....., llllnu diM..,.. C.ll fi4.4CI..

j,llluN*yl~-·

mc::

~-

...

tor. S1,100 On o 10 Doy
Nolte. lllrh llotum 6

- . . . ...., Ha_,; TIICO
1.4 . . . F - RL 7.

Rio OJlOliCia. ti14 •• 1031

r.q.-. 30U75- Country Mobllt Home Park,
112S3, J.ohn D. Oortoch, no Routo 33, North of P-roy.

lion mollod on

~14:..;"~:::•=1'=••;:..,:::·:..:Lol:;::•::ot:.,:•~:;=: I"'' - C _, llolft. .,. Locol ··~·· For s.IO, -·not-Pnono:I04-e75:na.
~~
~-,
~.~ - . ~ ,.._
.... For 8loort lime 1.._

"

~.

.,. . . .

Ro----

Drl•voto
ond d·-•
!ID4 • ·fi~..75-2Ut.
Nlco 2 lA, 4 112 mi. , _ 0 .
llpollo.pick-up
• rotna
.. wotortM
1
tiooh
pold,
USmo.
•o~ Aloo. 2 BR oportmont 1n

1
2
4 ·r-o. •All rootn•,
nlcoly

-.lod, olr oond"~-rng,
Wll Do - 1 HoUooclooftlng. , _ .,~., • - bill~;;-.;.....
SUO Per - · Oollpollo AloL llou ,.... oholco naw. No
111 141 1101. : '

FREE .1011 TIIAINING OHIO AND 21
BUSI""SS
W.Vo. YOUTHS. Aro ,..., Into·loci 1n ~In- -upo
Oppo:::J.nlty .
tlan- .. lP'!!,~"" ... 1----'-:=~~,_:......__
Gallipolis
olotont, - ·
ont Olld
INCmCEI
mocflcol cloollo. - · OHIO YALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
I VIcinity
trllnlng In ltoldo. YOWII rwcomonondo thd yail do bull- • 111111 · mon 11-21 yooro nooo- poapto you~- ond ·
alii. Out of - . d!OfiCH.Io or NOT to Hl1d ttvoi:Mil. the
-~~~~- -lnlo Pl. Pl. Joll mall until ,..., hln I.....Ttiitocf
Sorvtao, 1211 llllh Ill, Point tho olloring.
.'
"-"it, Tltuf'ICIIr, June 13,
10:001m to 3:00 pm, • lor Joll Arthur'o Choln ' Lin~ Fonco.
ALLY... lluol lo Polclln ~..
Aeeldlrwl.r, CGmnwclal, ln.
·,.. · DUDUNE: 2:00 p.m.
d,..rtot, F- 'EIIImatool c., ... .......,
tho ..., ..........
lo .. p.m.
"'"· ao........ ~ Htrtna S700-ti500 Diolo lnotolotlojl. Ploono: 114_.., • "'2:00
.
iltJ.-Ia· 314-an. ' '
Prtdor. Moncloy- ocfhlan • 2:00
...... lotwdoy.
vondlz
11-.ca•
.........
IOIY· • ;-.: ~:00::
i
Choori.
Soli
Quickly.
I·
l'fldoy, lilurdoy, - y . !"J OHIII.
~ 44 All, I

,.

2 - 31 - · 112 milo oft
Rowbum Rood. 1om ond 3 out·
bullcllngo. 304-17W408.

..' :pt~d~1 C::,

52 Sporting·GOOdS

1:35 (I) Andy Clllfftllt
7:tl0 ~ • D WhM4 of Forwne

June13,1"'
: • 11 you make doing the best Job you pot: albly can your primary objeCtive In the
• roar anead. your chanctll lor making
money wtH greatly Improve. converooty.
11 mlldng money l&gt;eCOmll your priority,
you might not dO 11 well.
-:. Ql. .
21....._ 10) Be Pfllde!l'
, In 1101 manegemont otrour llnanclll af·
111,. t.oday, and try not to draw upon,.
• IOUrce&amp; you've alreody ear.-ked tor
aomethlng etae. Uve within your meana.

'*'

Trying to patch up a broken romance?
The Astro·Graph Matcnmakel can help
you understand what to do to make the relalio~shlp work. Mall $2 plus a long.
sell-addreued, stamped envelope to
Matchmaker, c/o this newap81* . P.O.
Box 111428, Clevelttnd , OH 44101·3428.
CANCER (Juno 21...1uly 22) Circum·
stances could put you In a pOiillon to·
day where the priorities of others take
precedence over your Interests. II this
occurs. aulve to make the most ot a bad
arrangement.
LEO (July 13-Aug. 221 In order to be
pr.oductlvo today. you mull be mtthodl·
cal. thinking avery move through careluUy. A lack of proper organlzallo~
could create additional work.
VIIIGO (Aug. 13-Sepl. 22) Someone
you recently met may not be all that you
thought. It may be wloe not to get too
dMPI~ Involved too quickly with IIIII
Individual.
UIRA (Sipl. 21 0411. 21) In ordar to
ach- -'ngtul goall today, you
must be llrangly motlvlted. II your ba·
lk: atllludllalndllfel•- IUQCIII Ia
11~.-y

to..,.. =,au.

ICON'IO COol. M Ill 1. D) Don't .,..
...,, yotllllll 11 1ft 111th0rlly today on
_,.. a110u1 wtliCfl you know tmre. fie.
lor you wtH dlmintoh - It you can't
back up what you aay.

"*'

1\

t!AGinARIUB (Nov. 23-Doo. 211 lilt's
necessary lor rou to buy something ex·
pensive today. be oure 10 do a lair share
of comparison shopping. II you''re Impulsive or Impatient. you could make a
bum purchase.
CAPRICORN {Doo. 22.,.,._ Ill This
might nol 1M! one of your better days for
deall~g with others on a one-lo·one basis. This is why Individuals who aro uou·
ally cooperative could be the o - OP·
posing you the strongest .
AQUARIUS (Jill. 20-Feb. ttl You're
likely to be a better ratiONtlzer than
producer today. Several reaponllbiUttee
that require attention might be
~leeled .
PIICIS (hb. 20-lleroh 10) Be careful
what you uy to a sensitive lrlelod today:
II thla lnellvldual percel- that you 'd
rather btl llterlng Ume with oomeono
elM. hurt feelings could 1'81Uh.
AIIIIS (...,_ II•Aprtl11) II oubordlnatoo aren't producing tho way you
think thoy lhould today. the IIIJH could
btl ,_a. Give cryetal-ctear lnllructlona
and define your expectations In detail.
TAUIIUS (April »Mar IOJ U you do
thlngaageiMI your IHIII« judgment today. you COUld be liking lor trouble.
Don't let anrone entice you Into doing
oomethlng you know ·you ohOUidn't.

.

=·

llll• Anlenlo HaM Stereo. 1;1
9 Miami YIOa ...
Ill Fan ..... ,.itlvltl"
Iouth Cantina ..... Fair
Chlrlay Pride perlorma at
tho state lair In Columbia,
S.C. : Mike Snider IPOfllghll
other lair • - · (1 :001

88canuow
QIJMonerttne

and Mn. King

11:30(1). aJ Tonlgltt IMw
Stereo.
(J) The Roultlll

Cl).....,._'IDI..._
liD II

IE~!:-~.
CSia..t[IIIIIStereo. l;l

CI!L1!8RITY CIPHER

celebril~ C6pher CIYO,~toortniiMNiil lrt ....... trom "'*'llut'll bw lwncM PIOPII. ~~ MCI l"llft1.
Eacn ltlter .,. ... . , . , .....,.
r~ ·· CIW:

0 "I IICIIIIIf

tor._..,.

81p01taTOIIIgltt

11:311 Cll

a-. ...

12:011 Ill. -

.I ....

....... Stereo.

~!;i::;"•WMh
ill
Tile
I

....

12 !T 1 "'1

~'(2:00)

110¥11:

a.,..... v.
I

'R
CDK

C:DIIIY
WKEC

Z J G K

VF\'1111

M J AV

II E

J ..

KPKAMIIIK . '
MFAL
IAFSC.
PREYIOUS SOLUTION: "Ourl II tho only country delibtnlltly IOundtcl on
1

a- - ·" -

11:01(1) , ...,• • g
12:10 ~. 0 Lila llgllt wah
IIMIItl L I I -

John Gunther.
C1 ttl1 by NEA.&amp;

'

12

•

�Pomeroy~lddleport, Ohio

Page-16-The Dally Sentinel

'o"'edneedey, June12, 1981

.Documents sho~ fBI was tipped ofT to police wrongdoing
ulna·

Milk Prices

CLEVELAND (AP) - A
woman charged with hiring police
to protect a gambling opentiori
complained to a detecuve who
issued a citation against a ll)pless
dancer while he solicited a gam·
blin
yoff government affidavits
alle:c~ '
The affidavits unsealed Tuesday
outlined infonnation from various
informants alleging that Shirley

Carta'·Schmidt of Nortb Olms~
routinely hired Cle.veland vtce
De~tive ROIIIl~ Chtsmw. to pro·
~~illegal gambling opc:nllOIIS.
Tbe investigation led to the
indictment May 29 of 30 current
and former Cleveland police offi·
cers and. 17 ot~er people. The
charges mv~lvmg alleged. pay.
.ments .to J!OI!~ .to overlook ~gal
gambling acuvtttes. .
Ms. Carter-Schmtdt, 45, was

indicted OD cJwses of coospiracy home pboae number, could not be
and obatruction of laws 10 aid an reacbcd fer CQIIIIIICIII. An otr~cer in
illegal gam~ling operation. Ms. the. 2nd District vice squa.d said
Carta'-Sebmidt. who has an ~b- Ch~S~JW would be on vacallOn for
lished telephone, could not be at least 10 days.
reached for commenL
FBI spokesman Roben Hawk
Chismar. !12, of Middleburg 8lid Assistant U.S. Allomey Robert
!Ie~ghts, was !101. name~ in the . E. ~uUCrd dec~ 10 CO!'JDIC'l~ on
mdiCliiiC!'L He, IS still a police offi· ~ISmar's .status m the mvestJgacer and ~ asstaned to the depart· . lion.
mont's viCe squad.
U.S. Attorney Joyce 1. Oeor,ac
Chismar, who has an unlisted has said the inve,stiprion is cooun-

Police CliefEdward Kovxic
has said more illdictments were
possible.
. .
•
The government said m aaldng
10 wiretap the home phone of Ms.
Carter-Schmidt that informants told
the FBI chismlr "has been llllcing.
money from gamblers in the Cleve-:
land ~ to all.ow those gi!JIIblm
and theJr l~uons ~ ~unue to
operate without pohce mterrer-,
coce."

Ohio Lottery

Bulls claim
1991 NBA

Pick 3:873
Pick 4:0196
Cards : 4-H, 10-C
7-D; Q-S
Super Lotto:
14-16-21-32-43·44
Kicker:6243SS

championship
Page4

BIG BEND .............. Your Community Minded
Locally Owned Supermarket

•

e

'

-

' '

2S.Ct1on912 P"tiJ• 25 cenla
A llultlmedlo Inc. N-1p1per

AP

Shelly CO. awarded bids for road projects

.Milk prices drop ·

Dairymen

slow to cut
production
I

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
sharD drop in milk prices is laking
a tofi on dairy producers, but Agri·
culture Department economists say
farmers have been slow to reduce

ENRICHED FOODLAND

SWEET WESTERN

WHITE BREAD

CANT.ALOUPES

OUIP,Ul.

. 'Milk prices are dramatically
lower than a year earlier and arc
expected to erode the expansion in
millc output as 1991 progresses,"
the department's Economic
Research Service said. "However,
the adjustment probably will be
gradual"
'
Accordina to the agency. dairy
rarmers "entered 1991 in a
suon,aer financial position than at
any ume" in the last decade_
"The relative lack of immediate
debt problems wm tend to slow
producers • responses to lower
reUifns," it said. "Ample supplies
or replacement
improved
forage
suppliesheifers,
and relatively
UIU\ttractive ofr.farm employment
opportunities will help sustain milk
production powth.''
Millc OUtput per COW in the ftrst
quarter of 1991 was up 2 percent
froin a year earlier, but high feed
· costs relative to milk prices are
expected to· trim this produciion
rate of gain in the second half or
·the year.
The lower reUifns are discoUraging dairy expansion and are
"aecelerating farm exits from the
dairy industry," said the report in
the June issue of Agricultural Out·
look magazine.
"Early this year, milk cow numbers 'slipped below a year earlier
and are expected to continue slid·
ing," the report said. "By late
1991, cow numbers are projected 10
be about 1 percent below last
year!'
ReUtms to dairy farmers above
feed-concentrate costs are expected
. to drop more than 20 percent to the
lowest level since the late 1970s.
· One indicator is the milk-reed
price ratio, which expresses in
pounds the amount of mixed 'dairy
feed equal in value to one pound of
milk. Last year. the ratio averaged
1.72 pounds.
But in 1991, according to the
report. one J)OUIId of milk will buy
less than 1.5 pounds oUeed.
"At year end, millc production
is expected to be barely higher than
a year earlier," the report said.
"However, gains early in 1991 will
result in the annual total rising 1·2
percent to a record."
Faced with growing pressure in
Congress to do something about
the crunch on dairy farmers, USDA
is expected to make recommends·
lions by mid-month on a ~
for "inventory management • of
nsing inilk surpluses and to ease
price declines.
The National Milk Producers
Federation said the depanment's
recent study of several options
showed that an all-milk price of
$11.28 to $11.70 per hundred·
weight would stabilize dairy mar·
kets and assure consumers adequale supplies.
In May. the all-milk market
price was about $11.30 per hundredweight, compared with $13.50
ayewewlier.
But the federation said that at
such levels "milk prices will be
below the costs of production ror a
sianlficant proportion" of the
nation's dairy rarmcrs.
The federation said dairy farmers in 1989 averaged $13.SS per
hundredweight of milk. It said
USDA economists reported that
nearly 44 percent or all dairy farms
in 1989 received insufficient
incolne 10 cover all their rarm and
family expenses and debt repayment.

FIND IT.

By CHARLENJi; HOEFLICH
at a cost qf$29,333.04
Selltlnel News Staff
·
-County Road 15, Hysell Run
Bida on four resurfacing pro· Road, 2.55 miles, at a cost or
jects covering 11.14 miles of coun- $39.943.20
ty roads at a total cost of
-County Ro~d 345, Story's
$251,016.58 were aw~dcd to the .Run, .95 of a mtle, at a cost of
Shelly Co. of Thomvtlle by the $14,490.58.
All of the I08ds slated r~ resur·
Meigs County Commissioners at
Wednesday's meeting.
racmg now .hav~ a cold mt.~ sur·
The )/IOjects funded with Issue 2 face. H~t mtx will be used 1D the
monies InClude:
resurfacmg.
-County Road 31, Stiversville,
~t the request of Howard Frank,
!he fulllenRtb of 6.41 miles. at a Metgs Co1111ty ~r. th~ Board
COlt of $167,249.72 .
. . · approved the cxtens1~ of umc ~or
-County road 53, Whtpple the tax books 10 remaJD open. Orig·
Road. the full leawh of 1.23 miles. mally scheduled to close on June,

20, they will remain open until July
10.
.
Commissioner Richard Jones
pr:esenlcd a copy of the court entry
filed this week releasing the Mc~s ·
&lt;;oumy BOIIitl of County CommtS·
stoners fronun action filed by students and ~nts of the Carleton
School/Met~ Industries. .
That action which pertained to
operational fund deficits was ftled
against the Meigs County Board of
~en.~ .~elllrdation/0\lvclopmen~
Dtsabtli~ and the. Stile of Ohio,
both. of which remam a party 10 the
suit. as well as the Commissioners.

It was filed rollowing announce- students.
.
ment of personnellayofrs due to
No action was taken on a
budget restraints.
'
· . req~t from Mary Powell, director ·
Remodelin$ and renovation of of the Park Disuict. to transrer
offices occuptcd by the Probalil· funds from a salary account to an
Juvenile Counand the county audi- account set up to handle expenses
tor slated ror this summer was dis· incurred on the old Sugar Run
cuss¢ Commissioner Jones nolcd School building. At .the request or
that Bill Diao of Burgess and Nip· the Park District, a meeting
pie Architects bas comeleted plans between the Commissioners and
for the jlro~t which will be adver- Park District representatives was
tised for b1ds notlaler than July l.
set up for next WedneSday.
Engin~r ~il Roberts advised · The Board passed a resolution
the c;:ommtsstoners that plans are authorizing the Meigs County Pros· ·
movmg ahead for the summer work ecutor to advertise 45.5 acres local·
program for six to eight college ed in the western section or the

county ror sale. The property was
forfeited 10 the county on a drug
case. Proceeds from the sale will
go into the Jaw enforcement trust
fund to be divided equally between
the sheriff's department and the
prosecutor's office. The right to
reject any aild all bids was reserved
by the Commissioners.
A carr·y-over of $1,247.26 in
Litter Conuol funds from last year
was appropriated by the Commis·
sioners inio the budget of that
agency ror this year's work.
The Board approved payment of
Continued on page 3

·Smith·guilty of tax fraud, perjury
and making a false document
LOAVES

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) • public housing. The investigation, the Charleston newspaper, and .
The former director of West Vir· by the FBI, the Charleston Police apologized for delays in the trial.
ginia's rederal housing program Department and the Internal ReyFonhe rirst time, he told the
will be ~nlilnced on Aug. 19 ror enue Service resulted in the con Vic- jurors the delays were caused by
laking a $50,000 bri!le from a con- . lions of .three.housing officials and hearin~s convened to address the
several people doing business with issue of whether Smith's immunitv
tractor.
Carl Smith also was convicted housing authorities.
"reemcnt precluded his subseSmith declined to comment fol- quentP'Qsecution.
by a U.S. District Court jury
.
Wednesday of tax fraud, perjury lowing the verdict.
· Smilh did not testify during the: .·
Copenhaver thanked the jury trial.
and malcing a false document
Smith faces up to 28 years in following the verdict, according to
prison and more than $1.2 million
tn rines when he's .sentenced by
l11dge John T. Copenhaver Jr.
The judge set a $100,000' unsecur011 bond for Smith, sayina he
can usc his Winfield house as col·

EA.

I-----------U. GOVT. INSPE CTED

s
(HI (KEN LEG QuARTER

ASSORTED COLOR

s~

NORTHERN BATH TISSUE

·

.

·

.' . ·. · . .
. .....,._

Merchants discuss
plans for future events

. bond .IK;iiiUig,
~---'- AssiS·.
.
./ ~·
~ the ,
tant U.S. A~ M~ Feinl!erg
By JULIE E. DILLON
qf t~e businesses
the Pomeroy
asked that bond -.., set With !Ievere
Merchlints Association during the
Seadnel News Starr
limitations, accor!ling ~ today 's
remainder or the week.
Charleston Gazelle.
Plans for upcoming events of
Susan Clark, president of the
Prosecutors said Smith, who the Pomeroy Merchants· Associ a- . Association, reponed the Christmas
headed the state off'ICC of the U.S. lion were diSCussed at the group's banners, brackets, garland and
Department of Housing and Urban regular meeting on Wednesday.
lights, ordered rrom Sullivan DisDevelopment, demanded the
The Ohio University Communi· plays, have arrived. A work session
money from Ohio contractor Mau- versity Band Concert, sponsored by wiJI be scheduled to rework the
rice Toler, Gallipolis, who wanted Bank One, will be held Thursday, existing decorations will! the new
to keep a contract 10 build federally June 27, at 7 p.m..on Court Street so all will be ready for the Christin Pomeroy. In conjunction with mas season.
subsidized housing in Nitro.
Smith also demanded Toler give the concert the Pomeroy Men:hants
Elimbetb Schaad, Meigs County .
him a uuck and a rarm combine ~ociation will again sponsor "Art Economic Development Director,
and remodel his Mason County in the Park" in the mini park under contacled the Association and sugfannhouse, prosecutors said.
the direction of Annie Chapman. ~ested that a ~ebe created to
business disSmith's attorney. Dina Mohler, The Pomeroy United Methodist mclude a map or
Church will be selling homemade trict and items av · lc from each
said she will appeal.
She said Smith was given ice cream during the event and in member of the Merchants Associaimmunity· from prosecution when the lobby or Bank One cold drinks . lion to distribute to the people
camping at Royal Oak Resort.
he agreed in 1989 10 testify against will be available to the public.
Frank Vinson, the former director
The Oldies But Goodies Car . ~gements are in proaress.with
of the Kanawha County Housing Club will ·sponsor a show 10 Wilham Stuckey, v1ce prestdent
and Redevelopment Autltority.
Pomeroy on July 20 and the Asso- and manager of Royal Oalt, 10 proVinson was convicted of receiv- . ciation is plannina special sales for vide such a package.
ing illegal payments, perjury and that event. The car show will be
The possibility of implementing
placing an illegal listening device held on the upper parking lot in the use of a Merchants Employee
ma co-worker's office.
Pomeroy and on Court Street there Discount Card was discussed. The
. Mohler said the immunity will be an antiQ.ue tractor show.
c.ard, w~tch W?'Jid rescmb!e a plasagreement bars federal prosecutors
The Association is presently uc c~t card, would be assued to
from using evidence in the Vinson sponsorin$ a Father's Day promo· employees of businesses who have
trial against Smith. The U.S. auor- uoo in whtch tickets to a Cincinnati membership in the: Pomeroy Merney's otTICC said it found evidence Reds ball game and one night's chants Association. The card would
against Smith after the Vinson stay at the Clarion Hotel will be entitle the holder to a ssvings of up
prosecution, and that is not covered awarded. Farme{S Bank has donal· to 10 percent on re~ularly priced
by the agreement.
ed the ball game tickets and merchandise at p8rticipating busi·
Followina the verdict. Feinberg WMPO Radio has donated the nesses. The Association would like
said Smith's conviction marks the hotel sccommodations. To register to have this program in place by
end of a four-year investigation of for the prize packa!le stop by any
Continued on page 3

'in

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OR MORE

HUDSON CREAM .·

YUBI YOGURT

3

FLOUR
S LB. BAG

.

~RMOUR

311$.

ASSORTED FLAVORS &amp;

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RC COLA

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48 OZ. CAN

. DIET -RITE ......$599
FULl CASE

ARMOUR

VIENNA SAUSAGE
6

oz.

CANS

MT. DEW, PEPSI-FREE
DIET or REGULAR

PEPSI-COLA
OPEN MON.-SAT.

7 AM- 11

PM

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SUNDAY 8 AM-10 PM

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MT. DEW, DIET PEPSI

PEPSI-COLA .....LY'.P....
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CANNED HAM .....................

tiHIO Vi\lt!l' flll){lJ/\NO ()f'!N

BUY IT.
SELL IT.

"'

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, OhiO, Thureclly, June 13, 1991
Souroo: USDA

Partly cloudy tonight.
Low in mid 60s. Friday,
high in mid-80s.

99C
lftdWIC

CITRUS HILL FROZEN

ORANGE JUICE.

~~

99.~

PRESIDENT SPEAKS OUT • President
Bush speaks on the South Lawa of the White
no·use Wedaesday eveninr. He ridiculed

&lt;;onpess IIi a hopeless bottleHck blocklna solutions for the nation's domestic problems. (AP)

Bush, Democrat.s argue over policies .
WASHINGTON (AP) -Presi·
dent Bush and congressional
Democrats are blaming each other
for sucb naggina problems as crime
and education in a fight that sets
butle lines ror the coming presidenlial campaign.
Amid a fading afterglow of vic' tory at war in (he Persian Gulf,
·Bush took the orfensivc against
majority Democrats in an address
Wednesday night that decried "the
complications, the inaction, the
bickering" on Capitol Hill.
Democrats refused to stay on the
defensive. Even before the president delivered the sunset speech 10
a White House Rose Garden
crowd, they charged he was only
trying to obscure a poor record in
solving domestic problems.
"President George Bush rotlowed up the !()().hour ground war
in the gulf with 100 days of ignoring the economic problems of
America's middle class," said
Democratic National Chairman
Ronald Brown.

lin Fitzwater ack"nowledged as
much, sayi.ng the speech ~e "in
the begmmng throes ~f the kind of
de~ate that wtll defme the cam p81gn."
Bush's latest broadside came
just days after he joined Demqcrats
in a bipartisan celebration of the
allied victory in the gulf. And it
happened .on the same day his
Operation Desert Stonn commander, Gen. H. Norman Schwarzkopf,
was being congratulated on Capitol
Hill by, among others. some of the
Senate Democrats who refused to
autltorize the war five months ago.
The president specifically casti·
gated Congress for moving too
slowly on his domestic agenda,
although he did not single out
Democrats 'in his speech. He said
the clock !tad run down 10 48 hours
on his request that the Congress
pass crime and lransportation legis·
lation in a hujldred days.
"And I tliought a hundred days
was fairly reasonable.'' he said.
"And I WBS'I't asking the Congress

~to~alv~~flew~m
todehera~~min~~
both
ends of Pennsylvania Avenue 30
minutes."
on
WednesdayBush's
67th ed Congressional
Democrats wast·
birthday
- in the sort
of partisan
litde time in responding.
statements that would be echoed
"The president's phony 100many times over in the looming day challenge to Congress to enact
race for the White House.
' his lepslation on crime and trans·
Bush lias never said he will run portauon amounts 10 nothing more
for a second term in 1992, but than political gimmickry and really
therc's little doubt that he will. marks the opening salvo of his
Chief presidential SJ)Oitesman Mar· 1992 campai11n," said Rep. Vic

Mason County School Board ·
names Sheppard superintendent
Gallipolis City Schools Superin·
lilndont Grant Sheppard was hired
by the Mason Count,Y Board of
aducatlon. in • unantmous vott
Wednesday evening to replace
Rick Powell, who will be leaving
the position June 30.
Sheppanl, who bas been super.lnlendent of the OaUipolil school
,system for three years. was offered
. a three-year contrac:t with a salary
of $S2,SOO per year. · Although
Sheppard - unavailable ror com·
meat this morning. his wife said he
· has accePted the position.
·
. He will officially take over July
l. Powell bas accepted the superin.
ltlldent's job in Fayette Counly.
School Board President Nick
Wright called the special session
last nighL Immediately after calling
.tJ!e meeting ~order, ~right vacat·

.,

ed the president's chair 10 nominate
1. Brooks Smith ror the position of
superintendeD~ which died ror lack
of a second.
Board member Harry Siders
then asked fot an executive session
for personnel matlilrs, with Wright
voting no. The board president stat·
cd he felt an executive session
would be deception IQ the public.
Paul Doeffinger, board member,
said he felt an executive session
was necessary to discuss the superinlelldent position, including length
of rerm 8lid salary.
Wright claimed those items
should a1ao be discussed in public,
but was outvoted. He did not attend
the executive sesSion.
Upon reUJrning from the session
seven minutCS later, board member
Coadauecl oa paae 3

•

Fazioorailir&lt;imia.
House Majority Leader Richard
Gephardt of Missouri panned
Bush's "Polaroid presidency ....
The ·real stoey is, of course, that
this president has only a calendar,
not a domestic agenda."
Nearly 1,000 people many
involved in community action programs nationwide, gave the president a warm welcome when he
entered the Rose Garden to the
. strains of "Happy Birthday" by a
mililary band.
.
"I am disapPOinted, but franldy
I am not surprised," Bush said of
the imminent passing or the I 00day deadline.
"I cannot fully explain this
inaction 10 the American people,"
he said. "But I can say this as a
partial consolation: America's
problem solving docs not be~in or
end with the Congress, nor wtth the
Whilil House."
Bush for two years has been
mired in an ideological fight with
congressional liberals over crime

l"_c;o;n;d;•:~~o;n~p:•~3~----------~~----~-----~---------~~--,
·

Mo· unt Pz"natubo conti"nues to erurnt
'1:"

"l(l•cllor of

~:J&amp;O.{ava flow

P-

MANILA, Philippines (AP)
The latest eruption occurred
- Mount Pinatubo spewed a
at 8:41 am. today and lasted ror
deadly cloud of ash and $as
a half hour. It unleashed giant
more than 15 1/2 miles htgh
mudflows down the jagged, ash·
today after a turbulent nigh! in
covered western slppes of the
which the volcano shook with
4,795-foot mountam and into
the most intense fury since it
the Marella River.
L
f
·
·
r
The erupt1·00 sent a gray
awo.e rom stx centuncs o
sleeP,.
avalanche of deadly ash, gases
' What we are seeing now
and molten rock down the
are phenomenal eruptions,'' said slopes. The billowing !ISh cloud
·Raymundo Punongbayan, dircc·
above turned day to dusk.
tor of the Philippine Institute of
Associated Press reporter
Volcanology and Seismology.
Claro Cortes. who was 10 miles
"The story of Mount Pinatubo
west of the crater when the
is not quile over yet."
eruption occurred, said residents
Two deaths have been reportfled on foot in panic, some
ed from the eruptions, which
clulehing chickens 8lid holding
began Sunday.
handkerchiefs berore their faces.
About40 reporters and plioA Filipinb serving in the U.S.
Navy was killed Wednesday
tographcrs ran ror their cars,
when his car skidded on an ash·
taking in as many residents as ·
slickened road north of the
they could.
Subic Bay naval base, llbout 30
Ash fell as rar as Olongapo,
miles southwest of the volcano, · 2S miles to the southwest.
8lid crashed into a bus.
Aviation authorities warned
airline pilots to avoid flying
A member of the Acta tribe
that lives on the slopes of
ncar the volcano slter a Saudi
•·
Airlin•• 747 developed ....nne
Pinatubo ....d he sa his
die in sti eruption
troub;; Wednesday wii;;i it
There was no otTteial conf~·
passed near the ash cloud en
route 10 Manila from Dhahran.
lion, but the man was himself
badly burned.
The plane' landed lllfely and

WeW;.

, I

an inspection showed volcanic
ash in the engines, according to
air conlroller Roserene Reyes.
Today's eruption rollowed a
violent night in which the volcano exploded with a fury, first
atlO:S2 p.m., then AO'ain a short
·
1ater an d a I h~trd ume
time
at
04
IOda
12:.. T~~· is a1~eady the bi~
..
.
bang, Punongbayan satd ...
can't see any other eruption that
will exceed this ··· What we are
seeing now are phenomenal
eruptions."
Another seismologist with
the institute, Delfin Garcia, said
the volcano was entering "an
episode of big eruptions" that
..,ouud continue indefinitely.
Wednesday's eruptions
beaan at 8:40 a.m. with a
tremendous blast that sent forth
a mushroom cloud. It was followed by a second explosion a
few minutes later and a third,
smslJer blast II 11:49 a.m.
After the nigbuime erupdons,
the troops that remained at nearby Clark Air Base, rrom which
most personnel were. evacuated
on Monday, prepared to evacuate.

•

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