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Wednesday, July 10, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The bally Sentinel

Wife catches on after 32 years
Liquid eggs in little cartons?
Ann
What' ll we decorate at Easter?
Landers
By DIANE DUSTON
Associated Press Writer
WASHlNGTON (AP) - Imagine buymg all your eggs as pasteurized liquid in cartons that look like
little m111&lt;. containers.
No more broken shells in the
mixing bowl, but more imponantly,
no chance of salmonella poisoning.
The product is just in the testmarketing stage at grocery stores
for use at home. But it's already
been in use in restaurants for some
time - one way the egg and food
service industties are attacking the
most insidious heallh threatlhey've
faced in a long time , salmonella
enteritidis.
The infection lives in some
hens' ovaries and is transmitted
randomly to some of their eggs. It
appears in less than one half of I
percent of all eggs and is only a
danger in undercooked ones, but
for the very young, very old or very
sick, it can be deadly.
It' s unlikely that the consumer
who buys clean, intact eggs from a
grocery store and immediately puts
th em in the refrigerator at home
will have any problem. Even if a
si ngle egg contains the infection,

refrig eration keeps it from becoming big enough to threaten health,
and cooking until the white is set
and the yolk congealed will kill
salmonella.
But there's danger in restaurants
and institutions where many eggs
are pooled and left stand ing at
room tem perature while orders
come in for foods like omeleues or
scrambled eggs. One infected egg
can contaminate dozens if !hey are
mixed together.
Th e infec tion spreads mo st
quickly during the heat of summer
and became so bad that last year at
about this time, eggs were redesignated a " potentiall y hazardou s
food."
That means that 10 be safe, food
must be refrigerated or cooked and
not allowed 10 sit in certain temperature ranges. Salmonella enteritidis
grows in temperatures between 40
and 140 degrees.
Since the risks cannot be eliminated simply by discarding cracked
eggs or making sure the shell is
saniti ze d, the Food and Dru g
Administration is advocating the
use of pasteurized eggs as a safeguard.

The agency is advising local
health officials to require institutions to use pasteurized eggs
instead of raw eggs for foods like
Caesar salad, uncooked hollandaise
or bearnaise sauce, homemade
mayonnaise, eggnog, ice cream and
egg-fortified beverages. It said pasteuri zed eggs should be used
instead of pooling shell eggs when
large quantities of lightly cooked
egg dishes were being prepared.
Mark Winner, of Michael Foods
Inc. in Minneapolis, a leading manufacturer of pasteurized e~gs,
explained how most pasteunzed
eggs are made:
Eggs are washed and put in an
automatic breaking machine, broken individually and pumped
through a filter into a large tank.
The llquid is heated to 140 or 150
degrees Fahrenheit for three and a
half minutes, just below the temperature and time that would lead
to thickening. Then the liquid is
chilled and packaged.
The pasteurized eggs taste and
cook up just like those fresh from
the shell. Consumers should soon
see little 8- and 16-ounce canons in
supermarket dairy cases.

Dear ADD LaDders: This is for
all wives who think they can trust
their husbands because they come
straight borne from work and neva
go out alone in the evening.
I used to be one of those flea
brains until I discovered, after 32
years of marriage, that my husband
"Leo" has been sneaking around
behind my back for the last 20 years.
Who told me7 A "friend" who got
mad 81 him because she found out
he was cheating on her with another
woman who is also in our social
group.
My husband is one of lhose men
who just loves hardware stores and
can go in for. a screwdriver and not
come out for three hours. (At least
that is where he said he was.)
Although I could never get him to
fix one damned thjng in this house,
he was always happy to help out
any widow in the neighborhood who
needed some wiring or carpentry
work done.
I had to pay someone to fix our
roof last year because Leo always
said he was afraid of heighiS. When
I caught him hanging second-story
screens for a woman who lives three
blocks away, 1 got suspicious. We
had a talk and he convinced me that
suddenly, through prayer, be had
overcome his fear.
Now that I have the goods on the
rat, he has turned into the model

husband. I haven't decided what I
am going to do, but I sure feel like •
fool for having been so blind all
theSe yean. I hope you will print
this lwcr for other wi~ who are
living in dreamland, as I was.•• NO

..

Bowl alliance

Pick 3:871
Pick 4: 5978
Cards : 7 -H, 7 -C

formed

ANN LANDERS '
"1"1, Loo Aarel..

_8,......

Ohio Lottery

ud

NAME, NO CI1Y, JUST OHIO
Creltcn Syadlcole."
DEAR OHIO: You dido't ask for
any advice and itlloesn't sound as if couldn't do anything for me, that 1
you need any. 111 bet Leo behaves a had to call my own physician.

A-D; 5-S

PageS

lot belltr from now on. If he doesn't
The bill for all this is in ~ hands
and you need some reinfOICelllent, of a coUection agency. Last year my
write again.
iJICOOIC was below povaty level. I
Dear Ann Landers: I received a have written several times to lhe
call yesterday which left me sick to hospital and ambulante company
my stomach and exttemely angry. and asked them to send me lhe forms
The call was from a collection for general assiSIBDCC, since I can~
agency person who said if 1 didn't pay tbe bills. They ignore my
pay my bill, I would be reported to requests.
the atlomey general and my credit
It is a disgrace thai we are the
rating would be desttoyed.
only industrialized nation .wil!lout
What did I do to desC7ve lhis? Wu some form of public heallh plan.
I in charge of an S&amp;l, thai made This is just another example of the
sweetheart loans to friends and moral and ethical callousness of
relati~7 Did I buy a new ear that I
lOOse wbo are in positions of power
couldn't afford? No. So what did I in lhis couiltry. - B.M., tmCA,
do that was so tarible7 I fainted in N.Y.
a public place.
DEAR UTICA: It is a disgrace
Someooe called an ambblance and that 33 million Americans are
I was on my way to the hospital wilhout health coverage. I promise
when I woke up. Several hours laler you that this is going to change.
in the emagency room, 1 told the ·The American Medical Association
admitting clerk that 1 had no and several top senators and
insurance and no job. When the congressmen are going to see to it -doctor arrived he asked me if I knew and soon. As for your silWilion, visit
the name of the presidenL I replied, the hospital in person and get the
"George Bush." The doctor said he forms you need.

Vol. 42, No. 47
Copyrighted 1991

Super Lotto: 10,
20,23,24,33,39
Kicker: 944254

'

By JULIE E. DILLON
Sentinel News Stan
The Pomeroy Merchants Association voted 81 iiS regular meeting
on Wednesday to proceed with a
downtown revitahzation project
with a possible total package worth
of $500,000.
Members of the Association
heard the process of that project at
a meeting with representatives
from the Buckeye Hills-Hocking
Valley Regional Development District on Tuesday evening.
According to Boyer Simcox, a
representative from Buckeye Hills,
there is up to $250,000 in grant
money avililable for such a project
but an additional $250,000 would
have to be matched locally - in this
case by the Pomeroy Merchants
Association which will oversee the
project. Five percent of the matchmg $250,000 must be provided by
local government, in this case the
Village of Pomeroy.
Money from the grant would

make it possible to bring buildings
up to code standard both on the
exterior and interior; provide new
facades by creating a desired theme
and developing the facades to meet
that theme; as well as provide work
on sidewalks, curbs, streetlights
and awning~. although not restticted only to these items.
In other matters of the Mer chants, the July 20 car show by the
Oldies But Goodies Car Club was
discussed. The show will take place
on the ~n~ lot from 9 a.m. to 5
p.m. w1th anuque tractors and also
motorcycles on and near Court
StreeL
In conjunction with the show
the Merchants will have sidewall&lt;.
sales as well as other promotional
events. Angie Swift of the Association will be contacting members of
the ~up to donate coupons or gift
certificates which will be given
away by the car club during the
show throughout the day. The Merchants will also sell hot dogs with
sauce at the show.

The group voted to purchase
two magnetic signs that could be
placed on a car during parades in
which Holly Williams, 1991 Heritage Qreen, participates. Williams
is representing the Pomeroy Merchants Association in various
parades and activities in the area
and the signs can be used year after
year.
At the request of Mary Powell,
Meigs County Director of Tourism,
the Association agreed to place
works of local artists in their stores
during the Sternwheeler Festival on
OcL 11 and 12.
Finally, the Merchants agreed to
develop a tour of homes which will
be made an annual event by the
Pomeroy Merchants Association
beginning in 1992. The tours will
be held on Sternwheeler Weekend
or the second weekend in October.
However, due to the short amount
of time remaining until the 1991
Stemwheeler Festival the tours will
not be planned for this year.

Navy dentist Crooks retirin
,.

.,,,
"·

glass case contains the bones of the amputated
leg of Union Gen. Daniel E. Sickles and the can·
non ball wbicb struck bim at tbe Battle of Gettysburg in 1863. (AP')

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
Captain Walter Gene Crooks
who has served with the ·Dental
Corps of the U.S. Navy since 1967
. ~ ~'!Uid is now doing graduate .work at the Medical College of
Georgia in endodootics.
A retirement ceremony for Captain 'Crooks, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Walter Crooks of Middleport, was
held recently at Mahan Hall, Naval
War CoUe~e. Newpon. R.I.
Attend1ng from here were his
mother, his twin sister and her husband, Mr. and Mrs. Daniel
Thomas, and Mr. and Mrs. Louis
Rossi, Point Pleasant, W. Va.
Captain Crooks and his wife, the
former Nancy J o Cornwell of
Columbus, have two sons, John, a
student at Vanderbilt University,
and Mark who will enter Duke
University in the fall.
After graduating from Middleport High School in 1958, Captain
Crooks attended Ohio State University where he received his B.S.
and D.D.S. degrees. Additionally
he has a master's degree,in education from the University of Southern California and a master's
degree in special studies from The

Medical museum shedding
old 'horror show' image
gy.
visitors trekked through its doors
By ROBERT M. ANDREWS
It was here that Walter Reed
every
year
to
gawk
at
its
shelves
of
Associated Press Writer
conquered
yellow fever, allowing
pickling
jars
containing
mutilated
WASHINGTON (AP) - One
construction
of the Panama Canal,
or
deformed
organs
and
fetuses.
of Washington's most distin and
here
that
the world's f11st vacThe
museum's
"horror
show"
guished but obscure museuiJIS cine
against
typhoid
fever was proreputauon,
officials
say,
detracted
home of oddities such as a Union
duced
to
protect
American
soldiers
from
a
129-year
history
of
breakgeneral's amputated leg and pans
throughs in medical research led by in World War I. In 1896. it took
of dead presidents - is shedding
doctors on the staff of the parent one of the first full-body X-ray
its image as a medical freak show
Armed Forces Institute of Patholo- films.
of pickled defonnities.
Even if they knew about it,
tourists would have a hard time
finding the National Museum of
Health and Medicine. It occupies
the blaa.a.,aaD~..annM •·ctf.,:.,,....
1950s bomb shelter at Walter Reed
Army Medical Center, far from the
historic monuments of downtown
Washington.
Once inside, visitors are greeted
by a jumble of exhibits that reflect
the old and newly emerging missions of the nation's pre-eminent
medical repository, which was
founded during the Civil War as
the Army Medical Museum.
WITH FRIES ••••• S2.24
A few steps away from a modern AIDS exhibit is one of the
museum's oldest displays, a glass
case containing the bones of the
"At the End of tho Pomoroy-Mason Bridgo"
amputated right leg of Union Gen.
Daniel E. Sicldes, who was struck
on horseback by a 12-pound canPL ..
non ball at the Battle of Geuysburg
in July 1863.
Also on display in a ''cabinet of
curiosities" are mummified
Siamese twins, a dissected human
ear. a gangrenous human foot and a
well-chewed pair of cotton shorts
and a tunle bone found in a shark's
stomach.
The museum 's 350,000 historical objects, 20,000 specimens and
2.2 million documents and photographs also include one of the
world's finest collections of early
microscopes, primitive hearing aids
and dental instruments, a Peruvian
mummy, wax models of baltlefield
wounds and' two live leeches used
for medicinal bloodletting.
On display are a lock of Abraham Lincoln ' s hair, shirt cuffs
stained with his blood and seven
· tiny skull fragments removed during the autopsy after Lincoln was
assassinated at Ford's Theater on
AJri 14, 1865. Neilrby is a section
ol President J~es Garfield's
spinal column IKted through by his
290
MIDDLEPORT,
assassin's j)ullet.
SECOND
For 80 years, the m~um ~as
OHIO
hou.sed in a large, re4-brick bwldAVE.
ing on theN~ ,Mall next to the
SmithSonian Institution, A million

Fantastic

Opportunit)t For

Frankly. we're In a tight spot. Our warehouse Is big, but not big enough for the deluge of merchandise
that Is pourtng In on usl Like nearly evel)'One else In this business we bought more than we should
have and now we can't do anything about ttl We can't s~p load after load of merchandise now coming
ln. We're bulging at the seams ... and more shipments are arriving dally1 We've cranuned our floors
more than full, and cut prlces to the llmlt for quick sale! We're countlnl( on your ab!Uty to recognize
real bargains and to help yourself to fabulous savings.

Special of the Week!

PIZZA BURGER

A Mulllmedla Inc. Newapaper

Geo~

Washington University.
HIS specialized training included a post dqctoral fellowship in
endodontics and the general post
graduate course at the Navy Graduate Dental School, National Naval
Medical, .Center; Bethesda, Mary.Iand.
.. ....
Upon graduation from denllll
school in 1967, Captain Crooks
was commissioned Li~tenant,
Dental Corps, United State Navy.
He attained the mnk of Captain on
Aug. 1, 1980.
His military assignments have
included Naval Dental Clinic, Norfoil&lt;., Va.; Armed Forces Staff College, Norfolk, Va.; Naval Dental
Clinic, Yokosuka, Japan; Naval
Hospital, Yokosuka, Japan; Naval
Graduate Dental School, Belhesda,
Md ., Naval Dental Clinic. Washington Navy Yard, Washington D.
C., USS Canopus KAS-34 (Scotland, Charleston, S. C., and Rota,
Spain).
,
U. S. Naval Academy Branch
Dental Clinic, Annapolis, Md .;
Naval Dental Clinic, Charleston, S.
C. (Director of Clinical Services,
Aeet Liaison Office, and Executive
Officer); Naval Dental Clinic ,
Guam (Commanding Officer) and
most recently. Dental Dental Cen-

.....

4~ .

WALTER G. CROOKS
ter, Newpoii R. I, endodontist and
quality assurance coordinator.
Captain Crooks is a member of
the American Dental Association
and the American Association of
Endodontists. He is entitled to wear
th e Legion of Merit, the Navy
Achievement Medal, the National
Defense Medical with bronze star,
the Navy Meritorious Unit Commendation, the Navy E Ribbon, the
Sea Service Deployment Ribbon,
and the Overseas Service Ribbon.
The Crooks family now resides
in Augusta, Ga.

WARM WELCOME - Gov. George
Voioovich is greeted by supporters outside the
town ball in Bellaire Wednesday. The governor
went to the southeast Ohio community to sign a

bill designed to save the state's coal industry
while helping utilities comply with a federal
clean-air act. (AP LaserPhoto)
,

Governor: Clean-air coal
bill was compromise
BELLAIRE, Ohio (AP) - Coal
company officials say they aren't
completely satisfied with the state' s
new clean-air coal legislation, but
that it may help salvage southern
Ohio's w~epe&lt;J coal industry.
A bill designed to save the jobs
of 7,000 Ohio coal minm and to
help utiliti'" comply witll a federal
clean-air laws was signed Wednesday by Gov. George Voinovich.
The governor said during a ceremony 81 the town hall in the. heart
of the state's mining region thatlhe
bill was a compromise reached
after much debate between the
industry and lawmakm.
Some coal officials were not
pleased with the final version but
agreed it was better than nothing.
The legislation will allow utilities
to claim tax credits for equipment
needed to burn Ohio coal.
"This is the best possible bill
that we could come up wilh considering the interests of the electric
consumer, electric producers and
the people who supply coal," said
Robert Murray of the Ohio Valley
Coal Company in Alledonia.
"We still have to cam the right
to continue to operate under this
bill. But now we have a chance,"
he said.

Neal Tostenson of the Ohio
Mining &amp; Reclamation Association
said the use of technology will benefit not only the consumer but also
the coal industry .
" I wo~IJt)lave liked to have
seen the state declared it prudejlt to
use clean coal technology, Tostenson said. " We ought to make it a
state policy that it's prudent to use
technology.''
The bill allows utilities that bum
Ohio's high-sulfur coal to claim tax
crediiS for up to 20 percent of the
cost of anti-pollution equipment,
called scrubbers, that reduces the
sulfur content of smokestack emissions. Federal officials blame highsulfur coal for the region's acid
rain problems.
The bill also requires utilities
that switch to cleaner coal from
other states to demonstrate that the
decision reflects their lowest-cost
option of complying with the Clean
Air AcL
Voinovich warned that no matter what action the state took,
Ohioans would still see a increase
in utility rates as a result of the federal law. He said the Clean Air Act
unfairly penalized Ohio and other
midwestern states and that Ohioans
were being forced to shoulder most

of the responsibility for a national
energy problem.
"While Ohio produces I 0 per·
cent of the acid raid problem, we
are being asked to pay for almost
20 percent of th e solution,"
V'oinoVlch said.
Seven lawmakers were at the
ceremony in this eastern Ohio city,
including Sen. Robert Ney and
Rep. Jerry Krupin ski , the chief
sponsors of the bill.
They were joined by representatives of the United Mine Workers
union, industry officials and Craig
Glazer, chairman ofthe Public
Utilities Commission of Ohio.
Ney, R-Bamesville, and Krupir. ski, D-Steubenville , added an
emergency clause in the bill so it
would take effect when Voinovich
signed it. The Legislature passed it
June 28.
American Electric Power Co.
needed the bill to go in effect soon
because the utility must dec ide this
summer whether to install sc rub bers for its Gavin power plant in
Gallia County or switch to coa l
from other states.
AEP had been leaning toward
switching to out-of-state coal. But
after the measure cleared the LegisContinued on page 3

Commissioners adopt budget Meigs County Health Department to

$1.54

By BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel News Stan

The Meigs County Commissioners adopted a proposed budget
for Fiscal Year 1992 when they
met in regular session on Wednesday afternoon.
Between now and January, the
board must shave an estimated
$397 ,000 from the general fund
budget and thousands from other
county departmental budgets to
bring them into balance, as proposed expenditures outweigh
receipts by those figures.
The general fund deficit is
placed at $397,236. Other county
departments that reflect projected
deficits are Dog and Kennel Fund
($3,981): Public Assistance
($98,000); Motor Vehicle and
Gasoline Fund ($13,966); County
Home
($29,000);
MRDD
($16,300); EMS Transfer Fund
($2,346); and Tuberculosis ($552).
County departments that reflect
proposed surpluses are Child Support Enforcement. ($32,000); Real
Estate Assessment Fund ($50,642):
Soil and Water Conservation Service ($4,583); Children's Services
($19,300); EMS ($70,000); Youth
Services ($28,220).
The CDBG fund and Litter Control fund reflect proposed zero bal-

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY

~;OY,OHIO

2 Sections, 12 Pages 25 cenls

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, July 11, 1991

Merchants to move
forward on project

MASON:.FUR

GENERAL'S LEG- Marc Micozzi, the direc·
tor of the National Museum of Health and
Medicine at Walter Reed Army Medical Center
in Bethesda, Md., stands in front of one of the
oldest oddities among the exhibits Tuesday. Tbe

Today variable cloudiness with scaltered
showers and thunder
showers. High near 85.

2-2~\

SEND CARDS TO

GLENN T. CRISP

Robm 312 - I.C.U.
,Grant Medical Center
Grant Avenue
Columbus, Ohio 43215

THANK YOU

ances.

"Several categories, inCluding
those within the general fund, have
submitted fund req.uesiS that lhis
board will find Impossible to
grant," Commissioner Richard
Jones explained Wednesday. ~·It
will be necessary to make numerous cuts in the budget."
The final budget will be drawn
'j

"It will be necessary to make
numerous cuts in the budget."
- Meigs County Commissioner Richard Jones
up and approved prior to January I,
and between now and then, the
board must make the necessary
cuts to bring the budget into balance.
Such a deficit in the proposed
budget is not unusual - Jones estimated that the 1991 proposed budget reflected a similar deficit at this
stage. However, in January of this
year, the commissioners presented
a balanced budget.
Several interdepartmental funds
transfers were approved by the
board yesterday. $1,250 was transferred within the Meigs County
Juvenile Court budget; $5,000 in
the Public Assistance budget and
$10,295.86 in the Children's oServices accounts.
Road Projects
Meigs County Engineer Phil
Roberts and County Garage Superintendent Ted Warner were on
hand to review the Summer Road
Project that was presented to the
board last week.
According to Warner, the completion of this summer's project
will result in the reduction of gravel roads in the county to less than
SO miles. The department has
begun the fl!St project in the summer program, conducting spot
paving on County Road 1 '(Salem
School Lot Road).
As a part of the road program,

Roberts said that all newly hotmixed roads and Issue 2 projects
will be striped.
Roberts also briefly discussed
the pending purchase of a Case
International tractOr for the department to replace a worn-out Massey
Ferguson tractor.
Roberts reported that Issue 2
meetings for 1992 are ready to
commence and villages and townships should beg in considering
the11 projects for the new year and
infonn him of their intentions for
the program.
Other Business
The commissioners appointed
Florence Richards of Middleport to
the Meigs County Housing Authority, and called the first meeting of
that board for July 17 at 7:30p.m.
in Middleport Village Council
Chambers. A resolution establishing the board and granting it
authority to administer 50 HUD
Section 8 housing vouchers was
also passed at the meeting on
Wednesday.
The commissioners also:
• changed the name of Chester
Township Road 430 from Weed
Road to Dairy Lane, upon a request
from the township trustees;
• appointed Economic Development Director Elizabeth Schaad to
the Economic Development
Continued on page 3

offer cancer screening clinic ~July 24

A cancer screening clinic will be
offered by the Meigs County
Health Department on July 24 from
9 a.m. to noon at its offices in the
multi-purpose building at Mulberry
Heights in Pomeroy . Cost of the
clinic is $5 per client.
Accordmg to Norma Torres,
Nursing Director, the clinic is lacking only Jour patient at this time.
County residents who are interested
in making an appoinunent should
call the Meigs County Health
Department at 992-6626 as soon as
pcssible. Appointments are made
on a first caU, first serve basis.
The department is attempting to
provide these clinic services (pap
smear, hemocuhs, urinalysis ,
height and weight, blood pressures,
and a generalized health exam).
Dr. James Witherell will be
donating his services at the clinic
and Mrs. Phyllis Bearhs, Women's
Health Care Technician will be
coordinatin~ services 81 the clinic.
At this ume cancer is the second
cause of death in Meigs County,
according to Ms. Torres. It is on the
rise, nationwiile, but it is one of the
most curable of all major diseases
if it is diagnosed in time, she says.
Early detection of cancer is one
of the aims of the Meigs County
Health Department Cancer Screening Clinic.
Ms. Torres states there are seven
warning signals of cancer: change
in bowel or bladder habits, a sore
tllat does not heal, unusual bleeding
or discharge, thickening or lump in

breast or elsewhere, indigestion or
difficulty in swallowing, obvious

change in wart or mole, or a nagging cough or hoarseness.

Local briefs
Roadwork planned on SR 143
Resurfacing of 6.43 miles of State Route 143 from State Route 7
north of State Route 684 was included in contracts awarded recently
by the Ohio Department of Transportation.
The department awarded 59 highway improvement projects
totaling $28.6 million.
For the work in Meigs County a contract in the amount of
$291,459.72 was awarded to the Shelly Co. of Thornville. Scheduled completion date is SepL 30.

Free vis~n. clinic slated

.

A free .comprehensive vision screening clinic will be held at the
Senior Citizens Center, Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy, on Thursday,
July 18, from 9:30 to 11:30 a.m.
Reservations for an evaluation are not required. The clinic is
being provided by the Marietta Ophthalmology Associates. The
screening will consist of a full range of services including tests to
detect the possibility of cataracts and glaucoma. Those with blurred
vision or those who see halos around lights are encouraged to
attend.
Information regarding conditions and any follow-up treatment
required will be provided to those examined.

County board hires 3
Two coaches and a .teacher were hired at the Tuesday night meeting of the Meigs Local Board of Education.
Rick Edwards was hired as reserve basketllall coach and Rick
Ash as ·assistant varsity coach for the coming school year. Judy
Crooks was employed f~r one year by the board to rep!ace J_oy ·'
Bentley who is on a year s leave of absence from her Me1gs H1gh
Continued on page 3

�'

•

--Area deaths---

:'Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
II I Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON ARE'!\

~~MULTIMEDIA, INC
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CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller
A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Dally Press Asso· clatlon a nd the Ame r ican Newspaper Publishers Association .

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ties .

·Today in history
By Tbe Associated Press
Today is Thursday, July II, lhe 192nd day of 1991. There are 173 days
· left in lhe year.
Today~s Highlight in History:
On July II, 1804, Vice President Aaron Burr mortally wounded for-

mer Treasury Secrelary Alexander Hamilton in a pistol duel near Weehawken, N.J.
On this date:
In 1533, Pope Clement VII excommunicated England's King Henry
VIII.
In 1767, John Quincy Adams, the sixth president of the United States,
was born in Brainb'ee, Mass.
In 1798, the U.S. Marine Corvs was created by an act of Congress.
In 1864, Confederate forces fed by Gen. Jubai Early began an abortive
invasion of Washington D.C., turning back the next day.
In 1934, President Franklin D. Roosevelt became tlie first chief execu: : live to uavel through the Panama Canal, aboard the cruiser ''Houston.''

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, July 11, 1991

Scowcroft wanted to give Iraq the business
wASHINGTON Brent
Scowcroft, P~esident Bush's
natiOnal secum~ adviSer, was
bullish on increasmg business ties
wilh pre-war Iraq at the same time
his former employer, Henry
Kissinger, was pushing for more
commerce and more conciliatory
relations between the United States
and Iraq.
Before moving to the White
House staff, Scowcroft worked for
Kissinger Associates, the highpowered and secretive lobbying
firm headed by the former secre- .
tary of state. In the early months of
the Bush administration, the fmn
worked with a now-defunct group
known as the U.S.-Iraq Business
Forum - a group of top corporate
executives who wanted to do busi·
ness with Iraq and lobbied Washington to bestow Iraq with U.S.
bank credits.
As one of Bush's closest ad visers, Scowcroft argued lhe case for
credits within the administration.
The credits were gmnted but later
were discovered to have been
diverted to Saddam's military
machine, according to White
House sources.
At another point, Kissinger
Associates also threw its weight
behind the U.S. -Iraq Business

t(

Forum by sending an emissary
along with .a delegation. of corporate e~ecullves to Iraq 10 1989 to
meet Saddam.
Kissinger's consulting fmn has
served as a farm system for highlevel government positions, and
Scowcroft apparently subscribes to
many of Kissinger's foreign policy
precepts. There is no evidence that
Scowcroft acted out of a profit
motive, but he may have been 100
well-b'ained in the Kissinger agenda. Scowcroft owned thousands of
dollars in stock in many of the
companies that stood to benefit
from certain export sales to Iraq.
And many of the companies he
owned stock in were involved in
the U.S.·Iraq Business Forum. But,
he sold his shares in those fmns in
1990, according to his financial
disclosure report.
The House Banlcing Commillee,
chaired by Rep. H~on:lllllez,
D- Texas, has beelf11'1'!11jing the
Scowcroft and Kissinger conneclions to U.S. foreign policy-maleing. Committee invesllgators have
linked Kissinger to Banca
Nazionale del Lljvoro, an Italian
bank that gave more than $4 billion
in unreported loans to Iraq, a porlion of which Saddam siphoned for
military pUJ'l)Oses. Kissinger was a

paid membCr of BNL's consultillg
board for l~lernational Policy du;mg a penod when the bank s
Atlanta office was lending billions
to Iraq . Several of Kissinger's
clients were beneficiaries of BNL
largesse to Iraq.
Both the Reagan and Bush
administrations have had a blind
spot in dealing with Iraq. They
ignored warnings from the U.S.
Expon-Import Bank lhat Saddam
was a poor credit risk and could be
using the financial assistance to
boost his military. White House
officials and business leaders
claimed that forging business ties
with Iraq would improve relations
and moderate Iraqi behavior.
White House sources told us
that Scowcroft and Lawrence
Eagleburger, a top State Department official who formerly worked
for Kissinger, argued within the
administration for a more appeasing policy toward Saddam before
hts 10vas1on of Kuwait last summer. Even afterward, Scowcroft
argued internally against helping
the Kurdish rebels overthrow Saddarn. Scowcroft claimed that the
breakup of Iraq would spread mstability throuf!hout the Persian &lt;;Julf.
The advice only served 10 the
end to benefit Saddam, who conlln-

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In 1955, lhe new U.S . Air Force Academy was dedicated at Lowry Air
Base in Colorado.

-i.

In 1978, 216 people were killed when a tanker truck overfilled with
' - propylene gas exploded on a coastal highway south of Tarragona, Spain, ·
sening off a fireball.

:

In 1979, the abandoned U.S. space station Skylab made a spectacular
return to Earth, burning up in the aunosphere and showering debris over
the Indian Ocean and Australia.
In 1980, Amencan hostage Richard I. Queen, freed by Iran after eight
months of capllvny because of poor health, left Tehran for Switzerland.
In 1985, Nolan Ryan of the Houston ASb'os beearne lhe fliSt pitcher in
major league baseball to slrike out 4,000 batters as he fanned Danny Heep
of the New York Mets.
In 1989, Laurence Olivier, considered by many the finest Englishspeaking actor of his generation, died at age 82.
Ten years ago: Urban violence involving youths that had plagued
Britain for a week flared anew as riots broke out again in London and
eight provincial cities.

ues to threaten world peace despite
his temporary defeat. He's the
same ruthless dictator who derives
power from lhe barrel of the gun,
and retains power through a police
stale. Intelligence sources sa~ he IS
even reviving Iraq's cla•m to
Kuwait. In his international dealings, he's as untrustworthy as ever.
He routinely violates hiS promises,
most notably those relating to his
nuclear bomb-making capabilities.
Saddam is stalling on the ceasefire and rebuilding his military
might, even as he is_ permitted to
retain the fruits of h1s aggressiOn
by hanging on to billions of dollars
worth of stolen Kuwaiti property.

THE NEXT CRISIS - Serious
uouble is brewing for the nation's
credit unions. Federal regulators
are scrambling to prevent the
industry from going the way of lhe
savings and loans. The cns•s has
been caused by real estate loans
that are turning sour. These risky
loans make up one-third of the
industry's total assets. When we
reported earlier on the potential for
problems in the credit union industry, we were flooded with critical
mail from industry executives. The
loudest complaint carne from the
National Credit Union Administration, which is supposed to regulate
the industry. Now guess what? The
same National Credit Union
Administration has sent a letter to
indu~try executives about the high
risk of real estate loans.

•

Not everything went as planned

----~- ---- --· -- .

Continued from page I
School teaching positiOn.
Football coach Mike Scaggs was give permission by the board
for 15 instructional days in August to be used for conditioning.
Tbe board voted to join the Coalition for Rural and Appalachian
Schools for the 1991-92 school year.
Following the meeting, the board moved into executive session
to discuss negotiations.
Attending were Supt. James Carpenter, Treasurer Jane Fry, and
board members, Raben Barton, president, Robert Snowden, l,arry
Rupe, and Richard Vaughan.

Hit-skipper charged
Shawn Gilmore, 27, of Pomeroy, who fled from lhe scene of an
accident on Mulberry Avenue, Pomeroy, early Wednesday morning,
has been char~ed with leaving the scene of an accident, opemting
under suspenston, no insurance, failure to conttol, and obstructing
official business. The charges will be processed in the court of
Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler ne~t week. Gilmore appeared voluntarily at the Police Station several hours after the acctdent

EMS answers 7 calls

space.
In person, a1 83 , Dr. Teller is
living proof that it is no disadvantage to be short (or ''vertically
challenged," as we say these days).
Walking determinedly, with lhe aid
of a wooden staff a good foot taller
lhat he is, he looks for all the world
like an Old Testament prophet your first impulse is to get out of
his way. His voice, a booming baritone in which he enunciates long,
colorful and perfectly constructed
sentences, fortifies the impression
powerfully, and a thick Hungarian
accent rounds out lhc image: Here,
at last, is Absolute Aulhority.
Conservatives will be interested
to know that, in just about every
respect, Edward Tellct is one of
!hem. He not only loves this country, he has served it in ways few
other men could, and in which even
fewer were willing to. On behalf of
a grateful nation, I thank him.

WASHINGTON (NEA) - In
the weeks following lhe successful
conclusion of hostilities in Iraq and
Kuwait, we were bombarded with
glowing reports from lhe Pentagon
on how perfectly men, equipment
and systems performed. However,
now that the mililary services and
joint staff are conducting a more
thorough review, stories are beginning to seep out that not everylhing
worked as well as initially indicated.
As was the case with the conflicts in Grenada and Panama, the
biggest U.S. mililary problem continues to be interservice rivalries.
According to one analysis prepared
for the Joint Chiefs, Desen Storm
commander Gen . Norman
Schwankopf spent as much time
refereeing imerservice .disputes as
he did planning to fight the Iraqis.
Each service insisted that it be ·
given its fair share of the workload,
and its fair share of the glory. As a
result, many decisions were made
not on the basis of military necessity but to placate service heads.
The joint command structure
Schwarzkopf headed had been
designed to prevent this. However,
problems arose nonetheless, such
as planners from one service refusing to believe that ~other service's
weapon systllms could be IIUSted to
accomplish a mission.
One example is that Air Force
officers, planning the air war, ·

refused to believe that the Navy's
new Tomahawk missile would
work. At frrst they simply refused
to include the Tomahawk among
available weapon systems. When
the Navy came running to
Schwarzkopf, he ordered lhe planners to include Tomahawk slrikes.
But they were still so unsure of the
missile's reliability they ordered
two to three times the number of
Tomahawks frred at each target as
the Navy thought necessary.
In lhe end the Navy was proved
right. Tbe'fomahawks hit their targets 85 percent of the time. But
with each missile costing almost $2
million, one Navy estimate is that a
half-billion dollars was wasted in
shooting Tomahawks at targets
already desb'Oyed.
Air Force planners were also
unsure !hat Navy aircraft were suited for the ~nds of bombing mis·
sions needed. So most key mtssions
in the air war were given either to
Air Force pilots or Army attack
helicopters. The war ended so
quickly that the Navy and the
Marine· Corps ended up having
only minor roles.
Now the Navy is said to be
downplaying the results. Adm.
Frank Kelso, chief of Naval Operations, has reportedly circulated a
long memo within the Pentagon
calling the Gulf conllict "unique"
and warning that it should not be
used "as a model for all future

By Robert J~ Wagman

operations."
There appears to be general
agreement within lhe Pentagon that
the three biggest difficulties
encountered in the Gulf were com·
munical.ions, transpon and intelligence.
The most famous story from the
1987 Grenada invasion recounts
how an Army unit found itself
pinned down, wanting to call in a
fire mission from a Navy ship. off.
shore. However, the soldiers could
not communicate with the ship. So
an officer crawled to a pay phone,
made a credit.,;ard call to the operations officer at his home base in
Georgia; he in tum called the Navy
at the Pentagon, which in turn
radioed the ship to order the fire
mission.
The Pentagon has insisted such
communications problems no
longer exist. But one preliminary
analysis of the Gulf conflict asserts
they not only still exist, "but they
may be worse' then ever. On countless occasions, Army and Air Force
units could not communicate with
Naval ships, and Air Force pilots
had difficulties communicating
with Naval pilots they encountered
in the skies over Iraq and Kuwait,
using secl!fC. scrambled communications.
Things got so bad that Air Force
commanders in Riyadh - who
were unable to send daily targeting

information directly to Navy computers aboard carriers - resoned
to hand-delivering floppy disks
with the information to each carrier
every night.
The transportation problem has
long been known. The buildup 100k
much 100 long. On the day the land
war began, after six months, some
units' equipment had still not
arrived. One analysis says that if
the war had lasted even four weeks
~ instead of four days - it is likely that critical shortages would
have occurred.
As for the intelligence failure,
Gen. Schwarzkopf has already -!Old
a congressional committee that
much of the intelligence he was
given "was so watered down that it
was essentially useless." He also
complained that the intelligencegathering function was so spread
out over competing agencies that
field commanders could not get the
information they needed in a time! y
enough manner for them to make
decisions.
Less critical, that is unless you
were a soldier in the field, the
Army now admits that its muchheralded MRE - Meal Ready to
Eat - didn't work as a way to feed
large numbers of troops over an
extended period. An order has gone
out to find a better way to feed
troops in the field.

dens there.
Ward died on Wednesday, July
3, 1991 in lhe emergency room at
City Hospital in Wellsville where
he was ta~~:en after becoming ill.
Born in Portland on Jan. 31,
1912, he was the son of the late Ed
and Frances Danforth Ward. He
resided in Wellsville most of his
lifetime.
He was a millwright at the former Crucible Steel Co. before retiring in 1977. He ~ed with the lJ.
S. Marine Corps 10 the South Pacific during World War II, and was a
member of the American Legion
Post 374, Veterans of Foreign
Wards, Post 66, Eagles Aerie 772,
Loyal Order of Moose Lodge 122,
and United Steelworkers of America, Locall212.
A son, Paul Ward, preceded him
in death.
Survivors include three sons,
Alfred Ward of Calcutta, Frank
Ward of Tempe, Ariz., and John
Ward of East Liverpool; two stepsons, Raymond (Bud) Boso of
Glenmoor, and Joseph Boso of
Alliance; six daughters, Iva (Mrs.
Clarence) I!awrence of Portland,
Mrs. Albina SWlley and Darlene
(Mrs. James) Curran of East Liverpool, Sally (Mrs. Richard) Harris
of Tulsa. Okla.• and Linda (Mrs.
Kenneth) Cochran and Zona (Mrs.
Fred) Crabttee of Wellsville.
Also surviving are _two halfbrothers, Gene Ward and Andy
Ward of Portland; three sisters,
Mrs. Josie Jackson and Mrs. Goldie
Anthony of East Liverpool, and
Mrs. Mary Schoonover of
Struthers, 38 pdchildren, and 47
great-grandchildren.

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

By William A. Rusher

Berry's World

"WOW! This guy assumed responsibilitv tor
HIS OWN ACTIONS."

Funeral services for Ray Ward,
79, of Clark Ave,, Wellsville, a former Meigs County resident, were
held Simday at the Martin Funeral
Home in Wellsville. Burial was in
the Shadow Lawn Memory. Gar-

Let's all thank Dr. ,E dward Teller

On the Fourth of July, the TV became a citizen of the United
was full of bands, flags, baton States.
Now the plot begins to thicken. (both fission and fusion) , first at
twirlers and the other paraphernalia
of the patriotic paradigm . The Dr. Teller had long been engaged, Los Alamos and then at Berkeley's
Five years ago: An Air Force plane crashed in Sequoia National Forest "Am erika" -haters were staying as a theoretical physicist, in such Lawrence Livermore Laboratory,
fields as quantum, molecular and and as a Senior Research Fellow at
..in California. Officials revealed little, but experts speculated the plane under their rocks for lhe holiday.
It
suddenly
occurred
to
me
that
nuclear physics. On learning in the Hoover Institution.
was a radar-evading stealth fighter, a plane whose existence had yet to be
there
couldn't
be
a
better
time
to
1939, along with the rest of the sciAcross the years, Dr. Teller's
officially confmned.
pay tribute to a great American. entific community, !hat nuclear fis· contributions to American's securiOne year ago: Leaders of the so-called "Group of Seven" nations con- Best of all, lhe one that I have in sion had been achieved, he was ty are literally too numerous to
cluded their summit in Houston by encouraging Soviet President Mikhail mind is still very much alive. Why concerned over the possibility !hat mention. In addition to working on.
S. Gorbachev to enact reforms in return for Western aid.
do we tend to reserve our praise Nazi Germany might be able to the original atom bomb, he fought
create a new class of dreadfully and won the crucial battle with J.
Today 's Binhdays: Actor Tab Hunter is 60. Singer Bonnie Pointer is until its object is dead?
So
let
me
pay
tribute,
here
and
destructive atomic weapons. He Robert Oppenheimer, early in the
40. Boxer Leon Spinks is 38.
now, 10 Edward 'feller_
was soon at work on the Manhattan 1950s, over whether this country
To get the worst over with frrst, Project, to ensure that America should build a hydrogen (i.e.
Thought for Today: " Education is the ability to listen to almost anything without losing your temper or your self-confidence. " - Robert he is a white European male. He won the fearful race.
fusion) bomb. (The Soviets were
was born in Hungary in 1908 and
Frost, American poet (1874-1963).
As we know, thanks to Dr. doing so, but Oppenheimer and his
received his Ph.D. in physics at the Teller and citbers like him, America pro-communist circle didn't want
University of Leipzig in 1930 as a did. When World War II ended, America to match Moscow.)
graduate student under the great Teller beearne Professor of Physics Teller's has also been the major
Werner Heisenberg. With the at the University of Chicago.
scientific voice supporting the bril•
advent of Nazism, Teller left GerBut the Cold War was upon us, liant concept of a Strategic Defense
many, and in 1935 accepted and soon the Soviet Union had Initiative, whereby this country
appointment as Professor of stolen the key technology and con- would be defended against incomPhysics at George Washington structed its own atomic bomb. Dr. ing missiles by means of small
University in Washington, D.C. In Teller returned to government work orbiting satellites capabable of
1941, to our great good fonune, he in the field of nuclear weapons detecting and destroying them in

-·

Ray Ward

MINI-EDITORIAL - The
international community is in an
uproar about the way the United
States stuck a knife in the back of
an environmental initiative to protect Antarctica. The United States
had led an international conclave to
believe that it would back a 50-year
ban on mining and mineral
exploitation in Antarctica. But the
State Department stuck its nose
into the negotiations and sabotaged
the 50-year ban. Congress passed
two laws directing the Bush administration to pursue the ban. Yet the
administration put profits ahead of
protecting the world's largest pristine wilderness area. This violates
the spirii, if not the letter of the
law.

In 1974, the House Judiciary Committee released volumes of evidence
: it had gathered in its WaJergate inquiry.
: In 1977, lhe Medal of Freedom was awarded posthumously to the Rev.
· Martin Luther Kmg Jr. m a While House ceremony_

By Jack Anderson
and Dale Van Atta

Violet Mae Parlr.er, 68, of 47661
State Route 248 in Long Bottom,
died on Wednesday, July 10, 1991
at St. Joseph Hospital in Parkersburg, W.Va. following an extended
illness. She was a homemaker.
Born on August 12, 1922 in
Athens County, she was the daughter of the late Kertley and Tressie
Meadows Spencer.
Surviving are a daughter, Mrs.
Lewis (Carolyn) Smith of
Pomeroy; a son, Dennis Parker of
Long Bottom; three sisters, Mildred Holter of Mansfield, Eunice
Midlciff, Reedsville, and Mary Jane ·
Osburn, Washington, W.Va.; a
half-sister, Jessie Meadows of
Spencer, W.Va.; five brothers, Guy
Spencer and Richard Spencer, both
of Tuppers Plains, Bob Spencer of
New Me~ico, Kirt Spencer of
Grove City and Virgil Spencer of
Somerset; and two gmndchildren.
Besides her parents, she was
preceded in death by her husband,
Marion Parker, and three brothers.
Funeral services will be held on
Saturday at I p.m. at Ewing Funeral Home with Rev. Sharon Hausman officiating. Burial will be in
Meigs Mental)' Garden.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. and 7
p.m. I!&gt; 9 p.m. on Friday.

.

Seven calls !br assistance were answered on Wednesday and earl
Thursday by units of Meigs County Emergency Medical Services.
At 2:15p.m. on Wednesday, Pomeroy squad went to Pine Tree
Drive. Carol Craft was taken to Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital.
At 4:31 p.m., Life Flight landed at lhe heliport and took Jessie Panlow to Children's Hospital. At 5:22p.m., Syracuse unit went to Second Street and took Thomas Addison Allen to Veterans Memorial
'Hospital. At 6:28p.m., Middleport unit went to Overbrook Center.
Adda Newell was taken to Veterans and lhen to Holzer Medical
Center. At 6:41 p.m., Middleport unit was taken to Laurel Street
Christine Copec was taken to Veterans. At 8.:57 p.m., Middleport
squad went to Zuspan Hollow Road for Charles Wise, who was
taken to Veterans.
On Thursday at 1:05 a.m., Rutland unit went to Salem Center.
Kayla Icenhower was taken to Holzer.

Court news

Di~orce granted
Correction
has been granted in
A
divorce
The name of Jeffrey McKinney
Meigs
County
Common Pleas
in Friday's report of Pomeroy
Court
to
Martha
Wiseman from
Mayor's Court was incorrect. Jerry
Evan
Wiseman.
McKinney of Middleport was fmed
forDWI.

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial Hospital
WEDNESDAY ADMISSIONS
· Mildred Johnson, Middleport.
WEDNESDAY DISCIIARGES
-George Harris, Viclcie Boso, Walter Couch, Merle Manl~ IWd Martin Bowland.
~-

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The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, July 11, 1991

Violet M. Parker

..

.-

Sports physicals for
students scheduled
Sports physicals for all sports
for the 1991-92 school year at
Southern Local Junior High and
High School will be done on
Wednesday, July 17, at lhe office
of Dr. Douglas Hunter in Racine.
Tbe schedule for the physicals will
be as follows:
9 a.m. to noon, - seventh, eighth
and ninth graders (boys and girls)
I p.m. to 5 p.m. - tenth, eleventh
and twelfth graders (boys and girls)
There will be no charge for the
physicals on this day. However,
there will be no makeup day for lhe
physicals. If unable attend on
Wednesday,' other arrangements

Meigs announcements
Hymn sing
There will be a hymn sing at the
Faith Full Gospel Church in Long
Bottom on Friday at 7:30p.m. featuring a group from Parkersbmg,
W.Va., Bill Cadle of Middleport,
and other local talent. Pastor Steve
Reed invites lhe public.
AA meeting
There will be a 12-step AA
meeting on Sunday at 7 p.m. at the
J.T.P.A. office in Pomeroy, 117
West Second St.
Swimming party
The Trinity Church Youth
Group will have a swimming party
on Sunday at the Holter Farm
beginning at 2 p.m. Food will be
served at 5 p.m. and parents are
asked to bring a covered dish. Hot
dogs will be furnished by the
church.
Lodge to meet
The Shade River Lodge No. 453
will meet tonight (Thursday) at the
hall in Chester. All master masons
are invited to attend. Refreshments
will be served.
Training slated
The Community Assault Prevention Services Project of Gallia,
Jackson and Meigs Counties will
be conducting training for new
recruits on July 24 and 15 at the
CAPS office, 327 Main Street,
Jackson. Any interested party may
contact the office for reservation.
Call 286-6611 for furlher information.

Friday, July 12
Accu-Wcathe... forecast for daytim e conditwns and high temperatures
MICH.

should be made to have the physical done. There will be a fee of $15
for patients wishing to schedule
with Dr. Hunttr after July 17.
Children should wear shorts or
loose comfortable clothing on the
day of the physical and bring a
completed physical card with them.
The cards can be obtained at the
office at Southern High School. If
the student cannot come during the
time allotted for their age group,
they should go ahead and come at
another time throughout the day.
For further information call Howie
Caldwell at 949-261 I or Dr.
Hunter's office at 949-2683.

commissioners..
Revolving Loan Commillee and to
the Meigs County Local Review
Committee;

OH 10 Weather

\

'

\

e

\

IMansfield I 79° I• 1
IND .

,, ,, ,

•

• @:ol~ mbu s [ 81 o l

.___c_on_ti_nu_ed_rr_om_p;_a.:...ge_l_

• executed an addendum grant
for a Community Conections pilot
program due to the program's
101erim budget.
Attending, in addition to Jones,
Warner and Roberts, were Commissioners David Koblentz and
Manning Roush and Clerk Mary
Hobstetter.

Showsrs T-storms Rain

Flurries

Snow

Ice

Oulolde Ml!lp Counly

13 Weeks .................................. $23.40
26 Weeks .................................. $45.50
52 Weeks ....... .......... .. ..... ..... ..... $88.40

Sunny

Pt. Cloudy

VIs ASSOCilllfKJ Press Graph/CSNet

~ 1991

you want it ...
you·ve got it ...

Weather
Soutb central Obio:
Thursday, variable cloudiness
with scattered showers and thunderstorms . High near 85. Light
mainly east winds. Chance of rain
40 percent Thursday night, mostly
cloudy wilh a chance of showers or
thunderstorms.
Satarday tbrongh Monday:
Saturday, showers and thunderstorms likely, Highs from lhe upper
70s to low 80s. Lows in the 60s.
Sunday, fair north. A chance of
showers and thunderstorms south.
Fair statewide on Monday. Highs
·80-85. Lows in the 60s.

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 4524
•

. ' ""'"'""'
J~
Ll(HJi l

Cloudy

Accu-Wealher. Inc.

NTHE ClASSifll~
IJ . OO

I J . OO

UARGA : N /o!Ar! Nf[ S

aARGAltl

WlST

SATU it OA~

~ IGHT

I. SUNDAY

TUES DAY

fRltli\Y 7:ZO
SATURDAY l , OQ,UO,UO
SUHDAY l ,OQ,J ,1Q,Io10
l«lH . • lHURI .I ' 20

Hospital news
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges, July 10 - Margaret
Church, Betty Clarkson, Justin
Dill, Sally Fielder, Brandon
Gilben, Pamela Hutt, Chad Mayes,
Hill Ogdin and Ronnie Riley.
Births, July 10 - Mr. and Mrs.
Carroll Adlcins, a son, Patriot Mr.
and Mrs. Ricky Mayes, a daughter,
Point Pleasant, W.Va.

KEVIN COST"ER

ROBIN "Hooo
~Ni l

0 1 Hllf\ti

I'U l l -&lt;1 ....

I

I

TODAY 7:1 0,9 :40
FRI DA Y 7. 10.9 40

SAT . l : l 0 ,3 :40,7 · \0 ,9 40
SUN . ! : 10, 3 :40,7· 10. 9 :40
t()N . • THURS . J

· 40

110

P ~ 5H~

1'10 IAAGI.U NlGI!l

fODAY 7:00 ,9 :30
FRI DAY 7 00 ,9 : 30
SAT I :00,3 30.7 :00,9: 30
SUN. l :00 , 3: 30.7 ·00 ,9: 30
MON. - THUR S.7 :00,9 : JU

COM ING SOONJ M
B!ll &amp; l[O' S BOGU S JOURNH "

THE 1991

Eastern to bold car wasb
The Eastern High School Boys'
Basketball team will hold a car
wash on August 3 at Tuppers
Plains Gulf Station from 9 a.m.
until 5 p.m. The car was is free of
charge.

Governor...
Continued fr~m page I
lature, AEP officials said it provided information lhat would be useful
in its deliberations.
Voinovich also stopped in New
Lexington in soulheast Ohio on his
way to Bellaire and gave a $1 million check to a job retraining center. The money for the Hocking,
Perry and Aihens Community
Action Center is intended to retrain
about 500 coal industry workers
who lost their jobs.

NOTICE
Mason Furniture's

Big Furniture
Discount Sale
Final Days
Friday and Saturday
July 12 and 13

The Meigs County Fair Tab Is
Coming August 9, 1991.
Advertising Deadline Is
August 2, 1991.
CALL DAVE TO PlACE YOUR AD IN THIS
YEAR'S EDITION

lnalde Ml!lp toanly

t3 Week• ..... .. .................. .. .. .. ... $21.84
26 Weeks ..................... .... ......... $43.16
52 Weeks ......... .............. : .......... $84.76

PA

992-2155

�The Daily Sentinel

Sports

· Thursday, July 11, 1991

In an attempt to quiet post-season griping,

Major college bowls to form alliance

Thursday, July 11, 1991
Page--4

By STEVEN WINE
AP Sports Writer
MIAMI (AP) - It could be the best thing that's happened to New
Year's Day since the invention of aspirin.
A powerhouse lineup of four m8JOr bowls, two conferences and Notre
Dame said Wednesday they've fanned a coalition to improve the chance
that the nation's two top-ranked teams wtll meet each Jan. I.
. ..
"Most everybody says this sounds like, looks like and sm~lls like It s
going to be a great situation," said Harper Dav1dson, pres1dent of the
Orange Bowl Committee.
The alliance will include the Orange, Canon, Sugar and Fiesta bowls,
as well as the Atlantic Coast and Big East conferences and Notre Dame.
Negotiations began last February on the agreement, which takes effect
with lhe 1992 season.
.
It could quiet proponents of a playoff system •. who complam most
loudly when the two top-ranked teams play m dtfferent bowl games.
That's happened the past three seasons and s1x of the past e1ght
.. .
"I've never been in favor of anylhing beyond the Jan. 1 JlllrlleS, S81d
the Rev. E. William Beauchamp, Notre Dame e~ecuuve v.1ce pre!!lttent.
"If this helps eliminate or reduces furlher discuss1on of nanonal cham)llonship (playoff) games, I'm for it"
In addition, the mad midseason scramble each year by top bowls to fill
out the postseason lineup will become a thing of a past. The alliance plans
to wait until after the final regolar-season Assoctated Press poll m early
December to detennine its bowl pairin~s.
. . . ,, .
"One of the nicest things is that this has got a lot of flexibility, S81d
Jim Brock, executive vice president of the Canon Bowl. ''I think the lateness with which we will decide matchups ts better for everyone. It will
definitely improve bowl match ups."
.
.
Under the agreemen~ the Big Eight Conference w1ll conunue to send

While trying to iron out contract dispute,

Sanders stays away from Lions' camp
By The Associated Press t
Barry Sanders wants a new contract. Wayne Fontes wants Sanders
in camp. Neither got what he wanted.

Sanders did not show at the Silvc rd ome on Wednesday for the
Detroi t Lions· first day of camp,
mandatory for all players except
for veteran offensive and defensive
lineman and kickers who were with
the team last year.
" The camp is a voluntary camp
for some positions and mandatory
for others," said Fontes, the Lions'
head coach. " It was mandatory for
all the skilled athletes to come in
and Barry was one of them. l wanted him in here and for him not be
here surprises me.··
Sanders. m the third year of a
five.year , $5.9 million contract, is
seeking a new pact. He will be
fined $1,500 for every day of camp
he misses.
Linebacker Mike Cofer, in the
option year of his contrac~ failed to
repon and also will be fined.
Sanders ' attorney, David Ware,
said Sanders knew when camp

started and that he was scheduled practice and several veterans
to repon Wednesday.
remain unsigned.
" I think it's fair to say thi s is an
Steve Beuerlein remains the
effon on mine and Barry's pan to only quarterback in camp while
make sure this proc'ess comes to a Marinovich, the rookie from Southclose soon, " Ware said. "I'm very ern Cal, negotiates his contract.
hopeful we can get this resolved.
Among the unsigned vets are
Barry would like to be !here.··
Pro Bowl center Don Mosebar.
Sanders, selected third overall in quarterback Jay Schroeder, defenthe 1989 dtaft, led the league in sive linemen Bob Golic and Scott
rushing last season with 1,304 Davis, running back Marcus AUen
yards. He averaged 5.1 yards per and wide receiver Mervyn Fernancarry and scored 13 touchdowns.
dez.
San Francisco 49ers
New Orleans Saints
Defensive lineman Ted Wash Defensive lineman Frank Warington, San Francisco's first-rounil ren behaved well during his yeardraft choice, signed a four-year long drug suspension, so Commiscontract as training camp opened sioner Paul Tagliabue has cleared
with no rookie holdouts.
him to return, team president Jim
Six veterans remain unsigned, Finks said.
including tackle Bubba Paris, who Pbiladelpbia Eagles
has been ordered tO repon at 325
Philadelphia signed free agent
pounds or less or risk losing his kicker Dan Plocki, who played for
job. He is said to be hovering in the the Arena Football League, and
330-pound range after getting up as waived veter.an punter John
high as 375 pounds during lhe off- Te1tschik.
season.
Plocki, who played collegiately
L.,o\. Raiders
at Maryland,_received a one-year
First-round pick Todd Mari- contract. He was picked in the 11th
novich has missed three days of

Holyfield to tangle with Tyson in
long-awaited fight on November 8
Ry ED SCHUYLER JR.
AP Boxing Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - Evander
Holyfield , the undisputed heavyweight champion, summed 1t up m
one word for sports fans and probably for Mike Tyson, too.
"Fine," Holyfield said when
told by manager Shelly Finkel that
he will fight Tyson on Nov. 8 m
Caesars Palace at Las Vcgas.
It is The Fight, not a rematch
with Foreman, at least at this time.
which was about to happen.
Shelly Finkel, Holyfield's manager, said a fight with Foreman for
Nov. 8 was ready to be signed.
Suddenly Wednesday, the Holyfield-Tyson match was made after
a meeting between Dan Duva, the
champion's promoter. and Don
King, who promotes fanner champion Tyson.
Foreman can take a bow for his
role.
"He (King) had to do it,"
Finkel said. "Once he lost Foreman, where was he going?"
King, who has said, "We don ' t
need Holyfield," had made a major

round of the 1989 draft by Cleveland but was released before the
regular season. He played for the
Washington Commandos and
Orlando Predators of the Arena
League.
Teltschik, 27. played five years
in Philadelphia after being released
as a rookie by the Chicago Bears.
He had a 40.1-yard average on 345
punts and was twice named the
team's most valuable player on
special teams, but missed all of last
season while undergoing five operations on his right knee.
Pittsburgh Steelers
Cornerback Dwayne Woodruff,
the last remaining member of a
Pittsburgh Super Bowl championship team, announced his retirement as the Steelers opened camp.
Woodruff, 34, had been without
a contract since Feb. 1. He had
wrestled with the decision of
whether to try to return for his 13th
season or concentrate full time on
his law career. ,
Denver Broncos
Running back Steve Sewell
agreed to a three-year contract,
leaving the Broncos with five
unsigned veterans.
Eight of the team's 10 draft
choices also are without contracts,
but general manager John Beake
said he expects most to be in by
Friday, when training camp opens.

'

John Yates Wre~tling Camp
scheduled to open July 22
COOLING OFF - Detroii Lions 'uard Shawn Bouwens sprays
cold water on his face to cool ofT durmg the r.rst day or the Lions'
camp at the SUverdome in Pontiac, Mich. Tbe Lions are prepari~g
for their Hall of Fame game against Denver on Saturday, July 27 m
Canton, Oblo. (AP)

effort to make a fight between
Tyson and Foreman, the 42-yearold folk hero. But as of Tuesday it
appeared Holyfield would fill lhe
Nov. 8 date with a rematch against
Foreman, who he outpointed over
12 rounds on April 19.
"We had it (Holyfield-Foreman)," Finkel said. "If they hadn't
contacted us yesterday, the deal
Jose Sulaiman, president of the
World Boxing Council, contacted
Duva on Tuesday, saying that Ki~g
wanted to meet him , according to
Duva
Foreman , who is supposed to
fight Boone Pultz on Sept. 7 at Las
Vegas for $5 million on HBO,
remains in the championship picture.
Part of lhe deal, Finkel said, was
for "the winner to make a goodfailh deal to fight Foreman.·'
"Dan will promote in association with Don King," Finkel said.
"Evander will be guaranteed $30
million and Tyson $15 million .
Evander will get 60 percent of rev(See HOLYFIELD on Page 6)

11111111
10W30,
10W40

....
Ill' liW30

special price

this week only

Scoreboard
In the majors ...

Scioto Downs results

NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Division

w

Tum
PllUburah
New Yock
SL LouiJ

--··
..
..
.........
Chicago
Montreal
·········
Philioddphi&gt; .......

Pel.
31 .608
34 .515
37 .543
44 .463
47 .427
49 .402

COLUMBUS. OlilO (AP) - Scioto
Downa result• for Th11rsday, July II.

GH

L

48
46
44
38
35
33

l5

5
11.5
14.5

16.5

West Division
w L Pel.

Toam
L..o. Angde~

Fint R.co-$1,400CWmins Pa&lt;:e.
Lady Luck (Ledford) $11.00, 4.40,
S.OO; Sweet Miachic.f ( Pne:r Jr.) $4 .60,
4.00; Will Or Won't (Ater) $~ . 20; Time-

2m .
Also Raced-Standing Proud, Style's

o·, Angel Baby,

Beet Data, Standing Belle Scratch--No De-

GB

10.5

i&gt;a".
TrifCCII (~M) $298.80.
PedCCII (~6) $49.40
Second Rlco-$1 ,800 Conditioo Pace.
KcMcdy Chn (Rankin) $3.60, 3.20,

14.5
IS .5

5.40; Sea Sec (Wahen) $10. 60; Time-

49 31

613
ClndnnatJ
-·-- 44 36 .550
........ 39 40 .494
Allmll
San lheao ....... 40 43 .482
San Fnnruco ... ... 35 46 .432
Hous&gt;m
.... ... .. 34 47 .420

We~lhcr, 74 tnd cloudy, tnc.i.,Jood.

Ril\ht, Candy N ROICI,

s

9.5

Tonlgbl's games
Pltttbur&amp;h (Z. Smllh 9-6) at Cincinnati (Hammond 7-5), 7:35p.m.
Lm Anaelea (Ojeda 7-5) at Montreal

(Gardner ~5). 7:35p.m.

.
San Franciac:o (Wilaon 4-7) at Philadel·
phi• (Mulhcllond 7-8). 7;35 p.m.
St. Lou~ {DeLeon 3-7) at Atlanta (Avery 8-5), 7.40p.m.
San Dicao (Hurst 9- 5) at New York
(Gooden 8-6), 7:40p.m.
Houaton (Deshaies 3-7) at Ch1cago
(Maddu• 6-6), 8:05 p.m.

Friday's games
Houston 11 OUcago, 3:20p.m.
PltiJburah at Clnclnnau, 7:J.S p.m.
Loa Angd.m at Montrul, 7:35p.m.
San Franciaco at Philadelphia, 7:35p.m.
Sl. LouiJ 1t Atlanta, 7:40p.m.
San Oieao at New Yak. 7:40p.m.

Toronto

. " 49
42

s.....

D«root
New York
Milw•uktJC
Baltimore

Cleveland

Tum
Tcxu
Minnelou
California
CNc.ao

34 .590

38 .525

5.5
7

41 40 .506
.. 38 40 .487
. .. . l6 44 .450
. J3 47 .413
--- l6 53 ~29

11.5
14.5
21

West Division
w L P&lt;L

G8

.. 44

47
. ..... 44
. ...... 43

85

33 .571

36
)7
J7
38
42

566
.543 \

.538
... ..... 44
(hl4nd
.537
.488
...... .. 40
Sullie
K-C.ty ..... .. l6 44 .450

2
15
l5
6.5

9.5

Tonll!hl's games

Kanus City {Appier S· 7) 11 Detroit
(Oaltcl,. 1-2). 7;35 p.m.

.

Toiu (Brown 7-6) at Toronto (Candiol·

ti 8·7), 7;35 P.m.
Chicaao (Housh S-3) at Milwaukee
(Wepnan 4-3), 1;()5 p.m.

Botton (Huria ~ - 7) at Minnesota

(Tsponj 5-7),1,0, p.m.
Baltimore (Robiluon 4-6) u Odland

(S"'"""5J, 10:05 p.m.

cr..- • !Nou +tJ .. s.ar~~e (Jior-

man7-1), lt:t5 p&amp;

New Vodl: ~ 3-1) _at Califor.

,.;, (M.c..kill 7·10).10:1S p.m.

Friday's ~ames

Kauu City 11 Doaoil. 7;3S p.m.
Teu~at TormiO. 7:35 p.m.

801toa at~. I :OS p.m.
Chici.Jo at Milwaukee, 1:3!5 p.m.
New Yodt 11 Clllfomia, 10:35 p.m.
BallimcniiOoldand, 10;35 p.m. .
Clo•lland at Jeollle, 1...35 p.m.

Libeny High ·School, an AU-Conference football player at Glenville
State College, a fanner assistant
baseball coach at Point Pleasant
High School, and a wrestling and
football coach at Waynesburg High
School.
Areas that will be covered in the
camp include take-downs, reversals
and escapes, rides, pinning combinations, attitude, nutrition. and
conditioning.
A special scholarship is being offered for past midget 'league
wrestlers who are in need of financial assistance. Mason County
midget league wrestlers will be
considered first, then Point Pleasant
Junior High School and Point
Pleasant High School.
For more infonnation on lhe
camp, call 675-5300, Dave Darst at
675-5731. or Jack Cullen at 6754514.

its champion ti&gt; the Orange Bowl. The Southwest. Conference-Cotton
Bowl and Southeastern Conference-Sugar Bowl affihauons will also continue.
· d th
After the Big Eight, SWC and SEC champions are detennme • e
other slots for the four bowl games will be filled by a five-team pool,
which will include Notre Dame, the champ1ons of the B1g East and ACC.
and two other highly ranked at-large teams. The at-large teams could be
independents or conference members.
.
. .
The highest-ranked team in lhe pool w11l be myned to the bowl that
offers the highest-ranked opponent For example, 1f Texas IS No. I and
bound for the Cotton Bowl, the highest-ranked team m lhe pool w1ll be
invited to play in DaUas on Jan. I .
Notre Dame has agreed to drop out of the pool if it has a mediocre season. The coalition would lhen select three at-large teams mstcad of two ..
The Orange, Cotton and Sugar bowls have decades of trad1uon, wh1ch
means exclusive company for the 20-year-old F1esta Bowl. It was chosen
for the coalition over the Citrus Bowl and other postseason games.
.
The Fiesta Bowl will play host to the national championship gam~ 1f
the five-team pool includes the teams ranked No. 1 and No. 2. Otherwise,
the Fiesta Bowl likely will have to settle for the two lowest-ranked teams
in the pool.

~SALE!
NIKE AIR X-TRAINER
Reg. sws NOW

$3 600

REG. S27.95
CONVERSE SKIDGRIP

CANVAS SLIP-ON.......

$

-·

OO

10

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Jeep
Eagle

I

IS SIMPLY YOUR BEST BUY
ON A NEW CAR OR TRUCK!

2.60; Peregrine Pete (Paver Jr.) $12.00,

89

1:57-35.
Also Ra ced -Young Lug , Compu ter
Whiz, Lmg Ball, C 'M~ Robert, Cutlw,

Kirian l..igh[!ting.

Pedectl (84) $61.20
Third Rac:e-$2,400 Condition Trot.
Ju.stablWT (Bu-'ton) $8 .20, 6 .00, 4 .00;
Su.cccu AJ.ain (Cross) $13.40, 10.20;
Marenao Bill (Halton) $3.20; Timc-2:01 15.
Also Raced -Bii-Mir Lad, Long Guy,
Super Stake, Dawn's Colt , Mightyjack

99!....
1

10 OFF

Muratda, Keystone Lois , Rose Street Lobell .
Trifc:cu (l -3-10) $38~ .00.
Perfecta (1 -3) $71 .60
Fourth Race-$ I ,100 Condition Pice.
Nachu (Paver Jr.) $5.60, 4.40 , 3.40;
Budd1_ Baker (Rankin) $10.60, 5.40; El
Hud (Ruxton) $5.00; Time-] :!51-45.
Allo Raced-McBee Rc.d, Mua;a Magic,
My Boy-My Boy, Barwood, Party Power,
Ca'&amp;o Marko.

SALE PRICES EFFECnYE
JUNE 22nd-JULY 3ht
"I

1991

1991

1991

OLDSMOBILE
CALAIS

CHEVY
CAYAUER

GEO
PRIZM

S-10 TAHOE
I'ICICUP

Auto., Air

V-6, 6 Spd.

$8,999

2 or 4 Dr.

1991

Ped0&lt;11 {1·3) $81.00
Fifth Race-$2,400 Condition Trot.
Robcn: (AID) S7 .00. 3.40. 3.80; Crown

AMERJCAN LEAGUE
East Dl vision
w L P&lt;L GB
Team

Point Pleasant Junior High
School wiD be the site of the John
Yates Wrestling Camp, which runs
July 22 - 26, from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
daily. The camp is set up for
children in kindergarten through
lhe 12th grade.
ANNOUNCES ALLIANCE - Orange Bowl Committee !!resiCost of the camp is $40 per
dent W. Harper Johnson announces a post-seasoa football al~ance
child; there will be a late charge of
$50 for those not signed up by July
designed to make a national championship. match up mo~e hkely
22·' however, families
who
between the nation's two top-ranked teams m a ~ov~ des1gned to
.
. have
.
. quiet the annual debate when those teams play m different bowl
more titan one child wanung to s1gn
up can pay a family fee of $60.
. games. (AP)
Parents are urged to send a bag
lunch with their children each day,
or they may go home for lunch.
Director of lhe camp will be
Yates, of Pennsylvania. He has
First round action of the 1991 Norris added a single each.
wrestled for four years at the
For Mason, Kevin NeweU, Ryan University of Pittsb~~~gh, and is an
William "Bill" Hubbard Memorial
Little League Baseball Tourna- Russell, David Reed and Jason All-State Greeco-Roman Wrestler
ment, sponsored by the Syracuse Roush had a single each.
in Pennsylvania, a state champ and
Volunteer Fire Department, contina wrestling coach at Waynesburg
ued on Wednesday evening as the
High School in Waynesburg, PA.
Ral;;ine Reds rolled over the Mason Southern football
Assisting Yates will be John
camp set for Monday Lipscomb,
21-5.
also of Waynesburg. He
Racine made no doubt about the
The Southern Football Camp was an All-State Wre,stler and
as the Reds jumped out to a will be held for students entering football player at Clarksburg
lead after two innings and grades 4-6 this fall. The camp will
over the Mason team. Racine be held on July 15, 16, &amp; 17 frotn 6
six runl in the first inning to 9 p.m. at Southern High School.
sent 13 batters to the plate in
The camp is intended to intro10 run second. That inning was duce the student to lhe three basic
~igl~lighted by three consecutive phases of the game of football runs off tlte bats of Joe Kirby offense, defense and special teams.
., Matlhew Bradford and Jesse Rules, sportsmanship and other
Maynard.
aspects of the game will be cov: Racine plated another run in the ered.
top of the lhird to make it a 17-0
Players can wear tennis shoes ..
game. But Mason refused to roll shorts, T-shirts, etc. Water will be
over and play dead and plated all available for all players.
five of their runs in the bottom of
Registration forms can .be
the inning. Racine closed out the picked up at tlte Southern J-!lgh
scoring with four runs in the fourlh School office, or you can regiSter
inning, the game was called after from 5 to 6 p.m. the first day of
four innings.
camp.
Bradford had the big bat for
Camp instructors will be the
Racine with a double to go along Soulhera football staff, area coachwith his home run, Adam Roush es, and current and former Southand Paul Smith had a double and a ern players.
single each, Kirby and Maynard
If you have any questions, conadded their round trippers, Bobby tact head coach Dave Gaul at 985Writesel added a double, and David 3954 or 949-26I I.
Milliron,
Lane and

Racine Reds pound Mason Cubs
in Hubbard LL Tournament

was done.''

The Dally Sentinel-Page-S

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Time Demon (Buuon) $7 .60, 6.20;

Dick 'a Lil Siater (J.hwk) $4.40: Time\ :59-45.
Alao Raced-Hey Hey, Kemd, Mcadow
Nile, Granville Linda, R 8 Speed, Town
Actim, Grpry ~hecy l a.ll-falfTw in.

Trifecu (1 · 5·7) 1100.50
Pedecu (1 ·5) $48 .00.
Sixth Race-$! ,800 Oaiming Pace.
Friuie Shilo (DingJedine) $16.40, 5.80,
2.80; lack Konudie (Polhamus ) $4 .20,
2.60; Spicy Number (BUlks) $2.20; Timc1;5J.25.
Alco Raced-Happy Au L...d: , lu Gen eral. Kilkenny, OoOd To Be Here, Vel good, Belt To Sec You, Dooblc Down Style.

'17

Trifecu {1· 3·5) $155.20.
PedCCII (7· 3) $89.80.
Sewnth R.ac&amp;$1,800 Claiming Pac.

SS,999
1983 CHEVY BLAZER, 4x4

$4,999

VE
1987 FORD RANGER PICKUP

Losie (Coven Jr.) $17 .80, 6.80, 2..80;

Altmtion (l'&lt;tcr) $4.60. 2.60: Equi11bili!y

U,307.10.

16.000 miles

1 Owner, 30,000 Miles

Twin Trifocu (1-9·5) $9,186.50.
Trifecu (8-9·5 ) $464.20.
Ei&amp;hth R.cc-$13,000 Tu~eon Hanover
Series Ftn•l.

Supalect~ (9-2... .U)

1989 CHEVY S-1 0 PICKUP

1989 FORD
CONVERSION VAN

Unci&lt; l'!'1,lvy's Al, Pit Row.

Pedec1.1 (!1-2) ,t,OOZ20.
Handle ttl1.2:2&lt;1. A...,d...,el, 121.

$8,999

12 999

Also Raced -C'Mon Muty N. Steady
Bob, Momligh! Royce, Velvet Hammer.

Chanco-Acc, DNF:

SAVE

Loaded
1985 CHEVY CAPRICE

Jamu Powers (Bu.u on) $13.20, 7.80,
4.40; Accon!ancc (Aicr) $5 .40, 3.80; Bo
Dell Junim- (Dv Miller) $3.40; T~JT~C.- 1 :SI .

(GrilmOIO) Sl20; Tim.. t ;5~35.
Allo Raced-License To Race, Button
Owimc, Dowo The Mood Apin, Bwd
A&lt;lim, Suddon Eouy, Cuolt: LcdpiiL
Paf- (2-4)St04.60
Nu.b R-$1,400 Cainoio1 P....
On The Shell As'n (Ater) $10.60,
21.60, 5.10; Missy Sw (lhwk) $14.40.
6.~ O.orol&lt;oe O.antc (Lovely) $3.40;
Tim .. 2;()t45.
Aho Raced -SuHland Hanover, Top
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Page

~The

Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Eastern grid camp set for July 15
The first Eastern Eagles Football Camp will be held for grades
5-9 from Monday, July 15 to Friday, July 19 from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m.
at Eastern High School.
The camp will be open to both
residents and non-residents of the
Eastern Local School District. To
secure an application or for more
information please contact the
Eastern Athletic Booster Club, in
care of head varsity football coach
Randy Churilla. Eastern High
School, 38900 S.R. 7, Reedsville
OH45772.
The entry fee for the camp is
$20 which should be made payable
to the EHS Athletic Booster Club.
Refer to a future edition of The
Daily Sentinel of Sunday-Times
Sentinel for an application or send
the following information and entry
to Churilla: name, grade, age,
home, address, home phone, emer-

gency phone and shirt size along
with a parental/accident release
notice. The application deadline is
July I.
Highlights of the camp will be
non-contact drilling, form and flexibility running techniques, and
movement skills, proper stance _and
start-up, mstrucuon m centenng,
passing, kicking, cau:hing and line
techniques. Campers will be challenged to raise your expectations in
play, conduct and sportsmanship,
and instruction in the mental and
physical aspects of the game will
be given by guest speakers and
films.
Students should bring football
shoes, tennis shoes, gym shorts,
shirts and socks.
Each camper will receive aTshin, and certificate of attendance
as well as a strong basic knowledge
of the game.

Holyfield vs. Tyson ... ~ContinuedfromPage4)
enues over $48 million and there
will be 40 percent over $48 million
for Tyson."
TVKO will handle the pay-perview television fight.
Rich Rose. president of Caesars.
said, "We are excited and pleased
to have a match we think will be
one of the super fights of the last
20 years. It's our fiTS_! heavyweight
championship fight m e1ght years
and we know it will be a great
one. "
King had gone to the WBC
seeking a 55-45 percent spht
instead of the traditional 75-25 per-

cent spill favonng the champiOn,
should a mandatory defense go to
purse bids because an agreement
could not be negotiated.
The WBC ruled that the split
should be 60-40, but Duva went to
court and block the orgamzauon
from holding a purse bid.
The International Boxing Federation, whose tum it is to supervise
a heavyweight IItle fight, held
purse bids June 11, and Duva
topped eight other bidders wilh an
offer of $51,101,000, of which
Holyfield would have gotten 75
percent, or $38,325,750.

35°/o OFF ALL

tying John Franco's record . Of
course, the Rolaids people only
stancd to count save opportunities
in 1988.
OK, so there may not be many
significant records broken . But
there· s still some interesting batting
races as the second half gets going
tonight
Baltimore shortstop caJ Ripken,
the All-Star MVP, and San Diego
outfielder Tony Gwynn have numbers that would make Joe DiMaggio proud. Ripken leads the American League with a .348 average
and Gywnn paces the National
League at .358.
Ripken is the first shortstop to
lead either league in hitting at the
All-Star break since Cleveland's
Lou Boudreau hit .361 in 1947.
Ripken's 18 homers are the most
by a shortstop at the break since
Boston's Rico Petrocelli had 23 in
1969. You might say Ripken is
having a career year - and that's
saying something, considering Ripken's career.
Even though the Orioles are
going nowhere fast, Ripken could
be the MVP.
"He's had that type of fust half
and he's on lhe top of a great career

Softball tournament
set for July 20 at EHS

and he is seeing the ball so well,"
Oakland manager Tony La Russa
said. "He's a great player, he's
having a great year and he does
great things."
Speaking of great years, Gwynn
has 119 hits in 83 games. At his
current pace, Gwynn would finish
wilh a career-high 232 hits. He also
leads lhe NL wtth eight triples and
35 multiple-hit games.
Tbe be: t race in the second half
might be for the home run title in
the AL. Cecil Fielder and Jose
Canseco both got bot heading into

Meigs volleyball
camp scheduled
to open Monday
The 1991 Meigs Marauder Volleyball Camp will be held Monday
through Friday, July 15-19, at
Meigs High School, 9 a.m. to 12
noon each day.
The camp is open to all area '
girls entering grades 7-12. The cost
is $30 with a maximum of $4 5 per
family. To register for the camp,
residents may contact Marauder
Head Coach Rick Ash, 992-5960.
Shirt size. grade entering, and
phone number is needed upon registration. The delldline to register is
Thursday,July II.

A Class D &amp; E softball tournament will be held on July 20th and
21st at Eastern High School. Entry
Fee is $65 and you hit your own
ball. Trophies will be given to the
first -, second- and third-place
teams. First and second place teams
will receive individual ttophies or
shirts.

the breal!: and share the major
league lead with 21 home runs.
Fielder leads with 65 RBis and
Canseoo has 63.
Right behind Fielder and
Canseoo is red-hot Danny Tartabull
of Kansas City, who has 20
homers. Tartabull has homered in
nine of his l!lst II games, including
three last Saturday against Oakland.
If Ripken doesn't win the MVP
award, another sttong possibility is
Toronto's Joe Carter, who's hitting
.302 with 19 homers and 58 RBis
in his frrst season with the firstplace Blue Jays.
"I'm very happy to be here in
Toronto but it was diffiCult for me
and my family 10 leave San Diego
after just one year there. But if I
had to be traded somewhere Ibis is

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Thursday, July 11,1991
Page-7

By MALCOLM RITTER
AP Science Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - A neurologist reports in a prestigious medical journal that a wom~n got
epileptic seizures by hearmg the
voice of "Entertainment Tonight"
co-host Mary Hart.
Symptoms included an upset
feeling in the pit of her stomach, a
sense of pressure in her head and
mental confusion, said Dr. Venkat
Ramani, who reported the case in
Thursday's New England Journal
..-,
of Medicine.

""

DAVID MILLER

Two Holzer Clinic staff members recently completed a mini-residency program in Occupational
Medicine . David Miller. D.O ..
Medical Program Director of Occupational Health, and Director of
Occupational Health, Tim Betz,
CFNP, M.S., completed the flTSt of
three modules offered by the University of Cincinnati's Occupational and Environmental Medicine
Department.
The program covered numerous
topics related to Occupational
Health, including: clinical neurotoxicology, carcinogenesis, hazard
communications, employee assistance programs, epidemiology,
immunology and biostatistics.
The specialized training that
Betz and Miller received will

enable the Holzer Clinic to provide
employers and employees in the
region with the most up-to-date
Occupational Health treatment
available.
Nearly 90 health care professionals from 20 states and Puerto ·
Rico attended the nationally recognized mini-residency program. Certificates will be awarded upon
completion of the full residency in
March of 1992.
Holzer Clinic is Ohio's third
largest group practice and the only
facility of its kind within a 70 mile
radius. Holzer Clinic is a 64-physician multi-specialty group practice
that provides primary, secondary
and tertiary care to patients in
southeastern Ohio and northwestern West Virginia.

charge to children between the ages
of 6-16. Call 992-6626 for an
appointment.
TUPPERS PLAINS - The TuP.·
pers Plains VFW Post 9053 w11l
sponsor a dance Friday from 811:30 p.m. at the post home with
music by the Ramblin Country
Band. Refreshments will be served
and the puJ)Iiois invited.

i

~~

,

.. : .,;,

gered the seizures, which lasted 30
seconds to a minute or two.
"I don 't think it' s psychologi cal . Primarily 1t's a neurological. or
brain-related event," he said.
The unidentified woman had
thou ght Hart 's vo ice set off her
seizures, but "even her own family
members were skeptical," Ramani
said. With the laboratory confirmation , " she was very relieved, " he
said.
She has not had any major
seizures of this type since sh e
stopped watching the synd1cat ed
TV show, he said.
An epilepsy expert urged that
Hart not be blamed. "It's the pitch
and quality of the voice as a sound,
rather than likely what she's actual ly saying," said Dr. Marc Dichter
of the University of Pennsylvania
Medical School.
Susan
B.
Luttman,
a
spokeswoman for "Entertainment
Tonight" producer Paramount
Domestic Television, ·called the
report "a serious medical matter."
"All we know is what we read
in the New England Journal ," she
said.

Anti-inflammation drug not
always needed for knee arthritis

Community calendar

THURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Vacation
Bible School at the Rejoicing Life
Youth Church will be held through
Friday froiii' 9:'10 a.m. to noon
daily. Theme is "Adventures of
SYRACUSE - The Sutton
Life with Jesus." All children ages Township Trustees will meet Friday at 7:30p.m. in the Syracuse
3-18 are invited.
Municipal Building to appoint a
RACINE - Vacation Bible trustee to fill the vancancy which
School at the Racine Church of the now exists.
Nazarene will be held through Friday from 6:30-8 p.m . nightly.
SATURDAY
LONG BOTTOM - There will
Theme is "Heroes for God." Rev.
Thomas Gates II invites the public. be an old fashioned icc cream
For information call 949-2668 or social at the Long Bottom Community Building. Six flavors of ice
949-3084.
cream, sandwiches, pie and cake
SYRACUSE - Vacation Bible will be on sale. Live bands will be
School will be held at the Syracuse performing and prizes awarded.
Nazarene Church through Friday
RACINE - The Charles and
from 6-8:30 p.m. for children ages
preschool through sixth grade. The Fannie Lee (Wolfe) Beaver reunior.
theme is "Heroes for God." The will be held Saturday at Star Mill
Park in Racine. Bring a covered
public is invited.
dish and place setting. Dinner at
ROCK SPRINGS - The Rock noon. Friends and relatives welSprings Grange wiU meet Thursday come.
at 8 p.m. at lhe hall.
RACINE - Outdoor hymn sing
GALLIPOLIS - Diabetes Sup- at the Mt. Moriah Church of God
port Group will meet Thursday at 7 will be held Saturday with dinner at
p.m. in the French 500 Room at 6 p.m. and singing at 7 p.m. Bring
Holzer Medical Center. Jo&amp;n Cun- a covered dish. Singers include
ningham, exercise physiologist, Mountain Top Singers and Crystal
and the Dailey Family and others.
will be the speaker.
Bring lawn chairs. In case of rain
TUPPERS PLAINS - The Tup- the event will be held inside.
pers Plains VFW Post No. 9053
will meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the
FAIRPLAIN - The Liberty
Mountaineers will perform at the
post home. Note the new time.
Jackson County Jamboree in FairRACINE - The Southern Local plain, W.Va. on Saturday.
Board of Education will meet
Thursday at 7 p.m. at the high
LOTfRIDGE - Country Music
school in special session.
Night at the Lottridge Community
Center will be held Saturday from
MIDDLEPORT - The Evange- 6 p.m. to midnight. All bands are
line Chapter No. 172, OES, Mid- welcome. Refreshments will be
dleport. will meet Thursday at 7:30 avaiable. Public is invited.
p.m. Officers wear street dresses.
SCIPIO TOWNSHIP - The Sci POMEROY - Dinner at the pio Township Volunteer Fire
Meigs County Senior Center, Department will hold a tractor pull
Pomeroy, will be Thursday from 5- on Saturday. Weigh-in will begin at
6·30 p.m . with veal Pa{mesan, 5 p.m. and the tractor puU will stan
sPaghetti, tossed salad, garlic bread at 6 p.m. Classes are divided into
and beverage. Cost is $3 with ice 800, 900, 1,000 lb., 12 horsepower
cream extra. Entertainment by and over and 12 horsepower and
Junior and Rita White, AI Windon under.
and Bill Ward. A free will offering
SUNDAY
will be taken for lhe musicians.
DARWIN - The Modem WoodROCK SPRINGS - The 1991 men of America Camp 7230 will
Meigs Marauder Volleyball Camp have a picnic and potluck and comwill be held July 15-19 at Meigs munity service recognition proHigh School, 9 a.m. to noon each gram on Sunday at 12:30 p.m. at
day. All area t~irls enterinJI ~des the north bound park on Route 33
7-12 are eligible to participate. near Darwin, Meat and soda pop
Cost is $30 with a maximum of will be provid~. Bring a cove~ed
$45 pt! family. Registration dead- dish, table serv1ce and lawn chairs.
line IS Thursday. Contact Marauder Public is invited.
Head Coach Rick Ash, 9920-5960.
Shirt size, grade entering, and
ph~e number is needed when regRACINE - The Theiss Family
tstmng.
Reunion will be held Sunday at
Star MiD Park in Racine. A potluck
FRIDAY
POMEROY - The Meigs Coun- dinner and registration will be from
ty Health Deparbilent will sponsor noon to 1:30 p.m. A program will
a "Sealants Day" on, riday, free of follow. Bring a lawn chair.

...

Ramani, who stu ' the lse•zures
when the woma
dl Hart's
voice during labora · !ling. She
would rub her stomac , hold her
head "and then she would look
confused and far away, the expression in her eyes, she looked like
she was far away and out of it."
The testing confirmed that
Hart's voice lliggered the abnormal
electrical discharges in the brain
that mark an epileptic seizure, said
Ramani, a professor of neurology
at the Albany Medical College.
In an interview, he said he did
not know why Hart's voice trig -

Holzer Clinic staff receive
advance occupational training

Community Calendar items
appear two days berore an event
and the day or tbat event. Items
must be received weD in advance
to assure publication in the calendar.

DLACX HILLS GOLD

I

TV host's voice triggers
epileptic seizures in woman

TIMBETZ

There will be an organizational
meeting for the Big Bend Youth
Football League at 8:00 p.m. on
Monday, July 15 at the Pleasers
Restaurant on West Main Street in
Pomeroy. All parents of participating children and interested people
are invited to attend.

e

the place to be IJ'Bded to,'' he said._
"Every night, 50,000 fans come to
the SkyDome and playing here is
like playing in a country club. I
can't wait to get to the ballpark.''
Howard Johnson plays at somewhat-less-opulent Shea Stadium ,
but leads the NL with 19 homers
and 63 RBls. Johnson really isn't
the rype to be a home run king, and
someone like George Bell ( 16) or
Fred McGriff (16) might end up
wilh the title. But it's obvious theNL has lost a little pop the last few
years. Did you see the Home Run
Derby?
Two of the league's most dangerous sluggers, Kevin Mitchell
and Darryl Strawberry, have been
hampered by injuries. With 14
homers, Mitchell could get right
back in the race with a hot streak.

30°/o ro 50°/o OFF

FRI.·SAT.·SUN.
, ~urt Russell in

Organizational meeting
scheduled for Monday

I

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

Batting races, eclipsing career marks among future attractions
For true optimists, Dodgers center fielder Brett Butler starts the
second half with a 21-game hitting
streak. The Los Angeles record is
31 by Willie Davis in 1969.
California's Dave Winfield is
closing in on 400 career homers,
but that's an achievement. And of
course, Nolan Ryan breaks his own
records almost every stan.
There is one rather obscure
record about to be broken. Cincinnati's Rob Dibble is 23-for-23 in
save opportunities this season,

I

Thursday, July 11, 1991

In baseball season's second half,
By JIM DONAGHY
AP Baseball Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - It might
be a good idea for those who like
records to check out Sergei
Bubka's schedule for the rest of the
summer.
For baseball fans, Rickey Henderson broke Lou Brock's all-time
stolen base record on May I and
that may be it in terms of biggies.
There are some good seasons
going, but nothing of the recordbr~ing variety.

r

Harrisonville community notes
Capt. Marie Riggs, Montgomery.
Ala., called on his grandmother,
Stella Aikins and Aunt Ruby Diehl
recently.
Bert Glaze, Marietta, and his
sister, Virginia Smith, Fla., visited
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Alkire on Saturday. They were former residents.
He's a retired professor and she is a
retired R.N .
Mrs. Stella Atkins, Pauline
Atkins and Charldine Alkire
attended Dan Riggs' wedding in
Columbus on Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Steinmetz
visited her mother in Utah and othe
relatvies in California the past two
weeks.
Recent dinner guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Doug Bishop were Mr. and

Mrs. Everett Bishop, McArthur,
Mr. and Mrs. Glen Kennedy and
family, Mr. and Mrs. Tim Bishop
and Mr. and Mrs. Kenny Davis and
son.
Mrs. Esther Brandau Jackson
was a recent guest of Mrs. Lola
Clark.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Alkire visited
Saturday evening with Mr. and
Mrs. Chas Alkire, Racine.
Mrs. Virginia Gibson spent the
weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Allan
Gibson and sons, Columbus.
Recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
Bob Mahr were Jessie Morris, Mrs.
Tbelma Hartzell. Fla: Mr. and Mrs.
Gary Foley, Syracuse: Francis
Foley, Columbus, and Ardis Waggoner, Albany.

Vacation Bible school ends
Vacation Bible School ·at Hill side Baptist Church closed with a
program presented by all age
groups .
Each class sang a song and
recited a bible verse with the theme
"The Light is the Way Through the
Door to the Shepherd."
There was a special presentation

by the puppets and the clowns.
God's Little Lambs sang two
songs.
Following the bible school
activities a pizza party was held for
the teaching staff and their aides
and families at the church social

room.

There was a total or 114 present
at the closing.

Would-be fraudmeisters note:
spelling and accuracy count
DALLAS (AP) - A scheme to
· trick the Federal Reserve out of billions of dollars of Iraqi money was
tripped up by a small detail: The
perpetrators misspelled Saddam
Hussein's name, authorities said.
On Monday, three men presented the Federal Reserve Bank of
Dallas with an $33 billion international certificate in the name of
"Sadam, "• Secret Service officials
said.
The spelling "Sadam" tipped
off authorities thai the signature
was a fake. Also, the note was
dated 1967 and signed by Treasury
Secretary James Baker. Baker, now
lhe secretary of state, was treaSUry
secretary from 1985 to 1988.
Lewis Willburn· Driver,' 53, of
Lamesa: Tommy Lee Buckley, 44,
of Childress: and Leroy Allison
Mickey, 27, of Redwood City,
Calif., were charged with trying to
pass a forged security, said Assistant U.S. Attorney Tom
Melsheimer.

Marvin Ray Ruffin, 53, of
Columbia, S.C., was charged wtih
conspiracy to defraud the United
States, Melsheimer said.

THE
WATERING
HOLE

ST. 0. 7, POMEROY
Will Be Rodcin' and
RoiHn' With

"BLACIETHORNE"
FRIDAY &amp;
SATURDAY NIGHTS
JULY 13 and 14
10 pm to 2 11111
$2.~0 Cover Char11

By MALCOLM RITTER
AP Science Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - A drug
that just relieves pain worked as
well as another that also counters
inflammation in a study of treating
· pain from knee osteoarthritis,
researchers said today.
The result challenges what one
expert called _the "reflexive," routine prescnbmg of anu-mflammalion drugs that can cause side
effects.
In the study, patients got a similar amount of pain relief from
acetaminophen as from low or high
doses of ibuprofen. a non-steroidal
anti-inflammatory drug or NSAID.
NSAIDs relieve pain and fight
inflammation. Ibuprofen is in such
products as Advil, Medipren,
Motrin
and
Nupnn.
Acetaminophen is simply a pain
reliever, contained in products
including Anacin-3, Excedrin and
Tylenol.
"It is not always necessary to
use an anti-inflammatory agent to
relieve the pain in patients with
osteoarthritis," said study coauthor Dr. Kenneth Brandt. director
of the Indiana University Specialized Center of Research in
Osteoarthritis in Indianapolis.
Surveys suggest that doctors frequently begin treating osteoarlhrius
with high doses of NSAID, B,randt
said. Even at low doses, those
drugs carry possible side effects
including ulcers, bleeding of the
stomach and intestines, and
reduced kidney function, he said.
Despite his findings, Brandt said
NSAIDs work better than other
pain relievers for some osteoarthritis patients, such as those wnh
marked inflammation. He also
noted his results pertained only to
ibuprofen and to osteoarthritis of
the knee.
Other NSAIDs include aspirin,
naproxen, indomethacin and piroxicam.
1\n estimated 5 million Ameri-

cans have osteoarthritis of the knee,
which results from cartilage dam age. It differs from rheumatoid
arlhritis, which is an inflammation
of the lining of a joint.
The study is an important challenge to "reflexive" prescribing of
NSAIDs for osteoarthritis, com mented Dr. Matthew Liang of Harvard Medical School.
It was funded by the federal
government and publi shed in
today's New England Journal of
Medicine.
Dr. Anhur Grayzel, senior vice
president for medical affairs of the
Arthritis Foundation, said the study
confirms what he called good practice. Most osteoarthritis patients
need only pain relief, which can
often be achieved with low doses
of acetaminophen or NSAIDs. he
said.
As for safety, the choice of lowdose acetaminophen versus lowdose ibuprofen is "still an open
one," he said.
Olympic rings
The Olympic symbol o' five circles
represents the following continents:
Africa. the Americas (North and
South), Asia, Australia and Europe.
They are interlockmg to show friend ship among the people of the world.
The colors of the rings - btue, yellow.
black. green and red - were chosen
because they are commonly found
among the flags of all the counlrie~ of
the world.

Weekd1g Spe~ll/$ AI PIBI$Bf$
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Plate .~.'!~.s.~~~~~~!~~. S229

TUESDAY:

Club Sandwich Plate ~.1 !~.5.~~~~~~!~~.

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WITH S~AD, HOWADE ROLL or GARLIC BREAD

THURSDAY:

Baked Steak Dinner ................ ..

FRIDAY:

.

All You Can Eat Spaghetti ........

$425

S300

WITH SALAD, GARLIC BREAD

S~TURDAY:

Meat Loaf Dinner .................... .

SUNDAY:

•

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Baked Chicken Dmner ............ ..

S425

S385

INCLUDES HOMEMADE ROLL or HOMEMADE PIE

BRING IN YOUR CHURCH BULLETIN FOR
10% DISCOUNT

698 WEST
MAIN ST.
POMEROY
992-2057

1

I

I

�Thursda~July11, 1991
The

Sentinel

By TONY SMITH
He said the agreement was "one
Associated Press Writer
of the steps on the Jon~ road to
LJUBUANA, Yugoslavia (AP) . Slovenian mdependence.'
- A European-brokered plan to . The pact is the latest atlempt to
avert civil war in Yugoslavia halt .clashes between secessionist
received a major boost Wednesday and federal fon:es. It caDs for army
when Slovenia's parliament voted units to return to their barracks and
overwhelmingly to suspend its the Slovenian militia 10 be demobi·
independence drive.
lized. It also calls for Slovenia and
Deputies approved the plan, Croatia to suspend independence
drafted last week by the Europesn moves for three months to permit
Community, despite misgivings by negotiations with the centtal govsome legislators that it offered no ernment.
Two days after Slovenia
guarantees federal tanks and wardeclared independence, federal
planes would not auack again.
The strong endorsement of the ttoops stormed into the republic. In
peace plan - by a vole of 189-11 Croatia, minority Serbian fighters
with seven abstentions - was sig- opposed to secession have clashed
nificant because Slovenia had with Croatian militiamen.
Slovenia's Red Cross says at
pushed furlher toward full secession dian neighboring Croatia and least 62 have been killed in unrest
has been the center of battles in the republic.
Besides the problem of withagainst federal forces.
The accord already has been drawin~ all opposing forces from
approved by Croatia, which like Slovema, other obstacles to a full
Slovenia declared independence truce remained. The federal govJune 25, !lnd by. Federal Premier ernment claims die republic has not
Ante Markovic and his Cabinet. yet released all capiUred army prisYugoslavia's eight-member presi- oners, another term of the agreement
·
dency still must accept the plan.
The
Slovenians
say
the
army
has
Some army troops and rebel
flown
hundreds
of
reinforcements
militiamen remained in the field
late Wednesday despite the pact's into garrisons in the republic.
Yugoslavia's collective presicall for full withdrawal.
"Let us not forget we are in the dency, which represents the six
Bafkans, where lies and deceit are republics and two autonomous
the highest moral values," V~r regions, scheduled a meeting for
Zakelj, a Socialist Party deputy m Friday to discuss the peace plan.
The presidency, which commands
Slovenia, warned the parliament.
Before the vole, Slovenia's pres- the armed forces, said Monday it
ident, Milan Kucan, told lawmak- could not adopt the accord because
ers their choice was ... war or Slovenia was violating its terms.
"We have infonnation that the
peace.''

'~

'

"\.

Benedict or Fleming, Joseph McCall or Shade, Jane Lawrence or
Portland, and Gretchen Taulbee, Logan.
BEST OF BREED WINNER · Paula Hitchcock of Belpre wo!i
tbe Best or Breed trophy and the Best 6 Class in Youth witb a Cab·
romian at the "Moonlight Rabbit Romp" held recently at the Rutland Civic Center. Tbe sbow was sponsored by tbe Southeast Ohio
Rabbit Breeders Association.

Southeastern Ohio·rabbits
romp to third annual event

RABBIT SHOW WINNER • Jennifer Hebble or Wapakoneta
won Best or Breed, Best Opposite or Sex Breed, Best 4 Class, Best
in Sbow and Traveling Trophy in Youtb witb ber Mini Lop rabbit
at tbe "Moonlight Rabbit Romp" in Rutland.

OPEN BEST OF BREED • Tim HaD ·or Lima won tbe Best or
Breed and Best 4 Class in tbe open category wltb a Florida Wblte
at tbe "Moonlight Rabbit Romp" in tbe Rutland Civic Center.

Hiding the truth doesn't always help
Dear Ann Landers: Last
M&lt;XIday I called my pBJelllS and was
told that Mom was going into the
hospilal for tests, but not to worry.
Wednesday night, Dad called to
tell me that the diagnosis was
cancer, but Mom was doing fine
and it wasn't necessary to make an
emergency visiL
Late Thursday night. Dad telephoned again and sugrtcd that I
might Oy in during the next several
days to meet widl the doctors and
discuss l!ealmellt options. When I
arrived at the airport, Dad admitted
that he had misled me about my
mother's oondition because he didn't
want me to worry.
By the time I reached my IIIOihec's
bedside, she was so weak and
heavily sedated that she couldn't
speak. I'm not sure she undentood
anything I said. Mom died 14 ~
later.
I feel that I've been cheated out of
my last opponunity to communicate
in a meaningful way with my
mother. There were so many things
I wanted 10 1eU her and now ru never
be able to say them. Although I
forgive my father, I feel that he made
a lel'rible mistake by not telling me
the truth so I could have ·come

sooner.

l

Ann, please teU your readers not
to deprive loved ones of a last
opponunity 10 lalk with a dying
family member before the illness
and medication make meaningful
communication impossible. Yes, it
is painful and awkward, but it
couldn't be any worse than the
hollow feeling I have in the pit of
my swinach as I write this lcutt. No
name, please, just - WITHOUT A
MOM IN MARYLAND
DEAR MARYLAND: Try not to
harbor angry feelings about your

father. His intentions were noble. He
was lrying to spare you anxiety. but
unfonunalely, his judgment wasn't
very good.
Your letter should serve to alert
readers to the risks they run when
ANN LANDERS
tbey keep the trutb from close
"till, Los Anreles
family members. Thank you for
11meo Syntlcale aad
writing a letter that is well worth
Crealorl Syndicate."
remembering.
Dear ADD LaDders: I wanted to and Jerry meet. I'm keeping my
write and thank you for helping me fmgers crossed.
fllld Mr. Right
Gein of the Day: Overheard in a
In October of last year, I read the cocktail lounge: "Hello, handsome.
letter in your column from the 111 do anything you want for $200. •
woman whose soo was Slaliooed in The man replied, "Wonderful! Paint
Saudi Arabia She said the soldiers' my house."
biggest problem was boredom and
What's the truth about pot, CO·
encouraged the folks baclc home to caine, LSD, l'Cl', crack, speed and
write to them.
downers? 'The Lowdown on Dope"
I decided to send a letter to •Any has up-to-the-rnilluu information on
Servicepersoo," and a Marine named drug f. Se(!!i, .a se./f-addrtsstd, long.
Jerry received it Since November, business-sJze envelope and a check
Jerry and I have written to each or money order for $3 .65 (this
other faithfuUy. He has sent me at includes postage and handling) to:
least three letters every week. I Lowdown, c/o AM l..anders, 1'.0.
have written 10 him every single Box 11562, Chicago, Ill. 6061Iday.
056Z. (In Canada, ~nd $4.4~.)
It may sound crnzy, but Jerry and
I fell in love through the mail.
Although we've seen each Olhec only
in photographs, we both know that
once we meet we wiD make a life
together. Two weeks ago, at 5:28
a.m., he called me for the first time.
It was so wonderful to hear his voice,
I broke down and cried.

Ann
Landers

and a baby quilt was won by Evelyn Freeman of Racine.
D&amp;M Pizza in Syracuse donated
pizza which was sold.
The show ended with the selection of Best 4 Class, Best 6 Class
and Best In Show in both Youth
and Open Divisions.
Winners were: Best 6 Class
Youth -Paula Hitchcock, Belpre;
Bes1 4 Class and Best In Show
Youth Traveling Trophy - Jennifer
Hebble of Wapakoneta: Best Four
Class Open, Tim Hall, Lima; Best
6 Class and Best In Show, Bob and
Elizabeth Eakins of Jamestown.
Ohio; Best Display Trophy Open,
Bowman Family of Ashland, Ohio;
Best Display Trophy Youth, Jimmy
Black of New Concord.
Trophies were donated by: Bob
Evans Farms of Athens, Rutland
Furniture, Ohio Valley Bank in
Gallipolis, Whaley's Auto Parts of
Darwin, Rainbow Cage and Supply
in Racine, Grotto Farms of Logan,
and West/Pierce Horse Farm in
Albany.

:-:,Ohio

WILMINGTON Del (AP) _
co1urnb'•a Gas Systems
I~c said it
.
:
ananged to pay mterest onJts overdue short-.terfn~~~s ~nitst~h'f:{_
post·:turn~ 00tes
~h coun
• h'ch has said
high-;rf~e~p~~JU.a~t; for natural
m ~ n:e it to me bankru tc
~~ d:fa~lted on $39 milliln f~
shon-term debt payments. Another
$11 million short-term debt payment was due Wednesday. but

0

By RANDOLPH E. SCHMID
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
nation is facing a weather-satellite
emergency, Sen. Ernest Hollings,
D-S.C., said Wednesday, blasting
NASA for a program that has doubled in cost and fallen years behind
schedule.
"It's just unforgivable, having
these things go wiUy-nilly along,"
Hollings told the heads of the
National Aeronautics and Sia
Administration and the Comme
Department, which directs o
·
tion of the weather satellites once
they are launched.
Hollings brushed aside assurances from NASA Administrator
Richard Truly that new satellites
will be ready soon, proposing that
money be provided for an emergency backup program.

Meanwhile, a European saleUite
is being "borrowed" to fill in and
officials are considering asking
Japan to Jetdle United States use a
weather satellite it had built but
hasn't yet launched, Commerce
Secretary Robert Mosbacher
reported.
The problem is that the United
States currently has only one stationary weather satellile, GOES-7,
in orbit. It was designed to last
through 1992 but could be kept in

operation longer, officials hope.
A program to law:'ch a senes ~f
five additional satellites starUn~ m
1989 has run into a staggermg
series of problems and delays and
the cost has ballooned from $54 7
million to more than $1 biUion.
If GOES-7 fails before a
replacement can be launched 'the
nation will be left "in the dark"
and vulnerable to weather hazards,
observed Sen. Daniel K. Inouye, D·
Hawaii.

TROMM BUILDERS

FREE ESTIMATES

.:E:::.~~..~~~:ls. s~cks ~.;:fJ1li'

::::!

e:l~ili::i

NEAIIBV

I.11Di111151Af

J&amp;L
I.NSULATION

MOBILE HOME
HEATING &amp;
COOliNG
Located On Safford School Rd. off Rt. 14 1
(614) 446-9416 or 1-800-872-5967

BENNETT'S
CATN'S

.

36 \' ure Experience

FREE ESTIMATES

Wo Soy Whot Wo Do.

992-7458

We Do Whet We Soy.
t0·19·1 mo.

,

•Sidewalks

•Patios
•Driveways
•Slabs

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

NO SUNDAY CAW
3-11-Hn

W. H. MOBILE
HOME PARTS
If you're in need

of Mobile Home
Parts or
Accessories...
SEE US FIRST!

1

992-5800

·

RT. 33 WEST OF
DARWIN, OHIO

HappyAds

61 Fann Equipment

OLA MAY WEARS
McDANIB

SUMIISBlOUY
Of YAIDIIAN MOWDS

90th Birthday
SUN., JULY 14
12 Noon to S PM
At Hartford Commun·
ity Center, Frillnda are
urged to come help
calabr11te.

New Shipment Of
David Winter Cottages

GREAT
SAVINGS AT

PEPPERS ......................... 4 FOR $1

REAR TINE TILLER. 6
HP., 4 -cycfe. Reg.
PUSH MOWER.
2-cycle. 4 HP.

21"

Blgger/ Mulchor. Reg.
329 99
'
· SALI $259.99
LAWNMOWER
SERVICE. REPAIR

COMPETITIVE SALARY
FlEXIBLE SCHEDUUNG
VARIED SHIFTS
SHIFT DIFFERENTIAL
BENEFITS

MORRIS EOU.MOO

Contact:
Sally Gloecknll', RN DON
Ovlt'brook Ctntll'
Middleport, Ohio

~

IU1lAIII, OHIO

742-2455

e~

THE

The American Collection

BIG

By Maurice Wideman
NEW TO THE LINE

SALE

AND

British Traditions

SHOP LOCALLY

A DIFFERENT COTI AGE FOR EACH MONTH

rr ~ 1if[di4JOil

.

~

L..-iJ:f:Jr.._1Jf•l:l=ll

107 MILL STREET
MIDDLEPORT

CA~ti?!!

$JS.95
Tum your clutter into cash,
Sell it the ~ way... by 9hone,
no need to leave your home.
Place your classified ad today!
15 words or less, 3 days,
3goper,,$6.00

$

NEW WHITE 10 .LB. lAG

POTATOES ..................~t.~.... 219

TRUCKLOAD OF HOMEGROWN
ROYAL SWEET

$

WATERMELONS ...........~?;~~!.. 288

MASON JARS WITH
QTS. $411 CASE

Call our office for paid ill advance rales!

CANTALOUPES

lANDS &amp; UDS/ 12 TO A CASE

PINTS

$311 CASE

MEIGS FARM MARKET
300 WEST MAIN ST., POMEROY, OHIO

1.
2.

10. _ _ _ _- 1

3.
4.
5.

11 · - - - - - l
12 . _ _ _ _-l
13 .._ _ _ _-l

6
7.

14 . _ _ _ _~
15··-------i 1

8. _ _ _ _ __

985-4180

mo . pd .

6 -10· '91 - 1

205 N. Seund SlrHI
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 457 60

Offi&lt;e 614 -tn-2&amp;a6
HOME 614-992-5692

EMILEE MERINAR
Owner &amp; Operator

DOniE S. TURNER, BROKER

614-992-6820

HOUSES• LOTS #FARM~
COMMERCIAL

Pomeroy, q~i1o91 · Hn

STEWART'S
GUNS &amp; SUPPLIES
•BUY •SELL oJRADE
OPEN
Tuesday thru Saturday

10 :00 am- 5:00pm

\\'t&gt; l'lj.-t&gt;cf

l.iM li.~~~!l

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
-

·Room Addition•
Guner work
Electrical and Plumbing
Concrete work
Roofing
Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting

742-2421

!FREE ESTIMATES)

2 112 Mi. outside
Rutland on New
lima Rd.

V. C. YOUNG Ill

1-10·'91 lin

ROOFING
NEW -REPAIR

11· 14-'91 · 1 mo . pd .

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
Fr11 Estimates

985-4473
667-6179
5-JJ .'9Q tin

BOB JONES
EXCAVATING
DOZER and
BACKHOI
WORK
(614)
696-1006

6-6-'91

FREESTONE
38# aox
PEACHES
BY YHI BASKn or POUND
WE HAVE LOW ACID YELLOW TOMATOES
WE HAVE FRESH HALF RUNNER, BLUE LAKE &amp;
TENDERmE GREEN BEANS
.

(614)

992-621

s

Pomeroy, Ohio

11·14.'90 tfn

INDEPENDENJ ·
CARPET CLEANEIS
and TILE FLOOR CAIE
•Reasonable Rates
•Quality Work
•Free Estimates

•Carpe1 Has Fast Dry
Time

•High Gloss

Floor

on

Tile

J. 14!91-tfn

A&amp;B
COMPLETE AUTO
UPHOLSTERY
Convertible Tops,
Carpets. Headliner
&amp; Seat Covers and
Minor Auto Repair.
MAIN ST., MASON, WV.

1-(304)773-9560

Ill Till

HOMEGROWN

CAROliNA U. ~-NO. 1-2 112 IN. UP

Toke the pain out of
• painting.
lei me do it for you.
VERY REASONABLE
HAVE REFERENCES

742-2451

PIN down EXTRA

DAY FOR

FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168

Want to, .

just Arrived!

INTERIOR • EXTERIOR

SALEI1799.99

SIP
E/S. Reg. '1 999.99

EOE

IS THE LAST

LINDA'S
PAINTING

FREE ESTIMATES

38" 12 HP IC Hyd.

Jielp Wanted

6 -14- ' 91 -tfn

SAUI2349, 99

42" 14 HP Vanguord
OHV Twin Hyd. Elec.
PTO. Reg. '2649.99

992-6472

10POUND
TOMATOES ...~~~~.!!~.~~.~~..........~~.~ .. $4 50

992-6648 or
698-6864

Finish
MIKE lEWIS, Owner
Rt. 1, Rutlond. OH.

IISTOCI

For H1r

HOMEGROWN

CEDAR
CONSTRUCTION

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

171 11. 1tc

TOMORROW

Complete Grooming
For All Breeds

Howard L. Writesel

Futi ond Port lime
Positions

tond.

•Remodeling and
Home Repairs
•Roofing
•Siding
•Painting
FUllY INSURED
FREE ESTIMATES

r~ GR:;'OM
ROOM

Now Homos lull!
"Free Estimates"
PH. 949-2801
or Rtt. 949-2860

I O"'o DISCOUNT YO
SENIOR CtnZENS

FOR

TRUCKING A'IAilABL£

614-992-2328

oVINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

SURPRISE PAm

BULLDOZER and
BACKHOE WORK .
HOME SITES .
LANOCLEARING .
WATER and SEWE R
LINES

213· No. Secand
Middleport
Hand Tufting
Custom Drapes

992-5335 or 915-3561
Auou From Jlost Oflico

Polllt

5 / 22/ lfn

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

,, MlddllpDII
UPHOLSTERY

WASHIIS-$100.,

- 67 5-6 9~'

742-2328

4 -29 9 1

Dnts-,o• .,

IANGlS-Gos·I1K.-$ 1B up
FHEZEIS-SI2l up '
MICIO OYINS-$79 up
KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

Stock!!

AIR CONDtnONERS • HEAT PUMPS and
FURNACES FOR MOBILE &amp; DOUBLEWIDE HOMES

USED APPUANCES
•o DAY WAIIANn
IIFIIG!UTOIS-$100 up

Now In ·

.~!~ •...,....

•VInyl Siding
•Replecement
Windows
•Roofing
•lnlulation
JUlES KEESEE
992-2772 or
742-2251
639 Bryen P~·~:
Middleport. j"j:j-i.Hn

5

•20 Years E•peri ence
•Quality Homes and
Cuslom Remodeling

and

NURSES

The public i1 invtted to 11-

OPEN CLASS WINNERS • Bob and Elizabeth Eakins or
Jamestown were winners in the Open Best or Breed, Best 6 Class
and Best in Show categories at the ''Moonlight Rabbit Romp" held
recently at the Rutland Civic Center.

Pomeroy

I•
1

11

Partial owner financinf&amp;1vg~e. The price
has been reduced lo
, .$17.900 and
owner linancmg of up to 110% .ri. purchase
amount .maj be possible for qualifying pe~on
to buy '(i!!Y nice far~ home on 31h CK:resln Ra·
c1ne. 4 l!ll, 3bath~ 2garag~ rented 1BR apt
Property lldudes 4,800 sq. fl farm bldg
Caii61H92-7104 for Appt.

Station.
They will hold their July
mHtlng following tho bud·
gat mHtlng.

AND EVERYTHING UNDERNEATH

RATES - Day, Week, Month, or Season
PICIQ:C IHELTER and STAGE P'or Rent
Rcunlons · Get Togethers - Parti es
,...,.,..,.,;~=,....,.,

' 99 u 9 . wrl850.99

PRICE REDUCED'

"

I

I• CAMPING - BeauUful SurroWldlngs

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

PUBLIC NOTICE
Rudend Townll'oip
Tru- wll hold lluir Budget
mooting for the 1992 Budget
on Thu...t.y, July 11, 199ht
8:30 p.m. at the Rutland Are

nas SEMON .. POOL
OPIN TO 1'llE PUBUC

SIGNS

BULLETIN BOARD

Tho

212 E. Main -

NEW

McLaughlm did not proVIde any
FREE ESTIMATES
deUiils of the ~gements.
.
992-7130
Oswald 581d 1alks were conunu8-4-'91 -1 mo.
ing with the banks.
In June, Columbia said it faced l:r-~---'--losing $1 billion if it cannot get out
c:ttAtllll
of old natural gas contracts .that
require it to pay up to several ~es
the gomg rate for nalllral gas. e
price of gas has plummeted recentby tlc:k lttDIVtll(
ly to 1ts lowest JX?IDI m years, makB~ by
mg the company. s old contracts an
r
enonnous flnanc•al burden.
.- .
UALITY

Public Notice

ALSO

IT'S A BOY! • Romani, a 14-year-old elephant at tbe Burnet
Park Zoo, Syr.acuse, N.Y" eyes her 220 pound male offspring, mea·
suring 30 Inches tal~ born. at 10:15 a.m. Wednesday. Ca~lee Wallace, starr veterluarlaa, (r~ght), tends to tbe newborn while Chuck
Boyle, senior elephant keeper, watches mom. (AP)
·

spokesman William R. MCLaughlin
said he did not know whether it had
been paid
Undei the arrangement, the
company anticipates paying the
interest on a weekly basis. But
Robert Oswald, chief financial officer, said the payments could only
be made for a bnef penod 1f
Columbia is unsucces~ful in renegouaung Its credit hne with •ts
banks.

Senlin~l -

ROOFING

WE DO

Camping Is Family Fun

An EC
truce-monito~~
...o....~~~.a~;.~·~;~:!""!,"I"~"
arrived
in Belgrade
on Tu
yteam
and 1
I'L~-'-OM~Eit
was expected to travel to Slovenia
·later in the week.
SPECIALIZING
IN CONCRETE

Nation facing weather satellite emergency

more."

Fire officials have only themselves to blame. because they wanted a serious message, says
Wahlberg's attorney, Frank Haddad Jr.
"We could have jazzed it up,"
said Haddad. "But they wanted
their scripts, and they wanted it to
have a serious message.''
The group would be willing to
do the spots over: Haddad said, but
city officials said never mind.

Yugoslav Army is preparing an
attack," Slovenian Information
Minister Jelko Kacin said Wednesday. "Whether this is against
Slovenia or Croatia is a (\Uestion
that must be answered tn Belgrade.''
There were no reports of clashes
in Slovenia Wednesday.
Tensions have not eased in
Croatia, which refuses to consider
giving up Serb-populated regions
as the price of secession. Serbia,
the largest republic, has vowed to
annex those regions if Croatia
secedes.
Scattered ethnic clashes were
reported in neighboring Croatia
Wednesday. There were no immediate reports of casualties.
Zlatko Kramaric, the mayor of
Osijek, a Croatian town in the
republic's Serb-dominated region
of Slavonia, said Tuesday that 90
people had died in the last three
months in Serb-Croat clashes.
On Sunday, the army was drawn
into the fighting, fuing on Croatian
forces and adding a dangerous
dimension to the situation.
. I
t' fforts
I n Europe, d1p
oma IC e
continued Wednesday.
The European Parliament passed
a resolution calling on federal
troops to return to their barracks
and demanding the 12 EC governments respond sharply to any new
fighting.

The Dai ly

Business Services

Columbia arranges interest
payments on overdue notes .

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) New Kids on the Block's Donnie
Wahlberg has a new critic, the
Louisville fire chief.
The chief isn't happy will! the
21-year-old singer's latest videopublic service announcements on
fire safety, drunken driving and
drug abuse made as a condition for
dismissal of a second-degree criminal mischief charge.
• "There's no visual accompaniment, no sound to better get the
point across,'' said Fire Chief Russell Sanders after showing the !ape
to reporters Tuesday. "He did what
he was required to do and nothing

Jerry lives in Louisiana and I
have already booked a flight to visit
him. I can't tell you how thrilled
and grateful I am. Again, Ann,
thanks a million from Jerry and
me. -- WALKING ON AIR IN
CALIFORNIA
DEAR WALKING ON AIR:
Thanks for letting me know I played
Cupid. Please wrile again after you

told USA Today in today's editions
that the photo session with Moore
was ."very nalllral .... I thought she
was more beautiful like that than
with her clothes on.''
Inside tbe m~azine, there are
~ more revealing photos of the
pregnant Moore, known for her
a11pearances in films such as
''Ghost" and "St Ebno's Fire."
One shows the 28-year-old
actress with her hands on her
abdomen wearing a sexy black
brassiere and panties

The Southeastern Ohio Rabbit
Breeders Association held its second annual "Moonlight Rabbit
Romp" at the Rutland Civic Cenler
on Saturday, June 29.
The festivities began at 9 p.m.
and lasted until 3:30a.m. with several hundred rabbits entered in the
show. Exhibitors came from as far
as New Jersey, Maryland and Tennessee.
During the midnight break, the
group held a "dress-up contest" for
rabbits and people. First place rabbit went to Gretchen Taulbee of
Logan, with bunnies in a baby carriage and mother. Second place
rabbit was won by Jane Lawrence
of Ponland with her rabbit dressed
in a running suiL Third place went
to Henry Benedict of Fleming, who
dressed his rabbit in a "Dessert
Stonn" costume.
Terry Fender of Lynchburg,
Ohio was the best dressed human
and Joseph McCall of Shade was
the second place winner.
A queen/king quilt was won by
Lou Childress of Lexington, Ky.,

Donnie Wahlberg
does his time

Demi Moore naked and
pregnant on Vanity Fair cover
NEW YORK (AP) - Actress
Demi Moore appears naked and
pregnant on the cover of v.~ity
Fair magazine's August edmon,
with one hand under her bulging
belly and the other across her
breasts.
Both her baby and her next film,
"The Butcher's Wife," are expected in lale August. She iUid her husband, actor Bruce Willis, alrea~y
have a daughter, Rumer, who •s
almOSt3.
.
Photographer Annie Leibovitz

~

Slovenia accepts peace plan;
officials still wary of violence

t

COSTUMED WINNERS •
· rabbits and tbeir owners were
winners in the "Moonlight Rabbit
held in Rutland recently. Pictured, left to right, are Terry
or Lynchburg, Henry

...

rv'"'" .,

9._ _ _ _-l

BISSELL
.UILDERS
CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At Reasonable Pricos"
PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949-2860
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS
4·i6·86-«n

FOREVER
BRONZE
TANNING
Sumtrllt Speele/1
30 SESSIONS

$3 0

949·2826
TACIIIVIUE RD.

RACINE, OH.
6/11( 91/1 mo.

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK

992-2269
USED RAILROAD TIES
6· 12·90-tfn

MICROWAVE
OVEN REPAIR
All MAKES

Bring It In Or Wo
Pick Up.
KEN'S APPliANCE

SERVICE
992-5335 or
985-3561

Across From Post Offlco
217 I. S.&lt;ond St.

POMIRO Y, 01110
3/6/90/Hn

POOL~2!!~NINE
Open Tues., Tt,urs.,
Fri .. Sat. 7 :30 p.m.

POMEROY
BOWLING
380 East 2nd St•

992-3432 or
992-2403

8 -4 -'91 -1 mo .

I

~.o..--_;,__---------------------- ---- ---- ··· - · -·

�Page-1 0-The Dally Sentinel

Announcements
3

Thursday, July 11, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

32

Announcements

Mobile Homes
for Sale

44 •

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry

Apanment

1

Wright

fidential and affordable. Wrtla .
Slnglaa, PO Box 1043, Galllpollo, OH 45631

Autos for Sale

t981 Codolllc Coupe OoVillo, big
car, every option, new tlr•, 35d,
v-a, tts95, &amp;t4·992-67'19.

for Rent

'72 mobile home 12xe!, exc
cond, $4,500. 304-1115-3ell4.
12180 T,.llor For Solo, On
Clorko Chopot Rood 814·3888473.

Single tervlc:e and newalettar
tor arN alnglel. All agn Con-

11

Pomeroy-Middl~port, Ohio

ill:Jfsday, July 11, 1991
BORN LOSER~--,
':.1~ 1\\"i 1r; F~~

I&gt;W

G

M~ V~TI?Il ?TA!lf~

IWN""', CAlJ I

D

THU., JULY

11

•

writers, I have
known suffering.

ABOUT FOUR
MINUTES LATE
6 112 Chol1 Typo Old Model
Froozor In Good W01klng Cor&lt;fl·
tlon, Mut Be Removed From

BaHmtnt 614·379-2612
C.t and 3 klnana, 304-675-1484

992-&amp;na

kitttnt, light gray,
montha, a304-615-$953

Wanted to Buy

5449

Couch nMda 110m1 repair, 614·

Frat

9

:'::':'::-:"':":"""':'"-~~-:,...,..­
Wanted to b~. Standing Umber,
Bob Williams &amp; Sona 614-992-

2

Wanted To Buy Standing Tim·
ber, Top Prices Paid For White
Oak 6 Aah Call aner 7p m 614-

367-7S19

Htlf Collie Pups To Glv..way

614·388-11033
Heavy stHI aiding and lumber
from a building, 1Ul·992..&amp;802
Maytog Dryer, Avocodo Color,
614·3711-221'2
Part Chow/Part Englleh Shtperd
puppies, 2 mo old, "614·i92·3161
Puppies Fr• To Good ~oma
Have Bean Worm«t. Haa Shott,

Employment Services
11

Help Wanted

==--:-...:..---,--,---

11

Help Wanted

Wanted· Sarvlct T.chnlcian tor
Heating &amp; Air Condition·
lng/Rerrlgtratlon. Experl•ncltd
Send Auuma· Cll 071, c/o Gil·
llpolls Oallv Tribune 825 Third
Avenua, Gllllpolls, OH 4563t

14

Business
Training

Relreln
Nowi!ISOU1hustem
Business College, Spring Valley
Piau Coli Todoy,l14-446-436711
Regil1traUon ttO.O!S-12748.

AVON · All areas, Call Mar ilyn
Weaver 304·882·2645

18

Answer phon.. locally tor
Natlonwldl Co. full &amp; part.tlma

Will Bobyoh In My Homo
Anr.lme
Rodney
Area
Re arencH Availabla Ali Shifts
Coil 614-245-5788.

or will train, hiring lmmadlately
tl1rtlmtly high wagea, Sat·Sun
11om-Spm, M-F 9:00-5 OOpm,
614-&amp;g.a..2061
Puppies, mother Beagle, 304882-3507
POMEROY
' ASSEMBLERS NEEDED'
Two 3 Month Old Khttnl, Two 8
Immediate openings. No II·
WMk Old Ktnena, 514..46-4070
parlance needad ~ulj/Part-tlmt
8 WMka Old 614-446-6634 attar

6pm

TOLL FREE 1-60Q.743-592t,
Bilm·10pm 7 days
----------·I Coil

Wanted to Do

Bush Hog Service R11scnable
Ratlt. No Job To Smalll 614·
37'11-2942.
Chrtstlan Mother will baby In
hlr home, Flatrock arH, 304·
895-3801 or 3()4.6n.381 1 b.fort
9:00PM.
George• Portable Sawmill, don't
haul your log• to the mill juet

6=-:L_o:-::st..&amp;-.-:F-:-o-U_n-:-d-:--:-l
AUSTRALIA WANTS YOU
7l·singl• water ski found on July Excellent
Pay,
BsneUis, call304.e75-1957.
1 on Ohio riverside near Transportation,
407~92-47'17,
MlntriVilll, 614·992·5623
Ex I. 571 9a m -10p m Toll Have room for elderly person In
Refunded
need ol good homt, 614-.667·
Found- Sm groy 6 brown
3776
AVON
I
All
Aroaa
I
Shlrloy
DOOdle, Rocksprings Ad, vary
Spears, 304-675-1429
..,onast, axperitnciW:I house
~riondly, 992·27'111.
painter, would like to paint In·
Found. Cal In Gallipolis, 614· Case Manager Full-tlmt, Salary sldt and oul, 304-675-7609
Position, Monday Thru Friday
446·9346
Hklh School Education Rt- Interior and exterior painting, 10
Found. Milod Brood Shoppard, qulrod, Wllh Addltlonol Training yrs experience Roof palnflng.
Experience Hand washing hou111, trailers,
like long Hotrod Mole Doa RtcommtndMI
Found Norntup, C"lf1""' Roaa Working With The Public A Plus wlndowt Odd jobe Rtlarancas.
Aree. He Mi11n Owner! Plta.t, This ~o-'Ucm Requlrn An En· Ffll eallmat11 304-675-2708.
614-256-6442, With Olhor ldon· lhuslasllc Poroon Wllh A Caring
tltylng Information
Altitude, Somaon. Who Is Inter. Mlsl Paula's Day Care Ctnltr
tsttd In Ptople And Haa A Sate, affordable, childcart M-F
Lost Bugle pups, O.monlha old, Commilmant To Helping Ptopla 6 1.m • 5.30 p.m Ages 2~10.
1·white and lan, 1·red, Mt Hill Make Poslrlvt Changesln There Belora, after achool. Drop-Ins
arM of Racine, 614-949-2985
Lives Applicant Must Havt welcome 614-44e.8224 New In·
Reliable TransportaUon Stnd lanl Toddler Ca,., 614-44U227.
LOST blk mlniiUrt Poodlt, 2tilh Resume
To P.O. Box 454, Gal· Will build patio covers, dtcb,
SlrHt 1r1a, answers lo "So",
llpolis, OH 45631, Anentlon
acrHnld rooms, put up vinyl
304...&amp;75-1085 after 4 30
Personnel Olrec:lor
siding or trailer skirting 614·
Loll Ski·Bob, blue, yellow, and
Domino'• Plzu of Pomeroy now 245-5657
black Lost In Ohio River, 614· taking
appUcatlona.
992-6983
LOST mans glaaHa In lan ca ..,
Sluablockera,
nor1h
Point
Pleesant 304-675-3937.
lost

1 While Female Seagle
Cog in vlclntly Bladen Road
Has Red Collar, With Kennel
UctnM Numbtr 212, Lliat S.. n
July 41h, 614·2!16-8173

7

Re~

Yard Sale

Gallipolis

&amp; VIcinity
2145 Eaetem Avanue, Lol 21,
Saturday,
9·?
Cunalna,
l'ouoohold, lntanl, Toddler
Soya, MIK
3 Femlly: 1930 Chatham Avenue,
July 111h, 12th, 131h
• 3 FamUy: Craf1e, Clothn, Ping
• Pong Table, Fumtlure, Home
lnt , Roollng Shlngloo, Blkoo,
"Scoottri.L Camping Equipment,
:Jiooko, •rldoy, 121h, Sotrudoy
.J31h. 4 Mll11 Out Bulaville Pike
.Aaln!Shlnt
- 4 MIIH Oown Rt7, 1r.l MIIH Off
- 111.7, (Orchord Hill Rood, Foot,
Sh-lrlna Rldgo Rood) Fuml·
turo, Clothoo, (lll SIZK) Toyo,
Mlac. Friday, Saturday, 8-0ark.
All Yord Soloo Mul1 Bo Pold In
Advonco. DEADLINE. 2 00 p.m
the day bltore tha ad 11 to run
Sunday .dhlon • 2 00 p m
Friday. Mondey tdhlon · 2 00
p m. Saturday.
Big Solo! Juty 121h • 201h 3
Mllu Below Rio Granda
Toware:t Soulhwastern Schools
Big Vard Sala Today thru July
13 9 to 5 424 Rand Avt ,
KenMigl, OH
Garage Sale July 12th, &amp; 13th,
g...s. ~ LaGrande Blvd Nica
Adult l Chlldrens Clothmp,
Toya &amp; Other Hou11hold Items
July 11, 12, 13 1154 S.Cond
Avenue Eatatt Salt! Contents
Of Six Room House, Furniture,
Appliances, Tools, And Mise, 9·5.
Yard S.le Firsl One Thla Year!
July 111h, 12th, 13th 3 Famllltal
ClolhH, GlaiiWirl, Furniture,
Many More hems! Balnaltt
Road AI Picken• Furniture WV

Pomeroy,
Mlddlepon
&amp; VIcinity
Garage Salt, Fri.S.t, Ok;k War·
ner rMkfence. Seneca Or bel·
wNn Salisbury Elementary and
Molgo High School
lntlde Rummage S.la, Fri-Sal·
Sun, July 12·13--14, 48644 Hor"
Cane Ad Racine, 314 ml ott
Bashan Ad Lots of hems very
low pricoo. Roln or Shlnol
July 11·12..13, David Brewer'•,
g,.,.., Rd on eo Rd 21,
Portlond, Bold Knob Rd.
July·13, tum flr.t road ..n. p.ut
WMPO from Mlddlorrt Hill, 5th
h...,.., roln or ohlno
Yard Sail, chUdrwne toy•,
Soturdoy July-13, i:00-4:00, 102
Pork Sl, Mlddiop011, OH.

8

Public Sale

&amp; Auction
Rick PooNOn Auction Company,
full time aucllonear, complete
ouellon O«Yice. llcenlod Ohio,
Wol1 Vlrglnlo, ~-77:1-5'185 .
Top PrieM For: All Old U.S . .
Colno, Gold Ringo, Olamondl,
SU...- Colno, Storing, Gold
Colno. M.T.S. Coin Sfiop, 151
Bocond Avenue, Oolllpollo.

EARN MONEY R..dlng bookol
$30,000/yr Income potential
Ootollo (1) aOS-962-8000 Ext Y10180
Fiesta Hair Salons, Inc, NHds
Talented Stylist• 6 Managers
lmmldlattly. Top Hour1y ll'ay
Phil
Cammlsekm,
Paid
Vacations, HNtth Insurance,
Credit Union. Fr11 Educations &amp;
Incentive Programs Available
Join The ~asteat Growing
Family of Hair Salona In lh•
Mldwnt &amp; Share Their Succe11
For A Fantasuc ClrHr Future
Whh No limits. Coil 1-800-8256363 Aak For Myma
n Rtcepllonlst Records Clerk
Need•d To Provide Clerical
Support In Mtlga COunly Out·
pallant Clinic In Pomeroy And
Vinton County Outpatient Clinic
In McAr1hur RequlrN A Highly
Organlzld And Aeaponslble In·
dlvldual Who Ia Familiar With
Clinical And Fiscal Record
KHplng In HeaHhcere Settings
Pltaaanl And Helpful P11·
sonallty Reliable Tranaporta·
tlon. M-F 8:30 a.m -4 30 p m
PlteH Rtspond Wlth Rtsutm
And 3 References To Bonnie
Sweeney, 406 Richland Avenue,
Athena, Oh 45701 E 0 E
Growing Southeastern Ohio
HVAC Contrector In NHd Of An
Experienced Service Tech·
nlclan Good Pay, bcallenl
Bentllta Stnd Reaume To
"Technician" PO. Box 806,
Jackson, Ohio 45640.
Growing SOuthlaetem Ohio
HVAC Contractor In nHd of en
experienced Mrvlce technician
Good pay, excellent benefits
Sind Resume to ''Technician"
P 0 Box 806, Jackson, Ohio
45640
HIV Program Coordln.tor.L Full·
Tlmt, Frve·County Area ttased
In Athena Takt Ovar A Grant·
Fundtd Project Which Aequlr11
Dual Skllla Of Community
Development!Educatlonal Out·
reach And Individual Ttsl·
lng/CounsaUng Bachelor'• 0..
grH In Health, Social Service
Mangemen1 Or In Related Field.
Sllary $20,000 To 522,000. Sond
letter And Resume Naming
ThrH Employment Refertr"CH
To Planned Perenlhood Of
SOulhull Ohio, 396 Richland
Avenue, Alhens, Ohio, 45701
ATTN Zudak E.O EJE.S P
HIV Program Coordinator, full·
tlmt, live county erN beNd In
Athens Take over a grant·fun·
dtd project wtllch requlrH dual
skills of community dtvelopmantleducatlonal outrnch, and
Individual lntlnatcounHiing
Bacnelor'e degrH Tn health, social urvlc:e management, or In
related field. S.lary $20,000 to
$22,000 Send tetter and resume
naming tt"tr11
employment
reterencn lo PlannMI Partn·
lhood of Southeaat Ohio, 396
Rk:hland Avenue, Athens, Ohio,
4!701
ATTN
Zuclak
EOE.IESP
lnterealed In 11lling or wanl to
buy Avon, trH glh, call Kay 614·
992·7180.
JOBS IN ALASKA-Hiring Enlry
Lavtl. $800 00 + wetkfy Con·
alrvctlon, Cannerlu, 0 11 Flelde
CALL NOW t-200·736-7000 Ext
16t7Ba
S.rvke Aeprauntallva: Per·
manent parl·llme , whoJeull
distributor •eka mature, ml·
obto lndlvlduol to oorvtco choln
account• &amp;: place re-orders In
your local era One day per
Wllk. Good WI. • paid
mllllgo. lnlervlowo will bo hold
In yout: aru, Send written
respon11 to A Gasper, PO
Box 1813, Kent, OH 44240.
Someone lo Haul Scrap Buildtnt Motorlolo Awoy 114-~2612 .

Financial

New 18x80'a, Now On Display AI
EIHII Homa Center, AHor·
dablllly, luxury, 6 Ouollty. Coil
1-800.51111-S7'10
New 1011 14x80 three bedroom,
2 lull bothoh ohlnglo roo I, vinyl
aiding,
s Ulllf'l,
carpetld
lhrouQhout, all drywoll Interior
ond 2-boy window. ti7,D!I7.00.
Coll1-800-7211-4045.
Mobile home and thrte 1011
Prlco roducod. Phone 304-812·
3557
Trailer for ule or rent, 304-7735226.
33 Farms for Sale
11 Acroo, Cilln 6 Hoot, Vory
Nlco 3br Homo, OUtbuildings,
B1rn, Tobacco Ball, Mineral
Rlght•L?vor 4 AcrH Boltom
lond, ...,,ooo. 614·256-1357.

34

Business
Buildings

Completly Furnished mobile
home, 1 mile below tow~1 over·
looking river: No Pets, \#A. 814·
446.0338
North 3rd St, Mlddloport, Ohio, 1
bedroom furnished 1pl, releren·
en and deposit rl&lt;(uirtd. 304·
aa2-2588
North 4th Mlddloport, Ohio 2
bedroom furnished tpt, depo1ll
and reftranca required, 304-882·
2566
One bedroom apartment In Uld·
dltport, stove end refrigerator,
AC, 5225.00 + Oopooll, 1-814992-3687 or 992-3312.
Small tumlahld apt on Mt. Ver·
non Ave, loWtr duplex, S26S
month plue eleetrlc Reference
and deposit, 304-675·2651.
Vlf'/ nice 1 bedroom apl, beaut~
lui country Htling, frte laundry
&amp; Wlltr, air concf, loca!IW:I Park
Ad Darwin OH, call C.R Pratt,
614·594·5322, $275 monlh.

OFACE SPACE FOR LEASE on
2nd Avo, Golllpollo Clooo to
Coull Houn. 1 room, 2 rooms,
Furnished
3 rooms, 4 room. All nicely 45
deconltd, air conditioning,
Rooms
your Wiler &amp; aewtr bill are pata.
Meke your chok:e now. No Apartment availab le lor 2 or 3
quotH over tho phonolo you conslructlon workers :104-882·
muat 111 them Phone r an 2S66
oppolntmonl. 114-446-76DD day,
446-1538 lVI.
Rooms tor rant • wetk or monlh
Staning at $120/mo C.illlll Holel
614-44~-95110
35 Lots &amp; Acreage
Sltaplng
room• wllh cooking
Loti I 1creaga available tor
new home conltructlon on Also lrallar epact All hook·ups.
Rayburn R01d. Paved road, Call a her 2 00 p m , 304·77'3county
water,
reaaonable 5651, Mason wv.
reatrlcllona. Complete Inform•·
lion mailed on raquel1. 304-en. 46 Space for Rent
5253, John D. Oortoch, no
Country Mobile Home Park,
elngla.wldt tralltfl, plea11
Route 33, North at Pomeroy
25 acres, rural waler avaUable, Lota, 11nlala, parts, 111ft. Call
locatlld on Broad Run Road, G14·992·llf79.
Now Hovon, $28,500. 304·773-

5881

Mercer Bottom Sub-division,
one acrt lois, Rt. 2 frontage,
price r8ductd, city water, 304·
Opponunlty
578-2331.
!NOTICE!
Ohio Rlver lot 205' frontage,
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. comer lot wlold trailer b.. rfng
r11commends th.at you do busl· fruit trHa, garden, $17,000 30(.
ne11 with people you knowhond 882-3425
NOT to 11nd monty throug the
mall until you heYe inv11trga11d For Sale: River bank propeny In
the oHerlng.
Mooon. 304-773-!16!11
Ar1hur'a Chain Link Fence
Rtsldtntlal, Commercial, In·
Rentals
dustrtal, Free Estlmalesl Com·
pitt• Installation Pnone 514·
384-&amp;m
41 Houses for Rent
local Va~~i Route For Salt,
Cheap 1·
95·1119.
2br HouM, 58 Mill Creek. Wllh
VENDING ROtJTE· Got Rich Stove.._ 6 Rolrlgorolor 11651mo,
uopooH 6"14-446-3870, 614Quick? No Way! But We Have A 1100
Good, Steady, AHordable, Busl· 446·1340.
ntll. Won't last 1..000.284· 3 bedroom, GaillpoUs Ferry,
VEND
30HI75-395Q, 7 30 till 4.00 Wllk
doyo only.
3 or 4br Housa Out Of Town In
Real Estate
Gellla Counly Ar11 614·367·
7844
21

31

Merchandise

Business

Homes for Sale

room hOUII 44 Ollvt Sl, Gal·
lipolll. $275/mo Inquire at 918
Second Avtnua
5

Srnoil 2 BR/1 B homo In
Syl'lcuat,
rtfrenc11
and
3br 2 Fun Bolhl, Gltat Room, 2 MCurlty cleposh required, call
Car Gorogo, $57,5QO 614-446- collect, 1..CQ8.723.47C2 after
0706
3pm.
5 Mdroom, 2 112 bath, lg
kitchen,
fam1ly
room, 42 Mobile Homes
w!llraplace, living rm, dining rm,
for Rent
double garage attacMd, 4 113
acrn, $"65,000 Firm, call 614· 12x60 mobile home for rent Par•
985-3574.
tlolly tumlolltd. 814·367-GSB&amp;
Roducod To Sell 2 Story 3br 2·BA mobile home, central air,
Comer let In Cheshire, Ohio large lot In country, very. nice,
Excellent Condition For Financ- $250 month, $200 aecurlty, 614·
Ing, Five Star Mor1gagt, Vickie 843·5288
Hauldfll.n. 614-44&amp;.404"2, Sailer
Will Pay Polnls 904-932-69S9, 2·BR mobile t-tomt, private
drlveb nice ntting, moat
904-932-7670
suita Ia :atfdulta, no pelt, 5
flatwoods Ar11, Pomeroy 2 Polnta tref, 614·992·2640
Story Home New Kilchan,
Bathroom I Carpeting 11 2·BR, Iota of yard and llowtra,
no pets, above Ntw Haven, $200
AerH 614-4•&amp;-2351:1
mo. 1·304-812-2468
For tale by owner, log home In
country, 15 ec111, 3 -bedroom, 2br mobile home In village of
llvlngroom, family room, 2 112 Vinton, clo11 lo store &amp; post
batt11, In ground pool, heat oHic~ill occopt H.U 0 614·
pump, all tlec, ertras Owner 388-vr 111.
will finance down payment to
qualified
•ppolntment 44
Apartment
only 304-8115for Rent
GOYERNME!fl HOMES lorm tt
(U repair). Dll}~uent tax 1 BR apartment living room,
Aepoaeeaalons. Vour fum'ld kllchen, atovt, rtlrlg.,
oroa (1 1105-962-1000. Ext GH· dlehwaal1tr, g~rbage disposal,
10181 lor curronl ropo 1111.
ehower In bath, gas hut, air
cond
Oulet neighborhood
Hou11 for F,..ll Mull move oH Referencu tnd deposit 614·
lot In Middleport Fill In bo... 446·1370 after 5 p m.
menl, aNd and ltraw Muat sign
contract! 2.. BR, Lllrga LA, D"R, 1br Apartmanl, Appllancll FurBolh, hoi now root and guttor, nllltod,
1
Bloek
From
now coppor ond PVC plumbing, Downtown. Call 614-446--4639
need aome work , You piiY for
the movlngf Only Hrioua :Zbr Apartment Water, Tnah,
colloral Coli 6M-982·207'1 oftor Slovt, a Refrigerator Furnished
614-446-3940
700pm.

buJ:e

p10portf

Lyons Addhlon In M11on, 661 Third Avenue, Gallipolis,
quonly IKIIH, 4 boclroomo, 3 2br, Attrigtrator, Stove, Mentha
Oulsktt
Storage
baths, cuetom Nt In kttchln, O.poait.
DR, FR, 2 llrop!ICII, CA, 1 ocre $250/mo. 614·245-959S.
lot, Morelli $117,500 30-4·'77,l. Apartmont For Ront, Golllpolls
5881.
&amp; Point Ploaoant 5M-448-8221
Me yo Drive, Ntw Haven, 10x125' Apt tor rent 8HCh Street Mid·
lot, 4 bodroomt, t 112 botht, 2 dloport, Ohio, 2 bedroom tur·
IIOfYij Ill brick, bock doCk COin• nlahed, dlixllh and reflrtnce,
plot vcorpolod, --2312.
304~82-IIMI.
On lilt-, 2 811 ,....blo Sid, IUUTlFUL APAIITIIENTS AT
2 t/2 bom. I oor flll'lgl
wicorport. 1.711 ocroo pluo. Oil· BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
llpollo oc_.o_ Owner looking ESTATES, 531 Jocbon Plko
trom l1!121mo. Wolk lo shop 6
lor ollwo. 211-235-m!.
movloo. Colllt4-441-2588. EON.
32 Mobile Homes
B-h Stroot, Mlddlopoft, Ohio.
One roan oHic
opt,
tor Sale
,.,.,...... lnd d1
• ~
W-1.1881.
•
SSOO Down On Soloct R..,.,..
-ood Mobile H - . Froo Sot Cottago lor ront, tumlohod, AJC,
Wonted· Poroon To Hong Up And Oollvory. Flnonclng corpol, good neighborhood, no
Dropory, 1/ortlcal &amp; Mini Bllndo Avolloblo. Mid Ohio Anonco, f. ~ :,. Pil111nt, WV 1·304114-441-o-111
100-.1811-5711.
2

=

51

Household
Goods

Booullful SOlid Ook Dining
Room Suite, 1 Y11r Old, 614·446-8000
Corpol $4.00 Yord &amp; Up. Vinyl
$3 99 &amp; $4.99 Yord Porch Turl,
53 99 6 55.110 Yo rd. Mollohon
Corpola, Upper River Rood, 114440-744-1.
County Appllonco, Inc. Good
ulld appllancn, T.V. slla. Open·
a o.m lo 6 p.m Mon ..Sol. 614448·1600, 627 3rd Ave. Gal·
llpollo, OH
Forts! gr11n urpel, haltwey
runner and padding, racllner
chslr, table and chairs, 304-1756120.
GOOD USEO APPUANCES
Waahers, dryers, refrlg•atora,
rongoo. Skoggo Applloncoo,
Upper River Ail Bnlde Stona
Croat Mo111' Coli 614-446-73INI.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Comp1111 home fumls~i~~=·
Hours. Mon-Sat, 9-5 61
0322, 3 miiH out Bulovlllo Rd.
Fr11 Delivery.
PICKENS FURNITURE
Now/Uaod
Housat"tokl fumlehlng 112 mi
Jerrlcho Rd. Pt PINHnt, WV,
call 304-67S·1450
Rtfrlgeratorll $125, automatic
washerl, ssS; lllctric drylll,
$7S; goo dryo,., $50, goo rongn, $75 , wnlte Kenmore
tltctrlc l"llnge, like new, $150;
electric range, $75; 5' cheat type
dMp trHter, $150, portable
compact washer, $125, 2 gas
double oven ranges, $9S tach,
gas build In oven with drop In
burner, $75, 2 electric drop In
bumera $50 each; 5 hood tans
wllh llghll, $20 oach, 1 Spood
Ou11n wringer washlr, $7~. All
klnda
of
mlacellantous,
houeet"told
lltma .
O.lbtrt
Swisher's UMCI AppUancea,
Comer Rand and Perch StrHt,
Konougo, 614-446-7473.
RE!fl2 OWN
614-446-3158
Vi'ra Furniture
Sola 6 Choir, $11!0 WHk:
Reclmar, $5 47 WHk, Swivel
Rocker, $3.63 WHk.Bunk Bid
Complete $8 41 WHk, 4 Drewer
Chill, $3.26 Wllk; Poster Bid·
room Suhl, 7 pc., S16 67 WHk,
Includes Baddlng.Country Pine
Olnttte With Bench &amp; 4 Chairs,
tt0.98 Wook OPEN: Mondoy
Thru Saturday, 91.m to 6p m.,
Sunday 12 Noon Till 5p m 4
Mll11 Off Route 7 On Route 141,
In Centtnlry
SWAIN
AUCTION 6 FURNITURE 62
Olivo Sl , Golllpollo Now &amp;Ulld
furniture, hutars, Wntem •
Work booto. 614-446-3150
VI'RA FURNITURE
114-446-3156
LIVING ROOM: Solo &amp; Choir,
tt99 00
Recliner,
l14t 00;
Swlvll Rocklr, $11!1.00; CoffH &amp;
End Tobloo, SIID.OO Sot.DININO
ROOM: Tobie With 4 Podded
Chalre, $141.00, Couni'I Plno
Dlnotto With 8onch nd 1
Chi!~ 1210.00; llltcl!lnt 2

~ eo:c~.J:,''~

:;a:

low
aCt1t111'1,
S112t.OO.BEDROOM: Pollor Botlroom SuHo (5 pc.), $34t.OO; 4
Drawer Chest, $44.81i Bunk
Bod, $229, Complolo Full Mon
sat, tt~.oo Sot; 7 pc. cectar
Bedroom Sullo, $1111!1 OO.OPEN:
Monday Thru Seturday, la.m. to
lp.m., Sunday 12 Noon Til
5p.m., 4 MIIH Off Routo 7 On
AoU11 141 In Centenary.
Whirlpool woolltr end dryer,
304-682·3367.

AKC Fomolo Collie Pup, 3
Monlho Old, tt5C. 10 Btodon
Road, Second HouM Right Ott
Rt. 7
AJ&lt;C registered malt Cocker
53
Antiques
Spaniel, 8 months old, buN, 111
5 Palco Antiquo Tobto Sot, Make shott and wormed $75, 814-992·
Offor. 614-441·1014.
6406.
Buy or atll Riverine Antiques, Boston Terrier Puppita 1 Mile
1124 E. Main Street, Pomeroy Below Swan Cr11k Bridge on 7.
Hoult M.T.W. 10:00 1 m to 6:00 575 Eoch
pm, Sunday 100 to 800 pm
Dog and Cat grooming all
614-992-2526.
brHdl, apeclallud In POodle
grooming, 12 yrs experisnc:e,
304-875-6332.
Dog
Obldiance CIIIHI, Start·
54 Miscellaneous
Ina· 7120J91 For Information Call
Merchandise
61~-446-1884{ Sho"Y Roberto,
Cortlllod Tra nor.
Fuel Oil Furnace, Horizontal
Typo, 100,000 BTU, Uood 5 Doa Obedience Clann, basic
Yoo,., Good Shape, (Somo ond odvoncod, olartlng July 20.
For Information ca~ Sherry
Plpo) 1125.114-:JeJ-71170.
Roblr1a CerUfied Trainer, 614·
1UI John Ooen Modlt B 44&amp;·1884.
Robuln, Excallent Condition!
Hvotor 4 Slago Fork Lift, Dock Oragonwynd cattery Persian,
and Himalayan killtns
Prate, 3 Trallir Axlel, &amp; Trailer Siamua
614-446-3844 on or 7 p.m
Bod. 114-4441-1.1381.
1980 vw Doolwr -Dtoool, 111711 Female i'omeranlen puppy, 304·
Chowv Wogo:&gt;n, 1m Kowookl 695-3926
KX-111 Dirt Blko, Over tho Cob Fish Tank, 2413 Jackeon Avt
Truck Camper, 2-Qimpor Sill Polnl Ploount, ~-675-2063,
Relrlflll'ltOrl, o14-11!12-3otl0.
full line Tropical fish, birds,
1INII Ford C.rao Yon $11,500 small animals and suppll11.
Seven pair arumn Mutt•• Full
blooded
Norwegian
Honda 70 thNe whlellr. Gravely Elkhound puppl,o, 1 malo, 1
btodo. Modlclno cablnoto. Roclp ltmolo, 304-a95-3019
oaw. VInyl oldlng ond trim. 304175-4004.
Poodle pupplea, toy•:. and tea
~upe, AKC Champion utoodline,
2 Plotolo, 44 Mont'""· g MM, Coolville 614-817-3404.
both IXC cond, 304-882· 2010.
Poodle pupplel, loye and tea
2·UIId air condftlontrs, $50 ea, cupt, AKC Chemplon l:uoodtlnt,
coil 614·D92-2155, Tilt Dilly Sen· Coolvlllo 614-&amp;t7-3404.
tlnol.
Regllltered Cnow--ehow puppl11
310 Pounda Welghta With for n le. 3 cream, 1 brown, 1
lench 1 1 Month Olcf, $350. 114· blue, 1 black. 614·446~323
446-87811.
Slam111 Cal, Male, Oeclaw-.:1,
ACARIBBEAN BLOWOUT!
Neutered, S25. 614--446~511 .
We Over BouGht CruiHI,
Florida to The BU.amaa On a 58
Fruits &amp;
luxury Unor, 5 Doya, 4 Nighll,
$22Wcouplo Hotot Paid, No
Vegetables
Olmmlcko. Tlckoto Good 1 Yoor
404-4!11-INI&amp;O
Blackbarrlu tor aale, plcktd,
AduH Trik!L Mloml Sun, All now $8.00 gal, lg swHI, local grown,
114-11!12-8858.
po~o. 51~ 114-11!12-5152 No
later than 1:00pm
leme BlackberriH $8 gal Bring
Approxlmallly 110 yordo bolgo containers, 304-895--3930 or 304·
882-2l114.
carpet, llko now 304-875-65118
Blade I ch1lne for riding
Farm Supplies
gravely, 114-IU-4331.

&amp; l ivestock
Complete Sot Of Encyclopodlo
Brttanlce, Like Hew, 1200. 114446·7503 ollor lp.m.
Concrete l plast~ .. puc tanks, 61 Farm Equipment
Ron Evan• Enterpriaea, ,Jeck·
165 MF Tree1or Wllh Loader,
eon, OH 1-80Q.537-SI526.
54,"!1; 1030 Ferguoon tt,995;
Coppo~ono
111rfgorotor. 8" Llll Modo! 135 IIF $4,550; 900
table uw B&amp;D grau trimmer, Ford $2,105; WD 45 AC New
BID odgor ond trimmor 304· Rubber $995, 11191 Horoo 6
875-10110.
Stock T1111ier, 14ft. $1,995, OWner
Electric Stove With Double Will Flnonco. 614·288-8523.
Ovono, tl25 814-446-80113.
1991 Long 4 Wh dr tractor
Lalt model 454 lnt
Folding Bicycle FOI Clmplng $8095;
(Foldo Up For Tronoport) tto~. dl111l tractor with bush hog,
$31115; 4000 Ford. $2195, 3010
814-446-31134.
JD dlosol, oharp, S4a5C: 7030
lhi-Hd lift choir, tlko now, AC $6995. Owner will finance
prlcod lot quick oole, $300. blue 814·288-6522.
cloth, 304-8711-1811.
Evans Molors, 15-30 Easltrn
RecondtUoned Waehere, Dryere. Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio, Ju1t
Guarantlld prompt: Hf"'IICI for Traded UaiW:I 20ft Goountck
all makH, modell. The Washer Flat Trailer $1,800, New Trailers
In Stock Br. Pondoroeo, 10' 2
Dryor Shoppo. 114-441-IIM4.
Horu Till ar, Bum~r Hitch
Romlngton
1100
Shotgun. Llvutock Trallere 10 Thru 18';
$2000. 8ulh Hoa Flail mower, Alto 6'x18' GooHntck, New
15" pull-behind, 11400 new, Now Hlulboro Trotloro In Stock (2)
$550, 114-II85-43U.
6xt8 Bumper Hitch, Goooonock
Modell In 6x11, 7111, 7116,
Royal Ook Property; 7120, Aloo 24' Goooonock Flot
MuM sll..!t take over paymtnla, Trailer; 8 112 SIMI FlllbtcW"For
caiiiOI-TJHNO 1tter !I p.m.
Plcltupo &amp; Ton Trucko, 17'115
Scanner, kJichln cabinet, oak Wlllgllt Kh. Good Soloctlon of
drttur, oek hutch, metal Trollor Porto &amp; Truck Ac·
clout, microwave w/etand, 304· e~~nories . Bed Mat1, Bed
llnoro, Bug Shloldo, Rumlng
178-1488.
Boarda, Etc. Phone, 61~
Saari Free Stsndlng Flnplact 6592 Open M-F 8-5, Solurdoy, 8-3
Whh Piping &amp; Acc-rioo.
tt50. 114-446-111110 (Doy), 114- 1961 FORI 800 Power Muter
Tractor, EXCIIIent Condhlon,
445·1807 (Eve).
53,800 114-388-11724
Now bolgo cushioned folding·
chaire, regular price at S24.tS, Gravely tractor, runa aood,
Mlllna tor $15.00 a chair, 614· nHdl muHier, 304.e75-45~8 or
675-5441.
11!12-3l114

SIMI pipe ldHI for culvert, all Jlm'o Form Equlpmont, SR. 35,
elzu, call from 5 00 to 8.00 PM. Wool Galllpotlo, 814 .. 46-9777;
W1dt aelectlon new • uNCI farm
Conogov!Me, WV 304-372-8405.
tractora I lmplementa. Buy,
Surpluo orm~ orlglnol 1111111, Nil, trade, 8:00-5:00 w11kdays,
colloctabloo, (rontol ourpluo 53 Sol. 1111 Noon.
garment), Sam Sotn~rvlllt'e,
BHido Sond)'VIIIo Poll oHico. Mllll)' Ferguaon Tractor T0
Frt_, Sot, SUn; NooMI:OO PM. 35 With Bruoll Hog, Blodo, Dlok,
Culllvalon,
Otnor dayo, ltouro call 3D4-273- Culo Pocko,.,
PIOWI, Wagon, $4,000 Firm. 614·
6855 botoiW11:00AM.
2S8-13S7
Tobocco Stlcko, 114-3711-2272.
63
Livestock
55
Building
Ntw Polled Hereford bull, 8
Supplies
monlhl old, brHdlng atock,
OUaplt Howard, 614·112·7458
Block, brlck, MWer Dlpea, win·
dowo, llnlolo, otc. Cloude Wln- Ulld goooonock 4 11oroo troller,
toro, Rio Orondo, OH Clll 114- $2305; 3 yoar old AQHA Wootom
Ptusure gelding brott"tar to
245-.112\
Worid PloaSUit chomplon 614Pool docko, ln-9round I obov!&gt; 2111-8522.
Country P01ci1H open •
ocroonod In Ortg(nol dlslgn•.
Frte Htlmat•
Ret.,.nc"
Transportation
ovolloblo. ContoCI Odlo, 114-44617S8.
71 Autos for Sale
56 Pets for Sale
1947 Plymouth Coupej 1DM Fal·
Groom ond Supply Shop-Pet con, Bolh $3,200. 614-446-2971
Grooming. All billdo, otyloo. lhtr7p.m
lome Pol Food liMier. Julio
Webb. Cal 114 441 0221, 1-IOO- 111711 Otdo Cutlo11, good body
W-G2tt.
ond ol1orlbr, 1250 304-885-

:IINI.

.uu: ~
" OacW"""""
-.z
,_ ...

1
Whhe ond
Buff, 171. tach, 7 wk• old, 111
ohoto ond wormed, 304-6751020.
AKC Boxor puppiH, 4 Wilko
old, callovonlngo, 304-871-1588.
-~~. lull

AKC Clllhuohuo Pupploo, Mollo,
tiOOi Fematn, 113!1. AIIOi
Clllhuohuo Stud Sorvlca, 114311J-7HI.

1177 1 f'enl LTD, 4 tleor, air,
......- . $410•• 0~
llr, 161 N...... Dr.
1m Lincoln lllrlt V, now
Mlcholln llroo ond b,.ko lob,
11,200. 1117'11 Pontile Bonnovlllo,
A·1 c;ond, $1,200. 304-773-8130.
111711 Comlro Z·2S, robuiH
tl'llntmialfon, new exhlu.t, new
tlroo, r.no QIWII, ~-685-3081 .
1980 Plymouth Horizon, (Now
Shocko 6 Struto, 2 Now Tlroo)
814-446-8150 onor 5p.m.

1970 Doda• 1 ton flalbed, 318
snglne, 3"7,000 actuaf miles,
51600 call anor 4 oo 614·742·
2S41

6:00 (II . . (I) (I) . . IHl 1121 til
1121 Newo
()) Andy Qrlflltlt
(!) Club Connect
(J) Reading RatnbOw [;J
I]] til Andy Qritllth
t!J Cartoon Expreao
ID Thoroughbred Olgell
world Today
ID Our House
6:05 (1) Bewitched
6:30 (II D I!)) NBC Newo [;J
()) I Dream of Je•nnle
(I) (I) D ABC News [;J
(!) Wild America Stereo Q
(J) 3·2· 1 Contltct Q
IHl I!)) til CBS Newa Q
I]] til WKRP In Cincinnati
1D Up Clooe
6:35 (1) Andy Qritlltlt
7:00 (II II I!)) Wheel of Fortune

~ Ntght Court I;!

197'1 Toyota Land Cruiser, E•cel·

II! MocQ~ver Q

ID SportoCenter

a Moneyllno

2968.

1986112 NltHn, 4dr, hard body,
king-cab, roll·blr, brush guard,
logllghlo, rod wlblock trim
53200.00 304-882-3425
19&amp;a GMC outo PSIPB AC
cruloo, till. loto oloxtrao. nnt;;d
w1ndowa, dlllll. 614--446..ao44.
1989 Ooclgo D-50, 21,000 Mlloo, 5
Spead, Bed Liner, Super Sharp
Truck! $13S/mo. 614-446-6751,
614-446-7804

&amp;4

IT"'5 A VI/ZVf T/'"IAT
MtG~A1'EI&gt; HE{i'E
I f'OM TtNNf,.({ff ....

you'llt GOT T,.,f

WD's

C/1ATTANOoGA

1986 Ct"ttvrolll half lon truck,
4x4, 35!500 Otlglnol miiH, 30S
V-8 eng ne aulo, $7,000. 304-882·
2012
For Sale. 1980 Ford Rtngar, 4x4,
V-8, Auloi: Air, Topper, Mog
Whlela, txetllent Condition
$4,DOO. 614-441-(1419, oftor 5p.m.
74

A He Hoo • AHC/fOo.

Motorcycles

1979 Honda-Gotdwing, Full·
Dress, 1000ml on engine, $1800
BO or Trodo, 8 OOam-12 00
noon, 614-D92-3078
1982 Honda Goidwlng, 1100 cc
614·992·7794
1983 Hondo 75Q Shadow, Uko
Now, Only s,aoo Mlloo, 614·37112927 after 7p m

EEK AND MEEK
'rEM~.

I&lt;IGHT

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

4 Goodyear Elgl1 tlrH, VR60P22SI60 VR1S, S!SQ 304-6753528
79·up Chevroltl truck hood
$50.00, 7'11-up CfMivrolot bod·
skta, pn11nger side, $50.00
614-992-t125 afltr-5.00

Budge! Transmissions, Used a
rebulll, starUng 11 $99, Auto
Pa~s
614-24S.56n, 614-3792263.

(J) Myoteryl Stockbroker
Ntgel Timpson Is s uspected
ol tnsider tradtng (PI 3 or 6)

I GUESS THIN66 ~E
PRET1YSI..OW;, i3ClCA!E
THE RE-'vOI-L.ITION-

' ON THIS DI-Y IN
HI6TD~ IN 'Tl-4E
YEAR 1769 ..

i

1121 til Trfllla of Roole
O'Neill Ros•e defends a bOy
accused ol desecrating a
Jewtsh cemetery (R) Stereo

Home

and Dylan reassess thetr
relat•onshtp Stereo Q
1!! MOVIE; Bod~ Slam iPGI

Curtle Home lmprovamenta·
YNro Exporlonco On Oidor a
Newer Homta. Room Addhlons
Foundation Work, Rooting '
Wlndowo &amp; Siding. Froo Eo:
tlmaluf References, No Job To
Big Or Smlltl 614-441-D22S.

(2 00)

BARNEY
WHAT FIGHT
AT WHAT

ELVINEY WAS JEST
TELLIN' ME--UH··

WEDDIN'?

HERE COMES

JET

Ron's TV Service, specializing
In Zonlth 1110 Hrvlclng moot
olhlr brand&amp;. HouH caUs, 11so
eome appliance repilrt. WV
304-.176·2398 Ohio 614-446-2454
Septic Tonk Pumping $110, Goltlo
Co. RON EVANS ElflERPRISES
Jocklon, DH 1-800-537-9528. '
O.vla
Slw·Vac
Service
Georgn Crllk Rd Parts su~
pllll, pickup, end deliverY 614·
446.()294,

ASTRO-GRAPH

Will do remodeling, roofing
building, tr11 trimming and
removel, hou11 painting For
frM nllmatn, call O.Orge at 1·
114-11!12-5752.
Plumbing &amp;
Heating

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

gl

,--:.rter's Plumbing
andHuUna
fourth and Prna
llolllpollo, Ohio

514-446-~1

Elactrlcal &amp;
Refrigeration

llooi411Miol or coonmorclol
wiring, new atrvlce or repelra.
Malter Uoanatd elechiclan.
Ridenour Eloctrlcal, 304-675t7M.
Upholstery

Mowrty'o Uphollloring OMVIclng trl county oroa :U yoo ... Tho
.,_ In tumttu,. UphOIIterlng.
Clll 304-e75-4154 lor !roo ootim••·

~---- ·--------------------------------------

I

0

f---,:....;;.~-r-n-;~ 1

I

I

I MH

._

s
I

I

0

AR

~.....l:.....;.,l...;..;-r.I6,.....TI-,II'I'-;

Overheard m lobby at mtar·
m1sston : "Have you ever
not1ced that the larther a
theater seat IS from the atsle
the later the patron . . ..... ?"

e

COtnpielo tho chuckle quolod

•
•
•
by f•ll.nQ 10 the m1ss1ng words
1 you develop
IL-....1.-...L...-L--"--'---'
from step No 3 below
A PRINT NUMBERED tEllERS
~ IN THESE SQU ... RES

6 g~~c!~~iER tEllERs To I

IIIIIII

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS

J • 'o

Orphan- Adage - Tooth ~ Ehc1t - TALENTED
Piano teacher to unruly student. "You'd better
behave or I'll tell your parents that you are
TALENTED."

July 12, 1991
lmprovQments 1n your financial poait1on
are likely 1n the year ahead However,
you'll have to guard agamst the mcllna110n to speculate or take monetary
risks
CANCEII(June 21-July 22) II there has
been an Improvement 1n your fmanetal
aHa~rs recently, you 'd be smart not to
talk about It In front of a friend who has
not yel repa1d vou an old loan Get a
1ump on llle by understanding the Influences govermng you In the year ahead.

Send lor Cancer's Astra-Graph predlc·
\Ions today by ma11!ng $1 25 plus a long,
self·addressed, slamped envelope to
Astro-Grapn c/ o lhts newspaper. P 0
Box 91428. Cleveland , OH 44101-3426
Be sure to state your zod•ac s1gn
LEO (July 23-Aug. 221 Rather than
make waves today, "you may make
some concess1ons to someone w1th
whom you re closely mvoived But be
hrm when nectfssary
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sipt. 22) You' re nol
hkeiy to lack 1n1t1at1Ve or 1ndustnous·
ness today. yet you may not accomphs,h
your ob1ec1ives. there's a chance you II
use the wrong tools or procedures.
LIBRA • (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) The right
types ol social mvolvements could do a
world ol good lor your attttude today
However. associating wl1h nega11ve
companions will take the edge oH your
optimism
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) II you chal·
lenge someone whose views and opm·
Ions are con1rary to yours today. noth lng of value Is likely to be gained.
Neither you nor this tndlvldual has Ihe
power to change the world
· 8AGmAIIIU8 (Nov. 23-0ec. 21) Your
ra 1th In your philosophy of me might be
tested and found to be lackmg today. It
m1ght be' wise to ask yourself. 'Who Is
wrong. 1or my behels? ·

NORTH

BRIDGE

@ NoohviMe Now Stereo
ID Top Rank Boxing
Heavywetght bOut Alex
Garc•a (20·1, 15 KO•) vs
JerryGolf(16-11 . t1 KOs) ,
10 rounds from Gardnerville,
Nav 1~1
Larry K1ng Live!
9:30 (II I) II]) W1ngs Helen s
birthday becomes a source
or competrtton (A) Stereo Q
10:00 (II I) I!)) L.A. ~ow McKenZie
proposes to defend Rosalind
Shays after she IS arrested
(AI Stereo C
&lt;I) (I) IIJ Prfmotlme LIVI
Stereo C
(!) (J) AOva From 01( Center
Stereo. C
IHl 112111f Candid Camero
DysfunctiOnal gadgets.
shnnk1ng shelves, the owl
and the m1crowave, k1ds m
the kttchen, confusion tn a
Chtnese k•tchen: the lady
fireman . (Rl (1 00) Stereo Q
I]] ID Star Trek
World Newo
all 700 Club With Pat
Robertoon
10:20 li) MOVIE: Night of tho
LIPUIIPGI (1 55)
10:30(!) (J) New Televiolon Q
ll!l Crook end Chua

CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jan. 191 A jotnt
venture tn whtch you 're Involved could
work out OK, prov1ded there is panty 1n
all th tngs Netlher should be expected
lo rnvest morelhan the other
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Feb. 19) You may
request advrce lrom several people today. then do what they told you nol lo
do - 1n sp1te of thetr unammous opm.
10n Don 1 blame them 1f 11 doesn't work
out
PISCES (Feb. 20-Morch 20 Your produciiVIty will be pred1cated upon the
way you schedule your tasks today The
worst th1ng yOY can do Is put yoyr most
dlnlcun Jobs last
ARIES (Morch 21-April 19) You may be
put In an awkward position todav where
you hava to deland an old lnend regard1ng an Issue you don't truly sup·
port Oo the best you can, even '' your
heart Isn't In It
TAURUS (Aprii:IO-Mey 20) tt 's very_ •mportant that neither you nor your mate
air your domesttc dlfterences tn public:
today II you do both or you could soverely tarnish your Images.
GEMINI (M•r 21-June 20) Something
vou feel enthusiastic about should not
be discussed at this time w•th an assoctate who rs notonous lor expressing
, negative views It could dampen your
oullook

1 U-11

+Q57; l
.Q ~
+61
+Q 8 72

.2

PHILLIP

ALDER

WEST

EAST
+A J

.J9164

• 10 8 3
+A KQ942
+K3

• 10 7 3

+Jt094

SOUTH
+Kt0 9 64
• AK2
• J8

Clairvoyants
may apply

+A 6 &gt;
\ulne. . East-West
Dealer South

By Phillip Alder
SGutb
West
Nortb
East
Pass 2+
3NT
The result on some hands ts almost 1+
Pass 4 •
All pass
tmposstble to predtc t As an example. Pass
look at all four hands m today's dta·
Openmg lead
J
gram What do you thmk wtll be the
outcome m four spades. g1ven the club
Jack lead'
L--------------'
East's Jump to three no-trump was
slightly sporting. but tf his dtamond
won the ( orst tnck wtth the club ace,
sutt was runmng and dumlny tabled played off three rounds of he arts. dtsJUSt the club ace. he would have nme
cardmg one of dummy's dtamonds
runnmg tncks Here three no-trump and led a trump to the queen and ace
was destmed to hmsh two down, but
Surely the best East could do was to
rather than rtsk tis makmg. North sactake hiS two mmor-sutt wmners Howrthced in four spades
ever. he was made of sterner stuff
West made an unfortunate lead True he cashed the club ktng. but then
Gtven hts hand and the auctton, he
he led a low dtamond
s hould have deduced that hts partner
If only South had been awake, he
held solid dtamonds A lead of that sutt
would have played the dtamond Jack
would have ktlled the contract for
and made an overtnck But he d1dn' t
sure But the J-10 -9 sequence lured rum a good story - he put m the etght
West mto leadJng hts top club
So West won the trtck wtth the dta·
East was marked With the club kmg , mond 10 and gave hts partner a club
and smce the second round of clubs ruff for one down
could be ducked to brtng 1t down , de@ 1•1. NEWSPAPER ENTt:RPAIIE ASSN
clarer looked to be m !me shape He

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The World Almanac Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS
1 Actor Richard
5 Can. prov
8 Machine
parts
12 Va61 p8rlod
oltlmo
13 Employ
14 Barrel band
15 Surfeit
16 Comparative
suffix
17- -about
18 Small open·
lngln door
20 Strong·
smalllng
21 Last mo.
22 Four qts.
23 Of whom
26 Arctic vahlcle
30 Jekyll's
opp0111e
31 Martini
liquors
32 Ear (comb
lorm)

Anawer to Prevlout PHzzle

33 Unclose
(poet.)
34 Dangled
35 Shark
36 Complaining
38 Walks In
water
39- and
down a
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41 Hums
44 Of no value
48 Cemenl
containers
49 Whale
50 Tilled
51 Tamarisk salt

tree
52 N. Amer.
nation
53 Unclothed
54 Golf pe~s
55 Women • pa·
triotic soc.
56 Waned -

2 Slippery
3 Dissipated
man
4 Speak
eagerly
5 Comlorter
6 Plaintiff
7 Always

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�Page--12-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, July 11,1991

Ohio Lottery

Thomas smoked marijuana in colleg.e President Bush accepts
base-closing plan

WASHINGTON (AP)
Supreme Court nominee Clarence
Thomas "took several puffs" on a
marijuana cigareue in college and perhaps again in law school but the White House says the matter is "inconsequential."
The conservative appeals court
judge "believes it was a mislake
and never repealed it," the White
House said in a statement Wednesday nighL
The statement said: "Judge
Thomas took several puffs on a
marijuana cigarette in college and
perhaps once in law school.''
"Judge Thomas fully disclosed
thi s information on the FBI form
and interview which were provided
to the Senate Judiciary Committee
in connection with the judge's
nomination to the court of
appeals," said the statement read
over the telephone by White House
spokeswoman Judy Smith.
"We view this maner as inconsequential,'' the statement said.
Ms. Smith said she could not
immediately provide information
beyond the statement but suggested
that questions about dates and
places might be cleared up today.
Thomas is a graduate of Holy
Cross College and Yale Law
School.
The statement was prepared in
response to a query by The Washington Post.
Another Supreme Court nominee in recent years was tripped up
by marijuana smoking.
Federal appeals Judge Douglas
Ginsburg was selected by President
Reagan for a Supreme Court seat
on Oct. 29, 1987, after the Senate
defeated the nomination of Judge

on Bush," Bork said. "If he nominated a white male conservative,
there wouldn't be a chance that
he'd go through. The Senate Judiciary Comminee has forced a quota
system on Bush."
The president denied Wednesday that he was filling a racial
' quota by picking Thomas to
replace the retiring Thurgood MarshaD, the court's only black justice.
Bush called Thomas' nomination "the right thing at the right
time" and predicted he would win
confmnation.
Thomas is continuing his visits
to key senators at their Capitol Hill
offices and is preparing for his confirmation hearings scheduled for
September.
Bork said Thomas is "probably
not" the best legal mind the president could find for the court job.
"But he may be the best legal mind
he had a chance to get confirmed,''
Bork said.
"There's no point to (Bush's)
throwing up great legal minds who
are going to get shot down," Bork
added. "The object is to get somebody confmned. George Bush has
a problem with that very liberal
Senate and an even more liberal
Senate Judiciary Committee.
"In these days ., you have to go
to somebody who has a constituency. and right now that means a
black, or a Hispanic or possibly a
woman," Bork said
Bork said he thought Thomas
would be confmned despite a rancorous political fight. "The key is
the Southern Democratic senators
who need the black vote to be
elected," he said. "If the black
vote is solidly against him, he

UNDER SCRUTINY - Two Supreme Court nominees in
recent years have been tripped up by marijuana smoking. Judge
Clarence Thomas, right, President Bush's nominee for the High
Court, "took several puffs" on a marijuana cigarette iD coDege and
perhaps again in law school. Federal appeals Judge Douglas Gins·
burg, len, who was selected by President Ronald ReaJan for a seat
in the Supreme Court on Oct. 29, 1987, withdrew hiS nomination
after admitting be bad smoked marijuana while a professor at
Harvard Law SchooL (AP LaserPboto)
Robert H. Bork. But Ginsburg won 't be conllnned."
withdrew nine days later after
But Bork said the black vote
admitting he had smoked marijuana probably will be split, allowing
while a professor at Harvard Law Thomas to win confmnation.
School.
Southern blacks and numerous
Meanwhile, Bork said in an civil rights organizations opposed
interview with AP Broadcast Ser- Bark's nomination four years ago.
vices that political reality forced Anthony M. Kennedy eventually
Bush to use a quota system in pick- was confirmed to fiU the vacancy
ing Thomas for the high court.
Reagan had chosen Bork, and then
''That kind of a choice is forced Ginsburg, to fill.

Space station gets subcommittee 0 K
WASHINGTON (AP)
NASA's space station project survived a challenge in a Senate panel,
but critics of the $30 billion-plus
orbital laboratory said they may try
to slash the money later on.
An appropriations subcommittee
gave voice vote approval Wednesday to a bill giving the National
Aeronautics and Space Administration $14.3 billion in the fiscal year
that begins OcL I.

That would be $437 million before the full Senate Appropria- not only NASA's science and techmore than the House approved last tions Comminee late today.
nology programs, but those of other
month after rancorous debate, The
. Part of the work for the space independent agencies as weD.''
Senate version adds $128 million station will be done at the NASA
Some Democratic senators said
to the $1.9 biDion the House allo- Lewis Research Center in Cleve- after the subcommiuee meeting
cated to the station, bringing it to land.
that they might try to slash tile stathe $2 biUion level President Bush
Approval of the space station tion's funds when the bill reaches
requested.
money came over the protests of 14 the Senate floor, no earlier than
An $81 billion bill to pay for major scientific societies. They next week. Once the Senate votes,
housing, veterans and space pro- said in a lener to the Senate that the any differences with the House will
grams, including the station, in the "excessive cost" of the proposed be ironed out by a joint committee.
coming fiscal year was to come station "threatens the v1tahty of
The $30 billion cost estimate is
NASA's and covers expenses to
the turn of the century when the
station is in orbit and ready to be
occupied permanently by four
astronauts.

New figures released on
deaths caused_by US forces
By SUSANNE M. SCHAFER
AP, Military Writer
WASHINGTON (AP)- U.S.
forces killed 20 of their own and
British troops and wounded 28
more in "friendly fire" in~idents
durin$ the Persian Gulf War,
according to figures released by the
U.S. military.
But Pentagon sources warn that
investigations under way will add
to the tragic toll.
"It won't be massive (numbers),
but there will be more," said a
senior Pentagon officer, who spoke
on condition of anonymity.
In the most detailed description
yet released of cases where allied
soldiers were killed by American
forces, U.S. Central Command said ·
Wednesday that 11 Americans and
9 British troops died, while 15 U.S.
troops and 13 British were wounded by friendly fJre.
That translates into about 7 percent of all Americans killed in
action during the 43-day war.
"This is our best snapshot so
far," said Capt. Jack Fouts, a
spokesman for the U.S. Central
Command in Tampa, Fla. "As
. more investigation is done, the
numbers could change .... This 1s
something that certainly will

rece1ve lots of study."
From the beginning of the air
war on Jan. 17 until the end of the
ground war on Feb. 28, the U.S .
military counts 148 troops killed in
action and 458 wounded.
The British count 24 total deaths
from combat action. Eleven of
those were due to auacks from U.S.
forces.
The Central Command and the
Marine Corps cited the ongoing
studies in declining to reveal the
names or many specifics of the various incidents.
ln past conflicts, the military has
not provided casually figures for
U.S. troops firing on their compatnots.

But given the high-tech nature
of modem warfare, the subject has
become the object of intensive
Slildy inside the Pentagon, which is
scouring its performance in the
desert to fmd ways to prevent such
deaths.
Here are the Gulf War friendly
fJre incidents, as reported by Central Command:
-Jan. 24. Two Marines were
wounded when a U.S. Air Force A10 strafed a Marine Corps HumVee and a 5-ton truck.
-Jan. 29. Seven Marines were

.

.

killed by friendly fire wben a U.S.
Air Force A-10 fired a missile that
hit a Light Armored Vehicle during
a clash with Iraqi forces.
-Feb. 2. A Marine lance corporal was killed and two Marines
were wounded during an air attack
at the battle for Khafji.
-Feb. 14. Three U.S. soldiers
were wounded in a small arms
exchange during urban clearing
operauons.
-Feb. 17. Two Army soldiers
were killed when a Bradley fighting vehicle was struck by a missile
fired from an AH-64 Apache helicopter. A ground surveiDance vehicle was damaged in the incident
and six soldiers were wounded.
-Feb. 24. A Marine was killed
and two Marines were wounded
when a missile struck a radar unit.
A Marine Corps spokesman said
the incident occurred near AI
Wafra inside Kuwait.
-Feb. 26. Nine British soldiers
died and II others were wounded
when the armored vehicles in
which they were riding were fired
on by a U.S. Air Force A-10.
-Feb. 27. Two British soldiers
were wounded when a U.S.
armored vehicle ftred on their tank.

Rep. Leon Panella, D-Calif.,
whose district includes Fort Ord,
said the community must look to
the future uses of the base's land
Some Texas lawmaters have
concluded that although the state is
losing Carswell, Bergstrom Air
Force Base in Austin and Chase
Field Naval Air Station in Beeville,
Texas will gain about 4,000 jobs
because realignments will draw
more people to Fort Hood and elsewhere.
Courter said communities hit by
shutdowns can be the "beneficiaries of greater prosperity down the
line" if they readjust to using the
base for other purposes.
The panel made one last-minute
change to the list: Fort Chaffee,
Ark., once listed as a closure, was
put in the realignment column
because some active duty personnel
will remain at the facility_

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2 sections, 14 Pages 25 cenls

Vol. 42, No. 48
Copyrighted 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, July 12, 1991

A Multimedia

tnc. Newspaper

AEP: Coal bill
won't matter
WELLSTON, Ohio (AP) - A
new law that seeks to preserve coal
mining jobs by giving utilities
incentives to bum Ohio coal likely
wiD not affect the fate of American
Electric Power's Gavin plant, an
AEP executive said.
William Lohta, executive vice
presidenl of the corporation, told
the Southeast Ohio Regional Council Thursday that incentives contained in the bill were positive tools
but must be placed in perspective.
"The $!-per-ton tax credit at
Gavin would amount to about $6
million annually, but contrast that
with the average annual cost of
compliance at Gavin, which ranges
: from about $125 million to $230
· million, depending upon what compliance option you choose," Lohta
said in prepared remarks.

"So these incentives, though
they may possibly be helpful at
other locauons, probably will not
play a major role for Gavin," he
said.
Bill Oiler, a United Mine Workers official, said he wasn't surprised by Lohta' s remarks. Oiler
was among 120 people in Athens
Thursday night for a Public Utilities Commission of Ohio hearing
on the Clean Air Act.
"AEP is a business. They can't
make a viable decision on just the
legislation. The PUCO will have
something to say.'' Oiler said.
PUCO Chairman Craig Glazer
said the hearing and otllers to be
held in Columbus and Canton
would help the PUCO analyze
AEP's overall plan to comply with
Continued from page 3

FAMILIAR SITE. You know it must be summertime when the
Delta Queen travels through the Big Bend area. The boat "visited"

Middleport and Pomeroy during tbe midday on Thursday,
bedecked in red, white and blue bunting.

·Aging program funding phased! Voinovich will sign budget
out in approved Ohio budget
By ROBERT E. MILLER
Associated Press Writer

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
Only phase-out funding for the
Options for Elders program was
·included in the two-year budget
passed by the Oh1o General
''!\$Set!jbJrltlld' Mw awaiting Gov,
George V. Voinovich 's signature.
Eleanor Thomas, director of the
Meigs County Council on Aging,
expressed her disappoinanent at the
program phase-out Friday morning
after receiving word of the General
Assembly's action from the Ohio
Department of Aging, Columbus.
It was Gov. Voinovich's original budget recommendation that
the Options for Elders demonstration programs in Southeastern Ohio
and Franklin County be phased out
and that the Hassport program be
expanded.
Mrs. Thomas said that $3.5 million has been included in the budget for the two year phase-out period. The program ·of assistance to
the elderly in their homes will
cease in July, 1993.
In Meigs County approximately
75 frail elderly have been able to
remain in their own homes with
some assistance through the program. Many, according to Mrs.
Thomas, may now be forced to
move into a nursing home or in

with members of their families in
order to receive the care they
require.
The dollars from Options has
provided home delivered tleals,
homemaker services, transporta·
lion, and chore services, and health
care through the Home Health Services of Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Services were provided on a
sliding fee scalc,meaning that
many receiving services paid a portion of tile cost. While this many
times was a small amount for
many, it meant that they contributed to their care while being supplemented through Options making it
possible for them to remain independent in part.
Options for Elders has been considered an extremely successful
program in Southeastern Ohio by
the agencies involved and the
recipients. Many of the 75 receiving services have indicated that
they would not be able to remain in
their homes if such help was not
available.
Mrs. Thomas has repeatedly
defmed the Options for Elders progrnm as cost effective, pointing out
that the cost to the State would be
much increased by phasing out the
program since the services provided in the home are much less than

Maynard, the village's pool manager. Maynard resigned as pool manager but was hired by council as a
Dennis Wolfe was named on lifeguard. She agreed to continue in
Thursday night by Syracuse Vil- the position or manager until a
lage Council to fill the unexpir_ed replacement could be found.
However, council did hire Shanterm of Council Pres1dent J1m Hill,
whose resignation was effective on non Slavin as pool manager. Slavin
could not be reached at last night's
July 3.
.
There have been two resigna- meeting to confirm the appointtions on the council in as many ment, but had previously told counmonths. Earlier, Jack WiUiams was cil that she was interested in the
named 'to fill the seat of Teresa position.
Discussion was held regarding
Tyson-Drumm~r. ~illiams was
the general operation of the pool
sworn in at last mght s meeung.
Pool Business
and the pool's financial condition.
Also resigning a post was Marty According to discussions held last

Tf1EMrN IJflii S ~ AVINGS f DUN!J IHHIJlJGHOlll lHF SlfJRF 1

7·2·2211
TOU AEE 1·100·137·1217

Tonight, mostly cloudy
wilh a chance or showers
and thunderstorms. Low
65-70.

Page4

By KATIE CROW
Sentinel Correspondent

WE HAVE A SUPER SELECTION OF USED APPLIANCES.
RA!'IGES, DRYERS, REFRIGERATORS, ETC.

St. lt. 114

Pick 3:756
Pick 4: 9414
Cards: Q-H, 2-C
J-D; 8-S

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) nursing home care.
Ohio's lawmakers adopted a $27.2
Tbe budget does provide for an billion biennial budget bill and
expansion of the Passport program• · Gov. George Voinovich said within
However, as explained by Mrs.
he will sign it into law
Thomas, only the indigent, or Med- minutes
when it reaches his deslc, probably
icaid eligible, qualify for services next week.
under that program. She said that
final votes marked
of the 75 now on Options, only theThursday's
end
of
a
long
pro- ·
about 10 or 15 will be eligible. This cess that started bargaining
in March and
means that a few thousand dollars bogged down two weeks ago when
elderly residents might have saved the Senate and House were forced
for home or health emergencies or to enact a one-month budget to
even burial expenses would have to meet a July I fiscal deadline.
be "spent down" before they would
In a flurry of activity Thursday
qualify for any assistance through before adjourning for a summer
Passport.
break, the Senate completed pasUnder Options in the Southeast- sa~e when it voted to go along 27-5
ern Ohio project which covers I0 wllh the report of a conference
counties, a caseload of about 700 commiuee that resolved Senatehas been maintained.
differences.
Under the Passport program in House
Earlier, the House approved it
eight of those same 10 counties, 80-15 after members of both parthere are only 100 slots for Pass- ties called it a responsible docuport. This means that 600 of those ment that stretches the state's
frail elderly now receiving ser- declining tax revenues as far as
vices, even if they are Medicaid possible to avoid cuts and maintain
eligible, will not have a place in the vital services.
new progrnm.
While the governor said he
In anticipation of the phase-out would sign the bill, he indicated he
of Options, no new clients have might veto pans of it. He did idenbeen accepted since July I. Ser- tify any specific targets Thursday.
vices will continue over the next
In other business, lawmakers
two years to those already in the completed passage of a separate,
program or until the $3.5 million 1991-1993 budget totaling about
set up in the budget has been spenl $411 million for the Bureau of
Workers' Compensation.

Also approved was a separate,
two-year appropriation of $77.4
million for the Ohio lndustnal
Commission, which hears appeals
from decisions regarding injuredworker claims.
Both of those agencies arc
financed by employer assessments.
Rep. Patrick Sweeney, D-Cleveland, chairman of the joint committee, told House colleagues that tile
two-ye~r budget is fair and balanced, and is the best the state
could do in uncertain econom1c
times.
Sweeney said the bill shows
necessary restraint but protects
education, health and other v1tal
services without raising major
taxes.
"It's a budget you can take
home and say, 'Ohio is· well managed,' " be said.
. .
While General Fund spending m
the next two years would exceed
the 1991-1993 budget ~~~ore than
$2 billion, the bill man
acrossthe-board cuts if tax revenues fall
below estimates.
It calls for about $281 million in
new "revenue enhancements" that
enabled the conference committee,
after other adjustments, to add
$120 million to the bill's total.
The revenue gains will come
from. among otller things, extending the base of the 5 percent sales
tax to lawn care and landsc_aping.
detective and protection services.

I

and purchases or equipment by
cable television companies and fed eral contractors.
The biggest portion of the
money is earmarked for welfare,
including a soaring Medicaid program, which receives $11.3 billion.
Primary and secondary education is down for $7.4 billion and
higher education $3.6 billion.
Generally, education will
receive money in the first year
about equal to current levels and a
5 percent boost in the second year.
House Speaker Vern Riffe. DWheelersburg, said the budget is
"in tune with the economic realities of tile state at this time." He
said it reflects beuer management
than other states that are struggling
to pass budgets during the recession.
Some minority Democrats in the
Senate voted against the bill, how
ever, denouncing sharp cuts in the
General Assistance welfare program and what they said were inadequate outlays for education,
among .others.
"This is the worst education
budget in this state in the past l 0
years," said Senate Minority Leader Robert Boggs, D-Jcfferson.
The biU, in the negotiatin~ process, was stripped of several trutiatives proposed by the governor,
including a plan to turn Ohio's
retail liquor stores over to the privaiC sector.

Syracuse village council discusses pool, recycling program

You'll Find Storewide Savings On
All Bedroom, Living Room &amp;
Dining Room Furniture••••
NOTHING HELD BACK!

President Bush, who has sigThe most commonly known
naled a willingness to sign gun- brands that the bill would ban are
control legislation if Congress Uzis, AK model assault rifles and
passed a crime bill to his liking, the Street Sweeper.
mdicated last week that he found
The assault-weapons ban, first
the Senate bill generally accept·
sponsored by Sen. Dennis
able.
DeConcini, D-Ariz., was narrowly
Attorney General Dick Thorn- approved by the Senate last year
burgh went to Capitol Hill .on but was stripped out of anti-crime
Wednesday to urge Republicans to legislation during a House-Senate
vote for the bill.
conference.
But one of the Senate· s leawng
It would require people who
supporters of $un control said he already possess the weapons to regwould vote agamst fmal passage of ister them with federal authorities.
the measure because of the numer- The measure also would impose a
oos death penalty provisions.
10-year mandatory sentence on
Sen. Howard Metzenbaum, D- defendants found guilty of using
Ohio, said the bill "virtually • the banned weapons in a violent or
assures that we will execute inno- drug crime.
cent people; people whose only
The focus of the gun-control
crime was to be caught in the cross- debate was on the so-called Brady
fire of this legislative duel over Bill, which imposes a waiting periwho can be tougher on crime."
od on handgun purchases to give
Beside the waiting period on police a chance to check to deterhandg._lllf'rPurchases, the bill would mine if buyers have criminal
ban tile manufl!Cture and sale of records.
nine types of semiautomatic
Th'at debate effectively ended
weapons. These arc five foreign- June 28 wben the Senate voted 67made styles of assault weapons and 32 to impose a five-day waiting
four domestically produced types.
period on handgun pwthases while
police conduct background checks.

·,

' defense spending by 25 percent in
the next five years.
A number of other major installations are slated to be eliminated:
Fprt Ord, Seaside, Calif.; Fort
Devens, Ayer, Mass.; Carswell Air
Force Base, Fort Worth, Texas and
Long Beach Naval Station, Long
Beach, Calif.
Congress, like Bush, is forbidden bv law from amendin~t the
repon, Its lake-it-or-leave-it vote is
likely in September.
Courter, a former Republican
con~ressman from New Jersey,
predicted the report wiD eventuaUy
"receive the blessing of
Congress," but not without a
pitched lobbying battle.
Lawmakers from Pennsylvania
and New Jersey have filed a lawsuit in federal district court to block
the closing of the Philadelphia
installations.
Senate Majority Leader George
Mitchell, D-Maine, was one of nine
lawmakers who unsuccessfully
petitioned Bush to send the report
back to the panel with recommendations that it remove from the list
three Strategic Air Command
bases: Carswell, Loring Air Force
Base in Maine and Castle Air Force
Base in California.
The lawmakers complained the
panel reached its decision on the
SAC bases "hastily under an
abbreviated, irregular procedure,
simply because" members faced a
deadline.

8 Big .
DaveI

Senate moves toward passage
of sweeping crime bill
By JAMES ROWLEY
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Senate is moving toward fmal passage of a sweeping crime bill that
would impose a five-day waiting
period on handgun purchases and
ban nine types of semiautomatic
assawt-style weapons.
Senators took a big step
Wednesday night toward final passage .when they voted 71-27 to curtail further debate, which has taken
up nearly three weeks of the chamber's time.
It was not immediately ~lear
when the final vote would take
place.
But Senate Majority Leader
George Mitchell, D-Maine,
obtained an agreement for an additional 10 hours of debate, with
amendments restricted to those
directly related to provisions in the
bill.
The crime bill expands the federal death penalty to include 51
crimes and conrains tougher ~nal­
ties for drug traffiCking and illegal
use of fueanns.

By JOAN MOWER
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - President Bush declared his "total
acceptance" Wednesday of an
independent panel's recommendalion to close 34 military facilities, a
belt-tightening move that reflects
the nation's shrinking defense
requirements.
Bush sent the report to Congress
where the battle over the bases
began almost immediately .
Congress has 45 legislative days to
approve or reject the package, but
cannot modify iL
Sen. Arlen Specter, R-Pa., upset
over the panel's proposed closing
of the Philadelphia Naval Shipyard,
introduced a resolution to kill the
plan. Aside froJD the clqsures, the
plan would restructure 48 other
military installations in the 1990s.
About 82,000 uniformed and
38,000 civilian jobs are directly at
slake in the areas where the closores are slated, and many other
workers doubtlessly would face
layoffs as local firms struggle to
survive without military dollars.
But other communities stand to
gain, because some bases would be
enlarged and modernized in the
shuffle.
Bush said he was happy with the
way the seven-member Defense
Base Closure and Realignment
Commission conducted its business. "I think they did their work
without any reference to politics,"
he said, adding the list had his
"total acceptance."
Bush, speaking at a news conference, acknowledged· the hardships some communities wiD experience. "Any time' you close a
base, your going to have people in
that district or that state raise Cain
about it," he said.
Jim Courter, the commission
chairman, said the president was
"very enthusiastic" about the
report as well as the panel's handling of deliberations in open sessions.
The closings proposed by the
commission will cost $4. I billion
from 1992 to 1997. After that, savings are projected at S1.5 billion
annually.
The cuts, which were endorsed
by the Defense Deparunent, underscore projected changes,in the U.S.
military m the post-Cold War era.
The Pentagon is planning to reduce

Pirates beat
Reds

night, the pool continues to' operate
at a deficit and costs the village
from the general fund. Council held
discussion on possible remedies for
the situation.
Recycling Program
Henry Eblin, the village trash
collector, also met with council
regarding the recycling program
that ~ill be mandatory in June,
1992. Councilman Jim Pape stated
that Eblin should come up with
ideas that will work for both Eblin
and the village.
Eblin noted that he has not spoken to anyone regarding the progr:un at this point. and is not cer-

tam. at thiS JUncture, which pro- ucts ...
Other Business
gram would work. He is also not
Member Kenny Buckley
sure at this point how the program
brought to the attention that a lot at
would work.
Pape stated that it must be eco- the comer of Bridgeman and Third
nomically feasible for !iblin and needed cleaning, and trash ncar the
that the village must have people area needed to be hauled away.
willing to work with thc -progrnm.
Buckley also noted that a
"If the program does not work," guardrail near the corpol]ltion limit
Pape said, "where are we going to was in need of repair or replace put the trash?"
ment. Council believed that it was
"Recycling starts in the the responsiblity of the Ohio
kitchen,'' Eblin noted. "If people Department of Transportation.
have a good attitude. it will work.
Buckley also reported that vanHowever, recycling is just another dalism at the park and dugouts is
utility. It will cost additional
mon~y to handle recyclable prod-

increasing .
Attending were: Mayor Eber
Pickens, Councilmen Buckley and
Pape, Council members Katie
Crow. Jack Williams and Minter
Fryar. and Clerk/Treasurer Janice
Lawson.
The council also adopted a proposed budget for fiscal year 1992.
Receipts are estimated at $166,425
and expenses at $168,325. Council
estimates the balance as of December 1992 at $20,448. The council
also adopted a mayor's report for
reciepts $1,496 for June.

Kings Island death
~------Local briefs--------,
resulted from drowning
Sheriff's deputies probe accident
Sharon Farley was treated but not transported.

Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby repons th;lt his deputies
probed a one-car accident Tuesday pight on State Route 681 at
Snowville.
According to the report, Alan Holter of Athens was heading cast
in his 1989 Ford and went off the roadway on the right in a curve.
Damage was sustained to the underside of the vehicle.
No injuries or citations were reported.

EMS units answer ji~e calls
Five calls for assistance were answered on Thursday and Friday
by units of Meigs County Emergency Medical Services.
At 1:41 p.m. on Thursday, Middleport unit took Benji Call to
Veterans Memorial Hospital from State Route 143. At 2:23 p.m.,
Syracuse unit went to College Street. Russell Radcliffe was laken to
Pleasant Valley Hospital. At 4:27 p.m., Rutland went to Meigs
Mine 2. James Johnson was laken to Holzer Medical Center. At
6:05 p.m., Racine unit went to Canter's Road. Icy Tucker was laken
to Veterans.
At 4:30 a.m. on Friday, Middleport unit went to Mill Street.

•

Theft, entry reported

·

On Wednesday, Meigs County Sheriff's deputies took a th_eft
report from Norman Milliron, who reported that a bathroom smk
and fixtures were laken from his son's home on Bone Hollow Road.
The theft, according to Milliron, took place within ~e last two days.
Deputies also took a report on Wednesday mght from Glema
Yarbrough of Beech Grove Road, who reported that she discovered
someone had broken out the door glass and ransaked the home.
Nothing was reported missing.

Racine fight investigated
The Meigs County Sherifrs Department was called to Racine
late Wednesday evemng for a fighL According to the departtnent, a
vehicle stopped and two subjects got out and began to fighL Shortly
thereafter, the fight stopped, one subject got in the car and the other
walked toward town. The subjects were gone when depuues
arrived. The caller was unable to identify the ear or the subjects.

CINCINNATI (AP)- One of instantly from cardiac arrest caused
two men killed in a pond accident by tile shock.
at an amusement park died from
Haithcoat had jumped into the
drowning and not electrical shock, pond to save a friend, Timothy
the Hamilton County coroner ruled. Binning, who had fallen in and
The men died in the June 9 inci- received a shock . Robertson
dent June 9 in which a faulty aera- jumped into the water to help the
tor pump was submerged in the other men.
pond at Kings Island in Kings
Binning, 22, of suburban
Mills.
Mariemont, recovered.
Coroner Dr. Frank Cleveland
Stanley Chesley, a Cincinnati
said Thursday he ruled the death of lawyer representin~ the families of
Darrell Robertson a drowning in the three men, sa1d Thursday. the
part because the 20-year-old cause of death has no bearing on
Hamilton security guard's lungs possible lawsuits.
and stomach con tamed water.
Officials from the Occupational
But Cleveland said Robertson Health and Safety Administration
and William Haithcoat Jr., 21, of said they expect an investigation
Cincinnati also both received elec- into the incident to be completed
trical shocks.
within a week.
Cleveland said Haithcoat died

,.

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