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                  <text>Page-1 0 - The Daily Sentinel

,•0'-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

r

Rain falls over much of nation early today
•

Y. F. D.

RECEIVES DO!IIATION - The Columbia Township Volunteer
Fin Department rPCeived an economic boost recently In the form
of a M~O donation lrom Southern Ohio Coal Company's Meigs
Dhlslon. The donation was pre!iented to Jim Gaston (right), lire
&lt;'hif'f, hy Mike Delco Ito, .eellon supervisor safety /training lor the
Mrlgs No.2 mine. ThP. fire department ser\'·lces the mine as well as
Us surrounding area, DelcoUo says.

--Area deaths-Rt•\.

Larry Wilson

Hr\·. I.JIT\ E. Wilson. ~):\, of
\'i(' nn:t W Va .. diPtJ .Sunday
morn ing at Camdrn Clark Mem orial Hll:-.pital.
Born in ParkNsburg. \1\: \'a.
Wil.o;;o n wa.;., the son of ttJe !J t r

W.S dnd Eva Jam' 1Pritchard 1
Wibon
Wil so n

\VJ s

rmpln _
v l'd

b.\"

Sco tt . , Lumber Compa ny as a
..,atrsman . Hr was ordainrd bv
lhf'

Aiblf'

l3aptis l Ch ur(' h in
Parkrr&lt;;burg and was a graduatP
of thr L1bnty Baptist Blbi l'
Co llrge rn Lvnrhburg . v.,
Hr h survivpd bv hi s wi fp

Do nna Jones YVi!son·: two ~uns:
Robrr t A Wilson. a t homt•, and
.lamPs F . .JonPs. JacksonviiiP.
Fla .; a granddaugh!Pr. Jill ; one
brothf'r . Frank Wilson; a n lf'CC', a

nrphrw. four au nts and a cousin .
SrrvirPs will br conducted ar 1
p.m . on II'Pdnesday atthl'IVhlte·
Ethridge Funrral· Hom&lt;' in Bel
prr wi th Rev . Donald E Mat hen(•_
, . officiating. Burial wi ll foll ow
in thr Pf'nnslxlro MasonicCPme·
!Pr y Friends may call at the
funrral home from H p m and
-; . ~,p . m . on Tuesday .

Tina Chandler
Tina Darlene Chandler. 21. of
West Co lumbia. d.Jed Saturday, July
7. 1990, m West Columbia.
Oom Dec . I . 196H. in Ch1cago,
Ill .. she was a daughter of the late
Noel Bernard Chandler, and rs sur VIVed by her mother and stepfather,
Pa~tera Ann Chandler Blankcn sh rp
and George 0 Blanken ship.
She ts also survtvcd by three saslers, Grnger Lynn M:uwcll of Roll '"~ Meadows, 111., Susan JcanetJ£
Krndcr of Ch1cago, Ill . and Joanna
Ly nn Chandler Dangerfield of
Le tart; maternal grandparents. Er nest H and Lucille N. Reed of

Mason.
She was preceded rn death by a
hrother, Da"d Noel Chandler m
1979.
The funeral will be Wednesday, I
p.m .. at the Fog lesong Funeral
Home w1th the Rev. Bennrc
Stevens offr cratm g. Burial will be
in Kirldand Mcmonal Gardens
Fnends may ca ll on Tuesday at
the funeral home fmm fl to 9 p m.

Edward VanMt'lt'l'
Edward Guy VanMeter. 14. West
Co lumbra, dtcd Saturday, Jul y 7.
1990. iC West Columbia.
He was a laborer and served rn
the U.S. Army.
Born Nov. 27. 1955, 10 Mason .
he IS survrved by his father, Charles
Frank l rn VanMeter, Sr., of West
Columbra; mother and stepfather ,
Helen Sur ( Hrll ) Phelps and AL
Phelps . Jr. of West Columbia.
Mdwonal survrvors include two
brothers, Char les Frankhn Van Meter. Jr.. C lrfton. Joseph Allen
VanMeter. West Columbta: two
Wtlcy and Earl
stepbrothers.
Phelps. both of Pomeroy: two stepsisters. Douic Will of Pomeroy, and
Jeanie Cleland of Chrisney. Ind.: a
half-sister, Norma Hutchinson of
Chillicothe, Ohto.
He was preceded rn death hy hi s
grandmother, Mary L. Hrll in 1986.
The scmce was conducted thrs
morning, II a.m., at the Foglesong
Funeral Home wtth the Rev.
George Hoschar officlllting. Burial
was in the Kirkland Memorial Gardens. Military graveside riJ£s were
conducted.

James Hanlon
James Keidt Hanlon, 72, of
Letart, dted Friday, July 6, 1990, al
the residence of a daughter, Martha
Browning of Camp Conley, Poinl
Pleasant.
Born Marth 13, 1928, in Hamillon, Ohio, he was a son of the late
James Wiltiam and NeUie L. (Truster) Hanlon.
He was a retired school teacher
and evangelist. A U .S. Army

Monday, July 9, 1990

veteran of World War II . he was a
member of the Lrvrng Word Church
of Pornt Pleasant
Survivin g arc his wtfc. Marjonc
G. Hanlon: two daughters, Mrs.
James (Mona) Wagner, Mrs. Paris
(Manha) Browning, both of Point
Pleasant: three sons, Dr. James
Kc1th Hanlon . Jr.. Morehead, Ky.,
Dw1ght S. llanlon. llatti , West In dies. and SJ£ven E. Hanlon,
Durango. Colorado: a brother.
Forest E. Hanlon. Kensrngton, Md.:
one stsJ£r, Bernice E. Winkler Messinger. Davrsville. W.Va.; and II
grandchildren.
The fun era l will be Tuesday, I
p m . at the Foglesong Funeral
Home wllh the Rev. Parker
Htn7.mtm offiuatmg. Bunal w!ll be
in the Sunnse Memonal Gardens,
Letart.
Fnends may call today, 3 to 5
p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m .. at the funeral
home. Mtlitary graveside ntes will
be conducted .

Sarah A. White
Sarah A White, 68 . of Pornt
Pleasant died Saturday, July 7.
1990, at ille Pleasant Valley Nurs ing Care Unit.
Born March 2~, 1922 m Grafton,
West V1rgmia, she was the daughter
of the late George D. Keener and
Lillie (Zumbro) Keener. She was
also preceded m death hy two
brothers. Kenneth Keener anct Jack
Keener and by two srsters, Margre
Coleman and Ada K. Knapp
She was a rct1red employee of
the Goodyear Plant at Apple Grove
and had also worked at Robbm s
and Me ye" rn Galhpohs, Oh10 .
She was a member of the West
Oh1o Con ference of the Umted
Methodtst Church, a member of the
Pmnt Pleasant Woman's Club, a
member of the Order of the Eastern
Star and the Order of Whit£ Shnnc
of Jerusalem tn Gallrpohs. Ohio.
She is surv tved by her husband .
the Rev. Omlle R. Wh1tc ; a son.
James M allO&gt; of Port St. Lucie .
Fla .; a brother, George D. "Bud "
Keener. Jr. of Ormand Beach, Fla .:
seven sisters , Ellen Hogscu of
Ralcrgh , NC, Frances Beller of
Point Pleasant , Grace Jackson and
Sue Hoschar both of Dunbar, NnUI
Keefer of Troy, M IChigan , Jo Lou
All of Davrdson, Mrchtgan and
June Avts of Ormand Beach, Fla.
and two grandchildren .
Funeral services will be held at I
p m., Tuesday. July 10, 1990 at the
Crow- Hussell Funeral Hom e with
the Rev. Frank Rowe and the Rev.
Bennte Stevens officrattng Bnnal
wrll follow rn the Kirkland
Memorial Gardens, Pomt Pleasant.
Friends may call at the funeral
home today from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. A
White Shrine Memorial Service
wiU he conducted at 8 p.m. on
Monday.

Licenses issued
The Meigs County Probate
Co url ha s issued marriage li censes to Ronald Arlington
Haught. 55, Farmington. W Va ,
and Agn es Murrell Buckley, 45.
Middleport; Delwon Ray Lau dermlll, 18, Racine, and Renee
Marie Norman, 18, Racine;
James Norman. 20, and Valerie
Lynn Woods. 22 , both of Pome·
roy ; and Chesler Combs lll , 23,
Racine, and Melissa Ann Mar·
cinko, 19, Chest er.

By United Press International
Wet streets and soggy lawns
greeted much of the nation
Monday as lltunders torms hit the
Southwest and norlhwestern
New York stale and rain dam·
pened northern New England.
Georgia was plagued by~ rash
of Sunday lightning strlkelj that
killed one person and injureld six .
A teenage boy was kUied by a boll
In DeKalb County while walking
past a swimming pool. Lightning
also struck near a crowded rail
going down the Chattahoochee
River, Injuring six of the eight
occupants. Two of the rafters
were hospitalized and the ollters
were treated and released.
In the West, last·movlng thunderstorms left flooded roads and
wet campgrounds In Utah, Nev
ada and Arizona as more than an
Inch of rain !ell in 90 minutes in
western Utah and 55 mph winds
were reported near Salt Lake
City.

Flash flood warnings went up
throughout the region and
campers and travelers were told
to take precauUons, the National
Weather Service said.
The storms were expected to
continue through Tuesday In
Nevada, where raging thunderheads produced a record lor Las
Vegas, the lowest high temperalure ever for the day Sunday, 91
degrees.
Flood warnings were issued
near Phoenix and drivers on
highways east of the city were
told to be extra careful.
To I he east, In the area of the
upstate New York city of Buffalo,
severe thunderstorms with
lightning and heavy rains passed

over Massachusetts, Connecticut
and Rhode Island.
Temperatures ranged from a
high of 70 In rainy Manchester ,
N.H., 10 a low of 61 reported In
Worcester, Mass .. and Houlton
alport In northeastern Maine.
Fire swept through about 100
acres oft he Douglas State F'orest
In Massachusetts, where a dry
spell had lasted lor several days.
But a lire department spokesman said he could not speculate
as to whether dry brush fueled
the flames .
Scaltered thundershower s
across the South gave slight

respite to sizzling temperatures.
The Alabama Department of
Public Health issued a critical
heat alert lor much of central and
south Alabama through Monday .
Montgomery recorded a 102
reading Sunday, Huntsville had
101 and Auburn 100. Millington,
Tenn . also had a 102temperature
with Jackson. Miss. sweltering in
!DO-degree weather and Atlanta
had 99.
A cool front passed across
southern Wisconsin taking lingering thunderstorms with it
ear ly Monday and !raving behind
drier air

across several counties near

who was transported to Veterans
Memorial Hospllal.
Atl2 · 29 p.m .. the Pomeroy and
Syracuse sq uads. along with the
Chester Fire Department. re sponded to a motor vehicle
accident on S.R 7. Jennifer Lisl e
and Shelia Mahood were taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Kelly Marcinko and Bill Mahood
refused trea tm ent.
The Racine squad responded to
a call at1: 38 p.m. for Ryan Yat es
who was taken to Veteran s
Memorial Hospital. At 7:26p.m . .
the Middleport squad went to
Walnut Street for Pa t ric ia Demoss who was taken to Pleasant

Leaders ...

taken to VPterans.

cont inued from page 1

his painful reforms.
But all appeared determined to
see that topic and ollter co nt en·
tiou s i ss ues like trade and the
environment are debated in
private and a only unified front is
presented In public
~onetheless, on the eve of the
mPeling, US. officials reaffirmed their resistance to European calls for concerted West e rn
aid for the Soviets
"Th at 's not right now In the
cards." Secretary of State Jam es
Bakc&gt;r sa id Sund ay on ABC's
" This Week with David Brink lq ." In stead, hesa ldBushwould
see k support for continued " tech ·
nlcal ero nom!r assistance" to
hel p Gorbachev reform the Sovir~ economy .
Bush told reporters he looked
forward to briefing other leader s
on a let ter from Gorbachev, but
offered no hint of a change 10
policy.
White House press secretary
Marlin F'ltzwater said the Soviet
president had asked for "princi pally technical economic assist ·
ance and some credit that cou ld
be beneficial to his reform
ef fo rt."
"I t doesn't raise any new
is sues or new req uests.·· fllz ·

water said.

Stocks
Dally stock prices
(As o110:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; l..ocwi
Am Electric Power ....... . 29Y.
AT&amp;T .
.......... .. 381{.
Ashland 011 .
.. 35'1&gt;
Bob Evans .
. ..... 13.1;;
Charming Shoppes .... . ...... IU\'1
Ci ty Holding Co..
. .. 15V.
. ... 17\'1
F'ederal Mogul... .....
Goodyear T&amp;R
. 29\j,
Key Centurion .............. 12V.
Lands' End.... ....
.. 16%
Limited Inc ....... ...... ... ..... 23%
Multimedia Inc .
. ... .7li'J
Rax Restaurants .. .......... .. 2JI,
Robbins &amp; Myers .
.. ... 2211J
Shoney's Inc .....
. .... 14 }'8
Star Bank . ... . .
. .... 19%
Wendy's Inti
........ 6%
Worthington lnd .
.. ... 23'!.

__ Local news briefs ... _~
Continued from page 1
recenlly in Columbus.
The results of the competition were:
Sarah Harmon, second place In the 50 meter dash and filth
place In the sollball throw; Lis Montgom9ry. !ourllt place In
both the 50 meter dash and the standing long jump; Mandy
Jeffers, third place In the 50 meter dash, and fourth place In the
softball throw; and Tara Boston, fifth places In bollt llte 50
meter dash and softball throw .
Chaperones for the state games activities were Sally and
Roger Holman. Tracy Holman, and Jerod Holman.

Bush has sa id he is unprepa red
to join In what West Germany
and F'rance have proposed as a
$15 billion multilateral program
of loans. grants, cr edit and joint
ventures. But he also has made
clear he would not seek to block
such efforts by individual
co untries.
That sa me approach applied to
aid to China , evidenced Saturday
when Bush met with Prime
Minisfl'r Toshiki Kaifu and said
he would not criticize Japan for
i I s proposed res umption of loans
to China while retaining U.S.
eco nomic sanctions aga inst Bell ·
i ng for the Tlananmen Square

massacre .
On other issues ranging from
farm subsidies to global warm ing summit o!flclals worked
behind the scenes on a final
co mmunique that would endorse
econom ic assistance to Moscow
only In broad and co nditional
terms. give a sholln the arms to
world trade talks , aod m as k
differences over enVlronmental

WEATHER MAP - A weak front will produce scattered
thunderstorms over the central Plains. Widely scattered
thunderstorms are also over the mld-AtlanUc slates. Hot and
humid weather will be over the southern Plains and Gull Coast
slates. There will be pleasant weather over the northern Plains
and the northem Rockies. Sunny skies prevail over most of the
wesrern states, while triple-dtrll temperature readings continue In
the desert Southwest. (UP I)

- - - - - - - - Wealher·------SouO. Central Ohio
Partly cloudy Monday night .
with a chance of showers and
t hunderstorms , and a low in the .
upper 60s. Chance of rain is 30
pPrcent Mostly cloudy Tuesday,
with a chance of showers and
thunderstorms, and highs in the
lower 90s. Chance of rain is 40

percent
Extended Forecast
Wednesday through Friday
A chance of showers and
thunderstorms Wednesday. with
fair weather Thursday and Fri day . High s will range from the
mid 70s to th e mid 80s each day ,
with overnight lows in the 60s .

CLEVELAND tUPtJ - The
Ohio Super Lotto j ackpot ad
vanced by least $3 million for
Wednesday' s drawing because
no one wa s a ble to pick the six
winning numbers in Saturday
night 's $6 million dra wing .
Wednesday's drawing should
be worth at least $9 million
The numbers were 6, 19. 27. 28.
35, and 41.
There wrrc- 111 tickPls with fivC'
of those six numbers. worth
$1.00.1 apiece and o,619 winners
worth $75 eac h.
Total sales were $:3.946 .107 and

the payout will be $532.42o
In the Ki cker ga me . $100,IJOO
for the seq uence of 609368 also
went unclaimed
Six llckel s ha ve five of those
numbers In corrrr·t order for
$5.000 each .
Other comb inations of those
number. four -oul -of -six, 60
winners, $1.000 each; three·out of -slx, 632 winners. $100 each,
and IWO ·OUI · Of -s lx:
6,495
winners, $10 each.
Total sa les In the Kicker game
were $729.304 and lhe prize
payout will be $218,150 .

- - - Meib_., announcements---Bedford Trustees to meet
Bedford Township Trustees
wi l l hold its meeting tonight at 7
p.m . at lh e town hall.

Band BooslPrs to meet
Eastern Band Boosters will
meet Tursday at 7:$0 p.m . in the

Trustees to meet
The Bedford Township Trustees will meet Monday (today) at
7 p.m . at the lawn hall.

high sc hoo l band room .
B&lt;&gt;ard to meet
The Mei gs Cou nt y Board of
Elections will hold its monthlv
mee ting on Tuesday at4; 30 at the
office of the Board of Elections in

f

1 Section , 10 Pages
25 Cents
A Muttimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. Tuesday, July 10. 1990

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel Stall Writer
A budget of $1,599,335 for 1991
was adopted by Middleport Vil lage Council at its regular
meeting Monday nigh! al villa ge
hall.
The budget , as presented by
Mayor Fred Hoffman. showed a
projected deficit of $89,136. with
$75,200 of tha t shortage being in
the general fund
Estimated total receipt s inlo
the various funds total $U39.R7R
with $496,950 in the general fund,
$44,000 in the fire truck fund;
$122.250 tn the street maintenance fund. $32.400 tn !h e cemetery fund. $39,900 in the sw imming pool fund. $221.07R in the
public transportat ion fund;
~ 178 ,800 in lhP watPr fund ,
nothing in the water system
improvement fund; $6.000 in the

Arts Council Fund. $16,000 in the
ARC Housing Fund: $40,000 &gt;n
the I ssue 2 Fund; $9,000 In the
meter deposit fund , $145,300 in
th e sewer fund, $34,700 In the fire
equi pment fund, $20 500 in the
economic development fund. and
$12,000 in the mini -goif fund.
The deficit budget projects
estimated balances In all funds
on Dec. 31, 1990 at $70,321.
making est imated funds availa ble In 1991 of $1.510,199, a
shortfall of $89.136.
Puhllc Hearing
As a part of th e meeting a
public hearing was held on a
proposed comprehensive hous Ing program which is designed to
make affordable new houses
ava ilable to low and middle
income families who aje able to
secure private financing.
Following the hearing Coun cil

passed a resolution authorizing
commitment of local fund s In thE
amount of $40.200 and giving
M ayo r Hoffman aulhorlty to
procPed with th e application to
the sta iP requesting $92,300.
According to Hoffm an the loc al
fund commitment would In clude
$18,9&lt;XI from the ARC grant
which lhl' village already has .
and the $21,300 would be adminls-

trat ivP involving 10 hours per
week from two cur r e nl
cmployel's .
Of the $92,300 in Community
Dev elopmenl Block Grant monies, $1i0,000 would be designated
for six $lO,tJOO awards, S28,000 for
lot purch ases, and $4,:300 for
administrative purposes .
The proposed plan is to grant &lt;.1
$10.1HXI down payment Jo qualified purchasers and Jhen make
lots appraised at $10,000 avalla ·

SUMMIT MEETING - Pardclpanl&lt; in the
economic summll, left top to bottom, Brian
Mulroney, George Bush , Margarel Thatcher and
Toshlkl Kaifu; right from top, Guillo Andreolll,

rlosrst

Pcunomic

alliPs

compromisP statements on lht·
thorny issues uf aid rot h(' Sovil'l
Union and global trad r
To pomp and ceremonv. l ead
er s of the- seven mos t powerful
democrac ies camr togcthrr on
thr grounds of Ricr Un ivf'rs it v
for three days of talks domi natrcl
by the challenges and opportunl
ti es of a new politic al and
rconom ic order.
·'A new world of frrrdom lnvs
before us. hopeful. con fid~n t - J
world wherr pracr r ndures,
whrrr rommrrcr ha s con
sc ience, a nd wherr all that sC'rms
poss ibl!' i&gt; possible ." Bu sh d r
ria red . ·so let u&gt; begin in goO&lt;I
fa ith to set lhP stagf' fo r thr nrv.·
millf'n ium .··
Thr 16 th annuo:JI Economic
Summit of l ndu st ri alizpd No
li ons bPg.1n with Bush press in g

his six summ it partners on th e•

most fractious political iss ur
before th em the C.S . ca ll for a
wo rld tl'ilde sys tf'm frPe of farm
subs idirs
ThP conflicr,Jargrly pittin g th!'
United Statrs and Ca nada
agai nst Western Eu ro(X'. th reH t
rn s rffo n s b,· the 91 -nation
Grnera l AgrPe mr nt o n T&lt;t ri f fs
and Tradr to rewrite global trade
rulrs brfore thr cu rTPnt round of
nrgotiations (~ nds in OC'crmbrr .
Later. thr focus shr ft ed from
('Conomic In polit ica l is sur sa t th r
Bayou Bend Co llecti on of Amen
ca n Art. where ovrr a dinner of
tortilla soup and gr illed red
sna pprr !3ush soug ht common
grou nd on aid I o t hr So vi r t Union.
U.S. official s la id ou t a pro ·
po sr d threr-point statrmrnt for
thr joint commun iqur tha t wi l l
conc lu dr thr summit Wednes ·
da v. v.· h irh in r ssr ncr would
paprr OYN clf'ar diffrrE'nc('~
brt\.1.1C'f'n thP Un1trd Stairs and
Euro~an a l lir~

Overa ll.

Wh itr Housr pre "

srcrf' tar y Marlin Fitzwater ron f idrnfl .v predicted "ge ner al
ag-rf."'rmrnf"' on "'thr major
iSSUC'S ..

· "Th erP arp differencr s to bf'
surr. in th f' senSf' that rach
cou nt ry has sli ghtly different
prio riti rs.· · hf' said. "But on the
lugrr Jssues - rerta i nl y ero·
nomi c. f'nv Jronm ent. political
rha ngr - there wil l be general
agrrem Pn t .· ·
Drspitr l ong timP argumrn ts
t ha t ~ ubs idi E&gt;s are vit al to F.u
rope' s smal ler and less effici ent
f ar ms. fears for the outcomr of
th P GATT ta lks. under way si nc r
198G. prov ided formidable impr ·
t us for a o:; tatf'mrnt of common
pu rposr .
··ou r roncrrr.. ·· sa id Whit('
Hou sr prC'ss SE'Crctar~· M&lt;Hlin
Flt zwa tN . · 'is that if thr summit
dors no: proc p~·d to rndo r~r 1hr sr
goal s rmd to urgE' thr1 r cont in uf'd
ro nsiCrratio n. !h ell wr would Sf'('
~con tinupd IJn pagr 51

Eastern heat sends mercury soaring

TER

Hy United Press International

ONLY
AVAilABLE FROM 35MM NEGATIVE ONLY

716 North

. S.COIII Au.
llil4l.,.rt

Francois MlliA!rrand, Helmut Kohl and Jacques
Delors, helng their first meeting at Rice
University In Houston, Texas, on Monday. (UP))

Summit to compromise
on trade, Soviet aid issues
ca's

GIANT 20"x30"

Phont

992-U91
Offor Good
llwu July U

ble to prospective buyers for
$5,000, which gives a $15,000
equity In the home going In, and
makes the home !lnancable at an
affordable monthly payment .
The location of the lots, avalla
ble by the village, are In General
Hartinger Sub-division but prospective buyers who have their

own lots can receive the same
assistance if the site qualllles
and Is within the village
The proposal provides for the
co nslructlon of six new homes to
low and middle income recip·
Ients who are gainfully employed
and can secure privat e flnanc ·
lng. The emphasis would be on
raising the standard of living of
those participating in the program and also helping to alle viate the problem of over crowded rental properties .
Expansion
Co uncil approved the purchase

of the Ruth Arnold property on
Nortll Third Avenue adjacent to
the property at the corner of
Nortll Third and Race which the
village purchased earlier. Plans
call lor that ar ea to be used as a
parking lot for the proposed
expansion of the Meigs County
Department of Human Resources building .
If was pointed out during the
meeting that the Arnold house
will continue to be rented with
only th r ba ck part of the lotto be
used lor a parking lot.
In conjunction with that expan sion project. Council accepted
the $1,000 bid of the Middleport
Housing Corporation for the
small strip of land behind the
building . That area has been
included in the ex pansion plans .
Street Work
Bids on st reet work to br
financrd with Issue 2 monirs

were opened bu 1 action was
tabled until th e next meeting. On
the Mill Street project there were
two bids. one from Eldon Walburn. Middleport. for $27.674.51
and the other fr om the Shelly Co ..
Thornvllle .
F'or the Co t tage Drive project.
the only bid was from the Shelly
Co. and it was for $29,533 .20. The
street commillee will review the
bids and mak e recommendations
to Council.
Other Business
Ag~ln discussed at length at
the meeting was the ordinance
regulating truck traffic through
the village . Dave Ross again
asked council if the trucks
hauling stone from th e Hobson
yards , loc ated In the vlllage ~
could run empty In the village to
co t down on the mil es they hav!'
to travel to circle around town to
!Co ntinued on page 51

Pfeifer says state paid felon
• •
•
•
cnme vtctlDl compensation

HOUSTON iLIPit - Prcsidpnt
Busl1 and the leadl..'r s of AmNi

Pomeroy

•
1 '

A ~hance of showers and
thunderstorms Wednesday .
Fair weather Thursday and
Friday. Highs will range !rom
the mid 70s to the mid 80s each
day .

•

opene-d th l'ir 16th annu&lt;.d su mmit
Monday to sig ns of PmPrg in g

Veterans Memorial
Saturday admissions - Mary
Ann Myers, Langsville: John
Hayes. Middleport
Sunday admissions - Frances
Young, Pomeroy: Mae Kelchka.
Pomeroy .
Saturday discharges - Joann
Hayes.
Sunday discharges - Juanita
Ritchie, George Staats.

Florence Richards. Middleport, underwent surgery Thursday a I University Hospital In
Columbus. She expects to be
confined there several more days
and then will go 10 the home of
her daughter, Janice. In Colum·
bus to recuperate. Cards may be
sent to Mrs. Richards at Rhodes
Hall. Room 730, University Has.
pltals, Columbus.

Page 4

Ohio jackpot up to around $9 million

Hospital news

Undergoes surgery

Piek-4
1832
Weather

~~~
··--

Middleport Village Council adopts budget

Issues .
Bush al so was see king a
summit agreement to drum up
broader International participation In his June 271niliallve In a ld
to Latin America. a combination
of loans. debt forgiveness and
Investment and trade promotion .
European and Japanese opposi tion to a U.S. ·proposed end of
agricultural subsidies stood In
th e way of compromise language
urging a succ essful end to the
Uruguay Round of global trade
negotiations by a December
deadline.

Daily Number
597

Vol.40, No 296
Copyrighted 1990

Lake Erie while showers covered
much of the northern half of
western New York stale.
Llghl rain fell over much o!
norlltern New England early
Monday , while clouds prevailed

Valley Hospital. At 10:02 p.m ..
th e Rutland squad went lo S.R.
684 for Frances Young who wa s
transported to Veterans Memor·
ial Hospllal.
Sunday morning at 7:37. the
Racine squad wen I lo Bucktown
Road for Courtney Jones who
was transported to Veterans
Memorial Hospital and then to
Holzer Medical Center. At 8:54
am .. the Middleport Fire Department went to the Middleport
Police Department to investigate
a suspicious smoke odor.
At4: 41 p.m ., the Pomeroy Fire
Department responded to an
automobile fire at the intersection of Laurel Cliff and Naylor's
Run . At 7: 12p.m .. the Middleport
squad went to Palmer Street for
Joe Anthony who was trans ported to Veterans Memorial
Hospita l.
At 9:17 p.m .. the Tuppers
Plains squad respo nded to a call
on S.R. 681 for Cathy Barringer
who was tak en to Veterans
Memorial Ho spital. At 9:24p.m.,
the Middleport sq uad went to the
VIllage Manor Apartments for
Donald Van Cooney who was al so

Ohio Lottery

NATIONAL WEATHER FORECAST TO 7 AM EDT 7-10.10

EMS has 14 weekend calls
M eigs County Emergency
Medical Services responded to 14
calls over the weekend .
Saturday at 1:02 a.m .. the
Pomeroy squad went to Wright
St reel for Mamie Stevenson who
was transported to Veteran s
Memorial Hospital. At 4:13a.m.
the Mlddleporl squad assisted
th&lt;' Mason squad on a motor
vehicle accident. Llfefllght was
called for Jim Gibbs to Grant
Hospital. At 11 :47 a.m.. the
Middleport squad went to Over ·
brook Center for Edgar Brewer

All-Star
game tonight .
in Chicago

Wiltin g hea t blanketed much of
the Eas t Mondav, r ndan gertng
dogs and turning people damp
with pPrspiration. wh il e strong
thundrrslorm .') lashrd part s of
thl' MldwPst. II was root a long
the Pacific Coast and hot as
usutll in tlw drsPrl South wrst.
Thr mt'rcu ry ran rrd f rom
Wichita. K an .. to Wa .o:.;hington.
D.C.. whert' jj was% a nd humid
at the op.m rush hour.
Memphis. Tenn. swelten•rl as
the temper ature rose to99 . Dogs
were dying of heatstrok&lt;' - some
because of a lack of wate r
"If you love your dog. you' ll
give it fresh water ... said Herber t
Parson, the city employee n·spo nslb le for picking up dead
animals. "People don't give
them fr esh water and shade."
City worker Lenora Pain said
that since July 1, the Memphis
sanllatlon departmen t' s "Dead
Animal Service" ha s averaged
pickups of about 10 animals a

rlay, &lt;.I ll victims of baking hrat.
Nashville reac hed 102 degrees
at 2 p.m . f11 ll owing a Sunda y h ig h
of 101 . and ra n out of frer fan s.
WaltPr Hunt , d irrctor of Met ro
Action C'ommitlf'P, thP group
t ha t has gi vf&gt;n away 170 fan s to
rlderly and handicapped people.
said hr was tr ying to rai se the
mom'Y to bu y mon:.
"August is usua lly the hotte st
month of the yl'ar," Hunt sa id
"I'm afraid that Jhr worst is yet
to come . J'vp been in some of
those hlgh·ri se buildings tfor the
rlde rlyJ and they'vp got to be
mlscrahlP. A lol of limPs JJ' s j ust
as bad Inside as it Is outside. I
don' t kn ow how thcycan take it. "
Richmond, Va . . hit 100 and
Orad Wilson, a painter. knocked
off work early and headed for
home. where II was cooler - but
not by much . " M y air conditioner
Is working about as well as m e In
this heat," he said.
Air conditioner s were tu r ned
up full blast In Indianapolis.
where the high reached 97

lhf' rity P&lt;1wrr
ro mp Jn.v posted a onP·hour rr·
cord for PIPCtririty usagr t.Jrraking ;1 mark sr&gt;t duri ng a
h('af wave two yl'ars ago .
ShowPrs and thunde rst orms
l'X !Pnded from central Pennsyl ·
v&lt;J nla int o northrrn Ind ia na Parly
Monday afternoon
Thund er storms in Ohio produced wind
gusts up to 64 mph and downing
1rrrs and power IinC's.
Trmperalurf's were generally
In the 90s by early afternoon from
eastern Kan sas and the southPrn
Plains to the southern and
mld -AIIanllc Coast.
Temperatures were In the 70s
in the central high Plains region .
the upper Mississippi Valley , the
upper Great Lakes region, and
no rthern New York and upper
New England.
Temperatures were In the 60s
and 70s along the northern and
ce ntral Pacific Coast at midday .
but were soar ing Into the 90s and
above 100 In the southwestern

clr grPrs. and

drsrrt s

COLUMBUS, Ohio fUPIJ State Sen. Paul Pfeifer. RBucyrus, the Republican nomi nee lor attorney general. sa id
Monday the state of Ohio paid
$12,000 In crime victim compen sation la st January to a Law .
renee County man who was
serving two life sentences for
rape.
Moreover, Pfeifer told repor lf'fs, Morris Young of Pedro.
Ohio. had been awarded $12,789
from the state crime victims'
fund In December 1987 after he
had been charged with a pair of
forgeries.
State law prohibits the award ·
ing of any crlme vi ct im assist ·
ance money to anyone who was
conv icted of a felony in the past
10 yea rs or who has bf'f'n proven
by a preponderance of the
evidence to have engaged in
co nduc t that would constitute a
felony .
"Awarding compensation to a
man doing life for rape is ju st
outrageous. completely contrary
to th e law. " sa id Pfeifer. "As
attorney general. I'll use every
Pxl st!ng resource. inc l uding
crimin al rf.'cords at th e Bureau of
Crimmal Jdent i fica tion and In·
vestigation, to prevent thesr
abuses and to recoup any awards
I find to have viola ted the la w ."

Street repair
topic of
Pomeroy
council
Meeting la st night in special
srssion. Pomeroy Village Coun ·
cil discussed street rrpair
throughout the villa ge.
.Jack Krautter, thf' street su·
pPrvi sor ro r Po meroy, was in
attendance at the meeting, and it
was dec id ed by co uncil that morr
manpower would be rec ulred to
complete those proj ect s.
It was agreed that at lea st two
more fuil ·time employees would
be hired and that those positions
should be adverUsed.
In discussing street repair.
co un cil members authorized VII
lage Administrator Jo hn Ander
son to get esti mates on a devi ce
used to 1111 cracks In city stre!'ts
wllh hot asphalt.
Council also agrred to approvr
a bid lor painting of the village
water tanks R.M . Sandblasting
of Gibsonia, Pa .. was awarded to
bid In the amount of $45,151
According to VIllage Clerk
Brenda Morris, a II but $5,000 of
Jhal figure will be paid by Issue
Two funds . The remainder will
be paid by llte water department.
Council members also approved amendments lo the adendum on the village waste water
sewage update, which has been
approved by council and Is now
ready to be sent to the Environ·
mental Protection Agency . The
plan outlines Improvements to
the village waste water plant.

Young applied for victim assistan ce June 18, 1987 , one year
after his leg wa s broken In a
scuffle with Steve Cra wford. who
cl aimed Young shot his cow.
which had wandered onto
Young 's property.
Young was awarded $12.789 for
medical expenses and work Joss
upon recommendation by the
attorney general. He applied for
and '"ceived a supplemental
award of $12,011 after he had
already been Imprisoned on the
rape convictions .
Pfeifer said Attorney Gener al
A nthony Celebrczze Jr .. a Demo·
crat. apparently mis sed or ignored Young's criminal record
when recommending approval of
his application for victl m

a ssistance .
Julie Graham, press secretary
for C&lt;•lrbrezze. sa id the attorney
gene ra I's office pe rfor med a
criminal background check on
Youn g in 19R7 and found no
f' rlmlnal n•cnrd
Graham sa irl 1ht• l&lt;tw dn£'s not

r eq uire another criminal back ground check on a supplemental
application tor crime victim
assistance. "l'i had already been
determined that he was a victim
of crime !lor the purpose of an
award)," she said .
There are4 ,300appl icalions for
crime victim assistance each
year. and many of them are
supplemental. Graham said .
Pfeffer said the Ohio Court of
Cla im s pays lor any lnvesliga
tlons by the attorney general out
of Its funds. which are derlvPd
from assessments against con
vlcted criminal s.
Graham said the allorney
general's office could have ap
pealed theawardtoYoungwithin
30days, bullhe Law renceCou nt y
prosecutor did not file notice tha t
Young wa s a convict until60da ys
after the award.
She sa id the altorney genera l 's
office is "do in g a thorough
rpview of this case" to sre how
lhP money might br recovered

Local news briefs-Scou arraigned; hearing July 16
.l osP Pearl Scott ..13. was arraigned Monday morning in Merg s
Cou nt .v Cour t on a charge of aggravated attempted murder .
The charge strms from the Friday evening shooting which
se nt Ronald CrPmeans of Middl eport t o Veterans Memorial
Hospital. whrrr hr rr main s in satisfa ctory co ndition .
MP igs rnunt:-; Prosrcuting Attorney Steven L. Story indi cated
tlwt Cremrans wa.-.; shot in the ba ck at hi s home on Vine Street .
Thr Meig s Countv Sheriff's Department reported ear li er this
Wl'f'k that Srot t was arrested a short time after the shooting .
Citing the fact that the Inves tigation into the incident is still
ong oi ng . MPigs Co unt y Prosecuting Allorney Steven L. Story
stct!Pd in rourl that "ot her serious felony charges may follow· ·
Sto ry reports that other charges which may be filed aga1n st
Srofl include kidnapping, aggravated burglar y and anothrr
allempt ed aggravated murder count.
MP igs County Public Defender Char les H. Kntght w as
appoi nt ed to r epresen t Sco fl . Bond was set at $50,000. and a
prPiiminary hea ring was set for July 16 . Scoll rema ins in the
Mirldlrport jail

Shelly firm gets highway contract
A contract fo r almost $1.6 million ha s been awarded to the
Shrll y Company, Thornville, to resurface 12.79 miles of the
Appalachian Highway iS.R. 321 that passes through 'Arigs,
A then s and VInton Counties
Ohio Department of Transportation spokeswoman Kare n
Pawloski said the project may begin thi s year. but will probably
be put of f until next year .
ODOT Director Bernard Hur st recently awarded $7.9 million
of construction projects. of which the S.R ..12 pro jec t is par t . in
1he department's Dl strict10 , according to Joe Leach. District 10
deputy director.
Other projects were announced In Hocking, MonrO&lt;'. Nobl e
and Washington Counties.
Pawloski said construcUon at the Intersection of U.S J3 and
S.R. 124 Is on hold until next year while negotiations are under
way with property owners near the Intersection.

Meigs woman cited in wreck
A Pomeroy woman was cited for failure to contro l when the
car she was driving overturned Mooday.
Belynda Sayre, 39179 Carpenter Rd., was southbound on
Township Road 13 In Melg§ County when she lost control on
some loose gravel, slid oil the right side oft he road and flipped
over, according to a report from the Ga!Ua·Melgs post of the
Stale Highway Patrol.
Sayre was not Injured.

�The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE 11\iTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L WINGETT
Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

PAT WHITEHEAD

Assistant Publisher/ Controller
A MEMBF:R of The Uniled Press InternatiOnal. Inland Datlv Press
Assocta t10n and tht:&gt; 1\rnt&gt;rk·an Newspaper Publtshers Association.
\.E TTERS OF OP lNION arr wrlcome ThPv should be less than 300
words long. All letters arP subjff! to E'dlling and must be s igned with
name, address and t('lephon(' number No unsignpd lf'Her s will be pub
lls hcd Lf'tters shoul d bf' !11 good ta~lf' addrt•ss lng Iss ues, not personal I-

tIE'S

Voinovich, Celebrezze hoping
to avoid tax increases
By LEE LEONARD
lJPI Stutehoust.• Reporter
CO L L:M !JL;s - The adrmn istrat ion of Gov Richard Ce lesle. wh tch
began 11:- Yf'dr" dgu f igh t ing a sea of red tnk . IS IPavtng Oh10 nPxt
.lanu,l r \ w1th a balancC'd budget and a s mall "ra1ny day" savings
account
B ut 1n order to kPrp th o budgrt bdlanced without mcrt'asmg any
major t3.x raws. thr admmlsll at1 on has bPen forc ed to use up most of
a $450 mJ!lJOn c u ~h10n fmmi9X4 , IPavmg only $50 mJ li !On tn the drawer
[or the nrxt govr r nor
StaI r T ax ( 'onnmssJUn('r Jo&lt;.~n nf' L1 mba ch a nd BudgE'! DtrPrtor Lrr
Walker la st "WPPk prowctrd ~ l o w, s trad~' growt h" for the nf'xt two
y ear s. but that mav no t br rnough to kerp up w1th thr stat f''s
expe nditurE's
Med1ca1d. thr stJI (''s mrrllr.!l msurance IJIOgram for th r indige nt .
is g roww g by lh ~ prrrPrt d V4'i.ll. and t he PducatJOn communit y has
bt:&gt;en m thP ha tut ol rPapin g &lt;ll !Pas t hulf that sizf' of an tnC rf' ase m
r e c ent .v rar s
The rru.'ssagP to thr tv.·u c,mdldali'S for go\·rr nOJ 1s not to sav · no· · to
the poss Jbllity of additiOnal ta xe s 1n J&lt;iGl ,1nd 11 .-lPJX'Cti S they are
takmg that message to hear t
'The candldatrs for govf'rnor 1n Oh1o u r dnv ot hPI stat e, need s to
IC'ar n a lesson from CPorge Bush.·· Limbach told 1epor ter s la st werk
"N o nf'v. taxps 1s a wonderful tiling to run on but a lousv thmg to
govPrn on
Rppublican gubpr natonal nommrr GrorgP Vomov1ch. at d nev.. ...
eonferf'n ce, reflected on thf' 1dea of Cdrnpalgnmg on ·no nrw taxes ·

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

~

Today in history

Ry l 'nitPd Prl'~s lntPrnational
Toda\ 1'- Tu!'sda\ . .Ju[\ Ht. th 4' 141st da\ o f \9 4-l(l v.tth 17~ In lullHw
Th f' moo n 1s \~dnlng. mm·tn~ tm\'ilt d 11" L1s t qua r tl 'l
Tlw mot nmg ....rar-. .11 t' \ 'rnus Mi.!!.., ,tn&lt;l S,11 urr1
Tll r p\enmg .., tar" a rc ~Picun · oncl l up JII ' f'
Tho&lt;..,P born o n tht s dJlr arP undrr tll r stgn of Cdn l t ' l Thl". m c lud( •
J' r orP-.t ant thPfJlngliJ !l .Joh n ( ' al\ 1n 1n l ~OY. t\mrncJn patniPr .J dmr"
\Vh ts tlrr 1n IRH FH 'nc h nuu·list Md iCPI Pt ouo..,t 1n l!':/1. bla r k

o·dur.tt or M an McLeod llci nunP in !Bi \ nO\I'i ts l Soul Bt' llow tn 1 ~110
1ag f' 711. T\ nr " " ,J ncho r and commrn td t or D ~nid Rr tnkil '\ 1n l~l L il
1agl' i'01 hoxPr .JakP LaMottd tn 1 ~2 1 1age IJll l . aut hor ./Pan 1-\Prl 1n
19'.!'1 ( agP 6i 1 . ff'n n I" &lt;; t ,H ,\1 thu r A shf' 1n 1Y·U l .!gf' -Jj 1. fo lk .-; mgf'r t\rlo
r;u thn r m 14-l'i 1 agl' -U 1 d rHI r~c·t rPss Su4 ' l .v on 111 l ~ ·lti 1agP 1·11
On thi s datP 1n htston
In lX~O. \\-\omtn g v.J s .JCim ltlJ' d t o tllf' Un1on

Bush tries to woo minority leaders
WASHINGTON - George
Busn would like to be seen as the
ralnbown president. He's augmented his administration wltn
minorities and made equality a
focus of his domestic policy Yet
there arc dlslurblng signs the
country-c lub elitism of the Reagan years lives on In the Busn
White House.
Sure, the president can tout an
lnl ergra t ed Cabinet. Heaitny
Lubjan and Education Secretary
Lauro Cavazos arP both Hi spa nic. Housing Secretary Jack
Kemp has made Inroads with
minorities tnrough his publicized
visits to homeless shelt ers and
housing projects In !h e Inner
cit les.
And eve n tnough IJ's as much
politics as Idealism - lhl' GOP
hopes to woo large!)' Democratic

blacks - It's still, on its face, a
marked Improvement over Ronald Reagan's feeble perfor mance on civil rights.
Lanny Griffith, who now counsels the president on lnlergovern mental affairs, ran tne Republi can National Committee In the
Southeast when the scandal
broke In 1986. Republican Henson
Moore a nd Democrat John
Breaux were vying for a U.S .
Senate seat when a secret GOP
memo. aut hored by another
party offlical. outlined a plan to
keep black voters from the polls .
The memo was addressed to
Gri ffil h
The plot Involved sel ect lve
chall enges to voter registrations ,
accordlnd to Justice Department
records A slate court put a halt
lo the sc heme, and outraged

Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta
black voters turne-d out In droves
to nelp Breaux win . .Justice
Department lawyers cal led for
an FBI probe , but tne Reagan
adm inistration, not known for Its
outrage at racism. declined.
In

an

Int erv iew

with

our

associate Scott Sleek, Griffith
says he now can't recall his
reac llo n when he received the
memo II happened so long ago,
ne sa id, and he added he ha s
worked hard to Involve black s In
tne GOP. His supporters back
him up on that . But Democratic
Insiders say an administration
attempting to win over blacks
should do better
Bus h' s appointment to head
!h e 1990 economic summit, Fred
Mal ek, also was Involved In
rac ial co ntroversy Malek is the

one-time Richard Nixon aide wno
resign ed a top GOP position
during Bush's 1988 presidential
campaign after reports surfaced

th P Hth

"-f&lt;-'1~ '

high -school semors, graded out
at a reading l evel below theslxtn
grade. And 10 graded out a! a
reading lev el of third grade or
below
Frank DuBoiS. the camp's
academtc dtrector. said botn
results are among lhp worst in
the camp's hislory He said the
camp usually nas only two or
tnree players whose reading
leve l Is al ihlrd grade or below
Past stall sttcs have shown thai
high-sc hool ath letes withal leas I
a sixth -grade reading level allen
can survivf' at most cu ilrgps but
!ho se who fall below thai mark

were concoc tin g un favorable

economic figures , but Malek has
denied any an ti-Semitism.
The pres ident also Is drawing
flak for hi s appointments to the
bench. Civil rights groups charge
!hat Bush nas failed to Integrate
tne federal judiciary Only a
It act ion of his picks so far nave
been minorities. Of the wnltes,
some nave a dubious devotion to
civil right s

have decrea sing chances.

WELL-TRAVELED HURLER- Gaylord Perry, who notched
311 wins In a 22-year career, showsolftheelght learns he played for
during the Old Timers' festivities, whicn were part of the i\JI.Star
Game program Monday at Ch icago' s Wrigley Field. (UPI)

'THe. SoVieT tltJiotl, iS aGaiNST

T~e eiGHTieS
~eaLLV a~ OV€1?,
~ReH'T TJ4eV?

GoVeRJ..IMeNT ReGULaTioN aND
STiLl. W®'T ~i$e T~te.S!

Fielder exceeds expectations
IIICH~Ril

lly

L SHOOK
UPI Sports \\rlter
Clt!CAGO ,urtr Crctl
Ft('[drr, rhc personab le ftr&lt;t
ba seman lot the Detrotl T tgcr.s.
1s tills yP.H 's Krv 1n M1trhf'll
M ll ciw ll. ll'ft fiPldt•t f01 tnpS c~ n
Francisco Giant s had 32 homr

runs and a bundle of RBI at l as t
yea r 's All Siar break. li e f tn

F ielder , ha s '2 Rhonw

run .s andioRFllallhrbre ak And
h&lt;' doesn't have Mat! Willtam s
httlln g brhtnd ntm. ltkc Mllchcll

Fi elder afler being turned down
bv Kent Hrbek of Minnesota and
Pete O'Brien of Seat~e in tne fr ee

did last o;; pason

agent m a rkf&gt;t

run ~

rz;, f{BI

ami

Th 1s

Vl'di

'' Wllu

knov.- ~

what's gomg 141
hJppen"' · San F'rnneisco man
.1grr Rogrr Cr~11g sa id of whJt

i" tPidcr can expect tn rh e second
holf "AI lea sI until If happens
'llhtnk pt! chrrs will approach

rll m '-' littled ifff't('nll y Hr's b('{'n
;.rro und lhP league once now
There' s no rea so n for rn ing s to be
dtffrrrnl All he 's gollodo is the
sa mP th1n g- bP aggrrss1vr ·
Tht&gt; th1ng that ctifff'rPntiat Ps
F 1elder from a lot of sluggers 1s
his knowledge of the s tnkc zonP
Though he strikes ou t a lot and
goes for too many pitches up thP
strtkc zonr. thr big Drtroir fir st
ha seman knows v.hat hr s doin~

a! lhr p la ll'
He JU st rtrppert

A boost for environmental education
F'u turP gener a lions of Ohioan~ .
as well as the presen 1generation.
should kn ow more about thr
environm en t under a new law
pas sed by lhr General Asse mbly

t raining Steps are being made t v
Improve science and math edu ·

air and water pollut ion v iol at ions
br used to pay for envtronmental

edu cation, the l aw will provide a
sl ea dy flow of Incom e to guaranlee that !his Important tnttiatlve

and signed lnio law !h is week by

calion In moSI &gt;cnool dis trict s
This new law reflects the grow Ing recognition th at environ men Ial educati on Is also a key

Governor Ce leste

tngn&gt;d!ent

The bill, H B. 804. of which I
wa s a strong suppor ter , sPts up
an environmental Pdur ation fund

lo be admlnls lered by tne Ohio
F.nvlrunmrntal

Protect i o n

Agency Money for the fund will
ro me fr om fine s assessed by tne

In our educa tion al
progTam, for adults and espe-

cia ll y for our you ng peeple
Tnls new law Is an Important
Slep a! ensurtng that Ohioans
understand the significance the
environmPnl plays In all our
lives For the past severa l years,

agency agai nst companiPs that
pol luff' the air and wa ter

a lot has been said about the need
for bet ter science and math

Tne fund, lne firs t of It s kind In
!h e nation. will be used l o pay for

traml ng Steps are bein g made to
improve sc!Pnt£' and math rdu

an environmental lllrracy cam -

ca t ion In mosl schoo l districts
This new l aw reflects tne grow Ing recognition !hat envlronmenlal education Is also a key

mental curricu la at schoo ls and
co lleges. Money al so will be used

for semi na rs, sc holarships and

env\ronmPnt plays In all our
llvPs For lhf' past several yea r s.

a lol has been sa!rt about !he need
for betler science and matn

succeed s
ThP law. whlch goes into effect

nn Oclabl'r I. will make Onio a
IPader Jn environm en tal educa llon Money In !he fund will have
lobe used excl usively to enhance
publi c awareness. The nf'w law
wlll allow elrmentary and secon
da ry schools. and colleges In the
slat e, to develop enviro nmental
c urri c ul a on enviro nm en tal
Issues. It will provide money for
!raining of Ohio 's public sc hool
t eachers on e nviro nm e ntal
Issues Scnolarshlps on environmental educat ton or environ men ·

tal engineering will be provided

ingredient In our educational
program, for adult s and espc·

for at one or more sta!P collf'ges
and uni versities

clally for our young people
This new law puts Ohio' s
government Into the growing

director to pr epare an environ ·

environm ental rducation movrment . By requiring thai half of

the firs ! $3 millio n collected tn
any year from civil p-:naltles for

The new law req uires the EPA
mental education agenda thai
describes Inc proposed uses of
t he env ironmental

Pducation

fund Thi s agenda will be proposed only after public hearings,

Sen. ]an Long
so that interested parties have a
chnnce to voice the ir opini ons on

!he fund 's priorities. These hearIngs and tne agenda that result s
also will give us In the General
Assembly the kind of record we
nPed to mak e .s ure that the money

:IIXI

shor tlv lwforr lhf' hn•ak coolmg
down f rom the 1~0 1 ,mgr
" !don 't ttnnk thmgs d i P gomg
tu hf' a n ~ d1 f ff'tPnl lor h1m l ht•

.seco nd ha lf," Hal l of f~ ame
calrher .Jonnny &amp;nch said "Tne
only v. a)· it could bf' diff r rrnt1 s if
thev walk htm alii he llmr .
,;But hp's go t a good sw mg, an
outstanding sw1ng And he knows
thr st rikf' zone"
FIC'Id Pr spr nt late Id s! week

--

....
~~
NEA.IAC. 7-A
I() tHO by

"Let's NOT say 'Hell reunification'- OK/?"

•

\

Democrats were seen as weak on
defense, and now there's nothing
that needs defencilng. And great,
because George Bush was caught
fibbing, and endorsed the despicable Idea of raising taxes, an
Idea abhorred by most Amerl·
cans, an Idea oops!

,'

The Middleport Youth L eague
will sponsor a baseball camp at
General Hartinger Park In Mid dleport from Monday to Friday,
.July 20 Youths In the 12 l~&gt;
year -old age group will meel
from 8 am to 1 pm, &lt;1nd
children in lne 811 yea r old age
group will m eel f rom I 30 p m to
p.m .

Eacn ca mper wtll be l augnt tne
fundamen ta ls in hitting, ca tch
tng. running , ptl chm g, ftelding
a nd sliding in addition. each
p laver wil l r r ceiv(' group and

individual l ra tnlng from !he
c-amp sta ff
The camp staff tnclud es .Jeff
Wayland, a form er Meigs and
Hio Gr and c College star and a

formPr pitcher In !he Ptttsburgn
Pi ra t es organization;
Kyg er
Cr eek hea d coach Scot Gheen. a
former Meigs star and catcher

and

h imsPif ll r wanted to m ake sure

mental probl em s. New laws also
are needed to get tougnerontoxlc
air pollution , and to make surt'
our landfills aren't overfi lled
wltn out of slate wa ste. But we all
as citizens need to be more

he rea l ly was at the .~II Si ar

for R10 Grande . Zane Fk~eglf' . a
former Southern aee and Oh io

game and not dreaming

Unlvrr&gt;lty pilcher and Meigs

environmentally aware , and
th ere's nothing more important

In !nat process than making sure
ln e next generation of Ohioans
knows all It can about problems
facing our environment.
If you nave any questions about
!his, or any other Issue before the
General Assembly, don't hesitate to co ntact me, State Sen ator
Jan Micha el Long. You can
either call me at 16141 466-8156, or
write me at the Stat ehou se.
Columbus, Onto 43215

.Jil of Mondav

p tnching

· I 'm !h r illrd Overwhelmed."
hr satd _"I never dreamed I 'd!)('
het r I wa s ;ust t r vm g to do mv
job. Ju st to bf' hP rP IS a !h r til l
appreciate it "

lie was No 2

1n

thf' vo ting

.l!

first ba se brntnd Mark McGw trc
of Oak land II IS ltkclv Tony La
Rus"a w1l l 111 F1eldf'r mto thr
gaml' late, l'VC'n though he 1sn t
as good a fielder as MrGw ire

F teld rr prcpjl('d for I his spa son
tn .Japan last year. where he hll
.18 home runs Wtth Toron!o. he
lirst had been behind l'!~lltr

The Daily Sentinel

Publlshf'(l

('VN Y

aftt&gt;rnoon. Mondav

rhrcugh friday. 111 Cou rt S!. Po
ov. Oh io , bv lhr Ohio Vall ev Pub·
llshln.l! Companv , Multtmedla, Inc
PomN ov. Ohio 457fi9. Ph 992 215fi S£'
co nd cliiss pnslagr paid at Pomerm. .
!Tlt'I

rates are up.
Will Americans vote by share,
or by Ievcl 1 l s Trump on the
ballot? Haven't Democrats lost
when they use the politics of
envy ? Have Democrats been shy
about saying America's not fair•
When does antl-wastrelrlcn (OK)
turn Into pro-wastrel -poor (not
OK)? l s sleaze a great Issue• Did
It work tor Mondale and
Dukakts•
Foreign Polley: Is It a testimonial to say that on the central
Issue of our time - the defense of
libertY - the liberal Democrats
were weak but, ha ha, It doesn't
matter anymore? Might voters
ask which part will be smart
about the next central Issue that
comes up?
Social Issues: Mlgnl liberal
overturn their deserved victory
on abortion• Americans overwhelmingly favor parental consent tor teen-age abortion, but
pro-choice activists condemn it.
Are liberals on lhe right side of
the death penalty porogrphy?

i

Ohio
MembN Un iTed Press lnt rrna!lonal
1ntand Oallv Press 1\ s.soc l at Ion and 1h('
Ohio New spapt&gt;t Assoc iat io n. National
Adver tis ing Rrpn''&gt;('n\a tlvf'. Bra n ham
N('wspapt&gt;r Salt'S, 733 Third Avrnuf'

Nrw Vork Nrw Yor k \OOli
POSTh1AS1T.R S(&gt;nd addrt'ss rhangr"'
to nw Dallv S('ntln£'1. Ill r.our1 Sl

PomN fiV Oh'to 45769

SUBSfH IM'IO N RATFS
Hy Carrltr or Motor &amp;uti'
On r \\Pe k
Sl 40
On r Month
$6 10

OnP Year

$72 80
SI~GLE

COP\'

I"RI( E
Dal!v

25 Cents

Subscrlbt'rs nut tl('s \rln~ I o pav lhf'rll.r ·
r\('f m&lt;~ V remll In advan~ direct to
Thr Da!lv Sentinel on a J 6 or 12 month
basl!i Cn•dll wtll lX'givrnrarr\t"f('aeh

wrek.
Np subscr iptions by mall pl'rn'lllled In
arms whrrr homr ear r\('f sender Is
available.
Mall Suhllcrlpt Ions
tn.. td~ Melp Cou nty
13 Weeks .. ..
. $19.24
26 Weeks
$.17 96
52 Weeks
. $74.36
OutMide MciJt!l County

13Week5 .....
26 Weeks .....
l2 Weeks .

.. . ....... $2080
$40 30
$7HO

On the other hand - Desptt e
1he negative numbers. some of
the camp' s -a nd thP coun tr y·-.
- top pla,vPrs are exceptional
stud rnts As a resul t, Duke is a
common itnk when tho se Plttr

players discuss thetr posstb le
college chotce.s
Cnns Webber of Dei tot! h.ts
Duke, GeorgPtown and Sl'veral
Big Ten schools among the ones
hr s cons idering Webber, a ~ · 9
forward, IS a member of the
cncs.s cl ub at Detroil Counlry
Da v a nd wan ts to hcconw a
wrifrr

Alan HPnd Pr so n of Indianapolis carnrs a :1 7 grade·pomt
averagr. i s a mPmbPr of the
Natio nal Honor Societ y and 1s
co nsid rn ng medirtne or la w once

he gel s to college. Hender so n. a

b R forward from Btebeuf Prep ,
1s looking at DukP , North Carol

ln &lt;.l and Ken tuck\ a s well as B1g

Ten .sc hool s
Cherokee Parks of Hun!ington
Beach. Caltf., want s to study law
tn co ll ege Th e 6-11 cen ter a!
rradv is down to stx sc hools -

MYL schedules baseball camp

alone won ' t solve our environ-

Ben Wattenberg
promulgated by Democrats .
Other liberal Democrats says
social Issues have turned their
way _ Democrats are for abortion, and now It's clear that
America ns are, too
Message: The liberals were
right all alon g_ No apologies. No
change. It's thelr turn . Hand It
over. lt was all an accident , don't
you see? Americans really agree
with liberal s. It's Just that Carter
was a jerk. And Reagan was good
on televlston. And Dukakls was a
puddlnghead. And Bush trlcks
people.
Are mainstream Democrats In
danger of being sucked In? Are
they counting thelr winnings as
calculated by a Republican
cycle-melster? Mlghtn' t It be
wise to examine these Issues•
Economics: Are the rich getting a larger share of Income•
Perhaps. The data Is less clear
than supposed. But the standard
ot living has been rising tor the
population as a whole. The
poverty rate Is down. Family,
household and per capita Income

b&lt;• p10ud," Fielder said of the
Tt gcr s ·'They took a chance on
mr a nd it worked out. I've rppa!d
th em and I apprec iate iL "

Is being spent In the rlgnt places
Creallng an educa tion fund

Democrats try politicus interruptus
1870s and lne 1920s and were
punis hed by a populist backlash .
(Dubious.)
Phil lips says Republ icans
were rats again In the 1980s.
Ergo: punlshllli'nt In the 1990s.
Clockwork. Metronomlcal. All
the Democrats ha ve to do Is
become eco nomic populists and
run against Donald Trump.
The liberal Democrats, IncludIng Jesse Jackson (w ho Phillips
thinks has the populism part
right), said that all along. They
like Phillips' pnlllpplcs, and add
their own stuff. Ron Brown,
chairman of the Democratic
National Committee, says It's a
great time for Democrats.
Why? Well, the Cold War Is
over, and that's great, because

"They're thr unes who should

r)

under

(USI"S 14~960)
o\ ()lvllllon of Mullhnt'dla. lnt·

Is Kevin Pnllllps a mole• Is
Ron Brown serious? Are liberal
Democrats - gasp~ - going to
do II all over again•
Political analyst Phillips (my
co lleague on CBS "Spectrum "
broadcasts) has written an Interesting and wrong-headed book,
"The Politics of Rich and Poor"
!Random House). He kindly
Informs Democrats how to win In
tne '90s. Interesting. Phillips Is a
Republican. His advice Is su Jcldal for Democrats. Hmmm ....
Phillips says that tn the '80s the
greedy prospered and the needy
su ffered. The standard of living
declined tor the middle class.
Phillips says It was the fault of
sleazy, gluttonous, arriviste, rich
Republicans who believed In
terrible things like markets,
captlallsm, deregulation, lower
taxes, less federal spending and
tree trade.
He says this can be seen In the
political zodiac. See, there are
these cycles. When Republicans
take power they behave llke
plutocratic rats . They did It In tne

Upsnaw and then Fred McGrtff
at ftrsl base, allowtng !he Blue
Jay s to lei ntm go to Japan .
"I! just wasn'l go tng 10 work
ou t fm mC' m Toron to,' sa1 d
Fteid('J, onginal l.v aequned bv
the BluP Joy s from Kansas City
for Leon R obens. " In Japan, I
got a chance ro pla y. It gave me
confid enc e."
It a lso gavr h1m morP than $.'{
m!lilo n tn &lt;1 eon tr ,u·t w1th thl'
Del roil T1gers. who turned to

rshPd fh(' srason w11h -I I homr

!he tra ining of teachers
The new law Is an lmportanl
step a! ensuring lhal Ohtolans
unders I and I he s Jgn lflcance t hr

Berry's Wor d

ers. most of whom are rising

that Malek had spear headed
Nixon 's secret campaign to Identify J ews In one federal agency.
Nixon reportedl y thought Jews at
the Bureau of Labor Statistics

HY oP~t-tetlT Doestt'T SuPPoRT

paign and 10 develop enviro n
d~

By KEITH DRUM
UPI CoUege Basketball Writer
PRINCETON, N.J iUPII After four years of Proposition
48, there sti ll are mixed signals
from the effect of the conlroversl al academic qu al tf y ing
standard.
Is It making betler sludcnts of
high sc hool at nleles '
Not according lo !he results of
reading tests given tne 121
players al tending tneelghth Nlke
ABCD Camp at Princeton Uni versity. One fourth of the play ·

Tuesday. July 10, 1990

" I did !ha l once ... no sa rd. " and I rtcc td cd nol lod o I nat llhts rim er "
The formPr Cleveland ma yor acknowl edged that "the sock is gomg
to br prartJcally empty' when lhf' Ce leste admtn iS tra tJOn leaves
o fftrf'. hut " I don ' t ,,ntkipatr th l:' nf'X! govf'r nor Js gomg to have to
r &lt;J 1sp tdXI's A t t h1s s tage of t hr game. v. r oug ht to be able to de a I w ith
thP probh'm s of th is s ta te w 1tl1 thf' do ll a rs that arp providPd 1
s1ncrrel v briJPVf' th a t ··
VolnOvlch plans to put an OpPr at1ons Improvement Task Force i nto
plav. srrmg ""'hrrr furthf'r f' conomiP" can he made 1n l he sta te
govr rnmrnt. before Pnt Prta min g fhp norian of raJslng taxes
DPmOfrat An thon y Ce leb!l'ZZP. if c if'Ci f'd, will take thai same tack
·Tunv tw lu.•ves v.-r need to takr a \'Cry hard look at revenurs and
rx pr ndllurrs" said his campatgn prrss sPcrrtary Melinda Swan
'He wants 10 n •vJew eac h and evrry program and agP ncy for cost and
C'f fi c1rncv We've got to be verv ro st con sc wus"
Swan sa 1d Cr lPbrezze d1d thP sam!' thing whpn hP took ovrr the
,Jttor nr,v gP nf' ra l's off1re m 1~&amp;3 She sa i d his ta sk force ma y inc ludr
uu t sidC't s and rl'presPnlC:Itt vcs of pri VJte bus i ness, as we l l as so mP
r es rx'rtPd fiseal PXpPns withm thf' C'r \e &lt;.; tf' ad mini stratiOn

Mixed signals abound on effects of Prop 48

head coach: John Chaftn, a
Wells ton gr a duate who pllched
for Marshall University and is
now In the Chicago White Sox
organizatio n ; camp director
Herb Sharfenaker Jr., a Colum

bu s Bishop Ready graduate and
catcner for tne University of Rio
Grande, and ni s father, Herb
Sharfenaker Sr .. the head coach
ar Bishop Read y.
Th e ope ning speaker for !he
ca mp ts Dave Og lesby , R to
Gra ndp's hea d coach
Cost of the camp is $2&gt;. and
Pach camprr wil l rece1 vr lunch
after their sess ion and a camP

T shirt Th ere will also be ltvr
games for both agP groups and
awards for f'ach age group
F'ot early regi stration call
HPrb Snarfenakcr Jr. at 992-2606
or Gene Wise at 992 -6224 Sign up
for the 12 15 age group wtll be at
i · 511 a m on Monda y .July 16, and
for theR 11 age group sign up wt ll
brat I 15 p m on Monda y

Brister, other pros guests
at Marshall Football Camp
Pittsburgh

Siec lrr

quat !PI

back Bubby Rns t pr is om• of
Sf'V PI al
pro footba ll player s

sc heduled lo make an appearance a! th e Mar shall Universil y
Foolball Ca mp, wh ich will run
from Sunday to Saturday .. Ju ly 21
at Marshall Unlvrrsll y .
Reg iStration for the camp will
take ploce al Twin Towers on
Frida y and Monday from 2 10 4
p m for al l campers Twin
Towers. localed on the MU
campu s. will be when' !he
ca mpers wtll sl ay

ru nnin g !rom .Jul v 18 ro .Jul\ 21
Th r cost fo r ovrrmg ht campe1 s is

$155 and $125 for day campers .
Boys ei ght yea r s old up to those
entering the ir senior }f&gt;&lt;H 1n high
srhool mav Jt tl'ntl thl' camp

Th e MU coac hing slaff wi ll
pr ov ide m st ru ct1on in fundampn

tats, SJX'Ci al coachtng on th e pro
passtng allack and the 4-3 de
tense . Jndi vtdualizPd 1nst r urt ion
at al l positiOns . non contact
tlrtll s. IPc t ures on drug s. smok·

coach .Jim Donnan and h1s starr.

ing and alcoho l abuse, specta l
help on nutrilion and wetghl
co n! ro l. weight !raining and
condlllontn~ . and allitudr and
moltvattondl anls

will be offen•d In two sessions,
with Session l running from Ju ly
15 to July 18, and Session !I

Inc Mt.: football office al r304)
696-6464 .

The camp, taught by MU head

For morP information, contact

IMCA econo-modifieds
to join Skyline program
This week the IMCA economod lfleds will j oin the regular
program at Skyline Speedway In
Stewart, as all five classes will
put on a show for regular
admi ssion prices.
Bob Adams Jr. of Racine
continues to lead the Late Model
points with a banner season
already under his belt.
Other area ldrlvers competing
are Bryan Wolfe In the McDonalds 5R, Lee Floyd In the Ebers'
Gulf 2L. Chris Diddle In the .!.D.
Drilling 55, Mike Adkins of
Minersville In the 4, Benny
Hickle of Pomeroy In the 51,
Marc French with Paul Garvin
substitute driving In the 29, and
Phil Davis of Gallipolis In the

·'

Whaley's Aula Por!s 8 BaiL
Davis Is t ne current Sportsman
points leader
Other drivers with area sponsors Include Larry and Andy
Bond In the Facemeyer LumberBall Logging, McDonalds cars
respectively_
Warm ups begin weekly at 6: 30
p.m ., with time trials at 7: 30p.m.
and racing at 8 p_m_ Last week's
program was over by JJ:45p.m. ,
with a full field of cars for the Bob
Adams Sr. Memorial race, won
by Adams.
Adams won the feature Saturday night at Tyler County Speed·
way In Middlebourne, W.Va.,
which was the Racine driver's
15th win of the year.

UCLA, Arizona, Arizona State,
Duke, Syracuse and Kentucky
Chris Harrison of Tollesboro,
Ky .. carries a 4 0 grade-point
mark and Is ranked No. I in his
class Harrison, a high-scoring
6-2 guard, patterns his game
after fanner Kentucky star Rex
Chapman and a lready has committed to the Wildcats_
Father figures- Six players in
the camp are sons of coaches,
and each of the six Is a point
guard. Thr!'€ play for their
fathers and two others may next
year when tney get to college.
Jeff Ca lhoun of Storrs, Conn. ,
Is !h e son of Connecticut coach

Jim Calhoun The younger Calhoun Is a scrappy 6-l player who
averaged 19 points as a junior.
Keith Willard of Lexington,
Ky., Is lne son of Ralpn Willard,
former Kentucky assi stant recently named new head coach at
Western Kentucky . The younger
Willard hit 47 percent of his
lhree-point tries l ast year
Danny Hurley of Jersey City,
N.J ., Is lne second son of Bob
Hurley, tne coach at St. Anthony's High. Bobby Hurley, also
a point guard, started last season
for Duke.
Br ian Henson of McPherson,

and has committed to follow his
older brother, Steve, to Kansas
State_ Brian Henson has the
same close-cropped crew cui his
old er brother wore In coUege_
Doug Etzler of Convoy. Ohio
made first -team all-state last
year under the guidance of his
father. Ray, at Crestview High
School.
Matt Alosa, who has commll
ted to Providence, plays at
Pembroke Academy In Concord,
N H. Hlsfatherqultcoachlngtwo
years ago but continues to work
with his son's development as a
player.

Kan .. play s !01 nts father . Mike.

Dykstra thanks New York fans;
Dibble breaks month-long silence
B~ CARRIE MUSKAT

UPI Sports Writer
CHICAGO (UP!) - Philadel phia's Lenny Dykstra said his old
fans In New York helped him
earn a starting spot on the
Na tional League All-Star team,
1ronirally ahead of former Mets
leammale Darryl Strawberry.
"! dtd get a lol of national
ex posure. " Dykstra said "Dul
there was thts ihree-game sertes
tn New Y ork and it was sold ou l.
The fans had to punch three
ou!field ers In I the All Star bal
lot 1 and I thtnk tney puncned
'Siraw' and they punched min e,
too."
Sr raw berry JU S I didn't gel
l'nougn ballols out of town .
l hi cago's Andre Dawson and
San FranCisco ' s Kevin Mitchell

arr lhe other NL starting
oulfielders
" I t does n'l surprise me ,"
Strawberry sat d of Dykstra' s
upstag tng htm In the NL voting .
· 'Hr' s come a long way to prove
hun self
"He rDykstrar got tnto a
sltuatton where ne's go tten to
play every day and he's shown
what he can do. "

Whal Dykslra na &gt; done to
garner his first All Si or appear
a ne e i s lead !he league In baiting
for most of the season He
cnlered Tuesday's break with a
.160 average. A'lld he' s still
re membered

fond ly

1n

New

York
" My fi rs t at -ba t !hey cheer
Then !hey boo when you gel on
base. " he sa id ...
Ctnctnnati reliev er Rob Dtbble
ended his month-long silence
Monday, sayi ng his S€lect ion lo
lne All -St ar Game proves he's
nol lhr jerk deptcled by the
media
The Cincin nati mPd!a cn t1c
IZPd D1bbl t' for not running out J

groundball during a game las!
mon rh . Dibbl e says ne was Ill
from m1 gratnr headaches and an
ulrN and was to ld he cou ld go
home before the- ga me Instead
he s t£l~' Pd . pitched and on lhf'

groundour. look fou r steps , lhen

headed for the dugout instead of
first base.
"This Is the first ttme I 'vr
lalked to the media for aboul a
month," he sa id Monday in !he
National L eague clubhouse "If
the Clnclnnali media is trying to
run me out of !own, t ney're doing
a good job "
Dibble sa id Red s manager Lou
Plniella told the media befor&lt;' lh&lt;'
game that his midd le reliever
wa s til Dibble says no one
listened
·'The headlines are never
'Reds Lose· wncn I'm pitchtng_
It's always 'Dtbble Loses,'" ne
sa td .
And his selection to the NL
pitching staff?
"!! makes th em rmedta
members ) look stuptd .'' he said.
Amertcan League player s not
on ly have to get accustomed IO
Wrigley Field' s close qua~ trr s.
but also to lh e ballpark's loca
tion. Boston s Roger Clemens
and El lis Burks said a cabdriver
dropped them off at the far end of
1he ballpark and !hey had lo walk

NEWPORT.

R I.

rUPJr

By BILL BREWER
KN OXV ILLE, Tenn i UPitTennessee tailback Chuck Webb.
a Heisman Trophy hopeful who
wa s kicked out of schoo l for
cheatin g on an exam, was
cleared Monday by the univl'r
sity lo play this season.
Webb regained nls ellgfbl)lty
by pa ss in g 23 hours of classwork
through COITt'S JXmdence a nd
summer courses. University of

Tennes see Vi ce Chancellor Phil
Sc heurer .satd
" During ln e past acadcmtc
yPar hr !=iuccessfull y r omple!Pd
2.1 sPmPster ho urs nf course
work I f you combine !nat with
tne 25 hours ne com pl eled as a
fres hman, In ai' s what ne needs

-

No

li-1, 6-4 Monda y tn tnr opening
round of !he $150.000 Tennis Hall
of Fame Championships
Lundgren . who reached the
fin al s laS! Yl'&lt;H al lhe Newport
Casl no -

the lone Amenran
grass-cour l s top o n the men 's
lour - won for just the third time
in 11 mdt Ch('s thls year.
" I sa td lo myself before com in g hPr&lt;' thaI I wasn't goin g t o put
pressure on myself. lo just have
fun," said Lundgren, of SwedPn.
who ts ranked 49th tn tne world
"On close ba lls and big point s
I've been unlu cky thiS year . so
win nin g today Is good for my
co nfid enc e. "

Van Rensburg, a na tivP of
Souln Africa ranked !38th, had
seven double-fault s In the second
sel The onlv break in that set
came when \;an Rensburg clo sed

out rh o lhlrd game wllh ln rre
consecutive double-fault s
" I wa sn'l sharp, " said van
Rensburg, who now lives In
Indians Wells, Calif " I had two
break points In Inc first game of
the malch and missed lwo
returns He played beller than I
did ."

catcher sa1d.

Heisman hopeful Webb
can now play for Tennessee

Lundgren tops van Rensburg
•
Ill Hall of Fame tourney
Unseed cd Pe lf'r Lundgren upset
No 2 seed Chri sto va n Rensburg

through Wrigley's underground
passeges 10 reach the clubhouse.
Burks, botllered by a pulled left
nams tr in g, was replaced by
Cleveland' s Brook Jacoby" I told Tony (La Russa, AL
manager) that the Injury was
pretty bad. It sllll feels the
same." Burks said after the
American League workout. "I
can hiLI can't run."
Tonight's All-Star Game Is just
another hlghlignl for Allanta
catcher Greg Olson, who Is
naving a fantasy year . A minor
league free agent, Olson was the
27t h player to make the Braves
team at the start of the season.
He had played six games at the
Triple-A level before joining the
major league team
"It's trul y a fantasy, " Olson
said_· 'I pray about a lot of things .
I don't In ink I could pray enough
to get thi s !All-Star berth). I 'm
really In awe . "
Eve n stranger Is the !act there
are lwo Greg! g) William Olsons
in tne All-Siar Game.
" I'm Gregory William Olson. l
go with one 'G,"' the Braves

4 l :ar y Mulll'r uf Los

1\ngclf •s stT ug glt&gt;d pas t Jimmv

Brown of L argo , Fl a., 6·3, 3 6, 7 6
17 .1 t
Muii Pr. a nafivpo[ South 1\friCd
1 an ked

6Jrd, won lhP fina l four
point s of th r I JPbrPak('r, but
""'asn' t sat i sfied w l th his plav

"I choked oul there ngnt from
l hr beginntng." sa td Muller " I
fell un co mf ot tab l e and l
slruggled I fr ill couldn't nll lhr
ball on the cou11 "
Brown, a r la v-court spt·cialist

who i s ranked ! 27th, Is 0-5 in
tiebreakers th1s st.'ason.
" I should havp overpowered
him ," Mull Pt se:11 d " I thmk he
know s I should win on grass and I

know I should wtn I'm rea l ly
glad to get tnis out of the way "
In the only o!hcr matcn tnvolv mg a seeded pl ayer, No 7 Eric
Jelen of West (;ermany rout ed
Mark KaplanofSiamford, Conn,
6-1, 6-3.
· I felt co mfortable ouli here,"
said Jelen. No. 101 In !he world.
"! played well on the grass at
England, and I've been nere
practicing since Thursday"
Jelen broke Kaplan's serve
lhree l imes In !he opening set and
romped to a 5-I Iead in the second
en rout e to the second round.

BIG BEND YOUTH FOOTBALL
LEAGUE 1990
SIGN UP DATES
July 14, 21 &amp; 28
10 A.M. until Noon

Pleasers Restaurant

to be eng tole tnts year. ·
Scheurer sa ld .
Webb, 20, cheated on an exam
last fall semester during which
he passed only three hours of
class work. and the university's
academic disciplinary board suspended him for the spring

semesler .
Tne ' -10, 197-pou nd Webb
ru shed for 1,236 yards and 12
touchdowns last season In lead·
i ng Tennessee to an 11-1 record,
in cluding a 31-27 ;1ctory over
Arkansas In the Cot ton Bowl.
"Na turally I am pleased that
Chuck Webb will be eligible for

the com ing season ," hPad coach
.Johnn y Ma j ors sa id . "He eer

tat nl y is Important to our team,
bul il Is also very Important for ntm personally that he nas
re gatncd hts eltglblllty and sta l us
in school due to an earnest effort
on his part."

Webb ran for a school -record
194 yards agalns r Mi ss issippi. He
ran for more yards than any
other freshman in Tennessee
htstory . rven lnough he subsUt u!Pd for sophomore Reggie Cobb
in fivr games Cobb - wno with
Webb Inspired the name "CobbWebb Attack" - was kicked ott
the team in mldseason for
f lunking drug tests.
Webb was named the outstand ing offensive player In the Cotton
Bow l by rushing for 250yards and
1wo touchdowns against
Arkansas

WE'LL
OVERLOOK
YOUR FIRST
ACCIDENT
When you qu.lify • • preferNd
risk tor St•te Auto Companitl'

..,.0.!

~w1ed.alat

AU1o Policy, your

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accident
Unlike timit•r policiea th1t require
thrM v••• of policy ownenhlp,

the Medallat allowa the ••emption
lmmedllltlty .
The Medalltt recogni:IM the oldtr,
aafer drlYer whh tutMtantLII rate
and reducdont and brotu:t• tovlf·

age Rate reductk&gt;na begin a early
.. age 215 and .,.. P•r1k:ularty littractive for the 4&amp; to 14 v•• old.
If you hiVe a 11ft driving record.
' " iut1 how low your cer kiRR" ance premtum c1n bl with the Medllist Auto Policy from $Uti Auto

lnau,.nce Companl•.
Call us about lhlt car intul'lnct
bra.. through for ••• drivers

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ER\.~

-~-

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY
992-6687

698 West Main StrHt
Pomeroy
-

Further Information Con Be Obtoi111d At Thot Time.

"'"- . -

-----

- ---

SPECIAl IIISUIAIICE PIODUCTS
FOI SPECIAl PEOfU '

________...-,__________

_.,__

•,,

�Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, July 10, 1990

Beat of the Bend

Canseco fails to show for
All-Star news conference
By MIKE TULLY
UPJ National Baseball Writer
CHICAGO tUP IJ- Baseball's $23 million man
opened the Al l-Star break in his own sty le
Monday , failing to show up at a news conference
honoring several baseball figures .
Jose Ca nseco, top choice of fans and holder of a
five -year, $23.5 million contract, explained by
sayi ng he arrived in Ch icago at 3: 30 a m. He sa ld
he co uld not remember If he had receiv ed a phone
call aler ting h1m to the 10 30 a .m gatheri ng.
But the Oa kland slug ger' s a bsence caughl !he
notice of his manager, Tony LaRussa . who zinged
him twice.
"Be fore anybcdy gets upset al .Jose , you
probably oughta' blame me." La Russa sa id .
"W ha t I sa id when we got off the plant• last nigh I

\

wa s, 'I 'II

'\

see

lilP first time sinc e the Truma n Administration.
Both previo us WriglPy F'irld games have gone t o

the AL.
Ca nscco led ai l players with 2,313,091 fan vo tes.
a disUnc tion that placed him on lhe dais with
Cubs' second baseman Sa ndberg, A's pitchers

you at lhP prrss conference. we

Wf' lch and Da ve Stewart, Craig , L a Russa, and
utht•r ili gn itariPs. All showed rxrrpt Ca nsero

When hr arriv ed al lhe ballpark. Ca nseco
de fended players' multi -million do ll ar co ntracts
-l ike the one he recen tl y signed- by co mparing

Russa said, "The third hitter, how shou ld 1 sav
this, 'Do n't come to th e ballpark.' JoseCanseco .:.
La Russa has named ri ght -hander Bob Wt•lch .
13·3, to star ! Tuesday night's game for lh c

ath letes to actor s. who a l so earn millions of

dolla rs 1n a high · profile oc cupation .
''You go t guys lik e Arnold Sch warzen egger who
rnakt' 30 mil lio n and thr•y get srvera l ta kes to ge tlt

American League. whilP Nation&lt;Jl Leagur man -

ager Roger Craig selected Cincinnall righty .J ack

perfect ." Ca nscco sa 1d . ' In baseba II. yo u only get
one shol. I wis h I could go up and if I st rik e ou t.
say, ' Hey, cui. Can I do th at aga i n'~ '"
Canseco played Sundav nigh! in C' lrvl'land, and

Ar m s trong, 11-.'t, as his starter.
Tuesday' s we&lt;t! her forecas t calls fo r shoWI'r ')

wants his new contrad

to

hl' hi gger than

Cansrl'o's. ( I IPI I

and th understorm s du ring t hr day, wi t h cool
temper a t ures . AL Presid ent Dr. Hollby Brown
said a postponement would send thr ·g am e to

hit his 22nd homH to hr lp thr A' s takt-" over f irs t
place l n thl' Am eri c an L PaguP V\·' ps t with an 8-3
r out of th f' lndi dns

WPdncsday night - whirh wo uld co nfl ic l wilh
seve ra l games al ready resc hed uled from lhc
loc kout.
Both c lubs wor kE'd ou t Mond&lt;:~ .v on a panl y

He has becom e !he crnlr r of several off.f ield
cont r o\·er siPs . inc luding spr eding tickrts, an
unregister ed gun In his c a r . and a feud wit h Sa n
franci sco fi r st basrom.:m \\'i ll Cla rk
i\ liSA Toda\ po ll said major league players
('Ons ider CiJ nst'eD thl' bPsl in thr gamr. Ca nsero

r lnudy day, with the wind blowing in ill Wri glr\·
F'1eld . Basrba ll Commiss ionC'r F &lt;:~v Vi ncf'rit
wa tched batting prartice from a go lf can onlv a

few fPet from the cage .

recrh·rd 122 \'O ics In the pol l. followed by
S"ndbrrg w1th ~JI and Clark with 44 .

St. Lo ui s shor tstop Ozzi e Smit h, v otrcl to

ttw
1\L's start in g linr up, missed thr wor kou t but is
rxp('cted Tuesday . ClevpJa nd thi rd ba sr man

•

"I hrard somPOnr

Si.l y hf' 1C'I J rk1 was thC' lwst
in basf'balt." Canst•t·n was quoted by USA
Tod;~y . "Spa rP m r• tht' gri r f."

pla~' H

Hmok J acobv repla ced injurt•d !-:I lis Ru rks on lh P
AL squad .

On Mond av. Cansr co a ncl Cl ark shook hands

Ch icago Cubs spco nd basem an 11 .\' nj ' Sa ndbPrg

du ri n ~ batting

pr a ctiC'(' a nd profe ssrd no ill wi ll.
Cl r,·rland cat cher Sand y Al om ar .Jr and San
IJirgo .'-:Pfond ba st~ m a n Hobt'rlo Alomar hav e
brronw onl .v thr thi1·d \P I n f brothn s to oppose
Pach othPr nn All-Sta r ro s tf'r s

ddigh tPd Ihe ca paci1v rrowd by lead ing theN 1. tu
a 4-1 v ictory in the Home Run Hitt i ng Co ntr., r
Sandberg hi t three homer s. mon-. tbdJ1 anv of rh~ ·
o rhcr seven participants .
Can scco hit none. though hr d id r ra sh thr m os t
unu s ua l batting p ractice homrr of thr da" Jr

'
'•

J

' I

·~

vote-getter, won the home-run hitting co ntest h e ld

between workout.o.; at Wriglt•y Fidd Monda}'.
Sandh l'rg is ha t tin~ .:J.H and has 2-1 homf'r ~ prior to
tonight' s i\11-Star (ianw . ( \ JI" I')

..

i

and .Jim and Gaylord Pr rr _v follow!' d in 1970 .

~ I..

drovr i n f ive r uns w ith a
thr Pf'· run hom(' run and a :nO-foot
si nglC' Mo nd ay to powrr th e

p loppr d hi s towrri n g two-ru n
.'-. in glr abou t fl vt:&gt; feel from thr

ThP host r i t_\' took an othPr blow
ro i t s prid r becausP shorts top
E rni e Banks L-ti iPd to eomr up

America n League 10 a 10-0

with thrcp gr uu nd bal ls as !he

Iine in left to ('hasc home the las 1
1wo runs . Th r pooped Allen
q oppcd at first and refused togo

vict ory over th e Na tiona l LeaguP

fir st four A I . batter s in thr serond
go t sin g IPs .
ThP publie adclrf' ss an nou nrrr
w~ts mO\'l'd to impl or r ··woul d th e
,\mf't'i can Lra gur plr ti.V' stop
hittin g g r ound(•r s to 1tu · lrft sid r
lwcJu S('
E r·n iP 's gr ttj ng
ti rr d ."
Hr rt Ca mpanr n .., promp t!\
co mi-Jiii'LI by g r oundi ng J n J{!l l
singif. ' to r ight . making it 6-(1 .Joe

Bob Fr llr r . w ho rP tired two of
thr lhrrr bafle rli hr facrd. was
tPrmpd the wi nnin g pi tr hPr with

Hullil' Fingers picking up a save
fo r gel ling I he las t ou 1.

Unser, crew
members OK after
pit fire incident

~

1n 1969.

F orm r r Cub FPr g u.,on .Jrnkin s
st artrd a nd too k th r loss for thf'

Allrn 's t hrPf'-run hom r run
ow•r th r lPft field fPn&lt;'e gav t' t hP
1\L a :t-0 lrad ami i t went on 10
~c nrr
SP\'C' n r uns on Pig ht
o.; rr aig h t hits i n !he second 1nnin g
hf'forr t hr r on tr s twas mPrrifu II\'
brought to a ronr lus1 on

••

f~r s l

RICIJ.~RD L. SHOOK
UPJ Sports WritPr
CHI CAGO rU PI I- llick i\ IIP n

in a lwo-lnn ln g Old ·T1mers All
Slar game

t..V

\\1NS LONG BALL CONTEST - The Chicago
Cubs' Ryne Sandberg, the National League's top

Car los and L&lt;•e Ma v bcc" mc !he

National League yesterheroes hand
American League elders I 0-0 loss
By

\ \I

men.

to lead the AL to a 10-0 rau l in !he Old Timer 's
Game.
LaRussa led Ihr AL to a 5-3 victory in last year's
game. leav mg the NL with a :1/.22-1 lead in the
series The AL is tryi ng to win three s tra ight for

gotta' be there.' And he a lways does the opposite
of what I tell him."

streak has helped put the Mets hot on th e heels ol
the NL East-leading Pittsburgh Pirates, said hr

By BOB HOEFLICH
The best laid plansofmlceand

A l len al so flrxrd his muscles, hit tin g a home run

Later. when announcing his batting ord er. L a

HEAVY TIMBER - Oakland's .Jose Canse co
and the New York Mets' Darryl StrawberrJ
exc hange pleasantries al the batting cage during
Monday's Alk~tar Game workout at Chicago' s
Wrigley Field. Strawberry, whose current hoi

The best laid P lanS

land ed on Wave la nd Ave . took one bounce, and
was corra led by a fan on a balcony.
Mets' slugger Darryl Strawberry drew the
heaviest booing. and res ponded by pantomiming
a flex of h1s muscles . Former big·ieaguer Di ck

CLE VE LAND 1U I'i 1 Unsp r

1\l

.J r . an fl four of his
who wrr(' burned in a

Cl'f' Wmf'n .

pil firr• during !he Cleveland
C r and Pr ix. arr rxprctPd to
competf' in Sundav 's Mr&lt;Jdow -

land s Grand Prix. a·leam spokes·
m dn said Mo nd ay .
U n '-.f'r su ffrrrd superficial
hur ns to his farr whrn thr firf'

br oke out on a pit s lop at th e end
of lap 62 of the Ro-lap raee. which

1\ft r r

Powe ll s

hi t. i\IIPn

a n~·

fur th Pr .
T hr crowrl of 3H,923 boot•d
Strvr Carvf'y dur!ng Introduc ti ons The for m er Los Angeles

and San Diego first baseman
"' OPJX'd a ft rr tak ing four strps
out of thr clugou!. ga v r a 'W hy
mr'' ' shrug V.'it h his arm_
-. out and
palm s up . thrn rro tt Pd out on to

other In tonight' s ,\ 11-StarG amt•. T his

is Lht• third time In tht· J\1idsumnwr

na~sit:'!-i

his tor y that hrotlwrs will pla .v on oppos it e tf'am s .

iUPII

Flora Bailey of Middleport
cou ld sta nd a kind word or two
about now also . She will mark
her 89th birthday Friday . The
address Is 620 General Hartin ger
Parkway. Her great-grandson,
David E. Vance. will observe his
birthday on July 12 - perhaps,
they' ll have a lillie jo int celcbra·
tlon to mark both occas ions.
Kormer Racine area res id ent.
Avice Roush Frecker. writes that
her daughter. Janice Rousy
Briggs and he r husband, Rl

Hudi followed wilh a ground Rill
sing le 10 IPft and Boog PowPII
grrrtr d rr lif'vr r AI Hr a bosk~
with a boom ing ru n-s corin g rlou
h ](• In IPfl CPiltl'l
Hrabu sky &lt;k lighWd thP crowd
h_
v go ing into h i.s ' 'Mad Hunga r
i ;1n" ac r. Hr turnrd hi s bark o n
thP pta tr. wpnt halfwa~' to srconrl
,md rubbf'd ur th P hall Hr thPn
... t;nnrn&lt;•d ir int o his g lu\' t'. tu r nrd
;1rouncl and sto rmrcl 10 thr
mound . wi pin g thr ru bbr r witl1
an r xa ggrra 1f\d swrrp of hi s foot
H r.1hO!-.k_\' \ f l r 'it pit ch sailPd
m·r r and behind Powdl 's ht•a d.
i ndu cing lhr long timr Raltimo rf'
f ir st ba seman to point a fingr r at
th P mound i n m ock Jngrr .
Hraho sky r.-tmf' in . got down nn
() Jl f' kill'(' &lt;J IId JJUt hi s hand behind

B.&amp;RGollJ' *TIIIH ~ .....,
; ~ru~T /~IJI!IDA' I IIEDIIH~l

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
44&amp; ·4524
BAII(.Io!N

1 1'

JAL ~ Sf »&lt;PI~I

~("-'" J \

""11N(H

"' l5t

\AT / !.UN &amp; W(O

s•l!fJI J~

l lJ fH"

"!)A I ~

NI GHT nasDA\
01 TIUI(l(R ' "~I [ &gt;t.UO 1' 1

JUL'r' 6 lhru 12
··:~~· " ' " 'lOJ·~ [II.l '

I

l~

I 9 ' ',

DIEHARD
2 -· ',

.lAII 1
,._ ,. ' 01 n "" 11 ~1 1
\)0 1 1 4 ~
.... 0

1

•

Briggs home which is on River
Narrows Blvd. in Hillard .
The Briggs' son·in ·law and
daughter. Mr . and Mrs .. Ja ck
Krider ar e li ving ln a new home
nparby as w e ll as a son a nd
daughter·ln -law. Dr. and Mrs.
Richard Lawrence Driggs also
live near Janice and her husband
wilh Janice and Richard often

.....

_,.

IOO IQ JO CIAI !'

Taryn, Whitney and Na th an.
Mrs. Frecker Is a life member
of 1he elgs Count y Pioneer and
Historical Society and belongs to
the Cen tra l Ohio Universit y
Alumni Assoc lafion and Is ablP to

at trnd an occaulonal meeting .
By the way. Mrs. Frecker's
address Is Apartment 302 3011
Hayd en Road. Co lumbus. Ohio
43235

cu ltural trade rpform . However.
a recent report by AartdeZeeuw,

chairman of th e GATT agrleuitu
ral working group. emerged as a
basis for compromise.
The dr Zeeuw report accom
modates the U.S. demand for
commitment s to phase out subs !·

dies . but would allow the Eum
pea ns to carry out that unpopular
change in a se lec ti ve . gradual
ma nner
In essence.

Amf'ric an

and

Europea ns to

immediatr

would have to see ··some amend ·
m ents" in that formul a, but
agrerd therf' were "som e inter·

estlng lhings in thi s report .
The U.S. language on assist·
ance 10 the Sovie t Union would
offer a vote of ru nfid('nCf' for

Ex-heavyweight champ Tate
arrested on cocaine charges
r!dr i n t hP f ronl sP&lt;JI of lhl '
· KNOX VILL E. Ten n. I UP II :Ex -world heavywe ight hexing unm arkrd police car.
champion "Big John" Tale was
Fr iends of the ex ·rhamp r x
art't'Sted Monday by drug agenls pressed shork and d is appoi n1
for selling coca ine to an und er
men! at his arrrst
cover officer, authorities said
" It catc hes you off gu ard . I
Tale was arrested al his don't wish any hardsh ip on him.
:Knoxville apar tment a fter Knox Who would?," sa id Alvin Na nce.
:County grand jurors returned lhf' co urt -appoinlf' d ronsPrvator
·charges against he and 120 ot hers of Tatr's esWtt~ .
caught In a yearlong drug and
In 1983, Tate ad mitted a drug
theft sting, pollee spo kesman problem and volunta rily gave up
Foster Arnett said.
con trol of his esta te to a co ns!' r
Tate, 35, whO was ja iled und er va tor. His ear nings lhPn Wf&gt;n•
$5,500 bend, denied the charges valued al $300,000.
A number ofTa te'sbelonglngs.
against him.
· " I do not sell drugs , period." he Including gear he used to win hi s
·told reporters on his way to jail. way to lhe top of the boxing
·"I think somebcdy made a wor ld, were auctioned to pay off
blunder In terms of putting down wme of his debts. At that time.
tha i 1 sell drugs . I don 't want Tate sa id hIs earn ings had
people In Knoxville to think I sel l dwindled to $140,000
.drugs. I'm totally against II . I
Tate fought to regain co nt rol of
·will go to court and I will tight it ." his es tate. But In 1988, a judge
: Tate was friendly and ottered denied hi s req uest, citing his
:no resistance to the pollee previous record of drug depenofficers who ~;:scorted him to jail. dency and excess spe nding.
The oltlcers even alloWed Tate to

'

Ta lent ed Florence Richards of
Middleport appa rently got a long
well following her surgery at
U ni ve r sity Ho sp il a l in
Columbu s.
She's now a t the home of her
son -In -law and daughiPr, Mr . and

Mrs. Edward Smith, and card s
may be sent to her at 5013 Folger
Drive, Co lumbu s, Opio, 43227.
There ' s nothing wrong with our
government - It 's just some of
thr people in It who've created
th at we've got a tiger by the tail
feeling for a lot of us. The
ori gin al co ncept was excellent somewhe re along th e line we let
It get out of hand . Now apparently, the skies the limit
and no om&gt; s reeling It back ln .

But we keep s miling.

/Conti nued fr om page 11

ac tion.
"We co uld negotiale wilhin
that. " sa id U.S. Tr ade Represen
tat ive Carla Hills .
Elizabeth Guigou. an adviser
to French Presidenl Francois
Mltterrand. said the French

1\lso i nj urPd wrrr Paul H arc us
ilnd M i kr Ar nold. who suffe rPd
fi rst drgrrr burn s on thl'ir face
and groin . and Br ian Barnhart
and Cary /\r nl£'n trau t. w ho wrre
tn•atPd for SUJX' rficial burn s at
fllf' rJc P rra r k Sunday

Liua and Ma rk Mo rr is and
their two sons are in from
Holland where Mark is a pilot
with th e U.S. Air Force.
Lisa and Mark love Holland
and are enjoying IJ&lt;&gt;ing stationed
there. They a lso are enjoying
their leave in Me igs Co unty and
are spending a lot of lime on the
river". Their parents are Don
and Carolyn Thomas of Pomeroy
and Janet and Carol Morri s of
Rutland.
Don and Carolyn
ret ur ned only recently from a
visit with the Morris family ic
Holland and Janet and Carol will
be making the trip in the fall.
accord ing to present plans.

reforms . rPcomm end gu idel inrs
for fu tuf{' WestPrn aid and

II
I
I

0 TIRES
0 BRAKES
0 FRONT END PARTS
ALIGNMENT FRONT END

!
I

II

9
M~~~T~AE~~U $1 6 ~h
-------------------------------1
Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
Couoon

GOOD THRU 7 / 31 1 90

bOO E. Main St.

992 -2094

SERVING THE AREA FOR 23 YEARS

Pomeroy

West Virgin1a's governor in 1961 65, servcd 46 months of a 12-year
prisoo term for bribmg the jury
foreman in his sensational 1968 tn·
al, when he was acquitted of accepting kickbacks in sUite contrncts. Barron . a Democrat , was
paroled in 1975 from an Eglin, Aa.
pnson.
A team of prosecutors, led by
u .S. At10mey Mike Carey, brought
charges against Moore and a host
of other political figures in a corruption case that continues. Moore
was charged for actions in his 19!!4
and 1988 campaigns for a third and
fourth term as governor, and while
he was in the executive office.
The former Republican governor
was beaten in his quest of a fourth
term in 1988 by Gov. Gaston
Capenon. an insurance firm owner
in Charleston.
"There is no fau or just reason
why 1 should permit now the
withdrawal of the pleas of guilty,
which were made voluntarily and
under oath by Mr. Moore ," Hoffman said. "He wishes now to
change his pleas, 1 think he's too
late."
The 67-year.nld Moore, accompanied at Monday 's hearing by his
wife and three children, displayed
no emotion at Hoffman's ruling . He

Middleport...

!Continued from page 11

ge t back to where they pick up
loads.
The solicitor's inlerpretat lon.
according to Mayor Hoffman, Is
that the village has the rlgt.t to
regulate traffic. The mayor read
a portion of the ordinance whi ch
states that truckers can come
info the village for legilima te
bu siness. The mayor sa id thai as

Council. On rPcommendat ion of

far as he is co ncern ed , thi s

includes bu yi ng fuel. Davis indicated th a t severa l truc ker s buy
gasoline in town and the mayor
and council conceded that i s

·'legitima te business".
To cla r ify the maller, Council·
man Robert Gl irno re proposed
an amendment to th e ordinance
which would permit empty
trucks to come into the village for
loads by the most direct rout e,
stil l excluding loaded truc ks and
throug h trucks. There wa s a tie
vote with the mayor cas ting the
deciding " no" vote. Vol in g in
favor were Gilmore. Jack Satter·
fie ld, a nd William Walters. Cou n·
cllmen

Pa ul

Gerard,

Ja mes

Cia tworthy. and Dewey Hor to n
vo ting against the amendm enl.
The mayor reported on the
activity of the new housing office
In Mlddle port . He commended
J ea n Trussell for her work notin g
tha t seve n applications for
FmHA loa n s ha vP bPen com an swered .
T he th ird reading on our
cl ar ificafion ord ina nce was
givrn and it wa s adopl ed b1·

of the seve n s ummit nations or
even the Wor ld Bank. to assess
Its probl ems and aid its transl ·
tion to a ma r k e t rconomy .

Th at formul ation would brush
over differences with European
alli es who see Wes tern assls l·
ance as essential to Gorbachev 's
success and s urvival and leave
each co untry free to pu rs ue i ts

Hospital news
Admiss ion s - Mary Uewcl ·
tvn. Pomeroy: Parley McDo·
na ld , Pomeroy: Rose Raub.
Pomeroy: Ora Sincl a ir. Pom e
roy .
Oi scharg rs· Mary Ann My er s.

under which everyone would be
free to do what they want to." onr
U.S. offi cia l sa id . "No one' s
foolln,R anyonP . "

held o n parks and r ecrPallon
areas to be i nc luded in the park

pian.
At the recommendation of
Councilman Horton. a special
commendation was give n to
l ;! lmorr for his work on th e
Fourth of July celebr ation ThP
success of the celPbra tion was
no ted and that success was

al tribu ted to thr leadership of
Gilm ore. II wa s proposed by
Cllmore that next year Ci Yir
organizations be r nrouraged to
takr over lh l' projl'el

Th e possibilit y of a com munit y
halloween party was discussed
foll owing a proposa l by Gerard.
A couple of lots about town wh ich
are not bein g kept mowe d by the
owner s was di sc ussed. and New-

aza Smllh lodged a co mplaint
against a rp s ld ent wh o is burnin g
garb age. It was notPd t hat the
individu al h as bern warned and

son; four brothers , Rober t Mar·
tin, Th er on M artin .
Vinson

Martin. and Herbert Ma r tin; and
one sister. J anet Werry .
F unera l ser vices were held a t
Co.x's Funeral Hom e in Beaver
on Saturd av wlfh Rev . J a mt'S
Spencer. offi ciat i ng . Burial was

SPnior CitJzp ns dance wi ll br

Plra sr bring refrPs hmf'n I~ for
th(' snack tablf'

twen grantrd a di ss oluti o n.

Past Councilors to m eet
Pa st Counril lor s Club of Ches
ter Counci l 32:l of Da ughl ers of
Am~ r!ra

w ill have their picn lr

and meet in g at Forked RunStat r·

Park .

o n Wf'dnPsdJ .\ ' pv Pn i ng at

Mount

and

Vernon.

Eloise Mankin and Mrs. Leo
!Belt yl Vining. both of Pomespven grandchildren a nd

r oy;

ni ne grea l·gra nd children
She was preceded in death by
two sis ters and four brothers.
Friends may call from 2-4 p.m .
and 7 9 p.m . at the Goebel
Fune ral Home in Crooksville
where funeral se rvices will be
held a1 II a .m . on Wednesday
with Rev. JeffMiddletonofflciat·
in g. Burial will follow at 2 p.m at
the Beech Grove Cemetery.

\

tn fonn al lon mnrrr n! ng the amou n 1 of Lhc fund and any net:c~
1nforma Uo n ro nccrntn~ Lhc rrest'nlmr:nt of a claim thcrfor may be obtained
by " ny p('rson possessing a propert y (p ropr/r:lary) in terest In the undalmed
fund s hy nd dr ess l n ~ n written inquiry as follow s:
Ohi o Dc parlml' nt o f Co mmerce
Olvl slo n of Unda lmcd Fund s
77 Sou th ltlgh S lrL'C\
Co lumbu ~. O hio 'i 32G6 0 5 -1S

l'rt: s ('nlwd

fi · .11J p.m Members arc to br ing a
rovrred di sh. prizPs f or g amr s,
and a la wn choir

Br own .

UNCLAIMED
FUND@

Ple as Cou rt . .J ane Ann Michael
and Paul Dougla s Micha PI hava

in Mrig s C'ountyr C'om
mun P lr as Court

Do ris R Russell, 77, Crooksville. died Mond ay afternoon at
Good Samaritan Hospital In
Zanesvi lle afler an ex te nded
illness.
She wa s born April 12, 1913 at
Langsville. th e daughter of Josep h and Myrtle Romine Bolin.
She was a retired employee of the
Cookson Pottery In Ro seville .
She is survived by two daug~ ­
lers , Mrs . Sheldon tJa nlcel
Wahl, Crooksville and Mrs. Glen
1Marvalenel Stoller, Toledo; one
son. Richard Russe ll , Crooks·
ville; fou r sisters, Gertrude
Richard son. Akron, Bernice

We Have $$For You!
Notlce of Names of Persons
Appearing To Be Owners of

agai ns t .Jon Walter Kl()f's in
MPigs Count y Common Pleas
Cou rt . In o ther actlon in Comm on

Syr J C'USf'

Doris R. Russell

County

T he ma yor's rrport s howrd
rrcf'ipts or $:l.2'12

A jud gem('nl acti on ha s bPe n
filed b1· Norandex. Inc . of
Park r rsburg, W.Va .. against
Greg B. Roush. do ing busi ness as
Rou sh Con struct ion Company of

at Union Cemetery in Columbu s.
Attending ser vlrPs were Mr.
and Mrs Osby Mar tin a nd Edna
Martin, Middleport.

Meigs

that a cila tion will be Issued the
nex t time it happen s.

}udgemml sought

held Frida)' nlghl from Rp.m to
II p.m . Music will be by lh c
Happy Holl is te r Boys . There will
be a do nat ion of $2 at th e door

ca use it provides an umbrella

A t th at time a discussion will be

Halph Elmer Marlin. 76 of
Be"ver. died Wednesday at Day ·
ton V.A Medical Ct' nt er fo llow ·
ing an exte nded Illness.
He wa s born March 18. 1914 in
Columbu s to John Edwa rd and
Lillian 1Cra lne1 Martin. He was
a veteran ol the U.S. Army
during World Wa r II .
Surviv ing are his wife. Edna
rMechllnl Mar tl n; three broth ·
ers. Alber! !Ei leen! Martin.
Pomeroy. Edward !Polly! Mar
lin. of Rutland. a nd Osby 1Mary1
Martin of Middl eport ; threr
sis ters. Louise !Thomas I Mil
chell of Coral Spri ngs . Fla ..
Sylvia Georg&lt;' of Co lumbu s .
Edna C. Martin. of Middiepor l.
two dau~hler s . Ullian SaunclPrs
of Columbu s. Ca thy Moore. of
Beaver : a nd onr so n. Douglas of
Beaver, three stppdaughters . .J
Helen Casey . .ludith Lroup and
Carol Salyf'r ~ : one stPpson. Her ·
bert Mcchlin : 19 gran dch ild ren
and 10 gre at·grandchildrcn
He wa s prrcPded in dealh by
both parents: one daugh ter,
Kar en SuP Mar t in . one grand-

A dc-crf'r of divorrr has been

to thP Soviet U nion," said Gui ·

co nditions. including resolutio n
of their defa ult on $1 billion in
loans dating back to the Ru ssian
Hevolution.
" I would think the Europeans
would bt• happy with this, be-

Announcement wa s m ade of a
meeting of the Park District
headed by Mary Powell. to be
held J uly 27 at th e Syracuse
Municipal Building at 7: 30p.m.

Ralph Martin

gr antPd 10 Rebecc a Ann KIOl's

Dance set

other rec iprocal economic ges·
1un•s If th e Sov1rts mrt C'Prtaln

some pay
adju stme nt s al the Middleport
pool. The head life g-uard and the
sw imming in structor will now
IXllh be paid $4 .05 an hour.
th er e werr

-Area deaths----

Divorce, di.~solution

own lending and aid po lic ies .
"What Is importan t Is to ta ke a
decision on the importa nce of aid
gou. She sa id the next logical step
would be to use Western expcr ·
tise to "di agnose" Soviel Ills
For his part. Bush was pre·
pared to offer loan guarantees or

Roger Williams, recreation dl·
rect or.

ing to tllpes prosecutors had of
conversations between Moore and
his 1988 campaign chairman John
teaberry. The conversauon, used to
press the obstrucllOil of Jusuce·
c~e. occurred in a Parlcersburg'
parking lot earher this year.
.
Three days before a grand Jury
indicted Moore on the five charges.
prosecutors played the tapes to
Hundley, and the former governor
entered into the plea agreement
with the government
." If this is your fault,didn,',t yow:
chenl know 1t at the . ume? Hoffman asked. "Why d1dn'1 you teD
me all this on May 8? You cannot
play fast and loose with the JudiCial
system ."
Since he denied a request to conduct an evidentiary hearing prior to
issuing his ruling, Hoffman wished
Hundley good luck in pressing an
appeal in the U.S. Founh Circuit
Court in Richmond.
Hundley said he would wait until
after the sentencing to decide
whether to appeal Hoffman's
ruling .

left the courtroom and shunned
reporters' questions.
Moore, a former congressman.
pleaded gmlty after s1gmog a plea
agreement on April12. In late June,
his lawyer, W.iUiam Hundley of
Washington , D.C. , filed a motion
seeking to withdraw the pleas, arguing that Moore felt under intense
pressure to enter the pact.
Hoffman refused Hundley's request to let Moore testify why he
felt coerced by prosecutors.
Hundley said Moore does not
belieye himself guilty of the extortion, mail fraud or tax evasion
charges and does not challenge the
obstruction of Justice charge.
"Nobody was fon:ing him to
plead guilty," Hoffman said. "All
you had to do is tell Mr. Moore to
plead not guilty and put the show
on the road."
"It was my fault," Hundley
responded. " ! was trying to save
the plea. I thought it was in the best
Interest of my client I subsututed
my JUdgment for my client's."
Hundley said he adVIsed Moore
to plead gu1hy in April after listen -

Fnnn.'i wllllw furn ished upo n

Na me a nd ad d n ..,s

mu ~1

rt:'fJUL' Sl

be given r:x ac tly as

o r inquiry In wrltlnt. :

II ~ led.

NOT!C ~:: N:tme an d a d dn·~ s of unclaimed accounts a dvcrUsC'CI ln p .1or
y(' a rs arc 011 fi k wl lh yo ur Co unty Treasurer ns WC'JI as una dvertised
tH ' ('(ltllll~ of lr·ss t h ; 1n S 10 .00 .

Scout outing rescheduled

STATE O F

0 11 10 .

·

tlf:I 'ARTMt:NT OF COMMERCE

RJ chard F. Cele1te
T he Brown ir Da isy f' V (' Of
which . vas
.
ea rlier cance li£'d has
~ n rpsched uled lor August 10 .
Additional registration Is open
thr ough July 20. More inform a

u on can bP obtained f rom Brrnda
NPutzl ln g ;1! 992-:,no. Thr ev f'n t
is OfX' n t o a l l Brownif'S i:lnd
Da islr s i n Meigs Count y.

Tbomaa K.

Nappy M. Het£lcr

G~race

Chid, Dlv1slon of
U ndalmt-d F'u nds

Director

EMS answers assistance calls

,------------------------------~

I

By BRIAN FARKAS
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (UP!) After losin~ an lith hour b1d to
blot out gmlty pleas to corrupuon
charges, Arch A. Moore Jr. faced
the prospect Tuesday of becoming
only~ ~nd governor in West
Vtrgmta s htstory to be shipped off
to pnson.
Moore was scheduled to be sentenccd at 9:30 ·a. m. EDT by special
U.S. District Judge Walter Hoffman, who only a day earlier rejected his attemjltto remove pleas to
five felontes mvolvmg the allegcd
shakedown of a coal operator.
Hoffman, lmown for h1s stem
apphcauon of legal protocol, admomshed the former Republican
governor that he should not be allowed to play "fast and loose" with
the judicial system.
Moore , a docorated World War ll
veteran who dominated West Virginia's political scene more than
two decades, pleaded guilty back
on May 8 to tax evasion, obstruction of justice, extortion and mail
fraud, but later claimed he was
pressured to do so by federal
prosec utors.
He faced a maXImum penalty of
36 years in prison and as much as
$1.25 million in fines.
W.W. "Wally" Barron, who was

propose se nding experts to thr•
Sovi et Union, under the au spices

Mikhail Gorbachev's eeonomir

! VACATION SPECIALS

Arch Moore sentencing scheduled today:

plf'ted and numero us inquires

Thr question was how far the
Europeans would go in charging
GATT nego ti ators to tackle agri

the

hi' bac k. Both plav••r.s laughPd

All was will wllh Mr. and Mrs .
Guy Shuler whe n they went to
Tennessee to visit their daugh ter, Sherrie Spuler .
However, Mrs. Shuler suffered
a hea rt at tack. had to be
hospitalized and ended up under·
going double by -pass surgery.
Cards may be sent to her In care
of Sherrie Shuler, P.O. Box :m .
Townsend, Te nn., 37882.

car ing for their grandchildren,

European off lcia Is indicaled il
co uld provide a way to glvP the
United Sta tes a broad agreemenl
In principle without committin g

U !!O ! 0(.

Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bealmear of Baltimore. Md ., have
been In Middleport visiting Mrs.
Bealmear's sister, Betty FrazIer , 827 Bosworth St.
The
Seal mears .a t tended the See
family reunion held over the
weekend near Point Pleasant, W.
Va.
The Baltimore couple also
visited with Mr s. Bealmear's
brother-In-law and sister, Mr.
and Mrs. Marvin Krider, Sy racuse; with her brother, Bob
McDa niel In Middleport, and
with a friend, Mrs. Leola Gilmore in Minersville during their
stay.

chard , are now l iv ing in thP new

th is questl on dif' _"

Unser domi n ;:~ted until th r flrr

nppo~r ~afh

Mrs . Arlee !Trecle) Abbett has
been returned from the Holzer
Medical Center to her homP .
Undoubtedly , she'd be pleased to
hear from you . The address is
.1546.1 Rock Springs Road, Pome·
roy .
Mr. and Mrs. Abbclt
opera ted a reupholstering bu sl·
ness In their home fr om a
number of year - a nd a good job
they did!

lhP field

end ed his day .

A FAMILY AFFAIR - Sandy Alomar Sr.
( eenler), a coach with the San Diego Padres, gets
:the pleasure of see ing his sons - the Padres'
:Roberw (le ltl and the Indians' Sa nd~ Jr . -

The Ohio
River Sweep In
Meigs County
had to be postponed a couple
of weeks ago because of heavy
rains which
brought abcut a swollen Ohio
River.
The Meigs County portion of
the program has ~n rescheduled for Saturday. July 14. from
9 a.m. to noon. All volunteer
groups and Individuals who had
registered for participation In
the sweep are being contacted by
the Meigs County Litter Control
Office regarding their taking
part on the rescheduled date .

Summit. ..

The Daily Sentinei- Page-5

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

Tuesday, July 10, 1990

Enjov rhe flex ibility and liquidity of a CD
wh 1c h is auromar ically renewab le and redeema ble
ar eac h 7 dav Jnn11·ersary
The 7 ·Day · l' rcrn iu m Cll
i ~ a nor her exalll plc of our
Comm rt 11wnr Tn C11,t om n ~

Cal l or

your nt';liT :-. r
Ce nt ral TruSI office for details 1od ay .
VISH

s1 0,000 MINIMUM DEPOSIT
M:u unurn tlt·pmrt S99.1J)9IJ ) S ub'lt.UHr :rl p cn ~h~ fon (":l rl)· w n lhlr .rwJI
l mt•re~ r jXIIJ rn pr rn11pJI &lt;111&lt; 1 Ulln r ounde.l .,... rl'~ ly RJrt.., r·fl r" !Yf' Jul y '1 . I'J'XI
.rn ,l ~ ub rt·ll l &lt;~l h;rnl&lt;e '"''"'"'I! nnrt~. e Y rr ld :rH umr\ rh .u \ l.lrcd r&lt;llf· rt'!Tl Jrn~ ·
t • r n~ r :r nr f11r J fu ll f l' Jf Wrt h 011 w u hd rJ wah o f rnrt' rt"l l or pr rnupa l

THE CENTRAL TRUST COMPANY
The Bank That .Wak e.&lt; Th•ngs Happen .

992 -6661

446-0902

Middlapon

Gallipolis

I

Member FDIC

Six ca lls for ausistancP wrr P
answered on Monda y by units of
Meigs County Emergency Medi·
ca l Services.
At 9:18 a.m .. Syracuse Unit
was ca lled to Swan Road for Ruth
Stethem. She was laken to St.
Joseph Hospit al. At 11 :51 a.m .
Mlddleporl was ca lled to Vlliage
Manor Apartments for Ralph
Fry, who was transported to
Veteran s MPmorial Hospital.
Pomeroy unit was called to
VIllage Green Apartm ents at
12: 45 p.m. for John Six. He was
taken Ia Pleasant Valley Hospital. At 1:09 p.m ., Pom eroy unit
was dispatched to Pieaser's
Restaurant for John Snider. He
was taken to Veterans Memorial.
At 3:27p.m. . Pomeroy squad was
called to Sumner Road for Ora
Sinclair lor Veterans Memorial.
AI 3:37 a.m., Syracuse was
dispatched to Fifth and Pearl for
Rosemary Raub. She was tran!'

Clly of (hr s \ H
Jlrui!ITI, Muhle . Unknown ;
Ma•ry. Unol~'"Y · 40111. SRylor. J W. H stonewall

COUPON
ported to Veterans Memorial.

Stocks
Dally stock prices
(As of 10: 30 a .m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
ol Blunt, Eilts &amp; Loewl
Am Electric Power .... ........ 29%
AT&amp;T ... ........ ..... .. ... ..... .. ... 38\~
Ashland Oil .. .. .... ........ .. . 35)&gt;
Bob Evans ....... .... .. .. ... ....... 13%
Charming Shoppes ............. .IO'h
City Holding Co ...... ............ 15 V.
Federal Mogul ... .. .. ..... ........ l7 \i.
Goodyear T &amp;R .... .... ... .... .. ... 29
Key Centurion ...... ... ... ....... .12\'.
Lands' End...... ..
..... .16 V.
Limited Inc .......... ............. 23')1
Multimedia Inc ...... ... .... .. 70\2
Rax Restaurants .. .... .... .. ...... 2\i.
Robbins &amp; Myers ..... ......... .. 21 34
Shoney's Inc ............ ........ .. .14%
Star Bank ...................... ..... . 20
Wendy's Inti ........................ 634
Worthington Ind ................. 23)1

HEARING TESTS MEIGS COUNTY

Dr W

Fr• El«tronin hoaring tesb wil be giwat by hi- Hearing Aid Cent• at

MIDDLE PO IT FAMll Y PRACTICE
Z. I . DAYO, M.D.
306 SECOND AVENUE
THURSDAY. JUlY 12
9:00 A.M. TO 12:00 NOON

llo• 3 l A

408NW lllh:JmklN. t:ll&amp;abfth , 30130
Crawford St. Soendenr , J~me.C t\ W11lram R. 408
1\'W ll lh. Smdtl'l. Jamm G. Wm R Edward FA
Arthu 408 NV~~ 12th: s~ . en~g. 5101 s.-

Ci ly o( Mld dlrport · Barker, J H, Unlmown ;
Caroline . 70 N Soeo::ond 5 1 II , 1-ly-.ell, lAw ·
n"nrr. 760 l.aun" l St; Klein. Ourtlna. 75 Cu11D
St; l..yollfl, John r., 7tll5 Chestnut St.; ~ lcl!em.
Lynn, 100~ 1/~• 2nd Ave; l'tuaelm, Glrur Rae,
nr. 5 ::lrd St S~lr.r. Gladys. l46 J-ludwm 51;

City ofRactnt : Countl. Mtltnda. Rt 3; en-.
John W &amp; Stlnley M, UnknoWTI: ~ler. Mariene. ·
498J 1 S.. 104 : Yockey. Nelda, Rfd 1

!lln~L,

THE TESTS Will BE GIVEN BY ALICENSED HEARING AID SPECIALIST

Clly of Ottow1: K-h . .JDMph. Unlmown

invl!od

to

or Pomor.roy:

su~Rrl

City or Rutland: Colem.n, PlruiJ. fU 1: He• th.
Ed , Unknown, Hoffman . Larry. Mtt\lmber Hill
Ret .Ju:Uon, Hertha W. f'O Box 473: Neleon. ·
VlrJL), Rt l ; Tlllll. S.undn. Unknown.

City of Mtnenrv1lle: ....h. Mlwtn G . Rfd I.

Ci ty

City of IUM1vt1~: C•ulhom. Curtll P 6
Marpn!l. ro Aox 1: Chne, C.rol W. 39684

Cltyo(Reedavlle : Cutltp, l..arry. 49J07 Sr 681

Wince, Orien. 146 Hud.on St .

hwo • IT• h-lnlll_, to-11~ ll'~m con boholpecll Bllngthio coupon
with you for yout FREE HEARING TEST of H&amp; vllluo. Aduko only, pt-o.

TEST

1313 1!'r Con . ftnn

~ulhur ,

Mth A'"-

l'lly of l..onl( not tom Gom!ll. Che.ter N. Rr I

Call Tall fr• N......, 1-100-634 -5265 f01 immodiatt aiii)Ointmtnt.

COME IN WITH COUPON FOR

City ofl'nrtland: llrtrr L.
C'l!y of Durer J oh niiQn . .-.drllr E. Unknown .
Sl m•. W tlhu r I ~ H1 I

rtty of l..an(Jvrllr Cit lAnd, 1'. PO Doll 10

BELlONE HEAliNG AID CENTER
1312 EASTERN AVENUE, ROUTE 7-GAlliPOLIS
WEDNESDAY, JULY 13
9 A.M. TO •:00 P.M.
CALL ··6·1744 or 1·100·6U·526S
UMWA and UAW PROVIDER

Anyone who h• • - • -Ina 01 u-mndlng COIW...,ion to

Rt 4: Wt1hom. Wilham E. !lt 2 CIT• Rrt.
Young. Mac. 240 Condor S\ .

Cupenter, Shirley A. 147

Mulhtny Allt ; Cuckler. ChJJord C/'+I!J f'uiU. 8 V.
PO Bo~t 723; Dye, M1dgeJ, IV 4; Hyeen, Roger, 4
O•lt; Mtner , Oonald H 1k V\l:l!d J , AI l ; Moort: ,
Olrf. Rl3: Nonnm OUlkt E. V!11ate OrecnApu
Ul ; Pt:rrter, F'ranlt WJrf'*Bal\ey, lo.. C, 111
1 13 E 2nd St PO Boll 686: Ridenour, John 8 ,
345 16 Sr 7: Rott(en. E M /'ttl Wrf&amp;hl. Nelhe, 259
UntonAve: Ru1well, Nary, 104 SJ111n1Ave; Smtlh,

Eugene R. 110 Butumut Southe.m. Elllfi'
South em, A. Upper Monkey Run: StMy, Goldie
M, Rt l ; Taylo. CM.topher. 38&amp;498.-.dburyRd;
Warner. Knaty .t Cindy, At 4; Wamer, Vkld

*

cny oiSyracuae: Aah. Rkk Ill Rldwu-d c . PO

...

Oox 106; Taylor, Mark.

~ &amp; JO)'t't.

PO Boll

Ctty of1\rppr.nr Platna : Dol'll Helen. PO Boz .
196: GNeter. Juanita. PO 8oJI IDS; ttofr.mn.
W•lter, UO)d &amp; Jtoter, PO 8oJI 196; Holfm.n.
W•lter. Uoyd 8: Roger. PO Boll: 196.
City Unknown: Jarrett. l.udllt, Unknown;

t.ee . J W, Unknown; Marshall. Randall Un·
lmo~.

�"

Tuesday, July 10, 1990

By The Bend

Two shuttle skip_pers grounded for safety rule violations

The Daily Sentinel

CAPE CANAVERAL, F1a. tUPI)
- Two veteran shuttle com~
manders In training for 1991

Tuesday, July 10. 1990 '

Page- 6

ctelaJd nanted

Bridal shower held

AU-Amt.tican

Guyla Roush, bride elect of
.Jeffrey Walburn, was recenlly
honored wl!h a bridal shower a!
The Ch ri sllan Brethren Church
Fellowship Hallin Mason . Host ~
ing the occasion was Coral
Walker, au nt of the bride elect,

~

Dodle Cleland has recently
been named an All~ American
Scholar by the United States
Achievement Academy~
The USAA has established the
award progran In order to offer
recognition to superior students
who exce l In the academic
disciplines. The AII~American
Scholars must earn a 3.3 or better
grade point average.
Cleland, who attends Meigs
High School. was nominated for
this national award by Mrs. G.
Notter. Cleland will appear In the
A ll ~ American ~holar Directory,
which is publlihed nationally .
The academy selects All ~
America n scholars upon the
rxc lusive recommendations of
teachers. coac hes, counselors

and other qualified sponsors.
Once awa rded, the students may
be n•cognized by the USAA for
ofher honors .

and .Jpan and Gai l Roush, si s ters-

in· law .
Games wer e played and prizes
were awarded to Mary Thabet,
:vlary Kebler, .June Baker and
Evelyn Stewart. The shower
cake was baked by Gayle Rou sh
of Gallipolis. Mi ss Roush wa s
al so trea ted to a personal shower

at Sebastians res taurant in Parkersburg,

workers at
pian 1.

DOOlE CLELAND
She is the daughter of Car roll
and Debbie Cleland of Middle ~
pori. GrandparPnts are Yvonnt'
Se ller, Pomeroy, and Mae C lc~
land. Racine

Lions announce program
to fight global blindness
ST. LOUIS tUPII - Lions
Clubs lnter natronal. launching
the most ambitious progr&lt;J m in
its 73~ year history, announced
Monday it will spend $100 million
lo try preve nting millions of
people around the world from
becoming blind ~
At a news conference in St.
Louis that Included satellite
hookups with blindness expert s
and

suffer from gl aucoma. Kupfer

reporters in London and

Washington.

D ~ C ~.

the world's

(&lt;Jrgest se rvi ce organization an ·

f4

nounced it Is starti ng a program
ca lled Sigh!Firsl.
Lions Inter national President
William Woolard called the effort
'.' the grea test challenge" In Its 73
yea r s.
About 40 million people around
the world arc blind, but 80
percent of all blindness can be
prevented or cured, said Dr. Car l
Kupfer, director of the National
Eye lnstilule and presid ent of the
In ter na tional Agency for the
Prevention of Blindness.
"If nothing is done, !hal
number !40 million 1 will double
[n !he ne., t 25 ypars," Kupfer
sa id. adding that 9() percent oft he
world's blind live in undeveloped
nat ions.
ThP Lions com mittf&gt;d th em ·
ielves to th(' SightFi rst program
tor a minimum of six years. ThPy

mia, ca use d by a deficiency of
Vitamin A and the most co mmon
causr of blindnrss among ch ild ren;
and onchocerciasis or

unc Bak E' r. Sa m H aw l ey.
l vau nna Lld r l , Lo11ir Jenks .

Helen Quivry, Nora Fi eld s, Pal

America and Africa, whrrr sta

The most important difference
bPtWPf'n SightFirs t and exi s ting
progr ams to pr eve nt blindness is

said .
· ''Thl' h'e hnic al adv isers &lt;H('

thalmic specialists. thPse advis
Prs will ass('ss thp nPt.'d for carr
i n the1 r alT a , propose pro j ec t s
and monit or th em a."i thr ;.-·

develop. ·
Lions Cl ub !niC' r nar ion &lt;:d is thr
world 's lar grst se r vicrorga ni za .

l ion wil h nearly H million
members in 171 co untries . Club

said .
: The world' s leading cau ;p of
blindness Is cataracts. which
affect 16 million to 111 million
people worldwide. ~ven though
surgery to correct the problem is
90 percent effec tive. lhP group
3aid .
The other leadi ng causes of
t&gt;lindness inc lude trachoma. an

rhr blind and v isually impai rf'd.
to sponsor th r wor ld ".-; largp q
drug abust' p n ' \"Pnt ion c urri cu .
lum and tn support diabetl's
Pduc ati on rr sra rch .
Lions ha vr bf'rn fighting blind ·
nPss sincr 1 92~. when Helen
Keller, a norrd writer and

infpctious eye dl seaS(' associa trd
with unsanitar y livi ng rondi ·
lions; g laucom &lt;:t. often asso ·

lec t urN blind and deaf from
Infanc y, chal lenged !hrm to be
" kn igh ts of !he blind."

mPmbrr s rai s(• hundrPds of mil ·

lions of dollars annually to hC' lp

!he

tenth

vear

Oh1o

University Is hosting Etdrrhos
tel, an educational program for
sP nio r c itizens who w is h to
con ti nup to expand thri r hori zo ns
&lt;~ n d to drvelop nrw interes ts and
&lt;' nthusi asms .

Miss Lam bert l! r artua tf'd fr om

Senior AU'ard
given KennedJI
,IOSHUA SI'IRES

Cl arid a.

Bu sh, .lu ":&gt; hua

wi th

cx~erirnc e d

award

came

in

Sport Industry, a program in !he
Sc hool of Health andsSport Scien·
ces. ThC' sc hool is part of thP
Collegt' or Hril l lh an d Human

Souther n High School and Hock
ing Technical College .
A graduate of Wahama Hi~h
Sc hool, Zuspan will graduate
from the West Virginia lnstitutc
of Tec hnology In December. He
is employed at Raven Hocking
Coal Corporation .
A reception wil l be held at !he
home of the groom 's parent s.

MONDAY PAPER
TUESDAY PA PE R
WEDNESDAY PAPER
THURSDAY PAPER
FRIOA.)' PA.PEI=I
SUNDAY PA P ER

been awarded Hocking Techni ~
cal College Foundati on Scholar ·
ships . Brenda Hysell, a nursing
Ievell utudent , and Sonja Steele,

Classified

a medicalhassisrant student, wil l

foUI'Jt~in!l

446 367 388 245 2!;6 643 379 -

year st udent in the culinary arts

Me1g1 County
AreaCode614

Galltp ol+s
Cheslme
Vrn ton
Ato Gr1nde
GuYJ n 0111
Ar1b1• 0111

W•Inut

843 - Por t'-nd

773 -· Miton

247-Letar1 Falli

882 - New t11 ven
895 - Let an

949 - Aacm e
742 - Rutl•nd
667 - Cooi'WIIII!

Workshops,

57 - Mu••cal huuumenu

8 - Pubhc S•l• &amp; Au ction
9 - Wentld 10 Buy

58 - Fturtl

11 - Help Want ed
12 - Sr1u111tOn Wanted
13 - ln surance
14 - Busmeu Tr11nmg
15 - Schools&amp;, lnt .,uCt ron
16 - Red&lt;o. TV&amp;, C B R~tp•"
17 - M ISCelilntoo,~J
18 - Want•d To Do

71

- tiomn fgr Sal e
for Sale

33 - Farmt lor Sele
34 - Busmeu 8uild1ngs
35 - loll &amp; Acruge
36 - Real htall Wanted

COURT Of MEIGS
COUNTY. OHIO
PROBATE DIVISION
SUSAN WADE. eta! ..
Pleintlffl
- vs.PATIY VANCE . the named
Ellecutrix of the Estate of
Mary Crickman. Deceased,

RACINE DEPARTMENT STORE

JRD STREn

RA(INE, OHIO

MASTERCARD - VISA -

GOLDEN BUCKEYE

TO: The Unknown Heirs at
Law. Nut of Kin, Devileea
and Legate&amp;a of Mary Crickman. Deceased. their Executors. Administretora, Custodians. Auigns. or Guttrdians.
and the Unknown Heirs at
Law. Ne~et of Kin, Oavisees
and Legatees ot Hobart Hal.
Clinton Hall, Sutle Hall, David Hall. Lucy Hell. Rosie Fer·
guson. lea Halt. Haden Hall.
their EIU'Cutors. Admlniltra·
tors, Cuttodiant, Assigns, or
Guardians. Addresses unknown and David Haft, Lucy
Hall, Rosie FeriJUSOn. Ad·
dresaes unknown.
You are hereby notified
that you heve been n•mod
p,ftndantt In the a~i9" onl·
t~lo4
l')'odf, II ~ .,
P1tinltfto, VI, Pa!IY VI"~' '

*AIRWEEKEND
SHOW*
JULy 14 AND JULy 15
GALLIA-MEIGS REGIONAL AIRPORT

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
******************

81 · H ome lmp•o..,.ment•
82 - Ptumbtng &amp; He rung
BJ- hctvtlrng
84 - EI~tC'Irrc•l &amp; Refrrger1110n
8~ - Generel H•uhng
86 - Mobl l e Home R•P•"
87 - Upl\oltterv

*******************~

AIRPLANE RIDES!

*
WIN AN AEROBATIC
WARBIRD RIDE!

will be pubhaMd once each
week for tiJt: (81 successNe
weeki. The lut pubtiCIItion
wiH remain on the 31st day

lll-----------------1
BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30P.M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

twering wHt commence on
that data. In the case of your
flilure to answer or other ·
wise rMpond •• requested

by the Ohio . AuiH ol Civil

Procedure, judgment by default wilt
be rendered
ageintt you end for the relief
dem1nd&amp;d in the Complaint.
Dated this 21st day of

161 26:
171 3, 10. 17. 24 . 31.

&amp;tc

Public Notice

qn th• 8\h day of MerGII,
1~SQ, ~· !lt!li'Md lnnll~

SUNDAY-1:00 P.M.

Yoy
fur1htr notlfltd
ond
ott lrt
"Ide.
that ¥9~ moY hoYt IP!fll
clelm or lnttrMt In the
p•o~Oidi•v• whlph ,,, nlfll
tt"eln. You •rt r~ulred to

*

SINGLE ADMISSION
F~R BOTH DAYS:
ADULTS: 54.00
STUDENTS 16·15) S2 .00
S &amp; UNDER FREE

2

In Memory

ROY AND

li~MA

HENDRIX

July10,1980&amp;
Nov. 21,1886

W,e do nollorltl you,
Nor do we Intend.
Wt t~in- of ytu often,
And will Jq tilt eo4.
Gone and I011otten b~

--\C5'

Some you m•1 be,

l:

But detr to our memory
Yo~ will ·~•' bt.
~•mW

tnd l'rlendt

SPECIAL

30 Sessions-130
Co. Rd. 28

also acid bclil and rod
out rodiaror,. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

P4T HILl FORD
. 992-2'1 116

Middlepon.

•

Ohio

CUSTOM BUILT

HOf«~S

&amp; ~~A~ES

"AI At919n~t rrlw'"

,r ll"·
'4N&amp;•o
p,y
or Night
NO SUNPAY (ALLS

.:•===-==•·"'::::::;

t'

.az ;;.:

In

&gt;::sa*'

loving memory

9! Bernlot IHrll
W~Q Plfft~ IIWIY
gne year •1o to~41y.
July 10, 1

n.

O~ly

lhQft who htve
1911 Qt" 1111
Tht p~ln ~f f•ntng
wHhfY1 ftrtwtll
Whlt9
tlttpl p Pfl·
ctfultlttp
H" "ltmory we altalltl·
wop keep.
lltlly ml111ed llv her
tltWI, C:lfl!"""' l1trl9n: brotllf•t• C:h1rl"
fa Ctr! lt!ll'lt; d1u9h·

'h'

It•. lttnclv
'"ndohlldrtr1

l!app,

.. tnd

''"' • grtnd~lllldrtn
1nd tlll!ll't·ln•ltw.

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVI(E
992-S335 or US-3561
Arro11 F""" Post Offiro
POMfiOY, OHIO .

10/ J0/'8911n

tl::;&amp;·z:""
-·--~
.8

WQ ~fQ I09king f9r p~oplv In

M''"' CoYnW who 111r1 willinu to
th@rt th•ir h9mv Dml prqv!~e
fr!fn~tt'!!p to two Pd\llt• wi1h
learning llmi141~1ont, Wt tn11n y91,1
and 011n 11d~ 1.1p to •1 ~~QQQ 41 Yfar

"FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK

788 N 2ND AVE .
MIDDLEPORT
''

892 -2178

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL

"LIGHT HAULING

~-4-,.c
-(M".,_.I ~-ARB

i

s~ nso""

YARDMAN &amp; ECHO
OUTDOOR POWER
PRODUCTS

R. 1..

&amp;

co.

FREE ESTIMATES

Toke

the pain out
pointing.

of

let us do it for you.
VERY REASONABLE
HAVE REFERENCES

{6141 985-4180
6 - 18 ' 90 ~ t

SALE
Puoh Mowen &amp;
Riding Moweu-Twin (vi .
Repair All Makes &amp; Models of
Chain Saws and I.Jwn Mowers
Saw Chains for Sale
PICKUP &amp; DEIIYIAY

•Mobile Home

.,.,·~~::~oinf
.•~!':~~~i11,

Repair All Makes &amp;
Models of Farm
Machinery

MORRIS EQUIPMENT

PICKUP &amp; DELIVERY
MORRIS EQUIPMENT

742-2455

742-2455

RUTLAND, OHIO

RUTLAND, OHIO

6-29.'90-1 mo.

mo. d.

~OQNTRY
MOBILE
HOME PARK

IETOR
TRACTORS &amp; LOADERS
MOWERS, lAKES
AND TEDDERS

6~29~' 9(1

4 ~AnHG
Now Loratlon: ~ ·

PLUMIIIlG

16&amp; North Sorond
Middleporl, Ollio 4$760

SALES

~~~~~~~-

All MAKES

Bring It In Or We

.... "'k Up.

~Jti'S API'IJAN&lt;E

SERVICE

.•,.,,

992-UU tr 9U·H61
Acrou fNm Post OHiro
117 I, Stc, Pomlt'ay

992-7479
Rt, n lltrth .
Pomeroy,

~

;'fl.J,...--...,.:;.:;;.!l~

For

TRU(IING

TrJde

C!IE$TII, C)HfO
•QRAVIL

367-0588
I·IJ.'I~t

·~IMiiiTONE
•F!l~ QIRT .

••·P&lt;I

Announcemenls

•ANYTHING
At ALL

90$·4422
,.,, •• ·lfn

·

Information call

•I&lt;I'Q'""•

SIPEUNES
SPOilT CAIDS
!1\!Y • ~II

HO~LON

~rlv,r'll !lc'n~l,' !lncl goo~ drivlnv

rftqlljred.

I mo

MICROWAVE
C)VIN RJPAIR

10 yoyr lnc;ome and ttlll work ot
horne, tt!gh t91\QQI d'gr,er vet~
re~ord

992·2269

USED RAILROAD nES

1 / H / 10

BISSEll
SIDING CO.

BUILDERS

Do yo" 11e~d e11tra in~qm• but
still want to b• ~t h9m•?

Fast

INTEIIOI EITEIIOR

BISSELL

wanted

Mal&lt;ll and . . .!.

LINDA'S
PAINTING

4-i6 ~ 86-Hn

FOR SALE
Whirlpool Wa sher 1 100 ~ 00
Upright Freezer '150.00
27,000 btu Air Cooditiooer

11

Fartory Authoriud
Senit:e Cent• F01 Most

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

Pit. '49-2801

1 t..

90 DAY WA.AIITY
WASHERS-1100 up
DRYERS-$69 up
REFRIGERATORS-$100 ui •
RANGES-Gu-Elec.- 1125 up
FREEZERS-$121 up
MICRO OVENS-179 up

I ~ ll ~ Uc

NO SUNDAY &lt;AIU

614·99N488

In u-A!l .

USED APPLIAN(ES

1· 31 ~ '90 ""

SALES AND SERVICE

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949-2860

400 00.

"

985-4473
667-6179

Watrh For Slgm

" Free Estimates"

1

~~~~t :~~~~~9~~~~r;

1

949·2794

Now Homes lttilt

Whoever borrowed
Sott Wolfe's Racing
Helmet Please
Return It

June . 1990.
lena K. Ne ..elroed, Clerk

•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FrH Estimates

SER~ICE

of July, 1990. en&lt;J tne twen·
ty·elght !28) day1 fM an-

•• &lt;:om1J1on Pint o! Mlllp
C91mry. Qhiq, Pr~ll&lt;tlt Plvf
lion, th• groy•r of th~9'11•
ploim ~on'da &lt;hwt 1 p~r·
portod ~oot \Iiiii •~d toll·

SPONSORED BY:

~

w!thl"after-ty-elghr
!281
dayt
the IMt ptJbllce·
tion of tMt Notice, which

(ONSTRUCTION

We can repair and re·
core raclla tan and
heater cor11. We can

·BULLETIN ·.BOARD

"'''V"'d ~··• No. iftH,
.!J'd lo gon~i~Q In tht Court

2 12 HOUR*AIR SHOW

AND

Roo m s

thv ntmed ~~eCYtrl~ ol t~'
hllte of I'Yiorv 9rl~~m4n,
tlvcv•te&lt;!· •• ol.. C!tlfll~·
onto. Thlo oclion h" bttn

USAF F-16
NASA EXHIBITS

*
HELICOPTER

tM ' ·eorriptalnt

of ·

Serv1ces

$"""

SATURDAY FlY -IN
Hot Air Balloons
R/C Airplanes

answJ; •·

commander

AIDS was causing an "emer·
gency situati on" at her parish
and lesbians were " lea ving the
church In droves" because ~ they ~
wanted to worship In congrega·
lions with lesbian pastors.

BISSELL &amp; BURKE

6·21-'90· I mo.

41 - Houses lor Rent

• I•

as

ordinations made se nse because

seminary, added , " I wanted to be
a pastor since 1 wa s very young. "
The committee, representing
the Evangelical Lutheran

RACINE, OHIO

l;t@tlAI

and

Church of America, has been ~
hearing testi mony sinc e Satur
day to determine what action
should be taken aga inst the Flrs,t
United Lutheran Church and the
St. Francis Lutheran Church,
both congregations in San Fran
cisco, for ordaining Frost, Zll ~
!hart and a gay m an, Jeff
Johnson, 27. on Jan . 20.
The church says homosexual•
may be pa stors only If they do not
practice their sexua lity .
Frost said her and Zillhart' s

two women were in a Minnesota

Call Now To Make
Appointment

Autot lor Sale

Publle Notice

Public l'lotlce

SAN FRANClSCO 1UPI1 Two lesbians who were lrregu ~
larly ordained as ministers told a
Lutheran Chu rch disciplinary
hearing Monday that the ir lite~
long dreams were fullfllled when
they became pastors.
"I always dreamed of becom~
lng a pas tor," Ruth Frost, 42, told
the 12 member committee that
could ex pe I two Lutheran congre~
ga llons for defying unwritten
church rules by ordaining
homosexuals.
And Phyllis Zlllhart , 32, who
became Frost's lover while the

MOW OPEN

H -C ampl!fs &amp; Motor Homes

- i"qu1,.,en1 tor Rent
9 - ForlaMe

..

J:ert~•zer

72 - fr ucks lo• S•le
73 - V•n• a, 4 vyo · ~
7 4 - Mot ore vel ell
76 - 8oau &amp; Motors tor Slle
76 - Auto Parts&amp; Acc•t.OIIII
77 .. Auto Repl~t
78 - C•mptng Equipment

Real Estale

1984

Columbia In January 1986, the ·
las t mission before the Chal~
Ienger disaster .

Lesbian ministers seek blessing

FOREVER BRONl
TANNING

64 - Hev &amp;, Gra1n

66 - Snd &amp;

Servr ces

32 - MobdeHome~

The action was the latest in a
series of embarrassing failures
and setbacks that have haunted
NASA fn recent weeks, Including
problems with the Hubble Space
Telescope and fuel leaks that
have grounded the shuttle fleet.
Gibson and Walker violated a
rule established June 21, 19!18, in
a memo written by Puddy that
clearly banhed astronauts
named to shuttle flights from
participating In hlgh ~r lsk
activities.
"Without backup flight crews,
NASA's responsibility Is to preserve the health and safety of
existing, named crews," the
memo said.
Astronauts named to shuttle
crews were ordered not to
participate in high-risk rec rea~
tiona! activities that could "ex ~
pose crew members to maj or or
fatal injuries." Such activities
Include "automobile, boat. air~
plane and motorcycle racing,
parachute jumping and snow
skiing," the memo said.

Business Services

61 - farm Equipment
62 - Wanted 10 Buv
63 - l lvest ock

to Lo an

23 - Ptolllt~Onll

career."

Farm Supnlies
&amp; Livestock

f.

THE'foMMON ' ~LEAS

S, Veg11111bl•

59 - For S1le or Trade

Employment
Services

~5 - Furn + thed

Ceu No. 26673
NOTICE BY PUBLICATION

A

55 - Buddmg Suppl1e1
56 - Patt lor Saht

ol6 - &amp;piCe .. rR I!fH
- ~.lnll- ·10 A t nt

IN

Mt~~rchand11e

54 - M•tc

6 - lost end Found
7 - Y Ill! Sale lpa•d '" actvan Cl)

937 - Bulhlo

I

Defendants

SUPB!AMBUCA.

4 - Guii8WII'f'

42 - Mobi le Homu for Rt:tnt

e1 al. .

F'or information on this status or
a particular program conta ct th e
office of Conti nuing Education,

51 - HouMh ol d Good~
IS 2 - Sporting Gooda
53 - Anllques

~ - HIPPV A&lt;1 1

31

675 - Pt Pleaunt
4!i;8 - Le on
5·6 - Apple Grovl!

98!'i - Ch n1er

Merchandise

2 1- Bus1nes s Opportun•tv

AreaCode304

992 ·- Middleport
Pomt1oy

S1 .301doy

3 - AnnouCiment ~

WV

Mat on Co

t5

Transporlalmn

co tw the

telephone exchan{!es ...

Galt. a Co untv
Are.C ode6 14

42
60
.06 / diV

2 - In Memorv

~

SUITS, DRESSES AND
SWEATERS. HURRY IN TODAY.

Auditorium !.1. ,
AthPns. Ohio 4 ~J7fll . ~q3 1";76.

The program, $250 per person

Ish brothers Hans and Gad
R
'
auslng, who control a packag·
and 37 billionaire families , for a
lng empire worth $9.6 billion, the
total ol 99, the magazine said ~
magazine said.
Japan followed with 40 bllllo~
Joh n wer ner Kl uge foun d er ot
1
nafre fortunes, and West Ger·
Metromedla, co ntinues to be the
many ranked a close third with
richest Individual American bllll·
38, Forbes said.
onalre with an estimated net
R kl
d ft
T 1
'
an ng secon a er
su ·
worth of $S.2 billion, Forbes said.
sum! was another Japanese
Other Americans earning a
businessman, Taikfchlro Morl, a ' spot on the list were financier
former economics professor
Warren Edward Buffett publish·
turned real estate developer, the
ers S.l. and Donald Newhouse
1
d
magaz ne reporte .
and H. Ross Perot, founder of
Ranking fifth were two Swed~
Electronic Data Systems.

paf!PS

$9.00
$13 00

1 - Card ot Thanks

22 - Mon~

r ach receive a $300 scholarship
made possible through volunteer
payroll deductions by Hocking
TC'c h employees.
Belinda Sayre of Pomeroy,
Eoutc 4 ha s been awarded a $500
Amer ican Culinary Federation
Sc hol arship. Sayre Is a second ~

2 5°/o OFF LADIES

M e morial

and !eachers as g-u idE'S.

applica11on . Some commuters
arP &amp;ccepted on local campuses.

DAY BEFORE PUBliCATI ON
11 00 AM SATURDA'r'
- 2 00 PM MONDA¥
- 2 00 PM TUESDAY
- 2 00 PM WEDNESDAY
• 2 00 PM THURSDAY
- 200PM FRIDAY

t5

Announcements

'A clu••l•ed 1d'Yerttsement placed m The Dally Sent met te•
cept - cl•sd1ed d11pl8¥ . B~.~sm•s C11d and legaj nOt iC81 I
Will 11$0 •PPIIII In the Pt PleMint R~tgrlleo an d It'll! Gall+
pol1s Dl+ly Tr rbune. reachtng over 18.000 homes
CO PY DEADliNE

20
30

A•tn ••• for conM(ut Ne runs b•oke n updavs Will bl Charged
fnr ea~h """' 11 t.IOIIIII! ads

' ReceN e ' !)0 d1scoun1 for ad• pa•d on •""•n~e

Scholarships
are awarded

''

15

43 - Ferm• lor Renl

De bbir Brow n, .Jud y
Sn owdPn and .Juan it&lt;-1 l.arnbl' l' l

and

6

10
Monthly

Over 16 Words

Rate
$4.00
06.00

44 - Aparrment for Rent

Pam

Co nferences

1

3

POliCIES
'Ad, ouls•de Me1gs . Ga lha or Mason ccunt1M must be pre
plld
"free ads - GIYeaway and Found ads under 15 wo•dl w111 be
run J ciiJ¥1 11 no ch•ge
.
"Puce of •d for all c::apitll I!lien+! double puce of 1d cO lt
' 7 pomt lm~ type only uMd
'Senttnel •• not responsible tor errors1htr ftrs1 diJ¥ tChedt
for euort 11111 d~ 1d run• .n paper! C1l l b efore 2 00 p m
diiV at1m pubhclf,on 10 malte co rrect+on
'Ads th81 mutt be Pltd m ad... ance are
Card o l Thant~s
H•PPV Ad1
I n Memortam
Yard Sties

Words
16
15

Days

co very , schedul ed for l aunch in
December 1991 to carry two
European science sa telUte·s into
orbit .
Walker, veteran of two shuttle ~
flights, Including the May 1989
flight that launched the Magellan ·
probe to Venus, wa s named May
24 to command th e shuttle
Atlantis during a secret mil itary
mission set for an early March
1991 takeoff.
While the nature of Walker'&gt;
Infraction wa s not revealed, the
shuttle skipper, piloting a T-38
jet , was involv ed in a near ~
collision with a co mmerc ial .
jetliner In June 1989 near
Washington .
Gl bson served as CO·pflot ol the
shuttle Challenger durtng his
first space flight In February

Gibson , vete ran of three shut ~
lie flights inc luding the second
post ~ Challenge r mis sion, is one
of NASA's most popular astro·
nauts. He Is married to fellow
astronaut Rhea Seddon, also a
shuttle flight veteran in !raining
for an upcoming flight.
But during an air show race
Saturday In New Braunfel s,
Texas, Gibson's plane and a
Formula~l slngle ~ seat aircraft
piloted by Henry "Rocky" Jones
of Newport News, Va., were
Involved In a collision.
Jones and Gibson were racing
with five other planes In the
"Aerolest '9()" air show at the
New Braunfels Airport when
their planes bumped, pollee said .
Jones was killed Instantly after
spiraling Into a cornfield, but
Gibson maintained control of his
aircraft and wa s not Injured .
Gibson had been In training as
co mmander of the shultle Di s ~

Gibson' s air race was a "clear

RATES

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992·21 Sb
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to S P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
'
CLOSED SUNDAY

make a mistake and recove r
from it and continue their

viola tlon ol the poUcy ," the
s!Jl tement sa id Monday. As for
Walker, official!; said he was
grounded for "Infractions of the
Johnson Space Center aircraft
operating guidelines."
The safety rule came in sharp
focus June 17, 1989, whPn astr&lt;r
naul S~ David Griggs, veteran of
a 1985 shuttle flight, was killed In
Arkansas while practicing aero~
batlc maneuvers In a World War
ll ~ viutage fighter.
Griggs had been In training to
serve as co~pllot of Discovery for
a military mission last No~
vember . He was replaced by
veteran shuttle filer John Blaha .

'

program at Hocking Tech .

~P I" Vi l'C S

Gibson also was barred from
T·38 jet trainer flights for one
year while Walker was grounded
tor 80 days. Neither pilot will be
eligible lor reassignment to a
shuttle mission until they are
back on T -38 !light status.
Tile weekend air show crash
was cited In Gibson's case, but
the details ol what Walker did to
warrant such discipline were not
announced . Puddy 's action
marked the llrst time NASA
astronauts have ever been removed from !lights because of

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

genealogist s

mains. and as a result, many

The United States led the list
with 62 Individual billionaires

Srr vices
Kennedy's

missions~

Those send ing gift s !Jut unabl e
to attend were Shi r ley Lambert .

Japanese developer tops billionaire list
. NEW YORK I UP[) - A
j apanesuallway and real estate
developer has earned the rank~
f the world's richest bus!·
l "n
'"' o
n..ssman for the fourth straight
.
year. according to F 0 ~bes an~
nuai list of the world s bllllo~
nalres released Monday.
~ With an estimated net worth of
. c biHI
y hlaki T utsuml
$_t~
on, os
s
,ranked first among 271lndlvldu ~
als and lamHies worldwide
wJtose personal net assets are
worth more than Sl billion,
F bess ld f It Jul 23 Issue.
Y
llr
a n 5

Kath _v

La mbPrt and l rC' nC' l.ambPrt.
Thf' door p rizf' was won hy Lori
8arnes

bf'Comc co nsume r exoerts.
ThP sPrond program is sc hr ·

curricular activiti es.
The National Ca talogue of
programs Is found at your l ocal
library or you can call Rosema ry
"I 1 ~ 800~336~ 5699 In Ohio between
R a. m and 5 p.m . for an

66&lt;H010 or 66H434.

Award and Recog nition llecep
lion put on by Ohio University's
Co lleg&lt;• of Health and Human

Spires. Charles Br ian William
son Jr . and Gl or ia Ma lone.
G ifts wen" gi vP n to M ar y

llevo luti on. F:l derhostel parli ci·
pants will learn about topics
incl uding TV enterta inm ent ,
news , children's programs and
commPrc ials. how to vidro tapp
in the studio and !he !reid. and
they will IL&gt;arn to bf'comr morr
co mfortable with Ieday's tec h·
nology which wi l l help th em to

remains also show ruSt.'d vert('·

For more informationm . ca ll

Hiverview Dr h·r. Pomeroy. rr ·
rP iVPd an outst anding senior
Jwa rd a t thp annua l StudL'nt s

safety Issues.
Walker will be replaced by
veteran shuttle skipper Freder~
lck Gregory for a March 1991
military mission~ A replacement
was not Immediately named for
Gibson, who had been scheduled
for launch In December 1~91.
Chief astronaut Daniel Bran ~
dens teln said by telephone from
Houston that Walker's grounding
already was In the works before
the weekend crash Involving
Gibson.
"I guess there are two m es~
sages here . One Is we have
policies and they're there lor a
purpose and we expect them to be
followed," Brandensteln said.
''The other message that we hope
to come out of this Is people can

Classifie

FRIDAY
LON G BOTTOM - There wi II
be a hymn sing at the Faith
Gospel Church In Long Bottom on
Friday at 7: 30 p.m . with lhr
Dailey Families, th e Hand Maid
ens. and other local talen t
Refreshments will be served.
Pa stor Steve Reed in vites thr
public.

Two Pomeroy resid ents havr

Chri stoph er Kc• nnedy of 2l6

production and lhP Llving Room

brae and broken ribs I hal Fish er
said were probably caused fr om
aggressive altercations wi th
other mas tadons.
Ohio has no laws gove rnin g
ownership of paleontologica l re·
ha vp

POM E ROY - There will be a
dinner al the Meigs County
Se nlor Citize n's Cen ter on Thur s ~
day with serving from 5 ~ b : JOp.m .
The cost will be $:100 per person
wilh a menu of baked steak,

POMEROY - Pomeroy group
of AA and Alanon will meet on
Thursday at 7 p~m~ at Sacred
Hearl Church in Pomeroy For
more Information, ca l11 ~800 ~ 3 33~
20,1.

T he fi rs ! of lwo ~ru g ram s tak es
place July 1&gt; ~ 21 and includ es
Teit•vi slon Critici sm, TV ~ Video

is all ·i nclu sive of registra tion
cos ts , all mf'al s. five days of
classes and a variety of ex tra ·

privately owned fossils
been lost or dest royed.

annual inspection on Thursday
evening at 8 p.m . Members are
urged to a I tend the meeting at
!he Grange Hall.

Elderhostel scheduled
by Ohio University
Fm

Rock sp~

rings Grange will meet for its

A. Zuzpan, Ma son. W Va

t hf'y will t ra er rlus lvp anecs tors

Michigan, notrs thr skPIPt on has
groovPs on som e or it s ribs that
may have been cauS&lt;'d by but·
cherlng from Palco ~ Ind ians. or
gnawing from sc aven~cr s Thp

THURSDAY
IWC'KSPRIN GS -

SyrarusP, and tllr groom -e lect ·is
tile son of Mr and Mr s. Fra nci s

dult•d fur August 5~ 11. Parilc l·
pant s will embark on the Great
Amrrican Ancrsto r Hun! wherp

State fair to boast relic

SC IPIO- The Scipio Township
Tru stees will meet Wednesday.
Th PrP will bfl a budget hearing at
thi s time. The publlr is invited to
at tend.

Plans havr been co mpleted for
the open church wedding of
Oarla Marie Lambert. Sv racusP,
and William Todd Zust;an, Ma ~
son, W.Va. The wedding will lake
plac e on Saturda y at 5:30p .m . at
thr Christian Breth re n Church.
Mason, W. Va
The bride~e l er l is the daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Doug Henslev,

Baby shower given recently

with boolies
Those a! lending were Lucille
Lambert, Jennie William son.
Mary L ambert , Mary El len
Lambert . lrPnf' Lamben . Lori
Barnes . F.dith Lambert. Rita

masters C:lre urged to attend .

mashed potatoes and gravy,
creamed peas, tomato slices,
biscuit and bev era ge. Tee cream
will be available at extra cost for
dessert. Junior and Rita While
will be playing old time favorite
songs for entertainment begin ~
nlng a! 6 p.m The public is
inviled to a!lend.

Lambert, Zuspan to wed

and Cpa r les Brian Williamson,
Scoll . Brenda and Zachar y
Gray; Bob. Cheryl and Robe;!
Davis, Jpnnlfer Stitiner: Donna
Jones; Ermel and Dawn 13eck·
ley; Jessica Da vis: and Cec il and
Mi ldred S!anord.

Angela Spires

their crews and grounded Mon·
day for violating flight safety
rules, the latest In a series of
embarra ss ing setbacks for
NASA .
Th e unprecedented dlsclpll·
nary action came after shuttle
skipper Robert "Hoot" Gibson,
43, was Involved In a collision
during a weekend alr race In
Texas that left a second pilot
dead and raised questions about
!he enforcement or rules banning
such high-risk activity by ex pen ~
slvely trained astronauts.
Donald Puddv, director of
flight crew operations at the

Bunner .

Dean and Ar r on Davis: Jenni e

A pink and blue theme w as
carried our with a cake decorated

such as public educa tion , pal len t

Janie Kittle, Gayle Roush, Jea n
Rou sh, Cora I Wal ker. Pa tty
lloush , Jordan Li del , Curti s
LidPI. Sarah Hawley, Todd Kit
lie, Charlene Kebler , Jeanette
Carpe nter, Becky Cox and Dana

grandmother 's house in Rulland.

Lions clubs worldwide, which

care and tra nsportation.

13u !trirk, TPrrsa Cuurlnl'y, ShP·
lia Kebler , Pat M ossman, M P·

Angela Spires, Rutland, rece n!ly
ce lebrated hi s second birthda y
with a pa r ty a t hi s matt:&gt;rnal

Anita Hajivandi tHarm o n l
was r rcenr ly ~ive n a babv
shower by Pa t Ha r mon an ~l

through communlly program s

Zus pan, Glady s Riley , Haze l
Smith, Mary Walbu r n. Pam
Walburn, Evelyn Roll~en, Elsie

.Joshua Spires, son of John a nd

lis Ucs compiled by WHO show as
much as 2 percent of the
populat ion migh t be blind .
The program Wi ll be funded by
also wfll parllclpate In I he dforl

Linda

Sara h :S hiC'Ids.

Spires birthday

Trachoma acco unt s for 2J
percent of blmdn ess worldwide,
while about J million pcop!P

esse nti al 10 Sigh tFi rs t' s sue·
cess." Woolard sa id . " As oph

tained and preser ved rem nant
O'om Ohio's Pleistocene Age .
· Part of the Jl,700~ year ~ old
mastadon skeleton !hal created
so much excitement upon its
discovery in Licking County las!
winter will be on display this
summer al the Ohio Slate Fair ~
The mastadon 's skull and oth er
s&lt;&gt;lected bones will be on display
[n the Ohio Department of
Resources Pavilion throughout
the lair. Aug. 2-19.
l&gt;r. Daniel Fisher, mastadon
stJeclallst from th e Unlveristy of

Ashley Payne, Ruth Ryan, Clara
Bell Riley. Judy lliley. Donna
Morris. Sa lly Bland. Nancy Hall.

mon; Lucille and Raymond Lam ~
bert; Ram ona and Gary Davi s;
Arlene Davi s; Doug , Sh irl ey and
Chri stopher Lambert ; Mary,

the world, cl ub leaders said.
SightFirst funds will support
Qphthalmic tra ining for doctors.

This ypar Statf' Fai rgorrs will
see a prehi storic. wel l main ·

Those t.~tlending ttle shower
were Sue Zu rcher. Golda Rou sh.

A clown themrwas car ried out
Those at tending were Pat Har ·

said. He noted !hal xerophthat ~
mia blinds between 250,000 and
500,000 children annually, with liU
percrnt of th(' victims dying i n
!he first year Onchocerc iasis
atfects 18 million people. he sa id .
Slgh!First becomes !he most
ambitious program pver under taken by !he Li ons. cl ub officials
sa id . They sa id Sigh!Fl rst activ i·
ties would begin In India, Latin

Roush,

Roach, Sandy Bullrick, PPnny

and

America

mem~r s

tiated wl!h diabetes; xeroph l h al ~

th e Philip Spo r n

Africa, Central
South AmE-rica .

pquipmrnt and supplies around

3ionals to r un them .·· Woo la rd

her eo

and one at hi s paternal grandpar ·
cnt s' home in Albany .

I'Jill help build clinics. educate
ihe public. and provide medical

by the World Health Organiza ~
(lon shows some countries ha vr
fewer than one ophthalmologi st
for every I million people.
"A l l the new clin ics in th~
world won't prevent blindnrss
without properly trained profps

by

"r iver blindness," cau sed by the
bite of a species of fly found in

th at each of SlghtFirst' s lnd lvld ~
ual programs will rely on !he
support of medical experts. cl ub

riUr ses and c linician s. A rrport

W.Va .

Judy Cox , .J enn.v Bunnrr , Pat

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Pomeroy
Lodge 164 will meet Wednesday
a! 7: .10 p.m. in Middleport.
Mas ter Ma so ns and all pa s t

Jollnson Space Center, said In a
statement Monday that Gibson
and veteran shuttle skipper
David Walker , 46, had been
removed !rom their upcoming

missions were removed from

Community calendar

Laudermilt , Sylvia Midkiff, Jane
Hazelton, Katie Roush, Sally
Roush, Lora Ann Ru ssell, Jenny
Young, Nikki Young, Betty Hud·
son, Barb Zus pan, Molly Rou sh,
I.eoto Smith. Mary Kebler, Ruth
Riley
Thelma Henry , Betty Sayre,
Millie Riley , Matthew Roush,
Sara Cullums. Ella Zerk le. Mory
Thabet , Beth Foreman , Evelyn
Stewart, Ang ie Payne, Minni e
I !offman, Clrl e Henry . Jill LaVal ~
ley. Joyce Price. Sally Buck .

The Daily Sentinei- Page-7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

later than

SEARS

uk for Jorjl.

...DIIIOP

,.. "· ,....

Equ•l Opponunlty

lmploy.,,
\

�8

Page
3

The Daily Sentinel

LAFF-A-DAY

Announcements

DIHicun

41 Houses for Rent

lrrftabla
urination? Far .. nat Hnd $!5
and a taU asddresaed .tamped

lnvtlopa to: A.K. 54 MHI Creak

' 1

St. Qalllpollt, OH 45631. 30 day
mon.y back SJUiranl•.

CREDIT

Six room houM 3 bedrooms

I

. \

CARD

ciMnlng
dlpoeH, IChool but rvule. 30.f-

Bedroom, unfumlsMd
houee In Pomeroy, 814-Hl-2218
etter e p.m. ·

1·100-Ml-&amp;100
Ill. co. billl 49.50 fee.
Singl.. lnlorm.tlon and 1 &lt;Mg.
nlll«&lt; option for finding a

3~rooma full
baMmt,., two ltorage bulidlng.
Pomeroyi\ Nya Ave.. $2&amp;0 permonth. lfe,.nce and d~
rtqulrtd. &amp;14-949-3027.

Unfurnished

partn.,. Hurtturch: P. 0 . "llox
1043, GlllllpoUa, OH 45631.

l

Giveaway

42

Mobile Homes

•· ....1"'""/
/

In 5 w•ka, 304-175-73M.

Two blk I whlta long

hair~

kit·

lena, 7 wka old, 304-675-5456,

6

Lost &amp; Found

~red

collar) Tri-color. Ovar "'•kand,
Kantuga

Dl1v•ln

"Whaddaya mean you can't
.,., ..
( I() L.

loat+tarelord cow. A.d and
while. In Oet1ar/llngtvllla area.
Reward. 614-JI!I2-200t.

WnMYtr
borrowed
Scott
Wolft"l Racing Helmet ple. .e
rttum h.

Yard Sale

7

1~:==7:=:=7:::=::=::=::=::=,-:=========~
·
11

Help Wanted

21

Business

alllst•nt.
Ravenowood•••ry
Coli Conlor.
C..ll

Opportun lty

Full-tiN

304-273-1883 allk fDr PhyUia.

vlclnHy.

Reward. 814-446--6128.

He.rtland ol JaaUon LPNIRN
tul'-'lme
PMhk»n •vellable.

100% tuition retnburwment.
Send resurnt1 or 01 11 tor an eptment. EOE. Gall Rewllne,
Rt 13 J
' .........
- ~~. St
......· ., a.:IOitiec_......,
0111• · u"""'
·

~ -·a

a.---

Hourty Clinic Atdt nMdacl part~
Um. (n famlty piiMing otflcH
In Meigs, G1tll1 and Uwrenct
countNia. Mu• hawa high

diiOioma -lvallncy:
~ communication
akllla; ac&gt;
cu,.cy wtth llgurw: rnedlctl
office oxporllnco halplul· will

Vending Aoula. Proven Cuh
Bualn••· Mutt Hll Chttp. 1-

900-749-4230.

WOLFF Ttnnlng Bad•. Com·
marclai-Home
units
trom
ti9UJO. Llmr.-lotlona-Aeeeesarles. Month y poymants low
•• S1 8.00. Call todty FREE
Color Catalog 1-800-228-G2U.

All Yard Sales Mull Ba Ptld In
Advance , DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
tM• day befo,. ltw ad lito run.
Sunday edllloo • 2:00 p.m.
Frldly. Mand•y ~hian - 2:00
p.n). Stturda't.

Pallo Salt

• 1 mile out
Hom.wood Dr., BldwtU . WMnnday, 11th. ~ 1 Uvlngroom
chair,
hau..hold
bema,
chlldr.n't I tduftt clothing,
toye, gtmu, 2 relit brirb wlrt,
wHd•tllf', etc.

Big Yard Salt, 401!1 S.Cond 9l.,
Wtton, WV. L.ota of everything.
Yon and T!At, 1:00am tUf ?.

Yard ,..., 102 Marten~ Sill, Mon,
Tu.. , WMI. FirM tlrnt Hie,
HQme Interior, Nlc-Nuka, mlac.
Yard Salt, Juty fl,10~1. fi:OO Am·
?. Dogwood Lane, ..._,, WV.
Altey besldl llltphone awltchlng atatlon. CIDI:h-. dlahwuMr, guns, houlthold tlema,
tina. boyw ckltMt,

m. "·

Y1rd Salt, Tutldly, July 10, li:OO
1111 ?. Rt 2, Witch tor signa 2 112
mil• trom Shoneyl Rill . Rain

eaneetl.
Y1rd S.ltl, OM mila out 3 Mite
AOMI abov. ~ Mon,
Tu..,Wad.

Pomeroy,

MJddlepor1
&amp; VICinity
BrowMII

Avenue ,

•

..v. ~....

lbll 1 nct willing to work all
ahlftt. Prater cartUild bul will
train. Apply In person at
Amlfrtcarw Pom«oy 36751
Rocklprlngt

Road

Pomeroy,

Ohio. EOE.
Opening for elderty Clfll In my
homa1. Good raflriOCis. 304·
Tn-1241.
Per1·Ume Pat66nl S.rvlcH A.lietant to worh In flmlly pllnni::J' cen11,. In Meigs, Gillie,

an Lewrwnca count let. Mult be
IXplrilneed In rnedleal oHIN
pntetlc• and cllanl ralaUons.
Rasponlible poahlon tor • m•
1u,. lndlvlcfutl whh good

Judg.tmtnt tnd ~~naltlvlty to
r11productl'll hN!th needs of
WOIMn tnd tsmiUII. Mutl M
w-'1
organlz.d;
have
cternon.tr~ttd compet.nee wtlh
flaw• tnd recotdkNplng.
a.fulf be tbls to work un~r
guldellnw whh mlnlmel supervtllon •nd hive superior warbal
communk*lon MlJie. Aequ,_

reliable tran~~pontttan; flulbUIIy ot lime 1nd ablltty lo ti"IVII

3 day ytrd Nil. July 10, 11, 12.
877

,.,...,,
"""""
tnd
two
emptoyment rat.rencea
to
Planned
Pt.renthood
of
Southeut Ohio, 3M Richland
Avanue Athena Ohio 41701 by
'
J 1• 11 ' 1 ~ E':L--~:.:,..
lmmed181:a opening tor part-time
nursing Ullstant Mull bl tltx·

&amp; VIcinity

-.ro, mlec.

tr1ln mtiUrl lndlvktual ;ho Ia
....ttlvt to reproductive hN.tth
nMdll of clltntl. Looking for
ton"MOna who II Hlt-moUv.tad
and can grow In the poetllon 11
need 1rt111. PoeHion ,.qulr11
reliable lraneportatlon; will·
~nea to tr1vel to other
0 officii. WHkdly, evening and S.turdey hou,. •ra to
be u,.cted. Send ~"" ol In-

u,

Pt. Pleasant

r.tld-

dllport .

Sofl and Love 9Mt, cotfM
ltble, ltbte and chtl,., bed
spr.-ds1 cur1alna, thl*t, cloth·
lng tM mite. 1'15 Sycamort,
July 11th-1-4th . ~!. No clwck.t.

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

Yard 1111. Aoc:klprings Ad.
Thurtday and Frldly. July 12-1'l
CioN to nu,.lng horne.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

8

Ul'l

1 bedroom 1pt Slove.t.. retrlg.,

-k. Vl'Ra F.. nHuro. Rl. 141, 4
cu.
frNZ•,
$10.110 par
mllll ft.off Rt.
7-Camoruuy.Opon
7

nlca. Consldlf Humsn :MI'VIelt
or HUD. 402-1&lt;1! 24th so .. Pl.

Pt....nt, w.v. 814-~..usa.

2 Apt. 11ch 4 roorno &amp; bo1h. 1
tum, 1 unturn. Rtf. I Sac. Oep.
No pets. 814-44~44.

2 BR epartment, stove I Nl.
furnished. Up•taira. Water I
tr11M lumllhtd. Upper AI. 7,
Upper Rlv11 Rd. 614-4464940.
2 turnlshld eHiclencloo. ,.
"II
utitl•ioo
~o.-oh . •to
or
" g'ld. Shere IHI
•
Second Ava. 814-'46-

31 Hames Ior S a I8
3 bldroomt, 2 full baths, 24138
1112 •ern. Prlct
gtrage,
r.ducad. 814 -t4&amp;.c 248• 4460365, 44~27.
3 Br. l'lnch, gat furnace, CA,
gtrsge, full b~ttment. Prict
Reduced. 814446 -0 390 or 3888652.

.'::?. •

c7733 81·
•

.em.

•

4-4._..

2BR, lurn'od1 con1r11~ locotod

~ pels.
$225/mo. ph.- •ecurtty deposit,
reterancea. 81,....~2238 or 614-

Adutta

prarerr.d.

448-2581.

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 536 Jeeklon Plke
trom S19Ca21mo .•~~~~ ~~ sl'top &amp;
mov 1H . 11 61..--u-&amp;.a68. EOH .

38R In Chlehlre. Central Air, Fumiehld. Newly remodelad.
new carpat and tppllaneas, New ca,pll, new mtttrns.
b11amenl and etrport. $38,000. u ..... alfll, 1 Br., utllltill ruold
&amp;14-M6-12651fi14-446-0963.
,.....
,....
Second Avenue. 81~411-1623 .
3BR, 1112 baths, FR, lR, tully •
quipped khchen wJ dlnl~ ltwl. GFICIOUI living. 1 end 2 bed·
2 car g1r1ga, 1n-grou
rvom oportrntn11 11 ~ooogo
pool.
•• a
81~""'723(
Mtnor
and
Alvarai e
Apar1ments In Mlddl•port. From
e room houM, 3 mi. from town, $11M. Cell 814-i9Z·T787. EOH.
W.B. fireplace, full baNrntnt, Nlc.ly turnllhad mobile home, 1
cfty sc~s. 114 U6 0385, ew.
mile below town, over1ooklng
448·1458.
r1vtr, CA, hNI, Rtf. 814-44~
7 rooms 1 112 t.lht, country 0338.
living but ctoae to Melgl School
and town At . 3l-4 tane, Ona bMtroom tptt . tor ,..nt .
Town1hlp Road 27. Arll road to 1225 month. O.poe;h requlrtd .
~·Call 814-992-1111 or 1-384- 814-Q92-2218 ahar I p.m.

Muat Sail: 2BR Log Homt.
Newly carpeted, atoned hllnh
wood·bumer
10'x24'
Dick,
12'xt2" bu(ldlng . Riverview.
U.ks Offer! &amp;)&amp;.("46-tlKKI or 814·

251-1982.
Pr~

Aeducldl Pontr Brook
SubdMakwl, 3BR, 1 112 Bath,
F.A. Scrwntd-4n-Porl:h, 314 acre
lot, CHy SchOOl. 814-ot-4~19611 .

32

Mobile Homes
lor sare

,,.......711.2.

tP KlriMood 12d0 2BR, axe.

con&amp;. auao.

18711 1211711 3 Bod,_, llobllo

45

Furnished
Rooms

we••

Rooma tar rent·
or mon1h .
Sttrtlng at S1201mo. 0•111• Hotel.
B~i580 .

SIMplng rooms with cooking.
Also tl'lll• .,.a.. All hoall.-upe.
Call aftlf' 2:00 p.m., 304·1735151, Mason WV.

46 Space for Rent
21ota, tor rent, C.ll614-367·11'38.
Country Mabile Home Park,
Route 33, North of Parn~roy.
L.olli, ,..nt111, ~rtl, 111. .. C.ll
814-ft2·JIJ71.

dayt 1 w11k.

Rool I houH pa.lntlng ahln·
gllng rvola, hou11 ropolr. 1143II8-V7ti8 tfttr 5 p.m.
Sovo 10llo on Ill corpotln otock
wHh od In poper, llollohon Fu~
ntfl.w• 614-44&amp;-111...

Building
Supplies

-=-:-~.;:.7.--==:.:::-::-~-;-=
='83 Aentult Ralllncao.c4 door,
auto, ~ cond, M,DW milia,
S1,3&amp;0. 304-175-4185.

rofrlg. Iii; OE l'llrig. liM&gt; , _ - - - - - - - - - -

871-1515.

$150, lido by oldo rolrlg., har- 3 AKC Rog. B.,.gll gun doJII. 1
vMt go4cl, n~l- $250., etec. m.le, 2 temele. 4 mos. otd, 150 1m Chivy Nove. 37,000 Ill)'
ronvo 30" $95, wnlrlpaol ..... NCh. II tm ...otod coli 114-241- miiH, new llr11, gae •hocks.

::J" 30" $95. Allin IXC. cond.

_95_18_._ _ _ _ _ _ __

pl.. nca1. 81~73g&amp;.

ltertad.

guaronlood. Skaggo ~

53

Antiques

Buy 01 tall. Al..,lne Antlquet,
1 124 E. Main St,.et, Po~Mroy.
Howrt: M.T.W. 10:00 e.m. lo 1:00
p ~~unday 1 :00 to 1:00 p.m.
I1
-2521.

RECORDS. 3!1'o-45'o-78'o-EP'oJl....ctaai~I ­

50'e-60'•

Countrr·B~ Bond-Rock. 114~-1857 Mire Fultz..

Top C..tl paid. Old fumltura
cubolrda,
quiRt,
oriental,
palntlnga, toyt, or antlrt Hteta
c•ll correct
523-3854.

54

304-525-lm, or 3Q4.

12 hp whaal hor.. lwn trtctor.
4:Z
Inch rnDWII, Hldro.tlt
tranaml ..lon. ,..._, complttlly
,.bull! tnglnt, turf rlr• price to

..... 114-412-2201.
18,000 BTU Arntna slr-eondhlontr S200.Atto Unlco large
eMil ftttzer 1'12&amp;. 8*"2-3701

lftlr 5 p.m. WHkdap.

2-3'" showc. . .. 2 office desks,

tlbl.. , IIO¥M, be1uty St\of.l ..
qulpment, ate. Phone 304-'1731!040.

30 Inch Coppertona gu range.
114-41t-4331.

allgnmanl,
ca11Ntt1 with

br1k11,

AM~M

8~.,

PS,

v.-um 8M-687-3856.
AKC Reg. Miniature SchNUUr
pupo, IHH l poppor) I wU. old.
3 t.....le,1 mala. en-ue 3483.

1118 Thunderbtrd Exc. Cond.
LAw mileage. 614-387-7081 .

BNutlful

AKC

rtallft~

Ongonwynd C.naty Pwaltn,
starMM end Hlm~.t.ysn kllttnt..
111 Ul l844 after 7 p.m.

Fish Tank, Hl3 Jackson Ave.

P&lt;Hnt Pleaunt, 304-475-2083, 10
gal Ml up 11•.ee and 10 gtl
eomplett $43.21.
Clfoom ond Supply Shop-Pol

G100f111ng. All brlldo. All otrt11.
Wobh. Colll14-441-0231.
Poktna- pupploo. AKC Roglo-

1..-.cl. Shote and wormed.
MatMriFelhlr an ~mltas. 814992~800.

Rod • WhHo

~-

111111 Ford LTD POO. 304-I"IS-

&amp;072.

1fl79 Olde CUIIIII, ruM good,

saoo. 114-&amp;ee-3516 '"" 5:00.

Formula. lf14-08!-4308 or 814-

Q!I2-,25ee au for Jim.

te81 Cadillac Sedan Deville.
Good condition, !~ lilt, erulsa,
A~FM CUHUI. taOO. 814-3677885.

Unturnl8htd,
ooa-badroom
eptrlmant. Second lloof', COf'ntr
SPECIAL Fectory to you1981, 2 Second end Pine, OlliipoUs.
or 3 badroom14K10 mod•l• al Stove and refrigerator. Wttar
lha unb11Uav1bla
prlc• of Pf'OYidad. No pet.. Rtttrencn
$12,900 delivered 1nd 111 up. ,..qulred. sm per month . 814c.ll 1-80().~ for detslle.
~-4249, 11~2325 or 814-

33

Farms lor Sale

3 BR, 2 bath l'tauM 1nd 75
acrn. CloM lo Vinton, Ohio.

114-381-i139.

44H425.

Merchandise

Farced 1lr full fwnace.. Gun
type, 250 gti., fuel oil tank. 114-446-4538 bet~W 10 p.M.

GE high off~ Ioney olr cond, llu

new, UNCI
175-2115 .

ont

summer, :J04.

Glboon lrlg.. 1 twin bod, comp..-e. Both In good condMion.
Call attar 2p.m. 114-ti2-72M or
114-Wil2-6224.

J••on 400 power tiiHCOpt with
tri-pod-new, $100 caM. Mini 5 '"
ecr..n tv .... Good ahtpe. $50
cah. Mkr~»cope 1,400 power·
$50 cnh·new. P1lr of aaw
harue lor S26. cuh. 814-192-

31160.

Ftmlly looking tor •m•ll ltrm to

Flrot Aid ond CPR. SR 7, Tup-

114-992-2463.

1182 Bulc• L.eubrt, 4 dOOf, In
good condhlon. C.ll &amp;14-192·
8101 tfter 5p.m.

114-t67-t183.

ca•

1911e Slercr1h

old. Spoyod. li&gt;W92-111711.

Squlrrll Doge male Cur, 2yrs
61d, good $600. Male llounl1ln
FlMt 1 12 shlrtad. Femala
Maunttln Flut 1 1t1rltd.
Fema._ Mount•ln Filet 8 ~h .

Aoammete

tor

lhlpo.l14-192-1217.

Two 7 -

Musical
Instruments

Regular J&amp;M Cutllonwra etwtya
recetv. mon than they're ch•raod lor. J&amp;U Plono Sorvieo. Bill
W.nl 304-112-:1325. Alit ...
oboui"JioU".
Thomas Ptaymatt Chonl Ora•n.
Excolt.nl coodHion. 114-1192-

3277.

58

1884 Chrytler E San... air, lift

1U5 Aenauft Altl1nce Ol, l7
onglno, $1,275. --31'93.

w..v.

1981 Pontiac CIT Floro. VI.
Aad/SIIvar.

•e,ooo

mllea.

Recov.,. tl'teft. NMdt minor
ropot11.
114-94..2100

u,aoo.

dlya,I14-M•ZMII IYtniOQI.

$11,000. 814-1102-2427.
1g88 Doctaa Caft_ Excellent eondillon. $3115o. 114-448-235D.
1981 Ford T1H11po, ....~,!~· M~

0\lnrovln ffu" Farm. Just ort of
9f 181 Exot ol Albany. 114-llil&amp;8298. We accept tood ll.ampe.
Aml8h productt, strawbarrita,

ktldad. 35,000 mi. 140t00. &amp;M441.001 .

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

Oodae Dltena, must Nil,
coli 304-175-3000 mon-~1 H
p.m.

1Nt ctwn Blutr. Approx,
poaehooil grwn bNno. ..7 dolly. 28,500, Ale!, running bolrda,
ClaMd cinder and July 4.
c~om lira. 814-.,.2-"2803 •ftar
5p.m.
11&lt;8

3-

Services

EEK AND MEEK
11-IE. BAL Af.JCf. OF 'TRACf
Wlll1 JAPAIJ 5~00 10 HAV£
IMPKIJ.I[) GffA'TLY LAST tv'affi1

HAWAII

Examine the rise and fall of
the black leader, Adam

lnr.motloii eoll 1.aG4-IliU1 ..
Ext 1710.

.... - . AIIIFII. Topo. 1"14-4411431.

............. lor Ill

1817 Chovr 314 ton Sllv~r~do
.fx4 loecMcf. , . . Prowler Clmpor :M' wtlh o~, OWI1111g, T.V. onlllln&amp;, ....,.. call oftor 7 p.m.

1,..._nn

91, UniYgll, Ohio.

Uncondltlansl lltltlmt gulr'lntM. Loctl rtftrtnc11 fumlahed .
FrM Htlmat•. C.U eolltet 1·
81-4-237-0488, day or night .
Rogan Bulment Walarproo-

.
'

1;1
10:00 (]) 700 Club With Pol
Aobertaon

11"9-

mClll mI]) lhlrtyoomelhlng

O•rdntf''l Homt Improvement
AH. &amp; Cam., Roofing, pelnting,

(D Nowowalch

Sterao. 1;1

i:..:'~tla deek.t, and lie. &amp;14-

HENRYS ROOF PAINTING,
87&amp;-6831

Of

INTRHOP

304-

IT WOLJL.D LOOK L.IKEc
A HU6€ P~PP~RON I

30..~g ,

HouMhokl

M•inlantnca :

AND I'D "IND EifOSRAPHY
A LOr NCl'IE INTERE5TIN:;-.

PIZZA ...

Rooting ,

newlrtpalr,
tiding ,
new/repair, carpentry, odd lobs.
Htim1t11 . 814~71l-2020 , 11i tOf

Mitch.
Ron's TV Service, specializing
In Z.nlth 11.a Nrvlclng mMI
ather brllnds. House c•l1•. also
soma 1ppt1enee rtpalrs. WV
304-671-llii Ohio IM-448-2454 .
Roollng

end

Siding .

'w·· w '"·

Trailer

roots painted. FrM utlm1taa.
Fred M1rka, 304-m-9118.
Rotary Of e~ble tool drilling.
Mo.t Wills completed ume d•y.
Pump ..... end Mrvlet~, :J04aa5-3802.

HARNEY

Tonk Pu...,.ng 180cGalllo

"THREE"

Sept~

Co. RON EVANS ENTERPHISES,
Jackson, OH 1-aoG-617-9528.
O.vls

Servlca,

S.W-V•c

lnauranoe claimt

Plumbing &amp;
Heating
carter's Plumbing
end t-!Atlng

Fourtl't •nd Plne

Galllpollo, Oldo

814 Ul 3988

$1.25 to A stro-Graph. c/o this newspa-

ASTRO-GRAPH

Refrigeration
Commercial

1nd

Relldenllli1

wiring, now or ropolro.
u--d Ellctrlclont. PooqtMII
EIOCirlc Borvlco. 814-441-VII.

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

or
commercial
wiring. naw ..met or rtpaira.
llolnMCI lllctrltltn. Rldanaur

Elootrlcol, 304-671-11811 .

85

General Hauling

fftjA~\

A &amp; A Wlfer llfYica. Pool .. cl..
ternt, welle. lmmedlat•1 000 or

~~~ion• dlllvory. ci11 304-

w.n.r.on·a

'Your

~~/ 'Birthday

Heullng

W.ter

rwuonable ,..... volume dl.,:
OOUnll, 2,000 to 4,00C Clpacfty
alaterns, poole, wells lie c.il

July 11, 1990

Upholstery

lis h in the year ahead for very specific
reasons should work out rather well . On

304-t78~t11

'

.

u_,.,·,

Upholot•rlnt ..,.1••
lng "' oounty .... 25fl011 Tilt
bai1t In tumtru,. uphot81Wing
C..ll :JOW'II.4114 .... ~- ..
llmo110.
o-., UJiholotory C.r11or 303
HIIHop Dr. Coli for ~f:oromonto
• oollmot... C..ll e
11-3431.

0

m m

l!1l Miami VIce
12!1 Churt:h Sln!et Station

[ CA N'T WAIT TO TELL
"ONE" UNDER TH' "Z"
ALL ABOUT IT

ellctrleil, ptum~Mng arperlance.

Electrical &amp;

u

I!]) Moneyllne

Remod-'lng :
Wobllt
Homt
r.p1lr rooTing, concrt4• work,

84

aliNewo
10:30 (D Rololng Kido
II) [I) Taxi
all Crook &amp; Chou
10,35 (!) MOVIE: Houoe On
GrHnopple Roed 12,00)
11 :00 (l) Batman
ill 1111
I]) 11m
1111121 l2ll News
(D Moyero: The Public Mind
IPI 2 Of 41 Moyars a•amlnes

Ill I1J) Aroenlo Hob

O.OrgH CNik Rd. Pans, •uppll•. pickup. 1nd detlvery. 814&lt;41-0204.

82

(I) P.O.V. The science ol
freezing the dead for luture
revi11ai Is examined. Q
II) [I) New Twilight Zone
I]]) Evening News

the power of pollsters to
Infl uence public opinton . 0

UNDER TH' "N"
WON FER ME AT BINGO
TO DAY, JUGHAID II

R...._lal

114-

Clay1on Powell. 1;1
llrrt King Llvel
l!1l Budweloer P111oent1:
Tueldoy Night Flghll
12!1 Neohvllle Now
9,30 Q 1111 Iii I]) Coach Slereo .
I!])

accitpttcl 814--2.!~161 t

1DI8 Dodge D-tO pickup, 5
opood, lledllr11&lt;, oUdlng 111r

"I don't understand this eleventh
commandment: Don't rip those lltlle lags from
pillows and maltresses."

TH!;. y Ea.JQ-lT

BASEMENT
WATERPROOANG

114-~.

Holiday
Inn,_ O.Hij&gt;oilo,In Ohio.
4&amp;0
Plb

Home
Improvements

81

1H4 Dodgl pickup 150._~
mlllo, aoOcl oondNIGn. .....,.,.

H. Au..,.., Nl ~2 .

AeMmbt• DI"'ducll at home
Nrn up to tcoo •lktv, no •x·
perilno11 .uy work. For mort

0001(, houn, -

Mullt 1111, 1i89 Scamper c.m-

Reference~

lor Sale

010.-~

or wrb: PASE-5170, 181 S. Un·
calrMOy,

Tl'Ucks

1m Ford F-100, 12,000 octual
!!IIIIo. 302 VI. 1.. 0., $25110.

ArMteur photogr1phe,. w.ntadl No n . Up fo $1,800 d•lly:
Call 1-IOO-m3631 iU91mln.)

~Mpl

Cond.,

INI Chovoltt, 4 opel., AM!fll
wtno e~...ne . Good condition. $1840. 114-25t-l:l!l.

n

AVON • All area, Call Marilyn
304-882·2645.

the 1988 lire . 1;1
11m IIi!]) Major League
BaoeboiiC
1D I!]) MO'IIE: She'o Having
A Baby IPG13) 12,00)
I!]) PrimeNews
l!1l Murder, She Wrott
12!1 Churt:h Sln!et Station
all Movie
8:05 (1) MOVIE: Murder By
Re ..on Of tnunlty 12,30)
8:30 Q 1111 1D I]) The Wonder
Yeoro Stereo 1;1
12!1 On Stage
9:00 (I) U.S. Olympic Felltvol
Q 1111 D I]) Rooeanne
Sleroo.Q
(D (I) American Experience

po~up

Pamoror,Ohlo.

par11 tor ..... motot, tFI,..XII,
- . , ole. Phont 114-te2-3242.

Help Wanted

a

L.A&gt; viGAf ,I

camper.
6. Good condttlon. 614-

1884 Okla Dena, excallent eondiUon. S4fl00. 132 Bunernul,

Wrwckld 1N4 Fiero P011tlac. All

11

CHIP5''

614-

91U

from 1100. Forde. Wercadaa.
Cor¥1tt11. Chavys. Surplus.
Your eru. (1) ~Ext.
$-10188.

Wanted IO Do

good condttlon. $1200. C.ll

DIHII, IOIIdad, sll ~naf. SIU
tar PIYOtl. 814-44&amp;or :Z45-

cor. 1725. 1142.
GOVERNUEHT SEIZED vohlcln

e

&lt;)

the Yellowstone are a aher

- . cnolot, loW """'?,.'·,~ per, 31 ft. tuU slzt bad', roor air
Nit. good cai. I
condition. TV 1nt1nn1. Will ttkt
7380.
payoff, owner will help lifllnct.
1e84 CullaA SlerTe Brvughtm. .14-441-1003.

1H7 Z-28 lroc C.mero. Losded.

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

IE I
AfOCJT A i~ I p TO !'

WA&gt; GOING TO

..9-2480.

78 O.teon 2802, sunrootl. AT,
axe. pt.rta, runs L~&amp;luood

446-3664

18

304-t7U132.

.:&gt;

THOUGHT IT

1913 Dutcheratt, ll lf-contalnld,

1M3 Okftl. An power, In good

pup. 11 months

Mt5TE~

.I

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

SchniiUllf puppiM. San and

Slblrt.an H'--ky

"GooPKYt

0
0

Q C111 Enterlllinmont Tonight
Iii I]) Mama's Family
crat Ill i!]) Qt Jeop1rdyl 1;1
lllllD M"A"S"H
I!]) Croooflre
all Bewitched
7,35 (1) Sanford And Son
8:00 (l) Georve Woohlngton (PI 2
01 4) (t:40)
II(]) 'Poor LltUe Rich
Girl: Barbara Hutton SIDty,
Pl. 2' NRC Movie 01 The
WHk 13:0011;1
(!] Tour De France
Q 1111 Iii I]) Who's The
Booo? Stereo. C
(D (I) Novo Sc(entists study

Went to buy Fldlttor br 1978

11112 -3844.

AKC. III-887-3004.

Magazine

'C.TJ tm/f~J~ (gZQW~ D ~ WHAT A sv~p~t&gt;E.'
tvow Showing

379-2263.

AJC, crulaa, PS, P~.l_AM-FW
IItie. As.. ng $2ouu. S2 MPG.
Colt 304-773-9545.

pepper. Chlmpton Qn.nd Sire.
$150. Also Tiny T~ PoociiH

ID I!]) Nlgh1 Court
i!]) Moneyllne
l!1l Miami Vice
12!1 Muoic Row VIdeo
all Andy Griffith
7:05 (1) Jefleroono
7:30 II(]) Fomlly Feud
(I) Mop League Booeball

FRANK AND ERNEST

Budgll Tr.Mminlons;
All
Typn, UHd &amp; Rebuilt, 30 dlys
to 1 y.. r w•rr~nt~. owner: 8111
Flowe.... 814-24S-5m or 614-

79

I

BOLEN

I

I

1--,lrr.'TUHOY
..:,.I_;_r-l--,l-1 :.

"The tough thing about true
_ , . humility," complained
the
stuck up fellow, "is you can't
~~_M_I_D_S_U_N-~~----- about it."
.

.

_

.

.

I
I
I
I
I
5

.

_

_

_

_

_

_

L-1-.L...J_..J.._J......J

G Complete

lhe chuckl_e quoted
by fdl . no;~ in the miS!1ng WOldS

you deve lop f.om step

&amp; PRINI NUMBERED LETTERS

artnership arrangements you estab-

the other hand, loosely structured alliances may crumble.
CANCER (Juno 21-July 22) Menially
you shOuld be sharp as a tack loday,
bul you mlghl be a trllle clumsy with
your hands. Focus on lnlellectual as-

signments and avoid using tools II possible . Cancer. treal yourself fo birthday
gift. Send tor your Astra -Graph predlctiOM for the year ahead by mailing

per . P .O . Box 91428, Cleveland, OH
44101 -3426 Be sure to state your zodiac sign

1oday where you are requ1red to play a
leadership role . Everything will run
more smoothly if you don 't take your :;ell
or Bllents too seriou sly.

LEO !July 23-Aug. 221 Make your re-

AQUARIUS !Jan. 20-Feb. 191 There Is a

sponsibilities and du ties prior ity matter s today instead of relegating them to

o ffing .

possibilit y 10 may gain in some manner
at lhis t ime lrom an endea11or that has
been s itUng idle for quite awhile . Unusu a l circumstan ces might infuse it with
new llle .

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) You'll know

PISCES (fob. 20-Morch 20) Be a&gt;lra

how to make things fun for your com panions today by keeping a tleJ&lt;ible
agenda. If everyone plays things by ear

attentive and friendly toward new people you meet at this lime, because one
or two of these acquaintances could
blossom into permanent relationship.

a lesser position

on your " must do " list.

Beneficial surprises coukl be in the

a good lime can be had by all.
LIBRA (Sopt 23-0ct 23) Several mal -

ARIES (Morcb 21-Aprll 191 You Inher-

tars that haven ' t been resolved property

ently possess Imagination and re- ·
sourcefulness and today these attributes will be accentuated. Use your
gifts to further your personal ambitions
In a responsible manner.

thus far can be concluded to your satisfaction today if you have a mind to do
so . You 'll !eel better after things are in
. place.

usual circumstances that could spice

TAURUS (Aprii20-Moy 20) Interesting
invo lvements could be in the oHing for
you today. You may team ol something

lhings up. Have a ball. but try 10 pula lid

you can use 10 your advantage and you

on your spending.

will also dispense lnlormallon or know-

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Hov. 22) This should
be a tun day for you owing to some un-

how lrlends lind helpful.
GEMIII (May 21-.IUIMI 20) You'll recommercial or financial affairs today ., spond eflectlvely today to uneKpecttd
Don't take any foolish gambles, but be' developmenlslhat will have odvanlagea
• bold enough to capitalize on fast-break- others might overlook . Even though
lhey may lack your foresight, ~ry to InIng developments.
CAPRICORN (Dee. 22-Jon. 19) Do not clude them in the picture.
SAGinARIUS (Nov. 23-Dic. 21) Lady
Luck mlghl ploy an acuvo role In your

be too rigid or forceful In arrangements

l2ll TwMight Zone
11 ,30 ffi Georve Washington (PI 2
or 4) (1 ,40)
D (]) l2ll Tonight Show
Stereo.
(I) SporloCenter
Qllll Chura 0
II I]) Nighdlno 1;1
11m Night Court
I!]) Sporls Tonight
1111121 'Stingray' CBS Late
Night Stingray lakes his way
in1o a psychiatric ward. (R)
12!1 On Stage
all Magnum, P.l.
12:00 (J) BooeiH111 Tonight All-Star
Edition
Q 1111 NlghHine 1;1
II I]) Enl8rtolnmenl Tonlgh1
11m Magnum, P.l.
1D I!]) Love Connection
I!]) NIWSNighl
l!1l Crime Story Torello and
Krychak join the Federal
Strike Force lo topple Luca.
Stereo.
12!1 Nuhvllle Now Counlry
music's hottest stars are
featured live.
12:30 II(])
Late Night With
David l.lttenmln
(I) G1111t American 1111...,.11
Quia (0:30)
Q 1111 Love Connection
Ill]) Hord Copy

a

18[1) After H011r1
all MOVIE: The Dulh Of
Ocean VIew Pont (2 :301
12:35 (1) A Fllllvll At Ford't
Theon Valerie Harper and
John Forsythe hosl 1111s
all-etar ehow attanded by
Prealdent
Buah.
Many o1 the notlon't top
ertlata will perform. (1 :30)
12:37.GNewl
1:00 I]) NIIIOnll High School
a...rtNdlng ChampiOnship
From D"ando. FL (T)

aeorve

No. 3 below

IN

THESE SQUARES

A

W

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

1.,

SCitAM-LETS ANSWERS
Jackal- Minus- Enact- Ritual- MANIACS

I've come to the conclusion thai the slow drivers are
idiots and the last drivers are MANIACS .

.-----------,

BRIDGE

at Wheel 01

Fortune

Auto Pans &amp;
Accesso rles

NoNd
old 165.00

Buga.s. 8 w..u
Eacl\. 814-2!M271

118t Ptymouth Rtlllnt, 2 dr.,

montha.Fumlshed, Halt, Non·
Smoker. tntarvtlw ErqiNMt. 814-

elon M"obha Marlnt. We eoma lo
youl 81-4 -259-5979.

I

Iii I]) Currant Affair

1983 Cadillac Coupo Do Vlllo.
1e82 Cut.._ Supreme. 304-lm.. 1rn Rover Irani tl'lller. S.ltconttlnld . Crankout awning .
2403.
$1800 OBO. 614-3417-9682.
te83 Okft Cutll• Cler1, 4 door,

20,000 rnl. Good condition. 114-

rwl'll or buy on Lind Contract. pers PI•Jna, Oh. 814-687-1321 or

Mareurt Mercru..,•r Speciallat.

ARTTEY

NewaHour

IHI2.JIIIHI.

57

Jart. 814..347-7208.

BOATERS

!'he

' I I I, I I

Q lllllnolde EdHion

&amp;14- 875-516.5 .

Miri'Of" T-Tope. All Opllonl.

1118 Torota Turcel Wagon. 5

ning

ler 5:00PM.

I

(D (I) MacNeil Loh111r

11m Ill i!])

IAMI

below to form four slrnpl• words

(I) SportsCenter

1181 Corvett1. Whtta on bitch. Ford pick up 302 engine, 304-

door, lift beck, IXC .
saoo.114-37t-2722.

occts•lonsl tabln, anllque
chel't, e~rpat, flint, dlak, can--

88hp Evlnrude, 304~75-7988 •f-

S©\\~ltA-~£~s·

Rearrange letters of
0 four
scrambled words

~ (]) PM Magazine

~~'(' llJAPi '-JOT lit'(
U!&gt;OA~ litUGc I

thru wlndthltld, llfa jackltt, 2
sat:a of lkie, ail covara 1nd pull
cover, drive on trill«, 3~755448.

1980 Chavy 4 wholl drive pick- 76
up, lhorl ottp lido. 11171 Cor·
\10111 Sllng,.y. 1m Flrobl&gt;&lt;l

11122.

Call 1-800-&amp;n~tn

m

:·::::~:.:..:;:..·---c--c--:-c-:c
tm Oialltron 17 h. lrf-hull,
190hp. tn boa&gt;&lt;~ cutborod, ''"'
cond, $3,8G5. 304-875-6470.

Factory IFiintd, bondtd. Precl-

Bedroom tutt, •lr conditioner,

buyer~~.

11m Ill a2t CBS Newo 1;1
I!]) ThrH'S Company
12!1 Top Cord
all Newltart
8:35 (1) Andy Griffith
7:00 (l) Scarecrow I M111. King

3- •1110

1188 Procr11ft 18ft tlal't and akl

Nice two bedroom epar1mant or
emtll hou11 for eldtr1y couple
In Pomeroy, Mlddltpor1 .,. • .
Raterencn tvlllable. Call 614m-2947 or &amp;M-gg2-31n..

ll•t.

(I) 3-2-1 Contact 1;1

n. Ex. cond. IM-446-tl09 or 614-

•

aMMr tr.ct.lna. 114-44e-8038.
HJ&amp;e A-.twoodt4xT2. lbr, total

POSTAL JOBS $18,392-$17, Down payments on uMd or
.. _ _ d mobil• hom• oo 49
For Lease
125/yr. Now hlrl111J. C..ll 111 887-&amp;ooo Ed. P-4562 tor cun"tftt ~ 11 1500 down to qu•llll*' ,.,...,,.--~...::.:..::.:.;__ _

Qllll II) I]) ABC Newol;l
(D Body Electric

lor Sale

Gtu.:J:,•

firm. 81

old AKC Booton
Tlfflar pupp..._ 1 m.la, 1
......... Very emtH, hot shot•.
wormed . .,..-387-G117 01 114-381-

Wtntad to Rent: • houN wUhth
abou1 1! mil• ot Rio Gt"1nde.
Prater~bty rural . 814~87-1262 .

~ SportoLook

--.,.....,-~-;.,_..,.,,.,.,....,
1m 17 ft . Stareraft Trf.Hull

1186 B1yllner Capri 14 112 M, 50
l'tp. 304-&amp;7&amp;-2031aft•r 5:00pm.

miiNgt. I
11157.

Ierne Pet Food Dialer. Julie

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

naw

AKC Boooot pupt&gt;llo. Sho&lt;o apNktre,
$121. each. Franc•

Hlmlllyon malo S.Oioolm klrtonl
8 wkl akt, hi• had tl1'11 Ill o
WNCH BOXES. Kklo Ontrl oho&lt;o, very IOiayful, 30HI5-1?112
Pliylng Uf) to $150.00 tor Jat. -nlngo.
oon'o box, Hlg- prlco pokl
roglltorod
puppllo,
lor vinyl and m.ttt boxaa. AKC
Cocker Sptnllll,
aotvro ""'lh-" owoy glvo " Duhunde,
Pomeran&amp;ans, :J04.171-21e3.

eway or 1111 fl ro cheap. C.ll
814-t82-1857Marc Futb..

complete

Air Condition• 22,500 BTU 1
JHr old. Under Warrtnly. Uke
new. 61.U46-4606 .

304-678-2222.

a

ALL~

wo-

47 Wanted to Rent

Timo In Golllo Coun1y. COli 1·
81)1)..458-M1&amp; In Ount.r, WYa.

10 Ti-l INK

AT

Motta CarlO 25000 ectusl
Block, brick, IIIPIO. wln- 19711
mit... AC, Tilt, Pi\. fo4000 OBO. 1918 SNSter 15 112ft . trl-htul 70
"-,_llnlolo, .... Cloud• Wln- 814-387a.&amp;2.
ttp, Mere., AU equip. Call tfttr 7
Wont boot1. 6M-448-315D.
llrll, HID Grande, 0H Call 814p.. m. &amp;14-448-Q243.
24UI21.
1975 Pontlle 12,000 actual
Whl"pool
IH. GE
mU•, \:lood running cond $600. 1eM hi• lalender 180, A-1
wuher It!, OE Drv1r $7'i, Hot·
13 ft i"mana deep rr.u.. 304- cond, Inboard 140 hp, 18ft walk
polm rolrla. us. Yloo11 1111hou.. 56 Pets lor Sale

1983 ,.,,, good cood., 3 B•..

1888 Schuft wllh IXp.tnd, 3 bedroomt, :Z ba1ht 1 hAl pump, unclefpMnlng tnct cone,.le llttpt;,

~AVE

1872 Naute-llne house boat 34

Autos lor sale

employment

Trained Pw.onr.l To Comptate
Mab161 lrwurtnet Eume J)art-

75 Boats &amp; Motors

GOOD! 11-1AT
MEANS I DON'T

C..ll 1114-251-1316 '"" ,,., p.m.

Olive 91 ., Gllllpolls. Naw &amp; Uted
turnttura, hNters, Wtlttm I

Human StrvlcM. C111ltltd In

Employment Services

55

JLIST i{EMEMI)E~
Ti-1E !)ETTER T~E ,
PLA'&lt;ER, T~E MORE
IMPORTANT TI-lE
MENTAL GAME
6ECOME5

Boat. 1211 HP, Evlnrudo Engine,

call 614-446-a68.

~Mte. e~:z45-6aoo .

Ill a2) Qt NoRunning And Racing
m Second Voyage 01 The
Mimll;l
(I) Reading Ralnllcw 1;1
1D I!]) Andy Griffith
I!]) WMd Today
l!1l He-Man
all I 0111am Of Jeannie
8:05 (1) eeverly Hillbillies
8:30 II(])
NBC Nightly News
(1)

oomplate top, new ufholatary.

Merchandise

SWAIN
AUCTION l FURNITURE. 12

.::.:.::.:.....;..;;;;;;.;..;..:_...;.;.;..:;:=.__ I ottgtbto ,., ..., babyoituna
9
wantad to Buy
lhrough 1he Deportment or

1102-6657.

Miscellaneous

1016.

CAll • BOOGS AUCTION SER- Care tor •tderly In my home.
VlCE. AUCTIONEER ' DAVID Wan or womtn. Muwt be amBOGGS. IM-446-m&lt;J.
bulatory.
Allo
aec.pt
Alzhelmef11 patltnls. 114-607ea.to's Auction Service, Bu1· 1183.
talo, WV. llcenMd Ohio and
Welt Vlrglnil. 30 y11ra 11- Certified Day Cart Providw hi•
per1ence. For your aa le ctll us. 3 openlngt lor chUdren of any
Q~den Cillo 304-i31·2276 or •ge. tr you live in Melge Of"
Jnper C.to 304-t37-212fl.
Alh..-.e Caunll11 you may be

Quilts

~~.,~-~~":":"':""==~~~:r=========-~
71

•

II (]) IUD II I]) 11m

Ktwtukl 1981 KOX 80, Excellint condttton. 814--'48-4111

,..,

8 HI• of Shutten. If lntlf... H

Wendy't now hlrtng for Ill
Shlhe. Apply In Pereon. Sun
Rick Pearson Auction Company Thur.. Betwllf'l 2&amp;4 E.O.E.
now booking suctions, experltnce m•ites the dltterence. 12
SHuatlon
licensed Ohio, hntud1y, Wut
Vlrglnl•. 304-173-5785.
Wanted

AntlqUI Of' new. Excellent eondiUon only. Prompt payment. 614-

&amp;
J·"

K.,m&lt;n dryer. EXOIHint conda.

~UIZUI

WOlD

----...;_~ ld.. d by CLAY I. ~OILAN

8:00 (]) Hordcootle And
McCormick 1;1

71 DOO Kaw. Mag rims, Good
tlrM, alectron~ ~~~':"iN-r
e~.rbe. $821. 814·
0

lion. Almond ...... 114-912-7115.

TUES., JULY 10

TIIAT DAILY

EVENING

12500. 814-4411~54 .

Treu., space, aewer end wtter
fumlahad, reterenc11, 304-675-

CA, dac•, undtr!lnnlng, con-

•

1D85 M•udur8 V·1:ZOO Suzuki.
Late ot chrome, new tlr" &amp; battery. Low mllaagt. G•r•g• kepi .

to otl'tar •g•ncy offlcel u
nMdad. Evtnlr.g, S•turday and
WHkday hourt lrt IO bri IXptCIad. Send resume and two
Nftraneaa
to
Parwtthood
ot
Southeall Ohio, lit Rlehltnd
Avanue, Alhen~-~io 45101, by

Ci\, M~, 11-IAT'? A "''«K!
'{~&lt;;., W~'LL TALK /&gt;eCAJr rr
1\-llf, E'Vt:l.ll~ ..

111811 Hondo Z50 R, mini blko,
good cond, 3&amp;4-175-1'917.

54

The Daily Sentinel- Page-S:

Television
Viewing

1fl85 Hondl 7'00 M•gnt Naw
UrN. Excallld condlllon. Aeklng l1200. Cell .,......., ....
batwtln 5:30 &amp; 1:00pm.

Nice Ttlll• $2500.00
OBO. s.. It 311H5 W.tehlown
Ad. Mlnnert~vllla, OH or e~ll 8M44U:M7.

Plsnned

BORN LOSER

firm . 304-675-2072 evanlnp.

0

OuHn
1lz1
water
bed,
headboard, ptddtd 11dt r~~lls,
$200. 10U75-31 17, It no •ntwer
... ve rn~~~ao-.

week. 4 poster bedroom eulte,
eomptat1 $1&amp;.20 ptr w..k,

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

1983 Hondo CBX&amp;O, lullr equip-

Jorrlcho Rd. Pt. PIN11111, WV,

114-446-3158

10, 1990

ped, 1,200 ICfUII mil.. , $1,800.

c

Houuhold fumllhlng. 112 mi.

dinette with 4 chtlrl 17.50 per
week. Mtgle Chef 14 cu. ft.
Ralrlgoralcr S12.t6 por wook, 15

$1!0. '"

0

GOOD USED APPUAHC£8
We•hers, Blulggo
dryWI, raft1glralort,
rongoo.
_,_
U - Alvor Rd. S.ldo Slono
C..ot llolol. C..tl 1114-441-'1388.
PICKENS FURNITURE
NowiUHd

6 pe. weed g""'p $14.01 per

5:00.

1DB2 Vemlh1 750 Mulm. Ald.
IXC. cond. 11,000. Eve's 814-3792168.

Horne,

July 11, 1990. EutJ•SP.
WtdnMCily,e-3. ThrM mlln N. PllllboOomlll
or
llodlc.llly

ot Che.tll. MMI elolhlng will be
25 canl .. Lota of mltc. CottM

llpolle,

Apanment
lor Rent

44

3145.
2 rooms &amp; bath $17!/mo. oHk:t
lp.ICa $100/mo. all utllllln Inludod Lalo ott U1 II 61 ••

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

~SIItttlf

Count't Appll•nce Inc. Good
u..ct appllane., T.V. alta. Open
8 o.m. 1o I p.m. lolon.-811. 614-·1111!J, 127 3rd. AYI. Gll-

RENT TO OW..

3400 or 304-882-3626.

$200. Reward for return of 2

loa1 : Mala BIIMII Hound

1110 KIWIIIkl 1M, $400. 114-

BR. 114-141-4824.

,.,.renee

mala Blua Tick Coon Hounda.
Lott : C.mp~lgn Ct'lurch ar...
30oi-175-7V75, 114 148 4864

1:ttJ.

14x70, axpando, 1 112 bath, 3

Two trali1r11,
required,
tor appointment call 304-8(15...

$100. rew~rd lor uta ""um R.cl
tama .. Dashuncl, 304-475-2798.

Found:
tru Cont•ct
of Mill
Ck.
tnd Blcyela
EutemIn An.
Golltpcllo Poltco Dopt. 114M6-

1m Harley D1vldlon motor·

cycla, 304-175-17&amp;2 evening•.

caii304-47'5-1UO.

lor Rent

klttana ready now orhera

taad~

11oo.

Motorcycles

74

Household
Goods

Thrae

da~t

4

1200. rnonrh

5'1$-23Cit.

l

VIU!Mastarc:ard guarant•d no

tecurlly

51

10, 1990
Tuesday. July

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Bun.ttan Lane, Gallipolis. 3 BR,
$300/mo. piUI deposh. 814-4-*
.-222 batwaen g &amp; 111m.

urinltlon?

GOLD

Tuesday, July

iddleport, Ohio

NORTH
8AQ107

t712
·~·
+!7 42

By James Jacoby
ll 's nol olten that Lhe btdding gtves
such a clear p1cture to a defender of WEST
what nee&lt;ls to be done to set the • 9 8 6.

•w

contract .

&gt;tt-tt

EAST

+J2
• J 86
t A K 84

9

Put yourself tn the EasL posillon af - • J9 3
+A 10 I 3
ter partner has led the six
clubs +Q9 8 6
I You play the ace. and declarer drops
SOUTH
the king . Although it 1s barely possible
+
K 13
Lhat declarer holds K-Q-9- 8 of clubs
.AKQ732
and is makmg a clever decepllve play.
• Q 10 6
tits more likely thaL declarer had the
+K
lone king of clubs . He cannot have
Vulnerable· Easi -West
more than nine poonts in hearts (A-K·
Deale" SouLh
Ql. and the problem for East is to picture the rest of declarer's hand . Of Soutb
West
Norltl
Easi
course if declarer lacks the king of 1 •
Pass 1 •
Pass
spades. he shou ld have the Q-J of dia - 3 •
All pass
monds. But if he holds the ktng of
Opening lead
6
spades. he would easily have the val ·
ues to jump to three hearts wtthoul the
diamond jack . Do you geiLhe dnft' L-------------'
East's best chance Lo take five hand. he will put tn the 10 of diamonds.
tricks and set the hand is to find de- (Thts wins when East ts leading from
clarer with lhree lostng doamonds and A-J or K-J and only loses when East
West wtth Lhe 10 of hearts. If South has holds A· K and is brave enouglt to unthe diamond queen and not the jack. derlead.) West will won the jack and ,
defender East must gove h1m the return Lhe suit, and East will take the
chance Lo go wrong . So at Lrick two A-K and play a fourth diamond. Hap- ·
East should lead a low diamond . Un- less South's fate is seale&lt;l before he:
less declarer is looking into East 's riT':-Tir..!!r=-starte&lt;l
the hand

or

+

CROSSWORD
by lHOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
1 Organized

42 Celerily
43 Watchlul
44 Raw-boned
(gangland) 45 Heslon in
"Will - ..
6 Pertinenl
facls
10 "To err ts
DOWN
1
2
3
4
5

Fellow
Vulgar

11 Choose
13 Modily
Piclure
lor use
Mercalm
Empower
14 Long poem
division
6 Ornamen
lalion
15 Baseball
lhrow
7 Wing
16 Weddong
(Lal )
words
8 Sawbuck
9 Sel tn
18 Amounl
19 Regisler
molion
12 "Garfield"
on
is
2f Moccasin
one
22 ViciOry
cry
23 Composer
Nino
24 Ill woll
27 Vocal
c omposilion
28 Morgan s
hair
29 Ninny
30 l able
scrap
31 Hard-hil
baseball
33 Residenl
( s ullix)
34 Skill
35 lell
- glance
38 Pronged
40 "Cry Me a

Yesterday' s Answer
17 Billy 29
Williams
20 Memo
31
23 Noose
32
24 Wilhoul
36
bumps
25 Unlair
37
26 Vivid
39
27 David
Janssen 41
lilm(1961)

Falslall's
title
Burdened
Poe bird
Manne
bird
Bohemoan
Greek
leller
Island
(Fr)

DAILY CRYP'TOQlJ()TES- Here's how tn wnrk It :

7:10

AXYOLBAAXR
I~

LONG F'ELLO W

One letter stands lor another In this sample II is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
runts . Each day the code lelt~rs are different
CRYPTOQUOTE

7-10
t1 V E P
VG

VG

D

OlJADFG

T I Z
EV 0 P

M I Z
DJDVX

ElJDSP

M I 0 XV X .1

vz

Z YDZ
VZGPlJE

QDZQYPG

PCP OF

ZVSP

D

QYVlJL
VG
MTOX. - J M.GYDA
Y••terdar'• Cryptoq110te: WHAT ONE KNOWS
IS. IN YOUTH, OF UTILE MOMENT; THEY KNOW
ENOUGH WHO KNOW HOW TO LEARN. - HENRY
ADAMS
C&gt;

t990 by King Feature!! Svndica ta . Inc

�Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, July 10, 1990·

Pomeroy-" Middleport, Ohio

Homeless pay final respects to Snyder

Smoking threatens
diabetics' lives
DALLAS tUP!i - T he risk of premature death Is nearly
double among Insulin-dependent diabetic women who are heavy
smokers than lor their non -smoking counterparts, researchers
reported Monday.
In a study of about 550 diabetics, Universi ty of Pittsburgh
researchPrs found diabetic women who smoked one pack or
more of cigarettes pl'r day for flvp years or more, wpre twice as
likely to die over a six -year period as similar diabetic women
who did not smok e.
"A comparison of the death rates ... revealed a striking
pat tern of excess mortality for women who smoked heavily,
particularly coronary hea rt disease mortality,'' wrote Claudia
Moy and her coiiPguPS, In a study published In Circulation, an
American Heart Association journal.
Si nce diabPtics already face a death risk 10 times greater th an
non-diabetics, heavy smoking boosts a dlabPtic woman' s ri sk of
death even fu rt her. to 20 times that of the general population.
researchers said.
The study also found male diabetics who sm oke also increase
their chances of death, but t o a lesser degree. Wh ile
non·smoklng male diabetics are six times more l ikely to die
than thP general popul ation, thei r co unterparts who smoke
heavily are 10 times more likely to die.
Un til the University of Pittsburgh stud y, there had never been
sc ientific data to support the Increased nsk of smoking to
diabetics, May said.
"Diabetics are still smoking; they are not quitting." Moy
sa id . "More attention should be focu sed on smoking
prevention."
The American Diabetes Associa tion esti mates 11 million
Americans suffer from diabetes, which causes the bod y to stop
producing, or react abnormally, to Insu lin , the m aj or
fue l·regulatlng hormone. High blood sugar levels res ulting
from diabetes can severel y damag e the heart, blood vesse ls.
kidneys, Pyes and nerves .
About 10 percen t of dlabeties arc insulin -dependent and
require dally injPcllons of the sub stance.
T he Pittsburgh resea rchers studied 548 ln sull n·depl'ndent
diabetics, Including 284 males and 264 fema les ranging in age
from 17 to 40 .
Fifty -four patiPnts, including 32 males and 22 females, di ed
du ri ng the six yPars aft er the st udy started In 1982. Half the
death s In womPn , as compared with one-fourth the dea ths In
men, were caused by cardiova scular disease, the st udy found .
Cardiovascular disease among women ages 17 to 40 In the
general population is uncommon, May said .
" With an addltionah1 sk factor, suc h as cigarett e smoking.
you may be enhancing the effec t of diabetes In the women . ., Moy
sa id.' 'It 's a tragroy that nobody is focusing on reduc ing the r isk
of cardiovascula r dlsease in these pati ents."

WASHINGTON (UP!) - Peo·
pie whose Jives were touched by
Mit ch Snydpr - from the homeIPss to celebri ties- gathered at a
Was hington shelter Monday to
pay their last respects to the man
who drolcated his life t o the
downtroddPn.
One by one mournPrs, who had
formed a line around the corner
of the Community for Creative
!'o n ~ Violence
shelter Snyder
risked his life to crpate and
where he dlro, filed Inside past a
sl mple wooden coffin surrounded
by flowers for Snyder's wake . Hi s
funeral Is schrouled for Tuesday .
'' I sometimes just get the urge
to cry because I just don't believe
he's gone," said KPnya Smith,
en tering the shelter she ha s
ca lled home for six years.
Smith and others said they

believe no one can

replace

Snyder , the nation' s most vocal

champion lor the homPiess.
He spcured the city's largest
homeiPss shelter whpn he staged
a 51-day hunger strike tn 1984 tha t
forced President Reagan to turn
over a once vacant federal
building. Further lasts helped
secure thP funds needro to turn It
Into a 1,300-bed shelter Snyder
called a modplfor thP nation.
Snyder, 46 , was found hanged
Thursday In hi s third-floor room
at the shelter In what pollee sa id
was a suicide. A note lndlcatro he
took his life over a failed love
relationship with longtime com ·
pan ion and fellow homeless act!
vtst Carol FennPIIV.
Among mourners Monday wa s
actor Mar tin Sheen, a clo se
friend of Snyder's who portrayed
him In a 1985 t elevision movie,
" Samaritan: The Mitch Snyd er
Story."
Shpen, schrouled to deliver a

eulogy at Snyder's funeral , said
he believed Snyder didn 't mean
to kill himself.
" I think he struggled ," said
Sheen. "I don 't th ink he inten:led
to do what he did. I th ink he was
hoping someone would come In or
the phone would ring ."
" He just went so far and hP
couldn't gPt back, bull promlsP
you he tried to get back," he said.
" He was trying to say he had
been hurt."
Snyder's death came just days
after a major defeat In the City
Council, which voted to overturn
the city's Initiative 17, a land ~
mark 1984 voter -mandatPd law
guarantPelng Pmergency shelter
for anyone In nero .
Snyder had been lnstrumPnlal
In the passage of thPiaw, and had
vowed to gPt It put back on this
fall's ballot.
After his funeral Tuesday

outside th e shelter, Snyder's
coffin was to be taken In
horse-drawn carriage to the
District Building, which houses
City Council chambers. Homeless activists have vowed to fight
to reinstitute Initiative 17 as a
legacy to Snyder.
"Maybe now people fighting
against us will come closer
together. Maybe they will bend a
little," said Gary Morris, 46, who
has Jiv ed at the sheltPr 60 days.
Fennelly, dressed in black,
declined to answer questions
about her relationship with
Snyder.
''I am just running as last as I
can run away from thP grief, "
said Fennelly, who worked 13
years with Snyder. "Mitch Is
trrepla cpa biP. He was a magical
moment In time , and we can't
bring him back ."

avascu lar surgeo n, sa id theoper ·
atlon on Gina Franco was only
thet hird timea hea rtrepalr-lung
transplant had ever been pe r ·
f ormed In the United States .
"The uniqueness of this procedure is that In one operation we
repai red this patl ent 'scongenlt al
hea r t defect , and at the sa m e

SANTA BARBARA, Ca lif.
iUPii - Actor Howard Duff,
radio's original hard -boiled detec tlve SamSpadewhowent onto
play ruthles s wheeler -dealers on
"Knots Land ing" and other
prime time soap operas, di ed
M ondayufa heartattack. Hewas
72.
Duff was pronouncro dead at
11 3 a.m . in theemergPncy room
at St . Francis Hospital of Sa nta
Barbara. Hi s wife, Judy, wa s at
the hospital.
Jean Mangus, a spokeswoman
at St Francis, said the actor wa s
stricken at home and arrlvPd by
ambulance aI th e hospital a bou 1.1
a.m .
Born in Bremerton, Was h., on
Nov.24, 1917,Duffwasfirstta ken
with aeting wh ile still In high
sc hool In Sea ttl e and financed
acti ng lessons by working at a
local radio station.

lung," says McCarthy.
There have bee n two othrr
suc h procedures done In the
United States, both at Stanfo rd
Un i ver si t y.
McCarthy and a team of
su r geons and anesthesiologist s
comp ll'tcd the four -hou r proce·
dure at 8:30a .m . Aftl'r surger y ,

g;h;t;;;;;~F~ran co

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l a;n;te;d;;;;;;h;e;r;;;;;r;i

Daily Number
633
Pick-4
3997
Weather

Pages 4-5

After sening in World War]]
as a correspondPnt for Armed
Forces Radio, Duff landed the
rol e In 1946 that Jaunchro hi s
career - Dashiell Hammett's
crusty detectlvp Sam Spade.
Devoted listeners heard Duff
close each episode with a dlc·
Ia ted report on how he solved the
latest "caper," sign lngoffwlth a
perfunctory "Period . End of
report ."
Durlnghlsthreeyearsonradlo
as Spade, hebega nhlssuccess ful
movi e career . Hi s first film role
came In 19471n the priso n feature
"Brute Force."
In 1951, he m arri ed actress Ida
Luplno, with whom he co-s tar red
In the 1957 television seri es " M r .
Adams and Eve." Duff and
Luplno had a daughter, Bridget .
The cou pl e's marriage. re·
k indled severa l times aft er sepa

rations, ended In dlvorcP.
Hi s film career Included many
supporting roles In major l ea·
lures as well as leads in "B"
movies. In the 1950s, he began
appearing on the small screen,
most frequently on telpvlslon
drama anthologies, among them
''Ford Theatre," " Rheingold
Theatre" and "Science Fiction
Theater."
In the 1960s and 1970s, Duff wa s
seen frequently as the vet er an
cop on "Felony Squad" and In
gues 1 roles on many other series,
particularly erlme shows.
Duff's other movie cr edit s
Included "Naked City," "All My
So ns." "Calamity Jane and Sam
Ba ss, " ·'Sierra Stranger,"
"Pa nic in the Cit y," "O h God!
Book I I," and " Krame r vs.
Kramer."
One of hi s las t feature films
was "No Way Out" with Kevin

! a~ nln ar flow room spl'ci flcal ly

designed to proteet transp la nt
recipients from infec tion.
' 'S he Is In serio us condition, but
doing well," McCa rthy sa id.
"She will r ema i n in the int ensive
care unit for about a week ."
Franco wa s on a wa itl ng lis t for
a hear t -lung transplant when she

so ugh t a seco nd opinion this
sprin g. T he average waiting tim e
for a heart -lun g transplant is
es tima ted at two yea rs
She had been emp loyed as a
secretary until November 1989,
when she became too ill to work .
"Her heart problem had lm·
paired thp functioning of her

was t r ansf errPd t o a

Beef Blade Or 7-Bone

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
"We do no t pla y poli tics in this
office'' was the respon se from
Meigs Co unt y Boa rd of Election s
Chair man Evelyn Cla r k. when
faced with angry voters a t last
night s' r eg u lar board meeting .
Clar k was responding to a llPga tions m adr at th e mepting th a t
political motives had ove rta krn
aclion on the rc -dls trict i ng of 1wu
Meigs County voting precincts .
Th rPt' mt•mbPr s oft hP Co mmit
tee to RPston• lht' Rt·Pdsvil iP
Voting Prec inc t W&lt;'rt' p rt•sent at
th e m eet in g. and once agfli n
appealed to thr hoard to recon sid er actio n rP-district i ng tlw
Reedsville• prrrinr t in to t wo
preci nc ts. T he• &lt;Jrtinn . l ilkPn in
F'rbruary of lYKq_ r·om hinf'd .t
po rtion of t l1P l{ppd svi llP i..ind
Long Bo tt om prrcinrts into a npv.

Sou th Olivf• prPr inct , and ('Oill
Drugs, was Jcwwtte Radlord. The tickets are
available at various locations around the county .

ON SALE - Meigs County Fair tickets are on
sale. Purchasing the n..,.t ticket !rom Linda
McKinney, right , employe•• at Swisher and Lohse

Meigs County Fair memberships
go on sale; event set Aug. 14-19
Membership tickets for th e
1990 Meigs County Fair. to be
stagro on the Rock Springs
Fairgrounds Aug. 14 ·19, went on
sale Tuesday .
The llckets which sell for $9 are
available at various location s
over the count y. In Pomeroy, th e
ticket s can be purcha sed at th e
Sugar Run Mill, Swisher and
L oh se Drugs, Gloe ckners. a nd
Dave's Exxon. while in Middle·
port the tirkrt s may be pur ·
chase d all he Midd iPpor t Depar t
m(' nt Storr and D . J 's Tradin g

Po s t

DAYTO N, Ohio tUPII - A
Cinci nnali attor nry who trains
lawye rs on the str ict new federal
guidel ines for se ntencl ng crim I·
nal defendants experts ba sebJ II
legend Pet e Rose to be sentenced
to a bout one yea r in pri son.
Ma rtin Pinal es sa id in a stor .v
Wednesday in th e Dayton Da il.v
News that the guidel in es ca l l for
Rose to rece ive a 1 0~ to 16-m onth
sen tencf'.
Rose ple aded guilt y to tw o
co unts of filing false in co me tax
ret urns and is to be se ntencrd
.l u lv 19 by U.S. Di strict Judgr S.
Arthur Spiegel in Cincinnati.
Pi na les, a crim ina l defen se
attorney, said Spiege l has a
reputation for bei ng tough on
wh i te-collar cr imin al s and wi l l
prob ably fol low the senten cing
gu idelines.
The guidelin es use a point
svs1em to determine sentences .
.iudges ma y a dd or subtract
points based on such things as th e
nature of th e offense, the defend ·
ant 's cri minal histor y and accep·
lance of responsibility.
Plnales sa id the offen se leve l in
the Rose case would total 14
point s. Pi nales sa id he deducted 2
point s because Rose accepted
respons ibil ity for hi s crimes,

The Rutland locatio n is Joe's
Country Market, and In Syracuse
tickets arc for sale at Baer's
Market. Other locations include
Waid Cross and Sons in Racine.
Kecbaugh's In Chest er, Whaley 's
Ma rket in Da rw in, C. and D
Penzoil at Five Point s. and
Baums Lumber at ChPstrr
Phyllis Lark tn s i s handl in g
tick r t sa les in Long Bottom . and
Nr ta .Jean Rrtchie in T uppl'rs
Pla ins.
ThP mrmbe r~ hip

t ickf't s CO\"f'!
adm lss ion to th e fair a II fi VI' d a\"'-'
as wrll as frf'( ' parkin~ dnd

leav ing him w i l h 1'1 J.Xlinh .
If Sp iegel departs frorn IIH'
gu id elines, he mu st statp h i~
reasons ford oin g so. a nd dt ·rPn SP
IC:Jwvers and f edera l prost.•cut or..,

have the right to app~.•;; l hi s
dec isi on, Pinales sa id .
Rose's Dayton law yer. H.ogPr
Mak el y , sa id at the tim e Rose
pleadro gu il ty that sever&lt;JI fac
tors should bt&gt; mitig ating cin·um
stances in th e sen tencing.
Makelv said the basebal l '"
gend had paid ta xes of $2 .Un .4E
on in come of $4 .660,368 fr om 19H4
to 1987; had no previous crimina l
offenses and wa s clea red of all
other cri mi nal a ct ivi ty of wh i ch
sever al peoplP &lt;H'CUSPd him .
made complet e restitution t o tllr
governm ent : . coope r atPd fullv
with investigators and wa s undPr
thfl care of a psychiatric s(X'cial
Is t for his gambling problt•m
But Plnales sa id suc h fac tors
wer e co ntemplat ed bv th e U .S
Se nt e ncln~
Co mmi ssion and
should not resul t in a point
reduction.
Th e Cinci nn at i attorney ,.,
pects RoSl' to be se nt enced to a
m inimum -security federa l pri ~
so n. The closest is In Ttnr
HautP, Ind . , where some• of
Rose's accusers also werP sPn l·
enced to pri son term s.

Ohio River won't be lowered

Better TOTAL VALUE!

July 1 1 , 1 990

~act ion.

14 Pages

25 Cents

A Mult im edi a Inc . Newspapef

Reedsville voters get
response from Clark

Attorney says Rose
could get year in jail

Better Quality - Better Service · Better Selection

2

Pomeroy-

Costner.
In recPnt years, Duff worked In
miniseries and teiPvlston movi es. as well as holding roles on
evening soap operas such as
"Knots Landing" and "Fia ~
mingo Road."
Duff had long aspired to play
wh at he thought was the consum~
mat e villain, Shakpspeare's Rl
chard III . But In 1981, when hP
recP ived a large check from NBC
for his work on " Flamingo
Road," he said, "I am happy to
settle (In the role as1 Sheriff
SempiP."
Hlslatesttelevl slonguestspot s
i ncl udro thP miniseries "War
and Rem embrance" and series
such as "Midnight Caller" and
" FalconCrPst."
No fune ral ser v ice was
planned, and a memorial wa s
pending.

lungs, ca using weakness and
difficulty In brPathlng,"
McCar thy said.
Franco became Ohio 's second
lung tra nsplant recipient. Phillip
Mendoza, 44, of Port Clinton,
Ohio, received a successful lung
transplant at the Cleveland
Cl inic Feb. 14.

Low tonight In the mid 60s.
Chance of rain near 100
percent. Thursday , high near
80. Chance of rain 90 percent .

•

Aaor Howard Duff, «Sam Spade' dead at 72

Woman has heart repair-lung transplant at cleveland clinic
CLE VELAND !UPII A
25-year -old Pittsburgh woman
underwent a lung tra nsplant
operation and surgery to repair a
hole in her hear t at the Clevela nd
Clmr c Fou nd a tion Monday ,
avo iding the nero for a heart
tra nsplan t.
Dr. Pa t ric k McCarthy. a cardi·

Ohio Lottery

American
League is
2-0 winner

Contrary to rumors among
boat ers on thP Ohio River, the
U.S. Corps of Engineer s does not
plan to lower the river by 12 feet.
Rumored levels of river lower·
lng have rangro from 1.2 feet to
12 fppt , and have been accredited
to th e recent construction of the
new Gallipolis Lock s and Dam.
Rick Buckley of the Corps or
Engineers said the Corps does
not plan to change the dam pools
due to the construction on the

new
lock and dam
n ear
Ga llipol is.
Buckley sa id i f the river would
ever be lowerro by as muc h as 12
feet , It would cause tremendous
damage. " Banks and roadways
would slide Into the river,"
Buckley explained
Buckley works In the permil
department of the Corps. A
public affairs pPrson was not
available for commPnl.

•

represent a substanual savings

to r es idents who fr equ ent the
fair . The ticket .prioe represents
a one dolla1 Inc rease over !aut

vcar
· As explarned b)' Marv Gil
morf'. f air board sPcreta r,v. there
is a n additio nal c ha rge for the
carniva l ridrs ovc' r th e mrmber ·
&lt;hip ti c ket pn ce. T hat is $3 a day .
HowP\" Pr thf' mem bers hip ti cket
does p r ovi de f reP arcr~s to all
Pn tC'r ta in ment on thP ground s. .
F o r lhOSl' who pay to get in at
thl' ga tr each da~' . thr prie r is$:)
for Parh adm ission but that p n c('
!ndud(•s tllr ridPs .

Parents may
be lwble for
serving alcohol
C' OL UMflt i S. Oh io !C PII T h(' Oh io Su prf'm f' Court rul Pd
Wpd nl'sday thai p ar ent s who
al low thrir r h ild rPn to pr ov ide
alcoho lic hrvrragf&gt;s to somro nP
undl'r thP lf•ga l drinking ag r rna\·
bf' Jiablf' for an.\ damagr rausrd
tJv 1hat pl'!"son
· The high rour t ru led on Jn
Ot wwa Cou nf\· r asf&gt; in whi ch t h~ '
pan'nls. Ha rry and Lind a Cor
drll. a llowl'd their ch ild ren to
havP a New Yt·ar ·s Eve party on
Dec 31. I !IH.'J. wh ile the\' were not
home .
Abo ut 111 ~~·np l&lt;' attended l hl'
party. :nos t of thPm under the
lega l dr inking age o! 19. and the
par e n ts said thPy knrw thr
guc s t!'i would "pr oba bl y h ave
some hPrr." a.ccord ing t o court
trs timony
Alcohol was ~erve d. and a
traf fi c acciden t occ urred lat er in

which Robert Hu ston. one of th e
gues '-"· was injured. Hi s parent s
sued th eCordells and some of th r
ot her youn g people and the ir
par ents, charg ing negligence.
The Cordel ls I nit Iaiiy were held
not liable by Ottawa County
Common Pleas Court in their
claim that they did not person ·
ally serve the alcoholi c
beveragPs.
B ut th e deci sio n was reversed
by an appellatP cou rt, and th e
Supreme Court sent the matter
bac k to the Common Pleas co urt
to dPtermlne whether or no t
ano ther youth was driving th e
car In which Huston was Injured,
whether th e driver was und er th e
lnfluPnce of alcohol, and II so,
who supplied thP alcohol.
Justice Herbert Brown wrote
tha t " liability ca n attach when
the Injury commtttPd by the child
IS the fores eeable consequence of
a parent's negligent act."

bine d lh P rPmaindl'r Of
Reedsvillr prPrlnrt v. ith

tllf'
thP

0 1ivP-Ora n gP prPci net, formin g
thp Nort11 Olivf' prPrinct
Member s of thP cornrnittPP
claimed that th P long dhtan rr&gt;
Reedsvil lP vo tPrs now had to
travel to vote wou ld cause \'O!P r
turn ou t in that commun ity to
dwindle. AI thr very lea st. the

grou p said, vo ti ng by abse ntee
ballot would Increase . One spa
kespe r so n from the R~ros\1lie
group said that so me absentee
voters did so. al though they
would prefer to have voted in
person . ThP d is tance, they said .
ma de that imposs ibiP.
A lett Pr on 1hr rna t tl'r ol
preci nct r P-dlstricting writtrn by
Ass istant Prosecuting Attor nry
Li nda R Warner wa s di stributrd
to board members at the mrr t ·
ing. The letter indi cat ed that the
board was not, in fart , prohibited
by law fr om acting on red etini ·
tion of preci ncts, stating lhat the
·'Board of Election will be within
its ri ght s to reconsider the
dl' t('r m ina tio n or a ny prec i nct s
wit hin thP co unty within 25 days
bcforr thr gPnrral elrctio n this ,
I all"
Accord ing t o Rrrdsvill r Co mrnittrf• Co -c h ai r m an M ax ine
Wlntchc&lt;Jd, the board had pre ·
vio usly stated to the committ er
that th ey were un able to change
the precinct boundaries for th e
rrmainrr of thr year
After a read ing of the lette r b\'
Clark. Mar y Hunter. a memller
ol 1hr boa rd . madt- a mo!ion to
tJ bi(' all ac tion on the r e·
di stTicting issue until December

due to w hat she termed th e
"political ramifica tions" of th P
let ter.
Th&lt;' vote on HuntPr's motion
was a tiP votP. with both
Democrat s on thl' bo;ud, Hun tPr
and John l hlc. voting for th e
motion and both of the board 's
Repuhl1can s, Clark and Henr~'
Wells. voting a ga inst.
Clark . statin g that shr felt
··compf' lled to gPt this mai!Pr
settled oncP and lor all ", then
made a rnoti on to resc ind the
o ri gi n&lt;~ l February action. Her
moti on. if approved, would h ave
ret urned the Rcrosvilleand Long
Botton precincts to th eir original
locations.
Be fore a vote co uld be taken on
Clark's motion . Mi chelle Jen
kins, a field representative fr om
the Secret ary of State's office.
remind ed board members that "
motion to table action on th e
m atter had not been resolved .
After telep honing the Secrc·
tar y of Stat e's offic e regardin g
th e co rrect procedure, Jenkin s
m!ormed th e board th at no
furth er action ro ut&lt;! be tak en
unt il Hunt er's motion was rP·
so lved . Huntrr then wi t hdrrw
hrr motion and Clark rP
Co nt in uPd on page 9

Principal and coaching posts
filled ·by Meigs School hoard
By CHARLENE HOEFUCII
Sentinel ~rws Staff
,\ princ ipal 's po st and se\'f'ral
coac hi ng positio ns were flllPd at
Tut&gt;sday nig ht 's meetin g of thP
:\1 eigs l ~oc a l Board or Education .
Hirt' d a s f'l C'm l'ntan· pri nc i pal
for onP yp ar a t thr PlrmPntan·
princip al'" sa la n w; t '- .·\nrhon _,.
Pnr\' wl1o romrs In thf' dis trict
from an l'lf•mf'ni;H-\" tr;~ c hrr" s
position in 1!11 · P:~inr \'alit'\"
Sc hool Dls tJicr in Bainbridgr . f h ·
will b(' JS'-' i g ned 10 thr Hu rl and
t~ n d S;_ !lt;m Cenrrr '-'Chon !...;
Amo ng thl' nev.: te ;tchf'r'-' hin •d
w as

.lotln

VHn

HePih

fnr

a

lcan1ing disnbi lit\· mu sw po " i
lion at thf' high "chou! nn a
om' \"l'&lt;tr ("O nlracT He was al"o
r m plo.vPd a ~ ;1ssis ta n t band
d in•rtor for tlw l !l~IO.fll sch ool
vr&gt;ar. &lt;.1 new po sition. nn lht'
suppl l'mPntar v SJlan· schrduli'
Sh irlry McD o n &lt;.~ld v.'as h 1re d as
a rPtJc hrr foronr vt.~a r at Hu tl&lt;.~nd
rrplu ci ng Kim 01 iphan 1who is on
a 1Pi1V(' of a bspncr . Su pplrmf'n
U\ r y con t ract" wrrf' awardrd t&lt; l
flw' pcr&lt;&gt;o ns af rr r thf' board
pa ss('d a resolut ion noting tha t
'&gt;P\'0ral coachi ng po s ition~ ;md a

c h('f' rlrC:JdC'r adv i sor·~ post coul d
not be filled from ce rtified staff.
I n that gro up werr Donn&lt;~
Brn tl r y, junior h ig h chf'€'rleader
advi sor. Phil Ha rri son . head
bovs' basketbJ II coach. Joe .John
'\O n. 13i11 Ro:--,s and .J im Nida y .
ass is t;-! nt
\"Jl·s it .\ f oo tha II
coa chrs for onP yP ar .
Th r rt.'~ignations of .John l3irrh
as head tt•;JrhrraiBradburyand
Chrry-1 Light frit z as J tPachrr at
thr Ss lPm C'P ill(' r ;-;c hoo l wpn·
,Jrc t'ptcd
I .i nd a Ft shr r a lso
rPsig ned ;t.., a .; ; ubstitulf' trachcr
" in cP shf' ha s accrptrd full ·t imc
Pm pl oymrn't
MPlva Shrr\· a·s n'signati on a"
a suh.-, titutr scnPt ary was ;.~c
c epted. Jnd L ynn r Crow wa ~
g ra n ted a o nr .vra r lra,·r of
a hSt' nCf' 10 fUrt hl·r llPf rdu cat ion
Mi..!tnnit .v IP.:l\'t' wa s gran ted 1H
M ar v Br.1urr .
Tht' boa rd JpprO\"Pct M orga n
M alhl•ws as a tuition st udPn l and
dC('(' ptl'd llir oko Ma ruki J'-' a
for t•ign t'.'\ Ch J n g' ' .s tudt.' n t
thro ugh th P ·1· 1-1 La bo F.xcha ngl'

rrngram
In uth f' l ac tl O!l, apprO\'al ~\· as
g i\'f' ll to Mi cha Pl Slaggs . football

c·o&lt;J\h tou sr 1:, 1nstruct1onalday :-.
for foo tball as permrtted by lht·
Oh io Athirt1 r Association
lt was votPd to join th1 ·
J.: cluc at iomll TC&gt;lP\' l ~ i on Prop ra m
of Sout hea stern Ohio 1ETS UI '
for thr 1990-91 .~r hool _\"Pdr at &lt;~
cos t of Sl ..1f2 . 2~ of which SX'i".l2:,
will comr ba r k to thr di strirt 1n

grants .
Ac ti on to mod if~· thr &lt;:~I tPnd
LH l Cl' po li c ~ · WLIS l akf'n at lht·
mrrt1ng and thP numbrrufda.\ ·-.,
w hic h a st ud r n t ma~ · br Jbsen!
a nd still rf' ta in crr clit s Wds
rccl urrd from 30 to JR . Tli r pol1 n
allows for thr adm ini stra t ion tfJ
usr discret ion in making {'.1\ Ccp
l io n. parti cu la l"!y to student s u:h n
hav(' sP riou s illnPSSf's .
The board a ls o ac cepted th• ·
rrcommr nd atio n of Supt. .lam f·:-CarjX'n tPr to change th r gr;1din~..:
period s fr om s ix to nin r H·rek.-, ~l\
the high sc hool aod Jun ror hr gh
school
Attending thr meetin g ~n·n ·
Sup t. Ca rpanter. TrPas urrrJ &lt;m• ·
Fry. and board members. Eolwrt
fiarlon, p rrsident, Rich &lt;ll d
Vaug han, LarT\" Rupr·. g1h
Snowdon. and Je ff \\'ern

Big Apple picked over New Orleans
.
to host Democrat's '92 convention
WASHINGTO'\ rU P ir - The
Democrat ic Part\· Wrdnf'sda_v
announced it had chose n NPw
York Cit y as thr sit e of it s 19'1'
nati ona l 'ro nventlon and Chi;i ir·
man Ron Brown sa id thf'.V wou ld
t r y new and crra ti\·e wavs to
reshape th e ga thering an d ~or
tray the part y as advoca tr s fn 1
·· work i ng
&lt;1nd •mi l' Pi rs s
Am erican s."
Brown form ally ma dP thf'
an nou ncr mPnt aftt.•r· wProk s ot
spec ul ation that thl' co nvP nti on
would go to th e Flig Applr rat her
t han Nrw Orleans .
" Whrn WP Democrat s h ave
fought for working citizens o[ I he
United States we have been at
our bes t When we have looked
the powe rful, th e corrupt , the
mean-spirited and irresolute in
the eye and challenged th ei r
narrow viPw of th e American
exper ience, we ha ve spoken for
millions of voiceless Americans
- th e everyday folks Republl·
cans too oft en for get, " Brown
sai d.
"What better place is th erP to
tell this story than New York ?"

he as kc•d Flrnw n called the
ga th eri ng. w h•• rr the part y will
nomrnate its Jqq2 pres identi al
ca ndidatr, · ·otJ v iousl y a televi ·
sion evl' nt " and sa id he was
studying a number of wa ys
in cluding perhaps sho r tening th e
convC'n ti on t n makP it more
intNes ting an d effective. "I'm
trying not to be res tr ictive , but
th.e n ' arr a number of cr ea tive
steps tha t could be t aken, "
Brown said
Brow n defended the dC'cis ion to
go t o liberal New York rat.her
than a mo re mains tream Ameri ca n ci ty and argued that what
wa s more Important to the party
was Its message rather then the
co nvention location .
" Frankly, I think the politi cal
co nsid erations are grossly over~
r ated. WP were supposed to
sweep the South In 1988" when
the convention was In Atlanta ,
Brow n sa id . "I think what
matters Is what is said !rom th e
podium, not where the podium Is
locat ed," Brown said.
It will mark the fifth time the
Bi g Apple will host a national

poli trcal co nventi on. All ul i ll&lt; '
previou s rour co nvP nll on~ hL· ld in
th e c it y have bern for Dnn 11
c rats, the las t tw o of w hirll - 111
1976 and 1980 - nomtn c&lt; i&lt; '&lt;l
Jimmy Car ter .
At leas t part o f the rr;-1'-.on tor
choosi ng New York was brca usr
of th e recent pa ssage h,. thl'
Loui siana Legisla ture of llw
toughest abor tion bill in 1h&lt;·
na tion, sa id sou r cesconnrctPd to
the party. Louisiana GO\·. Fludd,·
Roem er , a Democra t, ha ~ not
sai d whPther he will sign th r
mea sure.
However, sources added that
while Brown had come under
some pressure from abon ion
rights groups, other reasons Including the su ppor t se rvices
and hote l rooms avai lable ln New
York - were equally Important
In his dec isio n to hold the
convention there.
There had been ta lk for werk s
even before the abort ion
legislation passPd - that Brown
wanted the convention to go to
the Big Apple, where he wa s
rai sed.

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