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f

Ohio Lottery .

Reds lose
5·2 battle
to .Phillies

DOUBLE

MANUFACTURER'S
All THIS WEEK

COUPONS

Pick 3:

931
Pick4:

9329
Super Lotto:
6-7-8-27-34-47
704199

Page4

•• '•

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save as much as

5

1 11
Vol. 44, NO. 25
MuiUrnedl•lnc.

36-39 02. CAN
•ADC •EL. PERK OR
•FRENCH ROAST COFFEE

... '

~

....

'

UMW expands coal strike -~

HARDWORKING lOW PRICfS·

DANIELLE SCOTT
DELEGATE, MUS
'

...

.

.

save as n1uch as $1

10

~

MICHELLE GUESS
DELEGATE, EHS

PENNY AEIKER
DELEGATE, EHS

save as much as 95'.
160Z. CANS
VAN CAMP'S

24 02. CTN. • SMALL CURD •LARGE CURD OR •LOW FAT

Pork 'n ·

.Poodland Cottage Cheese

'

/?t£5(5
...

.lOW PRICfS

. Delegates and alternates to
Buckey.e Girls State have been
aMounced by AmericiiD Legion
Feeney-Bennen Post No. 128 and
Auxiliary, Middleport
Buckeye Girls State will take
place June 19--26 at Ashland Uni·
versity.
Each delegate and her alternate
.will be seniors during the 1993-94
school year.
Delegates from Eastern High
School are Michelle Guess, Penny
Aciter, Jamie Wilson and Nora
Eastman. Their alternates are
Wendy Rach, Kathy Bernard,
Amber Well and Marilyn Kibble.
Delegates from Meigs High
School are Danielle Scon, Tonya
Thornton, Jennifer Fink and Erin
Harper. Their allemate is Ann Rif.

18 02. JAR HERSHEY .
.CREAMY
. •CRUNCHY

-

Reese's
Peanut Butter
••

Bonele11
English Roast

. $1!9

LB .

FOODLAND STORE COUPON
.
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Foodand Spec•o1
Coupon 1189
Valid 51»8/5193

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22 OZ. - DISHWASHING

1

Sunlifht i
LiqUid

t1e.
Michelle 6uess is the daughter
of Michael and Marcia Gueas, Tuppers Plains. She is a member of
F.H.A., Feeney-Bennett Post No.
128 Junior Ullit. and is a nine-year
member of the Alfred Uvestock 4HOub.

HARDWORKING LOW PRICIB

i

save as much as 30'.
'

WITH COUPON

1

5LB. BAG
•PLAIN •SELF RISING

Hudson·
Cream Flour

L-----------------~-----------~

.EASTMAN'S

BIG BEND

ODLA

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Labor
Department
today
announced regulations, effective
Aug. .5, implementing,a new lliw
that provide&amp; about 40 percent of
American workers .with unpaid
leave for family amcqencle.l.
· President Clinton signed the
Falilily and Madical· Leave Act of
1993 011 Feb. .5, 16 days after Ilk·
ing office. Former Prelident Bush
lwice vetoed limlllr mouurea.
The law provldea for up to 12 ,
weeb of ••id leave Cor w11bn
to care for newborn or adoftod
children within 12 months o tbe
birth or edoptlon, to cope wilb ICI'ious lllneu of family me111ben or
for thole employDCI wboae bellth
condldon 1*0•'01111 them l'rom pill'·
flllllliD&amp; lhelr .lobi.
The Labor Deputment issoed
the 94 pages of resuladons after

¢
...

~

••You'D Notice fta Savlags!
W. Ra aan. lte Righi to Limit Ouan.... • Prlc• E"-cttve Tllru ht., June 5, 11111 • UIDA Food ltM!pil and W1C
Coupone Ace aplltd ~Not Reeponelblelor ~llPhllllll or PlatorW Erron.

,.

RKING

PRICfS
-···-_,..

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"We'll be here one day lon(!er
than the operators," he sat d.
''Whatever it takes.''

.

Ward said about five miners had
been picketin~ since midnight at
each of the Ohw locations. He said
they would remain until the strike
ended

0

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CONSOL Vice President
Thomas Hoffmann, a spokesman
for the Bituminous Coal OperatOrs
Association's negotiating commit·
tee, criticized the .expansion late
Wednesday.
"Instead of workin$ to create
the opportunities for JObs in the
future, the union seems intent on
working overtime 10 ~ the
job base its membershtp already
has," Hoffman said.

CONSOL.
The union and coal operators
have been trying since November
to reach aareement on a new contract. covering 60,000 miners in
Ohio, Pennsylvania, West Virginia,
KenlUCky. Dlinois and Indiana: • '
The union has accused the operators of evading a provision of die
expired contract that guaranteed @
percent of new jobs at mines
owned by BCOA memben would
be offered 10 UMW millen.
"Peabody iS ~Bing profi1S ICDCI·
a,ted by Ollr ina:eascd produetivjty
to open new mmes and to create
new jobs that they refuae 10 give to
our members ... who are responsible for the prosperity of the coal
industry." said union Presidenr
Richard Thunta.
. The operators say the ~mt
d.•ll: n~t apply to non-umon subSidiari~s and that they must compete With low-cost non-union alill
overseas producers.

House OKs milk pricing bill

0

JENNIFER FINK
DELEGATE, MUS

ERIN HARPER
DELEGATE, MHS

Penny L. Aeiker is the daughter of Ron and Linda Eastman,
of Pat and Cindy Aeiker, Pom:f). Chester. She is active in 4-H, Teen
She is activo in vanity volley , Institute, student council, basket·
basketball and softball. She is a · ·ball, softball and track. She is a
member of if!e 'Varsity "E" Club. member of the Varsity "E" Club
summec softball. She IS a member and was a recent member of the
oftheQueenBce's4-HCiub.
Meigs County Fair Queen's Coun.
Jaime Willlon is the daughter of She was a Miss Columbus CandiBeryl and L.ioda Wilson Jr.. date and a candidate for Middleport
ReedsVille. st1e is lldive with Bill· Fesllval Queen.
dent council, NllliOIIII Honor Soci·
Wendy Rach is the daughter of
ety, volleybull, b!lkelball, softball, Jerry and Sheila Rach, Rcedsville.
Varsity "E" Club, Teen Institute, . She is active in volleyball, tuck,
Who's Who. She mjoys water and prom comiuee, Governor's Schol·
snow skiing and alhleucs.
ars Rrogram, yearbook staff and
N~ K. Easunan is 1111? daughter
• Continued on page 3

Regu(ations implementing family
leave law to take effect Aug..s

E-GET ONE :I
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Girls State
delegates,
alternates
named

save as much as 70"

•

as necessary.

No one answered the telepholie

this moming at the Ohio officea of

~.

.

Boneless Chuck Roast

NorJhem Panhandle of West Virgiriia.
Ward said the walkout would
continue to expand until coal operators a~ to give workers job
security. He said union me~ bers
were prepared to strike for as long

By JIM FREEMAN
Commissioner Manning Roush trial of William D. Li~M~ters u.
Sentinel Ne'll'l Staff
~aid i~stallation should begin
Com~lssioncn ~ier Plssed;JI
Residents and employees of the !ID111~tely. W~ are .c~ntly resolutton requmng county
Meigs County Infirmary face a !nstalh~g addlt!onal wmng for employ~ to ~ lime off in lieu
cooler-than-normal forecast this m~. he~·
. .
of recetvmg overume pay. Howevsumnrer clue to tho ·~ County ,. · 1bifleen people cwreotly live m '.· er, it WIS. pointed outthanho·C9IIIt
Boanf·of!·Commisaioners put'chiliil thtdl'fllnn.Y, he lllid. 1 '"···- · 4 ' can1101 alford 10o 1J11ft1 T)lioir»o
of air condltioaers for the bui1cWJ1
, Contract approved
. Drummer for the 82 bOUr period. · ~
• The' ~ori;dUrihg ii!J reg'rile commissi~n signed Into a
· · • · . otlier lidJan
, . •·
u1ar meeting Wednesday, accepted · new ~yoar pubUc defenders conIn other action, commissioners:
three quotes from local suppliers to ~1, e~liye July .1. for represen·
- Appointed Linda Dye: as
secure 18 window units and one tallon of mdigent clients.
deputy dog warden 10 serve only in
outside unit. Individuali'OOiils will
The contract call.s for the. county the absence of the regular dog waf.
be cooled by the window units to pay $9,143.25 IQ four mstal!- . den.
.
··
·while the outside unit will cool the ments which will be ~lit between
- Met with Rick Hagerty a
kiu:hen and dining room commis- . public defenders William Safranek Columbia Township owner, 10 Jm.
sioners said.
'
and Steve Story, the commission cuss Hagerty's )!llliXI8ed selling of ·
Thirteen upstairs window air said.
lots off Old State ll.oute 346 IIC3l.
conditioners were purchased for
Acting upon the recommend&amp;- U.S. 32. Commissioners said they
$7,076 from Anderson Furniture lion of Common Pleas Judge Fred approvedoftheJI!Ojecl.
and Appliance in Pomeroy while W. Crow Ill, the commission unan- Tabled btds for the sale of
five additional window uruts were imously approved pl!ying Bailiff property seized in drug forfei-s
·. purchased from Anderson's for Teresa Tyson-Drummer 82 hours and currently owned by the com$2,700 1p cool downstairs rooms. overtime at 1.5 times the regular mission.
the outside unit was pun;llased for rate.
Attendi11g were Commission
$6,000 from Warner Heating and
Tyson-Drummer accumulated Plesident,Roben Hanenbach Viii:'
Cooling in Chester.
the overtime during the ,murder President Janet Howard, Ro~sh and
Clerk Mary Hobstetter.

ToNYA TJiORNTON
,;DELEGATE, MRS'

TENDERBEST USDA CHOICE BEEF

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
-The United Mine Workers today
targeted nine mines and a pre~­
tion plant owned by the nauon's
two largest coal companies in
. orderin~ about 3,000 union members to JOin a 3-week-old strike.
· The walkout now includes 9,200
miners in Illinois, Indiana. Ohio:
Pennsylvania and West Virginia.
The third expansion of the strike
that began May 10 involved two
Peabody Holding Co. Inc. mines in
Indiana, two in West Virginia and
one in illinois, two CONSOL Inc.
mines in Illinois, one each in West
Virginia and Ohio, and a CONSOL
coal preparation plant in Ohio.
The iwo CONSOL operations
targeted in Ohio were Mahoning
Valle,Y mine No.36 and the Georgetown Preparation 'Plant, both
owned by CONSOL and in Harrison County in eastern Ohio.
Larry Ward, president of District 6, said today that about 90
union members were employed at
the Ohio operations. The district
represents miners in Ohio and the

Commissioners OK purchase :=
of infirmary air conditioners

-Beans

HARDWO

2 Sectlona. 12 hgee 25 cenla
A Multlmdalnc...........

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohlo,Thura$y, June 3,1993

MaxweU
·House

.

In 70..

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Low IODJabt Ill 511. Part17 _.

cloudy. FrldaJ, rala llbiJ, llllll ·

seeking public comment on Mirth
I 0 ori ·how to implement tbe new
law, the firsl major social Jelri•la·
tion of the ClinuJn ~.
The regulali0111 require companica thai employ It Ieist SO wort.
era within a 7.5-adlo radiul 10 provide ll..,md leave 11 the omp1oyeea
have wcrkcd for atlalst 12 IIICIIIha
and for at lwt 1~ houn during
the year JJRCCdina lhe 1ta1t of the
leave, or ibout 2Sllowa a week.
The regulations also aay that
under certain COIIdiliona and' at
either '!:c::loyea 01 employer
OJIIillu,
paid leave IUCb u
vacations can be substituted for

wotters conditions," according to
the regulations. "It must involve
the ~e or substanlially similar
duties and responsibilities and must
entail sublll®anr. oqui~ skiD,
effllfl, responlibtlity and authority."
The regulalions also
the
employee to be reato;:r: the
same wort sile and the .ue shift
or schedule:
Although tho law provide&amp; for
no compensation for the leave,
includin&amp; unemployment benefits,
II does require employeq 10 COIJiin.
ue payinallDilth care premiums.
But If an employee doea not
~leave.
reiUnl 10 wodt . . die leave Jllri·
At tbe end of tbe leave. the law od, tho employer hal the rlaflt Ia
JUir8Dteel emp,!!g..ee• their old mOlt 10 recover tbc c:ost of
providing maclical beoafil8 during
,iolll, or "Ill oqu11
t IJQiition."
"An equivalent polit1011 must . the abaeilee.
have the same pa,., benefits and

'

=ft

in the proposed $30.9 billion state
budget bill. The bill now goes to a
conference committee to reconcile
differences. House F'mance Chair·
man Patrick Sweeney, D-Cleveland, said the panel would begin
work this afternoon.
-Approved 96-0 ·a Senate bill
that would allow persons accused
of sexual offenses against the
elderly or disabled to be charged

with felonies instead of misde- •
meanors. The bill now goes back to
the Senate for consideration of
House changes•
The House approved a milk
pricing bill last year that made it
out of the Senate Agriculture Committee but did not reach the full:
Senate for a vote. ·
. Logan knows he faces anothet;
tough figbt in the Senate..
-

JAMES SMITH

JOIINSPENCD

Smith, Spencer named·
Boys State delegates .. .

~

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Racine American Legion Post
Smith and Spencer will lie·
602 has selected Its deloptel to , senlan at Soudlem Hilb Sc:llooL : "'
rep'esellt the J101t II Bucbye BoYs
Smith Is die 1011 rl.Mr. . . Mn.
State on Saturday at Bowling .C. 1bomal Slllidl.
·
Green Uni\WIIty.
SpeBCOt II 1M - of Mr
J8111C1 Smith and Jolul Speaeer Mrs. Emeat s...,..,
. .
will repreae.ll Poll 602. ThOy Ire
Smilh ltld Spaccar will ba It
co-spoasored by tho post and session at Bueb)O 11C1J1 S• ...
Dravo Sand and Gtavel
June 13•
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COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
dispute over a milk pricing bill that
could affect what consumers pay
bas returned 10 the Senate where a
similarmeasurefailedlastyear.
The House on Wednesday
approved 59-36 a measure 1p J?Cf·
mit the state 10 set minimum pnces
paid by bottlers to dairy farmers for
milk. The bill. now goes to the Sen·ate.
.
Rep. Scan Logan, D-Lisbon,
said the measure was needed to
help farmers who face economic
problems partly as a result of what
he called an inadequate federal
milk pricing system.
He acknowledged that the bill
could lead to a retail price increase.
· "The price could go up at the
store slightly. In theory it should
not go up It all bee•nse we're·deaJ.
lng with the raw milk produced
between the fanner and the processor, 1lut we cannot predict how a
ret8ilt~t is going to react if this measure iS 10 be implemented," Logan
said.
Rep. Iim Buehy, R-Greenville,
and other OJIPOOOIIts said the prognlll would lltifk:ially infllle Ohio
pric:et compnd wilh other IWI!I.
"Whea we control pr1ee1 from
production to C0111U111J1ti01 ••• we're
to create a litiWion that is
ve indeed," Buchy slid.
DireciOl' Fred Dailey rl.lhe Ohio
J:)qwtmcnt of Alriculture llld die ·
price increue for COII8UIDell Would
likely be lnsisnlflcant. "You're
talkin~ about one or two cents a
pllon, ' he llkl. ·
However, Dailey is liPJ)Oied to
the beclaae be 1iOiieft8 it
could place ()!llo proccnon It a
compedliw dilldVIIIIIP, CDCOur·
qlng out-of·lllte boufen to lblp
llielr milt into Olllo.
In other ICiion Wedneldly, the
Houe:
~90-S SCIIIIIte c~Janaea

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~ Jhur'ldtly, Jur11 3, 1193

~ommentary
•

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WASHINGTON (NEA) Only a late shift by Justice Sandra
.
Day O'Connor in a 1989 cate pre. DBVOTBD TO TIIB JN'l'ICRUTII OJ' 1'HE IIEIGB-IIAIIOl'l AREA
served a woman's constitutional
right to terminate a presniiJICY
before lhe fetus becomes viable.
Details behind the Supreme
Coun's
deliberations in Webster
•'
vs.
Reproductive
Health Services
ROBERT L WINGE1T
..
of Missoatri are contained in one of
Pablkber
..
3,000 case fdes kept by lale Justice
Thurgood MarshaU. They are part
MARGARET LEHEW
CBAllLENE HOEFLICH
of some 177,000 dOcuments gaven
Genenl Manager
Controller
· by Mars h aII Io th e L•.brary o f
Congress.
In a controvenial decision, the
U!TI'I!RS OF OPINION are welcome. They abould be leaa lban 300
wmda. All !etten are oubject to editing and mUJI be signed with name,
library has openedd
h the pepers to the
addreu and telephone number. N'D unaipd !ellen will be publillbod. Letbn
public , an t ey present an
1bould be in good taste, addreaing iuue~, oot personalities..
unprecedented look at the inner
workings of the coun. A library
spok~!flan. says it was Marshall's
exphCI~ WISh ,that the pa,pers be
opened unmediately af~ his death.
The Webster-case flle sh'!ws
there was ~e,ver a~y _quesuon
among a ma,JODty of Justices about
w~ethe~ they wou.ld uphold the
Missoun law aUowmg the state to
By WALTER R. MEARS
place various restrictions on
•
AP Specllll Correspoodeat
wom~n seeking abortions .. The
WASHINGTON - In the min01ed haUways of polilical image mak· queSbOil
was whether the majOrity
ing.: the product is in the perceptions, and the work of changin~ them is would use the Websaer case to
not :nst-lree. That is the Jl()lelllial down side in David Gergen s sudden overturn !toe vs. Wade.
'enlistment to return to the White House, Ibis time for a Democrat.
AftQ tours there wilh three Republican presidents, Gergen said his job
as counselor to Bill Clinton is to use lhe talents of the DemOCilllic cam·
paigo to belter advantage, and to develop and communicate a vision of the
ident's obwtives.
'pres"1be menage
,_ here is we are nsmg
• • above polittcs,
. " Clinton said •m
.a)liJOinting Gergen, a friend for nearly 10 years.
· But there's another. less positive menage for the skeptics who com.
plain about lhe way things are done in Washington, and it is that insidezs
prevail,~ and policy ties notwithstanding.
.
That s the Ross Perot argornent about lhe way decisions are made
·i.Oside the Beltway. He feeds the suspicion lhat they're all in it togelh«,
thal the establishment insiders wield power no matter who is elecled to

Marshall's Webster-case file
contains 26 memos, 19 drafts of
.opinions, and - mostiiDazingly
- his vote-tally sheet and band·

111 COurt Sbeet
Pomaoy, Ohio

Clinton gambles that Gergen
won't fail in image-polishing

Robert
./.• "~•"a:gman
·
" 1
written notes. from the justices'
secret decision conference on Apil
·
28 •
According to Marshall's hand·
written rall)' sheet, five jn!!llcea _
Chief Jusuce Rehnqulst,Justices
Byron White, Anton in Scalia,
Anth~ny
Kenned and O'Coan!Jr
aU favcnd
· the Missoatri
law.
listlld · self, Harry
Blackmon - who wrote Roe and WiJii8111 Blennln IS wanting to
strike down the Missouri law. It
appetr~ John Paul Stevens was
UI1SIIfC, and may not have votfld.
· The Webster-case notes and
early-declsioot drafts are fuU of aur·
prises. One is that, accordins to
ManhaU, Rehnquilt seems not to
have wanted to 11111 the case to aim·
plY strike down Roe. Manhall says
10 his notes "CJ: disagrees with
Jloe .vs. Wade ... not ovemale as
such. ••
What Rehnquist a~parently
wanted to do was stralte down

Roe's three·lrimester framework.
In his Roe opinion, Blackmun
divided p:anancy into three
trimesten,
pve 1ta1e8 greater
riJII!ts to n:gulate or fol'bid abortion
in the later trimesten. Rehnquist
would have established a new test
for the constitutionality or a state
anti-abortion law - if it "reason·
ably furthers the staul 1s in~C~at in
. protecting ~tial huinan life."
IlehnqU18t's opinion seems COR•
tradictorY. Ai one poinl he says·of
Roe, "We leave it undisturbed,"
but he concludes bf saying, "To
.the extent indicated m oor opinion,
wuce::t,.nifClly
C:~!!arrow Roe and
8 ,_.__
While
says Rehn~~
- not in favor or simply s · ·
doWD Roe. those in the minority
perceived it IS such. S~ wrote
a stinging memo to Rohnquist:
"Because lhe test really rejects
Roe vs. Wade in its entirety, I
would think that it would be much
bell« for the Court. IS an inatitu- ·
don, to do so forthrightly rather
than indirectly with a bombshell
flflt introduced at the end of its
opinion ... if lhe deed is 10 be done.
I would rather see the Coun give
the case a decent buria(instead of

•

toning It outlhe window of a fast·
moving cabOose."
Kennody llld While silned IIIlO
the Relmquist opinion in
and it
went through 10111e minor changes
in two IUCCCCding drafts. On June
21, Blackmon circulated the first
draft of his blistering diuenL ·
It besan ~'Roe .no longer survives " and continued "Toda a
. bare majority of this 'court ~·­
ierves the ~le of this Nation, !
and especaally tbe millions of : .
women who have lived and come : · :
of age in the 16 yean since the ·
decision in Roe vs. Wade was :
delivered. ... I rue diis day. I rue the :
violence that has been done to the . .
libeny and equality of women. I :
rue the violence that bai been done :
to our legal fabric and to the ·
inteP,IY of this Coun. I rue the ' · ·
iJievalable lou of public esteem for • -. .
this Court that is ao e.mD'ial. I dis· ·
sent...

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whr

my handbags over the years,
include:
.
Wallels, COIIIbs, umbrellas, tick·
ets. &amp;J•ua. sunaJ•••a, ball caps,

desisned by men, who doli't give a

whoopee about an~ in that bag
that thele 11 pleDty of room
in case be ever needl something
toted.
The perfect handbag would have
lots of various-sized COIIIpllrllllents
with a bottom narrow enough to
allow you to pass
alons a
miu oil, sun visors, binoculan, IUD· crowded sup&amp;uldltet · withOut
tan lotion, swim trunks, socks, hooking fellow S~opper's cart
thongs, insect repellent, after· and spinning It completely around.
shave, portable radios, towels, (I had an unfortnnllte incident with
Band-Aids, silverware, sandwich· a tumstiie this year at a •lwli&lt;etball
es, chipt, c~thennoses of coffee game and racked up (00 extra
andjanof
.
.
attendees before they cWuld extri·
But I don 'I mind carrying 1 few cate me and my purse.)
things in my pqne for a man ·once
In ftlality,lhe averase American
in a while so he can continue to
is just one - · fat cavity
believe be doesn't have enough handbag
with
one
amaU zip~red pocket
. to
t
.
sewn in the inner Ianing. Everyrn::~if.1be =~a:: thing me carries is duown into this
that he would haul all bia stuff black hole, the~ to 118y until the
everywhere in a dirty pillowcase or bag is upended and the entim cona Hefty bag, and that would ember· tents dumDed out or you break 1
raas me.
fingernail trying to find what
I just wish handba&amp; manufactur- you're looking for, whichever
ers would design the thins• with comes first.
•
some forethousht about what the
This makes about as much.sense
bag is to be used for and ease of as designing a fishing llckle box.
finding items stored in them. My with no compartments and just
suspicion is that all purses are
e~

Sarah Overstreet

tr:!t

a

l

throwing aU the taekle down into iL
"Hang on a minule, Fred, I thinlc
I've just about put my finger on the
lure you need ... Ylllllliiiiiil
Dadgummit, I've put the dem thing
IN my finger.... " _
When I 111!1 elected president, I
wiU work IOW8rd the formation of a
National Handbag Committee.
Womeil from aU over America will
travel to Senate bearinss and tell
their horrifying tales of being' llpUII
around in supermartet
hung
up in turnstiles and having one
shoulder lower than lhe odaer from
carrying their husbands • softball

.wes.

------Weather _ _ _...;...._
~

Enterprlae Awdatloa.

.

; ':. Tonight, mostly cloudy with a
: chance of showers. Low SS-60.
• Chance of rain 40 percent, Friday,
: showers and thunderstorms like!~.
~ mainly in the afternoon. High m
: the mill·70s. Chance of rain liO per·
• cenL
•

•

'

~-----Area

•

.

\AI\&amp;.\..
~~\C f'ott
t(t£1)\CA\...
C.OVEfl~E.

a

rt

deaths· __....,.__
Donild 0. Hartung

:.Cletus ADen

:'-" Cletus W. Allcn, 72, d CoJum.
':bUs died Monday, May 31, 1993 at
~ tile VeleiUIS Administnltion Hospi·

·&gt;

~

&gt;·

tal in Daf!oo..
Bom m the Keno community of
• Meigs County, lle was the son of
ihe late M. H. (Todd) and Norma

:

·.
· ·
· ··
·· '
·· · ·
• ·
.·
·

····
.
.
· :
·.

Allen.
. Besides his parents, he was pre·
ceded in death by his wife, May-

jJeUe. He is survived by two sons,
Ores of Cleveland and Bruce of
Columbus , il daughter, Sherry
Lyons of North Carolina; six
grandchildren, one brother. Clayton
' Allen of (:besrer, one nephew. and
• -several·cousins.
Funeral services will be held in
Columbus at the Novak Thurston
Puneral Home on High Street at 10
L'm, Priday. Friends may call II the
funeral home from 6 to 9 p.m.
Thunday. Burial will be in Union
Cemetery, Colombus.
·

.EMS responds
;, to . seven calls

· ·
' '

:

Units of the Meigs County
Medical Service
- responded to seven Cans for aisis: Wac:e overnight. Units .esponding
~-Rmergency

;'Were:

•. '
·;
.'
;

·:
· ·

. .
·
·
;
.·

_·

.·.
..:
·. ·
_ ..
· ,· ·

.

,•

. ''

'

•

Exteaded lorecalt:
Saturday tlaroqil Moaday:
A chance of showers Salunlay.
Lows 50-60. Highs in mid-60s to
lciw 70s. Fair Sunday and Monday.
Low on Sundar in upper 40s to .
mid-SOs. Highs m the low and mid·
70s. Lows on' ~011day in the SOs.
Highs in tho.80s. .

~·· Sou..,·Cealral Obio

~L
. .~blljl designers will have to

follow strict codes developed by
the National Safety Council IDd the
International Un1011 of Operating
Bngineers, men will be required to
carry their own hand= and
IICCCSSI'bility laws wiD m
thai
aU public res11001ns have handbag
boob. Violat«s wiD be ~entenceil
to carry Zsa Zsa Gabor's bucket
bag falled with bricks up the . .
of the Scan Tower.
Sarall Oventreet ~ a IJDdl·
cated writer for Newapaper

..'

W. VA.

.

• . WEDNESDAY - 7:S9 a.m.
: Middleport to Wagner Lane for
.: Bonnie Mcl'hmon who was trillS: ported to Holzer Medic:al Center;
: 11:59 Lm. Tuppers Plains to Rice
• Road for Ella Mae BailOn who was
: IQnsported to S~ Joseph's H~·
, lit; J:Oil
o. 1m. Middleport to Guid·
: fng Han .School in Cheshire to
• assist Oallia County EMS. GaUia
: li.MS ·transported Roser Taylor
~ who was laler transported to OSU
- a:ospital in Columbus via Life~t; 3:12p.m. Syncusc to ~le
:'Orove- Dorcas Road for Fredrick
: Sisson who was transported to
: HMC; S:32 p.m. Pomeroy to
• Pomeroy Police Department for
a o11n Blankenship who wu trilla·
: pOrted to Veterans MeniOiial Hos·
: ...its!; 6:30 p.m. Middleport and
• J19meroy volunteer fire depart·
: meDII North Front Slreet In Mid: f~rt for a structure rare at the
'
Haw~ residence; ll: 42 l'.m.
: T~n alna to Ohio 124 for
Davad Barber who was treated 11
:' tile
scene.
. . . - - - - - - - -.;:
--.;.;·-·;·;.;··;;;;

The .Daily Seatinel

larly concerned what the caustic
Marshall might bave had to say
about them in his private mllli!Jgs.
That's the main reuon for lhe fuis.

the Mar1haii papell, thus implying
· 3. Of all the government inltitu·
that joumalisii were hardly serious dons that come immediately to
researchers.
mind - including the CIA - 11011e ...
The Marshall family attorney. could beudit more from a sporadic •
former Transportation Secretary · ~of publicity than the Supmne ; : .
WUilam Coleman, allowod thai tho
'
r
The nine justices IRI cloisteted -" :
release of the papers was "the
_ _..:..._ _.:_ ___::...__ __
wont lhinll I have seen happen in a in that buildin~ with no contact · ·
A fCC!IP for th!&gt;5C who haven't long time In Ibis town." COlumnist with the real world. Theirchamben :
been paymg aaenllOII:
Carl Rowan declared that the 11e off limits. 1bey pve few inter· ··
WheiJ he~ in 1991, Justice Library of Consros..s· had viows. One Er'ustico, Clarence ··
Thursool\ Marshall donated his "betra~ed" Marshall "in an Tl)omas, even
of readins no - :
papen to the Library of Congreu UIICODICionable way. ••
newspapers an watchinl no · ~ :
with the undlntandina they would
broadcast news. The coan does · ·
be made public lft.er.liia deldl. He b e = which three points beg to havo i "public Information
'
died lut Jan. 24, and lhe library
1. Lilnriln of ConDesa J110es office," bot u il a fllee. It doellll· . :·
subsequently relul"' his papen- BiJiintton, God bleu blin, dclaves tie bot dillribulo lepi JliPCitl to the . . •
some of which concom caaea I Flni Ameadment aWIId of 101110 ...... P&amp;IOIIII que~tionl about the
:
decided u recently u' two yean sort for his ......., clef- of the JUIIicelllelltricdy •cdJolea.
.
'
ago. No one paid mach IUmtion public'• right oflllCell to the Mar· I liD not 10 tbict-bn1ed u to · · :
unlil Tho WulllnJIOIII'Uit allrted IW 1111*1·
so..that SUJ111111C Court doiib- · · :
wrilinJ lbout them on May 23.
2. NOthing Ul tumod up that il eritlona be coDclucted Ia public. · · ·
Prom the J"eiCtion, you'd thinlc embarrulinj to ~ybody. Indeed, But I do tblnt suniitht II a IIIIUnl :. : :
the ADocaiYtlle wu upon us. alief Pulitzer Pr!Zo-wlnnlna tiiolriDher diainfeccant thai aome1&gt;ow ~ . :
Manhait.
Jllllkil
IldiDquill, a llllist David Oanvw wrote In .tbiVIIIh· humility u well. An occasional . · •
That's not the explanation you at bell and maybe even a crypfD- iDStOD Post that tho Marahall dose of it II a '-~thy Ullc.
." ::
hear from the poob·&amp;aha involved oliaarcb, ~ecnsed tbe Ubnry or pepen "repeMedly allow the Coon .
JOiePII Sptar II a ~lcated " . I
in the fracas, of coarse. The'- "blid .Jncl&amp;me'l'" IDd da t llid to in a most 11Crio01 and committed wrllet lor Newlpaper
p; lw
I
intone learnedly about the court 1 tate lila Jilpln fire-11n. Former .....
......~ "
AIIOCialloL
. I'
uad.ition of secrecy 111d need for Chief Julllee w- a..... who
'.
detachmenL.
once cutiaatecl Tho Now York
Oh, hone petooty. The j111lices Timea for not teturnln• lbe fee·
'J'hau&amp;bt for Todiy: "Tho lil&amp;lal-that can be conveyed in a Jlanco, In 1 . I
of the Supreme Court IRIIS bUIIIIII tqlll ......... IS llllleD lb•lellll,
as the ~at of 111, and they don't .el- hUft'lly pOinted out thlt only IIIOIIIo pioUI llllile, In a wave of the hand, II often the ne Diu liltra of 'lrt. · .. : :
Whit Insult II 10 ben or 10 keenly fell, u lbe polile lilsuit whlcb it il
'
ish the proapect of looldntlike enaased In "serious releirch"
impoaible
to.-nt'l"
-Julia
ICavanagh,lrilh
novelllt
(1824-1877).
•
damn fools. And they are particu· were supposed to have acura to

Joseph s.near

Donald 0 . "Tub" Hanung, 63,
of Norton died Monday, May 31,
1993, as a result of a motorcycle
accident in Tuppers Plains.
Born June ·g, 1929, in Chester,
he was the son of Verneda Tuuie
Hartung of Chester and the late
Earl Hartung.
He was a truelc driver at Spartan
Enterprises in Barberton, a member
of the F.O.P.A. LOOge
and the
Bar'uaiOia Civitan Club.
He is survived by his wife,
Phoebe M. Hartung of Norton;
sons, Donald A. Hallung of Norton
and Donald Hai1uns of Alabama;
daughters, Fern Louise Large of
Ohio and R.OBemary Longwell of
Texas; stepdaughter and son-inlaw, ;Jeff and· Victoria Patton of
Mansfield; a stepiOII, Charles Todd
Belchet of Akron, and 11 grand·
children. .
Other siltioivors include' a sister,
Vena Martinko of Chester; sister
.and brother-in-law, Jack and NIIICy
Hoffman of Mansfield; brothers
and sisters, in-law, Charles and
Phyliss Hartung of Norton,' Daniel
and Sandy Hartung and Raymond
and Bettr Hartung, aU of Akron;
brotbers-m-law. Kenneth llld Ore·
.~ Clark, bodl of Akron; mother· '
IR·law, Jllelnor I OSsdan of Barber·
ton, and many nieces, nephews,
CO!IIina, aunts, uncles and friends.
He was Jli1!C*Ied in death by a
daughter, Delllnh Am Hartung; a
si!ler and brother·in·law, Irene and
Tom McGI'IIIa, and his father-in·
law, OmerC. •Sben:y. ·
Services wi,ll be held 1 p.m. Friday at the Campfield·Hickman
Funeral Home, -566 W. Park Ave.,
Barbe,l'lon; wiJh 'Pastor Edward
Bartter officialing. Burial wiD follow at Greenlawn Cemetery in

*6

•

Shedding light on Marshall's papers
One of the ironies of life in
America is that our open sovem·
ment is so fraught with people who
lhink it should not he.
From capital city to county seat,
we are led by politicians and
bossed by bureaucrats who thinlc
we should know little of the wortings of government So they huddle
behind closed doors and sfued and
classify documenll !&gt;)' the mUilona.
Why'l Do they think we - too
stupid to compehend the subtleties
of sovernance? Do they truly
wony that some roe will learn oor
secrets and jeoswdize the national
security? 6r do they fret mostly
over their own persocaal and politi·
cal security?
Skeptic that I am, I say it's the
Iauer. And nothing coulcl be more
illustrative of it than the current
broahalla over the papen of tho late
Supreme Court Juatice Thurgood

II'ID.

.

·-r "l (]

'

r----r--.;' .. .. ..
IMans1ie~c~l no I•

• IColumbusi7:JO J,

The disaent apparently changed ': .
·o•connor's mind. Two clays later
sbe released a draft of her own concurring opinion, ~g to llrike ·
down the Missouri law. but not to
overturn Roe's trimester frame·
work. ReluacJui! had lost his fifth
vote to .ewnre Roe. Hfl IIIIIOIDICed ·
• delay in the ending of the court's ·
tenn, and he rewrole his decision •
for a fifth time, eliminating any · .
broad constitutional implicationl. . .
Blackmun also rewrote his dissent chanlini "Roe no 1oqer survives·~ to-"Por today, at ieut, the
law of abortion standi undll·

On July 3. the court IIUIOIDICCd
its decisaon in Webster. Rehn·
quilt' a opinion now represented
himself, Kennedy and White.
O'Connor's concurring opipion
was Joined by Stevena. Justice
Scaha wrote an opinion saying
simply that Roe should he lllruCk
down. Blackmun '1 dissent was
joined by Brennan and Mlnhall.
America never knew bow cloae
~ had come to being dlslllantled.
Pending any change in their sla·
tus. Justice Thursood Marshall's
papers are available In the Ubnry
of Con~· Manuscript Reading
Room an the Madison Building.
Access is currently limited to the
press, Til r ithers llld scholan who
have given a description of theii
research inleJesl.
Robert Wapaan llaiJlldlcat·
eel writer for .Newspaper Enter·
prise A~tlan.

.. .... ,

1hl Dally Sentinel Page 3

By Tile Associated Press
a.m.
the 60s -in the Northeast, the Great Wednesday included an inch at
Ohio is in store for couple more
Arolllld tile natioa
· Lakes and New England. Utah, Orlando, Fla.
days of cloudy weather before the
Cool, cloudy weather continued Montana and South Dakota, and
Record highs were let We&amp;les·
sun breaks out and warmer temper· for anolher day IICIQIS most of the pariS of North Dakota, Nebraska day 81 Del Rio, Texu, with 105,
atnres return.
nonhem United Stalel, while typi~ and Iowa, expected highs only in breaking the old recard for the date
A stalled frontal system will caUy clear, ·warm spring weather the 40s and 50s.
of 102 set in 1960; Midland·
produce scattered showers and prevailed again toclay IOUih of the
Highs in the 70s and 80s were ()tem, Texas, at lOl, COIIIj)iled to
thunderstorms through Saturday, Masoii-Dixon line.
expected from California across to 100 in 1977; and Wichita Falls,
the National Weather Service said. ·
CollidinJ air masses spelled New Jersey and down to the Car· T-. breaking the 1971 recan1 of
Tempenuores will hold in the 60s unsettled WCilber fnxn the nonhem olinai, in the 90s across the desert 100 by 3 degrees.
.
and 7(8,
Rockies into the lowor Ohio VII- Southwest, most of Texas and the
Hi&amp;h tetnpera111re for the nation
But the clouds will Slarl moving ley. with thunderstams, heavy rain deep.South, and around 100 in west Wednesday was 107 degrees at ·
out oldie stale on Sunday and by and floodinR. large hail and torna- Texas.
Laredo. Texas.
Monday temperatures will be in lbe does possible. Northen) Colorado,
Hail fell and IOniadoes touched
Men cool weather WliS forecast
80s.
:
eastern Wyoming, Nebraska and down Wednesday across Penver, for the coming few clays and the
The m:ord·hiKh temperature for Kansas were ·in prime position for Colorado and Utah, while thunder· weekend in the Northeast and
this date at the Columbus weather the turbulent weather.
storm winds gusted up to 90 mph nonhein Plains as a new storm svs• sta!ion was 99 degrees in 1895
Scatterel\ rain was forecast for in parts of Flmda.
. lem moved in. Rliin was expected
whtle tbe record low was 41 in much of the rest of the north, from
Heavier rainfall ditring the six to cban.lle to snow in the moun1929. Sunset tonight wiU be 118:55 Washington state to.MIIne.
hours ending at 8 .p.m. EDT
With accornulations of a foot
p.m. and sunrise
at 6:04
Ternperat111re1 were forecast in
the highelt~-

conditions

'''~'~'~--r-'~'.'''

Inside tlte.great American handbag

One of tiie men in my life once
said that if Amelia Earhart had had
my pone with her when ~ went
down on that island, she'd be alive
tol\ay.
.
(Of course. if President Clinton
had been gettins a l;laircut at the
time, she wouldn't hl\ve been
allowed to land. ·But that's another
column.)
·
My present boyfriend keeps his
position pre~isely b~cause be
doesn't menuon the sa~e of my
handbags. He doesn't dare, because he knows if he did he would lose
his purse privileges. My purse is
only MY purse until we go some·
where where HE needs a purse when it becomes OUR purse. But
then, why would he need his own
when he not only has a ready purse
for which he has not spent one
dime, but also a pack mule ,to carry
it for him?
If you ask a man
he doesn't
carry a purse, he wil (a.) laugh
uproariously, then (b.) tell you that
EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears, vlce .presldent and colum· a man doesn't need a purse because
nlst for Tile Associated Press, has reported on Washington and men, unlike women, don't need to
carry a lot of posse8sions. Some of •
n~tioaal politics for more than 30 years.
·
lhese J)ossessioos they do not need,
which I have carried for them in

aerry's World

•••
•••
••

turbed.''

targe15

a
. dm •

Accu·W~foJeCUtfQr

•

Ohio

Warmer weather forecast for weekend

Frlday,Jtme4
MICH.

gov,;:inBeltway
crowd imd the brain-dead politics of Washington were
Clinton's own campaign for chanee. Clinton ran as the outsidel;
'tfle new look at the White House doesn't q,wte fit that mold.
'• "I just think it's time we get beyonl\ some of these games that we play
in Ibis town," Gergen said in a CNN interview. "The people in this coon. are sick of it."
·
try He was talking about par!isan infignting. When Perot says much lhe
·pme thing, it is about the Wasltingtpn establishlllent although he too ~
'dose enough to Gergen to have tried 'to !lire him'for a top job in the 1992
-• auet to lhe . wstr;ltton, as he did a
·.campaign.
Gergen may weu prove· a """
dozen years ago in selling the Reaganomics program Clinton denounces
and seeks to undo with his economic plan.
·
Indeed, Clinton hardly can afford to let it be othezwise. In Oezgen, the
president has hired a Republican media celebrity for a publicly announced
effort to change his image. Saying that makes it mae diffiCult to do. And '
to have it end badly would be a political disaster. .
·
"I have been very concerned that the cumulative effect of s6me of the
things which are now very much in the news has given to the administra·
.tioila tinge thal is too partiaan and nOt coonected to the mainslream, prochange, future-oriented politics and policies that I fl!ll for president to
implanent,'' Clinton said Satunlay as he announce!~ Gergen's new role. •
, That roundabout sentence suggests that he hasn't changed, just that
impressions of him have. But Clinton signed off on the strategy that
sought to push his economic proposals though Congress on IJ8I!r lines,
with. Democratic voteS - the course lhat undid his jobs spendmg bill
when Senate Republicans blocked iL
Clinton emphasiw! issues and agreed to appointments that seemed to
his centrist Democmtic allies - and to Gergen the commentator - a
lun:h to the left.
•
In the process, some campaign pledges have faded or have been
reversed.
In politics as in big league baseball, lhe instinct is to change managers.
That's not enough to end a losing streak unless the players deliver. With
his campaign foundering. President George Bush summoned his old man·
ager Jim Baker, back to the White House. But what change there was was
neither scion enough nor convincing enough to tum the coune of a losing
campaign.
·
.
Geraen said he believes Clinton wants to be more of a centrJSt than he
has seemed. "No one individual'is ~oing tri ... save Ibis presidency," he
said in an ABC interview Sunday. 'The presidency doesn't need to be
ved.''
sa What it does need, he said in the CNN interview, is to "develop and
communiclle a vision of where this president waniS to go ... so the people
lalow when: he wants to go and are willing to march behind him."
While mol\erate and conservative Democrats praised the Gergen
appointmatt. Sen. Bob Dole, the RCJ!Ublican leader, said on ABC that "it
may be more PR than anything else. '
And that, Dole argued, isn't the real problem.
"It's not lhe messenger, it's the message."

:

••

The Marshall papers

The Daily Sentinel

Pag1 2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomlf'Oy-Middleport, Ohio
Thur~day, June 3, 1993
·

'

~omeroy-Middleport,

!!L

••
• OHIO Weather
••

.

Akron.

. Friends ma)! call Thursday from
7to9p.m.
.
.

Hospital news

VETERANS MEMOIUAL
d
d . •
Wednes af a m11saons None.
. ·
Wednesday~- None.
HOI ZER MEDICAL CENTER
June 1 dlaclailraea ..... Amy
McNerlin, Verla Gray, Brittany
· Patterson, Ern* Cooper, Bury!
Whoite, Mary Morrison, Stacey
MeSSI!t, Clarice Erwin, Auvil
Mitchell, Sarah Marr, Harold
Payne, ~colas W,ooldri~ Dustin
Reynolda, Joshua Wilson and
Cindy Zion.
If•

· · Stocks
Am Ele Power....................3S.t/2
AllllaOO 00.........................26 1/2
ATATo...............................61 S/8

a.t ()nc...........................53 314
BobEv.w ......................... 171/l
CbanaiJr&amp; Sltop.....:'............ l6 718
Clamp_~ ................ I4
Cly ~ ••.•.••• ~........ _.,25
~

Moaul. .........._.......21 5111

Oood,... na................... tl/4

I.-llld........._..,~:~ ..........31
J.Jml-.llllc. ...................... 2.4 1/8
Mullirlledia Inc..................36
Poalt Blncclp.......,.t....... .... 14
Ru R•annL-....:1......... .3/16
Je1lw:e Bloclric.••••.. ~·······.21 . 114
~.-;. .......... 17
~··&amp;
19 112
S.Jilllr: """ ' ' ''' " u ooooooon oooo36
W~ l'll'L..... ,....- .. l ........ l41/l
Wca~ *' Ind. ............. ..29 314
lcoela nports are tile 10:30
1

ww.m

. . ....: ,. . . .

I

.... q . .aea prOYlded ' '
Ke•per Senrltlu, lac., iii

Wls ,,

•'

.,

..

KATHY BERNARD
ALTERNATE, EHS

WENDYRACH
ALTERNATE, EHS

MARILYN KIBBLE
ALTERNATE, EllS

AMBER WELL
ALTERNATE, EHS

Girls... Continued rrom page 1
she is a member of the Seiei Kan
Fighting Arll, YWCA.
Kathy Bernard is the daughter of
Jim and Ellie Bernard, Reedsville.
She is a member of the National
Honor Societ,r. Varsity "E" Club
and she is editor of the yearbook.
She attends Vanderhoof Baptist
Church.
Amber Lee Well is the daughter
of Texanna Well, Pomeroy, and the
late Howard Well; She is enrolled
in coUeg~ preparotory classes ani\
the s~ondary enrollment oytion.
program at the University o Rio
Grande. She enjoys sports inclul\ing volleyball and swimming.
Marilyn Kibble is the daughter
of Bill and Mary Kibble, Tuppers

Plains. She is the statistician for
boys • basketball and she is active
with the rearbook staff, concert
band, National Art Honor Society.
She is a volunteer at St. Joseph
Hospital and she is the pianist and
an ·active member of Vanderhoof
Baptist Church in Coolville.
Danielle Joeseue Scott iS the
daughter of Jonathan and Kathryn
A. Scott, Middleport.
Tanya Thornton, Mi4dleport, is
~ daughter .of Elaine Bur100 and
Bill S, Thomton.
Jennifer Danyel Finlc, Middle·
port, is the daughter of Deborah ·
and Rnger Dingey and Danpy F'lllk.
She attends the First Baptist
Church .of Middleport and is

employed at Vaughan's Cardinal.
She is active with band, flag corps,
Spanish Club, pep club and Sllldent
council.
·
Erin Annette Harper ·is the
daughter of Guy William and Car·
roll Ann Harper.
Ann Riffle is the dau.llhter
Charles and Ruth Riffle, Middle·
port. She is enrolled in college
preparatory classes and is active in
the nwching and concert band. She
plans to pursue a career in the
health field after graduation. ·She
was selected for the National all
American Scholars Program. She
enjoys swimming, horseback riding
and music.

ANN RIFFLE
ALTERNATE, .MHS

__ Meigs County announcements- .......--Local Briefs--•
will meet Tuesday at7:30 p.m.
, QuUt lllow planned
Pomeroy man arrested
Mqllbers of the Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority, will present a quilt show
at St. Paul Lutheran Church on
June 12 in conjua\ctiOII wilh Her·
ilag""Weekend.

Booslen to mett
The Meigs Band Boosters will
meet Monday at 7 p.m. at the
Meigs Band Room. All band plir·
ents are urged to allend.
VBSset

Vacation Bible School at Mi.
Union Church, Carpenter Hill
Road, will be 'Monday through
June 11 from 9-11:30 a.m. dail)l.
•

CouncD to meet
Pomeroy Chapter, Bosworih
Council and the order of Malta wiU
meet Wednesday at 7 p.m.

A Pomeroy man was arrested early this morning by Gallipolis
police.
. ·
Jason S. Hy~l. 19, 23 Ann Slftlet, Pomeroy, was arrested on 11
wammt from MeigS CountY for a charge of febOOus auauiL
'

·

Man cited in accident

· Barbecue planaed
The SyraCuse Fire Department
will hold a chicken barbecue Sunday beginning at 11 a.m. Cost is $4
for a half of chicken, baked beans,
macaroni salad and roll. Desserts
will be available.
· Bake sale planned
The Eagles Class of the Asbury
United Melhotlist Cbun:h will. hold
a bake sale at Kroger's on Friday at
9am.
•

Meetins slated
There will be a meeting of the
Meiss County Republican Central
Committee on Tuesday at 7'p.m. at
the Meigs County Courthouse to
'
appoint a committee person for the
WASHINGTON (AP) _ The
Bradbury Precinct in Salisbury .
Township.
nornber of Americans filing fii'St·
time claims ,for jobless benefits
Trustees to meet
rose by 5,000 last week, the govThe Board of Trustees of ernment reported ·today, driftinJ in
a range analysts said suggests little
Columbia Township will meet employment growth.
Monday at 7:30p.m. at the flf'C Sta· . The Labor Department said new
lion.
applications for unemployment
insurance totaled 344,000 last
Enlertaln-nlllet
week, up from a revised 339,000
Star Mill Park will present its the previous week. Claims first
fltSt night of entertllinment for the were thought to have totaled
season on Saturday at 7 p.m. 340,000
during the week ended ·
GrQUps include Out of the Blue and May 22
The Classics. Public invited. Bring
Last ·week's total was the highlawn chairs. Chicken noodles and est since claims totaled 346,000
hOidogs will he served.
during the week ended April 24.
New applications had dipped to
Reunion planned
337,000 during the week ended
The fam~\t ~union of Elbert May 8, but have averaged about
and Della G' 1 wiU be June 13
at noon at lhe Kyger Creek Power 342,000 for the last six weeks.
Plant Club Houle. Bring a coverel\
Fire damages trailer
dish.
.
Cause of a fire at the trailer
VBS announced
home of Rick Hawley located at
Vacation Bible School will be Walnut and Front in Midl\leporL
held 81 Racine First Baptist Church early Wednesday evenins hu not '
Monday throush June 11 from been derermined,
9:3().11:30 a.m. daily for children
MiddieDOrt Assistant F'lf'C Chief
age two throush high school. Kenneth Ifyer reported that the fire
. Everyone welcome.
Slatted in the blthroom about 6:30
p.m. He said inOSt of the clunqe
OES Cllapter to aet
wu due to IIIIOb rather - fire.
The Racino Chapter No. 134, Both
Middleport llld Pomeroy had
Order of the~ Star, will meet firemen and equipment on the
Monday at 7:30p.m.
scene.

An Albany man was cited for driving left of center Tuesday
morning after two vehicles collided in a curve oo County Road I,
the Gallia· Me~s Post of the Sljlte Highway Patrol reported.
Larry B. Willard, 29. was essdlound when he went left of center
and sideswiped a westbound vehicle driven by Sue A. Peck, 40,
Albany. The impact forced Willard's vehicle into a concrete bridge.
No injuries wa-c reponed. Both vehicles sustained light damage
and were driven from the scene.

Editor's note: NIIDes, ag~ and addresses are printed as they
appear 011 otrlclal reports.
·

Jobless clatms
·
sweep announce
·
d
are up 5 000
-----..R zver
-----

Lod&amp;e

to.... .

WaltDIHI(s

FIL·SAt·SUII.

HOMEWARD BOUND'

......e6nl ..........

STARTING FRIDAY

.

-

INDECENT PROPOSAL
MIB IAIIIB B

FIRE IN THE SlY ,.••

SPRING VAllEY CINEMA
446 4524

:. .

7 .Lowest price
oftheyearl
. J.

Athena
'II" SALE PRICE

Racine LAxJ&amp;o No. 461, FolAM,

KANAUGA DRIVE-IN

The Meigs County Litter Con· should be signed and returned to
trol Program is coordinator for lhe liuer control offace by June 10.
M · Coun • parll' ;.,..w, · the
e11s
ty s
c..--.. m
1993 Ohio River Sweep. The event
is scheduled for June 19 from 9 2-3 WEEK DELIVERY!
a.m. to DOOIL
Volunteers will be picking up
trash along the banks of the Ohio
River in Middleport, Pomeroy,
Racine and Reedsville/Long Bot·
tom .-ea. Ownm of campsites and
picnic areas along the river are
~ncouraged to join in the ootstand· ,
mg cleanup evenL
.
All vol~teen who are plann~ng
to take part m the Sweep must sago
a waiver fonn (al\ults &amp;:nd minors).
These ~orms can be packed up at
lhe !"'e,gs &lt;;ounty Luter Control
Offace, Umon Avenue at State
Route 7, near Pomeroy. Forms

R.JOHNS, LID.

• INNQYATM STVUS • VALUE P1100

AUGUST

ttr~.:r.4~~':.

ct.

THE SANDLOT ,.
IHOW Tllolllc

FIIL.ut...._

1110 a 1110

._NO

MONDAY TMIIU THURIDAY
One lnlolll\o
JAIII 'talon 11. • tW •ill

......

CliP

~

POaOY,OIIO

992-2711
Jr. . .

lllnGI••

•
'\

Atlu

•

5 ,..

.

�•

r

June3, 1993

The Dally

NBA Eastern Conference finals,

•

:~

In NL affairs,

.Homers by Batiste, Pratt help
Phils notch S-2·win·over Reds ~i

ing Wednesdliy ni&amp;bt's National Leagne pme in
Cincinnati, wbere tbe Phillies won 5-2. Tbe Reds
got a run ou tbe play. (AP)

BROKEN UP- CiDebmati's Regie Sinders
slides Ia to break up a double-play attempt by
Philadelphia seeoud baseman Kim Batiste dur·

In AL action,

Fifth-inning riot p_ushesNew ·
York to 8-5 win over Cleveland
NEW YORK (AP) - Jimmy
Key got a lot of suppon. and &amp;om
some rather unexpected sources.
Mike Humphreys hit his first
major-league home run to cap a
seven-nin fifth inning and help the
New Yolk Yankees to an 8-5 victory over the Cleveland Indians on
Wednesday night
Key (6-2) gave up eight hits and
five runs, only twO of them earned,
while striking out six 8nd walking
none in 7 2/3 innings to help the
Yankees to their fifth win in six .
games.
"h's really a credit to the
team,". Key said.
.
Humphreys' two-run homer, a
415-foot shot, was only his third hit

of the season in 20 at-bats, and Belle's major-league leading 18th
came after he had struck out his home run and 51st RBI.
rust two at-bBIS Wednesday night
However, despite the late outThe home run followed an RBI burst, the Indians had dug themdouble by Spike Owen, a two-run selves too deep a hole.
single by Kevin Maas and a two"It WI!S a frustrating hole. We
run triple by Gerald Williams.
dug that whole ourselves .with our
"I was happy I hit it. I didn't pitch selection," Indians manager
think it was going out of the ball- Mike Hargrove said
park, but it just kept going and
Matt Young (0-4), seeking his
going,'' Humphreys said.
first major league victory since
"I was watchmg (left fielder) May 120, 1"991, when he defeated
Albert (Belle) and the way he was the Milwaukee Brewers, started the
running, I thought it might have a big inning by allowing a one-out
chance.''
double to Mike Gallego before
As it turned out, Key needed the Owen doubled and Randy Velarde
8-1 cushion when he allowed four walked on a full count.
runs; only one of them earned, in
"I ~ot behind Gallego and he
the Indians' eighth, including
(See AL on Page S)

Scorelloard
B.,...dloririo 5-4) •

·- ·• BasebaD •....:

.... s-~).l~p....

NATIONAL LEAGUE
T-

lutonDIWLPd.CB

~ ...........36 15

•oRon o ooo o o. l S

.106
.549
.510
.510
,SOO

10
10
lO.S

~YOlk ............. II

32 .360

17.5

................21 :13

Odc:o&amp;&lt;&gt;-................25

:14
St. Loail ...............36 2:5
fttb' "'
2:S
................ ..22 30

.~23

I

s.
Fnncilco ··-····"
Atluto ..................30

19
lo4
............ .. ..21 :13
Loa ,\nloleo ......... ..n lo4
CINCI!INATI..-... 2S 21
S•Jlloao ..............21 31
Coloroda ................ IS 31

.641

.5S6
.549
.S29
.47Z
.-404
.213

S
5.5
6.S

SID Pr ' oo 3, Pialdl2
PhH '·ril5,m«::NNATI2
~ . -Sao Oioto 2
St. Loail s. Lo&lt;Anploo.

SCQII Lowia, pildl•.co Vucaav«.
MILWAOKEB BREWERS : Plaeed
Pat l..iatach. lhortltop, m tho 15-4ay cliJ..
a blat lin.

TOI!ilabt'a aarM
Phoath at Soanl.r,. 9 p.m.

NEW YORK YANKEI!S : Rocallod
loll ldu!olll, pitdlor, from Cclumbllo '"

~-=--~
t'6i"- (D.
MllliiMil-S~ 7:!5 P"'·

Division I

Frlday•apIt

(Malh=U-d~).7 :~~

SL Loa1o (A...ha 4·0) 11 CINCIN·
NA11
3-3), 7:35 _p.m.
Ne.w Yc:d: (Taa~m 3-3) 1\ Hou110n
(llunildl 5-:1),1:05 p.m.
Florida (HouJh 2--6) at San Dioao

on-a.

~~.!0:05p.m.

(OioW&gt;o H)" Loo .........

(ll-4-3),10::15 , ....
AalbwJil (Coab 3-2) 11 Sill Prant:iaCO (Bndleyl-3), 10:35 p.m.

AMERICAN LEAGUE
T-

-DIWLN.CI

o-.u. ...................30

lll
22
NowYcllk .............. 30 Z!
BooiGll ..................%7 25
... ........:13 l6
22 3Q

r -.................. 31

s . -...............

CUVI!Lit.ND .......21l 33

,600
.SIS
.566
.S19
A:l3

.m

.5
l..'l
~

6.5
9

uJ

w-.DI.23 .S40

css .................27

I t . - Cdy ...........77 23
OOaao..................l6 :13
_ , _ ................26 'II
r - ....................:zs 26
ML.-a~a ~ .............22 n
()all1aaol ................20

21

.540
.531
.491
.490

..449
A17

j

2.5
2.5

4-'
6

Wedll..,ay•o ec:ona
Baltim
:5, Olki&amp;Dd 2
-6.MU-3

X.UCdy7, ...... 2
a.ioa10 10. Dai&amp; I
N.., y . . I.CIJM!lAND ~
Miaatiaata 6, T - 3

T..-7, Ctlllomlo 6

_

"''--4-l), 7:05 .....
~lilla
C1 tfiS :J-3) ac ltalau

.......
,...•
j

CIIJ ~3-21. 1:35 p.a.

c .....).

c 1 ufMnl• •nvr S· l) a&amp; Dtcni'
(Wollo6-t), 7
CLI!VJ!.
~(II I # 4-4). 7:05 , ....
OUJaM (Wei. . ~·~) at Toroouo

~llB~(S...
-5-2),7:35p.oa.
-

NlllonaiLeipe
COLORADO ROCitiES: Rd.ea1ed
lbyn Smilll, pW:ber.
Purdaued the CCIIItrlct

NoUoul F-M laalll
ORBBN BAY PACltER! : Si&amp;ned
Rory Grave~, afrmaive IUkle.
MIAMI DOLPHINS: Announced the
ftltinrnart ofTJ . 1\untr, n01e tackle.
. NBW ORLEANS SAINTS: Sipod
Dml Brown, NMiDJ back, to a three-

,..,_

PIIILADELPIDA EAGLES: Sionod

Mike Hall«,_...,.._

Hockey
NaU...t Hockey Lao...

BUFFALO SABlES: NIDlod RoDdy
Scoa_fll_aod_,
fLORIDA PANTHERS : ~amed
ltoooo'Noilaoacoacb.
Los ANOI!U!S KINOS: Sionod Miko
O.ul,do(ST, LOUIS BLUES: Sionod lim
Moore....,., Nallloa La(ayeae '"d !an

P"'-

Lapmico. ....... aad apaad to tennt
wilhEewin MWn,r.......J.

Oump;.n.IOp: Sa.....,." 3 p.m.

-

DMIICIII IV

,_1

'f1nlml• Mu1110a S&amp;adJUII, Canto.
PIDpo&gt;rt "-""" (27·3) w. Cin&lt;Wiati

- • State softball • - • tournaments • COLUMBUS, Obio (AP) - Paldop
fot hith achool atate aoftbtll Mllliliaal
toumlma'ltl:

· -...... Allllaod

AUIIin10Wit·Fi~-3) " · Plqoo (22O)at l p.m.
SprinJficld (27· 1)

VI .

Dlvlllon n

--=va.Edlfonlcodh

(l7-6)1l10a.aL

1Jma Balh &lt;2'-01 vw. TallmMtp 01·3)

II

12;30 p.m.

Cbauq IMdrlp: ~J'I110a.IIL

Altros5, Expos 4

Brave~ 5, Padres :Z · ~
Pinch-hitter FI'UICisco Cabrera
singled in the IJO·ahead run :lt~J a
four-run sixth mnin.J. as At\~. ta
defeBICd visiting San Diego. '' .
Ron Oant led Off the inninii-lth
a home run, his 12th, to lie 11 at 2
off Andy Benes (7-4).
· '~
Steve Avery (6-2) pitched'iix
innings, allowing six hits and ·~
runs. Mike Stanton got the fist
three outs for his major leaueleadinJi: 19th save.
-~
Card1Da1115, Doclten 4 ~~
Donovan Osborne (3'-2) pi1Che4
seYen strong innings and G~g
Jefferies hit a two-run ~ ar!:t
Louis cooled off Los 'Angel~at
Busch Stadium.
'
. .
1&gt;oclgers starter Pedro Ast&amp;t!io
(3-4) lasted six innings and gave'bp
four runs and seven hits.
Cory Snyder went 4-for-4lfor
the Dodgers, including a home'rllh.
Pirates 5, Rockies 3 : · "
Orlando Merced doubled liciile
the go-ahead run in the ninth inning
as Pittsburgh bell Cokindo ~~
a crowd ol 50,122 at. Mile H,tJh
Stadium.
'
·!:Merced made a pinch'i !
't
appeatance in the seventh innt
and stayed in the game. With ·_ •
ners on first and diird and one · ~t
in the ninlh, he drove a pitch flOiB
Jeff Parrett (0-2) into the gap for
the go-ahead ru.n. Kevin Yo~g
added a sacrifice fly.
· ;·
Malt Petkovsek ( 1-0) got ~e
win with two-thirds innings. Sljn
Belin&lt;!!£!.tched the ninth for '!\U

Eric An!hony's slow bases-load·
ed grounder was bobbled for an
error l!y fii'St basenum Jolm Vander.
Wal, allowin• the winnini nln to
score in the ninth inning and lifting
Houston over viliting Montreal.
Montreal tied &lt;the score in the
top of the inning on Frank Bolick's
RBI single off Doug Jones. (3-4),
who blew a save for the third time
in 14 chances.
"'
Re~ Mel Rojas fell to 1-4.
team-!

'· ~

· gllth SIVe.

,:~

.

JohnsQn's math education reflect~(!
in philosophy of Irianaging _teanis 1~
'

By TERRY KINNEY
CINCINNATI (AP) - "Ufe is
like a sine curve, kind of peaks and
valleys ,'' said Reds manager
Davey Johnson, who knows more
about mathematics than batting
averages and playing the, percent·
ages.
'
His math degree .from 'J'rinily ·
University in San Antonio entitles
him . to comJ!are life's U,PS and
downs to a sine wave that nsea and
falls from the plane. It also represents his philosophy of managing.
"If you put guys in situations
where they can do well, rest them
properly, you can eliminate some
of the bottom pan of that curve,''
Johnson said Wednesdsy.
Johnson believes in the power
of persuasion; the biggest pan of
managing and coaching is convincinll players they can succeed, he
S81d

· "There's ·still plenly of time to
win here," Johnson said, despite
trailing NL West leader San Francisco by 9 1/2 games.
"In the next two weeks, I
should have most of the answers I
want about this ballclub," he said.
"Give me 30 days. That's like my
spring training."
In an efrort to assess as many
players as possible Wednesday
night, Johnson started Willie
Greene at third base and Jeff Branson at fllSt base. Chris Sabo and
Randy Milligan were out wilh back
problems, Sabo on the 15-day diaabled list with a ruptured disc and
Milligan resting another day aftet
having a spasm Tuesday nighL
"Anytime r.ou have a collision
and your back s so stiff you~ to .
come out of a ballgamc, It doesn't
hurt to have another day off,"
Johnson said ofMilllan.
"If we hadn't had the new guy
(Greene, who was called up from
Indianapolis on Tueiday), I would
have gone with Juan Samuel."
So instead of Branson playing .
third base, he stadcd at fnt for the
fmn time since he played fnt base
for Southern &lt;lloctaw High School
in Silas, Ala.
·
"If you can play infield, you

.~~

can play first base, \• JOhnson said.
Green drove in bbth Cincinnati
runs in a S-2 loss to ~lphia,
homering and hilling into a runscoring fielder's choice.

Bip mllles p-achlatloa: ~~

"Never Aplll."
Bip Roberts had IOIIiCp)ace'~'d
rather have been Wednclday niJht
than at the blllpllt - hia ""'••htet
Jovan's
kindergarten gradual!~~
Wllat does Mltdt think?
"They B!;hedulecl, it '' night' )lo
· Kevin Mitchell, ·~iho's miised a more
parents could atteti"~;''•Jie
dozen games with Vlll'ious ailments said. "How about tbll."
·. ·
had his pwn analogy for a team _ . 'Roberts, whole" famlly 'Diovef to
playing all season without Hal
cineinnati during
.t..bllll - Morris, its regular fii'St baseman, son
but Hves in California the '~
most of the season without itS best of the year, vowed hC )II'Qu14tt '1
stopper, Rob Dibble, and now los- miss Jovan's next big day.
&gt;_..!
ing Sabo, its regular third baseman.
"I'll m11te her. next one, 'ller
"It's like going ilownhill with- sixth """'" graduation, that's''tor
out brakes," .Mitchell said.
sure:"iObens said. "I' U be 35
He's never without a line, but then, and I'll be long gone fiocim
unlilre Johnson, Mitchell doesn't biseball. You're not goilig to'tec
think in sine curves. He's just wait·
me ~g to hang on at 36 ~o
ing for pitchers to start throwing way.'
,.;:.
him strikes again. , ,
Mitchell doesn't feel he's bad
Words ot inlplratlall ,..; ;
11101e than a couple decent pitches
L11ngtime Reds pitcher.and
to hit sinoe being na,med National broadcaster Joe Nuxhall wun'tJ in
~ pJaytz of the week for May
the broadcast booth Wednesday
night, one of his rare llbiealtCI.. ,;.
"I'm swinginf at bad pitches,"
He WIS I ~ IIJI"'Wrf at
Mitchell said. ~ilihey're going Hamilton High School, where~
around my act Wilen was the last was a 15-y--old IChoolboy Mien
time I had a strike CJ)led7"
J:te made his major lcape debutoin
He watched one Wednesday 1944.
f~
night
(See NOTES oa Pqe ~
1•

me

-

oO •

• I

.

SWATMEISTER- Clllcago guard Michael Jordan (23) blocks
tile poillt·bllllk lleld·IOII 1ttempt by New York frontman Charles
Smitb as Bulls front-liners Bill Cartwright and Scottie Pippen and
Knlcks forward Antbony Mailon Oower lel't) move In toward the
basket during Ganie 5 or ..e NBA Eastern Conference finals at New
York's Madisoll Square Garden, where the Bulls woo 9'7-94 to take
a 3·21ead In tbe best-of-seven series. (AP)

"~¥.nen:'CU:gc::~ :~~o:=l'=
Froble enters
fifth triathalon,
led to convincing victories in the
·
·
ras~twogames.
. new di.Vl.SI·on afiter bi•rthday
"We~m going to have to do it

"'(be lead at the end, but Cllarles
"~mith had three tayup .attempts
"Ytjected in the finall2 secoods.
Chicago also got an outstanding
game from Scottie Pippen (28
points, 11 rebounds) and a key

CUYAHOGA FALLS, Ohio 40 miles a week, and her swim"
(AP) - Julie Froble is going to ming at 6:30, getting in at least six
Hawaii, but she wiln't have time to miles a week in the water. The bit~
relax on the beach.
ing comes after work, about 5:30
~ .A
I'
(Co_ntinued frotil Paae 4.).
Froble, of Cuyahoga FaJ!s. has p.m. a co,uPle of times ~ week, and
:li
b ·
entered her fifth Ironman Tnathlon she puts m about 175 miles a week.
just happened to put the good pan throwing puaches· ,
World Ch11mpionships. Any
Froble wasn't an athlete at St
or the bat on the ball. Spike lust
AftW S.almon s home~ cut scenery sbe sees will come while · John's High School in Bellaire.
reached out and one-handed n,'', Toronto'Slead to. 5-3, fans show- she's swimming, running or biking.
"They had no athlelics for
said YIJUllg, who ))as appeared in ered the· ficltt w•th !ed and blue
· Froble has passed up trips to · women at all when I was in high
47 straight sames without a wi!' baseball•.thll were pven to every· Hawaii, the last two years, but has school. II) a way,l'm glad. I ~ink I
...and has now lost his last 14 deci· one entetmtheglhe ba!lpark."'--A Cur qualified again for the Oct. 30 would've burned out. I tbmk I
~ iU!ns
About
11111e nme, ...,,.,..
· competitioo.
wouldn't be doing what I'm doing
' " ~ "With Velarde, 1 h4d a base tis- ~t by a pitch ear~et: in the
"There's a magnetism that now."
·"''" and was trying to mate him inning 10 apparent retabauon for draws you back once you've been
good pitch. Not that you're brushbacks of Alomar ~nd !~e there,"Froblesaid.
c) r.ying to walk anyone, but he Carter- came~~ of Calif~ s
This time, though, there's an
:: ·aidn 't offer It them and, then, 1 dugout to ~ With Toronto lh!rd . added incentive.
· WN"'otofthepme" You,ngsaid.
baseman • ijjl: ~prague. That trtg"I turned SO" she said with a
,.; _· T""o· r·
m ' v..;.-er reiieved lnd had gered a tnwl in front of the stands laugh. The 'birtbday put htz into a
&lt; ;
IW. .U
third base
neW diViSiOn, Where She Will be ,
· · all
kf
h oneofthetopcontenders.
: e ven worse luck tlian Young, ncar
·~ ~lo=: the
sine: Jim Leyritz . "I got the b bac rom dt el . Froble, who is executive secre.The deadlb\e for the 1993 Meigs
• that
and t1we hits umpire, I looked ov, er a.n
........... ' Hoi
we re gomg at tary of the Alcohol, Drug Addie- Marauder girls basketball camp has
•·~;~.
in a row with two outs that blew - '"""'6''~
Ycow~
it,"' said TQIOIIto
pttcher Pat Henl· tt"on and Menul Health Service been extended. There is rootn for
-~.-.., pme open..
"It' ~
becan'le I thought, Board, has competed in the Iron- .10 more plyers it\ each division.
·~T •Maas singled in Owen ~nd ~en.
s unn_y
.
, man four times - in 1985 -86 ,
The camp will be held from
...Melarde before Williatna' triple if we were gomg to go at It, he d 1988 and 1990- and placed high June
14 to June 18 at Meigs High
...,scored Leyrilz and Maas and (Curtis) come out and get me right twice. She llfliS third in the 45-to-49 School.
The cost of the camp is
··:Humphreys homered to finish there."
'
division in 1988, and was fifth in $30. No family has to pay more
v • Kramer
As police tried to restore order, 19S..
than $SO if more than one girl
· "I peas I wain 't prepared," ~ continued II? pe~ the field with
"I would Jike.to brealc the previ- aaends
the camp.
Kramer said •'I thought I had good baseballs. The SilUatlat JOt so bad ous record (12 liours, 24 minutes)
For
girls
~tering - grades 4-6 this
::.:SlUff, but it seemed lllce they were thai the stadium's.pubhc •address in my age group this year,' Froble fall, the camp
will be held from 9
-·an everything 1threw.''
announCer warned the crow~ that said. "If I have a good day, and if a.m until noon. For those enlering
~~" . Velarde pve the Yankees a 1-0 the be~avio~' could result m an the weather conditions i!l Hawaii grades 7-10, the camp will be held
· lead with a third-inning RBI· dou- An~ls ~e!L
.
.. are favorable, I think the chances -· from 1 to 4 p.m.
~~ble. but the Indians tied it in the
We didn t try to htt anybody,
are pretty good. I'm really psyched
Coach Ron Logan and llis staff
.~1fifth when Alvaro Espinoza douA~gels manager B.uck Ro!lg~rs this year ind the training 1s going will instruct the campers in all
"11lcd, moved to third oo Felix Fer- wd. "Alomar ran mto an ms1de
erv weU
of the game. Bach camper,
&gt;timiD's infteld hit and sCared when pitch on a bunt an~ we knocke,d v __t'The~ are yei.s when the head areas
will receive a catnp T-shirt and a
JuniOf Ortiz grounded into a fteld- Carter bac~ . The mtent wasn t winds.can gust up 10 so mph and it basketball.
tr'• choioe.
the_re t~ htt anyone, bu.t th~f can make lhe biking torturous. The
For more information, call
Young allowed f11ur bits and thought 1t was and. they retaliated_ biking probably is the toughest Logan at home at992-2723.
four runs while w~ t1we and .
Sprague was ejeCted along wtth pan, bemg the longest pan of the
r-.atrilting oot five in 4 113 lllllings.
two of his Toronto team~, out" Ironman in the bottest pan of the
~
Elsewhere in the American f~der ~II Coles and 1;11tch~r day ..
·
En• Of The Semn
' League, it was Toronto 7• Califor- Mark Eichhorn. Three California
The triathlon begins with a 2.4: nia 6; Baltimore s, Oakland 2; players al~o were thrown out: mile ocean swim, foUowed by 112
Clen-Out Salt
~ ~ttle 6, Milwaukee 3; Kansas Ja~. Curtis and second· baseman miles of biking, and then the 26.21
7, Boston 2; Chicago 10, Danuon Easley.
. mile marathotl.
· AU FLITS....................... 5
i Detroit 1; and Minnesota 6, Texas
In 1974, Cleveland had to f~ell
Froble dilln' t compete in the ALi IAIIIII IASitn••• •s
1,
3.
~ game to Teus when f~s drink· contest !he.last two yeara.
ALL•• POTS"••••"••••"••••50'
!,
•,·
Blue Ja..O 7, AD•Id
m.g 10-cent beer at Muructpal Sta"I q•··'ifit·A each of those years, ALL TRIES
__, OFF
- ""not to go. I hadn't
..m ..•••••••v"'
' . '--Firat, there ,.
was the Ukentbeer · diumg~outof control·
but I chose
OpenMon.·Sat.$:6
l
in~. Then came the
Five years .later, fans 0~ the stopped. I'm still out there year
CLOSED SUNDAY
: '!Disco Demolition Night" riot in field at COmtskey Park dunng an after year.' '
HUIIARDS GREENHOUSI
: Chicagoanti-disco de~nstration ~tween
Froble usually begins her runj ~;r.:.= ~ ::~~ ~=d~.a~=?~OS~l~o:; ning at 5:30a.m., avtzagin~ aboUt
lyrtKI. . . tf2-J776

L a.ames ••. .

r.

Marauder girls'
.basketball camp
deadline extended

\ .l";ins at Anlheim Stadium show·

1

·
)

)
;
'
:
'

Air lettrus" Extra,

",.._

·•Mtn :S and Womtn :S
'

'

.
r o.J&gt;.

: .••
....

HARRIS F

'

21!1 N. Second

992-5627

'

Mlddle~il(';
I '"

,.

j

Sf!:

forfeitwu
the
because the
, field
~ the field with souvenir base· ·
Oriolel , Atllleticl Z

btlll clurina a wild pme between
At Oakland, Fernando Va!enOalifomia and Toronto that fea- zue~ B1;1owe4 CJI!C eamc&lt;! run m 6
tired a bench-clearing brawl and 1/3 mnmgs to p1ck up his second .
victory of the ~n. Valenzu~la
• ejection of llix players.
~ The Blue Jays won 7-6 behind a (2-5) checked tho 'A s on five hits.
!Wo-homtz live-RBI performance He waiJccd four and struck outlive. ·
bf Robenli Alomar. But Alomar's · The Oriolea benefited from a
peat &amp;atne W!IS OVcrshadOWed by two-run throwlhg ~ by ~d
111 18-millltle melee RIIUiting from
catcher Terry Stem"!Jch dun~g a .
a beanblll
and the spec- four-run outburst m the ftfth.
tacle of fan1 ~ lwte!JeUs on Bobby Wiu (S-3) wu the loler.
the field in the Jixlh inning follow•
M81'111en 6, B1ewer1 3
ina a two-run homer by the Angels'
. Roya1117, Red SOl: :Z
Tim Sllmaa.
Twllll 6, RM..n 3
"I'm JullJiad nobodJ got
burt,'' wd c lfornla outfielder
S•Javillr, • allho e~ playen. "It was hard 10 1M who you
hit when you llave 10 DWIY guys

l::..:~~=::.::.==:..::=~=~~i~~~~~~

exc-.

Eastern football
.camps scheduled

· Reds notes •••
(Contlnued from Pile 4)
.

Marriii'J'IIIIo JaQ

: Firll b111nu 1111 Molds, wbo
• Ml .m..d all-. wllllalhoul: dlr ll!pmllon IUft'end in a~
: IOU pmc lnwl, illbouliD bclllla
' rehab . . , _ , with Jndlwpo! lls.,
.
.
'
"I think tho =Jlan Is to
: 11!1111 bini 10:::.;
Friday 10
~·=-~
lnd Sabnay," .
t

,,

' EXTRA CLEAN CAR
4 dooro, front wheel driw, 4 cyl., air,
111110., PS, PB,IIIwheel, CIUIM, rMr
, delag., AM'FM aiiNO tape.

2dooro,6cyl.,lir.IIIIIO.,PS,P8,win. dalog. AM'FM &amp;llnlolape.

WAS '1o,.4115

WAS '10,4115

NOW$9,495

NOW$9,495

the hard way,'' Riley said. "This is
the most defining moment in this
team's life."
·

·

Pick Mon.-Wed.-Sat. 8 am-12 noon
Container~ Furnlahed. ·
Come ride the berry wagon to and from the field.
FRESH PRODUCE DAILY IN OUR MARKET
Market Hou,.: Mon.-Sat. 10 am-7 pm
Sunday 12 Noon· 6 pm

i'

Day 6 of

fliisco

WEDJIESDAY, JUNE 2 - 8 a.m••·l2 Noon
.,. lb.

54810 Sl 124, Portland, Ohio 45770
PH. 614-143·5193

. tluee-pointet from BJ. Armstrong
~ the Bulls' only three-pointet of
Michael Jordan's media bo)1:011: A the gilme - that put thCDI ahead
good one for Chicago, an tip-and- 9S-93 with 1: 171efl. .
.
dOwn one f~ the supersllf.
"I thought the ~:: play of
Jordan had a triple-double - 29 the ~e,was BJ.' s 3
the corpoints, 14 assists and 10 rebounds btz, ' Kmcks coach Pal Riley said.
.r;; .....- as the Bulls took away the New
Tile Knic:ks trailed 95-94 when
~ '~ixt; Knlcks' homecourt adV811111Je they got control of the baD with 28
;.~edneaday Wilh a 97.!14 victory m seconds left. Patri!:k Ewing DBUe4
' Game 5 of the Eastern Conference to Smith, and his first layup
··fif18:1.
·
altempt was blocked by Horace
~·.., And as has become his cUllOm GranL He regained possession IU1d
- Since it WIS reported he spent 8 Jate Wtnl up twice more; but bodJ times
, ,jliJilt befcre Gune 2 at an Atlantic .lhe shot was blocked ~ bebind
:.. $;1ty casino, Jordan had nothing to by Pippen.
·
,.lly after the game.
.
The crowd yelled for a foul, but
";,:;. Outside Madison Square Gar- the referees let PlttY continue. Grant
·aen, however, plenly was being saved ihe ball and Armstrong made
said about him.
· a layup as time expired.
~f A book by a San ~o enter"We're not. going to cry over
_J8inmelll executive aile that lor- spilled milk. We thought that he
~ -lost $1.25 millioo while belling was fouled, but it wasn't called.
;,~golf, making this the third gam- That's it,' ' Ewing said
blinll·relatecl CQIIIl'OVersy to tarnish
Smith agreed. "We won't cry
. ,lbe unage of the NBA's best play- and beg for help. If the same plar.
~;cf
.
·
happened all over again, tl'd do 11
' In another ~isode, Jordan paid the same way."
Armstrong finished with 11
, ~.165,000 111 golf and poker
·~·
· including a $57.000 chel:t to points, five in the fina11 :17. Ewing
"aconvicted cocaine dealer, prompt· led the Knicks witb 33 points.
...,jqaanNBAinvestiplioo.
"II was a dogfight,'' Bulls
·. Tile gambling an~le is contro- coa~h Phil I ackson said. "We
"'.'~miai, but it wasn t relevant on knew it would be one of those
:; ;tile court. Jordan played well in all kinds of games. It was a heUle &amp;om
··'facets of his game and the Bulls beginning to end, defensively and
. ~pped' up their defensive intensi· offensively. Every shot was con~· ' ,bringing New York's 27-gamc tested."
~ - mecoun winning streak to an
Gatne 6 will be Friday night in
.;llld and take a 3-21ead In the best- Chicago, and Gatne 7, if necessary,
p(-7 series.
·
would be Sunday in New York.
·~. ' The Knicks hun themselves by . If the Knlcks are to have a
:"mlssing 15 of 35 attempts from the chance at dethroning the two-time
B:J CHRIS SHERIDAN

NEW YORJ( ,(AP) -

' =•Y

FIRST DIY OF PICKING

Dlvllloo I

Akr~

Reds notes

11, Chicago 3; San Francisco 3,
Aorida 2; At18nta 5, San Diego 2;
St. Louis 5, Los Angeles 4; and
Pittsburgh s. COiqrado 3.
Gluts'3, MarllDS :z
Will CIIR 1iit a two-run homer
and Jolm Burkett became the major
league's fJJSt eight-game winner
this season u San Francisco beat
Florida at Joe Robbie Stadium.
ClaJt's third-homer of the season barely clelied the right-field
fence in the o¢n· inning against
Jack Armstrong~.:$.
BuJteu (8-1)'pve liP nine hits,
wallced one and hit a batter in six
innings.
'·
. Metsll, Culls 3
l&gt;wiiht Gooden (6-4) im ved ·
to 25-4lifetime 'against ct:l~go
and New York hit three homers in
a seven-run fourth inning as the
Mets beat the Cubs at Wrigley
F'JCld. Todd Hundley, Bobby Bonilla and Chico Walker each hit
homers in the fourth.
· Frank Castillo (1-3) gave up
seven runs on 10 hils in 3 2/3
innings.

PlekYour
Own
Fresh
Strawberries,

(1?-'l atll ""·

Cftlltview (21-6) Yl. Min&amp;o
JanctioD(ll·S) It 3 p.m.
a..mpon.hlp: Saturday ll 3 p.m.

Malyavi1le ~2) It 3:30p.m.
a..mpicialhip: Saturday a\ I p.m.

ot Miw:h Lyden,

FoolbaU

,_1
Tr_...IIPIIW,ONoSlllt
Cold- (16.4) .... a.. lad1aa lli11
!24-')a1lua.
Campball Memorial (21 ·4) VI .
s...booYillo c-. c..aat (23.2) " 3

Ccmv~

'

tian.

catcher, from B4monton of dle Pacific
Coan Leaaue. Moved Steve Decker,
catchclr, from the 15· to the 60-day db·
abled lilt.

Dlvlolonm

c...,. n.,

liln. Opdoaod 1ctr BI'CIIlkey, pitcher, lO
Oklahoma City fL tbc AmcrU:an. Aaaocia·

FLORIDA MARLINS : Placed Bob
Natal, catcher, on the ls.day disabled Uat.

Tadoy
Traullnlan,..... OhloSr.te
AkmD Hoban (19-8) VI, Sholl&gt;)' (21-6)
atlla.m.
Ho1roQ Labwood (25-4) .... HliDillon
Ba&lt;tin (21·9) al p.m.
Oumpioalhip: Salllrday at II a.m.

TODIIIIt'a . -

~2-,1:35

Xami.en.iecld, pitch«, 1o Columbul.
TEXAS RANGERS: Activated c_raia
Le!J..,, pilcher, from oho IS-day diooblod

DlvlslonU

Qieoao (McCulllil 2-5) " Douoh

*•

the Intornational u,aV.o. Sent Scott

Tado7
'111ur.u M•- SladkMI, Cantoa
Tolodo Start (26-1) n . Cincinnati
Moellor (26-1) 1111 a.m.
Cevoland S• Jpaliuo (26-3) vi, Bu·
{26-1) 113 p.m.
Oltmpicnlhipi Saturday at 11 a.m.

Monuul

(Shlw 0-2), 7:35p.m.
ColOftdo (Blah 1·2) ot Pllllad&amp;lphio

-

Ruu Sprinaor, pildm-, ..._ v,.couvor
of the Pacific Cout Leape. OptiOned

Westem CoatereKt ftnals

COLUMBUS, Obio (AP) - p,.;n,;p
. rorObio 1D&amp;b . - ..... - ball tcmDUnellll:

SL LaoW (Ollv,.. 1·2) 11 CINCIN·
NA11 (l'bF :1-5), 7:35 P"'l'llloloulF (NeopCJ.l) .. s.. Francia·
.. (ll.....-1~. 10:35 p.m.

•

OW:aao at New Yom. 1 p.m., ifnoca·

Today'aaames

Sao Oioto (~- S-6) .. Al1lnla

•

Lat!i."'tJFORNIA ANGELS ' Recallod

- • State bQSeball • - ·
- • tournaments • - .

l'laobaiP s. c..Icado 3

'

~t::-·
NowYoD:u
p,9p.m.

Satur'fii!J't&amp;IDM

NowY. . 11,0iaao3

'
'

_

mao!Ud 1UL Oo&lt;ioaod run B,.d. .iofiold·
er, to Pawtuci;e1 of tbe!Jnemational

Suttle II Ph9cnix, 3:30 p.m., if nCIC:Q&lt;o
IUJ '

HauoloPS,MonU.I4

Qh:a1o (Guzman 4_.)

Greenwell, outfielder, from the lS· day

IUJ

13
19.5

ouapa11lcn

day.
.
BOSTON RED SOX: Activatod. Mike

WedaeldiJ'IICOI't
OU.caao 91, New Yorlr: 94; Chicaso

_,..

BasebaU
..._
.......
AL' Uphold tho tlno-pmo

Belle. Cleveland lndiant out·
field«, aDd umounood it will bop fri.

Eutem Coaferen(e llaaJs
la.di..V.3-2

- • Transactions .• - .
of Albert

- • NBA playoffs • ...._

9.S

Wednellday'a .Cores

.

Now York (Abbott 4-S) at Texu
(Bmwn 4-3), 8:35p.m.
Milwaukee (Wcpnan 4-7) at Ktn~u .
City (Pkboolo :1-2), 8:35 p.m.

1~.5

w-.DI.-

.

C1W:oto CAl·

By Tile Alloclatecl P,eu
The Philadelphia Phjlliea are
getting big hits from just about
eVeryone this season.
Kim Batiste and Todd pratt,
who entered Wednesday night's
game with one homer between
them this year, each hit solo
homers to help Philadelphia beat
Cincinnati S-2 at Riverfront Sradium.
"That was a big game for the
young shortstop, an outstanding
game,'' Phillies manager Jim
Fregosi said of Bar!.,.., the Phillies'
regular shortsu!p for now.
"Yeah, that makes me feel more
like a part of tlie club,'' said
Batiste, who has twO h011111rs this
season. ''I always ~ to get in the
mix of things, 10 stay active. But it
was more of a sit back, wait and be
patient kind of thing."
The first-place Phillies took two
of three in the series and have won
five of their last six pmes.
"They do everythin&amp; right,"
Reds loser Jolm Smiley (2-7) said.
"You throw them one bad fastball,
one bad curveoon, and they're sitting on it."
.
.
Ben Rivera (4•2) scaltered eight
hits, wallced two and struck out a
career-high nine in eight-plus
innings. Mitch Williatns got the
final three outs for his 16th save.
Batiste homered on ttie first
pitch from SmileY. in the third
inning to give Philadelphia the
lead.
Elsewhere in the NL, it was
Houston S, Montreal 4; New York

_,__ nils edge Kni-cks
·-97-94.to lead series

BlWern High School will hold
dneThe
fuot&amp;!:'l: June ~-10 for .
bleb 1114 receiver•. Tile 1ee0nd
wUl be 111111 14-17 Cor Junlor high
...... The lhlrd will be Jull 1'9~ ·ror liDemen. All c•mps will be
r.om p.m. at the JUab lc:hooL

u
~::=o'::=~~ be

c&gt; "rdq Dave Birr • 992-33J!l

Tho colt 11 $15 per penon per
camp and thOle plnicipatlng Will
recehe a T-lldrL

.,.

!

help
uood as

Ueoch olus rnolceo ~ill

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4 dooro, flont wheel drive, 8 c:rl., .llir,
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1919 Olds 98 Brougham LOADED••••••18,495
1989 Pon. Formula v-s, T-ToPS, AUTO.. 1 1,49~
1988 •r. Sable ALL POWER, EXTRA CLEAN..• 5,495
1987 Pontiac Fltro.............................•2,995
1987 Pontiac Bonneville..................*3,995
1916llncoln Contlnental...._......."".•5,249
•
1987DodgeD•1504K465,DOO ..LEs.•••6,995
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everydoy habi~ we'U lieep iJw bealfiY of
our """'II'JI on solid grow1&lt;!. For mar.
id&lt;u on haw you can help, caU Tw
Pride in America at 1-IIQ).U.S. f'I:!OUD.
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•

�•
•

a· The Dally Sentinel
Sports Probe
Pia•

•
Pomeroy--Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, June 3, 1893

.

'

\

Dreifort, who is 20, is a local just 2}9. He abo had three ssves. • Whitwlll'lh with Rhonda Glenn (SL
hero. His hometown is Wichits, In 79 inningS pitched, he waited Martin's Plas, 1990).
Kan. He helped lead Wichita State only 29 batters whiJe striking out a
''How to Master a Great Golf
to the 1993 Missouri Valley Con- totalof84.
Swing," by Maxine Van Bvera
ference title.
By the way, Dreiflll't's top pill:h· Lupo (Contemporary Books,
Scouting director Roger Jooge- ing rivals 81 the college level this 1992).
waard of the Seattle Mariners, season were said by Baseb1111
"The Why Book of Golf," by
which had the first pick in the draft, America to have been left-bander William C. Kroen (Price Stern
told Baseball America: "Dreifm's Brian Anderson of Wright State Sloan, 1992).
got a nice arm, and he's close (to and right-hander Wayne Gomes of
If you are planning a vacation,
being ready to pitch fill' a major- Old Dominion.
Golf for Women recommends twO
league team)."
• What should well·read women ·publications:
· Dreifon stood out among the golfers loot into?
"Golf Travel: The Guide fill' ·ihe
nation's. best college pitchers, a
Here are 8ome of the boots rec- Discriminating Golfer'' is a 111011th·
groupthalwasconsiderediObelhe ommen4ed by Golf for Wome11 lynewsleuer .saldtoCQllminpactimost talented of any in this year's maazine:
cal tips. For infonnalion: 800-225- .
amateur drafL •
r'Ouide to Women's Golf," by 782S.For Wichita Siate, ~ifort went Amy Alcott, wilh Don·Wade (Dut·
"The USA Today Golf Atlas~'
8-1 with an earned ron avcnige of ton 1991).
,
(Simon &amp; Schuster, 1992) offers
:'Golf for Women," by Kathv maps' that locate the top _courses

B7 HOWAJU) SINER
·
Today's questions in the Wlll'ld
of sports:
• Will Dlrren ~ifort turn into
a major-Jeaaue biSC'hall Slll'1
He sure will, according to predictions by experts.
. Basdlall America, for mstance,
says the right-handed pitcher from
Wichita SISie was the nearest thing
to a bia·leaguer 011 a college campus this seasoo.
Going into the June amateur
flee-agent draft, BQ#ball America
rtlnked Dreifon, a 6-foot-2, 205pound ice, u the top prospect in
the natioa.
.
It predicts tbat he is the closest .
to making it in the big le~J8ues.
·· ·

from coast to colst. II coiuains key
fact,s 011 yanllae,l*, course design
and acceas.
Elsewhere, Golf for Wome11
notes tbat Harvey Penick, 87, the
best-selling writer, is something of
a visionary.
In 1952, the teaching pro- and
future author of "Harvey Pmick's
Little Red Book" -noted: "With
modem household he~. golf for
women should grow more than fill'
IIICII."

.

' •''

By STEPHEN WILSON
6, 6-3, 6-4.
break points along the way. SamPARIS (AP)- Pete Sampras
"Certainly it buns a little bit," pras began playing more offensiveagain failed to produce, beaten Sampras said. ''I beat a couple of lly, broke fill' the first time to close
SOilndly in four sets w~~ decent clay-coun players this tour- to 4-3 and won four straight games
Sergi Bruguenl in the q
nament, but Sergi IS in kind of to take the set.
of the Ftench Open.
another class. I thought I proThe third set was a disaster for
"You can only ,say so much gressed apin this year, I thought I Sampras, as he won only 10 points.
about a tennis match," Sampras competed well. but· I am not satis- Bruguera won 13 of the last 14
said after the 6-3, 4-6, 6-1; 6-4, tied like I was last year. I was bop- points 10 close out the set m just 22
defeat. "It just wasn't a good day ing to win the loumament."
minutes.
fill' me:I'm very disappointed."
"I Wl!S a bit discouraged after I · The two were even until 44 in .
The result eliminated the possi- lost the first set and I lllll broken in the fourth, when Bruguera got the
bility of a final between the Wlll'ld's the second," he said. "'i could just crucial break as rain clouds moved
No. 1 and 2 players, Sampras and see myself kind of sloping down."
in. Sampras saved one break point
Jim Courier.
"If I would have beaten him, with a service winner. On the sec- ·
No. 3 seed Stefan Edberg was in that would have been a hell of a ond, he came in behind a good
trouble against Andrei Mcdvedev, win for me," Sampras said. "He SC(Ve but Bruguera got it back and
who was leading 6-0, S-S, when has got a good chance of winning Sampras hit a forehand into the net,
their quartafinal Was suspended by this tournament."
.
. letting out a shout of rage.
rain Wednesday night.
.
Samjlnu was let down by his
Medvedev, an 18-year-old big serve. He connected on only 49
Ukrainian seeded No. 1'1, lost only percent of his first deliveries.
seven points as he w011 the first set
Bru$uera kept Sampras at bay
By JIM COUR
ip 16 minUiel. Edberg regrouped in with h1s heavy, looping topspin
. the second set to 11ay even, nntil a shots. He hit 10 clean forehand S SEI\S'J"!LEhope(AP)they'The SeaUlethe
uper orucs
ve seen
downpour stopped play with winners and passed Sampras 17
bes~
of
Charles
B11ldey
and Dan
Medvedev serving in the 11th times.
.
game at30-0.
Sampras had only two outright Maple.
!f:B~eyandMaFrlebatterthe
The match will resume today · forehand winners and committed
before the women's semifmals pit- 60 unforced enurs. Bruguera had SoJ!ICs 10 Thursday s Game 6 ~f
theu Western Conf~n~ final m
ling Steffi Graf vs. Anke Huber, just 24.
and Arantxa Sanchez Vicario vs.
Bruguera broke Sampras twice Seanle the !"BY.they_ did m Game 5,
Mary Joe Fernandez.
in the first seL He took a 4-3 lead ~Juns wiD lie gomg to the NBA
.
..
. 1'he lOth-seeded Bruguera will when Sampras made fQW' straight 1 s.
The
S~s,
trailing
the ~-of'face either Edberg Ill' Medvedev in unforced errors to drop serve at
seven
sen.
~
s)-2,
are
hopmg ~o
the men's icmis. Courier, the two- · love. The Spapiard broke again two
force
!I
deciSive
seventh
game I!J
time defending champion, will play games later for the set, hitting a
PhOCIUll
on
~a~y.
No. 12 Richard Krajicek, who spinning forehand which Sampras ·
. B11kley IS f!llk!ng about wrapbecame the first Dutchman since couldn't handle.
pmg
up the senes m Seattle, where
1969 to reach the semis by beating
Bruguera went up 3-0 and 4-1 in
the
Suns
took Game 3 104-97.
No. 13 Karel Novacek 3-6, 6-3, 3· the second set, staving off five "Obviously,
we'd like to win it 11!1

Brilguera served out the match
in the next game. On the first
match point, Sampras moved up on
a short ball but chipped a sloppy
backhand wide.
·
"I feellike I can win here,"
Sampras said. "I am going to be
here for the next 10 or 1S years.
Hopefully, one ytar I will win iL''

Elfller today•• :

Top-seCded Graf cruised into
the French Open final with a rout
·Of Anke Huber today after Stefan
Edberg was outhit and outsmarted
by Medvedev.
.
Playing in only his third Grand
Slam, the 11th-seeded Medvedev
fencl.ed off an Edberg comeback
attempt with bullet-like service

.......

'

ieniors.

,,

;;o

returnS and deadly lobs to win the and she was probably nervous.-'' t.:
Graf's victory in the all-GermaJr.;
last men's quarterlinal6-0, 6-7 (7·
3), 7-5, 6-4. ·He earned a semifinal match enabled her to reclaim ~
match Friday with No. 10 world No. I ranking for the first
time ainc:e September 1991, wheq;
Bruguera.
·:;
In the other semifinal, No. 2 Monica Seles sUI]lllssed her.
-Seles 'j¥(]11 the French ()pea thci·
seed Jim Courier,: the two-time
defending champioa, plays 12th- ~ three years, but is out ot actiol\1
seeded Richard Kraj1cek of the 10definltely after being stabbect
Netherlands.
.,,
,April 30 in HamburJI, Germaay 1J&gt;::
In the first women's semifmal, a factory worter who said he want
Graf won 6-1, 6-1 in SO minutes ed to help Graf become No. t
over error-plagued ijuber, the No. again.
.
~
8 seed. In the second 11181Ch, No. 2
Graf is now 6-0 apinst Hu~
seed Sanchez Vicario played fifth- losing only 20 games m 12 sets. ,.
Graf won the tide here ip 1981'
seeded Fernandez.
"I don't think she flayed UD to and 19~8. and Sanchez Vicarid':
her best," Graf said Q Huber. f "It won in 1989 before Seles began hef',
...
was her fli'St Grand Slam semifmal
su~.
-

Mize dead at 80

I' .
•

' 'McSorley is an impact play·
·er," said coacl\ Jacques Demers,
whose Canadiens will II'}' Thursday
night to pull even in the best-ofseven senes.
"He can do it to you any way. If
·you want to fight him, he'll ~o .
He's physical. He comes up With
good defensive plays. He joins
their offense. We have to under·
stand that McSorley is 011 the other
side, but we're not going to intimidate him.
"After Wayne Gretzlcy, I think
Marty McSorley is their leader.''
Is Demers actually trying to ssy
that some sltinl)y 175-pounder is
bigger for the Kings than 6-foot-1,
225-pound tough guy Marty
McSorley?
"That just lcills me," McSorley
said. "If Gretzlcy beats me to the
Hall of Fame, I'm going to be
mad.''

McSorley has been lugging
around a reputation since he broke
into the NHL with the Pittsburgh

Penguins in 1983 and accumulated
two goals and 224 penalty minutes.
He went to the Edmonton Oil·
ers, was shifted from defense to
right wing "so I could play the
heavy," and racked up plenty of
time in the penalty box in helping
the Oilers wm two Sranley Cups.
"It doesn't hurt to carry the rep· utation of a whacko," McSorley
.
S81d.
After coming to the Kings with
Gretzky in 1988's trade of the cen·
h
·
··
. tory, e c~nunued pilmg up the
penalty mmutes; he had a career·
high 399 this season. Shifted back
.to defense, his game has evolved.
He now anc hors.a most1Yyoung
defensive corps and has become an
offensive threat.
He had career highs in goals
(IS) and assists (26) during the regular seasoJI, And in the victory over
the Toronto Maple Leafs that lifted
the Kings into their fmt champi·
onship appearance, McSorley and
Gretzky com!»ned on a shorthand·
ed goal. The Great One fed The
Grating One, who snapped a per·
feet pass back to Gretzky for an

DEMOREST, Ga. (AP)
Johnny Mize, whose long-ball hitball' 5
ling powered him into base
Hall of Fame, died today at his
80
home: He ~ ·
.
M1ze, mcknam~ th~ Big Cat
bec•nse he was an IRiposmg figure
c. t, 2 and 215 pounds died in
at 6 ee
•
his sleep, said Lanny Meeks of
McGahee Griffm Funeral Home in
Cornelia.
Mize a first basc:man, broke
into the rna~ leaguCs in 1936 with
the SL LouiS Cardinals.
He quickly made a name for
himself, topping the National
Leaglle in hilling, with a .349 bat· !939 H 1 0
ting average In .
· e a~
topPed the teague m home runs m
four separate years between 1939
and 1948. And he led in doubles in
1941 with 39 and in triples in 1938
with 16.
He was tnJded to the New York
Giants in 1942, but broke off his
career for a stint in the military
during World W11 D. He played for
the Glanll from 1946 to 1949
before jqining the New Yodt Yankees, anll with them, bad a pinch
hiaer"a role In live World Series.
Mize led the Americall League
in pinc;h hill for lbree lll1lilbt ,ear~
~ 19!51 to 19!53 _:...,with a biBb of
19.
·
Ria caJeel' baainJ averqe was
;312 will1359 bome nma 111111,337
RBII.
eleeled to the Hall of ,
Flllll .. 1981.
.
SulfiVCIII inch* hla wife, Mar·
pis.

a.-

•

..

easl. acore.

'How m11ny other guy• with
400 penalty minutes make that
~y?" Los 1\ngeles coach Barry
1rosc asked.
.
"By the middle of next year,
I'm still going to be known as the
guy who takes penalties, the guy
who gers hiJ nose dirty. I'm never
to ·gea away from the factlhllt
1 geSort
inleto saidf~11 and lllleiCatia!J,"
Me
y
.
"The only mcognition I've had
is lhll I've beea lble to win a COU·
pie ~!__511nley CUJII. ADd I . _ to
be ,....,wn as the guy who played .
on anothet s~ Cup tean1."

'·

1\LUMNI RECOGNIZED· Paola Laird, left, daas o11960,
ElcajGD, c.nr.. Will recopbed ror travelilla tH farthest lor the
1993 Raclae-Southel'll Alumlli on Sat.rday evnlq. Sadie Thuen·
er, a member or the class or 1923 was recoplzed u the oldest
IIIWDDL

The Pomeroy Ducky Derby will
The dertiY will belin llat the
be held June 12 during Heritage riverl!ank irl front of Pomero~Vil·
Weekend activities 813:30 p.m.
.!age Hall wilh the finish line af the
The derby will take to the water levee area at the city parting lot.
of the beautiful Ohio River in an
Proceeds from the race will jill
anticipated Ootilla of 1,000 ducks.
to the Pom120y Mcn:hanrs Aasoc18Anyone may "adopt a duck" fill' lion to fund several beautification'
only $Sand pnzes include a $1,000 projects in downtown Patneroy.
U.S. Savings ,Bond, a $500 U.S.
Further information on the
Savings Bond, a membenltip to the Due~ ~ may be obtained by
Big Bend ~th and Fitness Ceo- contacting Dick Warner a Krogers,
ter, a "duck diluJer" from Krogers, 992·S490, or Joan Wolfe at Bank
and many more prizes.
One, 992-2133.

j

coach Georgi? Karl~ "The S~!"~
showed the1r. class 10 Phoem~
Now, .we've got to show our clasii
in Se•ttle "
.:
In Game S, Kemp led the Sonlca
with 33 points, h1s top scorins.
game of this season's playoffs, 011
13-of-18 shooting. He had lg
points in the fourth quarter.
:.
Seattle's backcourt of ·Rick7
Pierce and GQrY Payton acored :;?.
and 20 points.
Payton is still shakilig his head
at the sensationallhnie,point shQot·
ing of Majerle. "Some peopl'6
don't shoot 8-for-10 from there'
when they're wide open,'' Payton

said
·

pounda and ·two inches to
4·9
Bailey said a friend got Estabioolr:
said
brother, Ernest. "I came up and
. ""
in the their friends atachoollmow' thef
watched him and saw everybody
. was ,11 t)'JIIg -!ulwa.
• boll, but it
deal.
liked iL I joihed
gym,'' wd Ernest, who IS three
Trainer Clay ReXrode 3S said·
He, had' his first bout .in last minutes older than ~haun. "A the Balleya,have
in·
year!sJO-l'OUI1Itl1IICPL - . · . ..friend of•mine (,Lee Mizer)' was up the ring· ....,..
~ ·
.,
"!'was kind of nervous, but I here boxing. I had seen it on TV.
••Sliaun followed after Deid
still won,'' Shaun said. "I learned M!ke Tyson was my favorite, al~g Ford (1991 national Golden Glove8
some style, how to move aronnd, Wllh Hector Camacho and J uho ligfitweight champion froll)
throw a jab. I try 10 fmd them out Cesar Chavez."
Alliance) " said Rexrode "He's·
in the first round, then work them
Fighting at the intermediate more of~ boxer Ernest fOuo~
in the second. Sometimes it's toUgh level•. aftes 12·13, E~est said he after Mike Hamon (an Estabrooi
to come here wh~ you could do 1
0S!!"&amp;B ~fid~dhL, f 1
.. h
lightweight). He's more of a
somethingelse.BillllikeiL"
ut 1t 1 n t az.e me,
e brawler
said. "I ~as mad1 ~ut I got a
"But both started off fighting
rema'!=h w1th the ki4 l!"d, won. I tough kids. Now they're ahead of
was kind of sloppy. I dido t throw their class "
·
"
league alive beyond 1993-94 . . my. punches the right ,way. I
Through last week, Shaun (1!5•
LeCrone said he, b,as ~!ked lO finish them off: lfor,'fullY, I U be 4) bad won 11 straight and ErneSt
schools he wouldn t ulmtify about here for a IOIIJ! ume.
.
(14·S) had won 10 in a row.
···
Both Baileys, who tram at
.•
joining the MCC. He also spoke
with Missouri Valley Conference
••
commissioner Doug Elgin about
the possibility of an alliance
between the IWO leagues.
'
Indiana Finn Dllcoven:
The MCC has been ravaged by
defections. MarQuette and St. Louis
left the league for the Great Midwest Conference in 1991. LaSalle
and Duquesne were added, but
Dayton decided to leave for the
Great Midwest at the end of last
season - a move that prompted
CARMEL, IN (Wirt Bulletin,Read what our users
Duquesne to rejoin the Atlantic 10
If you suffer from the pain of
after one seasoo in the t-fCC·
have to say:
arthritis, rheumatiam or bul'litia,
Dayton's defect_ion cost the
there's 1 small CCII'lPBny in
"I 11H PAIN BUST becalM I
MCC 1ts automatic bid to the 1994
Carmel, tndtanalhllt manuau/Mr
from tenllon In my lltclr
NCAA tournament.
factures a procluct that you
and
ahouldwl.
I CIIIT prllle your
The changes have damaged the
should try. ·
produCIIIIOUflh.
I'W IMd other
league's chances of adding other
o/11,_,11. bul they donTThe
procluct
ia
cstted
Plin-Bult·
schools, Schwartz.
All, and Hia a IIOCIIhing rnedicll8d to wort u ful nor 1111., tonp. •
"I think we have to sbow a unitTllanlr you. Thank you ...
cresm that you limply m•-ge
~ front ~c.:e .~ can ~~t 1m1body
Thank you;
C.ltF.
into your aching jointl. II goea to
m~~ mJO~g us, SdrNanz
work immediately by p8nlllr1H11g
' "Lilt night when I _,t to ll8ep
said. N~ one (m the MCC) Wl!lts
deep into the joints where ll'in
I ru*d aome PAIN BUST on my
to put thei!' name on ~ doaed line
begins - brlngi"9 inatant rtlltf.
I(Jttechlllg kllll. 15 mlnutN ,.,.,
now.for an extended wne. Every·
And whlfa ~ it will not ailin
I fell
llid W1111t 8
one want to better their own situa·
or amtNlr clothing or bed lheell.
houri
later
wltlllblo/1111/y
no
lion."
Though the prOduct is not widely
peln. I wlah I trr.w lboul PAIN

Be 'a Jll!rl Of the festivities Heritage Weekend by participating in
'the costume coolest. You may wear
an authentic costume or reproduclion of a costume that would have
been Wlli'D during the 1800s.
The costume contest will be

'

IIOUiid...,

niDIY.al UIDIY-MDIIIY
.
JUII 4, I, I 7
.BUY ONE PIECE AT THE REGULAR
PRICE AND GET THE 2ad PIECE AT

YJ
. PRICE

known, It Is 100'!1t aale end 111111
ctatm tlllt there'a nOihing elM rin
the mlrket IIIII -., cornea ctoee
to it. In lact, eccord[ng to .com• pany Pnllident Bryan Autr . ..
"Wt get /l!lfti'HJiflert on th"
product than .,y of tire other 33
ptOIWcta In our 111181 AlltJ ,_,.
.,,,,. "' ~·y It/ling "' tllet
l'aln·Buat·RII Ia Ytie Ileal' ~

BUST long efiO." •

"I'm 72 YNII old llid lllfiw trom
erthrllil In both lrllidt llid ,..,

On dlmP, COld diYr lUNd to 110
out of my mind """' pe/n. Not

en,morw, I flf1llf tfi/Oy , . _
ol mind llid lllln ,,.. /Oinll.
R.a/»Ctfully,"

R.B.O.

Available at:

•

................
: ....,...
...................

firing

JCas•a n r:::z.a.M
I'

290 II. Seco1d

992·3614
,.

Pomeroy, and ·Mildred Parson§,
Racine . Maternal great-great·
grandmother is Bonnie Miller,
MiddlePCli'L
•
Paternal grandparellts are 111111!8
D. and Ruth N. Weaver, New
Haven, W.Va. Paternal -great·
grandmothers are Beatrice Weaver,
Mason, W.Va., &amp;nd StellaR~,
New Haven, W.Va.
~

'

held followi{.g the parade on Saturday morning. The parade begins at
10 a.m. with the judging immediately following. All plrticipants
will be intmdnrm and awards presented on Stage One at noon.
Categories include authentic
costume and reproduction costume•.
· • There wiU be separate categories
for male and female adults and ·
three entries in each category.
Judgi11g will be based 011 appearance including accessaies, authenticity and uniqUCIIIOSS.
There is no entry fee, but those
participating ire asked to preregister by June 1. Registration forms
are available at the Meigs County
Extension Office, Box 32,
Pomeroy, Ohio 4S769 or ca11 be
obtained by calling 992-6696
between 8:30 a.m. and 4:30 p.m.
Monday lhru Friday.

.

OF
YEAR • Llada Keesee, left,
was preseated a plaque Ia
hODOI' of beJaa lliected moth·
er of the year at Victory Bap·
tist Cburclt Ia Middleport.
The plaque wa presented by
Mrs. Tammy Ball at the
fourth aaaual motber-daap·
ter banquet.

In the service'
'

Marine Pfc. Robert B. Yonker,
son Of Ray L. and Rhea A. Yonker
of Pomeroy, was recently promoted to his present rank while serving
with Headqu11ters and Wervice
Battalion, Marine Corps Base,
Quantico, Va.
The 1992 graduate of Rosepine
High Schoof o( Rose.pine. La.,
joined the Marine Corps in August,
~992.

Navy LL j. g. Ryan C. Oliver,
son of Raymond and Susan Oliver
of Route l, Racine, recently visited
.Dubai, ·united Arab Emirates,
aboard the submarine USS Birmingham, homeported in Pearl Har·
bor, llawaii, while on a six-month
deployment to the Western Pacific
as part of the aircraft carrier USS
Nimitz Baale Group.
The 1986 graduate of Racine
Southern Hl&amp;h School joined the
Navy in December, 1988.

Weight control
class. to be offered
· A series of six-week classes for
· weigbt control will be offered by
the Meigs County Health nepanment begirupns at 6:30 p.m. Friday.
There will be a choice of nights
for the clasSes, either Wednesday
or Friday and classes are free to
Meigs County residents.
Bacb class wiU be of·IWO hours
duration. Auendance is required at
only one. two: hour seuion weekly.
. Classes will iilclude nutrition education, .stress ~ .weekJy
we!Bh-111~, relaxation techniques, .
recJpes, diet recall abeets, exercise
tecbniques and other phases of
weight control.
There will ·be a limit at to the
number of people· who can be
admitted to each ,series of classes
which are to be beld in the cmference room of the inultl-purpose
building, Mulberry Heights,
Pom120y.
Residents should register as
soon as poasible due to class size
limilaliOIIS.
.
Meigs County rcsidenta may
register by calling the health
depanment at 992-6626. Indicate
your preference or Wednesday Ill'
Friday evening clla.

.....
I ElM

=-~

==-

Reception held

The deacone11 of the Racine
First Baptist' Church hosted a
receplio1t receatl~ far the churcb 's
new purer and his' wife, Sreve and
Ruth Puller.
. ' _Approximately 120 members
welcome the couple to the
Pete Eggleston and daughter, llDIJ)ed
chllrch family.
Thelma, Charleston, W.Va., visited
The i:Olor theme of turquoise,
recently with AIDilll Butdler.
·, while·
and IIIII wete carried aut in
Gladys Cum'lnsa and VifJinla tbe ISblclclocba IDd no-- -acGibson visited with their Sister 1111111111 Ill tbe llbleL IJ'be cab, ..V•
Juanita Richards of DaytOn.
• ina as a ..........., of 111e ..vtng
: Mr. and Mrs. Bob Gibson and tsble, was decorated with white
~ Alkill, Colanlbul, were week· lcb!l lad . . . . ol turquoise lid
. end pe•u of Mr. and Mrs. Bob real, was fluklld by caadelabra
~.
""'d'na ...,.,.. cindJel Ndlnl
Mr. IDd Mil. Gary Poley, Syra- were embc 11 d Ia 1811 with "Welc:Ua,e, were 'lrml e11d visitors of Mr. come Sle1e and Rulb.•
IIIII Mil. Bob Mahr.
Coffoo 11111 paach, along with
Recent visitors of Mr. and Mn. lla&amp;ilodl were .,.,.._

Harrisonville
news notes

• .

IMust N of 1...1or Lesser V•IH)

B. M.S.

Dwaine and Gina Weaver
announce the birth of their son,
Cody Lee, at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
The infant weighed seven
ponnds and 6.2 ounces and was 20
and one-half inches l011g.
Maternal grandparents are
Robert and Cathy Scarberry,
Pom120y. Maternal llrellt-811111ldpar-

children. ' ,
Prizes' \VIII be IWiriled 10 ... top

'/idn'l

Special· New
fQr arthritis

Ohio University will once sgain
offer Project Challenge this slim·
mer.
. Project Challenge is an educaUonal program for children who
have completed grades 1-6 by June
1993. The program will be held
June 21-July 2, weekdays, from
8:30a.m. to noon on the Ohio University campus•
·Children, grouped together in
grades 1-2, 3-4 and 5-6, choose
classes including ecology and con·
servation, clowning, Frencb, fitness, camer11-free photography, is available at the Office of Coolinoceanography, creative writing, uinrr Education in Mem"""·' Audikarate, tennis, video production, :-'l'
"'""
Ohio nioneer history, Japa
and tonum. Phone registration will
fuluriSiic thinking. ~each . be~in June 3. Since classes fill
grade level will reOect greater com- qwcldy, early registration is recomplexity and skill for older children mended.
and less fill' yonnger.
For more information or to
Each class is in session fill' one receive a Project Challenge
hour, with a IS-minute recess in brochure, contact the Office of
between to move to classes. Chi!· . Continuing Education 81593-1770
~en 11e fully supervised at a.ll ~~·free in Ohio at 1-800-336limes by staff members of Project
Challenge.
·
·
To register for Project ChalU.S. Gen. William HuU invaded
~e 19~3. parents must fill out Canada from Detroit at the begin. . return a registration form that ning of the War of 1812.

Announce birth of son

.Costume contest is scheduled

MCC .in danger of ex~inction:t
CINCINNATI (AP) - The
Midwestern Collegiate Conference
may not last much longer, Xavier .
of Ohio's athletic director said.
Jeff Fogelson said he doesn't
expect the conference to silrvive
intact beyond the 1993-94 season.
''I'm very pessimistic about
that," Fogelson said "It definitely
has the potential to be the last year
as we have known it. Circumstances could change. But ... that's
my sense of it."
Fogelson isn't alone in his pesslmism. Asked if he expects this
season to be the final year for the
MCC as it's currently aligned, Loyola (Ill.) Athletic Director Chuck
Schwartz said: "AI this point in
time, yes. Hopefully something
could change. But as of ri3ht now,
I would say yes."
The $ill full-time MCC members
- Xavier, Loyola, Evansville,
Detroit Mercy, Butler and LaSalle
- have signed contracts to remain
in the league fill' the 1993-94 sea·
son. But none expressed commitment beyond next year during the
le~~ meetings last week in
Ph·
~phia.
· MCC Commissioner Jon
LeCrone is still trying to keep the

•

Heritage Weekend will feature
'Ducky Derby~ during festivities

~·

Kings' McSorley not as Bailey twins mean double trouble in coming fightfest ·
hls
Ernesf
"'Rccretiion &lt;:infer
·tiruised as·Cailadiens' ·
~.~nterested.la
'-"~-all
was no biJ
19'·"
~P:t:id~. in. ~~~ .!itle,se~Jes
different·loOb
CLEVELAND-(~&lt;~') - The
Bailey brothers mctlll double bOOble in this year's Cleveland Junilll' •
Olympic Boxing Tournament.
The 1~-year-old. twins, seventh
·graders•at Clevel8nd'a·Aiexaiider
Hamilton Intermediate School, .
have been making a name for
,themselves since they fli'Sl climbed
through the ropes a little more than
a year ago.
·
''My brother started maybe a
day ahead of me,'' said 70-pound
Shaun Bailey, who has to giVe 10

'

,....."
••

__

-Page 7

OU to offer
Project
Challenge

• Which college has the SJil811esl
footballplayers?
·
.
II could be~ University.
The Blue Devila have won the
College Football Association Academic Achievement Award for
(C)1~93
NEWSPAPE~';
graduating 100 percent of their . ENTERPRISE ASSN.
;

playoff best- and seiting an NBA '
playoff record with eight 3~pointers.
. "It was just Olle of those nights
where you feel it, you shoot it and
it goes in,'' Majerle said. "I was
just feeling comfonable."
The suns outrebou1\ded the Sonics 42·25. Seattle's 25 rebOunds
marked the Sonics'1owest total .
ever in a playoff game. The team's
previous low was 29 against the
Los Angeles l..akers ilf 11 19R1 playoff game.
· , •
"But they played their \)est and
they couldn't put us away," the
Sonics' Michael Cage said.
"We're 0 · to fight,'' Soni
g mg
.
cs

Thursday, June 3o189J

'

It's the fifth time Duke has won·
since the award was created in:
1981.
.
:
The CFA reports that the jpadu-.
ate rates for football players at its•
member schools have hit an all-:
time high of 58.9 ~
~
Nineteen CFA members:
received honorable mention fof&lt;,
graduating at leas.t 70 percent or:
their seniors. Among the bigge~
teams on that list: ·
.;
Notre Dame; the Univenity of"
Miami (Florida); Syracuse; thO:
University of Nlll'lh Carolina; Penn~
State; the University of Tennessee;:
and Rutgers.
.
~

Sonics looking to force seventh game with Suns
soon as. .,Ossible," the league's
MVP said.
"We have a chance to close it
out and we want to do tbat," Suns
coach Paul W~ said.
·
lnTuesdayrught's6fthgame81
Phoenix, Barkley and Majerle led
the Suns to a 12().,114 victory.
Barkley scored a carea- playoff
high 43 points, also pulling dawn
IS rebowids and adding 10 assists.
He was 16-for-22 from the field
and 11-for-11 from the free-throw
line.
"That was Ch11les Barkley at
his best," Seattle's Shawn Kemp
said.
Majerle scored 34 points- his

The Daily Sentinel..

~

Bruguera, Medvedev, Graf among those making French Open semis

By MIKE NADEL
·
MONTREAL (AP) - The
white of M11ty McSorley's right
eye isn'L It's red.
Other badges of honor include a
1 1/2-inch gash under the eye and
an inch-long slash over iL And the
right side of the bridge of his nose
is nicked. as is lhe lower side of his
right cheek.
"I sot punched in die eye. I got
IJI)' head hit into the glass. I got hit
With a stick. Last night I got raked
with a stick," the Los Angeles
Kings defenseman said Wednesday. "I really believe the more you
put into it; the more you get out of
1L If it's looking into the mirror and
seeing a shiner or a crooked nose
Ill' stitches, SO be iL
"Ten years from n&lt;iw, maybe a
little kid will come up to me and
ssy, 'How did you get that?' And I
can sar, 'I got 1t in the Stanley Cup
fmals. "
Mter only one game, Tuesday's
4-1 victory fill' the Kings, the Montreal Canadiens already have had
their fill of Marty McSorley.

By The Bend

,

Wichita State's Dreifort said. to have best chance-at majors

t

•

I

..... ._ .. ..-.

&amp;fll.

o,..-..-··

fiiltJIWIWW

.....

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PI' lj..,_

.,..Citl.

..

IPEI IDEI IAYI I WEEk
- . - . . ...

·1:10 11.111. II 7.....

UI.LIPI.I

,

~ ...........

j

s;.,.........
!'l*r
D I p.lll. ...,.Y

.,, - I &amp;&amp;

2011 ~ llold

•..•

�•
•

•

•

Gllllpolll
&amp; VIcinity

.•

•

Pomeroy,
alddllport
&amp; VIcinity

•

•'

4:30 P. M. DAY IEFOII
. NlliCAnGI -

•DOZERS
oBACKHOE
EVERY THURSDAY
•TRACK LOADER
, EAGLES'
'
... CLUB
·
•TRUCKING
• IN f'OMEROY
D. A. 101101

•

8:46p.m.

PARENT VOLUNTEERS· A tea wulleld
receedy at T~q~pen Plalu Elementary to hoDor
tbe pareet voluteen. Jolul C!M'•au, elnlee·
tarysupervilor, was pre~e~~t aad CODiflllalated .
the atalr. Pictured, l·r, front, are: Joana Cal·

Secoad row, 1-r, Coaale Connolly, Laurie

Boyles, Jeaole Weeks, Mepn Swain aDd Terri

¥ltldleport,
Po•ror, R•cl•••
· Rutl•••·•••
lreu

Upper At. 7 Gallipolis
446-8154
Free Country Dance
Lessons every Thursday.
Fine Dining Every
·
Evening 4 pm til10 pm
Under'New Management

Cllue. Absent were Sheila Coaaolly,-Shella
Speui:er, Pill Keaton, Cheryl Bartram, Rboada

. SaDden aad Fouda Tbomu.

IWIIY pd Leslie Kidder, volunteer coordlaton.

.....

-1010 TRMERS
-aUSHCUTTtRS

••••-IIMIL
FIIAIKIIG AYAUII.E

949·2391 or

MORRIS

..

1·108-137·1460

EQUIPMENT

LnnMowlng.
Fenlllzlng. WMcllng.

sw. • . lltl. (Co.. .

•nd Belding.
Shrub•ndTI'M
Trimming &amp;

CALL 992·6123
Reasonable Rates
Dependable

A-•• •,t

n

u.~11111,a ComiiLii&amp; ,,

FREE. ESTIIIAT!S

Seriice

THE BOOK

~

,

_______,.t· _.,
..
...
~

. 117LWSt•

........,•• ow.

Backhoe
. and
, small
Dozer Work

1111111111,01.

'"*"·
· etartar hom• or home lor

RUTLAND - 1 loor lrwn• home with 2 beclroome, b&amp;th,,
1 car g11111111, gerdln

Observes birthday

floor.

Andrea Buckley, daughte{ of
Bryce and Pain Buckley, recently
.aelebraled bet finl birtbday with a

COIIIIEACIAL BUILDING- 2nd 81. Pom•oy - A rael , ..
value! Commerclel room -downol8ira with 2 apertmenta
upslalra.
. ASKING $20,000.

Jl811Y at her home.
A teddy bear "Baby's First
Birthday• tbeme was carried out in

IYRACUSE - Rllnc;h 11yte horn. witli 3 beclroome, belli,

$11,100.

carport, eppllancat, etorage ..,..,., good nolghbolhoodl

$34,100.

the cake, hats and balloons.

·'' .

!nil troae, tiPPIIilllole. Nice
aldar lndividuala u •1 on one

IIIDDLEPORT -Two atory frame home with 3 bldlaoma,
bath, now rapaira •round home, tlectrlc h•t pump,

_ Oike and ice cream were served
to her parents and brothet, Daniel,
John and Glenna Riebel, matemal

ftraplace, attic opace, ba-~ ~x. 1 ecra.
·
$41,100. (*Y conlkhr oller.)

graadparenta, Darlene Buckley,
p~ternal grandmother, Dortha
1\ifibel, maternal great-grandmodl·
.er, John and Henrietta Bailey,

•

POtoEROY - 3 bedroom ranch etyle horn. on nal lot
n•r laWn. Ful buerll•nt, &lt;eantral air, woodbumlng
firapl...,., 1 car~-

paternal gr~-grandparents; ~ohn
Riebel Jr., Diana. Michelle, Milan·

'

S25,000.

Frei Estltnllt•
· Replacement
Wlndowa
VInyl Siding
::

Roofing
C.lluefor

;a

992-7178
..:(614)
..

~

31904 .........

SpeciiiiP~on

Siding and Windows

; . 992-2772
Jarnee Klo11•, owner

WANT ADS bring
Vacation Money

FREE ESnMATES

': 949-2168

KA1HY CLEl.AttE)-...............------·--.attt

. (6,14).992-7878 .
' .

'

• TRAINING
l-OOKING FOR
SOMEONE TO
· TAKE CARE
: OF IN OUR
'
HOME.
.. 614-992-7698

.•

&amp;12&amp;11

i
I

.• t

PICTURE DEADLINE IS FRIDAY, JUNE 4th

'

..

. '
•, '

.

The Baby Sentinel i&amp; a Special Section filled With
photographs of local kids, age&amp; newhom to 4 yean old.
The- Baby Sentinel will appear in the June 11th iuue of · :
'fl:te Daily Sentin~l
l•
.:
..
Be sure you child, grandchild, or relative is includ~d.
Complete the form below and enelo~e a snapehot or wallet
size picture plus _a $5.00 charge . for each photograph. . .•
.'
(Encloee payment with picture.)

....

Fo•••otlo•

1-f t -

.

PtmiiCSale

&amp;Auction

. EBLIN'S

_

:::-::.:ra:
e.
c::.v~: .
. . ............
........-.-

24 HR. EMERGENCY SERVICE

-Oiolalon lllr'VIoe.
...
~

New Wirln. Rewiring,
Troubi..Shootlng

I PKRENT$'NAMEo
I
.
I CITY ol STATE
I CHILD'S NAME(S) ol AGE
.
I
I
I
L

.

SuhmiUed ~

·

.

FR~:E

ESTlMATES

------------~---SEND TO OR DROP OFF AT....

,..,,.• .,. rlglol to • • •

' lnferiMIItloa, to ,.._, •ny
IIIII Ill lllde or lo _ _,,
:-1111411111111 lhld will bMI.-

'

''

'.
•• '

The Dally Sentinel

. . IJIIIrleL

P. 0. Box 729 • Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
BABY SENTINEL

. POSI Kit COM'IST HELD · J!f! 'ill ........ 0....lleld a
Euler PG*r -~ II .._dj. AWIJ'dl wen .... Ill Ill Jlftld.
paDII, Whurl _., Mn. Racllel Hood, Htltber Hoad ad Dmtl
John--. HoldiDa Jo'-'1 pldure II Dao Hood. Each recelftd 1
Iarae caedy bu'.

(614) 742·2345

-1'}

I

(614) 992·7878
•
FAX (614) 992·7878

Shade River Saddle Shop
'

CUSTOM.SADDLES, •
LEATHER' REPAIR
and BALL GlOVE. REPAIR

36358 SR 7

J&amp;D.. _ , _ . , . . _

='-=~"*

..... truoiO:

Cheater, Oh. 45720

985-3406

"

; Worll Gull~a"nt..d

' 61Mct·2tllor
· 614-lti•SOIO
11-U-1

E111ployrre11t SCIVICPS
11

Help Wanted

'o\_. o\Uo\IIIMI Shon"""

11. . _.h oa. l'ou'M -

u..

o\VON I o\1 - · I . .....,

Spaore,~--

TWIN CITY MACHINE &amp; WELDING
24 Hour Pcntable WeWiril Su vlc.

"

.:

: .• ~
-··;, ' tt•
.' .' )
. ··
~

:,..

,

~

: UIU UIIS

: (fonn~r Malon Lane~)

:3rd ' 'Pomi!IIV ......
,'

M-,WV

:

(104) -77N515

: Sun.·Tllur 5--10 pm
! Fi1-8111-11pm

co•Lm MACHI. SHOP
. ....
WE LEASE
~·--·
...... - .
.

._
..._.- ......
·- - - -·-·a~~

•Cilllidi. IIIDDIIII•,..... I~

GENERAL MACtiNE WORK l -.
WELDING

•

••

•

,,1

.........

•r•ICIIDII-MMVtD ..... IIINitliMI

1)1.08ED WEDHESOAY

..•

HOURS:

7:30am • 5JJ0pm
Mon • Fri
1:30am . !2:00pm Sol

IN SI()P .
ALL TPESOf

•

. •J

J

~Coeta.

! • SUMMER HOURS"

. .'

g

.

oompany. 14100- ....

I
I
I
I .
I .'
I ..
. I ''
:.1

Uoa:

MAITECH INDUSTRIES

' ~. lul..... Out
' ' Frw btlfllll•,

• &gt;

·

'

COMMIRCIAL &amp; RESIDENTIAL
LictniHL Insured &amp; .....

r-~--~------------,

.

Tha Tupp•ro Pl•lne·
Che•ter W•t• Dl•trlct

I

~IDE

-. '''

...........

a. 1,11, "· ...

Steel Fabrication
and Welding

•
•
• •

..,,..,ted,
••utlon

(I)

~

·' WITH CPR

FIVE GENERATION • Memben ot tbll ftve lfllf!Udoa faml·
ly are, ,. r, III•Ddlnl, Boule Miller, lrtal"'l'eii·P'IDdmother;
Betty E. DIU, eat·arudiiiOther. Seated, Gilll Weaver, holdln1
son, Cody
Cathy Scarberry, P"•dmotber.

I

MARTECH INDUSTRIES

.

pareon, nrm

- ~\ and

.

Repairs.

.' .•

end/or -por•don, lntal'•t
In he eome •nd muat be

of~..

,. ,,

.

end muat aonllln the lull

•

J

•
• .
•
•
•

- " " ' ........... _olope

1\JPPERS PLAINSctEITER WATER
DIITRICT
It- !Wold lillbiOn,
..,.lcMol of lhe Board

'

•

OFFICE - ··-·--....- ....................-·----··112·2211

Tuppere Pl•lna-Cheol•r
Wa.., Dlelrlct 81 their olllce,
11111 B•r so Ro•d,
Rnl viAe, Ohio until 11:011
A.ll. on June 14, 1813,
covwlng 1he palndng, both
lntorlor Mid Exterior, lor one
16,000 g•llona 14'x75'
• at•n'::flpa w•ter . t•nk
1oca Ill 1he lnlerlecllon of
1Wp. Rd. 100 1111d Twp. Rd.
102 on the Sutton end l811rt
twp. 11M In u.lgo County.
Addltlonel lnlarm•tlon
1111d opeciHcetlona mey b•
obllllnecl It the office of the
Dlalrlat •• 31511 Ber 30
Roecl, Aladlvllla, Ohio.
Eeah bid MUll be
enctoaeclln en epproprlldely

Auto-B...tab
Sprfnrr Tfna•
Special

Plumbing Installation

,,},. ~~ ~t ....
ln
.

1

I

992·3470 ·.·;'

lltERII HART ..............- ................- -- ·····7G-2111

PUBLIC NOllCE
Se•led bide will be
• received Mid o ........ by the

-M.

3-4-83- 1

: Gutter Cleaning
· P1lntlng

36970WI•aa.l
r, •Pa11rroy, Olllo

•" .

each propoe•l to th•
utlalecUon of the Dlatrlot
Bolrd ... ou.,enty thlll ••
the bid I• •ccept•d, •
oonnct will be en~ lnso
•nd Itt p•rlorm•nce
On bldl thld ere
Njeoled. 1he .,.ren,_ will
be prempdy l'lltum.cl to the
blddara. On the bid thet Ia
aueh Bid Bond
· will be returnM to the
• auoc•elul bidder upon
of thO ContrecL
ln..P,atlon tDUr of the link
• will ,_,. lrolll 1M Ollloo on
-: ~une 10, 1113 to lhon who
o•ll •nd make ••
, eppolnllllenl on 1he lth ol
~UM before 4:00 P.M. The
ilnk will nol be dr•lnecl lor

SAYRE
614·742·2131

Gutters

WICK'S HAULING
SERVIa

Public Not!Ct

_ ,..... by • 100% Bid
Bond In 1he tull omaunl of

lOll. SAm

·.NEW - REPAIR

. 4/29/93 tfi

mon bird in New Guinea. tcn~~ehed
and pecked an American acierltist' s
band. it provided the filll proof that
a bird can be poisonous; notes
Nalional Geograpbic.

of wary

.

·. ROOFING

614·992·7144

When a hoo&lt;:'ed pitohui. a com-

-

.....

. . . . . . .111. . .

Howld LWlltesel

. CnekiHd
IIWdle~Mtrt, Olllo

$endinB Pfts were Harry, Mar·
garet and Jeff McElfresh, 1ack and
Cote Ambrose, Ron and Charlotte
Hanning, June Bearhs. Chris Ball,.
and Bob and Donal Thomas.

'.

LJ.STOIE,
GUVIL &amp; COAL

SIZED LIMESTONE . ~;

&amp;II)- ····-········--···--- -~111
TRACY BMttAGER........................- - - -··..141 2411

Spencer.

liAULIIIG

. Downspouts

~ E. C' f l

. Debbie and Sara Ball, Jeaa
Thomas. Larry, Janet and Ashley
Life. Kim Michael and Jared

· MARTECH
,INDUSTRIES

av~lfllng

WE NEED umNGSI
GIVE US A CALL IF YOU'RE READY TO SEW
'
.

· da and Benjamin Buckley, Jocelyn
and 1uli Bailey and T'lffany Hollon,

1-6-13

DAYIISON'S
ILUMIING
.

+Tax

.H-H-1

.......... (Co. 7)

ANDREA BUCKLEY

1129.95

. 992·7553

992·3577

. MORRIS
EQUIPMENT

Pric11 Stortfn1 II

'30HOUR ·

......,., llhG0-2100
ClOSEt TIIIIStiY

fliWICIIG AYMAIU

2 Fro•t Struts • Lal!i1tr
e 4 WIIMIAIII••••

RWOWLE RATES

lOUISa

3HP·11HP

J&amp;L INSULAnGN

IW~ DOZER WORK. I
DRIVEWAY WORK
· IIIIIIUMESTOHE
DEUYERY SUVICE

Ill e SILL • 'IUDI

. MANCO
MINI KARS

,.

CH.ILIE'S

BARN

'--,~_.!4fl!!!!!~ ~

,742·2455

cem~11b

•
•
•

· IIYII'S LAWI
llllltiiiiCI

UWN CARE

CHEFS GALLEY &amp;
CLIPPER LOUNGE

A'"'ou1

EICAYAftll
(614)
667·6621

. &amp;p.clal ~y Bird
. •100 P.yoff
Thla ed good for 1
FREE ctml.
Lie. No. 0051·32

CLOSING SALE
Featuring Home Interiors
DONNA WILSON
219 Union Ave., Pomeroy
10am-5pm
·
SATURDAY, JUNE 5.

•
•

'

992 -3768
17 COLE; POMEROY, OHIO

,,,

•

�Sentinel
SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

11

=. =-- . .

~~·

0

,..,.

...-

Apartment

NEA Croaaword Puzzle

torRent

m-

304

···~

Ohio

·:. =
•

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ACROII
1 - new1on

--.

~~~v.:r=··
~Peart
....

;

•

44

th'n ..-...,hours 1:00.

.. '11

.

Ohio

~J'~I!.'=
'wr'wl,-'o,....IM-448-

_ . .... Jsnlll.

PHILLIP
ALDER

32

4 Stretched
light

34NotOUI

I Follow

IIH oH

NORI'II
+713

514~ '

•Hz

...,.

HAT• I
~

llf T'HI

I)INNQ,

13 U..llulcl
· 14 HIP. 15~for

......

:;£EKAND MEEK.

EAST

••

TAit.!

.QIOU
tQIOU
. 410874

cr....

SOUTH

+AKU
.AKS
.KH

MICIIIIneoul
llln:hlndl8l

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Norlll

P881
Paao

zt
Paa

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51 Out1ll
52 Actor ""' 5381Nme

_,.

54 Cloth

55c-.ct

21-111

5S Snick llld 57 Wlll1e HouH

11Jber.te
21nlhi-

DIIcl (lllllr.)

3bllogerl
4 eon.truc:Uon

lniUIII

inlelllne

DOWN

31 Apiece

burn
5 OWn(lcOL)

Eut
Pus
Pus
·'

Openin£ lead: • Q

~-~ -,A;,toi.~..!:"~C::
~~~----· ........
lit •• I I
:r.~-~
Undd ah ..

Soli~

2+
3.NT·

41 ........
42 c.tiiU44 Adult ln-1
47Trllllwlth

27 Evergr11n

"-fro
30 Spinning

+A'KJ
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

38111plllllr.
38 Llrtlllook
IIIIChlne

18 J.- Hoover
20 Peruvian
Indian
21 Com!lll'lllvl
~
22 lrllllti Nevy
lllllrevlltlon
23 lllrlldlc

+vess

37

40 f'ICIImlll

111 came before

.AH

Filii'*'

311 Nbon'a Y.P.

12 llttlllllllll.

·

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,....,

33 Dllllnt

cloMiy

r

ARIIMf .. Pioullll ......

l GOT ME A

This way
or that?

SPECIALIST II

ll:i-T.V.41--

I'tlltl &amp;Ill.

-~-~
~~
'% ::~::•.:::.. 'on

Ooluw '

c..·

iML

Pl..

A1111. AI R' f

On

7111 Held In

lind R ... Or
To: CI.A m.
Dolt~. .,._ Au a - OriJ 'n. Ohio

ole_,....
I

I

-·

.._ 01 -

•~: ... 10 ,...........

-

.. INb, "" - .

J!M.

-.m;

21

- -PEANUTS

Buiii'IIU
Opponunlty

ASOUT THIS, MARCIE?

INOI1CEI
VAWY PUILIIIIIIG CO.
IIIII ~ .• IMIII-

•_...,.....,..~
••=•

-----

.........

11171' lo -II!OIIIr

1ho

C'ELEBRrrY CIPHER

-"""*"""&lt;9..... - -_.,_ -· ,_ ... ..-.
&amp;ch

'P

. ....
.,.

.,, -

*

Renlals

41

HoLINt for Rent

1111.

W.nllna ID ,..._ a or 1 t~• droam Fora.•Zinllh:ar'"lheMe, ln -nand...,.._,.,.. --~~~ good= .... .,..
tlon, . . . - ........ ~.,.. 1124144.
112..tUI,IIno-jlloUe
S.w n r 9 on II'IIIChlnL

All real utalt advtnlslng In
1niS newspaper Ia sub~ to
Ihe Federal Faw Hou!llng ACI

lmilallon o( ciScnmlnaiiOn

___
_
-.............

...........

loolll!lnl

based on "'"'· colOr, IOIIgiOI\,

l.lerchand1se

sa.: tamiW.Istalus or Miltona!

Orlgln, or any lnlenrlon ro ,

ThiS

Houllhokl
Goodl

newspaper will nol

YI'IIA PUIIIITURE
114 441 S1110r.,4 ttl .1 1.

~nowlngly ICCepl

oiiiD... Coli~ . . . 111111--.or-ololllllal
eountr of MRIDD, 1110
Clffl1 r - . P.O. ... 3G1,
.,,. I =, 0No 41771.
Ra DIIIIMIIi .. ...,. 8 ...,_ IIIJCI..
_
........J!-~ol J

advtrtiserT.tllt tOt rellalale
which Is rt YIOaa!lon ol the
law. Our

readers are henlby

42 Mobile Homes

torRent

.. ormld !hal all dwoMII'1,jt
ae7Vtnised In thtl·newtptper
are av1ilable on an equal
-~unly balls.
'

....lle,I14Wi1M•

-

Aonlno -

.TIIe--lollll.

make " sucn ptellt'lncl,
Nmlation or discrimination."

:::r1:.:':.
a:.:
dillon- .... _ .... . .

1.a.

.,..._11111 _ _

to adver1118 ·~ prelerence,

..............
In
, _ . , .Clfi
... of
__

........................
............
_,. ,....
"'*
..........
.....
..................
,,,
• h.., ....................
lq•itTl

'" 1968 wl1lch - · · lllleglll

........
._..

·-

.... For ........ llflll ~.­

.,. -

rJtWS

IWP

f'IAGAZINI'.J

lj

/

fj

'"'

.

......._ YfS. IF YOU

tMVf

8~ve

. ..
..
"" ..
_,

"

GfNts. ~

low

r

By Jeft'rey McQuain
Making solid by cooling or freez ·
ing is GELATION. Proces~ the cor·
rect pronunciation of this chilling
process: GELATION is pronounced
"jel-AY-shUn."

1M -

Mll24,- 2 1JZ
....... lull ..... - . wll~ -

Rd., ... oil IRIS, • -

Nooth

"'

41771.

3 br,
2bolho,3ocno,AII7J1Ck·
.
Counly line. pZ,!GO.
I I R I I r i o k - . 2 - - :104 411-1164 "'372.QH.
II: 'ullr home. 3 br, 2 bath·
-t
- ...lllld
,...,.,
llnlolr,....- tor . .
........ oobuiK- on
2.1-RI17-Countr
llno. $42,100. 304 41f.
11.1-'-WihZIIcn ,_ori72.QM.
- . A l f t l - ....... Coil
Aftori:IO, IU • 6110.
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ly brloll ronoh, I llod- Pomoi
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LAYIE'SI'URHITUAE

Comploto

homo

tumrlllllol!llao.ililllla

English
more
thjln abece~~tu~~ry~;·~~~~
noun andforverb
should
"muh·SAHJ" if you want your
ers to be relaxed .

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! M0 C A

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"My· Dad is so wealthy,"
bragged one lellow to his
· .
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roommates, ,hat when my
.---...,....-----·..., Mom had morning sickness he
NEK EL N
haditmoveduptothe---...... "

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chuc~le

quoted

by filling in the miuing word11
you develop from step No. 3 beloW,

I

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II

Wretch • Major • Enjoy • Fl~ht • HOW LONG
· ·oo you remember," the old timer asked his buddy,
~ 'when people worried about how much it took to buy
· a new home instead ol HOW LONG?"

.

~~~

-·r

...

I

FORI

Complete the

sciiAM-lEfs· ANSWERS

year
. Send for" Gemini's
(Nov. ~- 211 "Sharing"'
• • Graph prediclions today by mailing $1 .25 should be lhe oporalive word for you loday.
plus along, M"-addressed, stamped onva· 'This includes your love, as well as your wil · :
lope 10 Aslro·Graph, clo lhis newaparer. ingness, lo help people who heve previously
P.O. Box 4485, New YOf!&lt;, NY 10163 Be , helped you .
surelo slale your zodiac sign.
CAPRICORN (Ole. 22-Jen . 191 Even
BERNICE
CANCER (June 21.July 22) Left lo your !hough it will be ovonluaily betler lhel the .
own devices IOday your ,chances lor silc· lrulh comes oul, you may leam of somelhlng
BEDEOSOL. cess
look rllsonably good . However, il; . today conceming'lri&amp;nds lhal might nol set .
you succumb 10 unprodUOIIve, outside infiu·. well with you. Don'l makeloo much ol ~­
.,_you could deleal your own purpoee. , · AQUARIUS (,.,, 2G-Fob. 19) il's important
LED (July 23-AUfl. 22) Don'l gM invalvsd you llo se~ · reiian! IOday instead of ~hing
• today wilh any .cliques or "9roupa who do: · lor things 10 come 10 you lhrough others .
no1 apprectalo you for whal you are. If you ' . They mighl nol be operaling on lhe same
leal compelllcl 10 prove youraall. H mighl IChsdule u you are.
no1 come ollloo well.
PIICI!S l'tb. 20-llorch 201 Succe11 Ia
VIIIQO (Aug. 23 81'L %2) Do no1 ~nr · · likely today In liluallons where you caraiiAiy
your optXJOilion IOdly, eapeCially In mane10 . plan your .movea . However, in
~;
Jw. 4, 11113
lhll pertain 10 your CIIMf. n.re·s a c:hancl , wlln you loy 10 bull your way lhrough,
,!:"
1 you may !HI,_- fa110r you wheN. In , _.... CCJUi!lllo1Mllloll,_,
.
-nil.. .,1 ll)dicalionl you might becOIII~ JC:IUIIIIy, lhoy favor 11101her.
AlliS (lllicii21-Aprtl18) As long 11 you I
In lilt innovlllwl 11tajUII ..-.. LIIIIA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) II i omeone: moinUoln lhe leadership rolo today, your!
,_ year lhud. If you l 're wilily Mlec· mok8l yo.u r11her lavish ptomees IOdly, H'a • eanee ol ••H·tllttm, will be onhencld,
••llvf. " could bl 1 very l*oeii&lt;MI move or bill IlOilO llkt _ , ~ IIYI u goopel. · llov-r, ~ you .,. challenged or oppolld,,
your l*l
There'• 1 good c:hancl rt Willllllr&amp;ly be hoi·, you m""' wfthdlaw more 111tn you llhould. ,
10) U.U111
lOW~
TAURUS (April . . , . 101 In your com·
21 ..1 11111
GIIIINI
(lily
y
your
ICORPIO
(Oct.
24•Nov.
22'
Try
nol
lo
men:iiJ dl11,..
'""' m....,
Cllllflllln or contro11 your lrTIOIIoue.
r
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. - lloiiUf - l i l Y new, long renge oll'IOI"ner: ' 1 • • ra1hor llanlho grand- you
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oould miiCio oppowll
lwO unwlll
CIIOIIIoni. 11111 ttme N-·
,_ dO no1 hive ,_ old ones
........
~ Don1 bonk on Ill•""'''
...... you dor11
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,
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7 P.ll.
BIUIITifUL APAIITIIIEHTI AT
IIUIICJET PRICES AT , _ _
UT.IITU. AI .loobon Plllo

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T~1.0111

tor Rent

(WZYKF

form four slmp,to """"' •

L _J._J._J._.__._-.1.

. A. Don't let this word rub you the
wrong way. MASSAGE comes from
the French verb MASSER, "to rub,"
based on an Arabic verb for "stroke."
This word; used either as noun ("have
a massage") or as· verb ("massage .
your shoulder"), has been available in

E' ~ SI.OII.+J 5'1'
A HLWAN i3Eit-e.

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10

nGoHaeoor~

wonder why it's called that. .Can you
help?

_ ..... ---home.
- ·--

YS . YIZLM.'

CROFES

Q. Each time I get a MASSAGE, I

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PUIZLII

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OR RENT-aoOWN (NO DEPOSIT)

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SZYMF
HCiPIF.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Who wa1- golf on TV? Who calla eight frilnda
o- and gets a keg of beer? Landocepers, I gu.a." - Jeff CMirlo.

PtNONALITY
.,.AY It l"'t4t,ITeO.

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Tt411 A'TI'L.f SAYs A Me'-ANG~o,.y

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thtciphlr s&amp;aldt fof lftOther. T_,.,...cM;(J . . . . W.

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t 1 100m ......

~In

I

�P1g1 12-The o.Jiy Sentinel

. .
'

Thuraday, June 3, 1883
•
banquet
held at Victory Baptist Church .

Barb Covell presents recent
Racine UMW program
· A program was presented by
Barb Covell, afftliated with Good
Worb Inc. of Atbcas, at the recent
meeting of the Racine United
Melhodist Women.
·
She was introduced by Alice
Wolfe, program leader.
The title is taken from a bible
scripture and is known as a community of hope which is a shelter
for· t!'c homeless an~ is the only
one m 17 surroundmg counties
located at 91 Central Ave. The
~inisay of Good Worts Inc., continues 24 hours daily by trained
workers who supervise a volunteer
staff and work wilh lilt residents 10
assisllbcm in making connections,
nw:hing goals and taking responsibility. Air food. furniture and current needs are donated and volunteers come from the community
and university. The average star
for a homeless person is 22-1!2
'days.
Lee Lee
'ded at the business
meeting wlrl: opened with the
group repeating the UMW purpose.
After die welcome, Sue Grace gave
the opening prayer. The officers
reports were given by Chris Hill
and Clala'Mae Sargent. The penny
fund collection was taken and sick
calls reported. Correspondence was
read.
Sue Grace, Christian Global
Concern coordinator, reported on
world hunger and the United
Methodist Committee on Relief.
:The group enjoyed taking a short
quiz on questions about world
hungu and UMCOR. ·
.
Lee Lee thilllted members for
helr.ing with and donating to the
De ta Kappa Gamma and Alpha
Delta Kappa dinners which were
served recently.
· Important dates to remember are
District Annual Day on Sept 16 at
Marietta and District Enrichment
Day on Oct. 16 at Belpre. The district president urges members to

ment involvement in important
issues by writing to congressmen
and senators. Sbe also said lhat die
top concern for UMW is attracting
younger women followed by membership expansion.
The nominating committee will
meet before the August meeting
and members are Etta Mae Hill,
Alice Wolfe and Tammy Hill. ·
Alice Wolfe annou~ about.
the bloodmobile a1 the senior citizens liuilding on June 23 and volunteers to help are Opal Diddle,
Mar1!,West, Etta Mae Hill and
Lee
• The UMW serves sandwiches and beverages.
Several other items of business
were aaended 10.
The mother·dau~hter banquet
whic;h was co-chaued by Ruth
Dudding and Chris Hill was held
recently a1 the church.
All of the wal and table deccxa·
lions use!l depicted the 4ves of
women which related 10 the theme
"All in the Life of a Woman.•
The favors were various colors
of a hiJh heel small plastic shoe
containmg a small net bag of pot-

~e welcome was given by

UMW president Lee Lee. Ruth
Dudding was mistress of ceremonies. A humorous skit was presented by Sally Ervin, T.C. Ervin,
Sharon Hubb~rd, Brenda Hill,

the fourth annual mother-

dauahter blnquet was held reoendy

Robyn Reiber, Rhonda Dailey,
Carla Wallace and T - W'IIJon.
Scripture wu read by Cbris
Hill. Judy Pape pn:sooted a voc:al
sOlo.
The recipienu of door prizes
were given large hanging basJrets
of flowers.
Sue Grace read an appropriate
original poem and ,also gave the
closing prayer..
.
The dinner was calered.
The farewell psrty for Rev. alld
Mrs. Grace and family will he beld
June 25 at the new picnic shdter
house located bcllind the Mdbodist
Church. It will start at 4 p.m. The
picnic will be community wide but

=~':sh::C~ and a
Refreshments were served by

ing die social hour.

LONG' BOTTOM - Revival, Mt.
Olive Community Church, Long
Bottom, through Sunday, 7 p.m.
niJhtly. David Crowell, Ravenna,
Mich., evangelist. Public invited.

'

RU11.AND • Rutland Township
Trustees meet Thursday at 6:30
p;m. at the Rutland Fire Station.
Public invited.
TUPPERS PLAINS • United
Melhodist Women of St. Paul United Methodist Church, Tuppers
Plains, will hold a spring yard sale
Thursday through Saturday in the
cburch basement. Hot dogs and
drinks will be sold and there will
be a bate sale. ~eeds will be
used for vacaiion bible schoOl.
RACINE - Racine American
Legion Post 602 will meet Thursday at die post horne. Dinner will
be a1 6:30 p.m. with meeting after.
The post will have a bean dinner
Salurday beginning at noon. The
cost is $2.
1

•

......... ...,... oq

~~.d ••:=n;.lcss Reedsville Nazarene Women
than 10
of Ill
elect officers for new year
, _ v ........

American

paceal

AtGtcnding wVc:rek. !'ilaH.IlWKallace,
S ue race, 11: 1 1 , aren
Walker, Margie West, Chris Hill,
Margery Roush, FraliCes Roberu,
Gladys Shields, Dorothy McKcnzie, Mariam Bell, Ruth Stearns.
Opal Diddle, Dolly Wolfe, Mailha
Dudding, Etta Mac Hill, Alice
Wolfe, Clara Mae Sargent and Lee
Lee.
&gt;
The next meeting will be June

~=~.!~=church.
New
. .'

~~::.:~~~-~=1
"..._

She will appear in die United
Stares Adliellaacut kar'.any Offi.
a.l Yearbooto JMMished nNiuoaJly.

She is tile daughter of Pauy
Ward and die pallddaughter of
Charlie and Betty Pugh, Middleport.

'

Heritage costume
contest slated
Be a pMt

Long Bottom news notes .

,..ar

ne

GRAVES DECORATED·
Rll*-11 ol.._eroy Nw 1
and Rehabllltatloa Center observed M-odal Day by lilakbl&amp;
grave decontloas. They were •lsted lly J. .le Gillispie, actitltiei
director, Peon;y Eftlll, aetll'lty "Phtan\ ud Alan D1lnt, ••..._
nance 'superviSor. Pictured Is resldeat Herb Roula ud J•le
Gllllsple at the Letart FaDs Cfllletery where Roall's wile is baried
1

JACKSON • Liberty Moun-

taineers perform Saturday at Uber-

ty Township F'li'C DqatniCII: Filii

Fry in Jackson.

.

POMEROY - Meigs 4-H Pleasure Riders will have a car wash
Saturday at McDonald's from 8
a.m. to noon. The cost is $3 per car.
'

.

TUPPERS PLAINS , Orange
ToWnship TruStees meet Satunlay
at 7:30 p.m. at the borne of the
clerk, Patty Calaway.
SUNDAY
RACINE • Kiser family
reunion, Sunday, Star Mill Paik,
Racine.

RACINE- Kenny Wigius.wiU
present a progran1 on liacr control
Sunday at 7 p.m. at the Reorganized Church or Jesus Christ of
Latter Day Sainll, Racino-PIIidMd.
Pulilfc invited.
RACINE • 11111 amllll Gecqe
Holter Jr. descendanlll reunion Sunday aldie horne of lim IIIII re-o
Holter Werry. Court Slreet ltold.
Racine at 1 p.m. BrinJ. piduta and
potluck dish, Rain will DOl .......
Call 949-2746 or 247-2344 for furIller information.

MIDDLEPORT - The Bi&amp; Bead

Commualg.:and wiD

jli 1111

lis

propam d. die Sunday at 3 p.m. iD diD Mlip
Junior HiJb Audiicrium.
lhlid llld

1011

ticity..r 1'1

'•

••

Mr.

i*=:a~a:lmte;':.::
ter by JlmC 1. Reai••aiou for.

Vol. 44, NO.zt

............lno.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohlo,Frlday, June 4, 1993

ARk

-r·

I SAVINGS ON ·

of the year. Com!Dissioner Ja~et
The letter reads:
.
''This~'!"::';0~ceholders Howard voted agamst the pay llllS·
"In accordanc:e with your memo
dec'din
do
hat.
es.
.
.
of
May 19, 1993, we request thai
.
1 i 10
w IS nght for die
~ntes wd the letter.Wl!S hand each of our respective offices
cou.;~·
h
p ·
.
dehvered to the commtSSlon~rs' receive supplemental appropriaat was ow rosecu~mg offlCC Tuesday afte~n. Howev- tions at a level of five percent
AtiOmey John R. Lentes exp~ ~r. die letter was not di_sc~ dur- increase in the line iiClllS for offices
~0~ :1e~~~::S ~bmitted· !ng the regu~ commlSston meet- of salary, employee, PERS (Public
ComiJiissi~ asltiny,c:Yforo:~
mgThedle ~ollo~ day. li 'cal all ,Empio:ree Retirem~nt System~.
.
.
tssue ts not po b
II , Worter s Compenssnon and Medipercent pay ratses 10 · abatis~ Lentes said. Democrat and Repub.. care for the second half of 1993.
and that all county offir:es .recetve li~an officeholders alike feef the These totals aie delineated below
supplem~ntal appropn~uons to ~granted to two~mployees is foreachrequestingauthocity.
gra~ a ftve percent ratse to all · 1mproper and ·unfarr to other
~This requell is conditioned
emOn~ 4 commissio
_ emplo&gt;:ees. Jle .added that .lhe exclusively upon the .immediate
.
Roush
and
Robert=
~h
protest 15 ~ agamst t!'e two pea- rollback Of ~e excCSSI~e 18 JlCl·
rung
n
pie who recetved the l'8lSCS. .
cent retroacuvc pay nuses gtven
vo!ef8to trant two COI!"ty ~~~
They work hard, Lentes said, all two of your emplOyees by ICSOlu.~
.~t poy ~ses w
the coun1y employees wort very lion of die~ on May 5, 1993. ·
•nuses bemg recroacuve 10 the first hard.
''We believe that the 18 percent
By JIM FREEMAN

fJ

:committee
:meets behind
:closed doors

BASKETS
ALL 10 IIICtl FLOWERING BASKETS

NOW '8.98
OR 2 FOR '17.00

• REGI• AR '11.98

..

,,

r~

-'

ALL FLATS OF
BEDDING PLANTS
REGULAR '10.00 PEA FLAT

NOW'7.98
OR 2 FOR '15.00 .

•

ASSORTED 4 INCH POnED PLANTS
AEGUW1'1.79 NOW .99'

.

.ana~

~-..:&gt;.

'

•X AND MATCH
141N A FLAT FOR '12.00

.

BJ fO ••rr JOII rtllXlNI PltNIC 'l flltiOII...

JU80
, ...... OIIOIS

FLORIDA YllERIPENED

HALF RUNNER
GREEN liANS
99C u.

......

TOMIlOIS
'

.,MrfUII.I

••••••
WIRE POTATOES

IXTU LAlli JUMIO 9 COUIIT

CALIFORNIA CANTALOUPES

I.

*1.49

1 ,~

. .,

. - SWID, JUICY CIIMSON SWID WlftRMELONS

22 Uo AYI.

$4,98

'-•1

114 llle Norlll
•IOn 1111c1ga
.._, WY 1 " ' - m-.721

---

. retroaclivc raise to yOUPemployees
is no! )ustifie.d. based upon tbe
financ•al ~ondttion of the county
and is not fair 10 the other hardworking employees. The figures
relating to an equal increase 10 all
county employees are . .also
auached. and clearly indicate how
irresponsible such action would
be.•
Signing the letter were· Len
Auditor Nancy Parter ciun ~·
Treasurer Howard E. F~k·
Recorder Emmogene Hamilton'
Cle~ of Courts Ljlrry E. Spencer;
S~enff James M. SO!~lsby, Juvenile/probale Judge Robert E. Buck,
County Court Judge Patrick H
O'Brien, Meigs County Parks
trict Direcott Mary Powell Veter-

Dis:

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
·Senate-House conference committee vote!l to negotiate terms of the
staie buciaet in private, over the
objeclions of some of its members
that die jli'OCCS8 should be open 10
. the public.
Rq&gt;. Palrick Sweeney, D-Cieveland, the commitlee chairman,
defended die decilion, and he Will
. llQIIIOI1ed by Sou. Robert Ney, R·
St Clairsville; Sou. Rlcluad Finan,
R-Cioc!uqati and Rep. Barney
D-Toledo.

otest

ans Service officer MaX Cal
Commissioner Janel H~~ard,
who voted against the pay .raise
said she plans 10 bring the 15sue
for disaission during Wednesday's
meelinJ.
HoWard said the other commissioners did not tell her about
receiving the letter and that she
found out about it while talking 10
offJCCholders after the meetin
adjourned.
g was
"I think it's extreme! fair that
·(the five percent raise) all they
(the officeholders) are asking for ·
and tbat they are· not trying to .
bankrupt die county; she ssid.
Howard said the 18 percent pay
raise was brought before the commission in January bui was not

possed
she and "-tenbach
voted
· st it after meeting with
then-A§'tor Bill Wickline, Treasurer Ho ard Frank, Clerk of
Courts
Spencer and Recorder
Ernmog Hamilton.
"We fecH the public should be
aware of ~hat is takin' place,"
lfamilton ll!d Thursday. 'It's irresponsible ~ive two people 18
percent rai . The voung public
should know
actions of the people thiy elect.
·
The comm ssionen cry about
economic hardships thea give 'tlle$0
raises, she added.
"Iu just not right, regardless of
politicl."
Roush and Hartenbach were
unavailable Thunday for comment.

uti

fs

CADIZ, Ohio (AP) -

United nia, West Virginia, Kentucky; llli·

:vice president and spokeSman for

Mine Worlters members picketing nois and Indiana.
the BCOA 's negotiating committwo eastern Ohio sites are on strike
The union has accused die ~­ tee, said both Ohio sites had been

show their solidarity with coal
miners throughout die region.
About 75 of die 90 union members aldie two CONSOL Inc. sites
in Harrison County were on the
picket lines Thursday, joining
about 9.200 miners in Illinois, Indiana, Pennsylvania and West Virginia.
•
• "We're here because we were
called out," a striking worker at
Mahoning Valley mine No.36 told
The Times-Reporter of Dover-New
Phi!adeiP.hia. The .newspaper did
not identify the worter.
"We're doing whal we're told
10 do. This is an unfair labor dispute."
The union and the Bituminous
Coal Operators Association have
been negotiating since November
to reach an agreement covering
60.000 miners in Ohio, Pennsylva10

. ;.... p~ by both houses
. different fonn ~Sweeney asltedfor a motion to close future sessions. I! was made by Ney and seconded by Quilter,
Sen. Ben Espy, D-Columbus,
and Rep. Tom Johuson, R-New
ON S1'R1KE • LalTy ~arsc, left, ud Terry Rema _ ,
Concprd, opposed the decision,
the Ualted Mine Worten Local 7690 pldlet Dunday at the pad·
made Thunday after an one-hour · locked gate or Conaolldatina Coal Company's Georgetown
meeting thai included a review of
preparatory plant west oiCadb:, Ohio. (AP)
potaltial Sllllllbling blocks,
"We can ~ a lot more done,"
Sweeney satd, addinglhat open
meetings that include the media
lead 10 political po,sturing rather
than serious negobating.
"Open the meeting and we're
here until August," Sweeney ssid. . WASHINGTON (AP) - They my words," said Geoff, who plans
The c,ommi~ faces a July I bud- lobbed a softball toward Geoff 10 put his $5,000 prize in t1!e bant
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) get deadline.
~~r in the· 66th National when he gcu borne 10 Arlington, Motorists in IS counties would
g Bee and he knocked it out Tenn.
face mandatory tailpipe tests under
The Legislature is exempt from S
Ohio's open meetings law. Ohio's o the nor!&lt; with ~grin; "'k-a-m-i-kDavid, who had never heard the a bill passed by die House.
word "renascent'' before, wished
So far, die tailpipe tests, which
Constitutioo specifies that lawmak- a-z-e. .rers may go mto closed session
Spell "kamikaze" -· that's all he oould have c:hanged words with could cost up 10 $10.50, are only
upon a two-thirds 'l(ote of its mem- it takes to be named the nation's Geoff. But be wasn't bitter. He , required in Cuyahoga County.
bers.
top young z~=· But first get · won $4,000 and topped his perforIn other action Thursday, the
,"' "isonomy," mance last year, when he fiuished House approved a $3.4 btl lion
In recent years, the only closed ~h "m
t:ransp0i111bon budget. The bill also
sesaions have invulved conference "'munnously," "slalom," "trage- 66lh in die bee.
dian," "oleander," "ankh,"
"I'm excited," Dilvid said. "I would allow the Ohio Turnpike
ca,nmittees on die budget bilL
"neutercane," didn't expect 10 get in the top 20."
Commission 10 look into new roads
Jotwon noted that ihe House on "anorak,"
"empyrean,"
"isopleth,"
"phariThe
crowd's
favorite
by
far
was
that could link the southern and
March 17 gave 95-0 ~val to a
bill making changes m the open .saical," "caparison," "stupefa- the youngest speller, 9-year-old northwestem parts of the state.
Wendy Guey of Palm Beach Gar· ,
In the Senile, lawmakers voted
meetings law that include a cient" and "enchilada." '
Geoff, 14, aced all diose words dens, Fla. Aller sounding her way to move die state's presidential prjrequinmont for all legislative comduring two grueliug days of the throu-h "symbiosis" and "carei• mary from May to March to
millees to meet publicly.
He said the conference commil· World Series of spelling. He JM!lyuc," she fai!Oied in the lltb increaie Ohio's clout in the nomi~at' rocess. Senators also
t.e e should meet openly even emerfed as champion Thursday round over "meiosis"
Ali Soleimaui, 13, of Olathe,
chalges in child support
. though the bucltet biD hasn't been after 5 rounds dull elimin•lod 234
Kau., also chopped out in the 11th guidelines.
.
approved by die Senate. "I think youngsters.
After his las! compelilllr, David round, missing "posseme... Thai
• Tho two chambers exchanged
there is a great concern (about
closed meetinss) not only in the Urban, 13, of Amarillo,. Texas, narrowed the field to three- diebillsforfurthervotes.
The House apProved 59-39 a
public ancJ the news media, but misspelled "renucent," all Geoff Geoff, David, and Yuni Kim, 12, a
among our own members, wllo needed fur viccory was oae CXJmX:t seventh-gqder from Poasville, Pa. · · measure 10 ~wre pollution tests
All tliree spelled their wor~ or cas and light-duty lrUCks in tbC
want this process opened up," spelling. When die piOIIOUIICCI' said
JohnJon said.
.
"bmilw.e," the 963rd wont of die ~y through two 1a11e mnnd•
following counties: Butler, Clart,
Blpy, pointing 10 a copy of the . bee, Geoff smiled broadly. He · But in the 14th round, Yuni- ClCIDlOIIt, Geaup. Greene, Hamilmyslified by die word "apotheo- ton, Lalte, Lorain, Lucas, Medina,
bill, lilld, "AU lhese pages are die knew be had won.
people'• business...
.
"I auess there wasn't much size." She turned away from the Montaomery, Portige, Summit,
Warren and Wood.
·
· Noy said !hat budget sessions pressure on me thea," Geoff uid audience, aw.jd. a1 ber feet a
Lcgislaton said they have to
seldom atlrll;l public !lllmtion and afterward, holding a 110sCr, in his Seconds, then spelled it "•po-1-hying at e-t-i-z-c." Di•ppointed, she approve the 1e1ta bocanse of presthat people who want open ·meet- lap. B1dfluct helped,
quickly turned and man:hed off the sure liom the federal JOvernment.
ings usually arc memben of the hour a day beforeluwd didn't hurt.
"I
did
not
Oat-out
p:ss
any
.
o
l
it~OUI.· leaving tile two boys to duel which haa threatened financial
media or speci;aJ ~t groups.
penalties for areas thai don't com-

- - - Local briefs
Deputies probe wrecks

Ohio's jobless rate
drops to 6.1 percent
WASIDNOTON (AP) - The
unemploym011t rate in Ohio
eli~=)' 10 6.1 pen:ellliD
May,
10 fipla reJoued
todiy by the Llllor DepalnaL

'
Depudes
of the Mei&amp;J County Sheriff's Do]IW1ment investigated · ·
two accidents thal occwred 'lbursday.
Accordl!IJ to the sheriff's IepCI't, the fillt accidonl oa:umd at 9
a.m. 011 prlya~e ;tp;ty at .S ync-. Waller F. Roush, Syncuse,
had parted his 1
Ford at the SYJ'ICUIO l'lllt Oftice. Paul s.ter,
The lllle'l jot:IDW lite Ia April
Sy~~a~~e, hPod hit 1981 Chmolet Inlet iniO die left ftOil feDdcr
wil 6.5 perc:eDL
or Rousb 'a veldc:Jo. IJabt dmiJC wullsaed to Balr«'• lnlCk while
Tile lllllaa'aiiPelldlmlaa 111e
damlp wu lille4 u moderale tn Roush'• car, ~ 10 the
allo drdinnd ali&amp;lltiY ... montll, 10
report.
6.9 porcouc frOm 1 percoaL Tbo
Tho IDCCIId eccklent .....led Ia I i•Mh• 10 bolla driwn. Acc:ard1 0 _ . Aid I aurp ill CCIII•
m, 10 tile npart, Willian C"Jaddh. Reedmiio, ~pulled out
lliucdon jobll Wpod drive Nay'•
onto Route 16om lloutdll ll OH I • A-~
IJlKbp Inlet
1110 10 lbo lowell Iiili IIG1 ' "
driven by Owles C. Antoa, CoolYIIJo, IMned 10 tho 1fa11t to I'IOld ·
The jobl111 111e bid be11111 7
Contl•llld ..... 3 . .
pon:ent for dlnle lllai&amp;bt _.....
tho Labor Oepaii!IIUilld.

ators of evading a provision of die
expired contract lhat gUIU1I{IIeed 60
percent of new jobs at mines
owned by members of die association would be offered to UMW
miners.
.
The union's four-year con~t, ;
negotiated in 1988, expired on Feb.
I. "The I!CXt day, mioon ,wont ·OD
sqilc:e agliinst Palbody Holding Co.
The walkout ended March 3 with
an agreement 10 extend the COlllriiCt
60 days. But talks broke down May
3 and no new talks have been
scheduled.
"If you don't do something
o 're going 10 lose anyway," said
Barkhurst of Adena, one of
members II CONSOL's
Georgetown Preparation Plant near
this eastern Ohio town. "We went
120 days and survived before."
Thomas Hoffman, a CONSOL

shutdown.
"What the union is doing is
jeopardizing the jobs they have iii
striking for what they call jobs for
the future," Hoffman said.
When union miners strike, customers look for coal elsewhere, he
said.
.
"If the customer decides to go
somewbere else, the queslion shifts
from .whether w~ can provide jobs
for the fu!Ure 10 Are there going to
be jobs?' That's die risk you run ·
when so little of the coal that is
mined is mined by the union • •
Hof&lt;man ssid.
'
About four trucks were turned
away from the Georgetown plant
by piclteters after the strike began
said Terry Remas, another striker. '
Authorities reported no confrontations between die strikers and
other CONSOL employees.
·

DriveTS closer to tailpipe tests

few

I~

'

75· Harrison County
miners join strike ·

Tennessean wins natonal
spelling bee with 'Kamikaze'

TOP

1 Section. 10 Pqe. 25 "'"'Ia
A llultimedlalnc. Newepaper

Officials rip commission ·in bipartisan

-the two-year, $30.9 billion

a·s

Low IDDJaht In 60s. Rlln.
Saturday, cloudy, blab In 7GL

5276

'

HARRISONVILLE - Fingerprinting for children, Saturday, 10
a.m. 10 2 p.m. at die Harrisonville
POMEROY - The Eagles Class Masonic Lodge. '
of the Asbury United Methodist
SYRACUSE - Western dance
Church will hold a bake sale at
sponsored by Middleport Arts
Kroger's on Friday at 9 a.m.
Council, Sarurday, 8-11 p.m. at
POMEROY • The Meigs Coun- Carleion School iu S~use. $3, .
ty Golf Course will be having a single, $5 couple. Public invited.
youi)J league for children ages 814, ooys and girls, with an organiSALEM CENTER - Star
zational meeting Friday at 6 p.m. at Grange and Star Junior Grange,
die course. A scramble will follow. Saturday, 8 p.m., grange ball.
The league staru June 8 a1 1 p.m. National needlewort and stale oooCall Carol McCullough, 992-5322, tests will be judged. Potluck
or Cheryl Thomas, 992-6763 for refreshments.
information.
HARRISONVILLE · HarTUPPERS PLAINS • Round risonville Lodge No. 411 F.t.AM
and square dance Friday from 8- will meet Saturday at 7:30 p.m. AU
11:30 p.m. sponsored by the Tup- master masons welcome.
pers Plains VFW Posl No. 9053
Ladies Auxiliary. Music will be by
HARRISONVILLE - The SciSmoky Mountain Drifters. Callers pio Fire Department will hold a
will be Red Carr and Melvin Cross. fish fry Saturday at 2 p.m. The cost
Everyone welcome.
is $2 for children ahd $4 fer adults.
A tractor pull will be held with
REEDSVILLE - The Olive weighin II 5 p.m. llllll&gt;pull at 6 p.m.
Township Trustees will meet Fri· with classes for children, 800; ape~
day at 7:30p.m. at the Shade River adults, 900, 1,000, and 1,100 with a
50 percent payback.
State Forestry Building.
.
CHESTER - The Ladies Auxil·
iary of the Chester Fire Department
will hold a yard sale Friday from 9
a.m. 10 4 p.m. Donations of items
will be accepted.

CA' ''C . . RJI".._Ik" OM''*'!(.:.
'l1lere will be . . . . c:ategorics
for lllle IIDd female adults and
c:biJdn:n.
PriJiea will be waded 10 die tap
tluee entries in each category.
Jw!&amp;i?'l ~ be ~.ad .oa IIJPCar·
aace •• ''ed"'l' 11X P 1 itil, •••lwtn-

Pick 4:

•

~

By MF.LODY ROBERTS
Arkansas. He traveled there with .
Phyllis I .arl&lt;ins recently spent a . his daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Larry.
few days with her mother, Mrs. Stiffler, Lancaster.
Wilma Wamsley, Cheshire, and
Mr. and Mrs. Randy Cowdery
sister, Mrs. Betty Loudin.
have a new son, Dakota Jacob.
Mother's Day visitors of Mr. They have a 9011, Christopher.
·
aud Mrs. Dorsel Larkins have been
A Mother's Day cookout was
Mr. aud Mrs. Kenneth Laikins and . held Sunday at the homo of·Paut
family, Columbus, Mr. and Mrs. Hauber and family. Callcri during
~ttv~ Salisbury and family. Gal- die day were I:.cla Hawk and Rob.
bie, Long Bouom; Wells VanDylte1
lipolis.
f
n:.;... . M
Guests o Mrs. """'811 ount Broadwell; Slwpton Moodispmgli;. .
have been Mrs. Betty Karr and Belpre; Chad Sinclair, Sumner
James Mount, Lancaster. Emory Road; Krista Sellers, Larency,
Weddey jost returnefd home from :Deai,se and Jeremy Johnston, Pat,
vacationing with his nephew, Mr. land; Debbie 'Dally •. Doug and
and Mrs. Dou11ias Mount, Brenda Hauber, Long BoltOIII, Bob
and Mary Alice Bowles, Milte and
'
are available at die Meigs County Diane Bowles, NiCholas and Jenny,
Mr. and Mrs; David
Extension Office, Box 32', Pomeroy;
Ross Milllllcpm.
. '
Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769 or can be
and Mrs. David Rigg~. Mid'
obtained by callint 992-6696
dleport,
called on Mrs. Lela Hawk
between 8:30 a.m. and 4:30 p.m.
and
family.
Monday thru Friday.

s.ur-

659

'

~

m..., festivilies Her-

Pick 3:

Page4

,.•

Officers were ~ Icc ted a~ ~he ters, Kristi.Boston, Cristy HensleY.
recent meeting ofl\be ,Reedsvt)le . Gloria Decker, Janelle Sargent' .
Nazarene Women. Cathy Master Barb Swartz, Amanda Scyoc,
pmidtA .
JoAnn Baum, Greta Suttle, ~
· Wendy Wilfong gave die open- Teaford, Lisa Putman, Dian BiA'
ing prayer. Marlene Putnlan had Tonya Brooks, Wendy Wilfong;
devotions centering around Moth- Linda Pullllan and Tanmy Baker. •
er's Day. She used 11"-ges from
The next meeting will be witi
Provabs.
Carol Kanawalslry. Robin Putrnu
There were 71 shut-in calls and Tami Putman will be co,;
reported and cards were signed for hostesses.
•
the sick and shut-in. ·
. Doug Bishop were Mr. and Mrl.
Attending were Sue,Suttle, Barb Granville Reeves of Alban!Y and
•
Masters, Tami Putnlan. cathy Mas- Everett Bishql, McArthur.

• was li!OI!Iinatec! for

Reds third
loss in row

and Jessica ind Jennifer, Mt~­
QUillen. Bessee Fisher. Angie 1\GI•
and Cole, Wilma Neace, Amber
Fisher, Cheryle Fisher, Margare\
Nunn, Rita Radford, Belva John9011, Kathy Wood, ~YO~
er, Phyllis Hudnall, ,..,....,y ~...
Kathy Young and Julie, Melis~;~:
Chrisleena. Miranda. Jenny llld J~- ·
Iianna Young, Burton Smith, Loi1
Hawley, Becky Ellis, Wendi Ma»
and Sandy I 11Jdermilt, Trilla Hud!
9011 and Jamie, Alberta Hysell 111!1
Beth and Halinah, Melinda Venox
· and Alexic and ~rook, Carolyn
Pemosky, Sherry 'Jarvis, Sue
Adkins, Tammy Ball, Hazel Ball.
Linda Keesee, Alice Mills •nd
Mary Wells.
·
·
,

n ..:...A

beld lilllowilla die ]iW . . 011
clay ......... Tile J*W lqintll
JO 1J1L widl die jadPig i-Ndiately foiJo1riD&amp;. All puliciputa
wiD be a.-• ed ..r awads Jft. - d 011 S111F 011ea110011.
Catepriea illl:1ude authentic

-

,

D ..............

of.,...... ...

MIDDLEPORT - Evangeline
Chapter No. 172, Order of the East-. ·
LONG BOTTOM - Faith Full
ern Star, Middleport, will have Gospel Church in Long Bottom
officers practice Thursday at 7:30 w.ill have preaching and singing
p.m. AU officers are 10 attend.
Friday at 7 p.m. with Pastor Steve
Reed and local singers. Public
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers invited. Fellowship fellows.
Plains VFW Post No. 9053 Ladies
Auxiliary will meet Thursday at
MIDDLEPORT - Feeney Ben7:30 p.m. Virgie Bumgardner will nett Post No. 128, American
install officers. Everyone urged to Legion Auxiliary, will hold a sale
attend.
at die park across from die annex
. on Mill Slieet on Friday and SaturPOMEROY · The Pomeroy day 11 9 a.m. In .case or rain, Wile
· Group of AA will meet Thunday at will be Sallll'day only.
7 p.m. at Sacred Heart Catholic
Church. Call 992-5763 for infor7
POMEROY • DAV members
mation.
will be selling ''forget-me-nou" in
Middleport and Pomeroy on Friday
REEDSVll.LE • Eulern Athlet· from 9 a.m. 10 4 p.m.
ic Bdosters meet Thunday 11 8:30
p.m. at the high school cafeteria.
SATURDAY
CHESTER - Chester High
ROCK SPRINGS - The Salis- School alumni and dance will be
bury Township Tnutees will meet held Saturday. B~uet. starts 6:30
Tbunday 11 7 p.m. at die township p.m. wilh dance roJJowina at 8:30
buildinJ in Roct Springs.
p.m. wid! George Hall. For reeervations contact Rosemary Keller,
PRIDAY
34856 SR 7, Pomeroy, 45769, or
, MASON, W.VA.· Bend Area call9854434.
.
Gospel Jubilee, Mason County

.•

u.J:
l.:iNoot:.:rW:.~~
acr "'- ..__

ilqc We ' eM by . . WiJwring in
lhc•OI''*'* u • 1 You . .
111 ...,.,..; a•"• or 1epoduc·
lioD
woald have
beeD- &amp;wil'l die JIIIO'L
ne costuae CCIIltest will be

Community Calendar Items
Fairgrounds, Friday 6 p.m.. Satuiappear two days.before liD eveat - day 1 p.m. and Sunday 1-5 p.m.
and the day of tbt event, Items
Public mvited.
'
mut be received well Ia advance
to ~publication In the calRIPLEY, W.VA. · Liberty
endar. · ,
Mountaineers perform 11 Skateland
in Ripley, W.Va. on Friday.
THURSD~Y

Yeauger honored

Higll S

Community Calendar

RACINE - Vacation Bible
School will be held at die Racine
United Methodist Church through
Friday from 9-11 a.m. daily. All
children are welcome.

LIS4UAU~

~~~~~~- ~;:~;t,~uendsMeigs

atlml.

Margie West reported on the
Festival of Sluirring Day on Sept.
25 at Athens aild explained about
the various kiu to be made and
turned in at the August picnic.
Cbn Mae Sargent reponed that die
1993 pledge has been psid.
Lee Lee reported on the 1993
UMW issues including women and
children proverty, abuse and litera. cy; recycling; personal commitm~t: reading program and govern-

ll \fictDiy Baptist Chun:b in Midclepoit.
A candlelight dinner was held
and theme of the banquet was
"Memories." Several or the ladies
llroqbt in piCIUICS of their riiOiha'
and MIL Bessee Fish« guessed the
IIIOil modters.
.
' Mn. Aage1a Hall was die speaker for the eveniq.
.
Thurman Smith and Angela Hall
11111g "Gentte Hands.•
There was a five generation
family present including Mrs. Burton Smith, Lois Haw fey, Wendi
Mace and Aaron and Mary Beth.
Attending were Angela Hall,
Verenia Barbnen, Wanda Ashley

Ohio Lottery

Cards hand

Mother~daughter

lion could begin.
updating child support guidelines
In Senate debate about moving · and fiXing the amounts based on
the presidential primary, Sen. both parents' annual income.
Anthony Sinagra, R·Lakewood,
Although most of the .changes
complamed that Ohio's election were approved without objections,
has no impact because odler states senators voted 18-15 to remove a
VOle~.
provision lhat let non-custodial par.
"This bill will put us in the ents reduce poyments if their chil·
thick of the fny, and that's where dren visit overn'ight more than 90
we want to be," Sinagra ssid.
, times a year.
Senators also approved a bill

Jobless rate 6.9 percent in May
~A~HINGTON (AP) - The
nauon s unemployment rate
declin!"f ,to 6.9 percel!t in May as a .
s~ge m c~auction jobs.helped to
drive ,the JObless rate 10 tts fowest
l~el m 18 months, die government
SRld today.
.
. The Labor Department said die

tm~rovement .follo~ed t~ree

sll'll!ght months m, which the JOb·
less rate had been stuck at 7 percent.
.
' However, m May, the !lConnmy
seemed 10 shake off 1ts wmter doldzums. Total employmen!, as measured by a survey of hou~holds,
surged by ~57 ,000 dunng t~e
!"Of!th. the btggest one-month gam
m ~~.......
fficials
.....- y.-nt o
cautioned against reading too much

into the one-month increase, noting
lhat employment statistics become
unasually erratic during the spring
as schools close and thousands of
.students enter the workforce.
. Still, the advance was certain 10
bolster arguments that the economy, after a slump in growth ca11sed
in party by unusually severe wil)ter
weather, was now in the midst of a
rebound.
·
The 6.9 percent unemployment
rate was the lowest since a similar
figure in November 1991.
· That rare reflected die fact that
119.3. million Americans had ·obs
last month while 8.86 million ~ere
listed as·unemployed. The increase
in employment based. on the household survey was 857 000
' •

Prosecutor's office receives
Represenlatives a11o approved .
grant for computer system :
tho trWpOrtalion budget, which
r~~lbeCleanAirAI:tbyJuly

includolllCIIIItnledon and maintenance c:o~~~, The budaet is fullded
by tho Slate and federal gasoline
lUeL

.

.

It al10 letl dlo Ohio Turnpike

Commlaloa ..-. 1110111)' 10 atudy
any lllnlpib jiilljoel wbecber proposocl, undei conall'uctlon or Ia

operation. Swocmey llld poulble

toU jliOjecll iDcluda diD pl"OpCIIed
Interacace 73 from ToledO
1'1111• "'IIII!, ..rJ-74 flam CIDCi.,_

10

Dill- ••••NI'II Ol!lo.
The ID:C 1'1 IIIII aeeda Son••
and pbemllcrtalllpjliOVIL U die
blll ,...... tho aovoraor would
have 10 118NC belen MY COI!IIiDC·

A. $15,000 grant has been
recotved by the Meigs County

~u~ ~··office from

the Obi~ l&gt;rOsocudng Attorneys
Assnclanoo for lbo Implementation
oh now
Acc:ordiu&amp; IO.Pllie:utina AJtor,
Dey 1oltn R. lAta~, diD !lOW c:OIII·
puter l)lllenl wiD ue die Oldltina
hlrdWIIftl II dlo )MCWIIIlli'l
purchased ID lafe 1992. 1'1111)1'tem, blown • lho Olilo PnwIDa AUDrnoy'1 Auoclllion COPS
n I)'IIIDI. w111 allow oftieo ltllfto
'.illl"llete -.y ot diD liliDlltl fuac.
tiOIIIDOw belni pwfoialtld.
In tddltion, the program will

oomp•l)••·

omce

allow the local P'QSCCutor's off'ICC
to network with the association's
office in Columbus where a
· detabese of criminal cases is main-lained.
·
Five work stations will be
inllllled In die JIIOIIlCUIOr'l oftlce.
· IDstallalion Of the DOW progran1
will take place law this lll!lliller
Iller the pulei:IJIIJI'I oftlco W'IIVCII
to its !lOW o8'icea 11117 W~~~&amp;Soc­
onc1 Snet, P'omoioy 1'111118011e 11
MtlclpMidinllleJuie.
No eota~ty funds wiD bo IIPelll
for the l)ltem sinc:e tho 110w liill6Wllftl il in place;, Lotullllld.
·

·,

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    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="32494">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="32493">
              <text>June 3, 1993</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="191">
      <name>allen</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2072">
      <name>hartung</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
