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                  <text>Pomaroy--Middltport--GIIIIpona, OH Point Pleattnt, wv

P8gt DB Sunday T1m11 Sentlnal

June 'rl, 1993

Gallipolis FFA names new officers•

State Farmer Degree.
·
Greenhand Chapter Degrees
were Chad Briggs, Sara Cremeans,
Bob Crisenbery, Paula Masters,
Travis Ratliff, Jimmy Steens,
Jason Snyder, Brian Unroe, Jemny
Williams, Nathan Belville, Scott
Clark, K.W. Fellure, Randy
Harold, Vernon Miller, Chuck
North, Barney Vollbom, Renee
Carmichael, John Carroll , Troy
Duncan, Mike Gibson, Scou Gib·
son, Jamie Harris, Jason Howard,
Heath Hutchinson, Jason Queen,
.Tim Slone, Charity Smith, Angie

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis
FFA ticked off second quarter
activities with their annual awards
ban~uet recently at Buckeye Hills
Career Center.
Fifty-five members and guest
were ~nt. Six awards presented.
Miss1e Sanders was presented .
awards in the areas of Accounting,
Wildlife Management, Specialty
Crop Home Improvement and Star
Chapter Farmer.
Renee Cartnjchael was presented Star Greenhand award. There
were 29 Greenhand Degrees, one
Chapter Farmer Degrees and one

Vance , R, .J . Calhoun. Chapter
Degree were Brett Cnemeens, Terry
Burneu, Floyd Evans, Scott Lear,
Jeff Pope, and Leana Sanden.
The chapter had one Slate FFA
Degree - Missie Sanden.
The banquet concluded with the
instsllation of the 1993·94 olf~CeCS.
'The are: Billi Jo Jones-presideru;
Missie Sanders-vice president;
Renee Carmichael-secretary; Aoyd
Evans-treasurer; Jason Howard·
reporter; Leanna Sanders-sentinel; '
and Barney Vollbom-student advi-

Ohio Lottery

Ex-Dodger ·
great dies

Pick 3:

927
Pick 4:

sou

Page4
•

•
Vol. 44, NO. 42
~IMCialno.

student advilor; JUN HOWII'd, reporter. BliCk
row: Billl Jo Jones, president; Renee
Carmlchae~ secretary, Leanne Sanders, sentinel
and Missle Sanders, vice pretldent.

Kelly Canan, racing for
Pomeroy Flower Shop, and David
Ramsburg, racing for the Veterans
of Foreign War Post of Mason, W.
Va., raced to first place spots in the
stock and kit car divisiQ!Is, respec·
lively, at the Third Annual Meigs
County Soap Box Derby on Sunday afternoon.
Canan and Ramsburg will represent Meigs County at the championship finals in Akron on August
7.
.
Twenty-one participants raced
their cars throughout the afternoon
,on the newly paved General
Hartinger Parkway in Middleport.
Mathew Peckham, racing for
Circle H Auto, captured second

Farm Bureau program discourages rural crime
ted, the program gives people an
incentive to report information that
could help catch _the criminals.

For more information contact
the Gallia County ,Flann Bureau at
1·800-777-9226.

Clinton plan has farmers
using fewer pesticides ·
WASHINGTON (AP) - Fann·
ers for the fust time will be forced
to cut back on pesticide use on
fruits and vegetables under a Clinton admi.nis1nllion plan to take the
feat out of eating right.
Anticipating a pair C?f reports on

the amount of pesticides tound in
the foods eaten by children, the
administration Friday announced a
"commitment to reducing the use
of pesticides and to promote sustainable agriculture.''

a plaque and an ODOT District 10 ball cap.

RETiREE HONORED • Retirlag Ohio
Department of Transportation District 10 Crane
Operator John GIUUan, center, received several
gifts Ia )lonor or his recent retirement, including

With GUUlan are Melp Count ODOT Superin·
tendent Jim Promtt, left, and District 10 Admin·
istrative Assistant Geor]le CoDins.

Newark base to be closed

A Record Number
of Municipal Bonds
Will Be Called July 1

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
federal base closing commission ·
voted today to close Newark Air
Foree Base in Ohio, a sophis~
facility that does JIICCISIOn repaii'S
on Air FO!te instruments and mis·
sile guidance systems.
On a vote of 7-0, the Base Closure and Realignment Commission
recommended closing the base in
Heath, Ohio, to let other arms of
the military or private contractors
take over its high-technology tasks.
The Pen1agon has said it expects
comractors to move into the base to
take over the work. But commis·
sion analysts met with contractors
and found them interested in por·
tions of the workload but uninter·
ested in doing the work at Newark.
That means the base' s trained
work force might not be relained
after privatization.

Business briefs
WASHINGTON (AP) - Regu·
lators slashed their projection of
bank failures this year to a level
· that, if realized, would be the low·
est since 1987.
The Federal Deposit Insurance
Corp. said Thursday that banks
with total assets of $10 billion
probably would slip into insolvency this year. Only three months
ago, the agency was expecung
assets in failed banks to total $25
billion. Six months ago, the prediction was 100 to 125 banks with $76
billion in assel!l.
CINCINNATI (AP) - Procter
&amp; Gamble Co. said it expects to
reduce its worldwide employment
of !06,000 but dismissed as speculation a news report that the cuts
could totaiiO,OOO jobs.
.
P&amp;G said Thursday it has not
finished a review it began in
December to identify ways of
reducing costs and elim inating
duplication.
WASHINGTON (AP) - Wire·
Jess computen so small they lit in
the palm of the hand but still capable or sending and receiving mes·
sages moved closer to becomming
a reality as the gov ernment
approved construction of a network
for so-called personal communications services.
·
,
The Federal Communications
Commission Thursday opened II
channels for the "palmtop" computerS and gave Mobile Telecom. munieation Technologies Corp. the
go-ahead to build the network.

I

Some JIO blllio1 lll ra.alcipal
wi111utare or k call~ Ia
July. It's •UDaW .,. • kMt IA2
..,.~n;,:•·~~·' pre-ret
iiiUet

NEW '93 -BUICKS AND
.PONTIAC$ IN STOCK!

Mocll ol ... willlibly be,._
lnuled or "rolled o•p• i1to tb
•~aalelp~l •~rll:•t. If yo• o•a •
....,... or he called

Now Is the Time to Discuss
Municipal Strategies with
Your Merrill Lynch
Financial Consultant.
More than $.10 billion In municipal bonds will
mature or be called July I. Many investors will sud·
denly lind themselves with cash, creating a demand
for quality municipals that may outpace the supply.
And if tax rates increase next year, tax-exempt
municipals will be even more appealing. Our Finan·
cia! Consultants can help you develop a financial
approach with tax-exempt investments to suit your
needs and other quality investments to m~t your
financial goals.
Call now while you have a choice. We will be happy
to give you our latest special report, Mapping Out
Your Municipal Strategy.

There's a difference between advice on municipals
and intelligent advice on municipals.
Tbe difference II Merrill Lyncb.

1993 BONNEVILLE$
s750 REBATES
OR

3.9% FINANCING
1993 leSABRES
.,, rq

•1 ,000
REBATE! ·
'93 GUND AM'S
$1500
RElATE

..------------------------------------------------.,
Malllo: MorrUI L)'!!Ch
I

Plo--

1002 4th A......,Hunun~~on, WV 25101 , -'-: !I• Ev-

mo your lolMI Tu Alort, AI&lt;Jppi., Outlbur Jlunldpol Slru.,....
Homo _ _ _ _ _ __ _
AddiHI _ _ _ _.;__
Butl- Phone L.J _ _ __
City - - - - - ----,Homo Phone L) _ __ _ _ Slate _ __ _ Zip _ _

D

Morrill Lynch cllonll, ploue give lhe name and office oddre11 of your
Ananclal Consullanl:

L=

-··•••• ••••••••••• • ••• • •••

'·

~

.......

Lpch

Gore warns Saddam Hussein
against retaliatory attack
WASHINGTON' (AP) - Vice
. President Gore advised Saddam
Hussein today that it would be
"unwise" for bim to retaliate for
the U.S. missile attack on Iraq's
intelligence headquarters.
Core, who made the rounds of
morning TV talk shows, said the
Tomahawk missile attack on the
Baghdad complex "was geared to
the~" of the foiled Inlqi
ploJ to tiD fonner Ptillslcledt Bush.
"Iris designed to send a,power·
ful message that the killll of action
lniq attempted is simply unacceptable," Gore said on CBS. '~This is
an oqtlaw regime, it needs to
change," he said on F&lt;ix TV.
Asked if adminislration officials
expected Hussein to retaliate by

attackil!g Iraq's Kurdish poplila· · Gore said the attack on Iraq
lion, Gore said: "It would be should serve notice on any other
unwise for Saddam to retaliate in country that may contemplate terany capacity because that would rorism against the United States:
receive a response.''
"They know one thing: This presi"If he does something that is dent, President Clinton will
prohibited under the United respond ... (they) now know that if
Nations resolutions, there will be a they do that, they are going to get a
response," Gore said, alluding to response," Gore said on ABC.
·
U.N, resolutions imposed after the
The White House and the Pen.Persiao Gulf war that bar Iraqi tagon say the U.S. missile attack on
auaeks !Ill the Kurds In nOrthern 'Iraq was sueeessflll; but stopped
Iraq.
short of claiming the s·u ite U.N. Ambassador Madeleine destroyed Saddam Hussein's abiliAlbright said on NBC that the U.S. ty to use his intelligence network
action ''was a warning. It is intend- for lemlrist purposes.
ed as a deterrent. We will continue
Bush, vacationing in M'aine,
to .pursue the issue here to make said he supported Clinton's decisure Iraq lives up to its internation- sion to strike. Clinton called. Bush
al obligations."
Continued on page 3

~liit•&lt;~qP F.H.tory 1'1oqr.Jr11

1992
FROM

'16,900
1993

1992

CENTURY$

GRAND PRIX'S

FROM

*10,900

. 1993

lUIS SPORTS
SKYLARKS
LO!~II '11,900 L~~~ '16,900

FROM

By Cheryl Kulaga
Seatlnel News Staff
Ohio House SJ)Caker Vern Riffe
said on June 24 he will ask the
·House tomorrow to invite conference on Senate Bill 107 to work
out House-Senate differences on
workers' compensation.
"Somewhere in this bill there is
room for common ground, but it's
going to require a conference com·
mittee to work it ouL When all is
said is done, 1 hope the General
· Assembly can keep business premiums from rising as the House proposed. Any agreement should also
•mprove SCI'Vice to injured workers.
Otherwise, it falls short," Riffe
said.
The workers' comp reform issue
will 'be settled by Thursday since
Governor George V. Voinovich has
called for reforms before any new
budget for the Bureau of Workers'
Compensation and the Industrial
Commission is enacted. The budget

must be passed before July I.
Andrew E. Doehrel, president of
the Ohio Chamber of Commerce
said in a press release that much of
what the Chamber supported in
Senate Bill 152 is contained in the
House Bill and continues to urge
businesses and individuals to con. tact their legislators in support of
the bill.
Parts of Senate Bill 152 that
have been compromised include a
requirement of a 100 pera:nt com·
pensation payment after the first
hearing in contested claims, elimination of a provision in inlroduced
version of SB 152that would have
subSiantially tightened the eligibility standards for J,lCrmanent total
disability, eliminanon of a 40 week
waiting period for filing of permanent partial disability and a premium parity provision for unionized
construction industry workers.
Paula Thacker of the Meigs
County Chamber of Commerce

said the current system needs
reform because Ohio loses business
because of. the high cost of workers' compensation which is less
expensive in 9ther states.
Riffe said, "I am concerned
about the scare tactics that have
been used by some people to
"reform" Ohio's Workers' Compensation system. Ohio stacks up
well against other states including
Indiana. There is still room for
improvement, and we need to wor1c
out a com~ise ~ment that is
fair to all rnvolved.
If passed iniaet, the bill will also
implement a managed health care
system to treat all injured worlcers,
establish.a "deductible" for all state
fund employers enabling them to
pay the first S1,000 of medical
claims without it lleing charged to
their insurance rating; and privatize
the current state-run rehabilitation
program.

Gallipolis youth
.drowns in pool

OVER 50 MORE
QSED CARS·
REIDY FOR YOUI

BUICK·PONTIAC
0

"Whirl Setvlce ...... ,,. Dlfflrlnct•

WASHINGTON (AP) - Tax- joint resolution of disapproval.
paye~ would save billions of dol-. Unless it clears both houses, the
Iars from a federal commission's commission's recommendations
recommendations to shut or cut are adopted. Congress must take
dozens of military bases, but thou- up-or-down votes but cannot vote
sands of residents losing jobs from plecemeal changes.
. coast to coast hardly feel like win·
''The nation should be very
pleased," Commission Chairman
ners.
The bay area of San Francisco, a Jim Courter said Sunday after the
Northern Virginia office complex grueling marathon ended. "This
near the Pentagon,/ortions of round of base closures means the
upstate New York an Charleston, . suit will fit the man and the man
S:C., were among those devastated was-shrinking."
Sunday by recommendations of the
The commission has not tallied
Defense Base Closure and Realign· a list of overall savings from its
ment Commission as it wrapped up recommendations. But the panel
five days of deliberations.
adopted most of the Pentagon's
Other ·areas had taken their ~its proposals, which Defense Secre1aryearlier in a cleaving process that Les Aspin said would save about
started last Wednesday.
$3.1 billion per year starting in
The commission bas to get its . 2000.
list to President Clinton by Thin-sCourter and his six commission
day. He can approve or reject all or colleagues said they were in perpart of the report. If the president sonal agonr day after day as they
disapproves, the commission has made decJsions that w•ll leave
until Aug. 15 to submit another list. thousands of Americans jobless. •
If Clinton fails to send the second Before voting to temper
report to Congress by SepL I, the Charleston's losses by establishing
process ends and the proposals ate
not enacted.
But if Congress receives a report
from the president as expected, it
has 45 legislative dsys to enact il

a high-leeh naval electronics center
there, Courter acknowledged the
panel was devastating the city
"block by block."
The commission voted to eliminate the city"'s naval base, shipyard
and supply center, while sparing its
naval hospital.
·
The commission eliminated
naval facilities all over the bay
area, including the Oatiand Naval
hospital, two air slations, a sbip·
yard and an aviation supply depot.
In Southern California, the Long
Beach Naval Shipyard was saved
but the San 'Diego Naval Training
Center was selected for closure.
In upstate New York, the Jllllcl
decided to close Plattsburgh Air
Force Base and leave almost nothing at Griffiss Air Force Base.
And Northern Virginia, across
the Potomac River CJ:om Washing.
ton, •s set to lose CIJht different
Navy commands, which would be
lnlnsferred from rented space near
the Penta¥0n to facilities else~h~. Estimated job loss for Virguua:

11,000.

..--Local briefs--

'11;900

1900 Eastern Ave.oGilllpolll, Oh. ·

Third Annuiii Meigs Coun!y Soap Box Derby
held Sunday afternoon in Middleport. David
Ramsburg went on lo win the r~~ee and will represent the COtiDty at the champlonsbip llnais In
Akron on August 7.

Riffe to ask House for conference
Panel
wraps
up
five
days
-of
work
on _Workers' Compensation reform
with more changes recommended

C.us CIH·ck U•, Out &amp; S.Iv("

1992

place in the stock division, while Bill's Quality Body Shop; and IsaZach Meadows, racing for Meigs iah Kebler, H&amp;R Block.
. Chiropractic Clinic, won the third
Other racers, and their sponsors,
place spot. There were 10 racers in for the kit division included: Court·
the stock division.
ney Haines, Valley Lumber; Jaysen
Richard Ramsburg, racing for Gilbert, Thomas Do-it Center;
Vaughan's Cardinal, won the sec- Stephanie Chapell, Roy Dowell;
. ond place spot in the kit division, Adam Doczi, Twin City Machine
with Christopher Snouffer, racing and Welding; Steven Chapel,
for SnouffCI''s Fire and Safety, cap- Racine Home National Bank;
turing the third place win. There Joshua Carpenter, Thomas Truss
were 11 racers in the kit division.
Plant; Matt Smith,, Meigs ChiroOther racers. and their sponsors, practic Clinic; and Bobby Day,
for the stock division included: Feeney Bennett Post No. 128.
Dustin Kebler, H&amp;R Block; Carson
Chairmen for the races were Bill
Midkiff, Bank One; Josh Hooten, SnouffCI' and Gary Snooffer.
Middleport Trophies; Chad Dailey,
Trophies were donaled by Mid·
James Mourning, C.l'.A.; Jason dleport Trophies.
Knight, Kroger's; ·Johnalhan Acree,
Tom Reed was announcer for
the

KIT CAR CHAMPIONSHIP · David Ramsburg, racing for the VFW Post or Mason, W.Va.,
and his brother, Richard Ramsburg, racing for
Vaughan's Cardinal, are pictured here in the
championship
ot the .tit car division at the

race

ALSO IN STOCK - Grand Prix, Regals, Centurys,
Sun birds, Trans Sports, Park Avenue Ultra.

ROADIWTERS

614-446-1176 or 1-800-937-0238

.
Meigs County Soap Box Derby held Sunday
anernoon Ia Middleport. Canan went on to Win
the division and wiU rer.resent the county in
Akron on August 7 dur n1 the c(Jampionship
finals.

STOCK CAR CHAMPIONSHIP • Kelly
Canan, radn1 lor Pomeroy Flower Shop, and
Mathew l'ftllliam, racing ror Clrele H Auto, are
pictuted here durin&amp; the cluunplonshlp race or
tbe stock car division during the Third Annual

Thru 716193

Low

A Multlmeclalnc. . . . . . .

Canan, .Ramsburg win
Meigs Soap Box Derby

burley tobacco. The amounts differ
In addition to the rio-net-c"-t
because only producers paid assessment producers and purassessment for the 1982 through · chasers are required by law to pay
1985 crops and the assessments a tobacco marketiqg assessment.
collected exceeded the amount nee- The marketing assessment for 1993
essary to reimburse CCC for its crop was announced on April IS u
losses. Accordingly, this excess 0.8414 cent per pcund for the proamount has been credited to the ducer and 0;8415 cent per pound
producen' 1993 usessment.
for the purchaser.
The Agricultural Act of 1949
Both the Burley Tobacco Groviwas amended in 1986 and requires ers Coopecative and lhe Burley SIB·
. that the no-net-cost assessment be bilization Corporation, the producdetermined so that producers and cr-owned associations throu~h
p111Chasers share equally in the no- which price suppon is made availnet-cost account on 1985 and sub- able for burley tobacco, wme consequent crop of burley tobacco.
suited before a final detennination
was reached.

.JACKSON • The Ohio Farm
Bureau's $500 Reward Progr!llll
continues to discourage rural crime
by encouraging rural residents to
watch out for dielr neighbors.
Kim Harless, Gallia County
Farm Bureau Organization Direc·
tor, explained that Farm Bureau
offers the reward to those who provide information leading to the.
arrest and conviction of persons
who commit crimes against Farm
Bureau members.
•'
To participate in the program,
members post $500 reward Signs
on their property and vehicles. Har·
less said when crimes are commit·

1 halloo. 10 PlliiN 25 centa

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, June 28, 1993

.

1993-94 GALLIPOLIS FAA OFFICERS·
Pictured above are the Gallipolis Future Farm·
en ol America Olflten ror 1993·94. They are
f'rom left to right, front row: Barney Vollborn,

Low IDalgbtlll 601, raiD.
Juesd8y,IUIIIIY· Hlp Ill 80s.

sor.

USDA announces '93 burley
tobacco no-net-cost assessment
.
By LISA COLLINS,
GalHaASCS
.
·WASHINGTON - The U.S.
Department ol Agriculture's Com·
modity Credit Corp. · announced
that the combined burley tobacco
no-net-cost assessment plus the
marketing assessment will total 1
cent for the producer and 3.5 cents
· for the purchaser on each pound of
the 1993 crop of burley tobacco.
CCC needs only to collect a nonet-cost asoessment of 0.1585 cent
per pound form producers and
2.6585 cents per pound from pur·
chasers on the marketing of 1993

Super Lotto:
ll ~12-17-20.32-40
Kicker;
899321

COMPLkTfNG PLANS· A pill lode ale·
br&amp;tloa wUI take plllce Ia Middleport oa the
evenlna or July 4. Prlda7 Tom Dooley, aecond
rro• right, Mar7 Wlae, left, and .Jeanette
Thomas, Middleport Arts Connell me111bers

servlna on the celebntion committee, met with
Mlddlepart Maypr Fred Hotrmu at Dave Diles
Park to clllcull plana. AU aCIIYIIIel loUowlllathe
parade at 6 P·•· wiD t1ke pl1ce on tbla ilew
ltlp In tle park.

-' .

A Gallipolis youth drowned Saturday afternoon after ilaining
entrance to a neighbor's pool, Gal·
Jipolis police reported.
Amar Patel, 3, 151 Upper River
Road, drowned in a pool belonging
to Rich and Angela Potts, 6 AiQJOit
Road. He was transpot1ed to Holzm
Medical Center where attemptS to
revive bim failed.
According to the ~lice report,
Kenny Patel, the boy s father, was
working in the garden when his son
. wandered off.
Patel advised that he heard the
boy's sister calling for him and ran
to see what was the matter. He then
found Amar floatin1 in the pool
and got 1w0 neighbors to help get
the boy out ol the pool.
The OWIICII of the pool were not
home at the time of the incidont.

., ..

Man injured in D.U.I. wreck

A West Union, W.Va., man sustained minor injuries Saturday
night when be lost control of his vehicle and SIIUCk a p&lt;ile, the Galli&amp;-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol reported.
Doruild L. Pence, 35, was transpolted by Meigs County EmCI'·
gency Medical Service to Holzer Medical Center where he was
treated and released.
Pence was cited for driving under the influence, failure to control, no operator's license and no seat belL He is being held in the
Meigs County Jail on Wlll'illnts from Franklin County.
According to lhe accident report. Pm:e was weslllound on U.S. ·
33 in Bedford Township when his vehicle went off the right side of
the road. Pence then lost conirol of the vehicle, C2'CIIed 10 the left
side of the road and struck a pole. The vehicle then slid into a cui·
vert.
The vebi(;le sustained heavy, disabling damage and was towed
from the scene. .

Patrol probes hit-skip
A parked truck sustained modenlte damage Friday night wben il

was struck in the side by an unknown vehicle wbich left the scene,

the Gallia·Meias Post o( the State Highway Patrol reponed
The truck:, owned by Reeds Country Store, 661'70 State Route
124 Reedsville, was parked off the berm o~_ S.R. 124 acroa from
ContiDMCI on pqe 3

�Commentary

...•
Page 2-The Daii,Y Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio ~
Monday, June 28, 1993
~

•
.

The Daily Sentinel

'

.

Letters to the editor ·

A 'politically correct' step forward

PRESS

NatHentoff

Today in history

0

.

•

.•

....

The high season for school and
college reunions has come and
gone again but the memories linger
on for those who went back.
They do so despite the miasma
of doubt, mistrust and scorn the
very idea of such gatherings seems
to draw forth from many people.
What they a~tly have m mind
are either 1diotic costumes and
heavy drinlcing or strained conversations between semi-strangers
whose old school ties no longer·
bind.
.
.
Whatever lies behind the attitude, it is just dead wrong. In a
world and time that malce mincemeat of communitr, history and
long-term connccuons, reunions
arc a partial antidote. AI a moment
when rootlessness is a national
affliction, they provide small but
significant reanchorings in shared
experience and old friendships.
Obviously, not every reunion
worlcs nor doel every former classmate turn out to be a man or
woman for all seasons. Too often,
one or two or even a significant
handful will mistalce alcohol for the
I

fountain of youth. A few may
return simply to parade their wealth
and status before the lesser breed
with whom they were once associ-

Hodding Carter Ill
ated. Not all programs, however
weD-intended, work out. Noses are
put out of joint from titne tu time
and feelings hurt because of what
was inadvertenUy said, or unintentionally left IIIIS8ld.
But that is tile rislc and nature of
all human gatherings, whatever
they are called and lllldel' whatever
auspices they are held. What
reunions uniquely offer is a rich
'reminder of umes past, good and
bad, and an equally rich 0Jl110111111i·
ty to reflect upon lessons learned
and decisions made in the years
since graduation.
These are generalizations from a
veteran reiUiion-goer. To be more
specific, there was the 40th
Reunion of Greenville High
Schoch class of 1953 earlier this
month in our Mississippi Delta
hometown. About SO percent of·our

remaining classtnatcs gathered this
time, most of us grayer, heavier or
balder than in '1988.
Many of us bave been coming
baclc every five years since our
I Oth reunion. Quite a few showed
up for the fust time. To my personal lcnowledge, every single person
was glad to be there. We talked,·we ·
sat and listened, we visited in
homes and we partied in the Mississippi Valley Gas Lodge up on
Lalce Ferguson. There was a dinner.iJance on Slllllday nigbt at the
Country Club, the social high
point, and a moving service of
remembrance on Sunday mOrning
for claumates (too many) who
have died.
And throughout, we came
together as adult human beings
who, though scattered acron the
American continent and berond,
have becri joint participants m the
common experience we call life.
As such we had much to offer each
ther and much to accept, and it
in that exchange that the true
v e of this reiUiion, as with aU,
was
d.

•lcaunibusl83•

------Weather----Wednesday tbrouJib Friday:
South-Cenlral Oblo .
Fair
on Wednesday. Highs in
Tonight, showers and thunder-·
storms lilcely early, then clearinJ. the upper 70s to mid-80s. Lows
Low in the mid-60s. Chance of ram from the mid-50s to the low 60s.
60 percent Tuesday, mostly sunny. Chance of thunderstorms Thursday
and Friday ..Highs in the mid-80s to
High in the mid-110!1.
low 90s. Lows in the upper 60s to
Exteaded forecast:
low70s.

·Meigs Health Department
to offer mammographies
The new Mobile Mammography
Unit from Riverside Regional Cancer Institute of ColumbUs will be at
the Meigs County Health Depart·
menton July 12 and 13. _
. Norma Torres, nursing director
of the Meigs County Health
Department, said in a press release
that only six appointments are
availa)lle for women 3S years of
age or older.
The cost of the X-Ray is $55,
but there is a special fund, from
Riverside hospital, that will belp
those who arc unable to pay with
proof of income. Any paperwork
that shOws proof of income such as
a pay stub, medical c.ard or tax
return (W-2) must be brought on
the day of the X-Ray. Oialts who
have MCidicue coveraae should
bring their tards; Medicare 4oes
cover the cOlt every two yea~~.

Only at the July screening will
no one bQ turned aw•y due to
inability to pay. Interested parties
should call 992-6626 from 8 a.m.
to 4 p.m., Monday through Friday,
for an appointment. Those with
technical questions about mammography should call Riverside
Regional Cancer Unit toll free at 180()..752-9119.
Mammography from the Ohio.
State University Hospital Mobile
Mam1110g1a111 Unit wiD continue to
be offered in ,o\ugust and November 1993 for SSS.

Couples granted
.mafriage Ucense$,

Two couples were recimtly
· granted marriage licellses In Meigs
Counay Probate Court.
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Receiving licenses were Larry
Saturday admissions - Earl Gene Bunger, 42, and Judith Lynn
McKinley, Middleport, and Charles Mora, 29, both of Pomeroy, and
Kiser, Pomeroy.
Jeremy Lee ·c ombs, 22, and
Saturday discharges - None.
Michelle Renae Carmean, 20, both
Sunday admissions - None.
of Long Bottom.
Sunday discharges - Virginia ,
Dean, Pomeroy, and Earl McKinley, MidtllepQrt.

any quality at all.
A few days before what would ,
have been Stoney's birthday, Frie- •
da Smith told me: "We realize that
life would not have been easy, but •
we would have lilccd to have had "
the chance. We wonder what he . :1
would bavc said and done. We see
handicapped children and wonder
if he would have been Iilce them.
Finding out, afterward, that we let .,.:
him die was like burying him all '!
over ~ain. How the doctors say
they d1d nothing wrong is some- ,.,
thing I 'ustdon't understand"
As /or.the five.year experiment, '
Dr. John M. Freeman of the Birth '
Defects Trea1ment Center at Johns ·i
Hopkins Hospital wrote to Pcdi- ·J
attics that the team surely did prove ,
it could get "infants to die quick- '
ly." The 24 who died, Dr. Freeman "
added, "might have done well and
might bave ... wallccd _with assistive
devices, gone to regular school and
be of n&lt;irma1 intelligence.''
I
Says Frieda Smith: "With the 1
doctors' attitude toward the lives of •'·
people in low"income brackets, it's ,:
no woncjer people like us don't "
ttust those in authority."
,
Said the medical team in Pediatrics: "The 'untreated survivor' ·:
bas not been a siF,fiCant problem
in our experience. '
''
Nat Hentoff is a nationally ·.,
renowned authority on the First .:
Amendment and the rest of the Bill "
of Rights and a syndicated writer . '
for Newspaper Ente1prise Associa. lion..
'
•

Hospital news

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Juae l5 diacharae• - Tesla
Adlcins, Thomas Lam ben, Chris
Lane, Darla Rainey, Gecqe Wade,
Viclcy Jones, Robert' Odell, Sandra
Brewer, Bonnie Coon, Mabel
Porter, Kimberly Beaver, August
Rouse, Brirldl CIUiningham, Kimberly Reese and Wayne Abbott.
June 25 births- Mr. and Mrs.
Donnie Long, 11011, Crown Qty.
Juae l6 dlachar)les - Joshua
McGlothan, Jonathan McGiotban,
Brian Payne, Mrs. Steven Morris
and son, Paul Carmichael, Sherry
Gibson, Clifford Hill, Sollil!
Brown, Heather Howard, Frank
Conlllllia and Lila•Denkins.
June l6 blrtlll- Mr. and Mrs.
Douglu Nitels, daughrtr, 1acbon.
l7 dllcharge~- Mareella
. Rothaeb, Mrs. Donnie ~~ and
11011, Mary Smith, Donald McCarty,
Emily Marshall, Carol Luckett,
Elizabeth Bennett and Tracy
Cheney.
'

..
' .

.'

!

•

damaged

·.
The htgh temperature for the
~~ S~ was 119 ~grees at
·
. ge, · ·
,~ today wae forecast. 10 be
mos YIn the 80s and 90s m the
Northeast, Midwest and South.

:!:
g! ~~~was ex~
ill New :wco
~.
and

Woman cited in accident
A Pomeroy woman was cited for failure to maintain assured
cle.- dislallce followina 1 two-vehicle accident 11 the junction of
West Second Street ancfDutlmiUt Avenue Friday around I: 17 p.m.
Accordina to a report from the Pomeroy Police Department, a
car driven by Jane Stewart, 27, Pomeroy, struck the rear of a
stopped ~ IIUCic driven by Kerr Gooch, 77, Gallipolis.
No in.JIIfles weft~ reponod,
·
Damage to the rear of Gooch's 1989 GMC was lisled as light
while Stewart's 1989 Ford Probe sust&amp;ined Ught damage to the front
and front-left.

·

POSTMA5TEJ~, Send add- cha._ 1o
Tho Dally .Sendnel, . Ill Court St .•
Pomeroy,
4li169. , .
·
8VB8CIUPTION RATES
llr Corrior orllotorllo•te
Clbo Weok............................................ l.60
0.. M011th ................ ..........................,.ll6

on._,

Judgment sought
Fust Deposit National B.Jc of Pleasant, Calif., aeeb a ~~
of $6,S29.1U plus Sll1.22 in~ from Rhonda Fetty of
:
The action for judpnent was filed Friday in the Meigs County
Coon of Common Pleas.
.

0.. Yeor.......... ,................................ ll3.20

liNG!.&amp; COPY
PJIICII
Dollr:............................................:JII C...tri

Salilmt.a no1 '-fnnr to p.y t.M earn-

Fair royalty forms available

er may nmlt in adv•nce ~net. .. The
Dolly s.a11no1 on a u.-, Ill• • 12
...,u. buio. Credit wiU bo ~~- corrioT

..... ....,..

.

.

N• oubor:riptl0111 by ...n parndtlod to
whe.. home ~mer ..me. t.

•ree•

••atloblo.

Mlolll•boorlpINidoNoliiiCOIIOIJ'
.
13 Woeb..................................... :... f21.84 '

116 w..................... ,.........................l43.16
$14.76

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

O.loldollalp C...atr

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13-......................................... .a
211Woalla.......................................... .110
~woa~~a

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.

and
lion
·

AIDS commission wraps up work
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
National Commission on AIDS
ended iiS wor1t today on the same
note it hit when it SUited four years
ago: The COIDitry is doing a tarible
jobofdealingwithtlleepidemic.
More people will be infected,
mm: will die, a cure is "difficult to
i~" and a vaccine fa general
use m h - is 11 least me to 10
,_,._,,the commiljjnn aid in
f

v.

.

lllck at the extelllion off'ICC by 4:30p.m. on
July 311
llpplications will be acc:epted after July 30.
Tho lcina llld queen must be at 1eut 16 years old ~ Jan. 1 this
year, not married nor haw 1!efm lllilrried, nor having borne a child.
For 1110Ce information, COIItiiCt Oiip Haagerty at the Meigs COIUI·
ty lllltenlion Office It 992-6696.
1r0 due

N--.

IC

a"' prlatecl •

tlley

minutes after the attack was
launched to brief him.
The administration's claim of
success is fa having delivered the
message, not for having inflicted
enough pllysical clamaae on Iraq's
central intelligence headquarters in
downtown Baghdad to shut down
Saddam's intelligence operations.
Testimony to Saddam's
resourcefulness is the fact that the
target of the Satwday night attaclt
had been hit by U.S. missiles during the Persian Gulf War and had
been rebuilt. Iraq's intelligence networt is soread throu2hout the
country.
'
Spealcing with ~ before
church services, Clmton said, "I
feel quite good about what has
transpired and I think the American
~e sbould feel good about it.
' We sent the mcssagr we need·
ed to send," Clintoo said.
Rear Adm. Michael Cramer,
direclllf of intelligence fa the Pentagon's Joint Staff, told reporters
Sunday that the 16 Tomahawk
cruise missiles that hit their intencl·
ed targCIS in the iniCDigenc:e bead·
quarters compound did a grell deal
of damage.
"Certainly, there's going to
have to be a lot of office mSecml·
tion done Monday," he said when
asked whether the missiles had

Lottery numbers
CLEVELAND (AP) -There
were no ticlcets sold naming all six
numbers selected in Saturday's
Super Lotto drawing so Wednes·
day's jackpot will be $12 million,
the Ohio Loaay said.
9-2-7

{nine, IWO, seven)

Plck4 Numllen
5~1-1

(five, ,zero, one, one)
Super Lotto
11-12-17-20-32-40
. (eleven, twelve, seventeen,
twenty, thiny-IWO, forty)
Kicker
8-9-9-3-2-1
one)eight, nine, nine, three, two,

,,

The commission, which sW1ed
its worlt in 1989 and consisted of
both Democrats and Republicans,
often criticized the Busb adminis·
tration for not doina enough about
the epidemic and for being
squeamish about discussing subjects such as homosexuahex.
But in this rlllal repQrt, the commission said, "New hope surged
with the election of President Clinton.,,

........

_.._,_,_bOll. has ..- . •

r-.,........

""' -•wuoua
a 1994 budget that includes $2.7
billion fot AIDS research, treatment and txevention, a 28 ~t
increase o- this year's spending.
Nevertheless, the report said that
while Clintoo was sympathetic to
the cause and had pronu~ much,
he bad yet to deli-.
Members of the commission
were ready to be openly critical of
the president for failure to act. But
after his appointment last Friday or
Kristine Gebbie as the govern·
ment's AIDS policy coordinator,

coniinuec~rrompaget

Pick 3 N•llen

Contest may be picbd up at the Meigs County &amp;ten-

Edllor'1110te:
Ill" aad adclre-.
,ppear . . . . . npolll.

report. '

"This is a short, sometimes
port · ed ·th sadness
~81('~;,~1saidw!. introduclion to the report by Dr. June
Osborn, the commission's chairman, and Dr. David Rogers, the
vice cbainnan.
"The human immunodeliciency
virus has profoundly changed life
on our planet," tbey wrote.
·'America has not done well in
aclcnowledging this fact or in mobi·
lizing its vast resources to address
1't approprlatel "

forms for the 1993 Meip County Junior Flir Kinl
.

--riDai

liS

Gore ...

The Eastern Local Bolrd of Education too1c action to proceed to
with Landis and Gyr to upgrade heating, vcntilatioo and iighting at
the dillrict' s schools during li special meeting Tuesday.
In addition, the board II!IIIRIVed studeitt accident msurance with
Brogan and Warner Insunnce Services for the 1993-94 school year.
. In other aclion. the bolnl: ·
- Approved the 1993-94 school calendar after ageement by the
Eastern Ulca1 Teachers Association;
- Accepted the resignation of Grace Stout as head coolc at Eastep~ High School due to retirement effective 1uly 1 and accepted the
resignatioo of Patsy Plater, substiture bus driver, effective JIUIC 3.
- Transferred Kay Long_ from Cbapter II reading at Tuppers
Plains Elementary School to ldndergartcn at Towers Plains.
Attending were Board President Ray Karr, Vice-President Jim
Smith and board members
Ron Eastman, Bill• Hannum and Milce
•
Martin.
The next regular board meeting will be held JIUIC 30 at6:30 p.m.
in the high school library.

Mombor: The Auoc:lalod "'-· IUid the .
Ohio NaW!!pa]&gt;W ""-lotion, Noijonat '
Advetitaint RepnHnUtive, Bnnham
Newapaper S.lel, 733 Third A'#Onue. ·

111017.

Am Ele Power....................37 1/8
AsltJancl Oil. .......................26
AT&amp;T.................................62 7/8
Banlc0ne............................ 55 3/8
Bob Evans ......................... 17 518
Cwming Shop.................. 13 If).
Ounp Industties................. 13 1().
Oty lloldina......................2S Ill
Fcdenl MOIIII ....................20 318
Goodyear na ..................40 318
l.ands Elld...........................27 lfl
Lilitiled Inc....................... 21 If).
Multimedia Inc..................34 3/4.
Point Bancorp.................... 14
~\Reatlllrlll&amp;. .................. l/32
Reli8nce Electtic.............. ,.l9 118
!tobbins&amp;Myers ................ 16
Shoney's lnc....................... l7 3/4
Star Banlc ........................... 36
Wendy lnt'l ....;................. .14 518
Worthington Ind................30 3/4
Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by
Kemper Securities, lac., ol
GaDipolls.

at tbe dae oi!M accldeat. Tile driver, Larry T.
Joaes, •ae 1111d acldren aareportecl, tr...
JIOI'Ifd by tb.e Racine squad ol the Meip Couty
Emeraeacy Medical S«,vlee. The RadDe Volnteer Fire Department also respoaded. .

EXAMINING WRECK • Tile State Hipway
Patrol lnvestlaatecl a tractor ud seml-~ller
wredt that occurred late Friday afteraoon oa
S.R. 124 aear th' Raveaswood Brld&amp;e. The
truck, owaecU1y QST Express, NewbeiTJ, S.C.,
was appaready baalitl&amp; a load or plaltic pellets

. Stocks

Eastern to upgrade buildings

Pllblllllled every allenioooo,' Mondoy
u.._h 1'1iday, til Com 81.~ ~.
Ohio ..,_ lhe Ohio v.n.y ....,Hohhw
Company!Multhnedla Inc., Puuno&amp;Oj',
Ohio 45781, Ph. 11112-21116. 8occmd cl........ paid otl'omonf. Ohio.

New York, N.., York

Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service
responded to five calls for 11$Sistance during the weelcend. Units
responding were:
Saturday - 12:25 p.m. Rutland
to Township Road 175 for Marie
Richmond who was traiiSIJ(Ided to
Holzer Medical Center; 10:16 p.m.
Pomeroy Volunteer Fire Department and squad to intersection of
U.S. and Ohio 681 for Donald
Pence who was transported to Vet- .
erans Memorial Hospital; 10:50
p.m. Middlepon to Oxyler Road
for Lilly Oxyler who wiiS transport·
edtoHMC.
Sunday - 2:28 p.m. Racine to
Broadway Street for Inez Hill who
was transported to VMH; 3:32p.m.
·Rutland to Beech Grove Road for
Gerald Overturf who refused treat·
ment .

the store when a westbound vchicl~ ran off the right side of the
road, struclc the lnlCic in the JIMSCDger's side front fender and then
left the scene.
The pairol is still investigating the incident

(UBPIIts.HCI)

'
'' '

I

.00

EMS responds

Continued l'rol1 pqe 1

The Daily Senlinel-

f

'

l

River from St. Louis, Mo .,
upstream 10 SL Paul. Locks aJona
the river began 10 shut down Friday
ber!M1se of torrential Midwest nin
in recent ween
In MiiiiiCSOIB, flood Wilen .._
reced ing in St Paul today afte
cresting saturdiy More than
miles of rivers in· Minnesota have
been flooded The Red eros. said
as many as 8oo homes have been

'

.----.· Local briefs~ .. ......,....__

J••

Not for the f1rst time, we were • :
reminded that there is nothing so ' I
ridiculous as the typecasting and . : :
pigeonholing with which teenage · ' •
life is afflicted. Some of the most '. :
startling success stories bad been ,
written by people who left ,
Greenville High in 1953 with the ' 1
lowest pros~ts. For some, the • •
journey had
from mill floor to ;
corporate headQuarters. For others, :
it had been to (ar distant lands and , l
far northern states.
'
For some of us, of course, the
story bas been of unrealized paleo- · 1
tial, of bad luck and ill-timed deci- • :
sions and personal disasters. Bui ·: •
what was strilcing was how resilient 1 !
eYIII the most afDicted bad proved ··: :
to be. One of our coaches used to , ., 1
tm1sure the players with "no quit •
in them."
• "
Budding Carter III, former 1
State Department spokesman -• :
1111d award·wlnnlnJI reporter, edt- • :
tor lllld publisher, Is presldellt 01 1 I
MalaStreet, a Wubln)lloa, D.C.· · l
ll8led television production tom- : ·!
paDy ..c1 a writer lor Newspaper '
1
Eate1prile AsSociation.

p.m. and sunrise' Tuesclay at 6:06
The West and Southwest were
a.m.
forecast to be mosUy dry and bot.
Aroucl tile •tina
On Stlnday, thunderstorms
The West and Southwest were ripped, througl) parts of the South,
mostly fair and dry today but Midwest. Nonbcast and Plains.
clouds huniJ over much of the
Tornadoes touched down at
·Northeast, Midwest and South.
Crescent Beach, Fla., and near
Hot, muggy weather with heavy Brunswick, Ga., causing damage to
afternoon thunderstorms was some buildings.
expected to move ICfOSS pans of
Golf-ball~sized hail pelted plll18
the South and the western Gulf o~ Indiana and Ohio, and high
States.
wmds from a thunderstorm overColder air was expected to col- turned a mobile home at West
lide with humidity in the Nold ut, Memphis, Arlc. There were no
bringing severe thunderstorms to reports of injuries.
parts of the region.
About4 1/2 inches of rain fell in
Also, severe thundenlmns ~ about I 1/2-hours near Daleville,
· expected in J!Ja;:;of the western Ala., causing local flooding.
and nortbem · , with IOm8docs
Flood waaers continued to bait
possible in Montana, Idaho anc! commercial traffic along a 500Wyoming.
JDile stretch of the Mississippi

to five calls

.' '

v

I

W. VA.

,,

Class reunions reaffirm old. lessons

0

· By TIM! AW!Ciated Prea
Heavy thunde~storms duf!lped
as .much as tbree ~ of ram on
pat1S of.western &lt;?Jt!!l and caused
some mmor flooding early today,
the National Weather Servlc:e said.
The cold front spawmng the
IDIStable weather was to move out
of the state tonight, leaving clear
slcies behind. Sunny and.dry weath·
. er was forecast for Tuesday and
Wednesday.
Temperatures will cool to the
upper 70s to mid-110!1 on Tuesday,
forecasters said. Lows tonight will
be 55-65.
The record-high tenlperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station wa.s 102 degrees in 1944
while the 'record low was 48 in
1950. SIUiset tonight will be at9:04

IND.

"'
•uf

Short life of Stonewall Jackson Smith :

MOSQl&gt;ITOES ARE
"THE \41~51" l''#E
EVER Sf.E"'
it\ EM!

c:ooditialil and high

Consumer choice key to success of health plan
By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein

·nus ve,..R..

Cold front will move out of Ohio tonight

Accu-Weather• forecast for

These are the lcinds of stories
that can sink a hcalth-i:are reform
agenda, even if they are not retxe·
sentative of the managed-care
industry as a whole. Republicans
have already signaled their eagerness to pOunce on any proposal that
tramples patient choice, and some
Democrats are willing to break
ranlcs with the White House on this
one issue.
Wyden recently f~ ~d an
alliance with a diverse c 1· ·on of
30 consumer groups representing ,
more than 30 million people. Their • •
agenda will focus on topics such as : :
greater dissemination of inform a- ;
tion about doctors through the
National Practitioner Data Bank
(which remains closed to the public) and improved peer review sys- !
terns to ensure quality ':Ire·
!
As one Democrauc observer ;,
says, "We'll lcnow when (the
administration) is going overboard ,;
when they start trading away
patients' rights and access to ~n- _
tia1 information in order to appease "7
the doctors' lobby."
UNDER THE DOME - Party
loyalty is one of the most prized virtues on Capitol Hill, which is
why the recent defection of a
Republican press secrecary bas ruffled a few feathers in the GOP.
;,
Coming just before David Ger- . •
gen 's celebrated move to the White "'
House, Republicans are privately , ;
grumbling about Lynnette Moten's
move from Mississippi Republican
Sen. Thad Cochran's office to .
become Illinois Democratic Sen. :•1
·Carol Moseley Braun's press secre- '
tary. Cochran is chairman of the ,
Senate Republican Conference - - ~
the Senate GOP's chief strategy
shop - and seldom sees eye to eye
with Moseley Braun on the issues. '_;
But Moseley Braun is philo- ., •
sophical about the contrOversy. She 1o
was roughed up by her home-state ",
press even before she formally ~
office, so the senator needed a new · , .
spin doctor just as badly as Ointon , '
needed Gergen. When Moseley ,: ,
Braun learned of the Gergen ·.,
appoinlment she rushed to deliver J •
the news to her new aide.
"See," Moseley Braun told ,. ;
Moten, "I'm not the only one" :1
(stealing Republicans).
·' 1
Jack Anderson and Michael ·•:
Binstein are writers for United .1.
Feature Syndicate, Inc.
..

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

OHIO Weather
Tuesday, June 29

.

'

WASHING10N - The Clinton cold weadier. For several years, the for her weeldy visiiS to her regular
administration won' t unveil its Miami woman bas been getting her doctor, nor did it pay for her pre·
111 Court Stleet
health-care reform paclcage until blood iested on a weelcly basis by scription. The Medicaid Plus she
l'oJDeioJ, Ohio
after
Labor Day, but one prominent the same doctor, and had her pre- was enrolled in was actually a
DEVOTED TO THB JNTERE8T8 OJ' THB MEIGS-MASON AREA
Health Maintenance Organization
House Democrat bas some words
that had conlriiCted with stale Mcd·
of advice for Hillary Rodbam Oinicaid·officials
as a carrier. Its
ton:
agreement
with
the
stale allowed it
"If you mishandle (the conto
advertise
for
customers
through
sumer-choice issue), the healththe
stale
Medicaid
program,
as well
reform effort is over- it's dead."
ROBERT L. WINGETI
as
to
troll
for
customers
in
places
said Rep. Ron Wrden, D·Ore . .
Publlsber
lilce
food
stamp
offices.
Patients
"That's the first thtng people are - - " ' - - - - - - - - going
to aslc about health reform.: scriptions filled at the pharmacy who sign up for the se~vic~ ~re
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
MARGARET LEHEW
How does this affect me?"
closest to her home. Pons relied on resuicted to that company s climes,
General Manager
Controller
The Clinton administration Medicaid to pay the bills for her and can only buy prescription
drugs at a sanctioned pharmacy.
insists that its. upcoming reform treatment because she can't worlc.
LETIEtS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less lban 300
"I thought I was sif!ing up for
paclcage will preserve the right of
One day she was waiting in !iDe
word&amp;. All letteiS are subject ID editing and must be sigll!'d with name,
Americans to ·choose their own for food stamps when a solicitor for information about Medicare Plus. It
address and telephone number. No unsigned leum will. be published. Leum
physician. But some House mem- · the Medicaid Plus program turned out to be more like' Medi· should be in good taste, addiessing issues, not personalities.
bers are concerned that in the rush approached her. Having heard care minus," Pons now says of the
to mollify conflicting constituen- about it through a Medicaid adver- experience. A spokeswoman for
cies - doctors. insurers, hospitals tisement, Pons asked the solicitor the HMO that enrolled Pons,
and corporations - consumers for more information and volun- C.M.C. Ramsay, told our associate
may be left oot in the cold.
teered her name, address, and Jan Moller that her company has
That's why doctor choice will Social S.ecurity number. The fol· · llllcen several steps to improve cos- .
remain one of the biggest battle- lowing month, rather than receiv- tomer satisfaction in the 19 months
grounds - a point driven home by ing her usual Medicaid Card in the since Pons accidentally enrolled in
the story of Milagros Pons. Pons, mail, Pons received a Medicaid the program. She added that the
Dear Sir:
state of Florida requires her compato anyone else.
. an ebullient woman of 65, suffers Plus card.
This letter is in regard to the letI con~acte_d t~e O~HA and from a rare disease that causes her
Pons soon found out that her ny to market its programs at food
ter by Mr. Vern Riffe which ran in reported It thmlcmg this would immiDie system to break down in new Medicaid service did not pay stamp offices.
your paper last SID! day. Mr. Riffe bnng an end to the dangerous pracwould have you believe that this tices of this company, but the
"outstandi!1g bill" was a godsend investigator, and I use this term
when, in fact, it is just another step lightly, did not even bother to
in a long line of steps to nowhere. inspect the equipment because he
~ liE MOSt" IRf/aEVANT
The fact is the politicians are not was told that it was not being used
at
that
time.
I
have
the
repon
to
addressing the issues at all.
QUESllOH I COULP A$K YOU?
The lower premiums are the confirm this. Why was nothing
~rJ I AAVE Af&lt;ILLOW.UP
bait. Throw it out there and see done? I haven't a clue. The fact
CONF~t.:E
QUEST!~.
how many you can catch with it. that OSHA is a government run
SoiDids good doesn't it? If the pre- organization and the owner of this
miums are lower, we, the business• business was a former state senator
es, can save lou of money, right? was probably just a coincidence
Wrong. You will eventually have wouldn't you say?
There are businesses just as bad
to pay higher premiums once again
to cover the rising costs of injured as this one in your area and hunemployees you have never seen. dreds, if not thousands, more
And just why are these costs con- throughout the country forcing
tinuing to rise? From the story on their employees to work in these
page one and Mr. Riffe's letter they same dangerous and illegal condiwould have you to believe that tions every day and as long as they
fraud by workers would account are allowed to continue there can
for a majority of it, but that is nOt and will be no decrease or reform
the case. I admit that there is fraud to wlllker's compensation that will
by some employees the same as be of benefit to any one, be it an
there is fiaud in politics, but that is emplayer of a safe and decent busia whole other can of worms. The ness or their employees.
So, Mr. Riffe, since you're so
real reason that the cos IS of wlllk •
er's comp continue to rise, along giDig-ho on spending $600,000 on
with you premiums, is because or fraud prosecutions why not spend
companies and businesses that are that much on going after the ones
allowed to practice IUISBfc and ille- who are really adding to the cost of
gal worlcing conditions without fear worker's compensation expenses,
of being stopped and sometimes the shoddy companies that are
with the blessings of the so-called responsible for injuring So many of
us.
"overseers" of our well being.
A word to the O!her politicians
I was permanently injured in
1987 while worlcing in just such. a who are patting themselves on the
place. In my observation not only baclc for this "outstanding" bill. If
In the October 1983 issue of Those chosen for "active vigorous recommended. But we ttusted these
was this company stretching the our farmers could spread on their . Pediattics, a medical team then at treatment" were operated on to doctors to do evetything possible to
limiiS of the law with it's operating gardens as thick an!l as fast as you the University of Olclahoma Health close the spinilllesion. Those given save his !if~ under any circumproced!lfes, but it was also brealc- politicians can spread it in the Sciences Center, told of a five· year "supportive care only" were given stances."
ing nearly every safety guideline papers, there would never be anoth· experiment on infants. All these
Frieda Smith also notes that the
set forth by the stale of Ohio. I am cr food shortage in the entire babies had spina bifida - · an
doctors
"failed to tell us we were
not the only one who was injured at world.
part
of
an .experiment. We were
imperfect closure of part of the
John Love spinal
this place, there were others, but I
completely unaware of this until
column.
Crown City
did try to prevent it from happening
The team evaluated the infants no activt. medical treatment: no six years later when we saw someas to whether "active vigorous surgery, no sedation and no antibi- thing about it on the news. AI that
treatment" or "supportive care otics to treat infections and other time we became involved in a class
only" would be·indicated. The cri- acute illnesses. Of those laid aside, action suit against these physicians
teria included a "quality of life" 24 did indeed die. Of the 36 babies · and the Oklahoma Medical CenBy The Associated Press
formula. Taken into consideration given full treatment, 35 survived. ter."
Today is Monday, June 28, the I 79th day of 1993. There are 186 days
The primary claim by parents
was the baby's natural endowment (The exception was lcilled in a car
·
and guardians of several of the
left in the year.
(physical and intellectual). But accident.)
In each case, the parents were dead infants is that those children
Today's Highlight in History:
emphasis was also given to the
informed
beforehand whether· the not given full medical treatment
On June 28, 1914, Austtian Archdulce Francis Ferdinand and his wife, quality of support the handicapped
physician
recommended full treat- were discriminated against because
Sofia, were assassinated in Sarajevo by Semian nationalist Gavrilo Prin- child would lilcely get, as time went
ment
or
not.
Parents could reject they were handicapped. And that
cip - ·the event that uiggered World War I.
on, from his family and from socithe
alternative
of "supportive care was a violation of Section 504 of
On this date: .
ety.
only."
But
some
have since the 1973 Rehabilitation Act
In 1491, England's King Henry VIII was born at Greenwich.
As the medical team put it plainclaimed
that
the
medical
team's
In 1778, Mary Ludwig Hays ~arne lcnown as "Molly Pitcher" as she ly in the Pediatrics article, the treat·
Another cause of the discriminarecommendations
were
not
clear
a
carried water to American forces at the Revolutionary War Battle of Mon- mcnt for babies with identical natution, it was claimed, WaS that the
mouth,in New Jersey.
ral endowments "could be quite 'ompletc enough to be fully IUidcr- parents of these infants had low
In 1836, President Madison died in Monlpelier, Va.
different, depending on the contri- · stood, nor was the ''quality of life'' mcomes and therefore could not
In 1838, Britain's Queen Victoria was crowned in Westminster Abbey.
bution from home and society." A element revealed.
provide the "support" their spina
In 1894, Labor Day was established as a holiday for federal employees low-income home could help deterbiflda children would need.
One of the infants left without
on the first Monday of September.
Joining in the litigation was the
mine whether the child had a future
medical treatment was Stonewall National Legal Center for the MedIn 1919, the Treaty of Versailles was signed in France, ending the arnot.
World War!.
At the time, I told one of the Jaclcson Smith. His lifespan was 53 ically Dependent &amp; the Disabled,
In 1919, Harry S. Truman married Elizabeth Virginia Wallace in Inde- physicians that this clearly was a days. His mother, Frieda Sll\ith, along with the American Civil Ubpendence, Mo.
.
means test He denied it but could told me recently that she had erties Union. Their arguments did
In 1939, Pan American Airways bepn regular trans-Atlantic air ser· not explain the formula otherwise. agreed to only "supportive care." not prevail in the lower courts,
vice as the Dixie Clipper left Port Washington, N.Y., for Portugal.
The concept turned out to be a pre- But, she added, "we did not mate which ruled that the parents, after
In 1950, North Korean forces captured Seoul, South Korea
cursor of the current cost-benefit the decision to let Stoney die. All aU, bad been involved in the treatIn 1978, the U.S. Supreme Court ordered the University of California ideas .about which siclc people are we were ever told was that any ment decisions.
Medical College at DaviS to admit Allan Balclcc, a white man who argued worth keeping alive.
Earlier this year •.however, the
treatment would only cause him to
he'd been a victim of reverse racial discrimination.
Sixty-nine spina bifida infants suffer needlessly. Like any caring U.S. Supreme Court- without
were made part of the grand experi- parents, we wanted to spare him comment - refused to reyiew the
ment between 1977 and 1982. any pain and did wbat the doctors cases of those infants denied life of

Berry•s World

Monday, June 28, 1993

destroyed Iraq's terrorism network.

He said that there was major
damage to the operations center,
much of the communicalions tapa·
bility, reconls and computer sup·
port.
There may be altana&amp;e fa:ilities,

they were planning io temper their

remarks.
"We're~ that the Clinton
adminilltration bas fsnally started its
engine on AIDS," Rogers said ia a
separate statement accompanying
the report.
An administration official,
spealcina on condition of anonymity, said the timi111 of Gebbie's
8pi!Ointment IIIII the re'-e of the
report was a coinc:idence.
The commission, which issued
14 reports in the past and many
recommendations, has boiled its
message down to two points, calling on leaders to speak frankly
about AIDS and to develop a
"clear, well-articulated national
plan'.' for dealing with the disease.
"What should be done is not
complicated," the report said.
"But it requires leadership, a plan,
and the national resolve to imple.
ment it.··
As of March 31, acquired
immiDie deficiency syndrome had
been diagnosed in 289,320 Americans, of whom 63 percent or
182,275, have died s1nce Jun~ 1,
1981, accordinf. to the Centers for
Disease Contra and Prevention.

Livestock report

. COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Direct livestock prices and receipiS
at selected buying points Monday
by the Ohio Department of Agriculture:
Barrows and gilts: fully 1.00
lower; demand light.
U.S. 1-3, 230-260 lbs., country
points, 46.()()..47.00; plants 47.5048.50, a few 49.00.
Sorted U.S. 1·2, 230-260 Ibs.,
country points, 47.00-47.75.
Receipts Friday 7,100. Estimat·
ed receipts M()nday 6,000.
Prices from The Producers Livestock Association:
Cattle: 1.00 to 4.00 lower.
Slaughter steers: choice 71.0079.00; select 60.00-74.00.
Slaughler heifers: choice 70.0077.85; select 57.50-72.00.
Cows: uneven, 2.00 lower to
3.25 higher; all cows 63.00 and
down.
·
Bulls: uneven, 2.00 lower to
2.00 higher; all bulls 70.75 and
· down.
Sheep and lambs: uneven, 7.50
lower to 5.00 higher; choice wools
47 .00·66.00; choice clips 4 7.00KeMCth L. Balta is chairman of 60.00; feeder lambs 65.00 and
the finance committee of the board down; qed sheep 35.00 and down.
of trustees of Woodland Centers
Inc. and not chainnan of the bolrd
of trusk!es iiself as 1ep011ied in FriSPRING VAllEY CINEM• day's Dally Sutl11tl in a story·
446 4)24
.
'
titled ''Biker appointed 10 post".
The illfOflllltion was Incorrect
as received by the paper.
Cramer said, "but this is their
headquarters, by far their most
important facility, and it has suffered a major setbaclc."
.
Secretary of State Warren
Christopher on Sunday aclcnowledged that the missile barrage
"probably ,doesn't end the story,
but it certainly is a reminder 10 hiJD
thai we've got the capacity to hurt
him very badly."
lllari8e Lt. Gen. Jaclc Sheehan
told reponers Sunday that 23 Tomahawk missiles were fired at the
intelligence headquarters compound from IWO U.S. Navy ships,
one in the Red Sea and the other in
the Persian Gulf. He said three
landed outside the compound,
strilcing what apparently were private homes.
Iraq said at least eight people
WCI'Cicilled.
Four of the 20 that landed inside
the walled compound lllissed their
intended Wgets.

Correction

DOWIIII CllliS
MlUIMUSSII

INSUUNCE

111 Second St., Pomaoy
YOUR INDEPENDENT
AIEIUSEmll

·•11scoum
$liCE 1161

.

..

�.-

Sports

Monday, June 28, 1993

The Daily ~0~~!~~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

At Wimbledon,

Page-4

Most favorites, sunny skies stay
around to begin second week

Reds beat Padres 7-1 in 11 frames

CAMPANELLA DEAD- Brooklyn·Dodgers
Hall of Fame catcher Roy Campanella (right),
shoWD mating an out pliy on the New York

By BERNIE WILSON
SAN DIEGO (AP) - The post·
Gary Sheffield era didn't stan well
for the San Diego 'Padnes.
Sheffield, one of San Diego's
offensive leaders, was traded to the
Florida Marlins on Thursday. The
Padres proceeded to score only
nine runs in losing three of four
games Ia the Cincinnati Reds.
·On Sunday, Hal Morris singled
in the go-ahead run as the Reds
scored six runs on seven hilS in the
lith inning to beat the Padres 7-1.
San Diego is 4-11 in its last IS
games
.
The Padres' new philosophy of
relying on defense and pitching
came through in Saturday night's
five-hit, 2-0 shutout of the Reds.
"Last night and today were
examples of that," manager Jim
Riggleman said. "At least today
was through 10 innings.~·
.
Before the 11th, the Padres had
stranded 13 runners, including
bases-loaded situations in the
eighth and 1Ddt innings. and would
strand two more in the bottom of
the 11th. or the 1S runners sttand·
ed, eight were in scorinj! position.
Riggleman said getllllg hilS with
runners in scoring position "wasn't
something that was happening with
any consistency anyway.
"I was pleased with our execution and intensity," ~iggleman
· added. "The Reds picched tough in
those situations and we just didn't
get any runs. You've got to give
their pitchers credit."
Cincinnati, held to one hit
through seven innings by Andy
Benes, had four straight singles to
chase Gene Harris (4-1) in the
lith, and sent 11 batters to the
plate.
Juan Samuel, who had two hilS
in the inning, led off with a single,
stole second and scored on Morris'
bit to.center. aobby Kelly, Samuel
and even closer Rob Dibble added
run-scoring singles, while Reggie

Giants' Dar-yl Spencer at the plate in a 1953
game at Ebhets Field, died Sunday or a heart
attack. He was 71. (AP)

Hall of Famer Campanella dead at 71
By BETH HARRIS
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Roy
Campanella set major league
records as a power-hitting Hall of
Fame catcher for the arooklyn
Dodgers, He realized his greatest
impact as a role model off the field.
Tragedy struck Campanella at
the peak of his career in 1958. An
auto accident shattered his rotund
body 1111d made him a quadriplegic,
but it never broke the spirit of the
man nicknamed "Campy."
Campanella died of a heart
attack Saturday at age 71.
"He served a niuch greater purpose on this earth being chairJx&gt;und
as he ever did as a player," veteran
Los Angeles Dodgers announcer
Yin Scully said.
For the last 17 years, Campy
was a falililiar sight on the field at
Dodger Stadium. From his
wheelchair, he tutored such proteges as former all-star catcher
Mike Sciascia and current caccher
Mike Piazza.
Rookie Piazza was at·b.at in
Dodger Stadium when Campanella's death was announced Saturday

nighL
"Roy was. a very inspirational
man. He helped me out a lot,"
Piazza said
· Campanella joined the Dodgers
in 1948, a year after Jackie Robin·
son broke baseball's color barrier.
In 1969, Campanella again followed Robinson, this time as the
second black player -elected to the
Hall of Fame.
"Roy did not want to mix in the
politics of iL He wanted to play the
game," former Brooklyn pitcher
Clem Labine said Sunday from
Vero aeach, Fla. "He's the personification of the ·ballplayer who
played for the game and not just for
the money."
While Robinson pioneered the
difficult desegregation of baseball,
C!lfllpanella was no less a popular
figure. The Dodgers and New York
Yankees drew an unprecedented
crowd of 93,103 to the Los Angeles Coliseum for a Campanella
benefit game in 19S9. Thousands
more were turned away from what
is still the largest crowd to attend a
game between major league teams.

"People alwl!ys asked me what
was the difference between Jackie
Robinson and Roy," current
Dodgers broadcaster Don Drysdale
said. "Jackie was more the flamboyant, boisterous type, and
Campy was more the fatherly type.
He was quite a guy.
"And the way he persevered,
that was the amazing part of his
whole life, the way he survived in
that wheelchair."
.
Campanella was at the height of
his career, having just won the
third of his three National League
most valuable player awards, when
Drysdale joined the Dodgers as a
pitcber in 1956.
"I remember going up to him
and Carl Furillo in rildJt field during spring training and saying to
both of them, 'What do I have to
do to pitch in the major leagues?
What's it going to take?'
.
"He just said, 'Son, you don't
have to do any more than you're
doing right now. Just keep throwing the ball the way you're throw·
ing it and ol' Campy will take care
(See CAMPANELLA oa Pap 5)

Sanders hit an RBI" double and Dan while striking out four and walldng
two in two innings for his first
Wilson a sacrifice fly.
decision
since heating New York
It was a rare situation for Dibble
··
- his frrst at-bat of the year and last Sept. 3.
"I'd rather get saves and not
onlr. his third hit in the majors.
'Saba's bat did all the work," worry about wins and losses, but
said Dibble, referring to the fact it's a win for the team and that's
that he has no bats of his own and what we needed,'' Dibble said.
Dibble squashed one bases uses the 35 1/2-inch, 35-ounce
model used by Chris Sabo. "I just loaded jam in lOth, while Kevin
wanted to put it in ·play. I don't · Wickander and Jeff Reardon comwant to give the other guy a pun- bined to end a bases-loaded threat
in the eighth.
· .
chout.
.
"It wasn't pretty for eight or
"I liate hittinl!. I like to leave
that to the profess1onals.' •
nine inrtings, but it was a heck of a
Dibble (1-0) allowed one hit team effon," Reds manager Davey
Johnson said.

Musser, Ind., aobby Morris batted,
with 11 home runs and 43
runs batted in.
·
At the University of Iowa he· hit
.305, .335 and .355, numbers simiOS.
Hoping to add yet another lar to his big brother, who is a .308
brother tandem to major league career hitter.
The two have never played on a
baseball is Hal Morris' brother,
team together. However, aobby
aobby.
Hal Morris, who plays fust base Morris said he would welcome the
.
for the Cincinnati Reds, just missed opportunity.
"If I played with him it would
winning a batting title two years
ago and is an established big league be fun, but I'm not worried about
that right now. I just want to make
player.
aobby Morris' professional the big leagues;'' he said. "aut
career began when he was the with Hal being a ftrst baseman and
Chicago Cubs' ninth draft pick. He me being able to play second, we'd
began his pro car~r this month as . be on the same side of the infiel(l
'
HuntingtotJ Cubs opened their and that would be tempting."
His brother helps him out with
Class A minor league season in
long -distance advice.
Danville, Va.
"I don't get caught up in com"Hal is good to call. He can
parisons," aobby Morris sai'd. help me with my game. He knows
"J'm a different type player. We a lot about baseball and he picks
both bat left-handed and like hit· things up real well. He doesn't play
ting the ball to all fields, but that's second or third, but he plays with
where the similarities stop."
some of the best in the game," he
Hal Morris, 28, is 6-foot-4 and said. "And Hal has been through
215 pounds; aobby Morris, 20,-is all this. We talk about it and he
6-feet, 180 pounds.
helps me prepare and know what to.
As a h1gh school senior in expect.''
Ohio (AP) - First
there were the DiMaggios, then the
Alous. In more modem times, we
have the Alomars and the Cansec·

Tonlgbl'sgiDies

NATIONAL LEAGUE
lulenl Dlwlllan
TWLMGB
Plillldolpllia .......... ..ll 23 .689
St.IAu.ii ..................3 lO .S89
7,j
.........................39 35 .527
12
I'll......... ..............36 37 .493 14..!
Clticoao..................34 31 .472
16
Floriila ................... 34 40 .4l9
17
New Yodr: ..............21

S2

.281

29.5

Western Division

SonFron..... ........SI :ll

I

Tuesday's giDios

40

.671
.Sl3
.521
.l21
.474

1L5
ll.S
IS

Sm lMJo ..............29 46
Calondo ................26 41

.317
.lSI

21.l
2A

Atlanu ..................42
HaultGn .... .............38
.... An..... ...........31
ClNCIRNATI ........36

34
:t5
3l

9

Saturday's scores

St.IAUil4, New Yme 2
Colondo S, Son Fnncitco I

......... 4, Florida 2
Pltlobwp 4, Plw.dclPU-o 2
A...... 6, llouota! l
S&lt;n -l)U,p&gt; 2, CINCINNATI 0
Loo Ana.t.. s, au.aao 4

St. UluiJI S, New Yari 3

Loo An 1o~a 3, au.aao 1
CNCINNATI 7, San Die8o I (11 inn.)

San FnncilcoS, ColtndoO

Florl&lt;h 9, M - 2

Tonll!bt's games

Pituburgh (Walk 9· 5) at Mon~rcal
(Oo.Mmmal-l), 7:3l p.m.
Philadelphia (D. Jaciaon 7-3) at St.
LoW (c..rruc.&lt;l--4), B:3l pm.
Chicaao (Wendell 0..2) at Sm Dieao
(&lt;lq H..,;, 1·1). IMl p.m.
s.n Franc:ileo (BI.ck 7-1) 1\ l..ol An·
aolai (Con&amp;ol 3·l), 10,35 p.m.

Tuesday's games
New York ('hnana 4-7) at Aorida

~ 7)

at

Toronlo (Hc:maCil. 10.2) at Baltimore
(McDonold H), f:3S pm.
Milwau.lr:M (Navarra 5-4) 11 Botton
(Se!e 1-0), 7:3l p.m.
Sea.ttle (Leary 6·3) at Minneaota
· (OU..todo 0-2),1&lt;ll p.m. ·
K~na .. City (Appicr 9-4) a\ Tcua
(Pavli113-'l), 1:3l p.m.
CalifOI'I)ie (l..enpton 9·2) at Oakland
(Dulin&amp; I-4),1D&lt;ll p.m.

Pi-.

Piao~4. Plw.dclollia 3 (10 inn.)

Houuon (Drabek

CLEVELAND (Clorlt 2-3), l&lt;ll p.m.
Oeuoit (M. Lc:i.ter 6-4) at New York
(Komieniocki 2-1), 7:30p.m.

National League leaders

HOUIUII'I 3, Adanw 0

MontJW.

II

Chic~ao (Undecldcd) 11.

BATIINCl: Gotomao. Colondo, .414;

Sunday's Stores ·

(Bo...,...,,),Hlp.m.
PitllbwJ,h (Wip!.e'l' 3-3)
(N.obholl J,S). 7:3l p.m.

·

Chica&amp;o (Be:re :J.l) et CLEVELAND
(Mea 6-:5), 7~l p.m. .
Decrait (Moore S-4) 11 New Yad; (Key
9·2). 7:30p.m.
Tcrnnto (Sto:ttlcmJ"+5J et Baltimote
(Sutcliffe B-2). 7:35p.m.
Milwaube (Boact 4·5) at Boaton
(~ ],5), 7:3l p.m.
SCiaalc (flcmins 2·1) 11 Mi.ancaota
(Coponi ],I), S&lt;ll p,m.
Kanut CitJ {Haney 3·1) et Texaa
&lt;R"llcn 5-l),l:3l p.m.

CINCIN~

NATI (Bro.-nina H), 7'3l pm.

Calouda (Ruffin 3~3) at Athnta
(Smoltz 6-7). 7:otO f.m .
Philaddpldl (llive:n 7-3) u S1. Louia
(Anloh• 6-1).1:35 p.m.

ChiCIJO (Moraan 4-8) at San Diego
(Tim Womll 0-0), IO,Ol p.m.
San Fnnciac:o {Burkett 11- 2) at Lo.
. An..... (ll...m. .. 6-6),10:35 p.m.

B.onda, San Franc:itco, .357; Merced,
.349: Kna,l'hilodd!&gt;hio, .344;
Piuza,l..o. AnacJ.a, .331; lrlrcri.•, St.
LoW,.331: Roblhcmpooo.
co, .328; McGee. Sen Fmnciaca, .321.
RUNS : Dykttra, Philadelphi1 67 ·
Bmd&amp;., Sill\ Franc:Uco, 58; Kruk, Phibdd~
...... ll; O.ullon, Pllilodelpllio, l2; ....
W'Uliamt , Sao fnncilco, 51; Jay BeD,
Pilllblqh.ll: Bigio.H...-,49.
RBI: Me~t Willitmt, Stn Francilc:o,
64; Bondi! Saa Franciaco, 60; O.ulton,
Philodelpbio,l9; Od.,..p, Colondo, 57;
Piau, ~ .~· !l; .Once. auca,o,
l2: litcoviali•· ~.....,.. ll.
HITS: Kelly, CINCINNATr, 97;
Oeluna•. Coloredo, 94; Bandt Stn
Pr~ncilco, 91; Buller, Lo1 AnJcl~, 91;
Btpell, Houaon. 9C), 1effaicl, SL. La.Ua,
90: loy Bell. Pilllblqh. 90.
DOUBLES: Grace, Cbicaao, 23;
Bidootte, Col«o4o, :l2; Dylu .., Plw.del·
...... 22; Cordao,ldonlrW, 20; 7 ... tiod

s.. mn.-...

wi1h 19.
TRIPLES: Ctatilla, Colorado, 6;
Mcnndini., Philadelphia, 6; D. Lcwil, San
francilco, 6; Colenun, New YOlk. 6; E.
Youna, Colorado, 5; Martin, Pilt1bw&amp;h,
S; I arc tiod wilh 4.
HOME RUNS : Mau William~, Sen

F.....-...., 21; Bon•, Son Fnnciaco, 21:
Bonillo. New York. II; ClOIII. At!An10, 16;

Mc:Oriff, San Dicso, 16; Pi.au.a, Lol An·
ad•. 15; Juatic:e, Atltn.t.a, IS; Daulton,
Philodclollia, 15.
STOl.EN BASES : Coleman, New
YOtt. 33; D. Lcwil. San Fnncilco, 21:

AMERICAN LEAGUE
!u&amp;em Dl•illan
Ttam
W L Pd.
TO!Or1lo ..................46 30 .60S
43 31 .511
New y.,k.. ............43 33 .566
Bokim~n ...............40 34
.!141
B......................... l&lt;l 31 .416
CU!Vl!LAND .......33 42 .440
Milwaube ............. 31 42 .42.5

o.uw....................

Gl
2
3
l

9
1:1.S
13.5

W.ter. Dblllon
Chico.....,.............. 39 33 .!142
Collfomlo ............... 37
Konou Cily ........... 37
Selala .................... 36
Tu• .....................33
. . - . .............. 31
Ooklmd ................. 2'1

36
36

.507
.507

2.l
2.5

39

.410

4.S

39

6

40

.458
.437

41

.414

Saturdafsocoros

a-ll,O....U4
,CUVI!VoND 7, Koiuu City 4
BollirnoroiZ,Ncw Ycdt 10
TOftlft&amp;O 3, Mil...ukec 2
Celifoalia 4, MUua.ote 0

au..,. 7. Soottle 4

Tau

10. OUlond 7

Sunday'• 1eoru

a-I,O....U2

New Ycdt 9,lldlimore l
Tmno ' · Milwaube4

-.z,CdllrniiO
Clli&lt;oto 6, Seoltle 4

Taa 4, OaJdand 0
CUM!LAND 3, Konou Cily 2

'I

I .

7.l

9

23; Dybtn, Plw.ddphio, :l2; B. Do.U,
Loo An...... :l2; B. Y"""', Col.,odo, 21 ;
A. Cole, CoJondo, 2l; ·Nixon, Atltnu,
21.
PrrCIIINCl (I decial...,): T. Greene.
PhilodclPU-o, 9-1, .900. :1.96: Kilc, H..,..
1Cn, I· I, .119,:1.27: Block, Son Fnncioco
7-1, .11S, 3.46; BUJtd.l, San Frtnci•co'
11 -2, .146, 3.2.!_; A'llery, Atlanta, 9-2:

.Ill, 2.79; Ollvtne, Atl.ntt , 9·3, .150,
:1.91. Arocho, St. Louio, 6-2, .750, 3.07:
HiD, Morueo1, 6-2, .7l0, :1.62.
STRIKEOUTS: Rijo, CINCINNATI,
100; a. .. San Dicao, 96; Smoltz, At-~ll, 9~; 0 . MadduJ: , Atlanta, !l2; Har·
niach, HOilllm, II; T. Greeno, Philedel·
~ 13; SchillinJ, Philadclphit, 71:
Orooo, Loo .Ana..... 71 .
SAVES: 1M Smilh. St. Louil 21·
Mild! Wil!i'mo, Plw.de1pruo, 23;
Saa PrmCliCO, 22; Huvey Florid• 22;

Beck:

..,.... Otir:oao, 22: s......;, Atluu, 20:
Wcaeland, Montreal, 16.

Amerkan League leaders
BA TTINO : OleruJ, Toron1o, .40S:
Omnlcz, Teu~, .321: Molitor, Tomnto,

.321; O'N.W., New Yoti, .3Z7· H111llhon
Milwoukee, .325; Ldlon, aiVBU.ND'
.321; Whil.l.kcr, Dr:troit, .319.
'
RUNS: White, Toronto, 63; Mofttar
Toronto, 61; R. Alomtr, Toronto,

ss;;

Lofton, CLEVELAND, S4; Fielder, De-trOit, ": Olerud, Tororno, 52; 0 . VauaJln
Milwaukee, S2.
'
RBI : Fielder, DetrOit, 64; Belle,
CL£VELAND, 63: T.ul""", Oeaoit, 62;
I

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KIT WINNERS • David Ramsburg, Rkhard . lively, during the Third Annual Meigs County
Ramsburg and Christopher Saoutrer, l·r, cap· Soap Box Derby held Soliday afternoon in Mid·
lured lhe flnl, iecoad and third places, respec. dleport.

..
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By DAVID CRARY
WIMaLEDON, England (AP)
- Although Goran Ivanisevic is
gone, all the other favorites and a
handful of longshots remained to
do battle in Week Two of Wimbledon.
.
Aside fro.m Ivanisevic's upset
by American Todd Martin, perhaps
the biggest surprise of the first
week was .the weather - gorgeous
throughout
. Heading into today's fourth·
round macches, the women's competition had an aura of inevitability.
None of the other 14 survivors
seemed capable of preventing a
final Saturday between Steffi Graf
and Martina Navratilova, winners
of every title here since 1981.
But the race for the men's title
was wide open ...,. London book·
makers listed six other players as
having as good or better a ·shot at
the crown than defending champion Andre Agassi.
·
Agassi, one of the best servereturners in tennis, faced his first
true test of the tournament today
a~st ninth-seeded Richard Krajicek, one of the game's most
potent servers.
John McEnroe, writing in The
Mail on Sunday, said Agassi needed to move more quietly and hit
his second serve harder. aut McEnroe said the delirious crowd support for Agassi "is worth a game
each set"

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The Agassi-Krajicek winner
would almost certainly have a
quarterfinal meeting with top-seed·
ed Pete Sampras, whose fourthround foe today was Andrew Fos.
ter - the last ariton left in the
field and ranked 332nd in the
world
The British press was indignant
that Foster's match wasn't played
on Centre Court, but tournament
referee Alan Mills was unrepentant.
.
Despite his world No. I ranking,
Sampras is only the oddsmakers'
third choice, behind Stefan Edberg
and Michael Stich, both former
champions on the grass courts of
the All England Club.
Three-time champion Boris
Becker also has looked strong. And
two-time Australian and French
Open winner Jim Courier, a base-line player, would emerge as a serious contender if he got past South
African serve-and-volleyer Wayne
Ferreira, the No. 13 seed, today.
• T_he only man to roach the
fourth round without losing a set
was Henri Leconte, ranked 75th in
the world and plagued two .years
ago by back l!roblems so severe ·

last changeover, ~th'e_n_s_,.ta....,l'ke-d off
the coun.
He was fined $2,000 for spuming the post-macch interview, lost
$500 more for throwing hiJi racket
during the macch, and earlier in the
week was fined $1,000 for swearing.
Things have been a bit more
calm among the women, but Graf
and ~avrarilova seem to be waging
a pnvate struggle to see who can
demolish their foes more completely.
Navratilova heat Patricia Hy of
Canada 6·1, 6-0 in 41 minutes in
the third round on Saturday. That
dido 't quite match Graf, who
crushed another Canadian, Helen
Kelesi, 6-0, 6-0 the day before.
Graf was macched today against
American qualifier Meredith
McGrath, ranked I 48th in ihe
world and a 1,000-1 sh&lt;il to win the
championship. Navratilova faced
16th-seeded Nathalie Tauziiu of
France.

that his career seemed in jeopardy.

The Frenchman, who turns 30
on Sunday, won his firsttournament since 1988 earlier this month
on grass at Halle, Germany, and
has delighted the Wimbledon
crowds with his reckless, net-rushing style. ·
His fourth-rnund foe was aecker,winner in eight of their 10
career macches.
· ·
Stich faced 11th-seeded Petr
Korda, while Edberg played American Richard Matuszewski, a journeyman who never before got past
a Grand Slam second round.
In two of the men's fourth·
round eoiltests, no seeds were playing. Auslralian Wally Masur faced
France's Cedric Pioline, and Americans David Wheaton and Todd
Martinsquaredoff.
o Martin was the man who ousted
Ivanisevic,last year's runner-up, in
a five-set UPset Saturday.
The Croatian, seeded fifth,
di~'t even take a seat during the

Holyfield beats Stewart to make
case for rematch with Bowe
By ED SCHUYLER JR.
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP)
1'Evander Holyfield won the
fight, but may have lost ground in
his bid to regain the heavyweight

would encourage Evander Holyfield to retire."
Holyfield, of course, disagreed.
"I thou~ht I fought a pretty
good fight, ' said the 30-year-old
Holyfield, who wants a rematch
with Bowe in November.
Bowe will fight Nov. 5, Newman Said, "but I think it's fairly
slim that it will be against Holyfield."
Newman would like Bowe's
second defense to be against
Tommy Morrison, a decision winner over George Foreman June 7.
There has been talk about Morrison challenging Lennox Lewis for
the WBC title in February. However, most fans want to see aowe
recognized as champion by the mF
and waA, fight Lewis.

utle.

Holyfield easily outpointed
Alex Stewart at the Convention
Center in a dull bout that dido' t end
until early Sunday morning.
Holyfteld saw his performance
as the kind of patient, controlled
effort that would enable him to
regain the title he lost on points to
heavyweight champion Riddick
Bowe·Nov. 13 . Many ringsiders
saw it as something else.
. "I'm very good at assessing
f1ghters and I'm assessin~ Holyfield as a shot fighter," satd Rock
Newman, aowe's manajller. ~·I

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Contplete Medical/Surgical Care
_ For Ear, Nose·&amp; Tllroat

..

John A, Wade, M.D •

Suitt 112 Valley Drlvt
Pt. Pltalant, wv.
Call 354·675·1244 for appt. or Information
'

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:·••

16:

.•••
••

DOUBLES : Olctud, Torolllo, 31;
Whil6. Tmanta. 23; Andc:n:m, Baltimore.
20; Cuter, Toronto, 20; M. Vauahn,
Botton, 19; Tbornu, Chic.go.19; Pallncr,
Tela,19; Oritfey Jr, Seaale.19.
TRIPLES: Hu.bc, Texas, 7; Cuyler,
De..-.~ 7; Lofton, CL!!\'I!LAND, 6: L

:-

.,·:•.,.

......
••

J':'hn1on, Chic:aao, 6; McRae, Kanau

' • ~ ..

atr. 5; Baqa, CI.EVE.LAND, S: Con,
au...,.s.
HOME RIJNS: Belle, CLEVEUND,

.~

20; Griffey Jr, Seattle, 20; Gonnlcz,
Tuu, 19; Rddcr,lldroit, 19; Te:ttldon,

''

OIL CAN RACE • Larry Tucker and
Danny Haines are pictured bere as lhey, particl·
pate In the on can race durin11 the Third Anaual

••
,.

Detroit, 19; Carter, Toronto, U: 0.
Vauahn, Mi.lwaull::eo..17.
SToLEN BASES: Ctu!i1, Colifomio,
33: Loft001, CLBVELAND, 33; R. Hen·
daJon, Ooklond, 2l; R Alomu, Torauo,

::
&lt; lnNHLdraft,

1993 Chevrolet
Corsica

23; L. Johnson, Chicaso, 20; Polonit,
Colilootio, 20; While, T....... 17.

PITCIDNO (8 dccW.m~) : Wickman,
New York, 1·1, .889, 4 .30; Guuntn,

TOtooto, 1·1 0 .115, 4.69; Hcntacn, TmvnID, 10-2, .833, 3.18: Wollo. tlouoh, 9· 2,
.Ill, 2.93: Key, New Yod&lt;, 9· 2, .118,

1992 Chevrolet
Cavalers·

5

10,988

2.30; LanJ'LOn, CtHfomia, 9·2, Jill,
2.50; Sutclift'e.. Baltimore. a.2, .100, 4.4!5.
STRIX.EOtTI'S: R. Johnaon, Suttle,
147; Lon...... Colilomlo, 102; Cemeno.
Booton. 91; Peroz. New Yodl, 96; llon-•oa. Sol\1le, 93: Guzrnt.n, Toronto, 90;
Appier, Kan~u City, 89; Cone, K.an.u
Cily, 19.
SAVES: Montaomery, Kan•.. City,
22; Olaon, Baltimore, 21: D. Ward,
Toronto, 21; Aauilera, Mianctota; 21;
Fur, New Yo,rlc, 18; Ruuell, BOltOn, 16;

. $7,990

fl

tj
!;
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::

- • Transactions • Baseball
Arnerb• Lutue
BALTIMORE ORIOLBS : Ploced
Shennan Obtn4o, ou.tficldia', on the Udat dit~bled hat. Called up 1ohn
O'J.Jano&amp;llue. pW:hu, from Rocheaer d.
lhclntcmolioru!LeoMINNESOTA TWINS: Rcleaud
Ron4y Bush, oulfield&lt;r. Recoiled Dere.k
Loe. outfiOldw, rrom Porllond or the Poclllc Coul .........

12,495

NEW YORX YANKEES: Aetinleld

Mike Otlleeo, infield«, from 1he U-dey
dUoblod Uo!. Optioned o... Silv-. in·
ficlda', 10 Colwnbut of !he ln~etrttUonal
Lc.po. Re.letiCd Neal Hotc.on, pitcher.
Callod up Paul Gibaon, pitcher, (rpm

Col~m~bul.

1992 Lumina.
Euro,4 Dr.

1992 Oldsmobile
Ninety-right Regency

10,995

5
·

National Luaue

.t CIN'CINNA'IJ REDS: Acdv1~ Swvo
~rran ~ ll·doy dlooblod
till.~ Mi11«1 HW, p.1dlo:r, '-0 lndi·
1111
• of lbo American Auoci.ation..
ORJDA MARUNS: Tndcd OIYe
Ml_.dln, third b111amn, to tho Sualc
Morinen
11auy
outfield« one~
loff Duwin, pild!or. Nomod Toay
direclor of in~em~donal nlaUona&amp;ad tpec:ial.-....t 10 lht~lfNft} rntnlpr.
SAN DlEOO Ji"ADRES: AMounctld
th1t D.J. Doricr, outfielder c:leared
weivwt Md wu ... ouaiaJat ~ Lu V•
... ollho l'leific Couo Leop.
SAN FRANCISCO O!ANTS: Plor:od
Mat William~, thinl bucmln, on the 15-

5

fil'h"'·

P.r..

16,995

l8x A Title Fees Not Included

~~s1 r::!.l er.;,

'

0

I

1993.

LOS ANGELES ll:tNGS : Trod..t
Conly Millon, ceaiM, 10 tho Now 1 Drerilt for • fifth.JOUnd p.:k in die 1993
dnll.
NBW JERSEY DEVILS : AcquU.d
Mlko Ptlulo, left winlo tmm. tbo Oluw•
cmnpl... tho CniJ Dillin.....
trode. .

-to

CHEVROLET•OLDSMOBILE•CADILLAC•GEO
OHIO .
J

;:: Campanella... ·
&lt;:;

;:
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(Continued from Page 4)
ofyou."' \
During a 10-year major league
career with the Dodgers, Campanella set major league records for
catchers with 41 homers and 142
RBis in 19S3.
With Campanella behind the
plate, the Dodgers won five penaantJ and finally ended years of
frustratiOn ~ beating the Yankees
5

:::; :~..::
i.er':::~s.8 season,
with the Dodgers on the way to Los

doubledl Stop by and see why•

B""be, tell ...... IOiho Wuhinpln C.po
itila lor 1 fl.flh-rouad piclr. in dlo 1993
dill\.
HARTFORD WHALERS : Troded
full.,.....,._ond tblal-..... pw;. ....
1993 drat\ aod futr.n OiA
liuw to tha
!an JON Slt.ttb for a fimt.ftJIUQII pick ia

..-

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In lust two short years, our sales &amp; senlce have

H«key

By KEN RAPPOPORT
QUEaEC (AP)- Ouawa Senators general manager Randy Sexton
has no regretS ova' signing Alexandre Daigle to a big contract. The
same Cllll't be said of the rest of the

;·:
Daigle's reported five-year,
•: $12.million deal with the Senators
:: has ignited a baddlish from many
: •· ~s· worried about salary infla•·"'~ tton.
::=: "It's areal concern," saidMon:-,: treal C~adiens president Ronald
•-: Corey. When you see kids com~. ing in with that kind of money,
;• what about the players .who have
. • been around for a while?"

5

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·.

Angeles, tragedy struck Campy's
career and 11CfSOIIai life. Dri vmg
alone to his Long Island home. his
- slr.idcJed and Overturned.
Campllllella was paralyzed· by
spinal nerve damal!e· Ho was a
quadriplqlc, immob~ from the
chest down, and his playing days

~-

wercover.

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Mei'11s County Soap Box Derby beld Sunday
afternooa In Middleport. Haines went on lo win
lhe race.

Ottawa signs Daigle to $12M deal
before his becoming first selection

, .. NHL.

1993 Cutlass
Oera

EckeRiey,Ooklond,IS.

eoao.

Suaday afternooa Ia Middleport, Kelly Caun,
first; Mathew Peckham, second; aad Zach
Meadows, third•

•

Tomtto,S9.
lOTS: Olcrud, Toronto, 104; Moliu:w,
ToronlO, 99: McRae, Kan1aa City, 91;
Lofton, CLEVELAND, 88; Griffe_y lr,
Scaale. 88; R. Alornar, T~. 87; BacrCLEVELAND, 86; White, Toronto,

r..

STOCK WINNERS • Pictured, 1-r, are win- .
.
nen
·or the stock ear division from the Third
,.
Aanu.al
Meigs County Soap Box Derb:y held
.

•
•.
•
•

Carter, Toronto, 62; Baeraa, CLEVELAND, 60; Thonlu, OU.C.ao. 59; Olc:rud,

Cur, Florida, 21; Robono, CINCINNATI,

·

.sao

Scorclloard
- • Baseball • -

..
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Hal Morris' younger brother
looking for shot to make majors
~ONTON,

The Dally Sentinel-Page-S

He eventually regained movement of his arms and limited use of
his hands.
Campanella is survived by his
wife, Roxie; •d children Roy II,
10111 CamDBDOila Roan, Anthony,
·~ Jobn,lllll kuth _CIJIIplnella Bffort.

"'

That was the general reaction
around the league as Daigle agreed

in principle to the deal witli the
Senators just before he was select·
ed No. 1 in the NHL entry draft on
Saturday.
"He's fortunate we didn't have
the fmt pick," said general manag·
er Harry Sinden of the Boston Bruins. "That's $11.5 million higher
thitn we have been willing to pay.''
Marcel Aubut, owner of the
Quebec Nordiques, had long covet·
ed Daiale and tried to swing a deal
for theNo. I pick. But even he was
aghast at the price tag for a rookie.
"I never would have paid that
kind of money." he said.
Perhaps he would have had no
choice.
The current market conditions
fot a player of Daigle's stature
were already in place, thanks to
Eric Lindros' contract last year
with the Philadelphia Ayers. Lindros signed a six·year deal worth
about $21 million after sitting out a
season with his controversial holdouL
A creative and c!uwismatic center in his own right, Daisle ftgured
to command at least a good portion
of that upoo joining a league intent
on marketing its young stars.
aefore taking his ftrst strides in
the NHL, Daigle will already be
tho sixth hi~· paid player behind
Mario LemieuX, Brcu Hull, Wayne
Gretzky, Lindros and Mark
Messier. · .
"We had to do what was ri4h1
for the franchise," Sexton sud,
"and what was right is having
Alexandre Daigle 1111d pu~ him
in our lineup. Ills merthandismg is
very important. That's supported
by the chaismatic personllity he
is.''

They're already calling the Sen·
aton' planl!ed new Palladium 8lllllll

"The House That Alex Built."
He's expected to be the comentone

in more ways than one.
The Senators are hopeful that
Daigle's magnetism can keep the
Palladium ftUed for years to come.
It's scheduled to open for the 1995- .
96 season.
There were reports that Daigle's
presence will bring in new money
from American investors and that
work on the Palladium would begin
earlier than ex~ted.
. As for Dmgle's contract, his
agent described it as "a partnership" with the Senators. Pierre
Lacroix said it includes a joint marketing venture between Daigle and
the team. The Senators will have
full coqtrol and responsibility of
marketihg Daigle, and they will
share the revenues.
When his selection as No. 1 in
the draft
announced at Le 'Colisee, the Senators handed out a
slick press kit that contained
glossy-looking "tickeiS" expressing the thought:
"Daigle - the hottest ticket on
ice...
The kit included invitations to
the media to meet DaiJ!le a\ a post·
draft get-together w11h refreshments. All this for an 18-year-old
who has yet to step out on NHL
ice.

was

- - Sports briefs-Cydlnll
PARIS (AP) - Three-time
champion Greg LeMond of the
United States will mias the Tour de
France because of an allergy that
has weakened his immune system.
The three-week race begins Saturday.
· Track and fteld
KUORTANE, Finland (AP)Tom Pukstys set an American
record in the javelin with a mark of
281 feet, 2 inches, in an international meet Saturday. He broke
Tom Petranofrs 1986 mark of 280L.

Touching an underxround ~ line with anything could result in a serious or fantl
injury. Protect younelf ~~home and at work.Call for help in locating these lines beiOre
you

?ig. I (800)362-2764 in Ohio.

\

�PeQI 6 The Dally Sentinel

Homeless people need.to be treated with dignity
0.. Au • ndn: I limply bad
10 1i'II'(MMI ID tile letter from the
E

~ dl: II flllll(:libcr who -

JIOina

boekln liYin&amp; to translate tapes
diciiiiJd ~~s who eat while

thc!Y Me

0

•

•

I do a 11'1* deal oC II'IIIICribing
for doc:lun, llld I will! eatins was
die Ollly t11iDa I bad to listen to
toe•"" die cic:uiDon. I have heard
BID ellen, llld JXIPilinB, apples
beitlc a • ·Jwl, a kid pmcticing die
cllrinet in the back1round and
airplues drooins. Some of the
clotbsclic•M• while they ate at bill
11-.oa, attendinB wcddinBS or

Plarml poka'.

] llape IIlia .... mUea it into your
col1111111 !w:aer docton who diclatc
oboold know bow they come acruss.
If IIIey n ID p
ve their imqe
as hi1h-claas profcssionlls, they
should 1ilteR to their tapes now lllld
thee before they ICIId them in to be
1rliiit:iibcd. They WOII1d be emberruled. •• BLUSHING IN SAN
BERNARDINO
DEAR BLUSHING: Your leuer
wu one of hundreds I received on
this 111bject, and most or the
C011JP1a1n11 Cline from California.
Cu it be something they are
puainB in the Wllla7 Read on:
De.- Au Lucien: I'd lite to
add IIIOiher complaint to the ones
CI!Mb-.1 by die transcriber who
was upaet with doc:toQ who eat wbilc
they n lllkinB into the machine.
I am driven up the wall by

Ann

pmqe. Please don't think you~~e

:=::.w~:=.::.:.your

More Americans are exerc~~ing,
but 1.osmg
• ·the batt1e of the bu1ge

U you really want to do a
kindness, buy a whole mcsl or
Purchase a bag of ·Broccries.
Sorupa'rood ~!"S~p
~

WASHINGTON (AP) ·_ More
Americans 11e exorcising, wearing
scsi belts and using smoke detcctors but most are still losing the
....... ""
w"'"' bailie of the bulge a survey says.
you eat out and' buy . a fresh·
Sixty-five perCent of adults are
.
hamburger and french rriea for a overweight, according to the surdoclm who mumble, nlt1c papco, penon who will ~ it 1 feast. vey of health habits released today
yawn, blow their IIOIICS, cough and Don't offer them your leftovers. ' by Prevention magazine.
.
The magazine has sponsored
clear their throats. They don't They have eaten out of dumpslttl
realize lhallll sounds ue nplified, too often.
similar surveys for the past decade
and tbey just abo11t break our
Homeless people need to be and this year s score on its PrcvenCll'drums.
treal1ld with dignity. Sad to af, they lion Index was the highest ever:
But not all doctors arc Slobs. have been kickechround by life lllld 67.3 out of a possible 100. That
Tholle of us wl!o do this work ate 10 don't need to be beaJen down 111y was llmost six points hiBber than
grtteflll to the 1entlemanly flll1ber. And thole who rellty MOt in 1984.
physicians who ate orpni...t llld to help can volunteer their lel'Vic:es
''Americans arc now much
concise l1ld say, "thank you• at the It a soUp kitcllen or a food blllk. more safety conscious than ~ey
end. •• MISSION VIE10, CALIF.
Tllere's ..._... of work 10 ·--" were 10 years ago," the magazme
.,..,...T
JIO ........... said.
DEAR MISSION AND ALL I ag'EAA
~~M,!?..~ ....
Seventy-one percent of adults
01HERS WHO WRO'IC: I hope die
. : • ,_,.. or u"' said they always buckle their sest
1um chewers, mumblers, ~per clobber. I bad It coming. My belt in the front SCSI l)f a car, up
lltllcrs and apple crunchas will ace readcn often tell me that they have from 19 percent in 1983.
this lllld shape up.
lcamcd 1 lot from me. Well, rve
Only 17 percent said they someDell' Ana Lucien: rm wrilinB lcamcd a lot from lhcm, too. Your times drive after drinking, down
about your response to the woman letter was a fme exnple.
from 28 percent a decade ago.
·
whose friend "Mary• lUes her
1'/attllittg a weddi11g? What's
Eighty-nine percent said their
dogie bag with leftovers from her right? What's wro11g? "TM A/111 homes have smoke detccton (up
meal at a rcstiUranl and leaves it on ~rs Guidi! for Bridu" ,will re- from 67 percent} and 40 percent
top of a mailbox for a homeless litvt )10111 11/Uiety. Selld a ulf-ad· said they get at I~ 20 min.utes of
person to find. You thouBhHt was dresS~d,/ong. bruinus-siu IIIW/opt sll'enuous exerc1se three times a
"a good idea." Have you lost your and a check or mottey ortkr for ~ (up from 34 percent). Scycnmind?
$3.65 (this i11cllldts postage and ty-eiabt percent get some exercise. .
•
din
"'•••
·
OK
•--·"'" ) . 8-'~- ., .. __ , __
. Tlic results were drawn from a
Food
. orom your ner ..- JS
""""'uog 10 • '"'"'· "' 0 """ .....,. telephoDe II of 1,250 adults ihat
for a late-night snack or a I1'C8I for ' dtrs,l'.O. Boz 11562, Cllicago,l/1. Princeton furvey Research Associ
the family pet. Otherwise,' it is 60611-0562. (111 Ca11ada, se"d ates conducted last Nov. 16-Dcc:. 4~
$4.45.)
The margin of error was three

:l:-t

Social Security and the generation ap
g.

By Ed Petert1011,

Monday, June 28, 1993

PomeroY-MiddlepOrt, Ohio

Social Security benefits-widens
Social Seaarlty
the income pp between the elderly
IIJIBIIft' In AtHIIS
and the yoURB.
This strikes me as being an
One of the more interesting per.
awfully simplistic way of characcepcions of Social Security that has
terizing Social Security. It leaves
out several key elements that show
that Social Security-bas just the
opposite Impact on society. Social
Security is one of the most suceessful Federal programs in history and
is credited with helping keep families together when a breadwinner
retires, becomes disabled, or dies.
It provides a base for family fman. cial planning and income protecSpecial to The Dally Sentinel · tion throughout a per$011'S working
years, and assures that 98 percent
of all children have a means of
MeipCOUDty
projeciE, campS, fair ICtivities and income when a parent dies or
personal development activities becomes disabled.
~-Oflke
OfferinB JMIIP,&amp;ml available to such as lcadersbip llld citizenship.
As far as the proof that Social
all of Ohio's c1tizens, Ohio State
Home Economics activitJes Security spans the generations,
University Extension is tr11ly the include n11trilion, JeiOUit:C manage. consider this: a third of the cash
"front ~" to the resources on ment, parenting skills and self- bcncflll paid out by Social
The Ohio Slatll University. MeiBs Cs!eem. Pressure canner testing is
Security aoes to people under
County Extclllion is our lOCil link otfcrcd free-of-charge llld a Vllliety · age 65. And, Social SecUrity pays
to die Uni\Uiity. The lnljor focos- of m:iJ.IC'S for home I* 'r vation of out mon: benefits to children than
cs for Ohio E.xlalsioo 11e the envi· foods JS available. Stain removal anr. other Federal program. Disron-nt, economic development, and home CleaninB procedures lie ability benefits av~e $1,016 for
families, individuala and youth and alsoCpopularommun~tyuests~d Natural a family'of 3·
kdmhip.
_
Some of the least known Social
The: ExlenJion office is IocatM · Resource Development programs Security benefits are those paid to
· in the basement of the Coonty · in Meigs County include servinB children with disabilities. If a child
Home on Mulberry Heights. Our on county committees and net· is disabled before age 22-and a
parent is deceased or is collecting
office is =from 8:30 a.f!!. to working with other agencies. ·
Staff
members
work
closely
retirement
or disability benefits4:30p.m.,
through Friday.
EXICDSion Agents
Knecn, Agri- with community members to the child may receive monthly bencultlft; Chip Haggerty, 4-H; Cindy answer t~ions and provide efits that continue as long as he/she
information using remains disabled. Most "children"
Oliveri, Home Economics, and researchOffJCC Chairman; Office Mlnap, Ohio State Univenity and United receiving soch benefits are now
States Department of Agriculture d t
h
f~ f
d t
Becky Johnston and Expanded . references.
Materials
are
made
a
u
ts w 0 su er rom eve opFood lnd Nutrition 'EdJrlhon ·Promental impairments. Without such
gram Educator, Sharon Smith all aVIilable in the form of single PIBC benefits, most of these persons
work 10 provide services 10 Meip fKt sbccu, bulletins and pam- would be without any source of
phlcts. There is a n0111inal charge independent income.
County's residents.
Understanding that Social SccuThe Meigs Comity Office has a lot bulletins and pampbleu to
rity helps both old and young peowide Ylrie!f of JMOBriiiiS. Agricul- cover the cost of publicltion.
tllral priontics include pesticide
The District Offre is housed in pie is the key element that is misstraining and recertification, assis- Jackson and provides support to lhc ma from the view of those who see
tanee foi' fanners, greenhouse oper- sixteen county offices in the dis- a generation gap. Until we recogators and vegetable J.lroduccrs, trict
nize this, we can never truly cvaluFunding for the Meigs County ate how well Social Security is
hoffic, yard and ~ information
·
and insect identifiCIIIion. Soil teat- Extension office is provided doing its job.
The Athens Social Security
inB for ~ltural use and home through a pennerwp of the fcder1ardens JS also available at the at, SlaiC and county JIOvemment
office is located at 221 112 N
.Extension Office and a popular
For additional information con- Columbus Rd and lhc phone num·
aclivity IDinB the fJrst part of each IICt the Extension office at 992- bu is 592-4448. Our toll free numCllenda' year.
'
6696, or stop by during office buis 1-800-772-1213.
The: -4-H JIIOifllll offen nearly houn.
200 projecu and promoleS youth
S11bmltted by Cindy Oliver,
develCpment opportunities thrOIIgh Melp COUDty Extension Setvice.
emerged recendy is that ii is p!'J'pell'atinB a "generation gap." Some
people believe that the transfer of
money from workers to beneficiaries-from Social Security taxes to

It's your world

Meigs County

DALTON IMBODEN

Imbodens announce birth of twins
POMEROY - Tim and Joy
(Spaun) Imboden are IRDOIInCing
the binh of their twin 10111, Dalton
lsaiha and J&gt;tkog Isaac.
The twins were born at
Women's and Children's Hospitll
in Chlrlcslon, W.Va. on Apri127.
Dalloo weiihcd six pounds, one
and one half ounces, and was 19
inches long. Dakota weighed six
pounds. one ounce, and was 19 114

(CLASSIFIED ADS sure to gat raeuni)
'

To place an ad

Call992-2156

.l
!

MoJII. thru hi. 8A.K.-5P••• SAT.8-l2

j

_...,. ... . . . .

. ,......... ~, ... , . . . . . . . . . . . 15 .............

• Priooeled , .............................., ... • 7 , _ .... .,....,. . . .

..,...,...,It Ike ..............

CoN,,.....,
Ia M ,.._

Bapp, .u.
Yortl Saloo·
•Ad l._.edo•''
tploeodladooc.DipoloDoU,
T.._(...,aCh "ild..,.,.,B ' snCardorJ..,al
"--lwlllaloo .,,..... ..... Nat Plouoat R I' ....
S..llael, .....
18,000 .....

FREE ESTIMATES

Take the pain out of
painting. Let me do It
for you.
VERY REASONABLE
HAVE REFEf!ENCES

614·915·4180
. fi1CII93/1

Words

1
3
6 .
10

15
.15
15
15
MQI\thly 15

Rate

$4.00
$6.110
$9.00
$13.00
$1.30/day

$.20

SJO
$.42
$.60

$.05/day

Children at risk
from pesticides

p

.

12-30.92-tla

.Shade River Saddle Shop
CUSTOM SADDLES, •
LEATHER REPAIR
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR

(former Mason Lanes)
3rd &amp; Pomeroy Streets
Mason, WV
(304) 773-5585

• SUMMER HOURS*

•

36358 SR 7

Sun.-Thur 5-10 pm
Fri-Sat 5-11 pm

Autliorlzed: Brlggo &amp;
Stratton MTD, Ryan,
!.D.C. Roplllr Center·
PICKUP lind DEUVERY
Houra 06- !!1·1' J-3 Sat.
Closed Sunday

- . - . . 2 balll - ·
-lolll..,w...tdalpeoa

c.ntw,

pool, - . _,,.
$421/W f, ....... 1'11 IIJ.'ft71. I

JOE N. SAYRE

EXCmC LADIES UVE 1.00

.

111J.1111'a.in.11+.

614•742·2131
3-4-83- 1

1-..-

LMI 24 Moure A O.yUI Toll

Replacement
Windows
Vinyl Siding
Roofing
C.ll ue for
Special Prlc• on
Siding and Wlndowa

EAGLES

CLUB

• IN POMEROY
6:45p.m.
Special Early Bird
$100 Payoff
Tble ad good for 1
FREE card.
Lie. No. 0051-32

le •pplylng 10 1M Ohio 0..

for ..

ot

Tr~napol'lllllon
~ling .....,_

f)lnmMI1

grant uriilw Section 11 of lhe
F~ Tranalt Aal of 1884 ,

1nd 1M Ohio Pubic Tr1n1·
pol'lllllon Gnnl l'nlgram. Tho

lflllnl will provlda Dn•nclll
a .. ltlance for public
lrenoponallon owvlce lor
I'Mid•ll ollh• Mlddloport-

PoiiMrOY .,.. during ttM.
TtJe MrVIoe currenuy op-

Black, tan
Interior, demo,
sunroof, loaded
Stk. ·93-124

lftltea llond1J through Friclly I A.M. Ill P.II. and on
S.twday lr- I A.M. to 5
P.M. Service before I A.ll.,
•"- 7 P.M. 1nd on Sundaya
_ , be oohedulod. Wh..._

ssoD!deW

oMir - • ,,. pravlded lhe
HmiMrvlooaahedul. . aoU
olhw rMidenll. F._ ,,.
IUOpor- nylrlplotlh•

....... publlo whtt eldarty

Accor4 4 Door 1Oth Anv.

llnddloabltdrldooltiOOIDII
. ., trtp. Copt.. of
1M dellllld MrVIoe .......,.
lion Ire IVIIIIIblo •t lhe
per -

Green,alr,
loaded,

MIYora 011101, 237 Aloe St,
Middleport, Ohio, Mtw•n

' Raomy, modarn, -nllnt: Thlt delcrlbea lhl• 2
llory home klclted In Mlddlopnrt. 5 bed100ms, 2 112
ballil, living room with flrepl-. IFHached garage
Wiwolbhop, patio with grll and tumkure. Mucll-rnUCh
IIIOI'e. ~u really gotta 111 to apprec:llttl ASKING
MII,OOO.
·
.
.llllt out oi Rocln• 7+ acre• with 1986 Redman

MCtlonal 3 bod100ma, buiH In bar, hutch, flrepl-.
dbl. slnkl, 2 full baths, extra rental trtllor, garden
arM, fruit
collar, very modern ln•ld• In jlrlvllle
oountly Mttlng. $48,500.

tr-.

111ao1ne- V.ry cut• one floor frame hqme with 2

bldRMWna,blllh,dac~g.fk~ace, newer~ng

and amal glllgl. $23,000.

lit Iii v-nt _graund- 55+ acre•

with beautHul
Ohio Rlvar view. MIRY poul)le u- le. buldlng •••·
hunting, aubdlvlde, camping. hlklng ...you deeldel
122,000.
.

........,. 3 bedroom ranch llyla home lncluc!.t full
baloment, CIA, flrepl-. 1 car g~rege, near local
altoppi111. f25,000.

WI HAVE .IUYER8.-WE NEED US11NCISII

1M ltouro ol 1 A.M. Md 4
P.M. Monday through Frtd•y.

TtJe VUI~~p tnvlioa aorn-

. 992-2772
Jamee Kee1ee, ownllf'

.UNLIMITED ONE
MONTH TANNING

' $25.00

R&amp;C EICIYADNG

IMPROVEMENTS

BULLDOZING

Froin Fountllll!lion to

PONDS

S~PTIC SYSTEMS

Roof

Ytrclleriltle Rd.
Rsdne

Low Coate.
Work ~ua111ntaed
614·949·2911 or

LINES
BASEMENTS &amp; ·
' -'HOME SITES
HAUUNG: Llmutone,
Dirt, Gravill •nd Coal

614-593·5010

PH. 614·992-5591

949·2126
S-17-113-1 me.

•TRUCKING

BULLDOZER, BACKHOE
llld TRACKI:IOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS;

WAYNE
DALTON

EXCAVADNG

TRAILER IITEI,
LANDCLEAAING,
DRIVEWAYIINit'ALLED
UMESTONE-TRUCKING
FREE F.!I11MATES

992-3138

DO IT YOURSELF
&amp; CONTRACTOR
SPECIAL

•11 operaton lnoludlng ...1
opor•tora.;:r:_rding 1h•

DALTGr&lt;

Public Notice
PUBUC NOTICE
pultllo ~hewing wilt be
P.ll. .ltdy 11.
In the ••unoll
.. vtllage IIIII ..
..dMM\ ... 1114
for the VI.... •f ·

.........

R- I IIIII Ill GaloM
Toblolo IIIII E-Vop "Waaw Pille".
Avol- el Fllllli Drug.
!!IJoolo Fon? A - .,...,.
Trlvlo cau -~~1-zaa.otD
El1. 3111 12.18 Por llln......
lo 11 YMrl Old, 131-0115.
THE OltY CONNECTION 1 ~712.-.1..

_

or ........ ...., In lllllonlghl. Qof............. ca

100'0

IIOCAFL

Wo,.ed: locly componion to
oha,. . . _ , aoumry ' - ,
1 child - - 30W'/5.0&lt;~Z311-

4
I

Giveaway
looutliul !-ont Heiled Kill-

To o-tf Homi, 114 111 1121,

211ole Tabby COto, 7 Wootoo Old

11Wil'.otlt

'

=

I Cute Kill- I Wootoo Old, 1
. llloll, 1 , _ , 1 Yo- •

~
A:':t::o':.ll."""'
........,... _ _ fotholl

--..-.
........-.....

.J!acl......_!loo ....

olu

I

-,

Chair, eubble for upt1aJ 1 ''

··-

rM-

IIIIaed Dog I , _ To A
Good Hami, Low Oil...., 1'14-

hiiR for publlo

. Vlllllge ol Middleport
(1)21, 21 2TC

BOCA FL

-.

wtu be

Fred Holf1Mn lleyor

llooup' I In

-::A·--. .., . .,. .

P.M.In theoou!ldl chant bora

aornment.

min 100"1 ot81,
....

,..... o,_lodoy.

Nolhon, • Nomlon :.".~ Moo-;
.....,_llll7 Aftw 7 P.ll.

hold cln.luly 21,,.3117:30
•• vlllag•

112.40-

11t ... 1310.
WAY~&lt;E

These Sizes Onlrl
8z7 •••••••••~. S1
9x7·••••••••••• $1
16x7 ••••••••• $

· 1111'12/1 mo.

1-· -m .......

OHIO'B OONNEC'IION ALTER·

NATIVE 1-~7

Recover Your
lnvetttaent"

Steel Wood Grained Textured Raised
Panel Garage Doors Complete With
Track, Lock, Spring and Hardware.
WHILE THEY LASTJ

(614) .
667·6621

lram d ln1oretlld
puiJIIo, prlv•a., •nd flll'llren-

.n:u

l

D. A. BOSTON

HOlE SITES •nd

UCIIIE, OHIO

••Helping You To

MORRIS
GARAGE DOOR SERVICE

·•TRACK LOADER

EXCAVATING

UPHOLSTERY

IIISTRESB IIAOONNA UVE 1·
--1111
12 min. · -..
-.MCV18A11+.

1

•DOZERS
•BACKHOE

HOWARD

SNODGRASS'

LICENSED IIIII BONDED

5-24-1 mo.

-

pror:U":uo

WATER &amp; SEWER

Inside

fOREVER
BRONZE
,

LAND CLEARING

••tl Out
Fraa e•tlmatae,

WOLFE BED/
FACE TANNER

~

I

To

looullful Glrtol!l
El1. 11371, 13.18 Per llln. llual
.. 11 v... Co. 102-0111.

FI'M Estimates

J&amp;T HOME

t•

711113.-. JIC.'IIIA 1 -

. SAY.E

EVERY THURSDAY

Accord EX Wagon

I

COCOA lEACH, - . -

Reasonable
: Rates ·

'

clau-.

810 EAST STATE STREET
59W555
c. 594-21

3 Announcement•

J&amp;L INSULATION

undlfohlnda tho
•nd penalty

THEHAPPYHONDAPEOPL£

Announcements

GRAVEL &amp; COAL

Wttdealers

FlEE

256·6640

LIMESTONE,

949·2104

floiiiOiil

ATHENS · HONDA CARS

llafls' TN• lnllfe•

HAULING

WALKER ALLEY
Paris and Servke
Mowers • &lt;haln S.ws

992•3470

•nd
..........t. thel 1M

Offer explreo Wedn11dlty 8-30-83

RACINE
MOWIR CLINIC

&amp; FILL DIRT

bOnd

with any purchase of .a new or
used vehicle In stock.

INSURED
3/Wn

liMESTONE, TOP SOIL .

...... hlmloh •
porolill (100!1.)

Savings on your groceries

Formnl~ •f

985~3406

CLOSED WEDNIESD'A'

GRAVEL, SAND, .

Public Notice
'lh• VIllage ol Middleport

400

tRIMMING ancl
IREE &amp; SlUMP REMOVAL

Chester, Oh. 45720

36970 Ball Run Road
Pomeroy, Ohio

E!

5

614·992·7643
2112192/tfn .

HAULING
SERVICE

Cars

sso'!deW~t

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES
, (No Sunday Calls)

E

USED RAILROAD TIES

BUILDERS, INC •

tla

3-15-93-tfn

51171111

New Homes • VInyl Siding
• New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing •

-CALL FOR PRtaNG•EXHAUST SALE NOW .. PROGRESS*

Middleport, Ohio
614·992·7144

BILL SlACK
.992·2269

Call614-992·7878

614·446·0 7 36

ZOS.75A15"11gw " - X1M AWL
ZOS.75A14" llgw PM X1M AWL
215-75R15" FlrHIIIM OWL
235-75A15" FlrMIIIM OWL

Crt~kload

- - - - . ; - - - ' •LIGHT nau
Public Notice
•RREWOOD

RL 7

Llcensetl, l•sured ••d lo1dtd

ORIGINAL EQUIPMENT REPLACEMENTnRES

38904 Leading

slated.

demo.
Stk. 193-113

RODGERS 1-Z RIDE

BISS~LL

:;;a

TRIM and
REMOVAL

Tanks, Leach Lines.
Repair &amp; Installation

p

.... -

1:1"'1141R.State

DAVIDSON'S
PLUM liNG

CALL 614·992·7878

Auto-Bent41b
Sprlne Tlnae
Speefal

WoAIIo Hlvo
7112

Riffle twins honor(!d
on third birthd~y

While detailiDB the perils of
pesticides, the panel encoura1ed
families to have their children eat
fruits and veBetablcs.
"It seems intirnally inconsistent, I know," Donald Mattison,
dean of the graduate school of public health at the University of Pittsburgh, said ·in a telephone interview.
But "many members of ibe
panel believe washinB and peelinB
fruits and vcgelablcs will go a long
way toward reducing risk," said
Mattison, vice chairman of the
panel.
"We know the benefits of fruits
and vegetables in children's diets,
and there's a gut sense that the
risks arc ~robably of a smaller
magnitude, ' Mattison added.

129.95 +lax

SEWER PROBLBMI

Sto11&amp;C=•re
flEE EST
ES
985-4473
667·6179

:::}1'

'

1

(614), 843·5264

eCol!'flete
Remotleliag · .

Gutters
DownsPouts
Gutte~ Cleaning
Painting

SHRUB

Pric11 Startrng at

Middleport, Ohio 45760

.........
ee;.,....

n~~)~ing

949·2168 '

GEr BFS1JLTS • J'An'f

Pt.mllc Notice

Box 189

NEW-REPAIR

•

WASHINGTON (AP) . Because lhcy 11e growing, infanis
and children are more sensitive to
· pesticides than adults - but the
j!Ovemmcnt baS failed to take this
m10 account when assessinB health
risks, concludes a study by the
National Academy of Sciences.
WESLEY RIFFLE
WHITNEY RIFFLE,
There is "a potential concern"
.
that some children may be in~est­
ing unsafe amounts of pesticides,
says the Sl!idy releucd Sunday.
.·•'
"We found some serious deficiencies lhat need to be corrected" ·
in the BOVcmment reJiilatory process, Dr. Pllilip Landrigan, a pediatrician who chaired the 14-membcr
Wesley and Whitney Riffle, Roberta, Colin and Christi Maidpanel that conducted the smdy. said twins of Tony and Laren Riffle, ens, Kathy and Rebecca Smith,
m a stateanent.
recently celebrated their third birth- Joey and Bethany Riffle, Paul, Kris
The tltUdy, entitled "Peaticides
day with a party at their 'hOme' A ,.. and· Bryan Harris, Vicki arid MaiC
in the Diets of Infants and Chil- Beauty and· tbe Beast theme was Hill, Debbie and Jessica Hill, ancf
dren,'' said the JIOVemmcnt should: carried out
Nancy Hoback.
-Develop new test procedures
Attending the party were materSending gifts were Kent, Jodi,
for evaluatinB pesticide toxicity in nal · grandparents, Larry and . Ryan and Kort Wolfe, Hilton Jr.
children
Delores Wolfe, maternal 1rcat and Marilyn Wolfe, Rose Wolfe,
-Collect mon: detailed data on grandfather, Eldon Kraeurer, pater- maternal great grandparents Hilton
the amount of food cbildml eat
n~ grandparents, Jim and Virginia Sr. and Ruth Wolfe, and Jolm jUf"Infants and children are sub· RJftfe. Leda Mae Kraeuter, Date, fie.
'
ject to rapid tissue growth and
development, which witt have an
impact on cancer risk,'' lhc study

mo. pel

FREE ESTIMATES

I ,

'I

Reasonable Rates
Dependable
Service

ROOFING

Over 15 Words

Rala •re lor conaecutlve nms, broken up dayw will be
charpl for IIKh day .. Beparate adt.

I

CALL 992·6123

Rocky lt. Hupp, D.C.U. •Agent

Howcrtl L Wrltesel

RATES
Days

'•
I

INTERIOR

DAY BI!RlRI! l'UBLICATION
1:00 p.m. s.turcJ.y
I :00 p.m. Mondlly
t:OO p.m. Tu.dlly
1:00 p.m. Wada 1 ity
100 p.m. 'lhunday
1:00 p.m. Prklay

'
2 Froat Struts • Lallor
• 4 Wll"llliJI . .IIt

Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health
~Accident • Annuity, IRA • Mortgage

: BISSELL &amp;
. (ONSIRUmON

LINDA'S
PAINTING

w.. ·-

•

•

p_.oy,Ohio

•..W.IMt-M,.Wa.-. ····an:

I

'l

C. YOUNG
992-6215

•hd ·•-•••• ''llfor..,..aflerflntMr(•._~
.... _
.... .., ...... Ia ,.,..~Cal...,.,,. I :GO • •••

j

'

......

........ _ ........ ,.w .. - - .

.. non,

· AMERICAN GENEUL liFE ancl
ACCIDENt INSUUNCE COMPANY

Middleport,
Po. .roy, .l1clae,
lutlaad, Masoa '

POUCIES
.............. ~,.... ........... ,. »lli!l

I

smokers, up from 2S percent last

LAWN .CARE

a

Cl.oSID SUNDAY

i

po~iJ:~n:::'~}·thepeoplein
this year s poll said they were

he exists and nothing more.
One night his son, Jonah, conRated PG
•••Vl (out of five}
cerned about Sam's loneliness,
calls a radio talk show and broadTri~tlr Pictures
(Now playl11g at rhe Spring Valley casts nationwide his Christmas
CiMma 7. Chect local listings for wish for his father - he wants to
IbM)
find Sam a wife.
Sam is coaxed onto the phone
where be spills his emotions to the
Movie revie'll'
By Kevin...__
' psychologist radio host. On the
other side of the country, Annie
There was a special magic in {McJ Ryan) hears the broadcast in
thoSe movies of old. when conflict Baltimore and is so taken by Sam's
was portrayed without explosiOns sensitivity that she can think of no
and two hours of romance could one else - not even her fumee.
pass without so much-as one roll in
The film modernizes classic
the sack.
·
romantic themes from movies of
Progress sometimes rolls over the 40s and SOs without tarnishing
DAKOTA IMBODEN
such t6inp, leading us to believe their style. Sex is only me~~tioncd
they have been forever scaled in briefly. not flashed on the ICreen in
the cement foundation of the new largtz than life flesh tones.
and improved.
Only one complaint. Too much
inches lonB.
But occasionally a film like of the film is wasted to shoT:ing
Maternal grandparents are Sl~tplm In Stattlt peelts throuBh Sam llld Annie in their own aepaCharles and Beuy Spllin, Racine, l1ld shows that all is not lost
1'1111 worlds. A lot of fOO:::.C:re.
and peat P1JICiplrenta, Junior llld
Slt_tpless renews the idea that before die couple gets
Marie SpaiD!, Racine.
love and destiny ate inlettWined it ~· a little IDIIISUil for roman·
Paternal gtandparents 11e Fnmk that each of us has a Miller or Miss tic leads to spend so much time
and Lora Mac Imboden of Right with whom Fate sets up an apart.
Pomeroy.
Otherwise, the film is fresh,
opportunity. The toughest pan of
The couple also have two other such an opportunity is taking a touching and funny. And a good
children, Zachary, age 5,. and cbancc Ill make the effort and fol- way to spend ,the evening with
Cbclsey, age 2 112 years.
someone special.
low through.
Tom Hanb is Sn, a widowed
Kevil ..._ It I ltalt' writer
{athc:z who moves from Olicago to
ror
OMo vane, l'ubMiq.
Seattle 10 escape the melliorics of
his lost wife. F'or a year and a half,
Seattle

'

1

year.
.
cies uOund the conceiifiil~ven- :
A
b 1ar
· childhood 1m
· •
muc
ger government sur- ~on. f'rom ~
.
.
m~- :
vey - the annual National Hoose- 11011 campaign to 111 sli1l ~ ,
hold Survey on Dru11 Abuse plan to ovcrllaul the enure b~th ;
released Wednesday mdicated 54 system, he said.
, t
million Am~s. or 26 percent of
•'Th~. more we look ,for ·
the population 12 and older, were answers to problems l'rom AIDS I
cigarette smokers.
.
to drug abuse ~ smoking-related !
Watrer D. Broadnax, the deputy illnesses, he satd, "the more pre- ,
~189'. of health~ h~an serventi.on stands ~ut as our most :
VIces, JOine4 m~ .editors at a eff~uve Sll'atCB¥·
.
•
news conference unvealing lhc.PreF1vc out of stX people satd they :
v~~ Inde,x.
.
have thtir blood pressure cbcckcd ;
Prevention- facmg the small csch year, 64 percent cat filxund
before it becomes bt- is die sin- 49 pm:ent try to limit the cholcsj!le most im~t tor in b!W~- terol in the~ diet Thrce-qWII'ttZfgo
mg and mamwnmg healthy mdi- to lhc dentist once a year.
,
viduals and. a .healthy society,"
But 62 percent said they.feel !
Broadnax said m a prepared stale- under grcst stress once or twice a ,
ment
·'
week.
, l
The Clinton adminisll'ation is
Forty percent said they were tee- ·
building its health and welf~~e poli- totalcrs.
•

'Sleepless in Seattle'
freshens an old idea

Sl~pltlllln

llonclay, June 28, 1993

24 HOUR F:V£RGENCT SERVICE

•

TWIN CITY MACHINE &amp; WELDING
24 Hour Portable Weldhi••Sei'Yic:e

COMPLETE MACHINE SHOP SERVICES
IN SHOP WELDING SE~~~~~A~~~~
ALL TPES OF •~ELOING F

WE LEASE
•

• HJI*OVO" • Co2 Argon • -

• CWde • ~opo GIS ·1'101*'1· CjlirlderS

HOURS
7'30om · 5:00pm

·

.

GENERAL MACHINE WORK l WELDING
• HMrc • Aluminum I Sllinlllll • Spra~ Wltaingi
• M.g Wetdlng · SIINI I ANrmnum • Weldw'lg Supplill
• r lbr'Uiion ·Abllrtv lo Rolllltnd Melli

1 -:- .... 1

....

Mon . Fri

=... ,...... ,.......

7:30am - 12:00pm Sol

t.oit:

Fully lnourMt
Job Shop FIOIIIIIM

COMPLETE

'

6 Lost &amp; Found
..... ..... Tan-...
:.n~.::F

IM Slilp FICilitin

0•190'·~·

St*illly Giles

.=..:r;·:.

otaa11111

......, -

S U Steel

fie :e

-. ~..nrt'
· !

RADIATOR It- !11J.l""""
SERVICE

992-3768

........ -

&amp;.a. ...._

... ...1814, llloclr,

.. -

1J&lt; .....

~~~-'"'
Loot: ..._ 'llecJ. ....

C... Mil--.~&amp;

�• ••
Page 8 The Dally sentinel
Yard Sale

7

Poinaroy--Middleport, OHio

Hom••
tor Sale

SNAFU® by B111Ce Beattie

32 Mobile

Galllpolll
&amp;VIcinity

Monday, June 28, 1913

ALLEYOOP

KIT ' N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

44

Monday, June 28, 1993

ACROSS

AUYordloioe-ltPIIIdln

ou.DUNI: 2:00 ......

• • •FilL

;.:,:-.t:o

~~~ILl&gt; ~

fflld . . . 1141
Routo 14\ Julw 111, 2nd,

10

WAI&lt; tN&lt;f

~·""a"'"' ~ vp

.

&amp;1110 ~

aat.

PHILLIP
ALDER

-1" 11~~£ ........

....., _ ....... 11 .. - .

=-t.~
......
.

r;AP.Y( IN 1"H6

0 ..

ani. • A.ll. Firm.
Rernodllina Sa..: Wht'ThC 'M
Fwnl-. 1&lt;11- Equlpmonl,
~...-!""" 3Cilh ..lilly 111, 12
Lww1o .....,. F,.., Hlglt-

M• fl../11 '"' (t' I

-WI,

....no
- ..•
...,u. ...,t,

e .........

.

Portzt• s..miiL don't
..... 'YOW laat 10 tho mOl }1111
aolltf14.171.1117.
•
Or

DENTAL H'tOIEIIST8: -

-~ .... To .....

....

:r::-lllllo
.:!.A=~
:._dWI~~~~-1i.,o'&lt;l.:..ru

1111...:$ =...,~
1"1.2ndi

-·

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Y...
rolo) - . - . .
........, Cal old11ollon To: 1 M . _
mUCh - . CioaftOII bu
Plb, Sullo 101, Clollpolll, 0H
46631
::llc::~=~:..:,,=.==.=.;::.:..:.=,"'w--...
•
10 llmlllit, o~u~y · 1ot, 2M,

-=-,.c:••-=:..
::-

~.:::- ~=
11ov1na pink llano
Yonl -

a..

-.., o- Ad., 181
Jull! 111-«h.
olall.... lola o l -.
YIII'CI -

-

a-.

Jufto

-

• Q6

21130. Y -

.. ........

bI......

2
AJC,
OOYifoc! poooh, ldlohon llllnd,
....... ::tn.~n:-·11nt.

W.ol

2•

:--..14~

'AVOW' ALLARIAII-JOIW
111M wllh ,., Yau'l Iho
~· 1ao • ass ·
AIIST. DOH
10 bod ..,. lloopllol II

....
=.~-:::.:.- ., a•

rwll.;:;::!;u:'lie';:.·=~

:::-::..=

&amp;:.:

~od!!lo: ~~~::~~~~~
GZ4,

..........,_ l'tolu -

-

For .... 3 , _ i&gt;llloo lnll.-,

12x5011., 114oHZ 121'2.

Col

.

=-~$='"=
"!
ond _ . , •

----~
Mnla&amp;
lla ••

ful thl II :llaPMI,

-.lllllo
......._

VJrtllnlo, -

T7WJI5. I . -

....... -.-.
A - I AI -

I INrlty

.

_ . , ,._.... -

-

-Iva
(IIEPTA)
Conlor
7 w. - y Nino DriYo
J

u

ZIM.

----.
-= ..._. :r.
...... 1-11·-·=
._ ..... "',........ .......

--------1 =:er..ooo =......,..
F:!IJn c:JI

n -11/L VMcnl Land wc.Miu

llloo ...........

21

Bullnaa

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

AeiMinot\ WY. J04.171..'Mt.

·lnlomlllonolbraudbolo apooro, polllo ..._......
_,
.......1111. ~ . Con
tlo!Mr.
.

E..........,
Expato!IOO . .h

- ·"'Ohio
~
tlan
K·12 R§4na Corllfloe.

lnlomlllonol Folllllll

Cllllwllor

---nallooNno.l

roqukod.
ICIUI ...nlft a - . Dndllne

•"-P.ll. tl.2110,
. • - Allor

r.. aolllloollon 1o July 1; 11H.

1. . I~~
Coftul.4
tlout,
AC, Col Allor

P.ll. I

.

74

.
50
~· aiiM.II.....,.. •

~
"&amp;'....c*.-l"'ttl
_E_Ion
__
lmunodlololy """""' .1uno ao,

U10L -

cond.,

e.~z.~r::
Tm:~~ .....

-lllllo, I l l - IOU.

.-.-of

, _ . 2110 4WD, ltw

:::.."=:;~:u.-=
~:""~......
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.,......, 11.1111;

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,._

lniii'VMI . . IIIUI OfiiDie.
'Pon·"lllllo
~
One
T -•

=71.-

m
..... llaok 1860:11 * t l - ilciUiiii
~
-

....... ,.rm

=-==~~
J'lllil' Ohio of

CJI -~~ cond. .JM.

m. .,IIIIIIIIM,$1100.

Hoa. ........
.-.
11.7116;
- · lucll
1JIIO Willi

(:.'=~:m'

lion

.I Fl. lrulll Hoa. I II. llnlo'lp,

-

--

-.

'Pon:nn.

PEANUTS
OKA'&lt;, KJD, IT'S STOPPED
RAINING. AND YOU GOT TWO

STRIKES AGAINST YOU!

Jun~ --. ony
112·71113.

Toll - .

Tap Paid: All Old U.S.
CoiM, Golcl Rrna-_- Colno,
Golcl Co1no. 11.T.l. Coin Shop,
WI

Ill.

1 - , Ext.
.,

-.cl"- O.Hipollo.

Wio1• ...
buy: 171
homla. .,.

-

Employmenl Serv1ces
11

Help wanted

" " - , , Wonl Pro
I 1tJ,
Con1p&lt;lor Bllllna Exp., Ei•
....._ 1'111!11 'llodlc:OI lno.,
W l l ' - To Loom llorlauo
Now Sldllo. ~To: P.O. 1oc

¥~~~1rd ::r:...~
llpollo, "!!.'15431·

&amp;oy WOfkl EICOI- Poyl Aoo

-

ln....... Molunlly In ·· - tar AIOnoY
De llopiM,. ............live.
AICILJIIM ......... IICPiflennt

ac ..lant

-...,.
IR-pllonlll
..£xporloilee llonoglng Appl.
........... ,_.... Pluono

ProduciO AI Homo.

Col

tar_..--

36

--·
w.-.

wlnlof-....:· ~~~- · ·
.-.
=
..:1-.itl-:-·

r-----------------'------------..:..---------...,
U.S. POST

~lon,

1-1"1 *lllo.

oblllly to
-..-o
01110 SOIIdiOf/ ~
nc.na.... Rrpanalbi•IMinitudl

=

hona

pr

r

tlng, . . . .

........ llltiQ, . . . polloy
_ .... Full I " - _...... to: P.O. 1oc 1114,
Alliono, Olllo 451111. EOE

No Ellporlonooi 16110 To Wooklv IPotlllllll -Oo!Jnl
FHA tlott- Relundo. Dim
Hour.. 140'1--;1 41 MM Elt.21S.

ilol-

W.nlbl._.t,

Aluoalesllle adYerllOing In
Ilia nowop- Ia oub(od lo
lho Federal Fair Houolng Acl
ol 1968 which males Kllogal
to advertise "'any pl9farence,
lmlaUon or-Ion
basad on race, cotor, ~n.
lilt famllal SlldUI or natk&gt;NII
origin, ouony lltonllon 1o
mike BfroJ such pra1arenca,
lmltallon or dlscrlmlnallon.•

This newapoper wll nol
knowingly accopl

-r

odYotllsemonts for 1011 nlalo· l
wl!!ch Ia In violation ollho ·

•w. our readlr3 are hiNby

lnlonnocf !hal all dwellngS
advorllled In tlio

n avahble on an eqUII
oppoi1UMy buio.

&amp;3

Clllll

:

porfwm ol

and

41 H0U181 for Rent
2 lldroom Houle For Rent,
Clnllomk-Rood,a-.
114 1411121
a bod,_ howl I n - - ·

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

need lmnied1atel!, In
Point Pl....nt ...... 304:S.

.,. .• - .and

ond

tho
but

~~--·--~
-lng, - t a r 3 or 4 llblu,
.......
..., pooy 8300/mo. H ulllllloo aro

'-ln-·nd~--­
llon, piCfcr prlvcla Nlti"'._~M111124421, " no . , _ - •

-~

...,._,

Hlglu

~

ono Jill' , _ . , . .

IGO

Taking Appllcollono AI:

Merchancl1se

Doml,_ PIUI!1••01illipolll, I

Household
Goods
14 cu. A.
ronly Dn

... Comp!lny
Holp No

nmo

·~afiZO.tarplon-

::=1......... .....S::f.i

-

::r.:t. ==loft -rolllod

_......_

~ ~

IOOOUI'ila.

Jooll¥•

RotOlo

w._ht 110ft Tolull W14 Cllolro;
Fan 8tdc

.......

- - WcV'li 11a.OO

aiiOr

=ne ~~~ ":.-.:. . .,

11.00. z ~- ........ ~.
Auotlon Or 4 llllll Oua 141.
Opon 8 ~.II. To I P.ll. lion 411.

.......n

-

,_fMid_.

- · · .. JWrt,1ta.

BORN LOSER

P"

~~~~..

'tUP. I G.OT 1'£ M:

c.Miu TruoUng, -

----~

IIlli ... ~.... . . -

Of~CH.

l'llONE!l TO~Y!

£Y.TRAVw.AAT

Ugly dock ., - 1 ""'wood doou I ..,_ 10 M..
- - OOildnlon wllloul ........
bina ...,..,_ Dcolt CoN.
Awillolull , . . . . ., con.
••, Rl21y-C" r, Pt Pl.

Building

55

T1 J :1s po!ldl :on

"""Ai"p;j~d;'"i;ji;i;:
~ AI . Arch lulldngo,
-MaiA•w
......... Con-.
4011. -

-1...:.·cr:.: =::
·-

...-;

tl= ·~

:..!: .t.~

ton, lao - , DH Col 1141411121.
'

58

Pill for Sale

.....

71

..,

-

711

Autos for Sale

. .........

~"'-=t-·
11171 Fonl T-llollon Woaon,
Run1 Good, One o.n.r, ti&amp;O,

...........

--Corio, ..
=-.
,
_
=..._
Suppllll

--1

IClfldoort
tar - ·or
Dodoo
CoiL
~
$

Rdt, 114-

4 . . . . . . . . . . . .VI,
. .- . . .
304471o40Malor 1pon.

11rn Wldo

Air

I 'NOlDeR

FEE.L..ING: "'THAT NOeODY
121/ER lJe'l1:t.J6 10 'lOLl~

WHATGcrr
IN10 l::!J&amp;..

a

Fl. lolt-

Ful Aumlna,
Cload ()cord:
tlon, 8S,IOC[ 1'4flt • •.
1fll 27 1'1. Trnol Tnlllo: AC, Attori:OOP.II.I1UII

K

_._.,........,.141'1.

p~ .
en... 8tH CorAIInocl, -,. . . : .•
11+44tiMINIOIDit.lt

~··

.

·~--

-·--

-llldo llo8t I 1111 ~-

PLE~SE,S~,

llOWVY,SON, Yt&lt;\ HININ'"
SIT OF CAR 1RO\JBL~ Mo&amp;\:1
I \\lA~ WOND£RIN' If .

NO Nl:.EP 10
PROSTRAiE.
'{0\l~ELF.

__
----.goool -loti, ono ol!lld, no

,.

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

....

o:J22, ' ...... 0111 lullvllll Rd.

111-tiiO....-.

=•- tor-. 131C1i
I:M.=-~·. =:!.
,__zor--.-ln
nnc·s rt,-.-.-...

r-dey.Junt 211, 11113
Noticeable Improvements in your material

aIf airs, are indica led lor lhe

y~ar

ahead.

Your largest returns could come trom situa·

lions where Lady Luck is the principle play·
er.
CANCER (June 2t.July 22) There areiWO
rea100t1 why you 're fun lobe around today.
One, you lei people do lheir own thing a~d
lwp, il they have. hothlng to offer, you II
think ol ways to lr\apire them. Know whore
10 look lor romance and you'll flnd it The·
Astro-Groph Matchmaker inslanlly reveals.
which signs are rornanlically ponoe1 lor

'

I

(

prenx

DOWN
1 Companpt
2 Flllr grtdt
3 TJJII olltt
4 1111'1 .......

7 Tllklftg bird
8 Btrrtl (tbbr.)
0 Trlln rtt.
10,Chtrecltr In

18 Cllll. llmt
18 lltrcury

·

21=10
22 ; : : , . IDr
~J

UOthttlott
11 Shldt ol blut

23 LIYtr l1ulcl

2!1 lllntllt lttm
21 Tlli\ WOIIIIft

14110 . . . . . llllt. code

21 Hllll
28 Notlllfto

-

211-- Clell
DIY

30 Singer-

If you need your pa~tner to make au

I~IDWIUal play, try to find an unusual

own to wtke him '- or he~

Lllnt

fn-+--t .

31 lltcldtt
33 Stcr. ......
34 s- (prtl.)
37 Shout or
lft1UIImtn1
311 Nolin tnJ
WIY

41 Adolttctnll
42 Cot
43 Loctl moYit
lhUitr (tl.)
44 WttktndWtleomin11
lbbr. .

45 sw tltlt
o&amp;8 Netto!

phunnla

411 Fut1.. bka.
411 EXIII
50- dtplume
51 Short lor
AUQUiu

53 In
551- Wom•n

CELEBRITY CIPHER

~- ............... . - ........ I • ., ....... -

. ...... E..:tl titter In 1M~ . . . . for lldler. TCidly't ~ S llqUIIIt L

·w

vwv

.
GBY

CM

MTf!IO

YDM

. YCWUL,

GNN .

FK

N

UXEMV

w

Y D M

I

v

YXEM

oeu

xuv

ISGYDML
GU

LDeY

NWMSV.'

.

LAXOEK

XUVMOLGU .

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Every lime JOU matce a ftlm, really you're maldn(
Ridley Scott.

a novel." - (Diroclor•

WOlD
IAMI

TIIAT D.IILT
PUULII

I

DOCIBE

I

I

A. This rule does seem to be chang·
ing. What was once writlen as "rain,
snow, and sleet" is now usually seen
as."rain, snow and sleet." Newspapers
and magazines have led the way 1n
dropping this punctuation mark • .
known as the serial comma, hefore a
conjunction. Many schools, however,
still insist that this comma be kept for
the sake of clarity. · Whichever Pf8C· •
lice you use, please be consistent.

r

. -r-M_U1 N-r-A_Hr::--111.
.

"I must be getting old," one
bachelor told his friend, "alter
painting the town red, I have
.-------......, lo wait before giving It the·---··

I. I. I. I.'

COPTIE
lcoal."
r-,r,5;_..;:rl.:......lr-TI
=-,lr.,--i
Q Comple;e the
I
-.!-·
-L.__.
C

1,:--L.-L.-L.

chudle quoted
by filling in the missing words
yov develop from step No. 3 below.

~ PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN

THESE SQUARES
UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
. TO GET ANSWER

--- --

., .
. ...... . . ..
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

-' -

' ·&gt;&lt;

Asylum • Knife • Unwed • Iodine • OWN KIDS

.. A friend and I sat on a park bench watching some
' childre~ playing. "'ne reason kids are so happy • my
1 compt..ni.on observed, "is that they don't have to ~orry
• about their OWN KIDS!" .

~q.

WAI.-1-Mllr
"6REtil:R"
'IQ'J ...

AITRO·GRAPH

I ~ J

5 DtctJ

I Ntpllvt

!EVEN
GOT II .lOB

.

~·-fum
Houro: 11oo Ill, w. 114-Me-

,

511 Alvtr In
GtlllllftJ

- -- -- -~

~E.TIIIG

81

LAYNI'II'URNrTURii

Olftllllon,

. _...

I

IN I\OI'ES OF

dhlonor, . - - . S2110. 171-4013.

ar, .......-. fDOd

58 Trpe or duck

AOBOTMAN•

you.

Holl, · 3 ton oonlrol air oan-

57 Newtt

-

1150~--·
tn:w:'
I a, ..... • • •

RN'IA LPN'S

!lliouglloul
Conlucl
And
Olllo. Col ........
13111. WESTERN IIIEDICAL
SERVICES

'

~

-lnulnd 11171, 440 Dodoo .....
......
Cload
CondR-

...

DO 'lOW E:M:R GE.T THE

Cempera&amp;
MOtorHomee

Conlo-. wV.V

In 1985 we had "Why Women Lose
at Bridge," written by Joyce Nichol·
son, a self·proelaimed feminist from
Australia. Now we have "Why Women
Win at Bridge,' written. by Danny
Roth, an EngUah bachelor (Faber,
$13.95, 800-274-2221). Buy the latter
· book, thougb, to enjoy the deals bid,
played and defended adroitly by worn·
en. Unfortunately Roth doesn't In·
dulge iD any scientific analysis.
This deal from the book features an
important defensive principle. West
led the heart queen: four, 10, two. How
should sbe have continued?
The bidding has a distinct EUropean
feel. West's two-spade opening - as
you have probably guessed - showed
either a strong two-bid In spades or a
weak three-bid in clubs. Roth says this
bid made it difficult tor North-South
to reach three no-trump. But I don't
think tbey would have ended in tbat
spot, even given an uncontested run.
South could have guaranteed his
contract by covering the heart queen
with dummy's king. However, he rea·
~~'~bly assumed that West was more
bave a singleton queen than

Q. I've noticed that the final comma
! hefore AND in lists is heing omilted .
• What has happened? Has the rule '
' changed?
··

14 " I tr. 1Wt 14" a..or.,
!'our . . ,.. Ao. .l TiroL .....

lllnlmtnt ·

56 French COin

Call For An-. • r ......_;, Aolaly-

AU pass

Jelhy McQuain
CORSAlR &lt; "KOR·ser") is used lor
either a pirate or a pirate ship ( "the
speed of a corsair"). You'll breathe
easier about spelliqg this noun if you
end CORSAIR with AIR.

One ... Cttt ~ Whocio

miPd.
llmciChr11.11.
I - llllil, . ,......
. 'i1mou.,.
57WIII .... t:oapm.
.

52 Prtjudlc:t
54 Aromellc:

SULYO
._,.--,,...,,1:"""'13
lrl ~

€VWOOe: ~
Clt*: ~ t~W5!

•".r.a":!::-=·

-

411 Atllelln11

26- Tor•
JtckiiOII
27 Ytrb ending
2llltlll
21Mtnureol
•tllllt
32 Rom•n 51
33 Lumberjtckl'

3.

~ OOFAVHOAAH t-10 W~'i !

FOR'IOO?

1111
I lonJni.DII.
. Rei, -

USED

TO NO Pill HOUR
or----l!lllflnt Dr Pulyote IJulr,
... l'lfuln 1M _ . , of . . , . . . . o r , . - - ,. Flnlbli Houro, -...-...
knowll clgr of fDIMIM•Itll IOo
DeadiN tor

Anylllnt,

- · 111
... Tlulid
For ..........
- . . Cload
........
,,..
441-015111.

lollon ·
unM.
1111n1.._
q-lono: l .lt degroo
Mellor ........ ·~--In
...-~r~a.
bwlliooo
...
mlnllll'llllciil, or publlq lfl.
-llll'llllon
wllh .....
.,......a.~

....... n•lrtd,
~
--•allnollnl .....

Choir Nl;

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ISO
-1141
Ill;l'ull4
Drc•r
....11; Cor JloCI'o,
Bunk Bocl'o, - o r l'uii
Uno 01 _ . _ . , -

w rhl"iile; aaardlnata Tr'lfiiiPOr-

=

"""111"1

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....., ....... :JOW7S.46A

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ContiOI

...,....,....
.._.._,
nn.

air-··-

l1,2tl.lnolllli;l 2liiiOn
lnolliltil.l11 m 11111

I'URNIS-: 114,111.

OIITIIDE

441-411111.

- · poutlal-ln'dnclop-~
and ..,

o1 tginoy· -

8 :1;1 Woro
, A-1

VI•••I'IIIINITURE
114:441-a1110rl'l441114.
'10 OAY !IAIIEAS CASH
OR REHT~-DWN.(NO DEPOIIIT)

""'-""'...
...,and,.._
.................
.........
...........
lion. II PI Wlw lorYioo
I II d ..

"'C,.

Shaj!o, ~

-n~n~-.
trolnlna
1n """"""'
Avo
To
Doildllno
tar .,. fllllllm- 1'1 .....It·~
.. July 7, 18n. To llort HYou GUo , Coli l'or
.._ _ of l'upporl- lril..row llolwllfl
1 a, .,._

.-....

0141.
-Holllton ........... _

24HIT7.

""-.-.......
n=
--'1'·- -h

"-;!8 ·

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llladl:uul,

Ambullnce, Ook HIQ, WY. .

' T1-1AVI:5'

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- u· n
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lt
ri.
3
- - - - · »W711-1il2- .
• ld.,...
Wiollllna lo rani• Z or I bod_,

, . , . . . pi0Widlll1 aall Qineral

..

~~

--loronl:olllco-ln

teewmr•r-eeon.,...._

....... 30W1114147.
llblllly to """' out dolblllc . - or Ol&amp;llnolruc:llon.

lloullna:

-.

,, .

3124.

Point Pl....nt, 11'Y,
molnloln
and .....,........ p!IIIO
Paramed... Dlllrablltc~lcl ...
ll1d
poy· ..... ......, - · lno
tar
oporollomi.
Alilflllw
obiiRy olud.................
mojor
medical prowldlcl, mov~ •.. opply
.. ......... lnllollolloil
nialnl- .......

Uv81tock

••
w,
Wookondc.

tr~IS.,

ll o n o l - - - . ond

-

..

. . . . . . QTimoi~­
Fecl ...... c.ll .,. 111 1101 ....
~
clawa. Anyllnle

Wanted to Rent
tor....,._howoor

Q

Renlals

ol lho SEPTA .Cenllr
ftt,200oq.ftJ lnol•dlclfl -

lng o.tw., pa;luim ..... car-

MAWN~

uau.kt

...,....._ HU1811oro 011111;
Ivory M~ Cl;uok - -

-

::0..:..:-=:Gr:c.: I,::.
pomry
monuol ~-.
1 - loolca,
ln..,..,
ouPI!II•
--rr
roqulrodlno_.llo ·-.........
and

JNTSRNA'l10NAL ·=~~~

--..--

wantecl

.....

411 lloltltr ol

Eul

had continued immediately
heart jack and declarer bad
In the dummy, would East
overtaken with the ace? UnlikeWest found the. answer: she cashed
elub ace at trick two. Now when
continued with the heart jack, it
lor East to overtake ud ctve
a !Ietrt rufl to del~t the

omcs

1111 VXR Y1i1ia1!o
Ex- Condlllon, Aft• I P.ll.
f14.441.1200.

112 wanted to Buy

ReaiEitate

WANTS TO TALK
TO ME ...

T~E't''R.E f.lAVING A
CONFERENCE,AREN'T
Tl-lE'I'?TI-lErRE PLANNING
SOME CLEVER STRATE6't' ..
I
5T FEEL IT...

FRANK AND ERNEST'

lllolnl-nlc,

11.03/llr., 201uro. ~ """"' ......
oondhlon, 114- ~MMIIIIM.P· F a·

TIME OUT! ONE
OF M'&lt; PLAYERS

75 Bolltl &amp; MotorS
for Sale
11' llork ........ Til Hill, 140 ...
lnballldbe auti wtr~ _.......

2D For.,.'*

play better:
men or women?

HOME WITH
HIM AG'IN!!

..........
-Fenleao,,.=
r,
· ·~
. .

tNFoni,._I_UW.IIo-

...,.,...,..

ll:nDitll. P.O• ._ 721D, IUplrlr.
WY rtiZI'1. 101.
.

&amp;Auction

61 F.-m Equipment

-

...........

"*"_ I -.. ,..
......rr:!:""
1on11
, Is =ltean GlniiNI

Public Sale

1111 ...... Coli, " · -

.Tap, 82,200, Or Trilll For
'lnuoll OrCiir, ~

Fd:m Supp':r\
l\ '-J\,r::.tocK

Caoftpollllye

8 .

~

--....-·

t~ .m-~"='=•

-~~~no 011 iloolllllll dNCIIor ot
ftllrolnjj. Quollfloc! -

.., _ .... inoln ......
~ilhC'Mtrom
Hubbrlnfl II' 'n...nltvll

a.-

Grtndl. OhiL IM&gt;oltl I 2L

45 Born
411 Not old
47 IIIIYertJIIIbol

liS. orr-.

BRING IN'

HIS WORK

PAW II

0.....
RID

42 Catc.lla
43- degrN

Opening lea4: • Q

' HERE
COMES

111oo , _.. Dow eo.. Conlor 1 riC olrollor lllril Pl. Pit, 304-871lllookWoiiiiiHIICDn..._ :1711altor5:lOPII.
Pll10 lf6.l' I A.ll. .a:30 P.ll. H :;::.Can1op 141170 ·~=
10'24 ft npondo
CoN. Col UO For A VIIM. Inlonl ~lot. I30,000. ~rm.

Pass

BARNEY

Yiclol')'i
.....,,

35C
.
35- tlcohol

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: West

a.moo, ,_
~-~~--. tua~-~-.~•·d-z

olulw_,.. 'f'lM

You"

~ 1 Palnl:l • MIIIIOIY

+Q4

4- . - a or l7l-4m
::-:=:::::10:::.::::-:=::-=:::::::-==-

8-·a-IMIC

t2 Recent (prtl.)
13 - Celhouft
14 Donhr'• Cl'l'
15 Fleh trep
17 Hocker ore.

IOIIIId

souru
.KJI082
•s s 3 z

t=========T:--::::;:~;:=;:~-11aon.
18 ..,__t....,
11 H 1p ..,.........,
...,, .., to Do
1811 lllyllno Hollf IUdp 14x'lt,

~a:::.~

=
-

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t&amp;S32

• • 14 • 1U INIIor, -

4 Pert ol hit

pren.x
23 Center or 1111
25 o-ttonlllg

.A)096

·--··~.~~
...
llllha,atl)ll_n._1Zit.

"Has anyone turned in the romance
I once had in my marriage?"

311Jelk
40 One (Scot)
41 Boxlnt-

22Net•Uvt

EAST

homo In ..........

1117 -

rote

1 Sgt• •

otCIA

.1082

......y.

Hugo
:::...,..., L'TliD

.9

72 TNcka for sale .

Pomeroy,
Mldd..,...
.......rt

~.

EEKANDMEEK

3i4:m:

llM.

a-

AIIYord-Paid
In
"""',..·
- n o: 1It
-"
'"
doy bo1aM Ille 011 II lo """
... . . . . _ - I :OIIilm Pl1doy,
:::...~
........
10 OOa.m.
_....,,
:

Milo 1.7,-, ~

38Aroet - -

21 Scold

+AKJI07
.K4

11,000111,100.
-. ·..WI;.ooldnt

Shoootrlng Ri&lt;l•r.· 11- With
Sllnd, . .........
Clollllng,

&amp; VIcinity

~U-11

NORTH

."Q7
.K7 4

'ftWPIINI.
I.R. . . 2114. July 111, 2nd, W ,
ITo 1, IAia Olllomo.
Thundoy, July 111, N, Ill
lillie.

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

i

and a

could be instrumental today i n

slamped envelope to Matchmaker, c/o this changing your oullook aboul something
newspaper. P.O. Bo• 4465 , New York , that has had you perplexed. He/she will
N.Y. 10163.
knowhow lo lift !he veil.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22. II you are bottom AQUARIUS (Jon. 20· Feb. 19) Try 10
!ihe conscious loday. it will Mlp you to deal spend as much lime as possible today wkh
more profitably with .others in situations

friends you thtnk of as being Successful.

where-you have something you wentlo sell

The&lt;r ideas and ways ol doing things could

or buy.

inspire you to come up with some inge-

VIROO (Aug. 23·Sopl. 22) Today you'll nious conceptions of your own.
ste~ fi nding reasons lhal could help you PISCES (Ftb. ZO.Man:h 20)0v~r !he nexl
change a bad opinion about someone you few m&amp;nths lriends could s10n 10 play more
know socially. This will be precipitaled by imporlanl roles In your pe;sonai affairs lhan
nice lhings !his person will slaillo do.
usual. In most Instances their Input will be
LIBRA (Sepl. 23-0cl. 23)Career and coostruclive.
linances are the two areas where you are ARIES (lltrch 21·Aprii1U) E•penencing a
likelY 10 show 1M greatest gains today, In ·lift in your sell·esloem today cOuld be the
some inslances matters will be interrelated. result of the kind way you handled a silua·
in olhers they wonl
lion where you Choose to satloly the needs
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Your leader· of others above your own.
ship qualilieo are very pronounced today • TAURUS (April ZO.IIIy 20) Being involved
and it ccuid be difficull lor you lo be a lol· wilh persons whose ideas you respect
lower inslead of the guy/gal up front Oo would tum out lo be a poalllve experience
what your instincts direct.
lor you loday. They ccuid help you achieve
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dtc. 21) Usually bolh a change ol hean as well as a change
il isn'l very wise lo rely loo heavily upon olaltilude.
hunches in your practical affairs. However, GEMINI (lily 21-Junt 20) Your bestaSiet
today your intuitive perceptions oould be '' loday Is your innale ability to changa oul·
more accurate than your logical avaluil· mOded lhinljl lnlo something newer and
lions.
more functional. This could be willi rela·
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jtn. 18• A close lionlhips, as well ' ' wilti maltrills.

..

\

I

�By
The
Bend
..

Sentin~l ~

The Daily
·

Monday, June 28, 1993

Wimbledon

'

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .,..... --N·a·mes t·n the news-- .
Page-10

·. ~--,_-..,,..,... ~-·:t.~~, ..,..,-~..,.,.~·.w-~·~-_.._.,

Community Calendar
Community Cateadar items
appear two days before an event
and tbe day ol that eveat.llems
must be received well in advauce
to assure pubUcatlon In the calendar.

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - Meigs County
Republican Women meeting 7:30
p.m. at the Meigs County Public
Library. New members encouraged
to auend. For more information,
contact Patty Pickens at 985-4231
or Niese! Gerard at 992-6736.

!

AID

Foo d/D r1n
•k

COKE &amp;.
S2f9
DIET
COKE
lUI. 120Z.OII
COKE &amp;
$259
DIET COKE
COKE &amp;
DIET COKE
IIIII
HERR'S
CHIPS
I OZ.lS!IIlTRI

:J~CH

.

69•

STYROCUP

BEACH
LOAFER
CHAIR

STYROFOAM CUPS
120Z.

69•

BONUS
PKG. OF28

.•

RITE
-- -

-AID

: Vol. 44, NO, 43
• MultiiMIIalno.

ByJIMFREEMAN
Seatinel News Staff
A payroll deduction savings
· progrsm and appointment of members 10 a committee to discuss a
proposed joint wala' supply system
were among the items discussed by
,the Middleport Village Council ·
during its regular meeting Monday
night.
Council approved Bllowing village employees aa:css to the Ohio
Public Employees ·eompensation .
,Program. · .
• Rily Hardy, area program repre•sentauve, described the program as
,a voluntary payroll deduction sa~-

'

•:
'

I~
I
I ~&amp;Quality I
I
I
I As ~;As $1, $2, $31

""""""

$20fl:

RACINE - Southern Local
Bosrd of Education will meet MOD·
day at 7 p.m. at the high school.

I

~

J~:I

•

999

AID

Serv1ces

Rim AID PHAIIIIACY
ACC.JIIf08r MAJOR
PRIISCIIII'TION 1/JC •••

Rrr. AID Acc.P78 ALL
IIAMII'ACJ"'IIMR'S

1. .7G-3MI

unemploym~nt

benefits, from a
week!): ave~e of 374,000 in April
to 390,000 m May.
-A dec~ease in the prices of
r&amp;IV materials, indicating a soften-

ing_o~~~

in business delivery times, also signaling weaker
demand.
Four of the indicators we~e posi·
tive. ln on:b', from most positive to
least positive, they were:
·
-An increase in the inflationadjusted money supply.
-A gain in orders and contracts
for new commercial buildings and
business equipment.
-A rise in )&gt;uilding permits.

4 49

~OR CAPlETS

4.70Z.
STAND-UP 1\JI!E

Chief of the Middleport Volunteer Fire Department Kenny Byer
reports that he has received various complaints that someone is
soliciting ads for the departmenL He said no one is currently collecting money for the department and if contacted by this person
one should get as much information as possible and contact the
Middleport Police Departm~nL

~ 'j&amp;'

- -- , • -I
"""""'

t=coarfi&amp;

Photos fleeded for postcards
The Meigs County Plu1c District is looking for a few good pho-

tos.

KODAK
OOLDPLUS
3GMM
FILM
400 SPEE&gt;-24
EXP. OR

EDGE
SHAVE GEL

419

CORRECTOL
TABLETS

70Z.

.

According to Director Mary Powell, the district needs photos for
Meigs County postcards which will be usied to ~otc the county.
Needed are photos of the river, villages, hiStoriC sites and other
photos of interest coliccrning Meigs County, Powell said. P!Jotos
must be sharp, color negatives to be reproduced.
For more information, contact the Meigs County Park District at
992-2239 or send pi¥Jtos and negatives to the office at 200 E. Second Street, Pomeroy, OH, 45769. Place your name and phone nlllll·
ba on the back of the photos, Powell said.

30'S

100 SPEED-36 EXP.

Two injured in wreck
''

------· ---MAXIMUM STRENGTH

CORTAID

CAIAMOA ~

3•

OINTMENT ..........1~-1~

~
.. ~~~~
..
~

=COlT t-

MYCELEX·7
CREAM,...
4!; GM. OR ,_.
INSERTS
7'5

7"

MFQ. awl -400
!!'"""'"'"!!!'!c.::!~~--

"""" ·4"

,_COOT

'

A Racine man and his passcng« sustained minor injuries Mon·
day
afternoon when they struck another vehicle from bellind, the
•
GaDia-Meiis Post of the State Highwa_y Pattol nljJOiled.
Driver Shelby J. Pickens, 25,"31467 Pille OtOve Road, and pas·
senger Scott A. Ours, 22, Hone Cave Road, Racine, were tranJpcrted by Me!ss County Emergency Medical Service to Veterans
· · Meroorial Holpilll where they were ~ llld released.
Ac:cordlng to the ac:c:idenl repon, Pickens was Wlbound on State
R'!'JJe 338 in Letart Townsldp whtln he slruCt from behind 1 vehicle
driven by Charles B. Myen, 20, Ravenswood, W.Va., who had
reponedly stopped fcxo a lamb In the road
Piclcens was cited for failure to maintain an assured ,clear distance ahead and no IIeBI belL Both vehicles sus rained heavy, dis·
abling dam8ae and were lOwed fnm the scene.

•

COCIPON8.

.
(

"oods. .

ries-An
fcxo COIIjiUIIIU
increase m new clilims fer

Fire department not soliciting

Oilrqpxl now thrnutd&gt; july 18, 1&lt;})3,

~----------~
RITE
•

ue but at a modest rate. ·
In May, six of the index's forward-looking indicators fell . In
order of their effect on the index,
from largest to smallest, they were:
-A drop iii con.sumer confidence - the fourth in five months
- as measured by a University of
Michigan survey.
·
-A decline in the inflationadjusted backlog of unfilled ordas
at factories for big-ticket durable
goods such as cars and com_puters,
a si~ that the cunent workforce is
havmg little trouble keeping up
with oolers.
-A fall in new orders to facto-

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
' government's chief economic forecasting gauge fell 0.3 percent m
, May, continuing a seesaw pauern
that signals uneven growth ahesd.
The drop followed a 0.2 percent
gain in April, a I percent plunge in
· Marcb, i 0.4 percent increase in
February, a 0.3 percent ~line !n
January and a 1.7 percent Jump m
December. the Commerce Department said today.
"I'ts ... sl uggJ"sh stuff,m
. short,"
said economist David C. Munro of
High Frequency Economics in New
York.
Meanwhile, the government said
SijlWIIIllly_that sales of new homes
·plun'gea2l per-Cent iii~£y, the
biggest droP m 13 years, to a sea·
·sonally adjusted annual rate of
571-,000. The plummet virtually
erased April's 21.9 percent jump
and was· double the decline anticipated by economists.
The Index of Leading Indicators
is designed to predict economic
activity six to nine months in
advance. Economists take three
consecutive movements in one
direction as a good, although far
from foolproof, barometer of future
activity.
The recent behavior of the index
fits with most analysts' expectation
thlit economic growth, aflet racing
ahead in the fourth quarter and
faDing back in the fnt, will contin-

;
·•
:
'

I\OI)AI.J.'X: 1M UCtwoed " k.ndllk

113 W. 2nd St.
...._..,, oH. m•
omc-112-6471

.Leading index falls
.0.3 percent in May

A group trying to organize a volunteer fue dcpanment in Bedford Township is mcetinJ tonight to vote on bylaws for the group.
The Bedford TOWRBbip Volunteer Fire Department Commiuee is
meeting at 7:30 at the Modem Woodsmen building in Bedford,
according to Secretary Angie Bricldes.
Bricides said all township residents are invited to attend the .
meeting. Also, accordiiJ$ to Brickles, the committee is planning a
benefit for July 17 featunng area entertainers.
·

TOOTHPASTE

. : ,I

ton, along with Hoffman and Pilblic Affairs Board Member Tom
Anderson, were appointed to a
committee to invesugate the feasi·
bility of a joint MiddleportPomeror water supply system.
Bruce F1sher and Councilwoman
Judy Crooks were appointed as
commiuee alternates.
Horton explained that a joint
water suppl~stem would have a
better likeli
of receiving funding than two separate syStemS.
Discuss callle franchise
Council also approved transferring its cable television franchise
from Rifkin CCG to Rifkin Income

'

$1~:I
On ,;

ings program for Ohio public
employees. The savings are not
taxed until they are withdrawn, he
Sliid.
In order for the payroll deduc·
tions to talce place, the village was
required to approve participation in
the program. Vi~ employees are
not required to participate in the
program, he said. ·
Mayor Fred Hoffman indicated
that he would set up a meeting
bj:tween Hardy and village employees. Hardy discussed the program
last week with Pomeroy village
council members.
Council President Dewey Hor-

Bedford Township group to meet

COLGATE

AMultimedia Inc. 1\WMIPIII' er

;M iddleport Council approves savings .progr,a m

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

ADVIL
,,
IBUPROFEN

I Section. 10 PagM 25 cenlll

Ohio, Tuesday, June 29, 1993

··

-

.-:----------:..
I .
Savit¥ I

Pomert;~y-Middleport,

0

Photo Center

$~1II

JEFF WARNER

•

,.

.99
.99

J

Low lonlgbtln 601, pu1ly
cloudy. Weclnnday cloUdy Hiab

~

IIOZ.UL11/l

MONDAY
POMEROY - The Meigs County Veterans Service Commisison
will meet Monday at 7:30 p.m. in
the Veterans Service Office in
·Pomeroy.

SYRACUSE · Infant and preschooler aquatic program at Lon·
don Pool 7-8 p.m. through July 9.
For more information, call 992·
9909. $15 fee.

LEISUREWAY

PAPER PLATES

0946

.'

PRICES EFFECTIVE JUNE 21THRU JUlY 4: 1993.

RITE
----

Pick 4:
ln8GL

Funding, loan system among OVAL topics

The dauahter of Clyde and M.
RIO GRANDE - Karen E. Morris, a 1993 graduate of Eastern Angela Mmis, Long Bortom, MorHil!h School, lias been awarded the ris plans to major in Medical !.abo·
Uruversity of Rio Grande Trustees ratory Technology.
Scholarship and the Racine Home
National Bank Scholarship to
attend Rio Grande.
Morris was selected for the Rio
Grande Trustees Scholarship based
on her leadership skills, academic
talent and othet factors. The schol·
arship will be directed toward ·
tuition over a four year period.
The Racine Home National
Bank Scholarship is awarded based
on academic promise and fmancial
need.
In school, Morris was active in
band, the yearbook staff and baskelball. In addition, she was a
Regional scholar, an All-Amercian
scholar, a member of the Bowling
Green Honors Band and the Kent
Honor Band.
KAREN MORRIS

417

PageS

People in
the news

Karen Morris awarded
scholarship to attend URG

Pick 3:

action
resumes

-----~~----.....-.---~--~---"!"!'-~----~-----,;_.._-- _
NEW YORK (AP) - 1ulia the book as "interpretive biogra- "This is a common side effect of
Roberts finally made it 10 the altar, plly," telling The N'ew York Times the surgery.' '
The senator underwent brain
marrying singer Lyle Lovett in a last week that McGinniss "was not
S1,11'gery
two weeks ago to ~emove
intending
to
write
a
book
that
has
ceremony in Indiana over the
ISO
pages
of
footnotes."
the 2·inch benign tumor.
weekend, her publicist says.
Kennedy spokeswoman Pamela ·
The 25-year-old actress, wbo
MOBILE, Ala. (AP) - Rebecca
called' off her marriage to Kiefer HuJhes wd much of the hook is
Jones won America's Junior Miss
Sutherland just hours before the ficuon.
contest, along with ihe accompanynuptials two yesrs ago, met Lovett,
35, while the two were filming
LOS ANGELES (AP)- Syd~ ing $30,000 college scholarship.
1992's "The Player." It was, the ney Pollack says he was intimidat- · "I am incredibly happy and
fmt marriage for both.
ed by the idea of bringing John honored to represent these young
Actress Susan Sarandon and ' Grisham's best-selling legal thriller women," the 18-year-old from
Calhoun, Ga., said Saturday after
actor Tim Robbins were among the ''The Firm" to the screen.
guests at the wedding Sunday in
"I enjoyed the book enormous· winning the title.
She plans to attend Duke Uni·
Marion, Ind. Their 4-year-old son, ly, but I was petrified when I read
Jack Henry, was the ring bearer. it," Pollack 'said. "The~e was no versity this fall to study law or
Actor Barry Tubb accompanied way that I could see to make the communications.
The program began in 1958 and
Roberts' down the aisle.
book work on film."
,
Roberts took a three'llav break
Pollack, director of such thrillers was renamed America's Young
from filming John Grishamrs '~The as "Absence of Malice'' and Woman of the Year in 1989, but
Pelican Brief" in Washington, "Three Days of the Condor," said ~eturned to its original name earlier
D.C., spokeswoman Nancy Stitzer. olot changes were the kev to the this week. Program directors cited
name recognition as the reason for
Seltzer said ·
fll.m version of "The Firm.''
Lovett is on a national tour and
One of the changes was to give the swirch.
performed with his Large Band Abigail, the wife of hotshOt lawyer
Sundar night in Noblesville, Ind., Mitch McDcere, played by Tom
an Indianapolis suburb.
Cruise, a more active role in the
story. Abigail is played by Jeanne
BOSTON (AP) -· Joe McGin- Tripplehorn, who appeared ·in
niss sars he regrets letting his pub- "Basic lnstincL"
lisher mclude a disclaimer in his
"People will go crazy saying,
new biography of U.S. Sen. 'Why did you change this?' " Pol·
· RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil (AP)
Edward Kennedy that some of the lack told the Daily News of Los
EARTH DAY PARTICIPANTS ·In obser·
Sonia Circle and Margie Lawson, advisors,
Michael Jackson is coming
dialo4ue and internal monologues Angeles. "Well, film's a whole -down
vance or Earth Day the Buhan Beamers 4-H
Tommy McKay, Jeromy Raymond, Jeremy
to Rio in October, and the
were 'created by the author"
different vocabulary. I can't get pop megastar
Club plc:ked up tra.sh along County Road 28.
jackson, and Suzy McKay, advisor, fourth row,
will be giving away
McGinniss acknowledged that inside people's heads the way a
Partlclpldblgln the Earth Day pro]ect were, left
Dutchle McKay and Michael Lamon. Other
to poor cbil·
thousands
of
tickets
some references to Kennedy's novclistcan." .
to right, front, fara MJchaels aud Laraine Lawmembers of the club are Jeffrey Circle a!ld
dren;
.
thoughts in "The Last Brother"
"The Firm" opens nationally
son, sec:GDd row, Amber Hayes, Kelly Osborne,
Adam Mc:Danlel.
His agent, Marcel Avram, told
were "inferred," or that he wrote on Wednesday.
Suzy Milhoan ,and Christa Circle, third row,
the
daily newspaper Jornal do
what be "sensed Teddy must have
Brasil
the contract was signed
been feeling.''
PHILADELPHIA (AP) - U.S. Friday.that
Jackson's
stage: Maracana
But McGinniss told the Boston Sen. Arlen Specter is out of the Stadium, the world's
largest soccer
Sunday Globe: "That falls well hospital where he spent two nights
stadium.
The Board o( Trustees of the Ohio so that requests for items, regional library system in Ohio. It within the realm of legitimate bio- ·for treatment of a reaction to niedi·
It was there that Frsnk Sinatra,
Ohio Valley Area Libraries photocopies, or reference materials serves the citizens and libraries· of ~ical licence. You can certain- cation following surgery to remove then Paul McCartney, set records
(OVAL) held their regular meeting not available in their local libraries Athens, Hocking, Jackson, ly mfer a thought process from a tumor from his slrull.
·The Pennsylvania Republican for the largest crowd at a perfor·
at System Headquarters in Well· will be prt!Vided by OU.
Lawrence, Meigs, Pike, Ross, behavior."
of a single artist Mo~e than
McGinniss, who silid he can cite was admitted to the Hospital of the mance
ston on Thursday, June 17.
Rox1e Underwood, repn:senting Scioto, and Vinton Counties with
187,000
people saw McCartney
The areas of discussion were the Jackson City Library and chair programs of services developed by a source for every quotation University of Pennsylvania on Fri- perform at Rio's showcase sports
attributed to Kennedy in the biog- , day for a reaction to antibiotics. He
fundinJ. a loan system iii conjunci- . of the Personnel Committee, those libraries.
; complex.
ton with Ohio University, and brought recommendations from
Wanda Eblin serves on the raphy, said he will insist that the was ~eleased Sunday.
Nether the speci.fic date nor
"He was OK, but he was run·
employee relations.
that committee for Board approval. OVAL BOatd as a representative of disclaimer be removed.
Jackson's
fee was rell!ased. Tickets
Simon &amp; Schuster President and ning a fever,'' said Shanin Specter,
Underwood stated the committee the Meigs County Public Ubrary.
will
cost
$8 to $30.
publisher Carolyn R,eidy defendCd who visited his father Saturday.
•
Director Eric S. Anderson had conducted the, annual perfor·
reported that the Ohio Senate had mancc reviews of Director Andermaintained funding restored by the son and Clerk-Treasurer Re$ina
Ohio House. The conference com- Ghcaring. Both employees rece1ved
mittee is in the process of review- above average evaluations. Also
ing the state budget, but because approved were changes in language
OVAL had support in both the . in personnel procedures and a 3%
House and the Senate Anclenon is across the board salary increase for
optimistic funding will be main- regular employees.
tained at 1992 levels.
.
The Board approved the
· The Board app:tMd renewal of
Resource Library Agreement with th~ contr~ct for building cleaning
Alden Library at Ohio University. With Opumum Cleaning Services
This program ~vides back up ser- of Jackson.
vice to the c1tizens of Southern
OVAL· is the only swe' funded

Ohio Lottery

.'
•

Edltor'l DOte: Nam-. ~p~~IDd acldreal are printed • they
1ppcar OD Olllc:lllrtpora, · ·

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'

Partners L;P. A representative for donate gift certificates. Organizathe cable c~mpany~ Danny Elias, tions seeking donations are directed
~xplained the change is primarily
to a distribution site to receive the
m name only:
gift certificates - an envelope of
During discussion, Elias pointed either five or I0.
out that the OOIPJIIIRY is planning to
We need a distributor who is not
upgrade its cable service in the ares a member of our association, Doowith fiber optic liries and may offer ley said, indicating that the organi·
more premium channels in the zation would like to start the pro·
fubWne.
.
,gram by AugusL
Tom Dooley, representing the
In addition, Dooley presented ,
Middleport Community Associa· council with ils July 4 schedule
tion, addressed council concerning which includes a boat pllr&amp;de on the
centralized dislribution of dona- Ohio River.
tions of gift certificates and other
Other action
items from Middleport merchants.
In other action, council authoUnder the proposeg distribution rized Hoffman to advertise bids for
system, participating merchants the Park Street Issue 2 paving pro-

jcct if spproved.
In addition, council discussed
inviting Congressman Ted Strickland to spend a day in the village.
Hoffman ·said he would attempt
to set up a day with Molly Varner,
Strickland's regional field rep~e­
sentative.
Councilman Paul Gerard said it
would give village officials an
opportunity to get to know Strickland better while givjng Strickland
a fmt-hand view of the ares.
Atte.nding were Hoffman and
council members Crooks, Horton,
Gerard, Jim Clatworthy and Jack
Satterfield and Clerk(freasurer
Terri Hockman. ~

Missing West Virginia
pastor found in Portland
A West Virginia minister miss· trooper tapped on the window and
"We honestly don't have one
ing for two days was found alive in Hudson jum~ up, Lyons said.
shred o_f evidence of anything,"
Lyons wd an empty container Brenda. Hudson said before her
a park on the banks of the Ohio
of piUs was next to Hudson on the l!usband was found. "I wish 1
River, authorities said.
could say I thought this or that He
The Rev. Basil R. Hudson, 52, seaL
li wasn •t clear if Hudson had left intending to meet me at church
of Barboursville, pastor of the 26th
.Street Baptist ChiD'Ch, disappeared ingested them or if he had tried to and he didn't show up."
Nothing was missing from the
Saturday after he was seen travel- asphyxiiltc hililself, Lyons said.
"He
seemed
to
be
shaking,
church or Hudson's office, Scaring east on U.S. 60 near Barberry said.
,boursville, said Cabell County though," Lyons said.
Hudson was taken to Veterans
Hudson was not the type to go
(W.Va.) Sheriff's Lt. Larry
Memorial
Hospital in Pomeroy, somewhere without telling people,
Stephens. He was. to meet his wife
Lyons said. But hospital nursing Scarberry said.
at church, she said.
REV. BASIL HUDSON
supervisor
Sue Zirlde this morning
"If he's going to be 12 minutes
Hudson was found Monday
refused
to
say
whether HudsQn was !ate, h!:'s, on lbe pbone to I~ you
.ni&amp;ht .i!J.his ~-~~~Y .trying
·
·
know. ThiS is very out of character
to commit swcide, police said The "tieing treated. ·
.
.
·
A
telephone
message
left
at for him," Scarberry said. ,
·
· .
· park is across .the river from
Hudson's
home
late
Monday
was
More
than
2,000
Hiers
were
dis·
Ravenswood.
W.Va.
·
tributed to shopping malls, gas sta·
A hoSe .connecting the tail pipe not immediately returiJed.
"The family's on their way u,e tions, restaurants and convenience
.
b
· to the passenger compartment of
the truck was taped ·in place, but there now,. but they won't know if stores in western West Virginia,
•
·
the truck's motor was not running, it's him until they get there," said eastern Kentucky and southeastern
said Sgt. Harry L~0:, the Meigs Harry Scatbetry, associate pastor at Ohio, Scarberry said.
1cnl
the church.
The Hudsons, who have tieen
County Sheriff's
,
•
Family, friends, parishioners married for 32 years, have two
Two boaters on the river saw
Hudson's vehicle and alerted and police searched Monday for grown children. Hudson had never
,
disappeared or left town without
authorities,
Lyons said. A state Hudson.
CHARLESTON. W.Va. (AP)
telling his wife, Mrs. Hudson said.
- The Bituminous Coal Operators
Association said it has filed unfair
labor practice charges against the
Uilited Mine Workers and a com·
P!IDY that withdrew from the assoelation.
I\ bout 70 union members at
Homer City Coal Processing Corp.
in Indiana County, Pa., had been on
strike until last week, when parent
company CLI Corp. of Pittsburgh
"' ....... .
..·""'
decided to leave the association.
CLI signed an interim agree·
ment with the UMW, which has
members on strike in six states.
The agreement is at the center of
the coal association's complaint.
"The union and CLI unlawfully
have attempted to execute a contract that does not bind Homer Oty
to the final agreement BCOA and
the UMWA negotiate," association
spokesman Tom Hoffman said
Monday. "That is cltirly an unfair
labor practice under the law."
The interim agreement requires
CLI 10 sign an agreement between
' '
the union and the association if one
is negotiated by Feb. 1, 1994.
"We think it's very unlikely,
barger play in the children's pool at the London
GETTING COOLED OFF· Rebecca and
very remote that the union and
Pool
in Syracuse Monday arterDOOD.
Michael
Owen
or
Pomeroy
and
Amber
Will·
BCOA won't negotiate an agreeContinued on p&amp;Rf 3

·'·Be·o~· fll·e.s
char·oes

~gaznst

·unzon

Man killed
'
in wreck

Rival hospitals.to help state-owned rehab center

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Three competing health care sys·
.
tems would be asked to work
together to run a Cleveland rehabil·
itation center for Injured workers
under a new contract OK' d by a
A McDermott man was killed legislative panel.
and another was injured in a twoThe state Controlling Board
vehicle accident this morning on approved a one-year, $353 ,976
State Route 7 ncar Addison, the contract Monday between the Obio
Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Bureau of Workers' Compensation
Highway I'Birol~eported.
and Ohio SIBle University.
Paul J. Shaffer, 21, McDermott,
An arrangement originally pro·
was kiUed when his vehicle appar- posed by the bureau providod for
ently went left of center and struck Ohio State to work only with the
head on a vehicle driven by Delton Cleveland Clinic in providing proW. Fowler, 49, 3l.WO Salser Road, • feuional arid Ulchnlcal aervicei fer
Racine.
the W.O. Walker Rehabilitation
Fowler was transported by Gal· Center.
lia County Emergency Medical
But it was changed under an
Service to Holzer Medical Center. agreement backed by Gov. George
At press time he was still being Voinovich and approvod by con·
treated and a condition was not trollers to aJao reqUire inwlvement
available. Sharrer's body was of The MetroHealth System and
turned over to Willis Funeral Univenity Hl!lfitals in Cleveland.
Home.
Tbc mulu-par.ty contract,
Both vehicles sustained heavy, reached without involvement of lhe
disabling damage and were towed bureau, .comea lglinlt a backdrop
ftom the IICCIIC.
of legislation lppiiMid by the Sen·
The accident is still under inves· ate and peadlng In ihe House to
ligation.
require sale of the Walker Center.

Oeboni Batta, the bureau's pub- white elephant. That seems to be
lie affairs officer, acknowledged the driving force," Ms. Balta said.
the center has not been used to its
She said the point of the
potential.
bureau's proposed contract with
"For a number of years, many Ohio State was to improve utiliza.
employers have felt that it was a
Continued on page 3

L.B. Foster Co. buys Midwest Steel
L.B Foster Company recently
announced the completion of the
porchase of the rail-related assets
of Midwest Corporation including
the Pomeroy planL
L.B. Fosttr Company, located in
Pittsburgh, Pa. is a manufacturet,
fabricator and distributor of'construction rail and blbular products,
The aquisition of Midwest Is
another step in L.B. Foster's
announced plil of improving business through fold-in acquisitions
serving special mllltcts.
1bc cornp111y is in the proocss
of expanding tbe product line
through new teprCSCntation agieC·
menu and acquisition. as well as
throuah plant exiJIIISions or addi·
tions fn key rnarkela.
~west Steel~ and

distributes rail, trackwork and
accessories and is a mlliCJr factcr in
its specialized markets. 1broughout
its 40 plus )'ears, Midwest has
focused its effons on liaht rail and
related products whicll 11e used
extensively in mining operations
and Other industty.
.
Midwest conducts the manufacturing, engineering and wllebouaing of li'ht trlckwork and IICCCIsorias at 1ts plant in Puneroy. Mid·
WCSI also has sales and Wlnlbousing facilities relaled liD its dislrlbu.
tion business in a number of locations thoughout the COIIItry. ,
FOSIIir plans to opa•lbe IIICt·
work ciperstiona a the ~dwelt
Division of L.B. Foal« and iiQnd.
idate the remainln' dialribulioll
locations 1t its exisang
facililiee.
,.

-m.

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