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                  <text>Page DB-Sunday Times-Sentinel

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Pomeroy-Middlepon G'lllpolla, OH Polin Pleasant, wv

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Aprll28,1•1

It's time to plant strawberries
crop from June bearers. Punt says
everbearers are not as good a
choice for backyard growers. ·
Once you've chosen !\!Variety,
plant strawberries eillier as a
groundcover or 12 inches 81lan in
rows. Rows that are 36 inc:hes to 42
inches apart allow more room for
the plants 10 spread out during the
growing season and make them
easier to pic:lt and care for, Punt
says. In Ohio's heavier, clay-based
soils, he rec:ommends planting
rows either on raised mounds of
soil or in raised beds that are about
8 inches deep. This allows more
water to dram from the heavier' .
soils.
.
With good drainage arid plenty .
of room for !he pl8n!S to send out
MYSTERY FARM -This week's mystery
win SS prize.froiJ! tile Ohio Valley Publishing
new growth, you can expect many
farm, featured by the Meigs Soil and Water
Co. .Leave your name; address and telephone
quality berries. Punt says. ·
Conservation District, is located somewhere in
number with your card or letter. No telephone
About 10 days after you plant
!"Jeigs Couoty.Individuals wishing to participate
calls will be accepted. All contest entries should
your saawberries, you need to give
•n the weekly contest may do so by guessing the
be_turned in to tbe newspaper omce by 4 p.m. ;:
GALLIPOLIS - River City them a shot of fertilizer. Funt recrann·~ owner. Just mail, or drop off your guess
eacb Wednesday.In I!8Se of a tie, tbe winner will -:
Farm Supply, Inc., of Gallipolis, ommends a standard 12-12-12
orr~o tbe Daily Sentine~1ll Court SL, Pomeroy,
be chosen by lottery. Next week, a GaUia County ;.•
was honored recently at an awards granular fertilizer availal;lle from
Ob10, 45769, or tbe Gallipolis Daily Tribune, 825
farm will be reatured by tbe Gallia Soil and :i
banquet in Louisville, Kentucky. ·toea! garden ceniers. Granulars are
tb!rd Ave., GallipoUs, Obio, 45631, and you may
Water Conservation District.
.
,
,,
The firm was recognized for its cheaper than liquid fertilizers and
•
,.
'
outstanding sales and service dur- last more than twice as long.
ing 1990 by Kent Feeds, Inc., of ' Spread about one~halfpound of the
,.
Muscatine; Iowa.
fertilizer over IOO square feet of
Columbus, Ohio (UPI) :.. In the retrieve datiL Only now is atrention---llice maps prllrided data abo&gt;u~ !:uclt:
Twenty-two banquets were held strawben:Ies, he says.
.
next
three to five years, forest man- s_hif~~g to analysis and inlerpreta- thin~s as forest stand conlpasiti&lt;!ri&lt;
throughout Kent Feeds' marketing
· Ferllhze agam around August
agers
will pack away their bulky uon.
densny and age.
area with total auendance reaching 15. That's two weeks before the
topographic
majJs.
compasses
and
Tomlin
and
others
from
Ohio
Once in the data base ·~:o=~~
more than 4,000 people. Kent plants start forming flower buds for
bug
spray.
Dana
Tomlin,
natural
State's
School
of
Natural
tion
exists in layers. On~ or
Feeds has been sponsoring these next year's fruit Punt says the ferresources
information
sysrems
speResources
are
testing
·applications
layers
can be called up at one tim¢·
banquets for 40 years.
tilizer boos~ nitrogen levels in ti!e
cialist
at
Ohio
State
University,
of
GIS
in
national
forest1llanning
and
new
layers can be crealed b1:.
An American-owned company, le~v.es and mcreases the plant s
says
many
decisions
about
land
use
ai
a
st~dy
site
near
Nelsonville,
issuing
instructions
at the computcl:_
Kent Feeds, Inc., is one of the ab1_hty to blossom and produce
on
national
forests
will
be
made
Oh10,
m
Wayne
Nauonal
Forest.
keyboard.
For
example,
using aj~
• .
.
largest manufacturers of livestock fru1t .
instead
at
a
computer
work
station.
They
say
the
technology
can
be
tude
data,
a
map
layer
depicting
tlltt'
and poultry feeds in the United
Oh10 State Umvers~ty. offers
The
U.S.
Forest
Service
is
embracused
to
help
resolve
diSputes
over
land's
slope
angle
and
directiOJi;•
. States. Founded in !927, the com- several publications to help straw.
known as a;pect, can be creal_lli\it
pany manufactures feed at 12 berry growers. !?heck ~ith county ing geog~~ic information sys- how forestland is used.
gy.
The~ created a.~ta base of With forest type daUI, a new tay.eri
plants with dealers handJirig Kent ~ffices ~f ~e umv~1ty s &lt;;oopera- rems tech
. Products throughoutl4' midwestern 11ve ExtenSion Serv1ce for mforma- , "A geographic information sys- · selected sne characrensucs for the ·· that shows only ·trees of a cerllli!l ~
states.
·
lion on growing strawberries, solv- rem, or GIS, IS a configuration of 4,500-acre study area. .Information species and age can be crealed an~t
Aithough Kent Feeds, with• ing J;&gt;lant nutrient problems an_d computer hardware and software about land ownership, county viewed on the computer screen. · ..~·
Forest Service employees .ca~'!:
headquarters in Muscatine, Iowa fighung garden pests. Some of this specifically designed to acquire, b~ndanes, roads, _surface. ":'~ter,
maintain
and
use
map
data,"
Tomsod
type
_and
alb
tude
were
~g111zed
use
maps like this to develop long-'::
does not commercially feed live: information ~.as a ~ominal c&lt;!st.
stock, the company has pioneered Bulleun 591: Growmg and Usmg lin says. "Although it's been from UlStlDg topographiC ~aps tenn plans 10 manage multiple u~ the development of several revolu- F(uit at Home," Bulletin 436 : around for 20 years or so, GIS is aod aenal ~ho~graphs and denved on national forests, Tomlin says. ·::.
That's important since eacli tionary products, feeding concepts, "O~!o Strawberry Manual," and -still used primarily to store and from satelhre 1mages. Forest Scrnational
forest is required to devet;:.
and programs !hat have improved the Home, Yard and Garden Fact
the efficiency of livestock and Sheet" seres should be or particuop a plan that allocates land for :
specific uses, such as off-road vehi.' •
poultry production.
lar intetes~ Punt says.
cle trails, camping, hiking, grazing:and timber-harvesting. The public:
is invited to comment on these ·
co_n.:.:..;tin,;.:u.:.:ed;..:;rro:.::;m:::..:::D:!-1_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
· land-use plans and there may b&lt; ;
CHESHIRE - Stacie L. Arnold, in 1977 and to assistant shift oper- public debate as land ownersl' .
market would go through 3000 and that would be the
·next week and 11ntil the.Dow hi~ 2850, which would
assistant
shift operating engineer, ating engineer in 1990. Arnold and industry representatives and envt.
end of the rally, and that's what happened. Investors
be a buying point," he cOntinued.
. .
and
'James
·D. Reynolds, mainte- his wife, ~ancia, reside at 43815 ronmental groups disagree on t~e .
felt the Fed had no intention of lowering interest
· He thought "a bad Ul!employment number next
nance
mechanic-A,
at the Ohio Forest Run Road, Racine.
rates and that put a halt io any advance."
IM;st use of public land.
· ·:::.
week might turn tl!ings around, for then the Fed
Reynolds
joined
OVEC
on
Aprit
Valley
Electric
Corporation's
She added, "Many companies had poor earnings
might ease."
·
numbers for the first quarter and !hen you had profit
On the trading floor !his week, Saatchi &amp; Saatchi Kyg~r Creek Plant, received their 12, 1956, as a laborer in the
taking, which is understandable after the market went
was the most active stock down 1/8 to I 1/8. A anniversary awards for 35 years' labor//·anitor depanment. During
•
Continued from D-1
•
up about 700 points."
group of investors, including Laurence A. Tisch, service to the company according the ·fo loWing year, he transferred
to
the
maintenance
department
as
a
to
Nonnan
~
·.
Tarr,
plant
manager.
From its recent low Oct II to its record high of
design is p;oduced. Alternating the&lt;
chainnan of CBS, sold pan of its holdings in the
Arnold JOlDed OVEC on April maintenance helper.
3,004.46 on April 17, the market gained 638 points,
direction of mowing is easily&gt;
advertising linn.
In 1960 he was promoted to accomplished with this ap~roacl]; :'
or 27 percent.
Compaq Computer, which had higher earnings but 12, !9S6, as a laborer in the
DeMis Jarrett, chief market stnitegist for Kiddet,
warned the second quarter could be hurt by price la~or/janitor department. In 19S8 maintenance mechanic-C; in 1968, and soil compaction is mintmized·:
he transferred to the operations to maintenance mechanic-B; 31!d in as the wheels o{ the mowing equip:'
· Peabody &amp; Co.lnc., said the market became exhaust;
cuts, was second most active and feU 9 3/4 to 50 7/8.
ed after reaching 3000. Then investors realized the
department--as
an auxiliary-equip- 1978, to maintenance mechanic-A. ment are not run in !he same tracks
'AT&amp;T. which moved closer to completing its
operator,
and in 1971 he Reynolds and his wife, Carol, with each mowing. This striping
ment
·Fed would not ease.
takeover of NCR Corp., was third and rose 5/8 to 38.
advanced
to
equipment
operator. reside at 501 29th Street, Point effect cre.&lt;lleS outstanding ;~CSthe*
"You had a confluence of factors, so investors
NCR was also active, up 7 1/8 to 103 7/8.
took profit$," Jaqett said. " This could continue
early
He was promoled to unit su~isor Pleasant.
appeal.
.
Columbus, Ohio (UPI) - Next
year's strawberry shortcake
depends on !his spring's gardening.
An Ohio Stare University fruit specialist has· some tips for anyo ne
thinking about starting a new
strawberry patch.
.
"You'd better get busy if you
want to get new strawberry plants
established," Richard C. Funt says.
"April 15 to May 15 is usually our
optimal planting time here in Ohio,
and you need to get some things
ready before you can put plants m
!he ground,''
. Strawberries l.ike .sunlight so
pick a spot for your patch that gets
a full dose,between 10 a.m. and 4
p.m., Funt says. They prefer a
loose, medium silt loam soil to cia y
so you may need to add some compost or other organic mauer two to
three weeks before you plant to
improve its texture.
You should also rest your soil's
pH level before pl311ting-d.ifferent
varieties of strawberries prefer different level s of acidity . Garden
centers, nurseries and Cooperative
Extension Service offices offer soil
testing help. If the soil's pH isn't
favorable to a specific strawberry
variety, consider adjusting the pH
with a soil additive or planting
another kind of strawberry.
You have many strawberry varieties to choose from, Funt says. All
fall into three categories.
- Day neutral plants produce
fruit from spring until fall with
peak yields around June I. July 15
and Sept I . The first and last peaks
usually have the best yields. Day
neutral plants could give you a late
harvest this year if you plant them
now. But Funt suggests pinching
off any blossoms this summer to
keep fruit from developing and
1\ive plants a chance to get csUlblished.
-June bearers are the most
popular ·varieties in Ohio and East·
em sUites because they have larger
berries. They offer one major crpp
a year. Again, Punt suggests pinching off any blossoms o~ew plants

(

this summer to keep fruit from
developing and give plants a
. Chance to get established. In time,
you should periodically thin the
plants to reduce overcrowding
which cuts production of large
berries. He also suggests keeping
June bearers cool ~Y .mulching
around thetr roots; w1th a one-inch
layer of composed yard waste.
-Everbearers like long days
and start their flowers when there ·
are 12 or more hours of sunlight.
They produce two m~in crops that
typ1cally y1eld less than the single

River City
-Farm Supply
·honored
·

Computers may r,eplace maps, compasses

.

.

••
CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONDITION FOR

Farmers Bank and Savings Company

•

I

'

I

of Pomeroy, Ohio And Foreign and Domestic Subsldlarleti, at tile cloae of buslneu
March, 31, 1991, a state banking Institution organized and operating under lhe
banking laws of this state and a member ofthe Federal ~rve System. Publlabed
In li()Cordance with a call m11de by the State Banking Autborltr and by the Federal
Reserve Bank of this District.
·State Bank No. 1050X
Federal Reserve District No. 4
ASSETS
Cash and balances due from depository institutions:
•
~- ronlnterest-bearlng balances and currency and coin .................. 2,353,000.00
. nterest-beartng balances ............. ................. ............................... 300,000 00
Securities ... ······················ ······ ....................................................... 23 480 ooo'oo
Federal funds sold &amp; securities purchased under agreements
.. · · ·
to resell In domestic offices of the bank &amp; of Its
·
Edge &amp; Agreement subsidiaries, &amp; In IFBs: ·
Loa!'se~~~8:e;~~d~~~~~l~g· ~~~j~~·bi~~·:··· ···················· ···· ················.,.. ·2 · 32 ~• 000 · 00
Loans and leases, net of unearned Income ........... .:...34,001.000.00
LESS: Allowance for loan and lease losses ................... 308,001).00
Loans and leases, net of unearned Income,
allowance, and reserve ............ ,.. .... ................................ : .............33,693,000.00
~~~mlses tnd fixed assets (Including capitalized leases) ....................... 968,000.00
er rea estate owned ... ....... .............. : ..... .. .. ................................. .. .. 58,000.00
Intangible assets ..................., .... .... ... : ........................................ ;......... 67,000.00
Other assets ........ ......... .................................................................... 1,109,000.00
Total assets .. .. ......... ............................. ........................ .......... ........ 64,353,000.00
Total assets and losses deferred pursuant to 12 U.S.C. 1823(J) ....... 64,353,000.00

'

U&amp;hl WJMper. uae llde ..a.

l/2"x4'.S'

&lt;Mrshuthlng, under lldlnJ.

6.29

I

•••

Hclpa ,ou ll¥t ftlef'J)' by lddln1
ins~lltion

value. Ucht«iaht and

easy to handk. Foil on both lidn.

'J ... ' ~

•

( ~' .... t.

fiBEftGIAS

Deposits:
a. In domestic offices .......................... &lt;.. .. .... .... .......... . ..... . ... . ....... 58,651,000.00
(11 Nonlpterest·bearlng1., ••••••••••••• • : •••• : ... : ....... . . ..... ~.581,000.00
'
(21 Interest-bearing .............. ........ .... ................... 53,070,000.00
Other liabilities ..... ..................... ................... ........... .... ................. ...... 386,000.00
Totallla.ltltles ................. .... ................. .. ......... ...............................59,037,000.00
EQUITY CAPITAL
.
Common stock (No. of Shares A. Authorized ............. .... 20,000)
B. Outstandtng·... :........... 2o,ooor .... ....... 500.000.00
Surplus ................. ... '.. ....... .. ................................................... :.. ........ 1,000,oo0.00
Undivided prollts and capital reserves ................... ....................... .... 3,816,000.00
Total equity capital ........................................................... ............... 5,316,000.00
Total equity capital and tosses deferred
·
• ·
_pursuant to 12 U.S. C. 1823(1) .... ........................ .............................. 5,316,000.00
Total liabilities, llmlted-llfe preferred stock, and equity capital,
,
and losses deferred pursuant to 12 U.S.C. 1823(J) .......................... 64,353,000.00

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j

Joint
Compound

8.88

All-t~trp:~M: , rt~dy

In-me:.

_,_Sidlaa
. lll"dO"

Mobile Home
Skirtin

JHINI3:;

j

Fiberdass
Roofing
Shingles

Firtproofand pWaniled.
Steel skirting panel• add

uor~~c

space.
0"' , .. "

I,.

":t'Ylo"
Entry Door
!lPcliset

'

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t.mJUM.IM*l

!tiiii )(I I ·DI

.J••• hru~ll un lik&lt;" paint.

w:uer.

indOI'Ir!i or nut.

9.88
Up........................
pluMbinf pipt with hiWtl ilftpi;CI

mlunce.

I

State of Ohio, County of Meigs, ss:
.
Sworn to and subscribed before me this 9th day of April, 1991, andJ hereby certifY that I am not an officer or director of this bank.
~
•
·
Jo A.nn Crt1p, Notary Public
JoAnn Crisp, Notary Public, State of Ohio. My comm!nlon ctxplres July 17, 1993.

.r

Occasional showers and
chance of thunderstorms.

Kicker: 129795

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at

'Vol. 41, No. 241

Copyrlghtecl1.1

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Pomeroy-Middleport,
Ohio, Monday, April 29 , 1991
_
_

1A Section,
10 P-a•
21 _,,, ::
Multi1Mdl8
Inc. Newopoper

•

Meigs jobless rate
drops to 11 percent
The figure in Gallia County was
The Ohio Bureau of Employ- .
ment Services (OBES) today lower than March 's rate of 11.4
announced the Ohio county unem- percent, but considerably higher
.!han !he March 1990 unemployployment rales for March 1991 .
Among the stare's 88 counties, ment of only 8.5 percent.
The unemployment of Meigs
the unemployment rates ranged
from a low of 4.5 percent in County was 0.8 percent lower than
Franklin County to a high of 17.7 the previous month, but like Gallia,
percent in Adams County. Overall, greatly incte~~SCd from the same
rates decreased in slightly more month last year which showed un
8.4 percent rate. .
!han one-half of the counties.
The comparable not-seasonallyIn· Southeast Ohio, Vinton
adjusted
unemployment rate for
County had the highest unemployment rare, at 13.4 percent in March, Ohio was 7.6 percent, down from
slightly down from February's February's rate of 7.7 percent The
13.8.
comparable U.S. rare in March was
Following Vinton were Jackson 7.1 percent. (After seasonal adjustCounty, JJ.J; Meigs at 11; Gallia ment, Ohio's Manch rate was 7.3
County at 10.7 and Lawrence at and the U.S. -ate was 6.8 percent.)
10.6 percent ·
Eight counties had unemploy-

SERVICEMAN HONORED • James Cray. cr~lt, United States Marine Corps, was bonorecl
. Frtday afternoon wl•h a reception at Krogers in
Pomeroy for bis service in Operation Desert
Storm during the Gulr.War. Craycraft, a 1988

•

graduate of Kyger Creek Hlgb ·school, Is an
employee of Kroaers In Pomeroy. He was stationed lo the desert trom Sept. 2 to AprU 2. Pic·
lured wltb Craycral'l .are Jacll: Ambrose and Dick
Warner, managers of tbe store.

ment rates at or belOw 6.0 percent·
in March . The counties with !he·
lowest rates, olher than Franklin
County were: Hamilton County
(4.6 percent);' Delaware County
(4.9 .percent); Geauga County (S.S
percent); Union County (5 .7 percent); Madison County (5.8 per- ·
cent); Cuyahoga County (5.9 percent}; and Holmes County (6.0 percent).
Seven counties had unemployment rates at or above 14.0 percent
during March. The counties with
!he highest rates, other than Adams
County were: Perry Coimty (17.1
percent): Harrison County (15.4
~enl); Noble County (15.0 percent); Monroe and Pike counties
(14.6 percent); and Hocking Coun-:
ty (14.0 percent).
'

Ohio's Iion-farrit employment up

Ohio's seasonally adjusted non- ing industrie~ was reduced by ucts. Employment in mining and.
farm wage and salmy·employment S,OOO jobs to 1.295 million in construcuon was unchanged from
advanced by .4.000 JObS .m March ~h. the result of scattered lay- February.
.
\0 4.915 mtlbon, accordmg to the offs m most durable-goods manuSince March 1990 27 000 nonlatest empl_oyer survey conducted .. facturing industries.
farm jobs have been ~ded to Ohio .
by the Oh1o Bureau of EmployReductions were posted in trans- payrolls. Employment has
ment Serv1ces. .
.
ponation equipment; stone, clay in~re.ased 0.5 percent, from 4.888 .
. E!flploymentm semee-produc- 31!d glass products; and industrial m1lhon jobs in March 1990 to ·
r
!ng t!Jdustnes mcreased by 9,~ machinery and equipment.
4.915 million in March 1991.
·
.
"If
.
.
toda
JOiis
over
the
month
10
3.620
m1lA
shght
improvement
was
Service-producing
industries
. COTI'AGEVILLE, W.Va.- ment workers is "a short-tenn gain
11mmy. was 811ve
y• he II'on .
· ·-J ·m pnmary
·
·
·
· over the
repor...,
meta1 mdusprov1ded
70 000 new JObs
Companies like Ravenswood Alu- and a long-renn losst said Wise.
II_llprovel!lents were. noted in tries. In nondurable goods, employ. year. Employment incr.eases in
Union memben ~r~~velw fro!D H=:J'ye =~fn ;::;::~:~
minum -~ ~ ~~jng Cl)mlhit
will
a'm.e
out
'Of
lhfs
·
"""'vent
·
servqa,~
~..~ 111,aov.,ern; · lllC.II,L.~4oJliA 1,000 over .the busmess and heallh semces ~onmunilles liy furing permanent Massllchuleua, lnclillili Dli[l9is .00
10 yw
a
rec
"
.
.
ment,
especially~~
~·e ldc8llevel. . month .. The IO:iS occurred _in rubber ti'ibuted most' Ul the Improvement
replacement workerS, a union offi- Missouri to attend Sw\clay's rally.
urrence.
Rider
saul
Employment
m
soods-produc- and mJSc_ellaneous· plasucs prod- · ·
Continued on·page 3
cial said during a labor rally.
·
''I carne here bec8Dse I've got
'
.
·More than 5,000 union members work and I want to keep it,~ said
. and !heir families gathered cin the Terry Allbright of USW Local
Jackson County Junior Fairgrt)unds ' 2936 in Auburn, Mass.• who carne
Sunday to show their support for with 40 other union members.
Ravenswood employees involved
Special recognition was given
m a ti-fnonih-old labor dispute. durmg the third annual AFL-CIO
They also honored West Virginia . Worker's Memorial Day to five
union workers who died at
workers killed on the job.
"What we really have to do, Ravenswood after the plant carne
brothers and sisters, is to change under new ownership in 1989.
Uniled Mine Workers President
the direction of the American labor
movement," said Lynn Williams, Richard Trumka said they were
president of the United Stcelworl&lt;- among the I 00,000 A!Derican
ers of America. "I can't thirllc of a ' workers who die or are injured
better place to start than with each year in workplace accidents.
Ravenswood."
"Health and safety is something·
More than 1;700 steelworkers every one of us has to be deeply
have been off the job at concerned about," Gov. Gaston
Ravenswood since Nov . I, when Caperton said. "Today we're not
union and management offl~ials only here to mourn those people
failed to agree to a new contract. who have died, but to rededicare
The union said it was willing to ourselves to·e!iminating human
work without a contract while a suffering that occurs every day. We
new one was negotialed, but com- hav.e to fight for the living."
pany officials hired replacement
C8perton signed a proclamation
worl&lt;ers.
that commits !he stare to remem"We have to stop this kind of bering victims of work fatalities
MEASURING TREES - Using tbe pencil method, members or representing MGM, I entucky and Muguyob districts. Awards tbls
outlaw activity by American corpo- every April28 in West Virginia.
Pomeroy's
Troop 2411 measured tree beigbt at tbe Scout Camporee year went to Kentuck: s Troop 152 (First Place) and Troop 115 (Secrations,~ WiU1ams said.
·
As "e did so, the father of one
and
Sunday. Scouts and cubs trom Ohio, West Vlrllnla and ond Place); and third 11ace to Troop 86 ofProctorville 'and Troop 249
Saturday
Rep. Bob Wise, ·D-W.Va., told of the Ravenswood victims wept.
'
Kentncky
•
._ended
tbe camporee at Raccoon Creek County 'Park, or Pomeroy.
the crowd a vote on federal legisla"It (proclamation) tells me iliat
tion banning the perm31!ent hiring the ones who are gone are not forof replacement workers could come gotten," said Bobby Ridu of Ona;
within a monlh.
whose son Jimmy Lee Rider died
The use of permanent replace- in June 1990 while wodcing.

:Replacement hiring destroying
_comm-unities, union members told

.

By United Press International
Showers and thunderstorms are
forecast for Ohio Monday and
Monday night
·
The National Severe Storms
Forecast Center in Kansas City,
Mo., says some of the thunder- .
storms could be severe over the
western third of the Buckeye State
Monday and Monday night.
Skies were cloudy over the state
Sunday !he night with scattered
showers over !he eastern counties.

The showers and thunderstorms
were expected to become more
numerous over the entire state
Monday.
Temperatures were mild across
the stare early Monday. It was in
the 60s ucept over extreme northwest Ohio where temperatures
were in the mid 50s. ·
·
Occasional showers and ~ a
chance of thunderstorms were forecast for Monday. and Monday
night.

Ohio murder rate climbs

3"x10'

ot Condition

16.99

7~99
Envy 1ocbet for Uyed e1ucrior- doon.

Scbedule40
PVC Pipe

1;

21#
Waterproofer
'sriiiJ nmwn,YSurfan:s aM:tln:\1.

I,

and declare I hat it has been examined by us and to the best of our knowledge and be·
lief has been prepared In conformance \flth the Instructions and Is true and correct.
Rlcbard C Follrod
Doug\11{1 W. Lit tie - DireCtors ·
Pau!tl~ch
'

'

14, 21, 37. 47

PageS

,Showers, storms forecast

OAMT!Tr

•

'

Super Lotto: 2, 9,

. .... ~

FtBEHGIAS

I. Roger W. Hysell, VIce President of the above-named bank, d~ hereby declare
that this Report of Condition has been prepared In conformance with the instructions and Is true and correct.
Roger W. Hysell-V.Ice Preslden't-Cash!er
Date Signed: April 9, 1991
We, the undersigned directors. attest the correctness of tbls Report

Q/t!Bond

uildin
I~~rodue'&amp;

!i.-Gallon

UABILJTJES

l

3:629
Pick 4:0451
Cards: 4-H, 7-C
9-D; Q·S

·""..

.Aroo Id ' .Reynolds receive
35 Yea.r servi·ce award· s

~llill~..

.

~i~

a

Market... __

I.

Ohio Lottery

Henderson
ties. Brock's
record

.

By United·Press International
from 41 and Columbus by I perOnly two of Ohio's seven cent to 89 from 90. Youngstown
largest cities - Cleveland and reported 19 murders in each year.
Cincinnati - reeorded an increase
The number of reponed rapes
in their murder rates in 1990.
was up in six of the seYen cities.
An FBI report released Suriday
The number of rapes in Akron
showed Cleveland's murder rate rose to 228 in 1990 from 179 in
climbed 14 percent to 168 in 1990 1989, br 21 percent; Columbus to
from 144 in 1989. In Cincinnati, 647 from 543, or 15 percent:
the number of murders rose 10 per- Cincinnati to 388 from 351, or 10
cent to 49-in 1990 from 45 in 1989. percent; Cleveland to 846 from
The repon said homicide rates 837, or I percent; Toledo ro 422
decreased in Akron, Dayton, Tole- from 392, or 7 percent; and Dayton
do, and Columbus last year. to 321 from 306, or S pen:enL
Youngstown's rate wall unchanged.
The number of reponed rape~ in
Akron's rate drooiJed by 10 per- Youn~wn dropped 15 percent,
centro 18 in 1990 mim 20 in 1989, 10 61 m 1990 from 72 a year eaiiDayton by 11 percent to 47 from er.. ·
oil. Toledo by 10 percent to 37 •
\I

'

w•

SAW SKILLS- Members of Tr:c~ll trom Porter, Oblo, Unit- Gallla County fer tbe two-clay eveat. Cilalrman or the event
ed Methodlllt Cburcb sbowed lbelr
at
c:uttl1' durloa !k Troop 2.5' E•ale Scout D1vld Duncan and aulstant was Walter
Melp-Gdla·Masoa Camporee over the put weekead. be 131'Boy Walker, Troop 200 ScWtmater.
Scout and Cub Pac:k members met.at RacCOOII Creek Couty Park Ia

cro•

\

·-

�'•

.. .,...,ca;..,.,.. ·t"-~ ... ---- _._.""' ~.,.,..-::,.._................. .. - ....- ... ,.

••

'-)

Commentary
'

Page 2-The Dally SenUnel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio .

.

. WASHINGTON-Jna!an~nary (on:es bave fought m sJcir.
DEVOTED TO 'I'D: INTDIIIIITII OF TilE IIEIGS;-IIUSON &amp;a&amp;\
misbes u far as SO miles inside
Iraq several times since mid·
MarciL Their objeclive is to push
-~ f"T'-,,._...,..,~c:::::l·o=o '
Iraqi
Shiite rebei.J toward an
'q2v
..
..
Ml•l•Q.Iic: Republic of Iraq; .00 to
knock off JJOCbal of Inmian dissi• ROBERT L. WINGETT
CIIABLENE BOEFLICB .
dt.nts who hide 0111 in Iraq.
·
hbUalter . ·
,/
GMft'aJ M~
Re1ilble JllllltCS. including U.S.
and Middle Eastern intelligence
PAT WJOTlBEAo
sources, declined to call the secret
A ' teet hhllllter/Colltnlw
forays 111 Minvasion," even though
the insenion of llunchds ol!Janian
'
A MEMBERofTbe United PrsslnteraatJoaal, lnllllldDaUy Preis
soldiers could be called that.
: AaoctattOD and .tbe AmerlcaD Newspaper Publishers AIIOCI4tlon.
The cross-border incursions
•
•
LETTERS OF OPINION arewelmme. Tbeytllouldwh!llllwlJOo
have been designed to bolster the
• wordllOIIJ. AD letiA!rs are subject to ediiiJii lllld must w slped with
dwindling Kurdisb and Shiite
: name, addrmslllld telephone number. No unslped • - • W1ll w pub- · i armed ~Hi......, 1D the petnment
L
.L...
good
ddr
---•1- ; of SaMam Husrn. Also, lbe Ira' Ill bed. etters.uuuldbetn
taste, a
ess~D~Iuues. not per........
nians have been able to use the
_,,o.~o

)

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Backstairs ·a t the
White Hou·se
B1 HELEN THOMAS
UP1 WIUte H - Rtp01 let
WASHINGTON - Presidt.nt BUlb illvited a lalge gatbering of n:ligious leadezs oovering many faiths to joill him in lbe dedication of lbe
new wood and stooe cbapel at Caqlp David But no press COVl:lllge was
alloWed.
lt is rare thst on sucb historic occasions, reporters and cameramen
"'WOuld not be allowed 10 n:cmllbe event that is so much a pan of White
House klre.
'
Tbe $1 million chapel in the rustic sealng was built fu!m donations
afllir Kennetll H. Plummer, an active United Methodist layman and
seDuretired consauclion contractor from Chamberlburg, Pa., organized

lbefund

ontwoMoj _t .... ~
Tbe fipri.. - JIDIIII on Mlout
tile same lime a.fsaDjani paid a
secret visit to his ltevolutionary
Guard Con1s CWM!IIIII in lbe !ranian city o( Kermansbab. Western
- inteW,ence sources say that this
same garrison .bas rMeived ~e
nlllilbers of bigb-,levellllnian polit·
. icalllld miliwy YisiiOrS, indicating
heightened activity. But those
sources were unable to confirm lbe
major blules rqJOI'tCd by the l'Mpie's Mojlbedin.
The sources, including Central
Intelligence Agency officials, do
report that Mfrom dozens to hundreds" of Revolutioaary Guards
and Iranian intellijence agents
have been crossing lbe border to
arm. !rain and fight with lraAi

__ .. _,_ of .......
us a'vii -- - to dimi' nate thousands of Iranian rebels

i
n..---o--

~u:wl.BI

The RevolutiOIIII)' Guards are
under orders to kill _tllemselves
rather than be captured because
Rafsanjllli does DOt believe be CID
afford lbe wool to leak out that he
is dabbling in the civil war of bit
neigbbor, Sllddatn Hussein. The
~~in dUet! violalion of
Umted Natious resoiUIIOIIS
bannin&amp; any COUDtries from milllilY operations inside Iraq except
U.S.-Ied ooalition fon:es.
One Iranian soldier, Mehrdad ·
Sagbarcbi, was captured by the
People's Mojabedin on April I. He
rqJOrtcdly Slid, "They tqJt telling
us that if we _., caplllled by Iraqi

w!lo operate military forces from
bases just inside Iraq.
Tbe most signi!i.'8nt of lbe IraDian rebel groups is the People's
Mojahedin. For almo« a drcade, it
bas been fighting ~Jnmian lead-~ l'laideol Hubemi
Rafsanjan•. and the AyatoUah
Kbomeini before him.
Sources within the People' sMojahedin repon that the first
atiiK:b qain• lbeir bases in East·
em Iraq occuued on March 10. In
twin attacks, large groups of the
Iranian Pasdaan lbe Revolutico. ary G~y descended

'

Tack Anderson

J

1

or Mojabedin forces, we should
deny dill we aR: even Iranians. We
were told to wear loCal dress like
lbe Kurdisb so th4y_would not take
us and show us in lbe media in Iraq
and sbow the people that, for
example, the Iranian regi!lle had
violaled the cease-fire and uampled
those international things. They
have even told us nobody Should be
captwed, that we must do our best
to deslroy ourselves."
Tbe official Iranian media has
been silent about Iranian-directed
battles inside Iraq, even ordering
IOial secrecy n:garding identification of COIJlSC'.S brought bacl from
the battles. Families of the dead
soldiers are not told bow the soldiers die4.
One thing Rafsanjalli has not
kept secret is his desire for the
crnalhrow of Saddam Hussein and
the establishment of an Islamic
Republic in Iraq along lbe Iranian
model. Rafsanjani bas even called
for an election in ~· something
be will not allow in hiS own coontty. He firmly believes that with up
to 60 pen:ent of lbe ~i population being his fellow Shiites, it is
an election that IIIey cannot lose.
GOOD ADVICE-The career
professionals in lbe State Department tried to warn tlleir superiors

and Dale VanAtta

fighting stopped in lbe Persian Gulf
chaos and instabili!Y
were inevitable. The experts wd
tbe United States bad supported
Iraq during lbe Jon~ Iran-Iraq war
to pevent an Islamic fundamenlll·
ist takeover of Iraq. They warned
that tbe Shiites, with help from
Iran, would respond to President
Bush's call to overthrow Saddam
Hussein. But the experts were
frozen out by lbe tight policy-making circle around Secrelaly of Stile
James !Iaker, and J&gt;residen~ Bush
was taken by swprise. MINI-EDITORIAL-We don't
believe that Presideot BUlb knows
what most Americans really wani
him to do. Based our soundings,
we 'II slick our necks out and tell
him. They want a drastic overhaul
of the taX sysrtm.
·
· They want .to simplify lbe sy~
tem, eliminate loopholes and smp
the unworthy of special beaefits.
They also want to see an end to
wasteful government spending
bef~ their taxes are raised IIIOiber
penny. They want a welfare syStem
· based on a commitment to bard
wort and self-n:liance. They want
a health-care system to protect
them wben IIIey arow old and an
education system that will offer
their children a bright future.
War~ that

on

about what would bappenrafter--the--------....._

tN \9~ 1 MY

..

~~made by Bush and Plummer at lbe dedication caemony
with Cardinal Jm~CS Hickey, the Roman Catholic bead of lbe Washingm
arta archdioc:ese, deliverin&amp; the homily.
RqlOI'ten luM been invilied 1D co\W events at dte presidential mountain' top re1reat only on nre occasions.
PreSident Riclad Nixon put lbe ~dential retreat "off~limits" to the
media when his administration ~ lbe h•ilding of several new cabins
on'lbe grounds for use by staff llld weekend guests at taxpayas expense.

REPUBL\CAN ~t&amp;l'tt&gt;S
TRIEP TO TELL M'E,, I

·Bush's backyard playground is growing. Presiderund Mn. BUlb have
at ibeir command a swimming pool, teiiJiis courts, a bowling alley and
. noyi a new addition for the sports-loving family, a new ba5b1ball halfcourt near tbC Oval Office. They also are movie devotees IDi can see any
rmt run films IIIey ww.
-Mrs. Bush swims a mile a day. She is often !leCIIwalking IDW8Id the
pool in a suiL Her ICIInis pal is the widow of the late SUJRIIIe Court
JUSiiCe Pourz Stewart
,Tbe Bush grandchildren .e often seen scampering on lbe lawn, taking
lbe White House in thc:ir stride.
White House JRSS sc:odliiy Ma1in Fitzwater, wbo weut on a liquid
diet to lose weight, ~tpmlwt to lbe reality that travel is faumlng on
prcsidi:ndal trips, He losf 8 pounds and daea added S _pounds to his
~from recent llllvel.
Deputy White House chief of Staff Andrew Card is also on board.
After loamg weight, be gained 5 pounds on a presidential CalifomiaTeiw swing. Now he's bact oa a strict diet. ~officials have set goals
to lose 30 pounds.
Asked how bis iliet is coming along, Fitzwater bas one wool: ''Strug-

April a, 1991

I_

polind

.

.
•
Jfh~ ~hildreo descend on the summer home for their annual
retinionmAugusL
jut lbe welcoaie mat aiiO will be out for official guests now that lbe
111!11 bouse has been refwlidhed and newly deconled 10 meet liousing

iieEds.

~peaking of hou~es

•llhon&amp;h they ..ve a Jot in HOIIS!OO, Texas, whetc
they will retire when
leaves lbe While House, Mrs. Bush indicatc4
tmt insread of building a holile, the Bushes are ~g to buy a bouse.
«nowing the president's free ~g hospitable lallleocy 10 invi~ all
coilers to dinner at a moment's DOtlce, Mn. Bush fee)J that lbe president
w~ not want to stunt bis Texas-style "y'lll come" spirit by having to
wait many months to build a houae after he leaves office.

Bush

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6'

~erry'.s World

Beatrice E. Blatc, 77, of State
Route 124 in Syracuse, died Sun-

16~~ TMetR
W~~NIH&amp;. I VOTeP

I.

Almost II
af ter lbe cam·
paign of 1980, but just a little over
a year befm: tbat of 1992, two veterans of lbe Carter administnuion
are chargina that the late CIA
director William Casey and vice
presidential candidate George Bush
met secretly with Iranian offiCials
in Europe during tile I 980 campaign IDi promised to deliver arms
to Iran through Israel if Iran would
delay the release of America's
hostages in Iran until after Election
Day. If uue, such conduct was, of
Course, despicable.
Tbe author of lbe charge, which
appeared in a long article on The
New Yorll:.Times Op-Ed page on
April 15. is Gary Sick, wbo served
on lbe staff of lbe National Security
Council straight tluougb lbe Carter
lldminislnuion. He claims to have
interviewed Mhunclreds" of Ameri'
cans and fm:ignc:n on lbe subject,
and Ullils thatiOIIIC of them "are
no boy scouts " Almolt all of them,
bowever, ill a becaning display of
modesty, Minsisted on IIIOO)'IIlity."
Here, in the order of their
appearance, is a complete list of lbe

sources cited in Sick's article:
Cyrus Hashemi, an Iranian (now
dead); bis brother JIMIISitid Hasbemi (apparcutly alive, tllough his
present whereabouts and readiness
to testify under oath are not discussed); "Two sources" lllegedly
present at lbe meetings in Europe
(anonymous); Mtwo former Israeli
intelligence officas" (anonymous);
"Two former Reagan campaign
aides" (anonymous); Richard V.
Allen, later Reagan's NSC director, ·
who "vehemently denies" Sick'~
charges; ".more than IS sources
who claim direct or indirect know!·
edge of some aspect of" lbe meet,
ings in Europe (all ~onymous);
Israeli and American former officials" (nwnber umpecified, but all
anonymous); MA formeuenior officia I in the Israeli Ministry of
D_efense" (anonymous); Moshe
Arens, then Israeli ambassador to
Washington (qtiOIM in Tbe Boston
Globe in October 1982 in support
of a collareral JIC!inl). "Foomer offi·
cials and puucipants in lbe Reagan-Busb CIIIJP8i&amp;n ream" (nwnber
unspecified', &amp;ufall anonymous),
who Muniformly have denied any

SOLOIST • Alison Rose, third grader at tile Cbelller Elemen-

tary Sdlool wiD be one of several perfor~ners aJII!I!IIrlng In Coun- .

try USA Saturday, at Eastern High School. 'ne variety show will
be spo1110red by tile Eastern Band Bonitera. Alllon will be alngln1
"Soldle~a:z:::d ''Cotmtry Club." Tile doors wiJJ open at 6 p..m.
and en
nt wiJJ Itt und'"'!it:t 7 p.IB•. Retresbmentl will
be a'fdable. Admlllioll 11 $3for 1111
llld $Z for ltadentl.

I don't -

Car

ben s DIMly

~~·=:.t.::J:,=:

defw:!aa ~ otbsl' lin, or tplttill

-·byr"'

at the wearers and calling the•

I'm DOt one of the l!'imal protertioniltl who il u•:a!dilloPally
ClpJ'D rd to the uae of animal• or
IDIPNI
II for MIY lei70D.
Those are
folkiiOIIIC of Ill lend

to tum off as soon as tlley stan
Wh11 are labs thst do research
talking, thinking their views are f~ major manuf~turers doing to
just too radical. That's unfortunalc, animals? Lab prxoces and e~peri­
becaase one of tbe messages menrs vary, but here are some practhey're trying to bring us is this:
tices documented by inVestiBators:
In a nation where we buy our
Pouring caustic chemicals on
cbildreo gerbils, rabbits, puppies a~ima!s' skin. and_ letting it eat
and kittens to aeacb them about gigan!JC openmgs t!' their flesh;
responsibility and love, we con- exposmg pan of an1mals' brains
done the maiming and tilling of 10 inserting electrodes and recording
million animals a ye.: for lbe Illite data; polring pieces of lipstick in
ofr
cb.
lbe pockets under lbeir eyes, taping
Many e:pena say that these them face down to boards and
r
cb Jllllbo!ls are obaolere and putting them under sun lamps ·
inferior !D 111111 tba doa'l1118 ani' where IIIey slowly roast to death;
mall. For that rmm I'm motlif)o.
spnying them with insecticides and
ing my buyill ~~~llf. I reeordiiiJ their convulsions while
won't bo buyiqr
made by they ICialll their lives away.
eompllliea :haftat ......oduc..
Once lhe.Itests are O'llel', many of
oa animals. Molt of tbem are tboee that ae 1101 tilled are left parbouaebold we've grown up alyzed, in Jilin and unable to even
'with.
raise their heads to drink w•tcr
~

•

A Mid~ woman was cited for failure to yield Saturday fol·
lowing an accident on Scipio Township Road 148.
Catherine H. SchueiZDWI, 32, was cifled after she pulled out from
a $10J.1 sign on Township Road 259 and traveled into lbe path of a
crossmg car, driven by Forest A Lee, 31, of Pomeroy. Schuetzman
was also cited for no operator's license. according to a lqlOI1 from
lbe Gallia-Meigs post of the State Highway Paaol.
Neither driver was injuled in tile crash. Lee's passenger, BrianT.
Haning, 26, of Pomeroy, was also uninjured,
· ·

•

•

·

William A. Rusher

members of the Reagan administration, including Ronald Reagan but
above all George Bush, by eniiDgling tllem in a proliferating thicket
o{ unproved and unprovable, but
also (with luck) undisprovable,
accusations.
For the Democrats, with I 992
coming up, Ibis is a no-Jose situation. Can anything be done to rectify the balance? Specifically. can
we arrange to give the accusers
something to lose?
Why not invite them. to put
tbeir money where their moutlls
are? Will Leslie Gelb and Gary
Sick, and lbe producer of "Front·
line", each deposit (say) S20,000 in
an escrow acoount under control of
some independent referee, to be
paid to the Republican National
Com mince if the commission, by
June I, 1992, has not ruled the
charges )iroved, and if lbe speciUed
individuals. do not. by July I, sign .
and deliver to the White House
their individual wri!ten !'l~Diogies to
Mr. Bush for defaming hun?

I

I"

EMS answers 12 weekend calls;.~
"''

Meigs County Emergency Medical Services units responded 10 12
calls for assistance over the week·
end.

· · SINGING AND DANCING • This trio, caned
the Three Youug Ladla, wiJJ be slngillgand dane·
ing to "Side by Side" at Country USA, 1 variety
show to be staged at Eastern High School Saturday, 7 p.m. Pictured left to right ..-e Cbester EJe.
menlary slxtb 1raders, Lisa Stetbem, Meredith .
Crow, aad Anna Wolf. Featured 1uests will

Friends may call at lbe funeml .
home from 3 to 5 p.m. and 7 to 9
p.m. on Tuesday.

lnelude Bnce Wolfe add the Mldnigbt Cloggers,
Touch of Grass, Southern High Singers, and the
Rainbow Clogaers. Proceeds will go to the Eastern
Band Boosters, sponsors of the show. Tbe doors
wiD opeD·at 6 p.m. and refreshments will available
tbrouahont the evening.

..

... R1tb·d AID•al

TOIIr 'P....... """'-"

Plans for the Rutland Alumni
dinner and dance have been comWahkeena Nature Pruerve on Sun- pleted for May 25 beginning at
day. The group will leave Chester 6:30p.m. at the Rutland Civic Cen·
area at noon. Guests are welcome. tcr.
.
Call 992-5885 or 98S-397ll for fur.
The dinner will be catered and
ther information. Guides will be there will also be a round and
available to make the tour informa- square dance following the dinner.
tiv~
·
Reservations of $9 per person
. can be sent 10 .Rutland Alumni
Trustees to meet
Reservations, P.O. Box 125, Rut~
The Scipio Township Trustees land, 45775.
will meet Wednesday at 6 p.m. at
For further information call 742the PageviUe Township Building. . 2861, 742-2578, 742·2258 or-7422191.
Rum111111e sale planned
A rummage and bake sale will
be held Friday and Saturday from 9
a.m. to 4 p.m. in Tuppers Plains
beside the l'ost.Office. The events Am Ele Power .................. 29 518
are sponsored by the Rockland Ashland Oil ......................33 3/4
AT&amp;T ............................... 37 3/4
Pythian Sisters.
Bob Evans ........................ I 7 5/8
Charming Shop .................l7 1/4
Board Ot Health to meet
The Meigs County Board of City Holding ..................... l4
Heal til will conduct n:gular month- Federal Mogul.. ........ :....... l5 3/4 '
ly meetings tile second TuesdaY.of Goodyear T&amp;R ................. 21 5/8
each month at 4:30 p.m. at the Ke)t Centurion ............ :..... 12 1(2.
Meigs County Multi-Purpose Lands' End ....................... 21 .7/8
Limited Inc .......................28
Building in Pomeroy.
Multimedia Inc .................86
Rax Restaurant ................ :!
Rummaae sale to be held
The Pomeroy First Baptist Robbins&amp;Myers ............... 27 1{2
Church will have a rummage sale Shoney's lnc ..................... l7 l{l
WednCS!Iay through Friday from 9 Sial' Bank .. ~ .......................22 ·1/4
Wendy lnt'l...................... 10 3/4
a.m. to 4 p.m.
Worthington Ind. .............. 25 3/4

I

Stocks

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Weather

"

Published every .rtorn-. Monclay
thr&lt;Np Friday, Ill Court St., Jlo.
moroy, 01110, by tho Oblo Valloy Pub-

SPRING VAllfY CINEMA
446 4514

., '

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' ,.,., .., nuso-ft

......

J :lO,t :lO MILl ·
W/SUM MTIJIU
l :lO,S:IO
flaTtJ Ill

I f '
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7

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• I•' 11 •. I

MASON FAMILY
RESTAURANT :·

llablnl Compan~ulllmedla, Inc.,
Pomeray, Oblo 4 , Plo. 182·21!11. Second clUI (1011110 plld AI Pomeroy,

Ol!lo.

tadl[ at tile -kend event, repraentln1tbree ·
diiUkll • MGM, Keahlc:ky ud Muguyoll .. There .
o1 Mtltj.;GdJi-Milill Bo,s.Sclltlt Dla- were 12
ud -~ree. cab pac:lcl at the ca•·
· trkt ';tbeaoi"Cieek COiril17 Park. 111ere w-ere . porH, clialred by Point Plea1.. t Eagle Scout
'- 137
from Oblo, West Vlr1inla 1nd Ken- David Duacaa.
·
. COOKING SKILLS --' Jere•y Pierce of

""tl

~-.-- Ohio's...
Continued from page I
in services, up 49,000 jobs, or 4.1
·
~ent ..

while they mate a slow exit into
the mercy of death.
These labs are frequently supplbl by people who not only raise
anlmala In lldistlc conditions, but "
who also steal pets and pose as ~
families to take llllvantaac of ani" .~
mals Jlven 1way in PCl ex~ . :

·
Jn government, the .rate of
. lfOWth wu 1.6·percent or I 1,000
" J!!bl, with moat of tb~ arowth

ol:currtna Mille localleYeL WhOlesale trade added 4,000 jobs, a rate

They aro 1111t1ni a kiU!na &amp;.killing •,
so manufacturers ceo ... ~ t body "'
of data ready In_cuf¢'iannii:If .;

of 1.4 percent; flnanc:e, inlllrance
and real es1ate employm: t - up
• by 2,000 jobs, or 1.0 percent; and
tran~on and public utilldes
pew by 2,000 joba, or 0.11 peroeaL
The ra1e of powth In Rllllllllde •
2,000 jobs, Q!_0.2 percent, wu
below dlo averap for all~
'in lbe stale,

,;•
· ;;.

·,

z.

,:
::

(

\'

troo,.

·-

.

----Hospital news _____
Veter- Me.orlal HOIJiltal
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS
~ Slan:llll', ~S TUllDAY DIS
GES
· DaniJy Brit:ldell, MlddleDcn
SONDA Y Ai?MijSiONS
.Ralph OUrs,.chclti'.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES

-

Nathan Wood.
Birth, April 26 • Mr•. an~ Mrs.
"emer Grace, a son~ GaUipoliS.

Discharges, April 27 • Mrs.
- , COII,I.'Id Bowen and son, Mn. Stan~
• 100 Burdette and daughter, Juanita
- . Lawrence, Rhonda McComas,
NONE.
Erma Nunn, Andrew Pancake, Mrs.
Todd Kuillen and daugbter,
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER William Slone and Amber Will·
Dilcbarltl. Aprl126 ·Sandra berger.
Banta, Allee BCckeu, Carolyn
onr m, 01111 C&amp;w11 a•, bcbary
Discharges~ril 28 • Rachel
Htyu1, lleth Hudaoa, Mu.
Chlrlaa McDollalcllllCI10n, Vir- Cline, Bryalll y, Eugene Long,
giala·Rift!IIIY, Mrs. Quentin Sill· Wilma McGraw and Mn. Michael
pleton llld 1011, Dawn Waugh and Sjiears and daughter.

Member: Unl!&lt;d Pnla lntemattoaal,
Inland OaUy Preu AMoolltiM and the
OI!IQ NewapaS:Aia"'latton. Natloaal
AdWrtlslnJ
e~CYttve, Brllllham
·Neiv~paper · 11, 733 Tl!lrd Avenuo, •
New Yorlr, New York 18017. ·
-

--

TIO!HESTYLF 1 1'\'( . , .&lt;..;f'Ff'l·\1 S

POSTMASrER:
lddr&lt;!u •IWIIM
to .Tile Dolly Sentlllel,
Ill Court St ..

ll on d u !I I· 1 1 d" '1. I I u ,

Pumoroy, Obto - ·

; , . ! J' n t

StlllaliP'nON IIATICII

. , Clrrlor ......... .....
OnoWHit .. .. ........ ............. .. ....... .~.eo

Ono Month ................... :............. N.tll
one Year ................................. RUO
.,,
UIIIOUOOPl'

r•CJ:

Dolly ................ ~ ................ . !15 Cento
SUI!Icri!Nra DOl dtllrlq to pay tl!ecar·
rl.- _may nmH II! ldvuce- to
Tbe Dally llet!IIUI on a, lor U m111111 ·
buto, Cndlt will I»II- carrttr lid!

-

No ......lpl_.l!y mao permttltilta
.,.... Wilen home carrllr ..,.... II
avaUable.

MONDAY • Creamed _Chicken
TUESDAY - Bea, &amp;Cornbread
weDNESDAY • Stuffed Peppers, Mashed Potatoes,
.

Your choice of Green Beans or Com

JHUBSDAY • PePJ&gt;$r Steak Over Noodles
FBIQAY • Fish Dinner

1G ItA!' a ilhiWMT. can•• U*' II II MTnD
nDII en 'tiN I JDMI, !EXCLUDES DRINK A D"'V"'1l
-'
UIIIT l CIIIUUia ADal.'l

.......
.-= !. I! Cany
-··
52...................................... Tl
uw..u ..................................

· - . . . ...............................

CloloMt . . . . &lt;-,
13 .......................................

11

40
.......
.
.
.
.
.....
...
:. .............. .
52W-............................... ,. . .4Q
~

Out OrctenAntJ•hle (SCM) 773-5821 11

UNiou 0&amp;1'

1~ DJICOUI'rr

.

,.,

• • • SOutfl Central
- •~
Occasional showers and if '
·chance of tllunderstorms Monday
night, with a low between 60 and .. '.
65. Chance of rain is 80 percenl,; '.
Variable cloudiness Tuesday, with· ··
a chance of showers and thunderstorms, and highs near 80. Chance ' "
of rain is 40 percenL
Wednesday through Friday · .
A chance of rain across the state' •·
Wednesday and in the northeastern
part of Ohio on Thursday. Fail·-·:
elsewhere Thursday and fair across' 1
the state Friday. Highs will be· ·
mostly in the 60s each day, with
overnight lows in the 50s Wednet-""
day morning, in the 40s early ···
Thursday, and between 3S and 4~
Friday momlng. '.

(1.8PIU. . .)
A Dtv..._ ef •••llillla, bc. 1

Sarah Overstreet

~

St«krtpom tlrt tilt 10:30 ~~rm.
f/Uikl proPlded by Blunr, EU~
tlndlMwl ll/ GtiUipolls.

The Daily Sentinel

ea.-

you act some _perman_ent~!yte
solutlon In 'your eye aqcf,48¥,,.t
damqed your light, lbe comJllll_y
Clll say, "Oh no, that Clll't ~
poured that stuff ip I 50 bunnRIIII
eyes and our teSt da~ proves...."

.

On Saturday at 2:41 p.m., Rut.:
land squad went to Dye Road for
Lucille Lambert, who was taken 111.
Holzer Medical Center. At 5:03
p.m., Rutland squad went to Main
Street. Sandy .Smitll was taken to
Pleasant Valley Hospital. At 8:47
p.m., Middleport squad went to
Cole Stre~. Chris Rayburn was
taken to Veterans Memorial Hospi· •
tal. At 9:4i p.m., Racine squad,,
went to Perry Run Road for Gerald ·~
Moore, who' was taken to Holzer.'
At 11:03 p.m., Pomeroy sq~d, ..
went to Second Street for JennifC!'
Jenkins, who refused treatmenL : ..
On Sunday at 7:28 a.m., S~· , •
cuse units were called to a f~ ,,
on the Ohio River. EPA was
.
At 9:01 a.m., Racine squad went 10 ~
Main and Vine. Lois Franlc refuse4 •
treatmenL At 11:19 a.m., Middle·., .
port squad went to Third and Main: •
Lauie Young was taken to Veter~ .. 1
ans. At 3:04 p.m., Racine units
went to the scene of an accidentpl., o
State Route 124 and County ROlli,.•,
28 for Bobby Saltsman, who
refused tteatmenL At S;04 p.m·.,
Middleport squad went to Sou&amp;~~ '•
Third Avenue for Ernest Well$o .••
who was taken to Veterans. At 6:SZ · ,
p.m., Racine squad responded tQ ;,1
Trouble Creek Road for James
Hinkley. He was taken to Holzer. . '·&gt;
On Monday at 3:52 a.m., Syra- , '
cuse squad went to Roy Jones Road ·
for Ruth Wolfe, who was dead 011 ...
arrival.

&gt;.

tery.

Troop Z40 eoob 11reak1111t Sllllda1 at tile Sprlq

•

&lt;

'

~·

'

Woman cited after accident

The Chester and Shade Valley

personal know~~e or involvement in such a
; and "several
of tile former hostages" (anonymoos).
Sick's article was quickly followed up by a PBS "Frontline"
propam and a fwther article on the
Times Op-Ed page by Leslie Gelb.
Oelb, who was a Stale Department
official durin&amp; the Caner administration, is .now editor of lbe Op-Ed
page and IS probably orchestrating
the whole bamge,
Gelb's article is entitled "A New
Iran Hostage Scandal?", which will
give you some idea of wh11 the
author has in mind. Sure enough,
Gelh calls for a sweeping investiption: For aa act "so subversive oC
the democratic pocess llld Presidential authority ... those Jt3POIISi·
ble must be exposed." Gelb doesn't
want a mere congressional investi-"
galion, however; he calls for con"
gressional leaders to "appoint a
nonpartisan commission of private
citizens" to investigate the charges.
Oelb concedes that "No one will
go to jail," but his pwpose is obvious: to discredit the surviving
.

Sentlnei-Page-3

I

Floral Arts Garden clubs will tour

Ill

Dell~

'

·J •·

Accusers
should
put
up
or
shut
up
·
yean

- --·

Three people suffered minor injuries Saturday in a one-car acc:i· - ~
denton Slate Route 143.
.
Charles P. Riffle, 49, of Middleport, Matthew E. Riffle, 24, of •
Abilene, Teus, and William L. Facemyer, 25, of Pom~ were not ,
llealed for their injuries, according to a report from lbe Gallia·Meigs
'
post of lbe Sllle Highway Paaol.
, ,
Tbe n:port Slated that Riftle was northbound on Slate Route 143
when he swerved to miss a deer and apparently lost 00111101 of his
1,991 GMC Siena pickup ttuclc. Tbe tnl(:k went off the right side of
lbe roadway, striking a culvert and a ditch.
No ciraoons wen: issued in lbe crash.
..

~eigs announcements

- ·'

!Z

'

The

'

SO 6Utt.TY.

fOR ~UKAKlS.

Befm: I begia, Jet me clarify a
few points: I ea and will _probably continUe to cal-a vanety of
meats. I live in r.m countty and
take mz..:Jy runs past some
mipty
carle and . who,
eKCeJ11 for diJ they
D the
IBiby -.:t,ada, lift WI)' well. I
belieye .... lbles of c:ommen:ia1
farm• wbele anilllall . . alluaed,
but it'not uabjecl rve """'"'

"Presidential candidates, presidential candi·
dates - wherefore art thou, presidential
candidates?"

.,w-

3 injured in Saturday wreck

~e&amp;.

I

Opposition in animal testing grows ·

~&amp;va;.
C&gt; '"'"'Nl• ... -II&gt;

~-

........-.-Local briefs_._...=.

day, April 27, i99 I, II Ohio Sllle
Funeral services for Vern E. University Hospital in Columbus
~::Z 73, of Children's Home fo11owiaa an extended llbsa, Sbc
•
Pomeroy, wbo died on Sa- was a boulewife. ·
urday, ~ 27, 1991, II bit resj.
Sbe- bom on June 25, 1913,
deoce, will be beld II 10 a.m. l'ues· lbe dau&amp;bter of lbe late John and
day atlbe Ewing Funeral Home.
Lillian Mllbews Duffy.
'
Sbe is survived by ber husblnd,
. Landon Hope will officiate at
lbe eervice. Burial will be in Beech Charles Blake; two sons, John
(Belly) Eynon of 'florida, llld Bill
Grove Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral, (Dorothy) Eynon of Wasbinaton:
home ~y (Monday) from 2 1(1 5 four sisters, Inez Hill, Racine,
.-17 to9 p.m.
.
· Benha Grimm, Belpre, Gertrude
Neigler, Racine, and Carrie Roush,
lelart Falls; Dine grandchildren and
Madge G. Fife .
).fadge G. Fife, 75, of Lake four IJW·gnmdcbildnm.
B~idea her parents, she was
City, Tenn., and formerly o( Mid·
precCcled
in death by a daughter,
dlepon, died early Suoday mornCharloae
Neese.'
'
ing, April28, 1991, at St. Mary's
She
attended
the
Presbyterian
MedictJ Center in Knoxville, Tenn.
in
Syracuae.
·
Chwdl
She was bom in Oallia Counly,
Funeral services will be held on
lbe daughter of lbe late Clayton and
Tuesday
atl p.m. at Ewing Funeral
Ivy Taylor Barrett. Site was a
·
Home
with
Kris Treinlong offidat·
homemaker.
ing.
Burial
will be in Letart Falls
She is survived by her husband,
Cemetery.
John M. Fife, Lake City, Tenn.;
FriCIICIJ may call at lbe funeml
two sons, Leniy (Janice) Fife, and
home
from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. and 7
Johnny (Doris) Fife, Jr., both of
p.m.
to\)
p.m. on Monday;
Lake City; three daughters, Mrs.
Virgil
(Louise)
Pryo,
Williamstown, W.Va ., Mrs.
Clarence (Jessie) Might, Vinton, Ruth I. Wolfe ·
Ohio; Mrs. Bill (Shirle~) Scragg,
. Ruth Irene Wolfe, 92, Syracuse;
Parllenburg, W.VL; a SLiter, Mrs. died Monday, Ap'il29, 1991 at her '
Richard (Jessie) Orueser, Rudand; residence -following an extended
two brothers, Robert (Mary) Bar- illness.
n:tt, Middleport, and Charles (FioShe was born on March 27,
n:nce) Barrett, Rutland; 13 grand- 1899 in Saxon, lbe dau.RhiA!r of lbe
children; 7 great-grandchildren; late Josephus and Etta Smith Pick·
and several nieces and nephews. . ens. She was a housewife.
Sbe was preceded in death by a
. Sbe is surviVed by a daughter, ·
brotl)er, Bill"Buster" Barrett. ·
Mn. Lawrence {Marjorie) Hoffner,
Services will be Wednesday at 2 Syr•cuse; a scin; Beryl (Ruby)
p.m. at Fisher Funeral Home in Wolfe, Hebron; a sister, Everell
Middlepon with Rev. Rick Malloy Pearson, Arkon; four grandchildren
officiaong. Bllri41 will be in Gravel Jlised in her home, Timmy Wolfe
HiD Cemetery,
of Portland, Tommy Wolfe of Fort
Friendsn:a.call at tile funeral BraJB• N.C., Jimmy Wolfe of
home on
y ·from 2 p.m. to 4 Racine and Charlie Wolfe of Key
p.m. and~ p.m. to 9 p.m.
West, Fla.
Besides her parents, she was
pi'eceded
in death by ber husband,
Gracie McGraw
Gordon
S.
Wolfe; a son, Bernard
Grace McGraw, 92, of Meadowone brother; and three sis·
bridge, W. Va. died Sunday at her Wolfe;
ten.
·
home.
,
Her survivors include a daugh- · She was affiliated with the
ter, Mrs. Maxine Russell, Rustic Betltlehem Baptist Oturch in Great
Bend, Ohio.
Hills, SYI~~Cuse.
Funeml services will be held on
· FUneral services will be held at
Wednesday
at I p.m. at Ewing
lbe ·Wallace and Wallace Funerai
Funeral
Home
in Pomeroy with
Horne at Rainelle, W. Va., at I · Rev. Roland Wildman
officiating.
p.m. Tuesday.
Burial will be in Letart Falls Ceme-

Beatrice E. Blake

oil:Jrill. a

The Bushes are looting fa w•d 10 their llllditional Angua,vacarion at
Keonebunkport, Maine; and the first lady thinb she now bas a better idea
of I.,w to handle Ihe flow of flmily and official guesu at the seaside com-

-.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

gling."

Busb•s adminisuation is oftal called lbe "Reagan rqency" for its
adllerence to lbe a:JDSerVMive policies of bis predec: s101, Ronald Reap!.
,Some sonal, as wdJ as offic:ial similarilies hsve been found. Bush
dozed
mt.m.., in the East Room in honor oldie Kennedy
~tcr. The presidenl's head kept noddin&amp; and he tried with all bit might
to~awakc.
.
At Ihe pace be goes, it is no wonder. Reagan dozed o« from jet lag
wl¥n be had .. audience witb Pope John Paul n dlring his administratiol,l. Aides also ltflllited he fdl asleep at Cabinet Jlll"dings on occasion.

...

VernE. Story

. 111 c..rt liVed

L·~"="'~·--------~----~--~~~--~~~~--~ '

---,rr o.. - --;·---,..,.._--- --· \- -··· --- -· . -

------Area deaths----

Monday,Ap~l29,1991

·Iranians cross border to aid Iraqi resistance

: The
. Daily Sentinel
,.
•_

Monda~.

- - · - ·· ·· - · -

~AMERICAN EXPR&amp;ii6
...
.ACC&amp;Pli:D
'l

�...
Page

The Dally Sentinel

4

Mon48Y, April 29, 1991

MondaY. April 29, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.

Scoreboard

In the majors•••

,_

(AI~IDT)

AMI!RJCAN LEAGUE
Eul

WL . Pd.GI
...........12 I
.«10
1/1
........•. .10 7 .511

J

T·-

MD....UO

.........9 9

1

.500

................ 9 .471
a-taM ...........7 9 . .431
· ••, •.•••.•;6· 10
.375
llewYmk
.........6 10 .375

West
a.icoao •.........11 5
OotLtild
..........12 7
c..,..... ............9 to
t5

nr·

~Ci&amp;y

Tea•
-

1112
3
4
4

.611
.6l2
112
.474 3112
.47-4 31/1
.471 3 1/1
.~7 3112
.421 41/2

.......H.9 10

.......... 9
.............7 I
............... 11

Saturday's resulls

MiiUIIIGII 7, Seiale 2

DMroil4, TGftiii&amp;Gl

-6,KonouCity4
OUlmd 4, Cllifamil 3

Second Round

Mii-S.IIolu-2

PlllllburgJa..vs. Wasbln&amp;ton

I

w.--

Sllllday's resalts

(PIIIIIburab wins series 4·1)
Apoil174, Piaa""'aJt

T_,,o-;.6

8......,.5,MDftube4
J'
alll.---2

l

Apoill9 -l'illlboqJt 7, Wubinpat
6(0T)
Apoi121-l'illlboqJt 3, Wubinpat

~ ... llewY..tl

a...r:.......,Tow2

o.tland 10 CaJiftmia 3
2, ltonou Illy I

Apoil2l-l'illlboqJtl, Wubinpon

-

TodaJ'II!IDI..

Seaalo(Dd.oc:U l·l) otBaltimon
(kllllllonl-l). 7:35p.m.
..... {POa)' Q;J) .. Kuou Cily
(Sobodl'l'!" 1· 2), B5 p.m.

TIHIICiay's pmes

Seaalo at loltimaN,'I ,35 pnl.
~..... Mii....U..l-GS p.m.
11a1tm at S•alc.I:OS p.m.
Toma&amp;oat Tuaa.l:35 p.m.
New York at ~.10:35 p.m.
Clovolutd at colil..... 10:35 p.m.

NATIONAL LEAGUE
Ea$1
W L

Pluotiurah ..........13

Sc. Louis ...........11 I
llewY..t
...•...11 I
...........9 11
..........7 12
....•.....6 13

w..

Sal Dlop ........ 11
CiociMI&amp;i ......... 10
LooAnplea· ........ 10
Alllnla
..•..........1
............

s.. ,_.._ :.......•

GB

Pet.
.614

6

Norris Division
SL Louis vs. Mlmi(Milln- wins series 4·2)

l
.579
2
.579
.450 41/1
6
.361
.316
7

I
I
9

.579
.556
.526

112

10
11

.444

21/1

I

Apri110-S&lt;Louio!,-cul .
Apri122-- 5. 5I. LaWai
Apri124-- a. 5I. Laoil4
Apoil26- S&lt; Louis 4, Minlaou 2
April : I I - - :1, Sc. u..;, 2

1

.500 1112

Sm)111e Dlvlllon .
Los Allleles VL Edmonlon

. 3

.421

(Edmooton wins eerles 4-2)

Saturday's results

Pit....,

~.....

Apoilll- Loo Anploo 4, Edmatton
3 (OT)
.
. .
Apoil20- EdmattGn • . Loo AnaeJoo
3(201)
Apoil22- Edmonton 4, Loo An 1eJoo
3(l(ll')
.
Apoil24- EdmattGn 4, Loo Anaeloo
2
.
Apoil26 -Loo Anao1eo 5, Edmatton·

Ciltoimali 3
IO,NewY..t I

Phi!'*tfll!'·•.san~3,12iM.

St. Louis 2. -tnill

.
Atlaltla2.-1, 13iall.
S..Pm . . . . Loo......-3

Suadl!'l nRltl

Jlh.ilr' \'i•9,Sanlli-.o2
1'11 ' .. 7.11ewY..t"l

Mdi21-EdmattGn4. Loo Anae~oo
3(0T)
:l·lt.....,.

uo.:...t~:t::r'

-t.Sc.J.-.6
Loo ...... 7,S.OI'nftcioco3

NBA playoff slate

Today'sllllllOS

.,

FlntROUIId

Salt Dioao (WlUIIon t-2) .. -

phia ~ 1-2). 7:35p.m.
(Sadtz 0.3) "St. Louis
(T_....,.2.l), 1:35 p.m.

(bell-of-ftve)
Eastern eonre.....ce
CbJcaco n. New York
(Cbkaao leads serlel2.0)

-

Tueod•'=es

. Apri125- Clicaaol26. New Yodt
15

Loo ....... ... .
n!lht.
SaD Fraftt:ilco·at P.i1e:teJphli, J\iatU
Sea IJi&lt;lo at New y aot, niaJ&gt;t
.
l'ltlaborF II a...m.ti, ...,,

-

,,

.. euc.,o."""'

Apri121- 0Uclao89, New York

Apri130- Clicaao at New Y\'*•

7:30p.m.

x·Miy 2 - 0W:apatNcw YM, 8

NHL playoff slate

p.m.

•-May 4 -New Yodt .. aa..,••

Flnlloand

TBA

(best-of. .•m)

llaotua VL lndlua
(Series tlod 1-1)
Apri126--l%7,1adima 120

Patrlcll Dlvllloo
Plttsbarab.., New Jeney

Aldl:ll-llllliMIIlO, a.,.,,_a
.............. ,...

(PIIIIIIIaJDwilta--4-3)

Ill

April 3- flow Jonor 3, PI~ 1

Mlyl- a ..... " ladiml,l pm.
x·Miy5-ladimlal-.TBA

Aplil5- ............ 5,1'1ow1_.,4
Api1.7 Pt1 t zeit 4, New J.-y 3
~

l

Apri19- New Jonor 4, Pl-.., I
April II -Now1eaey 4, PllooburF

Allanla n. Dtlroll
(Serlel tlod 1·1) .

Apllll3 - l'iltoNp4,Ncw1cney

Apri126- Adlolo 103, Douoit 98

April 15 _,.,__. 4, Now1mey

AprillO- Dolrail otAillnll, l :lO

April:II-DolraiiiOI , Ailao~all

p.m.
Mly2- Dolnld 11 Allonla, I p.m.
, ..,..,' - Allaa&amp;a at Decroi1, TBA

- 0

N.Y. RaJieen w. Wublnlton
(WuiiJDatua wiDI series 4-2)

,...,

Apri13 - N.Y. ...... 2,

PbiiMielplda n. Mllwiukee
(PbBMielpbla leadleerlel2.0)

w.....,_

APril 25- P.!'rdeJphi• 95, MUwaukoo90
April%7 - l'llilldolphia ll6.1olilwo~l2
· 30-MilwaukceatPhiladel·
piU. :30 p.m.
......
• a•MIJ 2- ~--·~It Pbibdel·
piU,Ip. m.
·
a-May 4 - fbilldeq,bia u Milwaukoe,TBA

Apoi15-W.....,..3, N.Y.

~7 -

· ,..o

N.Y. ...... 6. Wubin&amp;·

._l

.Apoil9- W.....,.. 3, N.Y.
Apoilll -

.

w.......,.s, N.Y.

._.con
Apoill3-W......... 4.N.Y.

._2

Western Coofennce
Ponlaad n. Seallle
(Portland ltlllll-- 2.0)

AdamiDI•Islon
a.,n ... Hanford
(IIGI1on wins ltries 4-2)

Apri126-l'adlond 110, Staol1&amp; 102
April:ll-l'adlond 115, Staoii&amp;I06
AprillO -l'adlond·ll ....... 10

Apoi1 S- IIMIOIII 5, B - 2
Apoil5--4,1Wtbd3
Ajodi7--6,!Wibd3
Ajodl' _ _... 4, · - 3
Ajtdlll--6,"""-'11
Ajoo1113-a-3,11anf01111

p.m.

•·MIJ 2 - - d o t S.alo, TBA
•·Miy4- S.lllo II Pa1lood, TBA

San Antonio n. Golden Slale .
!Series lied 1·1)

·. 'Malllnll ... Buft'alo

Aldl25-"" Ao1011lo130, o.w..

(M.....................2)
ApoilS--7,.._5

s-111

........ ,.

..

Api!%7 - 0oWotllaiOill,Soa

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nine hits, while Rio Grande ·
on 11 10 slip past for lhe
viciory. The Redwomen recorded
one error and Urbana had two. .
The hosts launched a 15-hit
attack against Mount SL Josel?h in
the firsl game, but the viSitors
fought back wilh a 1'4-hit flllisb to
keep Rio Grande's defense on iiS ·
toes all the way through lhe con-,·
lest, which stretched into 10
innings.
·
Kalhy Lute (junior, Wheelersburg) pitched the fust 4-1/3 innings
and was relieved by Joseph to rmish lhe game. Rio Grande commit· •
ted three errors and MSJ had one. · ;
Robin Stull (sophomore, Hills- ·
dale) led the hosiS' hitting with
~~!ret hits, and agmn led lhe offense
in the second game. Joseph allowed ·
MSJ nine hits and a single error.- · ·
while the Redwomen had four hits · - ·
and no errors. The visitors . ~
remained behind for most of the
game until the sixlh innina, when :
some defensive breakdowns ·-~
aUowed lhem 10 slip ahe8d.
· The season ends for the Red· .:
women (~21) this week when they -::'
hos1 Mari~ Tuesday for a 1 p.m. ·
doubleh~der, and Ouej-bein _.
Wednesdfy, also for a twin' bill . beginnin&amp;1't 1 p.m. ,

·adv~ced

.Rio men third, women sixth :~
iri district track competition ·',.

2

.

Lafayette), 100 meter dash, 11.89. '· .
Brelsford also placed sixth in lite ,
400 meter hurdles at 59:44.
•'
Placing for the Red women in
fourth place were Debbie Gray
(s'ophomore, M,c Connelsville),
10,000 meter run, 48:16; and
Vonda Stiles (~enior, Shawnee), .
long jump, 15 feel, five inches.
Sherry Cooke (senior, Sunb.ury)· ,
finished sixlh in lhe ttiple jump at
32 feet. four inches.
.
Coach· Bob Willey was pleased
wilh the ·teams' effort. He said he
had hoped for lhe teams to finish
-higher lhan lhey did, but parlly ,
alliibuted the mullS 10 the dimin·
ished numbers of atllletes compel·
ing for him this reason.
· ·•
"For the guys to finish lhird out ,
of three teams in the Mid·Ohio ;,,
Conference and then come out
lhird of 11 teams in the disliic1, it's ' ·
a crediuo them," Willey said. · . '
"Given the fact there are only five ; ':
women running, lheir finish isn't .,
di
. ling."
.
~teams return to competition ~
on May 4 at Marshall Umversity
for lhe Twilight Invitational.
. ·,

The University of Rio Grande
men's track team rmished third in
Disttict 22 and lhe women's team
placed sixth among iiS COuntelp8!tS
when bolh teams competed in lhe
ROSEBERR'f'S PRIZE- Wayne Roseberry of Pomeroy Disttict Championships Saturday at
bagged his first turkey late last w~k. According to Rqseberry, pic· Malone College in Canton.
tured here with the bird, the turkey was kiUecl In lbe WUiow Creek
Renee.Peck (sophomore, Balli·
area and weiebecl an estimated 24 pounds.
more, Ohio) and Travis Rambo
Uunior, Columbiana) emerged as
the district.C:hampions in two
events apiece. Peck, a distance runner, was ftrst in the 1500 meter run
(4:42.79) and the 3000 meter
(10:38.01), while Rambo, a field
even1
specialist, took firs1 in lhe
The Meigs junior high !rack metei dash Adam Wyau shaltered
discus
with a distance of 141 feet,
team is off 'to a gOod stan Ibis sea- lhe Meigs junior high record wilh a
son. In girls' action, the Little time of 11.9. Bert Mash finished 10-3/4 inches, and was rust in the
Marauders defeated Gallipolis S4· second in the 1,600 and 400 · shotplll al49 feet, nine inches.
Also finishing for the Redmen
48 and won .a tri-malch against meters, and Jeremy Imboden. came
Wellston and Eislem Pike. Meigs; in third in lhe 800 meters. In lhe in· second place were Joel Spencer
which had 48 poiniS, was followed '200 meters, Wyau came· in first, (senior, Gallipolis), javelin, 164
by Wellslon (47) and Eastern Pike foUowed by Sltamon s~
·n sec· feet, S' 1/2 inches; Blaise Reader
(40).
. .
ond and Smith in third. y won (sophomme, Wavuly), high jump,
The boys lost to Gallipolis 50- the Ions jump, S1aa 1he high sixfeet, eight inches; Tim Murphy
49, and came in second in lhe tti- jump, Imboden came in · in lhe Uunior, Zanesville), 110 merer hurmatch, Eastern Pike, which had 49 shot put and in lhe discus StaaiS dles,l4:95; Mark Clin!l (senior,
poiniS, was followed by Meigs (42) came in ftnt and Imboden second.
Chillicothe), · 800 meter run,
and Wellston (38).
In the tti-match with Wellston 1:58.25; and Aaron Griffm (freshIn lhe ,~s· match against Gal· and EasiCm Pike, Smith came in man, Wellston), WO meter dash,
lipolis, N' . Bentley rmished rust third in the 110-meter hurdles, 22:39.
.
' .
in the I 00-meler hurdles. In lhe Wyalt rust in the 100 meters, Mash
Rio Grande's 1600 meter relay
100-meter dash Jackie Swartz rm- second in the 400 meters and Cliad 1eam finished third at 3:23.18,
,
ished in ru-st, Stephanie Davis sec- McKinney lhird ..Edmonds founh while Reader was also third in the
ond and Amber Blackwelllhird, In in the 800 meters and once again dislrict in die triple jwn!::!t2 feet,
the 400-meler relay the team of W)'lllt rust in the 200 meters. The 8-1/4 inches. Murphy p
fourth
. ""•
Bonita Barley, Swartz, Davis and 400-meter relay team of Mash, in the high jump at six feel, six
,.
Blackwell placed rust. In lhe 400 . Edmonds, Smith and ImbOden won inches, In fiflh place were Cline,
meters Barley placed first and rust place while W)'lllt once again 1500 meier, 4:03.31; Griffin, 400
' ,'
Annie Brown second. In lhe 200 took top honors in lhe long jump. meter, 49.79; Branl McLaughlin
meters, Swartz placed rtnt, ~lack­ StaaiS came in second in the high (freshman, Little Hocking), 3000
well second and Bentley lhird.. In jump, Imboden second in the shot meter run, 15:22.50; and Brian
lhe shot put, Bentley took home top pul and Slallls first in lhe discus.
Brelsford _(freshman, Wesl
••
honors. In lhe long jump Davis finished in firsl, B~ley second and
Brown won lhe high JWDp .
•
In the tti-mBICb with Wellston
and Easlem Pike, Bentley fmished
. second in lhe 100-me&amp;er hurdles,
and Davis llld Swanz finished secTwo Meigs High School gradu- .
ond and third in the 100-meter
'
continue to shin\\ for Kentucky
ates
.dash. In the 1600 meters Alison
Summer
Time
Is
Back
And
So
Are
Our
Gerlach finished lhinf and the 4()(). · Christian Colleae's basdlall team.
•
Chris Stewart and Joey Snydu
Lunch Hours, And Just In Time For
meter relay 1e1111 of Swanz, Barley,
Davis 10d Blackwell once agam helped lead KCC 10 two wins in_a
Those Great Summer Salads.
took top honors. Gerlach placed in round-robin IOUI'IIIIIIent in Uncoin
lhinl pl8llC in the 800 me~m, while Ill., last weekend. KCC defeated
'
in lhe 200 meters Swartz placed Cincinnati Bible CoUeae 10-0 and
,.
fusl, Blactwelllhinl 10d Bentley Lincoln Cluistian 13-1.
Snyder, a junior, had lhe hot lilt
founh. Davis and Barley placed
for
KCC, goina 5 for 9 wilh a twoone ~two in the long jump while
Brown
in second in the high run home run and five RBis, while
NOW OPEN: Tuea., Wed.- Thura.
Stewart ,a fleshman, picted up his
jump.
11 am.-1 pm and 4 p.m.-11 p.m.
For the boys in lhe meet wilh secol)d win in ~~we 1t1t11 pilchina
Friday: 11 a.m.-1 p.m. and 4 p.m.-12 Midnight
GaUipolis in the 110-merer h..-dles a tbree-hilter against Cincinnati
.
Saturday: 4 p.m.-12 Midnight
·
"·
Brent Smith finished first and Bible College slriting but 12 and ·
"
Sunday: 4 p.m.-1 A.M.
Phillip Edmon$ second. In the 100 walking !lniY one.
y
(

Meigs, GARS junior high
track teams claim victories

. ..

..
..

Meigs grads help
KCC to victories

D &amp; M PIZZA

State Routt 124 • Syracuse, Oh.

..

..

..

And Don't Forget Our Own
MARTY'S MIDGET PIZZA
Perfect For Lunch

.-

.

against DetroiJ, The vicl()ry__ went to relievu Mite
Timlin, 3.0, who replaced SWter Denis Boucher to
Robin Hood has nothing on Rickey Henderson
start the fifth and allowed a pair of runs in dwe and
these days- and !10011, neilher will Lou Brock. Havone-tbir4 · · Duane Ward pitched the ninlh for
ing tied Brock's aU-time SIOien base record Sunday,
his fifth sa~ J.eil«, 0-1, took the loa.
Oaldand's all-sw left fielder is 90 feet away from
Orioles 5, Brewen 4 - At Baltimore, Craig
~
being basdlllll's "Prince of Thieves "
WonhingtOn singled across Cal Ripken with the winKenderson tied the Hall of Farner's record in the
ning run wilh two ouiS in the eiJhth innin&amp; against
sixth inning of Oakland's 7-3 victory over .lhe Cali~
Milwaukee. Itipkcn drove in four runs. Olegg Olson
fomia Angels.
.
·
notched Jtis second save, piaerving lhe win for Bob
He was hit by California's Jeff Robinson's pitch
Milacki, 1-0. Milacki pitched five and onewith one out and he swiped second on a 1-2 pitch to .lhirdinnings of one-hit relict, strildDg out one and
Lance Blankenship. He easily beat lhe throw by Cali· . wallrina two.
fomia catcher Lance Parrish for his 938th career
Twlas 8, Marlaen 2 - At MlMeapolis, Jack.
srtal.
Morris earned his 200th career ·victory and Kirby
..
"I wasn't looking any particular pitch, but just
Puckett drove in three runs against Seaule. The
uying to ga a decent jump,'' said Henderson, who _Twins have woo five in a row and seven of their last
had missed 14 games wilh a strained right calf mus·
eighL Puctdl hit a solo homer in the rust and put lhe
cle before returning Saturday against California.
Twins ahtad 2-1 in third with an RBI Single. He also
-"Jeff Robinson is mainly a fodtball pitcher, so that
scored in the sixlh and drove in lhe Twins' sevenlh
makes it a lillle easier. " ·
· '
run. Morris, 2-3, pitched six innings, giving up two
The 32-year-old outfielder tied lhe record in his
runs on seven hill, walking two and strikins out
121h major-league season. Brock set his record in 18
three.
seasons.
.
.
.
Wltite Sox 4,.Yaakeei J - At Chicago, Prank
Henderson, who went hitless in four at·bats Sablr· · Thomas hit a solo homer llld an RBI single, and Jack
day in his rust game back after missing .14 straight
McDowell, 4·1; allowed five hill over sev~ and
contests with a strained calf muscle, led off Sunday's
twO-third innings apinst New York. Bobby Thigpen
game in Oakland, which the A's won 7-3. HeaTIES BROCK - Oakland's Rickey Render·
game with a single off California starter Jim Abbott.
startCd the nintli and picked up his sixth il8ve. Losing
dersoo 's steal -his 938th in his U-year career
son (right) slides Into secoad base ahead of tbe
He attempted to steal on lhe second pitch to Blankenpitcher Chuck Cary; 1-2, making his first start in 10
- tied Lou Brock's career stolen base mark.
throw from the plate to California shortstop
~ip,. but was picked off and tagged out in a rundown.
days because of a rainout, ICIIllered five hilS over six
(UPI)
Dick Scbolleld Ia tbe sixth inniag of Sunday's
'Naturally, I had il in mind that I might reinjure
and one-third innings. He struck out four and walked
myself. I'm not 100 percent.yet from my calf-muscle
seven.
pull and I need to woik on my legs to get lhem comIadlans 4, Raneen l - AI Arlington, Texas,
pletely in shape ...
Eric KinJ. 2·2, threw a six-hiller over eight and onePitcher Dave Stewart snapped a personal twolhir\1 inrungs for Cleveland. He wallred none and did
game losing Sll'Calt. Stewart, 2·2, scallered seven hits
" When lhis team gets in its
not all~w a runner l?ast second until lhe Rangers
By DEAN SCHABNER
ana has a 2-9 playoff record l!Dd
over seven innings as lhe Athletics completed a 1 scored lheir first run m the eighlh. After lhe Rangers ·
rhythm, we're very hard to stop,"
UPI Sports Writer
has never won a series.
sweep of their weekend s.eri.es against Califomi(l.
.
scored again in lhe ninlh, Doug Jones recorded lhe
The Indiana Pacers have heard
''I think tli'e team matured ' Hill said.
~leve Chilren pitched hitless ball for final two
final tWO OUIS for his rtflh save. Texas Starter Bobby
"They shot the lighls out of
aU lhe talk about lhe imponance of · loday, lhey had to, to win a game
innings.
·
Witt, 1-2, gave up seven hits.and seven walks .ovu
experience in the playoffs. They like Ibis," Pacers head coach Bob us," Celtics head coach Chris Fonl
. California starter Jim Abbott, 0-4, gave up five
said. '-'We were able to score, we
eigh1 innings.
just aren't interested.
Hill said.
runs and eight hits over four and two-third innings,
·
Red Sox l, Royals I -At Kansas City, Mo.,
"Young legs and ·determination,
Even Larry Bird, whose lale· just weren't able to defend."
walkina ~and striking out four.
Fill-in starter Dana Kiecker allowed five hits over
Indiana too_k lhe lead for good
that can oven:ome a lot of experi· game heroics lifted lhe Cellics to
Elsewhere in the American League, Toronto
five and one-third innings and Mike Greenwell
ence," said Chuck Person , who victory in lhe fu-sl game, noltced. wilh a 13-2 surge midway lhrough
topped Detroit 9·6, Minnesoll downed Seattle 8-2,
knocked ·in two runs 10 lift the Royals. Kiecker, 1·0,
scored 39 poiniS Sunday, leading · But then he had a close look, 1he third quarter. Vern Fleming
B8ftimore edged Milwaukee S-4, Chicago defeated was given lhe stan Friday after Commissioner Fay · the Pacers to a 130-118 victory guarding Person as the Pacers for- started the run wilh three baskets
New York 4-1, Cleveland beat Texas 4·2, and BOSIDII
Vincent upheld the five-game, $10,000 suspension of
ovulbeCelticsatBostonGardel). ward hit 16 of 24 field goal and Detlef Schrempf added a/·ump·
beat Kansas City 2-1.
The victory evens lhe besl-of· attempts, including seven straight hook . Person finished il of wilh
Roger Clemens. He suuck ou1 six and walked one
. Blue Jays 9, Tigers 6 - At Toro~to, Devon
before yielding to Tony Fossas. Jeff Reardon pitched
his sixth lh~-pointer and a jumper :
five ru:st round series at one game from three-point range.
While and Roberto Alomar each drove home two
·
d
·
h
p
lh
"
Chuck
was
great
today,"
Bird
the final one and one-third innings for his sevenlh
aptece an gtves .t e acers e said. "Time afler lime, when we. that gave Indiana an 82· 77 lead a1 '
111ns and Glenallen Hill colleclcd four hits, including
save. Tom Gordon fell to 1-1.
4: 16. Boston was never again clos·
home coun advaniBge. The series
a solo homer, to plice lhe Blue Jays' IS-hit attack
. moves to Indianapolis for Games 3 started making a run, Chuck hit a er lhan three points.
and 4·Wednesday and Friday.
big shot and demoralized us a ltltle
Indiana, whi ch had won just
The Celtics entered the game blt. "
three of iiS previous 29 games a1 ·:
wilh far !!lore post-season experi·
J:{e was impressed enough to Boston Garden, also received 24
ence, lhe 12-man roster having a · mention it to Person on !.he court. points from Micheal Williams and
total of 485 playoff games experi- Late in the second half Sunday 15 from Reggie Miller.
·
•
prove you can pitch."'
·
CINCINNATI (UPI) -A slider scored on a Mark Grace single.
ence
while
Indiana
had
jus!
70.
The
Bird
stopped
lhe
verbal
battering
For
Boston
,
which
is
lrying
to
The Reds took a 2-1 lead in lhe
AI Osuna came on at the start of
actded to his repertoire during
spring traiping has helped Cincin- third inning. Joe Oliver led off wilh lhe eighlh inning for Houston and ·Boston starters have a total of 331 he and Person have been trading avoid first -round elimination for •
nati Reds rookie Chris Hammond il single and moved to second on Dwayne Henry retired lhe final two playoff games experience com . lhrough lhe two games IO acknowl- the third straight year, Brian Shaw
edge the Pacer forward's perfor- and Reggie Lewis scored 22 points
right fielder Andre Dawson's error. bailers in lhe ninth inning to cam pared to 23for the Pacers.
get off to a fast start lhis season.
The Celtics have won 61 of lhe mance.
each, Robert Pari sh had 21 and
Hammond, inserled into the Oliver wenl 10 third on Ham- his second save.
82
playoff
series
lbey
have
been
in,
"
It
really
touched
a
place
in
my
Kevin McHale 20.
.
mood's
single
·and
scored
when
Atlanla
starter
Tom
Glavine,
2·
Cincinnati rotation this spring,
lhe
best
n:cord
in
lhe
league.
Indi·
heart."
said
Person,
to
whom
Bird
Bird, whose bad back forced
Chris
Sabo
hit
into
a
double
play.
2,
gave
up
two
runs
and
eight
hits
gave up a run and six hits over
has long been an idol. "It's some· him to go into traction the night '
The
Reds
made
it
3·1
in
1~e
over
eighl
innings,
walking
one
and
seven inninp Sunday, leading lhe
~~.rm always going to remem- afler Game 1, played 40 minutes in
Reds to a 4-3 victory over the fourth when Barry Larkin singled striking out eight. Glavine ,has
Game 2 an(! scored 18 points but . '
and
look
second
when
Sandberg
never
beaten
·1he
Aslros
in
his
Chicago Cubs. ·
· . ·
The Pacers took the simplest hit jusl7 of 18 field-goal attempts.
fumbled
O'Neill's
grounder.
lhree-year
career
and
now
is
0-7
' Hammond, 3-0, lowered his
route to victory Sunday: They hit
In other games Sunday, Detroit
earned-run average 10· 1.65 with Larkin took lhird when Hal Morris against them.
lheir
shots.
The
Pacers
nailed
50
of
stymied
Atlanta 101·98, Chicago
flied
out
and
scored
on
Todd
Ben"I
can't
seem
to
come
out
on
Sunday's perfonnance.
·
87 from lhe field, including 9of 13 held off New York 89-79 and Por·
zinger's
sacrifice
fly.
.
the
plus
side
againsl
them,"
"! .threw lhe slider well today,"
•
from lhree-point range.
Land dumped Sealtle 115-106.
•
Cincinnati added a run in the Glavine said. "S(IOner or later I'll
said lhe left-bander, who compiled
•
a 15-1 n:cord last year at Triple-A sixth when O'Neill walked and get them."
Casey Can4aele drove in the
Nashville before goina 0.2 with the scored on Morris' double to make
•
game's only runs with a two-oul,
•
Reds. "The slider helps my faslball it4-l.
•
By
GENE
CAD
DES
The
Cubs
scored
once
off
Dib·
two-run
double
in
the
seventh
and changeup, particularly since
•
UPI Sports Writer
•
I've now got lhe confidence to ble in lhe eighlh, wilh Dawson sin- inning,
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) gling to knock in Grace, and lbey
. Carl Nichols swted lhe rally by
throw it.n
.
Hammond outpitched Cubs vet- closed to wilhin 4-3 in lhe ninth. beating out an infteld hit wilh one Ohio State's quarterback scramble
eran Rick Sutcliffe, 1-2, who gave Shawon Dunston led off lhe ninlh out. Afrer pinch hitter Dave Rhode remained jusl lhat Saturday after
up four runs and seven hilS ovu six with a single, stole second and lined out, Mark McLemore singled lhe Buckeyes wound up spring
iMings before Les Lancaster and scored on Jerome Walton's 1wo-out to move Nichols to second. Can· drills wilh the annual Scarlet and .
· 1e
daele lhen lined a double into the Gray "game." before an estimaled
· Chuck McElroy finished up. .
smgIn other
·
National
Lea~
action
righl field comer to score bolh run- 35,000 persons in Ohio Slaclium.
"I haven't 1911he whOle ~ing
.,
Kent Graham, Kirk Herbstrcil
·
... put together yel," said Sutcliffe, Sunday, Hoilslbli downed 'AUanta . ncrs. · "We're definiiCly having trou· and Joe Picken!;, the three battling
''
who came off the disabled list 2·0, Philadelphia hammered San
Diego
9-2,
Piusburgh
thumped
ble
scoriitg," Canclaele said. "We to replace Greg Frey at quarterback
Aorill7. "I'm inconsistent, partic.,
ufarly out of the stretch 10d I'm New York 7-3, Montreal blasted have only been averaging a run a for the Buckeyes next fall, each
just not taking the bat OUI of their SL Louis 9-6 and Los Angeles beat game, but you can't press. That engineered one touchdown drive in
SanFrancisco7-3.
would only make it worse. We !.he offense's (Gray) 23.0 win over
hands yet''
l
Astros
~Braves
0
have to sray loose. We have a lol of lhe defense (Scarlet) in what actuRob Dibble, who earned his
••
Jimmy Jones, who many young guys. We have to keep them ally was a full-sale scrimmage.
fourth 11ve for lhe Reds despite
..
If there was an early edge, it
being nicked for two runs on five though! was washed up after last from stressing out. We just have to
gone
to
Graham,
a
6might
have
hilS in lhe lasl two innings, threw season, is making the Houston help each· olher out until we get it
foot-5 , 235-pound senior-to-be
his way iniO lhe spotlight after die Asttos graleful ror ·giving him going.'·'
transfer from Notre Dame, who
anolher chance in lhe majors.
.
PbiUies 9, Padres 2
•
game.
••
also
led
1he
offense
on
anolher
Jones
scauered
five
hilS
over
At
Philadelphia,
Charlie
Hayes
Dibble, obviously upset by his
drive thai ended wilh a 28;
ineffective pitching, flung a base- seven innings and combined wilh capped a five-run rtnt innina wilh scoring
ball well over 300 feet into the cen· two relievers on a shutoul Sunday, a three-run homu and lhe Phillies yard Tim Williams field goai and
·'
had a 20-yard TD pass called back
ter-field stands while he and his leading lhe Astros to a 2.0 viciOry turned lheir rus1 triple play in 23 because
•'
of
a
penalty.
over
lhe
Atlanra
Braves.
years.
Jason
Grirqsley,
1-3,
gave
up
teammaiCs were congratulaling
'
"I can't tell you who lhe quar-·
Jones, 2·1, walked 1wo and three hils, walked six and struck
•
eich other near the pitching mound
after the victory. The ball reported· struck out three while making his out seven in seven innings for lhe terback is," head coach ,John
•
Cooper said. "Even if I knew in
ly hit a woman spectator on the third start within a 10-day period. · win. Eric Nolte, 3-1, was lhe loser.
my own mind who lhe quarterback
Pirates 7, Meta J
Thrust into the swting roiBtion
arm as she was peparina to~­
was going to be, I wouldn't tell
after
injuries
to
Mike
Scou
and
At
New
York,
Barry
Bonds
"I've got no commenl, " . Dibble
ISIAH KNOCKED DOWN - Atlanta backcourt arllst Spud
·you.
I wouldn't tell them.
Marie
Portugal,
Jones
now
is
3.0
in
drove
home
three
runs,
scored
I'CipOilded later. "If you guys (the
Webb
knocks Detroit point guard lslah Thomas to the noor in the
media) want to ~te a ~ ,Jbout four career srans in the Astrodome. twice and stole home to help PillS· · "The best thing we can do is let nrst half of Sunday's NBA playoff game in Auburn .Hills, Mich.,
"Hopefully il will be a long burtth's John Smiley become lhe lhose guys work hard the resl of the
it, go ahead .W wnre one.
career,"
Jones said.
Nauonal League's rust four-game spring, Slay here in lhe summertime wbich the Pistons won 101-88. (UPI)
•
· Reds General Manager Bob
and
work
in
our
conditioning
pro·
if
his
career
winner.
Smiley,
4-0,
aUowed
lh~
Jones
wasn't
sure
Quinn said the club would "look
was over this winter, when he was runs and six hits over five-plus gram and compete early in lhe fall.
into.. lhe incident.
Hammond, who also collected releasee~. by lhe New York Yankees innings. The Pirales built up a 7.0 We're going to need 'em all nexl
~.
•
two sin~les, struek out four Cubs in ·and failed 1o latch on wilh any . lead after two innings againsl New
"I
think
all
three
of
them
did
PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL
Oilier
!li'Rani2ation.
Yolk's
Ron
Darling,
1-2
.
succesSIOII in the founh and fiflh
some good lbings. Kent Graham
The third pick of lhe 1982 amaExpos 9, Cardinals 6
innings - Sutcliffe, Jerome WaiI•
At SL Louis, Marquis Grissom and Joe Pickens bolh lhrow lhe ball
Ion, Ryne Sll!ndb-e_rg and Mark leur draft, Jones was listed among
the !Op five jliospec:IS in all of base· went 4-fer-5 wilh five RBI, includ- pretty well. Herbstreit's lhe beuer.
Grace - while waltiiiJI only two.
ball
when he was in the San Diego ing a grand slam, to help the Expos scramblu than the olher two. I'm
"I got slronget an Ihe later
•
organization.
But afiCr pitcl!ing .a snap a seven-game losing streak. pleased wilh lhe progress all three
· · and I didii't run out of gas
'
m:fdid in Hous10n (on April one-hilter agamst Houston 10 hiS · With the score tied S-S in the of lhose guys have made.''
Fullback Scottie Graham scored
23) " Hammond aid. "But lhey major-league debul in 1986, the eighlh, Grissom lofted an 0-1 piu:h
conSIBDtly struggled just inside the left-field pole fer his two of lhe touChdowns on one-yard
•
JOIIIC-~ ~lays behind me ris~t-lwtder
•
runs,
while
Troy
Lopes'
three-yard
against
big-league
hi11C11.
first
career
grand
slam.
Tun
Burke,
thalleally he
• ;
.
•
run
accounted
for
lhe
other.
•
Traded to the Y..UCS as part of · 2-1, pitched two-thirds of an inning
. Hammon jammed an ankle
•
Robert Smith, last year's UPI
•
die
Jack Clart deal in 1988, Jones for the win. The loss wenlto Mite
slkling into second biSe wbi~ lry·
•
national freshman of lhe year, was
reached
a
low
point
in
his
career
Perez,
0-1.
inlt to~a double...., m the
lhe
scrimmage
'a
leading
rusher
'
Dodgen 7, Glula 3
th&amp;d. .
the said~t('didn't when he failed to crack a weat
'
New
Yort
pitching
staff.
He
spent
AI
Los
Angeles, Kevin Gross wilh 100 yards on lS carries,
'
affect m)'
hinJil all."
••
Paal o ·u peced the aeven-hit two yean at Triple-A Columbus limited San Francisco to four hilS includinj a 23-yard run to the Scar·
let
2S
yad
line
on
Graham's
touch·
•
befote
being
released
in
OciOber.
over
six
ilminp
llld
Mike
SlwperReds allaCk.witlt a leadoff homer in
•
down
drive.
POI'IIm"'tty
far
Jones,
the
Astros
1011
drove
home
two
runs
witltouu
the second lnninl, his fourth of the
••
The IOuchdown enpneered by
seuon and thinl in the pasl tllree remembered his suc:cen against hit for the Dodgers. Gross, 1-~. Herbstreit, a redshirt junior next
•
them and invited him to spring suuck out nine and walked none,
•
•r
came on an 80-yard drive and
~i saw some pitches I could training. While with the Padres, ~g only a fourth·innin&amp; solo fall,
was
helped
along
by
a
15-yard
pus
to WUiie MeGee. John Burdrive," O'Neill IBid. "But I had Jones went 3-0 wilh a 1.29 earned·
interference penalty. Herbstreit also
•
run.~1
erage.
.
.
.
.
~
2-three2,
uddathe-~ while pitch- had a 19-yard (1111 completion 10
some bad aa-blls 1110, and I need to
came
mto
spnng
trammg
·mg
oo
ys
.......
••
be more consisiCDL"
.
Bernard Edwards to the Scarlet 27.
RAINING
Aftrlr O'Neill gave the Reds a 1· want1n1r the ball as much as I could
•
The final TD of lhe scrimmage,
IT'S
•
o lead, the Cubl evened the score Jel it.'" Jones said. "I just wanled
engineered by Plcltens, covered 58
••
BARGAINS ...
in the lhird. Jerome Walton beat to prove I could still pitch. When
yards
in
just
five
playa,
lhe
big
one
•
we bad a couple of guys get hun
ia the
OUI a twO-OUt~.~ to sec· lhey said, 'Here's the ball. Now
a 44-yard pass to wide receiver
.
CLASSIFIEDS
ond 011 Ryae s
umgle and
·Jesse Prewitt to the Scarlet II.

Indiana upsets Boston 130-118

Redwomen win three out of
four weekend softball gam.es

enor.

.

B;r SCOTr ZUCKER
UPI Sport~~ Writer

Tuesdar

: Debbie Dixon Qunior, Wellston)
led the Rio ladies wilh two hits,
and wenl on in lhe second game 10
post lhree hilS, two of lhem dou·
bles, 10 keep lhe visitors at bay and
permit the Redwomel) to record
lheir fim twO' wins in Mid-Ohio
Conference action.
Joseph ·was again the pitcher
and allowed lhe Lady Blue KnighiS

April II- Mia-tt'll· 2. Sl Lwill

Henderson's sixth-inning steal
ties Brock's stolen base record

bact to record four runs of lheir clean up with an ae!diti~ eig~l;
own 11 lbe bottom of lbc inning, . runs 10 i:onclude thetr sconng. Rio,_
thanb in pan to Wzigbt, who was urande got back on tract at ·the
two for three overalf, n:corded a boltom of the inning when a double
pair of home runs (including a by Roser sparked a lale offensive
grand slam). and had five RBis to effon lhat led to lhp hosll ' only
his credit
runs of the contest.
Botlt teams exchanged lhe lead
Rio Grande had five hila and
untillhe fifth inning when the Red· three errors while Dick Fishmen, leading 12-11, broke oul fer baugh's Oilers, who improdv~ hto
three more runs at lhe top of lhe 18-16 on their season, hac e1g ~
sixth. Otterbein responded al lhe hilS and a single error. Roser was
bottom of the inning wilh two, bul oneforonefordleR.en,aswas
not enough to ernse lhe Rio Grande · Young, while HalriSOil was two for
lead.
two wilh a lriple to fuellhe offenThe Redmen had 12 hits and · sive effort. ·
.·
.
four errors to Ouerbein's U·hit · Brian Hoy was two for five wilh
attack and one error finish. Beiidcs two runs scored to his Credit to lead
Wrighl, Rio Grande's hil hparade Otterbein,
while
.
'th Bob~ieel was
was led by Sharfenater, w o was one for two w1 a s
run to
lhree for four with two runs and assist the visiiOI'S. Wright took lhe
Young, wh!J was two for tltree wilh ioss for Rio Grande as piu:ber. ·
a run.
"Today's effort WIS very good,
Otterbein's Eric Miller was four especially after having such a
for four with the home run that demoralizing loss at Walsh,"
started 'lhe game, while teammate Oglesby remarl(ed. "Each of our
Todd McCoy went tl.tree for four. four slarting pitchers were tired~ so
Randy Linkous had the loss and we really couldn't get anlthmgAllen Elliott (freshman, Gallipolis) sWted with pitching, but think
was crediled with 1he win after lhe ef(ort we got from our relievers
relieving Voorheis and Chad Car· was decent." .
·
roll. EUiott's season record went 10
The Redmen return to district
1·1.
action
all p.m. for a doul
The visitors ~" off for a 5·0 bleheader against lhe University of
lead by the top of lhe sixlh in lhe F"Jadlay,to 6c played at Westerville
second game and proceeded to South High SchoOl.
,

The young but talented Vniversity of Rio 'Grande -softball team
has endured iiS share of IOS$l5 this
season, but was due to pick up
some wins before the end of lhe
campaign.
The tide turned this weekend fer
lhe Redwomen, coached by Angelo
Forte, when lhey swept a twin bill
wilh Urbana Umversity 1.0 and 8-7
on Sablrday and split wilh Mount
St. Joseph for a 10-9 win in extra
innings and a 3-2 loss in die nighl·
cap Sunday. Both doubleheaders
were played at Stanley L. Evans
.
Field.
Angie Joseph (freshman, Groveport) pitched a \wo-hiuer against
· the Lady Blue Kni3h1S while the
Redwomen n:corded four hilS and
limited lheir errors to two 10 win
lhe opener. Urbana committed one

Patrldt; Division

Chioor 14, Now Y..t 9

Teu~ 4, CIIWIIaDd

took us that far."
toss and went to 3-2 on the season:
In spiiC of the loss of the MOC Rob Kancler was w~ pill:her.
title, the Redmen, 22-13 after splitIn the ftrst same, thJn&amp;s went
ting with Oaerbein Sundar, lead more agreeably for the Rio men
District 22 and remain potsed 10 when rluovldvancc:d on two runs in
win the district crown should lhey lhe ruiifnning and DOllied IIIOther
sweep their remaining six games. two in the ICCOJid. W'abh IICXIIed its
Entering action this week, Rio rust run on a bomer It the bottom
Grande is 12-4 in district standings. of the second, bul the Rcdmen
in lhe second game with Walsh, cinched die win in the sixth when it.
the Cavaliers scored a run in lhe scored two runs. The Cavaliers also
ftrst inning and kept the Redmen at had two runs in the sevenlh.
bay until the fourth, when Rio
James Lewis (junior, Cincinnati)
Grande, benefiting from a lfiO for went two fer 11we for lhe Redmen
four performance by Eric McLean and was backed by 1eammates
(freshman, Columbus),and a one · Herb Sharfenaltec (senior, Colwn(or two effon from Jason Wright bus), Gary Harrison (senior, Gal·
(sophomore, Carroll), got on lhe lipolis) and-Wes Young (so=o.scoreboard wilh a run to tie.
more, Pomeroy.) y ouna and
•
The Redme!! exploded fer three fenaker were eacb one for two and
runs at lhe lOp of the sevenlh, bul Harrison was one for one.
. Walsh answered with three of iiS
Darrell Malcom (senior, Hamil·
own 11 the bottom of the inning to ton) advanced to 6-3 on lhe seasoo
deadlock lhe score at 4-4. Errors · with the win from the pilchlng
and inability to strike out· any mound, where he held the Cava·
Walsh hitters in lhe extra inning liers to four bitS. Todd Whalen and
lhen combined to allow lhe Cava- Chad Beeching were succc;ssful in
liers to posl the gam~-winning run limiting the Redmen to seven hits,
and seize lhe championship.
while Jeff Graffice was the hosiS'
The Rednien ~ eight hits and !eliding bitter at one for two. Rio
committed two errors in lhe game, Grande committed two errors and
while Walsh was crediled wilh Walsh had one.
Split wiJb Otterbein
eight hits and three errors. Erik
, Longwell went two for lhree and
Back home SID!day, the Redmen
Tony Periandri also connected on rallied to hind Otterbein a 14-13
two of his tJtree,at·bats 10 lead lhe loss in an opening slugfest, but lost
lhe second flllle 13-3.
·
hitting for the Cavaliers.
Brad Roser (freshman,
Otterbem, nationally ranked
Delaware) started 1he game as prior to the sllrt of its season,
pitcher for Rio Grande, but was broke out for t1tree runs on a homer
relieved by Mike Voorheis (sopho- ' in t1tc ftrst inning, but lhe Redmen,
more, Lucasville), who took the stung by the Walsh loss, batlled

The Dally Sentlnei-Page--6 .

In Oakland's 7-3 win over California Sunday,

MOC title eludes Rio Grande with extra-inning loss.to Walsh
' The Mid-Ohio Conferenee blse·
"It was a big di11ppointmen1
ball championship went to Walsh because we had lhe championship
College Saturday when lhe Cava- in our hands and Walsh bad just
liers , afler losing the opel)er, about _Biven up," Redmen Coach
defeated lhe visiting University of Dave Oglesby said. ''Then, all of a
Rio Grande by a single run in the sudden, we ma&lt;le mislakes , the
eighlh innina.
momentum IUmed and they wound
The Redmen fell 5-4 in the up wilh lhe win. This is probably
nightcap after posting a 6-3 wili in lhe most disappointing loss of my
die rust game. A sweep oflhe dou, coaching career.
.
blehmder played in Canton would
"But overall," Oglesby added..
· have given lhe Rio men the confer- "our team played tremendous baseencetitle,butlhelossoflhesecond · ball ucept for that last inning, so
game boosted Wals~ to 9-3 in the our guys should be. complimented
MOl;: and lhe sent the Redmen to for playing the kind of game that
8-4.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Re"s defeat Cubs 4-3 ·sunday

Gray downs
Iet 23 •0
s• Car
•
.In Q SU
. . sprtng
grid finale

~

JOHN A. WADE, M.D., Inc•

•.

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

•

"WE HAVE HEARINQ AIDS"

made

(304) 675-1244

•

I
•

(i;]

·. ..iT-- -·-· "
..

\

·----

~ ---

-

-~-· ··- · ·--·-

~·

_.. - ..

~ -­

1

I
'

�,.
,.., ....

' -

Page

6 The Dally Sentinel

WASHINGTON (UPI)- Serious crime rose 1 pen:ent in 1990, but
the violent incidenrs lhll worry most Americans increued by 10 percent, die FBI reported Sunday.
.

iC8i

stuclybll Earth's sbinullering aurora 10 find 0111 how ncb flickering

Ji&amp;IIIS ml&amp;lU malk enany missiles,

The asuonauu also used an
infrared tel~ called C1RRIS to
study the glow generated by the
shuttle's pusqe lhroagh wispy
aiOIIliC oxypn, awaiting word on
bow 10 fix a pair of data rccorder1
needed by four other experimonu
· that forced the crew to cancel 81
1eut one planned science obsa'Ya·
tion.
.
.
"ClRRlS says you're COllecting
real
good cilia for diem.'' payload
.
communicacor Burney o ·ocamp
radioed die asaonaurs from mission
conlrol after completing an obser·
Y8libn of die.-.
.
.
CIRRIS and lnllrumenrs aboard
a aateUite scheduled for launch
ovcmigbl Moaday are die lWO pri·
......... dlhc . • The
mary~';"poblem =four
:iivcly minor Cli~IS and
NASA officiala wd overall, the
flight was off 10 a flying 11111.
\'Of those four sensors, we
believe three of them can Slill get
slplficant science simply by per·
form~ JOIIIC ~-around proce·
dures, ' said NASA spokesman
Brian Wclcb.
.
One or &amp;be instruments, for
example, was act up ~onday to
study the etfects or a lhilllle roctct
firing in I'CICiadlto fully chatactorize lho nature of such exhaust

GOING OUT OF BUSINESS .

PICI~A-PAIR

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..... ..

1-Ctrd of Thenka
2 - ln M.mory
3-Annoucementa

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379 - W•Ina~

· .•,

a.n..a~ ~

SIIVicl ..... Tllh ....., '
Ill ftoud downllllllfdl wll111 1

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

11-Jr"it' a Vev_••bt•
19-For lilt or Trade

lVI'\\01 ~

1 15 - lchooll • Instruction
1&amp;-Aedio. TV. CB A1peir

17-Misc.U.niOua

Tr .Hr. pw 1.1:11111
2 1-lutK1WI 0PS~OJtunhy
22-Monl¥' to Lotn
2J-Prot•liDut III'YiHI

71 -Autol for lei•

73-V!I"I I 4 wyo·o
14- Motoreycl•
76-Bo•ts &amp; Motors tar I lie
71-AU1o Pwtt • Acc•tort•
77--Auto A•'• ;,
78-C•mping Equipment

34-lusin..s Building•
35-Lots &amp; &amp;ertegl

'7,-camp•• I Motor Hom11

33-Farma for Sal a

10130119 1fll

SHIUI I TREE ·
TIIM aH

915·1161

.

1171.~

St.
JIOMIIIOY, 0 .

BULLETIN BOARD

W&gt;l
•J

~

~

j

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

I

!
~

·~· I:

=. ...;

COWMIIA GAl 0' j
·
OHIO, INC.. ,
t&lt;ll :u. 21: Ill •• Ito
.

FLI!XIILI DILIVEIIY
CHMGI - 1:111 ..............
fiiOPOIIII ohal9o fDr til
....._.., . "" CGiumblt to

Cateh Gnat .~:
Bv,.laTbe &lt;~
Clatlli4etlel ,~·

t

UPHOLSTDY

IU•Ne. S.Ctlltl
II ••• ,.,,
Hand Tufting
Custom Dr11pee

·

36fMnE&gt;perieft..

614-991-1311
Wiley Whet We Do;
We Do Willi WI ley.
IO.If.l ••·

"··-

Public Notkie

iltDDL£POAT- Picture your family inthis beautiful.home!
2 stoty wtth 3 bedrooms. lovely fireplace and located on a .
'II ICe street. Irs all electric and.is carpeled. Th1s properly ha'
,n extra feature- rt has an assumable loan. So call for your
chowing·TOOAY! 'MAKE OFFER $38,400.00.

NOTICE TO I!DOIIII
In -rllo1101 wltll aoc·
tlon J07.H Dl tt. Olilo llo·
.... Coile, -lldllldl Wlli
Ill 11 livid "" till M....
County lloord of C0111ml8·
......... In their Ofl1co ....
GIUdln 1111 Courlliou11, Po·
......,.. Oltlo untl on
Mil\' I. 1H1.· The llldl
be.....,..." 2 p.m. on Mev
•• 11111111d , . , ·-for

WOLI:£ PEN'ID.- Appx. 22 acres of picture perfect Ia~ .

All hookups available w~h a pond f01 f1sh1ng. Askmg
AN OFFER!

~19 ,QOO .OO,MAKE
'
:

w•

·,NEW LISTING-.2 S101Y home w~h 51ots and a1car tmae.
HOME has 2·3 bedrooms, bath, some hardwood floors and 1
fireplace. This quaint place can be yours for ONLY

1111 folowlnt - . :
A -flllrloltod offloo
bullcllnl to llou• tile Mllp

$14,50f!:OO

WEW LISTIIG - RAINBOW RIDGE - Appru 16.82 acres

County 0ep

wrth a2 bedroom, II! bath mobile home. Talk about "coun·
lry tivinj.' this 1s i1! Many other features. Call about lhts steal
::- ONL~ $16,000.00.
'

d

'

..

-

NEW LISTING- COMMERCIAL BUILDING Ill POMEIOYI
Come •nd start your 011n business in this.2 story bu11d1nJ

Could be used for many lypes ol busmesses. ASKING

~19,9Qii.oo .

.

HENRY E. c ·LELAND .... ............. ... : aa2·11i1
JEAN TRUSSELL .......................... 141·2110
JO HILL ........ ;........... ..... ................ 111·4411
OFFICE ....................... ,.. ........ ., .... ~ IN·~II
I)

at- of Hu-

........... 11 Nortli

Tlllod' A-•· Mllldlopoot.
Olllo. IIIII loultllnt tlllll
DOftlllt of 1 ,OM 111...,. feet
mini-m
-·
11001111 toUI
_ ....
for ,..,
buldint lltould ~ for • ,.,
f10)_nth ......... ....
lion to ...., Nlcl .....
. . - tlllrty 1101 ...,. .or

.

JOU JIAY.HAVE WHAT SOMEBODY NEEDS! WE HAVE FAll·
lUES WAITING FOI MANY lYPES Of HOMES. YOUIS lAY
JUST BE WHAT Ofl£ OF THEM WAim LIST WITH US TODAY FOI FAST, COURTEOUS, EFFECTIVE ACTION.

22. 21.

GROOM
ROOM
(o~nplete

1111.11
1111.17 OF THIIIE·
v•ID CODI Alii ALIO
APPUCAIU.
.... ......... end ....
....... to: DIPAII'TMINT

,,,

lllouldln•dl thlt bidder 11
to prDVIcll molntMI- for
1M ....... end ~ ....... Of
1M building. • ... Ill•
....... fo ...............
~~~~~t• dDwil oot1t. ,....,. 0011.
llld
- ·forAdfll.
lioneltlldoWn
lptllllfllllliDnl
....

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

Yard Sale

..
pt, Plellant

&amp; VIcinity

CC..;;.,;;;;,.,;;M;;i.~r:'il~llof.iMI~y~:lliii.UO..i;. ~

vtlo Rldal. -

ford~ 104

-o--"'

C:..f 10,
... M3;-

1171,411-110J.

-EIMVical ond PluMbilll

-coracnr.wwn

Pomeroy, ·

-lloofllle

,........

-1-IE.-Ior
fFIIEE ESTIMATES I

Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

V. C. YOUNG 111

2 F8mllf RU11Wn1ae ...., ~,..

992-6215

P-or. Ohio ·

11·14-'90 lin

4 t:fl0..4:00. Doll c Rllldlnco- Ikon ltd.

:

--of

·-b

Open For !lprln1!

I'IMIII ......nllla
•Ev.,...lnp
Cr•flera. Grow you own
dried mewllla.
0 - Tliun. IIIN Set.

.CIRtpltte

......w....

Stop 1o Ce poro
frMI ..........

•

10·fi:"Sun. 12·1

........

147-4035

915-C.UJ
667-6179

51100

s. •. Jll,
,

•tl2/'tl/l

5-JI.'ID tf1

Rt. :MI,
7 ...... ,.... _

r Hilt. .
• ., loll Uloiow

buld·

•VInyllldtng
•llep'--'tlllt .

Ill olltllnod from

1M Cllrt Of 1M I""' of
M....cCounty CDIJimillloJio

Windows

.,. MIV:iMn 'the houra of

•Roofing

1:30 •·"'· 111d 4:30 MoliCIIw

dllou... ,rlcl8y.
The 11oort1 Of
County
CDIIImllllonorl lillY -Ire
oddllloioel DO'ItrMI fiiOVJ.
rdonl wltll ,... ..........
bidder
but nol
Umllod to tt.
of 1111 01"
lion
H nl·
oeeu t·
Tho hilt Of 1M _.._
IIIDIDIInl 1M IIIII 1111111 ilo
nlldftod ......., lid ....
, ......... Ofllo81ullfllne".
lltld•• 111111 fumllli dielr

m•
991·1772 I

JAIIIS

W'

lncludlr.

to....... ._..
,_

C111nty

Comet lulalllfa fillY ...,.

......... bltl or MiliCI the
IIIII IIIII for tho .........,

of

I'::::~:!!:::~!!!~
I·

PuiiiiC Notice

'~---.;..._..;._ _

,.

CourtlY Comm'u' n.-. ,...
- • tM rlglll to refiiCt ldiJ or
Ill loltla. •dlor port
lllofoof,

Mil" CountY

Commi11ID,..,.

M1oy H6l11111111r; Clorlt
f41 22, 21 2to

.., 1,1,117 .,. '

-..-

.,:1:4~

. ., 1111, - . . , lilly. -

RutCrllll,
1ng,
TY,·a
•-. ...

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO•

···--Wt

"Froo Elttmnoo"

Pl. 949-1111 .
or I ... 949-1161
NO SUNOA Y CAW

TII.COUm
IICYCUNG

OPEN 7 DAYS
A WEEK ·

"'"_.,,_

9 A.M. 'TIL 7 P.M .

•ln11118tlon

·

SPEEDY VAC loUdt
Thlnl IIIIH'1111rt, Oh6a
..... tPIII.
•
•
Quality
!.........
...,.. ,,...,,
.
• III'Anlli•, · -..e
, . Ylnl ltrul' '
Sweeper
.........
·,'

l ·ll·lfll

J&amp;L
INSULAnON

.

4 ....., Ill.... ~~2 1./1 ....

ClrJIOdt -

4·1·'fD•.I -·

IIIIIIIM-.&amp;mNGS
Now

- · ""' 1M .....

7

-1100111 A4llltfolno

698-6591

01110 IIYD •111

COIIniUCftON

Tho lloortl of

-~·-~a--.
lab tlllled. .... t111an .,......
2411234.

CARPENTER SERVICE

614-992-6820

CONMI'S

IISSilL &amp; IUIII

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

llbtty flO) ...,... All loltll

':::a' ·

Repair

12·'1 ......

lng -

Loll: 1 lilooktanblogll,llu
-rMIODolhlod,lilj ......

MOilLE HOME

Owllll' &amp; Optrotor

,_.,,

.9 92·6641 or
698·6164

-fobrlc1tld -

Grooming

For All •rllds
EMILEE MERINAR

CIDAI
CONSTIUCnON

·- ·

AI Olllo Vtii1tJ . . . .
Pllldna 2 Lal "' Rll 114- •
24s.a:d
~

........ OH
-Ytr.owt•h
• Ad.CINiyil
-

FREE ESTIMATES

f4)

- : I'I'IIIIIIIIIY flln, Ncr 011 L '

Stod/1

-

•I Mlillo''"

•Remodeling and
Home Ropalre
•Roofing
•Siding
•Palming
110 JOI TOO SMALL

Dill: 4-'11·11
Zto

If""'

YOUNG'S

3- 14-'9 J.tfn

-•n

,,

tt. 141
IUtl 4U·t•16 ., 1·IOII·IJ·2·S'967

741·2451

·D ••nmont Of ~rll

2Y_olil_.n.._..,

lrM. IIUb IIIII, - ' - .... IIiil •
whlll.
lind, . . . . . . . . .

L~cmt~ ·o.. Silffard ~oe~••· etf

-EIIWI$. OwiW
lt. I, 1111 ..... OH.

D"-

6 . LOit &amp; Found

4·5·91-1 110. ptl.

BENNETT'S ·

•High Qlo" on T'lt
Floor Flnlth

t

-whllo,CCicltlr
""""''
blicll end•
3 ,.. old;
IOW.w.n.

fREE ·mlMATES

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

•R•eonablt Rn•
•Ou811ty Wodk
•F- Eltlmi•C•raet H81 Felt Dry

1018,
Approved for pulolloetlon
In 1M Deily llntlnol,
Po~. Olllo M Aprl 22
end II. 1111 .
IIICOMMENDED:
Glen 0. IUaer, Cllllf
.
Dlvlllon Of """-tlon
Dill; 4-11·11
APIIROVED :
Frencoa I. lucllllolaor,

t:rHIIIsr~t:~::"t:
:·
4th Onlrl
••

All CONDITIONERS • HEAT PUNI'S and
F..NACES FOR MOllE &amp; DOUIUWIDE HOMES

........
Ttma ·

IOOFING

949·2168

CAIHT CIIAMIS
.... ftU fLOOI CAll

POMEROY, OHIO
992-2259

••

11-111'11 L W1ltastl

USED RAILIOAD JIES

-·.. ..

·-·l. . .

Real Estate General

4·:11·11· 1 mo. pd.

Gutters
Downspout•
Gutter Cleanirtg
Painting

HOUIII•LOTiti'ARMI
COMMERCIAL
'We Need U1dnp!
ll.S:tf.lfw

'

•'·

614·741-1904

•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD
BILL SLACK
992-2269

..MII.. ; '
DOml S. MNII,IIOIII

'

OHIO 45775-9626

NEW- IEPAII

Office 614·t91·11t6

\

·. IIITLAND,

lllflfffellf.

205 N. S.IIIOI Slrllt

SPACE AVAILABLE
·. 1 ~ ) ' AT-S5.00 PER DAY ,.....
•d
l..!.'...:.:~
· ..:::=.:::....:-=::..:...;;;.;.;..;_....J

... 1, ... 71·1

•·, 2·80.tfn

fiiiDUPOIT. 01110 4J 760"

,.,.

POOLS,
CISTERNS, UC.

IEMOVAL

· . !/1/tO/tfn

~--... ···-·· ii

,

au.

lEN'S APPUAJICI
SIIVICE
991·5SSS or

au •••rv.

PUCO.

992-SUS or 915-3561
Fiwn Past Office
I'OMBOY, ~

AU. uas .
. . . M .. OrWt

.l

bllll ......... "'

lEN'S APPLIANCE
SEIVICE

MICIOWAYI
OYIN IEPAII

........... ...,,_ :

, . , _ . . . . notloe . .

IICIIO OVIII$-$7t II'

4-:11·11· t mo. pel.

"'-llrlff• .

............
tiO,..Mof
· ; ; ; · . ; ; ; - ,3,000:Mof
l*leolllty - ....... Mof:
For .... 11.000 Mcf
- , _ _ t II
Mcf

UIIIIV--$115 .,
iBIDIS-I1U ., · '

992~1458

BOARD.

HAULING

-DATOIS-$100 .,

FREE ESTIMATES
SWVILt':\

WATER

tlll'riiS-S".,

D• .11UCKS
AYAUIU

:US-Alii £1tett WlritM

APPALACHIAN

WASIIIIS-,$ 100 .,

THIS l"xl"

T
.
il

._.,.c.._.

90MYW-.n

BULLDOZER and
BACKHOE WOIIK,
HOME SITES,
LANDCLEARING.
WATER •nd SEWER
UNES

72-TI!UCII.t for 1.&amp;1

31 - tfom• for Stlt
32-Mobilt Homn for Slit

usna...,Mas

HOWARD BROS.
EXCAVATING

18-Wanled To Do

~t::hi=!L .. l!T

c111-., ..,.,..

:.-:~:.==!':.r:

4-11-(6.tfn

'·~
'

t•rn•·r rh

PIL 949-1101
or 111.949-1160
'· Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALlS

4-23·, mo. pd.

. BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE
~
·. 4:30P.M. DAY BEFORE
1
I
PUBLICATION

i.

Al11l0Uill

14-Bu•in•• Tr1ining

•

fUJI. The Fleallll Delivery

·c,.- ...........

"AI IMIIIta•h Prlctl"

•ss

~liAJ.ITY

BISSELL
.UILDEIS

NEW GIIPS-........... 14

JIIcll ...

•.•

iJ~rby

CUSTOM IUILJ
HOMES &amp; GAIAGES

16141 915-4110

WMidJitod "" competitive ·

month f o r - '

by tldt mowttl(

11.

GOLF llssONS-SlO
6 for

VIO IUSOIIAIII
IIAVIIIfi-OS

l.-1111 \;ldlttlll'

t,,

I•I•

••DMam

17-MYiiclflftltft.Hfttntl

12 - liluatton Wanted
1.3- lnlurence

COUiriif CUll

, . !Itt pain .... ..
palnll...
Ltl ·fllt ... it for , ...

&amp;6-Petifor Ill•

Oet Reeaftc Fast

'

SIGNS

FREE EmMATES

LINDA'S
PAINTING

"

· "-er,oiiCI
me del-,·
,.. II lloaod, ';
1M c u - - DOntlnuo •;
to fillY tile Flulllll Delivery '0
Cliorgo dotenn- "" Co- ,

C:luttlllt

TRO~

1cron p,_ l'elt OHictl

••• for .. -mp..j
tlon for eHII itlonih, '"'II Ill ~

lumlole -

•G•.,.nol

PO.IOY

14-Misc. MercltencHH
1&amp;-Bulldtng luppU•

6&amp;7 - COolv~l•

..

,,

678 - Applt Grove
773 - MIIon

AND EVERYTHING UNDERNEAtH

992-5526

.10

.051.8¥

12-IIH!it... 53-Mtiqun

;,prV11:P('

M•on Co .. WV

458-Leon

.30
.42

11 -Hou.-old Go. .

1, - Hel11 Wanted

TUESOAY •PAP.EA
WEDNESDAY 'APER

.20

11'11' I I 11.111111 •. I'

Ctpl - clalifild ditpiiV. Butin•• Ctrd tnd leo II nofie•l
WiM •IIto IPPIM in tht Pt . Pl•••nt R1gister 1nd th• G1lll·
polit Otily Tribune. teaChing over 18.000 hom"
. :"" 11 :00A..M. SATURDAY .

.

ces

run-. broken upd8fiWiflll Nchwted

f IIII.II'YI'It•ill

MONOAY P.. PER

•

ROOFING

WE DO

I. L MASH
CAIPENIIY

ISWordl

., •.30/d•Y

•&amp; clluifi~ •IN-er1isement placid in Tl\t Deity Sentinel Ill! ·

DAY ,BEFORE ,PUBLICATIQN ,

0~

113.00

15

7 - V•d S1le !Paid in ,._,•nctl
8 - Public: Sal• • Auction
9-Wanted to lu,

'COP!cDEADLII"E -

•L8ncleQplng

14.0()
ti.OO
ti.OO

11
16
1&amp;
11

lor ~trrors fir~t d.., 1d runs in .,_.,I. Ctll befo'r• 2 :00p.m.
dl¥' 1ft111' public .. ion tO rnlkt COUIC1ion.
' ·
'Acfs: thlt must be paid in 1dv1nce 1ft
:
C1rd of ThMkl
• 1'"
In Memori·. ,

BU~_LEJIN

cu1tomer of cuttOmer-

thti amo11

tO
Monthly

.

·''

-

.,..;.. ·to

-G......
ooKitoh111e • lnhl
•VInyl Sldlno
•R-ation
•RepelrWodk

ATES

. M1iga, Getli• ot M110n countl.i mu11 be pr•

.

Clleio• will be ro- t
h...n 'll or Jlo.~
The muimUm 111• for ell . doliunhiiOl f_
CIIIJid) Meh IIIOftth.
1
llllloirill
""
Columbll
to
t
f
MAINLINE
DELIVEIIY ~­
cue om., o cunomer. CHAIIGE - 11111 clllivery'
ownoclt~~~llhlllllllllelmlll
...................1¥11111111 to) .
Oanerel s-Yico ..... rille,
• oolltecl . . COito. in
tllo• · ·tllrough
- - · -~J.
dlriiCtly
1 thlll· • ·
odclltlon. tile c u - - •
PUI'fiOIItofiCilitiH Df,j
PlY iny 1 ppl~ monthly
CultQmer Clla~~t lltllou... . Ml ..._.... plplllno IUflfl'
Her of Colulllbil. For IUch •
only 0111 C u - Chlcullomera.
lhe mut~nUm"
·
wHIIII•HIII~forNIHIIId
ahollbl t.21. ~
,,., 1;altltlofturvlcetoeny
one ICCOunt. Cult- II• por Mc;f per . llolllty I *
lhlll ·pey., Admlniltllllvo ~h.
:
·REQUEIT
F11 Of t20 month por
The AppiiiiiM ........ ;
'~!'Nqul,.menta llr¥ico IIIII 1M PUCO find tlllt 1111 •
i1 .... IVIIilllblo It I IUppil· pra11nt NtM for ... MrYicl :
....,111 chlriJI. . .
Ire unjult. Uft'f'IIFIIJII. ~·
GENERAL TRANIPOR· • llld lnMIIIIcltnt . .. yiiiii
.,
,...,..,,. compen..aon .. (
TAnON SEIIVICE II
rete ICIIoduil Ia e¥111•1111 to Colulllbil; find tlioil ... r - ~
111 ""•-•.wlloo-wt• .,ch.,..apro~mdlnllle I
Appl-n ,,. . jult tnd I
DOmply with the ~~~­
..... - wllprovtdtl \
_
'""" end condiiiOIIa Of _ , . _ , . _ .... l
Columbil'l 1-aportetlon
prllfii'IY dl¥01111 "" Colu"" I
llrlfll. ldJid who OOnMIIIIIIt . bl•
to ... p• ........: .... '
IH1t 300 Mcf per-··
The "'Illinium rete for oil
........... fll....
illllvollll "" Columbil to In .... fDrlll ,...,.._, In .... !
Applicdoft: ... and epprowa t
CUIIOntiO Of CUIIDIIIII•
,
... wltlidr-11 Of .... ....,. ••
...
111111..........
be ....
Gonorel
s-Yict
for ........ "'"' ... ......... • ..
.... all ,..... . 811 aolta. In .~:
lddltlon, tile • - ""'"' ,...
terlflafortiiMtll:
...... Ill .......
""""
......
PlY lilY lflplloeloll IIIOnthly
coatomor ,__
... ....... fUrlller ...... ..... .
only C u - Ch1191 · - - furtlloroelllf•
jull and ~
wtllll•.....,.foo ..... end ....., k
.•
......................... to lny pr-.
one - n t . CUlt- 11., GENERAL INFOIIMAnON '
lned on the current :
IMII -~ "" Adminllllltiw
~ 20
........
for 1M DOlt Dl Ill•· •
Fee Of
per por
11
................
-... ..... !
~~'Nqulromenta III'Vicl - I n a - I n
"""•- !
o1
11 I!D evlllololo It • IUppil- lhoulcl 1111 ••• 1..., In· ·
._ . ........
• Ill Plftlod In ful - I
LAIIOE GENERAL for NIH oirvlcel; Small 1
TRANSPOIITATION IER·
G...,.lledwlcei114.htor •
VICE - Tllla
..,........
to rela
. . .. .l.i
_ la
.. tr1111110rtet1on llrvlooe:
w11o .....,.,._ DDIIIfl.., wtth ,..,.. a ..... tnn.,-. _.
llle..,_II_IJid_. tlon ........ 10.0" tlont of Colu,..'a 11. , . G-.1 TfllllfiO teliool .... ·
partition tlrlffa, Md who vlcola 17.4".
. .
DOnMIIIII II 111111 11,000
TliHt -lid end 1 :
Mel YNo- ohert•• .,, 1011Djact to~ • •
vemloer 1 Md Octoloor 31, aMn111. tnaludlne aha"'" ro j
Mid tello dlllvort Of 1
· -fa1Dwln1
...,. """'· Ill
by "" ~•
miniiNJmof 1,100Mcf•ch ..
theto 'J!CO
_..,..,
......
flilll.
l
month. In addition, It 11111
~ of lducll ,.._,. Clllloii. 11-IIIIMndltlOni
wlllo!t ............ . A ...OOIIIUIIIplion INJII .
0111011 "'8¥ be ....... "" ....
'
be
DOIIIVmod In 1111 - billing month a of Apoll 1-.H Of llle PUCO. or 11W
througll Oetoloor.
h•~:::
lillY
H 1 oullo- filii to Ill
loW tile I'UCO.
'
AN PilliON, FIIIM, ' .
COIIPOIIATIQN.' 011 ~· !
chl1111dfDr1,100Mcfeut. IOCIATION · MAY~ PILE. '~·
lOIII · billing oato IIIII Jn. I'VIIIUANT TO Mlft.11 ,
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.........,: 1111 form Of tile
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cunomor of cunomtr·
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SMALL GENEIIAL
TIIANIPORTATION IER·
VICE Till
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who o-wiM comply with

me.

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tlon loivlot- .............

Instead of putting her in tbe
car's child safety scat, Carmen
Rodriguez held her crying child on
her lap as her husband drove. ·
On the way home, Rodriguez
made a lefi tum and die Clf was hil
by an oncoming van. The impecl
flung Veronica OUl of her mother's
arms into tile windshield. She died
of inassive head inj:lea.
·
Pollee conclu
lhc accident
was Rodriguez's fault, that be
failed 10 yield the rtabl 'of way 10
the van.
·
Three months later, he was
. charied with • unique hybrid
tyto Taws - vehicular llomiclde
and violatinl a 1983 Florida law
requiring motoriltalo ue fedenlly
approved, crash-tested child
ranint devices for dlildlm 5 and
under.

culllc fMt. In ldclltlon. •1011
oon--•pey•Cu•oChilli Of 17.40 P.,
- p e r month, rogercl111
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until the CUlt-Ills modi

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for 1111 DDnMimption llch.

Ca11,1t11 Ullt ef ¥.tltflllll

Open Monday, Tuesday, Wednelday,
Friday and Satu~ay
10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Only

SIMON'S

,

.,.

....da-eltnn.,-.

Dad facing trial in car safety-seat case

1m

_

Public Notice
COLUIIIIIIA GAS
OF OHIO. INC:

Days

11111 goes weD up ibcive die limo- ·
sphere and it's speciiiCUlar."
Running cwo months late ,
because of technical problcml. Dis- '
covory toot off on dlo IIOCOIIII shut·
de nussion this month 11 7:33 LIIL'
EDT Sunday, five days after die
ship wu grounded Tuesday by a
Caul!f engine-· . .
Circling the globe e~ 90 min- ·
, utes Ill an altilUde of 160 llli1el, die •.
ISlroniUIS spent the day c:hcaing,
out their $260 million payload, a l
battery of oxperimenlS primarily ·'
devoted
.
. to_,Sllalegic
__ ,_ ..;.... DefODIO
_.. Initia· · •
Uve anb•lll""""' J""""'WI•
.•
· The $oal of the flight. lhe first ,•
unclaSSified military ,mission in ~ ·
shuttle history, is co gather dall':':i
about how to locate and .track o:j
enemy missiles in ftigbl, a key ele· · i
ment of die SDI nmtm1111,
•~
While cririctC:i8frillbe contro- .,...
versial system could not stop an
all- out Soviet auack, supporters ·
say it could, in fact, protoc:l th~ '"
nation from at_tacks by. smaller ~
nations, cilina the succ:css of Paai·
ot missiles in shooting clOwn Iraqi
Scuds during tho PSiian Gulf War• •~ .
"What this mission tells us is !
what do our targets look like in tho
realislic space environment where )tool
we will have 10 fight/' sai~ ,
Michael Griffin, deputy for tech· •
nol~;~~Y. With die Strategic Defcnao ;..
ras.
. 'IZ
"We just were fascinated by Iniliative Organizalion,
If
Ill
goes
weD,
Coals
and.
Hamsome aurorae io the Southern
Hemisphere here," one of the mond will close out die oiglll-day •"$
astronauts radioed as the shuttle voyage wilb a Mojave Deaen land· . ,
sailed over Australia late Sunday. ing at ll:S? Lm. PDT onC:1611
"We're seeing some white aurorae Edwards Air Fm:c Base,
.;

plumes in space.
OthcrwiJc,,Discovery's sevenman Cl'ew was on or ahead ·of
schedule, despite one of tile most
compile~ lhultlo night plana
ever writteo. Early Monday, dlo
crew sUQOOssfully used the infrared
telescope to study lhe subde glow
produced by die shuttle as it
plowed through tenuous atomic
OXYJ!ell·
·
. The mission is being carried out
primarily to collec:t data for scien·
lists with the Slralr:gic Defonao lni·
tiative, or ''Star Wars,'' project,
who are trying to develop sensors
. .le of cletecrina elusive oncmy
IDlssilcs again~ a variOlf of back·
drops in lhe space environmcnL
On board Discovery arc Navy
C8pL Micbad CoalS, 4S, he com·
mMder: Air Force LL Col. Blaine
Hammond, 39,1he co-pilot; Gregory Harbaugh, 3S: Cliarlos Lacy
Veach, 46; Air Force Col. Guion
Bluford, 48; Richard Hicb, 3S; and
Air Force Lt. Col. Donald
McMonagle, 38.
. The primary goal of lbo 40th .
shuuie mission i~ 10 learn how 10
distinguish fast·mOving missiles in
different lighting conditions and
against a variety of space back·
drops .ranging from die black of
space to the nickering polar auro-

Ohio

• ·The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

Shuttle gathers 'Star Wars' data :·
CAPii CANA VERAI,., Fla.
(UPI) ;_ The Dilcovely UIIOIWIII
plowed throu&amp;h a full lillie of "Star
\Vats'' experiliaenu Monday,

1991

·'

the home were bcavily di!Mpd, ·
Officials did JIOl cleUrmine • dollar •
lou for Suadavb:om~:,uo ·•
lwN•IO of pre
fR
to·•
the building, Fire Dcpanmenr ·
...
Aboul 40 firefigluers extin· spokesman lim WeDs Slid. ·
auished die blaze in 27 · minulCS,
.The C111SC d the fire W8l under•
lil!t JIOl before die upper floors, of inyatjplioo.

$11111 and McLaren were li'Cil·
ed II Queen ol~ HoUywood
Presbyterian
Center for

billion and ~ as much as S9t only two or d.u'ec major cqntrac·
l)illion, roJOCting the bid from torS. . 1
Northrop Corp. and its parcner
"People will be gelling out of .
McDonnell Douglas Corp, Lock· the defense b!lsiness and focuslns
heed's angular YF-22 "Ligblning more on the noo-defenae aspectS or
2" ,Prototype blended stunning lheirCOIIIJ*Iics," Kolbssid.
&amp;Jillty with plenty of ltoalth and
Herbert Biker SpriDa. defen~
h1gh ~rformance, including die policy analyal for lbe Herilage
capability 10 cruise weD above the Foundation, said such diminished
speed of souild.
· numbers in die inch•tty could lead
Even before the ATF compcti- to aorious abnaos by companies,
don, the defense indu$1riallllse had particularly if the PenllgOII puts
bcgqn 10 .c:rode and will continue to ioo muc:b rcJilnee 011 one CUiDpellf
erode. CGmpaniol such I I tbt A1F for majOI"defenle IIOIIII,such a jCl
losers also will have 10 become flgbten.
. .
coniCnt with droppina it)to the role • "k'sllte 'the old aaP.nF. in lend·
of subcootracror aftcl yean on top ing,' • Baiu:r Spring said. 'If I'm a
of the hosp in the defense industry, bank ind a guy owes me $2,000,
Hanis ssid.
I've got him. If be owes me $200
While it seems unlikely that any million, he's got me."
defense giants will cease. to exist,
PoniiJOII officials acknowledge
the cumnt cnvinJ!unent could lead some companies could be in trou·
to friendly horizon Ill mergers · ble in die aftermath of the ATP
between previously top-echelon selection.
companies, wilb the maps likely
· "There is still a subs1ancial
10 be based on stock rather dian , funding IJise for the amart induscash because of the cash-flow diffi. tty out there;" Ali' Fon:e Secrc~~ry
. culties of some companies. Harria Donald Rice said. "Wbelhor il.will
said lhe result could mim1r lhe situ· sustain die same number of c:ompaation in 1967, when McDonnell nies as we've tnown in the past ...
merged ·with Douglas and North we will simply have to leave to
American Aviation R)erged with . markel forces to determine over
Rockwell Standard to form Rock· time."
well International.
In the ATP competition, each
"It will be more of a ·coopcra- side spent about $750 millioo out
tive lcind of thing wberc companies of lhe1r own pnckels in developing
with complementary PJOJ!f8li!S or their prototypes, with the loaors
technologies or relauons: fmding lhe ou.=r hard to swallow.
decide to get •dler" for the
Bu1 Rice · , "There c:enainly
of survival, Harris Slid.
isn't anythina in our plans dlat
Lawrcncc Korb, a seniOI: fcUow would mate any effon to repay
at the Brookings InsliluliOD and an those wb9 didn't JCl sela:led berc
sssiswu defenao secrelar)' during for whll lhcy have contributed.
the Roapn adminislralion, ssid the They purE money on tile line
winnowing process after die ATP and the competed strong!~ and
could lesve an in4usttial base with had !heir
at iL''

or

-----~ / Classifie
--

Monday, April

smdle inhalatim IIIII relcacd back
to d111y, ·Wall said. No other
injurica were reported.
.
~Tboy did a hol1 of a job,'' WiD

rlion

Defense ~ndustry due for sh~ke-~up

then: enough aimc outlhcle with·
ou1 having to mike oric lip?"
Rodriguez, a Nicaraguan
refugee and short-order cook,
agreed.
"It was an accident," be said.
"Why does the law wane to punish
me Oli lop of what bu almtdy happened 10 me? It's not going to
bring my daulhter blct to life. It's
not fair 10 have more misfonune
fall on me on top of what I have
11one through already." ·
·
· Prosecutor Sally Weintraub
said, "He drove ao rcc:ldessly that
be c••oed the dellh anolhor person. Why do !*Pie think lherc'sa
lower level of I'Ciji(JIIability for a
life if you 11ea pmnl?"
·
On tho morning of Aug. 3,
Ramiro anct Carm.eo Rodriguez
drove their
red Moore Carlo
10 a supennutet 10 buy milk, eggs
and cold medicine for 3-ycar-old
Veronica, wbo hid IWibned wllh
a fever and a lllh.
'

. .....

.

.,.

Monday, Aprll21, 1181

The homeless; lncludins a preJLOS ANGELES (UPl) - Two
~ oftics"l d•Nd into a bum- 111111 woman, fled into the neigh·
Jill Viclarilo boule 1114111CUed 12 borhood before police and fuehomolell people, int\lndiaa a JRI· fiahlln could
than about
IWII woman, wbo were lleepiq the fill. wan

sar

MIAMI ~PI) - Prosecutors
insist a father must face a jury for a
traffiC accident dtat killed his ailing
daughter, who was riding in her
motha''s arms inltead of a required
car SCSL
Jury selection was sel for Monday and expected 10 lake two days
in the vehicular homicide trial of
Ramiro de Jesus .Rodriguez, 30,
who may be tile fii'Sl parentlried in
lhc Uniled ·States for failing to use
a 1011 bolt for a child woo died in a
car. accidenL
The cue has P~UT~pled lettm to
the Illlde County Stale Attorney's
offiCC from all over the nation.
"Hasn't this man suffered
enough by losing his daughter?"
one lolllil' Slid. "Why should he be
puniiJJed lWicc?" S:WIIIIOOier.
"The communuy boheves the
osa:ution of this man is a mlscar~ of jullice " Slid Rodri~z·s
lawyer, Rcemberco Diaz. 'This
wu a lfl&amp;lc: acciclenL 0~ isn't

. -... - . -.--

~--- ·

.

FB.!!h.l:

wake of Lockheed's victory in the
bettie for the last great military
cOntract of tile century, the defense
industry appears headed for a dramatic shake·up that w.ill render
some former industry giants men:
bit players or worse.
. (ndustry analysts are predicting
a. winnowing process among
defense- related firms following the
Air Fon:e's decisioo to give Lockh6ed the Advanced Tactical Fighter, with the losel's in the five-year
high-stakes competition 10 produce
America's next generation of jet
fighters aJrcady staggering.
And the prospect of tough times
for some defense contractors bas
sharpened concern about whelber
die Pentagon bu a responsibility II)
maintain the health of lhe induslrial
base in the interest of national
security.
The recent Persian Gulf War
notwithstanding, the United Stales
is already in an era of dwindling
defense spendin$, with few bigticket defense pnzes on the hori •
zon.
· •'There arc too many com~es
and not enough programs,' said
Lawrence Harris, defonao industry
analyst for tile Kemper Securities
Group. ".You can't rer,eaJtile law
· of supply and demand. '
The ATF project was designed
to, in lhe words of Defense Secretary Dick Cheney, give America "a
fighter !bat means control of the air
for die ncxt30 10 40 years."
·
. The Air Force aolected Lockheed COI]l. and two panners, Boe, ing Co. and General Dynamics
Colp., for an ATF c01111'8Ct that will
uanslatc into a minimum of $60

...'

Police resc11e ho11,1eless people from burning building .~.

inlldc.
"lf !bey '-ID'I J,llliell diem 0111,
thoae
people would bave bcea in
P10peacy crimes dropped 1 pc:rtCIIt. lhe now s•rieric• lbowed. But
big
IIOUble,
.. Pile Jltialmillt Bal·
the categories of violent crime, and murder and auravlted mault.
talioa Cbler Tom Curry lllid. 1101·
both rose 10 pm:cnt. forcible rape incrnml9 perta~l ll!d robbery wa
iDa
lllm01 nalnll!lroliah the
up by 11 pereent between 1989 and 1990.
dueo
.,.7bamo.
The new figures also showed 11111 motor vehicle theft rose S pen:eat
Oflicen Ons 511111 llld Cllig
'last year, 81'8011 WIS up 1 peatalt, burglary drojiped by 4 jlcroellt and
McLaren
were drivlag weal ol
;larceny and theft remained uncbanjlod
·.
.
downcown aboul 1 a.m. Sunday
· The
. annual preliminary Slalisucs l!fC provided to d!c
whea they aaw flames ·mood,
:enforcemeut agencies nationwide. The fmal 5gures will be .
·
lhroqh the rocl of die ...Mfone
this summer.
·
Vict.orlan home, police SJL Rick
"I wouldn't be prepared to
that things arc going to beD in a
Wlllllid.
, handjmket,'' said Aiffed BIWIISWII, dean of the School of Urbln and
The !Que bad been the sile d. a
•Public Affain • PiusburRh's Carnegie Mellon Univcnity. "But a 10
rue
cwo months qo and officers
~pc:rtCIIt growth rate in violont crimes in a year is of concern.' •
lmew bomolela people often slept
• "Obviously there are many causes of changes in crime," Bl~
damapd bUiJdiDa, WID Slid
-'Bid. "Overlaid 011 11111 is lhe drug poblau and dill conainly bu 101 · in the
After
summonina the fire
&gt;tO be conlributing to die murder growth. Homicide is pan of the 'diJ..
deplf1nlent,
the officers poundod
' pule resolution' process in that business.''
on tho front door and yelled for
Blumstein said, ' 'To the extent that addicted drug uaors are in a
anyone inlide to Jel OUI. Wllllllid.
,panic 1D get money for .drugs, then robbery is a lot mm: llllniCiivc 1D
"They beard noises indicating
' them than burglary. Robbery gers you money. Whereas burg~ and
someone was inside and IIIey
larceny arc more likely .fO gtve you a product - a TV set or a bicycle
forced the fronl door open," WID
-thai you then have to convert into money."
Slid. "The found lWO. women jusl
:. "Violent crime has rtaehed epidemic proponions in.lhis country,''
inside the ~t door l'ramic:ally II)'·
'Said Sen. Joseph Biden, [)..Del., chairman of lbe Senate 1udiciary
ing
10 open it 10 get out...
'
·commiueo. "Today's FBI repott confanns that the bloodabed and
·
.
As
die
women
fled.
they told die
~mayhem on our strcers arc out of ooritrol.''
offiCCIS dill other bomtlea -w..
·• In a statement, Bidon said, "We musc take sreps to reduc:c lhe viowere lli11 asleep inside die ~
lent crime dtat is destroying our cities and towns. The pn::sidcnt and
buildin , WaD Slid
·
•
Congress must pass tough measures 10 f.Pt crime, ban killer IISIIIUit
The~ offieers, 1nViDa fallinj
gqns and combat the epidemic of violence againlt women - before
debris
and thick amotc, 111111111ed
.the death roD grows evon higher."
10 find people asleep in lbree dif.
; Broken down by regions, the FBI figures show that there wss a 2
fen:nt bedrooms, Wall ssid
~t crime increase in die Northeast and Midwest Slates, no change
"They assiw those people in
an the South and a 1 percent crime drop in lbe WesL
geuing
OUl and lbea llltelllpced 10
, Murder rose 12 percent in the Northeast, II pen:enl in the South, 10
search tho aoc:ond floor, but were
percent in the West and 5 percent in the MidWCSL
.·.
.
pushed blct by heal and smoke,••
Rural areas showed an overall 1 percent drop in crime bolWCCn
Wall ssid;
'
.
.
'1989 and 1990. while suburban areas and cities with JIO{!ulations
Rotreacing from the flaming
greatcr than 50,000 people bolb recorded 1 pen:enl increases m report·
houao, die officers began yelling
~crime.
.
and throwing rocks lhrouah the
The new FBI statistics include a "crime index" that shows llellds
windows, WaD said. "Scvelll peo.
. since 1986.
pie
came 10 the windowl and reaJ..
The index revealed dtat lhe number of murders fell 3 percent from
izecllhll the Dllce - 011 &amp;e llld
1986 to 1987, lben rose 3 percent from 1987 to 1988, rose 2 pen:cru
managed 10 l'md their way out of
from 1988 10 1989 and lben jumped a full 10 percent from 1989 to
the building, exiting through the
1990.
'
front and the rear."

' WASHING10N (UPI)- In the

"

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Violent crl.me up
10 percent in 1990 .

,.

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Fumllhtd
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IJ8IA World Ja1 Slcl Tour
women's Tour Wrw-up

• CfOitflrt
7:31 (J) 8anfonl ...., ....
1:00 (J) • IIJ , , . . PrinCe ol
lei 11116 Wlllrwltn Altliley's
teen Idol, Utile T, to lilr
birtltclly 1111\Y. Stereo. g
(I) MOVIE: Mellioe1111 (2:001

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1112 N-un. 1411. ~h, ~~-

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22U Unaaln Aw, SilO.-.

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Sioux lndlarls •v.lhllr
sacred land. Sl1ife0. Q

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wlncllt'lld.

Gil

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USED

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APPLIANCES
•elilgMtlora,

ANHM••,

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~-Coll-7111.
LAYIII'II'UIINITUIII
---..J~~v
Gold, lfl!ld ...a
c:otlipllle lumlelifnao. dryer,
41 ttou11 1 for Rent ·
MouN: 11011 Ill:, N. ............. MUO 114 111:1 1111 iftor 7:00
SliJnn.......,_fii!We._. 11322, I onU. out lulawHie Rd. p.m.
1111111. . - . M . fltoltlt ...L FNe_llotMry.

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creator
27 Found a·
lions
28 Cleve·
land's

Fla. (TI

w-

t.:IO dll IIJ • Dellgnilig
Charllnt readjulll to
married life when Bill comes
hOITit. Stereo. Q

allordable

(J) FNIIII 1he loltom Up

YORE DADBURN
GIZZARD!!

.........

PICICNI'UIIIIITVIII

'I
lad Did To W : 2 .ory ar
c... Lol "' a..hln. Ohio.
boaltnt oon•lft. 104 e.
. . . . .4 ...7171.

People - k
housing In New York, beslc
govemmentserviCel In
Texas, and jobt In
Mlnnesola. (1 :001
• @. Nollhem ElqloiUrl
Joel reconsldtrl his plans to
move biCk to New York.

,\ I

32 Mobile Home•
for Sale

:a.:-I':CZ~
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-IIIUTII

ptpemaaters

On
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1100-1110..
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- ·- - - 8rllf'"'Yotrfl"'ftffd"' ft:""rh8 ASII'()olir•vli
- -- - -- - - - - - Malchmaker Instantly reveals
signs are romantically perfect for you.
Mall $2 to Matchmaker, c/o !his newspaper.' P.O. Box 91428. Cleveland, OH
4410 1·3428.
GEMINI (Miiy 21..JUM 201 The timing II
right today lor negotiating an arrangeBERNICE
men! wllh s&lt;imeone who doea not r..dl·
BEDE OSOL 1y
make concesslons or compromloee.
Thlt lndlvjdual's mood could be more
receptive now.
CANCER (June 11-July Dl Tl)jt Is a
good day IO 111ralghlen OUI IliON clotiets or clean up the aiiiC or &lt;*lar.
There's a chllliCII you mtghl rer:IIIO!Mihlng of vllue you either milplaCed or forgot ycu liad.
LIO (.luly 21-A.... II) A c:hettce Mal
encounllll' IOCIIY couiCI b!'lng YOII together wtlh an lndl'lillual
you'v.
belli 1rytng .-y fWd to reacli. Try 10
A4lril 30,
exploit lhla opporiUiit1Y to your
aclv......
Your chart 1nc11ca1.. 111111 you could be VIIIG0(-8 lnpl ZI)DoiiOI.-ry
more fortunate materially In the year
IOCIIY lboul whal lillY flliPI*i.
ahead th., you haYII been tor quill lnatliici, iOQII poaillv.Jy on lhe out·
sometime. Your luc~ will Intensity once come o1-11 wtlll the ,_t optimllllc
you've ..1abllahld aloundallon.
olendlltQI.
TAURUI (Aprllfiii.MaJ 201 An lnvoiYII- L..u (..... II OrL II) A fr1end ol
ment-. you lliare a -led lntar•
with anotlier lliOUid be g.- ptlorlly DOIIIIIIOo
lorWll
wltilm
1hiJIIII
. . ..
IIIII Mid Of IliNn
IIIII
Conllelerallon IOC!II'· Thll II iiOOIIIOIIIly. All you lry to buoy up your
VOU'ra likely to .enjOY the greatest ,.. lllldcly'a l$llrh. youre will be .,..llleel
warda. Know w~~ereoo loOk lor ro.mance

wnom

14

1111

Eleclllcel &amp;
Refrtgnlon

~-·

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'-·

''Thtlll the ltlnerlty few you ...encllhll
II the One tor yoiw lugglgt."

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IUCt·
22) YOU 'coutd
be extremely lucky today where your fi nances and reputation are concerned .
What may occur mtgnt lmpresa olliers
aa well ao ycuroetl.
.
IACIITTAIUUI (Now. 2W)ec. 211 Your
chilllU o1 coming out on lop In compel·
111ve lnvol-lo today 11 a lad better
than the oilier guy' I. However. 10 be on
the Nle tide, do ycur bell at II llmea.
CAPIIICOIIN (Dec. 22....... 111 A friend
of youra might come.to. ypur llld today
to 1110w rou liOW to get 'lomelhlng
you've beCIIy wanler:t. Even thoUgh thll
lncll'lidual'a metliOda may dill• lrom
yours~them a try.
AQU
( ...... IN'elt. Ill Tile opportunity yOU'V. belli hOping lor ma,
.,... toelay; You ooulel mille • big hit
wlltt 1011-te you ftnd txtr...-y ap..-r~n~~. Put yow bell fOOIIOIWIId, but·
CIOn'l retOrt to aflaclatton or pulling on
lllra.
PliCal (Pelt, 8 Mmlt 201 Be expectant 8nd ltOpeluiiOday, ~ I CI " ' lharll ,
.. • good Cllaltce LACiy lUCie may lillp •
you eel*,. your "'"' Important, cur· .
rent obtacJive.
AMI (lllicll Z1:Aprll 111 H you lei
your pall ...,.,..,._, both good and
bad, • your gulelt IOday, .,_.,.
tiling lllol*l out jualthe wrlf you
arttlllprle f!i 110111 the IOCiel and ro-

Hparlmenlo.

8CNNE..............
11171111 Club Willi PRII
Raila 110ft
111-.30 II]). M'A*I*H
~Cl h;~'Cfl q yoii:iitlng Boc Challenge
Around Alone, lag 4 CD
11:00 (J). (I) (J). ill) @.

material

•1

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SOUTH

'

tKI08 H

•to

tA743

• AK8

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Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: North
Soolli

WHI

3t
&amp;t

Pass
Pass

Norl-

Eaol

!NT

Pus

4•
Pass

Paoa
Puo

Opening lead:

...• -.•
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..

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.
king, ruffed the club eight in the dum· :::
my, and played off the three lOp ._,,
•
ds. He .t \••
o i~
hearts, disca rdl ng two dtamon
,
ruffed tbe heart fwo in hand, while _
West discarded a diamond. Now a
trump was led, e!)dplaying West, who •• u
had to lead a diamond away from !be •;.;:
king. Plus 980 and a gain of 14 IMPs. ..

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Night

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20 Bllillef
31 Like neon
21 Fight
32 Kingly
24 Happens 33 Wear
over
away
25 Speech
34 Copen 26 African .
hagen
mammal
natives
27 "The Fab 39 Lenient
Four·
· 41 Eggs,
29 Genetic
to
Caesar
stuff

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need
40 Enter a
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password
. 42 To. date
. ~ 43 Dildge
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4-29

11 :11(1) Loll WOIIda, Yw.-...cl
uwa Sir o.~~~c~ Attenborougll
expiOrea the ...aord,Of 1he
progmo of ... loCked In the
prthll10ric 8Ift ,_ ••
roc:k. (3:001
11:10 (J) e 0 Tonlghlllliow
SllriO.
.
(J) Marl Ulldn OOIIf

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One letter stands for another. In this !lllmple Ills used
for the three L's, X foi the two O's, etc. Single lettm,
apomophcs, the length and formation of the words arc
all hlnU.. Each day the code letters are dlfferenl.
.

Yioe

11:00

EAST
t7
• .9 7 6 ~ 3

...... . .

I~

IIJ ......
•on._.
a lulliall Tonight
8

11:31 (I) er-e Q

tQJ8
.10 ~

AXVIHRAAXR

(I) . . . CCMilt Q
C!)NIWWIICh
(J) Dawn It .... llowllll
II]) • Artenlo ...

• On

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asrerao.
8urfllig Marui

. .!. I NIWWIMS 09
OJ. 411tiNI tllfiNI
s.&gt;t:J3~:&gt; .HJ.
:11 U:JONOM 1

.
...

29 Grass
coating
30 Bright'
color
35 Actress
·
Hagen
36 - King
Cole

10:00(1)Ntwt
m Other Helf ~peaka

lrLL FIIIZf

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.,, , .. nfaa ....,..,.

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lake

S'terao, 1;11

1311:
.....

17 'Rink·

IUS

Ill Larly ICing Live!
0 8eiU!J •ncl .........,

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......

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mw
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-117W.Ior .. or

GOods

R WI I w
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8:00 (J) • IIJ . . . .heel .. lllrth'
NBC MandiiY Night Ell 1he
Movies (2:001 Sllreo. Q
(I) (J) e MOVII: 'ColUmbo
and ._ Munllr of a Rock ltllr' A1C Monclly
Mowla (2:001 Stmo.
~ otthe or1c1 ·
S'tereo. C
o•~~urp~~r lkOwn
Murphy Cli PEl I public flap
when a joke is taken as a
slur. Stereo. t:;l
Cll MutiC City ...... C111onll y
8ofi0wt111rt Awarda '!lie top
. country aongwrlllrs of 1890
are honored at the Clrancl Ole
Opry House, IIYII from
Nashville, TMVI. (1 :301
11
ProClearwater,
llaliCii
Yolleybal From

L1crcllc~lldls~

.........

L-aue ....l~l~braJIM
De MliiOr D1t11 Ounny

e~~ons....-

Country
- a l t l- i o i P
1'1111,
-U,N
-.

NORTH
tAJ4 3

coworker
&amp;Hand
DOWN
lotion
1 Eat
ingredient
loudly
10 Skater
2 Dike
Sonia
· 3 Ekberg
11 Explode
or Loos
4 - Tin Tin
13 Sheepish
14 Wide·
5 "No
mouthed
Adm~15 Convened
tance'
16 Snapshot
6 Taken18 Swindla
(sur·
19 Rich
prised)
color
7 GaloOI
22 Regret
8 Mystic
23 Remain·
answerers
der
,
9 Advocate
24 Thesau- 12 Belief$

carH tor a nometeu puppy
lor 1he
Stereo. Q .

48 Space for Rent

•

44 Wa~ing
mom call
45 Auctions

1 LoiS's

lier,
chiMr her. Ster.o. C

Gil

•

.AKQZ

ACROSS

.

....., lobby.
and the men try to

BloUOm'• _

~11s

_

.,

by THOMAS JOSEPH

w

8:01 Andr Qrlflllh
8::10(J)e IIJ •aoaom

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CROSSWORD

0 IHI!!J•nd ......, '

.. .:

use:

Comp .... 'lhe chuckle Q~
by fllllnT In the mllli"'l -.lo
YOIJ develop rom IMp No. 3 below,

There are days when you wish you
had stayed in bed. You bid to excellent
contracts, but the cards lie so badly
that you go down, on other days, you
seem to be flying in the face of adver·
sity, but tbere are silver linings to ev·
ery black cloud.
.
Opposite the one-no-trump opemng
bid, South's t~ree-spade response
shows five spades and game values (at
leas\1. Now North has three options.
With only two spades, he rebids three
no-trump. With three or four spades
but an unappealing hand, he raises to
four spades. However, with an escel·
lent hand for spades, North cue-bids
bls lowest ace. So four hearts an·
liOUIICft a good hand lor spades, prom·
1ses the beart ace, and denies both mi·
nor-suit aces. South- needs no more
encoUragement.
In a team game. both pairs reache9
six spades. Atthe first table, the de·
clarer won the club lead and cashed
bls top spades. When the queen didn't
drop, be tried the diamond finesse. It
lost and he retired 10 his bunk, com·
piaining about bad luck.
.
,
The second declarer saw he didn t
a successful diamond finesse. He
started similarly, winning the club
lead and taking the a~ and king of
spades. But then he cashed the club

18 PtiiiiiNeWI

_.,....lor8ma1Molilte
HolM• ClmPif'. AI ttaol1upe.
111 ... 1114.
'

21 " ' ...
':'sa tar

(A)

Plo
Tour
From ZICI'Iary, LA. (TI

=·-,..;.;.•.:..--..m....._
......=----~ ~~
. . . ""lllo; ..... Offw. Colt ......

...........

E...... lhlcle

Boollw Club Sporll
Banquet (PI 1 of 21 Stereo.

. . "" , ~

-.. .._

IIJ.

Ava goes Into labor II the

•141
• .-.(

1:00.
-·
-'-lllnllalt.
110
Horllon.
....
I
1 d AI ..~

1111 'llluntMIIIrJ, WhHe, St,410.

114141 . . ..

Cll (J)e ~~oocar­
MecGvver helps a group or

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c:on.a!
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(J) Mljat

Rill Ealete
Wantld

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linfonM.

IIMIMIIMI en !0011... aa, Jahn D. GMioall, no

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14

Cllle. Stir

.................- l o r

utol., I Li=:.::;

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

..,.......R--IDIJ,
-----

Tonight Stereo.
Mama'a Family
Ill Whall of Fortunet;l
(!]). M"A•a•H .

- 41i..

'

Enee•.litll•.nent

(J).

35 Lote • Acreege

WOIIKIJ~

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i\iilllt ttl '"'

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Apart_,. ovolollllt lor 2 ar 3

IWLCiiiiWI=

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odiii·
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polO, toU71-IOII.

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IIIII ..... MOlliter..

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liar -

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.,.......
11100.

-

Honda
2, ·-front
Mtahhar
.. 1 ..-c~. 111'

~lor-lie,

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31 · Hom• for Sale

.-ne.-.CIIIttt •• J'll

....

~~dtan

tmllllltec.loMoN,

CA.I14 441 QIU

lltiNol_r._T
....
__

MotorcyciU

4

.

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l'llmllllad .....,.. home, 1 mile
...._ ......
dllldnt rtv.,
Not Wpt'l lor ChAd,.,., Pile,

Bullneea
Building•

74

7

By Plllllip Alder

l l c l i - and M,._ King

- - .....or.
.- - ; 111,000
- 111M\',
!!!!!fill =~=;;;;::.;;;;;~~~- .·
1111. . . Ia!', I. . . . . . _

MIIIIIJ art. ~ulppld ldtohlnl.
RwflaWlCII I~ requiNd.
tM . . 1141 ........

IIOI-77Wfll.

-·~ ••- :

75 Boltl&amp; Motors
forSIIe

lftl, Colll14-lt2·771t IOH.
- . a s 11c1m1 apel1nl0ntaln

lila,

a

PPP. '

"'"*"''l

...................... ,11. FtoM

-IMe.-lolllllillH.

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110 FortmM ~- ·· 100
••
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Tldll',p&lt;JIL.f&lt;-;11

. L.Cio\HIIY 11A1L

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- : a...-loa. t4.2SIIIr OIUrr"SJII
lnuftllllll hrvloa. ....... . lor -

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tlciW

IIAIMTYUIT: liNd .. of '""" ............... LJcan. s IIIMiroom hoMe, 21.31 .....
II lllliilf llUif M Yw Wont To ..J. Call Toll Floe, at HRS, 1·
1hl CIIIJ111h

lilly

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. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . end

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'lhllor, ~ Do I • -

33 Farms for Sale
-lint Poyt M- 22 Money to Lolln
lllll1tlo ........... -.Call
. . ......... lon. . 104-141.-s tt.OOO ... 000 .......... .._.. 2 - . " · - · 112 ..... oft
"""""' lloacL
end ' or IIMI COi 11 ~Jtllan. Low ~·
M447W40I.

. _ , W1W

Old -

lultlor- RtglrtoNd,_
llwafwd ....
at41. lllaCiirll, G . Ill. WV,
Moeon Cou!lly.
.

. Building
Suppllee

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a.t

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1

careful In Hlectlng

SCUM Lm ANIWIU
~-24
Merger - Humus - Aware - Uplift - WEIGHT
.
When an older hOme Is rellnanced the owner lhould
lind 01.11 if ncan stand the new mortgage's WEIGHT.

m

•

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DOUr~

SIDE EFFECTS .. ·

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F• ..- ...
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form four IIIIIPie _ ._

DROFLI

TY ~ llle ' ' ~. T1l.

EVENINO t

~711-1117

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8

MON., APRIL 29
C'l t..1

•low r::ro.:.b::r-wo:. :: /-""""'---"""'~

.

..

S II II

NVFHBV
•

t.MHGFT
.
.
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: THERE'S NOTHING TO
MATCH CURI!NG UP WITH A GOOD BOOK WHF.N
1liERE'S A RErAIRJOB TO BE DONE AROUNI&gt; TilE
HOUSE. - JOE RYAN

'

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'

The. ·naily Sentinel

By The .Bend
['

'

'I

l

:

I
I'

·D'Amato: '60 Minutes'
show business, not news

'

'

'

. Monday, Aprll29,1991
Page--10

Revelers jam downtown for
'L.A. Fiesta Broadway~ . .
1bir-

.

('

Community calendar

Pages 3-4

==:C~o~m~m~u~nl~ty~c~.==le=ild~.=r=ll~e~~J~.=m=u=st=be=p=ro=Vl=.ded=.C~al=l=J~im=C~al=d­

.

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KEY WEST, Aa. (UP!) - The
crypts have gone cond() at Key
West's only cemetery, adding a
modem, urban touch to a graveyard
long famous for its eccentric tombstones.
· , The grassy, IS-acre Key West
Cemetery is the fmal ~!iJig p~ce
for some of the island cny's earhest
residents
and' most outlandish ·char·
.
acters.
.
: The unusual inscriptions on the
'tombstones are legendary, making
the cel!letery a popular tourist
auraction. Perhaps the most famous
epitaph·is that of B.P. 'Roberts. ''I
Told You I Was Sick," his tombstone declares.
Another woman is remembered
"as
a
"Devoted Fan of Singer Julio
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ln . lS OrlC .cemetery

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Support sought for
Ravenswood Bridge
-" Connector Project

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. URGES SUPPORT FOR PROJij:CTS . Ja111es M. Jennings, standing, a collSultant for
the Meigs County Realoul PialiDina Commis·
· sion, spoke to the IIJ'OUP daring Monday's
terly llleetlng on,tl!e Importance or loeal

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':~~~Er:!sH~riCH

. By
Bernard Fultz, lon$time
active member of the Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club,
·became a Paul Harris FeUow in
a·recognition ceremony at Mon,
day night's meeting· held at the
Heath United Methodist Church,

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Middl,eport.

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.By BRIAN J, REED

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Briice Reed.
Jennings went on to say. howev- .
er, that Southeastern Ohio faces the
problem of having so few people:'as
residents ttaat voi¢es here are :r:1o1 .
heard as clearly a5 those in ml&gt;il:
populated areas of the state. Othet
projects, such as worlt on Route 2":1
at Portsmouth alld Route 35 near
Chillicothe also threaten the expc.~
dition of construction on the Meigs
County project, Jennings said. ·-:
. Reed, who regularly-attenas
SEORC l)ighway user meetings'oii
behalf of the planning commissi!JI&amp; ·
stated Monday that "Route 33 is
not as dead as some people think .
that it is," stating, however, the

F~~w~yJ!!::':~unit- ~~;o~~~~~jtl!.asarelo~=r:n~:~~~:~~fs:A~~
Jennings stated that the mittee', as well as the increase in

ed States Congress' authority to
spend that money will. end in '
September. He stated the legisla•
ture is cunently stockpiling _the
money for !he purpose of '·'offsetling the Federal deficit" instead of
.spendin~ it for the purpos4:s for
which it 1s being collected.
Jennings, who acts as a paid

SE.ORC's support of the project .local-level participation in the
was due ill large part to ilJe work of · Ravenswood project. Reed also
Mei~s County ofl'lcials- specifit:al- suggested that a local transporta· ·
ly ctting the efforts of the Metgs lion committee be ronned.
County Commissioners. Planning . county Commissioner Richard
Commission Executive Director Jones agreed with Reed on the
Charles Blakeslee, and SEPRC
Highway Oser Committee member
·continued on page 10

GM,:¥:Qrd ,:post $2--l»..lion,rin.,

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senled Fullz with a certifi!=Bte.
~Cdallion, and pin, the three
emblef!ls of appreciation which
go to a member selected for th~
Paul Harris FeUow recOgnition.
.Rotary President John R'ice
described !he recognition as
"The Rotary Fouildation' s way
of expressing its appreciation
for a sUbstantial conbjbution to
iiS humanitarian and educational
p~ograms." He said that t~e
recognition program is named
for tbe founder of Rotary, a
· Chicago lawyer who started
Rotary with three bilsiness asso- ·
ciates ill 1905.
··
Rice explained that Rotarians
designate a Paul Harris Fellow
as a lribute to a person whose
life demonstrates a shared pur- ,
pose with the objectives or The
i{otary Foundation. Before the
surpnse presentation to FuJtz,
Rice detailed highlights of his
family life and career and his '
contributions to Rotary.
The Rotary president also
recognized Mrs. Beulah McCOmas, widow of Lee .McComas,
also a Paul Harris Fellow. In his
comments about the late school
teacher and administrator, Rice
described him as "a man. who
did everything for Rocary. a man
who was a credit to himself, his
ccimmunity and this club." ·
For the Paul Harris Fellow
recognition of Fultz, the Middlepon-Pomeroy Club made a
gift of$!,()()() to Rotary Interns,

DOWNING CHILDS
MUlLEN MUSSER

combined first-quarter losses ·

PAUL HARRIS FELLOW - Longtime Rotarian Bernard
Fultz was recog11ized as a Paul Harris Fellow alld presented a cer·
tificate, medallion and pin at Mooday aight's meeting or the Mid·
· dleport·Pomeroy Rotary Club. Present to make the presentations
was BUI Stout, ClrclevUie, Rotary Governor or Di$trict 61111.

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iional 'to fund proji:cts .and programs around the world which
are geared to enhance international friendship and understanding. The money goes
toward a variety of programs
including group study exchange,
providing medical service, buying school supplies , giving
nuttitioital training, and provid·
ing supplies and IJ!Slerials ror
farm·-production to Third World
countries.
· ·
A report oi1 the successful
pancake breakfast held ~t th~

'
Spnng
Roundup' at the Royal
' Oak Resort Club Saturday
morning was given by Mark
Murphey, chairman.
Instrumental and vocal entertainment was provided following the dinner served by Heath
Church women by Sharon Hawley, Frank and Sue Smith ,
Donna and Steve Jenkins. .
Ladies night was observed
and among· the guesiS were the
honoree's wife, Betty Fultz, and
one of his three daughters,
Becky Parsons, and her son.

By JAN A. ~VERINA
UPI Auto Writer
. D~TROrt -The nation's two
largest automllicers Tuesday turned
ill first quatter losses IOtaling nearly $2 biiJion .worth ofre4 ink, with
both General Motors Corp. and
Ford Motor Co. crying the blues·
over a recession that caused North
Ameriean vehicle sales 10 sink to
their lowest levels in a decade.
Industry leader GM's losses of
$1.08 billion were slightly less than
expected by Wall Street, moderating from the $1.6 billioo loss post·
ed by the world's largest industrial
concern for the- fourth quarter of
1990 - the biggest three-month
loss in automotive history.·
But Ford's record $884 milliort
loss was deeper than anticipated,
erasing ilJe previous worst red ink
of $59S million posted by the No. 2
autoJDalcer during the third 'quarter
of 1980.
Third-ranked Chrysler Corp.
was expected to report first-quarter
results Wednesday. Some industry
analysts recently . deepened their
loss forecasiS to more than $500
million.
·
GM' s latest loss excluded a gain
of $403 million from the sale of its
New York office building in January, and an .overall $307 million
gain from an accounting change
related to supplies illven10ry.

GM earned $710 million, or
$1.02 a share on its $1 and 2/3par
value common slock, during the
first quarter of 1990. Worldwide
sales slipped 10 $29.2 billion ftom
$30.1 biUion in the year-ago quarter.
Its cash and marketable securities as of March 31, stood at $3:2
billion, down .substantially froll)
$5._S billion at !he end or the yearago quarter.
Ford's record losses compared
with a profit of $506 million, or
$1.10 a share, for the ftrst quarter
of 1990. Its worldwide sales and
revenues totaled $21.3 billion,
down from $23.6 biljlon..
·
Ford's cash and marketable
securities as of March 31 .totaled
$6.1 billion, up from $3.9 billion in
the year-ago quaner. But its automouve-related debt soared to $8.2
billion, vs. $3 .8 billion a year
before.
There was a bright spot, however. Ford's Financial Services
Group, led by Ford Credit and The
Associates, earned a record $270.4
million. or 57 cents a share, during
the fllSt three months of 1991, up

42 percent from .$191.2 million, or
4.2 cents a share, primanly due to
higher net interest margins.
But both automakers posted
huge losses in their main business .
'- making and selling cars an&lt;t·
trucks.
·
While GM would only say i ~
North American automotive losseS:
were sizable enough tO wipe Out
record earnings· in Europe, F9l'd's:
worldwide automotive·operations.
lost $1.2 billion during the quaner,
vs. a $315 miUion profit a year ago.
Ford's lalest results included· a•
$93 million charge for costs related
to early retirements and other per-.
sonnet reduciion programs.
Specifically, Ford's U.S.. automotive operations lost $947 million, compared with earnings of
$160 million a year ago. Its overseas automotive operations lost
$208 million, compared wilh earnings of $155 million a year ago.
"First-quarter results reflect the
fact that consumer demand
remained weak ill North America,
reOecting the extremely turbulent
events of the oast nine months,"
Contlauecl 011
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:AEP's Katlic feels political' leaders. ·'pushing
panic butt(ln' on issue without checking facts

INSURANCE ·

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Tiffin·stud~nt wi17:s
state civics test

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. Bill'SIOUt, CircleviUe ROtarY,
·tlliV{I:fiiOi' bf 'OtSiiic~··;·i?fe"=l

German measles
z epidemic hits ·
. Amish .·

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Fultz na_med Paul Harris Fellow

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consultatit for the planning comSent!DefNews Starr
mission in the area or road
The need lor local support (or improvemeniS at the Southeastern
the Ravenswood Bridge Connector Ohio Regional Commission, also
project was discuascd at length by discussed the importallCe of local
the Meigs County Regional Plan- · support of a maJor 'iocal project ·
ning Commission when the group now·being considered by the Ohio
held Its quarterly meeting Monday Department of Transportation -.that
afternoon at !he Farmers Bank and of the Ravenswood Bridge ConnecSavings Conmmy. -.
tor.
James M. )ennings of James M.
The SEORC plays an active role
Jennings Associates or Columbus in supporting road improvement
for llifbway improvemCllt projects, specillc:aDy
presented a videotaped program projects in ·Southeastern Ohio, and
that o the RaveDSWOIId Bridge Coonector. Also
concerning the Highway Users rec11ntly placed the prOject, which
pictured are, far left, Plaaaing Commission .. · . Federation; im orglmization cur·· would compleie U.S. Route 33
Presidimt Fred Hottman; Secretary Joyce
rentlrappcilliingfortheexpenditure from Rock - 'Springs to the
Bowen and John Rice. .
·
on highway projects, of an estimat; Ravenswood Bridge as one of its
ed $17 billion now avliilable ill the . highest priorities . . Officially,

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A Multimedia Inc. N~opaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, Apr1130, 1991

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People in the news

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-~;-~~~~:t:=e:WctLos . ~~l:~l~~~~u~=:!~:~~~

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numbers and, in· some cases, lished in 1941, describes a family
' COLUMBUS Ohio (UPI) season vegetables should wait at · home honiculturisl at Ohio ·State ezs to wait until early May to plant addresses. ·
. · of ducks in search of a niore peaceGardenefS itching to plant warm; -least another week in Ohio, says a University.
'
vegetables in southern Ohio, until
The alphabetical list is so long ' ful new home ill Boston. .
".
·
·
Jeanne Youger-Comaty says mid-to laiC May in central Ohio that only people with last names
garden soil across the state is 100 and late May in northern Ohio.
beginning. with the letters A
cold and wet fll!' warm-season vegA frost will kill most transplants through G were listed Sunday . .
Those with last names ~ginning
etables. Such vegetables include of warm-season vegetables.
1
with the letters H through 0 wiU be
tomatoes, eggp ants, peppers,
"The planting-date recommen- listed Monday, and p lhrough
squash and green beans.
.
dations also assume the weather wiU l&gt;e published Wednesday.
By United Press Intematlonal
.,
"In the last few years, the and soil will have warmed and
"The state Controller's Office is
"DALLAS" VALUES: Larry H1p1an says how are you gning
weather has cooperated for early dried some," Youger-COmaty said. holding over $800 million iit.prop.By Umted Press International .
to keep the comrades down on the communal fain! once they've seen
plantin,g of summer vegetables, .but . ''If it .stavs cold an
. d wet. , gar·
1 ·med b th
A German measles epidemic is
t th
'" y
c
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erty waiung to be c 81
y e
"Dallas." In other words, he thinks "Dallas" helped bring down the
no IS year,
ouger- omaty deners w1D Just have; to wall even riAhtful owner," the ad reads. spreading through Amish commu·
Iron Curtain by giving East bloc residentS a peep at the good life in the
satd.
longer. Right now, we need several
7 ill'
1c
ed nities. in PennsylvaniB and other
West. "I think the ~ulence, the consumensm, the fOod, the cars ~
"The recent cold, wet weather days of warin sun to get the soil " ver 1• m 100 peop are ow
has kept soil from warming and ready."
money. The list published in this states, health officials said.
' . . these things (people) .want
than their sovemments provided
While the disease, called RubelYouger-Comaty offers this paper only includes 12,261 people
them," Hagman told People magazine. "You take people who don't . dryinf enough to aUow early planthave any food to a ... supetllliWket, they're soillg to want to stay." As
illg o warm-season plants or seeds. advice ror gardeners who have ;:.~~ money was found last la, is normally not severe, pregnant
women with measles run a high
the landrqark series finishes up its 13-year run next month, Ha~
Arid there's stiU the possibility of already bou~lu transp_lants: "Keep
The ad e'ncourages Cal"om'aft• . risk or bearing children wilh birth
. recalled how years ago he reahud he had a chance to clean up IU hiS
frost," she said.
· ·transplants i'ndoors under Ouores.., -~
Warm-sea5on vegetable tians· cent lights or ouldoors in a warm, who believe they may be owed defects.
tole as the nefarious J .R. Ewing. "It was w~ all the :who Shot
As of Saturday, Pennsylvania's
plants put in the garden now will sunny spot. They need 6 to 8 hours . money to fiD out a coupon in the ad
J,R.?' crap hit the lim," he said. "I had just turned 50 and realired they
Health
Department had verified 12
stop grow.ing and have trouble ofbnght light per day. . ·
or to call a toll-free .numbet during
couldn't do the show without me. So I rengotiatcd the hcU out of my
cases
of
the disease, I 0 of which
contract," Hagmari eveniUally became an executive producer of "Dal- · ~ecovering when conditio.ns
. "Indoors. use lights set 10 to 12 business hours.
were
in
Amish
families. But offitmprove, Youger• Comaty satd . . inches above the plants. TransSome sums of money Owed
las." "Actually, that was just a ploy to JDalce me some more money
cials
believe
there
are many more
This "shock" can set back plant "' plants also dry out quickly, .so . include $25,392.90, $12,890.52,
because there wasn't any. more in the kitty to pay an.ac10r," he said.
undiagnosed
cases.
growth for the entire season.
. water them regularly," she said,
$10,355.17, and $5,039.97.
Seeds
of
warm-season
vegeta.
!"or
gardeners
who
can't
shake
.
· Most of the assets are cash from
GIVENS TAKE ON ACTING: ~obla Given• has plenty of reiebles
pl&amp;llted
in'
cold,
wet
soil
.
will
their
planting
fever,
it's
not
too
late
dormant
bank accounts, but there
vlsion acting expefience but she came down with a bad case of n~es ·
·
lik
1
she
·d.
1
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are
also
other
asseiS, including the
when it came to ftlming her movie debut. "A Rage ill Harlem" with
mll!lt e Yrot,
581
toP ant some coo -season crops, contents of some safe·de~osit
. Gardeners should wait until the Yougez-Comaty said.
··
Forest Whitaker, Danny Glover, Gresory Hilles and direciDr BiD
frost threat has passed before plantThese include beets, carrots, leaf boxes, Controller's office of ICials
Duke. "I was scared io death the fD'St day I worked in the picture,'' the
ing warm-season crops, said letbice and radishes.
,,,.
say.
former Mrs. Mike Tyloa says. " ... I took one look 8l Forest and a little
Youget-Comaty, advising garden•
voice said, 'Com~ on, Givens, you're going to act wilh Forest WhilakDucky da:y for duck levers
. erl' And everything left me. My confidence was gone. My mouth was
111 Stcilld St., Pomeroy
BOSTON (UPI) - Robert
. dry and I was sha,king." Givens Overcame her fears and the movie
McCloskey had a ducky day in
YOUIINDEPINDENT
turned out 10 be quite educational. "During the picture I learned what
Boston Sunday.
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acting process works for RobiiiGivens," she satd. "I couldn't pattern
AGENTS SEIVIIIG
myself after anyone else. It was a revelation. !learned how to become
The author of the beloved chilMEIGS COUNTY
a character and forget Robin completely."
. .
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dren's book "Make Way For
SINCE 11161
Ducklings" led a parade of hun,
PERPICH STAYS AMERICAN: The call of Croatia wasn't
eiJOU8~ .to ~ formez Minnesota governor Rudy ~erplch give up his
U.S. cuu.enship. Perp_teh had ~ asked to take the JOb of foreign min-.
COLU~US, Ohio (Ui&gt;I) - A
istet of the Yu~laVtaR republic but had to decline. "He would have
Tiffin ninth grader who knew
-~ the job if he could h~~e ~tained his citizenship," said l'flrwhich states the Northern Pacific
p!Ch 11de Teresa McFarland. He s very disappointed. He saw a lot
railroad traveled lhroluih ill the late
of good he CC)Uld do as the foreign milltster.'' Nonetheless Perpich
19th century won the Ohio Citizen
planl to live in Croltia and ~rve President Franjo Tucljman 'm anoth·
Bee,
a-test of civic lilel'ley.
·er policy-mating role, such as international trade and economic devel~
The
Saturday by
opmenL Perpich, whose father and maternal grandparents migrated 10 . Matthew 111swer
Shepard
of Titfm '1 Bast
• MiJ1ne1ot11 from Ooalia, wrote Tud)111811 a letter saying he would still
·Junior High won a $1,000 U.S.
, be illlcresiCd in a Cabinet job if U.S. citiwlship laws are changed.
Savings Bond•.His scbool received
a
$250 award.
· GLIMPSES: ABC's Diane Sawyer and Iiet husband director
He will join five other Ohio
,Mike Nidi~ will be the ~-· for Monday night's annual benefit for
fin~liats
who will compete in a
the P)'esbytenan HOSPital m New Yorlt. The guests include former
national
competidon
for acholar·
JIIIYOF Ed Kodl and 'TV sex therapist Ruth Wathelaler and Peter
shills
valued
as
hi&amp;h
11
$12,000.
Alita will Cillelllin ... Italian IICirC&amp;S Laura Allt.o adl, a sex symbol in
~hepbqd
correctly
pvc
Washthe "lla llld receml)' known for television roles, was III1'Cited for
ingiOn,
Idlbo,
and
Montana
to a
pa 1raion of 50 pams of C0C1ine • her viDa ncar Rome. Police Slid
question
Iller
hil
opponent,
Brett
, i\nuNDi, 49, had the cocaine in a bowl on.a living room rable, appar· . Biker, w11 unable 10 provide the
.-Iy In preparllion for a party.
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:,.. ar eners. a.... vised·. to wait to pl.ant
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Q·uirks _in.th_e· .ne·. s:

There were no injuries in the children who marched in the
Iglesi.,,"
.
city officials dealt wilh the problem
Sharon Wells, a local historian pecullar"noon Saturday illcidenL
parade and .hear!! proclamations ·
And one widow placed a plaq~ in the time-honored Florida fash- leading a sJ)rvey of the cemetery, is . · "He just ran out of gas," Gra- read in ~is honor.
.
.
Over her husband's grave declarillg, ion. They built condominiums urging the city to regulate crypt ham said. ·
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"Harry, I Know Where You're !'leek new high'rise crypts that cari heights 10 presezve the cemetery's
.
Later, he was lhe.guesto,fhonor
Sle~pillg TonighL" That 011e has accommodate up .to five of the charm.
Missing any mooey?
. .
at a celebrational tea in Boston's
been stolen.
dearly departed.
But not everyone hates. the new . . . SACR~N'fY, Calif. (UP~) posh Four seasons Hotel.
.
· Olhez markers honor Yorkshire
Some local historians consider vaqlts, Though huge and blunt In - !he_ Cahf~rn1a Controller s .
The author of several children:s
terriers or support' life-sized statues. !hem an eyesore and a sacrilege.
style, they have their own charac- . Office_1s runnmg newspaper ads boOks, including ':Blueberries for
Historians place intern!ltional . The high-rise vaults are ter .said Susan Olsen (lxecutive searchmg for the owners of more Sal" and ' 'One Morning in
imponance on the melilorlals 10 the "destroying the historical character dir~tor of the Key West An &amp; than $800 million in cash lmd prop- · Maille;" McClOSkey said he never
U.S.S. Battleship Maine, whose and integrity of the cemetery," , Historical Society, who leads tour5 erty held by the state from dormant expected the story or the ~ard
sinking in Havana Harbor led to the ·local historian Sharyn Thompson .througb the gnlveyard. .
bank accounts.
.
.
family to become and remam so
SpaniSh- American War.
wrote ill arep(ln to the city.'
. "If!ICI that the death rituals and
"You may be owed money!" ' popular.
·
·
. .But today, the dead oumumber
"While the need for · burial customs of tOday are 'just as impor- declares the hcailline a six-page . "In fact, 50 years ago I ·l)onOt
the living ill Key wes.1, an.d. 18n.d is space 15
· a seri
· should rant and o ti 0 f
ul•"· advertising supplement 10 Sunday's · think - I never would have
,
ous concern, 11 ·
re ec ve our c ""~ as Los. A.ng·eles Times. A similar ad expected this to·ha-n with 'Make
·scarce and expensive. M least not be addressed at the exnet~se of those of. the 19111 century," she
h L A
S ·
w • D kl:~ · · b
40,000 bodies are buried in the ·. the cemetery historically,r•"&amp;dded said. "They're going lobe siUdi.ed ran in t e os nge1es enune1
ay .ot uc mgs nor my pu Strang
·
stad
·n
a
th
100
years
~orm
·o
th
·
h
newspaper.
·
Ushers
...," McCloskey
said Sunark,
thousan
.
ds
more
than
.
the
.
Lynette
P
.
, no er
n w, even oug . The ad prints the names .of peo· da
·
island's population.
..
repon.
they're not as beautiful."
pie and businesses listed on 'the
YMcCloskey, Biso an artist, says
To keep up with local demand, ·
accounts left dormant for more he.wrote the story after watching a
than three years and !&amp;ken over by Mrs. Mallard and taer ducklings

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Low tonight near 55,
·P,arty doudy.Wednesday,
partly sunny.

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&gt;

~Sta ~=\==~

Pick 3:876
Pick 4:3547
Cards: lO·H, 10-C
3·D; Q.S

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LOS ANGEl,ES (UPI) ~
~5 countries in Latin A,merica, =~e7a'Y~rth~:~.:
~:~.949-2458 not later than
ty-six blocks of downtown were - ·~eluded the~ group Fandango, must be received weD illlllvaru:e
NEW YORlC (UPn - Sen. Alfonse D' Amato angrily denied Suntaken
over Sunday by "L.A. Fiesta . · smgers Jose ose, Jolumy Canales 10 BSSUre publieation in tlie eal
RUTLANi&gt; • 'fhli Rutland Gatday that he refused 10 be inlerviewed for a CBS " 60 MinuleS" report
Broadway," Ill outdoor.cclebration - andv~vm1Besax0cterhoa.,
·3t, from Canoga eadar.
- .den Club will meet Tuesday at6:30
~ hiS. ~- accusing !he long-running program wilh having more
of the city's Hispanic heritage ·. ..,..
h h
M p 1
mterest m " show business" lluu! news.
·
expected to.amaa up to 1 million . Park, Calif., said he came io .the
p.m. at t e orne: rs, ear e
·
·
MONDAY .
Kennedy for a potluck supper. A,
D'AmaiO was responding to a " 60 Minutes" segment· hours . ·
revelers.
festival to gel a flavor of different
POMEROY _ The Meigs .Coun- video will be shown on tulips and
before it was tO be broadcast - that contained accusations of wrongthe JR.ciJico de Mayo extrava; ,.Cultures.
·
ty Veterans Service Coni mission · Mrs. James NichOlson will ~nt '
doing !hat ~ beillg investigated by a Brooklyn grand jury and the
ganza
drew
75
local
and
interna"My
wife
is
froiD
Nicarag11a,
will
meet Monday lit ?:30 p.m. il) . a paper on annuals.· Mts. Virgil
SenaJe Elhics Committee.
· ·
10
tiona!
stars
to
perform
for
the
·
and
it's
sort
of.a
charice
experi·
the
Veterans
Service Office in Atkins will demonstrate Hogarth
The segment aired Sunday nighL
· .·. .
..
·
crowds
celebratmg
an
important
ence
part
of
her
culture
and
pan
of
Pomeroy.
··
arranging.
D' Amato made his comments Sunday niornin~ at a M;mhatlan
date
on
Mexico's
road
10 indepen- the. culture of Los Angeles," Bax· hotel, .where he I:eeeived a "Defender of Freedom ' award from the
dence. .
· . . ter saicl- "ll~s 'tcally a lot Of fun. In
LEBANON TOWNSHIP - The
WEDNESDAY
Emunah Women of America, a religi011s Zionist group. The senator
Organizers
w~
cncourag~
by
comparison
10
last
year,
thcte's
10
L
b
T
.
h'
Tru
.
POMEROY
Th S 1·. b
· has been a ,munch defender of Israel. .
·.
last year's trouble-free event, and times as many thillgs to do, to sec
~ lUIOn .owns 1p . Stees will
_·
- · e a IS ury
D' Amato ·vehemently insisted that he had agreed to be interviewed
hoped L:A. Fiesta Broadway wiD . and to exfi-!:'ence."
meet Monday at7 p.m. at the .town. Township Trustees wiU meet
by ~e segment's correspondent, Mike Wallaee, but only live and
.
ua1
__,,
·
·•
·
Hi
·
ld
·
-~ F
ship
building. - ·
. Wednesday at 7 p.m. at the hOme.
bee
. orne an ann ......aon. "pres 2 -year-o w'!.e, · atema;
of the clerk, ·sarah Gibbs: l!ubl.ic . '
linedited, a condition !he netwQrlc rejected. . · . . · · ..
music
festival,
.said
''there
are
mQIC
'famous
peo·
_
J&gt;OMEROY
_
The
J&gt;omeroy
invited.
·
.vious
dowtown
· "To have Mike Wallace claim as he does that I refused to be inter~
S~t
Scene,
was
marred
by
stabpie
thi,s
yeat.
I
thillk
it
is
more
fun
Cha
.
pter
186,
Order
of
the
Eastern
..
viewed is a dBmnable lie,'! said D' Amilto. "I spate to him on at least
bings and the death of one fan in thar! last year."
.
three occasions and I said ... to him repelltedly I was willillg to go on
POMEROY - Kindergarten reg: .
1986.
. Festival Olllanizers say ther.Iost Star, .will have inspection on Moolive and unedited.
·
will be held at Pomeroy
istration
" So far, so good," said Los money on last year's $1 million day at 7:30p.m.
A spokesman for the show said D' Amato hung up on Wallace, endElementary on Wednesday for all
TUESDAY
ing the third conversation.
·
. Angeles Police Sgt. Mike Long~ event, but were more optimistic for
st~~dents of the Pomeroy and Saliswalking
alon~
south
Broadway.
this
year's
edition,
despite
·a
$2
RACINE
_ Tuesday is the last bury attendance area. Contact the
The "60 Minutes" repon covered the Housing and Urban Develop"Everybody s having a good million budgeL
day to s ·gn up ~or seruo·r ltirls soft· principal's office at Pomeroy for
ment scandal, where D' Ama!O al~gedly used hiS clout 10 obtain subsitime."
·
.To make sure there is no trou- ball for1 Racine.
'' Registration
odiud housing for a relative and others, and an appellriulcc as a charac·
is mformation,.,992-2710.
. LOn¥ said about 300 Officers, ble, a privite security finn of 500 $7.50 and a birth cenificate copy
ter_wibless for Philip Basile, who wa5 convicted for conspiracy ill try·includmg a ·detail of_ mounted .offiCers was deployed in the slreeiS, ·
'
ing to gain the release from prison of a mobster.
"The broadcast p_ulls togeth?r various.elements on the embattled
were on hand In the
_!0 severw. ·. •
senator's career;'' wd a "60 Minutes" spokesmliJl, Roy Brunett, who
Severi
mlJSic
stages
were
erected
Ericka
Aviles
was
doing
a
brisk
said.D'Amato was offered an opportunity to address acclisations ill an
·
·
interview.
· ·
..
..
.
· in the festival area, and several · busbtess selling ice cream .bars iri •
Latin
mllsic
groups
perfornled.
A
the
so
degree
heat
"Everybody
is
That
California
tralfte
dreds
of
children
dressed-in
duck· "We do not grant live interviews," Brllqett said. adding that show
coup
for
organizers
was
arranging
buying
a
lot
of
things,"
she
said.
LANCASTER,
Calif.
(UP!)
·ung
costumes,
their
parents
and
has not done so ill its 22-yeat history 10 his recoDection.
for the North 'American-concert "It's pretty good."
A pilot whose light plane ran out of adult fans of his story of a family
Attorney General Robert Abrams, a candidate for the U.S. Senate
debut of Brazilian pop grot1J.l Xuxa,
Shade was at a premium in the gas had 10 land in the firSt relative- of ducks who $earch for a new
seat now held by D' Amato, said ihe senator is proving to be'an embarwhich has become a mus1c phe- festival area, but even an awning ly safe place he could find.
home.
rassment for New York.
·
·
nomenoniiiLatinAmerica.
didn't
provide
much
relief.
"It's
HechoseAvenlleO.
The book,,popular worldwide,
1
"AI D' Amato likes to claim that he 'delivers' for New York, but
Latin
st8rs_
who
agreed 10 per- hot,'' said another vendor, Jrene
The
pilot
radioed
airport
conhas
turned SO, and the Historic
the revelations on '60 Minutes' tonight conflflll once again that he
form
included
jazz
greats
Tito
Palmar,
duckinsr
under
a
beach
trollers
at
Gen.
William
1.'
Fox
Air- Neighborhoods Found11tion of
delive_rs, all right - but for a narrow group of political cronies, rebl- -Puente and Poncho Sanchez, pop umbrella. •'But it"s all right."
. field ill Lancaster that he was mak- Boston celebrated the milestone
tives, cam~aign conttibutors and clients of his br.other's law firm,"
crooner Manuel ~es is weD as · · A main goal of lbe festival is to ing an emergCI\Cy ia~Jd!n¥. sheriff1s with a tribute to McCloskey and its
. Al)rams wd. "AI D' Amato has become an embarras.sment to Ne\11
the legendary entertainers Lucha call attention to Broadway, an Deputy Terry Graham bid.
·
annual Ducklings Parade.
,
· York and his effectiveness as a senator has been drastically impaired."
Villa
and
La Pricta.Linda.
aging
thoroughfan;
that
is
the
sub·
He
managed
to
guide
his
Cessna
McCloskey,
77,
led
the
parade
.,
'
'
· Other entertainezs, representing ject of reiuvination efforts.
· · Centurion in for an emergency from .Beacon S!rCC! along a I:mile
landing on Avenue G between route-· the same; one the Mallard
0
0
Highway 14 and SieJra Highway in family followed in his book - 10
•
·
'

::~e,

•

..

Ohio Lottery

SVAC action
resumes
Monday

'

'

COLUMBUS - Are America's
political leaders likely to push the
panic button-wiilJout exanuning the
facts when it comes to environmental issues?
J. E. "Jack" Katlic believes that
is true. And the results, he says,
cost consumers more and can devastate entire industries.
· Speaking tp attendees at the
Eastern. Fuel Buyer's COnference,
beld ill Columbus, the senior vice
(JieSidcnt-fuel supply Of the Ametican Rlectric Power Service CClJl'O:ration wm:ted that global wllfiiUIIil,
is the environmental concem of the
90s. And, if scienlific fact and reason are not part of the public
deblte, Katlic said remedies for a
~ved" global warmin prob- ·
letn could cost qmsumers 1~ times
as much as the recent Clean Ail
Act amendments.
. The "invoice" for the Clean Air
Act llllendmeniS is now beiJII! ~
•red. he said,·as electric utiliues
.l!lust decide how to comply with

.

the law. The "costs" of compliance · global warming."
environmental panic," he said,
far outweigh the benefiiS, .Katlic
. 'He said tile coal industry is would rather have the public
observed, accO«&lt;ing to the repon of affected by t'be global warming believe that ilJe earth is becoming
the National Acid Precipitation issue because a byproduct of coal so warm that coastlines wiD change
Assessment Program. Commis- combustion is carbon dioxide, a due to glacial melting and that
sioned by Conqress, the NAPAP suspected contributor tO global extreme temperature changes will
report resulted from a 10-year, one- warming. However, he · noted , turn productive farmland into
.half billion doliar study of the acid- "Before you run into the stteciS 10 deserts. None of those issenions is
rain phenomenon. According to warn ever_&gt;:one that tbe sky is supported by scientific fact, he
Katlic, the study results were large- falling ... let s examine the r~ts."
said.
ly ignored by legislators.
Carbon dioxide has been found
"C"2 ac!ivity, should it result ill
Public perception, not facts, by one government physicist 10 the same legislative acdvity as acid
drove Congress to enact the Clean actually be helpfuiiO the environ- rain, will likely result in ten times
COAL 6 CLEAN AIR MEETING • 1be futare M s-lheat·
Air Act amcodments, Kame ment, Katllc 1IOiied. "Dr. Shetwood the costs of ·the Clean Air Act," . em Olllo'l t:Ml illdllltly and tbe Impact of the Clean All' Act upon
observed, just as it is beginning to · Idso, of the U.S. Water Conserva- Katlic 8SICited.
tbe reaiOII's - y aild joblba been . . IOpk: of ''serious -ern •
mov.e the.,.global wanning issue. ·
tion Laborltory, has done extensive . . "What a legacy to leave our , and bfgtaeit priority In my ollk:e," according to U.S. Repn~t~~ll- .
work on the value of C02," he children, our aation, and in thi.s
live ClareiiCt E. Miller (left). M!Uer •et wltb Amerbn Electric •
Power VIce Presldeat William Lbota (rlabt) to dlacuas AEP'a . '
_ , the people of the world." he ·
"Somebody mentioned that the explailled- "He has concluded tliat ,. case
efforts to comply wltll the Act's stiff sulfur dioxide e•lulo111 · •
·Clean Air Act of 1990 was like a our planet has been C02 starved, continued. "The burden of mneclymassive boulder that c.,nt off the could use so percent•more ... it inJ a peKei.ved problem, lhlt is not ' requlremeatl. The liRe (JIIIIItlllllnJ ea~lly acnabben 011 eoaJ.ftrecl _··
JIClltrltiDI pilatl or ll'lriteb to lower all!fur coal lw alto tieeD 1 '
mountain to rest on coal and elec- Would help increase plant growlh l'CIIIy a pmb1an • all, in f.:L"
matter ol "JJIrrmmOIIII.lmportuce'' ill talb M!Uer bll bid w1t11 :
"There is a sayill1 that goes:
tric ulilitles In the valley," he by one-third...with another onerfllollal d•le, bula• uti aove111meata1 leaders, 11 well 11 a
states. "N~ a bad analogy, bill it third bonus through plant moisture 'Fool Dill DIICO, shame on ~- Fool
me twice, shame on mel ' Klllic · recent coaweraatloa wltll Olllo Gonnor Gtorae 'Volao•Icla.
waa not finished. The massive retention."
~et~ltod.
" ...Merchants of envlrcJa..
Miler, wllo YIUd ~ tile act. plllla to •eet .ndi Valted Mlae •
Facts
such
as
that,
Katllc
assert·
' boulder did DOt SlOp in the vaUey; it
Worllen Prnlwi¥.1 Trtamkl. He alto \!owed to coatba•: ·
mental
panic;
here
tbey
come
ed,
rarely
are
given
the
credence
went up die other side and is about .
llll•r 111 art r. a.prebeallft c1eu c.oa•.tecbliOioay propuq,
.·
apia."
'
to come rolling back again ...as they deserve. The "merchants or

.

14

.

~

"

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