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11

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'
Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

· Ohio

Woodmen plan picnic
The . Modern Woodmen of
American Camp 7230 is having a
picnic and potluck and community
service recognition program on
Sunday at 12:30 p.m. at the northbound park on Route 33 near Darwin.
Military personnel and the11
families who were involved in

0 hio Lottery

American
League
wins All-Star

Operation Desert Storm will be
honored. A plaque and gift will be
presented to each.
The Camp will furnish the meat
and soda pop. Members, friends
and neighbors are asked to bring a
potluck: dish. Bring table service
and lawn chairs. The public is
invited to attend.
·

Pick 3:984
Pick 4:4771
Cards ; J-H, 3-C
6-D; 3-S

.,g~me

Tonight, clearing. Low
in the mid-60s. Chance
of rain 20 percent.

·Page 4

Women's Fellowship meets
MARY KIBBLE

DARCIWOLFE

JENNIFER SMITH

3 area students awarded scholarships
Three student s from Me1g s
County, Mary Ann Kibble, Jennifer
Darlene Smith and Darci Malinda
Wolf~ . have been awarded the Uni versity of Rio Grande Honors
Scholarship.
The srudents will receive $1,000
eac h annually for the1r f1rst two
years at Rio Grande, and $2,000 for
their remaining two years. Wolfe
has also been awarded the $500
Central Trust Company of Middlepon Scholarship.
Kibble is a 1991 graduate of
Eas tern High School where she
was active in softball, Varsity E
Club and as a basketball statistician. She was also involved with
the National Honor Society , the
yearbook staff, the marching, con-

ce rt and pep bands, and was a
homeroom representative and
JUnior class secretary. She also won
a superior rating for her solo perfonnance at the OMEA band competition.
Within the community, she has
been active in the Junior Civitan
Club, 4-H, the Vanderhoof Baptist
Choir and youth camp. The daughter of Francis and Mary Kibble,
Tuppers Plains, she plans to major
m accounting.
Smith is a 1991 graduate of
Southern High School where she
was pres1dent of the National
Honor Society, yearbook editor and
member of the scholarship team ,
scholastic quiz bowl team, the science club, band and choir.
A member of 1988 All-Meigs

County Fair Choir, she was a
reg ional scholar in the Talented
and Gifted Program, won first
place in the county in the Ohio
University history contest and netted state recognition in the Science
Scholarship test. The daughter of
Darrell and Imogene Smith,
Racine, she plarts to major in nursing.
Wolfe is a 1991 of Meigs High
School where she was active in the
National Honor Society, secretary
of the student council, worked as
an office assistant, served as a
homeroom representative and was
a member ofT.!. and H.U.G.S.
A member of the All-TVC Academic Team, Wolfe is the daughter
of Fred and Jeannie Wolfe, Middlepan. Her major is undecided.

Dean family holds reunion
A fa mily" d1nner was held
recently at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. John A. Dean, Wolfe Pen
Road.
The guest of honor was their
so n, M.Sgt. Richard Dean, and
their grandson, Kenneth, who were
home from San Antonio, Texas.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Markins, Racine; Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Reid, David Reid ,
Rodney Reid, Tammy Downour,
Virginia Smith, Josho Smith and
Mica Dawn, all of Pataskala ;
Garold, Gladys and Courtney
Gilkey, all of Athens; Mr. and Mrs.

Hoffman birth
is announced

CODY COOK

Couple announces
birth of second child

Wilcox birth
is announced
Dave and Sherry Wilco x,
Pomeroy, arc announctng the b1rth
of their first child, John Warren, on
April 6 at O'Bleness Memorial
Hospital in Athens.
·
The infant weighed seven
pounds and nine ounces and was 20
inches long .
Matern al grandparents are
Roger an d Marviene Beeg le ,
Racine.
Paternal grandparents arc Kenneth and Norma Gat! Wilcox, Middlcpon.

CHJCAGO (AP) - At least 506
people died in traffic accidents
nationwide over the four-day
Fourth of July weekend.
The National Safety Council
had estimated that 500 to 600 people would die during the period,
from 6 p.m. Wednesday to 12:01
a.m. Monday.
California had 57 confirmed
traffic fatalities, the most of any
state. Next was Aorida with 26,
followed by North Carolma and
Wisconsin, with 21 each.
No fatalities were reported in
the District of Columbia, Alaska,
Delaware, Ma ssachusetts, New
Hampshire and Vermont.

Mr. and Mrs. Kei'th Cook, Fan
Riley , Kan ., are announcing the
birth of their son, Cody Allen, on
May 30.
The mfant weighed six pounds
and II ounces and was 19 inches
ELIZABETH, N.J. (AP) long.
Paternal grandparents are Ray- How many American communities
mond Cook, Syracuse, and June have women's names? From Enid,
Okla. , and Alexandria, Va., to
Aoyd, Racine.
Maternal grandparents are John Helena. Mont., the list is endless.
There's a Marion in 17 states, ·
and Joy Ben~ey, Syracuse.
and
eight different places are called
The Cook's have one other ch1ld
at home, Ashley Nicole, age three Augusta. Ohio has Anna, Laura,
Felicity. Maud, Sabina and Helena.
and a half.
Dorothy is in New Jersey and Minnesota, which also has Benha. Aorencc, Mabel and Clarissa.
North Carolina. Texas . Tennessee and Michigan all have a
Charlotte, and Ada IS located m
OXFORD, Engl and (AP) The ftist public library m Europe, Ohio, Oklahoma and Minnesota.
Beulah , Grace, Hilda, Paulette
which now has 2 million books and
·more than 50,000 manuscripts, is and Victoria are in Mi ssissippi.
the Bodle1an at Oxford University, Geraldine, Marion, Enid and Terry
arc in Montana. Missouri has Bevdating back to 1327.
In 1602, after the purge of erly, Emma and Tina.
And Rosamond, Madeline and
libraries by King Edward VI, it was
re -established by British diplomat Dorris are in Californta. Almost
and sc holar Sir Thomas Bodley, every girl 's name tn on the map
somewhere.
and was named in his honor.

said Sister Judy Soares. who works
at Amos House, beca use the
"guests like seafood."
Amos House serves dinner for
300 to 500 people at noon on
weekdays. •
Co-director Jim Tull said Amos
House had received donations from
fishermen before, but the shark was
a fl!SL
"We'll fillet it up probably ,"
Tull said.

Natasha Lynn Don Knapp celebrated her first birthday recently
with party at the home of her
father, Heath Richmond.
Refreshments of cake, ice cream
and Kool-Aid were served.
Attending were Shirley Tyree,
grandmother, Bud McKinney, great
grandfather, Nakuma Tyree, Phyllis, Jenni and Lucy Howerton,
Andrea and Natasha Wise, Darrell,
Pam, Jerry and Chad McKinney,
Cain McKinney, Michelle Whittington, Vicky McKinney, Bethany
Boyles and Heather Boyles.
Sending gifts were Betty, Andy
and Love Batey, Chuck Tyree,
Bud, Lola and Barbie Whittington,
Chris and Jerod McKinney and
Margie and Jim Miller.

r-

•All Summer Merchandise••••••

News notes

jACK &amp; )ILL'

•
--

......,,..tOO

..~ '· 9:30-S:OO
w. n .. s.r.
· ~I

FrL 9•30·1!00

sign clean-air coal b.UI
By JERI WATERS
Associated Press Writer

were evacuated rrom their homes in May. The
graffiti on this home, located in the midst or the
community, renects the reelings or many residents there.

Fantastic
Frankly, we're In a tight spot. Our warehouse Is big, but not big enough for the deluge of merchandise
that Is pouring In on us! Like nearly everyone else In this business we bought more than we should
have and now we can't do anythtng about ltl We can't stop load after load of merchandise now coming
ln. We're bulging at the seams ... and more shipments are arriving dally! We've cranuned our Ooors
more than full. and cut prices to the llntlt for quick sale! We're counting on your ability to recognize
real bargains and to helpyourselfto fabulous saVIngs ... and help us get out of this real jam! ThlsAfterThe-4th-Of"-'uly Sell-A-Bratlon lasts for 3 days only so hurry in and help us make some elbow room!

Senator Jan Michael Long
(D-Circleville) and State Representative Mary Abel (D-Athens)
have set a public meeting to discuss cause and effect of the May
incident which knocked homes
from foundations and forced the
relocation of some 25 residents
in the "Pity Me" area ncar the
Gallia/Meigs county line.
The informational meeting
will be held on Wednesday, July
17 at 5:30 p.m. in the Riverboat
Room of the Meigs County Public Library . Senator Long's
office anticipates attendance by
individuals from the U.S.
Depanment of Interior, the Ohio
Department
of Natural
Resources, the Ohio Depanment
of Transponation and state and
local Emergency Management
Agencies.
·
Meanwhile, two months after
the slide, most residents are living in rental property and awaiting news from the state as to
what caused the slide and what
will happen to their properties.
Charles Stewan, who along
with his family now resides in
Middlepon, has had limited success in getting answers from
gov'Cmment officials. He stated
Monday that aside from a letter
from U.S. Congressman
Clarence Miller (R -Lancaster),
he has not heard from anyone.
In particular, Stewart stated
that a phone call to Long's
office remains unanswered
severnl weeks after the call was
made. (Long's Legislative Aid,
Scott Elisar, stated Tuesday that

DISCUSSES PROJECT • Boyer Simcox,
community development specialist, standing,
and Vijay Gadde, planner and architect, wilh
the Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley Regional
Development District, discussed the process of a
as a result of inquiry by The
Dally Sentinel, he had been in
contact with Stewan on Mon day. The office stated that they
had no record of the call.)
"It appears to me that Long
would show an interest in this
area since he is a Meigs COunty
home boy", Stewart said. "In
my opinion someone at !he state
level is dragging !heir feeL"
"I realize that these things
lake time," Stewart continued.
"But they (the state) haven't
even put a statement out to tell

us their intentions."
Stewan, who is employed by
the U.S. Army Corps of Engi neers in Racine, feels that purchase of damaged property for
the purpose of reclaiming would
be beneficial to all those
involved.
"The Div is ion of Surface
Mining could reclaim the old
mine sites, ODOT could fix the
road for good and we would
receive some money to help us
relocate and get our lives back
together."

Schaad discusses economic program
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Starr

X Off

,

i'

v

446-4343 .,

intended to retrain about 500 coal
industry workers who have lost
their jobs.
The coal fields of southeast
"For many of the miners out of
Ohio served as a backdrop today work today and for the next generafor the completion of legislation tion in Perry County and southeastaimed at keeping the state's coal em Ohio, the future will not be in
induSII)' alive while utility compa- coal," he said. " The grant we are
nies seek to comply with the feder- awarding today will allow us to
al Clean Air act.
work directly with more than 500
Gov. George Voinovich toured dislocated coal employees and help
the area to call attention to the coal them build a new future. "
industry.
The money is to be used for
His fl!St stop was in New Lex- workers in Athens, Belmont, Galington, where he presented a $1 lia, Guernsey, Harrison, Jefferson ,
million check to a job retraining Meigs, Monroe, Muskingum ,
center.
Noble and Perry counties.
The governor then planned to
Voinovich al so presented a
travel to Bellaire for a ceremony to $33,100 grant to Pasta Fresca in
sign the state's coal bill, passed by Perry County for the creation of
the Legislature on June 28. At least five jobs, and a $200,000 grant to
six lawmakers were expected to Mayer Plastics Corp., also in Perry
meet there with the governor , County. for 45 jobs.
·
including Sen. Robert Ney and
The coal bill allows utilities that
Rep . Jerry Krupinski, the chief burn Ohio' s high-sulfur coal lo
sponsors.
claim tax credits for up to 20 perThe $1 million for the Hocking, cent of the cost of anti-pollution
Perry and Athens Community smokestack scrubbers to achieve
Action Center in New Lexington is specified reductions in emissions.

The bill also requires utilities
tllat switch to cleaner coal from
other states to demonstrate that the
decision reOects their lowest-cost
opuon of complying with the federal act.
Ney, R-BarnesviUe, and Krupmsk i, D-Steubenville, added an
emergency clause in the bill so it
would take effect when Voinovich
signed it.
American Electric Power Co.
needed the bill to go in effect soon
because the utility must decide th1s
summer whether to install scrub,
hers for Its Gavin power plant in
Gallia County or switch to coal
from other states.
AEP had been leaning toward
switching to out-of-state coal. But
after the measure cleared the legislature, AEP officials said It provtded information that would be useful
in its deliberations.
The Gavin plant is supplied with
coal by a Me1gs County mine that
employs 1,258 people. Those jobs
apparently will be lost if AEP
decides to buy non-Ohio coal.

By BRIAN J, REED.
Sentinel News Starr

Y30FF
326 SECOND AVE. • GALLIPOLIS

Gov. Voinovich to

Long, Abel to hold meeting with
.displaced. H ahsl!n,.~ r£~de.nts,~.

MONDAY, JULY 8, 1991

•All Swimwear

A Mulllmedla Inc. Newspaper

NOT PLEASED - Residents or "Pity Me"
are not pleased with the attention they have
received rrom government agencies since they

\SUMMER SALE
BEGINS!

\J

! section, 20 pages, 2.5 cent.

JJJIY

OUR

The family of Juanita ~M. Miller.
and the late Ronald L. Miller, Sr..
held a reunion on July 4 at Billy
Cozart's Riverside picntc area tn
Racine.
There were 33 family members
and guests, including several from
out of state and the military , to
enjoy the potluck picnic and games
with a red, white and blue color
theme carried out

Vol. 42, No, 46

Copvrtghled 1991

MAS·ON FURNITURE'S

Large library

Miller reunion held

The remams of Charlie ChaJilin
were stolen in 1978 by extoruomsts
from his grave in Cosier-surVevey, Switzerland. (The body was
recovered near Lake Geneva II
weeks later.)

PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) The menu at Amos House will
include an item rarely seen at a
soup kitchen - ftllet of sbark - a
gift of three fishermen.
" People are starving every
day, " said Joseph Czerwein, 29,
one of the three who caught the
199·pound blue shark Saturday, 40
miles offshore in the Snug Harbor
Shark Tournament
"This will be a nice surprise,"

Birthday observed

Paul Paynter, Mrs. Ardis Wag goner, all of Albany; Donna Young
and Tomiko, Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Spaun, Shannon and Julia, Mr. and
Mrs. John W. Dean , James and
Sarah, all of Pomeroy.
Following dinner, a cake,
inscribed with "Welcome Home
Richard," was served.
The afternoon was spent visiting
and swimming. This was Sgt.
Dean's first visit in three years.
Wh1le here he attended his 20th
alumni banquet and Meigs High
School.

Female place names

JOHN WILCOX

Fishermen donate shark to needy

NATASHA KNAPP

More than 500
die on nation's
highways over
holiday weekend

HANNAH HOFFMAN

Mr. and Mrs. Larry E. Hoffman
are announcing the birth of their
daughter, Hannah Kathleen, on
May 22 at Holzer Medical Center.
The infant weighed se ven
pounds and five ounces and was 20
inches long.
Paternal grandparents are Glenni s and Deloris Hoffman, Chester.
Maternal grandmother is Nellie
Gonzales, California.

Th!f Meigs County Women Fel- were perfOrmed by Donna Jenkins,
lowship met recently at the Hem- Charlotte Lambert, Sharon Hawley
lock Grove Church of Christ
llld Jane Wise. Cindy Hazelton had
Jane Hazelton led the opening the closing prayer and Jane Wise
song. Devotions were read by Kar- sang a solo for the closing.
lira Stump and business and secreRefreshments were served.
tary reports were given by Kathryn
The next meeting will be at the
Johnson, president.
Middleport Church of Christ on
The program was presented with July 25. The public is invited.
a ladies quartet and skits which

· ~--~~~~---------------

Director Elizabeth Schaad
reported on a meeting that she
attended and on the year to date
when the Meigs County Chamber
of Commerce met in regular session on Tuesday afternoon.
Schaad announced that the
"Talce Charge!" program is scheduled to begin in the fall, with five
evening sessions. The program,
according to Schaad, is pan of an
on$oing attempt by the chamber to
tram a team of "economic development practitioners" within the
county.
Named to the "Take Charge!"
. planning committee were Joan
May, Frank Cleland, Steve Story,
Brian Reed, Tom Reed, Dr. Nick
Robinson, Bill Quickel, Charles
Kitchen, and Rick Crow.
Thai committee will be respon-

sible for "localizing" the program
for Meigs COunty panicipants.
Schaad also announced that a
small business workshop will be
conducted in September.
Six Points
Schaad.also reponed on a meeting with APIIalachian county leaders and Clovernor 's Office of
A~alachia Director Nancy HoUister an Chillicothe.
Schaad reviewed a list of priorities for Meigs Co1111ty presented at
the meeting. When listing those
priorities, Schaad'narned six important points for developing the area.
Firstly, Schaad pointed out' the
importance of the Ravenswood
Bridge Connector, stating that this
link is the "single most important
development tool" for the area.
Schaad told the chamber members that the county needs an industrial site to market to prospective
builders. All sites in Meigs County,

accordi,ng to Schaad, lack the
iiJ!Ili1Ai!,llt points that developers
· neeil;'ftamely water, sewer hookups
and/or good roads. The money to
provide these services and develop
1he si tes are the most important
point in site development.
In a related area, Schaad told
Hollister that the area needed srate
assistance in site marketing.
According to Schaad, Meigs
County has a disadvantaged population in terms of economic development. Schaad told those at the
development meeting that a team
of "economic development practitioners" was needed.
State assistance for the school
systems, namely Meigs Local, will
be needed if Southern Ohio Coal
Company closes the Meigs Mines,
Schaad said. According to Schaad,
the district will lose $803,000 if
those mines do close.
Continued on page 3

revitalization project ror Pomeroy's business
district on Tuesday evening with members or the
Pomeroy Merchants Association and other concerned community citizens.

Funds available for
Pomeroy revitalization
By JULIE E. DILLON
Sentinel News Staff

cussed the process with the Association as well as other concerned
citizens.
A group of members from the
Simcox stated there IS up to
Pomeroy Merchanls Association $250,000 in grant money available
and concerned citizens of the com- for a downtown revitalization promunity heard the process of a revi- gram. He went on to say that anothtalization project from two repre- er $250,000 would have to be
sentatives of the Buckeye Hills- matched locally - in this case by
Hockinll Valley Regional Develop- the Pomeroy Merchants Associament District on Tuesday evening.
tion which would oversee the proElizabeth Schaad, Metgs County ject. Simcox also stated that five
Economic Development Director, percent of the matching $250,000
earlier alerted the Merchants Asso- must be provided by local governciation that there is grant money ment, in this case the Village of
available for such a revitalization Pomeroy. Cooperation between the
project. Upon ~uest, the represen- Pomeroy Merchants Association
tatives, Boyer Suncox, community and the Village of Pomeroy is crudevelopment specialist, and Vijay cial as the application process for
Gadde, architect and planner, dls- the grant money will be done by

village government.
Money from the grant would
make it possible to bring buildings
up to code standard both on the
exterior and interior; provide new
facades by creating a desired theme
and developing the facades to· meet
that theme; as well as provide work
on sidewalks, curbs, streetlights
and awnings, although not restricted only to these items.
Pan of the money toward meet.
ing the $250,000 could possibly
come from Appalachia Regional
Council funds, according to Simcox.
Simcox stated that as a group,
the Pomeroy Merchants Association really has to decide that this is
Continued on page 3

Car crashes into grounds of Pomeroy school ·
Two utility poles were clipped
off, a fence surrounding the
Pomeroy Elementary School was
knocked down, and a swing set
inside the fence damaged when
struck by a vehicle traveling south
on Mulberry Avenue early
Wednesday morning.
Pomeroy Police said that the
1976 Mercury owned by Shawn
Gilmore, 27, of Hiland Road ,

Pomeroy, was apparently traveling
at a high rate of speed wben the
driver lost control. The vehicle
careened off the road to the right
hitting the poles and the playground equipment before' coming
to a stop.
The driver fled the scene and
had not yet been apprehended late
Wednesday morning. The accident
happened at 1:38 a.m.

There was heavy damage to the
top, front and right side of the vehicle.
Police said that five charges will
be filed against the driver, presumably Gilmore. They are leaving the
scene of an accident, operating
under suspension, no insurance
failure to control, and obstructing
offiCial business.
_.

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�.\•• ··· ·

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Wednesday, July 1D, 1991

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~lh

~~MULTIMEDIA. INC
ROBERT L. WINGETT

Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

PAT WHITEHEAD

Assistant Publisher/Controller
A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Dally Press Association and the Aml'rlcan N!'wspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words long. AIIIE'tters an• s ubj ec t to editing and must bE&gt; signed with
name . address and tel ephone number. No unsigned letter s w!ll be published. Lett ers should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personali-

ties.

·Law and order
Liberals call shots

'

L

Global headlines warn of repression in China, nukes in Iraq, strife
in the Slovias, and crime in
Crimea . No wonder President
Bush's New World Order is looking painfully like our old world disorder.
But late-breaking news from our
own long-running war - ow war
on crime- makes clear that we've
got a new order, after aiL And it's
happened just in time to help us
fight the rising rates of murder and
crime right here at home.
All hail the New Amencan
Order!
America's new order was created when our law enforcement officers teamed up with an altogether
new breed of pol - the Law and
Order Liberals. Together, they're
enacting tough measures that will
make it harder for crooks to get
guns and easier for cops to safeguard ow streets.
The New American Order IS
defeating, in rapid-fire votes in
Congress, those one-time hardliners on crime - conservatives who seem to have deep-sixed their
old promises to crack down on
crooks.
11 wrns out that these conservatives, led by President Bush, are
more fearful of offending the
National Rifle Association's lobbyiSts than they are of crooks buying
guns where you live. Now they've
fought and lost on measures to
require a modest waiting period for
prospective gun purchasers, so
police can comb cnmmal records
to assure the gun is not being sold
to a felon.
Fear of the NRA left President
Bush and his disappointing attorney general, Richard Thornburgh,
afraid to just say yes, even though
87 pen:entof the nation's gun owners supported a waiting period,
knowing that a five- or seven-day
wait couldn't hurt a citizen who
desired .a gun for purely legitimate
reasons.
· So too, Bush and Thornburgh
rejected the pleas of our police
chiefs, who merely asked them to
ban the domestic assault weapons
they SliY drug gangs are using to
outgun their cops on our streets.
Bush, nervous about the NRA, has
banned only foreign-made assault
guns; but the Senate just voted to
.ban the manufacture of 14 domestic assault weapons.
In 1989, Thornburgh scaled
back plans for a nationwide computerized criminal records system.
Now the Senate has called for creating just such a system, which will
eventually eliminate the need for a
waiting period - and it proposes
to give states $100 million to help
automate their records.
The New Arnencan Order turns
out to be an even bigger stort when

By Martin Schram

By The Associated Press
Today is Wednesday, July 10, the 19lst day of 1991 . There are 174
days left in the year.
Tollay's Highlight in History:
. .
On July 10, 1940, during World War II, the 114-day BauJ.eof Bntam
began as Nazi forces began a~cking , southern England by rur. By late
October, Britain managed to repel the Luftwaffe, whtch suffered heavy
losses.
On this date:
In 1832, President Andrew Jackson vetoed legislation to re-charter the
Second Bank of the United States.
In 1850, Vice President Millard Fillmore succeeded to the presidency ,
following the death of President Zachary'Taylor the day before.
. In !890 Wyoming became the 44th state of the umon.
In 1919: President Wilson personally delivered the Treaty of VerSllllles
.
io the U.S. Senate, and urged its ratification.
· In 1925 jury selection took place in Dayton, Tenn .. in the tnal of
schoolteacher John Scopes, charged with violating the law by teachmg
Darwin's Theory of Evolution.
.
.
In !925, the official news agency of the Soviet Umon, TASS, was
: established.
..
• In 1943, U.S. and British fon:es invadt?d S1cdy.
.
: . In 1951, annistice talks aimed at ending the Korean conflict began at
Kaesong.
.
hed f
C
In 1962 tile Telstar communications satellite was l~unc
rom ape
Canaveral: Fla., to relay television and telephone Signals between the
Urtited StateS and Europe.
.
• .. In 1973, the Bahamas became independent after three centunes of
. .
: British colonial rule.
-. In 1978, Soviet dissident Anatoly Shcharansky went on tnal m
· Moscow, charged with espionage.

John ·David Lambert, 60, of
Leading Creek Road in Middleport,
died Tuesday, July 9, 1991, at Vet·
erans Memorial Hospital following
a lengthy illness.
He was born in Milton, W.Va.
on October 23, 1930, the son of the
late John and Hattie Frances Black
Lambert. He was a laborer and a
veteran of the U.S. Army. He
attended the Believer's Fellowship
Ministry.
He IS survived by his wife, Mil·
dred Lemley Lambert, Middleport;
two daughters, Mrs. Harold (Evelena) Fetty, Middleport, and Mrs.
William (Patricia) Russell, Gallipolis; a step-mother, Gladys Morrison, Milton, W.Va.; five brothers;
three sisters; and five grandchildren.
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by two brothers and
two sisters.
Services will be held on Friday
at 2 p.m. at Fisher Funeral Home in
Middleport with Rev . Margaret
Robinson officiating. Burial will be
in Riverview Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home on Thursday from 2-4 p.m.
and 7-9 p.m. and on Friday until
time of the service.

EPA expert at pondering pollution
WASHINGTON - It has been
14 years since Congress ordered
the Environmental Protection
Agency to update air pollution
standards at least once every five
years. The EPA is still thinking
about it
The standards for three of the
worst air pollutants - lead, sulfur
dioxide and ozone, commonly
called smog - have never been
reviewed as mandated by Congress
in 1977. That year, Congress
passed amendments to the Clean
Air Act, which said that every five
years, starting in 1980, the EPA
would review the health effects of
air pollution and decide whether or
not to revise the regulations governing the worst of the pollutants.
EPA researcher Eric Ginsburg
explained that the EPA considered
the five-year deadline as "the target date." And he said, "Sometimes , there is, as we say, slippage."
The only "slippage" we could
find mentioned in the law is a
clause that allows the EPA to evaluate the standards more often than
every ftve years. What the EPA
calls "slippage," some environmentalists are calling negligence.
The scientific data on the health
effects of what could be the most

these recent House and Senate
crime bill voteS are read alongside
the latest national polls. Here's the
big picture: The combined forces
of Law Enforcement Officers and
Law and Order Ltberals have captured the political mainstream that
conservatives thought would be
theirs forevennore.
Ever since Richard Nixon fiist
wooed Middle America with his
law and order campaign m 1968,
conservatives chortled that they
had painted liberals into a corner
where the entire Democratic Party
would be trapped forever with an
image of being soft on crime. Truth
be told, it was the liberals who had
cheerily grabbed a brush and
helped paint themselves into that
comer. Those were the days when
liberals loved to fret in public
places about the rights of the
accused - yet seemed to feel that
it was unseemly to talk about the
rights of all other Americans to hve
in security at home.
Now it is the liberals who have
been quick on the uptake - and
it's the conservatives who just
don't get it. Liberals transformed
themselves into what I've called
Law and Order Liberals. Some,
such as Senate Judiciary Chairman
Joseph Biden, D-Del., now push
measures expanding the crimes for
which the death penalty can be
legal.
But conservatives still haven't
grasped what the latest crime bill
battles are really about. They're
about security, well within our
It's been convenient for many in
national borders, when we walk
down our own street or through the the press and for many critical of
darkened parking lot of the neigh- the current state of our nation's
affairs to blame most of our present
borhood mall.
The New American Order was problems, be they economic or othforged in the end because over- erwise, on the decade of the SO's whelming majorities in the Senate a decade which many critics defme
and the House decided that our as a decade of excesses. While I'll
conservative president simply was be the fliSt to admit that there are
not being tough enough on crime. some lingering and damaging afterSurprisingly, it's the Law and effects that resulted from the
Order Liberals who are leading the expansionist economic policies of
the previous decade, all in all, I
way in the 1990s.
think the 1980's should go down i~
NOTE: Martin Schram, a veter- our history books as a decade of
an JOurnalist, is a nabonally syndi- significant economic accomplish cated political commentator. HJS ment.
In the aftermath of the Reagan
column ts distributed by New spayears, all one hears are the critiper Enterprise Association.
Schram is also a frequent com- cisms; the contention that the
mentator for Cable News Network, 1980's have saddled the American
guest panelist on CNN's "The people with a budget deficit that
Cap• tal Gang," and national editor will haunt us ever after; that the
1980's created an underbelly of
of The Washmgtonian magazine.
He has worked previously as poverty in the United States that
nauonal affairs correspondent for will scar ow society for many years
The Washington Post; associate to come. This week I would like to
and Sunday editor for the Chicago take the opportunity to put this type
Sun-Times; Sunday editor of Den- of reckless rhetoric to rest, I would
ver's Rocky Mountain News; and like to illustrate with facts and figWashington bureau chief for News- ures that the 1980s was truly a
decade of growth and prosperity. a
day.
decade that laid the foundation for

Today in history

!~!~a~b~~ths Speaker accuses governor of
not cooperating over budget

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy...:...Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, July 1D, 1991

dangerous of the three, ozone, has
not been reviewed since 1978. The
major cause of smog is auto emissions. Heavy smog can cause
painful breathing, coughing and
decreased lung function. Ozone
levels vary from year to year
depending on the weather. Experts
predict that 1992 will be as bad a
year as 1988, when about 130 mil lion people lived in areas that did
not meet the national standards for
ozone. The number would be even
higher if the federal standard was
more strict - at least as strict as
neighborin~ Canada or even CaliCornia, which has a tougher state
standard. If the EPA got serious
about reviewing thOse standards
based on the latest medical data
about lung disease, the logical decisian might indeed "be to make the
standards more strict
And the problem is not limited
to cities. Fifty years ago, visitors to
the Shenandoah National Park in
Virginia would boast that on a clear
day they could see the Washington
Monument 89 miles away. Now,
tourists in the park cl)nsider it a
treat if they can see the next range
of the Blue Ridge Mountains 20
miles away.
If the EPA was doing its job ,
then some industries might have to

By Jack Anderson
and Dale Van Atta

spend a lot more money controlling
their emissions. But after nearly II
years of pro-business presidents,
the political appointees in the EPA
can't be oounted on to do their job, ferent scientists. And there has
even if the rank-and-file environ- been some action. In 1988 the EPA
mentalists in the agency are sin- issued a "proposed decision" not
cere. So others without political to revise the standards for sulfur
ties to bind them try to force the dioxide. After thus proposing that it
EPA to act.
would probably decide not to act,
In 1988, the Environmental the EPA has since not acted on the
Defense Fund sued the EPA for proposal.
failure to publish fonnal decisions
EPA spokesman Dave Ryan
on whether the pollution standards gave our reporter Nick Budnick
would be revised. Not only was the some insight as to why the EPA
EPA not revising the standards, but feels it can drag its feet without
it wasn't publishing in the federal repercussions. ''If you violate a
register the fact that it had · court order, you go to jail. If you
reviewed the standard and decided violate a congressional deadlme,
it dido 't need to be revised. An it's not as serious.''
appeals court ruled that the EPA
ANOTHER OCTOBER SURhad to publish its decisions. But PRISE - Whether or not Ronald
even when the EPA does that, the Reagan manipulated the fate of the
only way to challenge their deciAmerican hostages so he oould win
sian is for a private group to sue the 1980 election is an issue hotly
them. That puts private citizens in debated in Washington these days.
the role of enfon:ers of a law hand·
But there is another "October Sured down by Congress.
prise" theory about which there is
It isn't that the EPA has been
little doubt. In 1988, top Reagan
sitting on its hands for 14 years. A administration officials knew the
spokesman told us that reviewing
scope and severity of the savings
a1r quality standards is a "comand loan crisis. Yet Republicans
plex" and "ongoing" process,
interested in seeing George Bush
with plenty of uncertainty caused
succeed Reagan took pains to avoid
bv different interoretations bv diftalking about the problem. Fonner
savings and loan regulator Danny
Wall was at the helm of the agency
in charge of the thrift industry
when it shipwrecked. He continually downplayed the crisis and insisted that no taxpayer bailoul woilld
be required. But when Bush was
elected, Wall changed his tune.
Ironically it is now the Bush
administration that is losing sleep
over how to manage the $500 billion bailout.
MINI-EDITORIAL - It has
now been more than 18 months
since U.S. forces invaded Panama
and rounded up dictator Manuel
Noriega in what was called "Operation Just Cause." The declared
purpose of the invasion was to hall
Noriega's drug opemtions. Panama
was the financial center for the
Colombian drug cartels, and drug
money was laundered through
. Panamanian lianks. Sadly, little has
changed except for the people in
power who are on the take, and
Panama is still mired in corruption
and drug money. This is beginning
to look like a pattern for American
military actions - that bmve soldiers risk their lives for a "just
cause" only to have the status quo

~--~--------~

IT'61R' F1125r I

~...

~----------------------------... return.

Setting the record straight By Rep. Clarence Miller
further economic expansion well
into the current decade.
Overall, 'the decade of the SO's
was a period characterized by
record-setting growth and rising
prosperity. It was a decade that saw
seven years of uninterrupted expansion. The initial years of the 1980's
were marked by a restructuring (I[
our economy, as the country struggled to pull away from the double
digit inflation and staggering interest rates that beset our economy m
the second-half of the 1970's. As
we progressed tluough the 1980's,
our economy picked up significant
momentum and by the end of the
decade the economic well-being of
most Americans had risen to new
highs. By 1989, real per capita disposable inoome and the percentage
of population with obs reached
record highs, while the nation's
unemployment rate fell to a 16 year
low of 5.3 percent. The seven years
of uninterrupted expansion that
began in 1983 saw real per capita
disposable income in,crease 19 pe~­
ccnt more than twice as fast as n
rose during the preceeding seven
years.
The contention that the tax

reduction policies of the past
administration resulted in the rich
getting richer and the poor getting
poorer is what one would call a
half-truth. During the expansion of
the 1980's, the full truth is that
both the rich and poor made gains.
During the seven years of uninterrupted growth that took place
between 1983 and 1989, real family income for the lowest 20 pen:ent
of Americans rose nearly 12 percent, an increase consistent with
the gains experienced by all other
income levels. During this period,
the nation's poverty rate declined
from a recessionary high of 13.7
percent to 11.4 pen:ent Contrary to
some criticisms that the benefits of
economic growth were not evenly
spread through all sectors of our
society, figures show that Black
and Hispanic employment rose the
fastest during the expansion, and
female earnings increased significantly after stagnating for much of
the 70's, resulting in a much narrower gap between female and
male earnings.
The U.S. economy ended the
past decade in far be~ shape than
It began. The economic evidence is
there for all to see. Inflation, which

stood above 12 percent at the start
of the decade, was cut roughly by
two-thirds to an average of ust over
4 percent The unemployment rate
fell from a recessionary high of
over 10 pen:ent in the early 1980's
to 5.3 percent in 1989. Interest
rates, which were pushed slcyward
by the high inflation rates of the
late seventies and stood at over 15
percent at the beginning of the
80's, ended the decade at approximately half that level. Productivity
gains, while still discernibly smaller than the early post World War II
decades, recovered significantly
from the turtle lik£ growth pace
that characterized the 1970's,
increasing some 50 percent from
1.1 to 1.6 percent for the economy
overall, and some 3.7 percent for
the manufacturing sector.
The lesson of the 1980's, contrary to what some might oontest, is
that economic growth and ob gains
are the best prescription for economic prosperity. New obs remain
the best solution to addressing our
society's economic and social
shortcomings and policies promoting economic growth are clearly
the best invesunent

The First gets kicked around again
In a whirlwind finish to its tenn.
thc Supreme Court held that the
First Amendment permits benign
misquotation, is less Important than
a contract and offers no protection
to consenting adults who dance
naked in front of other consenting
adults.
A hug, a punch in the schnoz
and a boot out the back door. Kind
of a lypical year for Old No. I ,
actually.
The hug was probably difficult
for the public to appreciate. How
can reporters change the words
people say and avoid a hbel trial?
The logic evolves from a 1964
decision which held that, in our
democracy, the public discourse is
of paramount importance and bonest errors about public figures must
thus be tolerated. P.ublic figures
must prove that journalists knowingly or recklessly published false
hoods.
The quotations case began when
writer Janet Malcolm published
unflattering material about a wellknown psychoanalyst, Jeffrey Masson. Malcolm quoted Masson
describing himself as an "intellectual gigolo," bragging of his sexual·

prowess and saying other embarrassing things.
He sued, claiming she deliberately misquoted him. She ftled for
a dismissal, saying she could document every word but that it was
irrelevant because Masson had
publicly said nearly the same
things before and there was clearly
no significant distortion. Solely for
the purposes of her dismissal
motion, she said, the court could
assume that she misquoted Masson
and decide whether that fact alone
constituted sufficient malice to justify the expense of continued litiga- ·
tion.
The Supreme Court granted
Masson a trial, but in so doing
ruled that mere misquotation does
not always amount to malice. ''A
deliberate alteration of the words
uttered by a plaintiff does not
equate with knowledge of falsity,"
wrote Justice Anthony Kennedy,
"unless the alteration results in a
material change in the meaning
conveyed by the statement''
Why is this important to your
ability to gel the news? Because
quotations are sometimes scrubbed
up for grammar and syntax and

becausc.if every public fi 11ure who
clatmcd he or she was m1squoted
had a right to an expensive jury
trial, you'd be reading nothing but
comics and pork belly futures.
Bless you, Justice Kennedy, and
may you continue to be so enlight·
ened.
The contract case began when
reporters for two Minnesota newspapers promised anonymity to a
source who leaked damaging information about a political candidate.
Their editors decided the name of
the leaker was a bigger story than
the stuff he leaked and they printed
his name.
The source sued for breach of
contract, and Justice Byron
"Whizzer" White, writing for a 54 majority, held that the First
Amendment "does not confer on
the press a constitutional right to
disregard promises that would oth·
erwise be enforced under state

By Joseph Spear

uce"White wrote another decision
two decades ago in which he held
that reporters have no First Amend·
ment right to withhold the names of
sources. So tell us, Oh Wise
Whizzcr, do we seal our lips or stiff
our sources?
The nude dancing case began
when three performers in South
Bend, Ind., challenged a state indecency law which proscribes public
nudity. The Supreme Court held
there is some First Amendment
protection for nude dancing but
that the states can ban it in the
interest of "protecting order and
morality."
You get that? Nudity is
immol'al. That means every human
being on the planet came into being
as a pervert Why does the ooun let
itself be abused with this kind of
nonsense? Would Holmes or Branlaw."
This is a stupid decision for two deis concern themselyes with such
reasons: First, there will be many absurdities? Why doesn't the coon
more such lawsuits and more legal simply tell local officials .to go
fees and that means journalists will · home and pass a zonmg ordmance
avoid certain stories .and that trans- and leave the First Amendment
lates into censorship. Second, JUS· alone?

.

.

By ROBERT E. MILLER
Assoeiated Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio {AP)House Speaker Vern Riffe, D·
Wheelersburg, has accused Gov.
George Voinovich of refusing to
cooperate with efforts in the Legis·
lature to complete passage of
Ohio's new budget
A Voinovich aide denied the
allegation.
Riffe, R-Wheelersburg, took
exception Tuesday to Voinovich's
comments at a news conference
Monday about a decision by a Senate-House cooference oommittee to
reject his plan to tum state liquor
stores over to private operators.
Voinovich said he reluctantly
supports a compromise budget
agreement worked out between
Riffe and Senate President Stanley
Aronoff, R-Cincinnati, but deplores
the decision to scrap his proposal.
The governor attributed the
decision to "lobbying by unions"
that claim I ,400 clerks and liquor
department employees - whose
jobs would be lost in the conver-

sian- as members.
Voinovich said the rejection of
his plan cost the state $33 million
in revenues, representing mostly
the savings from discontinued
salaries. The governor went on to
hint t1w he might make the rejection of his plan an issue jn next
year's legislative elections.
Riffe criticized Voinovich for
reviving the already decided liquor
issue and for conflicting estimates
of how much the plan would save.
Voinovich said
Monday it would save $33 million, but others in the administration have pegged the savings at $4 7
million and $41 million, Riffe said.
"From the start, I have questioned the revenue estimates," the
speaker said.
He also said that when the
Republican governor "looks at
those 1,400 liquor store employees
he sees on Iy a union. He has made
his anti-labor stance clear during
the fliSt six months of his adminis-

inoome. I also wony t1w I00 more
stores (500, compared with the present 400) will mean more consumption (of liquor) and the
increased medical and social problems that go along with increased
consumption."
The speaker said that
Voinovich, mstead of adhering to a
policy of cooperation, "has opted
for a policy of oonfrontation."
The joint oommittee still has not
finished wooong out the derails of
the Riffe-Aronoff agreement but
both have said tlw the liquor pro·
posal will not be a part of the budget
Curt Steiner, Voinovich's
deputy chief of staff, denied that
the governor has been confron ta ·
tional and said he "has consistently
complimented the House and Sen·
ate leadership" for their work on
the budgeL
"But that doesn't mean that
tbere is not room for a legitimate
disagreement on this issue. The
tration.''
governor really believes the liquor
Riffe added: "I look at those proposal is a good way to provide
employees and I think of families more money for schools and other
who are dependent upon that programs," Steiner said.

r----Local briefs----, Talks resume between
Pomeroy man cited in accident
striking union, company
A Pomeroy man was cited following a one-vehicle accident on
S.R. 684 in Scipio Township late Tuesday evening.
According to a report flied by the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
Highway Patrol, Edward J. King, 24, of Pomeroy, was westbound
on S.R. 684 when he lost control of his 1972 Chevrolet pickup
truck. The truck went off the right side of the roadway, struck an
embankment and overturned.
King was transported by the Rutland Squad of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service to Veterans Memorial Hospital where
he was treated.
Damage to King's vehicle was listed as heavy.
King was cited by the patrol for driving under the influence, failure to wear a safety belt, failure to control and no operators license.

PIKETON, Ohio (AP) - Strilc·
ing workers and union officials are
optimistic about the fliSt scheduled
meeting with the operator of a government-owned uranium plant
since the walkout began a month
ago.
A federal mediator arranged for
tho meeting in Chillicothe Friday
between Local 3-689 of the Oil,
Chemical and Atomic Workers
Union and Martin Marietta Energy
Systems, union and company offi·
cials said Tuesday. Martin Marietta
manages the Portsmouth Gaseous
Diffusion
Plant for the federal govMeigs Emergency Medical Services units answered six calls for
ernment.
assistance on Tuesday and Wednesday.
"Of course, we're hopeful,"
On Tuesday at 4:19 p.m., Pomeroy squad went to Chamber
said
John Knauff, president of the
Road. William Will was taken to Holzer Medical Center. At 5:25
union.
"We like to think something
p.m., Racine squad went to State Route 338. Flora Wingrove was
could
happen
here.''
taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital. At 5:43 p.m.. Middleport
"At
least
they're
making headsquad went to South Second Avenue. Charlotte Goodman was treatway
by
having
a
meeting,"
said
ed but not transported. At 6:30 p.m., Racine squad went to State
L.M.
Thomas,
a
uranium
materials
Route 124, Corbm Sellers was talcen to Veterans.
handler for 20 years. "We were
On Wednesday at 12:12 am .. Rutland unit went to Stare Route
tired
of striking before we even
684 for an auto accident and transported Joe King to Veterans. At
started.
We dido 't want to strike.
12:55 am., Middleport fire deparunent went to Oliver Street for a
We
hope
they'll reach an agreenatl!ljll gas leak.
mentv'l'hat's all we can do."
'1Vir.:&lt;j
'·
Martin Marietta spokesman Tim
Matchett would say only that a
meeting was scheduled.
About I ,050 union workers
appointing a trustee to fill the went on strike June II at the plant
Country music night
after more than a month of negotta. Country music night will be vacancy which now exists.
tions failed to produce a new threeheld at the Lottridge Community
Softball tournament
year contract. Issues involved
Center on Saturday from 6 p.m. to
The
Locomotion
Teen
Center
overtime and plant safe·
seniority,
midnight. All bands are welcome. will sponsor a slow pitch men's
ty.
Refreshments will be available.
softball tournament on Aug. 3 and
Teams of four pickets have
4
at the Rutland Ball Field.
stood at each of the plant's ·six
Special meeting
Cost is $60 plus two balls. Call ~ates since the strike began . A
The Sutton Township Trustees
John
Harrison at 992-7546, Bob judge limited the number of pickets
will meet in special session Friday
Sisson
at ·742·2187 or Bob Johnson to 24 at the planL
at 7:30p.m. in the Syracuse Municat
992-6890.
ipal Building for the purpose of

Meigs EMS answers six calls

Meigs announcements

Blue Cross
assets
under fire
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
- Disputed claims against Blue
Cross and Blue Shield of West Virginia would wipe out the failed
insurer's remaining assets if upheld
by the courts, a state insurance officia! said.
West Virginia's largest private
insurer went out of business last
fall, then was revamped as Mountain State Blue Cross under the
control of Blue Cross and Blue
Shield of Ohio.
When the plan failed , it pwed
money to as many as 30,000 subscribers and health care providers. .
Anyone with a claim against
Blue Cross of West Virginia had to
have mailed in a claim by Monday,
said. David Gates, a special deputy
insurance commissioner who is
handling the liquidation of the
defunct insurer's assets.
Gates said the number of
claiman~ and the amount sought is
not yet final, but there appear to be
at least 15,000 claimants seeking
about $30 million.
The fa•led insurance plan has
·between $7 million and $8 million
in assets, most of it coming from
the sale of a Charleston office
building that housed Blue Cross, of
West Virginia, he said.
Blue Cross of Ohio bought lhe
building for Mountain State Blue
Cross.
Several groups, including the
United Mine Workers, say they
have $9.5 million in secured claims
:against Blue Cross ofWest Vir·ginia assets, Gates sa1d. Grou~s
'with secured claims would get paid
before anyone else.
If the secured claims are upheld
'in court the $9.5 million •; will
wipe oui the entire $8 million in
assets," Gates said.
Gates said it will take at least
until December to verify claims the
state has received.

The Dally Senllnei-Pag~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Supervisory and management
employees have been operating the
plant since the strike.
Members of a plant advisory
committee toured the plant Monday
to quell concerns that the plant is
unsafe. Committee members, who
include environmental scientists,
are paid by Martin Marietta as consultal!ts.
The group stopped at air monitoring stations, wastewater treatment plants and holding ponds.
said Leo Weaver, a private environmental engineer from Cincinnati and chainnan of the commit-

OHIO Weather
Thursday, July 11
Accu-Weathe,a forecast for daytime conditions and high temperatures
MICH.

e

IMansfield I as• I•
IND.

•I Columbus I as· I
W VA .

~
~
Showers T-sto""s Rain

Flumes

Snow

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial Hospital
TUESDAY ADMISSIONS Vickie Boso, Racine.
TUESDAY DISCHARGES Homer Moodispaugh, Rebecca
Karr, Ruth Burdette and Donha
Jenkinson.
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges, Tuesday, July 9Cecil Clary, Christopher Clemons,
Darlene Cunningham, Margaret
Duffield, Charlotte Ireland,
Thomas Ra~en, Sada Simms,
Michelle Smith, Heather Sparks,
Toni Walton, Beth Weethee.
Birtbs, Tuesday, July 9 - Mr.
and Mrs. Mark Gibson, Wellston, a
daughter; Mr. and Mrs. Kevin
Payne, Pomeroy, a son; Mr. and
Mrs. Bernie Rittenhouse, Wellston,
a daughter; Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey
Royster, Wellston, a daughter; Mr.
and Mrs. Phillip Waldman, Colton,
a daughter.

There was no need for evacua·
tion, Brady said, but residents
along Plymale Road were asked to
stay inside their homes with their
windows and doors closed. He
added there was· a faint odor
accompanying the cloud.
According to Brady, hydrogen
bromide is an eye and lung irritant
in a high concentration. BradY. said
the ooncentration. in the clouil was
so low there is no problem with
this incident.
Maintenance and emergency

Three were fined and three others forfeited bonds in the court of
Pomeroy Mayor Rithard Seyler
Tuesday nighL
Fined were David Ellis,
Pomeroy, assault, $213 and costs;
Charles Pullins, Jr., Pomeroy, $213
and costs, menacing threats, $213

South Central Obio
Tonight, clearing. Low in the
mid-60s. Thursday, mostly sunny
with the high in the mid-80s .
Chance of rain 20 percent.

Funds...

ping.

·0'

Middleport court news
One was fined and two others
forfeited bonds on charges of driving while under the influence of
alcohol or drugs in the court of
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffmlm
Tuesday night
·

Fined on the charge was Jerry L.
Lewis, Columbus, $425 and costs
and three days in jail. Forfeiting
$460 bonds were Paul R. Stewart,
Cheshire, Daniel James Boles,
Point Pleasant, W. Va. and Roger
Lee Hoschar, Leon, W. Va.
Hoschar also forfeited a $60 bond
on running a stop sign. Lewis was
also fmed $100 and costs for operMatchmakers
ating a motorcycle while under
suspension.
The U S. Employment Service re· license
Others
forfeiting bonds were
fers employable applicants to job
Robert
L.
Gent, Jr., Columbus.
openings that use their highest skilts
$110,
disorderly
after warning, and
and helps-the unemployed obtain servic,es or !raiping tQ _make them- em· , Wil.liam.P: BB(toe, Zaleski, $49,
..
ployabte. It' also provides special at- ~ng.
Fined
were
Ray
Stewart, Bidtention to · handicapped workers,
migrants and seasonal farmworkers, well, $25 and costs, open containworkers who lose tlleir jobs because er; Donnie Stone, l&gt;omeroy, $25 ·
of foreign trade com~titlon, and oth· and costs, open container; Robert
er worker groups.
R. Taylor, Chesltire, $25 and COSIS, ·

open container; Kenny D. Ramsey,
Pomeroy, $25 and costs, consuming alcohol under age 21; Larry E.
Laudermilt, Jr., Vinton, $50 and
costs, disorderly manner; and Paul
Kent. Bidwell, $25 and costs, open
container.

Pt. Cloudy

Cloudy

Ct991 Aocu-Weatner,lnc

Friday through Sunday:
F31£ on Fnday. Chance of showers or thunders~onns Saturday and
Sunday. Highs m the 80s. Lows tn
the upper 50s or the 60s.

Continued from page 1

Schaad...

and costs, assault; Charles Lantz,
McArthur, $50 and costs, speeding.
Forfeiting bonds were Gary
Curtis, Pomeroy, $63, open container on the parking lot; Charles
Davis, Middleport, $52, speeding;
Anthony Perry, Chillicothe, $51,

Sunny

-----Weather------

what needs to be done and go from
there.
The first step, after deciding to
do the project, is to form a committee of four to five hard working
individuals who have the time to
devote to the project and follow it
through until completed. On this
committee would be a lead person
that would work closely with
Buckeye Hills.
After a committee is formed a
downtown business plan must be
developed This plan would look at
tee.
factors such as traffic circulation,
"We didn't see anything unusu- infrastructure, parking, land use,
al at all," Weaver said
street signs, streetscape and design
"I don't think we need to lose a standards.
lot of sleep worrying about an
The busmess plan would help
imminent disastrous event here," develop design standards which
said Nicholas Dinos, a chemical would take a look at what the
engineer at Ohio University.
buildings in the designated district
There have been two incidents are now and what they could look
at the plant since the strike.
like when the project is completed.
On June 28, a malfunction These design standards must be
caused alarms to sound in six passed by Pomeroy VIllage Govbuildings at the plant, forcing I)Je ernment before any of the grant
evacuation of 64 workers. A con- inoney could be applied for.
tractor had cut into the alann line
accidentally, said Buck Sheward,
Martin Marietta's division manager
of environmental safety and health.
Continued from page I
On Thursday, about 10 grams of
radioactive gas escaped from a
Finally, Schaad said that local
storage conlainer as a plant opera- funding for local economic develtor prepared to transfer uranium opment was a necessity for
from one conlainer to another. The progress in Meigs County. She
gas was contained to the building.
cited the progress made m the past
The plant, in Pike County about year within the chamber.
70 miles south of Columbus, reprocesses fuel for civilian nuclear
reactors and the military.
Transportation Report
The chamber has passed a resolution urging the Southeastern Ohio
Regional Council to work toward
the completion of the Ravenswood
Bridge Connector, according to
personnel are investigating the SEORC Highway Users Commitcause of the leak. A full investiga- tee Member Bruce Reed.
tion and equipment repair will be
A local delegation has been
completed before the unit is restart- placed on the next agenda of the
ed, Brady said.
committee.
The Mason County Sheriff's
Reed also reported that the
Department assisted the AKZO chamber (and other community
personnel on Plymale Road with groups) have attempted to "centralsecuring the area. Brady said they ize" efforts toward the project.
(sheriffs officials) could not detect Meigs Counuans recogniz~:d yesan odor in the area.
terday for their efforts in this area
Plant officials also notified the were Schaad, Steve Story, Lenny
Gallia County Sheriff's Depart· Eliason , Charles Blakesle~.
ment of the leak.
Bernard Fultz and Rich Jones.

Pomeroy court news

Ice

Via Associared Press GraphicsNet

Bromine gas escapes from AKZO
Two vapor clouds of hydrogen
bromide escaped a Gallipolis Ferry,
W.Va. facility following a gasket
leak early Wednesday morning, but
the problem was quickly contained,
according to the J?lanl manager.
Bill Brady smd the gasket fail•. we in a pipeline feeding bromine at
A.KZO Chemical to a process unit
caused the clouds. One cloud was
knocked down almost imtnediately
with water over the plant. One
cloud went north to Plymale Road.
Brady said A.KZO personnel were
stationed along Plymale Road to
watch the cloud.

PA.

In other business, the chamber:
- announced a PUCO hearing in
Athens regarding the Clean Air Act
of 1990. Meigs Local Superintendent James Carpenter will testify at
that hearing;
- discussed a meeting conducted
by Buckeye Hills/Hocking Valley
Regional Development District
regarding downtown revitalization
which was to be held on Tuesday
evening (See related story.)
- reviewed proposed budget fig·
ures for 1991 ;
- welcomed four new members:
Vaughan's Cardinal, Reed's Country Store. George Wright and Brian
Reed. . •
The meeting was hosted by
Overbrook Center in Middleport.

The cost of this downtown business plan would average around
$12,000 and according to Simcox,
that money could be obtained
through Community Development
Bloc.K Grants which is held by the
County Commissioners. He also
stated that this portion of the revitalization project should be done by
a private consultant.
Simcox cautioned that even
when ·the downtown business plan
is completed that does not necessarily mean that the project will be
funded. He stated it may talce two
or three auempiS before the money
is actually granted but that eventually it will happen. The money may
be applied for every July and Sim·
cox pointed out that this year II
projects were applied for and six
were fWldcd.
Another eligibility requirement
is the participation of 40 percent of
property owners within the designated district.
A market analysis also needs to
be done which allows business
owners and operators to identify
who their customers are and what
they want as well as what is missing from the community and what
busmesses are needed that are not
here.
Simcox stressed that the project
is a great deal of worlc but that the
end result would incrcose business
and develop a downtown business
district that would auract people to
it.

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Sports

•

CALDERON STEALS TIDRD - Montreal's
Ivan Calderon (center) steals third at the
moment the ball gets away from Boston third

sacker Wade Boggs in the second inning or
Tuesday night's All-Star Game in Toronto,
which the American League won 4-2. (AP)

Ripken named All-Star Game's MVP
By HOWARD ULMAN
AP Sports Writer
TORONTO (AP) -Cal Ripken
was in his usual place at shonstop.
In the third inning, the ball shoot·
ing off his bat landed in a familiar
place- over the outfield wall.
The power that has put him on a
career-high home run pace produced enough runs to lead the
American League to a 4-2 victory

By JIM DONAGHY
AP Basebldi Writer
TORONTO (AP) - OK, now
it's the American League's tum to
gloat just a little.
It took nearly 30 years, but it
seems safe to say the AI. has something going here after beating the
National League 4·2 Tuesday night
for its fourth straight All-Star victory.
Let's say a trend is developing.
"Hey, Tony La Russa is serious
about this," Toronto's Joe Carter
said of the AL manager. "This is
not just an exhibition game. He
doesn't like to lose."
There was a time when all the
AL did was lose, lose and lose
some more in this game. That's
when guys like Willie Mays, Hank
Aaron and Roberto Oemente were
leading the way. The NL had
power, speed and pitching. It was
high-tech basebalL
The AL? They waited to see if
Harmon Killebrew or Frank
Howard would hit a homer. It was

r--Area sports briefs-..

Tuesday night and earn Ripken the hot," Ripken said. "I hit the ball
most valuable player award at the very hard (Tuesday) night and I
All-Star game.
was pretty sure the home run was
He singled in the fllSt, then hit a out
three-run homer off former Balti"When you get a few hits and a
more teammate Dennis Martinez homer it's a lot easier to have fun. I
that erased a 1-0 National League hit a breaking ball out of the ball·
lead.
park. To be hones~ I wasn 't look"I've been swingin~ the bat ing for it. I was just telling myself
very well of late and I think that's to relax and see the ball."
the key - coming into the game
(See RIPKEN on Page 5)

Hubbard's Greenhouse #2, Reedsville
win Hubbard LL Tournament games
BY DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Correspondent
The 1991 William "Bill" Hubbard Memorial Little League Tournament got underway with one
game on Monday evening and
:three games on Tuesday evemng.
Two games were scheduled on
Monday but Hubbard's Green house #2 won by forfeit over Home
Care Medical.
In Monday evenings game
Reedsville took advantage of two
four run innings and went on to
defeat the Pomeroy Mustangs.
Pomeroy jumped out to a 3-0 lead
heading into the bottom of the third
inning bul·Reedsville plated four
runs in the bottom of the third with
the big blow a home run off the bat
.of J. Tolliver. Reedsville .Plated
·three runs in the third with M.
:Smith slamming a two run homer
:and iced the, game with another
:four spot in the ftfth inning.
Smith had a single and the home
run to lead the winners, Tolliver
added his home run while Barber,
:Barnhart and Gasper each added a
:Single.
·
· David Anderson led Pomeroy
:With two singles, Josh Harris, Matt
Ault, Joe Hill, A. Roush, and
Steven McCullough a single each.
Tolliver was the winning pitcher
and Joe Hill was the loser.
In Tuesday evenings action
.Coolville jumped out to a 3-0 lead
::at the end of the first inning and
-rolled to a 16-1 over T.P. Baum
:Lumber.
Tommy Curtis led the Coolville
route with four hits including a
double, Aaron Brock added three

singles, Cecil Atkinson, Brian
Dixon, Jason Ashcraft and Justin
Edwards each added a single. Steve
Dmst had ~ double to lead T. P.,
B1lly Francts add~ a smgle.
. Tomm~ Curtis pitched a two
hllte_r to p1cked up the wm, Durst
was the loser.
In Tuesday's second game Nelson ville scored seven runs in the
fifth inning to break o11en a 1-0
game and defeat the M1ddlepor1
Cardinals 10-0.
.
Nathan Stadler led the wmners
at the plate with a single, double
and a two run home run, Josh
Walker added a single a!Jd a two
run home run, Clay Watkins added
two singles, Ben Robey added a
double and Cha~ Tedrow and
Sha~n Schllla-a-5.mgle each. Matt
Williams .!Gd the only Middleport
hit a single.
.
Schultz ~nd Tedrow combmed
for a one huter, Brad Davenport
was the loser.
In the evening's last game Caleb

American Legion
tourney dates posted
The American Legion's Eighth
District will begin its double-elimi.nation, post-season tournament on
Monday, July 15 at three locations
.in Athens County.
July IS action
The first game of the fiist round
will pit McArthur and Glouster at
4:30 p.m. at the Glouster village
park field. The second game will
have Athens and Lancaster on tap
:at 5:30 p.m. at Athens High
'School's Rannow Field in The
:Plains, and also at 5:30p.m., the
:third ~arne_ will feature Well~ton
·and Pickenngton at Dalton Fteld,
located on West State Street in
Athens. Gallipolis and Meigs will
_play in ~e fourth game of the day,
·whtcb wdl stan at 7:30 p.m. at the
::Oiousier village park field.
July 16 games
At Glouster, second-round
:action will put the winners of the
McArthur-Glouster and the Gal·
lipolis-Meigs games in Tuesday's
:first gallic, which will be stari at 4
:pm. The losers of those games will
10a the fitst pitch at 7:30p.m.
: At The Plains, victors of the
:Athens-Lancaster and the Wellston-Picterington games will
sqll4lC1 off at 5:30p.m., whil.e at
DillOn Field, the losers of those
~will face each other.
losers of the T!JCS(Iay games
;wiD exit the toumame11!- The home
·felllls' will be delerll)ined by coin
·rup after the second round.

• nae

-~_ .. _j ,_ ' -"'--'- - -- -

Shuler's three run home run broke
open a close game and Chris Bailey
added a two run home run later in
the inning and the Middleport A's
went on to defeat the Hill's Indians
7-2.
The Indians took a 2-1 lead in
the on a hit batter, a double by Seth
Davis and a single by Drew Dunkle
to take a short lived lead. But Mid·
dlepon used the long ball power of
Shuler and Bailey to post the win.
Besides the two home runs
Ryan Smith had a double and Rick
Hoover a single. Davis and Dunkle
had the only two hits for the Indians.
Bailey was the winning pitcher
and Dunkle the loser.
The Mason Cubs will play the
Racine Reds in action on Wednesday evening at 6:00, the New
Haven Reds was suppose to have
played Albany in the evenings first
game but New Haven has advanced
to the second round because of a
Albany forfeit.

Scoreboard
All-Star line score
Nati.ooal ............ .. 100100000 - 2-10.1

American ..........00300010x - 4- 8-0

NL bauerica - Glavine, Dcnnil Martinez (3). Viola (5), llamach (6), Srruiey
(7), Dibble (7), Morgan (8) and Santiago,
Bigio(l)
AL buteriea - Morris, Key (3),
Clemau (4), McDowell (5), Reardon (J).
Aguilera (7), Eckersley (9) and S. Alomar, F'11i. (:!).
W- Kcy. L-M.aninez. Sv-Etkmlcy .

HR...--Nationa1, Dnuon . Americ&amp;n,

Rif&amp;cn.

Baseball
American Lague
SEA TILE MARINERS Shawn Enea, pit.t:her.

Signed

National League
ST. LOUIS CARDINALS - PI' " '"

Pedro Guerrero, fint bateman, oo the 15day diubled lin.

Football
Nallonal Football Ltaaue
CINCINNA11 BENGALS - Agr«&lt;&lt;
to temu with Antoine Bennett, comer-

back.
DENVER BRONCOS - Sill"ed Tyrone Bnxton, comerback. to
one-ye~~t

contncu.

Tomu,'Sct The Hoolt, Populiac And lu.
TrifOCLa (3-l-7) $922.110.
Pafoaa (3-l) $55.110.
Second Ro&lt;»-$1,800 Condition Poce.
Loua Deotruaian (Ferxulon Jr.) 4.110.
2.60, 2.60; Tnvel Tune (Fout) 3.80, 2.80;
Bring To Mind (Riegle) 4.110.Tim.. 2'110

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Royal, She's An Orginal, DT's AnU\asia .
Pafecu (6-1) $20.60.
Third Rscc.-$1,800CondiUon Pace.

Junior golf series to resume July 12
The Tri-State Junior Golf Circuit, a six-tournament series for
golfers 17 years old and younger, will reaume with a tournament set
for Friday, July 12 at Riviera Country Club in Lesage, W.Va.
The entry fee for golfers, which will be grouped into three divisions (under-12, 12-14 and 15-17 year-old age groups), is $17,
which covers green fees and lunch. All entries must be paid to the
host course by the close of business on the Wednesday prior to the
tournament No exceptions will be allowed.
Entry forms will be available in issues of the Huntington HeraldDispatch, the Gallipolis driving range and at Cliffside Golf Course .
in Gallipolis.
.
. ..
There will be a player of the year selected m each diviSion. Players must participate in at least four of the five tournaments to be eligible for the award, which will be determined by a point system.
The remaining tournaments are at Sandy Creek Golf Club, Ashland, Ky., July 19; Esquire Country Club, Barboursville, W.Va.,
Aug. 2. Tee times will be 8 a.m. each Friday.
For more information, call Ed Wilgus at 1-886-8910 (Proctorville home number).

Organizational meeting Monday

1

•erie• of

LOS ANGELES RAMS - Signed
Raben Youna. ddcaaivc tackle.
MINNESOTA VIKINGS - Sianed
Ken S1illa, ufety; Jimmy Williams,
lineblcker,and CriiCartcr, wide Jeeeivcr.

NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS Signocl Marion Hobby, defeNive end, and
Oa\e Taylor, wide ltUiver. WaiYCd Zcke
Mowatt., tipt end.
NEW ORLEANS SAINTS - Signed
Buford Jordu and Bobby Monc, ruubiW, and Kim Magio, punw, .w oneyear &lt;:onuacu, and Hayward Haynes ,

ptd, W llWOoycatcontn~
.
PHILADELPHIA EAOLES Namod Michael Gilbarl uaistant dimc1or
.....b!io .........
PHOENIX CARDINALS - Sianocl
Anthony Padter, cornerback. Agreed to
&amp;.em\1 with Steve Lcftan, cotnerbeck, and
0.., Amllor. """""' back.

Hockey
Nadonal Hockey Leacue
NEW JBRSEY DEVILS - Named
:aobbic Plonlk auillanl coach.

Scioto Downs results
COWMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Scioto
Down• ruulll for Wcdileaday, July 9.
Wcalhor claiiClylb'lck'fuL
Finlltlco-&gt;1.400Ciaimin Pace.

Alleady Gooo (Pout) 1~.10. 6.60,
6.00: 0 K 11oo1t (Sllar) 4.40, 5.40; Hollywood Sput(Moooci')6.60.Time-2:003-l .

. AlcO Jtaced·TeaiJon Breaker,
Whrlln• Oervilh, HaiO'o DleaDi, Dauty

crowd of 52,383 at the SkyDome
seemed to get a charge out of Ripken's rising liner.
"It's Cal Ripken's world and
I'm just passing through," said
Boggs, a .346 lifetime hitter.
Ripken, the All-Star MVP, was
indeed a big hit at the SkyDome for
the All-Star festivities. He hit 12 of
the AI.' s 20 homers in the Home
Run Derby on Monday.
"I was concerned being in the
home run derby." said Riplcen,
who leads the AL with a .348 average.
The NL pulled to 3-2 in the
fourth inning on Andre Dawson's
home run and had a chance to tie it
in the sixth when .another futme
Hall of Farner made a big defensive
play.
.
.
With runners on fllSt and thrrd
and one out, Paul O'Neill hit a
grounder to Cecil Fielder at first.
Will Clark broke for home and was
called out when 43-year-old carcher Carlton Fisk blocked the plate,
took the throw and made a twohanded tag. It was the kind of textbook play a guy lik!l Johnny Bench
used to make for the other guys.
"I think the manager over the
last four years has made the difference as for how the players motivate themselves," Fisk said of Tom .
Kelly, the winning manager in
1988, and La Rossa.
La Russa. as everyone has come
to know, loves a deep bullpen and
he has used the best relievers his
league can offer to become the first
manager to win three consecutive
All-Star games. For this one, he let
Jeff Reardon, Rick Aguilera and
Dennis Eckersley preserve the victory for Toronto's Jimmy Key.
For those not counting, Reardon, Aguilera and Eckersley have
combined for 66 saves this season.
Bryan Harvey, who has 22 saves,
didn't even get into the game.
This is La Russa's version of
high-tech baseball.
"I watched the National League
for a couple of years as a coach,"
La Russa said. "I watched them
tonight, they get their runners started.

There will be an organizational meeting for the Big Bend Youth
Football League at 8:00p.m. on July 15, 1991 at the Pleasers
Restaurant on West Maio Street in Pomeroy. All parents of participating children and interested people are invited to attend.

Softball tourney set for July 20

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

By STEPHEN WILSON
AP Sports Writer
LAUSANNE, Switzerland (AP)
- Ostracized for decades by the
world sporting community, South
Africa has been welcomed back
into the Olympic fold and given the
chance to compete in the 1992
Games.
But South Africa's top sports
official says he doesn't want to
rush back into international competition toO soon. He rules out participating in the Winter Games at
Albertville, France, in February
and dismisses talk of competing in
the world track championships at
Tokyo next month.
"What we want is a steady
move toward unity and non-racialism in spon," said Sam Ramsamy,
president of the National Olympic
Committee of South Africa, which
received full recognition Tuesday
from the International Olympic
Committee.
"This must be meaningful and
not effected only 'for the sake of
international participation. We
want the credentials to be genuine.
The mechanics, the machinery,
must be in place.
. "We find especially that the former white spons groups are impatient," he said. "We've made it
very clear to them that they've
waited 20 years and waitinll for a
few more months is immatenal."
South Africa was expelled from
the IOC in 1970 because of its

apartheid policies of nieial segrega- his committee more power to contion. Most other international trol the unification process .
sports organizations joined the
."U~!tY in certain sports was
}lloratorium.
bemg htJacked both by people who
When the South African parlia- wanted to get into international
ment scrapped the last legal pillars ·· sport yesterday and by people who
of apartheid in June, it fulfilled the di~n't wani to move at all,'· he
IOC's main condition for reinstate- smd "Now we know we have the
menL
authority to directly intervene in a
In addition, the IOC said Tues- sport where unity is being threatday it was satisfied that South ened."
Africa is on the way to achieving
The IOC is expected to invite
unification of its national sports South Afnca to compete m the
bodies on a non-racial basis.
1992 S~mf!ler G3:"1es at Ban:elona.
The IOC said its decision is sub- The mvttaUons w1ll be sent out July
ject to review in the event that 25, a year befor~ .the start of the
South Africa reneges on its reform Games, and offlc1als sa1d South
policies.
Africa is all but assured of being on
"It is really an important day, the list.
not only for the Olympic movement but for sports around the
world," said IOC President Juan
Antonio Sarnaranch, who reinstated
South Africa on the recommends•
lion of the Apartheid and Olympism Commission.
Former U.N. Ambassador
Andrew Young, a member of the
commission, likened the development to the "ping-pong diplomacy" which broke the ice between
the United States and China.
''If they (the South Africans)
really work at this, they will
become a leader in multiracial
sports," he said.
Ramsamy, a South African of
Asian descent who left the country
in 1972 and returned last August,
said recognition .by the IOC gives

DAYTON, Ohio (AP)- Chicago Bulls guard John Paxson, who
became a free a$ent when his team
failed to sign h1m by July I, says
he has talked to other basketball
clubs and has contract offers from
two teams in Italy.
"Right now I have the opportunity to go out in the market and
look for other teams,'' Paxson said
Monday. "We've talked to quite a
few other teams.
"I have a couple of offers in
Europe from two teams in Italy.
The money ~uys are making over
there now IS mcredible."
Paxson is visiting family members in suburban Kettering.
Paxson, who made $350,000
last year, turned down a contract
offer from the Bulls.
"It was an offer we didn't feel
was in line with other players in the
. league who play my position and

do what I' do," he said. "We told
them they have to come up with
something better, and we haven't
heard back from them yet"
Paxson said starting point
guards in the NBA probably average $1.5 million a year.
·'I would probably settle for less
than that," he said. "In Chicago, I
certainly would. But the offer they
made me was barely half of that.''
However, Paxson indicated he
would like to stay with the Bulls
and doesn't want to miss next season's home opener in Chicago,
when the Bulls receive their championship rings.
''My worst feeling is if I have to
go back to Chicago Stadium next
year as an opponent and get my
ring that way," he said. "That
would be very hard. I don't want to
do that."

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.. 7

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(Continued from Page 4)

&lt;.

•

!

R1pken, who has played 1,489
• consecutive gaf!les for the Ori~Ies,
:leads the Amencan Leaj!ue With a
: .348 average and Ill ~Its. He has
; 18 homers, three beh1nd leagu.e
, h~aders Jose Canseco and Cec1l
~F•elnder.eac h. of his mne
. f 11 season
:
u
s,
,he has hu between 21 and 28
:homers. At hts cu.rrent pace,. he
.should hit 35. A differen~ batung
fs~nce may have helped mcrease
, ........_
. Jlns .~~er.
.
.
·., t ·I JUSt spread out a little bJt and
:ne~ed my kl\ees. It allows me to
~wlllt f~ the ~I .and use my hands
:moreR,. khe 3~· ha •1 taken a day
,
•p en, , sn
.
.off sm~e . the 1982 sea~on. ~ts
!.strong httung- whether tt be 10 a
!legular-season game, All-Star con••test ot even a home_-run derby · :misses only an occas1~~ game.
•' · In Monday's home-run hitting
!exhibition, Ripken slammed an
_[__..;....

- ....._____
_

....

McGuire picked up the win in
relief of Hamon.
In the win over Logan, Meigs
plated six runs in the second inning
and went on to defeat Lo4l80 12-4.
Randy Corsi got Metgs off on
the right track in the second leading
off the inning with a home run.
Finlaw singled with one out, Stanley walked, McGuire single, Reuter
doubled and Baer and Wright both
followed with singles to plate the
runs.
Baer led the Meigs at the plate
with four hits, three singles and a
triple, Corsi added his home run
and a single, McGuire two singles,
Reuter a double and Wright, Eric
Heck, Finlaw and Danny Lewis a
single each.
Jeremy Phalin was the starter
and winning pitcher for Meigs,
Baer also saw action on the mound
for Meigs.
Meigs will travel to McArthur
for a single $arne on Thursday
evening and Will travel to Wellston
for a twin bill on Saturday. Meigs
will open up tournament play on
Monday evening at Glouster
against Gallipolis at 7:30.

1

___

we raced. He's going to have to
duel me for this. He's not running
against some old-ti111ers ," said
Blackmon, who finished second to
Law in the 100- and 400-meter
races.
They were among rwore than
5,100 athletes age 55 and older at
Olympic-style spons festival.
Five years ago, Law was a
heavy smoker and had high cholesterol. But as an enthusiastic table
tennis player he found himself winning medals at local and then stale
games.
"Then I noticed all these people
my age runnin~ . I said, 'Shucks, I
used to do that. I decided to give it
a try, " said Law. who described
himself as a mediocre sprinter in
high school and at Lincoln Univer~
sity.
"After those days I sat down for
40 years," he said.
His doctor told him to forget
about competitive running because
of his health. Instead, Law quit his
49-year smoking habit, began exercising and eating a macrobiotic
diet.
"The senior games got me paying auention to the role of my diet
and exercise in fitness," Law said.
" II taught me that old can still be
(See LAW on Page 6)

CLEVELAND (AP) - Makers their own shrubs and trees, everyof the feature film "The Babe Ruth thing they needed to make the
Story" needed a husky boy who school look like an orphanage,"
can hit left-handed to play the role said Clinton. "They had a lot of
of the young Babe.
things in their big trucks, including
A search of-£1eveland sandlots air conditioning in the one that I
turned up 10-year -old Clinton used for a dressing room."
Nageotte, who fit the bill.
The tern peratures were in the
John Peyton, Cleveland Base- 80s and 90s two weeks ago when
ball Federation program director, the movie was shot.
contacted longtime kids league
"I had to wear knickers, an old
_.manager Eugene_ Duke, who sug- shirt, a beaked cap and black
gested a few players, amon~ them leather high-top shoes," Clinton
Clim&lt;l!l. The youth, who •s hmmg a said. "I also had to bat left-handed
Babe!ik~.-6~0 and ~as mne home when the priest (an actor) threw me
runs m •s eague •s season, got the ball. I was there for about six
the,~:e. f
d lot of work .. hours."
How does Clinion sum up his
'd N was un ahn ala ,
•.
S8l
ageotte, w o p ys .our pos•- brief movie career'!
lions _ pitcher, shonstop, carcher
"It was a Iiule bit boring, but
and first base.
not too much," Clinton said. ''But,
Ruth, in his heyday as a slug- before I got the chance to play him,
ging outfielder with the New York I knew (about) Babe Ruth and I
Yankees, was idolized by children, read about him. I'm happy that I
often visiting them in hospitals and was able to play him.''
cheering them with gifts of auto graphed baseballs . Ruth died in
1948.
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
Nageotte now has his own tale
446 4524 " ~.-.-: .. :'
to tell his classmates when he
S3.00 BARGAIN *TIItE£S SATUN!t'V I SUfG\l
returns 10 Cleveland's William
SUlO BAIUIN NIGHT T\J[So.-,y
Rainey Harper School after sumL___ fRIDAY
oM.Y I lllru II
___j
thrw THUfiSIIA¥1
mer vacation.
For the shooting of the movie,
7: 10,9 :40 OAIU SCHVJJ1R2ENFGGE R
S AT /SU~ IU.TINE£5
Clinton did not have far to travel.
TERMINI&gt;.TOR 2
I : 10,3 :40
All he had to do was walk across
~NTOf".Y
the street to Harper School, where
'"
next month he will be in the fifth
grade.

By coincidence, Harper School,
located on Cleveland's West Side,
had been selected some time ago to
serve as the orphanage where Ruth
lived as a youngster in Baltimore.
When he was 7, George Herman
Ruth was sent to St. Mary's Industrial School, where he learned to
play baseball under the eyes of the
priests who ran St. Mary's.
"The movie people brought

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,.
-: RIPKEN N.&lt;MED MVP - Baltimore shortstop Cal Ripken Jr
;_ poses with his All-Star MVP trophy al'ter Tuesday night's Midsum:- mer Classic in Toronto, which the American League won 4·2. Rip·
:: ken wbo won the pre-game home run contest Monday, cracked a
:: thr~·run game-winning shot to earn the trophy. (AP)

~Ripken named MVP...

Law, a psychology professor
from Johnson C. Smith College m
Charlotte, N.C., won the 100-, 200and 400-meter dashes at the U.S.
National Senior Spons Classic Ill
in Syracuse, which ran through
July 3.
"I don't consider having peaked
at age 65," said Law, a slim, muscular man with a greyhound stride
on the track.
''My times are still coming
down. I haven't gotten them down
as far as they can go. I think I can
do better if I continue to condilion,'' Law said while resting in the
shade in between qualifying for the
400-meter and 100-meter sprints.
In the final heats, he ran the I00
in 13.11 seconds, the 200 in 26.20
and the 400 in 58 .93 seconds. All
three times brought him gold
medals in the 65-69 age group.
There's no danger Law will
threaten the men's world tOO-meter
mark of 9.92 seconds, but he owns
the American records for men 6569 in the I00- and 200-meter dash
and the world record in the 400meter with a time of 59 .39.
"He's got an all-white outfit he
runs in the 100. They call him
White Lightning," said Willie
Blackmon, 66, of Columbus, Ohio.
"He beat me the only other time

Filmmakers find talented LL
slugger to play young B.abe

1

BY DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Correspondent
The Meigs American Legion
baseball team picked up two more
wins over the weekend, Meigs
defeated McArthur 10-6 in the
weekends fllSt game and defeated
Logan 12-4 in action on Sunday
afternoon. The wins give Meigs a
I4-3 record overall and 6-5 in the
eighth district league play.
In the game against McArthur,
Meigs plated six big runs in the
eight inning to turn arou~d a 6-4
deficit and post the 10-6 wm. Terry
McGuire led off the eighth inning
with a single, Tim Bissell reached
on a error and Andy Baer on a
walk. Jason Wright lripled to score
three runs. Jeff Durst and Shawn
Hamon each singled, they later
scored on a sacrifice fly and an
error.
McGuire had the big bat for
Meigs going four for five with
three singles and a double. Wright
added at the triple and a single,
Terry Reuter a double and a single,
Hamon two singles, Bissell a double, and Durst and Mall Finlaw a
single each.

MASON, WV .

Pafeclol (1 -6) $30.20.
Fowtlt Ro&lt;»-$1,400 Claiming Pooe.
Flo Snunica (Holland) 5.00, 2.80,
2.40; Strollins Snitch (Rie&amp;le) 3.40, 2.60;
Early Out (Coven Jr.) 5.60". Time- I :59 4-

By WILUAM KATES
AP Sports Writer
SYRACUSE, N.Y. (AP) Time keeps slipping away for Jim
Law. But Law loves it. He's a
world-record sprinter.

•JUI CER /STRAINERS

PICKEN'S
HARDWARE

tion would provide the best slage
for South Afica's rewm to international spons "because it is totally
non -racial and is played by the
overwhelming majority of South
African sponsmen.' '

Jim lays the Law down in sprints

Meigs Legion posts weekend
wins over McArthur, Logan

Rock Hill High School, which is classified in Division IV, is
looking for a football scrimmage opponent for Aug. 17.
Any intereated schools may contact Redmen head coach Bob
McOllister at 1-533-6069 (Ironton).

conjunction with other people in
South Africa. ' '
South Africa last competed in
the Olympics in 1960, when it
fielded an all-white team for the
Rome Games.
Ramsamy said soccer competi -

After giving up smoking at age 60,

•PR ESSURE COOWER /CANNERS
•PRESSUR[ COOm PARTS
'I EE l .; l( H1.\) :

Tea For Three (Hulon) 6.80, 4.20,

Ramsamy, however, said it
would be.' 'presumptuous'' to talk
now about competing in Spain.
"Barcelona is not our objective
right now," he said. "Our immediate objective is unity and nonracialism. We will consider it in

YOUNG BABE- Clinton Nageotte, a 10-year-old Little League
slugger shoWD practicing his swing during a Little League practice
session was chosen to play a young Babe Ruth in a new film about
the bas'eball legend. Nageotte, a talented hitter in his own right. had
only one adJ'ustmellt to' make - the right-handed !litter had to
·
·
( P)
SWJng from tbe left s1de or the plate. A

If's Csnnin~

Rock Hill seeks scrimmage foe

3.20; Diet Center (Noble UI) 3.20, 3.20;
Land Span (Thomas) 3.60. Timc--1 :58 4-5 .
A lao Raced -811nny Love, Stylish
Doris, Molly Don, Younp Circle, Crown
Gyp:y, Dula Reward, Forevu My Love.

The Dally Sentinel- Page-S

Will Paxson leave the Bulls?

WE HAVE IN STOCK ...

A Oass D &amp; E softball tournament will be held on July 20th and
21st at Eastern High School. Entry Fee is $65 and you hit your own
ball. Trophies will be given to lie fllSt·, second- and third-place
teams. First and second place teams will receive individu;ll trophies
or shins.

Trifeo:to (1-6-S) $61.40

Transactions

hard to play hit-and-run with those
guys.
The NL won 19 of 20 All-Star
games from 1963-82, including II
in a row. It was more or less an NL
convention.
"The National League was winning every year so they would go
out and think they were going to
win," said Tony Gwynn, the NL's
starting center fielder. "Now the
American League has that anitude.
They're playing more intense.
Maybe they just got mad. Now it's
their tum.''
While the NL has lost its big
boppers of the past, the AI. won the
game by sending up three potential
Hall of Famers in the third inning
against loser Dennis Martinez. It
was as simple as that, really.
With one out and the NL leading 1-0, Rickey Henderson and
Wade Bog$s singled. Cal Ripken
followed w1th a 416-foot homer to
center field. That's all La Russa
and his talented bullpen needed.
Even the rather docile capacity

Wednesday, July 1o, 1991

IO,C .invites South Africa to enter 1992 Olympic Games

Wednesday, July 10, 1991
Page--.1

AL All-Stars top NL 4-2 for
fourth consecutive victory

L
'..

1

The Daily Sentinel

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amazing 12 balls over ~e fence m
22 attempts. The Amencan League
wonthepowershow20-7.
"r d like to think" the homerun derby helped him Tuesday
night, Ripken said. "I was concerned being in the home run
derb , period. You can get yourself
into ~ad habits" by swinging for
the fences.
Ripken grounded into a forceout
in the ftfth inning and finished the
arne with two hits in three at bats.
5zzie Guillen pinch-hit for him in
the seventh inrung. .
It was an unusual respite for
Ripken, who has a shot at bre8king
Lou Gehrig's major league record
ofplaying in 2,130 consecutive
games.
The streak "is just something
that's happened from a desire to go
out and play every day •" Ripken
said "If (the record) happens it
. ·
· ,
wiHbe great.

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Page 6---The Dally Sentinel

•.

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p

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,.L)_,,,

Pbmeroy~leport, Ohio

·'·

'

~

•...•

.

,. ,. .. ... .

~----·--- .

-··---------- --,·--····-- --- .. ------··---~---- - .. -·-·

'

Wednesday, July 10, 199.1

Wednesday, July 10, 1991

I

Robinson among those with stake in-Ewing's contract talks
By BILL BARNARD
AP BasketbaU Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - Patrick
Ewing, his a~ent and the New York
Knicks aren t the only ones with a
slake in Ewing's contract dispute.
The July 22 arbitrating hearing
concerning Ewing's salary lllllking
stems from a clause in hls conttact
that allows him to become a
restricted free agent this summer if
he's not at least the founh highest-

paid player in the NBA.
shortly after Robinson left the U.S.
David Robinson of the San Naval Academy, says-that he can
Antonio Spurs has a similar clause become a restricted free agent after
in his conttac~ only better.
the 1991-92 season and ·for four
"We're watching the Ewing sit· years after·that ·if he is not among
uation with intei'CSt because it will the two hlghest-paid players.
impact on what will happen next
The Spurs can retain hls services
year," said Jeff Austin, one of the only by paying Robinson the averagents representing Robinson age of the two top salaries in the
under the Advantage Internatiqnal NIIA.
umbrella.
With huge raises for Larry Bird,
The contract, signed in 1987 Clyde Drexler and others kicking

in over the next few r.ears. Robinson slands to make millions of dollars more than· the $2.3 million he
made last season.
· Advanlage International is one
of the heavy hitters among the
agencies representing NBA players. Advantage~ 16 NBA clients,
second only to ProServ, whlch has
32 players on NBA rosters.
The pivotal offseason in
Ewing's contnlct is happening this

Major leagues, NCAA snub breakaway bases
By KELLY P. KISSEL
Associated Press Writer
ELIZABETHTOWN, Pa. (AP)
- More and more softball and
baseball leagues are using Roger
Hall's detachable base, but the
Pennsylvania inventor figures he
won't be home free until the majoo
give iu try.
Hall, a former baseball coach at
Elizabethtown College, developed
the Rogers Break Away Base that
separates from its foundation when
baserunners risk injury on a slide
that's too fast or too poor.
"It's tough to be playing sand·
lot when you know you're supposed to be in the bill leagues,"
Hall said, describing hiS lot in life.
"If I get major league backing, or
get in Omaha, who knows what
will happen."
A University of Michigan study
found the use of Hall's bases
reduced injuries 96 percent during
a three-year test and a sports
medicine group found even better
results among minor-league teams.
Still, Hall is fmding the big leagues
and the NCAA balking at his safety
feature.
"It happens everyday; someone
gets busted up," Hall said. " You
have pro players getting hurt under

I

I
I

'l

ideal conditions, and then you have
millions of Americans playing ball
on potholed fields.''
In 1989, Michigan found that
base-slidinf accounted for 71 percent of al recreational softball
injuries and the Centers for Disease
Control estimated that more than
1.7 million sliding injuries occur
each year.
"The concentration of injuries
resulting from this one activity
make it a lilcely candidate for rules
changes, better training or modifications in the design of bases as a
means to reduce softball injuries,"
Michigan researcher David Janda
wrote in 1989 at the end of the
study.
Outlawing sliding would be
impossible and instructing millions
of players on safe sliding would be
impractical, the institute wrote. It
recommended modifying bases.
Janda, now with the Institute for
Preventative Sports Medicine in
Ann Arbor, Mtch., found that in
1,174 slides among six minorleague teams last season, the base
popped off only 13 times.
"The general managers and
players all believed that the player
would have been hurt in each of
those cases if lhe base hadn't sepa-

mted," Janda said Tuesday.

als, a Class A team of the Detroit
Tigers, installed the bases last year.
"I think that as conttacts go up
and' up and the investment in a
player goes up and up, injury prevention tools are going to get more
of a look than they' every have
before,'~ said Matt Perry, the Generals' general manager.
"As steeped in tnldition as baseball is, there have been some safety
changes," said Skip Bertman,
whose Louisiana State baseball
team .won the College World Series
in Omaha,Neb., las! month.

Hall.' s anchoring system is the
same as a one-piece base, with a
square metal rod fitted into a buried
foundation. The difference is that
the top is attached to a plate with
rubber grommets.
Eight grommets are used for
youth league bases, a dozen for
teen leagues, 16 for adult leagues
and 20 for advanced'ii"Ptofessional players. The hlgher the number
of grommets, the tighter the base is
held.
The Fayetteville (N.C.) Gener-

Warfield not following in
Hall of Fame dad's footsteps
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)The son of Hall of Fame wide
receiver Paul Warfield is making a
name for himself, but his success is
coming between the foul lines
instead of down the sidelines.
Malcobn Warfield, a graduate of
Academy High School in suburban
Gahanna, was named the Central
District's Division III baseball
player of the year this season and
has signed a letter of intent to
attend San Diego State University.
Warfield said he took a long
time decidin$ what sport to play.
''I'm a btg fan of football, but
the truth is, I was just more interested in baseball growing up. I like
baseball," Warfreld said.
' ' I played a lot of different
sports growing u_p," he said. "I
played football in Junior high, and I
was a preuy good halfback. I also
play_.~d some tennis and basketball
When Warfield came to Academy from Cleveland University
School as a sophomore, he decided
to concentnlte on baseball.
. "I thought baseball was

something special."
Warfield played second base
·and batted over .300. as a sophomore, then blossomed at third base
as a junior, when he led the
Vikings in RBI, · '' ·
''Third base was a· little better
suited for me," Warfield said. " I
could fend off more balls over
there."
Warfield, 6 feet, 180 pounds,
was impressive at third again this
season, .but Wolf said he was even
better at the plate.
-....
"Everything fell into place for
him this year," Wolf said. " He
became a tremendously patient batter. With (sophomore shortstop)
Mike Hochnadel batting behind
him, he ·f!new he didn't have to get
a hit every time up."
Batting in front of Hochnadel,
who led the ,district with 50 RBI,
Warfield drew 35 walks this season
and batted .390. He also stole 21
bases and scored 39 runs to help
Academy to a 23-7 record.
. "I felt !ife 1 imJXOved_my.~ame
thts year,. Warfteld swd.. Last
Y~· !DY JOb w~ to get _hits and
5v~..!ti.:'~~1~~ _It Wll$ 1,0.__

summer, the sixth year of his 10year contract
Ewing's agent, David Falk,
could be poised to file collusion
charges against the Knicks and
possibly other teams if he loses in
arbitration, claiming they conspired
to keep Ewing's salary in the No. 4
position.
According to the New York
Times, the Knicks are prepared to
claim tampering by the Golden
State Warriors , who reportedly
planned to pay Chris Mullin more
so that Ewing would become a free
agent
,
The Times, quoting an anonymous source, reported in Tuesday's
editions that Falk may have tried to
convince the Warriors to restructure Mullin 's contract in order to
help his client.
The newspaper quoted the
source as saying they believe Falk
convinced the Warriors to raise
Mullin's salary for next season to
$3.2 million. That would bump
Ewing to fifth on the salary list and
make him a restricted free agent.
"We took a look at revising
Chris' contract and decided not to
participate," Warriors president
Dan Finnane was quoted as saying
in Wednesday's editions of the
Tintes. "The language in Ewing's
contract was common knowledge
around the league. We were interested in Ewing, but after -looking at
it, we decided not to do it."
Officially, ·the Knicks are
declining to comment until the
arbitration hearing.

"We've said all we can say on
th e matter," Knicks spokesman •
John Cirillo said "Our legal and
financial people imd the league
counsel say that Patrick is among
the top four highest-paid players
and vie hope that will be conftrmed
in arbilration. There is no rancor
between the two sides, and we're
looking forward to a resolution.' '
According to the Times,
Ewing's representatives believe the
Warriors m_i gh.t. have decided
against the contract change because
of collusion with the Knicks. But
Finnane said he's surprised the
team has been caught in the middle
of a strange situation.
"All we know is what's been
written in the papers because the
Knicks haven't called us and the
league hasn't called us," Finnane
said Tuesday. "All we did was
take a look at revising Chris
Mullin 's contract and decided not

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to.' '

John "Hot Rod" Williams of
Cleveland, Houston's Hakeem Olajuwon and Michael Jordan of
Chicago are known to have salaries
higher than Ewing's scheduled pay
of $3,138,000 next season. Falk has
claimed there was a founh player.
and has filed for arbitration.
Bird will make $7 .7 million
from the Boston Celtics next season, but nearly $5 million of that is
a signing bonus, and signing
bonuses reportedly are not counted
in Ewing's contract to determine if
a player's salary is higher than his.

-~-

Penn State shouldn't cry
about its schedule - Keady

By KELLY P. KISSEL
'·He needs to keep his nose
ASS()(iated Press Writer
clean,' • Keady said of Parkhill.
STATE COLLEGE, Pa. (AP) _ • ' We need to work together to
Penn State turned down opponuni- make this work."
ties to play four games against Pur"We didn't like Penn State
due or teams in the Boilermakers' being in the league in the first place
basketball tournament and has IiCtle ... but that would have been any right to complain about its schedul- body. We wouldn't have liked it if
By ED SHEARER
the possibility of having a national
ing problems , a Big Ten coach NYU (New York University) had
AP Sports Writer
championship game and having
says.
,
been admitted to the league.'
A1LANTA (AP)'- The execu· two highly-ranked teams that could
Purdue coach Gene Keady
Penn State's women's baskettive director of the Gator Bowl assure high ratings on television.
Tuesday said that the Nittany Lions ball team, meanwhile, has nine
knows it's a gamble, but it's one
"But there aren't any assurtwice rejected chances to play in _games scheduled against Big Ten
he's willing to lake.
ances," Bell said. "It's just a roll
his annual tournament and that oppon_ents next season.
John T. Bell says hls game will ofthe dice."
Penn State passed on a home-andThe men's team now is schedmake a pitch to become the fourth
There has been specylation that
home series with the Boilermakers. uled to play at a Milwaukee toumabowl in a tie-in with the Cotton, the alliance could be the forerunner
Penn State coach Bruce Parkhill ment with non-Big Ten teams on
Orange and Sugar Bowls that of a national championship playoff
complained last week that Big Ten Dec. 6·7, when Purdue' s tournawould provide Postseason spots for system.
coaches didn't do enough to help ment is scheduled. Penn State has
the champions of five conferences,
One of thee;;;~~~
him fill his schedule for 1991-92 an open weekend on the date of the
plus Notre Dame and two at·large
three&lt;&lt;bowls ~
•·:~~~~~~=~
,~
.wbicb the LioJISkwilL.pl~y ,as mi Northwestern offer.
~..'~:· teams. •··
'
sBid'Uuit's not ·
t..
tome '·' 15""'1'' '
· .
· :
· .
.. · independent. Illinois and Ohio ·
Such an alliance could provide a proposal stemmed
conference
playin~
wdi·i~~~~·~~lted
They
W~eld·SBid
_
h
e'likely
will
play
State are the only Big -Ten teams on
bowl matchup of the natton's top expansion that's laken some of the weren t
at all that I outfield at San Diego State.
the schedule · .. .
.
two teams - but it's not guaran- traditional independent powers oul didn't play football."
" I think I'll like the o~~field
" I offer~ them the chance to
General
teed.
Academy baseball coach Greg even _more than _thtrd b!15C, satd play in our tournament two years in
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) - Forof the mix.
Three of the conferences have
Penn State will be joining the Wolf also was happy with Warfteld,_ who·~ playtn~ center a row," Keady said. "I called him . mer New Englan~ Patriots running
contracts to send their champions Big Ten Conference. Miami is Warfield's decision.
fi~ld for hts Amencan Legton team when he first got in the league, ! back Tony Collins, whose NFL
to a specific bowl - the Big Eight headed for the Big East and florida
''When I first saw him play, I thiS summer.
knowing he was going to have to . career was shortened by drug use,
to the Orange, the Southwest to the State for the ACC. Those three and could see he was a solid pl1tyer,"
"It doesn't really matter to me. schedule games if his old league . drove his car into a lake in what
Colton and the Southeastern to the Noire Dame generally account for Wolf said. "We knew he'd be I'll do what I can do wherever I wouldn't help him
polieesaidwasasuicideattempt
Sugar. The other two conferences the nation's top-ranked indepenam. I just love to play the game.''
''I offered th~m a home-andCollins, 32, ~as treated at a hosin the mix are the Big East and dent teams each year.
home series and they said their pital and released about an hour
Atlantic C(IIISL
Once
the
alliance
is
fonned,
the
schedule
wasn't open.' '
later, police said. The car hopped a
The Gator is one of four bowls plan would be to wait until the regb
Ul
When Penn State restructured its curb at 4:45 a.m. EDT, went into
that will be meeting with the Cotular season is completed before
S~"l·ned
schedules after dropping out of the : the shallow end of the lake and was
ton, Orange and Sugar representa- placing
teams in the four bowls.
£1 u.
Atlantic 10 it never went back to ~ half submerged when paramedics
tives today in Atlanta. The others
Bell said one of his concerns
Purdue to pursue the offer Keady '· arrived. No charges were ftled.are the Fiesta, genera,llr considered was the selection date. Bowls can
TORONTO (AP) - Raghib he now needs to get into game said.
'
i
Collins, a starting wingback for
the front-nmner, the Cttrus and the announce their teams this season "Rocket" Ismail will spend his shape."
Penn State left the Atlantic 10 · the Orlando Predators of the Arena
Holiday.
on Nov. 17, bui Bell noted that a first pro football game watching
Lombardo said Ismail could see Conference on June 30 and will I Football League, played seven sea"We are just one of the play- number of important regular-sea- from the sidelines.
action a week from Thursday, play for a year as an independent sons with the Patriots before he
ers," Bell said Monday. "We are son games are played after 1hat
The Toronto Argonauts said when the Argonauts open their before playing a Big Ten schedule. ' was banned by t~e NFL for two
excited about being invited to go date.
Tuesday night that Ismail, their $18 home season against the Hamilton
The 1991-92 games against Illi- years_ because ~r hts drug_problems.
up and sit down and talk with them
Bell said the Cotton, Orange and million wide receiver-kiclc returner, Tiger-Cats. However, Lombardo nois and Ohio State are both road . He stgned wtth the Mtamt Dolabout becoming the fourth bowl. If Sugar originally intended to do a will miss Thursday night's Canadi- warned that Ismail still must work games for Penn State. Temple and : phins in a comeback attempt last
everything looks good, maybe it'll tie-in with Noire Dame and the Big an Football League season-opener off the effects of missing more than Duquesne from the A-10 are on lhe · summer ~nd played in one game
happen."
champion, but wouldn't have in Onawa with a strained quadricep three weeks of training camp wait- schedule, and other teams include • before bemg released
·the three Jan. I bowls that orig- East
had
a
way to pair the two teaniS if muscle in hls left leg.
ing for the injury to heal.
Buffalo, Maryland-Baltimore I
inated the idea of a four-bowl they fmished
fiTS! and second in the
Ismail will atlend the game even
"We e~pect him to play against County, Butler, American and
alliance say they won't discuss the polls. By getting a fourth bowl in though he won't play. He's sched- Hamilton," Lombardo said. Morgan Stale.
·
proposal until it is finalized.
the mix, that problem would be uled for therapy sessions today and "However, he may not be at his
After the Big Ten released its
Bell says there are some posiThursday morning and will jom the peak."
. schedules last week, Parkhill com·
tives to such an alliance, such as resolved.
team in Ottawa on Thursday afterIsmail, a former Notre Dame plained about the difficulty he had
noon.
star, injured his leg early in IJ'aining in finding games: "I'm disappoint. " Rocket has shown steady camp. He took therapy from team edmore Big Ten people didn't help
111 SecOIId St., Pomeroy
•mprovemen~" Dr. Steve Lombar- medical officials but the injury out. It's not that they couldn't.
do, a Los Angeles orthopedist who didn'trespond.
They wouldn 't."
JOUR INDEPENDENT
has been treating Ismail since last
While taking care of business
In addition to Purdue's offer,
AGENTS SERVING
weekend, said in a statement during a trip to Los Angeles late Northwestern athl etic director
CINCINNATI (AP) - The cy is imminen~ any long-tenn deal released by the team. "However, last week, Ismail decided to get a Bruce Corrie said last week that he
MBGS COUNTY
Cincinnati Ben~als' No. 1 draft would have to include a premium
L
second medical opinion. He was never got a response to an offer to
SINCf 1R68
pick, Alfred Wtlliams, probably on the latter years."
aw...
examined by Lombardo, who was host Penn State on Feb. 29.
won't sign a conttact by the start of
Assistant general manager Mike
(Continued from Page 5)
ainong the. physicians who helped
training camp neu week , the Brown said length of contract is as vital, vibrant and alive. I'd have Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Orel
linebacker's agent says. .
much an obstacle as salaries.
probably died without lhem."
Hershiser overcome a· serious arm
Sometliing (jooli's %ways Coo((jng Jl.t
"I still hold out hope," agent
"Talking with the agents is lilce
~aw had to sit out lhe inaugural injury.
Lamont Smith said Tuesday. "But listening to. a cracked record," semor Olympics in St. Louis in
Ismail came under criticism
we're quite a ways apart now, and I Brown said. "They want deals of 1987 because his doctor hadn't from teammates for what they perdon't llCC the gap being closed that no more than two years at 30 per- cleared him to compete. But he ceived as hls lack of commiunenL
soon. It appears to me there's a ten- cent more than the same (draft) lf:'OD medals a1 a regional competi- Whlle team officials said the trip to
dency on the part of teams to play a position was paid last year.
uon and then in 1989 got his Los Angeles was scheduled well
waitin!l game."
"But in regard to guys with an chance to win a national track title. ~fot:e camp began, SOJIIe plar.ers
Tratning camp opens July 18 at uphlll fi!lht just to make the team,
He did it b&gt;.; setting 1!8e:SI'O~ .·_sa~;n, !IS. ~ •tlllmpt by Ismail to
L~lted on Rt. 33 beside Mason ~xon and Mason Mobil, Mason, wv
Wilmington College. Linebacker we
fmd It diffiCult to swallow pay- records for mea- 60-64',in me·.lOO;! tpiQt•hw,'i,itJ!I'¥ f~mol\l days off.
·.· suliday: lhru Thursday, 6:30 itm' 10pm: Friday &amp; Sarurday, 6:30 am-11 pm
James Francis, the Bengals' top ing them more and limiting the (12.61), 290 ''(22,;72), 'lind ilSOO':~- ~ Argo~au.Js: g,~:neral ' manager
draft pick last/ear, is the team's contract to two years. We won't (58.89). This year.be.!s moved up tO Mike McCarthy calleita closedH OMESTYLE LUNCH SPECIALS
only ftrst-roun draft choice since give in on that, and they can just do the next age group to set records.
lidO(team' meeting Monday to clear
Monday-Friday, 11 a.m. to 3 p.m .
Dave Rimington in 1983 to have what they have to do."
Competition is not the entire the au. Head coach .Allan! Rita ha~
made camp on time.
Other agents said Tuesday they driving force behind Law's devo- a face-to-face. meeung wtth Ismwl
William'S on Tuesday ended also'
prefer short-term conttacts.
tion to running.
late last week and sai~ MondaY, he
MONPAY - Creamed Chicken over Biscuits
seven days of pre-training camp
"I've always believed that after
"Sometimes when I'm racing had made a mtstake m cnuctzmg
'
work with Bengals linebacker the fiTSt couple of. rounds, it's only I' ve got to push myself. 1 don't the hlgh-priced rookie.
TUESDAY - Beans &amp; Cornbread
caiCh Dick Selcer.
fair to do sbQrt·tenn deals,'' said have that killer intensity for really
"I laiow I inay not be here when Mark BlirUestein; who represents battling with another runner. That's
WEDNESDAY - Liver &amp; Onions,
camp swts, and this last week was Cincinnati fourth-round ptck Rob why I wasn't good in coUege " he
·a big safegUard against that possi- · Carpenter and fiftll-rounder ~e said .
.
'
GOOD ,USED '
Choice of Potato, Soup &amp;Salad Bar
bility," Williams said. "Now, if I ArthiQ'. "A -player needs to,live by
"To me the competition is;in ·
... ·
do get in (uaining camp) lale,I'II the contract he signs; but he should yourself: I want to bring "my timeS' ; "
SHERI DRYERSI . .
THURSDAY- Spaghetti, Soup Salad Bar
only have a short amount of work be able to improve hls situation if down every time I run," Law said.
REFRIGERATORS,: TVs,
to make up inateld of the whole
'
heproveshedeservesit"
Aurelia Law, Jim's .wife and a :, .GAS.'&amp; ELEC~ RAN.GES
mau of things;" '
Bacon Burger, French Fries &amp; Soup
Phil Williams, agent for second- sprinter herself, .admires her hilS- .: •
· ·
·
Smith wouldn't comment on the
pick Lamar Rogers, agreed.
band's commirment to speak up for '
subslanC;e of IIC)gotiations, but said round
' 'I don 'I think contract length · an active older life. She said her
the Bengals aren't -jOO inlllrested in will keep us apart if. the othet husband's good health and healthy I
a short-terin:dcal·
things are right," Williams said. attitude keep her in gciocl'spirits.
·
.
· ·
"Let's just say tbat .wouldn't be "But in cases other than a ftrst"Life wtth rum has been great.
627 3rd Avt., Galipolls
theii fust option,.' ' Smith said.
roun
~·I
thinkkeeit's
in
the
players'.
But
it's
be_
uer.
now,
particularly
·, Pll. 446-1699
" But gtven the fact there are bes1
mterest
to
p
a
conlract
as
because
he's
·
better
satisfied:
·With
·
HOutS:
. • a·A ...,.
. 6 P.M.
many of us who believe free agen- Short as he can."
•
himself."
·
~...,...,_,;,.o..;,;;-;;;.;;...;..,;,;;..;;.._,

Bell wants Gator Bowl to
be part offour-bowl alliance

The Dally Sentlnei- Page-7

Pomeroy_,.,lddleport, Ohio

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

-Sports briefs-

I :

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MUlLEN MUSSER

INSURANCE

Williams may not sign by
start of Bengals' training camp

1MASON FAMILY
RESTAURANT

'A

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�.'
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Page --8- The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Notice of Application to
The Public Utilities Commission of Ohio
For an Increase in Electric Rates
To whom it may concern:

Load Management Credh

1.95921

Wednesday, July 10, 1991

N/A

Pursuant to the requirements of Section 4909:19 of the Revised Code of Ohio
the Columbus Southern Power _
Company hereby gives notice that on April 2, '
1991 . rt fried wtth the Public Utrlitres Commrssron of Ohio, an Application for
authonty to amend and rncrease rts rate schedules which are under the
JUnsdrctron of the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio.

Present

Proposed

Customer Charge

N/A

$7.50

All KWH On-peak

N/A

13.9592C per KWH

All KWH Off-peak

N/A

1.1289C per KWH

Avlilabllity:

The substance of the rate revisions proposed in the Application filed on April
2, 1991 , rs as follows:

.mn1IL

The following clause_is included under the Billing and Bills Payable Section of
the Terms and Condrtrons of Servrce:
If the Consumer tail~ to pay in lull any final bill lor service rendered and said
Consumer recerves lrke servrce at another location, the Company may
transfer the unpard bala~ce of the final bill to tihe service account for any such
other locatron. Lrke ~rvrce refers to an end use within the following broad
categones: residential, commercial, or industrial. Such amount shall be
desrgnated as a past-due amount on the account at such location and subject
to collec~on and_d_lsco~necMn actron rn accordance with Chapter 4901 :1-18
of the Ohro Admrnrstratrve ~e and the Company's filed tariffs, terms and
condrtrons of servrce, provrded that such transfer of a final bill shall not be
used to drsconnect service to a residential consumer who is not responsible
tor such brll.
The following clause is included under the Temporary and Special Service
sectron of the Terms and Conditions of Service:
The Company shall not be required to construct general distribution Jines
underground unless the cost of such special construction lor general
drstnbutron lines and/or the cost of any change of existing overhead general
drstnbutron lines to underpround which is required or specified by a
munrcrpaltty or other public authority (to the extent that such cost exceeds
the cost of constructron of the Company's standard facilities) shall be paid tor
by that munrcrpality or public authority. The " cost of any chaflQe" as used
herern, shall .~e the cost to ~he Company of such change. The cost of special
constructron as used herern, shall be the actual cost to the Company in
excess of the cost of standard construction. When a change is to be based on
the excess cost, the Company and municipality or other public authority shall
negotrate the amount thereof.
In the Guarantee of Revenue Section of the Rural Line Extension Plan,
Delrmtrons, Rules and Regulations, tihe monthly payment charged to the
customer for Rural Line Extension has been increased from one to two
percent of the total "Construction Cost" of the line extension. Also, the
mrmmum monthly charge has been increased from one to two percent of the
" Constructron Cost. "

Customer Charge

Summer

$3.50

$3.50

.6683t

Intermediate Price
High Price

Reconnect1on Charge
Normal Business Hours
Reconnect at Meter
Reconnect at Pole '
Remove and Reser Meter
Install Locking Device

5.1860C 7.87511 per KWH

10.6935c

19.1888C

16.5952t 25.20034 per KWH

28.7829C

Oft Sh1fl
Reconnect al Meter
Reconnect at Pole
Sunday
Reconnect at Meter
Reconnect at Pole

70.00
250.00

105.00
230.00

Non-credit disconnect
Non-credit reconnect

N/A
N/A

30.00
30.00

Tamperi ngil nvestigation

N/A

25.00 plus additional
cost~ incurred

Avallabill1y

~

Proposed

Secondary Gentral Service

Maximum Demand less than 10 KW

· Customer Charge

S7.oo

~.eo

First 400 f&lt;Wtt"

7.6254C

N/A

First 1000 KWH

"Plus 140 KWH per
KW In excess of 6 KW
maximum clemaNI
N/A

All Additional KWH

4.03001

Summer

Customer Charge

$3.50

$3.50

$4.75

$4 .75

First 800 KWH

5.6356c 5 6356t

7.7737t

All Additional KWH

1.1000c 5.6356c

2.8366C 7.7737t per KWH

Storage Water Heating KWH 1 7000c UOOOc

7.7737c per KWH

11289c 1.1289c per KWH

SMALL USE- LOAD MANAGEMENT - SCHEDULE R-R-1
Present
Per Montn:
Customer Charge

ProposM

.sumaw

...wiolu

.5ummat

$3.50

$3.50

$475

$4.75

N/A

4.8714C

4 8714t

4.8714c

NIA

Over 800 KWH

UOOOC

NIA

2 8366C

NIA

1.1289C 1.1289C per KWH

Storage Water Healing KWH N/A

6.7880C

Per Monlh:
Customer Charge

ss.50

$7 .50

·ss.so

6.4379C

6.4379C

All Additional KWH
Storage Wafer Heating KWH

Customer Charge

N/A

Energy Charge:

5.50001

General Service Secondary

Per Monlh:
Customer Charge

'•

All KWH On-peak

7.766C

13.9592c per KWH

All KWH Off-peak

1.77641

1.12891 per KWH

Conservation and Load
Management Credit

crwve

Sum of lhe Customer Charge +
13c/KWH + AppfiCal)fe Riders

Availability:

N/A

Avalllbte to customers who u~
energy storage deviCeS with
time differentiated load
chatac!eristies approved by the
Company, such IS electric

===-~
durlno
tor use during on-peak hours.

NIA

1.0377C/KWH

$15.15

Ouali1ying GS-1 customers
who use the service lor
commercial purposes consisting of small fixed loads
off 0KW or less.

the off-pule bllng period

GENERAL SERVICE - LARGE - SCHEDULE GS-4
Present

Per Month:

Colorado supreme court
overturns death penalty

Proposed

Demand Charoe:
First 3000 rNA or
Less of Maximum
Demand

$24,500.00

Over 3000 rNA of
Maxl1111rm Demand

$3.n54/rNA

S6 121/rNA

$36.339.00

5.5406C per KWH

Proposed
General Service Sea!Niary and
Primary with low load factor and
maximum demands of 10 KW or
greater
Secondary

Primary

$9.50

$121.20

N/A

Typo p1 Lamp Wanaqo

Present

Lumlnai£1

OTHER EQUIPMENT CHARGES PER MONTH

Pmoosod
Lumipajra
Floodlight

Flggd'igbt

s 7.40

s 7.43

StaNiard
Standard
Standard
Standard
Standard

100
150
200
25D
400

"$8.15

Post Top
Post Top

100

1140
12.20

15.50
16.55 _

Cut-oH
Cut-oH
Cut-off

100

9.53
11 .85

11.00
17.60
22.45

150

2SO

400

100

N/A

Stendard
Standard
StaNiard

$&lt;1 .026/KW

$3.058/KW

Post Top

St .32/KVA

N/A

N/A

$2.15/!(W

$.311/KW

$.301/KW

S 10.0029/KW

N/A

N/A

Excess rNA
OH-peak Excess Demand

AIIKW

1.1833c/KWH
Product of the Applicable
Demand Charge and Max·
lmumDemand

N/A

5.0183t/KWH 4.8827C/KWH
100 KW aNII8ss: Customer
. Clllroe

Greater than 100 KW: CustQmer
Charge + 'Product of the
Demand Charge and minimum
monthly billing demand +
Applicable Rklers
Customer Charge + 13CIKWH
+ Applicable Riders

N/A

Rates available to customers who use
energy storage deviCeS with time
dlfferen~aled load c:haractertsttcs
ar,proved by the Company, SUCh as
eectric thermal storage S1J1Ce heating
and/or coo1inQ systems and Wlllr
heaters WhiCh COOSUIIIIIIICtiiCII
energy 9flly diJrifla off-PIIk·~.
and store energy for 1r11 dlrlilil onpeak hOulf:
·

N/A

S30 .10

On-peak

NIA

110S11CIKWH

OH-peak

N/A

1.2088c/KWH

GENERAL SERVICE TIME·OF·DAY - SCHEDULE GS-2 TOO
Present
Availability :

NomtnaJ Lamp

6.95

9.00

9.60'
11 .85

8.40
10.85
11 .60"
14.28

11.15
13.00

11 .85

N/A

5.70"

s 8.15
13.50

17.65

7.75"

N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A

$ 1.35

N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
.86

115

13.90
20.65
.80
1.55
2.70
4.05
1.20

l~

8.30"
13.25"'

Customer Charge:

N/A

4.10

175

10.20

13.85" '

Energy Charge:

N/A

4.302111/KWH

Mtta! Halide

Staildird
Standard

11.15
13.00

250
400

INTERRUPTIBLE POWER - SCHEDULE 1-P

14.35
17.65

· No new installations aner October 1, 1982

' "No new Installations pending approval of proposed tariffs

Per Month:

Present

Proposed

Service Charge

$750.00

$750.00

OTHER EQUIPMENT CHARGES PER MONTH

For each additional wood pole
For each aluminum pole
For each fibtralass pole
For each lddi1lonal 150 foot 0/H span
For mounting Oll)er 1han S1andant bracket
Bloot mastarm ·
12 foot'mastarrn
16 foot mastarm
20 foot mastarm
For each additional riser pole connection
For each underoround Wire lateral (50 foot)

$ 1.85

N/A
19.91-22.64
.60
.50
.85
1.15
2.00
N/A
90

Proposed

$ 2.50
13.90
20.&amp;5
.80

Nominal lamp
Wattage

Cut-off
Cut-Off
Cut-off

100
250
400

.

',:

!,

'

'

•''

.65
1.15
1.55
2.70
4.05
1.20

Rate oer Lamp ~r Month
Present
ropostd

$ 5.70
6.45
8.25
9.15 ..
10.35

22.WA!
24. A
24. A

Secondary Service of
200 Amps or Less Using
Totalized Output Leads 22.06

43.27

N/A

N/A

For the billing period starting January 1, 1994 and ending
December 31 , 1994
0.9820

$ 7.77

Option 2(b)
Primary Service or
Secondary Service
Over 200 Amps

8.80
11.32
12.50".
14.10

Secondary Service
of 200 Amps or Less

1t.~B!8
17.
22.7 B
8.05...

Option 3(a)
Primary .Service or
SecOndary Service
Over 200 Amps Usino
Metering Current Leads

~

13.25""

Sinole
Phase

Standard

N/A

N/A

$ 8.40

TOO

N/A

N/A

21 25

$11 .32

$14.65

N/A

N/A

8.65

18.92

N/A

N/A

27 .01

38.42

N/A

N/A

24.35

42.70

N/A

N/A

Options 2 and 3:

Customer Charge

On-peak
Off-peak

$15

8~

28.65

Present

Proposed

$5 .00

N/A

1.41C/KWH

1.58t/KWH

1 68C/KWH
1.41e/KWH

173«/KWH
147t/KWH

$1.50/KW

$ .90/KW

$3.00/KW
$1.50/KW

$2.10/KW
N/A

SPECIAL PROVISIONS APPLICABLE UNOER SPECIFIED CONDITIONS TO SPECIFIED
SCHEDULES- SUPPLEMENT NO. 14 AND OPTIONAL UNMETERED COMMERCIAL
SERVICE SCHEDULE FOR SMALL FIXED LOADS- SUPPLEMENT NO. 16
The proposee schedules have incorporated applicable portions of Supplement No.
14 and Supplement No. 16, thereby eliminating the present schedule supplements.

Presently the Supplement No. 18 Maximum Demand calculation for churches
whose maximum load requirements are during off-peak hours Is the result ot
metered d~mand muHiplied by_l/2. The proposed provision under this supplement
wrtl result tn thrs calculatron berng performed for churches, public and parochial
schools and recreatron centers who operate mainly·during the off-peak period. The
present supplement waives the ratchet in determinino the maximum demand tor
public and parochial schools and this provision has been deletad under the proposed
Supplement No. 18.

{

As of January 1, 2002 this Rider shall no longer be applicable.
•
The rates, charQeS and other provisions proposed above are subject to
changes, includrng changes as to amount and form by the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio following its hearing on the filed application .

.

ANY PERSON, FIRM. CORPORATION, OR ASSOCIATION MAY FILE,
PURSUANT TO SECTION 4909.19 OF THE REVISED CODE, AN OBJECTION
TO THE INCREASE DR INCREASES PROPOSED BY THE COMPANY WHICH
MAY ALLEGE THAT THE COMPANY'S APPLICATION CONTAINS
PROPOSALS THAT ARE UNJUST AND OISCRIMINATORY OR
UNREASONABLE
The Company's Application is lor authority to amend and lo increase certain
electric rates and charges and amend certain terms and conditions of
service .
The Company's Application states that the rates presently authorized by the
Commission and the rate of return on tne value of the property affected is
inadequate, unjust, unreasonable and insufficient to yield/'ust compensation
and that the rates proposed will not produce more than a air return on such
property and.are necessary for the assurance of adequate service.
rmprovement ol earnings and financial soundness.
The Company prays that the Commission (1) lind that the Application
Exhibits and Schedules are filed in accordance with Section 4909.18 'ohio
Revised Code, and the rules of the Commission; (2) approve the proposed
Notice for Newspaper Publication; (3) fix a date for a hearing; (4) find that
the present rates, prices, charge~ and other provisions of the schedules
affected by such Application are unjust and unreasonable and insufficient
to yield just compensation for the service rendered thereunder; (5) lind and
determine that the rate&amp;.' prices, charges and other provisions of the
schedules tendered lor filing are just and reasonable, and approve such
schedules in the form tendered and make such schedules effective as soon
as It is practicable to do so: and (6) grant to the Company such otherand
further relief to which it may be entitled.
A copy of the Application and all attached Exhibits and Schedules are
available lor inspection during normal business hours at the office of the
Public Utilities Commission of Ohio, 180 East Broad Street, Columbus,
Ohio 43215 and at the office of the Applicant, 215 North Front Street.
Columbus, Ohio 43215.

Percentage Increase
The increase for each customer class is as follows: Residential 31%·
Commercial24%; Industrial 30%; and Public Street and Highway Lighting
27%.

'

Illustrative Rate Phase-In Plan

9.03

12.36

N/A

N/A

200 Amps or Less Usrng
Metering Current Leads 27.39

21 .21

N/A

N/A

Secondary Service of
200 AmP.S or Less Uslno
· TotaliZed Output leads

Polyphase

CHURCH AND SCHOOL SERVICE · OPTION - SUPPLEMENT NO. 18

SecOndary Service of_

r.

Polyphase

Capacity Credit:
Standard

Polyphase

For the billing period starting January 1, 1995 and ending
December 31. 2001
1.0051

Proposed

Single
Phase

1.0502C/KWH

Single
Phase

For the billing period starting January 1, 1992 and ending
December 31 , 1992
0.8318

COGENERATION AND/OR SMALL POWER PRODUCTION SERVICE SCHEDULE CDGEN/SPP (continued)

.604e/KWH

Meter Charge:
Option 2(a)
Primary Service or
Secondary Service
Over 200 Amps

24 .73

For the billing period starting January 1, 1993 and ending
December 31, 1993
0.9044

For all energy consumed

Per Month:

If the rate increase granted is phased-in by the Public Utilities Commission
of Ohio in Case No. 91 -418-EL -AIR, the Monthly Rate in all applicable
schedules shall be multipNed by the following factors:

N/A

On-peak
Off-peak

Prooosed

500 EAST MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO
992-2174

N/A

N/A

Present
Single
Phase Polyphase

SMITH-NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

44.98

$.71/KVA

COGENERATION AND/OR SMALL POWER PRODUCTION SERVICE - SCHEDULE COGEN/SPP

CALL 992-2174

Secondary Service of
200 Amps or Less Using
Metering Current Leads 43.08

Excess KV ADemand Charge

Secondary Service
of200AmpsorLess
100
150
200
250
400

'
;:

'
'

SEE ED BARTELS, GEORGE HARRIS, or GENE GOODWIN

N/A

$3.801/KVA

The annual anachment charge for CATV and all others increased from $2.34 to
$3.50 per attachment per pole per year.

High Pressure Sodium (HPS)

Standard
Standard
Standard
Standard
Standard

,.

198 7 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE 4 DR.

NIA

$2.6870/KW

POLE ATIACHMENT TARIFF

STREET LIGHTING SERVICE (Proposed Schedule SL includes present Sl-1 and SL-2)
Type ollamp

''

Tilt, cruise. Air Cond., AM-FM-Stereo, Cassetta, Rear
Defoggar end much more. Extra clean, extra sharp!

36.14

Energy Credit:
Standard

For all KW/KVA of Billing Demand

Present

Option 3(b)
Primary Service or
Secondary Service
Over 200 Amps Using
Metering Current Leads

Wayne Mitchell of the American
Chamber of Commerce.
"We won ' t see a flood of
investment, but we mi$ht expect to
see people in the minmg, tourism
and housin$ development industries," he wd.
Mitchell predicted that many
U.S. cities and universities that
imposed their own sanctions on ·
domg business with South Africa
would lift them slowly, depending
on political c~ges in the country.
The end of sanctions should
make it easier to auract capital, but
with political violence ragin~ in
black townships, and uncenamty
over the country ~s political future,
investors who left might be hesitant
to rush back.
The African National Congrqs,
the country.' s main black opposition group, warned in December
that if the European Community
were to lift sanctions, the country
would become so ungovernable
that investa'S would be scared off.
The EC voted to end sanctions
in April, aclcnowledging President
F.W. de Klerk's moves to end
apartheid, but implementation has
been put on hold because Denmark
rettacted its afftnnative vote.
The ANC says sanctions should
remain until a new constitution giving the black majority the right to
VOle is ready.

Present

6.13
9.75

7.10"

I

Proposed

JOHANNESBURG, South
Africa (AP) - The South Africans
may be back in the Olympics as
early as 1992, but their full return
to the international scene is likely
.to take a bit longer even with the
lifting of U.S. trade sanctions.
Political violence, uncertainty
over the outcome of refonns and
recession reduce the chances of an
economic boom, business leaden
said Tuesday amid reports resident
Bush was about to lift the United
StaleS' 1986 sanctions law.
The law· s repeal would be a
huge confidence booster for South
African businessmen, whose coun·
try has been off-limits to most foreign investors since the mid-1980s.
It would be doubly beneficial
when combined with Tuesday's
decision by the International
Olympic Committee to readmit
South Africa to Olympic competi·
tion after a 21 -year ban.
"The end of U.S. sanctions will
send the whole world a message
that the South African government
is meeting its commiunents," said
Ron Haywood, deputy director
general of the South African
Chamber of Business.
The long-tenn effects - investments, the return of major busi·
nesses such as Exxon. which left in
the 1980s, and su&amp;stantial increases
in trade - will take longer, said

In the event acustomer owns and maintains
their own street lighting system and the
Company furnishes electnc energy. only the
following charges apply:

o.~perKWH

RESIDENTIAL LOAD MANAGEMENT TIME OF DAY - SCHEDULE RS-LM-TOO

Present

For each de~icated wood pole
For each aluminum pole
For each fiberglass pole
For each ad~itlonat 150' 0/H span
For mounting other than standard bracket
12 fool mastarm
16 toot mastarm
20 loot mastarm
For each pole riser connection
For each uno.rground wire lateral (50 toot)

MercurY Vapor
1.17641

statute as amended in 1988 mandates imposition of the death penal·
ty when the jury decides that aggravating and mitigating· factors are
equally balanced," the court said.
"Because we conclude that such
a statute does not assure a constitu·
tionally certain and reliable verdict
of death under the Colomdo Constiwtion, we are persuaded that ...
(th~ death .~nalty law) is invalid
on Its faCe. .. . .

STREET LIGHTING SERVICE (continued)

Rate per Lamp oer Month

Mercurv yaoor

Over 50KW

Availability:

PRIVATE AREA LIGHTING (Proposed Schedule Al includes present schedules Al-1 and Al-2)

High Pretsure
Sqdtum IHPSl

N/A

Maximum Charge:

DENVER (AP) - The Colorado Supreme Court today over'turned the state •s death penalty
taw. ruling that it is unconstitutional because it automatically imposes
death when factors in favor and
against a defendant are equal.
The divided court wd the law
as amen~ed in 1988 constitutes
cruel and unusual punishmenL
• 'The Colorado death .penalty

Other schedules have been modnied and increase as follOws

$&lt;1.10

N/A

Minimum Charge:

ms

GATES WILL KEEP
POST..._ Los Angeles Pollee Cbier
Daryl F. Gates holds a copy or a report calling ror bim to end bis ·
often stormy 13·year tenure at a news conrerence in Los Angeles
T_uesday. G~tes responded be would not leave immediately and
bmted that tt would take a voter rererendum to persuade him to
quit. (AP LaserPhoto)

For all KWH used during
Rates avlilable to customers who
use energy storage drilces with
time dlfferenttated load
chatacllristlcs approved by the
Company, such IS electric thermal
storage S1J1Ce he111ng and/or
eoollno systems and Wiler heaters
which consume electrical energy

force Chief Gates out the bllck monkey slapping time," "I almost
door." said Peggy Rowe Estrada, got me a Mexican last night but he
president of Citizens in Support of drop~ the darn gun to quick, lots
of w1t" and "I would love to drive
the Chief of Police.
The panel was fonned after the down Slauson (a street that runs
March 3 beating in which white through minority neighborhoods)
police officers repeatedly beat, with a flame thrower ... we would
stomped and shocked King with a have a barbecue.' '
The 228-page report said some
stun gun. He had been pulled over
" problem" officers in th e 8,300for speeding.
A bystander's videotape of the member department were not adebeating was broadcast across the quately disdptined. It said 183 offi·
nation. Four officers were charged cers had al least four excessiveforce complaints each from 1986 to
with assault and brutality.
The commission' s 10 members 1990.
The deparunent's "hard-nosed"
were appointed by Gates and
Bmdley. It was headed by fonner style " produces results, but it does:
Deputy U.S. Secretary of State so at the risk of creating a siege:
mentality that alienates the officer·
Warren Christopher.
"The leadership of the LAPD from the community," the report
must send a much clearer and more said.
The report said the police chief
effective message that excessive
force witl not be tolemted, ' ' the should serve a five -year term ,
report said. It added: ''The problem renewable only once at the Police·
of excessive force is aggravated by Commission's discretion. It sug ..
racism and bias within the LAPD." gested that the mayor and the com·:
The commission said it found mission share the power to fire the·
recurrent racial remarks typed by chief; the firing could be reversed :
officers into patrol car communica- only with a two-thirds vote of the
tion systems; such as: " sounds like City Council.

Violence may mute effect if sanctions go

Optional Load Management Time ot Day:

8.4810./KWH

556-4 .00

Energy Charge:

$7.50

Sum of the CustomerCharQI,

N/A

First 50 KW

1.8759c 3.3«5c per KWH

$5 .50

1.5506«/KWH

For Ill KWH used ClrrlnQ
the on-peal&lt; blllng period

$6.80

GENERAL SERVICE - SCHEDULE GS-2

2.080011

Customer Charge

1.6003C/KWH

1.OS02C/KWH

1.000C

Proposed

.90CJKWif

Energy CharQe:

.86CIKWH

Customer Charge

Present

$1 .278/KW

Energy Charge:

2.8276C 7.3274C per KWH

Per Month:

$1.321/KW

1.4326C per KWH

5.63561

RESIDENTIAL ENERGY STORAGE- SCHEDULE RS-ES

$1.47/KW

Off-peak Excess Demand

N/A

$7 .50

1.1289c 1.12891perKWH

$1.030JKVA

OH-peak

8.3706C 8.3700. per KWH

N/A

$1.(165/'fNA

rNA

$1.459/rNA

uooc
N/A

$1.03/rNA

Exces~

S.90/rN A

!50 KWH per KW in

messoi5KW
Billing Demand

$12.994/KW

Off-peak Excess Demand

Energy Charge:
First 750 KWH

$14.300/KW

$114.35

OPTIONAl DEMAND RATE - SCHEDULERLM
Proposed
Winter
Summer

N/A

AI KW

N/A

Optional load Management Provision:
Present
Winler Summer

N/A

16.49711 per KWH

NIA per KWH
NIA per KWH

N/A

N/A

6 7880C 6.7880C per KWH

Next 100 KWH

$8.7842/KW

Customer Charoe

N/A

Energy Charge:
First 700 KWH

Over 50 KW

On-peak

Energy Charge:

~

N/A

5.6716C per KWH

Demand Charge:

Energy Charge:

N/A

Per Month:

Proposed
Winter

$725.00

8.6717C per KWH

$6.00 per KW In
excass of 6 KW
Optional Load Management Provision:

RESIDENTIAL SERVICE - SCHEDULE R·R

Summer

Arst 50 KW

Demand Charge:

Wlllr helters
c:onsume
electrical energy only
off·PIIk hours and store energy

Minimum Charge

Availability:

Winter

$278.90

Energy Charge:

Present

Per Month:

$125.15

Per Morltll:

The residential rates have been modified and increased as follows:

Present

N/A

N/A

Optional Unmerered Service Provision:
Commercial service
Availability
for small fixed
eleclric: loads served
under Supplement
No. 16.

28.00

Primary

product of the demand
nl the ninlmum monthly
tiling demand + Applicable

Energy Charge:

N/A

Secondary

GENERAL SERVICE - SMAll - SCHEDULE GS- t

Customer Charge

Meter test charge

Generli Service Secondary
and Primary with ~ load
factor with maximum
demands greater than 50
KW

Mlnl1111rm Olarge:

on~ dunno off-peale hours, and
store energy lor use during
on-peak hours.

80.00
180.00

Genml Servke Pnma!Y

. Gates had said he would resign
hts Sl68,QOO.a-year job if the commission agreed with critics that he
created a climate of racism and
brutality.
On Tuesday he said, ·'I'm not
goin$ to run away," and he hinted
that 11 would take a voter referen.
dum to persuade him to quit.
"The peoiJie wiU speak and that
will say vofumes to me," Gates
said.
The report also recommended ·
cenain, unidentified members of
the Police Commission resign " in
the interest of harmony and healing." Acting President Melanie
Lomax and Sam Williams, outspoken critics of Gates, did so immediately.
Mayor Tom Bradley and com munity groups renewed calls for
Gales to quit. The chief has civilservice protection and can be
removed only by the mayorappointed Police Commission for
misconduct. Thus, he has vinual
lifetime tenure.
Gates' defenders were "out·
mged at the thinly veiled attempt to

ByNRCHAELFLEEMAN
Assoc:iated Press Writer
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Police
Chief Daryl Oates rejected a commission •s recommendation that he
. resign soon as part of an overhaul
aimed at curbing brutality and
mcism in the dcpartmenL ·
The independent Christopher
Commi ssion, formed after the
videotaped police beating of black
motorist Rodney King, released its
report Tuesday after a three-month
investigation.
The commission found graphic
examples of police mcism, a con·
frontational auitude by officers
toward the public aild a deficient
citizen-complaint system.
It warned of a "siege mentality" in the department and indicated
that Gates should resign. It broadly
criticized the department's leadership but did not single out Gates.
"We believe that commencement of a transition in that office is
now appropriate," the repon said.
"We hope that Chief Gates witl
remain in office while his successor is being chosen."

Riders

~

11 .30
60.00
28.00
3800

55.00
200.00

24.8928C 37.8005C per KWH

The Generar Service rates have been modified and increased as follows:

$ 8.00

8.00
50.00
17.00
17.00

S-4.75

5.99641

The lollowing Miscellaneous Charges have been modified and increased as follows:

$ 3.50

S"-75

1.03721 1.57501 per KWH

1.1993C

All rate schedules are system-wide.

Collection trip charge

summer

3 .~171

16.04034

Criticm Prlc:e

Availability:

Proposed

~

Energy Charge:
Low Price

Proposed

Customer Charoe

Proposed

Present
Per Month:

PrMt

Per Morlth:

RESIDENTIAl VARIABLE SPOT PRICE - SCHEDULE RVSP

Present

Report: LAPD needs new,chief

GENERAL SERVICE - SCHEDULE GS-3

RESIOENTlAL TIME OF DAY - SCHEDULE RS-TOO

Per Morlth:

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-9

6.37

19.50

N/A

N/A

In CSP's notice of intent to seek a traditional one-step rate Increase the
Company presented an example of a four-year phase-in plan that wOuld
lessen tihe initial impact on customers, recognizing tihat tihe Commission has
adopted phase-in plans in similar proceedings.
·
The following are tihe proposed factors to be applied monthly tO'base rate
changes to accommodate a four-year ~hase-in:
.

.'

COLUMBUS SOUTHERN POWER COMPANY
T. R. McCaffrey, President and Chief Operating Officer .

�.,

Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

...

•'·

.
'

.

Wednesday, July 10, 1991

,.

Subcommittee sidelines action City aims new ordinance at clubs ~
on combat jobs for women
.

WASHINGTON (AP) - A
Senate subcommittee has recom mended that decisions about allowmg women in combat be put o[f for
at least two years.
The Senate Armed Services
Committee's manpower subcom ·
mittee on Tuesday added to next
year's defense bill a proposal set·
ting up a special commission to
consider the questions and issue a
report in 1993.
Sen. John Glenn, the subcommittee's chairman, said a post-Gulf
War hearing turned up no consensus among top Pentagon officials,
military leaders or service women.
"This issue is too serious for us
to act hastily," said Glenn, DOhio. "Before wholesale changes
can be made, we need to be confi ·
dent that combat effectiveness
would not be compromised by
those changes,"
Glenn's subcommittee added to
the 1992 Defense Authorization a
proposal setting up a IS-member
commission, made up of people
appointed by the president, who

would study the issue and report to
the White House by April 1993.
At a hearing the subcommittee
held last month, the military's top
brass suggested that eliminating
restrictions on combat assignments
could end up rorcmg women to

IG BEND

register for the draft.
The Pentagon, however, said
there was no link between the draft
and repeal of combat resttictions.
The House already has voted to
allow the services to use women in
banle.

.

NEWPORT, Ky. (AP)-:- The
mayor says a p~posed ordman~
banning nudity m public places IS
just what city residents wanted.
' 'The citizens are tired of the old
image . ... What we're doing is
reacting to what our constituents
want us to do," Mayor Steve Goetz
said Tuesday.
City commissioners voted 4-0
Monday to add the anti-nudlly

clause to city ordinances. A serond
and final vote on the proposal is
expected ~ll~ week, Goelz said. .
The ordinance is aimed at clubs
along Monmouth Street that have
avoided efforts to prohibit 'IUde
dancing in places that serve alcohoi. By doing away with alcohol
sales, the clubs are able to feature
dancers who bare everything during their acL

'

I

'

,.;

... Home of
Hard-Working
Low Prices

Wednesday, July 10, 1991
Page-11

Community calendar

Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and the day or that event. Items
must be received well in advance
to assure publication in the calendar.

john C. Wolf, D~O .
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine
. Question: I always read about
so many drownings each summer.
Could you give your readers a few
tips on water safety?
Answer: Thanks for this good
suggestion. With many people
heading for the lakes and beaches,
it's time to think about water sports
such as swimming, diving and
water skiing. A little bit of care and
use of good judgment can help
reduce the risk that an accident will
mar your summertime fun.
One of the more serious waterrelated injuries can occur from diving into shallow, water. If the
diver's head strikes the bottom or
another object, injury to the neck
and spinal cord can result. In the
worst accidents, the injury to the
spinal eord is so severe that death
or J?Crtnanent paralysis occurs. The
eastest way to prevent this kind of
acQident is to familiarize yourself
with the area you're diving in. It's
a good idea to carefully go feet fmt
into the water before your first
dive. That way, you'll know the
water level and you'll find out
about any
dangerous objects.under the surface
that can't be seen from the shore.
Also, remember that the water levels in familiar lakes and streams
can change from day to day and
from season to season.
Accidents at water slides
account for the largest share of
amusement park injuries. About
3,000 water slide injuries are seen
in American emergency rooms
each year. Bruises and lacerations
are the most common ailments,
although a large number of more
serious accidents have been reporteeL Some slide operators have initiated rules requinng sliders 10 wear
helmets, thus reducing the probability or head injuries. Still, many
of the injuries are caused by people
lan&lt;li.tlg on their backs or buttocks
thrown agamst the walls
·

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Vacation
Bible School at the Rejoicing Life
Youth Church wiH be held through
Friday from 9:30 a.m. to noon
daily. Theme is "Adventures of
Life with Jesus." All children ages
3-18 are invited.

chances. and never drink alcohol
before going iniO .the water.
Question: What should I do if I
see someone drowning?
Answer: Drowning is the third
leading cause of accidental death in
' RACINE · Vacation Bible
the United States. Each year, about School at the Racine Church of the
7,000 Americans drown. The cir· Nazarene wiH be held through Fricumstances of these deaths vary day
from 6:30-8 p.m. ni§htly.
considerably, but certain types of Theme
"Heroes for God.' Rev.
drowning accidents occur frequent- Thomas isGates
II invites the public.
ly. In this category are backyard For information
call 949-2668 or
swimming pool accidents involving 949-3084.
young children, sudden deaths of
experienced swimmers who take in
SYRACUSE · Vacation Bible
too much air by hyperventilation School
will be held at the Syracusc
before attempting ooderwater long- Nazarene Church through Friday
distance swims. and accidents from 6-8:30 p.m. for children ages
involving swimmers and boaters . preschool through sixth grade. The
who have been drinking alcohol.
theme is "Heroes for God." The
In rescuing a drowning person; public is invited.
time is of the essence. If the victim
has stopped breathing, cardiopul·
RACINE - The Southern Boostmonary resuscitation, or CPR , ers will clean up the booster buildshould begin as soon as possible. A ings and grounds on Wednesday at
paramedic, lifeguard, physician or 7:30 p.m. All booster parents are
other trained person should admin·
urged to attend.
ister the CPR as soon as the victim
can be placed 'ill a notation device
POMEROY - Ohio Valley Draft
or on a dry surf3ce.
Horse and Mule Association will
It is important that you continue
meet on Wednesday at 7:30p.m. at
the CPR until you can get the victim to a hospital emergency room, the home of Bob Harris.
which should be done as soon as
MIDDLEPORT - The Middlepossible. In these situations there is
port Arts Council will offer a mop
no alternative for life-giving CPR.
doll and mini -mop doll class on
This is why ,I think all adults
Wednesday at 10 a.m. or 6:30p.m.
should be trained in it. The to be Michele Garretson in the instructor.
guardedly optimistic about the sur- Call 742-2157 or 992-2675 for
viva! of drowning victims. In one infonnation.
study. eight of II adult victims
who were comatose upon arrival at
THURSDAY
the hospital emergency department
ROCK SPRINGS · The Rock
survived with apparently normal Springs Grange will meet Thursday
brain function.
at 8 p.m. at the hall.
If you don't know basic CPR,
I'd suggest you contact your local
GALLIPOLIS . Diabetes SupAmerican Heart Association chap· port Group win meet Thursday at 7
ter for in[onnation. about courses m p.m. in the French 500 Room at
your area. Eve~ wtth ~ful prepa- Holzer Medical Center. John Cun~
ratton and u!l!' of good JUdgment, ningham, exercise physiologist,
~d
. happen. You should . win be e s.f!f'er.
·:'
. · deal with
: ''~":: , ,
,·~" ·'!,_· ·
• them
-::;r], whe
W
....,..
. th~,X 9!=Cur :~
.•
.
TUPPERS PLAiNS '-"'Tbe Tupall types is
' · "• · f!amii~ ~edicine" is. a wee~y pers Plains VFW Post No. 9053
use of simple common sense.
column. To s,u)'rmt quesuons, wnte win meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the
horse around on a water slide . to John C. Wolf, D.O., Ohto Um- post home. Note the new time.
Don' t venture into water alone- versity College of OsteopathiC
take a buddy swimming or scuba Medicine, Grosvenor Hall, Athens,
RACINE - The Southern Local
diving with you. Don't take Ohio 45701.
Board of Education will meet
Thursday at 7 p.m. at the high
school in special session.

KENT, Ohio (AP)- The ramily of a teen-age girl who collapsed
on a school bus and later died has
sued the city Board of Education.
The $550,000 suit, filed Tuesday in U.S. District Court in
Aleron, also names as defendants
Charles Dinsmore, transportation
director for the Kent Board of Education; and Charles Sackett, fonner
business manager of the board.
In 1989, Tami Sargi, 14, died
from cardiac arrest. She had been
diagnosed the year before as having an irregular heart beat, a condi ·
lion requiring her to take medication. She suffered seizures on the
way home on a district school bus
OcL 9.
Tbe suit alleges that school bus
drivers were ootrained in emergency procedures and that the board
knew it, but failed to take action.
"Had school bus drivers been
given proper policies, ru.les, and
procedures and been tra~ned for
emergency situations including
C.P.R., (Tami) would have survived," the suit said
The suit says that the girl died
on Oct. 12 as "a direct and proximate result" · of the Kent City
Board of Education, Sackett, and
Dinsmore's "inadequate policies,
rules and regulations, and failure to
train and develop school bus
drivers in CPR."
School Superintendent Donna
Lightel and Charles Dinsmore did
not immediately return calls from
The Associated Press on Wednes·
day. Telephone calls to Sackett's
house were not answered.
The bus driver tried without
success to contact the bus garage
on her citizens band radio when
Tami began suffering seizures, the
suit says.
The driver stopped to call the
garage and then continued on her
route, making four or five stops
before arriving at the Sargi residence, the autopsy report stated.
Once the girl was home, her
mother Terri Sargi, administered
cardiopulmonary resuscitation and
had one of the school children dial
9-1· 1. the suit states.
Days later, Miss Sargi died at
Children's Hospital Medical Center
of Akron. When doctors told the
Sargi family that Tami had suffered
extensive brain damage and that
there was little hope of recovery,
they decided to take her off a respirator.
The suit asks for $500,000 in
compensatory damages and
$50,000 for the pain and suffering
the girl suffered experienced before
she died.

/'a,

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Good Jhru Sat.;
13, 1991

BEAVER FALLS, Pa. (AP) A man who held two women and
his 2-year-old daughter hostage for
nearly 20 hours was in the Beaver
County Jail Tuesday on a variety of
charges.
John Fowler, 36, of Beaver
Falls, Beaver County. scrambled
out the back door of his ex -girl friend's house shortly after II p.m.
Monday when police lobbed tear
gas through a window.
Fowler had gone to the house to
visit Lori O' Neal, 22, and his
daughter, Nicole.
During the visit, the couple
argued about their daughter's -care
and upbringing, said Rodley Akins,
Fowler's brother. Lori's mother,
Carol O'Neal, 53, joined in the ·
argument, Akins said
Police who were called to the
house early· t-~onday found Fowler
holding a handgun to Miss
O'Neal's head.
Police filed the flTSt rounds of
tear gas ar 9:20 p.m. because it was
getting dark and they wanted to
apprehend Fowler before nightfall.
No gunshots were fued.
.

illl

LONDON (AP) - Dame Barbara Cartland, the queen of romantic fiction, took a rare brealc Tuesday to celebrate her 90th birthday
with lunch at swanky Claridge's
with her two sons.
"Claridge's is the fmt place in
London I ever went when I came
out as a debutante in 1919, so I
thought it would be rather appropriate," she said.
Wearing her trademark pink and
false eyelashes, Dame Barbara said
she started the day as she usually
does - with a dose of invigorating
ginseng.
"It keeps you young and active.
It is the oldest health food in the
world,'' she said.
Dame Barbara has given up
royal jelly. which she once helped
promote, because she discovered it
was labeled an aphrodisiac in
Britain's sex shops.
"It is disgraceful, it has nothing
to do with sex at all," said the writ·
er of 54 3 novels. Her heroines are
always virgins.
Queen Elizabeth II invested the
writer, who is step-grandmother of
Princess Diana, as a Dame of the
British Empire in February [or her
service 10 hterature.
NEW YORK (AP) - Raisa
Gorbachev touches on the role of
religion and women in Soviet society in her autobiography, due out in
September.
The 224-page "I Hope: Remi·
niscences and Renections" will be
published simultaneously in the
United States, Canada, Britain and
Europe, said HarperCollins
spokesman Steven Sorrentino.
Terms of the agreement were
not disclosed.
Rupert Murdoch, who owns
HarperCollins, personally negotiated the deal and traveled to Mo~w
in May 10 pick up the manuscript,
Sorrentino said.
"This is the first Russian
woman's memoir since Lenin's
wife wrote hers, which in ilself
says a great deal," said William M.
Shinker, senior vice president of
HarpetCollins adult division.
HarperCollins published Soviet
President Mikhail Gorbachev's
book "Perestroika" in 1987. His
wife's. book takes the form of conversations with Soviet writer Geor-

____________
'

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend
Familr
Medicine

Family sues
board in death
of teenager

Gunman arrested
after 20 hours

·'t

:Violators of. the new ordin~~
.woiJ\a face as much as 90·days m:~
jail.
ThC ordinance is pattcllled after~
an Indiana law banning nude dane-.·
ing that the U.S. Supreme Coun .
recently upheld, Goetz said.
The mayor said be wouldn't be
surprised if the Newport ordinance :
is challenged in coun.
·

'·

,_

··-~-

--·

gy Pryakhin.
In addition to her life and her
husband 's political achievements,
Mrs. Gorbacl)tv discusses a religious reviva1 and the role of
women and Home life in Soviet
society.
NEW YORK (AP) - Hotel
magnate Leona Helmsley gave her
husband. Harry. a couple of
smoochy kisses and a band played
' 'I'm Just Wild About Harry" as
the Helmsleys donated $200,000 to
two programs for senior citizens
Tuesday.
The checks for $100,000 each to
the Alzheimer's Alert Program and
Citymeals-on-Wheels were presented at the Empire State Build·
ing, which is managed by a company owned by Helmsley.
Mrs. Helmsley , 71, also
announced the Empire State Build·
ing would be lit up for the rest or
the summer in a silver-gray color to
honor older New Yorkers.
Mrs. Helmsley sang along as a
senior citizens band played "I'm
Just Wild About Harry," and
kissed her 82-year-old husband
repeatedly.
"I like tha~" said Harry Helms·
ley, who looked dapper in a blueand-white striped jacket but didn't
say much else during the press conference.
He was declared mentally
incompetent to stand trial with his
wife on federal tax evasion
charges. Mrs. Helmsley was con·
victed in 1989 and sentenced to
four years in prison and fmed $7.1
million. She has been free pending
the outcome or her appeal.
NASHVILLE, Tenn . (AP) Country singa4 Jimmy D3a. Charlie Daniels and Boots Randolph are
si~ned for a golf tournament to
rwse money for the Minnie Pearl
Cancer Foundation, officials said
Tuesday.
The Opryland Invilational Golf
Tournament in Nashville is set for
SepL 23-24.
.
Pearl, 78, a mainstay on the
Grand Ole Opry, was successfuny
treated in 1985 ror breast cancer
and is recovering from a stroke
June 17.

l'•"t'W..-•,ft:\

POMEROY ·The Meigs United
Methodist Cooperative Parish will
have a clothing day Thursday from
9:30a.m. to noon at the parish. 311
Condor Street in Pomeroy.

Robert Snowden instructed
MIDDLEPORT - The Evange- members of the Rutland Friendly
line Chapter No. 172, OES, Mid- Gardeners how to propagate roses
dleport, will meet Thursday at 7:30 from stem cunings when they met
p.m. Officers wear street dresses.
recently at the home of Kimberly
Willford with Marie Birchfield as
POMEROY · Dinner at the hostess.
Meigs County Senior Center,
Snowden said to select a mature
Pomeroy, wiH be Thursday from 5- stem from which petals have fallen
6:30 p.m. with veal Parmesan, and having three to five buds. The
spaghetti, tossed salad, garlic bread fmt of three methods is to cut off
and beverage. Cost is $3 with ice the top, leaving three buds, and put
cream extra. Entertainment by the stem in a bottle or water till a
Junior and Rita White, AI Windon rind forms on the bottom, then
and BiH Ward A free will offering plant. The second method starts in
will be taken for the musicians.
the same manner, except that the
end of the prepared cuning is put in
ROCK SPRINGS -The 1991 sandy earth in a shady area and
Meigs Marauder Vollyyball Camp covered with a jar, like a miniwill be held July 15!19 at Metgs greenhouse for a year or so. The
High School, 9 a.m. to noon each third way is to snip all leaves from
day. All area (!iris entering ~des the stem and roll a bundle of the
7-12 are eligible to partic1pate. stripped stems in a damp burlap
Cost is $30 with a maximum of and bwy six inches deep in the fall,
$45 JlC!: family. Registration dead· mulching well. In the spring these
line IS Thursday. Contract Maraud- cuttings will have calluses and
er Head Coach Rick Ash, 9920- should then be planted. Mound up
5960. Shirt size, grade entering, a mixture of sawdust, sand, earth
and phone number is needed when and compost into a raised bed. Ferregistering.
tilize every three weeks and mulch
deeply .
Janet Bolin used roses in her
demonstration
lesson on Japanese
FRIDAY
POMEROY - The Meigs Coun- basic Miribana design in a low
ty Health Department will sponsor black bowl. She said the tall line
a "Sealants Day" on Friday, free or should be at least one and one-half
charge to children between the ages the width of the container and leanof 6-16. Call 992-6626 for an ing back. The second line should
be two-thirds the length of the fmt
appoinunent.
line and pointing over the designers
shoulder,
and the third line should
TUPPERS PLAINS · The TuP.·
pers Plains VFW Post 9053 wtll be one-third the length of the secsponsor a dance Friday from 8- ond line. These lines are often
11 :30 p.m. at the post home with referred to as Heaven. Man and
music by the Ramblin Country Earth, and should fonn a triangle in
Band. Refreshments will be served three planes . The Japanese cut
nower ends under water, and place
and the public is invited.
the blooms so that they look you in
the eye, as the designer is thought
of as the Sun or the master or the
SATURDAY
LONG BOTTOM · There will design. Odd numbers of nowers are
be an old fashioned ice cream used and their sense of color harsocial at the Long Bottom Commu- mony is not the same as Amerinity Building. Six flavors of ice cans. To obtain clean open lines in
cream, sandwiches. pie and cake the design, you may strip or trim
will be on sale. Live bands will be the foliage.
Suzy Carpenter gave gardening
perfonning and prizes awarded.
tips noting that while intense sun,
RACINE - The Charles and hot days and high humidity preFannie Lee (Wolfe) Beaver reunion vails, garden activities are slowed
will be held Saturday at Star Mill now, but insects must be controlled
Park in Racine. Bring a covered as well as weeds. Lawns should be
dish and place setting. Dinner at mowed and fertilized as needed.
noon. Friend~ and relatives wei· Blossoms from all annual should
be removed as they fade to keep
come.
'"
the plants in production. Crowded
RACINE . Outdoor hymn sing day lilies should be lifted, divided
at the Mt. Moriah Church of God into single fans and replanted in
will be held Saturday with dinner at enriched beds. You can still sow
6 p.m. and singing at 7 p.in. Bring seeds or set out plants of marigold,
a covered dish. Singers include ponulaca. torenia and zinnia. VegMountain Top Singers and Crystal etable and pest control are activiand the Dailey Family and others. ties ror the vegetable gardener.
Bring lawn chairs. In case of rain Grapes may need periodic spraying
the event will be held inside.
FAIRPLAIN . The Liberty
Mountaineers will perfonn at the
Jackson County Jamboree in Fairplain. W.Va. on Saturday.

Ape turns neighbors'
home into personal jungle
'

LARGO. Fla. (AP) - An
escaped ape got into a neighbor's
house, terrorized the homeowners.
ran after their dogs and left the
place a mess.
The Hoot Cclabese ape named
Roscoe escaped Sunday from its
cage a [ew streets away and entered
Shirley and Norton Craig's home.
"It just blew by me," said
Craig. "He was a mean-lookmg
thin~. He \?&lt;'ked like King Kong in
mm~ature .

By the time police arrived,
Roscoe was racing from the mantle

Rutland gardeners meet

to chairtops to bcihind the TV and
to any other place that seemed safe.
Wildlife Rescue director Vernon
Yates corralled the ape behind an
aquarium.
"I just walked over, grabbed
him by the arm and walked htm out
of the house," Yates said. "Tben I
said, 'OK , guy, you're under
arrest.' '

Owner Rosemarie Dinardi, who
has a license for the ape, said he's
never gotten away before.
"He's such a nice little guy, "
she said. "He's not vicious at all."

News notes
Coal miners in Britain voted in
!985 to end a year-long strike that
proved to be the lon~est and most
violent walkout in Bnush history.
John Glenn became the first
American to orbit the Earth in
1962, circling three times in Mercury capsule Friendship 7.
Sir Frederick Banting, the co·
discoverer of insulin, died in a
plane crash in 1941 in Newfoundland.
Lord Baden-Powell, founder of
the Boy Scouts, was born in 1857~
Frank W. Woolworth opened a
five-cent store in 1879 in Utica,
N.Y., the first of a chain known
around the globe.

for brown rot and~ fruit plants may
need a netting drape.
Kimberly Willrord ~ave devotions on "Friend is a G1ft of God"
by Helen Steiner Rice, and roll call
was answered by naming a favorite
rose.
Election of officers resulted in
Kimberly Willford, president; Lorri
Barnes, vice president; Suzy Carpenter, secretary ; Marg aret
Edwards, treasurer and Carrie Morris to act as assistant secretary.
A meeting to plan the next
year's program books will be held
at the Barnes home on Wednesday
at 7:30p.m.
New membership was discussed
and it was decided to invite
prospective members to the July
meeting where Judith Hill is to
conduct a workshop on making
cornhusk dolls. Margaret Edwards
is to purchase cones and balls and
hats for the project with members
to bring creative twist, nowers and
ribbon. A potluck dinner will be
held with Mllrjorie Davis as hostess
at 7 p.m. in the civic park.
A letter was received from
Myrna Cordray, state chairman,
that a member of the club should
be present to accept the club ' s
award for the superior rating on the
three-club nower show held last
fall in Rutland. Janet Bolin is to
accept, and is entering the convention nower show as wen.
Margaret Edwards noted that the
civic center nower bed needs wedding. Suzy Carpenter completed his
prior to the fuly 4 celebration .
Kimberly Willford is to check on
possible menus for the Chrisunas
dinner and Margaret Edwards is
also obtaining infonnation.
Problems in participation in the
Meigs County Fair Flower Show
were discussed including the lace
of space to park and unload materials, difficulty in gening in and out
due to noone manning the gates at
times, placement in a unaircondi ·
tioned building or perishable nowers and plants, while pictures and
domestic items are in the air conditioned building and the cost of buying a membership ticket in order to
place the designs required for the
club. Kimberly Will[ord and Carrie
Morris are to be in charge of show
signs and Lorri Barnes, Judy Snow.
den and Carrie Morris agreed to
each do one design in both or the
nower shows during the fair.
Judy Snowden has had a design
of silk roses in the Rutland Post
Office, which has been replaced by
a pattiotic theme for July by Margaret Edwards.
The traveling prize, owed by
Judith Hill, was won by Lorri
Barnes, and Marie Birchfield was
given the traveling prize owned her
by Lorri Barnes. Janet Bolin won
the door prize. Secret pals observed
birthdays of Suzy Carpenter and
Joanne Fetty, and the anniversary
of Kimberly Willford.

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'

:Two charged with wearing
inappropriate swimwear
ERIE, Pa. (AP) - Two New
York women were charged with
wearing bathing suits that were too
skimpy at a Presque Isle State Park
beach because the pad is trying to
· promote a family atmosphere, an
offiCial said IOday.
Stacie McCarthy, 19, of Olean,
N.Y., and Linda Gallo, 22, of SaJa.
manca, N.Y. , were charged with
wearing inappopriate swimwear at
Presque Isle Slate Park on Lake
Erie, said Pete Houghton, assistant

pad superintendent

The women wore neon "thong"
bikinis that exposed their bunocks
as they sunbathed on Sunday, said
Sgt. Robert Viuon of the park.
police.
" Anything that shows body
parts, such as ... breasiS, butwcks or
genitals, is inappropriate," Vitron
said "The message we want to get
across is that this son of swimwear
wiU not be tolerated."

The maximum fine for the summary offense is $300. Ms.
McCarthy and Ms. Gallo must
enter pleas before a magislrale, but
no hearing has been scheduled,
Houghton said
Part police officers decide
whether to file charges or ask
swimmers to put on more clothing,
Houghton said. He said be wasn't
sure if Ms. McCarthy and Ms.
Gallo were given the option of covering up.

Ohio

Wednesday, July 10, 1991

Pomeroy---MiddlepOrt, Ohio

GElS F·u~niture · Annual Tent Sale

Episcopalians take up question
of ordaining homosexuals
By GEORGE W. CORNELL

active homosexuals. Opponents
have mounted a challenge that
urges barring homosexuals from

AP Religion Writer
PHOENIX (AP) - Whether the
Episcopal Church should authorize
the ordination of active homosexuals is the most tallced about of some
500 issues Episcopalians plan to
address during their Ll-day national roovention.
A chwch commission that conducted a six-year study recommends formally allowing dioceses
to ordain otherwise qualified ,

the priesthood

Bishop William Frey says the
issue is getting too much auention.
"The sexuality tail is wagging
the dog," he said "I'd like to see
other issues come to !he fore. Let's
get on with sharing the Gospel with
a hurting world"
Thf.
2.5-million-member
denomination's 70th triennial gen-

The

eral convention opens bere tonight.
Other resolutions cover a variety of
topics from racial justice to preserving the environment
About 10,000 Episcopalians
were expected, but the church's
190-member House of Bishops and
860-member House of Deputies
were to make the decisions. The
bodies are half clergy and half

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Page-14-The Daily Sentinel

Members of the Rutland Friend·
ly Gardeners ttaveled 10 Athens for
a meeting at the home of associatioo member Judith Hill.
Kimberly Willford presided and
Margaret Edwards had devotions
on "Simple Things," wilh members
present answering roll call wilh Ibis
year's lawn problems.
Planting annuals at the Rutland
Civic Cenler recenlly were Margaret Edwards, Joanne Felly, Jane
Favreau and Janet Bolin. Marjorie
Davis and Margaret Edwards had
assisled residents a1 Ve1erans Hos·
pital Extended Care Un it in
Pomeroy wilh making a IOial of 15
corsages of red, pink and blue carnations for Molher' s Day.
The club voted 10 donate $15 to
help wilh the junior garden club led
by Janet Bolin. The junior club was
to be assisted by the Rutland
Friendly Gardeners in preparing
bud vase arrangements of red car.
nations, baby's brealh and fern for
table decorations at the Rulland

Eclipse chasers: telescope
in hand, poetry in heart
By CANDICE HUGHES
Associated Press Writer
TROPIC OF CANCER, Mexico
(AP) - Bob and June Hoover are
eclipse-chasers - a special breed
of thrill-seeker with telescopes
under their arms and poetry in their
hearts.

They are first-timers , who
planned four years and ttaveled 973
miles from their home in Vista,
Calif., 10 reach a remote spot on the
edge of the Pacific Ocean near the
Tropic of Cancer.
Thousands have converged on
the rugged mountains and remote
beaches of Baja California Sur,
where sky and sea are a dazzling
blue.
The 1991 eclipse of the sun will
be one" of the longest - nearly
seven minutes, the maximum and most widely viewed in hisiOry.
It will darken a path 160 miles
wide and 6,000 miles long from the
western Pacific 10 Brazil by way of
Hawaii, Mexico, Central America
and Colombia.
Hoover, a 52-year-old retired
Navy officer, said their big thrill
should come shortly after II a.m.
local time (I p.m. EDT) Thwsday,
when the shadow of the moon turns
· the bright desert day in10 night.
"We wanted to see this curtain
of red light sweeping across the
sea, followed by a curtain of darkness, " be said, flinging his arm out
10ward the crashing breakers.
" And then we're going to be
standing in· the cool shadow of the
moon.''
June Hoover, 56, recalled when
their journey began - four years
• ago.
"I was loolcing across the breakfast table at Bob and I said: Why
don't we drive 10 Baja and see the
eclipse?'
"We don't have any money to
• speak of," Hoover said. "So our
first problem was flow would we
get here and where would we
stay."
He constructed a camper on
their old Datsun pickup from
scratch. It took him almost a y~.
They scraped, saved, planned,
packed. Finally, on June 24, they
pulled out of their driveway in
Vista, north of San Diego.
Six days later they were nestled
in the midst of a stark landscape

If you miss this eclipse ...

GM says cheaper
anti-lock brakes
mean more cars
will have them

•

8
8

Oct. 24, 1995
Mar. 9, 1997

Feb. 26, 1998

8Aug . 11,19~9

CD

O Aug. 1. 2008

0

July 22, 2009
f) Nov. 3, 2013

SouJCe: Asronomy, Facts on Ftle, Inc.

that could be on the moon, except
for the cactus.
They are having the time of
their life.
"The watch , the bra and the
makeup went right away," Mrs.
Hoover said with a laugh.
Unfortunately. so did the antenna for the ham radio Hoover
planned 10 use to chat with eclipsewatchers worldwide. He replaced it
with auiOmotive wire strung up a
bamboo pole.
On the olher side of the peninsula, on the rim of the Sea of Cortez,
old eclipse hand Roger Tuthill
watches the sky tum pink and the
waves turn gold.

Mar. 20. 2015
Mar. 9. 2016
21.2011

e Aug.

APrr oean caple

·

He has seen 15 total solar
eclipses in 20 years, and he's as
starry-eyed as the novices.
Tuthill invented a patented filter
for viewing or photographing the
sun. The idea came 10 him during a
1973 eclipse-viewing trip to the
Sahara dcsen.
It enabled him to quit his vice
president's job at a welding firm,
set up an astronomy produc~ company in Mountainside, N.J., and
devote himself 10 !he heavens.
For Tuthill, interest in astronomy started when he lOOk his kids 10
an amusement park with a 20-centa-view telescope.
"I got hooked," he confessed.

.- Florida enacts law to reduce
number of Caesarean births

.•

By JACKIE HALLIFAX
Associated Press Writer
TALLAHASSEE, Aa. (AP) One Florida hospital that clamped
down oo Caesarean sections saved
millions in tax dollars and found
that mothers and babies were just
as healthy. Hoping 10 repeat that
success statewide, Aorida law will
require dociOrs in many cases 10 try
10 deliver babies naturallr,.
Natural delivery ' has done
quite well by all of us over the
years," said Dr. Charles Mahan,
Florida's health officer. "It doesn't
seem natural thai God wanted half
of us to be born through the

.-

abdomen.' '

..
.•
:
~

.•
•
-

''· :

.•

,
••
::
::

About 25 percent of American
babies are delivered surgically.
often when vaginal birth is a threat
10 the mother or child.
But consumer advocates say
aboul half of all Caesareans are
unnecessary. Mothers are about
five times more likely to die during
a Caesarean dwl· during a vaginal
dcli'IU)', lllhoUgb the riSk is small
iD eidler c:ao, Mahan said.
A law passed by the Legislature
this sping requires the establish·
ment of guidelines for wben Caesareans may be performed. It also
!!llllclales.peer reviews for doctol'S
who do theni. Generally, the law
wiU require ~at vaginal birlh be
ompted before the dociOr resorts
to a Caesarean.
The law applies only to binhs
paid for by Medicaid in hospitals

where at least 30 such government.
funded deliverie$ are performed
annually . It will cover nearly a
Quarter of all births in the state.
"I felt that the state had an
exttaordinary interest in !hose Caesarean sections that it paid for out
of state dollars," said the law 's
sponsor. Sen. Bill Bankhead, a
Jacksonvjlle Republican.
The state and obstetricians
together will devise the law ' s
gilidelines. The law takes effect in
October.
New York enacted a similar law
four years ago.
The state of Aorida could save
up 10 $10 minion a year if it repealS
the results seen at University Medical Center in Jacksonville, where
!he rate of Caesarean sections fell
from 27 percent to 8 perce'nt,
Bankhead said.
Caesarean sections require four
or five days in the .hospital compared with two or three days for
vaginal births. Insurance companies pay dociOrs more for Caesareans, but in Florida the Medicaid
payment was equalized several
years ago.
Dr. Paul Gluck, president of the
Florida Ob-Gyn Society and an
obstetnctan at Baptist Hospi!ltl in
Mtamt, agreed that standards
should be statewide but noted that
many bospi~s already have guidehoes. Baptist has had guidelines
an.d peer reviews for 15 years, he
satd.

In the past 20 years, the number
of Caesareans in the United States
has risen sharply from 5 percent of
all births. C-sections are now the
most common operation in the
country.
Among the reasons for the rise:
increased concern for the welfare
of the fetus and doctors' fear of
being sued if something goes
wrong during a vaginal delivery.
Four of the 10 U.S. hospitals
with the highest Caesarean rates are
in Florida, including Hialeah Hospital, where 53.1 percent of 2,239
births in 1987 were by Caesarean.

•

.,.._ ,

•• • • •

_,..,&lt;....,. ...... ., ....._-. _ , ,_
~

The Dally Sentlriei- Page-15

By FREDERICK STANDISH
AP AuiO Writer
MILFORD, Mich. (AP)- General Mo10rs Corp. says it wiU make
anti-lock brakes standard on nearly
two-thirds of iiS 1992-model cars
and that all its passenger cars will
have air bags in 1995.
Ford Motor Co. said about 15
percent of the 1992-model cars it
expects 10 sell will have anti-lock
brakes as standard equipment and
about half of Ford's cars will have
it as an option.
Chrysler Corp. spokesman Tom
Kowaleski said about 7 percent of
that company's cars are offered
with anti-lock brakes. He declined
to estimate the percentage for 1992
models.
Meanwhile Tuesday, GM, lhe
No. I U.S. automaker, said all of
iiS passenger cars will include air
bags on both the driver and passenger sides starting with the 1995
models, one year earlier than
planned. Driver-side air bags will
be standard in 1994 model GM
minivans.
GM President Lloyd Reuss said
Tuesday his company developed a
cheaper way to make anti-lock
brakes, prompting the company 10
add the system to a wide line of
cars, including such lower-priced
models as lhe Chevrolet Cavalier
and Pontiac Sunbird.
He said he expected the company to sell more than I million
1992-model cars equipped with
standard anti-lock brakes systems.
Anti-lock systems will be standard on about 648ercent of the
1992-model cars M expects to
sell and optional on about 20 percent. GM currently equips about20
percent of its cars with anti-lock
brakes systems.
The systems, when offered as
options, cost about $900 each,
Reuss said. Because of that, antilock brakes have been available
only on more-expensive models.

SAVE STEPS!
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senior, industrial technoiogy:
Peggy J. Johnson Marcinko, Long
Bou.om, junior, undecided; Heather
Camille Shuler, Long Bottom,
senior, phys. astr., also the Ohio
Acaderruc Scholarship.
Trisha Anne Spencer, Long Bot10m, junior, psychology; Matthew
S. Baker, Middleport, sophomore,
health and sports sciences; George
Randall Bunce, Middleport, sophomore, art; Sherry Renee Cooper,
Middleport; senior, nursing: Dave
Gene Dodson, Middleport, sophomore, undecided; Ryan Britton
Mahr, Middleport, senior, industri·
al systems engineering; Elizabeth
Nadine Meier, Middleport, junior.
health and sporiS sciences; Jeffrey
Todd Nelson, Mid~l~pon, senior,
secondary educa~n; Shannon
Marie Newsome, Middleport.
sophomore, undecided.
Cynthia Lynn Ritne, Middle·
port, senior, HPER; James Allen
Schaekel, Middleport, sophomore,
undecided; Donald Lee Stein, Mid·
dleporl, senior, industrial teclmology; Tim Ray Wamsley, Middleport,
sophomore, pre-prof.; Denzil Lee
Welsh Jr.. Middleport, senior, elec·
trical engineering; Melissa Lynn
Woods, Middleport, iunior. elementary education; Melanie Sue
Arnold, Pomeroy, junior, special
education; Nancy Lynn Baker,
Pomeroy, sophomore, elementary
education; John Cary Betzing,
Pomeroy, sophomore, undecided;
Jennifer Lynn Buck, Pomeroy,
sophomore, undecided; Kimberly
Kaye Calvert, Pomeroy, senior,
psychology; Charles Eugene Carson Jr.; Pomeroy, sophomore, computers; Chad Allen Cook.
Pomeroy, junior, industrial technology; Marc Anthony Corsi,
Pomeroy, junior, electrical engineering; Kimberly Lynn Dent,
Pomeroy . junior, psychology;
Jason Lawrence Dodson, Pomeroy,
sophomore, phys. astr.; Sean Russell Dodson, Pomeroy, junior,
industrial technology ; Michele
Tracy Garfield, Pomeroy, sophomore, undecided; Rex Scott Haggy,
Pomeroy, junior, chemical engineering; Rhonda Y. Gomez Haggy,
Pomeroy, sophomore, political science; Audra Marie Harrison,
Pomeroy, junior, psychology; Darren Eugene Hayes, Pomeroy ,
senior, zoology.
Kristan Renee Heines, Pomeroy,
junior, psychology; Deeanna Dawn
Henderson, Pomeroy. senior, electrical engineering; Norman R.
Humphreys Ill, Pomeroy, sophomore, industrial technology; Kevin
Donald King, Pomeroy, senior,
anthropology, also the Martin H.
and Mar~~:aret S. Lutz Scholarship;

Central Trust
Employee Retires

Mentally ill woman who fought
abortion puts son up for adoption

Ay H. Mo111, Pomeroy, sophomore,
home economics; Sandra L. CarleiOn Need, Pomeroy, senior ele·
mentary education, also the Julia F.
Jolliffe Wood Memorial Scholarship; Dianna Sue Phillips,
Pomeroy, junior, secondary education; Ltsa Kay Pooler, Pomeroy.
junior, undecided; Todd Keith
Powell, Pomeroy, sophomore,
management systems.
Angela Kaye Sloan, Pomeroy,
senior, home economics; Monica
Layne Turner, Pomeroy, junior,
general business; Pamela Lynn
West, Pomeroy, senior, zoology;
Lori Richelle Adams, Racine,
senior, civil engineerin~; ChrisiOpher William Baer, Racme, senior,
electrical engineering; Kevin Gregory Burgess, Racine, sophomore,
mechanical engineering; Shawn
Louis Bush, Racine, sophomore,
undecided; Nancy J. Parker Camp·
bell, Racine, ~homore, account·
ing; Patrece Elaine Circle, Racine,
senior, health and sports sciences:
Mary A. Warner Findley, Racine,
senior, nursing ; Matthew Scott
Harris, Racine, senior, health and
sporu sciences.
Paul Bryan Harris, Racine,
senior, physical therapy, also the
James D. Euler Memorial and Col·
lege of Health and Human Services
scholarships; Tammy Dawn Holter,
Racine, senior, industrial systems
engineering, also the C.Paul and
Beth K. StoCker Scholarship; Connie J. Smith Meeks, Racine, senior,
botany; Greta Lynn Riffle, Racine,
sophomore, political science;
Melanie Lynn VanMeter, Racine.
sophomore, secondary education,
also the Ben Manley Scholarship:
Phillip Daniel Wolfe, Racine,
senior, math; Kirk Dean Reed,
Reedsville, senior, secondary education; David Scott Edmonds, Rutland, junior, zoology; Daniel Scoll
Kennedy, Rutland, sophomore,
electrical engineering.
Lisa Gail Miller, Rutland,
senior, special education; Kevin
Victor King, Shade, senior, zoology; Shaen William Arnell, Syracuse, junior, finance ; Tracie Rae
Hubbard, Syracuse, senior, home
economics; J. Todd Lisle, Sryacuse, sophomore, pre-business;
Kristen Deanne Pape, Syracuse,
junior, philosophy; Chnstopher
Ryan Stout, Sryacuse, sophomore,
pre-business; Bethany Suzanne
Arbaugh, Tuppers Plains, sopho·
more, undecided; and Dan Vaugh·
an Tripp, Tuppers Plains, sophomore, chemistry.
Otber
Gina Suzzette West, Coolville,
sophomore, chemical engineering,
Ohio Academic Scholarship; Allen
Glen Arnott, Middleport, senior,
mechanical engineering, Fritz and
Dolores Russ Endowed and the
Paul H. Black and Irene C. Black
Memorial scholarships.

A dinner was held at the Mason
Family Restaurant to honor Sarah
Fowler, a long-time employee of
The Central Trust Company of
Southeastern Ohio, N.A., in Middleport. Mrs. Fowler has retired
after 22 years with the bank.
Sarah Fowler began ber employment with Central Trust, formerly
Citizens National Bank, on July 15,
1969, in the Bookkeeping Department. She was promoted to the
Installment Loan Department as a
General Clerk Senior II in November of 1979 and served in that
capacity until her retirement.
She is.a lifelong resident of
Middlepon and active in the First
Baptist Church of Middleport,
serving as Secretary. Mrs. Fowler
has 2 children and 5 grandchildren
and plans 10 enjoy her family in her
leisure time.

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla .
(AP) - A woman who spent most

RIGHT AT HOME· Kaslka, (left), 17-root,
5,000 pound killer wbale swims with its newborn
calf Tuesday at Sea World Park in San Diego.

By SUSAN ffiGHTOWER
Associated Press Writer
AUSTIN, Texas (AP) - Four
. fraternity members were sentenced
for beating a pledge and selling his
· clothing afire, and three fraternities
· were fined $10,000 each as pan of
a probe of the organizations at the
University of Texas.
"What you see today is escalat·
ing punishment for the organiza·
lions and !he individuals, and if the
problems persist, the punishments
will continue to escalate," Travis
County Attorney Ken Oden said
Tuesday.
Matthew Dennis, Christopher
Temple, Richard Asel and Todd

Bowden all pleaded no contest to
misdemeanor hazing charges for
abusin~ a pledge of the university's
now-dtsbanded Sigma Nu chapter
last November.
The pledge, Mark Allen
Sanders, was beaten, lifted by his
underwear and had his jeans set
afire. Sanders has filed a civil suit
seeking millions in damages
because of the incident
All four fraternity members
received probation and fines of
$500 plus court costs. Three of
them also were sentenced 10 15 or
30 days in jail. Attorneys said that
at lhe discression of the sheriff, the
jail time could be served under a

community service or work-release
program.
Arrest warrants were issued for
four other former Sigma Nu members, Oden said.
Also Tuesday, the Phi Gamma
Delta, Pi Kappa Alpha and Beta
Theta Pi fraternities pleaded no
contest to organizational hazing in
separate cases involving assault,
harassment and destruction of
property.
Each fraternity was fined
$10,000, although community service may be substituted foc some of
the payment, lawyers said. Phi
Gamma Delta also was ordered to
pay $5,800 in restitution.

At the Movies: 'Regarding
Henry' opens in theaters today
By DOLORES BARCLAY
AP AriS Editor
Mike Nichols has spent the past
three decades pecking away at the
foibles, follies and fears of white
middle-class and upper-&lt;:lass society. He has created such jewels as
"The Graduate," "Who's Afraid
of Virginia Woolf" and " Carnal
Knowledge, " with their verbal
gymnastics and intellectual games.
But he's also given us lesser
. works. Last year's " Postcards
From the Edge" was a thin and
. forced comedy of personal relationships. "Working Girl " passed
muster merely by being cute.
With " Regarding Henry ,"
Nichols has gone completely soft,
with a roster of characters straight
out of central casting: arrogant successful lawyer; 8\tractive, smart
wife; pouty misunderstood daugh!Cf; gregarious black physical therapist who boogies 10 soul music on
a Walkman, It's all fairly pat and
aU fairly stereotyped, and as sweet
as a sugar cube dipPed in honey.
. And when the powerful lawyer
· suffers brain damage following a
. shooting during a holdup, Nichols
slides 10 utter schmaltz.
Henry Turner (Harrison Ford)

has just won a malpractice case by
being devious. He and his wife,
Sarah (Annette Bening), return
from a victory pany to their palatial
co-op off Ftfth Avenue. But
Henry 's out of cigarettes, so he
sails .into the night 10 a local shop
that' s in the process of being held
up.
Henry's arrogrance gets him
shot in the head and chest. A few
weeks later, he emerges from a
coma, unable to speak, walk or
remember the simplest concepts.
He also has no memory of his for·
mer life.
After months of physical and
occupational therapy: he learns
more about the man he was and
knows that he can no longer be thai
person. Now Henry loves and
needs his wife. Before, he had no
lime for her. He also knows that he
loves and needs his daughter,
whom be treated with total disinter·
est. His therapist, Bradley (Bill
Nunn), becomes his best friend and
mentor.
Once home, Henry reinvents
himself as his friends patronize
him. He goes over his 6ld cases,
trying to make good.

All is just too perfect in
Nichols' ftlm : Henry's recovery is
the fastest in medical history, and
he emerges a kinder, gentler soul;
Sarah is perfect in every way and
never falters; his 12-year·old
daughter is so understanding - she
even takes out her old reader and
teaches Dad how 10 read.
Despite the cloying emotionalism, there are some endearing and
genuinely funny moments in the
movie, such as when Henry points
out constellations he recalls, naming the "Big Dripper" and the
"Little Dripper." Or when Henry
stumbles into a porn movie house
and looks with bewilderment at the
brigade surrounding him.
Ford treads a fine line in
"Regarding Henry." His challenge
is not 10 make Henry 100 childlike. ·
He succeeds, though much of'
Nichols' direction has Ford resem·
bling Dustin Hoffman as the fright·
ened and catatonic Benjamin of
"The Graduate."
Nichols directed from a script
by Jeffrey Abrams and co-produced with Sco11 Rudin . Robert
Greenhut was executive producer
of the Paramount Pictures release
which is rated PG-13.

•

ByJO~NOLAN

Associated Press Writer
CINCINNATI (AP) - The
city's crackdown on panhandlers
stems from complaints from down·
IOwn businesses and the City Council and is reasonable enforcement, a
police official and city councilmen
say.
But advocates for homeless people said Tuesday that the city is
showing no compassion for the
homeless by arresting panhandlers.
Many of them have no homes and
are begging to support themselves,
said' Michael Fontana, coordinating
director of the Greater Cincinnati
Coalition for the Homeless.
"It troubles me as a trend.
When cities start doing these soru
of things, it often stariS a trend of
trying 10 drive homeless and poor
people out of downtown," he said.
"We don't support aggressive
panhandling. But that's such a

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small percentage of people who
panhandle that it's ludicrous to pass
a law against them. Most commu·
nities have laws to deal with that
sort of thing," said Fred Karnas,
executive director of the National
Coalition for the Homeless.
Fontana, who took his plea
before the council's law committee
last week, questioned police priorities in arresting panhandlers.
·'Their concern should be if
people are being too aggressive
when they panhandle ... if they are
grabbing people or beating people," he said. " If someone's just
begging change or what have you,
they shouldn't go out and make
arrests for that."
Police Lt. Gary Glazier said a
special operations team of plain·
clothes officers has arrested about
75 panhandlers the past two weeks
on misdemeanor charges of disor ·
derly conduct, violating the city's

1/2

PRICE
SALE CONTINUES
CHAPMAN SHOES
IN THE HEART OF POMEROY
OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT 'Til8 00 PM

mine: ·

When the 5-pound, 10-ounce
infant was born a month early in
December, PbiUips said he had no
obvious iU effects from Lefebvre's
medication for severe manic
depression.

'Thelma and Louise' amaze zoo visitors
SAN DIEGO (AP) - Thelma
and Louise are being held at the
San Diego Zoo.
But they're being weU cared for;
they get four mice a month - and
plenty of visitors.
Thelma and Louise are the
names given 10 a rare two-headed
female corn snake at the zoo ' s
Klauber-Shaw Reptile House. The
3 1/2-foot-long snake is connecled
just behind the heads to only one
body.
The heads have identical mark·
ings. The right head is the one with
the appetite. It seems 10 be the only

one 10 eat the twice-monthly meals
of two fuU-grown mice.
"We have not seen the left head
eat, but the fellow we got it from
says it also eaiS on occasion," zoo
spokeswoman Georgeanne Irvine
said Monday.
The 4 1/2-year-old non -poisonous snake was acquired in late
March from a breeder on the East
Coast, where corn snakes are
native, Irvine said. It is rare 10 find
snakes with two heads, however,
and it is doubtful Thelma and
Louise could survive in the wild.

" With two heads it would be
pretty difficult to catch food, to
maneuver the heads," she said.
AJl for the name?
Irvine, a big fan of the movie
" Thelma &amp; Louise," said she
thought it up in the shower.
''I thought: What a perfect name
for a female snake," she said. "I
got it approved from the reptile
people, although they don 't normally like 10 name animals.
''I'll probably get feminists caUing me. And I'll say: 'Hey! What's
th e matter? Are you prejudiced
against snakes?"'

Colleagues recall star of 'Days of Wine and Roses'
By JOHN HORN
•·AP Entertainment Writer
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Colleagues, friends and relatives paid
tribute to actress Lee Remick ,
recalling the skill she brought to
films like " Days of Wine and
Roses" and courage she showed in
her battle with cancer.
"I never knew a moment with
her other than sheer joy ," said
actor Roddy McDowall, a friend of
four decades. "She was one of

those rare creatures who never cast
a shadow upon the day.' '
The star died July 2 from cancer
at age 55 . She was memorialized
Tuesday in a private outdoor service at Westwood Memorial Park.
The 200 people attendin g
included Elizabeth Taylor, Charles
Bronson, Gregory Peck, Vincent
Price, Blake Edwards and Richard
Attenborough.
Jack Lemmon, who starred

opposite Miss Remick in " Days of
Wine and Roses," credited her
with giving the film iiS downbeat
veracity in the tale of a couple
addicted 10 alcohol.
Lemmon recalled that studio
chief Jack Warner insisted the film
have a happy ending. To prevent
the studio from changing the p1m
fmal frames, Miss Remick insiSted
that Lemmon fly off 10 Europe so
he would be unavailable for any
reshooung.

THE 1991

..

The Meigs County Fair Tab Is
Coming August 9, 1991.
Advertising Deadline Is
August 2, 1991.

.I

CALL DAVE TO PLACE YOUR AD IN THIS
YEAR'S EDITION

95~

'DEPOSIT

1 • 8 X 10
2•5X7
.J umbo Willets
.! 6 .' 'h Size Wallets

CHECKS
,,_ 1_ , ~

.

....

D.O. STUDIO TAKES MORE TIME TO GET THAT SOMETHING ,SPECIAL
Penona under 18 -

appointed Kathleen Phillips 10 act
on her behalf. PhiUips and the doctors agreed to help Lefebvre have
her baby.
Lefebvre's ordea l drew the
attention of pro-choice and anti·
abortion groups, which united in
support of her decision 10 keep the
baby.
Lefebvre remembers none of the
media attention or court decisions.
Her only memory of her son is
from the day of his birth.
"I touched hi s nose ," she
recalled. " I srud, 'Oh, it looks like

anti-begging ordinance or carrying
an open container of alcohol.
"We've been sending people
out to arrest panhandlers. But a
good portion of panhandlers aren't
homeless. They are young adults,"
Glazier said. "A lot of them arc
asking for $1 2 to have their car
repaired on the expressway. And of
course, the stories they use are all
made up."
Glazier said the police are
enforcing a city ordinance that forbids people to "solicit alm s or
charity by whatever means.'' The
law grants an exemption for a person who applies to a legitimate
charity for assistance.
" We had complaints regarding
it. It's a current city ordinance that
was made by council ... and we're
enforcing it. If cooncil wants to
reconsider whether to have the law,
that's their pleasure," Glazier said.

ON DELIVERY

CHAPMAN SHOES

of her pregnancy sttappcd to a bed
in a severe psychotic state while
doctors sought a court-ordered
abortion has given the baby up for
adoption.
"I signed the papers to spare
him from being eternally a foster
child," Denise Lefebvre said Monday in her first public statements
about the case.
"I just wanted to get it over
with, so it's behind me," she satd.
"But the baby wiU never be behind
me. After something like this hap·
pens, you'renever the same."
Lefebvre, a severe manic depressive, gave birth to a boy in
December.
Court documents show she was
strapped to a hospital bed in

Broward General Medical Center
for aberrant behavior that included
eating her own excrement, attacking hospital staff and threatening to
kiU her baby.
Last spnng, she stopped taking
lithium, known to cause birth
defects, for fear it would hurt her
fetus. She quickly slipped in10 a
deep psychotic state, prompting
doctors at Broward General 10 seek
a court-ordered abortion they said
was necessary 10 save her life.
In July, a judge approv ed an
abortion at the request of Lefeb·
vre's father, Joseph , and doctors,
who considered her condition life- .
threatening. But the 4th District
Court of Appeal overturned th e
order on a technicality.
In September, the court declared
Lefebvre mentally incompetent and

Cincinnati getting tough on panhandlers

MOTHERS!

r----

Five kiUer whales have been successfuUy raised
at Sea World Parks. (AP)

Four U. of Texas fraternity
members sentenced for hazing

.1 .. IICCOIIII*IIed by piiNIIL-

ALL AGES AND FAMILIES
UMIT ONE SPECIAL PER FAMILY
SPECIAL SCENIC BACKGROUND NO·EXTRA CHARGE
GROUP PiCTURE $1 .00 PER SUBJECT. PAY liVHEN TAKEN
· BACKGROUND
. .
. SCENIC AND BLACK
..

FOO.DLAND

I '

•

BIG BEND
POMEROY

I

j

--~_.._

__

SPLASHD()~ • F;friaii. VIIItpi; 9, cr~tes
aplub ila ·11e Jumps .iatci a mud puddle after a
recent r1lu atorm In Pueblo, Colo. The youtb

.

,

I

1

_________________.___.......

'

•
•••

WE HAVE THE NEW PICTURE BUTTONS

•

._

'·•··-

Ohio U. scholarships awarded

be applied cautiously and accordBend area students attending
ing 10 directions as should any pesOhio University have been awardticides used 10 kill insects.
Cindy Oliveri, a guest, and ed !he following scholarships. The
Meigs County Home Economics · students' names, along with !heir
and Extension Agenl, spoke 10 the address, grade and m!ljor are as fol·
group ori family communications lows
Dean's scholarship
and emotional help. She said that
Jonathan Vance Memtt, New
people fall into five categories of
manipulators in communication: Haven, W.Va., sophomore, music,
judge, sciemi st, beggar, escape also the Klinder Orcpestra Perfor·
artist and leveler, the latter being in mance Scholarship; Emilie Ann
!Ouch with their feelings and able Sisson, Cheshire, senior, manageto communicate them to others. ment information systems; Amy
She suggested that people should •. Lou Morgan, Coolville, sophosit down and talk, admit real feel- more, music; Amy JoAnne Penick,
ings without blaming and be Coolville, senior, special education; Whitney Daw.n Smith ,
descriptive.
Present were guests, Jane Coolville, senior, chemical engiFavreau, a former charter member neering, also !he Area Six Health
of the club now living in Mel- Services Scholarship; Kristin M.
bourne, Aa.; Cindy Oliveri, Edith King, Pomeroy, sophomore, zooloLambert, grandmolher of Judith gy, also the Kibble Foundation
Hill and members, Marie Birch- Scholarship; Larissa Lee Long,
field, Kimberly Willford, Judy Pomeroy, senior, health and spons
Snowden , Margaret Edwards , sciences, also the Kibble Foundation Scholarship; Susan Renee
Joanne Felly and Janet Bolin.
Young, Pomeroy, junior, accounting, also the Kibble Foundation
Scholarship; Jennifer Jayne Arnold,
Racine, senior, physical therapy,
also the Kibble Foundation Scholarship; David Jennings Beegle,
Racine, senioc, phys. astr., also the
Kibble Foundation, C. Paul and
Beth K. SIOCker and Ohio Academ.
ic Scholarships.
Kibble Foundation Scholarship
Janine Michele Schaekel,
Chester, sophomore, health and
sports sciences; Jeffrey Hu~h
Paths of totality for solar.ecrrpses in the Northern
Sayre, Coolville, senior, industrial
technology; John William
Hemisphere until 2017
Longstreth, Langsville. senior,
EKdudes
communications management;
Diana Marie Bissell, Long Boaom,
senior, hearing and speech, also the
Ben Manley Scholarship; David
Allen Edwards, Long Bottom ,

Alumni banquet with Judy Snowden to ready the vases. The club
was also requested by Jim Birch·
field to provide arrangements for
the Meigs High Alumni on June
22. The group agreed 10 work on
the project that day at the Birchfield Funeral Home in Rutland.
A repon from the Spring Region
II meeting of the Ohio Association
of Garden Clubs noted that Katie
Shoemaker had announced a trip to
Oglebay Resort near Wheeling at
Cbrisunas time 10 view the holiday
lighting there with member Marie
Birchfield signing for the trip. The
state convention was also discussed
with Janet Bolin to attend and
enter.
Margaret Edwards' led the gar:
dening program noting that lawns
should not be mowed too short.
One could check the pH balance
before liming or fertilizing and soil
samples should be taken to the
county extension office for testing.
Herbicides 10 control weeds should

•

Wednesday. July .10, 1991

Pomeroy--Middleport, Ohio

Gardeners travel to Athens-- -- - -

A

I

spent time witb · ·frleud ell(lerlmentlna Wltb dll·
rereut ways or 1eapln11 Into the muddy puddle
waters. (AP)

992-215-5

I

·.

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

~--~~~--~

~~~UL~- ~ ~ ··

•

�Page-16. The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, July 10, 1991

Q_hlo .

July 10, 1991

·z.ESTA

Classified

~· RACKERS·
POUND BOX

STORE HOliKS
Monday thru Sunday

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED 5UNDA Y

99&lt;

8 AM-10 PM

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH

PO liC i t S
' Ath uut 'IKi c M e tg• . G1lha or M n u11

cu untt ~ mu ~t

bu pu:

JlCIId

KRAFT
16 OZ. BTL.

79&lt;
s·

BEEF BUCkET ·

rl ;,y ;tft t:r publt c.ollw n t o m• k e corrcch o n
" Ads ttl .. mu s1 b e JN•d '" •dv•r,cc ,.,. ~
Card o l l h o~nk ~
H • ppy

lu ML•n1onar11

TUESDAY PAPER
W[ON ESOAV P.PER
THURSDAY PAPER
tHIOAY PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

49&lt;
Leg a.uarters ••••••••
5/$2
Fryer Parts ••••••L:·•••• 49&lt;

D AY BEFOR E PUBLI CATION
11 00 AM SATURDAY
2 00 PM MONDAY
2 00 PM TUESDAY
2 00 PM WE DNESDAY
2 00 PM THURSDAY
2 IJO PM FRIDAY

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

10.75 OZ. CAN

THIS l"xl"
BUllETIN BOARD
SPACE AVAILABLE
AT $5.00 PER DAY

CHICKEN MIXED

TENDER VlfiLES

ECKRICH

$

Bologna
59
Round Steak •••••• ~ 2

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00000000000

$159. CAT FOoo ·
12 OZ. BOX

9
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WANT
ADS
WORK!
Help Wanted

NURSES

Rate1ar«: lot r;on • wtrve run&amp;. bfokefl up d ' t S w tll b e ch•ged
lot eidl d., •s separa te ads

MetgS C ou nty
Area Code 614

G•U•• County
Attli CDde 614

446

G;~lhpoh s

367 Ch•hw•
388 Ytnton

245 RKJ Gr•nde
256 Guyan Otlt
643 ArDaOISt
379

W,linut

99 2

Mu on Co. WV
Area Cod e 104

Muklleport
Pom•ov

985
843

6 75

Ch•ter

Ponl.nd
247 let•r1 FMis
949 R•ctne
74 2 Rutlend
667 Coot...lllle

!t 76
773

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$2
4
9
Potatoes ••••••••••••••
'2 MILK
$1 59

,,
II

10 .LB. BAG

M•son
882 New H1ven
895 let a rt
937 8 uth•o

lll .• ~.,

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120Z.

Amer. Cheese •••~·:~.

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SPRAY--64 OZ. JUG

$

119

KEMP'S

.

$199 Ice C.ne.. ·a.m·.~·:, ·,•·•~··•····· $·2··99
c:
Sugar Wafers .~~~ 3/$1 T·v D~·, . •••••••.••••• 99
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Cranberry Cocktail ••

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~- u.s oz.

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$3 99

Good Only AI Powll I Supw Valu

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oz.~ 6/'$.1·

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13, 1991
Limit 6 "' Cysf•llfiiW

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...... .. 1.2s

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136 OZ.:·
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Julj 13, 1991

H

Sc~ool s

Rdto, TV 6 CO Rt:pilu
Mtsc ellant!Ou s

1_8

Want e d To Do

lot s &amp; Acr eeg e
Retll E s llle W..-.le d

41
41

H o uses tor R e nt
M o btl e H o m es f or R ll nl
Farm s tor Rent
Ap11rtmen1 lot Rutll

43
44
45
46
47

64 H1y &amp; Gu tn
65 Sued llo Futthur

Trans ortalion
1 1 Aut os lor S al u
7 2 Tftl tlu 1o r Sa1t!

73 Vttm 1!.4WO "•
7 4 Motorcydus
75 B ut~ t s &amp; Mo t on lor So~ l t!
76 Auto Pall s &amp; A cces~or•u.
7 7 Auto Rop;m
7 8 Campmg Equt p n~ un t
79 Cot mpeu. &amp; M CJ i or H o lltt!li

Furnished Roomi
Spac e tor Rent

Want ed

to

R e nt

Equtpm eol f o r Rent
For l eae

48

49

Merchandise

&amp; ln ll ruc h on

51
62 63
!,4

Household GoDds

55

Butld•ng Supplua

liijdiB$1

Sporting Goods
Anhques
Mise: Merchand1te

8 l Home lntPIOwttnent ,.

8 2 ~ Ptumbtn g &amp; H ul ul u
83 • E..cMta llng
84 1 Elet111 C: III &amp; R t~ lfl gmtt hun
85 1 Gtrn ttra l Haultny

56 Pen tor Site
2 1 Busmeu Opportunity
22 Mont!'¥ to lo•n
2 1 Pr o l •~to n•l Serv • c~

Far m Equ•pm un t
Wa 1111d t&lt;l Buy
liV t!lt OCk

57 Muli cll lns eruments
58 Fn.ut s &amp; Ve get1bl es
S9 Fo r Sal e or Tn rte

86
87

M obr ltl Ho m e Rt!p ow

Upholslerv

J&amp;L
INSULAII ON

Mllil•'"'

SIGNS
'lick

BISSELL
BUILDERS

. ·~~rby

FOREVER
BRONZE
lANNlNG

BOB JONES
EXCAVATING

g,,,, s,,,,,

BACKHOE

S3Q

·.

Real Estate General

.HOWARD

EXCAVATING

BUUDOZER and
BACKHOE WORK,
HOME SITES.
LAN.DCLEAR lNG.
WATER 1nd SEWER
LINES

1RIIC.G AVAILABLE
FREE ESTIMATES

992-7458

YOUNG'S

IIIDIPIIIDIIfl •
CliPn ClllMRS
Dllll nu flOOI CAll
•Reuonlble Allee

BISSELL &amp; lUilE
CONSTRUCDON
•New Ho11111

- llt'oom Addltiont
- Gutter work

oQu111ty Work
•Free Eetimetea
•Cerpet Hal F11t Dry
Time ·
•Higll Gloll on Tile
Floor Flnl1h
Mil! lEWIS. Ownor
11. 1, lutlancl, OH.

•Garaps

·c~t•

.......Wing

Stop I Comport

FrM llfimat11

985-4473
667·6179

·•

ond

- EI-

Plurnllloi

- C~•wo~

~

- Roofing

- InteriOr • Eater6or

Pointing
(FREE ESTIMATES) :.

V: C. YOUNG IIJ:
992-6215 ·.

742·2451

Pom•oy, Ohio •
11-14·'90""

3-14-'91-lfn

5·!1-'tcl Hn

SERVICE ·

CARPENTER

..

Real Estate General

STEWART'S.
GUNS &amp; SUPPLIES

Howard L Wrltesel

•tuY •SElL •naDE
OPEN
Tuudtoy thru SaturdiY
10:00 em·II:OO pm

NEW -REPAIR

742-2U1

POTATO

21/t MI. outside
OFFICE 992·2886

CHIPS

HOME 992-6692

6.7 OZ. CAN

206 NORTH SECOND AVE .
MIDDLEPORT. OHIO
DOTTIE.S. TURNER . BROKER

home will embrace you with that WELCOME
minute y011 step in lhe doot! This new bi·
home · 1 greal condilion, includes basement, 2 car
gatage, 3 lo 4 bedtoom~ equipped krtchen, basketball court,
cenltal beat &amp; atr. 3 ~ actes located Nl one ol Metgs County's
most desirable &amp;teas. As long $69,900. Any reasonable offer
w111 be considered.

GROUND
BEEF

DEXT£1 - Corntr Lot - A~prox . one acre la1rly level.
Could be a mobile horne site. Electric available. $1500

10 LB. PACKAGE

DARWIN - F11m - 151\7 acres of land wilh an older 2
story home. Has six rooms, 3 bedrooms. 2 barns. and ftee
gas to heal your home. Approx. 20 actes tillable. $85,000
POMEROY - No down P1Ymtnt - Owners will carry 2nd .
mortgage on thts two story home on a good street. Has a latge
famijy room. some hatdwood floors, 3 bedrooms, and a din·
ing 1oom. Has ~inyt siding fot a low maintenance.
ONLY $24,000

·

10-12 oz.

ROUT£ 124 - Have you evet dreamed ol owmng y011r own
business - Well now's the time to buy. Thts business is
equipped wrth shake machine, 4 freezer ~ ice cream
machine, deep fryet, ice machine, grjl and LOTS more. Sit·
ling on approx. one acre comer lol along a state roule.
.
ONLY H0.500.

GRO~ND

CHUCK

liVER fiiONT PROPERTY - Apptox. I acre beaubful ~tassy
lot w~h watet tap already installed. Great lot camp~ng _or
boiling - near Racine.
PRICED AT ONLY $7,000

10 ii.'PACKAGE

POMEROY- Lau11l Cliff Rd. -For a low ptice you can own
your own home. This Hl story 2 bedtoom hom a is sitting on
approx. a II acre lot with a small barn.
$7,900

$1690

IIENDA JEFFER$ ........ .................................. 992-3056
DAIUIIE STEWART ...... ................................. 992-6315
SAIIDY BUTCHER ........................................... 992-5371
SIIEm WATER$ ............................................ 3&amp;7~21

THE

EMILEE MERINAR
Owner &amp; Operator

614-992-6820
SUIIIER HEAT lAKING YOU SIZD.El Come lo where the
shade abounds! Cooling country bteezes wispalong the deck
and pon:h ofth1s II; story remodeled·home with the lookol a
loc home. Featutes IOO'x200' lol, 3 bedrooms, carpet,
equtpped kttchen. Cooling counlry comfort - Priced at only
$29,900.
POMEROY - Here is a home wrth an tncome1You can't beat
this! Anice large home and a guage apartmenl to use lor a
rental. With the rental ncome mt would be l1ke living lor free'
This ptH:e can'l be be beat either' ONLY $20,000. You've got
to see this to believe rt!

""'

RACINE - NEW LISTING - Acreage 26.11 acres. ASKING
$11.900.
NEW LISTING- Trailer only. 197614x60 5 room ~ 3 brs., 2
baths. Total electric ~eed s some repa11s. ASKING $6,500.
NEW LISnNG - H1ppy Hollow- 2 story home with 3 bed·
room~ nice interior 1ncludes all furnishings plus new range
and reftigerator. Situated on 15+ acres. ASKING $32,900.
LOTS OF LAND! If you're looking lot ~a cant ground, small 01
larae. come in and check what we have listed.
·
WE'RE 6UTING NEW LISTIIIIGSI BUT WE WANT IIORE! IF
YOU WANT TO SELL COlE SEE US, WE HAVE BUY.ERSI
WANT TO BUY, COlE SEE US, WE HAVE LISTINGS! THIS IS
THE PLACE TO BE IF YOU WANTTOIIOVE PROPERTY! GIVE
US ACAlli
HENRY E. CL£LAND ....................................... 992·6191
~ACY ~I NAGER ....... ..... .................. ..... ....... 949-2439
JEAN TRUSSELL. ............................... ............949·2660
JO Hlll ............. ... .. ...................................... 915-44&amp;6
OFFICE ...................... ..... .............................. 992·2~59

Pomeroy,

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING

•FIREWOOD
BILL SLACK

992-2269
USED RAILROAD TIES
8; 2·90-tfn

iUiii.u: 10 Rc ;; l r :

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
· Painting

1

1111110111 • IIYIIIOI :
FREE ESTIMATES ·

Tokt the pain out of.:
·painting.
Let 1111 do it for you.

205 N. 5Koncl StrMI
RIDDLEPOIT, OHIO 4576t

Offlct 614-992-2116
HOME 614·992 -Ut2
DDmf S. TUINd, IIOIEI
HOUSEB•LOTSIIFARMS
COMMERCIAL
We Need Uotlnp!

FREE ESTIMATES
949-2168

YEIY I£ASONA1Lf •
HAYE RffEIEfKES :

(614) 91S-411Q

11·10·'91 - I 'mo. pd.

u-no11n

,,_

POOlt~~~CHINE

$toe*~/
AIR CONDmONERS • HEAT PUMPS ond
FURNACES FOR MOilLE &amp; DOUILEWIDE HOMES ::1

Open Tues.• Thurs.,
Fri., Set. 7:30 p.m.

POMEROY
BOWLING

•

0

0

0

•••••••••

0

••••

0

0

•

••

••

•

•

•

•••••

MOBILE HOME

BENNETT'S

380 last 2nd St.

992-3432 or
992-2403
1 ·4·'91 · 1 mo.

~::~:,'

locatH On Soffertl School ld. off lt. 141
1'141 446-9416 ... 1·10Ct·l7't.J967

A&amp;B

Camping Is FamUy Fun ,.-:;;;;

COMP.LDE AUTO
UPHOLSTERY

Nr:w 17178 il&amp;l.soJY ••

POOL

OP&amp;Jf TO 1'RR ftvauC

Convertible Tops,
Carpets, Headliner
8t Seat Covers and
Minor Auto Repair.
lilA Ill ST • MASON, WY.

c.ufPING • S..util'ul SwToundinp
Rll'reS • Day, Week, Month, or Seuon

PICNIC IHELT'Ill and STACE 'or Rent

' Rcuntona • Ocl..Togclhcn ~ Parttcs
ftiiiiNG
,
IIITCIII:N NOW OPEN
SeMnc Brukl'ut. Mtols . and Snack..
*ARCAIII

*

*

1-(3041·
773-9560
•Remodeling and
Home Rapalra
•Roofing
•Siding
•!tainting
FULLY JNSURED
FREE. ESTIMATES

WE

DO

ROOFING

AND EVEIYTHING UNDEINEATH

TROMM
BUILDERS
· FREE EniMATES

CEDAR
CONStRUCTION

I

9U-6641 or
698-616.4 .

. ......, .tfn
I '

• ···...

LINDA'S .
PAINTING

'~ ~­

ROOFING

5·10."91-ttn.

Complete Grooming
For All Breeds

FLATWOODS· ROAD - Agrowing area. Apptox. 3 acres wrth
ll'eal laying building site or mobile home srte. TPC water
available. Elecltic lines actoss the pi!JI)erty. Farmers Home
Approved. Almost ready to go, lUst needs you. $8,000
OWIER WANTS All OFFER - Pomero1 - 5 lots wih a 2
story home. Home has 4 bedtoom~ dimng 1oom, and a lull
basement Newer gas furnace and a big one cat gatage.
PRICE WAS $17,900. ·
REDUCED TO $15,000

Rutland on Haw
Uma ld.

GROOM
ROOM

NEED ASIIALL BUSINESS BUILDING- To start your own
business tn langs~ l lellt's a nice building on apptox. 1 acre
lot. Has water, sewage, and restroom. Built to state regula·
lions.
$30,000

.

.

1S

16
17

35
36

t;tmma

HelD WM"IIIId
Snuattan Wanted
lnsutance
Bu sineu Tratnmg

1-2t·11 - 1 mo. d.

...

'DELICIOUS

11

Bu 11R C15S Butldtn gs

~::::::::::::~r.::::::::::::::1::::::::::::::~::::::::~~::;r.::~;;~~;:=t
OllwoPUBL~SALE
Town.,lp llo.ord ol 1.
TruiiHa hoa c..uoln peroo· r-------1
•VINYL SIDING
SPECIALIZING
nol property thm Ia no longer
W.
H.
MOBILE
•ALUMINUM
SIDING
nooded. Tho property Ia oa
IN CONCRETE
•BLOWN
IN
foUowa;
of
HOME PARTS
INSULATION
•Sidewalks
111 1978 F 700 Ford
UPHOLSIEIY
•VInyl Siding
Dump T•uck, ond
If you're in need
•Patios
•Replecement
213- ... S.C111tl
121 19117 Box Von
gf Mobile Home
Thl Whlctll Ire to Ill told
Wln~wa
•Driveways
lldtltepert
"1a lo". No _,.ntloo ore
•Roofing
Parts
or
Hand
Tufting
•Slabs
modto 11 ID tho condition ol
•lnluletlon
..•• ~~Mea lvllt
AlCessories ...
Cultom
D111pe1 :
tho whlct11. Tholl whlct11
10-te DISCOUNT TO
JAMES Ills&amp;
uFru Eltim•tel"
will be ovtllloblo for lnopoc·
S6
Y
earo
"perimee
"
SEE US FIRST!
SENIOI CI'IIZENS
tlon It thl relidltlCI ol PIUI
992·2172 or
PH
•.
949-210
1
614·
99
•2321
~
U'-. locowd ot lflotO SueFREE ESTIMATES
992-5800
742·2251
Wo Sly W...t We Do .. ·
· or les. 949-2160
CliO ROid, R-ovltlo, Ohio.
539 B;yen Place
Wo Do Whit Wo Soy. :
Thl truck a will be IOid on
IT. 33 WEST OF
992-7130
NO
SUNDAY
CAllS
Middleport. Ohio
10-19-1 ...
Soturdoy, Augull10, 1991
3-ll·Hn
11·4·'81 ·1 mo.
DAIWIN, OHIO
11·14-tfn
11 8:00A.M., to tho hlghoot
'"ponolblo blddtor. Tho ve·
hld11 1re to be oold by pub·
lie 1uctlon It 390110. SueUSED APPUANCES·
cttAUIIt
Clio Road, R-ovlllo, Ohio.
90DAYWAWm .
Ployment lo duo In fuN by
WASIIDS-$100
op
noon on tho d1y ollllo. PlY·
DIYIS- )OY op
ment lolo be by 011h or bonk
IIIFIIGUATOIS- SI 00 op
chock. Upon tho .-vmont ol
CUSTOM IUILT
DOZER and
by
H1DIV'lt~
1AIItiS-. .-IIoc.4125 op ·
tho full price. tltlo will be
FIIIIZIIS- S115 op
'
tl8noforred.
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
The Ollwl Town.,lp Boord
•cto
OYINS..,.S7t
op
.
"At lea10nollle Prices"
of TruttMa re•rve• the
KEN'S
APPLIANCE
30
SESSIONS
right to reloct ony ond oil .
VALITY
PH. 949-2101
WORK
bldo.
SERVICE
I
949-2126
17110, 17, 24, ltc
or 111. 949~2160
PGW\1 Pleasant - 175-69':!' ·
992-5335 .. 915·3S6l
(614)
TlCIIIVILLE ID.
Acron From Pest Offlco •
Day or Night
POMROY, OHO
•
IACIIIIE,
OH.
696-1006
NO SUNDAY CAllS
10!30flt
lfi
6·6·'91
61121'91/1
mo.
4-1&amp;-1&amp;-Hn

EOE

GALLON
••••••••••••••

h COUNTY LINE .IWS

6 Lou and Found
1 Y• d S •l e (p.;~td m adva n ce!
8 Pubh c Sale &amp; Auc t iOn
9 W..-. ted t o Buy

3I

Business Services

PubliC Notice

992·6472

FLAVORITE

0/
/0

5 Happy Ads

12
13
14

61
62
ti J

Jl f1bm s lo t Sa le

Appl e Gr o ve

PRINGLES
NEW .NO. 1 WHITE

GiveM!IW•Y

P I Pht-.anl

Soly Gloedcntt', IN DON
Ov•lnolc Cent•
Middlepart, Olio

99&lt;

'

Annouctmenta

4

&amp; L1veslu~k

Honuts lor S•te
M o lMI ~t Hom es lo r Sot1ll

31
31

458 leo n

(lllltad:

. 64 OZ. JUG

•
•
l

folttm titll! I t•lt•l'ht;,.., t•xdwtll!f'L .

COMPETITIVE SALARY
FLEXIBLE SCHEDUUNO
VARIED SHIFTS
SHIFT DIFFERENTIAL
BENEFITS

CITRUS
PUNCH.

LONGHORN

1 C11 d ot Th.nb
1 In M emory

l

Farm Supplies

Real Eslale

Employ111enl
Serv 1ces

Full 111111 ,... r~m~
Positions

SUNNY DELIGHT

PKG.

Colby Cheese ~~~L!~~~ $18'

'

SMALL
WANT ADS

A'lD&lt;

79&lt;

$

R1beye Ste.ak ••••• ~~
KWEN~UCKY BORDER '
' 8·
9
(
. •eners•••••••••••••••••
oz.

~~
t

$13.00
$1 .30 / day

.20
30
.42
.60
.06 / doy

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

LB • .

BONELESS BEEF

Monthly

$ 9 .DD

Ann o un ce11e~1s

15 Word&amp;

Ad ~o

Yond Sales

plo~c ...Y 1n Th e D a tly Sw• t ~ • t!i le •
ct:pt
chtsstlt ud tks!}l;ry . Bu t. lll t.=~oi Car d ;turl l~ t itl nol!ccsl
w tll ,tl tu a ppe• 111 th e Pt Pl c..s am R e HtStm •nd the G • ll•
puln, O;uly Trtbunc. m 01chmg ovur T8 . 000 ho ntHs

MONDAY PAPER

CAMPBELL'S

CHICKEN

US~ A. CHOICE

3
6
1,0

'

t 4.00
t 6.00

16
15
15
16
16

1

Ov~r

Rate

Words

Davs

Cln,, ., ;jit•d f'UJ{t' .' t'ol 't•r d1f'

• A c l ;~~;s.tl1 01. l .-.dv e rtn e•u '" ''

C OPY DEADLINE

CHICKEN
59
Cube S,teak ••••.•L:·... 2· · NOODLE SOUP

LB

RATES

' Pn cc o f •d f 01 iil ll caplt i ll"' h Hs '' lloub• c P"Ct: o f a d co1o t
· 7 ~nl1 tin e ly~tl only u M!d
' S t! nUH ~ IS nol retPOII!pble lot en urs ;~ h ut h n l tt .._ !Cht:dl.
lor eu o r&amp; hr s l dav .td 111111 111 papurl Co•ll bt!lore 2 00 p 111

BBQ SAUCE

USDA BONELESS BEEF BOTTOM

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

' Rcttmtll i 5 0 d ~ttou nt fo r ;,tiC p;ud '" advan ce
' Free a ds
Gtv e iiWiy 1md Found ad' undet 1 5 wor ds wtll be
'"" l lt;rv s at no c h•ge

PRICES EFFECTIVE JULY 7 THRU JULY 13, 1

Sentlnei- Page- 17

E&gt;hlo

o~j) · Y11111 .Experience
•Ou1llty Horneaend ·
Cuatqm Rtmoclallng

742-2321

5122/tfll

"

�18-The

Sentinel

Announcements

10, 1991

Ohio

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wriaht

Apartment
for Rent

44

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

71

Autos for Sale
~W

a:~~
~ l'f JUIUWID •.~
1l41S?!.....

and newe5etter
lot aroa ai"l!loo. All · Con-

Rdentlal and aftordable. Write:

Shtglea, P.O. Box 1043, Qal-

-

llpollo, OH 456:11.

4

Giveaway

'«JU'p OIJ(;W;T~ I
•

1lxiO'e , - On Dlaplly AI
El- C.nlw, Aflor.
dlbllly, LUIUry, • OIMIHy. Cal

WED., JULY 10

355l

614-367-G204.

It was an
enchanted evening .

Two strangers in a

crowded room. But
they never meet.

The room is

too crowded.

•

8:00 C2:l D &lt;Il ill D !Ill liZ
@Newo
(!) Andy Griffith
(!) Club ConniCI
(J) Reading Aolnbow Q
llll e Andy Griffith
liJ Cartoon Expreu
@ lnolde the PQA Tour
World Today
all Our HOUle Q
6:05 (}) Bewitched
6:30 (2) D @ NBC Newo Q
(!) I Dream of Jtannlt
(i) IJ)IIJ ABC NIWI Q
(!) Wild Americo Stereo. Q
C!l 3-2·1 Contact Q
!Ill @ Ill CBS Newo Q
l!ll iD WKRP In Clnclnnotl
13 Up Clooe
6:35 (}) Andy Griffith
7:00 (2) D !111 Wheel of Fortune

6

Lost &amp; Found

1·olnglo wotor okl found on July
I on Ohio rt ..,.ldo near
lllneravlllo, 814-1182·5621
Fltllo Hair Solono, In&lt;; Notdo
Talented Styll.ta • Menagert
Found· Sm. g,.y • brown lmmtdlatoly. Top Hourly l'oy
DOodle, Rockltirt"lll Rd, very Pluo
COmml11lon,
Paid
Friendly, 1182·2111.
VaCitlona, HMHh lnaun~nce,
LOST blk mlnolurt Poodle, 2elh Crwclt Union. Frw Educ:atlona I
Street areaL anawera to "Bo", lncen1lv1 Progr11m1 Available.
Join Tlla F"llttll Grovring
304 ..75-108:t ...., • =30.
Family of Hair Salon• In Tht
Loot Sill-Bob, btuo ond block. Mldwtll I Shoro Tholr Sueet11.
Loot In Ohio Rlvor, 814-8!12-88113. For A Fontaatlc ca...r Futuro
With No Llmht, Call 1-8110-825LOST: mono glto- In ton caot, 0383 Aok For llymo.
Bluoblockt,., north
Point
Ploaunl. ~383l
Loot: Rtd Whitt Ftmalt Btoglt
Dog In VtclnHy Blodon Aoid.
Hat Rtd Coller, With Ktnntl
Llctntt Numbtr 212, Loll Sttn
July 4th, 814-m-llT.I.

Yard Sale

1

JOBS IN ALASKA-Hiring. Entry
Lovtl. 1600.00 + -kly. Conotruel'!'!!. C.nntrloo, 011 Flaldo.
CALL rouW 1·206·7:16-7000 Ext.
1817BI.

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
3 Family: 193D Chill him Avenue,

July 11th, 12th, 13th.
3 Family: Cr~fta, Ctolh•, Ping
Pong Tobit, Fumhwo, Homo

Malnt1n1nce
employM
tor
general maintenance, electrical,

plumbing, carpentry, painting ot

1p11rtment

complex.

GOod

btntiHa. Appllc:otfont IValllblt
at GaUlt Mil. Eototoo, 381 Buck·
Int., Roollng Shlngltt, Blklo, rtdgo Rd., Bldwtll, OH 45614.
Seootoro, ClmPina Equipment, 81.--44&amp;-0251.
,.. . Jlookl, Frldoy; t:llh, SaiNdly
13th. 4 Mllto Out Bultvlllt Plko. MAJOR TELEPHONE COMPANY
Rol11111hlnt.
Now Hiring Toehnlclono, lnAll Yard Saito Mull Bt Paid In .tallera, AcCount Service Rep.,
.t.dvlnca. DE.t.DUNE: 2:00 p.m. Operatora. No Experience
tho day btk&gt;N tho td It to run. Nte~uary. For lnforme~lon C.ll
"· · Sunday tdHion • 2:00 p.m.
1·21 ..7:16-11807 Ext. T6432 8 a.m.
.Friday. Monday tdHion • 2:00 to
g p.m., 1 Doyo.
p.m. Saturdl,.
Big Yard Salt: Today lhru July
13. t to 5. 424 Rand Avt.,
Konougo, OH.
July 1\ 12, 13. 1154 Soeond
Avonut. Ellllo Salol c;~M~~~~
01 Six Room llouM, ~!
- Applltneot, Tools, And Mite,
'•rd Bolo: Flrll Ono Thlt Yurt
-July 111h, 12th, t:llh. 3 Fomlllool
ceocttee, Olaatwarw, Fumlture,
Many Morw Mornol Bolnollt
. _Rood AI Pie"- Fumhuro WV.
~ ~Yard Salt: July 11th-' l 12th. at
. .1343 Clarll Chapa! Hood. Hand
- llodt .t.fllghono, QuiH Top,
' Dollt, Oddt I Endt. Brood Axo

Now aceaptlna appllcationl for

port limo caohler: lluot bt 18 yr

old. Aooly In pa,.... bot,._
IAII.al'll. No phone calli
ploaot. Crow- O._y,

lltndlr.on, wv.

.

Strvlco Rop.--totlvo: Ptr·
r111Mnl SMrt..flme ,

-.....~e

dlllrtbulor moturo, IWI~
obit lndlvldllll to oorvlct chtln
-ounto l II*• , . - . In
your local ,,.._ Ont day par
wttk. Good wogt I paid
mlloago. lntorvlewto will bt llald
In your arM, Send written
,.opontt to: R. Oupor, P.O.
Box 1813, Kont, OH 44240.
Somtont
To Haul Scrap Build: . Pow« Sow lllla'tl
Ing Mottrlola Away. 114-:111-2e12.
Pomeroy,
Telephone Sollchorw Nttdtd.
ExporltrtCO Pnllrrtd. Santor
Middleport
CHiz- WtiC-1 Call 1-75..
8754, Mr. Hundley.
&amp; VICinity
- .July 11-12·13, David a-or·o, Wlnttd: Porion To Ha"ll
• -lrowtr Rd oN Co Ad 21, D,.pory, Vertical I Mini Bllndo.
114-441-0411.
Portland, Bold Knob Rd.
July·13, tum first road taft pa1t Wanttd: Sorvlc:o Ttchnlclan lor
WIIPO lrom Mlddlorrt Hill, 5th 11oo11ng_ I Air Conclblon.
lng/Ao_tngtrlllon. Exptrionctd.
ho1111, r~ln or shine
Stind Reaume: Cia 071, c/o Gat: Yard Sale July 11·12, Main St, llpolll Dolly TribUft!t. 825 Third
Avenue, Galllpolla, UH 45e31.
-Rutland.
Yard Seta, childreN toys, WAYNE COUNTY COMMUNITY
S.turdly July·13 , ·1:()().4:00, 102 SERVICE ORGANIZATION, INC.
Pori&lt; 51, lllddloport, OH.
JOB TRAINING PARTENSHIP
ACT • OLD
WORKERS
PROGRAM. Cobtl_l1 Llncotn1
Public Sale
8
Logon, M11on, Mingo ana
Wayne COUntY rttldonta 68 ,..
&amp;Auction
or older lnt-ltd In llndlng
Rick Pttnton Auction Company, employment
contact
Tim
full time auctklneer, complete Bowono, 304-212·5112. .n'PA,
auction ttnlc:o. Llc:onttd Ohio, EOE.
Wool VIrginia, 30H73-5Te.
Well groomed lndlvkfual tCH'

9

Wanted to Buy

dignified Mlel poshlon. No u~
peftence required. C.ll Mr. Prwion betw•n 10 6 5, Mon·Wed.

Wanltd to buy, Standing llmbtr, 014-445-3014.
Bob Wllllamt I Sotl• 114-8!12·

5441.

Wonltd To Buy: Standing Tlm·
btr, Top Prl- Paid For Whht
Dlk I Aoh. Coli oHor 7p.m. 014387·1!111.
Top Prieto For: All Old U.S.
, Colno, Gold Ringo, Dlamo8::1
Silver COino, Sltrllng,
Colno. u.s. Coin Sl\op, 151
" Stcond Avonuo,_Golllpollo.

Employment Services
11

He!p Wanted

AVON • All arMI, Calf Marilyn

WNrw 304-112·2845.

14

I

Business
Training

Rotroln
Novri11Sou1hoalltm
Buolnoto Colltgo, Spring Vallty
Piau. Call Today, 114-441-438711
Roglollfollon .-a-1mB.

18 Wanted to Do

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

WUI BabyiM In My Homo
Anr.lmo.
Rodnoy
.t.roo.
-Ra ortncao Avolllblo. All ShiHo.
C.IIII4-24S.s7ie.
Batw thtin9 In my homo, 304773-~ .

lueh Hog Serv~. Aeaaonable
RatH. No Job To Small! 814-

311-21142.
EARN MONEY Rlldlng bookll G-vot Portobtt Sowmll~ don't
130,000/yr.
lneomt · DOtontlol.
0111111. (11105-182-ICII!o
£11. y. hlUI1 yoiW ~ IO th 0 m II IUll
tOIU.
caii30H7ll-1 57.

THE BEST

FUll Oil F - . Horlmnlol
~· 100,1100 ITU, Uotd I

p;;-.:=..~.

(lomt

11" Ltwn ..,, $121. • lrock

n u _....

011111 dGIIep. 1-

· - 41,

Merchandtse

Goods
Point N-nl tUH, 4 bedroom
home, 2 cor gon~lnground
110011 tetO. month uo clopoth,
304•75-1381 or 1·
.
Local Vtndlng Routt CUh Small 2 BAll I horne In
,.,• .,.,
and
luolnttO For SOle. !loll Quickly. srrw:UM,
-urlty· cltpcloll requlrocl, call
1-800-344-5615.
.
eollte1, 1-408-123-4702 allor
Local V":/101 Route. For Salt, 3pm.
Choop. 1
118-1111.
ThrH btclroom oomplotoly
Own yow own apparel or Moe , . - . . homo on llorquottt
llore. chooM: ...........awur, Avo, 1400/month. - t t d
LtdiN lltn'e, lnllni/Prol-, Realty, Broker, 30+1'15-1540.
!;ergo IN..., Pwllt or llotomhy
lltpl, DonctWir/Atroltle, Bridal 42 Mobile Homes
Llngtrht Sock Shop or Ae....
ooriilo iltore. Clvor 21100 nomo
torRent
br.ndo. $21,800 to 133,800: Inventory, lrolnlng, 1111....., grind 12x80 rnobllo homo lor nnt. Par·
-mng,
tto. Con 11 ilayo. lloHy lumllhtd.
llr. LoUghlin (1~228.
10.115 2 bedroom mOI!Ito homo.
VENDING ROUTE: 011 Rich Rtclno 118LI14-tll-1158.
Quick? No Woyl lui W. Havo A
Good, Stoody, Allordo~uol­ 2· BA mobtlo homo, priVIIt
nne. Won't Lut. 1
284- drive, nlc:o ttftlna, no pall, I
Poln1tortt,IM-te.at40.
VEND.
2br Air, Fumlllfttcl Or Unfur.
nlohtd. Very Noe And BtouHiul
Real Estate
Rlvor Vltw In Klrwugo. Fct-Horno Pork.l-1802.

-7-.

31 Homes for Sale

Apartment
for Rent

44

1 milt !rom city llmho: 25 oeroa,
e room houM, much, much
moro. 1114-441-1340.
1 BR oportmtnt: !lYing """"•
llovt, rerrtg.,
5 bedJOOm, 2 1/2 both, lg. fum'ed kllchln,
prbtgo
kitchen,
family
room, .,_., In bllh, g11 dltpctll,
hall, elr
wlfiRJ)Iace, living rm, dining rm, cond. Quill neighborhood.
doublt gor.go onochld, 4 113 Allor•- and doPotll. 014ocrto.._?l5,000 Firm, call 814- 446·1370 oKor I p.m.
Sila-3oM.
1br Aport mont, Appllaneto Fur·
Rtduetd To Stl: 2 Story 3br nlthtd,
1
lltok
From
Comor Lal In Chlthl,. Ohio. Downtown.
Caiii1C 411 4111.
Elctlltnl Conclhlon. For Finan&lt;·
lng, Five Star llorlgogo, VIckie 2br ...,..rtmtnl. Wottr, Tr.oh,
H1uldrwn. 814 448 (0(2, Seller Slovt, "I Ra.......tor Fumlthtd.
Will Pay Polnto. 104·832-8851, 114-441-H41!.
804-132·1170.
A1&gt;1llmtnl For Ront, OIIIIDOtlo
Flolw- ArM P-oy. 2 • Polnl P-.... 114-446-1221.
Story Homo., Now Khc""!t
Both""'"' l Corptllng. 11
ront Bttoh 11- Midd
, Ohio, 2 bed"""" fur·
AerM.IM-441-2358.
b and ,._nco,
GOVERNMENT HOMES lorm $1 3114..,.. 25M.
(U ropolr). 011=1
uont tu
propor1r· Rep a••-- •. vour .EAliTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
oru (1 IQ!I.IIZ.aooG. Ell. GH- BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATE~&amp; Jockaon Pika
10188 tor cunlnt ropo 1111.
C.II 8;.W.,"]~ ~1°81°_hot&gt;E I&amp;_
Lyons Addblon In Mooon,
-~
.EOH
quaHiy bulK, 4 btdroomo, 3 Bttoh 81,.11, Mlddlopoll, Ohio.
bathe, cuetom Nt In kitchen,
DR, FR, 2 1.,._, CA, 1 tcro Ont room efficiency apt,
..and "-"• ~
~-llorolll $117,500. 304:773- 1824561.
,
-

d-.

=

= ."-.

::=.!

M•yo Drlva, .._ H•ven. 10x12S' Colllgo lot ront, lumlahld, AJC,
tot, 4 bedrooma, 1 'V2 blithe, Z _,.., good ntlghborhood, no
otory, all brick, bock dock com- IIIIo, Pr. Plt1ttnt, WV 1·304-

&amp;1!1-8200.

pllllly carptttd, 304-682·23112.
On tho rlvor1 2 BR pooalblo 3rd,
2 112 botn. 3 cor gorogo
wtcorport. 1.75 ICrtl ptue. Go~
llpollo oehoolo. ~ looking
lor ofltro. 211-235-!128S.

Ettk:lencr_ Apar1ment, Fur·
nlahed, ~H, a Atftr.nce

Roqul,.d. No Peto, 114-445-4511.

For ront, 1 bedroom oporlmtnl,
1225 utllhiN lnel-._diDolll
r.qutrtd, no.pots, 114-tw-l-Z21t.
32 Mobile Homes
FumlApartmtnt
Ior Sale
Downollt,., All Utllllltt Paid,
$500 Dow on Sol
tt111mo. ttl Socond Avtnuo,
-ttd llo'l.tto Hom:. F = Galllpollo, 814-44~841.
Up And Dtllvory. Financing Nlctly Fumllhtd Apartmont,
Avolloblt. Mid Ohfo Flnanet, f. 1br, noll to Ubrory, parlllng,
800-58..5711.
control - . air, roltrence ,..
qulrtd. 114-~338
12x50 Trollar For Solo, on
·
· .
Clarki Cllapol Rood. 814-311- Fumllhtd
Efflcloncy,
All
841:1. ·
UlllhiN Paid.:_ Sho!• Both,
$121/mo. ttl ......., Avonuo,
1117'1 Mldor 3 BR, 2 luU botho, Golllpolll, 114-441-3MO.
eomplollly rornodtled lnoldo,
now plumbing, mull movo. 114- Fumllhtd ENicloncy, $150
440-o132 or I~-441-47Sl
Ulll"l11 Paid, Sho,. Bath, 101
1812 Kirkwood mobllo homo, 2 FoUflh, OIIUpollo, 814-441-4418
••ton, ........
•··~ 114- oHor 7p.m. .
,
BR ood con~.
448 2311.
Groelout ll~lng. 1 and 2VIbtd11Riv.:=
1875 double wldt, ootup on 314 ;::.:, opo
;e.,;:- aokln8 $15,1100. 30H1!1- Apartmtnll In Mlcfdltport. From

=•

•J:

Corpol $4.00 Yard I Up. VInYl
lUI I 14.88 Yanj. Porch Tutt,
$3.H I $5.H Yard. llollollan
Corpa~1 Uppor AI- Rood, 114448·711...

Country Dl-• Whh I Choll'l,
1121. Call •-on 1:30 to
8:00p.m. Only, 114-446-4241.
County Appllonco,. Inc. Good

uotd ipplla-, T.Y. 1111. ()pan

8 a.m. • ~ I p.m. llon.-811. 114446·18'!_'- 827 3rd. Ave. Qol.

llpollo,""
For Sole SMro Ktnmo,. Part·
obto DloiiWoohor, 171, 114-1!12·

1111 John 0... llodtl" I
R-1, Exctlllltl Condition!
lilt, 5-11, VlfY elton, nleo
Hnltr 4 Sligo Forlt Lift, Doo1t
lt-.o, 11c runnlna, new Urea,
Ploto- 3 Trellir AliM, &amp; Tnlltr
dtlloclor, 11,500. 3114-41!1led. 1114 ••• 23&amp;1.
DngotM)nd Callery -n, 7311.
....,_and
Hlmaloyln
killona.
1110 VW Dolhtr ..m.-1, tm
Chow WIO!!'I, 1m Ko-ld 114 ttl 3144,aftet 7 p.m.
IO(.lfa Dill ..... Ovor tho Cob l'lth Tank, 2413 JICklon AYt. 73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's
Truolt Catnpor, ~-Compor Size Point - . . . . 304-175-21113, 1111 Clla.roltl llall ton truck,
Rolrlgoroton, 114-tll-.
lUll lint Tropical llllt~_llfrdt, 4x4, 35 500 original mt;: ~~~~
Y-1 ong1no auto, $7,000. 4 •
1111 , . , Carao ~n te,soo. tmtlllnimllloM ,..,....
Boven .IIOir olinnn ohullt11. lllltiiiUre Scllnluzw pupplto. 2012.
48,000
Hondo 10-- · · GraYoly AKC, 1111 &amp; - · good .... Dodgo
1111•, 1 Owrwr, Auto, Air,
-lno.- 1.
Atclp
CNIIt, 51- N- llrot,
- · Vlnyt lldlnt IIICI Uim. 3041711-4004,
Poodle DUIIIIee, loyo lnd ... te,SOO. 114-441-8751, 514-441cupo, AICC .Chef1i........looclllnt, 7104.
2 Plelolt, 44 Monaum, I 1111, Coo1v111t 114-te7~04.
both tiC cond, :104.a2·2010.
For Salt: INI Ford Aongtr, 4x4,
v.e, Auto• Alr1 Topper, !log
Fruits &amp;
Whoolo, uctllonl
COndHion.

n.-,

F - g,..n carptt,
Nn- iilnd pocldlng, rtOIInor
choir, lobtt ond cholro, 30H15-

t

8120.

-· -lnt-

c.......

Vegetables

111102.

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
W.lhlrl, dryoro, refrigolnln,
rongoo. Skitfllll AIIOIIoncu,
Uppor AI- Ail. Btoldt Slono
C,.ot -1. C.II114-441-T.Itl8.
LAYNE'S RJANITURE
Compltlt homo IUmlthina&amp;
Hou,.; lion-Btl, H. I~
0322, 3 rwltoe out Bulovlllo Rd.
F,.. Dlllvory.
PICKENS RJRNITURE
NtWo\lotd
Houtohold IUmllhlng. 112 mi.
Jtrrlcho Ad. Pt. P1-nl, WV,
0111304-875-1450.
Rolrlgorlloro, 11128; automatic
waohOrl, Its; tloelrlc d,.,.,
175; g111 dryoro1 -~; g11 ,.,.
gee, $75i wmne KenMOre
electric range, ••• new, S'IIOi
tltctrlc ronvo, $71; I' c-llPI

...~. portlbtt

...... -

2

at-.

Household

:".:.:"'
...., ,...:z:k2,~
gu bulkl In Oftn wHh dtop In

o\cluH Trik!L llltml SunLAll now
...... .......l-~1!12...,82 No

llltorlhln l:vvpm.

...............
Approllmotoly
--

•

riding

lor

IIIVoly, 114-t15-4331.

Itt Of Enoyeloptdlo

Brlllillco, LIU - · $200. 114-

-1M3 •"" llp.llt.

Ccnclllt I ~ topllc tonkl,
Ron Evant EniiiDritol, Jock·
ton, OH 1-ION37.t1121.
Eltclrlc · Slovo WHh Double
Dvtno, tl25. 114 441 1013.
Folding llcyclt For C.mlllng
IFokll UpFor Tronopofl) SIOtr.
.11148 ,

=-or

".:::.~

•.

Little UlliNI 1ft ahllr, IIU new,
prlctcllor aulck ..... 1300. btut
ololh, 304-fll·llll.

SWAIN
AUCTION I FURNITURE. 82
011.. St., Gollpolll. -~ Uttd
IUmhuro, hooioro, W_.tm I
Work boolo. ,,....._3188.
VI'AA FURNITURE
·,,....._3151
LIVING ROOM: Solo I Choir,
$1H.OOL Rtcllnor, $141.00;
Swlvol Rocktr, lti.OO; Collll I
End Tobttt, MI.OO Stt.DIHINO
ROOM: Tebtt With 4 Ptdcltd
Chll,., $141.00;
Pint
Dlntlte WHit Btneh nd 3
Chat,.,. 12119.00; · lloteNng· 2
Door "hell: $341; Or QII.OO

Itt
...i, Dolt.

te

9-

Couni'I

·~· ...;.~

''aMI._...

:::!:.!

,_.,ltd---.

81 Farm' Equipment
IIIII Ollvor lrlcl•. whh big
· $4HS.
Ftrguton
lrtclor Wwith-.y
Kolly
tnd lotdtr., 14150. 5040
AC . . _ 13880. IN FoN With
~' cunlvolor, ar1111tr bltdt,
121111. Lila moiler 40 HP Long
.._, S3180. ew- wiU ttnonct.l14-2114122.
1111 Long 4 Wit. tlr. lrtctor
11115; Lilt 454 Int.
· lrtclor
- S31111;
buth 301b
hoa,
S3111;
Fonl,
JD dltttl, thorp, f4110; 1o1J tHN; Ow- will finance.
1142111122
Onovtly 1rt01or, runo good,
mullltr, 30Wl'I-4UI or
IJI.6441.
Horoo I otoek troltor-11t1, 11 11.
82315. I yr. OltiAOHA Big Fancy
Aid A- golcl!!lg.
tern pltutft, lllii 11- Aorol
ShoW-... ft1.11UI22.
Jlm'l Form Eaul-111, SA. 35,
WMI CloiHIIOIIa, 814-441-1'717;
Wldt llllcllon now I uttd llrm
lrtOioro I lmpltmtnto. Buy,
Mil, lrldt, I:ON:OO Wttkdlyt,
"ltll-..

-n-

'"=

In Centenary.

&amp; Ltveslock

~~~··
.

........

c:omptolo

Farm Supplt cs

.

llumor, $75; 2 tloelrlc drop In
bumort $50 toch; I hood lono
whh .11ghta, 120 -h; 1 lllttd
Outtn wri,.... wuho'l $78. All

SWithor'o Uotd ADDIII-..
Comor Rand ond ...-ch 51-.
Kanougo, 114-446-liiT.I.
RENT 2 OWN
8,....._3158
Vl'ril Fum"u,.
Sola &amp; Chair, $11.10 Wotk;
Roell-, $5.41 Wtok, Swlvol
Rocker, $3.13 W..... Bunk 8td
Compltlt 11.41 Wtok, 4 Drowr
Choat, $3.20 Will\; Pol1or Btd"""" sune, 1 pc .• 111.87. Wttk.
.
lneludlt - t n t.Counlry ~ Pint
Dlnlllt WKh Btrlch I 4 Cholra,
$10.111 Wttk.OPEN: lllondoy
Thru Saturday, to.m. to lp.m.,
Sunday 12 Noon Till 5p.m. •
Mlln Off Route 7 On Route 141,

1·

.

PHIPPS~

Royll Dlk Aatort Propony;
Mull Nil loki o- po~,
caltBOI-7541110 ollor S p.m.
Sconnor, khchtn cabtntl, ooll
dm-.
oak hutch, - · •
ctoeet, m~rowav1
wlstand, J04.
175-1411:

63

'

~

'

.

11to1 pipe Mttl lor - · 111
111M, 111 , _ I:OO 10 I:OO Pll.
Colla..-, WV ~

"'";;:

~o':lot':.:'7~inll

. - ) ."".:: .=,;.~
a.dt llndy¥111 , _ ollloe.
Frl, Ill, 11111\; Noon-1:00 Pll.
011w .,.. 11our1 Clll :lOW?).
1111 11 :GO All
·
·
.
. .

55

=

Transporta tion
71 Autos for Sale
t$47 f!lymouth Coupe; IN6 Fol·
con, 10th $S,200. 114-441-Ztl'l
oftw 7p.m.
·lfN Oklo CuHau, good body
lind 111-, 8250. :J04.115-

- ..

Bulldlnll
S~
' pl.:.,•

1 - , brlok, . . . wfn.
clow, llnltlt, CIIUclt' Wintoro, Rio C1nnc1e, OH C111 114-

...

by Jo$eph......
..Farris
~
·.,.
''.J·,,

..

$o4,100. 814-441-ottl, after 5p.m.

31111.

1frt P"or!l •L'ID, . 4 dow, olr,

lmilit OOnlial, 1410. • 0~
111 N Por1t Dr
1177 Uricoln Marl&lt; v, now
lloholln llrot lnd mko Ia,
tt,200. 1111
lonntvlllt,
A·l -.11.200. 304-ln-~131.
1m. o-ro Z-.21, .-bulK
,..._.._,,.alhluot,now
111M, runo ..... 304 Ill 3011.
Chovlllo, 4 tpttd, 4 cyl,

.•

'

·

-lee

.

.r

seminar to work out their

t887 Ha~ll"!.~·•oon Tour Gilda
Clatale, 8
-2185 ollor 8p.m.
1880 Hondo XA 200. Now. $1HO.
814-245-8110.

differences. (AI 1;1
®J @Ill Fomlly Men Allison
becomes jealous when a
friend spends his time with
the guys. Stereo. C
@ E1pe&lt;11Uon Eorth
9:00 (2) D !I)) 'Noblt HouN (PI 4
of •I' NBC Movlt of the
w..k (2:00) Ster99. Q
(i) (I) 11J Dooglt HowNr,
M.D. Doogie helps a street
artist with AIDS. (R) Stereo.

IW WA"&gt; "rrR ()Alt. KJI1H

1Hf. j()J(f..T

fa&lt;f(Q\1

Offtetf¥... 1

I=O:J(Y

IT SIARTW

75 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

tH~IC£
~

Must Sell: akl boat, 11ft, new

...

motor, cov.,, uftey accntorita, ,..dy to go, 304-87112114 ony!lma.
Pontoon Boot, Slttl 50 HorM

g

Johnaon. New Deck, C.rret.

Sieling, $2,1100 Firm. 614_.414043.

76

r.

Auto Parts&amp;
Accessories

MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
Wi...throps Lavo : A li5-'f
l&gt;ulb il\ a" et6'::) -in -~ -

4 Goodyoor Eagle UrM, YRIIOPZZS/80 VA15, $50. 304-1753521.

at

11-up Chovroltl truck hood
$50.00, 11-up Chovrolll btd·
aldt, pauongor oldt, $50.00
014-1182-1121 ofttr 5:00.
Buclaot Tnntmlulono, Uttd &amp;
Nbultt, atlrtlng 11 IMi Auto
Ports. 814-~45-51171, 014-3112213.

Services
81

Livestock

-Ntw · Polltd
· Old, . - bUI,
lloek,1
Olloplt-,lf4. ·liiSI.
UNCI gaauneok 4 hONitrallw,
82385; S yoor old AOHA Wollom
Pl-uro goldlng, brother to
WCII1d Pltoouro Champion. 614·
:111\1122.
btlgt -II lolcflna.
tlriot
04.11,
-~=loi!WDU',!!
...oo
1 ohalr, ,,...

2I.OO.IEDAOOII:
room SUit (I pc.), 1341.00; 4
ll:,wt,U21Chtol0o,
eoin~'ulll~ll ' 24WR1. .
lot.
,..._
8tdr $1". So!~
CatMr
, _. dloltl~ 1 ......_
........~n:.,~~.._.OI'IN: - ,
..,.... a
i;.'m.;'' SUnday _!2 _floonm;~: ~~~~-:....,;..... R a =
lp.m., 4 IIIIM 011 IIOitlo 7 On avolltlllt. Contlcl Dollo, 114-846-

~··\

a

lllcltbtnltl 1or ..... plcktd, 74
Motorcycles
A CARIBBEAN ILOWOUTI
Wo OVer llouaht CNittt, N.~CIII. ~-·local grown,
· 11!12 Hondo Goldwlng, 1100 cc.
Florida to Tho Btna1n11 On a IM ld.IIA ··
Luxury u-, I Doyo, 4 1..~.,,
114-1182·77114.
Holol
"'II"'
T11ntll1 o-rltt ~1111. Iring
82211
Olmm"t:"..:.'"ilckllo 0.:..~· y~ - - . , 314-111 311311 or 304' 1882 XR 100, good c~blon,
118241114.
.
runi groat. $240."814 448 80113.
404-4!1~.

r:ll::"=·C.=t=te=M-=1182==·111=7.=EE=COH=·=£A=outt=MI=In=Cant=="'"="=·==:J.::1111::..-------E=304=-8=75-=t=5114=·===~

.

piG~CC. .

will /ao;t ft=n

tint(~

OS 10&gt;1_8 ...

. ·

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

tlS

a Ii1't bulb in

a ~rd - to - ~d - at­
place.

1·10

BARNEY

Home
Improvements

SUPPER'S
ABOUT READY,
JUGHAID!!

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uneond"lonol IHttlmo guoron·
IM. local ref.,.ncn fuml1hed.
frM Mtlmatn. C.ll colltc1 1·
I14-231-G488, day or nlfllll.

I'LL WAKE HIM UP
WITH A REAL

START
WAKIN' UP
YORE UNK
SNUFFY!!

START It

Rogo,. BtMmtnt Wolorproollng.

Curtla

Home

Improvement•:

Yoaro E1porltnet On Oldtr &amp;
Ntwor - ··Work,
Room AddHiono,
Foundation
Roolln8,
Wlndowo &amp; Siding. F- E•

tlmatnf Rtfertnc:•, No Job To

lig Or lmoiiii14-441.0:ZZS.
JET
Aenllon Molorw, ,.,.1 ..... Now
I ....,... - - In llock, RON
EVANS, JACK-. OH. 1.8QO.

,.

-··

mance? The Astro-Graph Matchmaker
can help you understand what to do to
make the relationship work. Mail $2

Ron'o TV Sorvlct, -lolblng
In :r.nlllt alto -Ina moot
Cllhtr - · Houtt CIITo, alto
~net ,,_.,. WV

plus a long. sell-addressed. stamped

Ohio 114-44644&amp;4.

Btpllc Tonk PUIIIPina $10 Ollila

Co. RON EVAHSIN11APNSES,
Jecklon, OH 1-ION37..1121.
Devto
-Vee
Btrvlco,
-..o Clltk Rd. Porto, aup~kUp. lind dtllvtry. 814-

82

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

tJ

Plumbing &amp;
Heating .

PISCES (Feb. ZO..Morch 20) You·re rea·

all concerned not to include this

Upholstery

-..y•o; Uphololerlng ..mo.

''

~

-.
I

-·-··- ---

the past. Operate in accordance with

about way yoi.-11 do things.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) Someone
you'vept3nned today . It may be best for

'

'

'

individual.
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0cl. 23) Ambition is
likely to permeate your being today,
and you may reach out tor something
you previously tel( was beyond your
grasp. II isn"t - if you're bold enoogh to
try.
SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-Nov. 22) Even
though you·n be able to handle weighty

your standards. not this individual's.

son ably safe today in t aking chances on

things that have been carefully thought
oul. However. shot-in·the·dark gam·
bles should be avoided at all cost.
ARIES (March 21•Aprll11) Do what you
believe Is right today. and don' t be
overly sensitive regatdlng what another
may think about your actions. l!'s only
Important that you know your motives
are pure.

TAURUS (AprH ZO..Mer 20) You"ll re·
calve the type of cooperalion·neeessary
to execute your plana today, provided
'·· ahead. ConseqUently, there are indicaIlona yciu may get Involved in exciting matters with relati\le easy today, your you present them In a s traightforward,
areas where you never previously companions may not. Don"i make them easyato-understand manner. DOn't emfeel uneasy; allow them lime 10 sort bellish facts.
ventured.
GEMINI (May 21-.lune 20) II you·re preCANCER (June 21.July 22) Someone things out.
wi1h whom you're closely _Involved , SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) You pared to earn what you get, you s hould
, might be very difficult 10 motiVate to- may nave an opportunity to profit be able to lind ways to edd to your re. day. It's best you proceed alone rather through another today - if you don't sources today. Don't waste lime think·
than wall tor this indlvlaual to gel Into get cold !eel just because the endeavor ing about dividends to which you're not
·
" gear. Trying to patch up a broken ro· . is more complex than what you·re ac· entitled.
Several new acquaintances will help ex·
pand your range oi Interests In the year

"-------~--

late in coming, thank s ·to the round·

who doesn 't fit in with the rest of your

July 11, 11191

ln!lllll ~...!."" 2e ,..... Tho
.... ·In ...,..uro u.,_orlng.
Call 3114-175-4154 tor ..
Umotto.

mUst have adequate time to carefully

we&lt;gh and balance al l your alternatives.
newspaper . P.O. Box 91428. Cleveland, If you move too hastily, you could be
sorry.
OH' 44101 -3428.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Your chances tor AQUARIUS (Jen. 20-Feb. 19) You may
achieving your objectives look good lo· have to deal with someone today who
day . But the desired results could be you feel has treated you a bit shabbily in

friends may be on the lis1 tor an activtty

",·.•

111

customed to .

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) In order
to make a sound decision today. you

envelope to Matchmaker , c /o this

· ts·A
WANT AD
I

-rAI o~j~AI·;,- -1\

@

Piano teacher to unruly stu·
dent, "You 'd better behave or
I'll lell your parents that you

-~I o~re ~-~~-~;~.~ .lbv'~i·~uoled

ki,..;:..IIS..:.c,...:lL:...Er-1.:..
T,...:I1:....,..
1
.

_

_

_

_

.

.

by ft UtfiQ"in the mi ssing words

you develop fr om stap No . 3 below.

PRINT NUMBERED
I
l ETTE RS IN SQUARES

Q

9

~ UNSC RAMBL E FOR
ANSWER

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS
'. ~
Versus - Owner - Hutch - Oriole - WHOLE HOUR
"Where have you been?" growled the boss. "I fell
down a flight of stairs," the wo11&lt;er explained . The boss
shol back, "And lhallook a WHOLE HOUR?"

NORTH

BRIDGE

+9 I 3

7-10 ·91

.A Q I
• Q 10 2
4 7643

PHILLIP
ALDER

WEST

EAST

+5

• QJ 81
• J93
t A96

.108 12

t 815I
+K QJ9

+ 10 52
SOUTH
+AK 10 62
.K 6 5
+K J 3

Visualization
is the key

4A8

Vulner able: Both
Deal er: South
S.atb

By Phillip Alder
In addition to ca rd sense. an a ltri·
bute that sets an e xpert apa rt from
lesser mortals is visuali zation. In his
mind's eye . an expert can see wher e
the other cards must lie. For example.
he can make things difficult for a de·
clarer in an apparently easy contract.
Mask the Eas t-Wes l ca rds in today·s
diagram, and decide how you would
play in four spade s agains t the lead or
the club kin g.
There a re two obvious losers : a club
and a diamond. The onl y problem ,
there fo re. revolves around the trump
suit. You can afford one loser, but not
two.
Clearly. ilthe s pades are dividing 3·
Z, you will have no trouble. You can
bash out the ace. king and a nother
spade , and claim . But what if the
trumps are 4·1 ? Then some care is r e·
quired . II West has four, including the
queen and jack . you will lose two
trump tricks a nd go down ~ unless
you have peeked at his cards (which I
· hope you wouldn 't even think ol doing)

Wesl

I+
4+

Pass
Pass

North

2+
Pass

East

Pass
Pass

Opening lead: + K

L - - - - - - - - - - -.....l

and can see tl is posstble to maneuver
a n endplay .
What happens if East has Q·J · x·x tn
spades' II you use your nine- a nd 10·
spots correctly. you will be sale.
The right play is to cash the spade
ace (or king) and continue with a low ·
s pade I rom hand - even il East drops
a n honor under the ace .
II everybody follows or il West
plays low and dummy's nine wins, you
are home . If Wes t discards, you put up
dummy's nine, later finessing your 10
to pick up East's remaining spades.
How are your powers of visua l-

ization ?
@ 1111, NEWSPAPER lNTERPRII I! ASSN.

The World Almanac®Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

mJake ond the

Fotmon Jake hunts lor a
witness in a case against a
mobster. IRI Stereo. Q
liJ MOVI~: Deodly Geme
(2 :00) Stereo. t:;J
121 Naohville Now Stereo.
9 Larry King Llvel
9:30 (i) (I) 11J Mon In the Femlly
Sal tells an attractive woman
Robby is his son; Angie
dates a cobbler. Stereo. Q
@ Outoide the Line• The
Autograph Game
10:00 (!) Newo
(I) IJ)IIJ Equol Juotlce
Peter handles a sociopath
accused of a brutal murder.
(R) Stereo. Q
(!) C!l Jeaeyt Norman Slngo
Cermen Jessye Norman
per1orms Carmen with Seiji
Ozawa conducting the
orchestra. (1 :00) Stereo.
!Ill @Ill •• Houre The
insane world of traffic and
driving in New York City is
explored. Stereo. Q
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121 Be a Star Stereo.
13 Bicycle Racing Tour de
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8:00 (2) D !111 Unoolved
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39 Actor
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40 Small wild ox
41 French noble
42 Grtaltd
45 Swealer
maker
49 Stege In a
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51 Oklahoma
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52 Palh
53 Pokor stake
54 Shlp·ahaped
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55 Companion
of odds
56 Seaweed
product
57 Exploal•e
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4 Depressed
8 Smudge
12 Actrell
Merkel
13 Isn't (sl.)
14 Actress Bonet
15 Joke
16 Moot
underhanded
18 Casta as per·
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20 Conducl01
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21 Even (poet.)
22 Chrlotmas 24 Fruit decay
26 Lone
27 Fermented
cane

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32
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36 Poosessed

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2 Two-toed
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10

�Page-20

Wednesday, July 10, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The bally Sentinel

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

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

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

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

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

..

Bowl alliance

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

formed

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

_8,......

Ohio Lottery

ud

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

A-D; 5-S

PageS

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

Vol. 42, No. 47
Copyrighted 1991

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

'

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

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

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

Navy dentist Crooks retirin
,.

.,,,
"·

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

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

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

Fantastic

Opportunit)t For

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

Special of the Week!

PIZZA BURGER

A Mulllmedla Inc. Newapaper

Geo~

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

.....

4~ .

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

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

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

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

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

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

Commissioners adopt budget Meigs County Health Department to

$1.54

By BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel News Stan

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

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY

~;OY,OHIO

2 Sections, 12 Pages 25 cenls

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

Merchants to move
forward on project

MASON:.FUR

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

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

2-2~\

SEND CARDS TO

GLENN T. CRISP

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

THANK YOU

ances.

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

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

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

offer cancer screening clinic ~July 24

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

breast or elsewhere, indigestion or
difficulty in swallowing, obvious

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

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

Free vis~n. clinic slated

.

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

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

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