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Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

, Page-1 4- The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, May 9, 1990

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Ohio Lottery

Marauders

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Daily Number
Ill
Pick-4
6866
Super Lotto
.
. 13-15-17-20-37-43
Kicker 028598

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campaigD

COPYRIGHT 1990 - THE KROGER CO. ITEMS AND
PRICES GOOD SUNDAY, MAY 6; THROUGH
SATURDAY, MAY 12; 1990, IN POMEROY. OHIO
WE RESERVE TH.E RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES.
NONE .SOLD TO DEALERS·.
ADVERTISED ITEM POI.ICY•Each of these advertised
items is required to be readily availabte for sale in
each Kroger Store. eM.cept as specifically· noted, in
tt"!is ad . If we do run out of an adver1ised item. we
w ill of1er you your choice of a comparabje· item,
wheri available, reflecting the same savings or a rain·
check which will entitle you to purchase the

advenised item

ilt

roger a utes
er n

Pdge4

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v'ol.40, No.266
Copyrighted 1990

the advenised price within 30

Cell·block ·area lights
need to be replaced

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. U.S.• GRADE A HOI,:L V FARMS

, Split Chicken.
··. -Breasts :
...

Slicing Size ·
Tomatoes

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Pound ..

U.S. Inspe~-1L~­
(4-7-lb. Avg.)

. Pound

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Frozen Young
Turkey Breast

NEW 'OFFICE BUIWING - This new 3,000
sqi!AI'e foot offlc~ building located near .the
Intersection of Hiland Road and State Route 7 Is
·expected to be ready for occupancy by June 1. The
Iuick structure, totally modern 811d h811dlcapped
accessible, has been built by Jim Clifford and
Greg Bailey cif Home Creek Enterprises. II has

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LARGE

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Gli&amp;'
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Package

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FRQZE!frExtE~l B(Ef FISH OR HAM I

Eggo Homestyle
Waffles

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11-oz.

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Banquet

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, Dinners

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8,7!il-11Hz.,

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FROZEN TEXSUN ORANGE JUICE OR PINK
GRAPEFRUIT JUICE 12·0Z .. . $1.09

300 ....... ,
PER ROll

Big n' Soft
Bath Ti1111e

IN THE DELl-PASTRY SHOPPE

6-Rolt'Pacl&lt;

Fresh Baked
Apple Pie

For
~2.49

EACH I

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secures
loan
Eastern board
.
to pay bills for ~e~t of ye~~
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By CHARLENE llOEFUCH·
Sentinel News Slalf · ·
The Eastern Local Board of
Education took action at a
speclai meeting Wednesday
night 10 secure a loan to pay bills
for continued operalion of 1he
district's schools for the 1989-90
school year.
The board authorized the clerk ·
to receive from the Farmers
Bank up to a maximum of
$171,000 to be paid back In equal
lnstalln'lents wllltlnterest over a
1wo year period. .
However; Dr. Dan Apllng,
superintendent . of . lhe Eastern
Local School District, indicated
· this morning that the board is
hopeful of only having to borrow
$111,000 for this fiscal year's
operating expenses.
Emergency \oan funds are now
handled 1hroug'b local banks with
the loans being insured by the
Stale Controllng Board. The
repayment procedure Is for the
· monthly payment plus the Interest on 1.he loan to be deducted
from ihe State Foundiltion·Funds
before any money is sent to the
district. That amount Is then paid
directly to the lending Ins 111ution,

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By JULIA E . DILLON
Sentinel News Staff
Meigs Cou!ltY Sheriff James
M. Soulsby reported &amp;1 Wednesday's meeting of the Meigs
County .Board of Commissioners
that the llght)ng situation in the..
cell block area of the jail needed
to be replaCed.
Sheriff Soulsby noted that the
present llgilting system allows
· prisoners access to the bulbs
which they are removing. Sheriff
Soulsby offered a suggesllon of
possible perimeter lighting outside the cells which would be
Inaccessible to the prisoners and
would allow law enforcemen1
officials to control lhe lighting.
He went on to say that such
Ughllng also would have to mee1
state specifications.
Commissioner Rich Jones
stated that the board would gel
someone to look Into the
situation.
.Sheriff Soulsby reported also
!hal plans for the renovallon of
the front office at the sheriff's
d·e partment were ready to move
forward with the consent of I he
commissioners.
It was reported by Commissioner David Koblenlz that Sheriff Soulsby should check into
purchasing another car for the
had been appropriated lor such ·
use.
Sheriff Soulsby staled lhat he
felt it would work out better If he
could purchase two used cars
rather than one new vehicle. He
went on to say that lhe two oldest
cars now In service could be put
up for sale and that money could
be put back Into the car purchasIng fund for the sheriff's
department
.
In olher mauers, a letter was
read from Peach Fork Road area
reslden1, Judy King Coomer. In
which she stated a heifer owned
by her family had been attacked
bY pit bulls. Mrs. Coomer's letter

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· Hit-s"ip
pro~d by
deputies

Gallia youth hit while crossing road

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Kroger II Coke Send-- You To:·
The Old Country!

NONRETURNABLE BOTTLE,
CAFFEINE FREE DIET COKE,

Diet Coke or .
Coca Cola Classic

50 Tickets for 2 ·t9 Busch Gkrdens, ·
15 Weekend Trips for 4 to Busch Gardens, •
Williamsburg .
·
· .- _ ' ·- .
• . Grand Prize of a trip foJ::--4 to Busch Gai-dens~ 'Tampa
. Florida for .a 3 day .weekend!
· . · . ·,No pll'Cilue DICIIIIIJ, .... -

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Financing 1he purchase of a The county aualtor deducts 1he
new, tanker truck for Racine Fire charges for workers compensaDepartment was !he subjec~ of a tion from the 1ax settlement, It
lengthy discussion at Monday was noted.
night 's meeting ofRacine VIllage
Slreet Commissioner G.Jenn
Cquncil.
Rizer asked council to approve
Fire Chief Robert Johnson, the· purchase of mlr'rors, .signal
David Nelgler, and. Doug Rees lights, and·a batteryforthedump
met with · council to talk about truck that has been recently
financing options and were as ked repaired after · being wrecked
by Mayor Frank Cleland to come last July. That request was
back with a three year plan so approved but council declined
that council can furthzr evaluate the re&lt;juest for a larger tank tor
_
\the situation.
diesel fuel.
· The possibility of the firemen
The drain problem behind the
having fund raising projects to . Hayman building on Second
assist with the down payment on Stree1 was again discussed as
the new tanker was also was the need for trimming or
discussed.
removing some trees. Also dis- .
Concern regarding th'e slate · cussed was . t)ie complaints qn
requirement thai all firemen be odor from the.llft station on Cross
equipped with approved turnout Street. Councilman Larry Wolfe
gear was also ·expressed ·by will meet with the sewer board .
coull,Cil. While a waiver of the members r.egardlng the
requirement Is a possibility, complaints . .
Council agreed It was a polo t of
Mayor Cleland was asked to
_ ~ concern because of the money It · check with tile COUI\IY h!lbway
w,ould cost to outfit the volunteer department regarding hot mix
department.
paving for the boat ramp. ResiCouncil approved a resolution dents donated funds for the ramp
aulhorlzlng the clerk to transfer repair, but high water last
funds within the fire fund to cover summer hindered the hot mix
the workens compensation workcharged to the fire department.
According to the report of the

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CommiSsioner Manning Roush
repor ted on a flooding situallon
In the Fores1 Run area . He stated
That afler a heavy rain wafer
backs up on the Grueser properly
causing Ihat basement to flood.
Roush wen I on to say that the
situation could be remedied by
the removal of a bridge In that ·
area that he believes lo be the
cause ol the problem. The bridge
Is a part of reclamation project
and was built with the thought
1hat when heavy rains occurred
Ihey could pass over tli e bridge
wl th no problem. However,
Roush stated tha t as it is now the
water is not passing over the
bridge but Is backing up into I he
Grueser's basemen!.
Jones slated lhat he will
conta.ct Mitch Farley, "(llh the
Ohio Department of Natural
. Resources, to see If he will come
down and review the slhlatlon
and ·to see if he has . any
suggeslions on taking care of the
situallon.
Also allendlng Wednesday 's
meellng was Dr. Ramola Hop.
kins, execulive director of the
Meigs-Gallla-Jackson Common·
lty Menial Health Board.
Dr. Hopkins attended t~emeet ­
Conllnued on page 12

d_~par,tment jV_l,th _mJlni~- 1':~£!1!.

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A resol\J lion was passed by the
. the superintendent explained.
board designating this week as
In the ,Eastern situation, pr.
Natlonid Teacher Appreciation
Apllng said that the first. pay'
inent will be payable from the Week In the Eastern Local School
Slate Foundation Fund July District .
The resolution described the
distribu lion.
The defeat of the 5 mill role of teachers In Ihe district as
emergency levy jn Tuesday's • 'extremely Important and
primary leaves .lhe board "dis- worthwhile'', expressed apprecitressed", commented Dr . ation 10 tbe teachers for their role
Apllng, "yVho did not indicate In educating Eastern youth, and
when another levy will be placed commended tile overall teaching
staff for dedication.
before voters.
Attending were Ray Karr,
The firm of Means, Blchimer,
Burkholder· and Baker were president, Charles Kn!iht; vice
retained to provide legal services president, and , members, Bill
relating lo a teaching personnel Hannum, I. 0. McCoy, arid Jim
· Smith .
malter.
·

A Centenary youtb was injured
In a road accident Thursday at
7:15 a.m. In Gallla County's
Green Township on S.R. 141 near
Centenary, according lo the ·
Ga!Ua-Melgs Post of the Slale
Highway Patrol.
AccoFding to a Palrol spokesman, Jared E. Elliott, 15, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Elliot! of
Centenary, was Injured when an
Jnternalional Seoul postal delivery carrier driven by Ro.bert H.

stated she did not know the
owners of the•dogs bu1 that she
felt there liad been four or five
dogs in the altack .' The letter also
staled .thai It was believed the
dogs belonged lo someone who
lives near her residence.
Mrs. Coomer's leiter staled
that the jaw area oft he heifer had
been mutilated as well as other
parts of the body. The leiter wen I
on to say that the heifer was
'taken to the Meigs Veterinary
Clinic where It was determined
that It should be terminated .
Termination was necessary be·
cause 1he alleged atlack had
destroyed 1he heifer's jaw makIng it unable lo eal or drink. Mrs .
Coomer's letter stated th31 the
treatment and loss of The heifer ·.
amounted to $1.000.
Jones slated thai nobody
should have. to live wllh the fea'r
of a pit bull attack on their
.property and that steps would be
taken to find out how many dogs
there were and 10 whom lhey
belonged. He went on to say that
If lhe dogs weren't licensed they
should be laken Into custody by
lhe dog warden, and that If the
dogs were licensed the owners
will be responsible for the loss of
lhe heifer.

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Erwin of 130 Bastian! Dr., hit
DAN HIERONIMUS
JAN LONG
Elliott . as he was crossing the
road. He was taken by I he Gallla
SQUARE OFF IN FALL - Dan Hleronlmus of Lawrence
County EMS 1o Holzer Medical
County, winner In Tuesday's GOP primary election over Athens'
Cenler before being tran~porled .
Claire Ball Jr., for nomination to the Ohio Senate's 17th Dlstrlcl
from there by helicopter to St.
seat lhls fall, will face lnc'umhent Democrat Jan M. LOng In the
Marjr's Hospital In Hunllngton,
Nov. 6 General Election. Hleronlmus received 16,064 voles In the
Deputies of the Meigs County
W.Va.
eight-county
southern Ohlg dlstrlcl Ball lolaled 10,987. Ball won •
Sheriff-s Departmen1 are InvestiElliot! was admllled to the
five of lhe 17th District's elglitcountles, but Hleronlmus achieved
gating a hlt-sktp acclden1 whlcll
hospllal's intensive care unit for
victory with strong support from Lawrence, Galla and Jackson
occurred on Tuesday evening at
treatment of a head Injury. He
Counlles.
Long was unopposed In Tuesday's primary.
the Park and Ride on Route 7.
was listed In critical condition at
According to 1he report, Carol
11: io a.m today.
Justis, Racine. returned to her
parked car, a 1987 Mercury, at
11:30 p.m. to discover !hat
someone had damaged the left '·
rear fender of her vehicle. No
other vehicles were at the scene.
Moderate damage was lis ted to
· the Justis vehicle.
On Wednesday, deputies look a
clerk, all funds as of April 30
report
from Carl Gorby, Langstotaled $158,91~.84. The Interest
who
stated that gasoline
ville,
from Investments for March
totaled $749.97. Balanc.e s In the and an alUITIInum step ladder had
. various funds were $34,307, gen- been stolen from his property on
Route 325.
eral fund; $29,071, street fund;
Deputies also took a · repori
$3,790, .state highway; $31,118,
from Conrail that a number or
fire; $45,299, water revenue;
$4,905, cemetery; $3,626, water batteries were taken from some
deposits; and $6,800, endowment railroad equipment near Carpenter. The Investigation Is·
· tor cemetery.
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Clerk Beegle reported that lot continuing.
Sheriff James M. Soulsby is
care fees tor Greenwood Cemetery are now being collected and reminding motorlsU; that It Is
!hat notices will be mailed out unlawful to haul passengers
·this week to lot owners. It was under the age of 16 In· an open
also reported that several resi- cargo storage area of motor
vehicles, or pick up trucks.
dents have started savings acHe stated that the section or
counts at the Home Natlnal Bank
In the name of the Greenwood law that.'1\'ent into effect on Sept.
Cemetery · Trustees and each 13, 19119, also prohibits the haulyear the bank malls the Interest Ing of passengers of any age in
from the. account to the trustees the cargo storage area or on the
tallgale while the tailgate Is
for the yearly lot care fee.
unlatched,
unless the vehicle has
Anyone Interested Iii participatcertain
factory
Installed ilafely
Ing In the proeram Is asked to
devices.
contact the.bank.
HOFFMAN ISSUES PROCLAMATION - Natloul Nunlnc
Sheriff Soulsby reported that
Council recessed untO 7 p.m.
Home
Week Is Mil,)' Is-It ud Wednellday Mlddlepor&amp; Mayor Fled
wllh the onset of good weather,
May 21.
BoUman,
left, preHnted Mark Murphey, Overbrook Cealer
he has observed a number of
Attendlna were Mayor Clellllmllllatnior,
wt&amp;h a slped proclamallon In obHrvanee ol the
land, Clerk Jane Beegle, Council violations of this nature. He allo
week Uld In rec:opiUon of the aervlce·wlllcll Overbrook Ceater
members, Robert Beeale, Henry . reporta that this section of the
provldea &amp;o the cl&amp;laens ud famUies of Middleport and Melp
Belitz, Ronald Clark, Carroll law Is a sa"Jety measure that
CoDJI&amp;y,
should be observed.
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Teaford, and Larry Wolfe.

Racine Council discusses various
w~ys to pay for · new tanker truck

24-oz.

IREGULARl Y ...

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been leased to the federal government and will be
occupied by . the Agricultural SlabiUzatlon and
Conservation Service and the SoU Conservation
Service, both now located on the secolld floor of
the Farnier.s Bank building on Second Street,
Pomeroy.

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28-CT. X-LARI'E

Ultra Thin Supreme
Comforts Diapers

· Kroger 1%
·. Lowfat ·Milk

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26 Cants ·

A Muttin\edia Inc. Nawipaper

Soulsby tells commissioners:
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2 Sections. 16 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. Thursday, May 10, 1990

days. Onlyo one vendor coupon wW be 8&lt;!Ctptad per
item purchased.

SALAD OR

Moslly cloudy tonlghlln mid
30s. Chance of rain 48 percent.
Friday, high In mid 60s.

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Pomeroy, Ohio
~EVOTED TO THE INTERESTs OF THE )IIEIGS-MASON AREA

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ROBERT L. WINGET!'
Publisher
·

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

PAT WHITEHEAD
' Assistant
Publisher/Controller
A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
AsSOCiation and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 3oO
words long. A!! letters are subject_to_editing and_··l}l ust be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unstgneil_letters will he pub·
llshi!d. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues; not personali-

ties.

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Vietnam finding it
hard to make tourism work
By LEON DANIEL
UPI CHIEF CORRESPONDENT
CU CHI, Vietnam -A visit to lhe famed tunnels of Cu Chi Illustrates
how the communists won the Vietnam War and why they are losing
the peace.
· The ..2IJO,mile subterranean network was a stunningly successful
strategy In wartime, but It falls miserably as a ·peaceilme tourist
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attraction.
The government's unconscionable price-gouging of foreign tourists
trlvlalizes the Ingenuity and Insults the sacrifice o( the courageous
Viet Cong guerrillas who dug the tunnels and fought from them.
For $55, the bureaucratic touts at Saigon Tourist, one of the more
Inept arms of the commurdst regime, will unenthuslas dcally arrange
a car and driver for the one-hour drive to the tunnels on the northwest
side of Ho Chi Minh City.
·
Since guides at the site don't speak foreign languages, tourists from
abroad are likely to be as baffled by lhe tunnels as American troops
were during the war.
·
That Is a shame because the tunnels are truly amazing.
The passages connect uriclerground chambers which were used by
the VIet Congas mess halls, briefing rooms and medical aid stations.
Despite massive bombing raids and artillery barrages unle!lshed ·
. by the Amer.lcan forces, the guerrillas not only survived underground
. but used the .tunnels to prosecute their winning war.
An adventurous tourist will find It Instructive - and perhaps a
frightening claustrophobic-experience- to crawl 50 yards or so on
his bands and knees through a tunnel, slightly enlarged to
accommodate broad-beamed Westerners.
It helps In understanding how the communists won the war.
In honor of the lOOth anniversary of the b!rlh of Ho Chi Minh, and to
earn desperately needed foreign exchange, this poverty-ridden
nation has proclaimed 1990 the year of tourism.
Unfortunately, the communist regime Is having trouble getting a
handle on how to make tourism work.
· Corruption still Is a problem, as It was for the government of Soulh
V.tetnam, which fell15 years ago.
;.Government officials admit airline staff have taken bribes from
!]'avelers trying to get on•scarce flights to V!etnar:n- and from others
Ryen more desperate to ,get out.
,
: Perhaps the grossest excess of the year of tourism Is the Saigon
floating hotel, docked on the Saigon River In the heart of Ho Chi Minh

etty.·
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:Towed all the way from Australia, Its tiny rooms go for $150a night.
The decks of the posh seagoing hostelry overlook shanties across the
river.
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• The floating hotels doormen are decked out In white French-style
9anor suits trimmed In pastel green.
. This long-suffering nation needs no such silly reminders of Its
· ~ench CQlonlal past.
. Nor does Ho Chi Minh City, which everyone still calls Saigon, need
to return to the wild and woolly days when American GIs roamed Tu
Do Street In search of booze and -sex.
This ancient nation needs to show the world Its nobler face - a
' ~ot.lntenance wl~ned by,war and centuries of tradition.

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Berry's World

UNDE~

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ARb

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1'~"'~KS

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Today i111listory
, By United Press International · ·
Today Is Thursday, May 10, the !30th day of 1990wlth 235 to follow.
The moon Is waning, moving toward Its last quarter.
The morning. stars ar~ · Mercury, VeilJIS, Mars: and Saturn.
The evening star Is Jupiter.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Taurus. They include
British statesman and scholar James Bryce ln-1838; Swiss theologian
Karl Barth In 1886; Max Steiner, who composed movie themes, In
1888; actor.dancer Fred Asta!re In 1899; movie producer David 0.
Selznlck ("Gone With The Wind") In 1902 and actress Nancy Walker
In 1921 (age 69) .
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On this date In history:
In 1865, Confederate Pr_esldent Je!ferson Davis was captured by
· UniOn troops and spent the next two years In prison.
In 1869, the "golden spike'' was driven at Proo10ntory Point, Utah,
joining the Union :Pacific and the Central Pacific lines to fonn
t
,.·
America's first transcontinental railway. &lt;:

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Thursday. May
10, 1990
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WASHINGTONSen. Strom
Thurmond led the ilrlve to close
the revolving door between government and lobbying, but hehasn't closed the one Is his own
office.
.
Thurmond, R·S.C., Is behind
the new ethics laws designed to
keep government workers·
turned lobbyists from putting
pressure on their old friends In
the federal bureaucracy.
But Thurmond doesn't seem to
notice when the practice Involves
his own staff. The senator has
been lobbied on a controversial
Issue by one of his former top
aides.
·
Stephen Cannon was chief·
anti-trust counCil for the Se113te
Judiciary Committee when Thurmond was the chairman of that
committee from 1981-85. Now

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, Cannon Is lhe lead lobbyist stores such as K-mart and
opposing a bill that could save Burlington Coat Factory.
shoppers big money.
Thurmond's stance on the bill
Arid who should be the chief Is predktable. The big manufac· ·
opponent of the bill In Colfgress turers who opi)Ose the bill are
but Thurm~nd himseU, Cannon's among his staunchest suppor·
ters. Groups such as the Amerl·
former boss.
The bill Is sponsored by Sen. can Textlle' Manufacturers Jnstl·
Howard Metzenbaum, D-Ohlo, lute and the American
and should warm the heart of Manufactur~rs Association conanyone who likes a bargain. It tribute to Thurmond :s reattacks vertical price fixing, a election campaigns.
practice that allows manufacturIt doesn't burt to have Cannon
ers to control the price of their In the manufacturers' court.
goods by controlling what kinds Cannon admits he has contacted ·
his old boss a few times concernof stores they sell In.
Vertical price fixing Is Illegal -Ing the bill.
under federal anti•trust laws.
Both Thurmond and Cannon
ButJn a 1984 ruling the Supreme Insist that tbe. senator was
Court .clouded the enforcemen.t opposed .to the blll .long before
Issue. Hlgh·prlce&lt;l retailers such · C11nnon started working against
as department stores can pres· it. Thurmond and other critics of
sure manufacturers not to sell the bill use the flimsy argument
their goods In bargaln·basement that It will result In lawsuits, ·

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By APRIL ALFARANO
Innings the last two days. "All of
UPI Sports Writer
our runs were· scored from the
The rain came down ·at an fifth IQning ·on here. ••
opportune time for Chicago but
The Cubs' Les Lancaster, 2-1.
much too soon for Atlanta.
had made 76 relief appearances
The downpour started In the datlngback' toJune4,1988before
Cubs' fourth Wednesday but slat-ting Wednesday. The Chi·
umpires did not halt play' until · cago buUpeti, which has been
after the Braves' fifth, and'!lldn't
thinned by the loss of struggling
Jose Nunez and Injured Rickcall the game until 1 y, hours
later . giving Chicago a 4·0 Sutcliffe, was weakened even
vlcto~y over Atlanta.
more by th'e Cubs using nine
" We .weren't able to get to our pitchers • in . the previous two
. part of the game, '1 said Braves
games, which , they split with
Manager Russ Nixon, whose Atlanta.
team had rallied In the late
"If something happen~d to

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which will drive up the costs to
consumers anyway.
His revolving-door bill dldn' t •
receive much ·attention until
former White- House aide. Ml·
chael Deaver was convicted for
1987 of lying to Congress and a '
grand jury about contacting
Whlte House officials as a lobbyIst for his new clients.
Cannon has not broken the
revolving-door law. It puts
former federal workers on ice as
lobbyists for only a year, and he
has been In .the private sector for
five years.
,.
But a one-year b1,m or even a
five-year ban doesn't eliminate
the Inside track. Lobbyists with · ,
friends In high places are a
coveted commodity In Washington no matter when they left
public service.

DUBLIN, Ohio tUPI) -Mark
Calcavecch!a loves the money. ·
So does.Payne Stewart.
. On the golf ctiurse, h'owever
'
Calcavecchla and S.tewan rarely
think about l)lelr checkbooks. At
that point. all they want to do Is
win . . .
T.hat Is why Stewart, with two
wins in 'the last three ·weeks, Is
more pleased with his 1990
season than Calcavecch1a, des·
p!te the fact that Calcavecchla
leads the PGA T.our In money
winnings with $632,144' while
Stewari is third with $496,491.
Calcavecch!a and Stewart will
be among the favorites when
play begins Thursday in the
. Memoi-lal Tournament, Jack
NICklaus's affair at Mldrfield
Village Golf Club In suburban
Columbus. .
·
The long-hitting C~~olcavecch!a,. · '·
witmer of last year's British
Open, Is playing well, with e.lght
top 10 flnishes and four second·
place performances, b11t the lack
of a victory does frustrate him.

.

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Majors

•

•

,,

NATIONAL LEA..G\JE
By Unlled PresH lnt'!riMUIIMI

Eut
..
Team
" ' L Pet . GB
PltllllN!K"h ......... .......... l9 1$ .1M -

•

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Monllreal .................... .ll
Phlla.J.,Iphla ................ U
NI!W Verk ...........•......•. U
Chkqo ...... ................. U
Sl. Lolllis ..... : ................ ll
W!!:!l
Clnd•natl ......... ........... l~
Los All~t~t ...... ........... u
Sa11 Dlt&gt;l(l ....................

I! J71
U .55&amp;
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, Ho•!llon ..... ....... ........... l:t It ·••

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' San FriUH.i!K'O , ........ ,.,.11 18 Jll Jt·
A.Uan(A , . ....................... ~. 17 ,.320 lO Y.

" 'ednetld.., -Hultlli

A_process turned
In 1974, Congress passed the
Congressional Budget Act. The
Intention of this legislation was to
establish a structured, time
driven budget process, that
would allow the federal govern·
ment to get a better handle on
how, when and where Its re·
venues. were to be ·spent. How· .
ever, with each passing year It
appears the process Is becoming
more confusiJ1g than clarifying. :
It Is becoming· more of a
political exercise than a practl·
cal exercise. The action by the
U.S. House of Representatives
this past week Is a case In point.
Unable to agree OJl a realistic,
workable budget, acceptable to
both the Congress and the executive branch, the House Leadership elected to put fortp a budget
proposal !hat wasmoreofaparty
platform than a fiscal blueprint
for federal spending·for the year
ahead.
As a result, what came before
the House for final passage was a
budget proposal laced with polltl-

part~san

cal I.O.U.'s, a proposal that Its
sponsors knew from the outset
had little cliance of acceptance .
by the White House, or for that
matter, by the Senate. The final
vote on.thls proposal was a telling
Indictment of Its political nature.
When It passed on a close 218 to
208 vote, not a single member of
the Minority party supported It
while 34 of the Majority's 1
members, (mostly conservatives, opposed to the deep de.
fense cuts centalned In lhe
proposal) felt compelled to go
against It as well.
No one ever said arriving at a
realistic, workable budget plan
acceptable to all of lhe major
factions Involved In the process,
would be easy, but If that Is the
end objective, and I'd like to
think that It Is, the proposal
passed this past week was a far
cry from a meaningful effort.
The Senate has yet to take action
on a budget proposal of Its own,
but !rom all Indications when It

Puerto Rico

~ebates

•

___c_o_ng_.c_aa_re_.__nc_e_Mi_ne_r ;

does It will reflect a number of proach to managing _our federal
major differences from the budget, one would be naive to
' think that only his point of view
House passed budget bill.
· Up until recently there hadn't will or should prevail. After all,
been any serious effort by either when you have a divided govern·
the House or Senate leadership to ment like we have with the
get together with the President executive branch being In the
and his administration's budget hands of one major political
'm anagers to hl!mmer out an party and lhe Congtess con·
accord that all sides can live troll~d by the other, the best you
can hope for Is a constructive
with.
Acknowledging ttie lack of give and take, a distillation of
such an effort and sensing the opposing philosophies that yl~lds
need to step up the pace of the a course of action acceptable to
budget process, the President all.
It makes little sense lor the
moved this past week to Initiate
just such ·a dialogue with the Congress, or for that matter the
Congress. Though the White administration to "play
House billed this weekend's chicken" . with the budget probudget meeting at 1600 Pennsyl· cess. A collision cours«:. of polltl·
vanla Avenue with tlie Ma}or!ty · cal Ideologies serves no useful
and Minority leaders of the end. Hopefully, . this weekend's
House and Senate as more a get together at the White House
discussion of process than con• will point the budget process In a
tent, It hopefully will set the stage new alld more positive direction,
for more substantive discussions a dlrectloll which puis our
to follow.
national Interests above the
.Though I personally stand with political Interests of those dl·
the President's conservative ap- rectly Involved with this process.

.

.,
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Chlcqo -1, AU~ta 0, .J-1,1: lnnlnp,
. 18hortt'ned d~e to min
SIUI Fl-anchu::n -11 Nt~• \ ' o'rk 'l:
. PllW.Uf'l{hG.f'lntla•tl t
Mlllllrul5, Loll An~""' !I
, Sl. l.Guls II, SMII gep il
Phlladelphlil 10, HOIUilln I '
Thul'!tdll)' GamCirl
·
SIUIDiepiR...m .....D:I-11-' lSI. LIJWM
(M'arraae-..1), 1:3$p.m •
Lo11 ,\n~et~ tR.Marune~ ~-1) Ill .
Monlreal tD.MarUiifz~-2), 1 : 35p.m,
CIMI nlalll I Rohin'M!al-1 ) at Pit lMu ~h
{Krumer 0-1), ";:35 p.m.
Fri~G•me~

Loli AnA'~!'Il'!l al Nt&gt;w York, •ll'ht
San Fnftl.•l•o •I Phlllldelphh&amp;, nl~:hl

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'

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HoWil:onal PIIW.J1th, niJ:Iilt
Cl!lcalfl ai Cl.clallllt~ niJ:H,
,\ttanta .U Sl. Lo-,, niJ:ht
Mll.-real at San Dtei'O. nl~:ht
i\MERICt\N LEAGUt:
E .. o
Tt·am
\\' L Pet .
Mltwau ~ri fl .f.tO Torenlo ................... .... 17 li! .:JM,I
Sosten ..................... .... IS I'! .55i
('lt'\l•land .................... U t:J .!HI
~111m on•.................... l:l 18 .UI

Named National· Leagul!- player
of the week last week, Sandberg
now has 18 hits in his last 39
at-bats for a .462 average.
Ramos's blast was his first this
season and sevenlhofhlscareer.
In other National League
games, san Francisco beat New
York 4-2, Pittsburgh pounded
Clncinnat16-2;Montreal defeated
Los Angeles 5-3, st. Louis blasted
San D!ego·H-5-, and Philadelphia
destroyed Houston 10-1.
In the American League It
was: Detroit 2, Milwaukee l;
Oakland 2. New York 1: Toronto

New \'erk -- ~ --·-·--··------- 10 HI .3MS
Detroit ............... , ........ 10 19 .:us

GB

2
3

3 \'; ·
6 \la
M

Oaklllnd ......................!1 I .7'tlli Chlc:llJI:O ................... ,... U 10 .5K3 Sl!f
TMP:a.'oi .......................... U 13 ,il l! 7
MlniiPIWila .. ....... .......... 13 Ill .HII 7 1J.
Sr._.l .............. .... ......... lll 16 .UII !I
ClillfOrala .................... IJ 17 .aN 18'-r
Kan!Ml'M)' .... : .. ........... t 11 .S-11 II %
" 'ednndu RetJull!t
Dr.trotl %, Mllwa•lllee I, II lnlinp,
shorkll('d dar to N.ln
Oakhwt t, fll'.-w rGrk I, 11 lltnlnl"
Toro•,.. -1, Chlnp S
(JJt&gt;Yf'land 7, MlaJRMII&amp;u :1
Tt&gt;xu 8. Ku111• Cl4y S
•
Bo!lllln -1, Sull .. I
lkllllmol"f' 9, California I
'i'hunlda.,v 0Mmt'tl
Torolfo l~tottlt"myrc&gt; H) .U Ott "'It
lRohiM»n I·IJ. 7:al
CleYt"l&amp;lld (Swl•h•ll i--J) 1M Mtn~OIM

'

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,.m.

(SmUll

,

o-3), H:Oli p.n..

Kan.u flly !Gordon 1-0) at Te11u1M
(Brll•'• S-1), II: 33 p.m . ,
faiUornlll (MLo('a~~klll 2-1) at St&gt;altlt•
(Hlllman .t-2'1, li:lt~ p.m.
Frlda,yGum4'1'
:\lllwuukl't'll( Mln ..~ota. nll{ht
Ka•""" l'lty 111t fhk-~~'· nl~

I was two years ago at this . think everyone here on this level
stage," Stewart said. "I'm man- · appreciates that challenge, beaging my game a lot better . I can cause then thebestplayers~ome
accept' the bad shots a lot easier. out on top."
Calcavecch!a · also likes the
"I've learned that there Is a'
time and place for temper and all par-72. 7.104-yard la'yout at Muir. that stuff. That can ruin you on a field , .a nd believes It Is just a
golf course if it ·shows up at the mat tfr o( time before _he wlns the
wrong Time. I've -learned to slxtli tournament of his career.
control it and use It to my Finishing fourth or higher Sunday would put him over the S3
advantage."
.
Stewart has never won the million mark In career earnings,
tournament, but he has played but he won't think about thai until
well, Including a final-round 65 in after the tournament Is over .
Until then, all he wants to do Is
last year's event.
win.
·
"I
like
everything
about
this
He won the MCI-Heritage
"The
Memorial
Is one of my
golf
course,"
Stewart
said.
Classic In sudden death; his first
favorite
tournaments."
Calca·
"Your
whole
game
has
to
be
win in six extra -hole affairs, and
vecchia
said
.
''It's
well-run,
and
You
get
a
true
champion
sharp.
last weekend he erased a painful
It's
out
of
a
CQurse
of
this
caliber.
I
a..great
course."
memory at ' the Byron Nelson
Classic In Texas . In 19S5, Stewart
was leading : until he dou.ble
bogeyed the final hole, forcing a
playoff. whl.c h he lost with a
-~
Krickstein topped Peru's
HAMBURG, West Germany
double bogey on the first extra
(l)PI) - Andre Agass! breezed · Jaime Yzaga 7-6, 6-2; Sanchez
hole.
rallied past Fabrlce Ssntoro of
But this ye,ar, he held of! Lanny by Diego Perez In the first set and
advanced to the third round of the France 4-6, 6-1, 6-1; and GustafWadkins for a two-stroke win.
''I'm a much better player than $)million German Open Wednes- fson downed Marcelo Filippini of
• day when injury forced the Uruguay 6-3, 5-7, 6-3 .
Two seeds fell Wednesday.
Uruguayan to retire In the second
Roberto Azar of Argentina upset
set.
No. 11 Cari-Uwe Steeb of West
Agassi, the No.2 seed from Las
Vegas, Nev., was leading 6-1,1-0 Germany 6-2 , 4-6, 7-5, and Luis
Mattar of Brazil defeated No . 6
· at the time .
Andre.s Gomez of Ecuador 6-7;
other
second-round
winners
Toronto a&amp; Detroit, niiM
Clnt'lud·at Texa~. allh!
7-6, 6-3.
included No.3 Aaron Kr!ckste!n,
New Y~rk at Bt"aU.tle, nlpt
Other winners: Franco Davin
No. 4 Emilio Sanchez of Spain
BaWmo~.- at Oakknd, •l~hl
of Arg~ntlna, Andrei Cherkasov
Bo.toalat Calilonla. •l~ht
and No. 15 Magnus Gustafsson of
ol the Soviet Union, Guy Forget
'i'hul'!lday SportM C&amp;dendllr
. Sweden.
' Baslldbllll
of France,- Jimmy Arias of
NB;\ Playo(fM
N.Y., Henri Leconte of
Seco .. Ro\lilll
- - Sports briefs-- Jericho.
Eat~ll'rn Colietenct&gt;
France
and
Lars Jonsson of
. BOxing
NY Kntcb It DelreM, Hp.m.
Sweden.
Jonsson
replaced No. 8
WeRW!n Coalenonce
Mark Breland will defend his
Porllaaci at San Allloalo,ll; 38 p.m .
Andre! Chesnokov when the
...._Dtl at L;\ Later..lt:311 p.m.
WBA welterweight title against
Soviet failed to show .
Boxl•k
Aaron "Superman" Davis July 8,
Stat,,hiP, N.-v . - J. .. lll -Tapia v~.
a..._.
Go•• · n . ••per flyWf'IJbb:
promoters announced. Breland
Nl(.-kJ W alilerv11 . leffMc;Crlldl.l!ll,ll, II~
Is 27-1·1 with 20 knockouts and
hM~ywel..._~~; Kelde Bank!! vt~. T1·rry
Sulherll,nd, l , lla:hi:Wt"lptM·Davis I&amp; 28·0 with 17 knockouts.
C)"t:lln«
ABC will televise the ' bout beRlflhmud, Va. -Tour de Trlltlp
· otvln•
tween the New Yorkers. .. . .
Boca Raton, · Fla Ala .m o
Former junior welterweight
lnterna.lloNal
Golf Duhlln, Ohio - PG.t .M1•moriKI
champion Aaron Pryor, declared
Toumame~~t · ·
legally bl!nd.!n his left eye by one
Ho ~ ke)'
NBL P1111yorf11
state
commission, has received
Conlnen~t' Fl,..li
{'umphf-11 ( :onfpffrH' I'
permission to fight Wednesday
Cldca~~:o at •.:dmonlon, B:U p.m.
night In Wi 0consin. The state
Ten•s
Department o_f Licensing and
Charl~on, ltr . - Mn'" Uatl.lllll l !.S.
Clll.)' Court U.ampiO...tlipN
Regulation granted permission
Davl... t 'allf - N(;Ai\ \hmt'n'K 0\vl!lion II champktnKhiPIS
for Pryor to fight well~rwe!ght
Gal~e~\tlle. f11to N&lt; ' A~ aomt'n'~
:• Darrell Jones at the Masonic
IMvlsllln I champiO.whiP!I
H~~ombura:, W""t German)'- M!!a'll Jl
Temple ev£'n though Pryor, 34,
MilliOn German Opt'!n
has cataracts In one eye and has
Ronw-- Women'K$5ICI,D OIItllllu Open
not fought In 32 months . ... East
Wd11etiday Sporb TrlliU•~1klllll
German Henry Maske. the 1988
81Ut"hall
Sf:. Loub&gt; - The C"rdh1toh itt.tlnled
Olympic ~iddlewelght chamihlrd ·htWJnaft1'..rrr Pf' ... fton and ~w.nl
PIOn and reigning world amateur .
rll(ht·hande• pltflher Boh TNii&amp;dlury lo
u 11 Tripht A 1...-m l'lallln-l.O\IIIII'•ml•,
light
. heavy,.,e!ght champion,
Ba..kelhall
. launched hls pre boxing career
· Erlf- ("'orld_ Batikl1h..U Lt&gt;~~Pr.l Slpd SL-ooif!r Barry ( J), Bod Fo~tlt•r
With a first -round knockout over
Save up to $3.00 per case
lit), K.!Q' H111J I f), Delray JSr+:tOkr; ( l ), Erlt·
Mexican Teo Arvizu at the
Mc Laukhlin 111:1. Holman Harlry tit'·
on NAPA Motor Oil. Limit
Chrioo Hollan (1:) , Ray Pltlh (1), Troy
Wembley Grand Hallin London.
Lewi!t {II, Ro...eVI!II Cll ..man (c),
one case per person or
AlllhOny IMc~M (t•), and -loiwWIIIiiUIIII
· CoUege
household.
Cfllo Onro YUI ('OIIIractM. ,
Two seniors, middle distance
NeYt HllY. . (Unltf'd St.\ltt'lj Bwdwth w-11
Le. .).- Samt"dTerryOTo""'r ht"~o~d
runner S!obhan Gallagher ol
.1175-050 5W-30 #75-110 SAE-30
(.-CJ8t•b-l(ftral nw.na~er.
1175-14020W-50 #75-lOOIOW-40
Providence
College
and
soccer
('o iiPF
#75-130 !OW-30
Gfltl'!llf' Wallhl•~on - Nan'wd Mlkt"
star Patrick O'Kelly of Seton
.Jar.t" h•bthall c olt~ h.
both
natives
·
of
Ireland,
Hall,
,
(Or-U~d ( 'anyoa Narnrd Lf'lshtlln
•After manufacturer's rebate.
Mri'nrJ h~W~kethall t 'CIIIch.
were named Big .East Confer'
Mollor - Women'll tf'nl6; I'OIU h lloh
ence . SchOlar-Athletes of the
St.·hneldrr reNipf'd.
.
f"oolhllll
Year.
;\ililnta - Slprd frf'f'"llJtal pard

.___.Sports briefs--

I•

'' •i

BuketbaJI
San Antonio Spurs center
David Robinson, NBA Rookie of
the Year, Wednesday was honored for haying the most Impact
on Ills team's success by \1rtue of
a mathematlcaUormula to deter· .
mine all-arourtd contributions.
Robinson, named w!nl)er of the
1990 Schick' Award, ranked lOth
In the league In scoring and
second In rebounding, averaging
24.3 points a game and 12.0
rebounds.
Swlmminl .
, Edsard Schlingemann, 23, a
member of the Dutch national
team that competed at the Los
Angeles Olympics In 1984, was
killed when his car hit a tree In
Vaessen, the Netherlands ,
S~hllngemann ·won nine career
national titles.
Golf
President Bush j:rlans to parUc·
!pate In the [)()ug sanders Senior
Celebrity Classic golf tournament next week at Kingwood,
Texas. Bush Is scheduled to ptay
May 19 at the Deerwood Club,
site of the PCA Senior Tour
event, With h!a ·~n. Georae Jr.,
and PGA Commissioner Deane
Beaman.
il

Member: United Pre-s International,

hRESIDE
11. JNN

Agassi adv-ance~ at Hamburg

1.

·~

Inland Dally,Press Ass«laUon and the
Ohio Newapap_er Association. National

Mvertlllng Representatlve, Branham

733 Third Avenue,
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Point Pieasanl

Pomeroy, Ohio 457111.

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D•IIM .... Rf-leiiiW d ll!lfetf VIt-I or !olt•oU
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Dei roM CArrU)- SlptdqUIU'Wrhll('k
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Canadian AI Howle ran 185
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°

"The money Is nice, but I'd
trade In some lor a win,"
Calcavecchla said. ' 'I've got
eight top lOs, but I'd trade.thern
In for two wins. That'd be better.
It 'd be less money, but I'd rather
have the wins." ·
·
Wins are something Stewart
does have. Before last season,
Stewart was famous lor his
second-place finishes, bu t a win
In the.l 'GA changed all that, and
he has continued to win ever
since.

·~

its ·future -again

4-0

4, Chicago~; Cleveland 7, Mlnne· two-run single capped a four-r~n
sola 3; Texas 9, Kansas City 3; th.lrd Inning against Fernan
Boston 4, Seattle 1; and Baltl· Va!enzuel~. 2-3.
more 9, California 1.
Cardlnalsll, Padres 5
Giants 4, Mets 2
At St. Louis, Vince Coleman · ·
At New York, Kevin Bass had three hits and drove In two
belted a three-run first-Inning runs In a seven-run fifth Inning,
homer and Bob' 1\_nepper com- helping the Cardinals, end a
blned with two relievers _on a five-game lo~lng streak. Rick
seven-hitter, helping San Fran· · Horton, 1-1, prtched 3 2·3 Innings
cisco snap the Mets' four-garne In relief of starter John Tudor lor
winning streak. Knepper, 1-1, his first victory since Sept . 24, :
scattered six hits over 5 2·3 1988. Andy Benes. 2-3, allowed :
innings In his first start. Bob e!ght hits and six earned runs 111 ·
Ojeda. 0-1, gave up !our runs and
five Innings, blowing a 5-0 Padres '
five 'hits, walking' one and strlk·
lead.
Phillles 10, Astr~ 1
lng out two over five Innings .
At Houston, Pat Combs fired a
Pirates 8, Reds 2
At Pittsburgh John Smiley
five-hitter. singled twice to drive .
and Bill Landr~ combined to
In a run and scored once leading :
stop Cincinnati and the Pirates
the Ph lilies. Combs, 2-2, allowed
co Uected 14 hits off four Reds · five singles, struck out five and :
pitchers. Smiley evened his rewalked three. He allowed only
cord at 3-3with slx 'pluslnnlligsoi
two Houston runners t.o reach
work, allowing two runs and
t hlrd base. Mike Scott . 1:3,
seven hits with five strikeouts.
allowed eight runs- four earned ,
Jack Armstrong, 5·1, allowed
~ on nine hits In 4 2-3 Innings. He :
four ruJlsandn!nehltslnflveplus
walked two and struck out two.
innings as .the ·Reds lost for the
first time In six games.
The Daily Sentinel
Expos 5, Dodgers 3
At Montreal, . Andres Ga!ar' (U8P8lii-MI)
raga drove In two runs to help
A Dlvll ... of Mdtmedla. r.c.
Kevin Gross Win his fourth
Published every afternocn. Monday
straight and extend the Expos'
througll Friday, 111 Court St., Powinning streak to four. Gross,
m..-oy, Ohio, by the Oblo Valli.')' PublllbiDg Company!Multlmedia, Inc.•
4·1, gave up three runs , five hits,
Pumeroy, Ohio 457!9, Ph. 992·2156. seno willks and had lour strikeouts
coDd class p01tage paid at Pomeray,
Ohio.
In 8 .1-3 !n'!_!!lgs. Galarraga's

IAPAMotor

" 'l'!ll

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico dollars worlh of benefits from of the Spanish-American War In
(NEA) - The Irony and contra· Washington. Tl!ls money has 1898 and designateda territory In
dictions Inherent In any debate . been crucial In sustaining t~e 1900. Its residents were granted
poverty level and more than half ..
about Puerto Rico's political and Island's economic growth.
U.S. citizenship In 1917, and
'
receive some form ot welfare
economic future are Illustrated
The coqtroversy over Puerto commonwealth status was autho·
benefits.
by these striking Incongruities:
Rico's future surely qualifies as · rized In 1952.
.
For. example, Section 936 or the ,.
- Puerto Rico's per capita what former baseball star and
The most militant lndependenInternal Revenue Code provides
Income of about $5,600 annually malaprop master Yogi Berra tlstas have resorted to violence
a special exemption to federal
Is among the highest anywhere In
describes as "deja va all over - Including an assassination
taxes on corporate profits gener·
Latin America. But !hat figure Is again." The dispute has been attempt on President Truman In
ated by Puerto Rican lacllltles.
far below the comparable underway for decades but pever 1951 and an armed attack on the
That tax relief costs the govern·
number In Mlsslsslpp~ the poor- has been close to resolution.
U.S. House or Representative~ in
ment $2 billion yearly In lost
est U.S. state.
Ithasheatedupagaln,because 1954 that left five congressmen
revenues but generates about
- II Puerto Rico were to President Bush, In his first wounded.
300,000 of the almost 906,000 jobs
become a state, Its residents address tQ Congress early last
But even the Island's main·
available to Puerto Rico's work ·
would be eligible for full welfare year, called for an Island-wide streamleaders-andmanyoflts force.
· ·~
benefits !rom the federal govern· election on self-determination. 3.3 million people- are exas~r­
.That _progran;~ Is criticized by . ,
ment - an Important consldera· "Personally, I favor statehood," a ted by almost a century of what -those who assert that the tax
. tlon on an Island where unem- ·he said. ''But I ask the Congress they view as oppressive colonial
subSidies enjoyed·by parttclpat· · '
ployment regularly · hovers at to take the necessacy steps to lilt rule.
,·
lng· corpdrations are .more than
around 15-20 percent.
the people decide."
In an extraordinary joint letter · three times a~ much as those · ·'
' I'
•I
But . continuation or commonLegislation now pending In to Bush less than a month before
f lrms (predomlnatly
pharma·
wealth status would sustain the Congress authorizes a referen· . the president's 1989 remarks, lhe
ceutlcal and electronics compan·
(sland's special exemption from dum next year, but Its future Is leaders of Puerto Rico's three - les) pay their workers. If Puerto
federal personal and corporate uncertain. Indeed, even the form major political parties noted that
Rico became a state, the pro- "
Income tal(es - an arrangement . .or the balloting Is a matter of the Island's people had never
gra"' would be unconstitutional. '
that provides jobs and saves dispute, wltb advocates of var- been consulted ''as to their
But statehood would makt ...
money lor the Island ' s .lous political alternatives press· choice or their ultimate political
Island residents eligible for the · 1
Inhabitants.
·lng lor everything from a self· status.''
full range of federal entltlemett •r
The third option, Independ· -~· executing plebtsclt to an
But political choice and ecoan.d assistance programs. Thlt •'
ence, would make· Puerto Rico advlsory vote.
, .
nomic necessity are Intertwined
probably would require ,a .!50
autonomous -and would lead to
Puerto Rico was ceded to the In a society where two-thirds of
percent Jpcrease In yearly pily· ·'·
the elimination of billions of United States by Spain-at the en4 ' the people live below the U.S. ;ments from Washington. ·

'·

Lancaster .in the second inning, 1
didn't know what I would do,"
Chicago Manager Don Zimmer
said.
Lancaster gave up four hits,
struck out two and walked none
In a hectic five Innings.
"When the rain srarted coming ·
(In the Culls"fourth), my job was
to get. out -there (In the Braves'
fifth) and -work quick,''. Lancaster said. ·.. '
Pete Smith, 2·2. took the loss, :
allowing homers to Ryne Sand·
berg and· Domingo Ramos, who
each drove In a run In the third.

Calcavercchia, Stewart Me111-orial favorites

•

Robert Walters

l
'
l

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Stand on lobbying confusing__·-~.J_ack_A_nd_ers_on

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street

Chicago~ ~ith help from ~eather, _ shuts out Atlanta,

Page-2-The 'oaily Sentinel

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Commentary

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Pomeroy:....Middleport, Ohio ·

Thursday. May. 10. 1990

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' May 10; 1990
Thursday,

Pomeroy-Middeport. Ohio

Paga 4-The Daily Sentinel

Thursday. May 10.

I

Clemens, 5·2, entered the game · and get them the next time. " ·
hit a two-run h~mer and Tom inning off r~llever Wayne Ed· . Hough, 3-1, walkeds~ men ~n t~e
with a 3.95 ERA and was·roughed
Angels Manager Doug Rader Brookens doubled home the .. wards, 0-1.
first two Innings but a owe on Y
up for six runs on seven hits over
agreed Langston was winning run in the sixth Inning to
Tigers 2, Brewers 1
two hits and retired the last 11
six innings In a loss to Oakland
overthrowlnll:.
·
snap a six-game Minnesota win·
At Mllwuakee, Lou Whitaker batters he faced In a six-Inning
last Friday.
"My assumption Is that he was n!ng streak. Consecutive doubles and Lloyd Moseby hit back·tO· stint . Storm Davis, 1·4, took the
That made the Mariners a
trying too hard ," Rader said. "It
by Cory Snyder and Brookens back homers in the first inning, loss.
welcome sight·. Clemens !m- seems to me that throwing too . snapped a 3·3 tie, enabling Sergio helpjng the Tigers end a lour·
·Athlellcs 2, Yankees 1
proved to8-3 lifetlmeoverSeattle
hard, you don't have your Valdez. 1·0, to win his ltrst game losing streak with a rain·
. (Uinnlngs)
by surrendering four hits, strik·
rhythm and control and your American League start. Doug shortened eight -Inning victory.
At Oakland. CaHIIf~Eric Plui~~
lng out Six and walking one. .
consistency will suffer.
Jones pitched two innings for his Dan Petry, 3·1, and Mike Henne- )Yalked Rickey e erson w
"He made I !look eas y," Boston : . "You try to get him to pitch hts
lOth save. John Candelaria, 3,1, man combined pn a seven-hitter
the bases loaded hln ~h~ :.u~
Manager Joe Morgan said.
way out of 11 . He was just fighting took tiJe loss. .
for Detroit, which had lost nine of Inning to complete t e I e cs
·'Once he got the ball down I! was
himself too much."
its previous 10 ga'mes. Chris
three-game sweep over the Yanall over. "
Cal Rlpken , Billy Rjpken and
mue Jays 4, White Sox 3
Bos!o, 3-1, . gave up the first· kees; Henderson scored Oak·
Davis's homer was the only
Randy Milllgan · each drove in
At Toronto, Nelson Llrlano Inning homers.
lands first run In · the eighth
extra base hit off Clemens.
two runs to lift the Orioles. Pete ·drove In two runs and reliever
Rangers 9, Royals 3
mnlng when . he doubled and
Quh\tana and Rivera hit ho- Harnisch. 3·0, gave up eight hits. Frank Wilts· pitched 2 2-3 perfect
At Arlington, Texas, Pete
da~hed home from seco,nd on an
mers on consecutive pitches In struck out lour and walked fou r Innings to help the Blue Jays lncaviglia's three· run, pinch-hit
Infield out. Pl~nk fell 10 2· 1 and
the seventh to chase Gary Eave,
In Baltill'lore's first complete rally from a 3·0 deficit. Wills homer highlighted a 14-hit attack
A's reliever Rick Honeycutt, 1·0.
0·3, and Pena homered leading game of the season. .
improved to 2·1. Llriano singled and helped Texas break a three·
pitched twohltlesslnnlngsforthe
off the ninth.
· With Cal Ripken 's two-run . homethewlnnlng run In the sixth game .losing streak. Charlie
win.
'·
Langston took a 9·4 career
homer. In· the ninth off Scott
record over the Orioles into Balles, he joined Ernie Banks
Wednesday night's game. but and Vern Stephens as the on~y
allowed seven hits and fou r runs shortstops to reach 200 homers.
while .walking a career· high
In other ALgamesWednesday,
By DAVE HARRIS
Kevin Taylor and Terry Reuter 11·5 In the TVC. Seniors playing
eight In six innings. Langston pad Cleveland cracked Mlnnesot11
Senior Ed Crooks· ended .hts added a single eaciJ.
in their last game for the maroon
won eight straight over Balti· 7·3, Toronto edged Chicago 4·3, Meigs Marauder baseball career
arid gold were Chris Stewart, Ed
Arnold
ledsthe
Lancers
·at
tiJe
mbre since his last loss to the
Detroit shaded Milwaukee 2·1,
In spectacular form Wednesday plate with-two slpgles, Summer· Crooks, Brian Warner, Mike
Orioles May 18, 1987 when he Texas trounced Kansas City 9-3·, . ·night as the Marauders defeated
field added a double and Harris a Walls; Randy Hawley. Dennis
pitched for Seat tie.
and Oakland niCked New York Federal Hocking, 4·3.
Boothe and Keith Hagen.
single.
Gillian was the starter
Langston, 2-3, was traded to 2·1 In 111nnlligs.
·
Crooks, rated by most as one of and loser for Federal Hocking, FedHock ... ............ 000 000 3·3·4
Montreal last May and signed
In the NL, it was: Chicago 4, the best catchers In the area,
Meigs ............. .... .. Ill 001 x-4·6
with California as a free agent Atlanta 0; San Francisco 4, New turned pitcher and In his first giving up 6 hils, 2 walks, hitting
Ed Crroks, Dennis Boothe 17),
one
batter
while
striking
out
3.
over the winter.
York 2; Pittsburgh 6, Cincinnati start, limited the Lancers to only
Kevin Taylor· {7), and Jason
·
The
Marauders
under
head
· ~ I felt as strong as any time
2; Monirea15, Los Angeles 3; St.
two hits In six Innings to pick up
coach Zane · Beegle end their Wright
thlsyear,"Langstonsald. "!was Louis 11, San Diego 5; and the win.
WP-Cr.ooks, Save-Taylor.
season
wlih a 12·7·2 record and
overthorwtng and rushing. It was Philadelphia 10, Houston 1.
Meigs jumped out on top In the
terrible. All I can do -is begin ·to
, Indians 7, Twins 3
bottom of the first when Jason
work out some of the problems
At Minneapolis, Mitch Webster Wright singled and· later scored
f. 'l ' '.
'
on a single by Mike .Walls. Meigs
m11de It 2.-0 In the second when
Terry Reuter led offthe Inning by
getting hit by ll pitch,Reuter then
stole second and third, then
----·------~~ -··~-­
.·
~·
scored on a wild pitch.
Wright led off the third with a
double, stole third and scored on
a single by Chris Stewart to give
the Marauders a 3-0 lead. And the
host made It a 4-0 game in the
sixth .when Walls singled, stole
second were he rode home on a
PRESCRIPTIONS~
base hit by Kevin Taylor.
Crooks had the Lancers off
stride . from the start allowing
only a · single In the second bY
A~TNA
Arnol!l and a slngl!l in the sixth by
Blake. Dennis Boothe tried his
.hand on the mound in the seventh
and the Lancers bunched a
double and 2 singles together
with a wild pitch to score three
•
.--~-----. ··
runs before Kevin Taylor picked
up the save by retiring the last
bat'ter.
Crooks struckiout 5, walked 1
and hit two batters In his 6
Kerut«h McCutlougft, FtPh.
Ch•l• Riffle. R. Ph.
Innings, Boothe went two thirds
Ronald Hlnning, A.Ph.
COMPLETE SEASON- The Meigs Mw,auilers
Kevin Taylor, Terry McGuire, Jeremy Phalln and
Mon. thnl Sat. 8:00a.m. t~ 9:00p.m.
of an Inning giving up 3 hits, and
l!nded their season Wednesday wltb a 4-3 win over
Tim Mays. Plclured In the second row Is Brian
··
Suftdll'f 10:00 a,m, to 4:00p.m.,
Taylor
retired
the
only
batter
he
Federal Hocklnc. Tbe Marauders llnl81ied 'the
PRESCRIPTIONS
PH. 992,2958
· Warner, .Tim Hall,. Dennis Boothe; Mike Walls,
·
faced.
: year With a lt-7-2 record overall and a 11·5 mark In
E, M•in
FrJtndly Service
Pom•oy. OH.
Eddie Crooks, Chris Stewarl and RAndy Hawley.
Jason
Wright
led
the
way
at
the
Opan We.. NiQhtt ·til 9 "
.the· TVC. In lhe front row from left lo rlcht Eric
Not plelured are head coach Zane Beegle and
'plate with a double and a single.
Heck, Jason Wright, Terry. Reuter,. Kevin Musser,.
asslslanl couh Terry All~.
Mike Walls added 2 singles.

1

Marauders slip past Lancers

ATTENTION

SCHOOL. EMPLOYEES. RETIREMENT
SYSTEM (SERS) OR OHIO MEMBERS:

.--··-

WE ARE AUTHORIZED BY ADNA TO
FILL YOUR
WE WILL
ELECTRONICALLY •SUBMIT THEM TO
AND YOU WILL BE
REIMBURSED YOUR PART BY ·ADNA. ·

SWISHER LOHSE

,.

- i'

a

the division leaders with a 14-hlt
attack off four Reds pitchers.
"Right now we are swinging at
quality pitches ·and we are
, getting hits," Van $1yke said.
"Going against a guy like Arm·
strong you have to be disciplined.
If you were writing an lnstruc·
tiona! book' on baseball, Page 1
would be to. be selective." ·
The Reds, riding a five-game
winning streak, were ready for
the challenge, but two of them
weren' I around fpr long.
Chris Sabo was ejected in the
first Inning after questionjng a
strike call. Mariano Duncan got
the. boot In the third Inning after
questioning an out call of his
attempted steal of third.

,.

tot

~

"What the heck's In the water
here (n Pittsburgh?" asked.Reds
Manager Lou Pln!ella ..
''He !Charlie Williams) never
talked to nie," Sabo said . ' 'I don't
respect someone who can't g,ive
me an explanation. I play the
game With emotion and I have
the right to question anything. I
asked him where the second
pitch was. Maybe in stronger
terms, but I didn't call him any

. Entry fee Is $35 per team. A
roster and registration mils t be
. rl!turned with entry fee to South·
ern High Football cqac.h David
Gaul by 7 p.m . Friday evening,
May 11.
c'onc'ess!ons wlll be avallable
and all proceeds will go to benefit
the Southern High Football
program.
Coach Gaul also Indicated that
students In the Southern District
and entire reading should make
plans 'to attend this summer's
Southern High Football camp.
Plans are currently in the mak·
ing, but Gaul indicated that this.
year's camp will be a specialties
type -·camp, where lnstructlori
will be given In specific areas,
such as linebackers, linemen,
etc . 'Look for upcoming details In
a future Issue of Tpe Dally
Sentinel.

BACKYARD VOLLEYBALL TOURNAMENT
SATURDAY, MAY 12, 1M-Starting at 1:00 p.m.
At Southem High School Football Field
Toumameot In held out-of-doors """ rain or shine
'

,.

'

1

'

•

Teams can have up to7 member•- bUt •muat ha\le at least 8.
Team~ can CIMIBt of any eomblnatlon of mea and wanen.
Th«e are no aae limits.
·

sunoco1
10W40or
Motor Oil

Tournarnent wll be n~•ln double elimination style.
TI'Gphles-awarded all team members of 1st. Zlld, 3rd place tea-.:na

L.Jm1112

ENTRY Fl!l!: l31.110 per team.
Roster aad rte~MraUon mut be re&amp;uraed with e•try fee to .
Clu~h Dan G•ul bJ 7:00p.m. Friday evenlrip;, May 11.

Team captain: I. _ _ _ _ _ _ _.:,___ __ __

'

3. _ _ _ _ _......;_ _-'-

•

•

;_ Chicago rallies· to .top.·76ers
·. By United Press lnternallonal
The Bulls scored 32 points ir!'
: Try as they might, the Phlla· quarter and Jordan had 15. They
delphia '76ers cannot make Ml· outscored the 76ers 19-71n the last
chael Jordan go away. They five minutes and led 78·77 enter. couldn't do it In Game I, and they ing the las.t period. ·
: couldn't do it In Game 2.
.
"'I could feel the intensity, the
· This does not bode well for the momentum of the game shift,"
··.76ers, who return home for Game Jordan said.
. • 3 Friday night traillng this
While Jordan electrified Chi·
; l)est-of·seven Eastern Confer- cago Stadium during the quarter,
• ence semifinal 2-0.
. Philadelphia's Charles Barkley
: : : The 76ers have yetto win on the produced nothing but static. He
.;.toad in the playoffs. They beat went scoreless and finished with
· "theCavaiiers in five games In the 16 points, only 2 In the second
first round holding the home· half.
court advantage. But for Phila"They double-teamed the· hell
delphia to advance they must win out of me," Barkley sald.'"So I .
at least once at Chicago Stadium. passed It .every t!me. ••
·
; On Wednesday night in Chi·
eago, Jordan scored 15 of his 45
Jordan went 18 of 36 from the
i&gt;olnts in the critical third quar· floor
and scored his team's last 8
ter, rallying the Bulls from a
Pippen added 16.
points.
16-point deficit to a 101-96 victory. For theScot\le
76ers,
.
Hawkins
: "That's why he's Michael had 23 points Hersey
and
Barkley
19
.Jordan," Philadelphia Coach · rebounds. ·
Jim Lynam said. "If you want a
'
. furnlng point, that:s lt."
1
· Late In the flrst ·half, the Bulls
' We were 16 pOints down there
trailed 54-38. The third period, and weren't ready to lose," the
however, belonged to Jordan.
Bulls' Stacey King said. ·

,,

The other best-of-seven quarterfinal serle.s resume Thursday
.night: New York, down 1-0, at
Detroit; Portland, up 2·0, at San
Antonio; and Phoenix, up 1-0, ai
the Lakers.

MegulaJ'S
wax

byc~~~~r:~~~~ ~~j~~~~ist of

most of the Southern High
Coaching staff, Including Head
Varsity Mentor Howle Caldwell;
Assistant Coaches Tony Deem
and Scott Wickline;. Junior High
Coaches Mick Winebrenner and
Jim Lawrence; Southern girls
coach Bill Baer, and instructor$
Gordon Fisher, Marvin McKel·
vey, Brad Maynard, Chris
Murphy, and Chad Taylor.
Also senior members of the
varsity team, Andy Baer, Todd
Grhidsiaff,' aJld Jeremy Rose Will

be on had to assist with camp.
Each day a s~clal guesf wlli
be present to talk to the campers
and among those already com·
muted are Charlie McAfee,
Forl'll.fr Athens High Coach and
member of the Oh lo Coaches Hall .
of Fame; Alexander High Vajsity Coach &lt;Jay Rees; Coach
Doug Foote, the University of Rio
Gtande Girls basketball and
softball coach; and Trim!:lie High
Varsit:v, Coach Paul. Petit.
Each camper will receive a
T-shirt and basketball with his
registration, plus there will be
IndividUal contests' Including:
Free Throw Shooting, One-ol)·
one competition, 3-on·J competl· . ·
tion: and a P.I.G. contest.
Cost for· the·camp is $35 .
Checks should be made pay a·
ble to Howle Caldwell, Box 263,
Racine, Ohio 45771.
The camp Is limited to grades
3·8 inclusive. Each camper will
be placed with players near his
own age group.

REGISTRATION roBM•
3RD ANNUAL TORNADO BASKETBALL CAMP

N A M E : - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . , . A • G I : -· -

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Coach Howle . Caldwell has
already announced plans for the
upcoming Third Annual South·
ern Tornado Basketball Camp to
be held June 25-29 from 9 a.m:to
12 noon at Southern High School.
Caldwell Indicates that the
purpose of the camp is to feature
the fundamentals essential to
produce winning basketba)l,
many of which are the ones used

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From left to rlgh are Brian
Boothe, Mike Walls, Ed CrookS, ChrlsStewartand
Randy Hawley.

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MHS SENIORS - Seniors who closed oul their
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· "They are scoring runs, swtng·
ing the bats well and playing
good baseball, " Plnlella sald·Of
the Pirates . " But we'll be~ back
tomorrow . I don 't think !Tues·
day's) day off helped. When
you 're w!nn(ng )IOU dpn't wan,t a
day off. It makes you a lillie
s lugglsh ."

.. ALL DEVON

"!"•

Southern Hlih School Football rrocrun

•

The Reds knocked SmUey from
the game after the Pirate 'lefthander had retired 12 straight
with the aid of a double play.
Billy Hatcher doubled and scored
on pinch-hitter Ken Griffey's
force out off Bill Landrum who
w,arked the final three Innings for
his fourth save.

Couch completes
.third year at Rio

Volleyball tourney May 12 .· ·
The First Annual Ba'c kyard
Volleyball Tournament ·will be
held ihls Saturday, May 12, at the
Southern High School Football
field beginning at 1 p.m. rain or
shine.
The entire tournament will be
held outside and will go on as
scheduled even if bad weather
sets ln.
Teams can have up seven
.members per team, but must
have at least six, and can consist
of any comblnatiQn of men and
women. There are no age limits,
however, . teams with players
\ under.. age 18 musthhave a
release form signed by their
. parents to participate .
· The tournament wlli be run In
double elimination formal and·
trophies will be awarded to all
team members of first, second,
and third place teams.

And the complete opposite
from last summer.
" You have to remember one
thing," Van Slyke said of last
year's 744·88 record . " If you take
any ballclub that wop last year,
take tl!elr catcher, first baseman, centerfield and stopper out,
they are not a very good ballclub.
No.t,onW were we unhealthy, but
we stunk. And ! 'was the lop head ·
on the totem pole."
But Van Slyke led the .attack
Wednesday.
The Pirates took a 1-0 first
inning lead on Barry Bonds'
two-out RBI single. Cincinnati
tied it In the second on Joe
Oliver's two-out single.
Jenni Couch, a 5·5junlorguard
Jay Belfs triple and Van
for the University of Rio Grande Slyke's RBI groundo1,1t In the
women's basketball team, re- third gave the Pirates a 2·1 edge
cently completed her third sea· and It stayed that WI\Y until the
sixth,' when nine men batted.
son wltll the Redwomen.
Couch played In all30 games Iii
Armstrong had retired nine
1989·90 and was a starter In 27. straight.before Van Slykes!ngled
She averaged, 7.3 points and 3.5 ' ' to open the sixth and scored on
assists per game, and was Bobby Bonilla's double, .chasing
ranked third In the Mid-Ohio Armstrong. Jose Lind, Smiley
· Conference in assists.
·and Wally Backman eached
In addition, she was .one of the knocked In runs off Tim Layana
team's ·leading foul shooters, that· were charged to Tim Blrt·
ending the season at 78.6 percent sas, who Initially relieved
from the line.
•
Armstrong.
The Redwomen were 18·12
"I made the pitches I wanted
overall for the season and placed 'to." said Armstrong, 5·1. "But
second In the Mid · Ohlo they hit the ball where 'they .
· Conference.
wanted to. ·But I'll see them
"A very scrappy player, Jennl again. I have. a lot better' Idea of
was also very good defensively how I want to ,pitch to them. Alii
and played a key role In our · knew · was from the scouting
press, " Rio Grande.Coach Doug ·reports, but nothing beats first·
Foote remarked.
h~nd experience."
Armstrong allowed four runs
A mathematics major, Couc!J
Is the dau'ghter of Robert and on nine hits and struck out two In
Isabelle Couch of Pomeroy.
five innings .
names until! got thrown ou t."
Both teams received art added
shot from the ejection.
"II took me a while to get In the
groove," said Smiley, whq went
six innings, allOwing two runs on
seven hits and striking out three .
"Then the two gu·ys got ~!eked
out of the line- up and helped
loosen things up afttle .bit. And
the guys were mak gall kinds of
plays out there be ind me. It's a
gr_e at feeling .' '

we're on a winning streak ... "
The P.lrates won the meeting of

Concesa&amp;ona available. AD proeeedl to beneOt

,.

The Daily Sentinel-~6

Poma-oy-Middleport. Ohio

PITfSBURGH (UPI) - The
Pittsburgh Pirates faced as big a
test as a team can justthesecond
month Into a season.
The first-place Pirates have
won five straight on the way to a
19·8 start, their best since 1977
·when they were20·7. But most of
the damage ·has been done
against t~:&gt;ams under .500.
Until Wednesday night, that Is ,
when they.beat previously unde. feated Jack Armstrong anti the ·
hot Cincinnati Reds 6·2.
•'Maybe we are in over our
heads," said-Andy VanSlyke who
went 3 for 4 with one RBI and a
run scored. ''But If we are, I hope
we stay over our heads lfor
another five months .''
After ·struggling from start to
finish In 1989, the Pirates have
opened 1990 as If they can do
notiJing wrong from -pitching
staff witb the league's best ERA
' to fielding to hitting.
They beat a Clnctnnatl team
with one of the best records in
baseball and a list of statistics
just as ill'lpressive ·as the
Pirates'.
·
"I think we were all pumped
up," said winning pitcher John
Sm Uey, 3·3. "We were going
against a guy 5-0 (Armstrong),

Pharmacy

;

1~90

Pirates roll over Reds 6-2; Annstrong dealt firs~ defe~t

Clemens stops Seattle for 1OOth Major League victory .·.· · .
By DAVE RAFFO
. UPI Sports Writer ·
, Roger Clemens extended his
dominance over the Seattle Marlners, while the Baltimore Or!·
oles broke Mark Langston 's
.mastery·over them.
·. Clemens pitched a tour-hitter
. Wednesday night for his 100th
career victory, giving the Boston
Red SolC a 4·1 trlU!JlPh over the
Mariners.
The Orioles defeated Langston
:. for the first time In three years,
·:. w!nnlnga9-1rout 0 vertheAngels
: at California that included Cal
:· Rlpken' s becoming the third
• shortstop In major league history
.
: to hit 200 homers.
; : The only bright spot for the
·~ Mariners was Alvin Davis' s
·· one-out homer in the seventh to
, : end Clemens' shutout streak
·· against Seattle at 40 1·3 l~nlngs.
.: Including 251·3 at the Klngdome.
• By thEm, Clemens was Well on
· his WI!Y to a 4·1 victory, backed
: by Boston homers by Carlos ·
-: Quintana, Luis Rivera and Tony
· Pena.
The victory was Clemens' fifth
of the season and his sixth
: straight over the Mariners. Seat: tie was thf! foU for Clemens when
: he set the major league record
• for strikeouts April 29, 1986.
:
"My 20 strikeout game was
•: against these guys," Clemens
: said. "So, II was only !tiling l got
:· my tooth victory here."
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�PlJQ8-6-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
,.

Thursday, May 10, 1990

The Deily Sentinel-Page

Commuriity calt;ndar ·
Lodge No. 453 will meet Thurs·
d ay at 8 p.m. a~ the Chester lodge
·hall. Work In the master mason
degree: All master masons are
Invited to attend.

THURSDAY
POMEROY · -The Pomeroy
Group of AA and At-Aeon will
meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the
JTPA office In Pomeroy . For
more Information. c a l l
1....:800-333-5051. ~

GALLIPOLIS -'-The Diabetic
Support Group will meet Thurs·
qay at 7 p.m In the French 500
Room at Holzer Medical Cent~r .

~OMEROY - Rock Sp.rlngs
Grange wtll meet at 8 p.m.
Thursday at the hall.

RACINE -There· wtll .be a 1
consignment auction sponsored
by the Racine !3oY Scout Troop
244 at the Racine American
Legion Hall on Thursday at 6
p.m. There will also be a bean
and cornbread or spaghetti
dinner beginning at 1 p.m. at the
hall.
.

POMEROY - The Preceptor
Beta Beta. Chapter, Beta Sigma
Phi Sorority will nieet Thursday
at .7:30 p.m . at the Grace
EpJscopal Church In Pomeroy.
Installation of officers will be
conducted.

.

POMEROY -The Senior Cit!·
POMEROY - The Amerl.care
zens Dance Club will have a Pom~roy Nursing Center will
round and s quar~ dance _on host a Mother's Day Tea and
Friday from 8-11 p.m. at the Fashion Show In the courtyard on·
senior cltlzeris center In Pome· Friday at'3:30 p.m.
roy . Music will l:le provided l:ly
the Happy Hollow Boy s of
MIDDLEPORT -There will
Athens .. Bring snacks lor the . be a mother-daughter.l:lanquet
snack tal:lle.
at the Victory Baptlst ·Church In
Middleport on Friday at 6 p.m.
POMEROY - The Return Jon- Mrs. JaWanda Varney will be the
athan Meigs Chapter Daughters guest speaker.
of the American RevolutJol) will
meet Friday at 1 · p.m: at the
SATURDAY
home of Mrs . Dwight Milhoan.
RUTLAND -The Rutland ·
Rlch Jones will be the .,guest Firemen's Auxiliary will l:le
speaker.
having a bake sale Satl!rday
beginning at 9 a.m. at the

Drama company to perform

l

The New Life Drama Company
Of Cleveland, Tenn. wUI be at the
New Life Covenant Church of
God of Chester on Saturday for a
·service at 7 p.m. and on Sunday
for the 10: 30 a.m . service. Both
music and draina are Included In
their presentatiOns.
.
Since starting on the road
full-time In June, 1983, the New
Life Drama Company lias tra·
veled extensively In the United
States and administered t_nterna·
tlonally In thousands of services

Rutland Department Store.

POMEROY -Valley View
Softball Complex of Buffalo wlll
POMEROY -The Royal Oak · hold an open men' s softball
Dance Clql:l will have a ·dance
tournament. Entry lee Is $70.
Saturday from 8-11 p.m. at
Traveling expenses will l:le
Royal Oak Resort. Music will be
awarded to the top three te ams.
by Orlando Columoo and guests
To enter, call ~ er ry Borwn at
may attend for $15 per ~ouple .... 685-6353.
The Ohio State University Ballroom Formation Dance Team
BURLINGHAM -The Burwill also perform.
lingham Modern Woodmen will
meet Saturday at 7 p.m . A ·
RUTLAND ..,.The Brother's potluck dinner In ol:lservance of .
Quartet from Virlglnia will be at Mother's Day wllll:le held. Meat,
the Rutland Church of God in roll, and coffee will be furnlshC\1.
Rutland at 7 p.m. The pul:llic Is Members ~e to bring a covered
Invited to attend.
·
dish ,
,

MAY 14th

POMEROY -The United Mine
',
Workers. Supporters Group wtll
FRIDAY
meet Thursday at 6 p.m . at
Pl~aser's
Restaurant. All .
CHESHIRE - . The Gallla
ml!mbers and Interested 9partles Meigs Community Aclion
Agency will have a free clothing
are urged to attend . .
day on Friday at the old high
REEDSVILLE -There will be school building in Cheshire from
a meeting oft he junior an (I senior 9 a.m. to noon.
parents of Eastern High School
POMEROY - Rite Aid Phar·
on Thursday at 7 p.m. at the high
macy In Pomeroy will have free ·
school.
blood pressure clinic on Friday
CHESTER -The Shade River from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.

TO GRAnllATE FRIDAY - Atternoon . Class Southern
Klnder11arten,, Melissa Blaek, PhUilp Sml.lh, Dally mll, Chris
Burris, Amy Wilson, Tyler Johnson, Donald Bush, Ma&amp;lhew
Jo!mson, Lori Sayre, Amber .Duff)-, and .Jeremy PuDins. Middle
row: Bridgett Alklns, Anlhoay Barber, Elttab.eth B.trd, Ruillell
Krfder, Garrison Davis, lao.Wlse, .J ames Rose, Eva Kiser, Tllflny

Judith L. Mees of Pomeroy, a
Graduate students must have no
senior accounting student at Ohio . less than a 3.8 and s tud!mts in the
University, was one of more than College of Osteopathic Medicine
100 Initiated In Phi Kappa Phf · must hjive at least a 3.6.
. during ceremonies held Sunday
Phi Kappa Phi Is a national
ln 'the Baker Center ballroom at
scholastic honor society with
Ohio University.
·-,.
headquarters at Louisanna State
To be ellgll;lle for Induction . Unlverstly and chapters at 251
undergraduate seniors must colleges and ·universities
rank In the upper seven percent
throughout the nation. Founded
ol:thelr degree college and have
In 1897 to recognize academic
at·.Ieast a 3.5 grade point average excellence In all disciplines, It .
on a 4.0 scale. Undergraduates in
has · honored more t hl!n 1,100
the final quarler of their junior §Cholars with awards.
year With at least a 3.8 are also
ellgil:lle.
.
HUIIAID'S GIHNIIOUSE
Honors Tutorial Colleg~ stu.dents must be In the final year of AIIIIIUifiiJ ,,,1~1
their programs wlthat least a 3.5.

By WILLIAM C. TRO'l'l'
United Press Jnternallonal
NEW KENNEDY HEIR: CaroUne Kennedy Schlossberg and
her husband, de~lgner Edwln·Schlossl:lerg, came up with an
unusual name for their second child ·- Tallana. The 7-pound,
10·ounce baby, who Is the second grandchild for. Jacqueline
Kennedy Onassls, was oorn Saturday at New Yorl\ Hospital.
"Both mother and · baby are doing well," said Nancy
Tuckerman, a spolleswoman lor OnasslS. "Mrs. Onassis Is, of
course, delighted ..'·' Tuckerman said the l:laby's lull name ls
Tatiana Cella Ken11edy Schlossl:lerg and she prol:lal:lly will be ·
called Tanya. "The Tall ana is after the lateTallana Grossman,
founder of Universal Limited Art Editions and a line
lithographer for whom Ed Schlossl:lerg worked and whom he
admired," Tuckerman said. "Celia Is for Ed's grandl)lother."
The Schlossl:lergs' other daugbter, Rose, will be 2 In June. ·

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NO. LAKE LADY BIRD: Lady Bird .Johnson says she s too
mode9t to have a parHon of the Colorado River named for.he~ II)
}\us tin, Texas; Mayor Lee C!)!)ke had suggeste'1 that the part of
the river -known as Town Lake..., be renam.d for the (orm·e r
first lady·but she wrote him letter.asklng htm to reeonslder .
"You .caughl me l:ly surprlSe and I feel I must ask you to set Ibis
iltea aside," t-he wife of Lyndon Johnson wrotl! ..'.'l wlllfeel very
. self-conscious ·tflt Is named for me and I must ask you to foll.ow
my long-held wish:" In accordance with her wish, the (::tty
Council canc_eled . a Tuesday hearing on the proposed name
change . ."Nat~rally I was disappointed that she elected one
more time to say no," Cooke said, " but, again, I have to really
· respect Mrs. Johnson and really follow her wlslies, " Johnson's
support Is credited with turning th~ shore's of Tpwn Lake, which
flows through downtown Austin, into a huge park with a popular
hlke-and-l:llke trail.
GLiMPSESj. Robin Williams and Whoop! Goldberg took their
· Comic. Relief act to Capitol Hill Wednesday· to campaign for a·
l:llll to help the homeless~ "We c·annot be a kinder, l:llinder
nation," Williams told the Senate Laoor and Human Resources
Committee. "We've l:leen holding the fort and waiting for the
cavalrv You are the cavalry." Williams and Goldberg, whc
woulci ti~ve l:leen joined by BlllyCryslallf he hlidn' t fallen Ill, got .
a warm reception from the senators and Sen. Howard
Metrenba·um, D·Oh.lo, buttered up Williams by saying he should
have won an Oscar for "Dead Poets Society" ... Singer Maureen
McGovern and actress Olympia Dukakls were special guests
· Tuesday night as John Williams marked his ninth anniversary
as head of the Bosto.n Pops. Steven Spiell:lerg, who used
Williams to score many of his movies, had l:leen scheduled to
attend but canceled l:lecause his girlfriend, Kate Capshaw, Is
. aoout to give l:lirth in .Cailfornla.

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· HOPE IN RED SQUARE' Bob Hope was among ihe
thousands In Red Square Wednesday watching the Soviets strut
their military might In the '45th anniversary celebration of the
defeat of Nazi Germany. As he hurried away alter watching the
procession o( tanks, missiles an.d soldiers, Hoj&gt;e said. "It ain't a
Rose Parade." Hope performed Tuesday night for aoout 300
menil:lers of the U.S. Embassy staff and.l:llew a line duriog the ·
show when ·he made a reference to hundreds of Air -Force
personnel In ttie· crowd. Hope apparently still was using the
' script from ·an earlier show at the Rhein Main Air Base In
FranJ&lt;lurt, West Germany. Brooke Shields, Rosemary Clooney..
and Miss Universe Mona Gndl joined Hope for the
performance, which willl:le broadcast on NBC May 19.

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TV TIME FOR WAITE'S OPPONENT: Ralph Walle's acting
work is creating free television time for Jeff Jacobs, Waite's
opponent lor the . Democratic nomlnatlnon for the 37th
congressional district In California. Waite appeared in a
Tuesday night' eplSode of NBC's " Shannon's Deal" so, Iinder
federal equal-tlnie rules , t!le Los Angeles affiliate KNBC will
have Jacobs on a pul:lllc affairs program ~ext month lor 15
minutes·- the amount of time Waite appeared on ''Shannon's
· Deal." KMIR, the NBC station In Palm Springs, also plans to
give Jacobs air time before June 5, whenWaite squares of! with
Jacobs In tht"Primary election .

,,,,

The Letart Township Commun4 IN. HARDY MUMS log. 11.00
Ity Association has collected $401 - NOW ISc ... - 10 FOR s7so
for the fire truck fund Of the
I 0 INCH HANGING'IAsms
Racine Fire Department.
REG. 15.50 NOW S4,.
Contributions are still l:leing
REG. 16" NOW $§75
taken and residents not contacted In •the house to house
AU SIIRUDERY &amp; TREES
sotlcitatlon may contact Luda •
20% Off
Anderson, 2474555, or leave their
s,lo Ctllltlnull 'lllr. .hMI Tlio S..on
doiJatloi!S at the O&amp;R Tackle Box , HUIIAID'S GHENHOUSE
In ;&gt;.Dtlqulty.
SJIACUSI, 0110
Next meeting of the .Assocla·
992-5776
tlon will lie held on June 11 at 7
0Den Dei;; i5· Sun. 1·&amp;
p.m. at the Tackle Bc?x.

FRIDAY 9:00 '"
SATURDAY 9:00

TANDY
1000 HX

&lt;

AU IEDDING PlANTS
3 PIS 1100 .

Fund raising
underway for
n~w fire·truck

.

of Winning a spot on the govern-..
lng body , said Sarah Suks, .
politics editor for the campus .·
newspaper, the Dally.Bruln.
Rather than a protest; "I think :
It was just a prank. It was just a
few Individuals who wanted to be
Iunny," she said.
She said records sh()l!' no Bart. ·
Slmpsonenrolle&lt;jatUCLA,sothe •
wrlte-lns In last week's election .
must have l:leen for the cartoon •
character.

People in the news

Mees initiated into honorary

'

Carpenter, J'liClhole Wolle, and Roberta Fore~~ler. Front Row:
Crall Johnson, ,Janet Craig, Ch~riAa Barnes, Mlkle Myers,
Robert Forester, Andrea Lon11,1ke ~pperson, Billie Joe McNeely,
TabathA Law&amp;O!t, Trlavt._ Chl.'drlllll!. and Tanya Baker. Absent, Jut
Matson and, VIola Youq. Graduation Is May 1, 7:30 p.m. at
Southern Junlor Rlllh·
·

LOS ANGELES (UP!) ·- Hey .
don't have a cow, man, but
student government at UCLA
will have to get along withOut
Bart Simpson.
Bart, the anti-establlSh!Tlent
son In the quirky cartoon family
on Fox Televisl~n·s ' 'The Simpsons. " garnered aoout lOwrlte-ht .
votes during UCLA's primary
ballOting for 13 posts on the
undergraduate Student Council.
That fell aoout 2 200 votes short
.

a

20t6

utilizing drama and music to
proclaim the Gospel of Jesus
Chris t.
Gary Hines, pastor of the ·. ·
Chester Church, Invites tile put); .' '·
lie to attend. Atthe6p.m. SundaY, ..
evening service at the church
there will be special music by ·'
l&lt;aren Shaner. Regular services
Included Sunday school at 9: 30
a.m. and worship service at 10: 30. ·,
a.m. on Sundays,. and dJscipleshlp class at 7 p.m. on
Wednesdays.

Bart Simpson a write-in loser at UCLA.

'

TUPPERS PLAINS -The
Tuppers Plains VFW Post 9053
will meet Thursday at 8 p.m. at
the post home.
·(

t

7.·.

•'

••••
· NOW

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Pega 8-lbe. Daily Sentinel

..•

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Thun~day. May 10, 19BQ

Pomeroy- Middlepol't. Ohio

Second woman drops out ·

of .- SNL show 'ovet; Clay

'

Staclenls ~ycotl McDonald's
began.
"I don't know If it's what made
. DES MOINES, Iowa (UPI) About 60 elementary.students at them more disagreeable ... but I
·: a Des Moines-area school have think taking the eggs may have
.: sworn olfBigMacsandburgers something to do .wlth It," said
~ until McDonald's becomes more
Thibault.
' environmentally conscious, a
Wl~lifeexpertssaidtheduck s'
-~ teacher said.
behavior poses no threat of
: The fifth• and sixth-grade InJury.
' students at Four Mile Elemen"If you' re not used to it and a
-~ tary SChool say they will boycott
great big duck nibbles your arm.
·:, the Golden Arches because It could be frightening," said Gill
:: McDo,n ald's uses damaging plas- Monteiro, Interim director of the
• tic foam packages, according to Wildlife Care · Center In Fort
.: Rodney Hllplpre, a social studies . Lauderdale.
:· teacher who has been talking
"But I've never knowri these
: about environmental Issues In ducks to &lt;JCiually attack," she
::. class recently.
said. "They'll (ieck at you but It 's
•• The students did . their own their way of communicating.
: grilling Tuesday when they In- They're frustrated. They're look~ vited two Des Moines-area
lng for affection to fuUflll their
.. McDonald's executives to their motherly Instinct."
-: class.
It Is·annoying, however. espe: Frank Glas and Duane Selbe- clallyforolderpeoplelessableto
;; rUng, who supervise nine of the maneuver around duck
f. tast food restaurants, received droppings.
·
c letters from the school from
"I like ducks but I don't like
~· students worried about poiysty- . getting slobbered on .or getting
, rene containers.
my nylons . ripped by hordes of
~· The students did their homethose big, Ugly ducks," Thibault
: work ,before the meeting and said.
' bluntly told the officials the
The egg removal campaign
:: plasUc foam harms the environhas drawn somecomplaints from
~ ment by filling up landfills. They
animal rights activists, but wild~ asked the executives why McDolife experts said It does not harm
.• nald's does not llfll! recyclable the ducks ,
n paper.
·
"It Isn't cruel," Monteiro said.
~- China Wong, an 11-year-old in
'The baby ducks_aren't going to
; the group, said adults don't suffer. The female will rebreed
~ believe children take the environ: 1 a'nd lay a.gal.n. · You eat eggs,
· • ment seriously,
.
don't you? '
:- The two corporate representa- ·
;, tlves said they were ·s urprised at
Go lien: Pack a flAk Jacket
;· the knowledge · dlspiayed by :: with your woods B!ld Irons ·
: quesUons from the stmtents.
· BELFI\ST IUPI) . - Flak
~ They argued McDonald's Is
Jackets may be more suitable.
"'making progress by using
than tweed knickers for golfers
. thlnnerfoampackagesandstart- on a new course in Northern.
· lng a recycling p~oJect, called Ireland, where Irish extremists
McCycle, at 4 percent of Its fast
have long battled British troops.
food restaurants nationwide.
But James Quinn. an optimist,
They also noted the chain. has · converted his 100-acre farm In
stop~Je'~ using pllistic foam conCounty Armagh Into an 18-hole
talnlnll chlorofluorocarbons,
course, saying the locals In the
which damage the ozone layer. . area needed more leisure
·The boycotters reinaln unconfacilities.
· vinced. Brian ~osenow, 11, said
"There Is no golf course In this
· Btg Macs are his favorite food
area and I believe the people are
but he won't touch them until
entitled to one;" he said. "Be. McD,o nald's stops using plastic
sides, fhls Is a beautiful part of
foam.
the country and I'm sure It will
attract a lot of tourists."
• Duell atlaeb leave resldeiiU
More than· 400 people have
IHJUBW... already paid Quinn an annual
PEMBROKE PINES, Fla.
subscription of $328 to join the
(IJPI) -A campaign to control
Ashfield Golf Club, which opens
the burgeilnlng Muscovy duck
June 22.
population by stealing tbelr eggs
·They are apparent~v unconmay have backfired, prompting cerned by British military actlvltleslnthearea,andtheoutlawed
tbe ducks to !leek revenge by
, attacking humans, local reslIrish Republican Army's at.
tempts to stop them In their bid to
dents say.
Some residents at the Century · endBrltlshrulelntheprovlnceso
V!Uage retirement complex beIt can be united with the Irish
lleve the ducks are frustrated by · Republic. · _..
·
tbe eeg-pllferlng and are pecking
Lord Merlyn Rees, the former
humans as an emotional
British secretary of state for
response.
.:.,.. Northern . Ireland, called the
'
region "bandit.country" because
Another theory holds that the lt Is the scene of frequent
ducks have grown used to being ambushes and bombings by the
· fed by humans, and the attacks IRA, which virtually controls Its
are simplY·· a signal that the rolling green hills.
_
•
Given Its history of conflict, the
animals are hul)gry.
"How can you figure what's In
new golf course will offer a new
.fbe mind of a duck?" asked City twist to life In theprovlnce. The
Compllssloner Kitty Thibault; golfers will try to shoot birdies
executive coordinator of the Instead ot each other and to stay
Condominium Owners of Pemout of bunkers ra.t her than diving
broOk Pines Association.
for them.
Whatever the cause, residents
at the Century Village and
nearby neighborhoods have com..-- plalned of Increasingly frequent
attacks by the fat, prolific •and
Marrtqe rate
unloved Muscovles.
Maintenance crews at the
Tbe number !II mamaaea In 1988
complex and residents through- wu
Z.SII,OOO - 1 pertllellt fewer than
out Pembroke Pines have been In ltl1. Tbe nat•l marriage rate
removing duck eggs from nests fell by 2 pereat, from 9.8 per 1,000
for about a year. They Insist the populatloa In ltl1 to 1.7 Ia ltl8. Thil
duck attacks have grown more wu tbe lowest marriage rate since
common- since ihe _program lt17.

MOTHER'S DAY
SPECI;\L ;. .

FIIDAY, MAY 11 &amp; SA1UIDAY, lilY 12
11 A.M.·I P.M.
Fried Chicken, Chicken &amp; Dun~Diings·

May 9th thru Ma)j l~tll

TERS...!!t.!].!:!!.......... ;,NOW Sl,91
SCARVES.;... ~.IJ:.!~:!t., ......... r.qw ~3.91
·•······~·····•··········•·········•········~· 1/3 OFF
· Mothers. Stop in atid pick up a flow..- on • ·
. Friday, ~y I~ th, 9 a.m. to S p.m;

· Steak and Gravy, Meaf Balls, •ish . .
. ·. Lots More
·. · ' .

.·s ., , . . . . . 4 . l~~elutll~t~

l- .

RACINE DEPARTMENT STORE '

311 SIUI

'.'lr.::HrNr; I liN ;; r

OliO

MASTER

lcM1Iil

H11VI N.';'.VIItl': :.

·

., 'I(''"
,;'I I 1 ' ' I ,]
'
! IP

•

Anderson's Mother's D~y Savings Are In Full Swing.Shop No-w ·
-· -..
·..
and Save On. Hollie,
Furnishings Sure To Please Any Mom.
.
'

'

'

•.

0 ,

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.M ·o. T H E R' S D A Y
~

·... Sunday, May 13th
fot

,..,'!

~

·.

In Wichita In November at
National Convention.
Women 's Activities Chairman
Catherine Colwell thanked those
who held with and/or contributed
to the Pomona Grange Bake Sale
recently. She also reported that
pork Is high In protein and Is good

-

THIS ECHO TRIMMER .IS
THE PERFECT COMBINATION
OF PRICE, POWER AND
PERFORMANCE.
REGULARLY $219.99

for you.
·
There were 19 members and 7
Juniors present for the meeting.·
The next meeting will he
Saturday, May 19 at 6:30 p.m. at
the Grange Hall. A potluck
supper will be held at 6:30 p.m.
followed by fun night activities.
'

'

Spring
Values!

.

Stakeout nabs headstone thieves
NEW YORK 1UP!) -Two men · · keswoman Sgt . Tina Mohrmann.

were caught red-handed early
Thursday snatching copper
headstones from a Brooklyn
cemetery, pollee said .
The suspected thieves were
nabbed at 1:45 a.m . after 83rd
Precinct officers on a stakeout
caught them pitching the tombstones "over a fence and Into a
shopping cart," said Pollee spo-

The two- identified as Robert
Glover, 33, of Brooklyn, and Tony
Davis, 29, a homeless man were caught with three tombstones from Most Holy Trinity
Cemetery, Mohrl)'lann said.
The cemetery has had a total of
66 copper headstones worth
abput $50,000 stolen In the las t
mont!), Mohrmann said.
TWelve · tombstones were
ripped · !rom the ground and
taken . sometime Tuesday night ·
from the cemetery.
Officer Arithony Mazzola,
·another pollee spokesman, had
speculated Wednesday that the
tombstone thieves "must be
melting thein down and selling
1the copper)."

SRM1501
LIGHTWEIGHT AND
POWERFUL • THIS
DOUBLE EDGED 19.7"
HEDGE TRIMMER MAKES
YOUR TRIMMING A BREEZE.
!tEGULARLY $259.99

HC1500
'.

•

GRASS TRIMMER STARTING AS LOW.AS $139.99
POWER BLOWERS STARTING AS LOW AS $139.99

I

· Davis and-Glover were nabbed ' ·
by Officer Rosario Rizzo of the
83rd Precinct's anti-crime .unit.
Both were charged with criminal trespass, grand larceny and
criminal possession of stolen
property.

.

.., .....'
,.

~···
... t

.

\·-~ "'.

.

RACINE
. '
EAGLE RIDGE SMALL ENGINE
17169 EAGLE RIDGE ROAD- 949-2969

•

STOClC NO.

12o6c
146&amp;A

1978 K BLAZER ..................................... Reduced To S2995
1988 GMC Sierra 'sLE 4X4 ............................,. Now 510,995

Loaded. Was •11.495

1514A

1986 C-10 Pickup..................................................... Only S7695·'

V-8, like new.

1s11A
1094A

·

.

·

1988 Nisson Pathfinder 4X4 .............. Reduced to S12,900

Air,

~

speed.

~OW-BACK

HIGH~IACK

SPRING BASE
. CHAIR
SALE

$85

·

SPRINGBASE '
CHAIR ':
SALE

1s1oa

1987 Chevrolet Blazer Tahoe ............~ ........... Only 51 0,900

Sptlng.fi•·Up

For. Mom and her special
day, ~top in and c~oose
. from a wide variet,. of
'.
gifts sure to please
, - ..... "
•COLOGNES
.
•nMEX WATCHES •••••••••••;................. 30% OFF
•RUSSELL STQVER BOXED CANDY
•15 INCH SIUC FLOWER BASKETS ........ S2 4.9S
•12 INCH SIUC FLOWER BASKETS ........ S14.9S

WALLPAPER SALE

...

·

'

POMEROY CROCKS Dated 1840•1990

25°/o OFF
SEL~(T

'oNLY

,

FROM

HASSOCK SALE .

Reg. 517.99 HASSOCK ............ Sale $1439
Reg. 524.99 HASSOCK .............Salt $·1999
reg. 533.99 HASSOCK:.:.........Sal-. $2719

$1600

ANNIVERSARY
SAVINGS
..
ARE STILL CONT.NUING ON
·.

#14621

6 cyl., one owner.

11481A

Washer &amp; Dryers
•Serta Bedding
•Living loom furniture
•..
•Occasional Tables
•Dinint Room Furniture
•Metal Cabinets
· ·•Plus More.
•Sylvania TV's

.

Sto' In

3-PIECE .
EARLY AMERICAN-

trtd See
1k18 Plut

LIVING ROOM
#14008

''

..

992-6669 .

992-3671 .

:Jim
r=:l

~
~~~~~---~---~~---1.''.•

..........

.- --:

. F-.nuiL A.PPuAIKU, 1¥'5, ROOI COVmNG

FREE
DELIVERY

DOWIIIIOD POIIIIOY, OliO
I'

Cobb

$8,-. 99 (

1

Chlvrolet-Oiclsmobile-CadiHac~Geo," Inc.. :
992·6614
P~~OY ,__ OHIO·

308 _E~SI MAIN

!·

--· ~. · - ~'
·~

. ..

•

•SOFA •LOVBSI!:AT and • CHAIR

1990 SPECIAL .PURCHASE ··~
1
1 fACTORY COISICA'S".. sTAmNo AT .
Monday 9i30-8:00
Tuesday-Saturday
9:30-5:00

$5995

MoP~I

'

STORE HOURS

ONLY

VERY NICE!

'

•Whirlp~ol

1987 NISSAN STANZA

1988 OLDS CIERA

_,. ' Doa't Forget•••• Mot.er'• Day ·

PIESC.IIPTION ·sHOP

Co.-

.

'

Give Mo111 saiMthblg to put her fHt up on. DurG»Ie
.
vinyl cov..-s. Great Colors.

WIDE SELECTION OF
MOTHER'S DAY CARDS

Furn

PoTTERY
$75 '. ROWE
SALT-GLAZE STONEWARE

5 Year Warrant

HUNDREDS OF PAnERNS TO

1986 Chevrolet Blazer Tahoe ....................~....... Only S8995

Loaded.

I

AI

' Don't Miss One Of The
Biggest Sales Events :6t The History
Of Our Store, Every Funilture Item In
Our Huge Inventory Is Reduced! ·

·

Loaded.

· · SA~INOS!

•. ,

group sang the song. Aslide shaw
"Listen to the Wind" was shown.
Star Junior Grange presented
a skit "At the Doctor's Office"
with all juniors participating.
Also readings I'm Growing by
Ginger Holcqmb and Satu\'day
by Bridget Vaughan. The program ended by signing Count
Your Many, Blessings by all.
The meeting . was opened by
Master Patty Dyer In regl!lar
form.
Plans were made to work on
our community project benches on Saturday, May 12 at
Montgomery's. A potluck dinner
will be held at noon.
Patty Dyer reported that she
jllacedlstlnthePubllcSpeaklng
Contest at Mid-Atlantic Youth
Conference recently and will
represent
and Mid-Atlantic

.JIM
·MORE TRUCKS
COBB'S LESS BUCKS SALE!

$259
.

SALE PRICES STARTING AT ONLY

.·•

7 Colcirs -

f·

May and Better Hearing Month
was the theme ' for the Literary
program conducted at the recent
Star Grange #778 meeting by
Deaf Activities Chairman Neva
Nicholson.
The program opened by everyone s(nglng "My County Tis of
' Thee'~ . followed· by . readings
History of Pledge of Alleglartce
by Neva Nicholson; For All of Us
by i'reda Smith. Nicholson presented a Poster of the Pledge o(
Allegiance, In sign langl!age to
Star Junior Grange and also to
Star Grange. · She also will
present posters. to Salem Center
and Rutland Elementary school.
Also a son~hook "Lift l)p Your .
Hands" was presented to the
Junior Grange. , The program
continued with Chip Macomber
singing Kum Ba Yah while the .

Solid Oak or Alder Frames. Assorted
upholstered seats and backs.
,_

MOTHER'S DAY

'

'

.

llilli••••••••••••••••••••••••••••-

GLIDER ROCKERS

SWINGS, GliDERS, TABLES and LOUNGERS

217 Notlh Second
. Middle,.,.~ Ohio

..

Star Grange meeting conducted recently

PRESCRIPTION SHOP

S••••v. Mtly tl,
t990
.

'

Joey Manuel, Rachel Manhall, lll!d )~rice Bill. Froat row: Be lither
Bable, Aaron ObiiDrer, Jeannetta Hudson, Mary Bees, Mllthew .
Bable, C"""olyn Bentz, Nikki McCarty, and Nathan Martin.
Graduation Is May 11, 7: SO p.m. at Southern Junior High.

GBADUATJON TIM)!:- MoniJur Clu1 Southern Klnderprten,
Back row: Joy Role, David Wolfe, Tiffany Williams, Matt Asb,
Ty1ei- Uttle, Donald Bush, Chulty Dillard, Jason Miller, Sheri
Cllllllitin., Brlttney RIH!e. Middle row: Trista Doerfer, Uudsey
Smith, 'l'ravallna Mopre, Joey Ct?mell, Joe Adkins, Travis Ban,

•i.

'

•

NEW YORK (UPI) -Record· . Messina ..
lng artist Sinead O'Connor will
O'Connor's spokesman could :
not appear on ihls . weekend's
not be reached to confirm the ·
"Saturday Night Live" show In
report.
protest of the selection of comeEar ller in the week, .comedian
, dtan Andrew Dl.ce Clay as guest
Nora Dunn, a vetera n performer
host, an ·NBC spokesman said on the 15-year-old comedy show,
Thursday.
a nnounced she would not per- •
O'Connor Is the second female
form with Clay on the show .
performer to withdraw from the
.. , don't want to be associated
program because of Clay's
with him. and~oppose his wprk,"
appearance.
the.· 37-year-old actress said.:
O'Connor Inform ed NBC
Dunn has beel! a' regular on thethrough a spokesman on Wednes- . comedy show since the 1985-86
day that she would not appear on
season.
the same bill as Clay, who has
Clay recently was cited by •
been criticized for his explicit
Time magazine as part of a· new ;
and raw sexist and r&lt;!clst jokes,
breed of performers who special- said NBC spokesma n Matt
lze in the humor of shock .

.THANK·YOU .SPECIAJ..

Our Entire Stock of lloyd/ Flanders is Rtductd for
Mother's Day Giving.

.

The Daily Sentinei- Page-9.
-

ADSaunta

Quirks in the news

.... .

•

P()fYieroy-. Middlf!P0!1. Ohio

Thursday, May 10. 1990

••

i

'i

-

P~i~is$688
QUEEN SOFA SLEEPER..............$488

Stop In Soon A"d Save!

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STARTS FRIDAY, MAY 11th ·THRU· SATURDAY~ MAY 12th

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ALL SIZES

16 99
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QUILTED ·

16 PIECE DINNERWARE SET

BEDSPREADS

13 MFG. REBATE' Set contains 4 each: dinner.

Threadless, p4nsonic
quilting . Poly_fiber
fill. lradilional
designs. Jwin, full,
Queen. REG. 19.99

19.97
EACH

bread plates, salad bowl , mug. Many patlerns.
linlt , ,.,.... P« ~ .

60 PIECE FLATWARE SET

12 each: dinner forks, knives. salad forks.
teaspoons. soup spoons. Patterns. REG. 26.99
Pette'ms 11'11)' 1181)' by store

Sr¥ffl may v•rr by start

25%

OFF

ALL CORNING WARE® or .
VISIONS® SETS

SALE 14.18 TO 28.32 See-thru compos ilion Visions
or patterned Corning Ware. Freeze r to
.
microwave to table. Patterns. Perfect lor your
home or as a Qift.
Sty,.s, p.t/lems mly vary by store

OUR REG .
19.99-37 .77

25%0FF .

EMBELI,.ISHED TOWELS

·

Llmlt 1 •flfl»le &amp;Mr houaettqkl

OUR REG. 4.89,14.89

lATH TOWEL.•,.REO. 1.19 oo •••2 FOR 8.81
HAND TOWEL.•.REO. 4.41 10....2 FOR 8.81
WASH CLOTH.....REQ. 3 .• 1 oo.....2 FOR 5.81

30%0FF

:

50% 0FF

9.99-149 .99

-'LL LADIES' tANKS
and SHORTS

SALE 3.74 TO 11.24 Styles . S.M.L.
FULL FIOUIIE ~TVLES
REO. S.lltl;15.9t.,SALE 4.49 TO 11.9t

•

21 " •32", CONTOUR RUQ
OUR REO. 1.19 N ............................ 6.9t EA.
LID COVER........REQ. 5.99 . ........... 3.88

OFF·

OUR REG. 2".99-1!1 .99

ALL LADIES: SLEEP ·
·and LOUNOEWEAR .•

AMBIENCE BATH RUGS ..

•

OUR REG . 15.99-399 .99

SELECT FAMOUS
NAME WATCHES IW

SALE 2.09 TO 11.18
FULL FIGURE STYLES
REO. 3.1N.tt...SALE 2. 79. TO 8.91

..

SALE 7.19 TO 199.11
Wide variety of styles.

Sl)'lll" ltNIY ~ b)' IIDII

40% OFF ALL LCD WATCHES
REO. 3.8H.99... SALE 2.39 TO

•

•

' '..r
'•'

ALL 10K and 14K
' GOLD JEWELRY llll

SALE 20.89 TO 104.98

'•

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St,.,.s •hv"n .,. r•piwJiftllliv• ol group

'

z•"a40" AUO .....RE0. 14.19..........10.99

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THE ICED. TiA POT"'

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20%

OFF

OUR REG.
17 .99·249 .99

PORCELAIN BRIDE DOLL

ALL B()XED CHOCOLATES

16" high. Gift boxed . Stand.

SALE 1.80 TO 3.46
Includes chocolate co~Jered
nuts, cremes, nougats.

minutes. #TM ·1. REG . 29.99

OFF

OUR REG.
29 .77

OUR ·REG. 2.67·5 .77

Makes 2 quarts of freshly
brewed iced tea in under 10

11" PORCELAIN FASHION DOLL

OUII REO. 11.71.:...................... 17.77
12" PORCELAIN DOLL

trimmed solids and
prints Square and heart
shapes. REG,.. 9.99
SfyiH

1111)' "*)' ~ IIOre

3 PIECE KITCHEN SETS

Includes terry velour
diSh towel , dish cloth,
pot holder. REG. 2.49

ALL BEACH TOWELS

52"x70" SIZE

7 99

SALE 14.38 TO
111.19 Many
different sizes
and features.

•
REG . 9.99

E~v

Low Ptlc1
G'*" Pm KIJI 10

White. bone. slate blue,
rose and peach.
ao" x14" OVAL,
08LONQ ·
REO. 1Ul oo.... U9 EA.
REO. 13.19.......10.99

not .,c~ .

IO"x102" SIZE
REO. 11.19....... 12.99

v.rY bv •tote

'

•'

.•'

•'

'

•

1.00
EACH

j

25%

OFF

3.99
6.99

POLYSILK
FLOWER BUSHES ·

TO

Choose from our larg e collection ol ·
st yles and colors.
Slyln end cotort. Me)' vary bv 1/ole

ALL BASEBALL,
SOFTBALL ITEMS

SAlE•I .U TO 44.89 Baseball and
softball bals. gloves and balls.
Many styles and sizes .
SfJI"ry, no ralnchtckt. Min. 12 per afore

OUR REG .
1.59·59 .99

20%

OFF-

OUR REG.
22 .99-159.99

Many arrangements in ~Jases,
cr.osses, wreaths and sprays
REG . 8 .99-9.99
SIYirH

fiJI)' ~

by a/ore

ALL GARDEN
TRIMMERS

3.99

·

SALE 11.18 TO 127.99 Electric,
, gas, auto feed, manual feed and
cordless slyles .
some rwpr. ....mOly

1.89
3.99
TO

REG. 2.29-5.99

BIB
APRONS

2FOR

Screerl printed ruffled top with
ruffled skirt. Poly/cotton.
REG. 5.99

SELECT
BATT£RIES

Ray-0 -Vac smart ~acks,
Energizer or Du ra ell in 2 pk.
C. D, AA, AAA or 1 pk. 9 volt.
Energizer or Ouracell in
AA:4 pk. Duracell mullipack
In AA-8 pk., C-4 pk ., D-4 pk.

1.00
I

PRINT
KITCHEN TOWELS

'
I

OFF.

'

i
i

30%

_O.FF
QUA REG .

~.99-14. 99

•

•••

'j·

•
i
•

•
'l

I

I

I

OUR REG . 1.99· 7.99

REO. 3.0D-23.99 .. SAL~ 2.10 TO 16.78

ALL LADIES' KNIT
•nd WOVEN TOPS

ALL LADIES'
FASHION JEWELRY Iii]

&lt;

i

•
•'

SALE 99' TO 3.98

SALE 3.41 TO 10.48
FULL FIGURE ITYLES
REG. 7.88ol0.9t..SALE 5.58 TO 7.88

St~ slto..n •'• reptes~fMife of

grovp

·,

20

~LL LADIES'
lONOVELTY
FRAGRANCES

OUR REG.
3.29·14 .99

"

SALE 2.13 TO 11.9t
Body sprays ,
Imposter fragrances .
Coty. Jovan. Revlon .
Max Factor. Brlt1sh
Sterling and more .
very br 1101e
Exc-.• c/MIIIfiCe
.ltwM
sr~JN me~

'•
'•

f25%'0FF
OUR REG.
2.99-9 .99

I
f

OF '*

ALL MEN'S
SWIMWEAR SHORTS
SALE 1.14 TO 1ala Many styles.
Sty,..,., ... b~ .lo,..
E•&lt;Judu ,...,..., Low Pnc• ••••to

OUR REG.
8 .99-17.99

.

P'OR YOUR
I

ALL LADIES' .
GITANO and VOlT®
ATHLETIC SHOES

25%

OFF

SALE 9.87 TO 14.98 Large
selection.

Sl.ret, lfJIII and CDJoltJ IH)' V•tl'f br I IOrl

OUR REG .
12 .90·19.99 "

So,-;, no tairtcrlfCke . ~H ro troclr

.

•

.'

SALE 2.2,4 TO 7.4t- Styles and
fabrics. 4-14.
WOVEN TOPS 7-14
REG. 1U9-12.9t..I.H TO 8.74
SELECT SHOATS 7·1 4 ·
REG. 7.88o1U8 .. .. 5.80 TO 9.74
ALL NEON SEPARATES 7·14
REG. 5......81 ...... 4.40 TO 5.24
30% OFF ALL IODYWEAR 4-14
REG. 7.88o15.H .. UI TO 11.11

I~

75~
· TO

.

4.50

SELECT
LADIES' HOSIERY

75~

of fashion pantyhose in 100% ·
nylon. Sport and casual socks in
cotlon blends . Fils 9-11.IIEQ. 99•-5 .99

TO

•

REG. li'-Ut

Choose from a wi~ selection

CONV.NI.NC.

'·'•

1

SELECT
LADIES' PANTIES

''••·

'

•
•

Choose salt cup, light
padded, lull figure styles.

Ny!on or cotton panties . SizeS.

•
'I

•.,

CLEARANCE*

ALL MEN'S and BOYS'
NOVELTV T-SHIRTS

SALE 2.11 TO Ul Variety of
styles. fabrics and colors. S, M,L.XL. .

OUR REG.
3.99-11 .99

3.00

.

•

SELECT
LADIES' BRAS

'

25
OFF 0 .
0~

•''

CLEARANCE* CLEARANCE*

.

25.F0 ·

•••'
,.·'
&lt;.
,'
••

••

0/

OFF

ALL qiRI.S' TANKS,
and' l'EES
•

'' '
'•

REG. 45'-1.29

Silver .Bridge· Plaza

30%0FF

SI}IMS t'rlt)'\ ...... by 11ote

''I

ALL MOTOR OIL

OUR REG . 4.99·14 .99

SELECT
LADIES'
HANDBAGS .
and TRAVEL
BAGS

I

SALE 40' TO 1.18
Quake r Sta te.
Castro!, Pennzoil,
Exxon and more .
Ouarl slz~ -~

OUR REG . 9_.99-28 .99

.
'.
..

50% 0FF

and jum psuits. In s1zes 5·13, 6·16 and
S, M,L Related separates In sozes S.M.L
Ca pe Cod coordinat es 8·18
StY'-' mev ~~try or 11011
ALL LADIES' SKIRTS

.

'
' •..''

.

SALE 4.11 TO 10.41
Many styles . fabrics
and sizes ..
ALL PURSE
ACCESSORIES
OUR AEO ..I.Oi-7.SI
SALE 1.31 TO Ul

;

' .j

Hemmed. 100% cotton loop terry.
Novelty pri~ts . REG. 75• ea.

10%

style wi th leather uppers. Tan or while.
StZes 6·9, tO. REG . 10.99

0 ~~h~1~Po.~~!.~~~!!!s

•,

I
l

MEMORIAL
FLORALS liil

S~ep-in

••'

ALL LADIES' DRESSES,
COORDINATES and

•'

• PACK NAPKINS
REO. 8.18......... 5·.89

.

7.69

LADIES'
LEATHER HUARACHES

SAVI 3.30

SOLID COLOR
TABLECLOTHS

70" ROUND

not lnc/udltd.
Stvlll ,..,

'' '

19.99

SALE 2.09 TO 13.99. Ma ny
styles . colors, designs,
sizes. Terr y. ~Jelour .

ALL
KEYBOARDS

S.tMr#a!

.
{

40%0FF

0 FF

\

.•

TO

12.00

14.00
TO
23.00

)
J

'"

••

SELECT LADIES'
DENIM JEANS

Choose from fashion or
basic styles Cotton blends.
Sizes 516·15116, 6-20.
REG. 19.99·29 .99
'IILL PIQURE
REO. 14.CJI.I1 .81
11.00 TO 11.1i0

.\•
I

·I

.,••

I
•
••
'

. . . . . . . . ., Vllty b I 1/Gte

•
••
'')
,

.......•'
•

•·

~ .

••

�.Page 12-·The Daily Sentinel

Thursday. May

Poueoy-Middleport. Ohio

A Racine area man was cited ln a car-truck crash Wednesday
at 3: 20p.m. ln Letart Township on S.R :bs, .3 of a mile east of
milepost 6, according to the Gallia-Melgs Post of the State
Highway Patrol.
•
__
Robert E. Milliron, 21, of S.R . ;338, Racine, was cited for
failure to yield after hls 1978 Ford F -150 pickup was hlt by a 1969
Chevrolet Chevelle driven by Jamie A. Jones, 17, of Racine.
Jones was driving east when Milliron pulled onto the road and
stopped. Jones hlt the brakes and skidded into Milliron's truck.

EMS responds to six calls
Units of the Meigs County Emergency Ml)dical Service
res'ponded til six calls for assistance on Wwdnesday. At 1 a.m. the ,Pomeroy · Fire Department was called to 104
Brick Street for a structure lire at the Paul Steinmetz Jr.
·
residence.
The Rutland unit a t 4: 31 a.m. went to Meigs Mine No. 31 Jar
David M~um w,ho was transported .to Holzer Medical Center,
and at · il: 21 a.m. the unit was called to College Street for
Jeremy Fetty \Vho was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
--- At' 11: 47 a.m. the Middleport unit responded to a call on South
Second for Edward Templeton who was taken to Veterans, and
at 4: 45 p.m. the unit went to the Cedar Bar for DOuglas Seyler,
also taken to 'V e.ter11ns.
· The final call ,tor ·as~Jstance came at 9:40 p.m·. when the
Pomeroy unit went to the pollee depwrtment for Steve
Tatterson who was transported to Veterans.

COLUMBUS, Ohio iUPH The effects that alcohol has on a
per son's job perfortnance can
cqst that employee the job and
unemployment compen-sation benefits, the Ohio Supreme court
ruled Wednesday.
The court ISsued unanimous
rulings in two separate but
similar cases from notbeastern,
Ohio In which employees were
d!smtssed,from their jobs, but
appealed an- had won the right to
obtain unemployment compen·
satlon. The rulings Wednesday

~

Weather

The Supreme C9ur t said . the ·packer for the Easco Alumlnw;n
appeals courts had erroneously Corp. He appealed to the Court of
relied on a· Supreme Court Ap[leals in Mahonlng County.
opinion that said alcoholism was '
In the Harris case, the court of
a handicap In respect to ihe civil appeals ruled that she should
The oplnton said that while .the rights statues.
receive .unemployment benefits
c.ondltton of alcoholics may be
One ruling affected l-otus J. .tor periods for which sbe could
characterized as involuntary, HarriS, dismiSsed In M-ay 1985 as demonstrate that she waa able
neither of the persons Involved In a sales person for Warren Music and available for work.
the cases under consideration · Centre. She had appealed to the
Buf In tbe · Arnoto case. the
heeded advise of their employer Court of Appeals for Trumbull court of appeals sent th~,.case to
to seek help or took reasonable County. The otheri'ullngilffected the board of revieW to determine
steps to p~ven.t their dlsablllty
Paul T. Arnoto, ·dismisSed ln If and when Arnoto was -in control
from affecting their Job
January 1982 from his job as a of' his aicoh,ollsm and was able
performance.
and available for work.

Cell...

PHOENIX ·(UPI) - Thousands of computer disks were
seized from "hackers" who au thorities said are respanslble for
. an "astronomical'' white-collar
- crime jl'ave. Involving alleged
credit card fraud and Improper
entry Into gQvernment computer
systems.
Federal' and Arizona author! ' • ties announced Wednesday they
had served more than two dozen
search .w arrants and seized thousands of software · disks and 42
computer systems In a nationwide Investigation. There were
no arrests for computer crimes,
but three people were taken Into
custody on · unrelated charges,
such as Weapons violations, said
Stephen M. McNamee, U.S.
attorney for Arizona.
OfficialS confirmed that agents
from- the U.S. Secret Service an&lt;l
-the Arizona attorney general's
office served 28 search warrants
in the last two days in more than
a dozen cities. ·But McNamee
said It was Jmposslble to determine how many people may ha~e
been Involved.
Garry M. Jenkins, assistant
director of the Secret Service ln
Wa.shlngton, told a news confereJICe that the computer disks wlll
have to 'be analyzed for possible
criminal wrongolng.
Tom Holtzen, an assistant U.S.
attorney, said the people under
lnvestigati9JJ "are linked In one
way or another," and may have
exchanged Information. about
such things as stolen credit card
numbers through computer' 'bulletin boards."
Possible crimes discovered In
the 18-month joint investigation
Included credit-card fraud. theft
of· long distance telephone and
data communications servicl!s
and Improper e11try Into computer systems operated by govern·
ment agencies, private corpora-

Wantter_te~perat~res forecast'

v-

'

·Saturday's grand prize $6 million

h. ·

.

.

Pomeroy Mayor;s Court

ahead of a strong cold' front were Ohio Valley -hehhid the front. Tbe
moving rapidly J!Ortheast acr~s ' weat[\~r service said the niltUre
the Buckeye stat'e Thursday of the air mass . wnr provide
· morning.
--enough lnstablllty for sbowe~s to
·
conttmie
11\IJ;l Th!irsday._. night,
. Cold, moist air was expected to
-with
temperatures
dropping Into
plunge into th.e Great Lakes and tlte 30s and ·16wer 40s
by Friday
morning. -'. .
' ··'
·

Remem6Bt Mom On Hei -Dig•...
- $undsg, Msg 13th · .'
WITH FLOWERS FROM
HUBBARD'S GREENHOUSE!
.
.
.
$ 50
BEDDING FLAJS,•••••• ~•••••••••••••••••••••••,..... 5
'

I

OPEN DAILY 9 AM-5 PM; SUNDA'( 1 PM-5_ P..M

Stocks

Middleport Court news

'·

· s4:so.. TO SS75
HANGING BASKETS..............
·
PORCH BOXES••••• :.:...............;~.............$995
GERANIUMS ••••• ~..................:•••••;••• FLAT $950.
41NCH POT 85C EA.
4 INCH POT 1Q FOR $750
SHRUBS and TREES ...................... 20°/o.Off
'

•

HUBBARD'S
GRE : •
HOUSE

'

Maxine I.alie
· Maxine C. Leslie, who has
resided In Laguna Niguel, Calif.,
for the past 14 years, died on•
1\prll 28. She was a native of
Pomeroy and a graduate of Ohio
Slate University.
She Is survived by a sister,
Betty Puglisi, Columbus; a son,
Richard F. Lesill!, Fairfax, Va.,
a . daughter, Barbara Demsey,
Ranchb Sante Fe, Calif., and four
grandchlldren. The family sug~sts donations to the American
Heart Association hi U~u of
flowers.

Irene Dodd
Irene D. Dodd, 86, Wood Street,
Coouvne, died early Wednesday
morning at her residence after
an extended lllness.
Born in Dodrldge . County,
W.Va. she was the daughter of

the late Benjamin and Vevie
Smith Davis. She taught school
for 23 yeats at the Troy Township
Elementary · School, and she
attended the_ Coolvllle United . -·
Methodist Church. She also was a
member of the Troy senior
citizens.
She Is survived by a sister,
Lucille Davis; Coolville, andseveral cousins.
She also was prec~ed In death
by h"'r husband, Reece C. Dodd in
1957 , and one brother, Carlton
Davis In 1957.
· Services will be Friday .at 1
, p.m. at the White Funeral Home
in Coolville with the Rev. Jeff
· Burdsall officiating. Bui'lal_will
be Jn Coolville Cemetery. .
Friends may call at the funeral
home after 5 p.m. today
(Thursday).

SYRACUSE,
OHIO

TO PLACE AN ' AD CAll 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY I A.M: to S P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

'.

'(
Meig~, Getflt

M11on c~untitia mu11 bt PU·

only ultd.

;

r•ponsiblt tor erron after fir.t t diV . !Check ,

";bj;;";;•ionad'toruns
irt paperl . Call befOre 2 :00p .m .
mtke correction .
·

PI

Plid in act,~nce ••

Card of Thankl

Happy Adl ,

In Memorilm

Ylf,d ~aiM

•A clanifilld adwert;..m.nt pl'aetd in ThaOaily Sentinel IItA ·

Veterans Memorial
Wednesday Admissions
Hugh Custer, Pomeroy; Edward
·Templeton, Middleport.
Wednesday discharges ·- Thomas Turner.

capt - cl•lified displ-v. Bulin•• C~td tnd legll notlc~J
will alao appur in the Pt ~ Ple•ant Aefisttr and the G1tl1·
polis Otily .Tribune, ,.. .chi~SJ over 18,000 homn.

- - 2 •00 PM .' r&gt;i!OND.Y
-

2 :00P.M . TU!SDAV

- 2:00P.M. WEDNESDAY
- 2•00 P.M. THURSDAY
- 2 :00P.M . FfUOAV

Jud~enl aw~rded
In the Meigs County Court of
Commom Pleas, Gary Freeman
has been ordere&lt;l to pay $6,500 to·
Bonnie Freemaiffor certain real
estate owned by her.

Classified paf;es· corer the
follou:ing telephone exchanges ...
Glllja

2 year Certificate of Deposit·
$5000 minimum deposit

Co~o~nty

A'"l Ccdt 614

'

.,

441-Gellipolis
387-Ch•hire
lii-VInton
241-Rio Orende
258-Guyrn Oist

'

A marriage l~ense has been
Issued tn · the Meigs ·-county
Probate ·court to Charles MIchael Canter, 35, Syracuse, and
Jennie Isabel. Bass, 38, Racllte.

143-Arlbie Oist.

379-WMnut

8.60~

.'

In the Meigs County Court of
Common Pleas the following
couples are seeking to end their
marriages.
·
Carol L. HUI, Racine, Is seek·
lng a divorce from Paul Eugene
Hill Jr., Racine.
Barbara Arthur, Pomeroy,
through her next friend, Anita L.
Casto, Cheshire, Is seeking a
divorce from Chester W.'Arthur,
Pomeroy.
•J ane Ann Michael, Pomeroy,
and Paul Douglas Michael,
Pomeroy, are seeking a
dlssolu don.

Ma1.on Co .. WV

992-Middleport
Pomii'OY
91&amp; - CI'\•Ier

171-Pt. Pltl""'

Arp• Cod~ 304

e•J-Portllnd
247-Letert Falls

941 - Aacine
742 - Rut.land
667-Coolville

458~Loon

17t-AppJe Grove
773-MIIon
Ill-letart
137-Butfllo

SALES &amp; SERVICE

MAIN ~1., -m~-:.

.. . .

CONNIE'S
OHIO IIVEI
HilliS and
EYEILASTINGS

- ~--

--

USED APPLIANCES
DAYWADAJm

APRI 1 THIIU JULY 1
. HOURS:

up

Sun .

KIN'S APPUANCE
SEIVKE
992-5335 ar 915-3561
Actou Frem Pett Offke

I flonltY. tit. 7, 1\12.

· llor ·

-· ~

11-. -

·--~-....... ....,. .........

-----"·

11th,121h.

....,

-

'

3
6

1'6
1s

SALES AND SERVICE
FAUORY AUTHOIIZED
SRVKf CfNTfl FOil
MOST MAIIES &amp; MODElS

"At ............ Prkts"

PH. 949-2101
.or les. ~49•2161f

Fast

Thu.._ol!::,

3 m... - h on 7.
Tupparllarw, dalhee: ...

w.
VCR · . ta-

-·....,..., ll!lptiflor.
10 Nol~ . - . fni!I!Y, ctathoo

fitted

.....

ry
imotho,
tllno,
eta- -'""·
. Willi.,
•

ALL Yord lluot h Pold In
- - DEAOUHE: a:oo p.m.
1ho cloy ..._tho ld lo 10 S&lt;Jndoy ldHicn - a:oo p.m.
Frldoy• .~~onder ld"lon · ' 2:00
p.m.htunloy.

F~ .• ~:30, Eaot

llolhll ChAd., off lulo.Uio Ad. Chain - .

~

Solo. 4 lamlloa. Fuml-

O&lt;Jt 211, F~

0.0- Solo:

Frldoy, lily 111!1,
oed.r ctt.t, reollner, chair,
wor11. .bench, ....._, otvthlng.

-a-.101-noDr.
-

---At
_ , lily

1.10J,!!.....

S.Liioot.........

·-·..,
..,....,_,,..
-·.. -·
·---

·-

tolno,
CM!Ionuy.
Ka rnt · Heater,
~

......... Ullllty ...... .....,. ~•

Day or Night

_., .-.

okllhlo, a-tnut . - . Fri.,

NO SUNDAY CAUS

Yord -

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM StQtNO
•BLOWN IN
. INSULATION

ot G.ogo an

10

t6

Monthly

16

o13.oo
t1.30/doy

.eo

v.,...

f IIIJIIIIVIIII'Ill

F;mn

Good

..

Srrppli!~S

ALL MADS

Bring It In Or We
Pick Up.

lEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE
992·5335 or 985-3561
acr- ,,_ Pett Office
!17 L Sec. Pe.lrey

73 - V•na &amp; 4 ~o · s

74 - Mo1orcvcl•
71-8oats I. Motors for Sale
?1--Auto '"'' 6 Ace• tori•
77- -Auto A1p1ir
71- Campin; 1Equ6prri1n1
79-Cempers &amp; .Motor Hom"

31 - Homn tor Sele
33-Fei'ml tor Slit

1•-BusinMI Buildings

I'OMIIOY

ilaward L Writ....

35 - Lot• • Aer•au•
31-Rullltltt Wented

1;@111
41-HouiUforAtnt '
42-Mobile Homn for Rant

ROOFING

SErVti:I~S

Public Notlct

PubliC Notlt.»

Fifth Annuol Account of

NOTICE OF
.APPOINTMENT OF
. FIDUCIARY
On Aprt 30, 11180, In lilt

Yvonno M. Dennlo, Guer·

diOil of Oenlol IAe Buclt

Kutin, • minor.
·
ESTATE NO. 28449 - Ff.
net•Cert
end Neuodng.
Olotflbute E._tor
Account
of

Moltt County ~· 2 Cout1.
C.e No. 21111, Juclth D.'

•

llltoan. 378011R 124, Pom.-or. Ohio 48711-.- H.
AndotMNL Mu11oorv Avo., 1'11-

m-.
Ohio..
palntid

of the Eotltll of Merprot A .

s1695

-.

~·

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

t•• of 307

•

.

4 Qt. Max.

MOVIE 1111AI.

-

CHESTR
QUII STOP

Lene K. N•oolrooll. Clerk

lilt 3, 10, 17. 3tc

St.ltt.712oll

~~ ....~

---

TRUCKING
•GRAVEL

I

•UMEITONE

'

'

243311

'

I:

915-4110

SMALL
CEII1EI

•FILL DIRT
•ANYTHING
AT ALL

-ADS
bring
Vattlion Money

915-4422
'•

w'21101.
"•
4

- . .....

0.,: 114 2111114, ~

- 11uo11. • ....
.....
...
_
.....
MI. .....
-.-jlj ...._..
....,..

Giveaway

Lortot

•·j~
yMr old ..... Oonnon m

.-~

.....,.,_~
·
!::
....
~,..:::=.;·:::.:·::;:.;;:::;:=:.·- ........
,_,.. J""'-.\111-11114 • .
Pomeroy,
blk :""

-ltor

• Dcun Clnnllll ...... - 1711.

(614) 992-7143

IPIIHIPHIAL
$1816

OPEN: MON.·FRt,
10 A.M.·I P.M.
OrlyAii@~~·......
-

lion In 30'o -ld !lito Ia meet
elnglo lldy for •-nlonohlp =::,......,..,.,~-=o:-:-:-:~­
llolt 111, 1 - . WV 1111- Plok..,p, '11.000 -m•-,

1

IAcr• fr•ltoloon lttrlllll ..l

To AI
TypeaOf
Travel" ._, ..,

WI&amp;, 0110

BANK ONE, ATHENS. NAIA PARTCH THI! CAlliNG 71AM
Atlle01, Ohio
Member FDIC

1614)
..,,,

CLEAN, LUif &amp; TEST

I. L

I

C.SIU.-

I.

AFTII 6 P.M.

YCI CUNIC

Connection

CONVI•ta srGUREMS

Probate Judge

HAVE IIFEHIKIS

MAINRNAIKI I _,All
1361 , .... St. IIIMI,..rt

"14)
742-2027

'lllf IIPAII

ll4olgo ~- Ohio. 48718.
llobert E. luok.

TU
PURSUIT

"Your

OIL CHANGE ;

Co-Adllall ..haiGi

· Wllh .tllo Wit A.....,. of 1M
of r:.- J. - -

'

~)a

Anno uncemenl s

VDT RIASONAIIE

949-2168
2-I·'III'IMo.

t..lt.....

487tllr. _ . , .

of,.......

FREE ESTIMATES

Business
Services
1----------

1-12-'18-tfn

FREE EITtMATES
tho , ... out
let .. do- h ftr , ...

Gutters
Downspquts
Gutter Cleaning
. Painting

41-For

99,·7479

lt. :IS Nertlir ••
P-oy, Ohio

MIIIIOIIIITDIOI
llllfal Cllan•
&amp; Palntllltl

NEW - ·REPAIR

81 - -Homelmprowm.,n
SZ-Piumblng6 Helling
. l:t-Eacwltinl
a4-Eiec:trlell RefrJp•alion
81-Gtnli'el Hauling

PubliC Notice

•Mobile Home
Parse
•Mobile Home
RenfBie
• Lot&gt; Rent'''

UNDA'S
PAINTING &amp; CO.

OVEN IEPAII

7.1 - Autol for S.l1
72 - Truckl for S1ie

Real fslale

&amp; VICinity

COUNTRY
MOBILE
HOME PARK

alto acid bail and rod
out rltlliators. Wt also
rtpair Gas-Tanks.
992-2198
·Middleport, Ohio
.
1-l:J.tfc

Tr allSIIflrl alrrrn
22 - MontV 10 Loan
23 - Protwlionll lervic•

. Pl. Pleaaant

for Homellto,

PAT IIILL FOlD

63-livlltOck
s•-H•v &amp; Grain
66-Seed &amp; Fertililer

21 ..:. lulii1•• Opportunity

-C:

PARTI AND SERVICE
For Moot Z ond 4-cycte
en gin•

hlatll' cora Wt can

27 Yro. Exp.'
Retitren- ,

61 - Ferm Equipment
82 - Wanted 10 luy

14-Bulin•• TFiining
11- lehools &amp; InstruCtion
16-Redio, TV &amp; CB Rep1ir
17- Miscllleneoul
1 a-wanted To Do

......,, 011.

chlldron'o

radiators

Clift

R'tlt•

T.L.C.

/1, IIVI~SIIII:'

12-SitUitiOn Wanted
1 3 - lnsuret.ce

25SI Wet llaln,

~.":.lt.nd,

Wt can ~lr 1ild r•· _

18-Pttl for S.. t
57 - Mulie81 lnuruments
51- fruits.
bl.
59-For S1le or frldt

Sl~l VII I~S

DArE'S SMALL
ENGINE IIPAII

SE~ICE

151-HouMhotd Ooodl
52-Sporting Ooodl
!53-An11quea :
54-Mtsc. Merchandilt ~
56-Blilldi"O Suppli• -':

, 3-Annoucemenu
·• -- Givtewl·y
5 - Happy Ads
6-Lost 1nd Found
· 7 - Yt#d SaltiP•id in 1dv1ncel
I- Public I~ • • Auction
9 - WII'Ited to luy

Frldoy, ~~~...,~-.-..,. -

BILL SLACK
992·2269
EVENINGS

.05/doy

Mcrch.rnrlr:,e

2 - ln . Memor~

:

Wo•dt•ot•'!· Tocumooh•

1--'"'- eer.h tl~ •• .ac»erau •:,:d::;•'!""'------:--1-C.d ot Th-'ks

.,hoof.

11.th.

4-1-1!1-1111

A...,. ere ta'r con•cutivt runl. bra,.,J'pd~•w"l be~•led

AJIJIIIU JIGWII: IllS

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

Yonl lalo: tlolllnd ""' ltdwol
-ntory
lily 1tllh,

MOVAL·,

.3o
.42

es ~ oo

·

~

"FIREWOOD.

NO SUNDAY

141.~

Yonlhlo: 1 - - Rt.7 , -

B-&amp; TREE
TRIM antf RE-

"LIGHT HAULING

PH. 949·2801
or les. 949-2160

ee.oo

....

4:30 ..~ At. 31,........,.

~ Solo: 1 milo

CLEARING

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

Galllpolle
&amp; VICinitY

turw, ctatt.., Ito. 41111 Loltolt
Drl"'!. oc.- from loi'li"'Undl.
Wed., Thura., Fri. 8-?
·

DOZER
.SITEWORK • R!)ADS

BISSELL
BUILDERS

YardSale

Thure•• Fri.

OPEN:

. Thura.

Rote
.P"'r 15 W~rdl
84.00
.
.20

t6

41 - FurniJhed Rooms
46 - IDICI for Rent

BANK=ONE.
Eighlssn Thousand People Who Care.
.

Ntw lemtlon:
161 North Socend
Mitkll.,.,t, Ohio 45760

.... . . _ . .t
"Free Eetlm.tu"

Words

1

882-New Havrn

'9'

--

,

992-2178
4-:11-1 mo.

8

•

1)ere ilatU~ penaltyh- early withdrawal. AniUJ yield~ by~ daily., ,

'

•Tire Sale•
•Front End
AUgnment
•Oil l:henge • Lube
•Brake Work

711 N. 2nd .
MIDDUPOU

PLUMIING &amp; IIC&amp;'n"'"

. 7

742-3088

SEARS

t
8tf '· R IUI·f l F1 l•••••••!l~l:l~l~l
·L•••
i~·~~~!.1•·1~!1~1~1•"1'•••:~:~po:~:!~1·iAI..I•I;,• •
1

•

J,

i=::::=IPROFESSiOnALI
INSTALLATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

32-Mobile Hom" for Stle

,

ITl imited Time Offer! Get the Savl.!:!J er's Soecial at any BANK ONE
o~ in~, -Perry, Hocking and
Meigs countJ.es.
.

Couples seek lo
end marTill@ell

RUTUND TIRE
SALES and
SERVICE

FReE
ESTIMATES

. RATES
. Days

43-farms tor Rent
44-A,.,.mtnt tor Rent

8.25%
Annual Rate

~

Meig1 County
Artl Cede 61~

I·

Effective Annual Yield

'.

FENCING

•

11 - HtiP Wan1.c1

DAY BEFORE PUBLiCATION ·
..:..11 :00 A .M : SATURDAY

In the Meigs County Court of ·
Common Pleas, Bonnie J. Mardn
has been granted a divorce from
Franlllln A. Martin,
Aiso granted a divo•ce was Len
Renee Capehart from Gerald
Lewis Armstrong Jr.

(

Or

·~;,;;,. 1.10 diecount tor ad1 ~id in adnnca. .
- Give.wav and Found adl und•11 word• ~~~~be '
no ch•Qe.
•
aH cepitall.:tetl ia double price of ad cott.

•

License issued

Cleen
WE BUY
STARTEAS.

992-5776

mutt

Divorces granled

I

San Francisco; Los Angeles; San
tions, telephone companies,
!lnanclal lnsitltutlons, credll bu- Diego; Sail Jose, Calif. ; Phoenix ,
reaus and hospitals.
Ariz.; Tucson, Ariz.; Plano,
Texas; ]\fla m!; Saginaw, Mich.;
" We are experiencing a crime
wave ln the computer area that ls
Chicago, Detroit, Cincinnati;
just astronomical, " sald Gall
Richmond, Va?: Newark, N.J .:
Thackeray, an assistant Arizona
Pittsburgh and New York City.
attorney general who headed the
McNamee said the investlgastate's part of the investigation.
tion was centered tn Phoenix
"We can't keep up. Part ofltls
because the Attorney General's
that computers have gotten · Office . has, special expertise
cheap and kids of younger and
involving computer crimes.
younger ages have access to
_Leo Cunningham, a spokescomputers," she said.
man fo~ the U.S. Attorney 's
Thackeray said the speed of office, confirmed that a search
computers can lead to "colossal
warrant fn connection wlth the
losses" as the hackers quickly
hacker's probe was carried out
trade Information.
Tuesday In San Jose. \here were
"This is not a victimless •· no arrests, he said, and the
crime," Thackeray said. "We affidavit supporting the court are all vlctlms."
order !or the search warrant has
McNam~e cal ted computer
been sealed by a federal judge.
hacking the "whtte-c.o llar crtme
Sgt. Richard Saito of the San
of the 1990s." He said anyone
Jose Pollee Department said the
convicted of computer cr'tmes 6 a.m. Tuesday search involved
could face prison sentences of up the residence of a recent }.'loneer
to 10 years along with a subs tan· ... High School graduate. 'Agents
tlal fine .
sought computer equipment al·
State Attorney General Bob Jegedly used to "deal in pirate
Corbin said the public needs to software and electronic fraud, "
take the matter of computer Saito said.
crimes seriously.
The national probe centered on
"This is not a game, " Corpln a computer bulletin board based
said. "Most of you have been In Phoenix, he said.
taking this as a game by
• _
be
hackers."
.
LU11ery num
1'8
Corbin said 'one victim alone
PICK-3
suffered a $1.7 mlllion 'Joss to the
111.
hackers, but the officials said It
.PICK-3 ticket sales totaled
was dlfficult to add up the total
$1,2~4;504.50, with a payoff due of
losses,
.
. $2,634,425.00.
·
·
Thackeray said suspects In·
PICK-4
eluded both adults and youths
6866.
and warned that parents have to
PICK-4 ticket sales totaled
be aware of what their children
$264,917.00, with a payoff due of
are capable of dotni with their
$52,242.00.
computers.
Super Lotto
"The parents have no Idea
13, 15, 17, 20, 37, 43.
what danger they can expose
Super Lotto ticket sales totaled
$3,156,552.00.
their chUdren to If they do not
supervise them hi usln!i: that,"
'Kicke.r
~98.
Thackeray said.
The warrants were served In
Kicker ticket sales totaled
$595,035.

Classified

.

Hospital news

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 13

Thwa.,, Fri., Sal &amp;-4.

ft ....................

--Area deaths---

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Cornpuiers seized in investigation
of 'astronomical' computer crime

reversed the appeals courts and
reinstate!! decisions oft he Unem·
ployment Compensation Board
or Review.

Soulb Central Ohio
Mostly cloudy and windy
By Unlled Press lnlernatlonal
Thursday night, with a chance of
Sunslne and more se111onal
showers, and a low bE:tween 35 temperatures are expected to
and 40. Chime!! of rain Is 40 · return to Ohio Friday ll'fter
percent. Mostly sunny Friday, Thursday's dose of readings In
with highs hi the mid 60s.
the 30s and lower 40s In some
Ex leaded Forecast -,
parts of the state.
·Saturday lbrno••h Monday .
But the National Weather
Service
· said ' a "potpourl'' of
A' chance of showers and
thunderstorms Sahti'day _ and weather conditions would affect
Sunday, with fair weather on Ohio Thursday night.
Moriday. Highs will be In the 60s.
The threat of severe weather
Saturday, rangtn111 from. the mid over west and southwest Ohio
Continued on page 1
60s to the mid 70s Sunday, and ended early Thursday morning '
.
between 70 and 80 Monday. as severe. thunderstorms that
lng to update the commissioners importance of the 'cerdfled aging
overnight lows will be In the 40s rumbled east from IllinoiS dlmln·
on what had been happening with program In Meigs County which
Sat ui'day and Sunday mqrnlngs, !shed by the time they reached
-that agency. She stated that she stated Is one of only a fel\' In
apd between 50 and 60 early ·· eastern Indiana.
there had been mwny changes 't he state. . ·
· ·
Thunderstorms along and
. ·Mond ay.
and much restructuring of pro·
Dr. Hopkins stated also that
.
I.
grams taking place but that the board needs two new
everything seems to be working members to replace those who
...
out very well. She went !)n to say· have gone off the board. She went
·'
..
, that t.he .changes • wh,ich have on to say that she had been ' CLEVELAND f UPI) - There million.
·
The
lottery
numbers
were
taken place have put the local provided . with the names of was no grand prize wtnner Jn ,
agencies In Meigs, Gallla and prospective people and that she 1Wednesday's $3 million Super 15, 17, 20, 37 and 43, with a total ·
.Jackson Counties In-better flnan· would , be contacting them to see LDtto drawl,ng, boosting the jack· prize payout of $369,32~ and total
pqt Saturday to at least $6 sales of $3,156,552.
·ctal situations. ·
If they would be Interested In
Dr. Hopkins cited some exam- serving on the board. Jones
ples of what the 18-member stated that th!' appointments to
mental health board has done. the board will be made after Dr.
Qne such exampJo: Is the child· Hopkins discusses the-e_&lt;!sltlons
Five were fined and nlnei&gt;thers Cheshire, $20 and costs, lm·
ren's program In Jackuon which with the prospects.
forfeited bonds In the CQurt of proper backing; Charles Smith,
provides a 24-hour crisis service
Otller matters discussed at . Pomeroy Mayor Rlc.hard Seyler Belle Valley, $63 and costs,_
for abused children, as well as Wednesday's meeting were as
operathig under expired license;
Tuesday rilght.
·
lhose Involved with drugs, In a follows, the clerk was authorized
Fined were Rachel Burns, Tim Davison, Chester, $375 and
~lx county area. Funding for thjs
to adv'erdse for bids · on the
costs, DWI and $63 and costs,
program was achieved thro11gh· refurbishment of an Emergency
driving under suspension; and
the efforts of the mental health Medical Service ambulance; It
LaDonna Large, Pomeroy,' $20
lioard. Other· examples cited was reported that dust control
and costs, ·disorderly conduct.
Jncluded the Theraputlc Foster had been completed In Olive and
_Forfeltlng bonds th the court
Care Program, an employment • Orange Townships hut that a Dally &amp;toek prices
werf Kenneth Show, Point Pleaconsortium for Meigs, Gallla, _ breakdown wjth the equipment (As of 10: 3t a.m.)
sant, $43, lllegalleft turn; Allen
Jackson, and Vinton Counties, has slowed that project; and a Bryce and Mark Smith
Wilson, Racine, $10, not using a
·and the Teen Institute program resident ' from Bradpu_ry re- of Bluat, Ellis &amp; Loewl
child restraint; Danny. Haggy,
at Meigs High School. Sh~ . alsb quested that speed signs be put
Pomeroy, $50, no financial re. commented on the success and up In that area to slow the traffic. Jun Electric Power ............. 29%
sponslblllty; . George Fveda,
AT&amp;T ................... .........._....... 41
West JVIlddlefex-; ·pa,, $63, traffic
Ashland Oil ... ..... .. .. ........ .... 36'%
light violation.
Bob Evans .... .. ............. ;.:.... ll)i.
.
.
Forfeiting bonds on speeding
Charming Shoppes .:........ .:... 9%
Three were· fined and another license, $25 and costs.
charges were Gay Petrin, PomeCity Holding Co .. ........... ...... 14
.forfeited a bond on· charges of
Forfeiting a · bond on the DWI
roy, $47; Shirley ShoCkley, Galli·
Federal
Mogul.. ..................... 20
DWI ln the court of Middleport charge was Tom E. Buckley,
polls, $38; Bobby Watson, Galll·
Goodyear T&amp;R , ....... ........... 35%
Mayor Fred Hoffman Wednes- · Rutland, $460.
polls, $46; Gina Follrod,
Heck's ........... ~ ................. .... 2~
day night.
Pomeroy, $45; Lester 's tewart,
. Others fined in the court were
$48
.
· Fined on the charge were Chuck McCloud, Middleport, $25 . Key Centurion ..... :.............. 14',7
Lands' End ........ .... .... ......... 16',7
Kenard Lee Prunty, Syracuse, and costs, dlrorderiy manner,
Limited Inc .... ;................... 42%
$425 and costs and three days In - $100 and costs and five days In
Multimedia Inc .................... 79
jail; Paul P. Council; Langsville, jail, resisting arrest; Barbara
Rax
Restauran1s .... .. .... :... 2 7/16
$425 and costs and 3 days tn jail; Boling, JVIlddleport, $150 and ·
Robbins
&amp; Myers ................. 16
and Tammy J. Bush, Racine, costs, shoplifting; VIcki Payne,
Shoney's
Inc ................ , ...... 13~
$425 and costs andlOdays In jail. assessed $9 for unpaid parking
Star
Bank
....................... .... ... 20
Prunty was also fined $25 and tickets and costs'; and Donald R.
Wendy's
Intl
..
4'}1
C.Osts on expired operatpr's II· Nickels, Middleport, $10 and
WOrthington Ind ................. 21%
cense and Council was fined on a costs, e;cptred license plates.
Goodyear Was ex-dividend· second charge of no operator's
today ,

•

Thursday, May 1 0, 1

job,-benefits

Local news briefs·. - .Alcohol can cost -employee
Patrol ,cites Racine man

10, 1990

&amp;

�'

,. Page-

14- The Daily Sentinel ·

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

...ffjten VOll walet

LAFF-A-DAY

51

!IJ
8

0 - IIYiftll. 1 oiNI 2 bodo
, _ apo~- II Yllloot

..._

....

11...,_

IMIIIIIn I l l =
· art. From
-~- ~d~·

· EOH ·

-n

Public Sale
&amp;Auction

,.._

qWM,
.
Ono llodroom op18, for nont.
1221
··aftoi
DoP-h
114-1112-2211
I p.m.nqulrwd.

,.... T - - APottmonto.

1111

.

Employment Servtces
--~-----

11

. . . . -lnof-.

~
2 · - · ·1...,uwwtaw,
111 aq. II. 1
112
bedh,211&lt;,CNCH,
Aunt, pl~roung, 2 ~.

wantacl to Buy

Clulho
Antiquo·-· EKcollonl ........
lion."::¥: . . . _ ,.,....,.. 114-

Help Wlntacl·

II $211. ft4.311-'1110.

74

"There are moments when I
wish I was turned back into
a frog, believe me!"

.

Start

M~lbt.

45

OM

R41a.

Room•

_.., ___

.,_h.
Hotol.
t::::·=======:r~====~::==~ lbt!lftllll t110Jmo. OoUio
21

Buslnau
Op,portunlty

34

Buslnau

114 • • • • · .
llooplftll , _ . whh oooldng.

Bulldlngl

Aloci trlllr -·All hooll'upo.

Quollly brfcll bullclftll, ""' and Call aft• 2:00 p.m.,
tiOfO , _, 2221 N. lloln St. 11111, ... ""!' wv.

304 ~77:1-

loluty ohop In Pomeroy. Qood
AVON I AI - · I Slolrley tocotiOn, aood ollentoto. Coli . :::ICM;,;...
,;;;l'f...;..;;l2;,;,;1t~
. ~----llpoon, :1tf4.1'11oIM·1111·2Bft oft• I p.m.
46 Space for Rant
- I n my ' -• 1 - lor aoto. RIOinocut 35 l.c»S &amp; M1'81g8
Coolntry llobllo H - Park,
ol Pomeroy.
1 3doyU polll,l11 Ul II II
:~"::~0:. ~~ In- : . :..."::'~at
h = ~ R - 33, Lalo.
.
.......
· Cal
........, ...... ln "" hOlM
bla ~
.... ,... 1,...11171.
=-~=&amp;_lluot llo It"'·
mlo Ill. 2 II
111,100.
5.

riobp-

..

~.

Real Estate

=.........-.'
r========:r=;=~=======i
uv· ock

Couoll
· ..... _ - · ...h '""
10 ....- Ra.- Trill , _ , ...
. fo Sal
63
ATI, ..,_ ";H- · &lt;~&lt;~ . Pats
r
I
f110, Alpine
Clrophlo I•
~• ..,_ now 1111, will I AICC !leg. •
ola, lrl oolor, · I .-

onalo, IJn.I,..,IIODCI ,wotoll

taMI100.11WIHIII.

m, oaa~~;
tW: 11o;,1 - ·
wl-. 101
111111, 1r1-,
~
Ul2487.
.
plotonwlnc!o\0. ~211.

11 IIUIIllnum .....- out
whh lull ocrMno , Mdl,-

rldl:'4l

· . - n 7 2 or

Goods

E-

41101 I

'
.
-ton, 212 •~

- ~~~~~~~!:
E R·.........,. Z•7V., Red! c.tt.,
~
••
tl •
Enla-. 1 yr. old, ~ •''••
lo-:
•.flrt.,.N:
114441-1il~- otter· llon
7: 114
114 4101.

Q

~ITU1
For Solo: Air 120 .

., 11,

\lilly - ·

Dn....,.,nd catt., - . ,
st.:;M and HI"'"'""" IIIIIJftL
11t 4413114 .,....7 p.rit. /
,

..,.._.,

JNoM•.......,._,_ •
Hay &amp; Grain" f

.

gal Ill up •~·
M3.25.

_,1!'11•

-

•

- n o. c.tlflod

ll'!!"!!..,oolh -

.... Col 114-

lii:Z.U...
For Solo: ·111111 - • • 1111111

-. -

, . _ 110. ..... ---·· .lorlcho
I 2110
,_,,llaocl
Roymand
F
. uttz.

-

S7

choir, wlrollooo,
• lloh tanlla • bor ..- .

FOR SALE: TobMoO

Musical

-..uso.111 ua utt.

-no

:.:":!! ~-·
.. -::-=::::-.:...~
,.

-:l-$"""

•= Word--

58

Fruits &amp;

A--

"-atabln
• ..,.

lng, toa.-

tDCL:d
Dey

I, -

-

on -

Hlllllll._

.

....

-

A• -

--•to•I
--·

polalo plo-

--

lloth
.~

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a

, . _ - . - . •lit.

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Allar I, ni

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lr

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•

,_
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. . . . . IIOura f.7p.m. doRy,
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__. ..... - -...... 'lldolla

:;;;;;;:

...

........*.

Pon:.,1•
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lfll1

lnno.Uoo.,_

......,

~ =rn~.;:- ;no:~
:~upor···
...
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- lor
.._
. porto.

1171 PIJOiaulll Yolllr. olont I,
orla.•onlloo, 2nd ""~·

!!:.02!.
_,r1211

- - -·
--·

"" -· ·-.·--

- · ""'--- -410.- :111.000

......

a

1""

cro~~flre

Night COUrt

1;00 ()) MOVIE: Zono, T1ie
Legencllleglnt (2:00)
• (I) Ill Colby lltow Cliff

...._
"'· iiO,
•~1
,.... 114-24NI17,
warnnty, Natlonwkla,
typoo.
11Wltlud;ll _

has a dream thet mon can

(!) (!) 1tome11t1• Follow the

•

basic framing atepo on
contracting a homit. Q

•

• (JJ

MOVIE: etuba

(R)

By EITQI' ·

·•

.. Don Wfllamo Don

WHIIame llvlllrom Tucoon
feotureo country muilc'a
gentle gilllt In COIICirt

*'

"* $011: 11111 Dod;o CllooriOFfnn

.

llotO&lt; - · ......... concfl.
lioo(
loW mingo, 14,111. 11424H ..I.
1
~Country Air traMt tronor. fullY
-. • ......., ...... ...-zm. ·

ACROSS

. Pl1tloaate (1:001
I:C)S (J) MOVIE: A ON1h In

' CollfOmla (3:201

.
1;311G ill 18 Dllr.oaool WCIIId
'
Walter propotn thai JIIIHI
ac;ctmlpany him on 1
'.

honef11100!11t'lp. (R) D

~·....,_

!I)8Ma_
k Pr•wtewaeloet

VIdeo

•
(!) W!td Amlllcl FOllOw wild

.......
PoiHoll - · ....,. .. -

mink~·-

......

.

Like Superta;. Q ,.
1:011• Ill ·a a-. c1111 futlllle

Selvtces

a dnllm by COf!lptlllng on

81

~p_._·

Home
Improvements

a 111 •

Cll.;;-.;·~.

Truman and Cooper ciiOoVll'
a grill)' cr1ma scene In the
WOOCII. g
•

(!) .

(!) MJ_,I Mortl ·

. • c;onfronts Sir Wilfrid abOUt
the death of Yuklo i..ea. (PI 2

~ \Qa ,~tcon c-t

lall'en flnilly r1vu1a the
truth to Danny and RIChard:

8 Llny
King LMI
MOVIE: Poolcy'o (R) (2:00)
II)

18 NIIIWIIII NDw

'

a MOVIE: 0.1. War llrldll
(1:001

9:30 • ~ 18 wtnaa CarOl
. retuma to the Teland with
Brien. Q
10:00 (I) 700 Clilb Willi Pal ·

BARNEY

=~rlla:nL..A. Law Kuzak

.1AMIY JOHN fl

I HEAR YOU
QUIT YORE JOB
DOWN AT TH'
SAWMILL

YEPfl
I SHORE
DID!!

·

I'M WORKtN'·
IN TWIN FORKS .

CAtLIN' BINIID
NUMBERS II

. =·gNa..i

r1prennt1 • POIICiman;
Bicker rulne hla marriage
(JJ

Prlmellma Uva

walcll

(!)UndW,....

Ill • • Kllll18 Undlnl

I&lt;Mon II trappaolln her ~
by her IIOOI'Ity guard. Q .
IIJ) Evanlng Newt.
"
Newt
10:30 (!) M811tlrpiiCI T1Metn
FIZII IICComfll"lao T..tq to.
·the North Wnt FI'Qnllar. (PI 3

Plumbing &amp;

a

--:::::::H:::a':::at~ln:::g
::-:--·'
· cartnPt..,..,.
·

.

andHootlntl
Fourtlland. Pfnil

.,•••• =p~.!~~
84

'

Electrical &amp; ·

.

OfS~Q

.
·. (!) Ryan'• Dan A "-ton~
Brief

• (!]) Maw Twilight

Re~ratlon

ASTRQ..ORAPH

z-

.. CIIICIIt I ChiN
11:00 lei~. Mil: King

,

80li'I'B

+su

~

........

.

t Provide
party

44 ll!egatlve
45Means

needs

DOWN

8 Immovable

1 Ringlet
2 Flrenze' s

9 Speec;hlly
10 Nasty

loOk

river
3 Undergo

12'Enterlng

4 Summer

point
13 Fiord
15 Destiny
18 Fabled
.
· bird
18 Greek
· letter
19 Circumvent
21 Olstanl

(Fr.)
5 Take
back
8 Goller's
fault 7 Poellcal
adverb
8 CherltlS
Bronson

22 Tennis
score

· film

•
20 Weather· 31 Antarctic

cock

hero

23 Snake

32 Spread

tooth
24 Small
bottle

·joy
38 Yemen's -

•.
building 39 Moo - · _..
28 French
gal pan • •

-

""'*'•
Wllar ..... 101111
-w.11 ..,.
r ....... lllii- •

Of

tt

30 Etruac&amp;n
. Juno
31 Billow
33 Guy (al.)
34 Constel-

lation's ·
main star
35 Drink up
38 BaHroorit

dance
40 Sultan's

decree
42 u.s..
statesman

43 Sldelr~
.
-'. -'-~~ ··
DAILYCRYP'roQUOII!2i-Here'lllowlowwtlll:

,,

AXY.DLBAAXR

'

One letter stands for analher. In tlil sample A II lllid ,:

. .

,.._ .,_

t-, .....

-

21

11-11
"'

J;;UCEPN

fJIIDMIIIII

~~::- 4;0110 '

' ....
- · itG.Oill

-._.._
-. ..
--1 --. . . . . .-._...... ..........-.1.., .......

·'K L I V V •

...... County,

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

. ,1011._!!. Coli

,._., ,.. 111111 PU;adlllllid

olltertw•lll.l11 -IIIL

•

"M"'t you ling t"' 'Rocky' tha'na - r
time you make a niCe shot?"

..

.

. .·

.

~

MSDKS· :·

NLVEUOSZ

-

E V V

QVKF

Y ED I

C • · I· K U F Y N -' .
Ynllll.,·•:=-•teawtENYOU'REDOWN ~~
" .. ANOOUT.SOI ~
ALWAVSTURNSUP-AND ·· ·
·~ · ITS USUAl I Y 11tE NOSES OF YOUR FRIENDS. - ~ :: .
I ORS()flt WB.LES
.
. .
• ..

1\op.

~ 1-4 ........
•,II.+.!............ - ·II

L 'IOSA. YV ·N

ND· OKMNUP
.

33 Farms for Sale

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

•

IKSVNL

--·a rat-._.
...voluiM-dli!·
Haull!!f

f

,, .
. ..

CDnOQUOTE

R liiWI!I• ..........- _ olol'
l.....,._t,OIIo or
. I7I-G7a.
2,01111 ........'A doh.,.
C.H -·• - ·
__ ...
•·
•.

In my - .
PIM. HI,.

'

.far the tine L's, X for the two O's, etc. Sinlle letten, :

......... -7doyl,l14o441-

Wll•=lh•
...... ..... ..............
••••• lllilllCtdl

·-

apollraphes\ the length and {onnaUon of the words are all : :
hints. Each oay the code letlerlare different.
~ :

85 Glnarel Hiullng
7

37 Jaunty

.23 "The
down
city
41 Clothing
Searchers· 14 Late
27 Bulltlght
alze
· dlrsctor
17 Poem
29 Couple
(abbr.)
24 Sing
r.-r.-or:-r.-~
27 Sweet
sluH
28 Enthuse
29 Russian
river

IILO~GFELLOW

BEDEOSOL

.'

capital

25 Airport

11 Slow

Clllll

BERNICE

v

by THOMAS JOSEPH

a MOVI!:' PIIoolllt'lln

·

+AH

.

CROSSWORD

l)erformlng 1011111 frQm hll
One
Goo(! WaH. ·

. Cllffent .RCA album,

Mit -~ ·~ - .
1711a00orllll-1112.
•
11 •· n - . - . lith
-.13
-. IM-317-l'lnZ:
'·
......
.

....

:::a

IIJl PolmeNewa
11J MunMI', She W,. Trial

1171 Chov. R.Y. - · ' Mlln;o, ' - olapo, motor and

• • J 7s 1

.JI52

2

d
.
ue
.
ed

(2:30)

,

+u 7 u

duiiiins
· ..

[Q
•
1121 41 Houro
·I «&lt;l

· delinquent kid brOther Ia
lrarriad fqr murder.

1871 Tony 1011 oontolnod wfth .·
ownlftll ~~- ~ •S2,2110. ll4-

,

F..... Dowlltlll

Myller!M Slaw Steve' a

.,

.,

......

+Q
+KIIU
'Dsr
+Jt7

. : ~ 10

;

=

,.r:=J~

-'-

.. .

'KQI074
example.
,
tKIOf
~ Soutb, a .,.- ~. bid two
+Qt
belrts, Nortb juilipied to four. He knew .
South beld at 1eut 1 five-card belrt ·
Vu!N'able: Eut·Welt
.suit and _.., bl&amp;b-ard points to 10
Dealer: South
to tbe two-level. I!'Mt tile ~ of
...,.
1dta!!M!DCII and returned tbe IIIII.
Pllii
;Soutb'a 10 wu oovered bJ' tile jllck and , P•
ruffed In dtlllllll)'. A low club ..t to I 2 '
lbe ~. ud decllnr plaJed anothOpeaillc lead: t 5
'
er
club
back
to
aiDe.
Eut
.waa tbe ace aad lila
uothlr ...,_
monel. South waa file
and piiJed
a belrt to clummy'a ace aad 1 belrt
•
badt to bla kiJW. "When Welt ~ Eaat. A aplde to
DlO'
oat aa tile 11«01111 beltrt. declarer bad
a neat endtaa wtth .
·eome · pi'Qb
. 111111. Eut bad a~dy tbe lead ud Sclatll bolcllal Q-lf of .
11bown with two - . 1K1 Soutb DIIJed burtl Eaat'a J-1. .Takia&amp; 11
· to diuamy'a
Nat be trlcb wu 1 fiDe ....tt, ~ 111
the kina of cl
throwiJI&amp; I t-. North,llauth plin wlla pll~
ud rufled tile lilt club.' 1\at .pme .. .,.,..., wllen tbe ,.,.hll'
bll trump lea&amp;th to tblt o( trump trlet caald !lOt be .... I •

7:35 (J) Slinfonl And Son

...,..__ _
--~~...,~~~S~IO~~~~.,......

114-

F1 ~ • - T
, . _ ..,.....
.....
11,000 mlloo. Nrii llorooi ~.4
.... - . . . . '

·

(!])

NOiml

+A QUI

pared with 12 or more _ . . of odler · WilT

competinc pain. Your total ICOn Ia
7:30. ()) FamiiJ Foud
not u Important u tile number of
(j) Ladlat Pnl 8owlarl Tour
tblt you you bave bateD, a Ill Entwtllllttmailt Tonight · Uttle
u 10 polatl. Ia IIIICb a caa8 Cll Mama'' FemiiJ
,
~trlcka caa be qtdte lmpor1121 a JeoplfCIYI Q '
' Today'• deill ~~~ u

.
I· IIJI • lf'A'II'H

..

·

yotii'ICOftGIII partleulardlalla t:1llll- :

7:06 (J) Jells.-.

"*·

.

f"·~

'l'otlm8ment pair 1!11111petitloll lllltchpolllt ICIIriJt&amp;, 'trhlch tlllt

a

1171 ado llllta M, .... runnlna 118dr.'tt44f7.GIZ4.
Ml1d..
,body ...... lhlpo. I40G;
mPCI •Milllii TraveI Tnl~
I'Mt41cl4fl.
. •. .
1
-, .
1171 ,.._h OIOtloq r:=l:=,.all lfvo.ln locllhloo.
~:·outo.l-.. 1300. • 1 - - .... ~. --

tm ~--.._ NnO
.......o - - - ·
r:-• ...,....•....._.,.
·
~-. . . . . ._.
1171~·
, ... 4

BRJOOI

ot

18 Mullc Row VIdeo ·
Abbot All1l ea.t.~~o

Aut0 p I rt. S &amp;

•••·

Whlel

'

bad. Voujulllockedyou~;:.;IN:...:the:.:::..:..HOU::=
. :.:::=:SE:.:I·'--....__ ___,

c-tQ
OMI•yll•
IIJ Mlainl VIce

'""'ory ln~)!d,

•

c.,_

•111 • Cll
Allttlt
Cll (!) ..acNell.......,

$2211
.,.....
c:.npor
Top, •loo
box, IIO&lt;t..'f'I!!'Y,
- ·
ut..o, Rood R..- Traolor. 140
11on1 - · 1 .1.0. Aloo'1111. I~IDO. 114o4414141.
-TEAS
llloftiii'Y • - Spool-.
·- - - w-. - t
o
·
1 -. - · - ·

campera &amp;
Motor Homes

6 UNSCRt\M8LE·
t\BOVE lETTERS I I I
TO GET t\NSWER
.
Button- Sixth- Lover-Jinglti-IN 1M HOUSE
Using reverse psychology on the 4 year old Who had
locked her out, the mo111ar said In a sad YOk:e, "Too

(j) lpol:taCeit1l&lt;

1. . Cllolkln, 1Th, 1:111 1111, 17
Nnn!ftll hoon on Trollot
SKI Equlpn...._hoW4e-at1. .

.79

k. SlOG

PLiii: -...~-1nd tlroo. 11,000.
Tllm--. . .... ~
. Ill..F:,: '::~.:..~.;.'! 1111-1143 ohr S p.m.
01 PAINT

aD. to 110. NWT Pl,lll, . . _
.-:

wo

-··=-·114-1112-2773.

l ghta, ..... - -

114-114.~ .

1177 Ford
cono1,
:104........
711.aG11.-

1 1_1,
OVation Oulllr l alllllon - . ona
--..... ·-..._ 114 t11-t4
. II.
...-.

.- .

It'"'

-

Did 1321-etlf ~

cholro, ohlld'a . . - I cllab,
yam, ~.,;
cubOior, I
100, lolo!lllf
chllra,
.autr, ~

:za.e,n ....-~ _

or lrodo

For . . . 111,_-III'ICiy II E.l&gt;
aNa •~:mphM• .._. thin 2

.•
.
1'-- :.,hlno,-k':o.::"'Ml..;;;
I

..baby

a-. llillbu 17110.

441.1;4. uo .

Tunlna
~nd" •
_ !i111..,- !Mil.llll - . n Furniture: Quolhy lorvloo. Cal Ill
Fumlt\lra ond Corpll, II loW
bN7MIU;' IIII
....._I
•• oo II.
.,._.....,;
folth
11 -.
... - . eo·..·~
- 1 1 1 ua
ttta.
·
~yanl. .-11144.
ICing ...:_,._, ooonplllo, I

'77

... PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
'I;IJ
THESE SQUt\RES

SCUMUTS ANIWIIS

..())PM Magallna

·.

1 D r - -. 104-t75-1231.
.
For Silo: 1114, 3115 rHiulft on'II ~ Z24, good cond,
TRW- Still In volllclo.
:104-tTWIII.
' .:.14-24NISS;.:-:;:.; .; .:-: ;-·= ==--::=
1173
Codlllao .lloehlnloalty :;::
ltoolollot bod lor pick up INCll
aoocl,body """"'; rnaU olfw. 1200. 304-tl2·3317.

PtymQU!h Soaoop, Slont I,
IIIIo
IIO!!d, body
den g11f,
~noa.

er·zr.t·· r-r..

I.JIIIb., 1,7110 lb., ~
WAHTED:
llono Jan, - · - guile, lcnl-. WIICI-, arrwlnda, good cor. 114JJ1..2110

23M.

' '.

a Hlngln' In

;;a;.-· h;ODO linn. •14-112-

76

I :I' I I I

1:35 (J) Andy Orlffiill
. . 7;00 ~ lcarectn Ulrt, KinO

can-;3ii.
:001"111.
1.. J1ofn!1!r 8Uo .iool. 110
lloraury rnCrlor, hao "-

.....

taTopc...l

tlon.114-tl2-2711.

body ond
Olllllor
aooc1·cond,
outo,
e&lt;ulao,
tlh olr - ono·
- · 111;0110 mliH, 1800. Air
Cond 1,000 btu 130. 3CJ4oe75.

111l11 Chov

Instrument• .

.. •

••

Pomlool ..zt" · Roll
haril
lop, full lumftun clnotto, leo
~ •
~ tral'"'
_., • tltru,
ooven, ~
·- ·, coRdi,..,,
~r
•• n tlnl:

·=
::----~---.--:-~--.
'73
ll. .ury 'llarctulo A-1 cond,

•

ano,
-r

--

•

117:1 17 ft. ...... 'fii.Hull
- · 121 HP, Evl ......
- - top . 11011 u
·,

you ··-~···

AutOS f or Sal 8

" ..

ond lupply Sloop Pal
_...,., All .....- .
Poll "
,'_
· Julo
-Ca
441 1231.

~

0111.
Ev-· ........
oond.,
t711111
·

-,I

t:,

I had asked illy huaband 10
clean up the house while I
went lhcipping. .His Idea of
Qleanlng up Wll 10 wtpe the
leaves olal my - ---. .

A &lt;=-plooe the chuckle q~
·,
V by filling In the miuing -d•
L-..J.L-..L• .;_L.
• .....1.-.L.....I you d..olop from 11ep No. 3 below.
5

~M=
Q
. · 1(!) 'iR~~. Q
«D
•• Coo,np lftJ

...

••.l'

.., , 71

o-

·3_

~11~4~~~~~,...
~.=-;:--::-;;;-;;;;;dt7 II. Croll- - · 711 '!Pd
1

0 .

i-~-T-R_E_E_·-L...,.
T.

1:30.(1) Ql NIC Nightly Newt

(I) lparttLa ah

0

L......L.-...J.L--..L-.....J.•..-.o. i'

l:osw .......,"1••1u

FOR IT TO ·
COMEOOTIN
P4PER8ACK ..

Vll!e - . o,wo.

E M0

1

a ChiiiM In Clllrge

off-·

sa....,.... 114-2111114.

Floll Tanir, 241J Jolc._, Avo.
It
Point PIMM-!-_.:104411-:IOa
II ··• 10 '._.

Wo-~ ror

IM :Mtlm.

A...

:a:- - . . . ._. .

oa1v
od , _ troln - k .
..... lullablo lor ,.
plandng. Colli.- 2 112% -

·FoiiT--.114211-1111

a!4-24M117.
~ROo' :'11T~=...~

......... JI.OI. llon.411. 814w
Clal-

246-11~··-· 1 ·~
Pa111n ior rent, 30Wl'f.1101.

7UO-

•

v.o NODI&lt;·
110. lor po . I

bollorn pUH lfpo plow 110.

::;...-&amp;. m

honll, I loan IUrUyl, i

r:ouilfll)~~h-. 114-

~ "'C ""
••

~~~~-;.;;·Aii-;;;~iiiiii~~
......
000 I -

a..

I

:104..~58.

..,, 31M •• -

IT.......

. . . 114-MNIIO.

Coello- 140. _.., :1tf4.1'11- tono olipo lll!d pooaod through
2011· •
....
_ - .-n
·
s
a
- .·
- .· -·-1 h· l

CUb Codol ~ · llllly - ; 1177 Ford 310,
llalliod truall. 114-211--. 114-

...... ,.,.

Ia-

.,.,
and I limbo lor oolo.

·--·

0om1o tloo, noollonl to - r.llllnt oondHion. nlue II $1,000. fllue. per
.....,. •·..
~. •~.klr 1111 of tltloo!

H~hokl

':A.::eanto

Aullnllon

llo leo

A ...

112115.

:Ill aal. ftoh lllluarluon - - •
wlllilo 1100. 011. Rook
rnaplo .dnoot loaf tablo.

Merchandise

11211. ~

M ft . .lolln bOot .... nllir, 3-l!p"
; trDUI~or, ond MC "-nnlon pupplao,
lifo )ICIII4a
. 11711 Chow -~~ - h p..-,
BI&amp;Zit': 350-~ 1 spred, ••'· _..7W113.

-

MAYBE I
SIIOUI.D WAIT

T-.12)·

14 . . ...... -

II I rI

.l!ll AndY Ortllllh

14 -...., llll
Ev-a ·
oloolrlo
..........
..
Tr-IIIII - ·
ton• ~~ UI,DO iJr"-J
Ron , , -

•

IDJ WCIIId fodoly
IIJHie-Mitn

I

P' L I M 8

&lt;Zl.c:tub Conotect
.
.&lt;!liiOIIdlng ~ Q

75 Boatl &amp; L\kiiOrl
'fo,rSala .

•

.

DlgHt

rI

I I I Is I' I

•o
SNewt
(J) ludwt'lt' Thorau;tOH

l o r _ T_ _

1133..114.

NDO. ittiiiiNOtt
• HP -~
n~ -

___

Q

11 ' :'

(J) . . . . Cil.

• •

.
- - :IODZWO~•.!.."!""'•

Top Cooh pold. Oltl lumlure
DUbll~
........
. . ....
paint-• • • O f - ......
call OOIJeOt I04o 121 tal&amp;, or~

~""·-

llt:Cm

--~--­

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

I' I

1:00 (J) Her~- "ICI ,And

'

I

CUPIIAK

I!VI!NING

............ 11,110.104 - - .

Mil. Rlv.lno Antlq-.
!lain ' lltroll, "-"!J'·
Houro: II.T.W. 10:00 un. to 1:00
r~~ 1:00 to I:CII p.m.

. rc

bo4h

Of

, .-. A~

, ....... 411 . . ..

Buy or
112'4 ~

'711 Pontloo 12,00 lllull -

_,

trol~- .....

-

1160. ....-uoa.
1117-3wt I

1?!-'IML

Fumllhacl

-.

ti.DO,
Awoy

........... oond;

1114 -

IIOVO, ..... a n d -. . .
arid .........., ·1410. -

...__""In_..,-

· lor

Motorcyclll

--7110.2--

-N·-

8t
11 __. --~ ~
- 0 0 ' ..-I'II-1M.

54 Mlscellaii80UI
Ma hindi

Whr _ , -

AVON • All ~Cal llorllyn

-:1114

~AI:,

C~:O..":' .f.:':~ 53
Antlquia
1 1 I , lion. • .,.Ant..,lq:-uo--wo-ocl.,..:,bum,..-,..lng-o""o•'"'k
· i'ii.iaO,
Oni.bi~,.,_-

......, _.. wfth or wllflaul
11101oro. Cal Lany Uvoly 114:1111303.

1-.
.
.
·-·
--·

73 Van11i 4 WD'I

- · IIC ' OuH. TIIWIIo, 1- - - - - - - - - , ~tlnol,' l morel Contac:t

lot

·9

KIT 'N' CARLYLE~ lly Lury Wrtpt

HouHhokl
GoodI

with awn~

10. 1990

Thursday. May

I( .

,,

.

"---

-

•

' &lt;

I

�'
Paga 16-The Daily Sentinel

Thursday. _
,_,ay 10. 1990

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio . .

... _;,

Ohio Lottery

Reds bounce
back·with

Daily Number
923
Pick-4
9091

10-4 Win
Page3 '

tonight near 110. Saturday, high near 70. Chance of
rain 70 percent..

•
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, May 11, 1990

2 Sec&lt;ion s. 14 Pages 2&amp; Conte
Inc. NBWIPIPi r

-

Meigs· votes no on
district Waste ·policy·
because of sheer economics and
By CHARLENE BOEFUCH
the travel distance Involved.
Sentinel News Stalf
After much discussion, an
While Meigs County members
amended motion was made with
strongly oppose a requirement
the addition that ''In the event of
that all solid waste generated in
area landfill closing. a variance
the multicounty Sol!d Waste
could be Issued to use another
Dis trlct be disposed of In w!thlo
the district , that provision has · landflli within the district. "
Another major Issue cons!·
been adopted bY. , the policy
dered at the meeting was the
committee.
· ''
recommendation from theel{ecu·
What this means, according to
Kenny wiggins, one of ~elgs ~ Ive committee for a real estate
property assessment to fund
County's representatives on tpe
recycling center and take care of
policy committee of the Athens,
other costs of the district's
Gallla, Hocking, Jackson, Meigs
operation.
and Vinton Counties Solid Waste
The proposed fee would be
Dis trlct, Is that the district has
assessed through each county
the authority to control the flow
auditor's office. According to
of waste generated In the six
Wiggins, the district has the
counties.
aU!horlty to implement such
At a meeting of the policy
Charges under House Bill 592,
committee In Athens County
Section 343.08.
Wednesday nlgnt a resolution
Another action which was
was adopted by a vote of 13 for to
proposed at the meeting wplch
9 against, wltn all Meigs Co)lnty
would prevent the district from
members voting "nq", to restrict
owning or operating a landfill
the flow.
failed tor the lack of a motion.
· That resolution specifies that
Paul Braasch of SCS Eng!'
waste generated In Gallla and
neers detailed the recycling
Meigs Counties must use the
method proposed for the district
Gallla County landfill, that w~ste
generated In Jackson and Vinton
Counties must be disposed of In
their respective areas; and that
Athens and Hocking waste must
be disposed of In a landfill In one

.BEDDING PLANT SALE
"Area :S Best SelecUon Of The FreshestAnd H~althiest Plants"

a

~ Coq~memoratlon

Of
61u 2oth Anniversary •••

'Flowerlng ...~a.~.
Baskets 20% Off
,

REGULAR •11.98

$959

lVOWJUSt

VICI'DI TREATED - This victim of the
Tri-Cnunty Simulated EmeflleDCJI sulferlag from
cllenllcal bul'lll II abowa u he wu plaeed Ia an
. ~~ ~tFr.JJ!I!!!I~ i:qom at VeteraasMemor·

q;;Jii:;'Qr'T1Rt'i r'•h' for examlnatlori and

~-~m. Tbesceaarloforlhlayear'sdlsallter-

We'l8 Fully Stocked With •••

.POTIING SOIL SALE
'·

Sale
Reg. Price

-Item
Potting Soii.....2A9......1.99
(40111L)

Top SoL........2.19-...1.99
(4011e.)

Peat Humus•..•..2.1~•.:...1-.99
,.....,. t.I
. .
Cow .-anu.-•....2.»..::..1.99

,.....,

•"Bob's 'Market Specialty"
New Guinea Hybrid Impatiens
In 14 Spectacular COlors
•Non-stop Begonias
•Fuchsias
•Ivy Geraniums.
·Geraniums
•And Morel

. atratn derailment of tank cars in Cheshire- was

prepared by Bob ' Byer, director 11f lbe Meigs

aearby. Pomeroy
flremen 'were oa the scene to rid the area outside
the hOspital of contat,nlnat!On.
·

udMoN,

,.

'
READY FOR VICTIMS - Staff members at
Veterans Memorial Hospital are pictured In
special atllre u they awaited patients froB) the
18th annual Tri-County Simulated · Disaster
Thunday night. About 15 pallimts suffering from
bums, hysteria, dlfflcully In breathing and otile~

•Calacllnms
'

SATURi&gt;AY
MAY 12TH

•Gardenias
•Emtic Lt111es
•Llslanthus

'
•Geraniums
··

•Cactus Dahlias
~.,·Potted

WILL BE GIVING

Roses
•New Gullaea Impatiens
•Hardy Bloomtng
Azaleas

AWAY BAU..OONS

And More!

AND THE
BOB'S MARKET
CLOWN

AND MOREl

:

brought heated opposition from
the Meigs County committee
members along with several of
the Meigs refuse haulers attend·
lng the meeting.
Although Meigs County Is not
the only county with some waste
being landfllled outside the district, most of the local haulers
use the landfill In West VIrginia

LOGAN, Ohio (UP!) - A
Logan man convicted six years
ago In the. mutilation slaylngs of
his stepdaughter and her bOyfriend was ready to be freed from
prison Friday.
Hocking County Prosecutor
Charles Gerken announced
Thursday he was dropping
charges against Dale Johnston.
56, who haS spent the las t seven
years In prison for the slaylngs of
Annette Cooper, '18, Todd
·
· Schultz, 19, In 1982.
Gerken said he mad e the
decision after the Franklin.
Deputies of the Meigs County County Court of Appeals upheld a
Sheriff's . Department Invest!· judge's ruling disallowing state·
gated two . accidents Thursday ments and evidence collected
evening.
during an Interview with John·
The first accident occurred ston In the Logan pollee s tation In
around 5 p.m. In Chester. Accord· ·1982.
lng to the report, Bruce Myers,
''The methods employed ... are
Chester, pulled out of Sumner violative of the basic principle
'Road onto Route 248 and Into the that ours Is an accusatorial and
path of a westbound vehicle not an Inqulstorlal system,"
driven by Wanda Wolf, Reibel Judge Dean Strasbaugh wrote In
Road, Chester.
the unalmous decision.
The report went on to say thllt
Gerken said he could not go to .
Mrs . Wolf applied . her · brakes trial without Information from
causing her vehicle to go left of · the Interview.
center and Into the path of an
"This c.ase could not proceed
• eas tbOundjeepdrlvenbyCharles wtth any likelihood of convlc·
Holsinger, Success Road. Myers' tlon." Gerken said.
1986 Ch·evrolet pickup sustained
He said by filing a motion to ·
light damage .but Mrs. Wolf's dismiss the case, he would have
1988 Oldsmobile was heavily __ the option of reflllng a charge If
damaged. There was no damage .there Is new evidence.
·
to Holsinger's Jeep. There were
Gerken said tHe case will
-no cliatlons and no Injuries . The remain open, but he ~ddmlted,
Chester Fire Department re· "I'm not aware of any · new
sponded to the scene for traffic' leads."
control.
Johnston was sentenced to
· The second accident occurred death March 23, 1984, but the
On Whipple Road. According to · Ohio Supreme Court ruled 1!11988
the report, John Rose, Bashan
Road , Long Bottom, was eastbound on Whipple Road when he
struck and killed a deer that ran
Into the path of .his vehicle.
Rose's vehicle sustalnfi(l minor
damages .
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Sheriff James M. $oulsby
Secretary of State Sherrod
· reports that a warr11nt . on ~n
Brown told an Ohio House
lndlctinent for David Shannon
committee Thursday that camBrowning, Beckley, W.Va., has
paign spending has become like
been sent to Giles County Vlrglan arms race'lhatls threatening
.nla to be used as a holder on
the t!'lle freedom of the people.
·
Browning.
"UnleSS we get a handle on this
Brown!llg was Indicted by the
problem, runnlna lor office will
Meta&amp; County Grand Jury . on
become a hobby for the wealthiMarch 20 for receiving and
est people In Oh'Io," Brown told
dllpoal!IJ of stolen property from
the State Government Commit·
a February breaking and enterlila at · the Wendell Hoover tee, which Is conslderl!'tf his
proposal to lilnlt spending on
residence. Browning Is •being
statewide and legislative races.
held In the Giles County Jail on
Btown said neither Democrats
VIrginia charges. SherlffSoulsby
nor Republicans want to take the
. advises the VIrginia authorities
first step to limit tbelr main
reported that Browning will be
weaponmoney- because they
taclng charges In that state
are afraid It will hurt them.
before be can be released to Ohio
:'At a tll}le when young people
authorities.

No one
hurt in ·
two wrecks

PLUS

'PLANTS

Johnston to be
l
d
frar t z;----~~
of~:;I'ifo~~':h':'' r~~~;~ tl~t'' re ease
Ohio pen today

Injuries and aliments were ·received at the
Pomeroy hospital as the result of the simulated
disaster which was the derailment lavolvlng tank
cars at the Cheshire railroad crossing plus an auto
accident near the disaster.

Recession
risk slim,
leaders told
HOT SPRINGS, Va. (UP! ) -A
report presented Friday to a
meeting of America's corporate
leaders said the chances of a
recession In 1990 and 1991 are
slim and predicted that the
economy will grow slowly.
The high-powered members of
the Business Council, which
Include the likes of General
Motors chairman Roger Smith
and General Electric chief Jack
welch. e~Cpressed guarded op·
tlmlsm at the forecast - and
agreed tbe econorny Is fragile,
"I'm certainly not as sanilllne
.as the economiSis, ' 1 said Lewis
Preston, chairman of banking
ataat J.P. Morgan and Co.
"When I get 19 economists
agteelng there's going to be 2
percentgrowth, there'sonethlng
I can guarantee: Therewon'tbe2
percent growth."
·
Added Edmund Pratt, chairman of drug maker Pfizer Inc. ,
"We kDOW frOfll experience that
economiSts are not . lnfa)lble.
,..;
Continued on page 10

'·

'

1

-flO

We Haw A IMJe Selectioa Of .
MuldMa, Nuqett. Play Sud,.
MD._ a.J,-. Red Lava Rock

POTTED

which would Include three pro·
cesslng centers. 15 dropoflloca·
lions, and seven curbside recy .
cling opera tions.
John VanVokenbrug, plan
coordinator for SCS Engineers,
reported on progress of tbe Solid
Was te Plan s and distributed
draft copies of various sections of
the plans .
Regarding liability Insurance.
coverage for committee
members, Marty Lewis of Arter
and Hadden, the district's legal
consultants, reported on a letter
from the Buckeye Admlnlstra- ,
tors Firm and Indicated more I.
Information would be needed I •
before securing coverage.
Mike Finney of Ohio University talked abOut the progress of
h\5 team In mapping the sill
counties In the district.
· ,
Plans were al)nounced for a
public meeting to be held on May
30 at 7 p.m . at the elementary
school in Wilkesville. Neltt meet·
lng of the I)lstrlct Polley Cop1·
mlltee was set for June 12 !II .7
p.m . .at the .Senior Center In
Logan .
'

that he· should have a new trial
because of the Improper use of
hypnotism in refreshing the
memory of a key witness at his
original trial In Logan.
A second trial was to have been
held In Franklin County on a
change of venue. During a
pretrial hearing, retired Frank·
lin COUI!fr judge William Gjllle
refused to allow a vest, bOots·and
other clothing to be used: · as
evidence against Johns ton. ;t'he
evidence was taken from John·
·s ton during and after questioning
on Oct. 21. 1982, at the pot1ce
s tation In Logan: .
The appellate cour1 upheld
Gillie's ruling.
The court singled out Logan
dectectlve Jim Thompson for •'
criticism. saying he tried to ,
deceive Johnston Into thinking he '•
had blood on his bOots.
"The conduct of the pollee .
during the 8 ~-hour session
indicates a' ,process of Interrogation and attempt to overbear;
(Johnston's) · free will through
coercive behavior," Strasbaugh ,
wrote.
·
·. 1
"The state presented no Ieillh ·· 1
mate reason fQr the length of the ,
Interrogation In this Instance. "
Johnston has maintained his
Innocence from the time of his
arrest on Sept. 29, 1983.
"My main goal Is to find the
person who killed my daughter,.''
Johnston told . The Columbus
Dispatch In an Interview conducted Th11rsday In his Llcklilg
County ja:ll cell. "Only my death
will prevent me from finding the
person who killed my daughter. •'

l;ampaign limits are
considered in House

TAKEN FROM AMBULANCE - . Victim II taileD from
ambulaace ud l'llllhed lato the emergeaey ..-n at Veterans
Memorial ._pltal durlag Thunday'a annual d!Auter drill.

1

around the world are ex.perlenclng the . exhilaration of democracy, knocking down the Berlin
Wall, we have In effect built our
'qwn wall around the electoral
process with the enormous CGst
of .nmnlng for olftce," said the
twO-term secretary of state.
•'In that respect 1 the effect of
money· on the political process Is
like the effect of the oil spUI on
•Prince William Sound, '' he said.
"The process bas become polluted by the Influence or money ,
and we are compelled to do
something abOut It - to clean It
up:"
Brown's bill would limit spendIng for governor·lleu~nanl gov.ernor to a1.6 million per team In
Con~Jued on page 10

' .

II

1

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