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                  <text>P.ga 10-The Deily Sa1lin.al

Pom&amp;ot Mldclaport. Ohio

·-

--Area deaths-Gladys Hysell

Smith-Buick Pontiac Qf Galll!KIlls In 1967 and was a World War II
Gla.,Ys M. Hysell, 82, of Wes· Army Veteran. · "
He Is survived by two daugh·
tervllle, dled,Saturtlay at Manor
ters,
Jackie Wolfe of Westerville,
Care Nursing " Center In
.
Ohio
· and Roberta Hartis · of
Westerville.
'
Gallipolis;
three sisters, Ruth
She was preceded In death by
Jewell
of
Coal Grove, Ohio.
her husband, the late Clyde
Alberta
Haning
of Nelsonville
Hysell, formerly of Meigs
and
Olive
Smith
of
Pomeroy.
County.
..._ '-"-· She Is survived by two broth·
He was preceded In death by
·era, Denver and Giles Salser, one brother, Max Brlckles.
Westerville; three sisters-In· law .•
Memorial services will be held
VIolet Hysell and Genevieve ·· 11 a.m. SatUrday, June Sat Beech
Burdette, and Rose Hagey, · Grove Cemetery.
_ Springfield; and several nieces
In lieu of' flowers, the faml~v
~d nephews In Meigs County.
requests donations be· made to
&lt;Funeral services will be held at
the American l!eart Association.
2
Wednesday at the MoreJ;'uneral arrangements are
Jane! Funeral Home, 55 E.
under the direction of Ewing
Scllrock Road, Westerville. Tbe
Funeral Home, Pomeroy.
Rev. Eugene Griffith will offl·
elate and burial wlll be In Robert Barber
• Fancher Cemetery. Friends may
call at the funeral home 2 to 4 and
Robert Barber, '59, Route 681,
'T to 9 p.m on Tuesday.
'Reedsville, died Sunday at Grant
Hospital In Columbus.
Robert A. Bric~es
Arranlll!lllents will be announced later by W.hlle-Biower
~· A. ·BrlckleS, 65, bf Funl!i'al Home In CQ!i\vllle.
Augu&amp;ta, ' Ga., died Saturday, .
June 2,1990.
---------He was born July_18, 1924, son
Tbe laraest collecUoo of parrots 1n
of theo late Eugene and Ethel
'
the
world CAD be found at Ilulcb GarBrlckles.
·
1
dens In Tampa, Fla.
r.tr. Brickles retired from

,

'JI.m.

j

Teen...

Monday, June 4, 1990

eonunuecl rrom pa~re 1

shoes and 111asses were follild,
alq wtlh a part of the grill frDm
the truck, the llherlff reported.
The hunt for the body and the
truck continued throughout the
night with officials on the scene
searching outlying roads. ·
Sunday morning, . Sheriff
Soulsby said that
call was
received at his office reporting
that a truck of the same description that bad hit WIU had been
stolen from the Riggs Car Lot,
State Route 7.
The names of Riggs and Ha,rri~
as having been. seen In a truck
like the one which hit Wlll kept
· coming up during the lnvestiga·
tlon and questioning of wit·
nesses, the sheriff said. Sunday
morning the two were called In
for questioning by sheriff's offl·
clals and Meigs County Prosecu·
tor Steven Story and his assist·
ant, Linda Warner. Both Riggs
and Harris were later released
until reports of their Saturday
night actions CO.uld be verified.
Since there· were ·cllscrepan·
cles, Harris was brought back In
Sunday afternoon and·· under
further ques tlonlng told what had
happened and where tbe body
and truck were located. He was
taken Into custody Immediately.
Officials from the sheriff and

a

prosecutor's offices 11nd Coronor
Doug Hunter went to the West
Shl!de Road site to recover the
body which was taken to the
Franklin County Morgue for an
autopsy•
The truck wu found In the
location given by Harris. Details
of how II got there and how the
two returned to M;etgs County are
still being determined, the shetiff said.
Rl'ggs was taken Into custody
about 8 p.m. Sunday night after
had returned frO!JI Eastern
High School commencement. He
was a member of the 1990
graduating class.

Environment said
· ohio~ top problem

CINCINNATI (UPI) - The Issues.
environment has beeome a high·
It Is also un clear whether
ranking concern of state rest· environmental Issues will re·
dents, an Ohio Poll released main lmport~nt to Ohioans over
Monday shows.
time, he said.
In a .survey of 628 adults.
The environment is the top
pollution was named by more concern for some whites, but no
than 13 percent of the respond· blacks, according to the poll.
.ents as the most Important
· Slightly more ln.an 15 percent
problem facing Ohio. Moret han 5 _of the white respondent.s cited·
percent of the respondents "Pollution as the top problem and
named solid waste. dls)lOSlll as 5.9 percent named solid waste
the rnost critical problem. · · .disposaL
Combining the two Issues
Among blacks, none cited the
·m eans the environment Is
ranked second lplmportance by environment, while 47. percent
Ohioans, behind drug and alcohol named drug and alcohol abuse as
'
PICK-3
their primary problem.
abuse.
888.
Among all respondents, · the
Substance
abuse
was
cited.
by
PICK-3 ticket sales totaled
Issues
and· the percent naming
·
20
percent
of
those
surveyed
In
$1,569,379.50, with a payoff due of
them
as
the top problem were
the
poll
conducted
April
T1
to
$2,577,550.
substance abuse, 20.2 percent;
May
4.
The
poll
was
taken
just
PICK-4
days after the 20th anniversary education, 14.7 percent; unem·
1623.
ployment, 13.5 percent; · pollu·
of
the first Earth Day.
PICK-4 ticket sales totaled
Al!re&lt;J Tuchfarber, director of lion, 13.2 percent; landfills, 5.2
$:ll9,179.l;i0, with a payoff due of
the survey, said II Is difficult to percent; and homelessness, ·4.9
$ll4,100. '
..
tell whether media coverage of percent.
Super Lotto .
The
environment
was c-Ited ·
Earth Day Increased cancer!!
3, 5, 13, 27, 32, 37.
most
frequen
t~v
by
younger
Super LotIn ticket sales totaled about the environment or
people,
with
27
percent
of
those In
whether the media Is only re$4,256.362.
the
18-to-29
age
group
listing
11 as .
sponding to Increased demand
.Kicker
their
top
concern.
for coverage of environmental
079623.

Ohio Lottery

Giants
unload
on Reds

Daily Number
347
Pick-4-

Page 4

•

he

Lottery numbers

.

Vol.40. No.272
Copyrighted 1890

tsy JULIE E. DILLON
Sentinel News Staff ·
New road construction at
Kerr's Run Intersection will not
be completed this year, accord·
lng to Pomeroy Mayor Richard
Seyler during Monday night's
regular meeting of Pomeroy
VIllage Council.
·
' ·
Larry Wehrung, council president, asked Mayor Sevier If he
'had. any n·eW Information on· the

'

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(Maple or Oak)

Tent Sale Priced

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Box Springs · ·
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80

81

B~OWNSVILLE, Texas tUPI)
Strlke-besei Greyhound Lines,
CLEVELAND iUPI) - Just
Police said Thomas Clark
the
nation's largest Intercity bus
hOurs after receiving their diplo· drove the car that bit a curb on
filed for Chapter 11
service,
mas , three St. Joseph High Euclid Avenue about 2:30 a.m ,
bankruptcy
protection to save Its
School student-athletes were Sunday, straddled It forabout43
assets,
maintain
profitable
killed In a fiery one-car crash.
feet, then smashed Into a utility
routes
and
stave
off
creditors
A stunned silence settled over pole and burst into flames.
·
until
It
can
repay
Its
mounting
faculty and students at the
Lt. James Blrk of the Cleve·
debts, company officials said.
570-student all-male Catholic land Accident Investigation Unit
Filing for Cli.apter 1l protec·
. school on Cleveland's east side said the youths .had been cele·
lion
Monday In U.S. Bankruptcy
when they heard the news. St. bratlng In the Flats. Authorities
Court
In J?rownsville,'the Dallas·
Joe's will hold a memorial had not yet determined whether
based
company and five subsl·
service Tuesday to mourn ille the auto was speeding. ,The.
diaries
and afilltates also asked
deaths of the graduates who had coroner's office Is testing the
for
an
Immediate ruling so
all planned to go on to co liege.
victims to see If they had been
customers
holding advance·
Killed early Sunday morning drinking. ·
purchased
tickets
could use
were Steven Clark, 1.9. Thomas .
One of the first to arrtve on the
Greyhound
services
.
Clark, 17, and Fred Blaine. 18. scpne was Emergency Medical
"We have taken this action to
Thomas Clark was Student Coun- Service technician Frank Gron,
enable
Greyhound Lines to concil president. All were football also an assistant wrestling coach
tlnue
operation
of Its total system
players who helped the Vikings at St. Joe's. He was stunned when
with
Its
full
team
of employees,"
win last season's Division II state he recognized Steven, also a
said
J
.
Michael
Doyle, Greyfootball championship.
wrestler.
hound's
senior
vice
president and
Head football coach Bill Gut.
Cuyahoga County Coroner Ell·
chief
financial
officer
.
brod said, "My God, just hours zabeth Balraj said Thomas Clark
"Greyhound's
value
to Its
after graduation. and they're . and Steven Clark, both of Clevecustomers,
employees
and
,api·
gone," The Cleveland Plain land but unrelated, died of chest
tal
providers
Is
maximized
by a
Dealer reported Tuesday , "We Injuries. Blaine of South Euclid
were successful because of these died of burns to his entire body.
kind of kids. "
Ervin of Cleveland Heights
Also injured In the crash were suffered a fractured pelvis. Doc·
graduating senior Eric Ervin,l7 , tors are observing Greenwood of
and his cousin Larry Greenwood, Warrensville Heights for a pul·
SAN . FRANCISCO iUPI) 16, a ninth grader at Warrens· monary contusion. Both were
Soviet President Mikhail Gorba·
ville Heights Junior High School.
listed in fair condition at St . chev blended an eloquent assessVincent Charity Hospital.
ment of thawing East-West ten·
slons with a bard pitch for
American Investment to bolster
his country's troubled economy.
Gorbachev wrapped up his
six-day summit visit on Monday
with a tour of San Francisco and
the Silicon Valley. He spoke at
,Stanford UniVersity and to a
group of American business
MANSFIELD, Ohio tUPI) take several davs to find an an
Jurv selection will continue Tuesimpartial jury In the community leaders and . met with Ronald
. day' In the murder trial of Dr.
shocked by the bizarre and much Reagan.
Just before leaving for MosJohn Boyle. accused of killing his
publlc)J:ed case .
cow,
Gorbachev sat down with
wife and burying her body In his
Prosecutors and defense lawySouth
Korean President Roh
new home In Erie. Pa. - but the
ers spent much of Mon&lt;jay trying
Tae-woo,
who Indicated hope that
press has been banned from the
to determine whether any of the
both
countries
are moving to·
proceedings.
69 prospective jurors had been
ward
normal
diplomatic
Richland County Common
influenced or prejudiced by pret ·
relations.
Pleas Judge James Henson Mon·
rial publicity.
In a speech to 250 business
day granted a defense motion to
Boy)e Is charged will) killing
executives
at the Fairmont
bar the public and press from the
his wife Noreen, 44, New Year's
Hotel,
Gorbachev
said, "The
remainder of jury selection beEve then burying her body under
winds
are
now
blowing,
flllljlg the
cause he said prospective jurors
the basement of his new home In
process
that
places us
sails
of
the
would be "intimidated" If reporErie, Pa. The Boyle's, parents Of
on
a
path
of
cooperation.
and
ters were present during
two children , were In the midst of
without
any
regret
we
are
saying
a divorce.
questioning.
Reporters , st&gt;eclators and
Names· of about 15'0 people farewell to the Cold War and I
prospective jurors jammed hal·
have been submitted as possible think and hope we have entered a
!ways and elevators lrr the
witnesses, about evenly split long period of peace."
He mixed those words with
Richland County Courthouse
between the two sides.
confidence
about perestroika, his
Monday In the first day of jury
The judge may allow the
program
to
reform the Soviet
selection for the murder trial of
couple's son Colin, 11, to testify,
economy
d_
u
rtng
~ t.lme of trethe prom lnent , Mansfield
but there are · doubts that the
mendous
political
and ethnic
osteooath.
daughter, Elizabeth, 3, wllltake
Attorneys have said It could
upheaval
that
has
challenged
his
the stand.

Judge bars press
from jury selection

Mattress
::~

A curbside recycling pilot io separate newspapers. mtscel·
• program will · get underway In laneous cardboard boxes, such
Middleport on July 1, Roger as cereal containers. glass,. and
Manley, owner-manager of Man· plastic containers and tin cans.
ley's Gecycle Center, announced The container will be emptied on
· the same day the trash Is picked
today.
Plans- have been made to up and will be left with the
Initiate the curbside recycling t resident for use the pext week.
The curbside recycling project
with 20 volunteers on Front,
Second and Third Streets where will· continue for two or three
· months. After that , it will be
trash Is collected on Fridays.
Residents who want to partial· evaluated and expanded If it has
pate In the pilot program are · .proved to be effective In decreasasked to contact Manley at Ing the normal amount of trash.
Next week Manley will meet
992-3894 as soon as possible.
Each participating resident with Middleport VIllage Council
will be supplied with a recycling to discuss the project. It is
reported that grant money is
container, a large red basket.
They will be asked to use paper available from the Department
sacks Inside the plastic container of Natural Resources to buy

f! J
.-"-~ -~~fYice __nes

•

full-system operation, that Is to
say , by serving the maximum
number of towns with optimum
frequency.
"We asked creditors for pa·
lienee so that we could devote all
available resources to running
maximum service during the
peak summer travel season."
Doyle said.
The five other companies that
would be affected by the ruling
are Eagle Bus Manufacturing
Company, based In Brownsville;
GLI Bus Operations Holding
Company; BusLease Inc.; Trail·
ways Commuter Transit Inc. and
GLI Food Services.
Greyhound has been strug·
gling on a reduced schedule since
March 2. when about 9,300
employees - Including some
6,000 drivers represented by th e
Amalgamated Council of Grey hound Local Unions of the
Amalgamated Transit Union went on st-rike.

••

Gotbachev makes pitch for U. S. lnvestments

$58

PINE BEDROOM SmTE

DO.

malntatmid as iar as cu ning
grass and removing trash and .
debris. It was noted that council r
has the authority to issue ell·
allons to properiy owners 1\'hO
fail to maintain their residences
and properties under an ordl·
nance which the village enacted
some time ago.
During the discussion of complaints from resid ents who warit
properties within tt1e village ·
maintained it was noted that th~
cost of the recent trash pickup
that the •1llage made available to
Its residents totaled $607.76 In
recycling baskets for the entire dumping fees alone.
In other mat ters. Mayor Seyler
community should Council decide to make curbside recycling
presented a proposal to restore a
road on Mulberry Heights to its
available to all residents.
Manley 's Recycle Center has
original condition.
moved from Beach Street in
Betty Ba ro nick, council
tower Middleport to the former member, stated she had received
Royal Crown Bottling Co·. at 503 several complaints from resi Mill Street. The company condents on the road ' who want it
restored to the-way It was before
tinues · to buy plastic, aluminum
cans, copper. brass , radiators.
the new waterline was Installed.
batteries , and clean aluminum . The estimate which Mayor
S.eyler obtained was for $3,500
They do not .buy but will accept
donations of newspapers which
and Included all concrete. and
are tied in bundles, cardboard,
sealing materials for the job. No
and tin cans.
action was taken on the matter.
Matters brought before council
The center is open from 12 noon
to 5 p .m . Monday through Fri- by member Brian Shank In·
day, and 9 to noon on Saturdays.
eluded the repainting of "No
Loitering" signs in the village
parking lois; the replacement of
a grating cover for a storm dra in
on Wetzgal Street; and the
need_!!_&lt;;! re~atr on Lincoln D~lve of
a~n
undtr the road which has
1
pu
' 11 e ·'u"ar
~"'"" . ' ,
Blll Young, council member,
reported . that he had received
calls from residents on Breezy
}:!eights
who would like to see
The dispute has been marred
traffic
restricted
on that hiU. The
by violence, Including the death
residents
reported
to Young that
of one picket and numerous
traffic
near
the
water
tower has
shootings Involving Greyhound
"the
young
been
heavy
and
that
buses. Company officials estl· .
people
are
going
up
there
to
mate the strike has cost at least
party.
"
Some
of
the
residents
on
$75 million In lost revenues and
increased costs, such as training the hill, feel a "No Outlet" sign or
possible ban'lcading of the tower
replacement drivers and In·
area
would deter some of the
creased terminal securlt'y.
traffic.
Young reported also that
Greyhound and Its employee
residents
living in Naylor's Run ·
unions have not negotiated since
requested
a "Children Playing"
May 5, when the company called
sign
'or enforcement of
caution
for a four·year wage freeze and
th
e
25
miles
per
hOur speed limit
the elimination of about 4,500
In
that
area.
union jobs.
Young voiced his approval or'
Michael Holden, vice president
the
job the street department has .
of ATU Local1205, representing
done
In replacing some of the
striking drivers In New England,
street
signs within the village. ·
said Monday the organization's
Tbom·as
Werry, council
leadership Is " really pretty exmember,
reported
lha t a drain
cited'· about the bankruptcy
sewer
near
the
tower
part of
lling.
Union
Avenue
had
bursted
and
"What it says is what we 've
needed
repaired
but
that
he
was
been saying all along : The man's
uncertain as to where the source
been lying," Holden said, refer·
of
the sewer leak could be
ring to Greyhound Chairman
located.
Fred Curry.

;;den; die mWf~-· ror·· Cii;P•er •·rprot~~~~~

GREAT SELECTION!

Wall Mirrors

REG. 1499

The representative also told
Mayor Seyler that the project
would 'cost somewhere around
the $1 mllllon range, and that
estimate does not Include the
necessary concrete work.

~ ·e··"".v"''·-:...1 ,. · · -~·. . . ~·.· Jo--:e
~
·.. ~ ___ ~~..-J;~Y. __9UD..

!
. t •.·,

Tent Sale Priced I

Hide-A-Beds
Tent Sale Priced
In The
.Main

T~=

VOLUNTEERS NEEDED - About July 1 a volunteer curbside
recycllag program wlll11ei underway on Front, Second and Third
Sis. In Middleport. Twenty residents of those streets are being
asked to volunteer to participate In the pilot project. Here Roger
Manley of Manley's Recycle Center displays one of the bright ·
recycle baskets.
·
'

II Dining Room
Furniture

Beautiful"Bassett

REG. 1300

..::J. ...... ,.

ltnu In The Tent And
Showroom Are Discounted!

3 Pc. SuiTE
T~'!:le

pppduJt.

In another road and proper ty
matter, council agreed to meet
Monday at 7 p.m. to tour streets
within the village to determine
which streets should be repaired
professionally and wh ich ones
could be rep~ Ired by the village
street department.
Also on this tour council will
determine which p roper ti es
within the vllla·ge need to be

Seek· voluntee~s for program

Scnnelt..SAt
Or Below Wholaale!

EXAMPLE:

· project. Seyler stated be had
talked to a representative for the
project who said that the only
work which will be done this year
is the installation of new sewer

'

ID'I'heTeat
.AnciiD'I'he
Sbowwooaa!

SCOIJinted
.

2 Sections. 12 Pages 26 Cent&amp;
A Muhimedia Inc. Newspaper

Kerr's Run road project will
not be .cOmpleted this year

It Bepns At 9 a.m. Tomonow • Rutland Furniture's Annual Tent Sale
On The Lawn 01 The Old Rutland High School .O n Main Street
.

.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, June 6, 1990

1
.

Low tonight near 55.
cloudy. Wednesday, high
lower 80s. Chance of rain
percent.

0795

*2300 Tent Sale Prfced At 0n(J1 $1188

•Financing Available
(With Approved Credtt)
oOI:I-Site Service Department

Stop In And , .
Save This w·'BBk

-

----~--,

.. _._..,

_________

--

!E:adershlp at home.
"American business should
look for ways to enter our market
so once the ( U.S.-Sovlet trade
agreement) Is ratified, we will be
able to use all the potential
Inherent In that agreement," he
said .referring to the trade
package he received from President Bush during their four-day
summli In Washington that
ended Sunday.
Gorbachev said Industry leaders who hesitate to Invest In the
Soviet Union will face being left
out In the cold In years to come
when the economic picture may
be 'improved.
"We are watching those who
risk something to cooperate now
and thOse who stand on the
sidelines. Those who stand on the
sidelines will stand there In years
to come. That Is only fair,"
Gorbachev said.
John Sculley, chairman and
president of Apple Computer,
said many business leaders will
heed Gorbachev's warning a bout
inveslment delay.
'~Apple lias been involved In
the Soviet Union for several
years ... we are very Interested In
some projects there," Sculley
said, calling Gorbachev's speech
"a real turning point."
Gorbacbev suggested even If
his own leadership Is seen as

shaky, the market reforms
sweeping his country are
Inevitable.
·1 During his talk, some 2,000
. demonstrators gathered outside
the hotel demanding freedom for
Lithuania , waving Armenian
flags and chanting "Free The
Baltics." Inside, the American
business leaders wore a lapel
emblem of crossed American
and Soviet flags .
Anger over Moscow 's crack·
down on Lithuania's bid for
lndependenee could hamper final
approval of the trade agreement
by a reluctant Congress.
The agreemen I Is seen as a
precursor to most-favored·

nation trading 's tatus for the
Soviet Union. which would be a
m·ajor boost to a Soviet economy
that bas failed to meet the basic
needs of its citizens.
In an address at Stanford
University earlier, the Soviet
leader declared. "The Co ld War
Is now behind us, and let us not
wra,ngle over who won It . .. :
.There can be no winners In a cold ·
war, just like In a nuclear war . "
Echoing the theme of Gorbachev's twin messages of glasnost
and perestroika , South Korea's
Roh said Improved relations with
North Korea, hopefully with
Soviet help, would end the Cold
War forever.

Sheriffs ask guns be put out of reach
COLUMBUS, Ohio iUPI) ' Sheriffs are asking adults this
summer to make sure firearms
are kept out of the reach of
children.
At least six children died In
Ohio last summer In accidental
bandglin shootings, the Bu,ckeye
Sheriff's Association said
Tuesdav.
'
The association, calling
summer the "killing season," Is
alerting parents to the dangers of
leaving guns within the reach of
chlldren. The association Is dis·
tribu ling public sevlce announce-

ments for radio stations featur·
lng sheriffs from most of the
state's metropolitan areas aimed
at persuading paren ts to keep
guns In locked boxes or to Install
trigger locks ,
Handgun accidents seem to be
more prevalent during the
summer because children have
more free time to play around the
bouse, said Robert Cornwell,
executive director of the BSA.
Cornwell said the message the
association Is trying to get across
Is simple - "If you're going to
have a gun , then keep It safe."

_.__

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�·commentary
1
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The Daily Sentinel

'

Ill Court Sireet
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS. MASON AREA

~lb

~ m~ r"T"'--' &amp;.."""T'". r-T""'E:!

.

~v

ROBERT L. WIIIIGETT
Publisher
.

.·

c ,-=-

.

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 300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be publlshed. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personalities.

The elephant on •·
~ the· budget stage
By ARNOLD SA \VISLAK
·
UP! Senior Editor
WASHINGTON tUP!) --; One of the classic sight gags of American
comic theater Is the scene, In "Jumbo" If memory serves , In which
. Jimmy Durante leads a gigantic elephant on stage.
Asked where he got the animal, Durante, feigning astonishment,
looks around and asks, "What elephant?"
Despite all the russ and feathers about a "budget summit" betwee~
the White Houseal)d Congress, the feeling persists that the American
polltl~al establiShment stlll Is asking, "What deficit?~' when th~
subject of the federal budget and Its multlbllllon-dollar shortfall is
raised.
: To be fair, President Bush did faintly tinkle an alarm bell when he
asked the Democratic leaders of Congress to sit down and talk about
'the budget. But, claiming he did not want to cause panic in the
securities· markets, Bush declined to say why he suddenly decided a
budget summit was necessary.
However, some deductions are possible. Obvlously,the president
was told that the deficit, which is supposed to be cut to $64b!llion in
the coming fiscal year under the Gramm-Rudman law,ls going to be
·
:a lot higher.
And unless the White House and Congress act to meet .the
Gramm-Rudman target, there will be.automatic across-the-board
spending reductions that might cause some real damage to u.s.
security or stability.
.
So, without revealing the sjze of the problem, Bush.called for budget
negotiations, "without preconditlons," which
was widely
· interpreted as a signal that the president is prepared to accept some
.kind of tax Increase, despite his ' 'read my Ups: no new taxes'' pledge
purlng the 1988 campaign.
That interpretation then became the issue: Who takes the blame for
raising taxes? The Democrats In Congress won't stand still for that
·and many of them approached the summit warily, expecting some
sort of Republican con game designed to pin higher taxes on them in
an election year.
Bush's chief of staff, John Sununu, did nothing to dlspelthat fear
when he said, in effect, the meaning of no "preconditions" was that
the Democrats were free to propose highertaxes and the Republicans
:were free to turn them down. And when GOP Sen. Phil Gramm of
• '!'exas said the Democrats would see the Second Coming before they
:- would see him call for tax Increases, the atmosphere of suspicion was
•: 'lieightened.
: Thus, tax Increases and their political consequences, rather than
. • budget deficits and their economic consequences, have become the
:: central issue, and to much of the public the budget summit process
: · must appear to be just another petty squabble among self-seeking
: i&gt;ollticians.And If that Is the case, why should ordinary people care?
-: • The truth of all this may be that the politicians aren't telllng the
: : public exactly how serious the deficit problem is because they are
' • afraid, with some justification, that they will be blam¢ when the
. : facts finally become known or when the economy starts to go down
. :-hill because of their inaction.
: ; · But it may be too late to play political games. Whether the
• politicians like it or not, the elephant is on &amp;tage and unlike the Schnoz,
~: they aren ' t going to get a laugh when they pretend they don't see it.

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· -~-Today in history
..•

•

By United Press International
Today is Tuesday, June 5, the 156th day of 1990 with. 2o9 to follow .
The moon is waxing, moving toward Its full phase.
The morning stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Saturn.
The evening stars are Jupiter and Pluto.

Berry's World
DAI). 11\/\Y I PLEASE

•

BORROW Tt\i CAR? l'VE
GoT A t&gt;AT&amp; lONlGHT.

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W\1Y?

MO!

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BECAUSE YOU
ARE ElGK\
YEARS OLD.

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Orioles down Brewers,
64;
.
Red Sox move into top spot

Page-2-The Daily Sa1ti1el

..

Poma11y-Middlapart.' Ohio

' .

'!'~·June

:

6, 1990

Squal~r

plagues Hong
Jack Anderson and Dale Van Atta
Kong refugee center
. WASHINGTON .- Inside a there. But he needs the papergutted building that was once a work, and when you're a refugee,
Hong Kong clothing factory, paperwork Is a glacier. Many'
1,500 Vietnamese refugees sleep refugees wait Ill the camps for
two to a sheet of plywoOd. Their more than · five years. But the
hutchesarestackedthreehighon wait at San Yick is better than ·
cement floors. Dirty towels hang- being back home, and better than
lng from the cubicles provide the In some other camps. There, the
refugees can leave for jobs
only .p rivacy .
This Is the San Ylck refugee during the day as long as they
camp, the house of hope for report back to be locked up at
Vietnamese who have fled tl].eir night. At San Ylck, at least they
native country in search of more know they will never have to go
freedom and less fear.
back to Vietnam.
That's not the case for most of
Tran Quoc VIet, a 20-year-old
who could pass for 14,livesat San \he 50,000 bnat people wareYick. Sweat beads formed like housed In 10 crude detention
tlnybllstersonhisforeheadashe · camps · scattered throughout
spoke earnestly about his dream . Hong Kong. Only about 15 perto settle in Oklahoma. His cent of the people who run away
English was broken, but he said from VIetnam get refugee status
"Oklahoma" without a hitch, and and the chance to walt for
smiled.
resettlement elsewhere. The rest
Viet wlllllkely get to Oklahoma are kept in squalid camps surbecause a relative awaits him

rounded by barbed wire while
they walt for Hong Kong to figure
the most diplomatic way to send
them back home.
·
Earller this month, Hong Kong
pollee climbed Into their riot gear
at dawn . and raided the overcrowded Whitehead Detention
Center .. The camp of 20,000 was
roosted out of sleep by tear gas.
Pollee seized about 2,500 weapons, mostly primitive knives.
The week before, about 100
Whitehead residents had cut
through security fences and
escaped. One Hong Kong official
with the refugee program admit·
ted the escapees probably just ·
wanted to see the glitter of Hong
Kong before they were stuffed on
a plane and flown home.
The British-run Hong Kong
government has vowed to send
the bulk of the refugees back. But

after the first forted repatriation
in December, the International
reaction was so severe that Hong
Kong backed off. Now tlie refugees pile up and the tension in tl\e
camps increases. Hong Kong has
responded by cutting off the
camps from the outside world.
Mike Hanson, coordinator for
the Hong Kong ·refugee camps,
admits that the government has
lost control of camps like Whitehead. And he said he sometimes
doesn't have control over the
zealous security guards either.
.Hanson is an honest guy with a
hard job. Sources told l!s the
British .government thought he
was too soft on the refugees, and
too compassionate for the job. He
Is being moved out .a gainst hls
wishes. They call it a
' 'promotion.''

Hong Kong Is doing Its best to
make the camps inhospitable
and to get that word back to
VIetnam. The government sent a
documentary video tape to VIetnam showing how grim Ute Is In
the camps. Ttie flow of the boats
has slowed, but the refugees at
Argyle say they woqld rather live
behhld barbed wire In Hol)g Kong
than In fear and poverty In
Vietnam.
Cao Hun Tuan, 24, speaks
English. He captained the boat
that brought him and his two
younger brothers to Honi Kong.
He wants to live in Colorado with
an uncle who is already there, but
he hasn't yet made It up the
paperwork ladder to the status of
refugee and a place at San Ylck.
Before leaving Argyle, . our
associate Lynch sUpped Tuan a
business card and a 1964
Kennedy half. dollar as sourvenir of the country he dreams
about. A security guard hustled
y,
over to Tuan td see exactly what
trill If !:'f) he had. Tuan was allowed to keep
s-_,. 'JtfMU,.I\- · the coin. His face clenched Into a
~~ ltiJ;I: I# tight smile and he raised his fist
and the coin over his head In
thanks.

a

•

Key .House races too ~lose lo call
THIEF RIVER FALLS, Minn.
(NEA) - If La:ke Wobegon
existed anywhere except In Garrison Kelllor's hyperactive Imagination, "the little town that time
forgot, that the decades cannot
improve" would be situated here
in Minnesota's northwestern
quadrant.
Moreover, Kelllor'·s radio
broadcasts of "A Prairie Home
Companion" are not the only
source of fable and fiction in the
sparsely settled 21-county area
that constitutes the state's 7th
Congressional District.
At the southern edge of the
district Is Sauk Centre. The
birthplace of . author Sinclair
Lewis, it served as the model for
Collegeville In his novel "Main
Street." The heavily wooded
northern portion of the district,
between Bemidji and Lake ofthe
Woods, Is the home of Paul
Bunyan and hls faithful companIon, Babe the blue ox.
Not quite as enduring but
nevertheless fascinating Is the
district's polltlcs. A biennial
drama here stars Republlcan
Rep. Arlan Stangeland, who
Initially won a special election in
1977 and has been· re-elected to

President Bush Is being urged hire to ensure proportionality, a
to be a good fellow and go along polite word for quotas.
This harms America. Affirmawith the proposed Civil Rights
Act of 1990. It Is said that it Is good tive action makes sense, in law
for America, good for blacks and and in life. But some specific
good for Republicans.
legal aspects of affirmativeIt's bad for America. It's act ion-via -goals-and-time-tables
probably bad for most blacks. It tend to push behavior based on
is . political quicksand for group proportionality · rather
Republicans ..
than Individual merit.
If there was ever a justification
Proponents says the bill does
not mandate hiring quotas. OK. for such pressure, It is gone.
So stipulated. But wlllit encour- When the Civil Rights Act of 1964
age actions that lead to the effect was originally passed, about 15
of quotas?
percent of Americans were of
Yes. That's why the Supreme non-white, non-European origin.
Court acted last year to define More than two-thirds of these
what procedures are appropriate were blacks. Today, due to
to outlaw dlscriminatlim without healthy Immigration, almost 25
percent of the population is
yielding reverse discrimination.
The American business com- non-white, non-~uropean. The
munity may often be praised for percentage Is slowly rising. Only
many salritly characteristics. about half are blacks.
Wo11't the new lawpushpropor·
Courage is not one of them. The
proposed law says that If hlrlng tionality for Hispanics? Asians?
doesn't yield what quotas would Moslems? Caribbean blacks?
yield, the burden ofproofis on the The newly free from Eastern
Europe? Do we want a society
corporation to show why not.
That foreordains that most where the goodies are divided on
corporations will respond ana- group identity rather than on
tomically. Short on splne,lnstitu· merit and content of character?
tlonally gutless, always covering ·l There Is a model for sue h a
their asses, they will pre-fold proportlonallzed country:
their hands. Rather than face a Lebanon.
Proportionality, quotas, perlawsuit, punitive damages and
bad publicity, they will supinely terence - calllt what you will-

Robert Walters

'

Is harming blacks. Writing in The

New York Times Magazine,
Professor Shelby Steele argues
that preferential treatment "nurtures a victim-focused identity In
blacks and sends us (Steele Is
black) the message that there is
more power In our past suffering
th .an in our present
achievement.''
The power to ''exploit" suffering, says Steele, Is Insubstantial
aild unreliable, diverting energy
from the enduring power that
comes when blacks take "responsiblllty for their own educational
and economic development."
Steele says racial .perferences
reinforce America's oldest myth,
"that whites are superior ... that
bla~ks are interior ... they have
the effect of stigmatizing the
already stigmatized."
That is why the polltlcs of
proportionality yields no good to
Republicans. It fosters racial
antagonism. Republican moderates look · at the black vote, 90
percent DemoCratic, and muse
"If we wink at quotas, we'd get
some of that vote, and we'd be

· · Ben Wattenberg
elected to everything forever."
That's twice wrong. The polls
show that almost half tl!e blac~s
- the halt that might vote
Republl~an disapprove of
preferential treatment. .
And 90 percent of whites
disapprove. Anyone who thinks
those voters "have no place to
go," didn't follow politics in the
1960s and the rise of then-racist
George Wallace.
Amerl~a·s polltlcal system is
nothing If not flexible. If, in the
negotiations with Congress to
come, Bush does not represent
those anti-quota views with fortitude, those views will flnd other
outlets, perhaps unpleasant
onces.
.
That's happening In Louisiana
today. David Duke, a swinish
ex-Klansman, a registered Re·
publicans, is running for.the U.S.
Senate using quotas as his lance,
splitting the Republican Party,
setting race against race.
Re-creating the politics of
racial conflict is no good for
Republicans. Or for ;\.merica. Or
Ifor blacks.

A thought for the day: Sen. Robert Kennedy silld, "Only those who
dare to fail greatly can ever achieve great~y . " .

Braves select shortstop in draft
runs and stole 14 bases.
summer game," Lajoie said . .
NEW YORK tUPI) - The
"We're
very
high
on
Chipper
,"
·
Detroit vice president fo'l'
Atlanta Braves, scared off by the
- - ......... , ...........
Braves
General
Manager
Bobby
player
procurement Joe McDo·
college aspirations of high-school
two-rim
homer
In
the
lhlrd
Inning
al
Fenway
Park
Cox
said.
·"He's
already
an
nald
said
he believed the Tigers
flamethrower Todd Van Poppe!,
BELTS TWO-Rl/N HOMER - Red Sox' Ton\
Monday.
Yankees
catcher
Rick
Cer.
o
ne
looks
on.
Clark
tcr sign.
excellent
.
defensive
player
and
could
get
instead took . prep ~hortstop
· Brunansky (R), Is col!gratulated by teammate
.
(UPI)
has
shown
outstanding
ability
as
"He
looked
Bo
iSchembechler.
Chipper Jones with the first pick
Dwlsht Evans .at home after Brunansky hit a
switch-hitter."
·
·
Tigers
president)
right In the
a
of baseball's a·m ateur draft .
Jones a 6-foot -3 185-pounder face when he asked 'What do you
Jones hil .488 with five home
stole 48, bases in
attempts i~ want to be?' and said, 'I want to
runs and 25 RBI in his senior
three
lflgh-school
seasons.
be a major-league baseball
season at The Bolles School in
"The fact •that he can switch· player,"' McDonald said .
Jacksonvllle, Fla. He was rated
'
hit Is a definite bonus, as Is his
Seattle. picking sixth,_took first
the best shortstop In the draft by
tremendous
speed,"
said
Paul
baseman
Mark Newfield of Hun·
Baseball America.
.
the
Braves'
chief
scout.
tington
Beach,
Calif., and CinclnSnyder,
The Detroit Tigers, picking
The
Tigers,
who
haven't
had
a
nat!
chose
Minnesota
catcher
second, selected outfielder Tony
Clark of El Cajon t Calif; l. Chris· first -round pick work out since' Dan Wilson seventh. Cleveland
.
AUBURN HILLS, Mich. I UP!)
Is gunrilng to become jus! the
care. I just want another ring so I tlan High School and will try to 1980, decided to gamble with made It two straight Big Ten
-It- Is appropriate. The Detroit
entice ·him Into giving up a Clark. The 6-foot-7 slugger has selections by taking Iowa shortthird franchise In league !)!story can brag all summer. "
. been compared to Darryl Straw· stop Tim . Cos to. Los Angeles
,Pistons, whose defense takes you · to repeat as champions. Qn·iy the
The Pistons can brag they were bask!'tball scholarship. ·
back to the days before the Lakers- !"'th Mlkan !n Minnea-. the NllA's top defensive team
Mike Lieberthai, a catcher at berry, but has his 'heart set on selected pitcher Ron Walden of
24-second clock, open the NBA pol(s and Magic Johnson In Los during the regular season, allow- · Westlake High School in Wes- playing basketball at the Univer- Blanchard , Okla. , an !I th_e New
York Yankees completed the top
Finals against the Portland Trail Ange)es- and the Boston Celtlcs
ing 1ust 98.3 points. a game. But tlake Village, Calif., went third to sity of Arizona.
;,We felt that he has the ability 10 by taking outfielder Carl
Blazers Tuesday night seeking to have accomplished the feat. ·'
Dennis Rodman and Co. have Philadelphia. The Chicago White
to
be a home run hitter in the Everett of Tampa, Fla.
join a select group that Includes
·'Some guys are.using that as a
Sox
followed
by
taking
pitcher
tightened their grip even more in
Montreal took catcher-third
George Mlkan.
boost," · Detroit forward John
the playoffs, especially at home Alex Fernandez of Miami-Dade major leagues, " Tigers General
Detroit, permitting a measly . Salley, whose team plays hostJo - where they've surrendered South Community College and Manager Bill Lajoie said. "He's baseman Shane Andrews of
92.3 points a game In the playoffs, Game 1 at The Palace (9 p.m.
Pittsburgh selected pitcher Kurt a ways away, naturally. but he Carlsbad, N.M., and Minnesota
only 85.6 points each time out.
chose pitcher Todd Ritchie of
EDT) said Monday. "I don't
Miller of Bakersfield t Calif.) will be an all-around player ."
Clark, who belted 10 home runs Duncanville, Texas . St. Louis
West High SchooL ·
Van Poppe!, widely believed to In his first 35 at-bats this spring, selected Nevada-Las Vegas
be the top prospect In the has accepted a basketball schO- pitcher Donovan Osborne before
country, told major-league larship from Arlzoqa and his Oakland took Van Poppe!.
"I felt pretty good," sald,Gore.
"Ogea is an outstanding col- teams last week not to draft him father, Arthur, said he intended
OMAHA ; Neb. (UPI) - A
"!got pitches over when I needed
lege pitcher anti we made him because he was planning to to.honor it.
game expected io be dominated
But unlike Van Poppe!, Clark
by hitters was stolen away to and Mike (Daniel) called a , throw 36 pitches in the first attend the Unlver.s ityofTexason
inning," said Ward. "! felt we a baseball scholarship. Stlll, he has said he would be willing to
Monday night by a freshman great .game. Things went well all
the way around." .
·
pitcher.
had seven real good at bats back was taken as the 14th selection by play pro baseball If an arrangeDaniel, who help Gore with a
ment co.uld be made allowing
to back and that 's wha) you have the Oakland Athletics.
Brad Gore allowed just two hits
through 7 1-3 innings and led the three-run homer in the seventhto have. You have to extend
Jones, 18, the · Florida High him to play basketQall for the
somebody somewhere ...
Oklahoma Stati! Cowboys to a 7-1 his 22nd home run of the year School Player of the Year, led Wildcats. The Tigers apparent~y
The second game Tuesday is a Bolles to the state finals In 1990 think that can be worked out .
victory over the second-seeded said, "He's had a go.od' slider
"Basketball, for the most part
Louisiana State · Tigers In the every time he's be~n out this
rematch of a first-round g~e in
year. I've never seen him with a
College World Series.
which LSU defeated The Citadel ~; ~~t~~c~gdd~~~~~ ~;:r~~aJ5 is a winter sport. Baseball Is a
8-2. Berlman saw only the tail
· The Cowboys, 55-16, earned a bad slider or curveball.
"What we did was hide the end of Monday's game involving
berth in the semlflnal round
Thursday, where a victory ls fasiball and throw straight The Citadel and was impressed.
" Baseball . isn't like brain
worth a place in Saturday's change; slider or cu rveball more
surgery," Berlman said. "You
national title game. LSU, 53·18, of the time."
"Brad 1Gore) pitched a heck of don't need 1.3 years of training.
drops into the elimination round
'
.
and must face The Citadel, 46-13. a ballgame. He mixed In tltree There's a lot of heart Involved
BLOOMINGTON. Ind. iUPil strong, clean athletic program
The Citadel dropped Cal State- different pitches for strikes and. and The Citadel is made up of
- Indiana University President and can open another television .
Fullerton, 36-23, from the made very comget!tlve pitches kids that have a lot of heart and a
Thomas
EhrUch, following the market for the Big Ten.
when he had to, falling behind In
lot of desire and some crafty
tournament.
consensus.
of the IU Athletics
The other elimination game the count, and held us down the pitching. "
Committee,
voted against the
The Citadel.knocked off FullerTuesday pairs top-seeded Stan- entire evening," said -LSU Coach
inclusion
of
Penn
State In the Big
Skip Bertman.
ton with a see-saw 8-7 victory that
ford and Mississippi State.
Ten.
a
faculty
representative
Oklahoma , State jum.ped on took 12 innings. The Bulldogs,
LSU entered the CWS with a
said.
.
team batting average of .331 and Chad Ogea, who had won 14 overcoming seven errors and six
Haydn Murray, who ohalred a
piled up 14 hits and eight runs in consecutive decision since suf- walks In addition to 15 Fullerton
17-member
transition and expanthe first round game Saturday . fering a Joss on Feb. 24, for two hits, were down 4-1 through six
sion
committee
formed after
But Gore held the Tigers hitless runs in the first but more innings and had leads In the
Penn State was Invited to join the
for 3 2-3 innings and then didn't Important to Ward mad~ Ogea eight)! and lOth innings before
conference, said all but one of
worked
through
seven
batters
in
In
the
12th
on
a
Tony
winning
give liP a second hit until the
Indiana's coaches are against
the inning.
Skole single.
eighth. Ritchie Moody got the
the Nittany Lions ' entry.
final five mils with surrending a
Murray said his commitiee's ,
hit, marking the first CWS
report, divided Into the categotwo-hitter In 15 years.
ries of academic standards,
scheduling and potential revenue, was purely objective,
with scheduling the. only major
The Daily Sentinel
concern .
Big Ten presidents acted uni·
(USPS 145·t•)
A Division of Multlmedla. Inc. ·
laterally in December to invite
Penn State "in principle' ' to the
Published eve-ry atternoon, Monday
conference, sparking a negative
through Friday, lll Court St.. Pom..-oy, Ohio. by the Oblo Valley Pubreaction from many conference
lishing , Company/Multimedia, Inc.,
•
coaches
and athletic directors.
Pomeroy, Ohlo.f5768, Ph. 992·!156. Se·
A 1 0 Shot, clip fod, woodltocl&lt;ed 22 ••·
cond class postage paid at POmttro:f,
Penn State Monday officially
lor 22 Long Riffle nn(V. Adjuna,
ORDER NO. 977231-0 tomotlc
Ohio.
·
joined lhe Big Ten when Its
blo tlghta. Corbino ltyto.
.
72669
'
received the necessary seven
Member: United Pre.~ Intornatlonal,
Inland Dallv PressAiloclatlonandthe
.
votes from the conference's
Ohio rf~sPaper AuociAtt~n. National
.
presidents.
SPORTVJEW 3.X..9X 32MM
Advertllbtg Representative, Branbam
·'I would say the majority of
NewsPaper .Sales, 733 Third Avenue,
.RIFL.ESCOP.E
New tork, New York 10017. •• •
the Big Ten - coaches, faculty
anq administrators - were not
POS'IMASTER: Send address chanJI'!S
to The Ilally Sentinel. Ill Court St ..
for It," Murray said Monday.
Pomeroy, Olllo 45768.
Indiana basketball coach Bob
Knight and football coach Blll
SviscRIPTION RATES
BJ Curter or Motor Route
Mallory have spoken against
Weight. 100Z.,I.8nglh; 11 .75•, Field; 38' ('f 3x: 12'@ ,
One Week .... ........•...•.....•............$1.40
9x. Eye Rotlef: 3.5'.
'
admitting
Penn
State,
with
One Month ..... .. ...... ...... ..............$6.10
One Year ...... ........................... $72.80
Knight calling a road trip th~re
ORDER NO. 952878-9
"a camping trip."
SINGLE COPY
MODEL 74-1393
PRICE
.
' 'I haven't seen anything that I
!laity ........................, .......... 25 Cents
think is really going to bene!lt
Subscribers notdeslringt o pay the car·
(the Big Ten) ," Mallory said.
rtw may remlt .In advince direct to
''Personally,
I don't see where
'lbe Dally !rntiDel on a 3, 8 or 12 month
bull. Credit wUI be 111ven carrier each
It's such a great move."
week.
Murray sald he's trying to be
No aubscrlptloDJ by malt pennHted In
optimistic about Penn State's
afeu where home earrJer tervlce II
entry. He said Penn State bas a
. available.
~-

Pistons, BlaZers · square off
this even~g hi NBA finals

5o

'

Indiana p_resic{ent votes
against Lions joining Big • 0

"HAPPY FATJRS OJY~'
The Place The Kids Can Shop
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116Woeb .................................. S37.111
'52 Woeb .................................. flf.36
I
· Melp C..IIIJ fal.lll•
13 Woeb
..................................
26 Wtob ................................. . $f0.30
'

..............................._. .. $75-fO

Spor18 briefs
T088E8 TWO-BITI'ER - Oklahoma 8&amp;a&amp;e Ualvenlty'a pitcher
Brad Gore follows tbr0111h with a pl&amp;ch, u he lltopJM!d Loulalana
saMe Ualvenlly on two hlta and one run uOSU deleaied LSU,·lln
their secolld round 1ame of the coDege world aeries ~oaday.
(Ui:'I)

•

•
I .

$398l

ZEBCO 33 ·
FISHING REEL

~2 w~

•
II

Innings.
failed to sco re when Dave Parker
"We certainly look for Joe was thrown ou t stealing to end
(Price) to give us some innings the Inning.
and get some left -banders out,
Elsewhere in the American
an«1 some right -banders, " said League, Boston tripped New
Robinson.
York 5-3 and Texas shutou t
"He' s started to do that. It California 1·0.
certainly makes the . bullpen
Red Sox 5, Yankees 3
better. Now you d.on't have to
At Boston, Tom Brunansky's
rely on some of the other guys for RBI -doublP. broke a ·3-3 tie In the
those added Innings," said eighth Inning to lift' Boston.
Robinson.
Brunasky , who · drove In four
Mark Williamson pitched the runs, went 2-for-2 with a two-run
eighth and Gregg ·Olson worked homer and a sacrifice fly . Jeff
the ninth for his 12th save In as Reardon, 2-1, the third Boston
many opportunities,
pitcher, picked up the win,
Olson has allowed just one working two scoreless innings.
earned run In his last 58 2-3 Jeff Robinson, 0-4, ·absorbed the
innings in.40 appearances dating loss for New York ,· which owns
back to July 31.
the worst record in.the majors at
Milwaukee reliever Bill lS-30.
•
Krueger , 2-2, absorbed the loss,
Rangers I, Ansels 0
allowing an unearned run and
At Arlington, Kevin Brown and
two hits over 4 2-3 Jnnlngs.
Kenny Rogers combined on a
Cal Rlpkln's sacrifice fly in the · slx-h!t shutout to .guide Texas to .
sixth Inning snapped a 4-4 tie and .. just their sixth victory In 21
the Orioles tacked on an insu- games. It was the first win for
ranee run in the eighth on Phi l Brown ~ 6 -4 . since May 5. Rogers
Bradley's RBI-single.
earned his first save. Kirk·
Milwaukee threatened in the McCaskill. 3-3. took the loss
eighth when they had runners on despite allowing just lout hits
first and second with two out bu t over seven innings.

·Cowboys win; Gore hurls two-hitter

Irt Florida's 2nd Congressional
six subsequent terms.
But Stangeland received more District, Demoerats have tarthan 53 percent of all votes cast in geted Republican Rep. Bill
Grant, who switched parties in seats will be held In November.
only two of those contests. By far
the closest was the 1986 race, ln early 1989 and represents a · Here in Minnesota, Stangeland
which the congressman's politi- constituency in which Demo- Is In more trouble than usual
crats outreglster . (but do not because of a continuing sex
cal fate was uncertain until a
recount weeks after the balloting necessarily outvote) Republi- scandal: Earlier this year, it was
cans by a 5·1 margin.
gave him a 121-vote margin.
disclosed that during 1986 and
In Washington's 3rd Congres- 1987 he made hundreds of lateDespite the fact that more than
90 percent of all House members sional District, Republicans are night and early morning teleare routinely re-elected (In 1988, . attempting to portray Demo- phone calls to the home of Eve
98.5 percent of those seeking cratic R!l.P· Jolene Unsoeld as a Jarvis, a Washington lobbyist.
another term were successful),' Uberal activist. Because she was
Insisting that his relationship
there are fiercely contested elected to a first term by only 618 with Jarvis was strictly profesraces ·in congressional districts votes in 1988, the GOP. believes sional, Stangeland, who is marthroughout the nation every two she is especially vulnerable . .
ried, claims his telephone reIn Oregon's 5th Congressional cords could have been altered to
years - and 1990 will produce Its
District, Republican Rep. Denny make 5 p.m. business calls to her,
share of those campaigns.
Smith
received fewer than 55. for example, appear to have been
In Georgia's 4th Congressional
percent
of the votes cast in four of placed at 5 a.m. .
Dlsirlct, Republlcans believe Dehis
five
successfu 1 races. Bemocratic Rep. Ben Jones was
The congressman's Democause
his
1988 victory margin cratic opponent, Collin Peterson,
victorious in 1988 only because
hls GOP opponent, then-Rep. was only 707 votes, Democrats is not without his liab!lltles.
Patrick Swindall, was indicted believe he can be defeated this Specifically, he Is a four-time
on perjury charges shortly be· year.
loser who was defeated by
New York, Kentucky, North Stangeland in 1984 · and 1986,
fore the election.
.This year, the Republicans Carolina, Indiana, Illinois, Mary- while falling to secure his party's
have mounted a major effort to land, Connecticut, Texas, Arkan- nomination in 1982 and 1988.
oust ffrst-termer Jones (a former sas, Idaho, Iowa, Hhode Island,
A former state senator, Peteractor best known for his role 'as Massachusetts, Call!ornia, Ala- son also has . alienated many
"Cooter" in the television show bama, Michigan and Utah are fellow Democrats. "We all do
"Dukes of Hazzard") before he among the other states in which . dumb things," he admits. ·•·rve
becomes entrenched.
potentially close races for House done my share."

Let·prefer~ntial hiring RIP

By PAUL DEFEDE
UPI Sports Writer
Baltimore Manager Frank R:obinson found out that practice
makes perfect.
Robinson, who was suspended
for three games following a
run-In with an umpire, ·used hls
free time to figure out how to get
the most out of hls bullpen.
Uport his return Monday night,
Robinson benefited from 4 · 2-3
Innings of scoreless rellet from
the Baltimore bullpen to hold on
to a 6-4 victory over the Mllwau'
· kee Brewers.
With the win, Baltimore lm·
proved to 7-3 on Its current
13-game road trip.
. "I had a lot of practice over the
last three days, sitt~ng there
second guessing the manager,
figuring out what I woulil'have
done after the fact," said Robin·
son. "! came out .and tried It
today and It worked."
Joe Price, 1-2, hurled 2 2-3
Innings of one-hit relief for his
first viCtory slnce.Aug. 27 when
he was with Boston.
·prfce has allowed Just two
earned runs in hls last 21 2-3

'

•

Track
The International Amateur Athletic Federation announced the
'1993 World Cup would be hel In
Havana, Cuba. ,

SALE

51399

EBER'S

949~9200

GUlF

RACINE, OHIO
.I

�•

Tuesday, June 5, 1990

POfTMIIoy, Middleport. Ohio

DOdger. hurler ·faDs .18_:as...~:
Los .Angeles · bl~kS Braves

By The Bend

..

Tuesday, June 5, 1990

Page- 5

By ERIK K. LIEF'
seven innings and Barry Bonds
Car(jinals' pitcher, worked a
scoreless lltlt Inning for the
UPI Sports Writer
delivered a two-run triple to lead
For some pitchers. It takes lB Pittsburgh. Patterson, 4·1, got
victory.
•
years o( success to be mentioned . relief help from Bill Landrum,
Padres 10, Alltros 2
in the same breath as the whO notched his eighth save.
At San qiego.- . Andy Benes
legendary Sandy Koufax . But for Shawn Boskle, 1-~. took the loss. scattered four hils o er 7 1-3
Ramon Martinez, it took 18
Cardlnala 3, PhilDes 2
Innings and the Padres sent 12
strikeouts.
.
11 1!1nlnp
men to the plate fn an eight·run.
. Although stlll young · and
At St. Louls, Terry· Pendleton eighth. Benes, 6·4, picked up hls
mos tly unproven, Martinez . singled :home Vince Coleman
third win in a row anct Craig ,
joined the company of' the from third base with. one out in Lefferts pitched 1 2-3 Innings to
Dodger star and Hall-of-Farner the 11th lnnlng .to lift St. Louis . · earn his ninth save. Jlm Clancy ,
by recording 18 strikeouts Mon· Marvin Freeman , 0-1, took the Hi, 1uffeted the loss.
day night in Los Angeles' 6-0 . loss. Frank DIPlno, 2·0, the fifth
victory over the ~tlanta Braves . .
Wlth the stellar perforrilance,
Martinez !led a -club record
established twice by· KoufaX anq
fell just one strikeout short of the
National League record of 19 held
by three pitchers.
' 'T!&gt;nlght was the best feeling
I 've ever had in the game, " said&gt;
the beaming 22 year-old. ':It feels
great to· be ·in the reeord book
with a star llke Sandy Koufax." ·
Koufax struck out 18 on lnl959
against the Giants and In ' 1962
against the Cubs.:.:rorn .~aver,
Steve Carlton and Charles Sweeney share the National League
record with 19 strlkeoub;. , .
Martlnez, who In .his firSt full
season with the · Dodgers( ·re·
corded the most stri!Ceouts In the
major league this season and
became baseball's strikeout
leader with a total of 87; 15 more
than Dwight .Gooden of the New
York Mets.
The formidlble ' pitching dis·
play left the opposltlon com·
pletely awed.
.
"I know what klnd of stuff
Sandy Koufax had, and when you
tle his record you have to pitch a
great game, " sald Atlanta man·
ager Russ Nixon. "I'll tell you
one thing: that S,OB can really
throw."
Don Drysdale, a Hall of Fa·
: SABO, REDS HAVE BAD NI~HT - GlaDis'
on a single to rlpt field by Kevin Mll&lt;lhellln tbe
mer,
teammate of Koufax, and
Will Clark goes into tblrd safely as tbe -ball gets
fifth Inning of their ~~:arne Monday. The GlaDis
now
a
Dodger broadcaster, said,
~way from Reds' Cbrls Sabo, Clark went to t'btrd
.'
won, 10-1. (UPI)
·~A nytime a pitcher ·has 18
strikeouts, he · has to Qe
.
.
overwhelming."
Martinez, 6,3, had struck'out 18
through eight innings·and had the
opportunity to eclipse the major?JAN F RANCISCO tUPii "I've never seen a team, as
sinkerball. It stands to reason league record of 20 set by Roger
Tile San Francisco Giants, eating ready to play · as they were
that when you're getting groun- Clemens in 1986. Despite having
humbl e pie ever since they won tonight," he said. "You could just
douts, the ball is sinking."
two strikes on three of the five
t~ National League pennant last
After the satisfying win, Matt batters he faced In the ninth,
feel it In the dugout. We wanted to
vear. claimed they weren't tense win this game bad tonight.':
WUJlams voiced thetr one-game- Martinez was unable to better his
for their first game oi the season
at-a-time official line.
Burkett walked only ·two while
performance.
.
aga inst the Cincinattl Reds.
striking out three )n his first
''There were a lot of strange
"I didn 't know I was one
But nobody believed them.
career appearance against the
plays tonight but nobody played strikeout away from the National
·'I wasn' t nervous facing Cincl- Reds.
FANS 18 BRAVES- Los An~;eles pitcher Ramon MarUnez Is
any harder because it was the League record in the ninth
seen as be achieves a personal best In strikeouts Monday night, .
nattl tonight - I was just real
Terry Kennedy and Robby
Reds. Johnny, threw good off- Inning, · but I felt good arld I'm
Mardnez fanned 18 Atlanta Braves enroulj! to a 6·0 victory. (UP()
excited," said roolde John Bur- Thompson collected two RBI speed pl~ches , and had good glad I got the shutout , 18
kett a fte r the Giants pounde.C\ the each, and every Giant ,starter command of all his pitches. But strikeouts and the complete
Reds 10·1 Monday nlght,for the{t' had at least one hit in the assault beating the Reds is just one more game," he said.
fOurth straight wlri and stxtl!; against the team with the best victory."
·.
By coincidence, CommiSsioner
~ctory In seven games.
'
The.Giants got all the runs they Fay Vincel)t was in the crowd to
r!!4:ord ln the. major lea211e.
Athens took home the top
and the 800 meters a nd fifth in the
. Burket t. 5-1. scartered seven
needed lrl the first by ringing up a witness the event, He pald·a vislt honors ln both the boy 's and girl's
Ron Robinson, 2-2, was rocked
1600
meters.
hits in the first complete game of
for eight runs and ten hits ln.just 3 season· high . seven hits In an to Los Angeles Manager Tom divisions in the annual Meigs
In the girls division ,&lt;\thens ran
his career behind a 16-hit attack
2-3 innings . Robinson entered the iMing. Brett Butler led offwlth a Lasorda ·s office to offer his . Junior High Invitational Track
away
wlth the title with 133
tpat .produced five runs in the game with a 6-1 career record bunt single, went to third on a congraaulations.
meet
held
recently
at
Meigs
High
points,
Ravenswood finished ln
first Inning.
Sll)gle by Rick Leach and scored
against the Giants, including a
"'You made it very special for School.
second
with 79 points . Vinton
· Some veterans denied there
on double by Clark.
2-0 reccrd at Candlestick Park.
us tonight, " the .commiSsioner
County
finished
in third place
Athens
scored
88
points
to
wln
was anything special about the .
After one out, Williams singled told Martinez.
"Burkett has learned how to
meet,
Vinton
C:ounty
followed
by
Meigs,
Jackson,
the
boys
fir st meeting wi th the power- pitch and he's not afraid to come ~ to score Leach and move Clark to
Martinez, a n~:~tive of the finished ln second place with 80 Wellston and Gal !Ia Academy.
bouse Reds , who were 10 games
inside," said slugger and team- lhtrd. When Terry Kennedy Dominican Republic, scattered
points. Federal Hocking finished
For the Little Marauders
atop the National League West
grounded out,. to ,the pitcher, .three hits and walked one batter
mmate Will Clark.
ln
third
place
followed
by
the
host
Heather
Hudson took· home the
coming into the game.
·
· Reds Manager Lou Pinella Clarll. sco~d to make it 3-0. • .
In pitching his fourth complete Meigs team .. Jackson finished ln top honors in the 100 meter
: But Bur kett spilled the beans.
' Thompson then singled to · game and second shutout of the filth place, Ravenswood ln six(h, hurdles with a tline of 18.0. The
said that Burkett "!)ad a good
score · Williams and · Jose Uribe season.
Wellston 111 seventh and Gallla Marauder 400 relay and 800-relay
followed with a single, moving
Elsewhere In the National
team both finished in second
Aca,d emy in eighth.
Thompson to second. Burkett League, Montreal topped New
place. Jaclyn Swartz finished in
drove home Thompson to make iI
York 5·3, Pittsburgh downed
third
place in the 800 meters as
Heath
Hudson
won
the
100
5-0.
. Chicago 6-2, St . Louis edged
•
meter hurdles with a time of 16.5, did Lee · Henderson in the 200
The Giants added three more . Phlladelphia 3·2 in 11 innings,
and 400 meters with a time of 55.8 meters , the Meigs relay team in
in the fourth. With two outs, San Diego slammed Houston 10-2 for the Little Marauders to go the 1600 meters also finished in
Majors
Hnlllon (O..hl.,;. s.i1 Ill SIUI IMe.,.
IRW~mw.en ~!), 11:11 p.m.
Leach walked, went to third on a
and San Francisco crunched
By l 'nlll'd Pn.,.~ lllh•rmtlonll
along with a second place finish thtrd. Rounding out the scoring
Allllnta U".Smlth 4--l)u.t Lo,. Anr;el~
single by Clark and scored on an
' .\ i\I ER ICI\.J'i L.E.\Gt' E
{Met"'fM i--:J), II:U p.m .
.
Cincinnati
10-1.
'
in the discus. Other Marauders for Meigs was·Tracy Flfe with a
Ea~ l
fll.,luatl cMmNirenc K-1) at Sll!l
RBI·slngle by Kevin Mitchell.
Expos 5, Meis 3
1'1'am
\\ L Pd. 08
who placed were Adam Wyatt fourth place finish in the BOO
Franl'l~o 4Garrt'IIKI·I) , 10: 35 p.m .
,Bo!IIIOh .........................'~ 1 23 .3:11 Tlm Layana replaced Robin·
M'f'dliNIU' Game.
At New York, pinch-hitter
who finished In second place In meters and Danlelle Scott with a
:\l llwau kt•t• .......... . ........2&amp; ~.1 .321
1::1
Clnrh,a11l :&amp;1 S~t~~ f'rllnt::bK': O
son
and
threw
a
wild
pitch.
'l'o ra nto .......... .... ......... 2"1 ~5 .5 1!1 I
Nelson Santovenla capped a
Hou~on a1 !ian Dlf'I'O
both · the 100 meters and 200 sixth place finish in the s!tot put.
l'I ~W~ Iund ............. : ......u 25 .17!1 ":'i
allowing Clark to come home
Mo•realat NPW l 'ork, niP&amp;
four-run seventh inning with a
Rick Edwa-rds was the coach
meters.
Eric Wagner finished in
&amp;ltlmort ...... ........... ...2.J 27 .-101 J
fhlt'LtKO ut Pllllibulllla. nlrlll
wltli the Giants' seventh run.
two-run single to pace
Dt·l rolt .................... .... ~ :! :10 . 123 5tt
PhlladelpWa at S4 . "Loutli, nlpl
f&lt;ir
this year's team. ·
third
place
in
both
the
long
jump
: Nf'W \:'ortr. ........ .... .: ...... JII lO ,37() ·7 %
Wllllams then singled, moving
.Atllllnt. aliA&amp; An•la, nla'Montreal. Blll Sampen, 4-0, who ·
~ •
Wc.&gt;s t
Mitchell to third and Kennedy
• · ·Oakhmtl ........... .. ......... :!3 16 .6'H relieved starter Mark Gardner, .
T~II,Y SportBfalendar
• ''Chica~o ...............•..... :10 17 .6:lll ~
Bubthall
singled
home Mitchell.
picked up the victory and Dave
• 'Minno.•!&lt;o(a ..•..••.. •. ••.... .~ ! 21 .51\t 1\1
.. NBA F1MIB
In the sxith, Cincinnati scored
'Callrornla ........... ....... . 1~ '! 7 .-181 9\4
Portlal!d'at Detroit, t p.m.
Schmidt earned his second
Sl'llHIC......................... z ~ 2" .'62 10 ~
its only run.
save.
David Cone, 1-4, lasted 6
Han!l:l-'i City ........... , ..... :!!' 27 .-US II
Fu&amp;hrrwel(hl~~o
•.
Ti!XIL&lt;4 •....•......• : ........... .2 1 :ll) .H 2 13
With one out, BlllyHaicherand
San late, CaJU. - Lu pt Guttlerex ..~~-.
1·3
lnnlngg
all five runs and
J\.lnrllay R ~ ull!i
MyronT-.¥1or, u.
Barry Larkin singled. After Eric
···'
allowing
eleven
hits.
Um.ton ii. Nc.,.,. York3
C~tiiDK
T~aR I. t"allfornla U
Davis hlt ·into a force out,
Bart. Italy - Tour of Ualy
Pirates
6,
Cubs 2
Balllmort-6, Mllwa u tier -1
NC/\1\ BalwbaJI
Hatcher scored from thtrd . on
At
Pittsburgh,
Bob
Patterson,
Tuelld"Y Gamf'S
Onwha. Neb. - Colle•e- World Sf'rles
1'\"I!W l"ortt t HavddnK l · ~ l al Bo!ilon
Paul O'NeiU's RBI·single.
•
S!Koct'r
start
of the
making
his
second
1Oop!IOn 0·0), -:::a:; p.m.
MISL Champlor.;hlp
made
it
9-1
in
the
The
Giants
season, scattered flve hits over
:\lln!W'IIota 1Smlth 1-I J at Toronto
So ,l{am .. -.·ht'dul•d
•
{\h•ll.., :l· OI . ,: :.13 p. m .
sixth
when.
Mitchell
scored
on
a
1't' Ogl&gt;i
· D••l roll ! P••If\1 ~-:n 111 Clrn•lun d
P lll'is - Ft, .c h Op.n
Thompson 's groundout.
(C'lmdl tll ll ,;.:! ). ; ;:t:l p.m .
"' "i~httlftln,l{
·•
Si&gt;nUI•• (lln lma n G-;11 ill Chlca~~; u
Sal".lje"\'0, \'~e~!d a" la Yl o fnt.&gt;n '~&gt;~
The Giants scored their final
( HI hhard 1·:11 . IU 13 p.m .
"Qrkl fhampluR~~hlp!O.
run in the seventh on Mike
... Haltlmorr , lTih hs :!·d) at Mll""lW'-'f'
• ! SUI':Ir rtl l· l l. i! :!l.i p.m.
Klng,e ry's RBI-slngle.
•
•
fntlrornlu ll. nngslon :t.;;l al Kun :;us

Mothers Day visitors of Mrs.
J .R. Murphy and Iva Johnson
were Mrs. John Down, Adam and
Dickie, Glouster; Mrs. Barbara
Davis, Ashli, Joshua and Miranda, Syracuse; Peggy and
Jeffery Bole, Horner Hill; Mr.
and Mrs. John Murphy, Racine;
and Tyson and Jonathan Evans.
Mrs. Blll Dummitt, Middleport, was a visitor of Mrs. Iva
Johnson. Mr~. J .R. Murphy attended the funeral of William
(Pete) Earnheart, Columbus,
where Masonic services were
held.
.
Mrs. Carrie Wears was a
Thursday visitor of Ida Murphy
and Iva Johnson.
Mr. and Mrs. J .R. Murphy, Mr.
and Mrs. Jeff BQie, · Robert
Murphy anq ' Robbie, Mr. and
Mrs. Joseph Evans, Tyson and
Jonathan, Mr. and Mrs. John
Murphy, Mrs. Barbara Davis,
Ashli, Joshua and Mjrlnda at·
tended the graduation of Chris
Murphy at Southern High School.
Chris was salutatorian for the

"The Power of Love " was the
theme of the program presented
by Etta Mae Hlll at the recent
meeting of the Racine United
Methodist Women.
Margaret West conducted the
meeting in which readings were
given by Gladys Shields and
Alice Wolfe.
A discussion was held concernIng whose love has affected the
members lives and if members
were shqwing love towards
others.
Get well cards were signed for
the sick and shut in of the

TUESDAY
POMEROY- Bible school will
be held at the Zlon Church of
Christ, Monday through June15
with the clOsing programon June
17, 7:30p.m.

Scoreboard ...

Balllmorr - Califod ap llr.e. h~~J~eman
Grer Walker frcm Rorhmt.r of theltlternaUotal Lt~«W (Ao\A).
ChlcaKO (AL) - &amp;pe• pUdatr Alex
Ftr•nlle:t .

Baltlmort• at ~lllwau Ill' e. night
(',al llornla at Kalis&amp;'! C ity, nlghl
O~:~k lund.u t T exas, nl,a;bf

Cleve-lull - Slpell clkllrr KeiiJ
SUnnrU, oulfleldert av..,. O'Neil uc1

1'o' A1' 10NAL I.EI\GUE

-r.. wn

E""'

W L Pel.

GB

PlltsbU!ll: h ... .. . .............l J 19 .UO ,\-ltllirul .....................211 :!2 .liiQ 3

Phlh-delphl ll ................241
' Sl. Loui N......................23
: 1\'tw li"t)rk ................... ..:! I
+ Cblcu ~o ..................... ...:!t
\\ 1'!11
•Cinclnna ll .. ........ ..... .... .33
'"'San Dl f'I(O ... ........ .... : .... ~&amp;
"' to ~ An.._,.INI., ...............Zti
• .~ sun Frantl ttco .............23

22 .5~2
:!R .UI
28 .U 7
~ .UI

~

l! t.,

ll h
9 \;z

1:1 .717 ~' ·.500 9
28 .500 10
H .U2 1:1

Allanta ............... ..... .... l&amp; ~ .3!MI 15

, HouMon:.......... ............~o 31 .It'.!
Mondll,Y Ret .. s

15 ~ 1

.WorireiLI5, New \'ark 3
PIUsbu Flfh 6, Chlcaro'

St. LuWN3, Phlladclptlla :, II lnhin&amp;S
San Di l'I{O 10, JlouSion Z
San Fran c l ~o 10, OnCiuail J
Los Aapl• f, Allanta i
TwHd .,. Game~

MoiRe.. (lk)'d J.l) .. N"' Yoltl
(Ojeda I.S) 7:15
Ollcqo (• .. edded) al rttallul'lll

,.m.
(1'errelll-t}, 7: IS ,.m
.

Plllladf!lpbla ( RuiD• S-f) at SL ~,.e-.

( Ma,(n1Dfi2.JI),II: J$ p.m .

"'

Mike- Shlrloy, &amp;eCCIIIII bwmu Mlpl!l
F lorn and pitcher ClareDCe Browa.
DetroN - 'l'raded u&amp;cher Malt Nolin
to Nt111.· York fA.L) lor pltcltH• Laore

McCull ers aM Clay P arlw!r.

Placed plt~her Bill
" 'ppnan on IH'" tliiiAbled IIMt,
Pittabu,.h - Puttl\ll.sed contract ot
catc her D!lnn BUal'dello from Buhalo of
ltl e 1\ml'rtl'• AIIIIOliatkln tA.M); eptl·
oned pile.' her Randy· Kramer to Buff81o.

Mllwauk ef' -

S~tn

DleAO - Aclll-ated flrtlt baseman

,Ja ck &lt;:lark; o~Jtlonrd pltcber Pat Clement• to LIUi V'~?p~ ollhe Paclnc C!uUit
Leap!! (AAA }.

c.Uev

BuUer - Named Mary Aaa Rollleder
~~~enlor

u..el* lllhWit •trector.

Fotlblll

LA. Raiders - Slptd Odla MciUnn!y

M ulllla•l ctach for special projeda.
NY Jett - Sl(lled plllller Bill IWti!IIOn
and kicker KeVIn Grene.

CalprJ -

""""

NUIM!d Oily Charre fto,

••ta•t
coac h.
·
.
Hardord - Named &lt;lim Calt•• to Ia
. . . .fii'J boanll.

PIU. . IIh- Sla-d def__.maa Paul

L•• ... riJIIt " ' • ¥1111! Nee..am.

J

· By United Press International
TRUMP TO CU'l' BACK?: Donald Trwnp without his yacht
and helicopter? According to The Wall Street Journal, the man
who has everything may have to cut back on his lavish lifestyle
because of a cash crunch. The newspaper said Monday that
Trwnp has been meetlng with the bankers he owes $2 billion and
they are pressing for changes such as selling some of his
properties and a more conservative management style. "He
will have to trim the fat, " said one source involved In the talks.
"Get rid of the boat, the mansions, the helicopter.'' Some of
Trump's holdings, such as the new Taj Mahal casino in Atlantic
City, N.J., and the Trump Shuttle, aren't generating the money
expected 'and Trump also is Involved in a split from his wife,
Ivana, that has the potential to be very expensive .
BAKKER'S BUDDY: What's Jim Bakker like as a cellmate?
· He's kind, considerate and charitable' and certainly not a
howling lunatic, says David Mlskavlge, one of Bakker's three
cellmates in a federal prison in Rochester, Mlnn. Mlskavlge
wrote a letter to dispute tabloid reports that sounded as If the
former evangelist had gone nuts. "! can state with absolute
certainty the press accounts of Jim Bakker's alleged activities
are not only inaccurate but are pure fabrications," Mlskavlge
said. '.'In fact, I would go so far as to suggest the author of such
stories is himself given to hallucinations. He is a considerate
roommate who Is In full control of his faculties .... He spends his
time at this hospital facillty working In the hospice program
where he is a companiOn to the gravely lll and dying. He devotes
substantial amounts of time to the Stop Smoking Clinic."
MILUI BROTHERS MEMORIAL: The town of Piqua, Ohio,
dedicated a monument to some native sons, the Mllltl Brotbers,
and the onlY surviving member of the singllig group was s_o
touched that he wanted to· take the granite statue home with.
him. "I'm only sorry that my brothers are not here to receive
this wlth me but I'm sure they're looking down," Donald Mills,
75, said at the Sunday ceremony In front of the black p-anlte
.memorial. ''Thls is absolutely beautiful. I wasn't e;Kpectlng
anything as elaborate as this. I'd like to pick it up and take It
home." More than 1,000 people turned out for the ceremony,
which Included erecting Sifllll at the city limits proclaiming
Piqua as the home nf the Mllll Brothers. Mills didn't sing at the
dedication but he and his youngest son, Jobn "Skip" Mills, 34,
perform together.

.•

Bueblll

SeiUII(' at Ch l cu~o.nt.r;ht

People in the news. __,

Introducing
The Hornesaver Account
from Central Trust

Mo Ill ay Sports Tran.actloDK

" cdm'lld a,v Ga mt'lt

Ml nno1w ta ui T oronl o
NPw li' ork ul Roston. nl g-hl
Dl•t rollm f l rvr land. ni Khl

l

Sports briefs
Soecer
Hossam Hassan, Egypt's national soccer team leading
striker signed a $450,000 contract
to play for Paok of Greece. .. .
Pope John Paul II, gave his
blessing to 36 World Cup referees, calling on the officials to
help work for "the highest ideals
of spo.rtmanshlp." ... Argenti·
nian Adriano De Vicente si:ored
the winner ils the Grasshoppers
defeated Neuchatel Xamax 2-1 in
the Swiss Cup final ln Berne.
Switzerland .. .. Scotland's. World
Cup hopes received a boost when
leading striker Maurice John·
ston, who tore a stomach muscle
last week was found fit to play by
doctors. ·
Televlaloa
Jim Valvano, the former North
Carollna State basketball coach,
signed with ABC to work on
college telecasts.

....
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ilac&amp;if&amp;cult chore. That:'S wtt~ we tksitned
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WIG a Homeuver .-\ccoun1. you ..:an save:

tar 2 dOWftptyment tn' ~y :unouru. J l lrly
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iblap »&gt;d before 1on1 you II haVe II'IC"
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So , fy~·re llrt!Smm,!l or· owntniJ :1. horM
:.: omtcliy. come 10 Cd1~ Trust and bqJn
JOlt ftnance ~our convenuon:u mo"!J3fe !oa.n :o m:lie th,t~t drum a r~l~uv. The Ceanl
lfln:Nih Cenml Trust. we w1 1i ;:we :'.nu ·::n
Trust Homes;~ver .".ccoum· 'the best: way1o
lln bonus• cquo&amp;l to Ihe :nleR:il you ve
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97 North S.Cand Avo:
992-6661 - 992-3007

Middleport

-~

i\ PNC BANK

•

-

ces are underway at the Middleport . Community Church, 575
Pearl St., 7:30 each evening.
There wlll be diffferen t speakers
and singers each night.

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Lodge
363, F. and A. M. will meet
POMEROY - The Enterprise ·
United Methodist Church will Tuedsay at 7: 30 p.m. at the
have Bible school through Frl· MiddlePort Masonic Temple.
day, with classes from 9 to 11:30
POMEROY - Regular JTleet·
a.m.
ing of the Meigs Local Board of
BRADFORD
Bible school Education will be held at 7 p.m.
will be held at the Bradford Tuesday fn the meeting room.
Church of Christ, through Friday
UlvRSDAY
with classes 9 to 1:30 a .m. All
MIDDLEPORT-The E;vangechildren of the communlty are
llne Chapter No. 172 Order of the
Invited.
Eastern Star will meet Thursday
REEDSVILLE - The Ollve · at 7: 30 p.m. M.e mbers are_ to
Township trustees will meet bring a sack lunch. Officers are
·
Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at the to wear street dresses.
Reedsville Fire House.
POMEROY - The annual ice
MIDDLEPORT - Past Ma- cream social for the Trinity
trons of Evangeline Chapter 172, . Church of Pomeroy will be held
Order of the Eastern Star, will Thursday, Friday, and Saturday
meet Tuesqay at 7:30 p.m at the at the church from 10:30 a .m. to 6
home , of Kathryn Mitchell, p.m. Flavors available are chocLangsl(ille.
olate, vanilla. peach. lemon,
pineapple, strawberry, banana,
RACIN·E - The River Valley and butterscotch. Also available
Herbalists will meet Tuesday at will be sloppy joes, hotdogs, ham
the home of Juanita Conrad. and ham sandwiches, potato
Ripley . An herb plant excha~ge salad, cole slaw, baked beans,
Is planned.
chicken and noodles with roll,
pie, cake, and beverages. Carry
MIDLEPORT- Revival servi· out orders will be available.

----~-

Transactions

community.
An Invitation was read to
attend a reception for a rettrlng
minMer, "Rev. Charles !&lt;Jrsch.
He was a former minister here.
The UMW is offering scho.larships to youth of· the church
wishing t.o go to church camp. .
The church is going to have a
bus trlp to the Reds-Padres ball
game in Cincinnatl on Aug. 3.
Anyone interested in going
should contact Rev . Roger
Grace.
Refreshments were served by
Ruth Wolfe and Frances Roberts
during the social hour.

Community calen{lar

.

• Cit ~· ( UUIS4.1 11 04 1, ~::Iii p.m.
" Ouk i11Dil (\Nrlch i·:! l :u Tf'X1l.'i 18o·
· hanon0·2).~~35 J1 . m .

class . A graduatlon party was
held for him and his friends and
rela tlves .
~
Mrs. Daniel Worley, Stacy and
Daniel, Daniels, W.Va.; Mr. and
Mrs . Doyle Knapp. Langsville;
Mrs . Kevin Knapp and Ashll,
were SundllY visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Charley Smith.
Mrs. Daniel Worley and Daniel, spent Memorial Day with
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith.
Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Murphy ,
Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Bole, Robert
Murphy and Robbie, Mr. and
Mrs. John Murphy and Chris,
Mrs. Barbara Davis, Ashll, Jo·
shua, and Mlrinda were visitor.s
of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Evans,
Tyson and Jonathan, .
Ida Murphy and PeggY,_ were
Thursday visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. John Downs and attended
the eighth grade graduation of
Adam Downs at the elementary
school at Trimble.
Harley Johnson visited Thursday evening with Iva Johnson ..

Racine UMW meeting held

Athens wins top honors ·

......

Gospel sing held recently

Wolf Pen personals

.Giants thump Cincinnati, 10-1

.

Sentin~l :

The Daily

'
'&gt;

A gospel sing wa s held recently
at the Hillside Baptist Church,
with James A. Acree, Sr., pastor,
giving prayer and leading in a
congregational song to open the
service.
The program e mceed by the
pastor, Included solos " Help M~
Stand Lord". " Miracle ln Me ·
and " The Ha rvest is Plenty" by
Angle Willett; music by the
moth er-daughter team of Kris
and Marlo Wblte wit.)l Krls
playing the keyboard; tne Gar-

Roush birth
Bob and Carrie Roush are
announcing the birth of theirflr st
chlld, a daughter, Rebecca
Pawn, on April 3.
.
.
The infant weighed six pounds
and flve ounces, and was 20
inches long.
Maternal grandparents a re
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Roush , Racine. ·
Paternal grandparents are Mr. :
and Mrs. Glenn Young. Chester.

WINS AWARD - Debbie run, 1111 art teacher for the Southern
Local School District, recently received lhe .Southeastern Ohio
CouncU for E"ceptlonal Children Lyle Lehman Award. Presenting
the award lB Bill Bauer, preslclent of Chapter '7'78 of the Council for
E"ceptlonal Children.

Southern Local
teacher wins award·
Debbie Hill; an art teacher for
the Southern Local School District, received ·the Southeastern
Ohlo COuncil for Exceptional
Children Lyle Lehman Award.
This award ls presented to an
.individual or group who has
shown an impact on special
education but is not a part of
special education. ·
The award was presented at
the SEO CEC annual awards
presentation at Ohio University
recently.
Several nominations were re·
cetved for thls award but Ms . Hill
has shown exemplary teaching
abllitv with her work with
chlldren that are malnstreamed
into her class. l{e,r nomination
statement reads , "Ms. Hill has
been very receptive to children
with disabilities as · she has
welcomed the students with ·
various dlsabillties Into her regu ·
Jar art classes at Syracuse
Elementary School. Ms. Hlll has
been very adaptable for these
chlldren from Carleton School. "
Ms. Hill has moved her roorri
from second floor to first floor to
accommodate children in wheel·
chairs . Becau·se of her receptive-

.• END OF THE SEASON
CLOSEOUT SALE
JUNE 4 thru JUNE 9 ·

ness and positive atUtude. she
has also provided the opportunity
for over 50 chlldren at Syracuse
Elementary to devzlop a posltlve .
awareness · of chlldren with di s·
abllitles. Through her efforts
these children possess a better
understanding of a person with a
disability.

9:00 A.M.-5:00P.M.
REBECCA D. ROUSH

Read the Best Seier
Read the

CLRSSIFED RDS

STOREWIDE REDUCTION
SALE CONTINUES!

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4 Inch Potted Geraniums,

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HUBBARDS
GREENHOUSE

RACINE, ·OHIO

949-2800

Ii •'

AH TrHs &amp; Shrubbery

STO~E

RACINE DEPARTMENT

•

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.Impatiens

OFFER GOOD THRU
JUNE 16, 1990

992-5776
SYRACUSE. OHIO

MASTERCARD -VISA - GOLDEN BUCKEYE

FINAL
2 'DAYS!

WEDNESDAY I JUNE 6
AND

THURSDAy I JUNE 7I 1990

Bible schools
RACINE - Bible s~hool is
underway at. the Racine United
Methodist Church and will coniinue through Friday from 9: 30to
11: 30 a.m . All chlldren, ages two
to those entering junior high
school are lnvlted to attend. The
theme is "Jesus Christ, Giver of
Peace." Church pas tor is the
Rev. Roger Grace:

•••

-'----

POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Church of Chrisdot will have
vacation Bible school at the
church from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m.
each evening, June 24·29 . Besides
Bible· lessons, there will be
games, sklts, and refreshments.
Barbara Fields and Pat Thoma
are co-directors. More lnforma·
tlon may be obtained by calllng
Mrs. Thoma at 992-2277 after 3:30
p.m.

FAMOus··--BERKLIN~_® RECLINERS!

Revival services
'scheduled
Revival services wlll be held at
the Fellowship Church of the
Nazarene - In Reedsville, June
7-11, 7 p .m each evening. The
Rev. Dave Pinson, pastor of the
Campbell's Creek Church of the
Nazarene will be the evangelist
for the weekend. He Is a graduate
of Mt. Vernon Nazarene College
and received)lis master's degree
from Ashland Tehologlcal Semi·
nary In Ashland. . '
The minister Is a professor at
the Nazarene Bible College In
Charleston, W. Va ., specializing
ln Greek, church history, pastoral helps, education, and evan·
gellcal skills In the ministry.
The church is located two mlles
south nf Reedsville on State
Route 124 across from Forked
Run State Park. John Douglas,
pastor, Invites the public to
attend the services. There will be
special singing each evening by
the evangelist and others.

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"

briel Quartet including Paur
Anderson who has sung bass for
the group since it started in 1975;
and Mark and Carol Coleman , a
tenor-pianist duo.
Ot hers participating on the
mu sical program were Duane
and Diana Bing; the Children of
God, two husband and wlfe
teams, with Dan Hood, bass,
Rachel Hood, alto, Ron Clonch,
tenor, and Debbie Clonch, soprano . .Their selections Included
"He Has Risen" and ''Still the · Blood." ·

.

'

(•

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,.

�Ohio

Protest_s~aker disappears

FIRST MEETING - Soviet Prealdeat Mikhail
Fraaelaco Mo•ay. The two couatries have not
GorbiiClbev poees with South Korea Presldeat Rob
bad relations slace 19110. (UPI)
Tae Woo, left, at the .F alnnont Hotel In Saa. •

:Yeltsin candidate elected first
·deputy .chairntaD .of Parliment
MOSCOW (UP!) - Russian
tactics to push his candidates
market reforms.
President Boris Yeltsln finally through despite earlier rejec-:
" It would be in the Interests of
pined appcoval Tuesday for his tions, saying the moves contra- .:. the president to let (Yeltsln)
candidate as first deputy chair- dicted the conciliatory Image
form a government without trouman of Par llament but withdrew Yeltstn projected last week as he
ble," Khasbulatov sal d. "I think
another nominee for a Cabinet tried to win moderate legislators'
this would even make life easier
position as his fledgling adminls· support for his presidential bid.
for Gorbachev."
·
tratlon struggled to get off the
"Now the chairman has reYeltsln's action Monday came
ground.
jected the democratic principles after. a coalition agreement colAfter rejecting Yeltsln's candlhe himself proclaimed," said lapsed last week when legislators
.cJates three times, the Congress
Vladimir Prytkov, a centrist rejected a radical Yeltsln candl·
pf People's Depjlties voted 604, date while app~bvlng two relalawmaker from Gorky.
3'18 Tuesday to approve econo- . ''He , got scared by. th1s \lead- tive conservatives. A second vote
mist Ruslan Khasbulatov · as . lock and decided that by propos- Friday also ended with failure
Yeltsln's chief deputy.
Ing single candidacies he could for Yeltsln's candidates.
Yeltsln earlier withdrew the
get out of this situation," said
The defeat enraged radical
.candidacy of legal scholar Se~gel
Leonid Kogan, a deputy from the legislators who fear that a
Sbakral for another deputy chairUrals who shares many of conservatlve Cabinet will foil
man's post. His difficulties In
Yeltsln's vlews . . "But In fact he Yeltsln's reform plans.
gaining approval for Cabinet
just exacerbated the
"They want to surround him
members raised ques lions about
confrontation."
with their own people so he can't
his mandate to lead the republic
On Monday Khasbulatov do anything,'' said Sergei NoIn radical changes.
blamed his early defeats on sovets, a young radical from
Yeltsln, who won leadership of
"forces outside the walls of the . Omsk in Siberia.
the Congress of People's Depu- Coilgress," Including the hostile
Nosovets and other deputies
ties and Russia's effective preattitude of Soviet President Mik- from the Democratic Russia
sidency last week by only four
hail Gorliachev.
bloc, · the backbone of Yeltsln's
votes over a required ll)ajorlty,
Khasbulatov told United Press ,parliamentary strength, said It ·
11ow has filled three posts In the 'International that Gorbachev's was likely he would keep nomifour-member Cabinet.
opposition was a mis.take, since nating the two candidates until
On Monday many deputies Yeltsln could be the lightning rod they are -chosen.
criticized Yeltsln's strong-arm
for popular discontent over

Canadian leaders wide apart
.
.
in Quebec amendment talks
OTTAWA iUPl)- Talks over leadershavesaldQuebecwilluse "'business community favor
' constitutional amendment · . the distinct society clause to pass separation.
.
granting Quebec special powers new laws that Impede the EngPremiers who oppose the
to promote Its French language llsh and other ethnic minorities
amendment · have sought addiand culture appeared on the In the province.
tional guarantees that the Senate
verge of collapse, Increasing
In . the third session of talks
will be radically revamped as an
prospects for the province's Monday, the federal government
elected body with equal repressecession from Canada.
offered. a comprehensive propentation from all provinces InDespite the continued Impasse, osal addressing key Issues, Instead of representation based on
Prime Minister Brian Mulroney eluding Quebec's distinct society population.
told reporters after nearly 10 clause, reform of the Senate Quebec, which insists on a veto
hours of meetings ·with provln- the upper chamiler of ParUaover proposed Senate changes,ls
clal leaders that negotiations ment - and the requirement In
unlikely to ever approve an
would resume Tuesday.
the Meech Lake Accord that
Institution. In which It has the
"We have a long way to go," changes In the Senate beunanlm- same number of members as
·. Mulroney said, adding that dis- ously approved by all provinces.
smaller provinces.
But Mulroney's Insistence that
cusslons were "pretty vigorous."
Quebec Premier Robert ' BouThe constitutional negotiations provinces approve the amendrassa has said repeatedly he 'will
go to the heart of hostilities
ment before negotiations can
not accept any changes to the
between Quebec and the rest of begin on reforming the Senate
Meech Lake Accord. His position
Canada. ;~nd • the French- left some premiers angry and
has been strongly endorsed by
speaking province has threa- doubtful that the accord. can be
Mulroney, who has personally
tened to secede If the measure Is saved.
attacked the dissenting provln·
altered In an1. way.
Alberta Premier Don Getty
ces and warned the country faces
The amendment, which Qu- said he was "not the slightest bit
grave economic consequences If
ebec has championed for three optHnistlc" about the negotlathe accord falls.
years, would recognize Quebec tlons although lnnovatlve proposNewfoundland Premier Clyde
as a distinct. society and give it als were •Offered by political Well, a constitutional lawyer
special powers to promote and leaders.
whose dogged opposition to the
preserve Its language and
"J don't sense the kind of effort
accord has made him a hero to a .
culture.
at nation-building· that we had
majority of English-speaking
' The Meech Lake Accord, as the before. We're dealing with the
Canadians said he has put
future of the country," said ·forward some proposals to Qther
amendment Is known, was
drafted three years ago after Getty.
leaders .
.Quebec ol;ljected to a constitution
Manitoba and Newfoundland
Wells also objected to the
that Canada adopted In 1982. made It clear Monday that
closed-door meetings. "The in'Quebec refused to sign the negotiations will fall unless they
terests of the nation would be
j:Onstitutlon on grounds It did not get a legally binding commitbetter served If we had open
recognize the province's 6.2 ment from all provinces on
discussions," he said.
· 'mUIIon French-speaking · res!- Senate reform.
dents. The country's 10 pi·ovln·
Quebec Premier Robert Bouclal premiers must approve the rassa said he would not discuss
111easure by June 23 or It becomes reforming the Senate until after
. yold.
the provinces approve the Meech
Besides glvlng Quebec special Lake Accord.
pQWers to preserve Its culture,
The dissenting provinces also
the amendment would give all want ll!e . distinct society clause
provinces a say In· selecting recognizing French-speaking
SUpreme Court judges and sena- culture amended to ensure that.lt
ton and requires the unanimous does not override the country's
consent of !Ill provinces before charter of rights and freedoms.
the Senate can be reformed or
Opinion polls Indicate most
new provinces created.
English-speaking Canadians,
Threeofthecountry'ssmallest cynical about Quebec's desire to
provinces - · New Brunswick, remain In Canada, oppose the
Manitoba and Newfoundland amendment. Meanwhile, most
oppose the :amendment. Their Quebecers and the province's

atEL11HE

•'

.
.

Americans' health behavior
improving slightly, report say~
'

tlonal site for protests, was that Inspired him to speak.
BEIJING ( UJ"I) - A student
"I was In bed and heard them
who dared speak at a raucous
detained on Monday by
singing so I came out. Fear Is
and daring weeke!ld rally a,t
au thorltles.
Beijing University returned to
Ll Mlnql, a third-year econom- useless," he said.
The foreign correspondents
the campus after a brief deten·
Ics undergraduate who was acllon but has dropped from sight,
tive In last year's student-led club letter, addressed to the
Foreign Ministry's Information
teachers and classmates said ' movement for greater freedom,
Tuesday .
was taken away at 2 a.m . Department, which oversees
journalists, cited "severe physiTlananmen Square In central
Monday after the campus procal abuses" of foreign reporters,
Beijing reopened after being
test, the teacher said.
closed fo~ four days before ·
Ll's roommates told United noting •several beatings and
pollee menacing of journalists
Monday's first anniversary of
Press International that Ll rewith firearms.
the crackdown on the proturned to their dormitory room
Other foreign reporters also
ctemocracy movement, which
about 11 p.m. Monday and then
were roughed up by pollee on
passed with relative calm In
left wlthou t leaving word where
most of the city except for the
he was going. He has· not been Sunday and Monday nights while
covering the Tlananmen anni·
_
student protests.
seen since then.
·
At the same time, the Beijing
''When he came back he looked versary and the campus protest.
very scared and was asking what The U.S. State Depart~ent on
Foreign ~rrespondents · Club
was _going · on," one roommate Monday protes led to the Chinese
delivered a letter to the Chinese
said. Other roommates said they government over the Incidents.
Foreign ¥1nlstry protesting
"It appears to us that these
beatings and harassment of
were not certain If he had been
actions are an attempt to Intimidetained again.
journalists 1by pollee In recent
"If he'd ·been arrested we date members of the foreign
days ancl charging the actlons
would have known abo.ut It," one press and prevent us from
were desl~ed to lnhlblt news
of Ll's roommates said. •'People carrying out legitimate. reportcoverage.
would have come to collect his 1ng activities," the letter said.
"We most strongly object to
An American television net·
belongings.". ·
tlie unprovoked use of violence
. and physical abuse," the letter
The classmates · said school · work crew also reported technl-administrators came looking for cllins at a Chinese government
,
said.
Ll Monday afternoon and Tues- satellite feed cen)er,had refused
· The Fovelgn Ministry, howday morning. Ll was a cloSe td transmit videotape of the
ever, Issued a "serious warning"
associate of Wang Dan, whO Sunday night protest taken Inside
to journalists against what It
·
·
called "Uiegal news .coverage,' ' · became a top leader of last year's ih.e college.
Earlier, Information Departstudent movement and has been
demanding journalists comp~y
with regulations to seek permis- · held for nearly a year In a prison ment official Liu Rucal summoned club president James
sion before entering college
.north of Beijing.
The only student willing to risk Munson, the Beijing correspond·
campuses.
speaking to the rally and one ent for.Canadlan Television, to a
· Beijing University was rewhose Jack of faith In socialism Is meeting at which he called
ported quiet after students
widely known, Li called China's journalists' protests of pollee
smashed about two dozen bottles
leaders "wild and savage au to- mls·treatment "utterly
on the campus Monday night In a
crats" who · rule without the unreasonable."
second show of dissent, much
Llu, however, claimed a
consent of the Chinese people and
smaller thl!n a noisy and brazen
urged students to reject'pass,lvit:V "small number" of foreign reanti-government demonstration
and campaign actively for porters "have1 connections with
by 1,000 ~tudents on Sunday
·
Chinese people who engineered
. reform.
night.
Ll had told a foreign reporter Illegal activities ang even engage
A teacher at Beijing University's foreign students' dormitory
after his talk that It was students' themselves in activities Incomsinging of the socialist anthem patible with their status." He did
said the student who gave an
The Internatlonale, the Informal not Identify the alleged
Impassioned speech to the march
anthem of last year's movement, perpetrators.
In the campus tria~gle, a tradl-

GABORONE, Botswana iUPJ)
"Apartheid is still alive but the Community, Canada and the
- Black lea~er Nelsim Mandela,
ANC Is even more alive," ManUnited States. .
In Botswana on the start of a deJa said. He praised South
Before leaving Johannesburg,
45-day ·foreign tour, warned that African President Frederlk de Mandela said lifting' t.he emer-·
lifting sanctions against sOuth Klerk for his courage in suspend- gency, which the -- government
Africa now "would be tanta· Ing Mandela 's life prison term declared · In a bid to curb
mount to stabbing the liberation and lifting a 30-year ban on the widespread rioting over the
struggle In the back."
ANC.
continued exclusion of the black
Kicking off a tour ,of Europe,
~ut he said the ANC would not
majority from power, would be a
Canada, .the United States and agree to a formal suspension of
"victory for the Uberarlon
Africa, Mandela set the tone its armed struggle and hold talks
movement ."
Monday for his most ex)enslve with the government until sevforeign trip since his release eral conditions were met During his own nlne-natfon
from prison In February, saying · among them the release of all European trip last month, de
continued ·economic sa.nctlons political prisoners, the return of Klerk pressed for an easing of
exiles and the lifting of a nearly sanctions . as a reward for his
~-year-old state of emergency.
reform efforts. Mam;lela Insists
of racial segregation. •
The state of emergency, which that until the pillars of apartheid
From Botswana, Mandela was S9uth African newspapevs with .. are abolished, sanctions must
scheduled t,uesday to visit Lus- links to the government said may
remain.
·
aka, Zamb a, and then head for be modified or lifted within days, , "If sanctions are now ended
Paris. His tour Includes talks prompted a severe tightening of
then this would be tantamount to
with President Bush In Washlng- economic sanctions against Prestabbing the liberation struggle
ton and an address to a joint toria In 1986 by :• .' European
In the back," Mandela said.
session of Congress.
The near-legendary 71-yearCOUPON
old leader of the Afrlc an National
Congress and his wife; Winnie,
HEARING TESTS MEIGS COUNn
received a red-carpet welcome
ElK Ironies hearing , ... wl bt giv• by lltltant liNing Aid Cintw
from President Quett Maslre .
MIDDLEPORT FAMILY PIAC11CE
when they · arrived in the
Z. I. DAYO, M.D.
diamond-rich country bordering
THIIISDAY,
JUNE 7 ·
South Africa.
9:00A.M. TO 12:00. NOON
Tribal dancers performed on
the tarmac land women ululated
before the Mandelas were escorted Into I town along Nelson
Mandela Dnlve.
After meeting privately with
Masire, president of the former
British protectorate since 1980,
Mandela addressed a crowd of
15,000 at the national stadium. He
appeared fit following a six-day
medical examination and
surgery for 1he removal of a cyst
on his bladder.

.

LAST DAY - Second Grade teacher Nancy
Stanlck says good by toller students on the last day
of school Monday after St. Mary Ma.:dalen closed

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(UPI)

Barry's drug, perjury .trial begins
'

~:fc~ ~e~~~~~f~~o~~~~dt~;;::~

TRUST PARTICIPATES IN LOAN PROGRAMS

WASHINGTON I UP! ) -More " adherence to 21 " heal th·
Americans are watching how promollng behaviors," was 66.2
much fat they eat and arebuc- outofaposslble100polntsln1990.
kllng their seat belts, but fewer That compares with 65.4 In 1989
are obeying speed limits·' or and 61.5 In 1984.
" It 1the Index score) hasn't
cutting back on sugary foods,
according to a health and safety Increased as fast we would have
"report card ."
liked, but in seven years we have
Prevention magazine's sev-, made a lot ·of progress," Beldon
enth annual ~urvey of U.S. health
said.
behaviors was released Monday
The number of adults limiting
and found 58 percent of the -1,250 the amount of sugar In their diets
In 1990 was~ percent, 1 percenadults questioned "try a lot". to
avold eating ioo much fat, up 4
tage point lower than In 1989aml5
percentage points from the 1989
percentage points below the 1984
poll.
level.
&lt;
In addition, 50 percent of
Healthy diets were not necesrespondents said they were resarlly paired with good exercise
duclng their Intake of highhabits. Only half of Americans
c)!olesterol foods such as fatty
who say they exercise strenumeats and eggs, up 2 percentage
ously ·practice good el\tlng
points from 1989 and 8 percen- · patterns.
tage points from 1984.
Only 24 percent of Americans
·'Even though tne Increases in
surveyed were In their proper
this year's Index are, small in
weight range, l!(hlle '61 percent
several areas, Its figures represwere overweight and 15 percent
ent millions more l\merlcans
weighed too little.
whO are paying attention to their
Another problem area turned
health," said Sanford Beldon,
up by the latest poll was a decline
In the number of women who
publisher of Prevention, which Is
based In Emmaus, Pa.
regularly examine their breas ts
The overall Prevention Index
for signs of cancer.
score. based on Americans'

...

Mandela calls for sanctions

C~NTRAL

The Daily Sentinel-Page 7

Ohio

June 6, 1990

'

WASHINGTON ( UPI)
Mayor Marlon Barty's drug and
perjury trial began with lawyers
screening a pool of 250 potential
jurors and the defendant claimIng a crucial piece of videotaped
evidence was leaked to a televlslorl" station.
,
,
Jury selection for the trial
started Monday, 4 ~ months
after Barry was arrested for
allegedly smoking crack cocaine
during a sting conducted by the
FBl and city pollee on Jan. 18 at
the downtown Vista International Hotel.
The trial opened with defense
and prosecution lawyers Issuing
detailed questionnaires to about
250 potential jurors, who were to
be questioned personally Tuesday in U.S. District Court.
Selection of the sequestered
panel of 12 jurors and six
alternates to hear the trial was
expected to last a we~k. ·
Barry, 54, faces three counts of
perjury for allegedly lying to a
grand jury in January 1989 about
drug use, 10 counts of cocaine
possession and one count of
conspiracy to possess cocaine
dating back six years.
The perjury counts are the only
felonies, but a conviction and jail
term on any of the felonies would
force Barry to resign. If con·
vlcted on all charges, he could be
sentenced to 26 years In prison
and fined more than $1.8 million.
Under the District of Columbia
Charter, Barry would have to
resign If jailed on a felony
C!Jnylctlon. Th~ mayor, a Democrat whose th_lrd term ends Jan.
2, 1991, has not ruled out seeking
a fourth term In the Nov. · 6
general election.
Barry smiled and waved but
did not talk to reporters as he
entered the courthouse, but
hours ear-lier, In an interview on
WOL·AM radio. he accused the
office of U.S. Attorney Jay
Stephens of leaking the FIBI
videotape of his actions during
the .,Vista sting to Washington
television station WRC.
The tape, which allegedly
shows the mayor smoking'crack,
is expected to be the most
explosive evidence during the
trial, 'which likely will last at
least a month.

About 44 percent of women
surveyed for the 1990 Index said
they checked their breasts at
least once a month, down 7
percentage points from the previous year. But the 1990 level of
breast examination was still
substantially better than In 1983,
when only 37 percent of women
said they did self-exa minations.
. About 63 percent of Americans
polled said they always wear seat
belts, up 3 percent from 1989 and
44 percent from 1984 survey .
However, for the (lrst time, less
than half of Americans - 49
percent . - said they do not
exceed the legal speed limit when
they are drtving , down from 56
percent In 1984.
.
In another safety area, 85
percent of 1990's respondents
said they had a smoke detector In
their home. up· 4 percentage
points fr&lt;ini 1989 and 18 percentage points from 1984.
The Index was based on a .
nationwide telephone poll of
randomly selected people over
age 18 conducted by Lou Harris
and Associates . The margin of
error was plus or minus 3
percentage points.

Crime bill reaches crossroads
WASHINGTON (UPI ) - Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Joseph Blden, D-Del, urged
the Senate to end' debate on
anti-crime legislation, which Includes a ban on hlne types of
assault weapons and provisions
to cut the time convicted killers
spend on death row.
The Senate was expected Tuesday to vote on cloture, the
procedural term for ending debate and forcing a final vote. The
cloture outcome, expected to be
tight, appeared to hinge on
senators who opposed the ban on
nlne.f(lretgn- and domestic-made
. ~eml-automatlc weapons.
In a last-minute effort to rally
support on Mqnday, Bid en and
)eaders of several police organizatlont urged Senate action.
"This legislation should not be
killed by delay," Blden said at a
news conference .
" Pollee officials share my
view that the bill Includes two
valuable anti-crime provisions:
the death penalty for criminals
who kill federal law enforcement
officers and a curb on the
availability of military -style as·
sault weapons that drug dealers

are using to terrorize our
neighborhoods ,
''That is why they (law enforcement officials ) are calling
on the Senate to invokeclotureon
the crime bill and move It toward
final passage, " Blden said.
The biggest obstacle to tt\e 60
votes needed for cloture is the
three-year importation ban of
five foreign-made assault weapons and four U.S. semiautomatic weapons. The Sena te.
approved that provision 50-49.
The approval of the ban was
opposed by President Bush and
fought by the powerful National
Rifle Association.
The assault weapon provision
prompted Senate Democratic
leader George Mitchell of Maine
and Republican Senate leader
Robert Dole Of Kansas to predict
before the Memorial Day recess
the pressure would be Intense
and the outcome of the vote In
doubt.
Attempts- to work out a compromise before the recess !ailed
for the same reason, even though
Blden lias dropped his plans to
offer numerous amendments
ranging from beefed-up law

Stephens had -no comment on scene at Barry's Jan.19 arraignBarry's allegation.
ment , when the mayor was
Chris Ostrowski, news director forced to elbow through
at WRC -TV, an NBC affiliate,
hundreds of onlookers, supporsaid: "I don't know where the ters, demonstrators and newsmayor got that (Information)." people to get lntd court. .
But she would not confirm or
About 25 members of the
deny whether .t he station has Guardian Angels crime-fighting
received a copy of the videotape. group carried signs outside the
"I really don't want to commep.,t · courthouse reading: . "Barry,
on it."
Don't Delay. Resign Today," and
Barry has acknowledged
"Bar~ Smoked Crac)l, We Don't
smoking the crac)&lt; at the Vista,
Want Him Back."
but said federal authorities could
A few B~rry supporters lined
have "killed" him by allowing
!1~ o'utslde the courthouse to
him to consume a potent dose of
express their views. Norm
the drug.
·
Nixon, a city resident, said the
Defense. lawyer R. Kenneth
Dis tr let Qf Co lumbla and black
Mundy Is expected to argue
leadership are on trlal'along with
during the trial that Barry was
Barry:
entrapped.
"It 's part of a national trend
During Monday's proceedings,
where there Is a double standard
each potential juror 'was asked to
between black elected officials
flU out a 25-page questionnaire · and white elected officials," he
including such questions as · said. "It started out as a
whether the ju(y, candidate. a
corruption trial, and When they
relative or a 'dose friend had
couldn't find that out they turned
suffered from drug or alcohol
It Into something else."
abuse, and whether a ·person is
ever justified in lying after
having taken an oath to tell the
\'.&lt;&lt;11 1 11\\]IJ\11 :,1111 1!11\]·l\ii\J]~\\J,(J\1
tDJth.
.
They also were asked whether ,
they had personal opinions about
the use of undercover or sting ·
operations by law enforcement
agencies, whether they whether
they have ever felt they were
.,
victims of prejudice.
'
.The questionnaire Included a
partial list of witnesses who
could be called to testi-ly in the
case. Among the 48 names were
Charles Lewis, with whom Barry
allegedly smoked crack cocaine
In a city hotel In 1988, and
Rasheeda Moore. the former
model romantically linked to
):larry who lured him to the sting.
Barry's spokeswoman, Lurma
Rackley, said the mayor was
naturally "nervous and afraid"
as -the trtal began. "Anybody
would be."
Reporters and the public were
barred from U.S. District Judge
Thomas Penfield Jackson's courtroom for the open lng proceedIngs, but were expected to be
$5000 minimum deposit
admitted Tues.day as potential
jurors begin answering questions
'

enforcement to shutting down
"crack'' houses .
But the Senate reached agreement on an · expanded federal
dealh penalty that covers 30
crimes. It bars· the execution of
the mentally retarded and prohibits the execution of anyone
under age 17.
· ·
The Senate also approved a
1imlt on the number of federal
court appeals by deat h row
inmates and a fixed timetable for
processing the reviews. Sponsors
said that in most cases an
execution would be carried out
within a year after the time a
state Supreme Court affirms a
conviction. ·
The Semite stlll has to deal with
sections In the bill covering
"good faith" searches by pollee,
money laundering and creation
of an Organized Crime and
Dangerous Drug Division In the
Justice Department.

UNEXPLAINED

WEIGHT LOSS
PUZZLES

SCIENTISTS

,.

FINLAND - The unexpected
welgbt lou ezperien~ by members
of a test group has puzzled medical
raearcben at a leading Flnnlsb university. Sclentista were tatlng a naturally-occurring compound for its
llblllty to lower blood cholesterol lev;
els when, to lbelr surprise, they
found that every penon wbo took the
formula bad Ioat a significant
amount of weight.
Tbe. formula was tben tested at
another prestigious European unlvenlly hospital. Apln, all pallen~
lost welgbl even tboup they did not
, cbanse tbeir eating habits. Tb~
report detalllns this atudy, published
In tbe British Journal of Nutrition,
stated: "Body welgbt was alsnlfi·
cantly reduced even tbou1h tbe
pallenta were specifically asked not
to alter their dietary luobita."

2 year Certificate of Deposit

oral~v.

'

The courthouse grounds were
almost' serene compared to the

·8.

State of emergency declared
·in Soviet republic Kirghizia
MOSCOW (UPI) -Thousands "southern crescent."
of members of rival ethnic
An Interior Ministry spokesgroups clashed In a land dispute man In Mpscow said 10 people
In the Soviet ~ Central Asian wee kllled In the riots and 210
republic of Kirghizia. leaving at wounded. He estimated .at least
least 10 dead and hundreds 10,000 people were Involved In the
wounded, the Interior Ministry clashes.
said Tuesday .
''The violence was sparked by
Auttiorlties declared a state of a dispute between the two comemergencY, Imposed a curfew In munltles over plots of land near
the republic and took the unusual the city, to which both sides laid
step of appointing the Interior claims," the official Tass news
minister A the region's military agency said.
"Wirlrout permission, a group
commander.
The unrest began Monday of Klrghizlans, worried about
evening when Uzbek rioters set receiving scarce housing In the
homes of Klrghizlans on fire In region, occupied the land plots to
Osh. the , republic's second- ._,- put up homes,'' Tass said.
largest city with a population of "Uzbeks . demanded that they .
209,000, and demanded that the also be alloted plots of land. This
western part of the republiC be led to clashes that resulted In
annexed to neighboring Uzbekls- . casualties.
The Klrghlz Interior ·minister,
tan, according to the official
Soviet army newspaper Kras - Maj . Gen. Vlktor Goncharov,
was appointed military comnaya Zvezda.
. The fighting between minority mander of the region: the news
Uzbeks and native Klrghizlans In agency said.
lind around Osh made Kirghizia
Assignment of chief military
the last of the Soviet Union's five responsibilities to the local InteCentraj Asian republiCs to be rior Ministry was an unusual •
struck by ethnic unrest In the move that Indicated the gravity
past year In tbe mainly Moslem of'the situation In Kirghizia.

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TU81day, June 6, 1990

Van Shelton takes· top country awards
NASHVILLE, Tenn. 1UP!) VIrginia crooner Ricky Van
Shelton was named Entertainer
of tlie Year at The Nashville
Network-Music City News Country Music Awards Monday night
during a two-hour live show on
the cable network.
Shelton, a native -of Grit, Va.,
also was named Male Artist of
the Year at the first annual

event.

l
• ·'

I

...

The awards were. surprising,
sqmewhat, in that Randy Travis,
nominated for five awards, came
away empty-handed at the show.
. Another mild upset was the
choice of Patty Loveless as
Female Artist of the Year.
"We drew !I lot of young and
older fans over to country music
since Rock 'n'RoU has gone off
the deep end," Shelton said, after
winning the Male Artist award.
"It means a lot to win. I get paid
tor waiting around. I don't get
· paid to sing·, I do that for free," he
said.
·
Loveless said at a press conference following her win as Female
Artist that she was "still in shock

_

inside." She said she thought
Reba McEntire or Kathy Mattea
would win the award. Also vying
for the hotly cqntested . award
were Lorrie Morga!] and Tanya
Tucker.
Other dual award winners
were the Statler Brothers for
Single of the Year- "More Than
A Name On The Wall'' ..:.. and
Vocal Group of the Year, and
Clint Black, who won Best Album
for "Killin· Time'' and the Star of
Tomorrow Award.
Black was asked about the fact
that he already W!lS a star
following the huge success of his
million -selling premiere album,
''Kiliih' Time."
"I feell&gt;retty famous.' ' Black
said. "If you force the word siar
on'me I guess I'li have to take it."
The TNN-Music ..City News
Country Awards were chosen by
the votes of fans of the cable
networkandthemonthlycountry
music publication.
·
Monday's award show marked
the flrsi time the · Nashville
Network and the Music City
News combined their awards

show. Theshow.was'co-hosted by
Barbara Mandrell and Jimmy
Dean.
'
. ,Traditionally, the Music City
News Awards has kicked off Fan
Fair week In Nashville, where
more than 20,000 fans attend
almost non-stop music during the
entire week.
Merle Haggard, who has had a
string of hits dating back almost
30 years, Including ' .'Okie From
Muskogee,·' was given the Living
Legend Award.
Winning the Video of the Year
award . ~_Vas Hank Williams Jr.,
for "There's A Tear In My Beer."
Named Comedian of the Year
was Ray Stevens, with TheJudds
taking Vocal Duo of the Year.
"Every one of these things is
sort of lll~e a love letter from the
fans ," Stevens said.
The Vocal Collaboration of the
Year also went to Hank Williams
Jr ., for "There's· A Tear In My
j3eer."
Tennessee Ernie Ford, who
· has .performed for over half a
. century, was given the Minne
Pearl
tot humanitarian

TOP FEMALE VOCALIST - Patty Loveless holder her trophy
after being named Female Artist of the Year at the Music City
News TNN Country Music Awards Show in Nashville Monday
night. (UPI)

..

service.
Ford said. "If anybOdy ever
felt like a milk bucket under a
bull, I feel like It now."
He said he was. ''surprised,
proud and happy."
The Chuck Wagon Gang won
for Best Gospel Group, while
Ricky Skaggs won for Best
Instrumentalist.

Lottery numbers
CLEVELAN.O--(UPl) - Monday 's winning • Ohio Lottery
numbers:
PICK-S
347.
PICK-3 ticket sales totaled
$1,350,793.50, with a payoff due of
$434.707.50.
PICK-4
0795.
PICK-4 ticket sales totaled
$267,439.50, with a payoff due of
$59,100.00.

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By JOSEPH MIANOWANY
VPI Political Writer
California's ~~ocratic gub·
ernatorial race - a surprising
and sometimes nasty battle that
could provide the Golden State
with Its first woman nominee for
go~rnor topped primary
llnenucpusmlbennnltl)ei svtaetresno.rs a.nd s~

1

neck and neck. However, two
su!Veys released Sunday - by
The Los Angeles Times and the
Field Institute - gave Feinstein
a double-digit lead.

.~

0

nators seeking re-election generally ·looked fotward to an easy
day Tuesday as they appeared to
face llttle serlous opposition.
The 'premier contests were
ones that did not involve current
office holders and were led by the
gubernatorial battle In Callfornil!., wtwre state Attorney Gen'
eralJohnVandeKampendedhis
campaign Monday doubt'lng poll~
and frantically trying to close In
on' Dianne Feinstein.
In probably the. closest:
watched battle in the country,
Van de Kamp and Feinstein, a
former San Francisco mayor,
fought for the right. to meet Sen.
Pete Wilson, R·Callf., In the
general election next fall. Wllson
faced only token OPPoSition in his
effort · to win the GOP
nomination.
The winner of the California
·gubernatorial race will succeed
two-term Republican Gov.
George Deukmejlan;. who decided he would not ·seek a third
term .
Early in the primary race, Van
de Kamp was considered a heavy
favorite, but 11, media push by
Feinstein propelled her to the
lead In most surveys. .
Going Into the last weeks of the.
campaign, poUs showed Fein·
stein and Van de Kamp running ·

Still, huge segm·ents of the
electorate : ·r emalned unpecided
ln~thsurveys.
.M d.
.
,Vail de Kamp went on ay to
San Diego, Los Angeles and
Sacramento and tried hard to
downplay the polls, going so far
as to suggest that vote~s. especially women, have mlsled
pollsters.
He likened the situation to the
state's 1982 eleetloQ; when Los
Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley led
.D eukmejlan In the polls but lost
- a tact political sclen tis ts
attributed at least p;u'tially to.
Democrats ·not being truthful'
about whether they would vote .
. for a black' candidate:

punched, you . just become a
punching bag and you can hit the
canvas," she said.
Strategists from both parties
have theorized that if Feinstein
Wins, there will be a clear choice
for voters in November.
But because . Van de Kamp's

NEW -

Gutters
Downsp""uts
•u
Gutter Cleaning

In Washington, the , J(\stlce
Department said federal observers would be sent to two
counties In Alabama and two in
New Mexico to assure that blacks
and Indians are allowed to vote
·without ·lnterferenqe.
In addition to California, one of
the best races was a Democratic
Senate runoff In North Carolina
for the right to face conservative
Republican. Jesse Helms in
November.
- Harvey Gantt. a· former mayor
of Charlotte, and attorney Mi·
chael Easley finished first and
second In a six-candidate prim·
ary 'May 8. Gantt, 47, is trying to.
become the first black In Npr(h
• Carolina to win a major runoff
' election.
. .

';A lot ilf people S!lid one tl)lng
to the pollsters, then voted the
other way tin 1982) /' Van de
Kamp said. "I think there's some
of that In this campaign ."
The closing days of tlie campaign were marked by an Increase in negative commercials
from both camps a_nd Feinstein,
campaigning In Los Angeles,
Stockton and San Francisco,
defended her tactics.
''foward the end of· the cam. One of several ballot questions
paign we made overtures: 'Let's
keep Ibis campaign qn the high In California also could signal the
road.' Again I- got hit. I just end of a tax revolt in the Golden
couldn't afford to do what (Mas- ' State. The proposal would allow a
sachusetts Gov. Michael) Duka- doubling - from 9 cents to 18
kls did, which Is not punch back." cents- ofthe state gasoline tax,
"Sometimes If you are with the money going to new
punched and punched and highway&amp;.

6-5-'9().1 mo.

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM BIDING
•BLOWN IN

WALLPAPER AND· ·

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Senica

PH. 949-2101
or Its. 949-2860

CALL

MEMORIAL BRIDGE APPROACH ON
GARFIELD AVE., PARKERSBURG
Mon.-Fri. •·•; Sat. 9·5r30

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992-2156
MONDAY thr~ FRIDAY I A.M. ta S P.M.

Days

8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

6

428-1065

'

1
3

~·.·

run 3 diVtlt ·no ch•ge.

;

BISSELL
BUILDERS

*SHRUB-&amp;
TRIM anti RE·
MOVAL:

' ' AIIIIOllil CI! til I! II IS
1-Cird of Th.,kt

2-ln Memory
3-Annouc:ements
4 - Giv..wav
5 -..., HIPPV. Adl

6 - Lost lnd Found
7 - V•d Selelpald in edvence)
&amp;-Public Sale &amp; Auct iO n

9-Wanlld to Buy

.

pO!il Dlilv Tribune. reaching D'llr 18.000 homet .

WEON£SOAV p,A"pfR
THURSDAY PAPER
FRIOAV PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

OAY BEFOFIE PUBliCATION
- 1-1 :00 A.M . SATUAOAV
- 2 :00P.M . MONDAV
- 2 :00P.M . TUESDAY .
-'- 2 :00P.M . WEDNESOAV·
- 2 :00P.M THURSDAY
- 2 :00 .P.M . FRIDAY .

11-H•Ig Wanted
12- Situltlon Wlntld

1 3- lntUrence

I

-

Meigs Counly

M•son Co .. WW

A,.acode611 '

Are•Cade614

AreaCode301

441-G•IIipoli•

992-Middleport

67&amp;- P.1. Pl11unt

Pom.-ov

317-Ch•hire
311-Vinton
24&amp;-Rio Gr~nde

98&amp; - .C h•ter
843- Ponlend
2•7 -::- Litlrt F1Us

211-GuYan Oilt
143-Ar•bi• Diu

9•9 - Radni
712 - Rutllnd

379-Wainut

•sa-leon

&amp;?e - Apple Grave
773- Ma•on
882-New Heven
896 - lltlf1
937 - Buffllo

1'"6"'"' '

21-Busln•• Opportunity
22 - MORIV to Loen
23-Prof•tionel Sttvlc..

foUtm:ing telephone exchanl{es...
.Oellia County

1 4 - ButinMs Tr1ining
1 6 - School• &amp; lnltruetion

. H-R•dlo. TV &amp; CB Repair
17-Miscellaneous
1 8 ..:_ W1nted To Do

Classified pal{es· corer the
....

.Rate
$4.00
86.00

Over

.·

•

*FIREWOOD

31 - Homft for S•le
32 - MobilaHomn for S1le

.

617- Coolville

33 - FI'",. tor Slle
34-BustnMsBuildinos
35 - lot• &amp; Acreeoe
3~Ae8j Estate W•nted

16 Word•

113.oo
11 .30/day

d..,• will' bectuwgld

Merdldlldl s e
61 ..,.. HoUsehold Good•
152-Sporttng Oooclt
53 - Antiques
64-Misc . Mercl't.nditt ·
56-Building Supplt•
56-Pets tor SIIA
67-Musieel lnetruments
58 - Fruits &amp; Veg•ebl•
59 - For S1l1 or Trade

Farm Supplirs
/1; II VES IIII:k
&amp;1-farm Equipment
82-Wanted to Buy
53- livestock
i4- t-l-v &amp; Grein
66,-Seed &amp; Fenililer

Tran sDor lation
71 - Au101 tor S1le

992-2269

EVENINGS

72- Trucks for 8•1•

73- VInS 6 4 'folO "I
74- Motoreyclel

OVEN REPAIR

POWEIWASH

Bring It In Or We

581 S. Fourth An.

Good Ret..

SERVICE

T.L.C.

Plcli Up.

27Yro. Exp.

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE

Middleport, Ohio
RESIDENTIAL •nd

75-Boat• &amp; Motors .for S1le
76- Auto Plftl 6 Acceuorl•
77-- Auto Rep•ir
78- Camping Equipment
79 - C•mPit'S
Motor Homes

a

209 Sauth .4th St.
Middlepcirt, Dlt.
'~LOW INCOIII

HouMI - Mobile Home&amp;
· Tranoport VehictH ·
Farm Equipment •
Hoovv Equlpmllnt.,Etc.
FREE ESTIMATE:&gt;
24 HR . SERVICE
.,.,~'-'

,....

lcr011 Frem Palf Offkt
21 ~ E. Sec. ' P-oy
POMEROY, OHIO
316/'90/lln

• .

FRl!lER$-$125 vp
MICRO OVEJIS--$79 up

CONSTRUCTION
•N•'w Homes
•Garages

Plolntllfo.
.

Stop &amp; COIIIIION

HO•S: M.f 9·7
Sat.
Closed Sun.

•-s

992-5!35 ar 91S-S561
l - • FroM Post Office

W. H. BERDINE. et at ..

Defendinto. ·
, LEGAL NOTICE
A.o Shorlfl ofMOigo Cou!11V.
Ohio, 1 honlly oflao lor ooteot
10:00 A.M. on J..,. 22.
1890, on the front llej&gt;l of
tho · Molgo County Coun-

houoo, I'Dmii'D\', Ohio, the

Here's one of th~ best deals in.the world that just about everyone can take advantage of Blue Max.® By simply keeping
$2,500 or morem a CD or savmgs account, you can get this gn:at package ofmoney-saving servicesreaturing no-servicechargechecking~ano~annual-feecreditcard,andevenaplanthatprotect&lt;;mostof)Qurpurchasesagainstloss,theft,or
.damage anc:;l ~the W31T3lltyup to one full }elf. Plus}OO get CD Cash.Bonus Coupons,afree]ubilee VJSA®Debit card,
and eren ~ounts on loans made through us. And more. Come in and sign up ror the best .deal in town, Blue Max

TERMI OF SALE
OIL. GAS, AND OTHER MITen perc.,t (10%) of tho
NERALS UNDERLYING THE omount of ouch occeptod
FOu.DWING DESCRIBED bid, but In no event tooo1h.,
f1,000.00. The !lot.,,. of
REAL ESTATE:
tho purchooe price ohoft flo
~uoted- ln Mofgo County,
T-nohip of La,.,on. Stote due ••d poyoble to tho Shor·
atO!H. being In Soction 28. · Iff of Metgo ,Cou!11V. Ohio
Town 3, Ronge 1 1 of tho wlthlrt thirty (301 doyo train
Ohio. Com pony' o Purch-. tho dolo•of contlrrnotlon of
known u the Henry Oura
""'•· JAMES M . souLileY.
Form, end bolng 111 of
SHERIFF OF ME~S .
lOUth hllf of ttl!! IDUt-t
qldirtor of SoctiDn 2•; - e
COUNTY, OHlO
ond OXCeP-tlng
18 - · Ai'PROVED:

BANKEONE.

\

which woo - o d to Wm. , P•trlck H. O'Brien
Ouro by Henry Ouro. J•n· AnORNEYFOR
uory 30, 1818. Votum• 88,
PLAINTIFFI
1'111101 372·373, ond con(Ill 22, 28; (Ill II 3tc

EigbiHn ThDciMIId ~ Who c.w.
TJioM( ONE, /47HENS. NAI A ltAitr, rHICAIIMG WM
Alfttllr. ~lo

.v.m~~tr FDIC

•
ll1990 IIIINC ONE COIIPORATION.IR.Ismustbc excl\l(led from this o11i:r Subollont'al penalryi&gt;r-""•\\itllclmwJ ills. If balance falls bet
""""""'"' S«urlry and Extended Prol&lt;ctlon certlin conditions restriaion&lt;Wt exclu.~ons~'- r;;:;;_. ·I ~o!' __ ,.....,__ -"·.

•

~T·&gt;· w

·

. . . ...,.,.

·fHfthe

··-"'"'

......._.
·
·
a monlhfy setvlcccharJ!&lt;WIU bcas!C101C&lt;l on )Ollrfltu&lt; Max chc:ddl'@account. Cn:dlt S&lt;nireisubjcct 10 "Jlfll''\\O.fur
" " " " ' " " ..... ~~,•-onoraftcrMay I, 1990.Rcfcr10progr.undescripdoni&gt;rc:omptc:rtdetoits. Loon~ntnot:Milablcon toonsmadetllroushadakrorthin:Jporty.

""'.,_,.ng_""""t.

CLRSSFIED 8DS

I

,.

'

.

•

•

u

~

.

Business
Services .

Call Now To Maka
Appointment

'

949-2794

SPEeiAL

Kathy. Unala

Ren••

n..

Wearing

collar.

R-aJ.,,,

vtelnlty of litui Club Form, 81.
Rt. saa.
u1 0013.
Loot:On Happy Hoi- Rd. II
Rutlond. Block moll wfth
whitt -rtilngo, ring IIIOOI6cf

- r d lor block a ton GonMn
Shephwd dog. 114 ••• 1111.

7

Yard Sale

1 114

mn.

an G•oroea Creek

Rd. llloe. a lloby olclthoo, Frt,
Sol ..........

30 S.ssions-530
Co. Rd. 21

3 Fomlly Yard SoloJ~ Eulom
Avo. Th...-y, F,_,- t:OO All
to 1:00Pm.

RACINE, OHIO

Advonoo. DEADUNE: 2:00 p.m.

w,tdl f• Signs

ALL Vonl Soloo lluot lo Poklln

tho dly bo- tho od ll to run.

Sunday odNton • 2:00 p.in.
Fridoy. ~doy ocJNton • 2:00
p.m. Satur•r.

FOR SALE

•'

One Oi Racine's Nicest llotnes
lncludu 4 bedrooms, big kitchen, huge
family room, 2 garages, 3 baths, rented
3-room apartment, 40' x 120'1arm buildIng, pond, over 40 acres fenced pasture
land and rented mobile home.

SPRINt SPECIAL

CLEAN, LUBE &amp; TEST

C1U

llovo.

Wod., Thuro. t.f. loby tiod,
Sholto· S75. Boby olathoo, oil

' Stop In and See
DALLAS SAYRE
AT
PAT HILL

I

-u-.

Juno 4,5,1. 721 Flrot N Old
1oo11, clothoo,
_,., ontlq-• ...., morning

llovtng. aoroao Solo: 114 milo
up Krtn.r Aoacl St1rte sat., Mlllng unto ovarythlng • -·
TllurrnoM' 3nf - . , right.

aft8r I p.BI.

CHIYSUI·PL YMOUTH
DODGE

•FILL DIRT .. ..
•ANYTHING

olz•. mloc.

lob McCannlck Ad. Johneone
Trollor Court. Noll to tat trolor.
Thuro.a Frt. t-4.
Yonl Solo: lory !.oy!W'O.
ChMhlf'a, OK. JUM 1,1,7,1. ean,..
COINrolno.

399 $. Third, lllchhport

AT ALL

985-4422

•

Mlddlapon
&amp; VICinity

5·16·'90·1 mo.

OFFERS 2 LOCAftONS TO SEIVE YOU._.
POMEROY. OHIO: Rt. 7 • S.R. 143
ALBANY, OHIO; Rt. 110. S.A . 143
NEWHOURS:
.
POMEROY; 9 •.m.-7 p.m. 7 Deya
ALBANY; 10 a.m.·li p.m. e Days. Clolld Sunday
PAYING AS OF TODAY, MAY 29, 1990
#1 Copper 90&lt;: par lb.;
Aluminum Cana. 36&lt;: per lb.
~lt18n

Pomeroy,

992-6421

I

TRI·COUNn RECYCUNG

992·6803
FLATWOODS. ROAD
POMEROY. OHIO

malt.

1 112 mltoe out Rt. 211, .hmo 5 a
•. - · · olathoo, •.,••
muehmc&gt;l'll.

Grallt A. Na.wlt

. 16141 992-7843

Buy • Sell
. Trade

2 flmtly
Tlloodoy,

:-ill.

171
.,_
tflopoot,
~

~.

.......,

"""· -

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

p.m. t1otn

••lui, our-

or tNM. Home

____
.,.......
_,_ ....

~ =.~~~u••~~u=.,,
O... ...... ln.,illl ...
4 .....,

-

P1!f -

on lr 1M, 3

llolldoy-~

Jt.ut

6/1/1 mo.

garden

thouilhi of him
At-Ide•-; .
In the h - thet loved
J
him
He •'-Y• wllbe there.
Tarrlllly mlsMCI by
Morn, w....,, Q,.m,
. Unci• Orv, Aunt I

~.

OPEIIINO SOON

. (61 ..1 667-3271

MIDDLEPORT
VCR CLINIC

SPC)IT CARDS

For today In rnamorllo
oldll.
Each d-nlng day • ·

Found: Whit. tona holrod

-r Rio-. ~a4US45.

Gallipolis
&amp; VICinity

DUMPTRUCK ·
Sand-Stone-Dirt

PAT HILL FORD

VIC'S
BODY SHOP

We stll w•Ik, olde by

.!!::..

FOIOICI: P - vtoJon lUthi•
cue lor
tn front ot
Pome~ oy
r ~ See 'at.tho Ponioroy F - . Shop.

FOREVER BRONZ
TANNING

NEWLAND
ENTERPRISES

1

5-21-'90-1

we love.

Lost &amp; Found

I)OZER

CLEARING

1

core radiators · and i
heat• torll, We can
aho acid boll and rod .
out rlllliatan. We alsa
r~pair Gas Tanks.

367-0588

thOH

6

915-4473

SITEWORK • R()ADS

SER~ICE

TIUCIING ·

c

No dllt8nce can divide;

oNori:OOpm.

mo.

R.L

vo.

Coun. Mefge County, Ohio.

Throo
""""'
qUIIter1 wHtoo
ChoW,okl -~~
304-41S.12"13
from 1:00 am 1o 12:00 pm lhin

15·31·1 mo.

•LIMESTONE

other mln. .l• to be far nul ,
tooo thon two·thlrdo of the
oto...otd oppl'llilod votue.
Sold ooto II oubject til opprovot by the Common PJ-

--·--·

2 pupptoo: 14 - - - To gMd

Frae Estimates

949-2969

Serv1eP.s

In

June

holrod
1 w11a.
BIIA:k with whtto loll, otoo 2
gray to good - - 114-M~-43~7.
2 molo- DUDI. 1 ,_lo, 7
old.IM-M2-3t23.
.

PltMI call IM--1!1N.acn.

1-odeling

MOVING!

•GRAVEL,

VI.

llttt-.

a tont

nook.
gontlo Hoo
oncl """"'-·"""'
lovtng. boy'o
1111. DMiol -fulolott

eComptlta

OUT

liEN'S APPUANCE
SEIVICE

We mn r~r tiiwl r•·

BISSW &amp; BURKE

EAGLE RIDGE .
SMALL ENGINE
CENTER
SELLING

$1816

41 -Houses for A tnt
42-Mobile Hom11lor Rent

IN LOVING MEMQRY
OF
RICHARD (Rick) :
SELLERS
Who p..1ed

p.m.

COMMERCIAL SIDING

992-5335 or 915-3561

C!IEml, otto

tah;ing 66 acr•. more or
la1.
REFERENCE DEED: Volume 239, Poge 187, Meigo
County D-.ci Retordo.
Soid oil. goo ond othor nlineral• wa
eppralaed ••
12,000. 00.
.
S.to of oold oit,
&gt;end ·

114-448-!M711o~orl:30

Kttt ... in Brtdbury to atvuway
to good homo. 114-112-1071.

AlL MAlliS

IAu .. h.. llol.., Tt!rlft 11. .1

47- Wanttd (0 Rent
48 l"!qulpment for Rent
:'"-FOr l.t•e

IN THE COMMON PLEA.S
COURT OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHlO
Cue No. 83-CV-2
JAMES W. SUTTLE. et al..

. 2 lnoldo .kilt- to aood ~-

ROWE

EUM HOME

loom &amp; Beard far
Senior Cltl1... and

OP~N,

2 -'·

ond tlhopoilf. aountry
hOml to Nn. 114-112-8201.

.;..,. 114-112.S24T.

Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CAUS

MAINTENANCE &amp; IEP A.
1361 Powoll St, lldol ....l

46- Sp•c• for Rent

Public Notice

4
Giveaway
a ,_to dop. """ llock Lob.

F,.. hoy lor cutting oncl houllng

PH. 949-2101
or las. 949•2160

992-2196
Middleport,

44- Aptrtment for Rent
46 - Furnlthed Rooms

Public Notice

____
Fruth

Block .... Oonlon - · I
- · old. Oood with ehlkf...,,

43- F•rm• for Rent

Oet .. R,cultt Fast

Pllorm~.
_......;

114-446-113511.

"At IM....-1. l'ricts"

BILL SLACK

WASHEA$-$100 up
DRYER$- $69 up ,
,
REFRI6ERAT015-IIOO up
.20
.30
.42
.eo
.06 / doy

89.00

lniploylllent
Services

•A clauHied adveniMment pieced in The Deily Senlinet tea·
cept- ciMiifitld ditplav. Butin•• C11d 1nd' legal noticet) •
win 11io appetr In the Pt. Ple•ant Reg111tr and the Glll i-

=:r:- ~::"~:r,.ht~~lco;.:-;

' \'lltor Pttto. Avoltoblo

Block Lob, aood whh ehlldron,
304..75o3Bild".

CUSTOM IUIT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

*LIGHT HAULING

RAIIGI$-Ga·EIJC.-$125 up

R"'• •r• tor con11cutillt "'"'·broken up

,

tlpotlo, OH 45131.

4-25-tfn

90 DAY WA8AIITY

S

_ · ti:u e•r:h rt1111 11 ltP•r•t• ads .

•Price of ld for atl c8pitel.lettln is double price: of ad coSI.
•7 point line type only u.d.
·
•Stntiftll is not rnpoMtble for' erro;• after first d~ . IC::hedc
lor enors flt1t diN acl runs in paper) . Cell before 2 :00p .m
dW •"-• public.tion 10 mike correction.
•Adt thlt must be paid in 'l dvlnct' IJe
Card of Th.,ks
Hqpy Ads . ·
In Memoriam
Y1rd Sales

COPY DEADLINE MONDAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAPE~­

16
16
16
16
16

10
Monthly

POUCIES.
.
· .
•Ad• outMde Melli. "G•IIi• or M11on countiM must be pre·
ptid.
.
j
,.
•Receive 1 .50 d•count for eds p.~id in advance.
•Freeadl - O~etwey end Found edt und• , 5-words will be

.J

Word•

Ohio

' or 992-7121

NO SuNDAY CAUS

•

•-or

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIIl
. Alto Trl•••lttlll
PH. 992-5682

Residential 81
Commercial

USED APPUANCES

•

RA

lt. U4J

...tto:

_,_rch, P.O. lox 1043, OoJ.

Loot cot, III'Of With wlltto bolty,

The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

Free Maasurlng ... Profession•I
lnotallation, Partt • Repair

Roger Hysell
Garage

Heating, Cooling,
lefriger,atiaii

!low H-llult
"Free E•timetea ..

.

'

BLIND SHOP

MAIN ST.,

HUMPHREY'S
CUMATE
CONTROL

INSUlATION

-..r,:::

oing':,

-uonohlpo,

•Tire Sales
•Front End
Alignment
•Oil Change &amp; Lube
•Brake Work

614-742-2772

99 -50jl2

Classified

742-3011

MORE.

949-2l68 ·

=:..

IM-ttf. 12.

OPENMON.-SAT.lOtoS
STIAWROWEIS: Dwarf
I ToH; I'AMPAS GRASS:
Pink &amp; Whit_r. FIISCHIA,
IASIIETS, HERBS and

Painting ·
FREE ESTIMATES

outttlookisslmila rtou1Wdllsbon~s,the
a orney genera1 co
e ,,urt 1 n

a he~d- to-head battle with the
two-termsenatorandformerSan
Diego m_ayor.
Voting In nine states Tuesday
made It . the most crowde(l
prirtlary day of the year thus far.

Paulin's Hillletween
lutlontl and Rt. 554

IEPAII

Rel""'"ces

ALL LEVOLOR®
READY MAD~ BLINDS

Country Music Awards show in Nashville on
Monday. Van .Shelton was'also'named Male Artist
of the Year. (UPI)

The Daily

Governor's race tops primary Business Services·-------election in ·.Califor~tia today_ "iooFiNo GREENH~~sE ·~~~D.!!:E
~i~~~~
SEIYICE

$500 Off

STUNNED AT WIN - A stunned Ricky Van
Shelton holds his trophy as members of the Oak
Ridge Boys applaud after Van Shelton was named
Artist of the Year at the Music City News TNN

Ohio

Announcements

LEVOLOR

·Departure for ·Toledo
Symphony leaves vacancy
PROVIDENCE. R.I. ·IUPI) for music director by January,
.: The Rhode Island PhllharmPnic manager Karen Dobbs said.
· is In the market for riew music
Massey, 44, is the third music
. director ·of the 45-year-old Phil·
director.
The orchestra announced Mon- harmonic. His tenure has been
day that Andrew Massey wi_l l marked by artistic success and
Jeave the post next 'June, when
progress in bringing down an ·
. his contract expires. It has hired
nual deficits .
Gustav Meier to be artistic
This year the philharmonic
adviser during the transiti ~ n and expects to post a $17,000 deficit, a
- to help find a permanent repla'cesignificant improvement over
ment for Massey . Meier heads
previous shortfa lis that ran as
high as $70,000.
the conduc.ting program at Tan·
giewood in Lenox, Mass.
Massey has had a contentious
Massey was hired as director
relatlonship with players in tqe
. Qf the Philharmonic four years orchestra.- Last season he put
ago th.is week: In March, he was several musicians on probation
. named music direc'tor of the
an&lt;), In December,. the percusToledo 1Ohio) Symphony,
sion sectlon quit after Massey
· In explaining his reasons for threatened to fire their leader
not seeking a -contract renewal
unless his playing improved.
Despite his pending departure,
with the Rhode Island orehes Ira,
Massey said he want~ to d~vote Massey said he does not plan to
move from Rhode Island. He, his
: ~ull time to his job in Toledo. .
.. · The PhilharmoniC is putting wife, and two young children live ·
together a search cqmmittee and in an old farmhouse in East
hopes to have a list of candidates Greenwich.

•

Tuaday. June 6. 1990

Pl.-NO &amp; uu·-~·~

... '-111111
161Nerths.c..J
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SALES I SEI9Ja
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HO. PAIIC

•Mob.. Nomi ··

I and J C.ONSTIUCTION
GREG IIlLEY
•NEW HOMES •SIDING
•GARAGES
. •REMODELING
•GENERAL'CONTRACTING

--

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.

l Grtat Ctllllbination-

"Quallty anct ._soaallla Prices"

WI GO ... 11111 .......
992-6110

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�r

LAFF-A-DAY

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VlclnHy

Tuesday, June 5, 1990

Pomwov-Middleport. Ohio

Page-1 0- lhe Daily Sentinel
44

~rtment

tor Rent

5I

HOUMhold

KIT 'N' CARLYLE~ by Larry Wrlpt

Goc!JII

MotorcyciM

74

...

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- · ....- 2114.

Public Sale ·
&amp; Auction

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WHt VIrginia. 30 ygrw ex·

75

Motor~

sx.af4.446.W31.

Boats &amp;

perlence. For rour nl• cd u..

TUES.. JUNE 5

Jasper' CillO 304-937-2'121.

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(!) Voy~~ge Of Tile Mlmii;J
(!) A_,. A81nbow I;J
(I]) Anc1J Ortlltlll

0 WOrld Today
· II) He-Man
121 Chlrteo In Charge
t:OSI]) !!everly HIUblllleo
4:30!!! W G1 NBC Nightly Nowo

,

1111 ICOirMmant TX Bau
- · 70' · hp Evtnrudil. Call
114-1114131.
.

SRAHH

(!)

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Have you ~r noticed that
L...:'...JI.. -L-J.-L--1
a newspaper is far more inter·
...-------~ esting when it's being read by
U N 1 T My
someone across the --·--?

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G
Gil e (J) ABC Newo I;J
(!) Body Electric
1111

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187:1 17 fl. TrtoHull
Boat. 121 HP, IYI~~~

Wanted to Buy

'0 four
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xrombltd words

8:00(1) Henlceetle And

tor Sale

GolMn CIStO 304·937·22'16 or

lAM I

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perlence mak•• the difference.

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Rick Pnnoon Auc11on Compony

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everyone.

now boOking •uetJone,

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Viewing

l!W~'IHil

'
11GYI..... I I O - -

Hugh I tomlly yard ooto, Juno 5
and e, eorn.. 4th and Rolllno,
N.., Havon. S-hlng lor

8

- The Daily Sentinel-

I

3·2·1 Conllcii;J

e aJ CBS N1wt1 I;J

e (I]) Th'"'" Company

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you develop from step No. 3 below .

b-; filling in the missing words

1211 Top Cord

121 Hangln'

In

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8 ()) PM Magaz ne

(J) lportoCenter
e1211 8 &lt;ll Current Affair
(!) (J) MacNeil Lehrer
·NawoHour ·
1111 Ill tl2l Gl Wheel Of
Fortune C
·
Ill (I]) Night Court I;J
tl2l Moneyh
II) Miami Vice Phil Collins
guest stars as a slick con
artist. (R) Stereo.
1211 Muolc Row VIdeo
tD Abbott And Cootello
7:051]) Jellersone

Employment Services
11

Help Wanted

7:30 8 C2l Family Feud

79

.

-

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Campers&amp;
. MotorHomes

1811 30ft Sho-h· campo&lt;.•

roof air fuU a1u bad, •all op.
11oM,~- will trado, 304-t'IBIO'IV.

ANP

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f!fP.UCING
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OUT

.

(J) Mojor League a..eball
111211 Entertainment Tonight
I) (J) Meme'a Fomlly
1111 Ill 11:11 Gl Jeopardyii;J
Ql (I]) M•A•s•H
t121 Crooollre
tD Major League lltioeball
7:351]) Senlord And Son
8:00 8 (2)
Mattock Michelle
· defends one of Mallock 's·
·
lriends. (R) Stereo. C
111211 II &lt;ll Who'e fhl
Boll? Angela's new rental
property Is a springboard lor
jealousy. (R) Stereo. I;J
(!) (!) Nove Former surgeon
general, speaks his mind on
AIDS, smoking and abortion .

.

a

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tlne,alrlcOnd.
.
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wit~
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1. .
Palomino
trallar.
Can 114-9112-htf.
'Evoningo.'

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Ill tl2l Aeecue: 911 A
larm child is burled alive
beneath hundreds ol pounds
ol grain- (R/ ~
mi!D MOV E: Cry Freedom
(PI 1 Of 2) (PG) (2:00) Q
tl2l PrimeNewa
l!! Murder, She Wrote Simon
Says. Color Me Dead
1211 Church Street Stetlon
8:051]) MOVIE: Harper (2 :25)
8:30 a1211 I) (I) The Wonder
Years Kevin jOins a rock
band In order to impress
~hth grade girls . (R) Stereo.

23 II. Air Stroom traitor, goool
oond., wll lliko INdo. 114'441ZIH.

•

30 n. ' AJr.t,..m motor· home,
fully Mil-contained. ·Excoltont
OGriclltlan, and 1114 Dodge AMI
Royal' plokup truck, licollant
oondltl!lll- lo pull :11 with.
$11,1100. p- 114-3lloln&amp;.

'N Chn. -O&lt;j CotiWWOion RV

wn. '"" Mltoogo,
- .. body
L~·
Ao!Wg iiiOO.,••t(..

. ..

i

&lt;SAo.oL

On Stege

9:00 8 (2) Gl In The Heat Of

Tile Night Chiel Gillespie
sets a trap to snare a pair of
Illicit lovers. (A) Stereo. I;J
DaD D(J)Roe..nne
There's just ohe problem
with Roseanne's new j&lt;lb. the
Stereo. 1;J ·
computer.
(!) (!) Fronll ne Frorllllne
examines the prolits lrom the
international drug lrade. C
llJl
t121 NBA lliloketllllf I;J
t121 Llny King Uvel
II) BudweiMr Praoento:
TUMday Night Flghte
1211 Naohvllle Now
9:30 CD Zorro
Gt1211 11(1) Coach
Hayden's feud with Judy
Watson takes a turn for the
absurd. (R) Stereo. 1;J
10:00 CD 700 Club With Pet
Robertoon
Dill Gl Midnight Caller
Jack is ambroiled in a volatile
family feud . (R) &amp;l,ereo. C
II Qll D (I) thlrf9aomll1hlng
Gary faces fatherhood as
Susannah goes into labor.
(R) Stereo. Q
(!) Newawetch
(!) Living Tile Llot Dar•
This film focuses on the daily
activ~ies of residents and
staff members at Los
Angeles' Brownllne Hospice ,
a facility devoted to AIDS
pallents. Stereo. Q
Ill (I]) New Twlllglrt Zone
II)) Evening Nawo
10:30 (J) ~or League lll..bell
(!) MaJor League lllee~all
(!) Fonun
ID (I]) MaJor Laaaue.

Serv1ces

Home
lminovil)'lsnts

(R/

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MORK
AOn'a TV BaMoa, -lallzlng.
'In Zo~lth alto -Ina olhor brandt. calla, alto

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104o1'114ill Ohio ~---·

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IN YUB-\ Cl1Y,
P0017MI)I EO NoiYI.X

l.C()Ke, LIKE 1HE:
\..OCAL. ~TATIOII'5

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AND~D

~e::AKING

HIS#AILIN

DELIVERED AU.
• HIS FEET...

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INANC.W

ANCHClRIMN.

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Aolary or cable tool drilling.•
wotlo complolad ~v· Mel -.Ice,
:

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SaJ!tto Tank Puqllng -~Ollila

Co. RON EVANS ENTERP11ISES,
Jut•"OH1~ .

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IIM'Iall•llna: . 11o1t11e
Home
,.palo -flng,
work,
111 atrlc.l, plu~ expertlince.

....... _

lnai!rincoi clolmo

1DIIIpted.f14~1111.

NEXT TIME

WHAI IS HI?
I'LL L'ARN HIM
TO FIGHT WITH

RUN FER YORE
LIFE If

GIRLS II

Plumbing •
. Heating

·~

ae..ball

QIICrook I Chait

tD Newtl

11:00 CD Scarecrow &amp; Mrs. King

Ca~or'a

Ptumlllng
andHoollna
PourthandPmo
Galtlpolo,Ohlo
114 441 •••

i!2l ae a(l) a

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(!) To Ill Announced'
O-.ytlne
II) Ml8ml Vlca Crockett and
Tubbs put the brakes on a
rolling railroed bordello.
Stereo.
1211111g Valley Jambo,..
Ricky Van She~on, The
Gatlin Brothers; Family
Brown, Blue Rodeo, The
M&lt;:Carters, Billy Joe R~al ,
end Michal Martin Murp ey
are among artists who
partorm.
11:30 e!ll ta Tonight Show
Stereo.
·
D1211 Cheers Q
(!) Stalin Stelln Is examined
as a planner and military
leader. Q
&lt;ll
I;J
illl •
Newa

ASTRO..QRAPH

year ahead by mailing $1.25 10 Astro- chances tor personal gal.n are rather
Graph, c/o ·this newspaper, P.O. Box st!l&gt;ng today, especially H you ara In·
91428, Cleveland, OH 44101-3428 . Be •volvad In some type of commercial arsure to alate your zodiac: l!gn.
rangement with an Influential friend.
CANCER (.luna 21..Julr :12) It lookollke CAPRICORN (Dec. 22..JM. 11) Do not
you might ttnltrlnto an IIIIIICII o1 con- delegate aaalgnmenta to otherl today
BERNICE
atthlltlme with a person with that you are more capable of taking
BEDEOSOL
whom you·.. never been prev1ou11y u- care Dl yourself. If you hi.. to ·
socllted 1n order to pursue a mutual • . spread yourMif a trifle thin to do ao.
Interest
, AQUARIUS (Jen. liDoFIII. 111 You're a
LEO (.llllr 23-AIIg. :121 Your chancea for • rather raourcelul person to begin with
•oc caaa todey will be greatly enhanced I ttn today you might come up with one of
If you truly enJoy what you'na doing. ' your better that could be profit·
Make love of your till&lt; 'four motivating able lor you
well
lor 1n IIIIOClate.
force
, Uoe ~(Alii. u-iept. :121 Eatablleh PIICII (Pib. a.•om't 20) Take ldlollY ob)e&lt;:tl- for yourself todey ,.._ , vantage Dl any soclallnvll!lflonl you get
gerdleU o1 how far-retched they may r 1today lhat•would give you en opportunlJune I, 1110
appear to your companion•. You'll per- ' ty to rrtee1 new people. There'l 1 Chllll)8
Special knowledge you'.. acquired form better If you feel you h.ve to pu011 1 you might link up with - n e
th years could lltiMI u a baM ln t your881ta bit herder.
excepuonal.
over on'tha eheld for a raft of new LIMIA fllpi.I~Oot.21) Thlngnhould ....-1 (Marolt 21-Apr1111) Lady LIICI':
::::You're now ·;eady to put unique '· work outtoyaurultlmateldvantagato- l lhOUICI be In your-~·
old ex~
.
day 11 you don't "*faith _ , ..._ your flnlnellllntereats.,. coo-ned.
==:~..., 21:;;...20) An lmporl8nt the going geta a trifle tqh. Put your ' Shl might ltl'llftll" - " • • rather
c:omrr•clllltWOI\'llt\Wit ~oc~ay 11 nOI' =~~,~vlctffi
=:::'wtNrequlreprompiiiCitonto r
likely to be CCIIICiuc*d lllang corr!IW'.-!
V
- l n . Zll Doli IIIOJta
., . , ,.__
alii- Thll cleplrlln trom tredl- you mMIIOclay wttere you niOoldng , T.IUIIUe IAjlotl • •• U
~--....·

_,renee

18

wanted to Do

Coneat ltucfent nMde Summer
job. Witt tab care ol polo whllo
yOu 'N on YICIItlon, my home or
you,.. Will ' atoo do r;rd or
houe• worit. 814 4U I 77 alk
lor LIN.

EU T- Sorvlce, topping,
trtmmlna, ,,.. rH'IOVII. FNe •
tlmotoo.lnciudoallacl!l'!" a lown
work.' l14

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Extra apantnga lor
.ona In mr hOme for

s;

adnncod otudonto a

toannerw.

adUlta.
Alto, INch chording . Mel
trano-'ng. If Into-feel COli
614-102·5403.

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your utlllaCIIOn.

ANSWERS

Beside- Nylon - Ebony - Praise - BOSS is ON
va~tton was SO•SO,
but I'm really enjoying the vacation the BOSS is ON.·

Orie co-worker to another: "My

.

BRIDGE

NORTH
1-r..H
.KQJ !08•2
.K 3 2 ,.
• 43
, ..

Jettison an ace
to survive

+Q6
EA&amp;T

WEST

.9i;'H

• "7

By James Jacoby

.7

.QJ 1095
.10876
Would you hesitate to go down an +K5

tJ2

+J98 7 32

extra trick in an undoubled vulnerable
SOUTH
slam contract. if putting yourself in
+3
.
that position gave you a better chance
• •\864
of success? I think not. On the other
.AKQ95
hand. you wouid need the imagination
. +A .lOt
.. to see the play, since it involves throwing aw'ay an ace.
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
· CuO:bidding back and forth, North·
South wandered into six no-trump,
Well
Norlb
Eul
with South declarer. South won the
Pass
opening lead with the ace of hearts
Pass
Pass
4
•
and led a spade. West ducked the first
Pass
Pass
5
•
spade, then took the second (South
Pass
6 NT
All pl!S
throwing a heart) and continued with
the heart 10. Dummy's king won ;1nd
Opening lead: • Q
declarer played out all his spades, dis·
carding. a heart, two clubs and a dia- L --.,,.-,=....,.....,.....-=,.----,;--1
mood. West, who had to make four dis- al squeeze. -Irhe ever tbi'QWS a di:a·
cards, let go two hearts and the five mond , declarer makes five diamond
and king of clubs, keeping his four dla- tricks. But throwing away the clu&amp;
fi1onds. to the 10. When declarer then king or the winning heart simply a!;
played the ace of clubs, West was free lows declarer to play a card from
to let his last heart go. So West took dummy -in the corresponding suit,
the setting trick at the finish with the squeezing West once again. Sure, tl)is
diampnd 10.
dramatic
costs declarer another
South can succeed by jettisoning his
East holds the length
ace of clubs 'as be ru111 his spade win·
diamonds, but the e.tra cbaDt:e jus·
ners. Then West is caught in an unusu-

t. . ,.

··CRQSSWORO
lty THO.MAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
3 Metric
1 Fellow
measure
5 J.ewel
4 Puerto
·weight
Rican city
10 Mild cigar 5 Burnt
11 Fragrance
sugar
12 Made
8 Irish
of cereal
Islands
13 Over·
7 Filch
wrought
8 Friend
14 Romney's
(Fr.)
rna
9 Boy
21 Marksman 37 Different
15 Fictional 10 College
22 Panchen. 31 Scottish
sleuth
In
or Teshu
river
17 Paper
Iowa
23 Utah city 39 Perched
quantity 18 Suffered
25 Sensible 4018 Church
from ·
27 Potpourri
Wallach
seat
17 Whirl
30 Faucet
41 Russian
21 Blackthorn 18 Boatswain's 34 Shut out
river
fruit
whistle
35 Piquancy 43 Central
24 Craving 111 Gsellc
38 Envelope
American
28 Seraglio 20 Darnel
part
iree
21 Memory
blank
21 Egg dish
31 Poverty
32Cap
33 Take
on cargo
35 Adhesive
38 G-man
(st.)

.

39 Auto style
42 Beauty
44 As an
escort
45 Humble

481rnbue
47 Hitchcock
111m
DOWN
1hammer
, 2 Abominate=~=~~:;

! DAILY CRYPTOQl.JOid- H~'allow &amp;o work It:

AXYDLBAAXR

Ia LONGFELLOW

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CIIYPTOQUO'II!
JZI

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Nlgltt VInnie goes chumming

D Z S H,

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FWW

SODWFAV
PIH

VZHRAVQ,

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lor thiiNrka of the muetc

s-.

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mualc'o ..,.._._,.are

IMiurldKve.

•

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A

L8le Night With

DINid uau••n
~ Corl.11011on

•

•

... .

M

One ietter stands for anolher. In this sample A is used
' for tbJ three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letten,
apostrophes, tbe length and fonnaUon of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letter~ are different.

1

, t2:3De(J) •

'

' SCRAM-LETS

: • Nlall1llnei;J
&lt;ll l!nlerte-t Tonight
Night Court I;J
.~;~'.,..CIS Lite

'

your t8CIIcl mlgiiiiii!!.!'L= 10
your UIOCIIalel, 111111'-,..
10
lUll yow needutld lltOUid work out to

UNSCRAMBlE ABOVE lETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

12:00(1) MOYIE: Tile Llet Wagon
(2:00)

l

::.. poacad- could pr111n1 you· outrora!ollld-''"'*. . •WIIIu
opporiUnlly. Olmlo yow own ttave IXCIIItt Clllll- lor
nl treat yourMIIto alllr1llday gift. Sene optimum ...n..

'II:

e

.PAINT NUM8!REO LEI lEAS IN
THESE SQUARES

&amp;:35 I]) Andy Oritlltll
7:00 ()) MOYIE: Bluel2:30) I;J

HRAVQK

PSVZES

z
JZI

s 0.

DWAVFPWS,-DFIW
VWFICSW
Yll'•••.,••
TOMORROW MGKr I
APPEAR FOR ntE FIRST TIME BEFORE A BOSTON
I AUDIENCE- 4000 CRITICS. -MARK lWAIN

C.jpla,•••••

1

01110 II\' King F - Sf,.._, Inc.

.

.,

••

•.

�'

,.
Pega '2-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Low temperatures recorded in Midwes.t ·

Papent filed

Mlzway,Jnc. of Pomeroy. Incor..
porporators are George H. Ingles
and Blllv J. Hatfield with Ingles
of 32984 Sid"e Hlll Roar! of Ru Uand
as the incorporator.

Secretarv of State Sherrod
Brqwn has' repor ted that artlcle•
By Ualted Press International
levels .In the 30s and low 40s theast South Oakota: ileavy rain except "for, south Georgia and · of Incorporation have been flled
· Icy winds blowing over the overnight in Cleveland, Dayton fell from central South Dakota south Flor\da which had dimln· with his office In Columbus by
·Ohio Valley· early 'Fuesday and Columbus, Ohio, and · in through lowa, Into Minnesota
lshlng scattered thundershow·
toppled cold-temperature re- Albany, N.Y., and Pittsburgh.
and Nebraska. ·
ers. JacksPnvllle, Fla. was 74
cords In three states, while
The most unsettl~ conditlons
Ahead of the storm, skies were early Tuesday; Charleston, S.C.
thunderstorms blasted the upper Tuesday were reported In the clear to partly cloudy In IlUnols
was 75. Atlanta was 68.
Midwest with driving rains and upper Mldw;est, where an intense and Wisconsin, with tempera·
Most of the Southern Plains
JIIISty winds, and clear skies band of thunderstorms brought lures In the upper 40s and low 50s. · states had fair weather over·
covered the South.
h!"'VY rain and high winds from
night, with some middle and high
Pennsylvanians awoke to frost
The Nal!onal Weather Service South Dakota Into southwestern early Tuesday as a cold front
clouds drifting over northern
said temperatures In Akron, Iowa, the weather service said.
Colorado, south Texas and north·
chUied much of the mid-Atlantic
Ohio, slipped to a record-co k! 36
ern Oklahoma ..
Wind gusts to 59 mph were · region. Temperatures ranged
degrees overnight, breaking the reported at Sioux City, Iowa, and from . the upper . 30s In the
Temperatures were hot Mon·
11ld mark of 38 set in 19:45. The wind damage was reported in . mountains of West VIrginia to the day In Southern Cal!fomia, and
mercury also dropped to record southern Unto~ County In 'sou· . 50s in southern Maryland.
nearly cloudless skies . covered
.
A cold front accompanied ·by
the northern and central portions
NADO~AL WEATHER FORECAST TO 1 AM EDTI-HO.
scattered showers and thunder· ·of the state. Some cloudiness was
. storms brought unseasonably expeoftid al,ong the coast near the
CLASSES FOR AGES
chilly weather to New England. Oregon border.
.
Temperatures early Tuesday
A weather disturbance
were in the 40s as sunshine and
reached northwest Oregon late
cool weather pushed back Into Monday and rain continued Tuesthe region.
·
day as cooler air pushed Into
The South was generally clear,
Washington state.

Pistons ,.
·take lead
in play~ffs

•

BIBLE SCHOOL

9hio Lottery
Didly Number
650
Piek-4

8625

Page 5

AT THE

RACINE
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
JUNE

11·15~6

2 THRU 18
1890

:. . - - - - -...... Weather-----Sou&amp;h Central Oblo
· Tonight, part~v cloudy. Low
near 55. Winds south 5 to 15 mph.
Chance of rain Is 20 percent. ·
Wednesday, showers or thun·
derstorms likely. High In the
)ower 80s. Chance of rain 60
percent.

Exteqded forecast
Thursday through Saturday
Fair Thursday, chance of
showers or thunderstorms Frl·
day and Satu,rday. Highs mid 70s
to mid !Kls Thursday and Friday
and In the 80s Saturday. Lows
mid 50s to mid 60s.
·

Pom1troy-Middleport, Ohio,

~·

- -

A weekly drawing ,course will
be offered beginning Wednesday
and cont.inuing June 27 by the ·
Middleport Arts Councll. The
instructor will be P.J. Harris.
The class. is intended for the
adult novice. ages 13 and up. The
class will focus on the fundamentals of drawing and an exhibition
of the students' work will be held
aththe end of the session.
Harris is a former graphic
design major at Ohio University
and is current~v majoring In
communications and publr relat!ons with a minor .tn art at the
University of Rio Grande. ·
The cost of the "Class is $25 and
materials will be provided for the
llrst class only.
To regl3ter contact Mary Wise
at 992·2675, Susan Baker at
992·7733, or P .J. Harris at
992-2451.

Roberf Lee·Barber, 59, of 53090
State Route 681, Reedsville, died
Sunday at Grant Medical Center,
Columbus.
Born in Reedsville Jan . 25,
1931, he was the son of the late
Leonard amt Blanche Pullins
Barber. He Is a veteran of the
Korean War, U. S. Army, and
worked as a millwright for
Ellrem Medal Co. at Marietta for
28 years.
He was a meml)er of the Oll,
Chemical and Atoinlc Workers of
Marietta, and the Labors International Union. Local 1085, Par·
kersburg, W. Va., and attended
the Freedom Gospel Mission
Church at Portland.
Mr. Barber is survived by his
wife, Carole Connolly Barber;
three sons, Robert Dale Barber
of Athens; Steven Gale Barber of
Reedsville, and Kevin Lee
Barber, at home; five grand·
children, a step-mother. Paullne
Barber, Reedsvllle; three broth·
.ers, Leonard Barber, Jr. and
Howard Barber, Reedsville, and
Danny · Barber of San · Mateo,
F) a .. and one sister, Ruby Drake. .
'of Long Bottom.
Besides his parents he was
preceded In deal h by a brother.
Carl.
·
Funeral services will be held
Thursday at 1 p.m. at the
White-Blower Funeral Home,
Coolville, with the Rev. Robert
Smith officiating. Burial wlll be
in Sand Hill Cemetery. Friends
may call at the fUneral home
anytime Wednesday . The famlly
will receive friends at the funeral
horne 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.

Donafd W. Usle
· Funeral services for Donald W.
Lisle who died May 26 ·at his
Syracuse home were held at the
Ewing Funeral home with burial
In the Letart Falls Cemetery.
Mr. Lisle retired from Conrail
In 1980. He was a veteran of
World War II having served with
the 729th Rallway Operating
. Btn., and was a membzr of the
Syracuse Asbury United Methodist Church. the Brotherhood of
Railroad Trainmen. ' the United
Transportation Union, . and the
DAV.
He was bOrn at SpDler (Old
Town) on June 19, 1919 to the late
Ked and Norma Mlller tlsle, and
was a graduate of Pomeroy High
SchOOl.
Hbaorary pallbearers were
railroading friends, Charles Es·
kew, Paul"Scott, Denver Nelson,
Wtuiam Morris, James Cl!fford,
Sr. and Charles Searles. Pal·
!bearers were John Todd, and
Scott Lisle, Keith and Jason
Lisle, Roy Jenkins. Donald
Jfarden and Lawrence (Butch)
Lisle.
Bealcles the. survivors listed in
bll obituary in The Sunday
Tlmei·Seatlnel on May.27, he has
.even ll'andchlldren, Kimberly
oawa aac1 Mary Rochelle Jenldnl, and five 8fandsons, Jason
Nick, Travis, Todd and . Scott
~le.

slty and Ohio State University.
He was a member of Faith
Rollir\ o. Dill, 80, Kerr ·Street, United Methodist Church. Potl!!r
Pomeroy, died sunday at Vete· Lodge No. 540 F &amp; AM, Canal
rans Memorial Hospital follow . Winchester Lions Club,· Amerl·
lng an extended Illness.
can Legion Post 220 and VFW
Born Nov. 17,1909lnPomeroy; Post 10523 ·
·
he-was thesonofthelateEdward ' .Mr. Will was a past member
Dlll and Anna Olmber Dill. He and president of Canal Winches·
was a truck driver and a World ter Village Council and a Navy
war II Veteran .
Veteran. He was a former Canal
Mr. Dlll is survived by a Winchester Post Master.
brother Allen Dill p
· .·
He Is survived by his wife of 60
•
• omeroy'
years Nola Kn lght Will a
and several nieces and nephews. ·
•
·
tn addition 10 his parents he daughter, Vicki ~o tJohn) Nl·
was preceded in death by his cholson, Marlett~, a grandson,
wife Harrietta Ables Dill! · 1969
Jeffrey Nicholson, two brothers.
a b;other Homer DlJJ . n d ' Mont~;omery and Wi.lliam Will;
sister, Gla'dys Smith. ' an a three sisters. Mary Kilpatrick,
be held Wed . Florence Ferrell, . and Betty
. Services
day ·at 1 p.m. at Ewing Fun=~=l Loucks; and several nieces and
.
Horne with Rev . Kennv Baker nephews.
and Rev. WIIUam Wllll~ms off!·
Services will be held Thursday .
elating. Burial will be In Gilmore at 11 a .m. at the Dwayne R.
Cemetery.
Spence Funeral Home in Canal
Friends may call at the funeral Wlnch~ter with Rev. John Ben·
-home on Tuesday from 2.4 p.m. son officiating.
and 7-9 p.m. and on Wednesday
Burial wUI be In Chester
until the time of the fun" 1
Cemetery on Friday at 11: 30!1.m.
Friends may call at the funeral
.,..ra ·
home on Wednesday from 2-4 and
Natielie Si@ler
7-9 p.m.
Contrlblitions may be made to
Natielie Sigler, 63. Of Beech · Potter Legge·· or Faith . United
Grove, Road, l_'tu tland, died ruesday at Veterans Memorial Hospl· MethodisT Chu r ch in his
tal following an extended lliness. memory.
Masonic services will be held
1i. homemaker, she was born on
at 8:45 p.m. at the
Wednesday
Sept. 23, 1926 at Pompton Lake,
funeral
home.'Iuesday
copy
N. J. to the late Harry Van
Inwagen and Mae Jacobs Van
Inwagen.
She is survived by two daugh·
ters, Linda Sommers of Ru tlarid
and Laura Mae Sigler, Pomeroy;
four daughters and sons-in-law, Dally stock prices
Donna and Don Laudermllt. (As of 10:30 a.m. )
Mary a~d Dennis McKenney, . Bryce and Mark Smltb
Rutland, Judy and James Sea· of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl ,
.
rJes, Colurnbu$, and Cathy and
Am
Electric
Power
...
.. ........ 301,1
Larry Van Cooney, Rutland; and
AT&amp;T
................................
.43Y,
three sons, Edward E . Sigler,
Ashland
Oil
...
..
..................
36'!.
Salem Center, Larry Leroy
Bob
Evans
...........................
13
Sigler, Rutland; and Michael
Charming
Shoppes
..
.........
...
lO'A,
Sigler, Rutland, and four grand·
children. Also surviving are City Holding Co ... ....... ........ 141;.
three brothers and sisters-in· Federal Mogul... .... .. ........... 22%
law, Ernest and Freda Van Goodyear T&amp;R ........... .... ....36'!.
Inwagen, Middleport; Therom Heck 's ........ ... .... .................. 3%
and Bessie Van Inwagen, Colum- Key Centurion .......... ... ........ 14
bus; and Sam and Mill!e Van Lands' End .. ....... .. ..............16%
Inwagen, Keen, N. H.; and two Limited Inc ......... .. .... .. .... ....50'A
sisters, Mrs. Paul 1Sue) Marr, Multimedia Inc .... ..... ...... ....81\7
Rax Restaurants .... :............. 2%
Po~eroy, and Mrs. Carroll (Bar·
bara) Smith, Middleport, along Robbins &amp; Myers ..... ...... ...... 20
with several nieces and nephews. Shoney's Inc ................... .... 14\7
Besides her parents she was Star Bank ........... .. ... ... .... .... 2017
preceded In death by her bus· Wendy 's Inti ....................... . 5%
band, Lloyd Sigler In 1971, one Worthington Ind ...... ............. 24
sister and four brothers. She was
a member of the Middleport
Pentecostal Church.
Funeral servcies will be held To meet Thursday
Thursday at 1 p.m at the Ewing
The Meigs County Public Em·
Funeral Home. The· Rev . Paul
ployee
Ret!rees, Inc. will meet
Taylor will officiate and burial
Thursday
at 1 p.m. at the Senior
will be in Mlles Cemetery .
Citizens
Building.
Guest speaker .
Friends may call at the funeral
wlll
be
Frank
Porier,
Pometoy·
home from 2: 30 to~: 30 p.m and 7
attorney,
who
will
talk
on wills
to 9 Wednesday at the funeral
and
liow
they
affect
retirees
and
· , ··
home.
their families . All government
retirees are Invited to attend.
Victor Will

State funding for a multicounty conalructlng a 125 bed regional provide funding for 20 JaUs.
.
corrections center in Southeast· . jail facility as the moat effective
At a meeting of COIIIItyofflc'-ls
ern Ohio ·was announced ·lhls way of relieving jail problems In in McArthur in early April,
morning at a meeting in Vinton
the area .
.
Candace Peters of the GoYer·
County.
The fu"dlng was provided nor's Office of Criminal Justice
A tptal Qf "',150,000 for the jail thrllugb fbe Correctional Reno- told officials tbat the pr~
V(hlch will serve Meigs, Hocking,
vatlon and Coqstructlon Pro- multicounty jail Is expected to
gram, enacted by the Ohio cost abOut $4 mUIIon. Peters said
Jackson and VInton Couiltles has
been awarded"In state funds from
General Assembly in 1982 and that the construction coat Is
the Governor's Office of Crimi· administered by the Governor's about $60,000 per bed or jail cell.
nal Justice Services.
Office of Criminal Justice She said that slmUsr projects
Announcement of the funding
Services.
elsewhere have used sales ttllles
came from State Senator Jan
In March of this year the or bonds to provide the local
Michael Long, t D-Circlevllle)
Leg!Jiature authorized an addl· share of the cost.
· ·
who stated that the ."funds
lional $44 miiUon for the program
Operating costs were dis·
represent a commitment on the
through tbe Capital Approprla· cuued at that time and It was
part of the state of Ohio to assist
tiona Bill. This makes a total of proposed by one of the officials.
our local communities in their
$114 mUI!on which has been ~ that legislators add on to court
efforts to fight crime."
authorized for the program over cost fees earmarked for operaMeigs County Sheriff James
eight years, accordlngto Senator lion of tbe proposed multicounty
Soulsby was among county offl·
Long.
.
jail.
•
clals in Vinton County this
The money Is· to be used to
· Both Sen. Long-arid Rep. Mary
morning for the meeting.
.
assist lOCal jails lit complying Abel t D-Atbens) attended the
Officials from thefourcountles
with the state's minimum Jail meeting ,In Vinton CouniY thiS
are In the planning stag115 of
standards. The new I'I)Oney Will
(Continued on Pa&amp;e 6)
' .

Slate will hear arguments to·.
reinstate W amer's convicti~n

...,.

.ttl. .

COLUMBUS. Ohio tUPI) The 'o hio Supreme Court Will
hear oral arguments Wednesday
on the staie m OhiO's •aj)peal. to
reinstate tbe convictions of
former Home State Savings
Bank owner Marvin Warner on
charges ot upauthorlzed securl·
.lies dealing · which led to the
thrift's collapse In 1985.
The high court also will hear
the state's appeal in ·the match·
ing cue againat fonner Home
State pmitlent David Schiebel.
Oral arguments are expected to
begin about 11 a.m. Each side Is
alk&gt;wed 25 minutes in eacb of the
two cases.

$859500 .

ONLY
SAVE THOUSANDS-SHOP AND COMPARE
•AUTOMATIC
TRANSMISSION
•AIR
CONDITIONING
•T~LT

WHEEL

.•REAR DEFROSTER
•AM/FM RADIO
. •REMAINING 12,000 MILES OR
1 YEAR WARRANTY PLUS 7
YEAR/70,000 MILES DRIVE
TRAIN WARRANTY INCLUDED

1990

Stocks
.

Victor L. Will, 82, Canal
Winchester, formerly of Meigs
County, died Saturday after he
was struck by a truck In Chester.
Mr. Will was a retired llchool
teacher and administrator. He
was a graduate of Ohio Univer·

2 Seiotlono. 11 " - 21 Canto
A Muttimtdlt Inc. New....,.

'

Rollin Dill

will

June e. 1990

Four SEO counties
•
receive grant to bulld
$4 nilllion regional jail

-----Area deaths----Robert Barber

•

at

.i

No.:Z73

Drawing class offered
by arts council

WEATHER MAP - Hot aild steamy condldons will prevail
, throu1hout the Gulf Coast States, while 1eaerally bot and dry
. weatber peridats over the Southwest. Thunderstorms wiU spread
northeast out of Texas Into the Ohio River Valley ahead of a cold
frODI that will move onto the East Coast by Friday. Gusty
northwest wladl will move Into the Northern Plains beblnd this
ayalem as cooler Canadian air SIIJ'IES Into the Plains Stales.

•

e

PM-8 PM

CLOSING PROGRAM
SUNDAY, JUNE 17~7:00 P.M.

Low *ICM 111'0111111 11.
Cllaaee fll l'l!la II pereea&amp;.
ftandar, nrlallle cloudl- . Blp Ia i o - ....
Chuee of raJ• 4t perceat.

IR·IWIIIE
'

4-REDS TICKETS PLUS S200 CASH ...ILE
SHOPPING AT PAT HILL CHRYSLER OR PAT
HILL FORD. ASK OUR SALESPEOPLE TO
REGISTER YOU FOR OUR DRAWING
JUNE .l9th.

',.

,.

.'..·

.....,movich:pled_ges,: to upgrade
'ftl~tding fo~ - ,O h.io ·edu~atio_n
·Vo~ovtch,

COLUMBUS, · Ohio t UP() ..:_ . .
"at .. a Stateillouse
PledgiDg to "squeeze every dime press conference • .also sal.d thP
. possible out of the budget for our governor and Legislature s bould
, schOols," Republican guberna·
lulve more authority over e·duca·
torlal nominee George Volltovlch ~.tion,_ adding that. he wants t,o be
said Tuesday If elected, be can' able to . blre and fire the state
. acld "huntlfeds of milliOns of v 81lperlntenlJent · of public
dOllars" to education spending · lnstFuctloa.
··
·
wltbout ralalni taxes ·
But he aiald any basic ctjanges

'·

'

· ·

'

1

.~Heritage Days schedule
"
Frld~J
6-7 p.m.- Melody Men Barbershop Quartet.
· 7-8 p.m.- Sweet Mountain Sounds.
1
·'tl-9 p.m.- Midnight Cloggers.
·
~8
p.m.- Tbe opening or the exhibit. "Ornate a!ld Simple
· • Forms: PomiK'Oy Furniture and Fashion, 1840-1880" at tt he
·r Melp Cqunty Public Library.
· .
~·
1

•. " ·
.,... ;.ll::t·

.
....

.

"··urday
.,..

.

..·

· ·

.:; ](). ·a·. m. ,;- Heritage Paraile, sponsored · by lh,e Pome . , •
; J4erchants Aasoclatlon. · ·
. 11 a.m. to noon- Civil War Ma'rchlilg DrUb.
. I
Noon to 12:tli p.m. -ShadY. River Slnlfflera.
. J.l:~i!.m: - Special ReqUKI Barbershop Bl!ld.
1. . p.m.- Restoration Jazz Band.
l: 30 p.m. - MeiP County Fair Queen anDOUnced.
3 p.m. - Costume Judging on the parking lot stage.
.I'
4·5 p;m. -Outhouse races.
··
~p . m . - Pl~r costume review and "wlnners announced.
.. 6 p.m. - Kyger Valley Gospel Quartet.
.
· 6:30p.m. - Brbthers of the Bnreh contest. ·
. 7•8 p.m. - Bob.and Kendra Ward-Bence.
·.
,
MO p.m. - Peter Shaw-Hotpolnt String Band. Sq, re
dancing In the streel.
.
!
. ·(lit Saturday following the parade there will be carrif~P.!t ride .
· t~hout the day beginning at Cour.t and Second St~.
. . Tbere alao
tie t:;lvll War Musket ~gacles d._YUII day

r

L

will

·

'!JatardAY.

'

.

'

011 SUnday riclea will be81J1 at the museum lite at l .p.rrl.

'Food and craft conceulons will be available all day Jl'tlday
111111 Sanirday.
Adlvlll• at tb• mu.um will be held Saturday aJiO

.-1·

5 p.m.

.

,..,.Y
'

.
'tM ellllllllt, •'Onate and llmDit J'OI'D'II: ~
f'llniJture

· 'l id ,_,...., ~1110" 8t ~library WID l'1lil tllnu$ll J - 22
· , ..,... tbt 11our1 o1 U a.m. to • p,m. """'l'Y 1111 c p F1.111ay,
W .l.. p.m. oa Saturday alld larlay.

~anagement struct~e

Report is
received on
mans death

Ww.AAr 'io, a former Cinelli:
natl' ' fliiancler and promlneiit
Democratic fund-raiser, was
convicted In 1987 of sLx counts of
unau tllorlzed acts and three
counts of securities viola! Ions in
connect.ion with transactlou he
made with a Florida .securities
firm, Schiebel, 60, was convicted
of three counts of &amp;ec~oritles

violations.
.• .. ' '""•
When ESM GovernmentSecur·
Ities ~- , Fort Lauderdale, went
bankrupt Ia March 1985, it
plunged . Home State Into $144
mWion wortb of debt and trig·
gered a run on other· statechartered, privately Insurance
saviiiiiS and loans.

Meigs hoard accepts
Horky's resignation
The reslpallon of Betsy Horky
wlro Is retlrlngwuacceptedwith
regret at Tuesday night's meet·
lng of the Meigs Local Boarct of
Education.
The boaf'd agreed to Join the
Educational Media Resource
center for the 1990-91 school
year at a cost of $4,737.89, and to
participate in the SEQ.EERRC
at 80 cents per pupil for a total
cost of $1,992.80 for the 1990-91
school year.
...
A resolution to participate In
the Ohio High Sch'lOI Athletic
Association at the high school
and junior high school-next year
was passed. ·
,..
Also passed was a resolution to
request Dec. 8, 15, 18, an~ 22 as
calamity days for all schOOls and
Dec. 19 as a calamity day for
Bradbury, Harrisonville,• Ru·
tland and Salem center.

The treasurer was au thorlzed
to advertise tor bids for ~
llllurance, gaaoline and oD products, tires and tubes, ftre
extinguisher repair, and boiler
Insurance.
Discussed at tbe meetlngwa$ a
propo681 by Board Member Jeff
Werry that the athletic director's
duties be expanded to Include the
junior blgh school in addition to
the blgh .school. No actpon was
taken on tbe matter, ho-ver.
Next meeting was set for June
21.
.
o!.An hour'• executive session
wu held to discues personnel.
Altelidllllf were Board Pres!·
deal Bob Barton, members, Jeff
Werry, Robert Snowden, Rl·
chard Vaughan , and Larry Rupe,
Supt. James Carpenter, and
Treasurer Jane Fry.

Victor L. Will," 82, of Canal
in the
or
Winchester, died instantly or
funding of educailoll will have to
within a few minutes of multiple
wail for public con~sus and a
trauma to the head, chest,
possible ballot issue late next
abdomen and legs u the result of
year or early in 199'2.
being struck by a truck Saturday
· Voinovich said that early In his
night In front of tbe Chester
administration, hewlllappolnta
Elementary Scl;IQol.
broa~·bued Governor's EducaThat was the, report giVen
tlon , Managem~nt Council,
verbally to Dr. Dougl!ls Hunter,
headed by himself, to thorough~v
Meigs County corO'ner, by the
review' the management struc·
Franklin
CO\IDty Coroner's office
ture of education at the state and
Tuesctay'afternoon,
according to
locallevels.
.
l'(lelgs
County
PrOsecutor
Steven
He said he wants at least 30
Story.
percent of the stat~ budget to go
Story . sal~ that the report
to education in ihe third b\ldget
Indicated
that WIU would have
year of bls administration. Edubee!!
"rendered
unconclous upon ··
cation received more than 34
Impact."
·
·
_percenLof, the budget lnUscal
Both Ja1on RIUi. 18. charged
liNN, he said. Now it · iell 28·
with
aggravated vehicular hom!·
WINFIELD, W.Va. 'tUPI) .,.. pany invett~Jator and had staked
percent.
·
clde,
,
abUse
ot
a
·Corpse,
and
Jury
selection has begun In the out Huck's residence wben lie
· An addition 'of 2 percent of t~
tan\pe~ni
With
·
ev14ence,
aDd
trial
of
a Galllpolill, Obio, man . surprised, Gray, Who allegedly
bUdll"' for ec!Ucatlo.n would be at
·
Douglas
HarriS,
26,
ebarpd
With
charged
with murdering a Put· was &amp;eiUIIII ready to set fire to
least $534 mi!Uon.
·
tampering wltb evidence, renam County, W.Va., sheriffs the dwelling. Gny attempted to
VolaoYich said. an Ojlerltiona
main In the Melli Cowlty JaiL · · deilllly.
.
flee and sbot Janey In the chest
Improvement 1'ask Force will be · Tlie two had appeared In the
Lawvers were expected to and bead. pollee contend.
appointed fa recom!IM!nd way• to
Meigs County Court for lalllal
present opening arguments WedJoe Thomas, o• of two court·
eliminate. waste ln.government,
hearllliS to set bonds Monday
Delday or Thursday In tbe trial of appointed lawyera, told proaJ*and that money will be shifted IO
mornlai. Bond for Rlqs on the
Robert Gray, charged in the tlve jurors Tuesday that Jlltllj
'
education.
three counts was set at $70,000
llboo~ last Aug. 17 of Putnam
flrat shot at Gr11 and later beCt
. ".We're going to have to u.s e a
with Harrls t bond belni set at
County deputy sheriff John bim With I flllhllgbt, and that
very sharp scalpel ·or laser m,ooo.
.
Janey.
Gray shot Janey Ia self-deten~~e.
surgery," .-ld theGOPguber~­
Preliminary heerings will be
The trial of an allepd accom·
The defendant had ao way of
torlal candidate. "We may have . · beld Frlday.momlnut 9a.m . for
pllce, RObert Bates, has been knowing' that Janey, Ia ciYIIIaD
to ma!le some very tough (..-nd· both Riggs and Harris In County continued. No new trial date was
clothes, was a pollee oftlcer, the
In&amp;) declsll)DS."
." .
Court.
set.
·.
·
.
lawyer declared, acldl.. that
. Volnovltb said' his' E~ucatlon
As explained by the prosecu- . Gray was Charged with killing Griy lho\11111 1111 life wu 'In
M_augemetit Council woultS be tor, at that time it will be
the off-duty deputy while a!·
danger.
almillr to Gov. Richard C.lnW1 determined whether or not there
le&amp;edJy trylna to aet fire to the
The deputy wu allot alrolit 1
"Education 2000 ComDIIuloll" Is probable ca1111 to believe tbat
Hurrtc- relldl!lle. o1 RaY· a.m. Aug. 17 and CrQ
which made ~meat!IIIOIIIIa afelonyorfelonleswel'l!commll- .moat! Huck. The OWIWr of the arrested a few houra latet IIIII'
late 1988, maay of wblch ' - . ted and that the deflmdantt may ·house allegedly hired Gray and
Hurricane. Gray oepcaiNJy .U
enacted Jut )'tar.
have committed the felcray or ·Bates to lei fire to tile baule 10 found wltllba a
· That COIIIJI\IIIIoa ~ felonies.
·Huck could 'eollct 1n1uraace aatlcarrrlilla plltllland J~'l
educatcn at tbe 1tate IIIII leal
If Ia tile preliminary beuiDp benefits on lt. Ruck pleaded l'ft'Olver.
.""'
~~. - · labor alld . . . . . It Ia IIIOWII tllat IIIII probelrlt. pllty MlreiiB loiN Mlkl..,_
Qmdt ....... a.n.c. W.tt
me~~t ,......~.~ rrcm 111e pmate
cause dDa l'ldlt, t ... lafarma.
mwctwlnaplta'J WJ•alwllh
l'lllltl 1MI Ire .......... :u
.. .ector. Volllovlch uld Ire -.11 lioD wiD be pnlftted f'o tile PJ-101'1.
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