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                  <text>Page 16-The

BIG

Wednalday, June 6, 1990

Ohio

Salltiuel

••• YOUR FAMILY OWNED

Sail In To

LOW PRICED
SUPERMARKET

Ohio Lottery

Electric
living
edition

ummer

Daily .Number
134
Pick-4
7769
Super Lotto
1-3-17-22-31-41
Kicker 703295

Insert

Low lonlchl near 70. Chance
70 percent. Friday.
cloudy, humid. Hlp In mid
11811. Chance ol rain :iO percent.

of rain

•

•

2 Sec:tiono, 18 Page• 25 Conti
A Muttirnedil Inc. New••P•r

Vol.40, No.274
Copyrighted 1990
'

Shelly bids accepted
for 6 Meigs projects

'

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ASST, COLORS

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By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Seallael News Staff
Bids from the Shelly Co. , of
Thornville on six resurfacing
projects at a total cost of $321,907
were accepted at a meeting of the
-Meigs County CommiSsioners
Wednesday afternoon.
Funding for the projects will
come from Issue 2 rnonl~. The
&lt;!sphalt cement resurfacing pro-jects are expected to get ui!der·
way .In July and be completed by
Oct. 31.' ·
·
The projects are:
Locust Grove Road, County ·
Road 28, 2.57 miles by 18 feet at a
cost of $62,951.10.
School Lot·ACL Road, County
Road 1 from State Route 143 to
the Athens County line, 2.73 miles
by 18 feet , at a cost of $70,n9.75.
County Road ~o. State Route
143 to the Athens County Road,
3.26 mlles by 18 feet, $83,574.15.
County Road 24 from ·State
walla had heeD · completely removed ))y the
Route 7 to the Pomer-oy corpora·
INDIANA BIT AGAIN - Indiana Governor
devaatatln1 tomado that hit Thursday. · See
tlon line, .66 miles by 18 feet,
Evan Bayh 1estu!'81 aa he stands In what had .been
weather story on page 7. (UPI)
$16,459.55.
the kllcben,.cif a home Ia Indiana. The roof and
•
County Road 17 from State
Route 143 to County Road 10,
three rnUes by 18 feet $73,603.20.
County Road 76 from County
Road 22 to the Pomeroy.&gt;Corpora·
tlon line, .59 miles by 18 feet,
$14 ,599.65.
Will · Mlmmlck of the Ohio
Department of Transportation
Colorado
De9v.er. l')'laklng it dltflcult for overturned, Including •two 18- and..._Gre.~~; .,Bailey, a ~f!ljenta· ,
w~i,Toar t\~·1 ,
. olflclals-fo'llftl!ss theollamaile.
tlve •ol . tlle,,Urm !"b)ch con·
· to
· "We've go! a lotofthings to set
Several~lt'ons ol a tavern just structed a new bulldl~ on Hiland
possibly trap~d lrt thjl
·
up, clean · up," Trahern ~ld. .outside ol tile dowl)town area Road ' to liouse '!Wo ' federal
left • by a" toi'nBdli ' that nearly "We've got dogs comlnt in frorti huddled In a walk-In cooler to agencies, met with the Commis·
·· wiped out downtown Limon.
other counties to make sure we walt ou1 toe storm, he sal!\. '
sloners to discuss the procedure
The twister, one of at least dol)'t have somebody under the · "I heard a roar," ·an unlderlti· : for the state to abandon a road
seven that crashed through east- debris. That's the first thing . fled woman told Denver televl· right-of-way directly In front of
.ern Colorado late Wednesday, we're going to do wMn daYilghf slon sta(lon KCNC. "It's just like tpe structure.
Injured at least14people, three of comes."
they always say. It sounded just
Mlrrtmlck suggested that the
them seriously, as It battered Its
Gov. Roy Romer surveyed the like a train. There was rain and county direct a letter to Joseph
. way through a 12-block section of tornado-ravaged town Thursday . · hall but the noise was just Leach, DeputY Director, Ohio
town.
"The Colorado State Patrol In amazing."
Department of Transportation,
"The center of town Is com- Limon is now back on line," he
"We were sitting in the house
asking that the right-of-way be
pletely destroyed," Pollee Chief said. "Pollee and the Fire and it started balling real bad,
abandoned. That would be fol·
Jim Trahern 113ld on NBC's Department are being coordi- pounlllng hard on the roof," said l.owed by a public hearing with
"Today" show. "We know about nated by CSP."
r:esldentDaveGrlmes. "Wewent
the whole process to take about
75 to 90 percent of the business
An unidentified firefighter said outside and t.h e trees started
three · months to complete, ac·
. area Is destroyed:"
tbe tornado serslously damaged snapping" .
cording to Mlrnmick.
Only limited communication the Fire Department, pollee
Colorado Highway Depart·
It was pc:ilnled out that no other
had ~ restored early Thurs· station, townhall,postofflce, two · ment spokesman Dan Hopkins property owners are lnyolved In
day. as telephone service was banks and a grocery.
said much of Interstate 70 the 359 foot roadway for which
knocked out In a wide area of
At least 25 trailer homes In a between Denver and the Kansas
abandonment wlll be requested
sparsely populated eastern Colo- mobile home park on the edge of · state line was closed to keep by the commiSsioners.
rado. Electricity was knocked town also were hlt, Tolar said.
traffic away from the violeAt
The Welshtown hUI sUp was
out lri Limon, a town of 2,000
Dozens of windows were blown weather.
discussed by Meigs County Engl·
about 75 miles southeast of out and numerous vehicles were
neer Phil Roberts and he notca
that the es tlmated cost of repair
has been set at $21.000. he said
that he Is In the process of
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Marvin Warner was convicted of
overturn those convictions would making application for Issue II
Former Clncln.nati financier nine felonies at a fair trfal, and to
be "ludicrous," the state of Ohio
argued Wednesday.
But Warner's defense counsel
told the Ohio Supreme Court that
the trial court changed the rules
in
the middle of the game In order
HERITAGE DAYS SCHEDULE
to
. get
conviction, and that
All Heritage Days activities on Friday and Saturday will be
Warner's
rights
were violated.
held on Court Street unless otherwise noted. Those attending the
The
court
heard
an hour's
festivities should provide their own seating.
worth
of
oral
arguments
In the
,,
Friday
WASHINGTON (UPI) -VIc·
state's
appeal
of
the
ovl'rturnlng
6·7 p.m. - Melody Men Barbershop Quartet.
Urns
of Ohio's recent floods and
last November of Warner's 1987
.7·8 p.m. - Sweet Mountain Sounds.
tornadoes
wlll get federal assist·
conviction on six counts of
8-9 p.m. - Midnight Cloggers.
ance
In
the
lorm of grants and
unauthorized acts and three
8 p.m. - The opening of the exhibit. "Or~te and Simple
low-cost
loans
thanks to a dlsas·
counts of securities violations.
Forms: Pomeroy Furniture and Fashion, 1840-1880" at the
ter
declaration
signed by Pres!·
Hamilton County Court of
Meigs County Public Library.
dent
Bush
Wednesday.
Appeals ordered that the slx
Saturday
Felkiral Emergency Managecounts
be dismissed and the
10 a.m. - Heritage Parade, $ponsored l)y' the Pomeroy
ment
Agency spokesman Car I
three counts be retried. The high
Merchants Association.
Suchocki
said officials will begin
court could reinstate the convlc·
11 a.m. to noon -Clvll War Marching Drills.
·
Thursday
to take the first steps
!Ions or affirm, In whole or In
noon to 12: 45 p.m. - Shady River Shuffiers.
toward
helping
residents from
part, the ·appellate court decl·
1-1:45 p.m.- Special Request Barbershop Band.
the
stonn-ravaged
areas, rec·
sion. A court spokesman said It
1: 4S·4 p.m. - Restoration Jazz Band.
over
their
losses.
will likely be at least two months
2:30p.m. - Melgs County Fair Queen announced.
Procedures lor requesting as·
before any decision Is rendered.
3 p.m. - Costume judging on the parking lot stage.
slstance
will be announced
Prosecutors said Warner, then
4·5 p.m. - Outhouse races, Second Street.
within
the
next few days, Su·
the owner of Home State Savings
5-6 p.m. - Pioneer costume review and winners announced.
chock!
said
.
.
Bank In Cincinnati, made 41 wire
·
6 p.m. .- Kyger Valley Gospel Quartet.
Many
residents
of Athens,
transfers worth $114 mUllon to a
6:30p.m. -Brothers of the Brush contest.
Hocking,
Lawrence
and Perry
Fiorlda securities firm In late
7-8 p.m. - Bob and Kendra Ward·Bence.
counties
were
torced
to leave
.1983, six ol them without appro·
8·10 p.m . - Peter Shaw-Hotpolnt String Band. Square
v;ll of Home State's board of their homes over the Memorial
dancing In the street. ·
, Day weekend alter heavy tbun·
directors.
On Saturday following the parade there will be carriage ride
Wben.ESM goveriiiJleat Se!!llr- derstorms and flooding' des·
throughout the day beginning at Court and Second Streets.
'
troyed property and clalm4!11 at ·
' lti~Jnc., Fort Lauderdale, went
. There also will be Civil War Musket Brlgades displays all day •
leaSt
two lives.
,
bekrupt on March 4,1985, Horne
Saturday.
Thunderstorms
and
tornadoes
State lost $144 million and the
On Sunday rides will begin at the museum sl.te at 1 p.m.
collapse
led to runs on 70 In Butler and HamUton counties,
Food and craft concessions will be available all day Friday
state-chartered, privately In· June 2-3, also lett many bQIIIeless
and Saturday .
•
··
··
and In financial straits.
sured thrifts.
· Activities at the museum will be held Saturday and Sunday
Suchocki said assistance can
Warner's lawyers got the con·
from 1·5 p.m.
,
,
Include
temporary housing,
Yictlons reversed by saying that
the exhibit, •'Ornate and Simple Forms: Pomeroy Furniture
.
grants,
low-cost
loans lo cover
one of the Jurors "hated" Warner
and Fashion, 1840·1880" at the library will run through June 22
uninsured
property
losses, and
and another had money In the
during the hours olll a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through FFiday,
other
pJ'Oil'Bnis
to
help
lndlvldu ·
state thrifts when the collapae
and 1·4 p.m. on Saturday and Sunday.
als
and
buslaes~
owners
recover
took pl$ce.
from 1he effects of the disaster.

Tornado nearly wipes out
Colorado town;, no one killed

State· says Warner· convicted fairly

eftAIII•SilfiiSitG

ASSOI1d

MAITHA WHITE

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son 'N' GENTLE

BATH TISSUE
410LL
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·Heritage·Days .schedule

$., 89

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CHUCK .RO·A~'---..·
GOUIMET

69

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$159~

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assistance

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•

emergency funds to do the work. took place In VInton County
The Nye Ave. Intersection and Wednesday morning about the
the bottleneck It presents was regional jail and the $3,1!50,000
discussed and It was decided that grant from the Governor's Office
Commtssoner Richard Jones will of Criminal Justice Services. , .
talk with village officials and
SouiSby reported that the pro:- .
then write a letter to the posed faclllty would have conappropriate state officials pro-- structlon costs of about$7,000,000
testing delays.
with the balance over the grant
Bids on surplus equipment of money to be raised by the fo4r
the Ml'lgs County Emergency counties involved. They are
Medical Ser:.•lce were opened. Meigs, Jackson, VInton and ·
and the bids of Rex Vance for the Hocking. ·ThiS would mean, ac·
i984 truck ol .$1,020. the bid of cording to Soul~ by, that ea,ch
Raymond Wilcox for a. two county would have to come up
channel radio ·or $356, and the bid wltlr $1 million lor construction
of the Gallla County Sheriff's costs. There has been no provl:
Department for a four channel sian for the expense ol operating
radio of $355.10, WE're accepted.
and maintaining the multicounty
The cornrnlssoners also ac· facility once It is COlJ$tructed.
cepted a bid from the Southern
The location of the proposed
Ambulance Builders of La· facility and where local construeGrange, Ga . of $41,975 for refur- lion and maintenance monies
bishlng Rutland squad 44 on wlll come from were discussed ,
recommendation of the EMS with allofthecomrniSslonersand
Bo;l.rd of Trustees. The . work, ·the sheriff agreeing that the ·
according to Robert Byer, EMS Initial cost could . be minor ·
director, wlll take from 60 to 90 compared to tile malntenan~e
days.
and upkeep once the construction
The resignation of Ron Ash Is completed.
'
frotn the Private Industry Coun·
The problems of transporta·
ell was accepted and Leese tlon to a regional faclllty and the
Murphey was appointed to fill his necessity lpr stU! maintaining a
unexpired tl'rm. It was noted that local Jail were among the topic~
Ash Is relocatlngtotheColumbus discussed with everyone a~ ,
area in the near future.
ing that despite the $3,150,000
Approval to the Jay Mar Coal grant announced Wednesday a
Co. for the application of brine regional jallls "a long way off."
(llr~tc;ontall:WfiSiil.Vell bY the •
At ...w!lnl -~ CQ r'lillloJ&gt;.
commlsslbners.
·
· ~trs ~annlng Roush, president,
Meigs County Sheriff James Rlcliard ; Jo_nes, and David Ko·
Souls))y reported t.o the Comrnlll- blentz, and Clerk Mary ,
sloners oil the meeting which · Hobstetter.

Shotvers, storms
move across Ohio
I

Mt. Vernon in central Ohio had•
By United Press Inlernatlonal
The unset tied weather goes on more than 1.5 Inches.
in Ohio: ·
A large area ol showers and
What cauSI'd the thunder:
thunderstorms that moved storms was a cold front that was
across much of the state Wednes· just pushing Into northern Ohio •
day evening exited the state · Thursday morning,
,
around midnight. However,
The National Weather Service
more showers and thunder· said the front would be a focus lor
storms moved back across the more showers and thund~r~
smithern half of Ohio during the storms through Friday .
The threat of showers and
early morning hours,
Rainfall amounts between thunderstonns will continue Sat- •
Wednesday afternoon and early urd&lt;!Y as a cold front moves
Thursday morning were varia· thro111h. Sunday should be dry as
ble. ranging from zero along the high pressure pushes ·ln.
lakeshore to more than an Inch at
It Is expected to be humid
Friday and saturday with highs ;
somE' locations.
The Greater Cincinnati Airport In the 80s. Temperatures will get •
reported almost an inch, while back to normal In the 70s Sunday.

Selection of jury for
murder trial continues
WINFIELD, W.Va. (UPI) Publicity surrounding the case of
a Gallipolis man accussed in the
slaying of a deputy sheriff from
Putanrn County, W.Va. , Is caus·
lng difficulties In seating a Jury.
Opening arguments were scheduled to be heard Wednesday.
but the trial has been slowed by
many potential jurors acknowl·
edging they have read or heard
about the case In the media.
Jury selection was to resume
Thursday.
Charged In the murder or.
Putnam County deputy sheriff
John Janey Is Robert Gray. The
trial of an alleged accomplice,
Robert Bates, has been con·
tlnued. No new trial date was set~

Gray was charged with kUling
the off-duty d!'puty Aug. 17 while '
allegedly trying to set fire to the •
Hurricane residence of Raymond Huck. The owner of the
house allegedly hired Gray and
Bates to set fire to the house so •
Huck could collect the Insurance.
Huck pleaded guilty March 28
to second degree .murder In a ~
plea . agreement with '
prosecutors.
· ~
Janey reportedly was working •
part·tlme as an Insurance com- ·
· pany lnves Ugator and bad staked .
out Huck's residence when he
surprised Gray, who allegedly
was getting ready to set lire to
the dwelling. Gray tried to flee
and shot Janey In the chest and
head, pollee contend.

GOP unveils calhpaign fmance plan .
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Majority Republlcani In the Ohio
Senate released their version or a
campalp flnanclll&amp;' reform bill
Wedliesday, stressing more pub.Jic dl~elosure and scrapptng
Democratic attempts to limit
political contributions and
expenditures:
The alternate plan, drafted to
tbe specifications of Sen. Robert
Cupp, R·Lirna, was presfnted to
a special Senate task Ioree on
campalp flnandJ111. It Is to be

an1elided Tbursday and possibly
reported out.
Cupp, chairman of the . task
force, said the leglslatloli would
bueady for a Door vote when the .
Senat~ reconvenes next
Tuesday.
•
Without bipartisan support, •
any campaign finance reform •
bill likely would remain atalern·
ated for the rest of the year.
Lawmakers plan to adjourn
week until after the Novembef '
election.
• ••

nexr..
.. ...

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1

�•
The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Ohio

Commentary

'

.

The Daily Sentinel

Giants hand Reds third loss
in ·row on Mitchell's homer

Page-2-The Dally SentiWII
Pome!Vy-Middleport. Ohio
Thumley.
June.. 7.- .1990
. -

.'

' .

li1 Co•n Street
Pomeroy, Oblo

Panel approves plan to ··
ban export of pesticides

"1: ~Mh\EM\? 6WOUP 1\o\ERAPY·
'YOU ARE NOT ALONE. Ya'l ffW

C.ON6ReSn'ERSONS ARi AiL-£ 1tl

I WANT' 10 CUT 'POWN.

TM'E frlMK\NS -nNn.EGE

I !&lt;NOW IT'S COMRILSIVE

tT •

SE~~VIOR ···MEANINGLESS'

-

REPE 1tTN-E ACTIVITY. ?
CAN YOU "'EL-1' ME,

\

Federal assistance--s ought

Today in history
By United Press International
· Today is Thursday , June 7, the I 58th day of1990 with 207 to follow .
The moon is waxing, moving toward Its full phase.
The morning stars are Mercury, Venus. Mars and Saturn.
The even big stars are Jupiter and Pluto.
.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Gemini, They include
' BrUish fashionplate George "Beau" Brummel In 1778: French
l post-Impressionist painTer Paul Gauguin In 1848; actress Jessica
. Tandy In 1909 (age 81); Gwendolyn Brooks, the firs! black woman to
:win the Pulitzer Prize for poeTry, In 1917 (age 73); heavyweight
: boxing champion Rocky Graziano in 1922; singer Tom Jones In 1940
· . 1age 50) and the funk-rock musician Prince In 1960 (age 30).

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

Berry's World

.

Normally, this report Is de- swing through many of the
voted to policy and legislative affected areas, arid from all
matters that concern the Con- Indications the final toll will be
gress and the Executive Branch high In both human terms and In
of the federal 'government. This terms of property and business
week, however, I would like to losses. As most of you I am sure
devote this column to the recent are aware, the Governor has
flooding problems besetting Sou- declared four Southeastern Ohio
theastern Ohio.
counties disaster areas: Athens,
Heavy rains and swelled wa- Hocking, Lawrence, and Perry.
terways have raised havoc for a This Is where the heaviest
number of communities and concentration of damage was
counties within Ohio's lOth Con- evidenced, but other areas such
gressional District. With Con- as Fairfield, Jackson, and Ross
gress .In recess for the Memorial · counties likewise experienced
Day period, I was back In Ohio at some hlgb water and flasli
the time the devastation hit, and I flooding.
found the damage to be extensive · By his declaration the Gover·
throughout the area as rising nor has set Into motion a series of
waters washed through streets actions. First, his disaster declaand vUlages leaving In their ration Implements the State's
wake many homes and bus!· emergency assiStance plan and
nesses under water and many enables the 'state to Immediately
families without adequate step In to assist the stricken
sheller.
communities. Secondly, It actiI had the opportunity to accom- vates federal and local emerpany federal, state, and county gency assistance survey teams
disaster assistance officials on a to assess the degree of the

......

~~
&amp;&gt; 1980 NEA. one.
by

"/can't wait to get out into the real world snd
leave all this racial. ethnic and gay tension
behind."

The United States buys Mexico's exports, floods' Its resorts
with money-laden tourists, and
employs hundreds of thousands
of Illegal Immigrants who can't
find decent work at home. But
even good friends should ask
permission before bursting Into
each others' homes. This the
United States recently failed to
do, and the Mexicans are angry.
Rightly angry. U.S. officials
have acted as If our law reigned
supreme not only on American
soU, but throughout the hemlsph~e. Frustrated by the fact
that Mexico failed to prosecute
Dr. Humberto Alv.are.z Machaln
for consplr!ng to torture and
· murder U.S. Drill Enforcement
agent Enrique Camarena In 1985,
DEA officials reportedly put out
a bounty for hiS capture. Money
!luty talked, and he was abducted
and transporled to this country,
where he faces trail.
Defenders of 19e kidnapping,

, By JOE CIALINI
· 'UPISporta Writer
PHILADELPHIA ~UPI)- In·
sis ling the time had come to see
"what's over lhe hill," Philadelphia 76ers general manager John
Nash formally announced his
resignation Wednesday.
Nash, who said last month that
he planned to leave his job but
considered s)aylng after owner
Harold Katz urged him to change
his mind, wplleave his position
when his contract expires at the
end of this month.
''I doQ't think you should read
anything into It other than I am
very comfortable with what
we've accomplished In Phlladel·
phla and It's time for John Nash
to see what's over the hill," Nash
said at a news conference.
Nash, 43, has served as the
76ers' general manager sblce
June 25, 1986, and has worked for
the club for the last nine years ,
acting as assistant general manager and 9bslness manager tor
five years.
"I think I'~e accomplished as
much as I'm going to," Nash
said. "The routine ~arne very
dem11ndlng and very taxing. A
.different environment migl}t _b e
refreshing."
In a statement, Katz praised
Nash and said a search would be
conducted for a replacement.
"After many discussions with
John and giving him ample time
to think ·aoout li!s filiure and
situation, It was his desire to

Padre$ reduce Reds lead to seven
games with 3-2 victory over Astros
ByC.J. HWU
UPI Sports Writer
Murphy's Law prevails In Sail
Diego. "Jack Murphy's Stadium
Law,"·that 'Is.
·
·"People say mi 0-2 you
shouldn't give up a hit," said
Houston Astros reliever Larry
Anderson, who surrendered the
game-winning hit to Garry Templeton with two outs In the ninth
as the San Diego Padres defeated
the Astros 3-2.
''Eiut I made the pitch I wanted
to make," Anderson added.
"Give him (Templeton) the
credit. If I had missed with It, I
would've come back with the
same pitch. I thought I made the
pel'fect pitch. It must be Murphy's . Law - Jack Murphy

Stadium's law ' "
run-scoring bloop Into short left
Templeton's single capped a
field.
thre~-run Inning for the Padres;
"It's a very good feel big,"
who swept the three-game series. Carter said. ''Two out of three
The Padres, trailing 2-0, had would've been good, butlt's~at
tied the s,c ore on. JOe Carter's to, take all three (games of the
two-run homer in the ·ninth.
series) . It dldn' t look good going
Roberto Alomar led off the Inning into the ninth 2-zlp, but we put a
with a single off Mark Portugal,
few things together. Sometimes
1-6. One out later, Carter belted a
you 'll get the home run. A lot of
2-2 delivery Into the left-field · times you won't."
stands for his ninth homer of the
Craig Lefferts, 3-1, worked the
year.
nblth and got qedlt for the win.
Santiago then singled and
Glenn Davis had given Houston
Portugai was relieved by Dan
a 2·0 lead In the fourlh Inn big with
Schatzeder, who gave up a walk
his National League-leading 17th
to Mike Pagliarulo. Anderson
home run of the season and
came on imd struck out pinch
seventh In the last six games.
hitter. Jack bark as the runners
With two outs, San Diego
executed a double steal. Tem- starter Mike Dunne walked Ken
pleton then followed with his Ob!;!rkfell and Davis fo Uowed by
clubbing a .2·0 pitch deep Into the
left -field. seats. The home run
was th~ 6lst .gfven up by San
Diego pitchers this season, whO
lead the majors In tlie category.
(Bielrckl i-:11. ~:01 p.m.
Portugal scattered seven hils
CIDCinnalllRijo 3-IJ a1 Hou•o• {Gulover
81-31nntngs In losing for the
Jickso• S--31, I'I:U p.m.
Friday Gamel'
fifth straight start. He walked
PIIHa.el,nla al ChiCIIP
three and struck out six. Dunne
st. Louis at Mo•real. niJM'
PIUIIbu I'Jh al New l 'ork. •l~ht
gave up just two hits ·over six
San Franclaco at Atlanta, nl&amp;hrl
Innings, walking one and striking
Cl•clnnatlal Holllll•n. nlpt
.[.o,. .u..,-. atSaaDiep. nlshl
" out four ,J.w: • --......~
:"We have to find a way to turn
WedneMIII.)' Sportll 1'1'an•cUOM
'·
Baleball
It around," said Houston ManCalifOrnia - Reacllvaled !lltan!ltop
ager Art Howe·. The Astros have
Dick Schofll'ld: requested wa1ver11 on.
pKCI'Ier Mark Clear. . ~
lost ·seven or their last nine
Mllwa111Er - Traded Infielder Frank
Bollk co 'sunk' tor ouUielcler Ml"key
games and six In a row. "PortuBranlk!)' Monel Willl~d Brantley lo
gal
pitched ap excellerit game.
Dt&gt;n\·•r of Atnerlean .\JUHM:Iallon
(AAA):optloE• plkhfr Tom F11er lo
He threw everything for a
O.nver.
strike."
Ne"' York t ALl - F1rt&gt;d mltl1llteer
lludt)' Dent, thlrd·hMt coach.lo•Sparb
San Diego's Tony Gwynn went
lind h•Unte COIICh Champ SuiNI'If!r!lo;
2-for-4,
giving him 14 hits In his
namt&gt;d Shmp Merrill man.al(8'.
Se•· \'ork (NLI - Sl~d draftt't'ft
last 26 at -bats. Blp Roberts went
!! hortlliop AarMI Ledf'sm1 Ud l:l&amp;thtf\
0- for-~ to end a 13-game hitting
MlcWI Patrb:l.
Olllaboma Clly {.\AI - Placed flr"'streak.
bwiemAn Pat Dodson on dl!lll.hled list;
In other NL games, San Fran·
outfielder 1'• !!:dt" Wlllla~m~ Johwd dub '
lrom Cbarlotlt&gt; Of Florida Slale Leape
cisco
edged Cincinnati 3-2, New
{i\ ),
York eeked ' by Montreal 4-3,
SeaUit&gt; .- AsRipd lnfleldfor Frank
Bolide to San Ber..,.dlno of faldornla
Pittsburgh defeate\1 Chicago 6-1,
LeaK~W tAl: p... ccd lfllort,.j:op Ml~
Br11111ley en 15-d~di*hledlllllt: rt&gt;c..Ued
St. Louis beat Philadelphia 12·11
lnlleldfor -I ell Sv-fer from Clll~r)' of
In 10 Innings, and Los Angeles
Paclfl'' C'oast Lellpt' tAAAl: 111l~d
draftl'f'!l. "llbriMOJ* Anthny Manahu
topped Atlanta 1-5.
.

.

Scoreboard ...
Majors
By UnMed l"retill Inter ..uo..t

.....

A..~ERICAN

Team

LEAGUE

" ' L Pet.

GB

Bo!lton ......... ................ta U .1-19 Mltwaullet&lt;.......... .........tl t:4 .:111 I !t

Toro•e .......................~R M
Balltmo"' .................... u . '!8
Cln•l~~nd ........... ......... 2S r.
Oft roll ......... ...... ....... ..:l-1 38
New l'orL ..................IR 32

I ¥t

,:; It

.n! ' .1
.410
.U.t
.SH

.41-1
~~~

l l,i

\\'Ill!' I
Oaklud ..... ........ ... .. .. . .35 Jti .6MB Cbll:~a«o

...................... .31
Mlnnnota .. ........ .........31
Caltrornla ......... .. ........ n
Seal~lf' .. ........ ..... ... ..... . .:IS
!Kan . . Cll)' ........ ....... ..2t:
Texu ... ........ ....... ....... .21
We~ay

Ill ' .1&amp;1

3

a2 .n;

~~·~

fi ·.SIMI

91,4

at .-113

II~!

21 All 13
32 ,:JH I$

Resull5

Mlnlll!flo&amp;a U, Torolllo S

BoAion .e. New Vork l
Del roll I, Oenlan d .J

Chlcap 5, Snltle I
CaHIGrnla I, Kaa!IIUI City:!
Balllmon&gt; fl, MIIW'au'lltoe- 7
Oakland :s, Tnu -1
Tt..ndQ Game.~
Sullll.' (JohMon -1-3) al Olt·ateo
(Paltrumll·l), 2::15 p.m.
Balltmer. t•ot.~on •3) a&amp; Mllwallll'f'
(Mirabe:lla 1-tll . 2:31p.m.
California (Finll.'y Hl al KanlltH Clly
ISahf'rh~ f.l),:l:35 p.m.

a declaration will be signed by
the President by the ertd of that
week.
Suffice It to say that If such a
federal disaster determination Is
made by the ·President, a broad
range of federal assistance programs will be made available
through FEMA and the Small
Business Administration to assist area families, businesses,
and communities to get back on
their leet. Such assistance would
be In the form of either federall~
guaranteed loans or grants.
Should the llndlngs of the field
surveys 1&gt;e lnsufflcleQt to justify
a federal disaster declaration,
then the only government sponsored assistance (other than
compensation claims to those
holding federal flood Insurance
policies l would be the monies
available from the State's disaster contingency fund, and lhls
assistance would be limited to
local units of government.

Nrw l'ork (Leary 3-6) a1 Bo~lon
'cHarriK H1 ; 7:31 p.m.
·
Mlnlll'IUU cT~nl l-3) at Toronto
(S(otllf'MYff' .J-8), 7:3$ p.m .
Ddretlt IDUbol!i :!·31 ut CJI!\·ehmd
cBlack J.!), 7:35p.m.
Oaldud tMooft' .l-S) ~~ Tt"nli (W'Itt 2·
7),A: U p.m.
·
Frldll,)' Gam""
St"altle at Drirok , !
Ne•· York at Baltlmon&gt;, ni,~:M
C'lf!''f'land at hlon, nl~

C'ht.:a«o lit Mlnftf'Aola,

•l~hl

Toronlo Ill Mlhn.u iwl". nlprl
Tn»at California, nl~
Kan-... City at OakiiUtd. nll!:hl
SAT'JON,\L LEAGUE
Ew\1
Tt'IIIR
\\' L Ptl . (i8
Pllhthura:h ...................J:t Ill .13:1 -:
Phlldt•lphia ....... : ........tl :!.l .l.MI il
Mo.-rtal ..... ...... ... .. ... ..tH 2-1 ..1311 l
St'W 1'nrk.. ........... .. .....t3 :!6 ...8 li' t
sa. LoWs .... .. .... ..... . .... :!~ 29 .-lft.S A11
fhlr.u.-o ...... .. ......... .. ...:!:! :II .tU 11 1t
" ' t'llt

ftatinmtl ................ ....3:1
San Dil'I'U .... ... , ............:!II
Lo~ .o\n~l,..,. ........... .. .... :!7
S!ul Frarwl,;co .......... ... :!~
,\tlanta ....... .................:!l!
Ho•llllln ... ....... ...... ... .... to

13 .IJAA
:!-1 .l:tll
:!7 .MIG
~ .tfi:l
30 .IIHI
3:1 .rn

" 't"Wtid.q Rh .. s
!ian Frand!W.'O 3. f indnMII
lnlliap

7
II
II
l.t

IU1• Up10!\iava. pllchn•Mk•.v.IHampt•n at~d Richard II&amp;IM!IL oudldderll
Tommy ~hl'rtMn and David LIIWMOn.
Te~:llll Dem*d pllfhf'r Brl..
Bohanon to Oklahoma fit)' of lh('
Americ'an .Woclallon t•\A•\ 1: mctl\'atrd ·
pltchct' Xolaa Ryan ofl d!Holl hkd IIIU;
IL"o~Pf'd pltt'hl'r ,JO!It" Guzman to PoM
Otarlotle of Florida Stalt' IA'Ill\lt' (A l on
ml.'dltalrthahlll&amp;atlon.
Tororu - Opclo•d pltch(lt" Sttovto
fummln!P'! to Synu.'•*' of lntrr~tlonal
lA'..._. !AA.A•; ho~ht t•ontnut of
.pltchA- Tom Gil""' from Syrat·u!OI':
usl~d pltchl'f ,Jimm)' Kt"y lo Du.edln
•f lht• Florida Slah• (.,a«Ut&gt; ( ,\ l for
rf'habllltaUon: !llp:&gt;d drafh•N ootfltldt'r
Howard Battle, pltchcrll Allen Rl'll'• and '
Dln.·ld M.no li, !ll.'t:o nd h Alif man ,q alltH'W
Hlldi It ""d lhort!'lloj) SL'Oit Miller .
,
Ba!!keChllll
,
Erlt' a\o'BLl su"prn*d )fUard
S''Otit"r Barry for ofK' rwnt·: Slrnt'd
~d A .·l . " ')'tlcit"r.
LillO \ "e1as 1WBL1 - SI,Ped ~ 1nd
Phlladt'lphll4- 1\nnOUIK't'd re~~lputlon
of C.neral

w~
~.

New l"orii.J. Mnll't'al J
fhlcai(D I. 1 1·: tanlnp,

....

81. Lttdtllt. Plllldell*l&amp;ll, 10 lnlinp

Green ••acQ ..~dll ptrcdtollhuh•b.

Thultlli!Q' Gamtf'
(DtlAOn J-S) 11 MoMreal

f'III"Y RllllttU -

AnntUMed UIIMant

~nl.,...,;erO.n18kll~wo..41•1M

he "iftalned.

Ill New l'ork

,

Qllebtc- AIIDHnee•G•s Lane.r will

'

'I

: I II : \~I

,j

'

.

I would not be talking to them
otherwise.
:

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS liS.. . )
A Dlvillon of Mllltbn~a. Inc.
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throogh Friday, 111 Court St .• Pomeroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Pub- '
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oiiC!f',

Sports briefs
CoUege
A Mississippi State professor
and former student pleaded
guilty In Oxford, Miss., to operatIng gambling rings that accepted
bets from several Bulldogs athletes. :.. Prairie VIew A&amp;M
alumni In Houston, angered by
lhe university's decision to drop
10 of 12 sports, have developed a
plan to review the athletic
program. ... Kentucky basketball coach Rick Pltlno has talked
to one woman and will be
Interviewing another · to fill an
assistant coaching job. There Is
no woman assls !ant In Dlvlslon,I.
Cycling
Gianni Bugno of Italy won the
Tour of Italy, becoming only the
fourth rider In the history·of the
. event to lead the overall stand·
lngs from the first stage to the
finiSh.

pursue other Interests," Katz
said. "The 76ers had a great nine
years with John In the front office
and we wish him luck In his
future endeavors."
Katz had attempted to convince Nash to remain at his job,
offering to split the business and
basketball responsibilities of the
position, but Nash said the time
simply .had come for him to
depart.
·
.
"It's hard to walk away from a
very comfor,table situation In a
highly-paid field . but It's time to
do so," Nash said.
Nash said he had not been
offered another job, but admitted
to !laving discussions with the
Denver Nuggets about serving as
the team's director of basketball
operations.
The Philadelphia Inquirer reported Wednesday that Denver,
soon would ofler ..Nash the job.
"I have not been offered any
new position," Nash said. · "I
have been In discussions with
several people about several
opportunities."
Nash also Is conslderblg becoming an a~ent _ for La Salle
forward Lionel ·Simmons, expected to be one of the top picks In
the June 27 NBA draft. and
auditioned with NBC for a
position as an analyst on NBA
telecasts .
''I have had some conversatlonWX!tb Denver, bl\J they are
al~~C coilslcfer'!ng i:ither 'people."
Nash said.'"! am very interested.

•
•

pia)' oae morue•o•beto~ jotnlnllroal

"""•d.-lpOii. !Howell l-31 ~ f1111ca~~:o '

Vincent Carroll

N'~h .

d~cn!il\'t&lt;

PIU.rwb f.

'J:SI,.m.

.Jolin
Collt"At&gt;

Mlnne,.ota N~~onwd Tom Gadd
c.-oordlrw.tur.
.
Footb .. l
N\' .Jf'b - Slpd runnln,; hrk
Freeman MleNt&gt;ll to ~rift! of l· )'!&amp;r
c."'Nrada.
Hoelley
Mla.IIU i\nROIM'f'd Norrr.n

11

IU Dlep I, lleulll•n t

1 s~:,~~~·
'J:1•t1101
SS p.m. ~I)
•

Mana~l'l'

\\I

)\fets 4, Montreal 3
In New York, Kevin Elster
drove In two runs with a seventh·
Inning bases-loaded single to lift
New York and help Frank VIola
become the1iiL's first nine-game
winner . VIola, 9-2, worked seven
innings before getting relleffrom ·
Alejandro Pena and John
Franco, who earned his ninth
save. Elster's single came off of
· loser K~vin Gross, 7-4.
Pirates 6, Cubs 1
In Plttsbrugh, Andy VanSlyke
hit a three-run hOmerto·highllght
Pittsburgh's five-run first ·In·
ning, sending the Pirates to a
victory and three-game series
sweep of Chicago In a rain·
shortened contest. Doug Drabek,
8-2, has allowed only 16 earned
runs In 65 2-3 lnnblgs. Greg
Maddux, 4·6, didn't make It
through the first Inning In his
sixth attempt at his 50th major
league victory.

Sllll' (")' {\•IJIU10\1t!h.

1M Mple. ':. AUula l

such as former U.S. attorney here II the roles had been between Washington and Pres!·
Joseph E. DIGenova, Po bit out reversed aud Mexican officials dent Carlos ·SaUnas de Gortar'i
that bounties "have been offered had posted a bounty for . the when It aired earlier this year.
since the Inception of the Amerl· kidnapping of an American. Or With fo;!W exceptions, the series
can Republic" - as If longevity. Imagine that Cblna employed portrayed Mexicans as brutal or
DIGenova also considers It thugs to forcibly repatriate stu· on the take, the DEA agents as
highly relevant !hat lbe Mexican dents studying at U.S. unlversl· Incorruptible heroes.
government obs~rueted lhe Cam- ties; or that Libya hired assas-·
President Salinas must somearena InvestigatiOn and· that sins to execute dissenters who'd times wonder whether good
Camarena himself was "ac- taken up resldenej! In the States. relations with Washington are
corded no due process."
· Mexican law enforcement ntay worlh the periodic humlllatlon he
Yet IllS In t1te nature of violent Indeed be corrupt by U.S. stand- endures' at the hands of Impecrlme-anyvlolentcrlm~-'lllat ards, •but that Is not to. say It's
rious Yanks. for t)le first time In
due jlrocess li Ignored. Camar- hopeless. ~t year. al'one, 70 decades, the United States enena wun't tbe only person Mexlcau pollee or soldiers died joys the presence of a Mexican
murdered In Mexico In 1985. NQr fiptlni drug traffickers. Even president who actually seeks to
wu hll cue tbe first corrupted · Camarena cUd not die alone. His be our friend, who appreciates
by official hostility to the truth. .Mexicau pUot, Alfredo' Zavala,
tbe need for south-of-the-border
The main difference between was bulebered with htm:
perestroika, who knows that
Camarena's murder and others
Somehow these facts seem to Mexico needn't fear freer trade
Ia that be wuau American on an escape the notice of those' who and Investment policies, and wJto
official mission, and lhat his wish to portray Mexico ~and · has cracked open the door to
understandably venieful col- Mexicans) as Irredeemable.
political competition. And what
leaJlUe&amp; may have had the They certainly escaped mention does he get for taking these
wherewithal to take the matter on the NBC miniseries :'Drug long-awaited risks?
'·
Into their own hands.
Wars: The Camarena Story,"
Treatment Invented · for ba· _.. , .
Im11111ne, however, the .outcry which P,rovoked the first strain
nana republics, that's what.

Nash·steps down as 76ers GM .

·the centerfield wall at CandlesUck Park Wednes·
day, The Glalita swept the series over the diVIsion
leading,Reds. (UPI)

MITCHELL BEI:.TS,GAME WINNER ~ S.F.
Giant Kevin Mitchell hlts·hbi 15th home run ofthe
!Ieason to beat the Reds In the 11th Inning 3-2 over

U.S. lawmen lack_respect .for Mexico
·

•

C"

Cong. Clarence Miller

damage that has been done so
that a basis for federal assist·
ance can be established by the
Feder~! Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) headquartered In Washington, D.C. If
the severity of the 'lllsaste" Is of
sufficient ma~ltude, FEMA In
turn will recommend to the
President that a formal federal
disaster declaration be Issued.
As of the writing of thiS column
we are at the second step of the
aforementioned actions. Feder·
ally directed .survey teams .are
presently combing the affected
communities to make a detallect
determination of the damage
that has been done. Once this Is
accomplished a formal survey
report will be forwarded to
Washblgton's FEMA headquarters. This report Is expected to
arrive In Washington by the
beginning of the week of June
3rd. If the survey findings
warrant a federal disaster determination, It IS ex~ted that such

•

•

SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) playing like we did last year,just In the fourlh against starter
Kevin Mitchell has an unusual catching up alllhe time, and this
Danny Jackson. Rick Parker,
amount of optimiSm about the year, that 's what we have to do."
who had three hits In the game,
San Francisco Giants.
Reliever Jeff Brantley, 2-1, led off with a single and went to
He hit a solo home run with two
pitched the scoreless 11th Inning second on a deep fly by aark. :
outs In the 11th lnnllig Wednesfor the victory. The Reds had two Mitchell walked and Williams' ·
day afternoon to rally -the Giants
men on base with two outs, but lJlfleld single loaded the bases :
to a 3-2 victory over the Clncln·
Brantley got Mariano Duncan to before Parker scored on Carter's :
natl Reds and a sweep of their
· sacrifice fly .
bounce out to third.
three-game series·. .
Jackson had struck out four :
Will Clark had led off th-e ninth
Mitchell hit a 1·1 plich from . with hiS lOth home run of the and walked four before leaving .
reliever Rob Dibble, 3,1, over the
season, · tying the score 2·2. with two out In the eighth for ·
center-field fence to cap the
.
;
Randy Myers delivered a 1-1 Myers.
Giants' three-run comeback. San
fastball that Qark drove over the
Robinson, making his third :
Frauclsco has won six straight
left-field fence.
start of the season, gave up eight •
and eight of Its last nine games.
The Reds took a 2-0 lead In the hits over eight lnnblgs, strlkblg :
The Giants. won In extra Innings
first Inning off Don Robinson. out six and walking none.
tor the third time In six games.
With two out, Barry Larkin
"I hung a spilt-finger to O' Neill
"The attitude In the clubhouse singled, stole second and scored In lhe first and he's a good hitter,
Is great," Mitchell said. "You'd
when Paul O'Neill belted a shot and he hit It out. But after· that, I ·
never know we were 12 games out Into the right-field seats for his settled down and pretty much :
or whatever, because .we're seventh hOme run of the year.
had command of all my pitches ," ;
The Giants pulled within a run Robinson said.

No fear of malpractice Jack A~rson and Dale Van Atta

WASHINGTON - Robert physical therapy, heat packs; hands of military doctors.
responsible. M;!Utary doctors
Longo should sue the doctors who crutches aud rest while Longo
Willie HarriS or Highland, told him he was Impotent beDEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE !IIEIGS-MAsON ABEA
told hlrn that the softball·slzed watched with horror as the lump Calif., Injured his knees playing cause, of abdominal lnJ!ItleS he
.
tumor
In his leg was a muscle In hla thlab ' grew:. Finally he basketball for an Air Force te~ received 111 a car accident. Th'-ee
~lb
. .
.
tear. The cancer spread to his asked oae doctor lOt eQUid be a Is 1963. He says milltal')'ldoctors years ago, Gremllch r~lewed
Bm!iil ,...,_,,_-r, ............ c:~.....
lungs during the months that tumor. ''I was told that I was too urged him to keep playing and old medical records and pieced
~v.
Longo tried to convince tbe young to have a tumor," Longo gave him cortisone Injections to together a different story.
ROBERT L: WINGE'l'r
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
doctors that they were wrong. recalled.
numb the pain. Today, after five
He had undergone Initial
Publlther
Geaen.l Mall.....
F1nally, a doctor sent . the knee operations, he Is a cripple. surgery after the accident at a
But he cau't sue because Longo's
doctors were In the Army and so complalnlni Longo . to a bigger HIS doctors blame the Injections. . civilian hospital, and then the
P;\T WHITEHEAD
Army hospital at Fort Sam
was he.
Marine Sgt. Lori Jolley_e ntered Army InsiSted that he be moved
Assistant Publlsher/ControUer
Victims of medical malprac- Houston, Texas. "The doctors the Balboa Naval Hospital In to a military hospital. Gremtice by military doctors could flll could not believe what ·they Long Beach, Calif., In 1986foran llch's records show that t1te
A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
a book with their painful expe- saw," Longo recalled. They cut appendectomy, For months after military doctors dldn' t follow the
Association and the American Newspaper Publlsbers AsSOCiation.
riences, but they can't flle so out a malignant tumor the size of the surgery, she continued to feel pos I -operative Instructions frclm
·
much as a single lawsuit because a softball.
thesamesymptomsofappendlcl· the clvUian doctors. Gremllch's
.•
LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less thu 300
Some
members
of
Congress
,.
a
federal
law
called
the
Feres
tis. Eventually she went to the orlglnlal physician c!alms his
·words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
Doctrln prohibits military per- think the people like Longo emergency room of a civilian urethra wasn't allowed to heal
name, address and te)ephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be In'gOOd taste, addressing Issues, not personal!·
sonnel from suing military should be able to call lhelr hoapltill. Doctors there told ber · completely, resulting In
ties.
·
doctors. ·
doctors to account through the that she still had her appendix, · Impotence.
'
Longo, of Onset, Mass.; first courts. Rep. Dan Gllckman, but -that she was ·miSsing an
Gremllch IS now bucking the
tell the pain In his left thigh while D-Kan., Is spearbeadlni the · ovary and her fallopian tubes. . ' · rules by sull)g the governml!1lt
he w;~s on duty Dec. 21, 1983. He drive to \egallze malllractlce
At f27, Jolley Is sterile and owes ·' for compensation fC?r his three
tolerated It for a few days and suits In the military. He says It Is $60,000 In medical billS. She cau't , decades of suffering. His case, If
then went to an Army aid station unfair that federal prlsoqers can find a lawyer to take her case successful, could overturn the
and got pain pills. Then for the sue the government, but Gls because none wants to taka oil the Feres Doctrine.
,
By CHARLES J. ABBOTT
next three months, doctor after can't.
.
Men_and women In the military
U.S. government.
· WASHINGTON (UPI} - A ·Senate committee approved a plan
Our associates Mellllda Maas
doctor at the Army hospital In
E. Christian Gremllch III of know they may haye to risk their
Wednesday to break a "circle of polson" by bannblg tlte export of
Fort Hood, Texas, told Longo he and Scott Sleek tiU'III!cl up several Broomall, Pa., became Impotent Jives, blit they shouldn'tfacethat
nestlcldes not allowed for use by U.S. fanners. despite charges the
cues In whlcb military person- at the age of 23. But It was 30 riSII because of Incompetence In
had a torn muscle.
action Is misguided and destined to fall.
They prescribed pain pills, nel claim to have suffered at the years before he discovered that1 1 a hospital.
•
: The Agriculture Commit~ vote means the legiSlation wiD be
an Army doctor may have been
folded -Into the five-year farm policy law that Is being written this
year. Chairman Patrick Leahy, D·:Vt., said the plan wpuld ensure the
sat¢ty of Imported foods.
: "Circle of poiSon" is shorthand fo~ wha,t proponents see as a
shortcoming of current regulations. Pesticides can be exported, even
If banned In the United States, and could be used on food crops shipped
to. U.S. grocery stores.
·
1: WliNT 10 IE IN GOt",_,L...
, : 'Imports accOunt for one-fourth of the 134 billion pounds of fruits !lnd
vegetables consumed annually by Americans. Critics say food
blspectlons are not an adequate saleguard against excessive or
"'~~e
lltegal residues In Imported foods.
: "I feel strongly we need to establish the same standards for
WITI-\OUT ASU~lNG
domestic and foreign production of food," Leahy said.
: RepubliCans on the committee argued the legiSlation was a
l)aternallstlc attempt to Impose U.S. standards on other nations and
cduld b4i easily circumvented. Sens. Richard Lugar, R·lnd., and Kit
~OC..
Bond, R-Mo., s.ald manu(acturers - simply could move factories .
overseas.
: ''This entire section of the bill Is entirely misguide!!," said Sen.
Slade Gorton, R-Wash.
·
·
· Sen. Tom Harkin, D-Iowa, the only Democrat other than Leahy to
s!J.eak on the Issue, called the plan "a moderate proposal" to prevent
uncaring use of dangerous chemicals.
." If It's banned, It ought to be banned from coming back into this
country," Harkin said.
The adminiStration opposed the legislation and said It should be
considered as 'part of a food safety bill or a reform of pesticide
regulations.
: The committee approved the legislation on a voice vote following a
relatively brief discussion of a revised draft written by staff workers.
· Under the legislation, foods would be banned from Importation If
· they are treated with pesticides that U.S. farmers -cannot use._
Pesticides ~ould n0 t be exported If they cannot be used ln't he United
States or If no U.S. tolerance level has been set for them In foods.
. • In .addition, haza:idous chemicals could not be shipped to a nation
·llUit does not want tbem, will not buy them from anotl!er suppUer and
·:wm not make them Itself. Countries would be as'ked annuanUy about
,new chemicals.
·,
Exceptions to the ban would be allowed In cases of research,
disease control and famine.
The revisions to the bill Included a provision ,to relax the grading
standards used on U.S.-grown fruits and vegetables to allow more
.cosmetic blemishes on produce. The change was Intended to reduce .
'tbe use of pesticides.
:
: Dan Haley, the bead of the Agricultural Marketblg Service, said II
' would cost $53 million to change the- standards.

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�.•

lhunday, June 7, 1990

Mldcleport. Ohio

ThUIIday; June 7, 1990

Fielder·smashes three home
runs, Tigers drop Tribe, 6-4
By PAUL DEFEDE
VPJ Sportawrlter
Cecil Fielder might be an
lmpoelng presence at the plate,
but It's not just his size that
scares pitchers.
The 6-foot-3, 230-pound, powerhltUng phenom showed why
Wednesday night ln. Detroit's 6-4
win over Cleveland.
FleJc1er drove In five runs with
a pall:; of solO blasts and a 470-!QOt
thrl!e'run home!' to left center In
the fifth Inning that proved to be
the game-winner.
.
"What am~ me about him Is
~hat everybody thinks a big guy
like that Is a big bozo':". Detroit
Manager !fparky Anderson· said.
"He's not. He knows what he's
doing up there at the plate. He's
not swinging for himself. He's not
a guy that goes up there
walling."
Fielder .now leads the majors
with 22 home runs and 53 runs
batted In and Is the .first Tiger In
his tory to hit three horne runs In a
game twice In one season.
Tracy Jones drove In the other
Detroit run with a solo homer In
the fifth, and Jack Morris, 4·7,
picked up the win.
·
Mike Henneman pitched the
final two Innings to earn his 14th
save.
.
.
Cleveland starter Greg Swln·
dell, 2-5, gave up all six Detroit
runs In five Innings. ·
FD;LDER HOMERS - Cecil Fielder, DeCrolt
The last time Fielder hit three
came Wednesday. It W118 hiS third cllnseeuUve
homers was on May 6 at To~onto.
. slUgger, belts a tbree-nin honu~r off Clevelud · round-tripper 118 he leads the league In home runs
Only nine men Jn history have
pitcher Grec SWindell In fifth lnnlllc l'ctlon oftheir
with H. ( UPI)
accomplished that feat, the last
being Joe Carter of the Indians
last year.
Besides blasting a shot In "the
fifth, Fielder homered In the
second and fourth Innings.
When he came up with none on
and one out In the eighth, reliever
Ceclllo Guante threw him four
straight balls far out of the strike
CLEVELAND (UPI) - A · zone.
Fielder's blast In theflfthcame
Cuyahoga County coroner has
found that two ·of the three
Cleveland St. Joseph High SChool
student-athletes killed In a fiery
car crash early Monday, were
legally drunk.
.
UPI Sports Wrller
Coroner Elizabeth Balraj said
TARPON
SPRINGS, Fla.
Wednesday tests showed driver
(UPI) - Jet! Barlow, the No. 4
Thomas Clark's blood-alcohol
player on a Clve-man team, fired
content was 0.13 percent and
a
4-under-par 68 Wednesday In
Sleven Clark's was 0.10 percent.
staking
Florida to a one-stroke
The third victim, Fred Blaine,
lead
after
the first round of the
had no alcohol In his blood.
NCAA
GoU
Championships.
A 0.10 percent blood-alcohol
Six
Individuals
and 30 teams
level Is considered legally drunk
competed
In
steamy
90-degree
In Ohio.
heat
over
the
6,999-yard
lsland
Thomas Clark's mother. HenCourse
at
rnnlsbrook
Resort.
rietta Clark said she wanted to .
Despite a 75 by Southeast Conferknow who ''sold them the beer or
ence
Player of the Year Chris
· Uquor. Whoever did, Is In trouble.
DIMarco,
Florida shot a team
rt's that simple." ·
total
of
1-under
287, one stroke
Steven Clark's mother, Ozle
ahead
of
Arizona.
Clark said, "If they were drunk,
Led by Bobby Doolltlle' s 71 and
that should not damage their
a
72 from 1989 U.S. Amateur
'Image. They were all fine kids
Champion
Chris Patton, Clemand had a good future. Unfortu·
son
stood
two
shots back at 289,
nately, all teen·agers drink."
followed
by
defending
champion
Pollee said Thomas Clark
STUMP MERRILl.
at
2-over-par
·290.
Oklahoma
drove the car that hli a curb on
Barlow
tied
Fresno
State's
Euclid Avenue about 2:30 a.m.
Terrence
Miskell
and
Jim
Lemon
Monday, straddled It for about ~3
feet, then smashed Into a utility of Arizona State for the lndlvld·
ual lead entering the second
pole and burst Into flames.
round. The tournament, which
Thomas Clark, 17, Steven
ends
Saturday •. counts only the
Clark, 19, and Blaine, 18, were
best
four scores within each
replaced him · with Bud football players who helped the group In calculating the team
By JOHN P. GREGG
VIkings win last season's DivHarrelson.
.BOSTON (UPI) - The New
total.
1
Ision
II stat"e football
"It's taken me 14 years to get
, ,York Yankees, with their worst
"Jeff Barlow has a te!ldency to
where I am today. Believe me, championship.
: record since the days before
play
one solid round per tournaInjured In the crash were
although I feel sad for Bucky,"
• Babe Ruth, Wednesday fired
ment
and today was. a timely
Merrill said, "this has to be, graduating senior Eric Ervin, 17, good round," Florida Coach
' -manager Bucky Dent after less
probably, one of the happiest and his cousin Larry Greenwood, Buddy Alexander said. "Ob- .
tl!an a year at the job.
16, a ninth grader at Warrens;Dent was replaced. by Stwnp days of my life." .
vlously, Chris DIMarco didn't
Merrill, a career minor lea· ville Heights JuniOr High SchooL
Merrill In the 18th managerial
play very well today. You can't
change since George . Stein· guer who has scouted and They are recovering at St. win this tournament on the first
tirenner purchased the Yankees coached for the Yankees for the Vincent Charity Hospital.
Cleveland Pollee Lt. James day, but you definitely can lose 11.
past 14 seasons; received a call
1p 1973, Merrill, who was manWe got our afternoon round out of
ager at the Yankees' Trlple·A from Steinbrenner at 1 a.m. Blrk said that at least the the way today, and that's genertarm club at Columbus, Is the Wednesday and was asked to coroner's report explained what ally the hardest."
happened In the accident.
12th different · manager em- replace Dent.
Arizona, which was led by
"But I feel bad for the famllles
"I couldn't get here quickly
ployed by the volatile owner.
current
PGA rookie sensation
, The Yankees also fired third· enough," Merrill said. "When . of the victims, " Blrk said. "I Robert Gamez In registering a
-base coach Joe Sparks, batting you're In my situation- a career really wish the report had sixth· place finish last year, reIndicated no alcohoL"
' coach Champ Summers and mlnor·leaguer as a player, a
The youths were reportedly In lied on balance Wednesday. Jeff
bullpen catcher Gary Tuck. New no-name - I knew when I came
the Flats that night, hours after Manson and Manny Zermaneach
york had been expected to be a Into the business It would take a
receiving their diplomas at gra· shot a 71, with Christian Pena at
· good hitting club this year, but long period of time."
par· 72 and Trev Anderson at 74.
Bradley said Merrill Is "an duatlJn ceremonies.
·Y-ankee batters have struggled to
Miskell, who has seven top 10
Bt• t Cleveland Pollee spokesexcellent baseball man. He's got
a .248 average.
finishes
for the Bulldogs, had five
The move came with the a great personality. He's a mar. Martin Flask said that after birdies llDd one bogey In galnlni
talking with the two survivors,
leader."
Yankees holding an 18-30 record,
a share of the Individual lead. He
However, general manager the youths did not get alcohol shrugged off a bogey-5 at No. 9
the worst In the majors, having
lost four straight games and nine Pete Peterson ' said MeiTlll re- while down In the Flats.
with three birdies on the back
ceived no guarante~ to manage
of 10. However, they are only 8~
side,
capped by a 50-foot Putt at
GoU
games behind first-place Boston the club beyond the 1990 season.
the
17th
hole.
Florida leads Arizona by one
''To my knowledge, just
In the weak AL East.
This
course
Is tough ... really
'
stroke after one round of the
''Our ballciub has Its worst through this year," Peterson NCAA Golf ChampiOnships In tough," Miskell said. 'There's'
record It's ever had," said sal d.
not one hole -out there that allows
Dent was the 28th different Tarpon Springs, Fla.
Gieorge Bradley, the Ylmkees'
Individual to manage the Yan?lee president for player person·
nel and development •'Bucky kees In the history of the
was not going to be able to turn It franchise.
When he took over for Green
.d~ound. That became obvious. "
; •Jlent was manager for only 16 last year, the Yankees were In
sixth place with a 56-65 record.
"Wt!eks of the regUlar season,
The
Yankees went 18-22 the rest
himself being promoted from
of
the
way to finish In fiflh , 14Y.!
Columbus to replace the fired
games
behind Toronto. The club
Dallas Green last Aug. 18.
put
together
a nine-game win·
Ironically, Dent received his
SHOW SlAm AT 1:30 P.M. TO 10:00 P.M.
nlng
streak
In
e!lrly September
termination In the city where he
and
Dent
was
given
a
one-year
achieved his greatest Yankee
D.J. FIOM 7:00P.M. TO 1:30 P.M. AND
glory. His three-run homer run In · contract extensiOn Sept. 8.
After a 13-year playing career, 1
AnD SHOW 10:00 P.M. TO .12:00 A.M.
the seventh Inning helped give
Dent
managed
five
seasons
In
the
the Yankees a 5-4 victory over the
nCDtS 011 SALE NOW 1116.00 PEl PilSON
Yankees' minor-league system.
Bciaton Red Sox In a one-game
His Fort Lauderdaleclubwoit the
AT THE DOOI TICIITS AlE 17.50
p)ayoff for the 1978 AL East Utle.
Florida
State
Leque
Iitle
In
198!1
· Dent Is the lleCOnd manager to
MUn IE 21 YEAU OlD
and finished second In 1986. He
be·fired this season, both In New
LADIES o•Y UNII. 10100 P.M.
spent the next 2¥., yean at
York. The Mets fired Davey
&lt;;olumbus,
flnlsbing
second
once
Johnson two weeks ago and
1 &amp; 143
POMIIOT,
and third twice.
~)
~
•

Report says
two victims
were drunk

about 15 to 20 feet shortoflandlng
In the center field bleachers,
where no batted ball bas ever
landed at Cleveland Stadium.
''That's not my goal, to bit balls
In the bleachers," Fielder said.
"My goal Is to win g&amp;mel for
my team. The main Objective Is
jUit to hit the ball h!IJ'(l. That
(hlttlllg four home rwia) ·wasn't
even on my mind." .
In four years with Toronto,
Fielder hit 31 homers and drove
In Sf runs In !106 at bats.
When every team jias~ on
him, he opted to play last season
In Japan. He hit ·38 home runs
with Hanshln, but more Importantly, he gained his confidence.
'1'm getting to play," Fielder
said, "that's the bottom line.
When you're silting on the bench,
you can't do anything.
"I got the opportunity to go to
Japan and I jus.tfee!lt helped me
tremendously. I don't understand what Is going on (this
year). HopefiiUy, II keeps comIng as It Is. I'm really thrilled."
Everyone except American
League pitchers that is.
Elsewhere In the American
League, Minnesota crushed Toronto 12·5, · Boston tripped New
York 4-1, Chicago zipped Seattle
5-0, California downed Kansas
City 6-4, Baltimore shaded Mil·
wauke!! 8-7. and Oakland scalped
Texas 5-4.
In the NL, 1! was: San Fran·
cisco 3, Clticlnnall 21n lllnnlngs;
San Diego 3, Housion 2; New
York 4, Montreal2; Pittsburgh 6,
Chicago 1 In 6 Y.! limlngs; .St.
Louts 12. Philadelphia 11. In 10
Innings and Los Angeles 7,
Atlanta 5.
TwiDJ IZ, Blue Jqa 5
At Toronto, Greg Gagne belted
a two run homer and added an
RBI single ani! Fred Manrique ,
also drove home three runs til
power Minnesota·. Kirby Puckett
weni 5-for-5 as the Twins col-·

Yankees fire Dent;
fMerrill new manager

MIZWAY TAVERN

"INTERNATIONAL CALENDAI MEN"

MALE REVUE SHOW
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 13, 1990

cona

a.o

.

J~:::~

!:' AUBURN HILLS, Mich. (UP!)
- The Detroit Pistons were
supposed to have the poise. The
..,Portland Trail Blazers were
;•supJlOS!!d to have the rebounding.
~ The Pistons wound up with both
... -and a victory -In the opener
:;, or the NBA Finals.
- Detroit beat the league's top
- rebounding teain on the boards
: Tuesday night and finished
.. strong down the stretch for a

lected 19 hits off of four Toronto
pitchers. John Candelerla, 7-1,
hurled three shutout Innings of
rellef for the win. Wlllle Blair,
0-2, gave up seven runs over 32'3
Innings to take the losa.
Red Sox I, Yulrr•1
AI Boston, Mike Boddlcker
pitched a two-hitter and Tom
Brunansky drove In two runs to
lift the surging Boston· Red Sox
and · spoil the debut of Stump
Merrill as New York Yankees
manager. Merrill replaced
Bucky Deilt, who was fired
earlier In the day. Boddtcker, 7·3,
posted his six straight vtctory
and his firSt complete game of
the season.
While Sox 5, Marlnen t
At Chicago, Melido .Perez
pitched a four-hit shutout and
ScoSt Fletcher delivered a tworun double to spark a five- run
first Inning to lift Ch,lcago. Perez,
5-4, pitched his flrstshu tout since.
Oct.1, 1988.and his first complete
game since Sept. 20, 1989. Loser
Matt Young fell to 1·6 and has not
won since May 13.
·
Orioles 8, Brewers 7
At Mllwaukee, Craig Worthington homered with one out In the
ninth Inning to propel Baltimore.
Worthington drove a 1-0 pitch .
from Blll Krueger, 2-3, over the
lett field wall for his fourth
homer and first since May 4.
Mark WlUiamson, 4·1, . pitched
two Innings for · the . victory.
Gregg Olson notched his 13th
save.
A's 5, Ranprs t
At Arlington, Texas, Jo$1! Canseco and Dave Henderson homered off Nolan Ryan to guide
Oakland. It was the flrststarlfor
Ryan, 4-3, since May 17. Ryan
had been dlsa bled with back
spasms. Scott Sanderson, 7-2,
picked up the win. Dennis Eck·
ersley ear'led his 18th save.
Canseco's homer was his 20th.

: Ohio fishing report

·

By UaHed Press International
rllng Is producing channel catThe weekly fishing report, fish up to 20 pounds near the dam
from the Ohio Division of for anglers using nightcrawlers.
Wildlife:
Bluegllls averaging seven to nine
'
Southeast
Inches and largemouth bass
Vesuvius Lake - Spotted bass averaging two to three pounds
, up to 16 Inches can be caught at are being caught from shore
the lower end or this Lawrence along old Ohio 207 In the upper
, cOunty lake near feeder streams en!l of the lake. Some ~rapp~s "
.. oi)' s'm all spinners. Channel cat- averaging eight to lllnches are ·
; fish and brown bullhead popula- being taken on minnows.
tions ·here are excellent and offer
Darby .Creek ·- The Big and
: good angling opportunities
Little Darby Creek offer good ·
: throughout the summer. Boats
fishing opportunities when water
are restricted to use of electric
conditions aPe favorable. Chan·
motors.
nel catfish can be caught when
Dillon Reservoir - Channel
using trildiUonal catfish baits
; catfish averaging 18 to 25 Inches
fished algng bottom. Smallmouth ·
are being caught here by anglers
bass are hitting softcraws In
: using cut baits, · chicken llvers
shallow water containing riffles . .
and nlghtcrawlers fished along
Bluegllls and sunfish can be
the bottom In sl)allow and deep
caught on waxworms and mealwater. An occasional saugeye Is
worms and larval baits.
caught In the spjllway below the
,
Northwest
dam. Crappies •and bluegllls are
Res!haven Pond. No. 8 . ~
fairly abundant and ,ea.slly
Res !haven Pond No. 8 is giving
caught from shore using tradl·
up largemouth bass averaging 12
. tiona! panflsh baits.
to 15 Inches to anglers using jigs
·
Southwest
and spinners .fished In heavy
East Fork Lake - Channel
cover near the center of the pond
catfish up to five pounds are
during early evening and early
being caught In the upper half of
morning hours. Bluegllls averag' the lake and In the tallwater pool
Ing six to eight Inches are also
, during evening hours on tradi- being taken In this same area on
tional catfish baits. Brushy
grubs and files. There Is a 12- to
. shoreline areas and heavily
15·lnch slot length limit Imposed
wooded coves provide the best
here on largemouth bass.
.opportunity" t6 'catch crap-pies
Maumee J;lay _: The Bayshore
averaging six to eight Inches. · Access Is where anglers are
•Hybrid striped bass can be
catching white bass averaging 10
·caught In deep open water areas
to 14 Inches on minnows through'on three- to five-Inch shiners or
out the day. Channel catfish
, live gizzard shad. Some spotted
averaging 15 to 24 Inches are
•bass up to two pounds are being
being taken .on worms and cut
'caught In the bays and near
ball tlshed along the bottom with
dropolfs and roadbeds.
an occasional walleye catch
Lake Loramie - Larval baits, being reported.
,waxworms and mealworms .c an
Northeast
best be used to catch bluegllls
Findlay Lake - This 93-acre
around brushy shoreline or vegeLorain County lake offers an
'tatlon areas. Crappies averaging . excellent population of bluegllls '
:eight to 10 Inches are being taken
with most fish averaging above
on minnows fished In shallow seven Inches. Waxworms, meal:water around lilly pads and other worms, maggots and grubs can
:shoreline areas. These· same be used In shallow water areas to
'areas and the.boat docks offer the catch these tasty panflsh. Crap;best chance to catch largemouth
pies averaging nine Inches can be
•bass averaging one to three
taken on minnows fished In
'pounds.
shallow water near the shoreline.
'·
Central
Largemouth bass are protected
This
, Deer Creek Lake
here by a 12· to 15-lnch slot length
•1,300-acre lake near Mount Stelimit and can be caught on small ·

SPRIN6 VALl H CINEMA
.

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 4524

Bill Lalmbeer then took care of
the other end, grabbing 12 ·of his
game·high '15 rebounds on defense. Even plnt·slzed Islah
Thomas helped out, collecting 7
rebounds to go with his gamehigh 33 points.
· ''Detroit does a very good job
of pushing you before the shot
goes up, Lalmbeer es peclally,"
Adelmt~n said. "And . (Oennl$)
Rodman and Salley are great

leapers with long arms. You
can't let them beat you to the
basket, or they'll get the balL "
Portland's Buck WllUams, who
had a · team-high 12 rebounds,
said Portland's failure to post up
on offense caused most of their
problems under their glass.
"We were standing on the
perimeter Instead of working
down low," he sail!. " We need to

eludes Sunday, the golfers will
remain In the same locale for the
U.S. ()pen, which gets under way
June 14 at historic Medinah
Country Club, some 10 miles
down the road .
The Western Open was moved
up three weeks this year to
precede the year's second Grand
Slam event.
Despite the promise, It wlll be
hard to surpass the climax ofthe

last two years ·with popular
touring pro Pet~r Jacobsen vic·
thnized txith times in heartbreakIn f h'
3a~b!~~- dunked an approach
shot In the creek behind the 18th
hole In 1988, allowing Jim Benepe
to take the title In his first PGA
Tour start. Jacobsen then missed
a three-foot tap-in on the first
playoffhole last June, giving the
title to Mark McCumber.

·

·

. ..

spinners and four-Inch rubber
worms.
West Branch Reservoir Striped bass weighing up to 10
pounds can be caug·h l In deep
open' water areas by using small
crankbalts,.. spln,nerbalt• and
thrl!e- · to·· six-Inch Uve · shad.
Muskle fishermen have g~
opport\jnltleS )o c~tch 't rophy !Ish . ..
when tr6lllng traditional muskle ,
lures. In 1~89. there were 247

muskles over 30 Inches caught
here. Walleye are common and
often exceed four pounds. Trol·
ling crankbaits Is recommended.
Lake Erie
Variable weather conditions
continue to iimlt fishing opportunltles this week. Walleye re- .
main abundant In the western
basin reef complex, especially
near the Islands. Most anglers '

;baseball contest
: The rosters for .the second
:annual Bob Evans .Dream Team
'baseball game, which will begin
•Saturday at 1:30 p.m. at the
;university of Rio Grande's Stan·
:ley L. Evans Field, have been
•announced.
The game will feature players
' ~who have participated In the
'CinCinnati Reds Week In Florida
In the past few years taking on a
team of recent high school
graduates. .The Dream Week
team will feature Reds Hall of
Farner Brooks Lawrence, who
won his first 13 decisions In 1956,
Iris first season , In a Reds
t.tnlform.
~ Forml!r . WSAV -TV sports dl·
fJ!Ctor Bob Bowen, who twice was
· named West VIrginia Sportsc1as•ter of the Year. wllltoss out the
~ceremonial first pitch,
• Tickets wlll be $2.50 for adults
' and $1.50 for children younger
than 12 years old. Youth league
' piayers In uniform will be admit·
,ted free. The gates will open at
12:30 p.m.
• Preceding the game will be an
auctlon•of baseball memorabllla
and a luncheon, which will begin
at 11:30. Luncheon tickets wlll be
' $10 and can be purchased In
•advance at Peddler's Pantry,
Bob Saunders Quaker State and
Sideline Sports In Gallipolis, all
Ohio Valley Bank locations In
Gallipolis and Rio Grande, and
all Foodland locations In Galllpo.111, Point Pleasant and Pomeroy.
· Luncheon tickets are also good
for admllslon to the game.
Proceed~! from the auction and
the game will benefit the Arthrl·
tis. Foundation and Its Gallla
County chapter.

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McCumber was a story himself, overcoming severe back·
spasms to win his second West·
er n Open title. After nearly
withdrawing from the tournament during the first round,
McCumber forged ahead. and he
and Jacobsen finished . 72 holes
tied at a course record 13-under.
The playoff was pushed back to
Monday ·because of rain, fog and
darkness.

I

I ..:

I

are drifting welght·forward
spinners tipped with night crawlers ;ilong the lake bottom in
15 to 30 feet of water . Smallmouth
bass fishing is excellent with
mos t anglers fishing In shallow
water five to eight feet deep near
t~e Islands. Jigging a long the
bottom Is strongly recommended
to Catch these bronzebacks. In
the central basin, walleye and

:
•
'
•

yellow perch fishing were rated
fair from Cleveland to Ashtabula. Walleye anglers are 'using
weight-forward spinners and •
trolling with deep·divlng crank· •
baits and spoons at depths of25 to . ·
35 feet five miles offshore from .
Fairporl to Ash tabula.and.along the bottom In 40 to5!lfeet of water
two to five miles offshore from
Cleveland.

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~Rosters posted for all-star

Gol*tar
Sam sung
Soundtlign
Z111lth

put pressure on their Interior •
players . This way, when a shot Is •
missed we' re In position to get an •
offensive rebound."
Keeping the Trail Blazers at
bay on the boards In the second •
half, when they were oulre- :
bounded 30-19, kept the Western • ·
Coruerence champions from un- :
leashing their potent running •
attack.
•

:Small spinners work _best- on Lake Vesuvius spotted bass

' ............ .

H6 4514

step toward the basket Instead of '
taking a step Into them," said
Adelman. whose club Is 8-0 In the
playoffs when It owns the rebounding edge, 2-6 when It
doesn't.
TiiedefendlngNBAchamplons
did most of their damage on the
offensive end, outreboundlng the
Trail BlaJ:ers 19-8. Reserve John
Salleygrablled8ofhls9rebounds
under the Detroit basket.

OAKBROOK, Ill. (UP!) -The sP!!ndlng time In Mexico scuba minute canceliatlon In 1989.
- $1 mUllon Western Open, the dl:'.'ng and fishing.
This year's field is crowded
I started thinking about golf with top names, Including 89 of
• !!fCOnd-oldest tournament on the
' PGA Tour, boasts Its strongest when I was underwater In the top 100 money winners on the
field ever this week ·as tap Mexico, about16daysawayfrom PGA Tour and 15 of the top 20
players flock to the Chicago area It," Norman said. "I'm . ~ooklng players In the weekly ranklngs.
for a. final tuneup before next forward to getting back.
In the past, many foreign
weeks U.S. Open. ·
Curtis Strange, who wlll ·atplayers have skipped the West·
: Greg Norman, the PGA Tour's tempt to become only the second ern In Its regular lime slot- the
current money leader, wlll head player to capt11fe three straight last week 9f June- because of a
: the pack at Butler National after . U.S. Open titles next w.eek, also · confllcJ with the British Open.
taking the last three weeks off, wlll l&gt;e an hand after a last- . But litter the tournament con-

·'I'm not concerned where Jeff
Barlow finishes here this week,
I'm concerned about where the
University of Florida finishes ,"
said Barlow, a senior from
Jackson, Miss. 'There are four
seniors on this team and this Is
the last hurrah for us.
"This tournament Is not gonna .
make me a living - I'm an
amateur right now. This was one
of those days where the shots I ·
was vlsUI~IIEing turned out the
way I wanted them to."

"~11

105-99 trlumpll. Portland Coach
Rick Adelman said he was
"shocked" when he learned his
team had been outrebounded
54-48.
Now shock has been 'replaced
by steely resolve. The Trail
Blazers know they must be more
. effective underneath If they are
to even the best-of-seven series
Thursday night at the Palace.
"When they shpt, we took a

~ Action · underway in star-studded Western Open ·tournament -

.......
Mtlt411L . . . . . . . . . . f.-r.YOUI
IIIDIDiaiiA'h'' · - - · - - · I O ., ..

T

The Daily Sentinei-Page:-5

rTrail Blazers hope to even. series in Game 2 this evening

Florida leads. NCAA golf tourney
you to play without thinking tong
and hard. I'm using a long putter
now that has ~;ut 2.3 strokes off
my average. It's obviously made
quite a difference."
Arizona State's Phil Mickelson, the defending NCAA lndlvld·
ual champion, opened with a 75
as the Sun Devils stumbled to
8-over-par 296.
Last year, the Gators fell 24
strokes behind Arizona after the
. first round as Gamez shot a 62
and the' Wildcats opened Willi a
270.
.

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MW-0100 VALLEY STARS
Player
,
.
' School
1-Chrls S1ewan ........................ .... Meigs
2-Scott DeWeese .... ............. Pt. Pleasant
· 2-BrLam Vinson .................. Kyger Creek

3-Frank HudnaiL . ... .. ........ Pt. Pleasant
4-Dave Wells ................... Hannan Trace
6-T.had Halnes ............... ........... Oak Hill
7-Jotm Ully.................... .... Pt. Pleasant
7-Jasat Quillen ........ ............... Southern
S.JE'ff Hendershott ... ... .............. Wellston
J:J.Chrls Burnelt ................ .. .... Gallipolis
14, Brent Shuler ......................... Southern ,
14-CIIo)lll&lt;'r Willis ....................... Oak Hill
1~Ridl Corvin ........................... Wellston
16-0ewt'y Hunt .................... North GaJlla
16-CIIad Johnson ...... ........... Kyger C"'ek
18-Ed Crooks ................ ................ .Meigs
19-John Sipple ... ................. •Kyger creek
20-Joe Hammond ............. .. Southwestern
21-Marty Jones ................. .. SOuthwestern
22-John Conley .................... North GaiUa
22-Todd Saunders ..... : .... ... Hannan Trace
24-Richard Holland ............ .. Pt. Pleasant
25-Brenr DaVIes ................. Southwestern
44-George Smalley ........... .......... Jackson
Coadlea- .Dave Olleaby (8), Unlv. ef
Rio Grande: ·,Brett WUOoa (8), Gallla
o\cadomy: and Brei I Boolle t H), Hanllan
Trace
RllDS DRilMI WEEK TllMI

P._r
.
Cllf
1·Tony Little ................ ........ Somerville
2-llrt!tt Comeoclk ....................... Dayton
:J.CIIarlle CQ~r ........................ Dayttlll
:!-Ralph Loch .........................Cqlumbus
f· Bob Eutman ............... ....... Gallipolis
7-Don Bedtett .................... ,.. Clncltllllltl
8-Don Carr ................Huntlniton. W.VI.
8-Menla ~tchum ...... Hun,tlnJIIIt, W.Va.
11)-Ron Arrick ....................... Portamollth
10-Bob llvtlns ..... ............... :........ Bidwell
ll·Paul Blllupe ................. Cere&amp;, W.Va.
14-Earl Fosler ,........... HuntiRJIIIt, W.Va.
12·RIIty Sol'l'!IL.. ...........................Eatm ,.
12·Mlke Wllklnom ........... ....... , HunlavUit
14-Mike rar ..u .......... HuntiRJI&lt;It, W.Va.
111'Johllny Ecker ...................... GaiUpollo
18-Johll Hawley .... .................. Cinclonatl
· ,18-Bob McKenna ..................... ClnciDDAII
211-Dovi4Pedl. ........................ Ctoc:looatl
22·~d Slaley ......................... GaiUpolla
24-Ed Berkldt....... ,.................. Galllpolla
25-Stew Hllllt!Y ...................... Cincinnati
31-Curtla Drummons ..................... Orient
3:J.Scotl Hlnacb .... :......................... Sidney
32-St.,., Loe ............... Charleoloo, W.Va.
••ataokl l.awJ"tiCO ............... Cincinnati
~

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�Petga 6-lhe Daily
inal
--·-Middl...,..rt. Oh10·
~~~----~~------------------------------~~~~·~-v~J~~~~~~~----------------------------Th~u~~==y~,~J~U~M~7~,~1~9=90~
.!'
···Divorce granted
rendered
- - -·Meigs announcements _ _ Judgment
Bank One, Atllens, N .A., has
A divorce has been granted t~ t
C&amp;Ddldll&amp;elo speak
public Is Invited.
been awarded a judgment of. Sharon Wickersham trom Je!- "EMS rKlS
L - - 7 calls TY/ednep,l,.,.,
Dan Hleronlmus, Republican Trllllleeli lo meet '
$407,420.02 from MGM Farm
frey Wlchersham ln the Meigs
W '
~J
nominee tor the 17th Senatorial
The Chester Township TrusS
.
e n t

r--Local neWS briefs.- Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service
responded to seven calls tor assistance on Wednesday.
·
Atll: 18 a.m. the Pomeroy unit was called to Lincoln Heights
for Elza Gilmore who was taken to Holzer Medical Center.
At 12:58 p.m. the Middleport unit wen! to South Second
Avenue for W!Uiam Butcher who was transported to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
The Rutland unit, at 6: 49 p.m., went to College and Locust
Streets for Rebecca Elliott who was taken to Holzer, and at 8
p.m. another unit went to Meigs Mine No.2 for Everette Schuler
who was taken to Veterans.
At 8:05 p.m. the Racine unit responded to a call on Bashan
Rriad for Paul Ervin who was transported to Veterans, and at
8: 19 p.m. the unit went to Route 338 for Richard Sayre, also
taken to Veterans.
·
The final call for · assistance came at 9:15 a.m. when the
Middleport unit went to Russell Street tor Ken Rllchardson who
. was transported to Pleasant Valley Hospital.

·'

Deputies probe B &amp; E
Deputies of th.e Meigs County Sheriffs Department are
Investigating the breaking and entering of two churches, the
Carmel Church and the St. John Lut!leran Church In I;'lne
Grove.
·
·
According to the report, a tape player, boxoftoys; cookies and
pop, and two five-gallon water coolers were taken from the
Carmel Church.
At the Luthern Church it was reported that speakers to the
public address system were taken.
&gt; Deputies were also called to a residence on Happy HoUow
' Road. It was reported that a stereo and records were stolen. The
report stated that the husbllnd, who Is separated from the wife,
reported that he had taken the stereo. No further lnforcement
action was taken.

i_'
",

Second annnul car show set

·~

Dtstlct, wlll be speaking at the
Rutland Church of Gpd, State
Route 124, Rutladn Sunday at1i
a.m.
Hlerontmus will be answer
questions tollowinghhls talk. The
public Is Invited to attend to hear
the candidate speak on his
concerns tor the state and nation.
For additional information on the
candidate's visit. residents may
call 742-20ti0.
Plan bymn sin&lt;
.
A hymn sing will take place at ·.
the Zion Community Church,
locatedonRoute682ontheLower
Plains Road Sunday at 2 p.m.
AmongtheslngerswlllbetheOid
Time Religion Singers of Springfleld and the Spiritual Lights of
Columbus. The Rev. Eddie
Boyer, pastor, Invites the public
to attend.
•
Bible School
The Mt. Hermon United
Brethren Church (Texas communlty) will be having bible
school Monday through Friday
from 9:30-11:30 a.m. dally. Julia
Willis the director and the theme
Is "Island In The Son:" There will
be classes tor all ages, and the

tees will meet Tuesday at 7: 30
p.m. at the town hall.
Blood pressure clinic ·
The Harrisonville senior CIU·
zens Club will hold a blood
pressure clinic on Tuesday from
10 a.m. to noon at the town house.
. The public .Is urg.ed to
participate.
Gospel· sin&lt;
There will be a gospel sing at
. the Carleton Church on Kingsbury ftoad on Sunday at 7 p.m.
Featured singers will be Narroways and the Welts Family. Rev.
Clyde Henderson Invites the
public.
DAV meetiD«
. The Dlsa bled American Y.eterans and the ladles auxiliary wlll
meet Monday at7 p.m. at the hall
at 124 Butternut Ave. In Pomeroy . Refreshments will be
served.
IUsiory group to meet.
The . Bedford · · Lodl History .
Group will meet Friday at.7 p.m.
at the Modern Woodsmen Hallin
Burlingham. Anyone Interested
In history Is Invited to attend and
bring history r.elated Items.

$uinme, Ssrinfl

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992-2851
POMEROYI OH.

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Pomaov-Middleport,
ohio
.

· 'The

Daily Sentinel-Page

7

'

Indiana hit by tornadoes; several bljured
By United Press lnternallonal
'J)tui:u!erstorms swept across
th~ -central Plains Thursday
after spawning a series of tornad • that Injured at least 14
people In eastern Colorado, while
thunderstorms with gusty winds
and heavy rain pounded parts or
the Midwest.
The National Weather Service
said at least seven tornadoes
ripped across eastern Colorado
Wednesday night. The most
severe, damage Was' reported In
Limon, a town of ·.2,000 people
located about 75 miles southeast
of-Denver.
A twister whirled through a
12'block section of the town ' s
ce!lter, destroying trailers ln a
mobile home pari&lt;;, damaging
several buildings and knocking
out communications, said Sgt.
Larry Toler or the Colorado State

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:.Friday, variable cloudiness
md humid with a chance or
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High 80 to 85. Chance of rain Is 50

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(As of 18:30 Lm.)
Bryce and Mark Smllh
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:;ToJ!Ight, showers and thunderstorms likely with aiow near 70.
Light winds. Chance a! rain is 70

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Stocks

• The second annual Heritage Weekend Car Show will be held
; Sunday at the Meigs County Museum on Butternut Avenue in
. Am Electric Power. T", ..... ... 30
• Pomeroy. ·· .
.
.: The show Js sponsored by the Meigs County Pioneer and '· AT&amp;T ...... ... ...... ..................43~
. Ashland 011 ............. :.......... 36'-'f,
:t Hlsiorlcal Society and the Big Bend Cruisers Car Club.
·
'
Bob Evans ................. ; .... .... 12%
:· :frophles will be awarded to the top 10 as well as one best of
Charming
Shoppes ........ ...... , 10
: show. The also will be seven special trophies &lt;!Warded.
City
Holding
Co .................. 14'!4
": Registration Is 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Sunday and the entry feels
.Federal
Mogul.
............ ....... 22'-'f,
• $5.
Goodyf!ar
T
&amp;R
............
........ 3~
: There will be door prizes, food, music, games, and remote
Heck's
............
,
.........
...
........ 3*'
• control car races.
Key
Centurion
....................
13%
· Dash plaques will be given to the first 100 entries.
Lands'
End
.........................
16% '
For more Information call Kevin VanMatre at 992-3024 .
Limited
Inc
..................
.
......
49*'
· (evenings).
Multimedia Inc ........ ... ...... .. 81'h
Rax Restauran!s ~ ................. 2¥4
Robbins &amp; Myers ... ..... , ....... 20'h
Shoney's Inc .......... :.'.......... .i5~ ·
Star Bank ...................... ..... 21~
Rieh~ Sayre
Lee HUS$ti11,
Wendy's Inti.. ........ .:............ 6~
,
,'
Worthington In(! ~_ .. ,... ... ....... 24%
:Richard Allen. Sayre, 52, of
I...eC Otis_Russell, Jr., 62, of ~int
(IJmlled IDe. 's May sales I'OIIe
~te Route · 338, Racine, an PICIISIIIt, illed wednesdsy, June 6,
18'!0 lo $NII.7 Dlll,IIIIJI fi'GIII SS10.7
egtneer ·· for Dravo at Apple. 1!190' It PI: "il Valley H~ital.
mWion.) ' &gt;'li"
~ove, died Wednesday at Vete- 'He was a mlifed riverboat C8ptain·
I
'
. rans Memorial Hospital.
, · • for M&amp;G Transport and for O.F.
:Born on April 20, 1938 at Shelnr ComJ11111y. He lltended Bel·
- ~t~lle, W. Va., hew~- the lcmead United Methodist. Church
son of. the late P. K. Sayre and and was 8 member of the Cot·
que Ambrum Sayre.
' tageville Lodae lfS4, A.F. &amp; A.M.
t CLEVELAN'D (UPI) An
. He.was a membel'oftheGospel
Born April 30, 1928 In Mount
-Ohio
Lottery
spokeswoman
said
l;lgbtbouse Church ,at Leon, W· Allo, WV, be Wll a 11011 of the laic
Wednesday last Satu~ay's $6
V)l.. the Carpenters Local 650, Lee 0. "'aa~ Hussell, Sr. and the
million Super Lotto jackpot will
Pomrroy, and a member of 1a1e Jessie (DIIJSt) Hussell
,' ·
•be
shared by couples . from
He~ sutviml'by his wife · Q...
Hbmeroy Lodge, F. and , A. M.
Fairfield
and Lorain. , ·
8lld the Shrine Club. He was a p11a A. (Roush) Mussell; three
Richard
and Waneta Gordon of
~teran or the U.S. Army.
R~ L. of Xenia, OH, WiUiam R . ..
Fairfield
and
William and Rose
· He Is survto,:ed by his wife, of New Haven and Bruce of Point
Tolliver
of
Lorain
will receive $3
JUanita Pierson Sayre. a son, Pl.-it: one daugb!,l:r Sharon L.
million
per
couple,
before manQarrell Ray Sayre. ani! a daugh- ' R,andolpll · of Point P!Wan.; four
datory
withholding
of
taxes.
~r. Lora Jean Sayre, all of biolhets c.1 of Napolis OH
Baker
ntchard
Gordon,
60,,f'Qd
Racine;_a brother, Robert Kenna Donlld •'E. of Roanoke, VA;
his
58-year-old
wife
have
three
Sayre, Boynton Beach, Fla., and nald of Mt Alto and Robert A f
children
and
five
grandchUdren.
a sister, Wilma Jean Sayre, Columbia, SC· three · leiS ~
They said they intend to use the
Columbus.
Alice Santm~ of S sasantoft. Olf.
to retire, travel and
~Besides his parents, he was Mildred "Mickey" w Burge of money
purchase
a new au tomoblle.
pr:eceded In death by a sister. MiUwood and Sbirle A Was •
•
WIIUam
Tolliver Is a steel· 1
Clouts Mae Sayre.
Y •
ser
worker at the USX Kobe plant in
' Funeralserviceswillbeheldat man °~ Toledo, OH aod five
•
grandchildren.
Lorain, and his · wife Is self
1l).m Qn Saturday at the Ewing
Funeral .
.
ill be held 2
employed.
FUneral Home. The Rev. Kenservtces w
. at
neth Durst and the Rev . Herman p.m. 011 Saturday, June 10, 1990.at
Jordan, will officiate and burial Crow-Hussell Funeral_ Home wnh
wtll be In the Letart Falls the Rev. Eldon G. Shmgleton and
Gemetery. Friends may call at \ the Rev. Bobby Woods offtc:iating.
the funeral home from 2 to4 and 7 Burial . will foUow m Kirkland
Velerans Memorial
Mem~ G~ns~ where Masonic · . Wednesday
to 9 p.m. on Friday.
admissIons
Graveside Rites will be conducted
.Pearl
Perry,
Rutland;
and Paul
by the Couageville Lodge.
Ervin,
Racine.
\
Otto Mortzfeld
Visiting houn will be held at the
'
Wednesday
dischargesZelia
funeral home on Friday from 2--4
Taylor, Cathryn Maurer, Sadie
: Mrs. Cari Moore has received p.m. and 7 1DIIil9 p.m. ·
Trussell.
word of the recent death of her
uncle, Otto Mortzfeld, 92, of 922
'
43rd St., Kenosha, Wise.
':Born oli Oct. 6, 18971n Kenosha,
he was married to the former
Myrtle Smith or Middleport ln
1833. She worked at the Stansliury Drug Store before moving
til Kenosha .
• Mr. Mortzteld was a machine
operator at Simmons Co., before
retiring In 1960. He was a
member of Friedens Evangelical
I,utheran Church and Simmons
Local Union.
. : Surviving are his wife and tw.o
grandchildren. Preceding him In
death were a son In 1979 and a
daughter ln 1986, one brother and
three sisters.
; Funeral services were held In
the Friedens Church. Burial was
In Sunset Ridge Memorial Park.
• The Mortzfelds visited in
.,
Meigs County many times
lhrough the years. Besides Mrs.
Nfo6re, Oscar, Donna Jean and
I:arry Smith are nieces and
nephews.

.

City, et al, in the Meigs County
Court of Common Pleas.

Th~.

Pattolln Denver.
At least 14 people were Injured
but no deaths were reported,
Toler said. Rescuers were dtgglng through the rubble early
Thursday as uUIIty workers
attempte&lt;) to restore communi·
cations and power to the town.
Dozens of windows were blown
out and numerous vehicles were
overturned, Including two 18·
wheelers, Tolar said.
Gov. Roy Romer toured the
area Thursday, and N at!onal
Guard troops were posted In the
area to prevent looting, authorities said.
The powerful · thunderstorms
that created the tornadoes
pushed across the central Plains
states Thursday, dumping heavy
rain and hall over parts of
Nebraska, Kansas and eastern
Colorado during the early morn-

lng hours.
Elsewhere In the Plains states,
light rainstorms rolled through
parts otthe Texas Panhandle and
western Oklahoma as temperatures headed toward the 100s.
Strong bands of thunderstorms
with heavy rain and hall whipped
through Missouri, Illinois and
Indiana early 'Otursday, causing
flooding problems In some areas,
the weather servl!!e said.
The Midwestern storms moved ·
through ·central Iillno.ls and Into
Indiana, where powerful storms
Wednesday spawned tornadoes
and hlgb winds that Injured at
least three people Wednesday
afternoon.
The hardest-hit area was Corydon, a southeast Indiana .town
already declared a federal and
state disaster area because of
weekend tornadoes and flooding ·

last month. Three people ·In the
area suffered minor InJuries,
authorities said,
In the mid-Atlantic states,
thunderstorms dumped heavy
rain over Maryland, New Jersey
and Delaware. Storms with
heavy rain and wind were
reported across much of Pennsylvania, where nine counUes
were placed under a flood watch.
New England enjoyed warmer
weather Thursday after a s tu!r
born cold front dissipated. The
higheSt temperature In the sixstate region early ThurSday was
61 In Burlington, Vt.; Bangor,
Maine had the lowest at 47. Fog
and rain were reported In Boston.
The South was generally clear
and warm Thursday , but scattered showers stretched across
Florida and fog obscured parts of
Mississippi.

•

WEATHER MAP - Mornln« tbunderstonns will perlllsl over
the Mldwesl during the mornln« hours and the area will expand In
. size during the afternoon hours. Showers will spread Inland along'
the Canadian border and also norilt outofllteGull of California lnlo
ArlzoDL Temperatures will- lo near the cenlury mark aloag
the soulhern ller of stales by Friday arternooa, while pleasanl
condlllons continue over much of the remainder ollhe co1111try.
.

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Page-S-The Daily Sentinel .

Pomeioy-Middleport. Ohio

Thursday,

A tour ot Connie Hill's greenbouse filled With ' herbs, scented
geraqtums and other plants,
highlighted the May meeting of
the Riverview G11rden Club.
The club members also toured
Mrs . .Hill's flower gardens and a
lUIIe · pond. She gave each..one
attend!~g a start of straw
flowers.
·
. Following the tour the
merp bers returned to the Mme of
Ella Osborne. for a short business
meeting conducted by Marlene ·
· Putman.
.
.
.
Named to the nominating commlt\ee wer.e Janet Connolly ,

musicians In Ohio.
. In the process of ~lectlon,
careful corislderatjon :.vas given
to at taln!ng representation from
all are!ls of the state, keeping In
mind a balanced grade distribution and finding the most quailfled students for the positions
available In each section.
After five days of rehearsal, ·
the band will pertorm at the 1990
Ohio State Fair from Aug. 2
through Aug. 17 In Columbus.
COURTNEY A; LONG
The b;md Is celebgatlng Its 60th
anniversary at the Ohio State
Fair.
Kay and ,Jay Long of Marietta
Wilson and F!lusnaugh are
are announcing the birth of -a
representing. Eastern .for the
daughter, Courtney A.nne, on
.second time with the band.
Feb.14 at St. Joseph's Hospital in
Parkersburg, W.Va.
The Infant weighed six pounds
and . four ounces and was · 19
Inches long.
.
The Laurel Cliff Better Health
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Jacobs and
.G randparents are Ruih Anne
daughter. Krist!, Clearwater., · Club held their regular meeting and Lyle Balderson, Reedsville,
Fla., spent a lew days with his · 111 the home of Mfs. Elizabeth and Vlole.t Long, Belpre..
·.•
parents, Mr. and Mrs, Clifford Hayes In Chester. . ·
Great grandmothers are Hazel
Jacobs and atten(led their son,
Mrs. Sharon Wright and son, Balderson, Vienna, w.Va., and
Sean's graduation at Meigs High Jason, and daughter, Tammie Lena Long, · Marleita. Great ·
· &amp;;hool. ·
'' ·
and · friend, and Mrs. Jean graqdfather was the lat'e-Edward •
Mr. and Mrs. Pat Johnson and Wright, Mr. and ·Mrs. DOn Lo~~g, lind great grandparents
!jaughter, Kelly, Colurn.bus; Mr. Nelson, Mr. and Mrs. Denver were tjle late Mr. and Mrs. R.E.
and Mrs. Bob Mash, Christy and . Nelson, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest W!lllarris.
Bobble, akd Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Vanlnwagen and Mike Clellmd .
Pullins, sj)ent Memorial Day
were. visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
weekend With Mrs. Ann Mash.
Clifford Jacobs on Monday
'
tMr. and Mrs. Roy ,Howell, Mr..
evening.
.
.
Rev. Chris Meenach and the
and Mrs. MlckHowitl, Mrs. Iona
Mr. and Mrs .. Paul Jacobs, · sunshine ga~~gw!llbeconductlng
13rlckles,
Mrs. Frances . ·South Shore, Ky., visited his · vacation Bible SChool at . the
Klein, Sha . , Fla., were S11n·
mother, . Mrs. Tina Jacobs on Pomeroy Church oft he Nazarene ·
day dlniier pests ol r.frs. Emnia
Saturday,
.
Monday through June 15 from
Fox.
. t,.
Mr. and Mrs. steve Eblin spent ~ 6:30-8:30 p.m. ·.nightly, ..
. .
, ney. Glen ,McClung InVites the
,
.
.
. . .. a couple Of dayS' in Mansfield .. '
. Mr. and Mrs. Ben Wrlgllt and
, Larry Jacobs; Texas, ipent a: p)lbllc. ·For further ll1formatlon
· children, ar.d Mrs. Jean Wright
lew days With hiS .parents,· Mr. calt992·5908: Rev. Meenach uses
spent the weekend In Mansfield.
and Mrs. Cllffo~ Jacobs:
·hiS miniStry tO reach all ages.
Four students from Eastern
High School have been selected
to participate In the 300-member .
Ml·Ohlo State Fair Band.
Selected are Aaron WilSon,
percussion; Kyle Fausnaugh,
tuba; Nicole K.anawaskl, basst)on; ·and Karen Morris, alto
clarinet. ·
· The four were . selected by
Omar P. Blackman, director of
the band, to participate in the
select group.
· Applications were received
from schools across Ohio. All
· applicants were. recommended
.by their school · Instrumental
music teacher and represent
some the most honored young

Delores Frank, and Grace
Weber. The program committee
consist,!; of Janice Young, Maxine
Whitehead, Ella Osborne, Kqa
Young, and Marilyn Hannum.
Presenting devotions was
Grace Weber with a reading,
"God Bless America" and a
Memoria!Day prayer. Devotions
had been prepared by Opal
Harris.
The club voted to contribute to
the flag proJect at the Reedsville
Cemetery.
·
Refreshments were served by
Ella 9sborne, Janet Connolly,
and Delores Fran.k.

Birth announced

1990 ~

meets.

Riverview Garden

Ohio State Fair Band
chooses local members

June 7,

~ Others

at rending were Debbie .
Pickens, a guest. Betty Boggs, ·
Mary Allee Blse, Margaret .
Grossnickle, Opal Hwrrls, Gi·ace-;
Weber, Marlene .Putman; and:
'
Ruth Anne Balderson.

WANT

-.

ADS
WORK!

992•2156 -·

Laurel Cliff happenings

TR .EAT.S
COLLECTIBLE
.
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Communit)l·· calendar

D.OLIJS
10 AssORTED SttLES

•ta-w1999·
-

. 160197 . lf60200

.
TIIUBSDAY
at the church from 10: 30·a .m. to 6 n!sbed by the hostesses.
POMEROY- Blble.schoolwlll · p,m. flavors av,allable are choc·
.
be held .at" the Zkin Church of ' olate, vanDia, . peach, lemon,
PoMEROY -The Pomeroy · ·
Chl'lst .through June15 wlth the pllleapple, strawberry, ba1111na, . Senior Citizens Dance Club Is ·
closing program on ~unel7, 7:;!Q and butterscotch, Also available haviQg a dance Frld!IY from
p.m . .
, wlllbesloppyJoes,hotdogs,ham -8-11 p.m. Music Will be by the
· and· ham sandwl~hes, potato Happy Hollow Boys, Athens.
POMEROY ~ The Enterprise salad, cole slaw, · baked beans, Those attend!qg should bring
United Methodist Church will . -~hlcken and noodles With roll, . snacks for the snack table.hPub. have Bible ~hoolthrough Friday ple, cake, find beverages. Carry lie Is trlvitzd. ·
.JI
with ~;lasses from 9 to \1:30 a.m.
out of!lers wlll .b e available.
.
\
.
.
· "'
SATURDAY
. BRADFORD - Bible school
ROCK SPRINGS -The Salls·
BURLlNGHAM -The M9derq
wlll . bJe held ill ,the Bradford
bury Township Trust~ Will Woodmen ot America Camp 7230 ·
Cburch, of Chrlst:throllih Friday . meet Thursday at 7 p.IJI. at the .. wUI have a cookout Satilrtlay at
, . with clalaN. 9 to 1' 30-a.m. All ' township building.
~ ~"
6:.30 p.m. at the south bound park·
'chUcJren "of. the community are
.
·, on Route 33 near Darwin. Each
InVited.
.. '*' . •I
RACINE - Tbere will be, a famUy Is to bring a, covered dish.
..
't
regular meeting of the Racine · Hot dogs and hambu~ers will be
•·. Mm~J;&gt;Oin·- ~t~Mval seryt&gt; American ~glon Post 602 on., , er,ovld~
.
•~
' '"et!!!'wlilldei'l¥ay. at t$!M!dd)e'lburiday at"7: 30 p.m. Retreisti-'''"'·' '' •·· •· . · - ;.•, ; ·· ··
,port- Qlmmunlty Churc.h, 575 '' ments wtll ·be served following
BURLINGHAM -There· will
Pearl . St., 7: 30 each evening.
the meeting. · '..
· be a benefit slng.on Satllfday at-7.
There Will be dltfleren 1speakers
· p.m. at the Word of l,lfe Chureh
a~d ~tnaers each ntgbt. · ·
SYRACUSE -There Will be a In BUrlingham. Singers will, be
Big Bend Girl SCout Service Unit . Chosen Heirs,. Full Gospel Tra·
MIDDLEPORT -'TIJe Ev~ngemeeting on Thursday at 7 p._m. at ' velers,"Highway Gospel S!~~gers,
• line Chapter No. 172 Ol-der of tlie
Syracu5e Elementary SchoOl. All · Sea walkers, and m~.e . .
!;:as tern Star .will meet ThurSday
leaders should attend to discuss
~
at •7: 30 p.m&lt; Members .are to
s,urnmer day ,camp til be held· In
.SUND!\Y
bring a sack lunch. Offki~s are
July at Forked Run State Park.
POINT PLEASANT, .W.VA
to Wl!ar·street dre5ses.
·
-The
OhiO Kanauga ,Branch of
&lt;
•
POMEROY
-The
Pom~y
and Daughters of
the
Sons
POMEROY - 'J:~ ar,tnual tee
Group
of
AA
and
AI
Aiton
wtu
Pioneer
Rlve,
r men will holt;! their
cream social for "tHe Trllllty
meet
'Thursday
at
7
'
p.m
.
.
at
quarterly
meeting
on Sunday at 2
Church of Pomeroy Will be held
.
Sacre!l
_Heart
Catholic
Church.
~unty Li·
-p.m.
at
the
Mason
ThufS4ay, Friday, and Saturday
For · Information call brary at Point Pleasant, W.Va.
1-800-333-5051.
The public Is Invited to attend.

··

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EACH

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PORCELAIN.
n.r. DOL~ PRlNCESS

,,

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[auocv L)

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lnly with draft

.

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control.
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#9309

.·--stfN'sEAM

•The

BOb· Evans Farm .wlll•
·swtng,Into summer with two days
of outdoor music June 16 and 17, .
dutlng the 12th Annual Country
Music Convention at the Farm In
Rio Grande. ' . .
·
VIsitors to this lively 'event will
·see some of the region's finest
amateur musicians comi),!!te for
-a total of $2,000 In prize money.
·Preliminary contests begin at
· 12: 30 p.m. Saturday; the stage Is
open beforehll!ld for any com pet·
!tor or visitor wishing to play:
The Farm opens at 8:30a.m.,
and admission to both the Farm
and the Country Music Conven·
Uon Is free.
Reg!strjltion for the weekend
competition Is 9· a.m. to 12:30
p.m. Saturday; competitors' en·
try fees are $2 per event and $5
per band. Categories Include
fl~ttop guitars, banjos, fiddles
and mandolins. Competing
bands will present both vocal and
, Instrumental selections for judgIng. Competition Is open to all
.ages.
. An enclosed shelter house Is
available Saturday for jam ses·
s!ons ~fter the competition·, and a
square dance wUI be held from 8
. p.rt.. to 10 p.m. Saturday.
, Sunday the stage will again be
•open before noon for playing, and
·Cioggers are welcome to join the
musicians on stage at 12: 30 .p.m.
· The Bob Evans Farm Is open
dally from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Memorial Day to Labor Day, and
offe" horseback riding, canoe- 1
!ng, and tree wag~~n tours that
10 a.m. to 4
leave hourly
p.m. · For more lnfprmatton on
. the Country Music Convention,
or tile Farin', wrlte: The Bob
· Evans Farm;·Route 35, P.O. Box ·
330, Rio Grande, Ohio 45674, 'o r
ca11614-245-5305. ' ,

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#2407

CHARCOAL
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BVJ)DY L 24it GRILL

)

,....
FRIDAy ··
POMEROY -The descend·
LONG BOTI'OM ..-the·annual ants of George and Anna 'l'homa ·
·flag day picnic of . the" Return WellS Will hold a reunion • on
JonatiJall Meigs Chapter DAR Sunday at the senior citizens
wtU be held Friday at 6 p.m. at
center beginning at 11 a.m. Bring
the Hackett ~ottage In Long a covered dish and table service.
Bottom. The meat, beverage, All famUy members and friends
and tllbie service Will be filr- ,. ate Invited to at tend.

220 EAST MAIN . .

- - -- -

,_lOY, 01110

· . By WILLIAM C. TRO'IT
United Press International

NEW YORK .( UPI) - Bluesy
rock legend Ertc Clapton kicked
off a live multi-city broadcast of
the Second International Rock
·Awards Wednesday and ·mtnutes
later walked ollwlth at! 'Elvis' as .
the world's most valuable guitariSt.
·
The ceremony , broadcast live
by ABC, originated from a
Manhattan armory and featured
David Bowie singing "Sultrogate
City" from London. Winners In 10
categories walked off with
statues of a young Elvis Presley
anti presenters pointedly dubbed ,
eae\l .prlze an 'Elvis,'
Pepper-tongued comedian
Sam K!nison co-hosted wttli actor
Gary Busey, and the controversial comic vowed to avoid the
kind of language that earned
· Andre!" Dice Clay a lifetime ban
from.M'fV d11rlng presentation of

the VIdeo Music Awards.
Clapton, however, was the first
to give broadcast censors fits.
After playing the night's first
live performance With ,another
blues gqltar legend; Buddy G11y,
Clapton accepted hiS award With
a modest, "I'm too old for tbiS

Rock Awards

...•
'

Theevenlng:s first 'Elvis' went Laurie Anderscln, Iggy ·PoP, ;
to Alannah Myles, named " New· Patty Smyth, and Bo D!ddley. : ~
"Late Night With David Letter~ .•
comer of ,the Year" against
man"
muslctan Paul Shaffer ·:
nominees Bad EngliSh, Lenny
jolited
model
Christie Brlnkleyl n : .
Kravitz , Skid Row, and Stone
presenting
the
'Elvis' for JM:!!t::
Roses. ·
keyboards
to
Brinkley
's hu ~ ··
Mrosmlth captured ' 'ArtiSt of
band,
B!lly
Joel.
;• '· ·
the Year" agalnstnominees Fine ·
Joel
beat
Out
Elton
John
Young Cannibals, the Rolll~~g
· • ·'
Stones, Bonnie Raitt and the Kate 'Bush.
Bonnie
Raitt,
who
recently
~
B -52s.
four
Gnimrllles.
continued
her
·;
Lou Reed presented the award
for "Album of the Year" to Tom wtnnmg ways by taking themoi't ::
valuable female award.
: :•
. Petty for "Full Moon Fever."
Steven
Tyler,
singer
for
Aet'P:
::
Petty beat out Aerosm!th, the
.
smith,
won
the
most
valualil~
. : .,
Stones, tlie Fine Young Cannimale
·
a
ward.
•
;
•
bals and former Eagle DOn
Don
Henley
won
the
besl
:
Henley lor best album.
Other presenters for the songwriter of the year award . • ·.~
Best bass player honors we!'t :~ ·
awards - · whose nominees are
to
Nathan East and be&amp;t -~
drawn from the ranks of Top 40
. radio· and are primarily middle· · drtunmer, to the Stones' CharUe :•
•
oHhe-road rockers - Include Watts.

SEE JANE AND TED AND TOM, TOO: There was. an
Interesting threesome at Tuesday night's Dodgers-Atlanta
Braves .g ame In Los Angeles. Jane Fonda ~at In a front-rowseat
behind the Braves' dugout and on one side of her was her
· boyfriend Ted Turner, who owns the Braves. On Fonda's.other
side was none other than her estrangejl husband, Tom Hayde~,' .
s-~ ."
the California state assemblyman. Ha;rden didn't let Turner .s
Clapton also took the "{riving
status as the Braves' owner keep htm frol'(l wearing a Dodgers
Legend
bf the Year'·' award.
.
Jacket a.nd cap.
·
. · . . .
C&lt;VJCEI;LATIONS: Madonna's Infected throat has forced
. ' 'Tour of the Year' ' winners,
her to cancel another show. She scratched her Wednesday night
the Rolling Stones, were shown
peiiormance lri Worcester·, Mass., and those with t!~kets wUI
stomping 011t their special brand
get refunds since the show won't be rescheduled. Last month
of rock .' n' roll In _front of the
Madonna had to cancel a concert In Rosemont, Ill. , because of
Ber)In Wall In a video of their
her tltroat problem ..• RAin l(ovle, the Vletilam War paraplegic
recently completed world. tour.
whose hawk~ to-dove transformation was portrayed In the movie
Charlie Watts also was named
"I;klrn on the Fourth of July," fell Ill and had to miS.~ an
the world's best drummer.
appearance at Harvard Unlver·s tty'Wednesday .. Kovic was to
Aerosmlth, Paul McCartney,
· have spoken at Harvard's Cla~s D!!Y exercises but a spokesman
Bon· Jovi, and the Who also were
· said he apparently fell Ill just before gettin&amp; on a plane ln .Los
nominated for "Tour of the
Angeles for the trip to Boston. The spokesman did_not specify
Year."
. what was wrong with ~ovic but said It was related to his
paralysis and . probably would have required emer~en,cy
s hosp!tallzatfon' It he had made the trip.
· ·.
, ... •·
McCARTNEY BARl'-S BACl'-: Paul McCartney .dldn t like
belng'called greedy by the manager ofU2 just because he !lad a
.
· coi'portate sponsor lor his recent tour. ·.Paul McGuln~.
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Conwomen should .alni for a 15-25
speaking at a music forum last month, denounced McCartney ·
trary to popular opinion, preg- , poundwelghtgaln.Obesewomen
for let ling Visa sponsor htm and also lashed the Who for having
. nantwomell with healthy diets do · shoilld gain at least15 pounds but
· a beer company back their tour last year, es~Jec!ally since the
not need vitamin or mineral
seek !ndlvjdual nutritional
Who's Peter Townsend Is a reeoverlng alcoholic. Townsend
supplements except for Iron, and
counsell.ilg.
.
wouldn't comment but McCartney responded with .a n ·
can gain more weight then
The guidelines said vitamin
e!ght·letter curse word. "M:Y ad...tce to Paul McGuinness Is to ' previously thought, acc_o rdlng to
and mineral supplements are not
grow up," McCartney said In Rolling Stone. ·
.
a division of the National
only unnecessary,. but could
CARNE ClEARS UP CASE: A Cincinnati judge.decided not
Academy of Sciences.
adversely Interact with nutrients
to sock It to Judy Carne over an 11-year-old charge. Carne, whO
The Institute of Medicine's new
obtained · through a sufficient
• played the "sock It to me" girl on "Laugh-In" In the 1960s, was·
guidelines were .Included In a
well-balanced diet.
fined on!y $250 for falling to appear In court In 1979 to be retrled .
study released Wednesday.
"Evidence Is not suffiCient to
on a charge of using a forged prescription ·to get sleeping pills
According to the Institute,
conclude that routlnesupplemen·
and the forgery charge Itself was droiJped. Carne was arrested
recent research showed that
tatlon with other nutrients is ·
last month In New York as she entered the country when
warranted , although clearly
Increased weight gain, particu· immigration ·agents discovered tlte 11-year-old Cincinnati
larly In the second and third
there are sltuatlo~s · requiring
cliarge stili pending against her. ·:J!:m,not bitter," Car~e sai(l
trimesters, · helps deter , low · special consideration," the 11\Stiafter the T~~sday court session. "I m so relieved that It s over. .
blrthwelght:
.
.
. tute said, noting the exceptions
and so quickly." ·
. .
Include complete vegetarians:
The study said average-sized
GLIMPSES: Actor John Lithgow Is concentrating on a sma.l l
women should gain between 25-35 · smokers and 11sers of alcohol or
audlerice- kids. He has just released a 30-mlnute home video
pounds . during pregnancy, apll!lclt drugs.
on which · he sings traditional tunes and some ·of his own
proXImately 10 pounds more than
"Since nutrient supplements
compositions while accompal!ylng ·himself. on guitar . . The
typically contain multiple nut-.
what the group recommended In
original songs, which have titles like "Mr. McCloud" and ''Big
previous regulations.
rients, there Is the potential for
Kids Scare the Heck Out of Me," came from so11gs that Lithgow
Underweight women at the
nutrient-nutrient Interactions
sang to hiS own children ... John F. Kennedy Jr.IS preparing for
start of pregnancy should gain
during absorption and metabohis third try at the New Yorl! bar e?&lt;am by taking a rey!ew
!ISm. An Increase In the concenbetween 28-40 pounds, the lnstlcdurse-i n Albany N.Y. Kennedy, 29, has failed tile tes ttwlceand
tute said, · . while ove_rweight ·
If does so .again in )u!y, he'll lose his job with the Manhattan
·
. district ~ttorriey's office.

ana :

wQn

..

.... .l:

.

'

tratlon . of one nutrlen.t . may
adversely affect the avallablllty,
absorption or utilization of other
nutrients provided by the supplement and by diet,'' the Institute
said.
The Institute said Iron "Is the
OnlY known nutrient for which
requirements cannot be met
reasonably by diet alone". and
recommended that during tile
seeond and third trtmester' pregnant women take 30 mlll!grams
of ferrous Iron dally.
Blit . a spokeswoman for the
nutritional supplement Industry
called · the· study "Incredibly :·
trrespons!ble' 1 and accused the
Institute of "bias" against the .
supplement Industry.
"There's been so much research and sound sclentlflc evl·
dence to shOw the need for
nutritional supplements In the
diets ' of pregnant women,'' said
Katherine Smith of the Council,
lor Responsible Nutrition.

~

Kate Rliddon, spokeswoman::
for tile American College of ••
Obs tetrlc!ans and Gynecologists, ;·
said her group advocates Iron :
and folic acid supplements
pregnant women who are good ;e11ters. But she said doctors·:
routinely prescribe vitamin :;
supplements.
.
. : •.
"There's a general feeling that : .
most women· don't eat proper ·
diets," Ruddon said. ''And a lot, of .;·
women ' thlrtk the more. (vitam· :
Ins) the better, but that c.ou!d be.:,
very harmful."
.
:•
. Another Widely h~ld view is: ;
thatcalfelne during pregnancy Is •
bad. But the Institute advised :
limited consumption of caffe!· :;
nated products, saying there Is •
only "Inconsistent and fragmeti· :
tary evidence" that caffeine I~ ; ·
dangerous for the fetus. The: •
Institute also discouraged expec-· ·
tant mothers from using special: :
protein powders or formulated;:
high-protein beverages.
-

tor&lt;

·Quirks in the: new~
pride In cleaning up and sprucing
Menu.order sparks ruckus
L'AKELAND, Fla. tUPI) -A ·up for Superman, we .get · to
city e,mployee who . ordered a . having things looking pretty
nice," Kommer said.
meal worth more tJ!an $500 on a
.
-'T""- .
restaurant $111 certificate given
to ·him•as· ~ks ·f or service has , ~ftilall players ·choose prom
'flo la:lid'ed"htin's@tf·jn hot water.
over playoffs "'~
·
NARRAGANSETT, R.I. (UPI)
OfJiclals said they ar.e·going to
- ,. When Narragansett High .
suspend him fr.oin hiS job as an
SChool's girls softball playoff
assiStal! t shift superVtser at a
power pl!!nt as punishment.
game fell on senior Pfl'm night,
the players had to decide
James · R. ·. Moran's fl;'ollc
through the menu at .the Foxf!re whether to bat or boogie.
They chose to dance - and
Inn lncfuded 33 jumbo shrimp
cocktails, one chateaubrtand and forte)ted the game. Now the Lady
three lobster tails. The bill added Mariners w!ll be out of the state
tournament If they lose once
up to $513.95. Employees who have worked .more, and they think that:s foul
for the city 10 or more years·are play.
"My prom date Is an athlete
given open-ended restaurant gift
certificates for two as a token·of and he told me to play," Jody
thanks. said Stephanie lt. Frank- Laurie, one of four seniors ori the
lin, acting emplOyee relations team, said Wednesday. •"How
director. But Moran overstepped could l tell him, 'You j.ust blew
$300 on a limo, tuxedo and'
the bounds of good taste. ·
tickets, now have a good time at
· Moran's supervisors at Lakehind Electric &amp; Water recom- . the prom by yourself"!"
Athletic Director Bernard Nor·
mended he be fired, but city
mand
Ill, who Is also the girls'
officials countered with a twosoftball coach, said he realized
week suspension without pay.
Robert Grizzard, Moran's law- there might be a schedule con·
yer, said his client did nothing filet. The opposing team from
wrong because there was no llmit North Providence agreed to
on the amount of food he could reschedule the game, but the
order. Moran, who has offered to Rhode Island Interscholaslic
repay the amount, wl!lappeal the League denied the request.
"They were all torn up about
suspension, Grizzard said. . .
''They ordered lots of food and whether to play or go to the prom.
had a wonderful time," Grizzard If we had played the game, the
said. "They were told there. was girlS wouldn't have got to their
no limit on. the ticket so they prom until 10: 30, so I made the
decision to forfeit the game for
didn't worry about lt."
them," Normand said.
"I tried to put mysg!f In tqe
Superman rules MetropoUs
players' shoes. Fifteen years .
METROPOLIS, Ill. (UPI)
For Superman fans from around ago, I couldn't go to my junior
the country, the plaQe to be this . prom and It was devastating for
week Is Metrop(ll!s, the small me and for my date. She was
southern Illinois town that has up for prom queen and ended
adopted the "Man of Steel" as its up going to !he prom with my
best friend.
favorite son.
"As long as I'm In education, .
On Thursday, the town "kicks
off Its annual Superman Celebra- I'll be darned If I let another kld
tion, and th'e scope ·of tr!b~tes . to m.ISs a prom.:· he said:
the comic book superhero would ·
depress any of Supen:nan's
archrtvals.
A bigger-than · life statute of
SU~man adorns the Superman
Square next to the Massac
Count}' Courthouse; b(llboards
. on the way Into town proclaim the
BAYONNE, N.J. (UPI) ~ A ,
town of about 7,000 as the "Home ship ran aground In t)le narrow
of Superman."
K!ll Van KuU just after dawn
There's a Little Miss Superglrl . Thursday, sp!lllng 130,000 gal·
and· Mr. SuperbOy pageant.
Ions oJ heavy fuel oil Into the
There's a Superman Parade,, a waterway separating New Jer·
Super DOg Show, Super Car Show ' sey and Staten Island, the Coast '
- and the Superman Museum Guard said.
·
and 'Film Festival. ' For athletes,
It was the third·major oU splU
· the Supertrek Bicycle Race and
In New York Bay thiS year.
the Superman Road Race are of
the vessel ·Nautilus. was
note.
.
headed to the INT"r Terminal In
· Mayor Bill Kommer sa.ld the
Bayonne at 5:20 a.m. when the
decision to officially adopt Superaccident occurred, -said Coast
man In 1972 has Improved the
Guard Lt. Cmdr. Paul Milligan.
mood and finances Metropolis,
''l.n ltlal reports are that ~30,000
which shares the name of the
g11llons of No. 6 heavy fuel oil
comic book character's fictional
spilled,'! said MIWgaJi.
.
liome. Merchants and residents ·
Clean-up ,crews were ' dis·
enthuslas tic ally spruce up the patched to assess the damage
town before the festival begins.
aild begin containing tbe spill, be
''People take quite a bit of said.
·
.
'

-

&lt;'

cduntry music'
will fill farm
over :weekend.

People iri the news.-___, Top 40 bands vie for second
"
.

X

I

t

~~::~::-~·~J:un~e~7~·~19~9~0~----~--~~----._~~-----·~P~'~'·~~~M~~~-~~~~~~~~~O~h~~------------~--~~~~The~·-o_aily~~--~-in_•_-~AM~,-~~
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Nutrition over .· vitamins for pregnant wome~f

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�The Daily Sentinel-Page 11

r:
~ Page-1 0-The

Daily Sentinel

Beat of the Bend
By BOB HOEFLICH
. ,· .Lively Vera Beegle, retired
.president of the
Bank ln
Racine, will
il)ark her 94th
.blr.thday tomorrow, June 8.
, Vera appre,ciates all of the
!tlends and relallv.es who sort of
·~~regularly that things are o.k.
. 'with her. She does lives alone
and does get along well. ·She
(oves hearing from friends. Her
:a~Ciress ls P.O. Box 232, Racine,

Thursday. June 7. 1990

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

A happy birthday••.
the calls. In addlton, 92 more
runs were made by Vte transfer
unit.
Busy, busy, busy .
. Charles Alkire of Racine has
been having some very serious
h ealth problwms over the past
six weeks or so.

· Following major bypass heart
surgery at Grant Hospital In
Columbus, he suffered three
strokes. :· After three weeks at
Gran·t Hospital, he was moved to
the Manor Care Nursing and
Rehabllita!lon Center., ·140
County Line Road, Westerville.
4§7TI.
Qhio 43081, where he has been
.- J lob Byer, director ofthe Meigs located lor the past three weeks .
His wife, Jean, whom you all
i:;opnty Emergency Medical Ser·
:Vloes, reports that units of the . know as Miss Jean, the kinder·
Services answered 212 calls dur- garten teacher In the Southern
Local School District, Is staytng
J,ri'gMay.
; . Of the total, 109 persons wer'C with relatives In Columbus so
taken to Veterans Memorial that so can be with Charles every
Hospital; 34 to the Holzer Medl· day.
i:ai Center; seven to Pleasant
---~---Valley, and seve~;~ to other
Todd Montanez, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Agustin (cq) Montanez of
~pspltals.
·
, Calls answered by varlou!$ Areclbo, Puerto Rico, and granduntis during the month include:
son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
Ables, Vale St., Pomeroy, gradu·
Columbia, two; Middleport, 43;
Pomeroy, 56; Racine, 35; Ru- ated May 20 from Marque)te
tii.nd , 42; Syracuse, 18, and University, Milwaukee, Wise .,
;FUppers Plains, 16. Units tra- with a bachelor of science degree
1/eled 5,836.6 miles In answering In electrical and computer eng!-

neerlng at the university's 109th
commencement.
Attending the graduation ceremonlel were his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Agustin Montaliz; sons,
Shawn and Agustin, Jr., from .
Puerto Rico; Carolee Moqtanez,
New Haven, Conn., and Mr. and
Mrs. Ables of Pomeroy. Durlnghthe week or gradua Uon, the
group visited numerous places of
Interest In Milwaukee and In
Chicago, Dl. Todd has accepted
employment In Mjlwaukee.

--------

Mildred Shuster, Lincoln'
Heights, Pomeroy, observed her
80th birthday on May 31.
This week on Tuesday, Mildred
and husband, Gerald, were: on an
outing to King's Island near
Cincinnati. What did they do?
Well, among other things they
rode what we call The Beast.
Now 1$1hat gutsy er what? Some
of us -and count me Ilion thatwouldn't get on It If you gave us
the jlark. Alta go, Shusters!

---.-----

Aaron and Iris Kelton, former
Meigs residents, are hanging In
there at their home In Quinton,
Va.
Both of them have crippling
arthritis. Aar!ln recently had to
undergo surgery on one of his

Senate getting last
chance on crime bill

"The economy's already mov·
ing sidewalls. Donald Trump's
played a vefy vlsll:)le role In this
town. "
Trump. who has acknowledged
he has been trying to resolve a
cash shortage, was sued Tuesday .
by bond holders In two Trump
casinos who charged that he
neglected the Trump Castle and
Trump Plaza In Atlantic City,
N.J., lq favor of his glitzy newTaj
Mahal, blUed as the world's.
largest casino.
The class-action ·suit c!larges
breach of contract, fraud and
violation of Securities and Exc hange Commission regulations.
Trump has not denied that he
may be forced to give up chunks
of his business empire, which
includes three Atlantic City cl.slnos, prime Manhattan real estate
and the Trump ShutU11 airline
linking Boston. New York and
Washlngton.

Trump trouble sends
tremors through city
her husband since a February
NEW YORK (UPI) - Donal!!
Trump's battle to save his
marital spat Involving actress·
empire from a cash crunch has
model Marla Maples, the alleged
" other woman," Issued a state·
bondholders boWna. bls em·
ployees worried and fello1" develment through her lawyer saying
opers nervous as cats.
she fully backs the mogul as he
But estranged wife Ivana Is all . confronts his financial woes.,
confidence apd comfort.
. But she may be the only one
· ''Donald and I are partners In · who's standing firm, Trump's
marriage and In buSiness," Mrs.
army of employees In hofels and
Trump said In a statement
casinos lnNewYorkandAtlantlc
Wednesday, as the Trump em·
City, bondholders an.d other
plre teetered precariously . " I
developers now reportedly are
will stand beside him through
worried about how a Trump
thick or thin and for better or
collapse would affect their lives.
worse.' '
' "This Is terrible for ·New
Mrs. Trump, separated from
York, " Phil PlleVSkY , a big
developer In New York said In
Thu~sday's Dally News. " If
wrists 11nd just after that fell In
something happens to Donald
theKeltonyardhurtlnghlsback.
Iris a Iso has 1ow blood pressure · Truump, It will put a damper on
.
development around the city.
·
which m akes her fa11 around a 1o1
·
bed
)
nd
and was sc . u ed to u ergo Perception Is really Important In
heart cathertzatlon today..
·.~~~~;:tness , particularly to the
Doesn't sound too great, but
you know what? · I'll be the·
Even the government 1 ~ sweat·
Keltons still find aspects or their lng It out.
"It's not coming at a parti,cu·
lives to be amused about even
with the problems .
.
larly good time," Sam Ehren·
They've learned to look for the
halt, regional commissioner of
silver lining. Wegottadothattoo
the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statts-

WASHINGTON (UPI)
Warned by Democratic leader
George Mitchell that time has
expired, the Senate must decide
If It wants an anti-crime bill or If
II wants to side with those who
oppose a proposed ban on some
m Wtary-style assault weapons.
Mitchell scheduled for Thursday a sec!lnd .a nd probably final
vote on ltmltlng debate .on the·
anti-crime blll . . U debate Is
limited, the Senate would be on a
direct path to final passage,
possibly by the end of the week.
If the attempt falls , Mitchell
said Wednesday " that's It" for
the anti-crime package, which
the Senate first began
· considering May 21.
"ThiS is the vole on the crime
blll," Mitchell said. " If anybody
Is for a crime bill, they have to
vote for . (debate·llmltlng)

Bankers owed some $2 ,.bllllon
by Trump are reportedly presstng for the sale of some assets, for
management changes at
Trump's principal holding com·
pany and fOr a much more
conservative operating style.

cloture."·

The class-action suit against
Trump was llled by Peter Suyvesant Ltd., described In court
papers only as "a corporation."

ikiee;p••:i.• •~t~lclsi
, t~o;ld;.;;th~e~N~ew;sii.• • • • • • • • • • •

and we

RUTlAND FURNITURE'S ANNUAL TENT SALE

PHOTO S~BIE'S- This,graphic, released by NASA Wednesday, shows the series of frames1111apped by Voya1er 1 on Its way out of
.
the solar system. (UPI)

ON TU LAWN OF Till OLD RVTI.AND HIGH SCHOOL ON HAIN ~.IT

'

Hundreds Olltems , .

·Solar, syste~ 'family portrait' released

FridaY (I Saturday
.Are Tbe r'laaJ z
DayaOIOur
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DbcoUIIted •

laThe .T eftt
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Den'lllfia Tlwato
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3 Pc. Blue Plaid
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3 Pc. Rust Plaid......'1499.............s594
3 Pc. Brown Plaid...'799.............sa99
2 Pc. Brown.;. .•.:.............tsso.............
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system where the mlllton-mUeper-hour solar wind Interacts
with dust and gas In the Inters tel·
lar medium.
Launched in 1977, the Voyagers
produced many new discoveries
but were unable to find any
evidence of extraterrestrial life.
''There Is no evidence - not a
smidgen of evidence - suggest·
lng life anywhere else. And for
me, that undersc.ores the rarity ·
and preciousness of the Earth
and the life upon It," Sagan said.
"The pcirtralt ol the planets
that has now been taken Is, It
seems to me, In the same
tradition as the extraordinary
photographs of the whole Earth
taken by the Apollo astronauts on
their way to the moon, which tor
the first time gave everyone a
sense of the Earth as a small
blue·and-wblte world set In the
'Velvet blackness of' splfce," he
said.
"For many people, It underlines the vulnerabilitY and .fragilIty of the Earth. It seems to me
thiS portrait of the solar system
has some similar feeling. " .
Two · television cameras
aboard the craft took the pictures
over a lour-hour period starting

States regain power to regulate
computerized telecommunications

TENT SALE

Washed
Pine
'
Vaughn Bassett
With Nite Stand........'1599.. ,........s798
Honey Pine
With Nite Stand
..........'s99............
ssaa
.
'
Pine Bedroom Suite With
Cherry Finish .......:.....•1s99...........S899
Contemporary Oak
With Nite Stand.........•120o...........s697
Cherry
Bedroom Suite ..........'21ss.....:..s1

~

Because of a coincidental tech·
WASHINGTON (UP!) - A
historic but ''bumbling" photo- nlcal fluke, Earth appears to be
graph of the solar system taken In the mlds I of a huge sunbeam.
from deep space showed Earth Mercury, Mars and Pluto, on the
and Its planetary neighbors as other hand, were not visible from
mere pinpoints or light In the · Voyager l's perspective.
''On that bl~e dot, that's where
"velvet blackness of space."
"Astronomy has always been · everyone you know and everyone
said to be a humbling expe- you ever heard of and every ·
rience," said astronomer Carl human being whoever lived lived
Sagan of Cornell University In out their lives," Sagan sa id at a
Ithaca, N.Y. ''I think this picture news conferenc.e at .NASA
headquarters.
underscores that point."
"It's a very small stage In a
The 8-by-10-lnch black-and·
great
cosmic arena. And again,
white photograh was taken Feb.
13 by Voyager 1 as the nuclear· just speaking for myself, I think
powered space probe soared out this perspective underscores our
of the solar system on an endless responsibility to preserve and
odyssey after completing a revo- cherish that blue dot, the only
lutio!lary exploration of the solar home we have," he said.
No other 'photographs have
· system.
ever been taken of the solar
It was released Wednesday .
The photograph, dubbed the . system from that far away a~d
"picture of the century" by some no other space probes are
astronol'l'lers, Is a mosaic made planned that could capture such
up·o f 60 Images taken by Voyager Images, said project scientist
nearly 40 biUion miles from Edward Stone.
"This was Voyager 's last
Ear.th, and is probably the last
light1 " . said Stone, a scientist
Image It wlll ever take. ·
In the mosaic, whlchcostabout fmm the California Institute or
$200,000 to produce, Earth, Ve- Technology In :Pasadena, Calif:
Voyager 1 and Its companion
nus, Saturn, Neptune and Jupiter
appear .as tiny points of light space probe, Voyager 2, are
· salling into deep space, se~rch·
arr&lt;~nged around a much larger
tng for the boundary of the solar
white sun.

•Free Delivery
•Financing Available
(With Approved Credit)
•On·SHe Service Department

Stop /nAnd

SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) - A
federal court has given stales the
power to control the multibillion·
dollar. market In computerized
telecommunications, a ruling
that may force the Bell compan·
les to set up subsidiaries to
handle such services as au to·
matic banking . and alarm
systems .
·
The decision Wednesday by the
· 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals
overruled the Federal Communi·
cations Commission, which had
put regulation of the lndustry.lh
the . hands of the federal
goverrunen t.
State regulators . now may
require the nation's Bell opera!·
lng companies to set up independ·
ent subsidiaries to provide spe·
clallzed computer services that
use Ute same telephone lines as
. regular cons.umer phone service.
The decision goes' to the heart
of control over the decade-old,
multibillion-dollar market In
such computerized communication services as automatic bank
teller machines. electronic mall,
voice mall. compu,terfzed data·
bilse serVIces, afarm services
and electronic meter, reading,
according to Pacific Telesis
spOkesman Steve Han1s.
The ruling may be appealed to
the U$. Supreme Court.
Mark Fogelman, attorney lor
the California PubliC Ut111tles
Commission, which led the
charge against the FCC preemption of state con)r.olsald, "We are
delighted with the victory. This Is
a big win for. the states."
The court overturned an Aui\ISI 1985 FCC decision that held
federal law preempted state
regulation . of Intrastate computerized services.
.
The FCC would bave allowed
the Bell companies to merge the
regulated telephone service basic consumer telephone services - with specialized, non·
regulated computer services.
· States feared the Bell compan·
lea would use their ,monopoly .
control of local telephone ex·
changes to pass on costs to

consumers that should haye gqne
to purchasers of unregulated
computerized services .
·
The state regulators also
feared Bell companies would
exercise their power over access
to local telephone lines to galn·an
unfair competitive edge by put·
ling their own &lt;;omputerlzed
services on limited telephone lin~
space ahead of independent
•
competitors.
The Bell companies and other
telecommunications concerns
maintained It would be cheaper
and more efficient to olfer the
services under federal regulation only.
' Judge William Norris found
the FCC 's abrupt 1985 a.bout-face
on the Issue of regulating compu·
terlzed services " arbitrary and
capricious" and therefore a
violation of the Administrative
·
Procedure Act .
The ruling pushes the FCC
back to a ruling In 1980 that had;
required Bell companies to set up
separate subsidiaries for compu-

terlzed services.
.
Norris !lOin ted out that the 1980
FCC decision originally held thlit
the possible unfair charging of
consumers for · the unregulated
costs ol computerized services, ·
called "cross subsldatlon, "
would be lmposslllle to monitor.
By 1985, the FCC reversl!d
Itself and said Increased competition In the computerized ser·
vice market reduced the threat of
monopoly abuse. The agency
rested Its action !In the proposal
·that new accounting procedures
would protect consumers.
Dozens of the nation's leading
computer and telecommunications companies joined In the
lawsuit, Including the MCI Telecommunications Corp., IBM,
NyNex Telephol\e CompanieS,
AT&amp;T, andGTETelephoneOper·
atlng Companies :
Joining the California PUC In
the attack on the FCC decision
were New York state and the
Michigan Public Service
Commission. .. .

at 8: l2 p.m. EST Feb. 13. The
United States was facing away
from the spacecraft at the time
the pictures were taken . .
.
· The Images were stored on
magnetic tape and radioed to
Earth over an 11-day period
starting March 16. It took
Voyager 30 minutes to transmit
each photo and the signals,
traveling at 186,000 miles per
second. took more than 5% hours
to complete the trip.

.

The highlights of the anticrime legislilllon . include an
expanded federal death penalty,
a process ·for speeding the
execution or death row Inmates
and a ban on nine mUitary·style
assault weapons.
The Senaie voted 54·37 Tuesday to Unlit debate - six votes
short or the 60 required to Impose
so-called cloture - with most or
the opposition coming from opponents or the prohibition on
assault weapons. ·
.
But Sen. Joseph Biden, D-Del.,
chairman or the Senate Judiciary
Committee; has predicted that
cloture will attract enough absentees from the first vote and
switches to. pass. ·with voies to
spare.
Blden told reporters that some
Republican senators and perhaps even some Democrats who
"had to give the NRA (National
Rlfie Association) their first
vote" would switch.
"I don't understana this effort
to vote cloture at this point," Loll
said In Senate remarks. " I also
don't understand this threat to
pull down the bill and go to other
Important business. I don' t know
or
more
."

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He denied accusations by spon·
sors of the measure that the biB
was being delayed " because ol
the gun ' Issue" - the most
divisive provision In the antt.
crime package.
.. -•
"'rhere are many lmportan.t
amendments and senators want
to get lnvoived In this," LottsB.Id,
charging that "senators hav~
been excluded from offerlhg ·
their amendments.''
' •
. In the week before the rece!l~.
the Senate reached a consensus~
by vote and compromise, · · O!l
three major provisions of · the
bill:
-An expanded ·federal death
penalty covering 30 crimes al)d
.provisions to meet the Suprem'e
Court's 1972 objections thatinvalldated federal and sU!te death
sentences. The Senate voted to
·prohibit the execution of men_t
liilly retarded persons and set' 1!
as the minimum age for .th~
ultimate penally: ·
·.
-A limit on the number' o1 ·
appeals to federal court a deal~
rown Inmate can make and ·a
fixed timetable for disposing &lt;~t
the petitions for a review. The
sponsors said this part of the bill
would assure that almost · atl
those who are sentenced to death
would be executed within a year
of the time a state Supreme
Courts approved a conviction. :
-A ban for three years on the
tmporiatlon or five fqrelgn semi·
automatic weapons and the manufacture of four U.S. sel)llautomatlc weapons, whlcll ~re
rapidly becoming the weapon. of
choice ' among criminals . a'nd
•
drug dealers.
Still under consideration are
sections of the blll putting Into
law a Supreme Court rulldg
allowing evidence to be lntfo.
duced If It was obtained In "g&lt;!!JII
faith' • searches by pollee; req\11'lng the Treasury Departmenf til
report money laundering transactions; and creating an Orgaplzed Crime and Dangerous Drug
. division In the Justice
Department.
'

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�Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

June 7, 1990

Thursday. June 7. 1990

Woman's pastor
supports decision

•

•'

•

'
PONTIAC, Mich. (UPI) Finn said. " It was removing a
Members of the Michigan medl·
medical device he no lancer
cal community condemned a
wan ted. He wu able to say his
patholOgist and his "death rna·
goodbyes and tears were shed, .'
chine" for helping the suicide of a
photos were passed, his fjlvorlte
woman suffering from Alzhel·
music was played ... and It was in
mer's disease, but the woman's
the home of his dearest friend.·: •
pastor supported the decision.
Adkins was not terminally Ill,
W!Wam Howe, director of the
Finn said.
Michigan Health Bureau, said
" She could've lived 10, 20
his office has started an Invest!·
years. Arid what bothers me the
aation of Dr. Jack Kevorkian,
most is the lethal lnjettlon was
who told ABC's "Night Une"
provided by a physician. That
Wednesday night that he did not
violates our ethical code, the
charae Janet Adkins a fee to
Hippocratic oath.''
connect her to the machine that
He said Kevorkian should lose
claimed her life by lethal
his license and should be forced
Injection.. ·
to face the legal community.
An · Oakland County Circuit
Dr. Richard Carlson, a Way11e
Court judge scheduled a hearing
State University professor and
for Friday to hear arguments
chief of medicine at Detroit
from Kevorkian and froin proReceiving Hospital, also called
secut-ors who want to stop him
Kevorkian's actions unethical.
from doing It ag'ain.
"Our job Is to preServe life,"
Kevorkian noted that ·an In·
said Carlson. "If we can't prejunction would apply only to . serve life, our job Is to alleviate . '
Oakland County because that Is
suffering. We will in a hopeless
where Adkins died, In the back of situation withdraw care under
''
a rusty 22-year·old van.
appropriate . guidelines, but . to
"I could make another rna·
actively participate In the lethal
chine In a little while," Kevor·
Injection Is not accepted at this
point.
.
klan said.
Kerkorian said Adkins, ·54, of
' 'Organized medicine and
PorUand, Ore., pressed a button
ethics do not condone this at the
on his homemade suicide rna·
moment."
c hlne, a device rigged 'to allow
Kevorkian .said he Is not •
Intravenous doses of three differ· worried about jail.
ent~ drugs that when combined
''Assisting suicide Is not Illegal
form potassium chloride, to stop In Michigan so I doubt I'll go to
her heart within minutes:
jail. But If I do, then that 's all
Authorities confiscated the
right. Let !hem make me a
machine after they found Adkins martyr,'' he said.
dead. No charges were filed
against Kevorkian, pending an
Investigation. The doctor notified
authorities after Adkins died.
The Rev. Alan G. Deale, who
will preside over Adkins' memor· ·
Ia! service Sunday at the First
Unitarian Church In P'ortland,
said he knew of and supported
'
her decision to commit suicide.
"I said, 'Have you done every· ,
thing you wanted to In life? Is
there more you want to do?'"
Deale said. "She said that she
This is our once a year price event.
had no regrets, she had loved life
This incredibly low price
and lived It fully, and her mind
is available ,only duri ~g
was made up."
summer vacahonl
Deale told the Detroit News he
did not feel It was his job to talk
her out of suicide.
. "I mainly listened,'' he said. " l
felt sad, as in 'Holy mackeral!
I'm not going to see this person
again.' This Is probably an Idea
Atlas
whose time has come. Mrs.
Adkins didn't believe she had to
walt for . society to make this
decision. She felt perfectly capa·
ble of making It herself."
Kerkorlan's methods were con·
demned by Michigan physicians.
" I would have to say that Dr.
Kevorkian's approach Is veterl·
nary medicine and that we as
human beings are not animals,''
said Dr. John W. Finn, director of
OffWD EJnUSMll If
the Hospice of Southeastern
R.
JOHNS,
Michigan.
"She died with Indignity. She
was alone In the back of a van In a
park with this machine and this
doctor. That's no way to die."
Last July, Finn supervised the
removal of life-support systems
for David Rlvlln, a quadriplegic
whose attending physician refused to remove the respirator.
Finn said the t-wo cases are not
comparable.
212 East Main
992,3785
''What happened to David
POMEROY
Rlvlln was niitan assisted suicide
and was not lethal Injection,' '

.

.

..
.

·DONATION BY GHOST DAD - Bill Cosby clowns with
members of the Harlem Junior Tennis Program at Cosby's home
In New York recently. The program's ninth annual Celebrity
Invitational Fundraiser, sponsored by Mutual of New York, will be

played there on Thursday. Cosby presented tbe group with SIO,OOO
from Universal Studios, the producer of his new movie, Ghost Dad.
(UPI)

Bush touts summit · success on campaign trail
MILWAUKEE (UPI)..,. Pres!·
At a fund-raising luncheon for
dent Bush sought political ml· Gov. Tommy Thompson, Bush
leage from the superpower sum- called his talks with Gorbachev
mit Thursday, declarlng.ltll'most ''very productive, " despite dis·
Important outcome to ha.ve been agreements · over ' Lithuania's
''the progress we made In under· drive for Independence, the fu·
standing the great pol!tll;l\\chal· lure military status of Germany
lenges we face."
··
and Cuba.
In remarks kicking off a
And in the face of accords on
two-day political swing through arms control and trade, he said,
the Midwest, Bush hailed "the "perhaps even more Important
forihright spirit'' Mikhail Gorba· than the agreements we signed Is
chev brought to the summit as the progress we have made in
"proof that we have Indeed understanding the great political
entered a new era in our relations challe11ges we face. "
with the Soviets."
Those challenges were the
"A united Germany in~TO, subject Thursday of a meeting In
the future of the Baltlcs, regional Scotland of NATO foreign minis·
problems: These aren't ques· ters and In Moscow of Warsaw
lions that can be solved silnplyor Pact-leaders weighing the possl·
In a single summit,"' he said. ble demise of their military
"But we make progress on t.hese alllance.
difficult Issues whenever we
Bush, who will confront those
speak with candor and without
Issues Friday with West German
animosity abOut our alms and
Chancellor Helmut Kohl and
Interests."
Monday with East German
Bush touted the success of the
Prime Minister Lothar de Mal·
summit while going through
ziere, hit the road to give a bOost
familiar political territory and
to Thompson's re-election, pump
Into the midst of a closely
$1 million Into the campaign of
watched battle over abOrtion In
Jim Edgar, who hopes to succeed·
Iowa. His emphasis on foreign
retiring 14-year Gov. James
policy achievement came at a
Thompson In Illlnols, lift · the
time when key portions ·or his
third-term hopes ot Gov. Terry
domestic agenda are flagging.
Branstad In Iowa and generate

needed cash for underdog Senate
now wlll see Its staying power
hopeful Hal Daub in Nebraska.
tested In November. With the
The way was paved for a warm
prlnnary election viCtory Tues·
reception by conclusion at the
day of Don Avenson, the Demosummit of an agreement com·
cratic speaker of the Iowa House,
mlttlng the Soviets to buy more
to oppose Branstad, the race
U.S. grain over the next five
could well polarize around the
years, which plays especially
abOrtion issue.
well ·in Iowa and Illinois, top
Avenson had the official back·
graln-pr()(jucing ,s tates that hope
ing of the Abortion Rights Action
to gain as well from a new
League In the Democratic ~Jrlm·
U.S.-Soviet trade agreement.
ary. With Brans tad a . staunch
The Soviets agreed to seal the
abOrtion toe, clear battle lines
grain agreement, which could · have been drawn for a general
mean bllllons for American
election campaign that could
farmers, only after Bush decided
determine whether public opln·
to not hold the trade pact hostage
ion and political clout have
to concern abQut the Soviet
shifted to the side of abOrtloneconomic squeeze of Lithuania.
.rlghts advocates.
The summit did not totally
Bush is neither a stranger to
divert attention from other
nor particularly comfortable
issues as Bush returned to the
with the abOrtion issue. As vice
nitty-gritty of partisan poUtlcs
president, he hardened his posl·
from weighty matters of super·
tlon to better conform with the
power relations. In Iowa, for
views of his boss, Ronald Reaexample, he was to . tiptoe
gan, by abandoning earlier oppothrough the thicket of a race for . sltlon to a constitutional ban and
governor that could gauge the
embracing more stringent condl·
resurgent political power of the
tlons for publiC financing.
ailorllon issue.
That places Bush at odds with
Iowa l$ one' of several states
the results of recent opinion
where the anti-abOrtion movepolls, at least In Iowa, which
ment first flexed political muscle
showed majority support for
·In 1978, prospered from the
abortion rights.
Reagan Revolution of 1980 and

Hot, expensive races begin in_two states
By United Press International
General election campaigns
for governor In California and
senator in North Carolina began
with all signs pointing to bat ties
that would likely be very close,
nasty and ex traord lnari ly
expensive.
And while Democrats emerged
Wednesday from Tuesday's
primaries speaking of unity and
trying tq,heal self-lnfilcted Intraparty wounds, they also acknowl·
edged that large amounts of
money would be needed as
Republicans geared up for some
stronger-than-expected chal·
lenges In the two races.
In Iowa, meanwhile, abOrtion
loomed as a critical general
election Issue In the race between
Incumbent Republican Gov .
Terry Branstad, who opposes
·abortion, and Democratic nom!·
nee Don Avenson, who Is strongly
backed by abOrtion rights forces .
Overall, nine states held primaries Tuesday . Incumbents
faced little trouble In any place
they were challenged.
In California, former San
Francisco Mayor Dianne Fein·
stein captured the Democratic
gubernatorial nomination and
immediately set out Wednesday
to showcase her differences with
Republican Sen. Pete Wilson,
who easily won the GOP guberna·
torlal nod.
Although some Democrats
have complained that the moder·
ate Feinstein Is too close In
outlook to Wilson, she argued
Wednesday that the two were ·
"from differen.t political philoso·
phles" and she tried to paint
Wilson as an ally of big-money
Interests.
Referring to his expensive 1988
Sef!ate re-election bid, she con·
tended: "Three weeks after he
took the oath ot office he talked to
the 'big cigars' and said, 'I want
to lie governor.'"
In defeating Attorney General
JoJin Van de Kamp 52 percent to
41 percent, Feinstein, 56, became
the first female gubernatorial
choice of a major party In the
Golden state.

As the general election race
began, all signs showed it to be
near a dead heat. ·
Ex! t polling conducted by
KCBS· TV In Los Angeles Tuesday showed a Wllson-Felnsteln
race too close to calL Pollster
Mervin Field, director of the
California Poll, predicted Wed·
nesday: "It's going to be a very
tight race, one where style will be
prominent because there's just
an Incredible lack of difference In
the Issues and points of view. "
"I can't remember when t-wo
gubernatorial candidates in the
general election were so alike on
the Issues," Field said.
In Washington, National De·
mocratic Chairman Ron Brown
co needed that the race would be
extraordinarily expensive, and
he conceded Democrats would
have to scramble tor cash to keep
up with the GOP.
But Brown added that he hoped
"the fact that our candidate
happens to be a woman ... will be
helofulln fund-raising."
Brown likewise said he hoped
that liberal out-of-state money
would go to North Carolina,
where former Charlotte Mayor
Harvey Gantt Tuesday won the
Democratic Senate nomination
and the right to challenge conservative Republican Sen. Jesse
Helms.
,
But even while Gantt, 47, was
euphoric at becoming the first
black to win nomination for any
major post In the Tarheel state,
he recognized that he may be
hard pressed to outspend Helms
and he began ou tllnlng what
could be a bitter race.
"When he tries to tag me a
' liberal,' I'm going to talk abOut
Issues ~ like education, a clean
environment, affordable health
care. Those Issues are Jes$eproof, " said Gantt.
Gantt added that his race
should not be ,an Issue, although
Brown Indicated that he hoped It
would help Bemocrats draw
money to defeat Helms, who has
a record of opposing various civil
rl&amp;hts measures and affirmative
action programs.

'

"It (race) has never been an
Avenson's Democ~atlc .oppoIssue in any race I've run. It
nents - John Chrystal 'and Top!
certainly will not be an Issue In Miller -joined In a show of unity
our case," Gantt told reporters.
for Avenson.
'·
"If race Is brought up. 1,'11
"I've been a Democrat for a
respond to li in a way that will set
long time,'' Chrystal said. "I've
the record straight. I really think supported every Democrat that
people want to talk abOut has run on the.Democratlc ticket
Issues."
·
and I Intend to do that again this .
Buoyed by the margin , of year without qualifications.''
Gantt's· 58 percent to 42 percept
Also at stake In Iowa Is a hot
win over attOrney Michael Eas· Senate race between Incumbent
ley,. Brown pumped up the Democrat Tom Harkin and Resignificance of the general elec·
publican Rep. Tom Tauke. '
lion race against Helms .
" It certainly will be a race of
national Importance. We know
that Jesse Helms has a record of
buying victories," he said, con·
ceding Democrats would 110t be
able to compete " dollar for
dollar" · with Helms, who won his
NEW YORK (UP! ) - Stock
third term In 1984 in the most
expensive Senate race In state prices moved slightly higher in
history.
· early trading Thursday, re·
On the CBS "This Morning··· bounding from Wednesday 's
program Thursday, Gantt said, weakness.
The Dow Jones Industrial aver"I've asked Mr. Helms to con·
slder not spending the obscene age, which lost 13.35 Wednesday,
amount of money they spent In was up 3.88 to 2915.53 at 10 a.m.
Advances led declines 586-463
1984. Let's go around to every
court house In North Carolina among the 1,603 Issues crossing
and talk to the people about th~ the New York Stock Exchange
Issues. · We believe we'll liave · tape. Volume · was mo&lt;~erate,
enough money In case he decides amounting to abOut 24.88 inllllon
not to do that , to run the kind of shares during the flrst30mlnutes
modern campaign that's of trading.,
Analysts said they expected
necessary.''
But even thougiJ Democrats prices to stabiliZe after Wednes·
are worried about money In day's weakness and continue the
North Carollna, there are signs upward trend which has taken
that a Helms-Gantt race could be the Dow Industrials to 10 record
a cliffhanger. According to a poll highs In the past four weeks.
Stocks closed lower Wedneslast week by the GreensbOro
day
In moderate trading, unable
News &amp; Record , Gantt was
to
fight
off profit takers.after the
favored by 44 percent of North
market's
bwad·based rally ' \
Carolinians to 43 percent tor
Monday.
Helms.
For the second day Ina row, the
In Iowa, abOrtion, which was a
market
was unable to shakj! off
key Issue In· the Democratic
~~;tter rallying to
profit
taking
primary, shaped up as an even
all-time
highs
In
the Dow Indusmore Important matter In the
trials
and
other
major Indexes
general electiori. National abOr·
Monday.
tion rlahts groups was ted little
time pushing Avenson, although
Analysts said' /hey expected
the National Abortion Rights
buying ·. Interest to remalit In
Action League said It did not
check since many Investors
underesUmate "the diU!culty of expect more of a pullback after
unseating entrenched, anti·
the record hlgha, making stocks
choice incumbents.''
avallilble at lower prices.

Stocks up some
in early trading

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Midcll,...,..

54 - M iac. Merchlftdile
66 - Bullding SUppli•

5 - Happy Ads
. 6 - Lost l!"ld Found
7 - Y•d Sale (paid in advance)
8 - Public Sele6 Auction

SAlES &amp; SERVICE

56 - Pets for Sill•

We C...-v Flohln8 auppii.O

67 - Music.! Instruments

58- Fruiu • Vegewabl•
59 - For Sele or Trade

[ lllliiii'/IIH:Ill
SPr Vlt'f~~;
11-Help Wenttd
,
1 2- Situation w_,led

·13-lnaurence
14-Butin•• Training
16 - Schoo .. &amp; Instruction
16 - Aadio, TV &amp; C8 Repair

Fslale

31 -Hom11 for Silt
32.-Mobile Hom" tor Sale
33-Ferma for Sal e
34-Bulin•s Buildings
36- Lots &amp; Aertqe
36-~e.! Estate Wanted

OPENING SOON
Call Now To Make
Appointment

Transporla lion

21- Buttn•J Opportun.ity
22- Mon.,- to loen
23- Pror.lianel Sarwlces

Re~l

,.
Milo
Btnd

CUSTOMER DIII.LED CALLING CARD
P,..entCherge

71 - Autos for Sale

949-2794

72 - Trucks for Sale
7 3 - V•na &amp; 4 vyo ·s

79 - Campen

30 Sessions-130
Co. Rd. 28
Waf"'

e. Motor Homes

• .eo

OPERAJ'OA STATION

RACINE, OHIO

5-17·'90-1 mo. d.

Serv1ces
81 -· Hom•

lmprO\IIIm~tl

43 - Farms for Rent
44 - Apartment for Rent
45-Furnished Roams
48 - Sp•ce for Rent

83- hcwatina

47-Winted 10 Rent
48-Equipment fot Rent
49 - For Lt•e

86 - Mobile Home

SITEWORK - ROADS
CLEARING

82 - Piumbing &amp; Hulling
84 - Eiec:trical &amp;: Refr igeration
85 - Gen•al HaLt ling
87 - Upholster~

PubliC Notice

PUBLIC NOTICE
The Vllt.ga of Mlddlepon
offers for Mia the following

Middleport. Ohio 46780 unti
3:00P.M. Juno 26, 1990.
Tho vMioge ruoi'Vtl the
righ1 to rejaC1 any or.all bld!l
end to wilive any informalltia in bidding.
Fred Hollman. Mayor
Village oi Middleport
(6) 7. 14 2tc

exc..1 .C.uipment of the vii·

loge:
1-1988 Ford. sold •• io.
formerty uaed a a police

cru•er.
Bldt wlfl be received It !he
Mayor' 1 office. 237 flace St.,

NEWLAND
'
ENTERPRISES

Re~alt

Public Notice

DUMP TRUCK ·
Sand-Stone-Dirt

(614) 667-3271
Grant A.

COUNTRY
MOBILE
HOME PARJC '
&lt;

•Mobile Home
.~1![!1
•Mobile Honuf

R11nfllls
•Lot- Rent~ls

Busfness Services

Pr•ent Cherge

Propooed Charge

1 ·10
1 1·22
23+

$ .76

., ,20
1.75
1.75,

1.10

1.56

PERSON TO PERSON
Present Charge
Propooed Charge
$3. 00
f3.50
The PROPOSED long di1tance rate chang" are:

VIC'S
BODY. SHOP
FLATWOODS, ROAD
POMEROY, OHIO
IIIII mo.

SIDELINES
SPORT CARDS
Buy· Sell

Trada

367-0588

Oev ratea ·

7% Deereeoi
Laa1 than 1% lncr... e
6 .5% lncreeee

18) 7, 11c

Read the Best Seier
Read the

CLRSSFIED RDS

Pick
It Up

Humorous, traditional, and giant cuds, too!

-

EUM HOME

•-&amp;leord For
Good Rot•
T.L.C .
27 Yro. Exp.
Referencea

SELLING OUT
MOVING!
HOUIS: M·F 9·7
Sat. 9.5
Cleltd Sun.

PAT HILL FORD

949·2969

992-2196
Middleport, Ohio

1·31· 1 mo.

USED AWUANCES ·

992·5042
209 South 4th St.
Middleport'

Oh.

"LOW INCOME HOME"

RESID~NTlAL ond
COMMERCIAL SIDING
Hou- • Mobihl Homo
• Trtnoport Vehicles Form Equipment •
Htovy Equlpm.,t. Etc.
FREE EStiMATES
24 HR. SERVICE

614;992·U42

HUMPHREY'S
CUMATE
CONTROL

lltatl~~g,

Cooling,
Refrlgtr.ation
Service

Bring It In Or We
Pick Up,

Reeldentlal 8o

wlrl connectors
whHo In color. Ont Bhtktoptlr
lroiPng molar Model IOIPS or
608 LP9. 0nt Crolhimon wood
Wlcktr 257 m-eoo. Ont
HomtiHI chtln IIW wHh :zo" btr
and chaln~covor S-r X112. I
will ldtnl , ~ ,.port Jrllo
to M•eon
ntv ~-rwe ..,.pt
or Chttlor llt~ln . 541 Copilot
Blvd El •·-~ Inti ··~e
., - · - . - · .
112 PRICE . SAlE Ill Slonloy
Homo Prod1.ic11. Juno 11·18,
11110: 387117 Salim School L.ol
Rd. La~ovlllo, Ohio. Phont:
814
12
-lltl'
.
Area alnglto quality
pooplt
tor
olgnlllclnl
wrllo:
roltllonohlpo,
Httn-rch,!'~O. Box 1043, Gal·
Npollo, OH ......

BISSELL
BUILDERS
CUSTOM BUIT

HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At RHsotlllble Prices"

PH. 949-2101
or •••· 949·2860
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS
Howard l. Writ-1

ROOFING

'

DAVE'S SMALL

NEW- REPAIR
Gutters
· Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

1531 West . ..,
PoMI":,'· 011.

AN

SERVICE

4-ayalo

Commercial

a

Paulin'• iliN lttw•n
lutland ... lt. 554

OPENMON..SAT.IOteS
S'IIAWRDWUS. Dw.f
I follr PAIIIPAS GWS.
Pink I W11ittJ MCIIIA,
IASIITS, liDS IIIII

llonn.,g. II.l'h.
Mon. thru .... 1:00 o.m. 10 t:OO p.m.
\ lundop 10:00 o.m. 10 4:00 p.m. ,
PIIEICIIIPTIONI
PH ... a.2911
E. Moln
Fri..., IMvlco
l'om•oy. OH.
Op., w... ,...,., 'II I

....
\

25th.
by

FREE ESTIMATES

Juno 7, B, ilh; At 141, noar
Country Convonl.... Stare. •
Boy'o BIIX llkt, Truinpol, Ylcl. Boy'o clollwl, ...a
ower litd, lluch -

on-.

Mowing Stlt: 3 mllto S., Rio
Grandi on 325, Ctnlorpolnl. Ad.,
1ol lnl-lon,
Rood
!It · - - · riiftl ·
Homo._,.. 2x~'1, homo ropolr
ouptll- Hondo XAIO llolor ,
IIIII, Junt 7, I, 8. 114-241-1044.
Porch l Ytnl Solo. Homt lnttrlor, clocu, of H.H. N-_. )
112 mllto 0111 At 218. lhuro. ,.,,
Itt. N.

rwm-

Thurmano' 3rd hoUit, ~ghl . .
Wtd., T...ro. 8-6. Bt!&gt;r litdl
Shtllll· S7&amp;. lolly ciolhto, tl ·" ·
.tz• . mlec.

-r

949-2168

6·5.'9(1.1 mo. pd.

Yard Sill•: JUM 7, ~. .h. '
Ctolheo, Knlek Knockt, litd, ...
orclll bl~, lie. fllrvlew

Ev_ .....

dish.- • etc. Acro11 from old

Rtd- r - W"'!hl: Takt · 8hopo D1o1 Pltn ' and E·YAP
Woltr Avalltblt Fnah

.Pt. PleiSanl
&amp; VIcinity

Vlth• .-~-Gat.

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUM INUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

1'8lnl.

0pon
F~., Sol., Sun,.DI"a
Ft11
·
Hortlord,
"'· 33
bll, I mllto
...,.. WV.
P-oor
Bridge WV licit. Stll till cflrll or

S1,,. June 9 . On~p•. cun.ins,
Hond• Shop, UpP.~Pr At. 7 . Rein

or shine.

"""-·

WANTED: 'Niot lllddlt-Aged
lody to Nvt In wHh mt, ,lor
compon-lp, 111 , , . _
paid. Call 114-&lt;11&amp;-1417, ..... lor
Evttrn.

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

WiNNING
CAREER
~TUNITiES ...Singto . Pl-0.
hoiMmakenl, or lnyont ent.,..
lng lht worll lon:t « chtnglng
ca....,._ You 1rt1 lnvfted to af·
tenet the s...,mor W.I.N. Stml,.r
11 Hockl"'l TECHNICAL
JUNE 2tlt!,30-12:00~ ~QUALITY
INN, Nt
vlllt. roc.. on
omploYmtnt lltlda not trod!·
IIOMI lor the gender of lht Pll'·
tlvough l&lt;ornoll aptll&lt;!"',
,.,_Ilion •net ........
lnlt..., touro ol lobt onct
c i a - . lltmlnor ollortd II

"-tlult

"Free Estimat81"

PH. 949·2101
or Res. 949-2860

Col-

NO SUNDAY

no co.li lncludle complimen-

tary conll,...,.al - -· Fun
In-Ion · wll bot o - on
wHol h tlklt to oct..lly -ollln
1 WINNING CAREER program II
Hocking Toclvllctl COIItiJI. Ltl
uo know ~ sro IIIW!dln~
ctlllng 1-.o lllrtln, 1

il82 ..fll3 .. 114-7134&amp;11, .......

alon211&amp;1.

Ytnl Sttt, 1200 Yllnct 81., Thtn,
Fri, 1111. 8:00 till ? Clothing, ·
-~
Ytnl Salt, 2 lu-1 Addn1 -

..-.Dit-.mlto. -.

friday -

J-. . . -

Solulday,

1. Cr1ft1, nice ototltll, manr
othtr a - . No eolto _ . •
8:00AM.

Pomeroy,

Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
31tmlly. Juno f.7, H p.m. Alln ·'

-"'I

ot ehlne. HQmt ,....,... cur- •
tel,., ololhlng, boW•
1-a Hublllrd'i ..

II••
GrM11HOUMln8yr11•
•. ·
• latnlly.C:.":.'~':1:. :::: :
9uncfly.
:a.w.

Qlveaway

:!

K and J CONSTRUCTION

2 lnoldt kll1 ..1 to aoocl " -·
114 441 S47l aftll I :Jo p.m.

GREG BAILEY

2 long halrod klfttnl, 7 .....

Block wtlll whit !MI, otto 2
gray to good"-.~

".:¥:'.

!:""::C.eoal"'l;..."l"':.J:~ ·:
lllddllp irt ....urdar. Juno .... 7 ·:

Hugo 0.'9 - · 'TIIurllotoy t- '
., 2
mlltt .t ._.., High
lc- iln Ill. 7 on lllgill.
·
Juno 7,1.1. ..'7p.nl. - .. '
~. Clil......... .,

a, fr1Cf1V 1'12.

-r. .... ..

good

-r· .

mloc.

II.--.
-··-- . -· -. -.........

5B..utt
pupt,mix,
- »t.a?l

lncf

1 Nllltt haW Sprlngor lponlll,

~CIHI.

-

Rd.,

-7173.

·

7 oclorabll ........ I - old

11111.
llock Lab, aood wHh cltlld,.,,

YMI -

ooll-lo fi-•Y to good

FOR SALE
O"e Oj Raci"e's Nicest Uornes

Chi-

Nllghboll
Ylftl
· Col- '•
ltgl
Ad.L andI•h
Sl, .,......_
Juno"'·
12 arMI llol ........., · '
lwln
.,..,...
T.V. llancf, ......._ pota, ·

304-6'7W712. .

301-1'15-31M

MIDDUPORY
VCR CUNIC .

.

Juno 7-t. H R.... •
_ . t. Otryl Wtl't. Clnoti'r _ •
......,_~~, chor&lt;l ..,..., tor ·
box, -~ polt, _....,.

-.114 IIH24T.

Freo hey for eulllng anct hauling

-Ill.

Khl- In . .ctbUrr 1o glvHwoy
to good homt. IM-11112-8071.

8

...... -

Public Sill
&amp; Auction

llall 8 - IIJI.

· - 304-I7I-I04a.

--CI417
Ont .. ..
- · tnlatd ~

·

to . . - . , . Coli 11411112·71142.
.
.

Threo 7 old ....4ft,j1Upo,
·
Chw;
_
,
hm 1:00 .,. to 12:00
pm thtn
llltri:OO pm.

1.011&amp; Found

' Stop In and S..

DALLAS SAYRE

IUINTIIIAIKI &amp; IEPAIR
1161 Powtl St. IIWII.,art

....... -""" ...... ....,,

PAT HIU

,,...

tPRifl IPHI9A,;. L• .1

.......

CHRYSUI-PLYMOUTH
DODGI

CLEAN, LUll &amp;

'

5291110.
I,

Witrlng

....

-

·

..........
llll,i .,
Club
'""'·
...... .......
•••
0013.••

l.oti:Otl ......, . _ Ad. ..
llur.c&amp; l l i i l i - .... -

399 S. 'llllrtl. • ' I pert
i

- .... - . .._
=-=·,.,. . ,. ,......... ''
-- .. ""' ...._
Junk .... -

AT

,................ so ..,
(614) 992-7843

614-142-2772
,,·. ~

Ju~:W

thlo
Thonk You, Otllt
Baplltl C..ory.

6

ANGIE'S
GIEENHOUSE .

r.rnavect on

- ...date..,._-them

can

CAU

pante 102 klneon Drive, Acroee

from llllpollo Clinic.

a

Anyono wlthlng lo kltp lhtlr

Includes 4 bedrooms, big kitchen, huge
family room, 2 garages, 3 baths, rented
3-room apartment, 40' x 120' farm buildIng, pond, over 40 acres fenced pasture
land and rented mobile home.

ENGINE REPAIR

•

oa,. hll: Krtoll Dr. Frldrl
In~, ol Ill. Sll, ac.- from Qal.
lla auto SliM.

In!'""-·

992-6110

316/'90/lln

2

So'"l'

CONTESTANT&amp;
NATIONAL TV
OAIIESHOWS
Whttl, Jooponly, Joktr/WIId lob 11cConn1c1! Rd. .lohl-tt
NIWIYWed, lie, . T- lhowo Troll« Coull. Nul to latllralltr.
1110. lf you quality, Wt PlY to LA Thin. Frl.tl-4.
t-7, ~~~L for
171-3, Vanl Salt: 118 llabOitnt Drive.
orm .......
Thur~~.• Fri., &amp; sa
Qollla Baptltl CtmlttrY would
llkt to •nnounc:e thllt •If floWire Ylnl lolo: Ftt l Sol., 1111 l tlh.
not on monl.lf'!*d or In ume will 11(11 T - A¥t., cancolltd II

AGreat c-bination" Quality and Reasonable Prices"
WE GO THE EXTIA MU .....

992-5335 or 915·3561
Acr01s F,_ Poat Dfflct
217 L Soc. P-oy
POIIIIOY, OHtD

Fri., Sot., Ill. 233 otl14\ mtloo, Log Cobin by L&amp;L
MetAl. LGio ot a-.tl-4.

~~~k~~':.... I =~=~~=~"'~=':-=,=,a-,J..,"'•-m-lly-~-J-":l,!
-,.-,,-!i •

•NEW HOMES •SIDING
•GARAGES
•REMODELING
•GENERAL CONTRACTING

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

PARTS
For Moat 2

Rklt;;

2 ldul
I lornalt lrillnll'
Spaniel 1
1 mile Yellow Col·
lit. a pupo&lt; •• Brtllnoy tnclttr·
rltr. t14-l'U·2821.

. All MAKES

LOCATIOII

convlc·

wfth rim•,

4

MICROWAVE
OVEN REPAIR

1-!1-'tG-1 mo.

-·a,

Fri., 1111. N . llln'e,
clllldron'o clollwl. Allolole.

properly Indian

La~ "ftO:. "!YIIIoolcn

PAYING AS OF TODAY,, MAY 29, 1990
#1 Copper 90¢ per lb.;
Aluminum
35¢ par lb.

SERVICE

II

mtec.

a.w T-hlp Building. 'lhln.,

~:zing!"~""!:"':.;:

POMEROY, OHIO: Rt. 7 &amp; S.R . 143
ALBANY, OHIO: Rt. 60 8t S . R. 143
NEW HOURS :
POMEROY: 9 a .m .- 7 p . m. 7 Days
·ALBANY: 10 a.m. -5 p .m . 6 Days, Closed Sunday

992·5335 or 915-3561
Acr- F,._ Pllt Dffict
POMEIOY

ALL Yard ..... lo Ptld In
........... DEAOUNE: 2;00 p.m.
the cfly btforlthe ad It 1o run.
SUnday tdhlon - 2;00 p.m. ·
Friday; lloncfly tdhlon • 2:00
p.m. Soolurdly.
~
..... . 2CI2 K l Dr.l'ht.n-Frl. 7-t, Ctolhlng, tun\1-

$300. REWARD lor lnlonnallon

OFFEIS 2 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU....

lEN'S APPLIANCE

5 mlltt out 211, · Frl a Sal.
ChlldranO • tdull clothing, •
mlac.

3 Announcements

Sl

~hbortlaad

on

M1

Road, Thuno, Frl, ltl

Announcements

BILL SLACK,
992-2269
EVENINGS
----

Now

trom

tu.., top.

loo~ to the....,-

Juno

4 Ft111lly O.rogo hll: 2 -

5-31 - 1 mo.

TRI·COUNTY RECYCLING

'II DAY WAIRANTY

up

Mlddle.-t, Ohle

.~ ~

SER~ICE

We can r~ir cind retort radiators and
heater cores. We can
olso add boil ·and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tonks.

Senior Cltluns ond

511 S. Fourth Ave.

992-2156

·.

Pomeror, Ohio

1·13·11c

ROWE
POWERWASH
SERVICE

USE THE CLASSIFIED$ TODAY

Rt. 33 Nerth of

EAGLE RIDGE
SMAU ENGINE
CEIIITER

1·21.'90-1 ....pd.

Propooed Chango:

Evening rltH
Night/WNkend rltH

992·7479

t-? Chi-. .......
much otllcl

FrH Estimates
985·4473
U7,.179

*LIGHT HAULING

-hH.

311 ~- Blv&lt;t, Frl,

e&lt;:omplete
lemodelng
Stop &amp;C0111pare

*SHRUB-&amp; TitE'E
TRIM anrl REMOVAL

'88·11•

992·6603

Milo
Bond

for Signs

.h.

-ciarap1

*FIREWOOD

SPECIAL

74 - Mo1orcyclll!ll
75 - Boats &amp; Motors for S1le
76 - Auto P1rts &amp; Acc•aor iM
7? -- Auto Repair
78 - Camp ing Equipment

I;IQ.IE11

Propooed
Chorgo
...

• .80

1·10

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

FOREVER BRONZ
TANNING

83- Uvntock
64 - Hev &amp; G,.in
66 - Seld &amp; Fertilil tt

17 - MitceUaneo~o~t

. REPAI~

PIIONE

Hotpllol.

····"-·

Aur6&amp;T'RuCK
Alto Trl•s•l~tloa

-H.on110--

BISSBl &amp; BURl(£
CONSTRUCTION

4-.25-tfn

11 - Farm Equipment
62- Wented 1.0 Suy

1 8 - Wanted To Do

Roger Hysell
Garage

Your Phone
Billa Here

Fmn Supp lil'&gt;
&amp; l1ve~lud

Th- chongoa art tohtduled to become elfectlve .on
July 1, 1 910.
Tht PROPOSED HrVica chor~ chonget tar tilt fol·
lowl!llll ...,.... ore eo fol'-t:

v• mi... an a p~ CrMII
Ad. IIIIo. a btby oiOihet. Frt,
ltlJw.NI.
3 FtmiiY: .hrnll a t, " - N. 2
1

·Rarei are for con•cutiYe runs. broken updfV-awitl btchwged
• fnr er.h tfMr 11 •para1e ada.
·
:l.

41,...Hous" for Atnt
42-Mobile ... omn for Rent

PubliC Notice

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

985-4422·
1 1-IO, tfn

.eo

11 .30/ doy

9-Wentld to luy

.

Cards for the
World's Best Dad!

I.L

=

-..... _-r!dngt,
_ , .......
, ' .......
Ywy

992·6421

!!!"l.~
M':.'::
~-.::; 114-111W401.

5-16-!9CJ.lmo.
••

....._

.. . . _ .•
GMUHif .~.
pltttl. ~ •

RIDtwd

8unctoy -

.

""""

,,

.

Call La"' Uwty 114•3111101.
....
Anllquo

.,
or-·Qlltl
111111,.-

\o

==:=~----~~--~·

!..........

.,

.._

liN.

.

...

�Thursday, June 7, 1990

Ponieroy-Middleport. Ohio

LAFF-A-DAY

trnpl o1 r'l•' r't Sr1v1ces
- -- -

-

5t

Aplrtlnent

44

HOUIIhold

KIT 'N' CARLVLEC by Larry Wr!Pt

--...................
.
.
.•
-·
.................

Goodl

lorRenl

--CIC-100. ·
~

· BORN LOSER

1111 ~~~~ 110 CIR, Clalllll

8

1113 a..- 1011. Cl,
17,000 ..... .. 114-

.,....

et= IBNewa
Dlgat

Cll Club Connect

.PEANUTS.
b- 7

THATS /'A'( BlANKET

YOU'VE GOT TlolE~E.
'(011 STUPID DOG! .

i

,•

............................. _... &amp;.·1

"Look, if ·you didn't do it,
how could you afford me'?"

-

e:...-

to2 llg Block.

--..--1111, ..

---

.. -

54 Mlscellaneout
Merchandise

~ CluoiiiJ

r:nna. -

iiJl

.

ond ro1111r. alth
Loow Dor:lolo.

e

3----·. . .

NewiHour

iiJl • i1J

~~ ••
-1pm.
Ina
- ·1210
· ..-....
. . . - ·.

Forlunl! C

a

ltl0.11t1'11tal

Auto Pan• &amp;
AcceiiOI'Iel

~' •MO .....U

Ill(

7:30e(]) Famllr Feud

. &lt;!l Collage laoeball

Q Qll En~lnment Tonight

11111 P.,_.. Yllllenl, N;, PS,
~ - " DOr, NOD. 114-

fiJCil Mama'• Family

illl • c a Jeoperclyl Q
ID l!lJ M• A•s•H
il1l Croufira
G Night Court

211,1

1:00 ()) MOVI!: Arrowhltld (2:00)
Colby 111tow ElVIn
tries to play Mr. Nice Gu~but
winds up in trouble . (A)
fiJ 121 Natlon1l Gaotrap~ .
HomaUme
(J) Fatltar DoWling
· My1te~11 Dowling and Sister
Slave investigate claims of a
haunted mansion. (R) Stereo.

m

e

Hornetime Discover which
areas to insulate and wnat
kind of insulation to use.
iiJl 1D C 48 Houra CBS
News repons on the
govermanl's expens[ve effort
to keep loreign marijuana out ·
ot the country and the
resulfl"!l increase in
domestic usage. (R) (t :00)
.l!ll M•A•s•H
(IJJ PrlmaNIWI
11J Murder, 8111 Wrote No
Accounting For Murder
r8 ~rtco:n Mullc Shop
111 M1jor League Bantall

-ho-ld
_ __

::.."11.100~~ =:..~ 1_ _
-Mille 2~
"""'""'·
1 loto,
GIIJIFdll
Lockl.3
lfilillllo - • no - - .

.--.
-wlh~·=t-­
· PCIITAL IEIMCE ....._ lollry
ID . .1(. ~~~~--Era.a=
J !"II,.. c,ll (I)
III.JLIOI...

Rrnl&lt;ils

. ....... ·-I..,_
.... us:iol••'
IMIIII t.w awn
Mnd
...., n•a ,.....

-••=li•Mhn
.., loi

41

Midi

...........

au JJN 10 • tMM.nwerk Mil
oul ....... In lllddhp lt. .,...

"'

lllro

_..
.,
lldwoll41114.

S.

for Rent

-

-......,_.t:OO•m or....,
......
1:111 ....

Goode

................. P!lood ......

-IDSIIO. T-UOond ..
to ti2L lld1 all1d1 PIG to
........,.... $221 .to $3'71.

l.o!lllil 121 10 f1211, 111!1011•
8101 ............. Wood tll:!l
,... ohlloo • • to f7ll. Dooko
...... 10 1171. -1400.

•. ind-

=. .

I:.'
":.re:;t ~.!
- ................ Clowl

iiiif""

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

W.nlod: ___
.,.plo,_
In,....
._
Full-limo

.

Houanhold

a..

Video

.............
-lnpolr. oldlng,
odol Ioiii.

lool•
Wo
poowl&lt;lo _ , ..... -and
I d i l l y - llldiiDinii'IIIL
,ond
................
11"...._.. In • limlly ...
R~q~~r• 1blttty to

•

.•

32 Mobile Ho11111
__. ,...,..
for Sale
be In llolgo
ot 12 •

dlwtte'l

c-:ty. ~. ...... lrollor
-·(114)441-l'IOic:r- '72
P.D. IDo 1104. Joall.., Ohio 811d1Uon en IU1120111ft lot, CA.

All. -

wlh 1411311

Hung ... _ . - . - . $10
-li. (30 cloJ g-oo on
-ryllllngj W. 1W1 HiVIcl COlli
on lliJ 'Yiil el OIIDIIo :coo. ~

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

15

-'114'11

~

JSt

---.-

su....

11M IIHil llladi.L., Tandem

--"'~"·""
'

lor Uoo.

1:00PM.

·
211 111011111 01t1 11or1 Coli,

::=.::'\::,-~,::...."":
r-r on 1a1. ..._..._,

IIOinll....

Odd

JDII'L

lnodgrut 111 Ut 0203.

Ulo.

pump, 2 ar ...._ Cl:lr-

SNAFU~ by

iM llrool, er-n CIIJ. ,,..,..

Corlor'a Pk:mblnt

anciHIOIIIII

'

II~ii1WIWN~~~~
· :~~~:
.,_
-. ar,.,...

Apli bi1811t

torRent
1ar21r.AI:I&amp;~por

- . All UIR'- lnah • ._ DID.

:::~ar'a\;: - · ~
r ••lliint. 1171.

a l1droom
30t-17N*.

2t , _ . , . . . ........
lillod • .

IMIINioo: -~~~

::::l'J

....... IYIIIolllo lor llmllod

limo """ ... ......... -....
..-..., C:OII1MIM7!111111.

I -

-lr.

Bo:vlco: ~ I D:yc:r
In llomo "' o11o11. ·AH - "
......... 114-301-0:134.

--·

Wll .....,... In "" - · 114-

Price Roduoed. CloyWI, 211r, vinyl
ftlllna. In Rio
Frwncfi'nt~u

11140. -··

...

·-

.
~

14110

~

or-. •n,oao.

lnhl'llll ,........,

,.....
··~
"llgtlborftat4
'""~•• nloi
lnd
·--.~1111t.

_,.,

...._.:.

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

IOtiiUI~IW ..........

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'

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rn

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C
..
B I

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~~1pan. 2 llldaw1a,

llleow~Pn, 14=. ~ ~.~"':;d':,no:::
,_.1" · :;:;;::r:., IW ond ........
114 . . . . .. . '
*"'l!'~~·t ' ' .

ASTRO-GRAPH

••

a-.

and l:olh, .............,_

71

Autoe for Sale

"All you pulled frQII'I your hou8e - . hot·
dogs, buns and a long barbecue fork? "

__, _ _ _ __
j

_,_~- -------

:~

'l

-·-

=Dr· Colllor=Uptl't'W'

Mil

,..... CIIf~1·

"

I
•

1

\I'

.

(l] Japin: 2000 The View
From W~hln
121 Crook I CIIIH
" 11 :00 \)( ~row I Mra. King

iaJ
• a eCJJ 111 a
Howl
iUIMDMvtlna
11J Miami Vloa Tubbs helps
Cutillo inveStigall a mljOr
cocaine smuggler. Stereo:
18 AmeriCIIn Mualc 8ltop

a

11:30 • (])
Toftight Show
Stlreo.
IJ)~

tK8H Z
+KZ

EASt

...

+QH3

By James Jacoby

.KH

In this deal in tournament competi·
+QI7653
,, lion everyone reached three no-trump.
SOuTH
' ,\11 declarers, upon winning the fjrst
+AJ7
trick, cashed the a~ of dlainonds, thus
• 8 7 32
protecting against all iour diamonds
tAQI09
being in one ~nd . Then they all went
+A4
·after overtricks. A low heart was
Vulnerable: East-West
played froiD South's hand. When West
Dealer:
South
followed small, the declarers made
. the rlflbt percenl.oge play of the nine SDO"
Well
NO&lt; .. Eut
from dummy. (The nine wins when . 1 NT
3NT
All pus
Pass
West holds K·IO or Q-10; it loees when
West holds K ·Q.) East won the kinl
Opening lead: +J
and returned a club. II declarer then
played a heart to the A·J and put in ftle L - - - - - - -- - - - - 1
jack, he would be rewarded .wltb two
overtricks for a score of plus 460. If
declarer was nervous about the possi· 1layout. So ne put ~p tne queen of
bilily of East falsecarding from a · hearts rlgllt away; JUSt as lbou&amp;b be
belding·of K·Q of hearts, be might sim· held K-Q. Declarer lot back to bls
ply Loke his nine tricJ!s. The greedy de- hand and led another heart. West now
clarers did well.
played low, and declarer put up-tbe
·At one table, defender West thwart· jack. Wben East ~ tbe kine. Soutb
ed declarer's strate&amp;Y by violatlnl tbe was limited to 111118 tncks and a mediadefender's rule of second bind playine ere score m comparison ,with 1111
low. That particular West Ulllllled othen.
'l#lttlby .flrlllro • ..,
that South was .1oin1 to put In~ jack •1::::;
::111 ..,,_,
1from dummy if the kiDI wu m the llio 11,. Oow'/114 JII&lt;OittJ •re- ,..- ,,
South hand. And he also tDew tbat tbe 10 1 1 •-.,.. ,..,. ·"" l'lloraoplay of tbe nine from dummy would
~-·=•-••su
force his pa~tner's king .'?" tbe actual

:;:J'G.,.,...

-

CROSSWORD
ACROSS
1 Restrict
8 Energy
9 Work
10 Garner
12 Playing

3 Subilde
4 Wlttlclam
5 Take
the liberty

marble

8 Babble
7 Lamprey
8 Richard

13 Exhausted
15 Favorlte

TV role

18 Rested
18 Biblical

Boone

11 Blackbeard,
for one
· 14 Curtain
24 Anlllles

lion
19 Ellett

fabric ·

man

21 Aunt (Sp.)

31 Beast

21 River In 17 High card 25 Biblical 32 Nobility
VIrginia 20 - ·
mountain 38 Fllllled
22 Soul (Fr.)
proc:eutng ae Scholarly 37 ~ate
23 - Schlpa 23 High·
18181on 31 Allegiance
24 Social
pflched
27 Hood's 41 Scoltlsh
clau

WIIIPOf'l

sound

explorer

27Cambrlc
28 Region
21Fashlon

30Tup
31 Spree
33 Son ol Bela 1=--t-t----'
34 Tease
35 Hal (sl.)

38 African
people

44Caddoan
Indian

45Thln

DOWN .
1 Applause
2 Frenzy

"'

DAILY CRYPI'OQUOI i8- Heft'l llow Co w9ft It:
AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW
'

,

I

One letter alandl f•IRCilber.

In UiiMIIIple A II .-d '
for the tine L'a, X for the two O's, etc. Sln8)e lttten, .
apoeirophes, the lelcth and fCII'IDIIIcln of the iHit de •~ ell
hints. Each day the code~ an different.

!~';:"o9

caYPIOQU011!

1\'r:.Q
~
:On
...
a ....... ...

EVX

: : - · Halt
TDnlglrt

(2:00)

c:

OXEMXT

PJZZXVSRD
VXVS~RHSRD

KRMI

KZ
Ql

SA

AK

Z.IMM.-VVK.IPA .

m·

l'

• AJ9

Department
of dirty tricks

(!J . .Hball Tonight

•

NORTH

+uz

43Made
ol cereal

Cll Maaterplac41 ThHtN

Send tor your As1ro-br~ph predlc:tlons arrangement wnere you snare a mutual
today by mailing $1 .25 to Aslro-Graph, Interest wllh anolher make doubly sure
clo this newspaper, P.Q . Box 91428, you 're lair today.ll the deal Is lopsided,
Cleveland , OH 44101-3428 . Be sure to both trouble and collapse are likely .
state your zodiac sigr&gt;. ·
CAPIICCORN CO.C. 22-.1111. 11) Left to
CANCER CJuria 21-Julr 22) It you 've your own deVIces today. you are likely
been lelting your work or re~ponsibil · to perform up to your uauel sllndards.
BERNICE
Illes pile up on you recently thiS could H . . - , ihlo might not be true R you
BEDEOSOL .be a day ot reckoning. Falling further feel you're being o-ly directed by an
behind now will make catching up a trl - , outlllde lnttuenc:e.
fte diHicult.
AQUARIUS C...... 20-l'eb. 11) Members
LEO (.luiJ 23-Aug. 22) Subdue lncllna· of tile opposite gender might not '
tlonslodey to take gambles on venlures you llli chariSmatic; as you youi'IIIH
.or persons about wt:om you know little. today. Coming on too strong could
;ij ; ' &lt;"'l......
Your Impulsive judgmenl might not tempi tiOIIMIOIIII to punclure your ego.
· #
- ·
'"'IUUI
.
measure up too welL
I'IICII Cl'eb. • lllrGit 211) TJY to op.
"
1
',~ -·...
. ."J.
.H',.
VIRGO CAug. 23·1opt. 221 In order to ' erat• wtthln your own sphere of .tnnu~
•.n.aa.J
maintain harmony on the home frontto· once today. It you attempt to projecl
,,.
day you must set the example not tile ·your IUihorlty in othlr ar-. II tould re.,
Juno I: 1tltlll
.
rules. Auuming a "Don't do as '1do, but . sultln unpteuant i'lpWCUIIIOI)t;
'!." the
aheed you could lind you wUI ' do uluy" posture could Ignite fl)arkl. r
(lilllnllt 21-Apltl11) You re not
In
year
wt: • ou rely • UIIRA (..,._ ~ ;111 A phlloaoplly IIUIY 10 be too patllnt today wllll per·
be luckier In i:~:.:n:f ot~erl. You'U that has proven advantageout for you 10111 who dlln't Ulde by your eugg11
on yourself -ewtthal 10 be lndapen· might not nee usartly eult tile nlldl ol 1110111 n ldMI. Try IO ketp Ill open
nave lhe
an UIOCiale. Don't impou your ICieU mind, ..._,. . we Gill alwayt leMI
•dentlr auc
..;,20)
Make
an
ef·
on tile unreceptive.
•
-.1111118 hom CU...
21
OPIINI
:iaiertlve In your one-to- ICOIIPIO COld. IM-IIow. Zl) ConwMr· TAURUI (AIIfl . . . . , Thll II a
__lort 10 be
toda 11 com- cial c1e111ng1 COUicl be 8 bll more com· . good ttmetottartlllltnga . . . Mideln
~"" :au~
wt~~~...Vir1ng
or pllcated thlll u_, today. 11 you llndr .~ -you~ to dNiwllll • IMr retny
• ,.an 1
not want lily· . younalt getting mired In IOIMihlng · l clayl. Dllln I . . yDUrlllllfiM In tile pall;~ ~::':~~~~~.~a jump an life , ' ltiGky, back out rathlr than 1J8111ng, 1t1on ~your ...... li IIOidlng only .
1
by understanding tile lnlluencel which 1 etuc:k.
· . t.ded PldOill apna.
are governing' you ln. the year at:ead . SAGITTARIUS CNCIW. 23-0ec:. 21) In an

,

.

eo..

Dynasties ·

,.

Refrigeration

wa~
- · 12.000.,
........ •wTtial
1144410141.

SQUA~ E S

UN SC ~AMBLE LETTE~ S TO

aStereo~
Q11
Cll Prlmellme Live

o-t fib Bantall .

Electrlc.ll &amp;

.._

•

GET ANSWER

Girl"
42 Australian
m818Upial

IIJ)I....tnQN....

. . , _ , .. D-110

•

A

40"Funny

10:30 (!) Major 1.11......llball'1
Fwd 1'110 1111...... Uko
--· t:l,100, IM-IIa11'11.

•

W

•A(])-anL.A. LIIW Sifuentes
has a rematch witt: a
diminutive tap-gun lawyer.

-•ndPino
OoHipalo, Ol:lo

1-.

For - - lnram.tlon .. 1o
rwgloler30441HM7.

, A PLUNB .ODD
IJtCUSIII

(!) Under Fire

-

IInce Beattie

.Itt:: 1:1113 ....... 2p.ftl.

Dor

I JEST
THROWED AWAY

9:30 8 (]) IB Setnfald George
persuades Jerry to move
when his apartment Is
broken into. Q
t 0:00 (JJ 700 Club With Pat

Stereo.

..

11t-1112:7MI.

2 IR
11447Nill bel·
CWro c.ntor _ , , , 1 p.m.
-ble, '
.............
llconoo, quollly chid CON. lion- lit Con:tnunlly '*""- I
dOJ th&gt;u F~d01, 7:30 1111 5:30. IR, .....lent - i o n . t'IIOO.

Mogle y...,

•

_.,,,.l~lllllt,

cloon - . lnt- . -

SHUCKS II

,..-,,

1t71 Cho:nplon, 141!!1 lllr, ...

LJ:wn ..,. ...~co, mowing, -

(R) (2:00)

Cll NewiWIIICII

2 , . , _ '=~::
.lonny. hl0.1112 .....

Polntllll
- 304-411t·- wr11.
ta.OO
por hour.

. 10t2,11doiCI....

1]]1 Larry King Llval
Big . .d M1m1 II.

-llollond ~ Oohl
Orlndor llllw.
•

'

Croea Emergency Tall John
· Ritter emcees this
emenainlng look at home
safety. wrth guest performers
enacting scenarios which
depict various home safety
hazards. Q
Cll (l] Myallryl lntenaa
rivalry leads into murder, but
which one is the killer? C

1!J MOVIE:

· ..... No'IIO:. will I'MUI-1 ·lrlcket1•mt

............ 1.~"

Ca11oao IIUdonl IiNdo
r 1171-. NOIIO.IM ttl liM.
)ol:. Wll 1oM ... olp.to whllo 1171 l'1on*'aD - . 1 - .
,_... on -lion, IWJ - o r , 1 lioiJ:, M-. ....,._

---:IOntdor1012. ·

RUN ME UP
A TREE AN'··

Plumbing &amp;
Heating
72 TrUCks for S&amp;le

---dod
. ..... - • . . . . . . . -.. I:GOPM.

18 wanuid to Do

~Y.

ilJJ 1D C NBA Balkltbll11 Q

DON'T WORRY,
SUGAR PIE!!
! AIN'T STARTED
SUPPER YET

WILD BOAR

winWin....
Rio
.
DH
Col
.,.. '
:MW121. .

lftal-.g:ii'MIII,

Airline lrwel, NurMe Alii, Tractor 1rollc:r 1111n1111.
.........,.. • • Flnol:clol1t &amp;h1b't If
P'
ment
'rtalll&amp;
lollaall tocol 2307
!iiHII Avo,
Pll ..... alsurg. WV 1G 111 141t

A BIG OL'

lloc:k, "'lck,
llntoll,llc.

IDDUI:J'Int/Aooounllng,

,

; ~ e (J) AEFIIriCIIn Rtld

r8 No1hvllle Now

-cr.:::·

- I t In Kor:oup, Ohio. 114-

lnltrUCtlon

MADE MY

HA~ONL..YONS.

..,

w... lnghO'W aulo
,.llllr .,, typo ill ODDIIonceo. WNt•
we _, ciWrill,.. hir co111111 -hlr lor lil!b· 114-112·1138.
~
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
dryc:r,ool.
uo 1ar onr lihimollon obDUt
Equal
opporlunllr
Building
"-""-" 2 -31M a2-ZIII
· - t22,100.,
u.u.
...., lb-IIICibllohC:mo- thlo Dolboot Porto
- ·oncl
· 55
- l o n , - . 304-f?Hlii
Uood ADallonon,
I:OOPII.
Suppllea
fk:hools &amp; •
....._ ·ec:r- ol - and
2 'llll'OOin mobil home, Heft.
-.10t-f11.1t72 ...... 5:00.

WHEN IT ACTL..IAU-Y

NANY PE:O"'-S SpEL-L

"INFINI~61MALu
WITH TWO ~'5556 .. •

'IOU vOOT

'•

.,..,.,aoj em.-,...,......_,

•.....
..=.-...::
"::'1,..-t:.:g
:x-·
lion. ....,. -

"'

-Goo o-.,
w.-.
--o-..
-·
11-.
ond Goo
Rolrlaoro
...E1oc1:
: All
llonglna Ill tD flOG.
!,0r1i Chol4 1Y1i1 ·- · Uko
lib .-, '!!!; Goo Foraod A..
,...,_, .,. 10 fiiO; Woll

;::r:hlrL

e (]) a

· MORK MEEKLE AND WINTRHOP

~~

· c-.~~y

(l] Wild America Western
d iamondback ranlesnakes
engage in the hypnotic
combat dance. Q
Gll!ll Major League
BaHIIall
r8 On Stage
9:00
Cheara Cliff nears
wetldlng bells when his
former postal trainee returns.

.. ~

=..~· t1447Nta, . . lor

M-,3044-.

_

by THOMAS JOSEPH

.

. Whitley and Freddie siSy at
the Dean's house tor a
weekend. (R) C
Cll Sneak Prevlaw1 Ooel

_lrojol, ...,....,,

-..g,

·

8;30 8 (]) iB O!Haronl Wo~d

•

Froo -.
- -cloy
Coli "'
1a - - , ... mini:
.....nlghl.
oo-

.......... tu.to.,.--

711. COUCh I Choir. 11112 Fl.
~ Coli ollor lp.m 114-44f.

OUT I)

IIAIEII&amp;HT
WATERPROOFING
UI!OOI:dMic:uol lllollme ....,.....
~- LDoll ........ furNMed.

CIIIIM-1271 I
!'Pt
K!nl
tuG.
4.... Ckii1 Cobl~
I, I,I 10

UIOUJ.

Lovtld (2:00)

Improvements

bebr 1:o.- tno 11111- c:r
boJ: ..,...lull or- m lln'o

PAINT PUIS. 01 loool M.
oniiWitfl or~ wrst inclt. 3 mL por . - . Dn - - lnlorlor
0111 luiiYllll Rd. Oliln 1 A.ll. to ond lllorlor Plltoburg Plllii18,
I P.ll. IIDn, tlwu
Coli 114- - - D n i U - Mtl · Jeckeon Ave,
Polnl

..... - · P.D. BGOI 111,

8:051]) MOVIC!: For Tho. I

1.\XJRKIIJG

Home

81

_
.... af , . . . _ , - . .
IMiaf IMIMtl, headt:laarda 130

..Urod,

HOIJ'S rr

Sei'IICes

........... - . ..........h
...am 1211 ond . . to t30L

....~-.~..::~-~
.......... ~

~

T - Mid

Houlll

.

r.lrrchandiSC

T:~

_

BRIDGE

IIJ) Moneyllne
aJ Miami Vlcl Crockett and
Tubbs try to connect with a
1react:erous cocaine dealer.
Stereo.
121 Mutlc Row VIdeo
G Abbon And Cootallo
7:~ I]) Joffaraona

"" ~ ltiW7I-I25I, Jalv: ~-loriWlt.
no lll•lo wldo
1100 IIIDnlh•

~~on::

P~I N T NUMBERED LE TTE~S

•

/il

==··...... -,.--Hol-,-...

•

WIIHI Of

.l!ll Night COUrt Q

l.a!o •- .- . conolruollon
ftlilolllo ""
,_,
on
11oJ1ium
Raid. nlod,
~
• •,
fiiiiHIIM
&amp;MI 11 a. lnk:nu 'k n ....a1ec1

:.'...":::.n'".t
~--=.:z

.

SCJIAM.LITS ANSWIIS
, .,
Knight - Oasis -Yours - Hamson - SHRINK
After telling me how much of the good food she had
eaten on her cruise, my friend then added, "And guess
what, the ~altwater made by bathing suit SHRINK."

Mqa1lne ·
(!) SportoCe!llar
fiJQI eCil Currant Affolr
Cll (l] MFICNall Llhrer

35 Lob a Acreege

'

6

_

IN THESE

i (]) PM

.,.

Kaolteiii:Jr ...

Complete :he ch~kle quolod
by f,ll ,ng '" the m•ss•no wor~s
I..-...L.......I-..L.......L-1..--,J
. you develop lrom stop No . 3 below.

Griffith .
7:00 (]) Sco:recrow I Mra. King

.,

111-

I
I 1 I .I I' I e
K R A WE L

.

• (]) a

.-. .......

.

..-- -----...=...,

Q
1121 CIS Nawo Q

7:351]) Binford And Son

11. .....,

I I I

My.brother-In-law is nol too
smart when H comes · to
money, so we weren't sur·
prised when the IRS called
him in. Granny says, "A fool
and his money are soon ---·-.·

6:351]) Andy

-·--'"' ·76

I

L.-.J--t.---L:....J..;'-1 ~

181!ll Th-'1 C&lt;ompany

Allie me·~ ""Jail".
Omnl- l:nd ouloholll. •••

PM.

II

1 (]) IB NtiC Nlglldr Now•
®Spo:t•Look
.
(l)llocly !lectrlc
(l] 3-2·1 Conl8ct

lhl - 1 .... Plano
lo:vlce. 1111 Word ~;1321.

oon:l, ~- .... 5:00

NA L UN

,_,:..:....:;...:::...,;-;.;---l.
s

1
· -

.QI eCJJAICNewiQ

T:ocllor. 711 "" .............. call
.,. . . 1111.
1N7 Low . _ - . wfth 110
_..., XJIZ. ...... t....

1m ond 1111 Cc:rv- Auto,
....
po. Wlndaw
pit. , _on both. 114,_.,
1124111.

.

IIJ) World Today
IIJ He-M1n
G Cilerte1 In CNote
8:05 1]) Blvlrty H••1a1

121 Top C1rd
G Hangln' In

-r -··
llolhor lnl...

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.l!ll Andy Orlttllll

6:30

llctj0~

.

114 112 124t.

NO. I'LL lAKE TI-lE
8LANKET ...YOll KEEP
TI-lE TI-IUM8!

l

T

S1200, 30t411-111'1.

Q

(l] Ratldlng RainbOw

- _ - .1111 W!leol. 10114...
..
...........

c:.-vm.~ ~""·
1110 ClloN!II, 327 s .-.

CORPIT

I I It

(J) ludwaiMr·Tl\ofoughbred

. . . . to

ts,DOO
IDWotllorMIIYI01modoiZ21
- · fit!".!·_ - ·

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~mplo

And
McCumMQ
• C2l • • • (J) 1111

~~~

·n RIMult .,••,.., 1 dDar
oulo, olr OO!Id. ~ cond,

low :o IO&lt;m four

tho
bewordr.

1:00 (]) Hanlcall4l

-lulllld ............. -

Autol for Sale

••••

R_ra.,.. lollers Dl
0 four
acromblod words

EVENING

XIIIO Hondo, 8310. 114-11121.

71

'::~:~' S@i-.~lA-~f..!JiS•

WOII

_ _ _ _..;_....;; 14lio&lt;l lor CLAY I . IIOUAN

8

THURS., JUNE 7

Utt4•

loll "' ....... iijlli,

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 15

Television
Viewing

.

'

'

•

PomeloyMidclaPot1.
- -'
--·---OhiO
'
....

-lhuraday, June 7, 1990

: oJa;:~

COlfUIIIlan, (R) Q .

\

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AOX

:t=s::&gt;:~ ~~~

SHE WENT. - SAKI

.

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. e tiiO llr ICII:g , ........ Syr a ... Inc. ••

�POITieloy-Midcleport. Ohio

Paga 16-Tha Daily Sentinel

Thursday. Juna 7. 1990

Ohio Lottery

Reds snap

losing ·spell,

Daily Number
429

top Astros

Pick-4

9042

Low tonight near 70. Chance
of rain 10 perceat. Saturday ,
high In mid 80s. Chance of rain
40 percent .

Page3

•
.

June

TUR

••o

IDlY, JUNE 18,.

Ford
•Air ConditiOn

•Automatic
•Power Windows
•AM/FM Collet1e

•Autor'riatle .
•Air Condition
o4:0 Uter Engine · oAoor Console
•Alloy Wheels
• Loaded!

•Power Locks .
•FIJI OpnoO Cal

SAVE THE POOL PREsENTATION- Syrac.- CoUDCibnaa James P&amp;pe, a member of tbe
poel committee, left, accepted a clleck for
$1,0'71.'13 b'om Z1111e Beegle, manager of the
London Pool, .and Sandra Cobb, a member of the

WAS *18,435

NOW

$14
. '999*

L~OEDI

NIIW

$9999*

NOW

The Meigs County Historical
While Pomeroy Is a feature of
Society Is joining Pomeroy this
the exhibits at the Museum, there
. weekend In the celebration of Its Is much more being offered for
· 150th birthday with an exhibit ·Heritage Weekend. VIsitors will
:featuring historical memorabilia
be able to step back In ilme and
-of the town.
discover how the pioneers lived.
There are photos, yearbooks, · A display of old postcards depict
and other lll'tlfacta on display at
various historical sites. A sUde
tbe Mlllellm relatlllg , to the
shOw presentatl9fl'wlll be shown
v11ltli'e7"'lfi~proneersnina ·Its
by the Southern Ohio Coal Co. on
pi'Ogless through the ,years.
the mining Industry In Meigs

2,988

$9999*

•sPECIAL ·ANNOUNCEMENT"
Ford Mot ot Company Jlas Given Us Additional Allocations
On •Ranger Pickups •F-Series Trucks And
The New .'91 Ford Explorer
Ju~t For This Sale . , .
Hurry,
· Whlle Selection Is Good!

1986 FORD BRONCO
EDDY BAUER PKG~
Slockt5881,2docn.4..,..m, v-.~ ....

8911S

WAS

1983CHEVY
CELEBRITY

PS, PB, AINFII - ·
NOW

PS,PB.

WASI2t85

•2191

drivo,4crt.,llr.auii.. AMFM-.

wu'8885

N01V

WAS

1990 FORD ESCORT

drive.4C¥1.air, d ., PS, P8, tinwhllll,auile,
Slocl!' 13520,4 ....... frant-

NOW

Allll'\t ·
- - llldilll,
wlndaw
dllag.

SlDck' 13350, 2daoll, front wheol drN8, 4 q&gt;l.,
Sapeed, PS, PB, AM.fii1W80 flll8. 111Cia11,
wlndaw defaa.

bucket-. -

WAS

NOW

87711

878.

1989 FORD PROBE.

Slocl! t 13380, 2 doors, o:&gt;upe, 11!'111 wheel

drive, 4'!'1., air, 81110., PS, PB, tibwheel, AM1FM
radio, radials, bucl&lt;et soall, rear window defog.,
gqes.
NOW

1986 FORD F-250
4X2

WAS

' 1980 FORD F-150

1989 FORD
TAURI.fS-GL

Stock t 43-U, 2 - . . V.fl, aull.,

PS, PB, AII/FMradiO, .-11, whlll
walla. 112

""'··'""'-bid.

1988 EAGLE PREMIER

1987 DODGE 150 4X4

WAS'2t85

· S10Citrstst,4whell tlll¥t, v.a, lir; au~o,, PS,
PB, Allofllllllo, 1121:111, long wide bad, raor
U!p bun!por, gouges, liding-

ar-.

SIOCit I 878111, 4 dooll, lltfln, f1ont wheel .
drive, I cwf,, lir, IIIID., PS, PI, pawor locka, tin

whell,
de~ auiM, AMfU

-···-window

NOW

WAS

'7995

S10Cit t2921. 2doors, twdtap, ct!UPI. v.a, lir,
S'iplld lllnd,, PS, PB, paworwlndowl, paw
locka, Ill whell, cMe. AMfU · - llpl,

buclllt-.

WAS·

v
----·---·---------·~~--~---~-~ -~-

1990 FORD TEMPO

wu'5695

...

- ....

'11,885

'10,4.

NOW

'9995

1988FORD:
MUSTANGGT

---~--- ~-

S1ock' 13470.
NOW

SIOCit t 13510, 4 doors, Mdan, front wheel
drive, 4 cyf., lir, IIIID., PS, PB, power lockll,
AtM\1 sterao rape, reor window detog.

WAS

tonight. From 6 lo 7 the Melody Men Barberabop
Quartet wlllalllg, from 7 lo 8 the Sweet Mountlan
Souncb will perfonn, and from 8 to e· p.m. the
MldDir(ht Cloggera will dance on Court Street.
These tents on the. parklllg lot will be used or the
arts and crafts displays.

Heritage Days schedule

I

Sloc:k.l 81073, 4 doGii.

Stodll SoW! I, 2 - ., V.fl,

COMING ALIVE - Tenlll for arlll 1111d crafts
went up, a natbed truck turned Into a covered
stage, and window dlaplays featqrlng thlnp of
yesteryear were put Into place Thursday ·
afle..-n and early Friday momlng In prepara·
lion for Pomeroy's sesqulcetennlal Heritage
Weekend activities which will get underway

SIOCkt5351 ,4 doors, &amp;c:yl., lir, 81110., PS, PB,
f'll"'" wir&lt;lows, power ...~ power loeb. &gt;n
wheol, cruise, AM.fllslenla lap8, llldiaJI, wMe
waits.

.

1989FORD
CROWN VICTORIA

SlDck t 13530, 4 doors, aedan, V-8, lir, v"Y!
roof, IUID., PS, PB, power wiMoin, power
- . power locka, Ill wheel, auiM, AM.fll
•. . , llpl, radilftl, .......:.._-.::-,::

WAS

\

will

County, and there
be Items
used In the mining Industry on
display.
.
Other special exhibits Include
tea sets which have been traced
backed to President Harrison, an
extensive salt and pepper collection, some antique and coming
from val'lous parts of the world;
owned by Garnet Ervine. and a
Continued on page 10

Parts ,.,.,.,., ipeclst
During This Sale Only
Ford Truck Bed Liners
. Only*189
lnstalllllon Extra

1987 PONTIAC
BONNEVILLE

d., PS, PB, paw wlndoool, paw locka, In
"" llldilll
. ....... CIUiM, Nom! ' lu:kei-.QIIIOII.
NOW '

. SyraCUII! Flft Department, both actively In·
volved Ill tile "Save the Pool" fund ralalllg
activltlea. 'lbe money will be uaed for dolllg
needed repalra at the pool.

·Celebration expected to .draw
:big crowd this wee·k end

LOADED/

WAS '12,751

1990

A Muhimodi•

tnc. Newopope&lt;

Delinquent sewer fee
pondered.in Syracuse

'

II PROiiRESS NOW TBRU ·

2 Sections, 14 Pogu 25 Cents

HERITAGE DAYS SCHEDULE
All Heritage Days activities on Friday and Saturday will be
held on Court Street unless otherWise noted. Those attending the
festivities should provide their own seating. .
Friday
6-7 p.m. -Melody Men Barbershop Quartet.
7.8 p.m.- Sweet Mountain Sounds.
8·9 p.m. - Midnight Cloggers.
8 p.m. - The opening of the.exhlb!t, "Ornate and Simple
Forms: Pomeroy Furniture and Fashion, 1840-1880" at the
Meigs County Public Library.
Saturday
10 a.m, - Heritage Parade, sponsored by the Pomeroy
Merchants Association.
,
11 a.m. to noon -Civil War Marching Drills.
noon to 12: 45 p.m. - Shady River Shufflers.
H: 45 p.m. - Special Request Barbershop Band.
1:45-4 p.m. - Restoration Jazz Band.
2: 30 p.m. - Meigs County Fair Queen announced.
3 p.m. - Costume judging on the parking lot stage.
4·5 p.m . - Outhouse races, Second Street.
5-6 p.m. - Pioneer costume review and winners announced.
6 p.m. - Kyger Valley Gospel Quartet.
6: 30 p.m. - Brothers of the Brush contest.
7-8 p.m. -Bob and Kendra Ward-Bence.
8-10 p.m. - J:'eter Shaw-Hotpolnt String Band. Square
dancing In the street .
·
· On Saturday following the parade there .will be carriage ride
throughout the day beginning at-Court and Second Streets.
There also will be Civil War Musket BrJaades displays all day
Saturday. _.
'
On Sunday rides will begin at the museum site at 1 p.m. '
Food and craft concessions will be available all day Friday
and Saturday.
Activities at the museum will be held Saturday and Sunday
from 1-5 p.m.
The exhibit, • 'Ornate and Simple Forms: Pomeroy FUrniture
and Fashion, liN0-1810" at the library will run through June 22
during the hours of 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. MonClay through Friday,
and 1·4 p.m. on Saturday and Sunday.

.Murder trial
in third day

t

WINFIELD, W.Va. (UPI)
Jury selection went Into Its thlro
day Friday In the case of a
GaiUpolls man accused of mur·
derlng a West VIrginia sheriff's
deputy.
Defense attorneys for Robert
Gray of Gallipolis, Ohio, have
slowed the process by moving
th&lt;jt each juror be questioned
Individually. Gray Is charg~ In
the shooting death of Putnam
. County deputy sheriff John
Janey.
The trial of an alleged accomplice, Robert Bates, has been
continued with no date set.
Gray Is accused of killing the
off·dutydeputy Aug. 17. Prosecu·
tors contend Gray was trying to
torch the Hurricane residence of
Raymond Huck In an Insurance
scam to whiCh Huck later
pleaded guilty.
,
Janey was working ,part-time
as an Insurance company Investigator and had staked out Huck's
residence when he surprised
Gray. Pro&amp;ec~~tors allege Gray
tried to flee lind shot Janey In the
chest and head.
Defense attorneys contend
Gray shot Janey In self-defense.
. Putnam County Circuit Judae
Clarence Watt ruled that he·
would allow as evJcleD.ce . a
confession signed by the defend·
ant tile morning after the
.
shooting.

re~lred, and repairs will be
. By KATHRYN CROW
made
to the fence section damSentinel col'l'ellpondent
aged
In
an accident. He gave
A step toward curbing delincouncil
.
a
rundown on dally
quent payments of sewage biDs
receipts
at
the
pool.
was taken Thursday night when
A
letter
was
read
from Mr. and
Syracuse VIllage Council met In
Mrs.
Freeman
Enoch
In regard
regular session.
to
flooding
·
In
.
front
of their
J'4eet1ng with council were Jim
property
during
heavy
rains.
Wickline and John Murphy of the
Kathryn
Crow
reported
that
she
()yrac1,1se Racine Regional Sewhad
been
unable
to
reach
Don
age District, Gordon Wine,
brenner and L;lrry Ebersbach of Johnson with the Ohio Departthe Syracuse board of Public
Affairs, and · Robert Wingett,
grants administrator:
Wingett reported he attended a
meeting of the Sewer Board to
discuss some existing pgoblems.
He advised there are two
major problems, one being sewage bills are not being collected
!rom everyone and there Is no
way of enforcing payment, and
the other being the rate structure
Meigs County Treasurer
which has not been Increased
·
George
Collins has been elected
. since the construction of the
to
a
two-year
term as Republlcan
system In 1982. There Is $20,000 In
County
Chairman
by the party's
dellllquent accounts at the pres·
Central and Executive
ent time, It WI!S reported.
Wingett also noted expenses Comlttees.
for the sewage operation Is
The organizational meeting of
party was held Tuesday night
the
approxlmatey $1.01,000 with revenue of $175,000, with two full at the Senior Citizens Center,
time and one part-time em- Mulberry Heights.
Collins succeeds Meigs County
ployees. He also noted they will
be In a crisis within a two year Commlssoner Richard E. Jones,
period.
who was first elected COU!Ity
.WJekllne alated there.are tbree ' chairman In J976 .and w.ho subhouses whiCh have not hooked mitted his resignation TueSday
onto the system, two In Syracuse . night. Jones Is the Republican
Party candidate for State Reand one In Racine.
The sewage board asked the presntatlve for the 94th District
(Athens, Gallla, and MelgsCoun·
water board and council If they
would consider an ordinance ties) and cited the demands of
providing residents delinquent that race on his time and energy
on sewage charges for 90 days as a reason for stepping down.
Jones thanked the committee
· would have their water shut off
with a possible reconnect fee members for their hard work on
his behalf In the May Primary
Involved.
There are 344 residents In electlon. In a three-man race,
Syracuse, and adding Racine Jones carried all 29 precincts In
·makes more than 700 people on Me~ County and received 81.3
percent of the vote, for a margin
,the system.
Council agreed to have the of 2,218 over his nearest
challenger.
solicitor prepare an ordinance.
Collins had been treasurer for
Members of the water board
-met with council In regard to the Executive and Central Com·
metering residents outside the mit tees for several years. In
accepting the job as county
corporation.
It was suggested bulk meters chairman, he commended Jones
be placed at both the upper and for his leadership.
MembersoftbeCountyCentral
lower ends of Syracuse and at
Rose Valley, and residents there Committee are elected from
pay a share of water going each of Meigs County's 29 preclncts. Officers elected for twothrough the meter.
.Council as ked for ligures on the year terms for the Central
number of meters, cost revenue Committee were Evelyn Clark,
estimates and a prolonged plan chairman; George Nesselroad,
Jr., vice chairman; Paul Gerard,
to be reviewed by the solicitor.
The committee to save the pool secretary.
The Central Committee then
met with council and presented a
check to Zane Beegle, London proceeded to authorize the creaPool manager, and J lm Pape, tlon of an Executive Committee
chairman of the pool committee ·to Include all the Central Comfor $2,071.73 to be used for repair mlttee members, plus a number
of others who were recognized
work.
for
their work In behalf of the
Council commended Heidi
Cobb Beegle, Sandra Cobb, Mary Republican Party. These In·
Pickens, Jeff Bable, Kristin and eluded Henry Wells, Granville
Jim Pape and the Syracuse Fire Lyons; George Collins, Richard
Department for their work at the E. Jones, John Manley, Dorset
pool.
Larkins, Brenda Roush, and
Beegle asked about raising the John Williams.
pay for life guards, but was
Elected for two-year terms as
officers
for the Executive Com·
denied his request because they
mlttee
were George CoUins,
are part-time hourly employees
Meigs County Comchairman;
and the village does not have
mlssoner
David
Koblentz, vice
funds for the Increase.
Council did, however, autho- president; Dorothy McGuffin,
rize pool personnel to-offer life secretary; and County Recorder
guard training and life saving Emmogene Congo, treasurer.
Plans were dlscuased for the
classes to current advanced life
upcoming General Election cam·
saving card holders.
Prerequisite to enroUment Is patgn. Collins pointed out r~ent
Red CrO&amp;S CPR and First Aid
training. Gene Lyons will be the
Instructor for the classes, and
anyone who wants to enroll
should contract Heidi Beegle,
992·9909 or 2f7-4455.
B'eegle · reported 96 passes to
the pool have been sold. He noted · Jason E. Riggs and Douglas A.
a leak In the baby pool Is being 1 Harris both waived their right to
1 a preliminary hearing In Meigs
County Court this morning. '
, Riggs Ia charged with aggra·
, vated vehicular bomk:lde, tam·
perlng with evld&amp;nCe, and abuse
.
of
a human corpae In Saturday
The Melp County Chamber of
night's
death of VIetor A. WIU.
Commerce will meet for a
Riggs
wu
present at this momTuesday . noon luncheon and
log's
llearJna,
along with his
buslnela -•lon at tbe Over·
attorney,
Herman
carson.
brook Center, 333 Pace St.,
Harris
Is
charged
with tamper·
MJdd.\epOrt. G~t apealrer will
log
of
evidence
and
was repres·
be Gary Batel, G'I,'E North wltb a
en
ted
at
this
morning's
hearing
, video presentation.

Collins··succeeds·
Jones as Meigs
GOP chai•·man

..,.....

GEORGE COLLINS
· polls showing Republican guber·
natortal candidate George Volnovlch far ahead of his Democrat
opponent, as well as other
contests where the raees appear
closer.
The new chairman stressed the
Importance of working hard for a
Republican victory, because of
the re-apportionment which will
be coming from the results ofthe
1990 federal census.
Collins appointed · a Meigs
County F'l.lr booth, committee ·
and a headquarters committee.
Refreshments were served durlng a social hour.
Central Committee members
are James H. Qulvey, Bedford;
Rodney Chevalier,.- Chester
North; David J. Koblentz, Ches·
ter South; VIrgil Windon, West
Chester; Gay F . Johnson, Co tumbla; G. Denny Evans, Lebanon;
Harry c. Hill, Letart; Bill
Francis, North Olive; Kirk D.
Reed, South Olive; Roger C. ·
Gaul, Orange; Bette Hobstetter,
Rutlwnd VIllage; Florence Barrett, East Rutland; Ann Barrett,
West Rutland.
·John F. Colwell, Salem; Ruth
Powers. Middleport 1; Fred
Hoffman, Middleport 2; Paul
Gerard, Middleport 3; Dorothy
McGuffin, Mldleport 4; Roger F.
Dillard, Pomeroy I; Evelyn
Clark, Pomeroy 2; Geroge L.
Harris, Pomeroy 3; Larry R.
Thomas, Bradbury; Nathan
Biggs, Laurel Cliff; George Nes:
selroad, Rock Springs; Lola
Clark;- Scipio; Cora Beegle, Ra·
cine Village; Emmogene Hol·
stein Congo, Syracuse Village;
Fred Smith, Minersville; and
Otis Knopp. Racine Precinct.

Riggs, Hanis cases bound
over,to Me~ Grand Jury

Chamber to
meet Tuesday

'lit' .

'll

ment of Highways to discuss the
problem on Enoch's property
located on Route 124. Crow said
tl!e effort will be continued.
Mayor Pickens reported on
work to be done a t the marina.
Attending were Kenny Buckley, Crow, Jim Hill, Minter
Fryar, Pape, arid Tyso·n
Drummer, all council members,
Mayor Pickens and ClerkTreasurer Janice Lawson.

_____
.

.

~-

I

.

-----·----...

~--------

--

' by his attorney, John Lentes .

Steven L. Story , Meigs CO!IIItY
Prosecuting Attorney, represented the State of Ohio;
~ With the decision of Riggs and
: Harris. to waive the right of a
· preliminary hearing, the cases
' have been bound over to the
• Melp County Common Pleu
Court for further proceedings,
Story stated the next arand.:
jury session would be June 1~ ·
1
Bond for Riggs and Harris al10
was continued.

I
I

\.

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