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Ponwoy-Midcleport. Ohio

Ptgr. 1o-The Daily Sentinel

Monday. June 26, 1990:

~eigs

have
.

..

'

"'"

EMS squads ·
Rain gives way to sunshine in Buckeye State
12 weekend calls

. .U.atls ,, of tbe MeigS County
E:mtqency Medical service re- ,
·~to 12 calls for assistance
~ tile weekend.
·
, ..Qa. Satilfday at 12:59 a.m. the
Ml~ unit was called to
Soutb TliJrcl Street for Rich Hally
wllci was'' treated but not

'?.. .rfld.., ,

:At- 'l ' p.m: the Pomeroy urllt
went to Buttern!lt .Ave11ue for
· Maey1Garqes .-who was taken to
Homer Medical Center, At l! 10
li..m; the· unit went to the Beacon
Stat.IQn · ~Of Tlni Herdman who
" • treated but not transported
and . for !Celth Musser who was
JMn~ to Veterans MemorlaUkiapltaL
. ·
.
, 'lllle Pomeroy · unit, at 2:22
a.m., was called to Route 143 for
~· Gramm who was taken
to Veterus, and at 8: 56 a.m. the ·
lllilt went to EastMatn !or Teresa
Budett~

,:· . .

, :.M U:Ot.a.m. the Pomeroy was ·

e.ue.i to East Main on a

motpr

' velltcle acddeilt In which Clla·
rlft .. Ne!!Cf, Michael Swisher,

-. ;•..

.

·

By U•lletl P.rea hterlllltloul
gan Tuesday afternoon.
'l'beralnyweekendgavewayto
Temperature-wise things are
sunny skieo! across most of Ohio
looking good. for Ohio !or much of
. the week, with afterliOOn highs
Kenny Ramsey , Duane Flsber, · Monday morning.
and
dl'lzzle
over
norreaching the 801; Tuesday.
Showers
· Shelly Wol!e, Jean King, and
t!Jeast
parts
or
the
state
ended
tor
On the early morning we!lther
Mike King were all treated but
tbe
mdsl
part
at
about
midntabt.
map,
iow. pressure was over the
not transported.
National
Weather
Service
,
eastern
Canadian maritimes. A
'l'be
At 10:32 p.m. the Middleport ·
said
sunshine
would
be
the
the
·
·
rather
large
area of high presunit raponded to a call on Oliver
rule
over
Ohio
Monday,
with
fair
sure
occupied
the eastern half of
Street for Christina Steinmetz
who was 'taken l!l Veterans. At .
weather
bigh pressure
..
weather
feature being
over the .
11: 47 p.m. the. unit wentto Beech main
eastern
halt
of
the
country.
Street for Barb Boling who was
Lower pressure that was over
transported to .Holzer Medical
eastern
Canada puUed ott to the
Center.
·
. . '
enough to allow condi·
northeast
On Sunday . at 12: 53 a.m. the
lions
to
clear
over Ohio, and the ·
Mlddlepi&gt;rt unit went to River;
weather
seJ;'vlce
said high presside Apartments for Tina Hensure should keep things In gOod
dricks who · was taken to
. shape (or all the state.
Veter!lns.
The weather will_remain dry
The Pomeroy unit, at 2:50
Monday . night and probably
a.m., was called to Route 33 for
through Tuesday. On Tuaday,
Marsha Orrick and Wayne Orrick w))o were taken to Veterans . however, the high pressure will
be sliding off to the east and weltk
Memorial Hospital.
low
pressure will be inovlng
At 1: 30 p.m. the Pomeroy unit
toward
the area-from the west.
went to Wetziall Street for NelUe
.
At
that
time it still looks. as .
Morris who was taken · to
though
the
air won't have enough
Veterans.
·
moisture
to
suppori showers, but
.Finally, at 4: 51 p.m. · the
they'll
probably
.be close by Syrac;use unit responded to a call
over
parts
of
Indiana
and Michlon. Welshtown . Hill for William ·
Wilson w~refused treatment.

Low pressure wlll become moJ:e ;
organized on Tuesday and will ·
move east Just .to the north of
lakes Superior and Huron. The '
low pressure will tral) a coler
front into the northern tier or&lt;
Plains and Great Lakes states•:
with lower pres,Surea -also mov-'·tng Into . the mld-Millslsslppl''
Valley.
.,

the .nation with centers over
KentuckyandMisslsslppt.Broad
but weak low pressure was (rom
south central. Canada and the
Dakotas Into Arizona and New ·
Mexico. .
Ori Tuaday, the high will still
occupy mos!'of the eastern third
ot the nation broadly centered
over the VIrgin las and:Carolinas.

Ohio ·Lottery

Cincinnati .
downs Giants
to up lead

' Daily N~mber

482
Pick-4

Page4

~;;;;;;;;-. iiii~illiltJiftf!r.ll~l'i~~

•
Vo!.40,' No.287

EACH , ·•
VHIONLV
PIIE-Y •·
. VIEWED :-

-Meigs announcements---- Weather·

Riverbank .erosion project ·will Cost $752,
provide $500,000 for the project.
As 'for the balance of the {unding,
the Ohio Departme~t of Development's brea~down Is $200.000 In
funds from that agency, another
$30,000 from another ·unnamed
state SOI!rce, and $12,000 in local
fuMing.
Atlast night's meeting, council
vote(! to provide from village
funds the $12,000 needed In IOC{II
monies.
It was emphasized by Mayor
Fred Hoffman that funding for
the project has not yet been

COUrt. ••

-- ..

I'I.ASIX :'

Dlllllt:·

... CUI'S ·'•

'

Area d'e at.h s

.

70Z.-- ~

.

.

_)_

Reed

.RITEAID
DRY

IIIIASfED

I'EAIIII7S
11 oz.

_ , , ,.

'I

'

.
~ $1,1!00 DONATION - Chldy Forbes, lelt, 1111soclate
dlreetor oUhe Grant Development Fouaitatlon In Columbus, gives
her lliPPrectatlon to .Freer C. Zlrlcle, admlnlstriWve manJer lor
Solitheril.OliiQ Coal Company's Meti!S\Divlslon, for a donation the
· com~)j 1aye i'lle Llfefllght helicopter service. .Forbes and other

Two players share ·

Hospital news

The · Pomeroy PoUc~ Depart-ment Investigate!\ a five-car
. accident on East Main Street a!
the Intersection of Spring Avenue
at 11:03 Saturday morning. No
one was seriously InJured. The
accident was not reported until
today.
A 1982 Volkswagen driven by
· Ml_chael Swisher of Syracuse
struck the end of a line of cars
stopped to allow Shelly Wolfe,
Pomeroy, to turn left onto Spring

m

t,~$129

.-

IIISI'II!JAaE

'

.RITE AID
SIII'EII
HEIR'$

POTATO

CHIPS

6.5 OZ. UG

_ , JV UIIIT tlll4n118 • :

Dissolution fded

sa.

RITE ,AID DISCOUNT PHARMACY
POMEROY

306 EAST MAIN .STREET
PHONE: 992-2586

'

~.....

---,-·- -·-·- .... -- I-

.
'

.

I

-~·--- ~~- .... __._•. . ··--·-- -· --- •. _I_._

E~. ·E.
U feFllght representatives traveled to the Meigs Division office on
one of the re~~eue helicopters to accept a $1,000'donation lrom·the
company. The money will be used for general operations ami
maintenance of a LifeFilght based In Wellston which services ·
southeaslerll Ohio communlllas.

Avenue.
The first car struck a 1986
Dodge driven by Charles Neece,
Middleport, was driven forward
and Into the rear of a 1981 Dodge
driven by_Michael King, Pomeroy. King's car was then pushed
Into the rear of a 1975 Honda
driven by Dewalne Fisher, Middleport. Fisher's car then struck
the 1985 Nlssan dr(v~il by Wolfe.
Damaga to Wolfe's car was
moderate. Fisher's car sustained

'
light damage. The cars driven
by
King ·and Neece both had heavy
damage and Swisher's car received heavy damage on ·the
front and driver's ·side.
SWisher was cited to failure to maintain assured clear distance.
Another accident Investigated
by Pomeroy police Involved the
1987 Ford truck owned by Melvin
Va!lMeter Sr., Pomeroy, which
was struck by another 1987 Ford
truck driven by Robert Jeffers,

Pomeroy.
The truck driven by Jeffers
failed to make the turn off of West
Second Street and struck VanMeter's truck parked at 106 Butternut. Jeffers left the scene and
was apprehended. He was cited
for hit-skip and failure to con trot.
VanMeter's truck received
moderate damage front and
rear. Jeffers'- truck had moderate damage to the front and
Continued on page 3

Mandela denounced by five Florida mayors

' . llllllt;llf ~~~

.

Marriage license

approved. Theurge_n cyofgettlng $64,569 in state funds. The mayor share.
.
. .
· payment and . make a $10,000
the corrective . work done was
was authoriZed to proceed wit~
Mayor Hoffman said that It · appralued iot available to prosempl;iasiZed and It was noted that . --the application.
appears there will have to be an pectlve buyers for $5,000, giving ·
the co11dltlon of the f(verbank is
Those funds do not cover the increase In·rates sometime In the · them a $15,000 equity in the home
deteriorating and could threaten iota! subsidized operation pf the near future. The rates have not going In, milking the home
the sewage lagoons,
cab company. Both Middleport been changed since the cab available at an affordable
· Asapartofthecouncilmeeting ' and the Meigs County Commls- company began operation in monthly payment ·
a public hearing was held on the stoners contribute annually. . 1985, Before ·s uch a change can
Mayor Hoffman reported that
application to the Ohio Depart- Pomeroy, it. was note&lt;!. has never take . place, however, a public restrooms at the park will get
ment of Transportation for.1991 contributed a share to the local hearing will be required.
under construction soon. The
funding for the public transit operating c0sts of public ·transit,
Mayor Hoffman reported that project is now being advertised.
system, The Blue Streak Cab. although requests have been bids will be opened on the Issue 2
As for business In town, It was
The application is due by July 31 · repeatedly inade . . Again village street repair projects in the noted that the Prescription
1\nd the amount being appliad for.· officials will ask for Pomeroy village on July 9. The repair work Shoppe has moved .Into the new
Is $49,809 ln. federal funds and Village Council to pay a lair will take place on Park Street, bJ,llldlng of Mitch Meadows on
Cottage Drive, and Mill Street.
North Second, and thatt another
Mayor Hoffman gave a ·brief building Is undergoing renova,
report on a proposed housing- . tton in preparation tor a real
,...
program through the Ohio De- estate and upholstery business.
·partment of Pevelopment . The
Rod Raymond 1"ho operates
village has not as yet made the . Cedar Bar and Lounge on
application for furids through North Second and Race advised
that agency since It Is required council that he plans to close of! a
that a public hearing be held.
.section of the building and open a
The project, according to Infor- supervised youth center with
matlon provided by Mayor Hof- video and arcade games. He
fman, relates not only to the area noted . that the facility will be
off ·Hartinger Parkwaq but to drll)k and drug free and that
private lots . within the village,,. loitering In front will not be
and is designed to make afforda- permitted.' He .also advised that
ble new homes available to low he plans to abide by .the village
and middle Income families wpo. curfew, operating during school
are able to secure private months from 3 p.m to an hour
be.fore curfew , and during the
financing.
A contractor, it was reported.
summer (rom noon to 10 p.m.
has made available a three
He said ihat there wllllbe no
bedroom pre-fabricated home access from .the youth center to
which Is both .FHA and private
the bar. Raymond asked for a
lending institution available to ' !:l'illver of the village amusement
the village at a special cost to low
ta)!: ft;lr tw.o months, Council voted
and middle purchasers for
to waive the charge tor that
$39,272. The houses are comperiod with everyone voting ln
·pleted within six week from the · favor with _ the exception · o'r
time construction begins. ·
Councitli1an Paul Gerard.
The proposed plan -and It was
Dav.e and E;ddte RQS1! ~re
emphasized 'tnat no fuDdlng has
again, at the meeting to diScuss
been approved,. nor hau ·the' traveling with empty trucks
v_lllage yet made applicationthrough 'the village. Tlie two are
WO\lld be to grant a $10,000 down
Continued on page 3

Nel~~one setiou~·ly ·hurt. in .5"-car accident

~~lf~

Stocks

'

···r;.. · ~·,""r

$9 million jackpo• ·

,.
I

1 S ...ion, 10 Pogu 26 Cents
A Mu~lmodlt Inc. Ne..;opeper

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Tuesday, .June 26, 1990

Copyrighted 1890

· By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
·
Sentinel News Start
Anptl)er step toward securing
. funding to correct the riverbank
erosion at the sewage lagpon site
below· Hobson was taken by
Middleport VIllage. Council Monday night.
·
·The project cost has been set at
$752;000 aild the Ohio Departmen! of Devel()pment has suggested a division of . funding
.through several agencies.
The U.~. Corps of Engineers
has Indicated that agency will

'!""
" ....
.. ·.,..
·

celehrailons Is Jnvlted to attend
South Central Ol!IQ
' · ~ ~-~~~· .Bible School
and
.
bring
a
covered
dish.
The
·
Clear
Monday night, with a low
, )VKatlo~ Bible School will
piCnic
will
bj!gtn
ai
6:
30
p.m.
In
the
mid 50s. Mostly sunny
l!eJ!D,I~ay I!Jd.continue th.rough
sm,...asbord
silpper
Tuesday,
with highs In the mid
FtlclaY'fi~. 9toll:30dally at the
There· will be a smorgasbord
80s.
·
1111:, .,Q~IDII .Church located . bit
supper on Saturday from .~ to 7
· Extende4 Forecast ,
Jtilll~ 143 on County Road 14, two
at
the
Wilkesville
PythUin
Wednesday
tbnaJ~ Friday ·
p.m.
)II"" '.OUth ot Carpenter. ConA chance of shoWers and
~ai!t 1MIIdl'ed _Workman at '742- · Hall. Cost is $5 for adults and .
2i85 i!r, Nancy White at 698-3411 $2.50 tor children. The public Is . thunderstorms each day: Highs ·
will be In the 80s each day; wlth
Invited to attend.
Jci~ tliHhet' lntotmatton.
Square
dance
overnight
~ "- , .:; Park bel!rd lo meet . . ·
. . lows In the 60s.
. ·'lbi! Star MIU Park Board wtU The Bells and Bows Square ·
me_et toaight at 7 p.m. In the Dance Club wJII sponsor a dance ·
. ·...:,_ ~aeln~e VIllage Council oil Saturday at the senior citizens ·
center from 8-llp.m. Caller will
Continued from 'page 1
ella~.•· . ·.
be Dale Eddy and the dance Is
,, .. ~!*tee picnic .
Antonln Scalia and Anthony ·
: Tile J•onieroy Saqulcenten- · open to all western dancers.
Gardea
club
lo
meet
Kennedy,
said a two-parent nodial ~lttee wiD meet TuesThe
Wildwood
Garden
Club
lice
requirement
with a Judicial
dly ~~~ at Grace EpisCopal
bypass satlstla the Constitution.
Qaurch ,-ror a po,lluclc picnic. wUI meet Wednesday at 7:30p.m.
at the home of Katbl'yn MIUer.
Justice, SaJIIIra. Day ,O'(;oMor
~
- whohasslsted . with the
.. '
called the tWo-parent tequlre.:..
"''.,.
1'.,
' ..
••..
· _.._ _
ment ot the Minnesota. law .
..,
"unreasonable when one cosld_. ~-' ~
ers that only half the minors In
~
many y~ars. She also was past
the state of Mlnnosota reside
president of the St. Mary's
with both biological parents."
Hospital Guild, now Doctor's
Nonetheless, O'CoMor, joined
'''MIIIirlce v. Reed. 65, of Reeds· Hospital. .
by Chief Justice William Rebnvliif,:d~ unexpectedly SUJiday
Mrs. Rogers Is survived by her
qulst and Justlca .Byron While,
atrtll residence.
husband, Robert, two daughters, · A,ntonln Scalia and Anthony.
· ' Bon ·tn Port Homer; Ohio, he . J~net RogeFS&gt; Arlington, Va.;
Kennedy, said a two-parent no- ·tile - ot the late Alvin and · and Mrs. Paul (Nancy) Wells, lice requirement with a judicial
Rale Kibble Reed. He was a Belpre; two sisters, Mrs. Pierce . bypass satlstleo! lbe 'Constltulipn.
l'tllred merchant and a w. W. n (Marilyn) Rice, Arlington, Va.;
'Justice Thurgood Marshall,
oU- J'urce veteran.
·
and · Mrs. Edgar (Leah
Joined by Justiceo! William Bren' He II IIII'Yived by his wjfe;
Je8.llllelte) Altmayer, Long ]snan and Harry Bllckrilun, noted
Fl 1il ,. ....,-tteed;-one daugh- land,
N.Y.;
and
two-grandchild,
·
tn
the MlnMBotaciiB" trult "Roe ·
.• , a..mary Young, Ractne, ren, Jodi Lynn .and Michael remains
the law ofthe land." and
f.liiQ - · Tom (Regina) Reel!, . Wells, Belpre. ,
weni ·sO' tar as to say the ruling
n4 Brtu Reed, both of ReedsServlca will be beld Wednes"reaffirms the vitality of Roe"· .r
Yillr, Jl~ brothers, Marvin, l)ohday
at
11
a.m.
the
Church
of
.
because
·nve members 'ot the I
1'111111,' •Gary_ and David, all of ~plpbany In Nelsonville wl.th court voted
1
to strike down some /
Rtld!l\'tlll; .. Robert of Jackson
William Lyle o!ticlatlng.
portions of the law.
•!Ill DeJu1!s of Ferndale, Fla.; Rev.
Burial will be in Beech Grove
However, Scalia took the court'
two alltera, lila Jean Weaver, of Cemetery.
to task for not overturning Roe.
~~ · aJI!I Maxine Dupree,
Friends may call at the
Flilrbom; and one granddaugh·
Johnson-Souers
Funeral Home
.ter; Lauren Young.
·
--•-He was pJ'I!Ceded In death by on Tuesday from 6-9 p.m. .
Memorial contrtbuttoils may
h!l perenll, one siSter, Kathleen
be
made to the Athens CountY
-Smltll, and a brother, Alvin
Hospice,
P.O. Box 873; Athens,
ftltt4, ~Jr.... .
45701,
,;, F\IDef&amp;l,, services will be held
·QII' Wedlleiday at 1 p.m at the
CLEVELAND (UPI) -'- Two
Wllltt F,uileral Home In Coolville Kathryn Fisher
tickets from Saturday night's
with t,h~ , ~. Charles Eaton
Super Lotto gam!! have the six
Kathryn Elizabeth Fisher, 88,
~iJ!a; ·surtal will be In the
numbers puUed In-the 'drawing,
~VJIIe Cemetery. There will · Middleport, died Sunday evening
me11ning the holders will share
at Veterans Memorial Extended
be ~·~ling liours~
the
$9 million jackpot;
Care Unit.
are 13, 15. 23, 33, 35,
Numbers
Born Au~. 20, 1901 In-Middle- '
and
39.
·
port, she was a daughter of the
Holders
can
redeem
their
·~;::,uJUi'''J: '" Keck, 72, ot 522 late . Wlllam and Mary Eunice
tickets
and
become
eligible
tor
..illlien'y · Heights, . Pomeroy, Crary Davis. She was a home$172,125
a
year
for
20
years.
· , j(led ·"'-~Y at St. Joseph Hospt- maker and · 11 member. of· the
, , ~ fo~ng a brief IUness. ·
Heath United Methodist Church. · Ohio Lotterr. officials said
· ... ,,Borii ' on 'Aug. 18, 1917 at
She Is survived by cousins, Sunday_that out of the $5,305,286
worth of tickets sold for Super
'CJI!))fi!c!'1Jie, ' he was a retired nieces and nephews.'
~ llfaettcal nurse having
In addition to.her parents she Lotto,158 of them have five of the
numbers, · good tor $1,000.
'Wdt,~ . at Veterans Memorial was preceded In death by a son,
Another 7,424 have four.ot them,
~pltMI ,tor 22 years.
John Clinton Fisher III, who was
good
for $75 each.
He·Wasil ve.t eran of World War killed In France in Wo~ld War II,
The
Klclcer game produced the
. II.,aoill..a member of the Mason three brothers, Robert, Crary,
number 1376n and two of the
Dllallled · American Veterans and - Charles Davis, and two
$896,863 worth ot tickets have
and tile Sacred Heart Catholic sisters, Margaret O'Donnell and
that number. Each ticket holder
Cllurcb. He Is survived by his Eunice Mae Dawson.
·
will receive $100,000.
· Wile, Leola , Keck, Pomeroy; a
SerVIces will be held WedftesLottery officials said 10 more
' nteee; C&amp;ptaln Mark (Linda day at 1 Jl.m. at the Rawlings
have
the first !lve!or$!1,000eaeh; ·
!.tewalltl Brooks, Franklin, Coats Fisher Funeral Home with
82
have
the first four ,f or S1.QOO;
·Tea,n.,and a sister, Clara Evelyn Rev. Frank Smith officiating.
790
have
the first tliree ·tor $100;
' ()!Ilion, Dayton.
Burial. will be In Riverview
and
7,989
have the first two tor ·
·
'' 'He was preceded In death by . Cemetery.
$10.
'
"hll perell(f.
.
Friends inay call at the funeral
,Funeralaervlca will bj! held at home on Wednaday from 11 a.m.
i la.m. Wednedsay at the Sacred until the tii;J)e of the.Service. '
Heart Catholic Church. The Rev.
,f't; Robe_rt. Borer will officiate
Dally stock prices
alld llurJal will be In Pine Grove
(As ofl0:30 a;m.) ' ,
Cemetery. Wake servlca will be
Veterana Memorial
Bryce
ud Mark Smtah
JMtld at the ru·n eral home on
Saturday admissions - None.
of
Blua&amp;,
Elllll A Loewl
, Tllelday at 7:30 p.m. Friends
Saturday dlscharga -None.
/
RillY ·c~ll at the funeral home
Sund11y admissions- Eber W.
'l'uelday from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 Pickens, Racine; Citf!ord Jac- Am Electric Power .............. 29
p.m. '
obs, Pomeroy; and· Ella Daugh· AT&amp;T, ........... ,........ , .. ......... 42~
Ashland 011 .... :.............. ,,, .. 36~
erty, Middleport.
,
F.IQe 'ROger8
Bo.
b Evans ........................... l4
Sunday discharges - Grace
,.
Charming Shoppes :.. ...........10.*
CalL
.,,,Elaine .M. Rogers, 62, NelsonCity Holding Co .................. 14~
~Uf!. ,died Sunday morning at
Federal Mogul. ................... 18~ .
q·m,~ ~orlal Hospital In
Goodyear T&amp;R .... :.. , . ~ .... , ....31%
· ~.._ ',foUowlng and extended
Heck's ...................... .. ......... 3%
Susan A. Mlller, Coolville, and
,._, l"lth pancreatic cancer,.
Key Centurion .................... 12~
. B.oni hi Pomeroy, she was the · Paul Joseph Miller, Coolville; Lands' End .......... :..... ,........ 16%
have flied tor a dissolution In the Limited Inc ...... ;,, ............. 22%
~ter of ihe late thomas and
Meigs
County CouJ1 of Common Multimedia Inc ... ,........ , .. :.. ,.SO
Geraldine Davis Young.
Pleas.
·
With ber husband, she owned
Rax Restaurants .................·. 2%
Robbins &amp;.Myers ................ 22%
iililil· ~ R.D. Rogers JeSboney's Inc ...... ,................ 14~
!~1 iii' Nellonvllle. Sbe .w as a
Star Bank ............................. 23
te •. of Pomeroy High
Clue of 1945. She was a
A marriage license has been Wendy'slnd ................ :....... 6~
' 61 the Church of Epl- Issued In Meigs Probate Court to Worthington Ind .................24~
Bank are ex
·
Iii Nellonvllte where she · John Mark Haggerty, 31, and · (ATAT and
dl\'lclenii todq.)
: · M ... . oil the altar guild tor ·&lt;April Yvette Clark,21.
1.. _, ')
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.,.' • • ,,

Partly cloudy Tue!iday
night, with a low In the low 80s. ·
· Partly · cloudy Wed~ay . ~
with hlp;hs In the mid 80s.·
Chance of rain Is %II ·
:

1992

. MIAMI CUP!) - Five CubanAmerlcl!n mayors In Florida,
including the mayor of Miami,
jointly denounced Nelson MandeJa fo~ · refusing to condemn
human-rights violations In Cuba.
The South African antlapart)Jeld leader Is to arrive In
Miami , Wednesday evening,
speaking Thursday to a Miami
Beach convPntion of the American Federation of State, County
and Municipal Employees. '
The mayors of Miami, Hialeah,
West Miami, Sweetwater and
Hialeah Gardens released a
four-paragraph declaration Monday denouncing Mandela.
"We, Cuban Americans, find It
beyond reasonable comprehension that Mr. Nelson Mandela, a
victim of oppression ,by his own
government. not only · falls to
condemn the Cuban government
for Its human-rights violations
but rather praises 'virtues of the
tyrannical Castro regime," It
said.
The declaration came amid a
growing political rift over
whether co111muntty leaders
should applaud Mandela's work
against apartheid or rebUke him
for his support of Cuban President Fidel Castro, Palestine
Liberation Organization leader
Yasser Ararat and Libyan Presl·dent Moammar Gadhafl.
Miami city commissioners
said last week they were reconsidering a . controversial Julie 7
_resolution offlclaliy welcoming

Mandela. The resoJuuon was
originally signed by Mayor Xavier Suarez and all but one of the
commissioners, Miriam Alonso.

It remained In limbo because
Suarez and Commissioner Victor
De Yurre withdrew their support
after Mandela 11ppeared on na-

tiona! television last week and
defended his support for Castro,
Gadhafl and Arafat.
Continued on page 3

.... td\ ••• ,._,

MANDELA TAKE8 i:ARLY MORNING
STROLL- Amid security penonnel and wearhlp;
a New York· Yukees cap and jack~, South

N

African black leader Nel.On Mandela takea an
e..-Iy morn1n1 lltroD through the slreeta ol
dowatown Wasblagton.

Evans, prominent·area
busines8_m an, 80, dies today

LEE ANN WELCH
OVP News Staff
Emersan E. Evans, regarded
for his commitment to Gallia
County and Southeast Ohio, died
Tuesday morning at his home In
Ga!Upolls. He was 80.
,The first chairman ofthe board
of Bob Evans Farms, Evans was
al,so a director, president and
chairman of Ohio Valley Bank in
GaiUpolls.
·
A man committed to education, he was Instrumental In the
formation of Rio Grande Community College, and the then Rio ,
Grande College named Its business management school In his
honor.'
''Mr. Evans was a man of great
vision for southeast Ohio," Dr.
Paul. C. Hayes, president of the
EMERSON E. EVAN!!
University of Rio Grande said _
today.
"He was deeply interested In dent said. Smith is just one of
improving the standard of living ,nany in the community who
for the people of the region, and credit Evans with "prodding us
through the college of business to do more," through his Interest;
Companies like Bob Evans
management, named In Ills honor, hls commitment was clearly Farms and Ohio Valley Bank are
demonstrated."
full of young people he motl:
According to some community vated," Smith added.
leaders, there's not enough room
But that Inspiration and motl·
· in a newspaper to say how much vaUon went 'beyond those com. Evans c.o ntrlbuted to the welfare panies - II Includes the Hotze~
Hospital Foundation and the
ofthe ar~a.
.
Morris Haskins, Ohio Valley health care industry, the Gallla
Bank Chairman of' the Board, Is County Soli and Water Conservation District, Future Farmers of
one of them.
·
He credits his s~ccess In life to America, the Gallla County JunEmerson E. Evans and their IOT Fair and 4-H Clubs and Boy
Scouts, · all of which he was
association. ''He was a Wonder•
ful man and I miss him."
Involved with.
Haskins said Evans was a man
A modest man, Evans would
of his word - and that word was
say "I'm Just an old country boy
trying to help," when praised,
everything. A written . contract
was Inconsequential- Emerson
according to a March 21, 1976
column by Hobart Wilson Jr. In
Evans' word was his
the Ga!Upolis Dally Tribune.
.commitment
''Ga!Ua County Is a better
That "old country boy." as he
place because of Emerson. I ." 'as
called himself was a nationallyblessed to have had the opportun- . re~ognlzed Charolals steer
'tty to work with him," current
breeder, and also actively bred,
OVB President and Chief Execuresearched and promoted vartive Officer James L. Dally said.
Ious cattle, like Brahman, AnEmerson Evans exhibited a
gus, Herelord, Cahrolals and
commitment to the young people
Anklna.
of Ga!Ua County , and there are,
Evans Is survl11ed by his wife,
many In the areas of agriculture,
Evelyn Tope Evans, and three
health care, banking and bustsons, MerrUI, of Ga!Upolls, Dan
ness who eonslder hlrn an
or Canal Winchester and Larry In
Inspiration.
.
Citra, Fla. He has13 grandchU~
"He had an amazing ability to
ren and four great
take young people and motivate
grandchildren.
them to do more than they ever .
Funeral arrangements are
though they oould do," Jeffrey E. · pending at Willis' Funeral Home
Smith, OVB executive vice prestIn Gallipolis. ,

'.f

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Commentary

,

111 Court Sire.,.
Pomeroy, Obio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~~
q;Jv
CHARLENE BOEFLJCB
Geaeral MuAier

ROBERT L . WINGE'lT
Publisher
·

PAT WHITEHEAD
Aulsllllll Publlaber/CoalroUer

A MEMBER of The United Press Il\lernatlonal,lnland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publlshors Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be lesslban 300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personali-

ties.

..,_,

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WASHINGTON - When it's
lplaytlme at Air Force golf
courses, clubs and bowling al. leys, It's pay time for American
taxpayers. An lnterQal Air Force
au!llt shows .that millions of tax ·
· dollars are belngspenton fun and
games, contrary to a congres·
slonal mandate to ·cut that
spending. And, the expenses are
being hidden by the local bases to
fool Congress and the Pentagon.
Auditors are still crossing the
"T's" anddottlngthe "l's" on the
audit of the Air Force's Military
Welfare and Readiness Division,
or MWR, but we hayeobtillned an
official summary of their find·
lngs . .It shows $20 mllllon In fraud
In the Air Force MWR, the

•

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agency that administers recreation and social facilities at the
bases.
The Air Force Audit Agency
· investigated 32 of the 140 bases
around the world, Including the
headquarters of eight AJr Force
commands. The auditors were
looking at how those bases spend
money on golf courses, tennis
courts, bowling alleys, clubs, day
care centers and other amen!·
lies. What th!!Y found wasn't
pretty.
·
In 1985, Congress ordered the
mU!tary to stop building major
new recreational facilities and
even stop large additions to the
old ones. The auditors found that
$8.4 rnllllon.has been spent or Is

administration ropes

A thought for the day: Author Pearl Buck wrote. "Truth is always
exciting. Life is dull without lt."
·

Berry's World
POC\otc=.,
WI-\~~E DO YOU
S'f~t-\0 o~

ElJ il"\At.l~CS\A'!
I'M

Ak\.- ~

'(O()"ft-\ \~

A.SIA.

\

I

~,

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u.s. 18•

slated to be spent in violation of manders have ordered the conthat order. Another $12.6 million struction of a new officers club or
In expenses 'l'ere labeled by the golf course In blatant disregard
tor the congressional mandate. .
auditors as '.'.queetlonabl~." -.
Four Air Force bases spent..
Air Force sources told our
.
more
than $1.5 · million total to associate Tim Warner that there
build
or
inake major repairs to
Is nothing to stop the fraud - nQ
golf
courses.
Myrtle Beach Air ·
external or IIJternal oversight
Force
Base
In
South Carolina
system to keep the local brass
spent
$646,505
on
golf course
from juggling the flgu~es they
construction
without
congres-.
report to the Pentagon and
city of .
slonal
approval.
The
Congress.
Is
already
the golf .
Myrtle
Beach
The auditors found cases
course
capital
of
the
United
where base officers deliberately
States,
but
apparently
the
Air
under-reported their expenses,
Force
brass
needs
Its
own.
or split a major construction
Slmlfarly, Wright Patterson
contract Into several small conAir
,Force Sase In Olilo spent
tracts that dl dn' t need approval
$446,068
on a golf .course In
from headquarters.
In some cases, the base com- violation of the · order . from
Congress.
. At Tinker Air Force Base In
Oklahoma, It was ·a $772,()00 ·
skeet-shooting club.
At Yokota Air Force Base IIi
Japan, It was a$1 million bowling
alley. Also at Yokota, the brass
simply had to have a $221,600
Italian resta.u rant It went out of '
business In two yel!F5. The ·
auditors put that one under the
heading of "questionable
expenditures:"
'
The auditors also found what
they called a "consplracyk" to
mislead the Pentagon and Con: gress by splitting major construction projects Into smaller
dollar amounts.
·
Mlldenhall Air Force Base In
England had approval to spend
$70,000 repairing the officers
club. Instead, the base spent $2
million on miscellaneous repair
contracts.
Apparently the folks at Ramstein have!)' I learned their les- ·
son. It was the revelations about
an $8 million fraud at .Ramsteln ,
last year lnvolvlngprjvate profit- ,
eerlng at recreational facUlties '
that prompted the Air Force •
Audit Agency to look at the other ,
bases too.

·to intenttarriage

When Am!rew Cuomo, son. of
New York's Gov. Mario Cuomo,
recently married Kerry
Kennedy, daughter of the Iate
Sen. Robert Kennedy, It was
hailed as the remarkable
coming- together of. two political
dynasties. It was. Moreover, one
assumes, II was also the marriage oftwo young people In love.
Beyond all that was unique and
beyond all that was universal,
the marriage was also a symbol
of a profoundly Important American situation that has reached
true majority status only In
recent decades. Barely noticed
nowadays, the Melting Pot has
happened. Americans of European ancestry are becoming one
people. Arguably, the same process is going on among most
non-European Americans , although at a lesser Incidence.
In the language of scholars who
study the field, the CuomoKennerly union was "exogamous" - that is, it was an
"Intermarriage." Mr. Cuomo Is
of Italian ancestry. His wife Is of
mixed Irish ancestry.
Today, Intermarriage between

whites of Ejuropean ancestry is
the rule. '!,'hat was not true In
earlier generations. Among ItalIan Americans (lA) born in
America .prior to 1920, almost
two- thirds ( 63 percent) married
Other lAs. But of lAs born after
1950 (like Andrew Cuomo), only
about a filth (22 percent) marry
other lAs.
Similar patterns of prevalent
Intermarriage now exists among
Irish Americans, Polish Americans and English Americans.
The overall figure Is about 75
percent. (The data comes from
the 1980 Census, as analysed by
Professor Richard Alba of the
State University of New York.)
Another way of looking at the
Identity of Americans Is througti
the prism of "mixed ancestry." ·
Just 8 percent of all. lAs born
prior to 1920 were of "mixed
ancestry." Of lAs borQ after,1960,
the rate Is 70 percent
The Census Bureau doesn't
keep statistics about religion, but
estimates show that almost half
of new marriages involving Jews
now Include non-Jewish
partners, compared to less than

10 percent In 1950s.
Now lntermarr111ge· has been
an issue abbut lis ·~asslonafe, and
sometimes poisonous, as has
ex.tsted in AmerJcan life. But
whatever the op'ljlons, Intermarriage Is now a massive fact We
are witnessing till! birth of genus
Americanus, and we're never
going to be the same.
The Impact Is powerfUl. In the
old days, newly arrived white
ethnic and religious groups faced
scorn. Alba hail written that
Italian Immigrants "became a
Jocus for expliclty racist thinking
and stereotypes;" perceived as
"swarthy" peoPle w·lth "low
foreheads," and that the deroga- .
tory anti-Italian epithet " guinea" referred originally "to
slaves from the Western coast of
Africa."
Much of that, n~t all, has
vanished. It's ·a lot harder to
countenance the rejection of
other peoples when your lnlaws
and grandchildren are thern, and
even harder when, In the next
generation, you are too.
It Is unlikely that Joseph P.
Kennedy, the "founding father"

Ben Wattenberg
of I he American KeqnedY: plan, .
envisioned. having gr~ddaugh, 0
ters married to people , named ·Cuomo (Italian), Schlossberg .
(Jewish) and Schwarzenegger ,
(Austrian). But whO's going to - ·
argue , particularly with •:
Schwarzenegger?
These trends of European .
assimilation are relevant to .
AmerJcans of non-EUfllPeBD ancestry. We are hearing a ,great .
deal about Increased tensions, ;
focusing on HispaniCii, Asians
and blacks . Most of the evidence ,
Is anecdotal, with little effort' to .
compare wha't' Is 'liappel\lrig 'no.,,i' ·
with earlier times.
':
. The black rates ~re slgnffl- ,.
cantly different, but the ~rectlon
again Is the same: 4 percent of ..
those horn after 19!50' have ·
Intermarried, compared to aboul
a half of one percent bo~n prior tO:
1920.
From intermarriage and Immigration, from the outs!de and: .
the Inside, speedily In some
realms and very slowly In others,
America Is becoming a universal
nation.
·

Nuclear whistleblowers lose their voice
'GLEN ROSE, Texas (NEA) In an era when nuclear power
plants are plagued by construetlon defects, operational lapses
and other flaws, whistleblowers
have assumed a crucial role In
alerting the public to health and
safety hazards.
Without those warnings, the
potentlal dangers probably
would go unreported - and
nowhere Is that more apparent
tl)an In Glen ROle, the communlty 80 miles southwest of Dallas

that Is home to the Comanche
Peak nuclear power plant.
Like most other nuclear generatlng stations built In recent
decades, Comanche Peak was
far over budget, way behind
schedule and beset by scandal
when It finally received Its
operating license from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission In
mid-April.
Construction of the facility was
announced by Texas Ull!ltles In
mld-1972 and started In late 1974.

Today in history
By United Press International
Today Is Tuesday, June 26, the I 77th day of 1990 with 188 to follow .
The moon Is waxing, moving toward its first quarter.
The morning stars are Mercury, Venus , Mars and Saturn.
The evening star Is Jupiter.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Cancer. They include
baseball pioneer Abner Doubleday In 1819; British physicist and
inventor William Kelvin In 1824; novelist Pearl Buck lnl892; German
aircraft designer Willi Messerschmltt in 1898; · William' Lear,
developer of the Lear jet, In 19()2; actor Peter Lorre In 1904; Col. Tom
Parker, who was Elvis Presley's manager, In 1910 (age 80); and
·actress Eleanor Parker in 1922 (age 68).
.
. ·
On this date In history:
In 1900, Dr. Walter Reed and his medical team began a successful
campaign to wipe out yellow fever In the Panama Canal Zone.
In 1917, the first troops of the American Expeditionary Force
reached France In World War One.
,
In 1959, Queen Elizabeth II formally opened the St. Lawrence
Seaway In Canada.
In 1986, a nationwide 26-day strike by 155,000AT&amp;Tteiecommunlcatlon workers, the first since the Bell System breakup In J aniiary 1984
ended with a new contract agreement. That same day, th~
Nicaraguan government closed the nation's last opposition
newspaper, La Prensa.
·

"

The Daily Sentinei-Page- 3

Pomeloy-Micldlepon. Ohio

·Th"nderstonns,
hail
pound
Plains
states
•

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·

Learning 'the Bush

A Thought for the Day

.. .

·M•J•
• .UD der scrutiny
• vale
Jack Anderson
I Ilary· f3CI•1•IlleS
VanAua
•

'

ByARNOLDSAWOSLAK
UPI Sealor Editor
WASHINGTON - Pollt~s being the art of the possible, the
Democrats who control Congress are starting to get a clear picture ot
just what It is possible for them to accomplish with George Bush in the
White House.
The short answer Is: very Iitle without the president's blessing.
Whenever the lawmaking function, which Is constitutionally shared
by Congress and the president, also Is politicaUydlvlded, a feeling-out
period is needed to find out who is golrig to dominate.
This Is not a simple matter of arithmetic, although Democrats
made a big effort to elect a veto-proof Congress - one with solid
two-thirds majorities In · both the House and Senate - after
Watergate. They got a sufficient majority In the House In the 1974
elections, but missed two-thirds in the Senate, 'which split 60-37.
But the Democrats In the 1975-76 session could not even depend on
their overwhelming 292-144 House majority to override President
Ford's numerous vetoes because the party was widely split between
liberal Northern Democrats and conservative Southern members.
That Iong-standlng.schism not only dented Democratic leaders the
veto over.rlde ,weapon but often gave effective voting control to the
Republicans.
It took conservative Democratic votes to pass President Reagan's
tax and budget cuts in the early 1980s and Democratic le;tders quickly
learned there were precious few areas where they could operate in
the face of a threatened Reagan veto even a(ter they recaptured
control of the Senate in 1986.
The Democrats obviously expected to have an easier time of it when
President Bush took office last year, and he certainly seemed to be
signaling his willingness to do business with the opposition from his
first day In office. ,
But Bush also displayed a stubborn streak many Democrats did not
expect, a's when he twice / vetoed huge appropriations measures
beCause they permitted the District of Columbia to use Its own tax
revenues for abortions for poor women and when he Insisted on a
·
sub-mlnlmnum wage for entry level workers.
Most of Bush's vetoes appear to be based on Ideological rather than
fiscal considerations. Thus, he vetoed an Amtrak biU because It
provided a regulatory feature he did not like, not because It provided ·
for subsidized pasenger rail service. His vetoes of a measure
providing asylum to Chinese students and requiring federal
Intervention In the Eastern Airlines strike also were similarly based.
Through mid-June, Bush had used the veto a dozen times and never
been overridden. Eventually, that will happen, but to date Bush has
piCked his targets well and the Democrats reluctantly have entered
Into negotiations with the administration on legislation they.probably
could pass with majority votes but on which they know they could not
produces two-thirds margins to overrldse vetoes.
Thus, Democratic leaders felt they had to cut a deal with the
Republicans to get a higher m lnlmum wage passed or to get any kind ,
of clean air revision enacted. Now, they are moving In the same
direction on child care legislation, a major civil rights bill and on the
toughest problem of all, deficit reduction.
·
Not much of this process was explained In high school civics, but It
Js. the way the world really works In Washington.

~

Tu11day, June 28, 1990

Page-2-The Daily Sentk'lel
Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
T~ey. June 26, 1990
•

The Daily Sentinel

.....

'

' J

.,

At the time, TU said the cost of
building a pair of 1,150-megawatt
units would be less than $780
million and the work would be Energy, an organization of whls-.:
completed by the end of the tleblowers, public Interest law}--··
decade.
ers and local residents who- i
When the first unit was 1 re- oppose Comanche Peak.
_
cently licensed. 10 years late, the
Because the payments were ·.
second was stlll only about 85 characterized by some critics as
percent complete and not ex- bribes, the N;RC asked utilitieS ·
pected to be finished untll1992 or elsewhere In the count!'): If they '·r
1993. TU's most recent estimate had' engaged In any actions that ',
of the cost to complete the project might be Interpreted as buying •
Is $9.1 billion, but the Texas whlstleblowers' sUence.
,.
Public Utility Counsel places the
The·federal regulatory agency: ·
.figure at $11.6 billion.
received affirmative responses .,That abysmal record Is largely from three other operators of -.
attributable to a construction nuclear power plants - Duke'
ef(ort so astoundingly sloppy that Power in North Carolina, Omaha
scores of plant workers blew tlie
Public Power in Nebraska and
whistle llbout hundreds of GPU Nuclear In New Jersey.
deficiencies. ·
In other Instances, however,
Problems were uncovered in the NRC has appeared to be more ,
the concrete poured for the
foundation and containment concerned about protecting the
reputations of Inept or uncaring ·.
dome of the first unit, the plant's
utlllty companies thl!D following ,.. ··
abll)ty to withstand an earth- leads provided by-.
quake, the Welds ·In the liner of whls tleblowers.
the pool required to bold spent
At Comanche Peak, one ..
fUel rods, the plant's pipe sppconscience-stricken worker told J
ports and e"en TU's quality the NRC &amp;'bout defective welds
control program.
· after securing a pledge that the ,
Whlstleblowers also raised agency would not reveal his
questions about the durability of Identity to his employer. The -~'
approximately 1 million bolts NRC broke Its promise and he ..
many of them possibly counter- was fired.
felt - and tbe quality of valves,
After almost two decade5 of
wiring, Insulation and other
anguish,
ComanchePeak'slntea- ·, :
components.
rlty Is still uncertain. CASE says ' '
In an extraordinary private It "sincerely wishes that we :' :
settlement In mld-1988, TU
could tell... the public that Co- ··,':
agreed to pay $10 million to the
Peak Is safe," but adds: · ·'
Citizens Assocl:'lon for Sound ~anche
'Unfortunately, we cannot." /'

Robert Walters .:

By United Preu lntematloul
Strong thunderstonns, hall
and Winds up to 78 mph pounded
the Plains states Tuesday, causlng power outages, downing trees
and prompting tornado warnings
for south central Nebraska.
Lightning was blamed for three
deaths In Florida. .
·
The storm system moved
through Nebraska and Kansas
early TUesday and thunderstorms also were reported from
the ·Dakotas to Mlimesota and
Wisconsin.
The tornado warning was
Issued for south central Nebraska· by tbe National Weather
Service about midnight after
winds gusted to 78 mph at the
weather service office In Hamilton and there were reports of
downed trees and power lines:
Storms with winds to 70 mph
r11ced across northeast and north
central Kansas at speeds of up to
50 mph and ,forecasters warned
residents to enter relilforced
shelters In preparation for· large
hllll. ljeavy rain and dangerous lightning. ·

The storm system cut a path 55
miles wide from southeast o!
Lincoln, Neb., ·to just north of
Russell, Kan .
Thunderstorms were reported
In North Dakota through Mlnnesota and Into central Wisconsin.
Dime-size ball was reported In
Eau Claire, W!s; , In the northwestern part of the state.
Lightning killed three people In
Florida Monday as violent thun·
derstorms drenched the central
and southern part of the state. ·
Lawn maintenance worker Ronald Zlgray, 22. was killed In
Plantation, near Fort Lauderdale. Just north of Miami, Jean
LaFortune, 35, was struck and
kllled as he sat under a tree with
friends during a thunderstorm.
Officials In Bradley, Fla .. east of
Tampa, said 38-year-old Larry
Anthony was operating a c~ane
when he was struck by lightning
and killed.
Sunny skies and warm temperatures were expected to domlnate the. Southeast, except for
portions ol south Georgia . and
most of Florida, where scattered

. ___ ___

R ..;verbank ..

continued frorn .:......:.._
page 1

hauling stone from HobsoiJ,
which is now In the village
. corporation limits. to Foote Mineral·In West VIrginia. They were
at thelastmeelingtoreq\lestthat
they be allowed to return empty
to Hobson over village streets.
The village has ac ordinance
regarcjing trucks which In effect
provides that they can only
trav.e l through ihe village to get
to their.usual place of business or
storage area. Since. the truckers
pick f!P their loads In the village
and purchase gasoline from a
local business, their contention Is
that they are, In fact, doing
business In th.e village anc! should
be. allowed to return empty
trucks through the village.
An Interpretation of the ordinance has been requested from
the village solicitor. That clarlfl- ·
cation was not available at last
night's meeting. Mayf)r ijoffman
did repeat ~at drivers of heav~
trucks can use "whatever route
Is necessary to do legitimate
business In the village."
A commendation for the Mid·
die port pollee, now doln!J some
walking patrol In the village,
came from Gene Dodson. He
asked about the status of the
proposed bicycle path lin\1 Councilman Dewey Horton r!!Vlewed
what had happened on the grant
earlle't' reeelved'by the village to
develop a_path. The. land for th.e
proposed path was.npt available
to the village at . an affordable
price, he noted.
The village plans to revamp
the route and again submit
applications for grants to two
state agencies.
Preliminary approval was
granted to Ohio Bell to Install
(lber optic ~able lines In Middleport. Representatives from thl'
engineering and constructl'on
crews were present at the meet·
!ng to diScuss what Is planned
and the route which the lines
woul&lt;! tak~ through the vHtage.
The lines would clime off the
flood road, down MIII Stret to

Seventh, onto Grant, then to
Powell and out of town at the
lower end of the viUage. The
cables would be laid beneath
sidewalks and all sidewalks
would be replaced as the work Is
completed. The representatives
also agreed to put in sidewalk
where there Is none now along the
work pa,th.
Approval, was given to Ingels
Furn lture to hold a tent sale on
the municipal parking lot.
· Mayor Hoffman reported that
ihe Ohio Department of Natural
Resourcas, Division of Reclamation, has been In and determined
that the drainage on Powell
Street Is mine related. The
Middleport Hill slip Is not mine
related, the representative advised. although the mayor re,ported that sorne technical advice on how to correct the slip
may be available from thai
agency .
The $412 bid of Dorset Thomas
for the old cruiser was accapted.
It was the highest of the four bids
submIt ted. Information on applylng for recycling grants was
given by the mayor who noted
that the village has until the end
of August-to apply. The July 14
date of .the rescheduled Ohio
IUver Sweep was noted, and the
variety of activities at the park
for July was reported on In a
letter from Roger Williams,
recreation director.
The various activities of the
July 4 celebration which Is being
spqnsored by the village with
Councilman Bob Gilmore as
chairman were outlined. A street .
light problem was discussed by
Councilman Jack Satter!leld,
and Councilman Gerard announced the multi -county Solid
Waste Management District
meeting to be held tonight at
Wilkesville.
'
Attending besides those 11amed
were Clerk-Treasurer Jon Buck,
and Councilmen James Clatworthy and William Walters. ,

Pomeroy man arrested
after domestic dispute
Douglas W. Orrick of 32880
Rose Hill, Pomeroy, was arrested and coilflned to the Meigs
County Jail following a domestic
dispute early Sunday morning.
. According to Sheriff James ,
Souls by, Orrick Is charged with
felonious assault after he allegedly cut his wl fe, Marcia, with
a knife. She was transported to
Veterans Memorial Hospltlll for
treatment. Douglas Orrick was
also taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital where be was treated
and released to the custody of the
sheri!(. .
Orrick appeared for an initial
hearing Monday in the court of
Judge Patrick O'Brien. Bond
was set at $25,000.
Monday dep'!tleS took a report
of a vehicle fire. According to the
report, Karen Pickens of Hoback
Raid. Racine. was traveling
north on Hiland Road when she

No one...

smelled something burning. She
pul!ad her 1984 Datsun oft of the
road and noticed fire from under
the hood. Damage to the vehicle
was light.
Michael VanceofDexterRoad,
Langsville, repor-ted Sunday that
an Igloo Ice chest was taken from
his vacant house. The Incident is
under Investigation.
Sheriff Soulsby reports that
David Lawson. New Strallsviiie,
was returned to Meigs County
Sunday afternoon to face charges
of .grand theft regarding the
18-foot trailer stolen on June 16
from Michael Appel, Route 1,
Rutland .
Lawson appeared In Meigs
County Court Monday morning
and ·was relea~ed pending
further hearlngh In the county
court. 'Lawson had,been arrested
Friday evenlng.by Perry County
deputies.

Florida...
Continued from page 1

thunderstorms were expected
along a warm front .
Temperatures across the Southeast at 2 a.m . ranged from 77
degrees in Miami and Tampa·,
Fla ., to 63 degrees In Chattanooga, Tenn.
Showers and thunderstorms
near eastern Texas and northwest Louisiana threatened to flood
creeks, streams and bayous
during th!! morning, the NWS
said.
Scattereil clouds covered east- ·
ern Pennsylvania and southern
New Jersey while the rest of the
middle Atlantic, from West VIrginia to Maryland. was clear and
cool. Temperatures ranged from
the 40s in the Appalachians to the
60s along the Atlantic Coast.
Clear skies were reported over
most of New England, with
temperatures ranging from the
upper 50s in Maine, New Hampshire and Vermont to 68 In
Boston.
In the West, hot early summer
weather continued In Southern
California and joined ,with heavy
smog and high fire danger.
The afternoon high Monday In
Los Angeles was 93 degrees. 15

degrees ~bo ve normal. Temperatures In Las Vegas were expected
to climb to 112 Tuesday.
About 150 Los Angeles firefighters batHed heat anc! a 500-acre
brush fire In the hills and two
firefighters were Injured.
The South Coast Air Quality
Management District called several stage-one smog alerts.
meaning the concentration of l!lr
pollutants had reached the ha·
zardous level.
Oppri,!Sslve heat transformed
much of the Plains and desert
Southwest Into a blast furnace
again Monday, driving Texas
thermometers to trlple·dlglt
readings for the 16th lime this
month and cracking the century
mark In at.leastfourother states.
The National Weather Service
reported temperatures from 100
to 108 degrees In portions of
Texas , Nebraska. Arizona, New
Mexico . and desert areas of
southern California.
. ''It's been horrible for a while,
because we just haven't had a
break from this ," said Brenda.
Pate, a bookkeeper In Lubbock,
Texas, where it hit 103.

------Weather----Soutll Central Olllo
Partly cloudy Tuesday night,
with a low In the low 60s. Partly
cloudy Wednesday, with highs In
·the mid 80s. Chance of rain Is 20
percent.
·
Eldended Forecast

Thursday lhrou1h Saturd~
A chance of showers and
thunderstorms Thursday, with
fair weather Friday and Satur·
day. Highs will be In the 80s each
day, with overnight lows In the
60s.

.Mrs~ DeWine to meet with
local officials on Wednesday
Fran DeWine, wife of Congressman Mike DeWlne, will
meet with local elected officials
and tour the Meigs County
Courthouse In Pomeroy on Wednesday, June 27, at 10: 30 a.m.
Congressman DeWine Is the
Republican candidate for lleutena~t governor.
Qurlng her campaign swing
through Southern Ohio, DeWine
will make stops In Adams, Pike
&amp;nd Scioto Counties on Tuesday.
On Wednesday, she will campaign In Gallla, Meigs, Washing.
ton and Morgan Counties.
Mrs. DeWine has been an
integral part of every DeWlne .
campaign Including her bus-

band's successful bids for
Greene County Prosecuting Attorney, Ohio State Senator and
U.S. Congressman (reelected ,
four times) . ·
She has designed and pubHshed seven campaign cookbooks Including this year's
''Family Favorites' ' with Janet
Volnovlch, wife of Republican
candidate tor governor, Georgw
Volnovlch. During election years, she often campaigns at
parades, county fairs and door·
to-door.
Mike and Fran DeWine have
been married 23 years and make
their home In Cedarville. They
are the parents of seven children.

---Meigs announcements---,
Arts COIDICII
A series of clogging classes for
children Is being offered by the ,
Middleport Arts Council beginning July 5 and continuing
through July 26. The times of th'e
classes will be 10-11:15 a.m.
The instructor will he Paulette
Harrison. The fee Is $2.50 per
sessiOJ1. For further Information
call Mrs. Harrison at 992-6248.
,

Township trustees 10 meet
The Scipio Township Trustees
will meet July 11 at which time
there will be a budget hearing.
The public is invited to attend.
Plan reualon
The Silver Run School reunion
will be held on the school ground
flat on Sunday from 1 to 5 p.m.
Bring a camera, lawn chair, and
old pictures for display .

Squads receive ·seven calls·
Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service responded to seven calls Monday.
At 1: 20 a.m., the Middleport
Squad went to Page Street for
Clara Slater who was transported to Veterans Memorial
Hospital. The Pomeroy Squad
responded to a call from Americare at 8: 50 a.m. for Martha
Burns who was tracsported to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
The .Pomeroy Squad went to
Frank Road at 1:30 p.m. for
Charles Bartels who was transported by Llfeflight to Grant

Hospital.
. At 3: 56 p.m., .the Pomeroy
Squad went to Second Street for
Helen WiiUams who was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital. At
4:02 p.m., the Pomeroy Squad
reported to East Main Street for
Woodrow Kuhn who was taken to
Pleasant Valley Hospital. At
4: 32, the Pomeroy Squad went to
Hiland Road for an auto fire, and
at 8: 27 p.m., the Pomeroy Squad
went to Chester for John Myers ·
who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

Pomeroy man hw:t in Monday aecident
A Pomeroy man was suffered
minor injuries Monday morning
when he fell asleep at the wheel,
drove off the road, and hit a
telephone pole, according to a
reportat theGallla-Melgs Post of
the State Highway Patrol.
Larry A, Rider , 22, 32894
Happy Hollow Rd., Pomeroy.
was . driving southbound on
County Road 5 around 3 a.m.
when he fell asleep and went off

Seeks divorce
Margaret Little, Middleport,
has filed for a divorce from
Anthony Little, Jacksonville,
Fla., in theMelgsCountyCourtof
Common Pleas.
Also filing for divorce Is
Marian Frank Davis, Ravanswood, W.Va. , from Peggy Sue
Smith Davis, Racine, In the
common pleas court.
Rick Hatfield, Pomeroy, and
Dottle Hatfield, Middleport,
have toed for a dissolution In the
common pleas court.

the leftslde of the ~oad, striking a
mailbox and a telephone pOle.
Rider was cited for failure to
wear a seatbell.

Hospital news

..•
WEATHER MAP- A bot dome of warm air wiD domlnl&amp;e much
of lbe Ce11tra1 and Wester• aecllou of the couatry. 'l'blll beat wave
will last Into' the weekend u It spreads 10 tile Eul Coast.
Tlnmderalom18 will form alon11he frontal system over tile upper
Mltel•llppl Valley oa Wednesday with uother area of
lhundenlonns over tile Soulhem PlaiDs. Holud steamy wealftr
abould prevail over the reel ol the aalloa except In tile Norlhweal
when: lemperalures wiD be aeasonal.

Smith denies guilt
before execution
reporters he considered it cruel
HUNTSVILLE, Texas (UP!)
that Smith's fate was uncertain
- A former voodoo priest conwhile
the Supreme Court debated
victed of slaying a robbery
two
last-second
appeals filed
victim smiled early TUesday ,as
over
Smith's
objections.
he received his . wish to be
"This probably was cruel and
executed, but not before denying
unusual
punishment
the
his guilt and uttering the words,
manner
In
which
It
was
carried
"Hare Krishna."
out because of the delay and
James Edward Smith, 37, was
making the person watt unUI the
pronounced dead at 12: 3l a.m .
lasi minute to flild out," Walt
Tuesday. He ended his statement
said.
with a wink, a smile and the
Walt, who said he understood ,
Krishna blessing before the
that
the dissenting justices bad
drugs were administered at 12:19
written
a five-page opinion on the '
a .m.
procedure
to decide an Inmate's
"I've already spoken the truth
lildlcated that juscompetency,
but beCause It was spoken by
tice
had
been
served.
someone accused. the truth was
Smith
remained
calm Monday, _
not respected," Smith said In a
spending
most
of
his
time spent
final statement as thunder
and
sleeping, .
watching
television
rumbled outside the prison. "If ,
prison
officials
said.
.,
must com~ from the man who
He
ate
his
final
meal
of
plain
spoke the lie.
yogurt at 6: 20p.m. and wore the
"I am not the killer. I myself
standard
prison unlforrn of while
did not kill anyone. I go to my
and
shirt for the execution.
pants
death Without begging for my
Earlier
Monday, psychologist
Ute. I will not humiliate my5elf. I
Jerome Brown of Houston ruled
will let no man break me. It just
Smith was mentally competent :
can't be done .
"There is a price to be paid. I , to make the decision to not
appeal.
want the people to wake up to the
The evaluation was set upafler
reality of executions. The price to
attorneys for Smith's mother, be paid will be a dear one."
Alexlne Hamilton of lndlanapo- .
Smith said he wrote his last
Us, brought up psychological statement for all death row
evaluations conducted In 1978 In
inmates upon the request of the
Mhiml. Smith at that time was .,
editor of the prison newsletter.
found Innocent by reason of .
The Texl!s .-executl!)n came
Insanity In a Dade County. Fla., .
more than three hours after the
robbery.
execution by lethal injection of
Brown previously had examRonald Gene Simmons,. 49, In
ined Smith and found him compePine Bluff, Ark., at 9: 19 p.m.
tent but sought the new evalua·
COT.
lion after reviewing the Florida ;
Smith, the third Texas Inmate
case.
todle by InjectiOn in the last three
Attorneys for the state and
months, was the 132nd person to
··Harris
CQunty submitted he executed In the United :&gt;tates
Brown's latest findings to-_
since the Supreme Court reinSmith's trial court, the Texas
stated the death penalty In 1976.
Court of Criminal Appeals, U.S.
Smith was convicted of killing
5th
Circuli Court of Appeals and ,
Missouri City insurance agent
the
Supreme Court without
Larry Rohus, 44, who turned over
success.
his money and begged for his life
Hamilton's attorneys also flied
during a 1983 robbery at the
a
second appeal before the
Union National Life Insurance
Supreme
Court questioning the
Co. In Houston.
grounds
of
the conviction.
. A former H11re Krlsl)na folSmith
complained
bitterly aflower who also claims to be a
ter
his
mother
won
a
stay of his ,
former voodoo priest, Smith two
May
11,
1988,
execution
date.
years ago asked prison officials
''Time
is
all
I
have,"
Smith
for dirt to enable him to perform
once
said
In
criticizing
the
a voodoo ritual marking or ·his
previous
stay
.
"I
could
already
body which would assist what he
be 2 years oltlln another body, a ·
believed would be his
2-year.
-old prodigy ." _
reincarnation.
Snillh had refused to allow
Ucense issued
·appeals to be tiled on his behalf,
contending that continued incarA "'arrlage license has been
ceration was cruel and unusual
Issued
In Meigs Probate Court to -•
punishment, and that he would be
William
Edward Kauff, Sr., ~o. :
reincarnated after.execulion .
·Pomeroy,
and Jlnnle Mae Clark. •
After the execution, Assistant
29,
Pomeroy.
'
Attorney General Bob Walt told

The Daily Sentinel
(tlSP8141i-. .)

A Dlvloloe ol M-odlo. !Joe:.

Admissions - Eugene Underwood, Middleport.
Discharges - Eva Pickens,
Clara Milhoan, Florence
Freeman.

Stocks .

Publlshed every . afternoon , Monday

lhr""'h Friday, 111 Cour1 St., Pome&lt;oy, Oblo, by the Ohio Valley Publishing Company/Multlmedla, Inc .•
Pomoroy, Ohio 157et, Ph. 992-2156. Second class postq:e paid at Pomerv.;.

POS1\IASTER;

Sead'· - cb•po

to Tho lllll)l Setltlnel. Ill O&gt;urt St..
l'l&gt;moroy. ado «miil.

6'

I••

It' a
AutoCompn•· MecW.
itt Auto policy.

...--

,If""'.,_
.........."" ,_

Advertlllna Representative, Branham
Nowopoper Sales. 733 Third A""nue,
N.., York, New York 111017.

To end mariage

N-thtreio.

Member : United ·Preas Intei-nattoaal,
lnl,nd Dally Press Asscrlatlon and the

Area death

""'.,._. . .'for-·-·-.
·-ld ......... ---. .
Ther-...,.lower. ,... DDUa

Am Electric Power ........... .. 29!11
StJJIIICBIPTION IIATIII
Continued from page 1
AT&amp;T
.............................
,
...
42~
.,
... - · _ ..
That In turn angered black
One Weekcarrt•
................................... $1.10
driver's side.
Ashland
011
..........
........
......
36%
One Month .................. ~ ---- ..........16.10
leaders.
Pomeroy Pollee reported an
One Yoar ........................... ...... $72.80
Bob Evans .... ..... .... .............13'Vo
"I
would
like
to
see
when
accident Monday morning at
Charming
Shoppes
..............
10%
SINGLE COPY
Mandela steps off that plane that
PBICIJ
10: 27. A 1987 Oldsmobile driven
City
Holding
Co
...............
...
14%
he gets the . red carpet treatDolly
----------------------------------25 Centa
by Herman Grate, Rutland,
Federal Mogul. .. ........ .... .. .... 18
llllblcriber
1 not desirinc to poy tho earstruck the rear of a 1989 Chev- ment,'' said Johnnie McMIIUan.
Goodyear T&amp;R ............. .... ..32%
Miami-Dade chapter president
ner may remit In adVance d.lrect to
rolet driven by Linda Bailey,
Heck's
.••..•.. ........ .......":.. .........3
The Dolly i!eDtll!olon a 3, 6or 12 moqth
of
the
NAACP.
She
called
the
Dexter. , Damage wau light.
bull. Credit will be livencarrltuacb
Key Centurion ... ............ ... ... 12
welt.
Grate
cited to'r assured clear commission's waffling "a slap In
Lands'
End
.........................
16%
the face'' to Miami's black
distance. , .
No Nbocrtpllooa' by mall permitted In
Limited Inc . ............. ..... .. ... 23~
community.
afi!U wbere homt' carrier aervlce II
Multllnedla Inc ... ... .............. 77
available.
Rax Restaurants .................. 2%
Ivan Gallaher
Robbins It Myers ...... ....... ... 22%
•
llall - - .... CouiJ nu•
Ivan
G.
Gallaher,
81,
of
Coo~
Shoney
's Inc .... .............. ..... 14~
A petition tor dluoludon of the
Council to meet
13 w.......................................
ville, died Tuesd~ at the Dayton Star Ban1t ... ........ .............: ..22~ . ' a w....................................... ITI.M
marriage of Rick Hatfield,
52 W....................................... S7U6
' Wendy's Inti .......... ........ ... ...
Pomeroy, and Dottle Hatfield,
The Racine VIDaae Council and Hospice Center, Dayton.
0.-MolpCouiJ
Board of Public Affairs will meet
Funeral arrangements will be Worthington lnd ........ .........24%
Middleport, has been filed In the
13 w....................................... DUI1l
• w.......................................I40JO
Melp. cpunty Common Plea~ , In a speclal-slon Wednesday, 8 · announced by the White-Blower
(ATilT uti 8&amp;ar llallk are ex
52 w................ .. .....................m .10
dividend
today.)
Funeral Home, Coolville.
p.m., at Star MID Park.
Court.

waS

PIII•Hfl hlr111

Ohio.

Ohio Ifowspa_pe&lt; AQoclatlon. National

Dally, stock prlce8
(As of 11:88 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis A Loewl

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

ere broader.

-

hool noviaiMione • •·

-- =·· ,
- l t - 2 1 _ ..... _

_...

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Reed stops Pbils
5-0 on·four hitter

"'

.,,..

PICKOFF i\TI'EMPT FAILS - Reds' Mariano Duncan gets a
hand In towards the bag as Will.Clark
. Is unable to put down the. tag

~incirtnati

CincinnatI rlghty prefered to talk
about his head rather than his
arm.
' "I'd slacked off a little bit but r
got back in the swing of things
because that's what it takes for
me," said Armstrong, who
struck out six, walked one and
kepi his league-leading ERA ,at
2.12. "I worked .my tall off
because I'd become mentally
complacent. Tonight I was men·
tally as good as ·I've been all

year."
"Jack pitched very well, like
he'd been doing early in the

Nets have No. I pick in draft
NEW YORK (UPI )' - The New
Jersey Nets, taking time ou tfor a
m lnor deal Tuesday, · courted
offers for their No.•l pick as time
dwindled before Wednesday's
NBA draft
.
,
,
New Jersey, which acquired
veteran guard Reggie Theus
from the Orlando Magic for
second-round draft picks In 1993
and 95, has the No. 1 overall pick
after finishing last in the league
with a li-65 record and ·then
winning the lottery. Nets Senior
\{Ice President Wltlls Reed has
made the selection available to
the other 26 teams but no offer
had yet caught the Nets' fancy.
ShOuld they spurn all offers for
the first pick, the Nets appeared
to be leaning toward Syra.cuse

Majors
·

By l lnitt•d Prri!lllntt&gt;r•tlo•l
AMERICAN LEArflUE
EIL"I

Tram

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GH

Bo!lton ......... .......... .. .....IU 29 .~1111 -

Toronlo ..... ........ ........ .. -li
tt ....·rh~nd ....................33
Mllwuulu.•e .... ..... .. ....... .:J:!
Dl'troll ..... ........ ...... .....:J-1
BaiUmon• ......... ....... .. ..J(

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31i
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Nf'"' Vork.- ..................!5 H

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c:allfornhr ............ .. ..... .:1'1 :u .!U 1111
Sri!Jlk- ..... ... .. ......... ..... .:15 37 - ~~~~~ 101 ~

Ml•nts obt . ..................!1-1 !!' .-IllS JOI't
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........ ..... ............ .31 ~~ .U'J 11
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Boston 10, Toronlo II

MllwatJkt&lt;~ ~Pn11•ellll-l)

al Nt•w l'ori;

1· .1 1, 7: :W p.m .

Torn..W I " 't!ll!i 5-1 I •• Bo"lon (Gardnt•r

1-IJ. 7: a5 p.m .
nf'Vc lund (Swindell Z·lJut Bl*lllnu•n•
CHarrtNch 7-31,7:35 p.m.
Teltlll I Browftt-1) at M1 n~Mt~~ota (S mith

1-8), II: IIi p.m.
. Det~II!Monl~ IHI) utuuldund (\"ounA"
J-'! ), lfi. 05 p.m .
K~t.n!IIL&gt;~ fit' (Gordon ~ --II 111 St•alll••
! Holn1an 14-S), IO:O&amp;p.m.
C'htua:n {PNert;On 0-1) al fullfornllt
(Biyi P\'I'n 7-4). 10:3~ p.m.
Wt&gt;dnt&gt;M-.v (iarm'!l
Dt-trult td OakJwtd
fhh-ar;u ul Calllomlu
Mll"·auleeal NI'W l'urk, niA"hl

TorMilo at Bo"ton, nl~t
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Tt&gt;Ull al Mlnnl'"nla, nlpt
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Mom.-..I&amp;IIBoyd :J-:1) Ill ( 'hlt·a,;o IMad_.n.: 1-Kl. !:: ::0 p.m.
.
l"hlbldtiphlll ( Rullln ~-6 ) all'lll!&lt;ihu rw; 11
1Pallfr!Win 1-31 . 7:U p.m .
SIU'I FraneiM'O I G~trrr.lt i'i Hi J Ill rl 1M.' In- '
nall( ·llldu~on :l·\!1, i : 3$ p.m .
Lo!i Anaei i'M (1\lorl{;m ; .~J at ,\tlunta
( Avt&gt;rJ'D-1) , '7 : -10 p.m .

SlUI Dlt'~ ( Rllt!mlfi*'" 6-4) at flow;ton
(f.'lant•y :!·7 \, tl: 35 p .ril .
Nt•• · fork (DKrlinK !· ~) at St. l.md!i
(Smith (1.6) , 11 : 3~ p.m.
Mo't&gt;dnMidll,V H~tm{'!ll
Sllll Fraoci!Oil·O lit flnl'innall
Monlreul ul Chlca~
Phihl.dt'lphla ul Plltshu r,:h. nir;hl
Los An J;t'lf"S at 1\Uanta, nl~ehl;
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ChieaKU 2, Culllomla It
1\tt•lld ll,l" Gamt'!&gt;i
(Hawld•.~

forward Derrick Coleman. At
6-foot·10, Coleman provides In·
side muscle and a fine scoring
tO\!Ch. He finished as the all-time
leading rebounder ' in coUege
history with 1,537 . and as the
Orangeman's leading scorer
with 2,143 points.
Coleman, who is the only
college player to have more than
2,000 points, 1,400 rebounds and
300 blocks, will earn 0ver $2
million a year should he become
the prize pick of the draft.
Georgia Tech forward Dennis
Scott and Oregon· State guard
Gary Payton are being conslder~d but Bob Casciola, chief
operating officer for the Net s,
reaffirmed after making the
trade for Theus, the team is still
entertaining offers.

Bulllm!IN' - tr.. drd phdtl'l2 -Ia~· Tlllh!i
to PltW!u~h fur • pM)·t•r to lw narm•d .
('lt&gt;vt&gt;lund - Pl~tn•d plh·ht•r -luhn
Fllfn-11 un ll-da,v dl!iahlt'd 11!011 .
Mldwl'!il l.t'IIKl'l' - Appro\'o•d ll'l.ln..Jt •r
ul U'au!lllll frant•hi!Oil•lo Kant' f'01tnt y, Ill.,
for Ut!lllll' ltMnn.
Tna/0 -l'un: hwwd t•ontrul'l of ,o;hor1 ·
stop Gar)· Hl't•rn lrc.n Ol.:lahoma nt vol
llw ,\merit· an A.•Hiot'lallon ( 1\i\ r\ ), '
Rlistl.r.thalr
S('W -lrrJOCJ - ;\t·q..-red ~rd ~-~~~·
Tlwu!i lrnm Orllu•do lor iH' t'tlnd·round
drult plt•lt.s In lUI and IIMIS.
Nt•w Vuk - E~~;k'nck•d ltlf OIK' WIV
conlral'i ol Gl'lwral Maana'a;t&gt;r r\181 aiM-hi.
S11cnmtt'nlo - Truded t•t&gt;ntt•r l'l•nb
Ellb;o" to "' a._'lbl~on : tH•quln·d t"t•nlt•r
Erl1· (..('t·knl'r , a:uard Bt:rhh:r Hanl'!l•n W1d 11
flr!il 11nd !II'Cll nd rn•nd p..;k In 1910 drall
fro1n Utah; ucqulnodullf't1tnd round pk·k
In lh•• !Mil dnafl fr.., \\'uhln#CJn .
lll.11.h -l'nadl'd l'j'fllf'r t: rk t.t- .. k .. ·r.
a:u.ard Bohby Han!ll'n. and 11 fln-tt and
llf'~'Ond round pick In 19!10 draft to
S""Nmento: acqUrl'd(Wird .Jeff M alonr
from WW\tllrta'onand a~~e c ond round pic k
In 1810 dr11fl from Sactllnwnlo.
\hlllll ... on - Tradt-d 1tt11rd ,1('11
MWont&gt;toUtllhi .~wmlset·ond roundplclt In
19111 drall to Sacramf'nto; llt&gt;qllll't'd
Ct'lltt•r P~·nt s EIIM'n lrom s'":ramcftto .
Collere
,John ,Jqy - Named Wllhemlu Lt!SIIn&lt;'
women'" hMMketlpdl·lllld J&gt;Jofth all coach;
nllmed P11trlclt MIUI!IIIIn men'" tennh1
('II.II.Ch.

K~tnllll'l Named John ,Jt'fll'r!IOn
,
rt'l'cl\&gt;er .. I:OIIIt·h.
Mhtlllurl - E11.tend••d •~ •Hirach• of
II!Uilll b&amp;nl hllllkf'lbtdltolu:ht-!1 Rich Dal)'
llnd Bob SU ndv Oild throua:h St.-pt. :10.
Texll-8 Tech - Announced ~IIIM.II.nt
rnrn'H hMketball coach Koh Evan~t 111
le1w\na; IO tak e a similar poNIUon 111

Oklllhoma statt".

Houllllon -

Foochan
Sla;ncd IIIM'hlk' ker Eric

Falr11 to J.)'f'• coar~~t·t .
Hock(')'
DtiroM - Slped rla:hl wlnA"er MlU'C!
Pnhln tu :l:- Y"W' cut1Nct .

.

.
In dme to get him a pickoff attempt. Reds went on to win 5-2. (UPI)
'
.
.
'
',
'

tops Giants; ups

CINCINNATI - Jack Arm·
strong was mentally tough and
that spelled trouble for the San
Francisco Giants.
The Cincinnati Reds' pitcher
Improved his record to 10-3
Monday night, allowing four hits
ov,e r eight innings to lead the
Reds to t.heir third straight
victory, a .5·2 conquest of the
Giants.'
·
Giants Manager Roger Craig
said Armstrong '' had great stuff
and he pitched extremeiy well
with a good curve and slider and
a 95-mph fastball,. , but the

--

'

l~ad

'

to 10 games

season," Reds manager Lou Armstrong all the runs he
Pinlella said. "(Reds Pitching
needed.
·
Coach) Stan Williams told me he
"I hit a hanging split finger
threw well on the side and said
pitch that he got up," • said
he'd pitch well tonight. And Stan
Benzinger. "It was a 3-2 pitch and
was right."
I'm sure It was a mistake on his
Pinlella turned to one of his
part. I !tit It with one hand and it
'Nasty Boys,' Randy 'Myers. In
was a flu!(e, something that
the ninth Inning when he sensed
might never happen again. :•
that Armstrong was tiring. And
Talking about Armstrong, Ben·
Myers immediately got into a
zinger noted that '.'his discipline
jam when he walked leadoff man
is simply amazing. From day one
Will Clark and gave up an infield. that's the way he's been, even
single to Rick Parker to bring the
when he wasn't so well known.
tying run to the plate In the
Now, teams ·are laying. for him,
person of slugger Matt Williams.
but he's gotten to know the hitters
But Myers struck out Williams
andd keeps books on them. His
on a slider, popped up pinch
attitude in the clubhouse has
hitter Gary Carter and ended it
been refreshing and now he's
by fanning Robby Thompson on
become one of the top pitchers In
another slider. "I threw mostly
the league."
heat," said Myers after picking
Mitchell's solo 18th homer
up his 14th save, "but I was
broke up Armstrong's na·hltter
get ling my slider ove.r and it was
with two out in the fourth.
my out pitch against Wl!liams
. Mitchell left the game in the
and Thompson."
eighth Inning with a 'pulled right
Todd Benzinger and Chris Sabo · hamstring suffered trying for a
provided offensive support for
first-Inning catch of Sabo's
Armstrong, who also stroked two
single.
singles in the Reds' · nine-hit
The Giants made it 5-2 In the
attack.
eighth on Brett Butler's two·out
Benzinger hammered a threesingle.
run homer, his fourth, off Giants
With San Diego fallin~ to ·
starter and loser John Burkett,
Houston, 5·3, Monday night, the
7·2, .in the first inning and Sabo
Western Division-leading Reds
chipped in the RBI hits In the
opened up a lO·game lead on both
fourth and sixth Innings to give
the Padres and Giants.

Italy, Ireland reach
W~rld Cup semifinals
wait 66 minutes before piercing
Uruguay's defense. Serena, a
second-half substitute; pushed
the ball through to Schillaci and
the 26-year-old striker unleashed
a left-footed drive from the edge
of the penalty area. Serena 'put
the game beyond Uruguay 's
reach with seven minutes left.
"The . whole team played a
farHastic game and I can tell you
when you score a goal lt's the
greatest feeling on this earth "
Schillaci said. "Now I want to go
home to my wife." ·
Ifa!y 'Is the only team not to
have conceded a goal in its four
games.
"Even If we had a tough time,
we gritted our teeth and came up
with two beautiful goals," Italian
Coach Azeglio Vicini satd.
. Uruguayan Coach Oscar Wa·
shington Tabarez said his team
could not sustain the pressure.
"I thought we could withstand
the siege in the first half," he
said. "But, as ·always, Individual
talents ·s urface. That goal by
Schillaci struck us and we
couldn't get the goal back."
Ireland drew all three of Its
first-round matches. Against Ro·
mania It needed penalty kicks to
advance.
"It doesn't matter that we have
not won a game," Manager Jack
Charlton said. "We might win the
cup without winning a game. I

ROME (UPI) - Italy and
Ireland swept into the quarterfi·
nals of the World Cup Monday
buoyed by their heroes of the
moment - Salvatore Schillaci
and David O'Leary.
· Schillaci, who has scored three
times in four games, and Aldo
Serena produced second·half
goals to give Italy a 2·0 victory
over Uruguay in Rome.
Ireland, playing fn · Its first
World .Cup, defeated Romania 5·4
on penalty kicks after a scoreless
regulation_and over.time in an
earlier second·~ound gai'ne
Genoa .
O'Leary, who failed to score in
51 previous international appear·
ances for the Irish, netted the
winning penalty kick after the
teams had played 'two hours
without a .goaL
"I wanted to take the fifth
penalty. " O'Leary said. "The
other lads .want to get theirs out
of the way. As it wen toni thought
the fifth one·could be the decider
and that 's how It worked out, but
my nerves were fine.'
" I thought of the people of
Ireland when I hit it . I didn't want
to let them down. It was a
fantastic feellrig, falrytale
stuff."
·
In second-round games Tues·
day. Yugoslavia faces Spain in
Verona and Belgium plays Eng·
·land In Bologna.
The two quarterfinal matchups
set thus far are Ireland-Italy on
Saturday In Rome and
Czechoslovakia-West Germany
Sunday In Milan·. Defending
champion Argentina plays the
Spain-Yugoslavia winner Saturday and Cameroon takes on the
England - Belgium winner
Sunday.

In

Before a crowd of 73,303 crowd
at Rome's Olympic Stadium,
Italy took another another stride
In its bid to become the first team
to win four World Cups.
However, the Italians had to

don't care."

,'

Ireland's other shootout hero
was goalkeeper Pat Bonner, who
moments before O'Leary's goal
saved Daniel Tlmofte's kick. The
previous eight . penally kicks
were.converted.
Charlton starred on England's
World Cup-winning team 24 years ago.
.
' 'The win In 1966 was wonder·
lui," he said. "But this Is even
better."
Charlton did not want to look
toward Saturday's quarterfinal
game with Italy. Some celebration was In order.

By The Bend

·Pltga 5 :

·VideoView ... ~_ _;_____._. By_J_eff_H_it._'tea_ry

=

CLASS OF 1970 - The Melp High School Class ·
ol11'78 held Its 20th reunion Saturday at the senior ·
citizens center In · Pomeroy. Pictured are'

[

'

.,,_

Meigs 1970 ·class reunton held
The Meigs High ~hool Class of
1970. held its 20tll. reunion Satur·
day ·al the Velgs County Senior
Citizens Multipurpose Center.
This class was . the first to
attend the new high school
foUowlng the consolidation of
Pomeroy, Middleport, and Ru·
!land High Schools. ·
Attending ~ere Roger arid
Mary Radford ·Gilmore, Larry
and Bette Hobstet ter Hoffman,
Paul and Linda Reeves Darnell,
Kathy Watson Hysell, Jeff and
Denise Howell, Mike and Janice
Couch Fetty, Kathy Conde Hubbard, Pat and Mary O'Brien,
Karen Griffith, Dan Hartung and
Dick Warnert all of Pomeroy;
Earl and Mabel Ramsbutg, Blll
and Carolyn Maples Nicholson,
Kathy 'K!ng ' Jdllrlspn ' and Darla

Sheridan Hawley, Middleport;
Owen and Theresa Blackwood,
Lonnie and Carolyn Darut, Ru·
tland; Roy and Linda Shenefield
Vaughan, John and Linda Car'
dille Smith, Tom and Mary Ann
Myers, Langsville; Dennis and
Sue Hackatt, Terry and Donna ·
Hendricks, Columbus; Bob and
Stella Blankenship, Larry and ·
Ruth Ann .Birchfield, Gary and
Kathy Spencer, Albany; Sonny
and Jackie Eastman Haynes,
CoolviHe; Barb Tatterson, Cln·
clnnatl; David Buskirk, Syra·
cuse; David and Penny McKenzie Warrens, Jwckson; Steve and
Pam Schilling, Baltimore; ,Bill
, and Cheryl McLaughlin How~lls,
St. Clairsville; Russ and Linda
Bea! Well, Long Bottom· Tim
Glaze, Delaware; Georg~ and

Diana Skinner, Garnettsville;
Grace King and Jon Scott,
Mansfield; Joe and Nancq Buch·
a nan Taposcl. Howard; John and
Mary Beth Lohse, Westerville;
Mark and Marlane Goodwin
Friedman, Worthington; Doxie
and. Brenda Walters, Hamden;
Harold and Regina Erlewine,
Dexter; Jan and ·susie 1-ong,
Circleville; ·and Dana adn Jan
Snouffer, McConnelsvflle.
Out of state guests were CUff
Wyatt, Larry and Connie Rom·
lne, New Haven; W.Va.; Frank
·and Jennifer Pope. Orefield, Pa.;
Diane Welsh Laferriere, Burke,
Va.; Rose Hartung Longwell,
Klllein , Texas; Jim · Swatzel,
Houston, Texas; Dan and ·s herry
Abbott, Palatka, Fla.; and Bev
Thompson and Jo.e Campbell,
Cherry Hill, N.J.

be ing accused of bank robbery.
Ge t . the picture? The movie
indu stry, mas ier of dre am and :
mag ic, ls determined to win us '
back and if Bonan~ and the ·
Ewok's movie are an example.
they stand a good chance of doing
just that.
Next month, there Is a special
surprise In store. but you'll have
to walt to find out what it is. So
until then, be kind · and rewind
those movies and check out your .
video stores .

JORDAN BUCK

Jordan Buck· recently celebrated ·his second birthday at the
home Of his parents, Jon and
T&gt;1ml Buck, Middleport
A Big Bird theme was carried
out with a cookout. Those attend·
ing and sending gifts were . his
, brother, Trevor, grandparents:
Fred and Pauline Hoffman and
Addle Buck, Beverly Hoffman, ·
Mike and VIcki Hoffman, David
and Kathy Hoffman, Dolly and
Ted Spires, Janice Daniels, Ray
Smith, Rhoda Duckworth, and
great-grandparents, Fred and
Ellen Smith.

Pastor appointed to church

NA~ day

I

''

and Pleasant Corners Churches
since 1987, and was previously ·
the pastor of the Cutler Chapel
and Pleasant View United Methodist Churches of Belpre.
He is married to Kathie
Alloway-Priddy, the associate
director of nursing for quality
assurance a,t Camden-Clark.
Memorial Hospital In Parkersburg, W.Va .
Alloway-Priddy is a student of
the Course of Study Program
held at Garratt-Avangelical
Theological Seminary In Evan·
ston, Ind.

celebrated

PRESCRIPTION SHOP

Community calendar
TUESDAY,
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
RACINE - The Southern Lo·
Church of Christ will have bible · cal School District wlll meet at
school through Friday from 6:30 the high school on Wednesday at
p.m. to 8: 30 p.m. nightly. Direc· 7p.m.
tors are Barbara Fields and Pat
Thomas.
MINERSVILLE - The Wild·
wood Garden Club will meet
RUTLAND - The Rutland Wednesday at 7; 30 p.m. at the
Garden Club will meet Tuesday home of Kathryn Miller.
at 6 p.m. for carry-In potluck
· dinner at the home of Mrs. ,
THURSDAY
Robert Kennedy on Hysell Run
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Roacl. The program wll! be on Tuppers Plains VFW Post 9053
wlldnowers and dallas. All wll! meet Thursday at 8 p.m.
members ~re urged to attend. .
Members are urged to attend and
meet the new state commander, .
CHESHIRE - The Gallia·
-Meigs Community Action
SYRACUUE - The Carleton
Agency will have a free clothing College Trustees will meet
day on Tuesday from 9 a.m. to Thursd'!Y at 7: 30 p.m. at ·the
noon at the old high school Syracuse Municipal Building. All
building in Cheshire.
members are encouraged to
attend.
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Sesquicentennial Committee will
MIDDLEPORT
The
meet Tuesday evening at 6: 30 Women's Fellowship of Meigs
p.m. at the Grjice Episcopal County Churches of Christ will
Church for , a potluck picnic.
meet at the Bradbury Church on
Anyone who assiSted with the Thursday at 7:30p.m.
celebrations Is htvited to attend
and bring covered dish.
CHESHIRE - The Gallla·
-Metgs · Community Action
POMEROY - Vacation Bible Agency will hold Its regularly
Schoo! IS going on al the Hillside scheduled meeting on Thursday
Baptist Church on Route 143 at 5: 30 p.m. at the Guiding Hand
thr,ough Friday · from 6-8 p.m. School In Cheshire. The public is
nightly. There are classes for Invited to attend and provide
ch!Jdren age two throuah 14. The community Input.
public
,, is Invited to attend.
POMEROY - There will be a
CARPENTER - Mt. Union ·
planning
meeting of the Commit·
Church, located off Route 143 on
for
the
Historical Drama of
tell
County Rol\d 14 Is having vaca·
Meigs
County
on Thursday at 7
tlon bible school thro1111h Friday
·
p.m.
In
the
Pomeroy
VIllage Hall
.from 9-11:30 a.m. dally. For
Auditorium.
The
public
Is Invited
Information contact Nancy
to attend.
'·
wmte at 698-3411.

were reportea ror . tne past two
months.
· The scripture lesson was from
Luke 4, and Romans 12 . The song
used was "Sunshine In the Soul."
Each member read a prayer
and a thought for the day . Mrs.
Scott read "Take Time."
Members reading were Ada
Nease, Mrs. Yeauger, Mrs.
Salser, Evelyn Hollon, Mary K ·
.Roush, Mrs. Sisson, Faye Wig·
gins and Erma Roush .
The meeting closed with
prayer and song "God Be With
You 'til We Meet Agalll."
Refreshmen.ts were served to
· members and a guest, Marybel
Warner.

boderi, Nola Young, Margaret
Powell, Wanda Smith, Jennie
Canter, Kimberly McClure,
Cathy Morris, Sally Caldwell:
Patricia Hysell Sharon Kearns,
Marcia Vassar, Claudia Pelkey,.
Rebecca Pearson, Judy Young,'
·corena Cunlo, Judy Musser,
Sheryl Wilson, Leota Wolfe,
Patsy Laudermllt , Jennifer
Conde, Allee Tripp, Margaret
Wyatt, Rose Causey, Aile a Rlf·
fie, Brenda Hauber, Rebecca·
Nursing assistants currently
Reed, Shaula Laudermlit, Mary·
providing care at Amerlcare·
Reynolds, Delores Cunningham.
Pomeroy are Dottle Nelson,
Chris Black, Joyce Wooten,
Teresa Hoschar, Paula Dalton,
Mandy Hlll, Charlot~e Hess,
Sharon Wllllavs, Shelly 'Satter·
field, Barbara Alkire, Laura · Catherine Masters, Pearl Swain,. ·
Trlna Lee, Renee Fish, Angeia
Hysell, Carol Justis, Amanda
Baker, Ruby Simpson, and Cindy'
Miller, Howard Jeffers. Barbara
Thomas.
Payne, Mary Newlun, Joy lm·

Jordan Buck
celebrates his
second birthday '

~

I

members of the class, which was the llrst to
graduate from Meigs High School.

•

LANDOVER, ' Md. (UPI) The Jazz are hoping that
The Washington Bullets, Utah Malone can provide consistent
Jazz ' and Sacramento Kings perimeter shooting, an element
completecl a major three-way the team has !ackee) the past two ·
deal Monday , involving guard years.
Jeff Malone, center Pervls Elll·
"We are adding a terrific
son and guard Bobby Hansen.
player, a two-time All-Star. and a
, The Bullets traded.the 6-foot-4 great shooter who can score. .
Malone and a 1991 second-round Going Into the draft, we felt we
draft pick to the Sacramento needed to Improve our perimeter
Kings for the 6-foot-9 Ellison.
shooting and I think we've done
The Kings, In turn, traded that." · Scott Layden, Utah's
Maione and Its first 1990 second· director of player personnel said
round pick &lt;33rd overall) to the
"Trades are always the tough
Jazz for Hansen, center Eric part of this business, and with
Leckner and its 1990 first - and both (Hansen and Leckner) It's
second-round picks (23rd and no exception."
·
49th overall).
The acquisition of Ellison helps
Ellison was the No. 1 selection the Bullets fill their most glaring
In the 1989 draft but was Injured hole - center. The Bullets this season and played little.
whose 31·51 record last season
"What we have accomplished · was their worst since 1966-67 with this trade is keeping our started Charles Jones last seaexpressed purpose of improving son, who averaged just 3.2 points
our overall talent base,'' Kings
a game.
General Manager Jerry Rey·
''This might Indicate a new
nolds said. "By acquiring Eric beginning, an opportunity to
Leckner, Bobby Hansen and an build wtth some quality youth,"
additional first·round pick, we said Bullets General Manager
are provided with an opportunity John Nash, who replaced Bob
to add three productive players Ferry last week.
to the Kings' roster."
From Nash's standpoint, the
Malone, ·an excellent outside opportunity to get a younger post
· shooter and the' second-leading player with potential for an older
scorer In BUllets' history , aver~~rd was too good to pass up,
aged a career-best 24.3 points a
Maybe the fact !Ellison) had
game last season. The lOth pick a disappointing rookie year gave
In the 1983 draft out of Mississippi us the opportunity to do someState, Malone has been named to thing we couldn't do a year ago,"
two All-Star teams.
Nash said.
Ellison, played sparingly fat·
lowing preseason surgery to
remove bone spurs from his right
foot and ankle, and then suffered
tendinitis In· his right big toe. He
averaged 8 points and 5.8 reSPRING VAll f V r.JNfMA
bounds a game.
446 l'tl4
Leckner was a first-ro~nd
selection In the 1988 draft and
$2.75
averaged 4.3 · poinls and 2.6
1 l ••
-~--1 IJ r.'l
U I 1 J •,.
rebounds In two years with Utah
playing behind Mark Eaton.
'
-1'/ll'~·,.~-,-, l
Hansen started 81 games for
the Jazz last season and , has
averaged 7.5 points a game In
seven seasons.
Sacramento, which has expressed a desire to draft Oregon
State. guard Gary Payton, already had the seventh pick In
Wednesday's draft and now will
also pick 23rd in the first round
and two second-round picks.
·-

There Is a saying in philosophic rles as my VCR became a time
cirCles which Is attributed to a machine for an evening.
It seems the first daY of spring
man named · Eddington: The
in
the Cartwright family Is a
universe Is not only stranger than
frightening
time. Hoss. that
we Imagine, it is stranger than
mountain
of
courage
with greilt
we can imagine." This month,
love
and
an
even
greater
heart,
through the auspices of my trusty
fallS
victim
to
spring
fever
and
typewriter , lin tend to take you to
the
trouble
begins.
a galaxy far, far away and
For example, he breaks Sheriff
reaqualnt you with those cute,
Coffee's
fingers by slamming
but very brave creatures called
them
In
a
desk drawer . He then ·
Ewoks who Inhabit the forest
goes
to
the
wrong town to bring
planet of Ender.
back
a
prisoner
and end s up
In the last Star Wars movi e,
"Return of the Jed!", we met
Wicket who rescued Princess
Lela from the Imperial Storm·
troopers and, with the aid of his
tribe, defeated them. Now we
"Careglvlng. A Ministry of
pick up the thread with the film WhOleness" was the title of the
Ewoks. "The Battle for Ender". program presented by 'Kalhleen
due out around June 261n video ScottwhzntheForestRunUnited
stores throughout the known Methodist Women met recently
galaxy.
at the home of ijllja Yeauger.
The evil King Terak and his
The purpose of the program
army of marauders make a was to Identify caregivers In the
sneak attack on the Ewoks and church and community; to un·
take them captive. The maraud- derstand the type of support
ers kill a human family. except volunteers need and the lmpor·
for tile little girl, Clndel, who tance of their time.
,
escapes with Wicket into the . Edith Uisson presided at the
forest. There they run into the . meeting and read an article on
crusty old spacer, Noa, played by Fathers Day , Carolyn Salser had
Wilford Brimley. Noa and his devotions from I Thess. : 5 and a
allen friend, .Teek, he.lp rescue meditation '·Always Keep
the Ewoks and the later-captured Praying."
Cindel from the villains. The
Officers reports were given
and 122 sick arid shut in calls
battle for the planet begins.
This film , a rea!flrmatlon that ·
good IS stronger than evil, Is one
of those rarities - a movie for
children also appealing to adults.
It's fun, well-done and exciting
Harold Alloway-Priddy, pastor
wlih special effects that look
of the Orient and Pleasant
real. The villains and heroes
Corners United Methodist
possess no shadowy llnes making
Churches, has been appointed to'
It difficult to tell what they are. It
the Coolville United Methodist
Is a science fiction fairy tale with
Parish in the Athens District by
ail the punch expected of one of
Bishop Edsel Ammons.
the George Lucas movies that
The new parish includes the
have done so much to make us .Coolville, Bethel, Hockingport
feel like kids again.
and Torch United Methodist
Also, the Bonanza series Is on
Churches.
Alloway-Priddy , formerly of
the way with the release of four
Lancaster.
·has been of service to
episodes. The days of quality
westerns, lamented as long· the West Ohio United Methodist
gone, were just catching their Conference since 1981. He has
second·wlnd and , with a cloud of servad as pastor of the Orient
cinematic dust over the horizon,
have come back In time to rescue
us from the 'Pangs of loss. One, a
·childhood favorite of mine, left
rile chuckling with fond memo·
Career Nurse Assistant Day
was celebrated this month at
Americare·Pomeroy Nursing
Center with a grilled steak dinner
prepared In the courtyard at the
facility for the nurses assistants.
Career nursing assistants provide for consistency of care over
time and this event recognizes
and celebrates the contribution&amp;
ol this health care worker.

·Forest Run UMW meets

Bullets, Ja7.z, Kings
mak.e three-way deal

'

·sentinel ~
Tuesday, June 26, 1990

"1 let out a yell, smacked my
By ERIC McHUGH
glove
and then I said, 'It's about
UPI Sporlll Writer
time.
It's a bout time to throw a
Rick Reed may have passed
to Kruk, "' Reed said, "I ·
strike
the audition, but he sttll hasn't
fell behind on him, and you
won the part.
shouldn't do that."
~eed , just trying to Impress
PhUlles Manager Nick Leyva
enough to land a spot on the
held·
off thought his hitters did a.
Pittsburgh Pirates' Injury·
pretty
good job of making Reed
depleted staff, ended up hurling a
look
good.
.·
four-hit shutout of the Philadel·
"We're
struggling,':
Levya
phla Ph lilies Monday for his first
said.
"We're
a
little
off
often·
win of the year.
sl
vely,
and
tha.
t
's
surprising
The 5-0 victory kept the Pirates
atop theN ational League East by because we've got a pretty good
1·2 game and was the the first' hitting ballclub."
shutout of Reed's lO·start, 23· · "You've got to give him (Reed)
appearance career - as well as credit. He threw a pretty good
the first by a Pirate this season. ballgame, but we're not going up
He' s now 0·1 on1he season and3·4 there and doing the things we're
capable of. We're not being
for his career.
But Reed may not have time to aggressive. When you're aggres· .
slve, things happen.''
savor his gem.
The Plra(es got their llrst .run
He's scheduled to ·take the
on
a wild pitch by Oe.J esus. Jose
mound In San Francisco Satur·
Llrul
drove In ·two runs with a ·
day, ll1i t his place in the rotailon,
triple,
Reed added a ·sacrifice ny
not to mention on tile roster, Is
and
Sid
Bream had a. second·
not secure as Injured left-handed
Inning
RBI
single.
.
starter John Smiley and right·
Elsewhere
In
the
NL:
Clncln·
handed reliever Ted Power both
are due to come off the disabled nail downed San Francisco 5·2,
Los Angeles bounced Atlanta 5·2,
list this weekend. '
Montreal blasted Chicago 7·3,
"Jf we get good enough that we
Houston
nipped San Diego 5-3 and
can't get a guy like that into the
York
edged St. Louis 3-2.
New
rotation, If he has to be a long
Dod1ers
5, Braves %
man, we must have a pretty good
At
Atlanta,
NL
strikeout leader
stable," Pirate Manager Jim
Ramon
Martinez
fanned nine and
Leyland said.
fired
an
eight-hitter
to pace Los
If this was Reed's only start he
Angeles.
Martinez,
9·3,
raised his
certainly made the most of It,
strikeout
total
to
i21
·
a
nd didn't
though.
a
.
batter
In
notching
his
·walk
He struggled in the second
league·leading
sixth
complete
loading the basess with two out:
but' got PhiU!es starter Jose game of the season. Braves
DeJesus, 0·1, on a called third starter Charlie Leibrandt, 2·1,
took the loss.
strike.
Expos 7, Cubs 3
"The whole day I was just
At
Chicago.
Nelson Santovenla
saying 'seven good innings,' and
drove
in
three
runs and Tim
when I got Into that second
Wallach's
two-run
single
inning, I said 'You're not going to
make It to the third if you keep sparked a five·run seventh In·
this up,"' the 25-year·old Reed nlng to power Montreal. Winner
Mark Gardner, 4·3, gave up five
said.
After the Inning, Reed said hits over six innings. BillSampen
pitching coach Ray Miller told worked the tina !'three innings for
hirtl to •''quit rushing, settle down hIs first save. Shawn Boskle, 2-4,
and throw one pitch a't a time absorbed the loss. ·
Astros 5, Padres 3
Instead of trying to end the game
At Houston, Mike Scott com·
In the Second inning."
Alter g!vlng up a single to Len blned with three relievers for a
Dykstra leading ·off the third seven-hitter to lift Houston.
Reed proceeded to retire 20 Scott, 5· 7, allowed five hits over 5
straight batters before Charlie 2·3 Innings. Dave Smith pitched
Hayes singled with two out in the the ninth to record his leagueninth.
·
leading 15th save. Andy Benes
''That crowd got to me at the suffered the toss and fell to 6-5.
end," Reed said. "I wanted to
Mets 3, Cardinals 2'
end the game on three pitches (to
At St. Lollis, Milt Thompson's
ilayes). I got two strikes on him, error on Dave Magadan's ninth
and I figured it was a great time
inning double allowed the win·
to end the game. · Spanky ning ruil to score and lift the Mets
(catcher Mike LaValliere) called to their seventh straight victory.
a curveball and I left it over the David Cone, 4-4, worked eight
plate."
'
Innings for the win. John Franco
Reed then ended the game by notched his 13th save. Lee Smith
fanning John Kruk on a 3·2 count. !~II to 1·2·.

ll"'

The Daily

YARBROUGH ANNlVERSARY- VIrgO and Gleana Mc()or·
nilck Yarbrou«h recendy celebrated their 50th wedding
anniversary with a dinner attended by famUy and friends. Mr. and '
Mrs. Yarbrough were married June 7, 1940. He Is a retired
Ironworker and she Is a homemaker.

Buckley layette shower
Pam Riebel Buckley was . ho·
nored recently with a layette
shower by several women of the
.Middleport First Baptls t Church.
Games were ~onducted by
Melanie Marshall with prizes
won by Dorotha Riebel, Jean
Thomas , and Carolyn Davis.
Helen Fields won the door prize.
Gifts were placed on tables
from which pink, blue, and
yellow streamers hung from a
ceiling mobile. A large wooden
rocker and a small chair with a
large stuffed animal were at
each end of the gift table. Mrs.
Buckley was seated In the large
rocker wherl she opened her gifts.
Refreshments were served by
Melanie Maruhall, Helen Fields,

JUST A REMINDER THAT WE ARE
NOW IN OUR NEW BUILDING AND
INVITE YOU TO STOP IN.

June Klees, Carolyn · Davis ,
Donna Gruaser , and Fran

Plenty of
Convenient Parking
on the Side
Parking Lot

Par~er .

Gifts were received fromDoro·
tha Riebel, John and Glenna
Riebel, Jean, Bob and Dorset
Thomas, Donna, Tracey and Jim
Gruese.r, Pooch and Mary Beth
Brewer, June Kloes, Helen and
Ray Fields, Melanie and Bll!y
Marshall, Karen Johnson, Fran
and Bob Parker, Chris Rouse,
Lynn Shuler, Donna Grinstead,
Sharon Seddon, Betty Denny,
Lll!ian Demosky, Ruth Ebersbach, Carolyn and Randall Davis,
Katy Anthony, Dorothy Anthony,
Marge and Amy Baer, Dan and
Cathy Riggs, Nora Jordan, and
Qulda Chase.

Art, craft auction planned
For the benefit of the Mountain 10:30 a.m. and 2 p.m.
State Art and Craft Fair Scholar·
All proceeds from the auction
ship and Grant Fund, an auction go to the Mountain State Art and
of art and craft works donated by Craft FalrScholarshlpandGrant
fair family exhibitors will be held Fund which makes funds avalla·
In front of the best of show and ble to West VIrginia residents for
quilt show exhibit on Thunday. the education and development
July 5, and Friday, July 6, at 2 of the West VIrginia Arts and
p.in. and on Satu~day, July 7, at , , Cnlfts Community.

STORE HOURS:
Monday thru Friday

9 A.M.·B P.M.
Saturday

9 A.M.·3 P.M.

.WE INVITE YOV TO STOP IN
TODAY AND OPEN YOUR OWN
PERSONAL
CHARGE ACCOUNT.
'
.

PRESCRIPTION
SHOP
992-6669
253 North Second AYI.

Midjapart, OIL

�Page_ 6 - The Daily Sentinel

Tu11118Y. June 21. 1890

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

with Bush Tuesday were House
Speaker Thomas Foley or Washington, Senate Democratic
leader George Mitchell of Ma ine,
Senate Republican leader Robert
Dole of Kansas and House
Democratic leader Richard Gephardt of Missouri.
White House spokesman Marlin Fitzwater said Bush' s meetIng on Monday was " just a little
review of the bull get negotiations
to this point." .
Sen. Robert Packwood , R·
Ore .. described the meeting as
"a roundtable diSC\ISSion, each of
us putting forth some Ideas of
how you might come together In a
package and we n•allze It has to
be acceptable to the House, the
Senate, the Republicans. the

Democra ts and the pres ident. "
Sen. Phil Gramm. R-Texas.
said Republicans "are very
per plexed" wit h the tal ks. " We
.don't understand what the Democrat s expect and we don 't under·
stand why we are not proceeding
with negotiations." Gramm said.
"We are ready. Everything that
has to be done, has been done."
Packwood said, " I think ou r
reques t Is for the Democrats to
come fo rth with a plan. If we
don't rea ch some conclusion,
significant conclusion, by the end
of this week, I think getting any
ser ious, substantative conclusion (before Congress's month·
long August recess) Is unlikely."
Afte r five weeks of preliminary talks on the deficit, Bush

started the negotiating phase last
week by presenting a budget plan
that cut $51 billion from the
deficit In fiscal year 1991 and $444
billion over five years.
The Bush plan proposed savIngs from additional cuts In
domestic programs and entitlements, such as Medicare and
farm programs.
Disappointed Democrats, who
had demanded that Bush present
his solutions to th,e budget
summit before Democrats did,
8:ttacked the plan as completely
Inadequate. A disgusted Senate·
Budget • Committee Chairman
James Sasser, D-Tenn., said the
plan "stinks."
An aide to a Republican budget
summit participant was pesslm·

Is tic on the success of talks awful."
One negotiator who might offer
d urlng the fewer than 40 congres:-stonal working days before ad· an alternative plan Is ~n. Pete
DomeniCI, R-N.M., ranking Rejornment In October.
"I just don't see how this Is publiCan on the Senate Bud&amp;el
going to work out, " the GOP aide Committee and a former cbalr·
said. "Obviously, we're having a man of that panel.
Sources familiar with Domenl·
little train wreck (In the talks) . ...
They ought to kick the staff out · cl's plan said the proposal would
cut the deficit by aboutl50b1Won
and get to work."
The Republican aide said Bush In tbe first year and by about..-75
budget dl~tor Richard Darm11n b!Uion over five yearsjjnd would
keeps hoping a compromise will Include · tax Increases Bush bas
emerge.
·
opposed. '
"We're obviously looking at
"I think that Darman Is still
environmental, energy and liD
~loping for the Immaculate con·
ceptlon where we can all sit In the (alcohol and tobaccO) taxes In
room together and come up with way tbat maybe the president
a joint document," the aide said. hasn't looked at them." uld tbe ·
Asked what kind of plan that source. "We're staying away ·
would be, the aide said: "It'll be from personal Income taxes."

a

WASHINGTON (UP!) - " A for u~ 'in campaign · advertise- .- amendment Is dead for tbe year,
constitutional amendment to ban men ts, In particular 30-second · '"Flag politics Is just beginning." '
flag desecration faced a "
commercials, drew heat on the
Thurmond, lgDorinll · tbe fact ;·
bolic Senate test, ·one that will floors of both chambers.
that House leaders say they will
have significance ·only In the
"Fear of the 30-second spot not deal with the question alla))l
November electloi)S.
eats away at the foundation of thlsyear,openedforamendment
Because the House last week
our democracy," said amend- supporters by saying the vote
rejected the amendment, the
ment opponent Sen. Herbert was an opportunity to send the
Issue Is legislatively dead this
Kohl, D-Wis.
Issue back to tbe House "so It can
year. But It remained politically
,:If you don't want to face those atone for Its earlier decision."
alive because of the efforts by 30-second spots this fall, vote : ·This Issue Is not about poll!·
President Bush and Senate Reaye, ·• said Sen. Dale Bumpers, Jcs. This Is not a First Amendpublican leader Robert Dole to
D-Ark., who had an alternative ·_ ment Issue. This Is an Issue .
Insist on a Senate vote.
proposal In the form of a law that ,whether (the) flag ... Is worthy of
The vote was not expeCted until
would declare It a crime ·to protection," said Thurmond . .,
the early evening on Tuesday, &lt;;lesecrate a flag In a manner
"Our shlpol state Isclearly not
· following a series of votes on · likely to cause a breach of 'the In danger/' said John Chafee,
suggested anti-flag burning sta·
R-R.i. 'Tl)ose who.burn the fl!ig
peace.·
lutes and proposed substitutes to
Other alternatives to the 20· are social miSfits, and there's
the constitutional amendment.
word amendment included a nothing they yearn for more than
The Issue was before Congress statute by .Sen. Jesse Helms, _publicity.' ... Remove the televl· • ,
because last year, and again two
R·N.c .; to take flag burning slon crews 11nd their actions will
weeks ago, the Supreme Court cases out of the Supreme Court's end."
·
ruled that flag burning was
jurisdiction, and two proposed
Added Cranston, "I did not
constitutionally protected free
alternative amendments, one by come to the United states conspeech.
Sen. Joseph Blden, D· Del., :the gress to water down the Bill of
l
.
'
A Senate headcount by Assist- . other by Sen. Strom Thurmond, Rights."
ant Democratic leader Alan
'
R-S.C.
"Where does It end? If we
Cranston
of California showed 54
:-,j\FL-CIO MEETING - South African black
The amendment reads. ''Con-· nibble around the edges of the
In .favor, 29 against and 17 who gress and the states shall have First Amendment, what about
lelider Nelson Mandela, center,a nd wile Winnie,
had not declared themselves or . power to prohibit the physlcaf the others?" asked an amendl'lght, wave to the crowd of supporters Monday at
who were undecldeO. If every desecration of the flag of the ment opponent, Sen. Tom Da·
· . member of tile Senate voted, It : UnitedStates." .
' .
schle, D·S.C.
·
would take just 34 votes to block
Blden opened Monday's debate
•'Why shouldn't Cooiress mess
the amendment. The Senate last by declaring the obvious:
around with the First Amendyear failed to adopt a flag"Here we are, engaged In what ment? The Supreme Court has
protection constitutional amend· I suspect we all know. and know been doing it for the past several
ment In a 51-48 vote.
full well, will be a futile decades," said Helms, R' N.C.,
•
Dole
that
the
exercise."
The
suggestion
by
quoting from a letter he received
;DUBLIN, Ireland iUPli lng our way," said a spokesman finding process. Diplomats said a ·
issue would be a prime candidate
He said that, although the flag froni a constituent.
Eluropean Community leaders, for British Prime Minister Mar- special EC summit on Soviet aid
applauding the "foresight and garet Thatcher. "Previously, the would likely be held Oct. 27 in
courage" of recent reforms in concept of step-by-step was not
Rome:
South Africa, signalled readiness accepted. It Is now. "
The EC leaders also said they
TUesday to relax economic saneThe EC leaders said they would consider a Dutch proposal
tlons If steps to abOlish apartheid welcome recent re!o.rms ln·Sout,h to create a E~ropean · Energy
· ·
Africa and "pay tribute"· to the Community linking all of Eucontinue.
;The 12 heads of state also roles of President . Frederlk de rope, Including the Soviet Union,
.... ,
ent~orsed the concept of financial
Klerk and African National Con- as a means of bolstering the
aid to the Soviet Union but gress leader Nelson Mandela.
Soviet economy . .
WASHINGTON , IUPI) Indoor air division. "There may .
the study for providing the first
"The efforts of President de
-A strengthened Conference on
refused to provide a $15 billion
About 3,800 non-smoking Ameri- specific "body coun')" attrlbuta- · not even be a chapter on he81't .
emergency -aid package sought Klerk to bring about a RI'W era In Security - and Cooperation In
cans die each year from lung
disease lin the compendium) :•· .
by ~France and West Germany. South Africa are testimony to his
Europe was endorsed by the' cancer caused by "secondhand" ble to passive smoking. But they
Axelrad said tbe evidence
3,800
.tung
said
the
estimate
of
IMtead, a high-level panel will foresight and courage," the EC summit, lnclualng creation of a _cigarette smoke, says a prellniilinking passive smoking to heart .
cancer
deaths
represented
only
a
study the ·Soviet Union's needs.
leaders said In the communique,
small secretariat for the homenary study Issued by the Environ· fraction of the total death toll disease was weak compared wltb · .
less, 35-natlon grouping. A landIn the ·final communique of a while Mandela "has Inspired
mental 'Protection Agency for ' caused by Inhalation of tobacco more ~u~tantlal data assoclat- .
mark CSCE summit Is expected ·public comment.
two-day summit, EC leaders said millions of South Africans op'
lng secondhand smoke with lung
smoke from : other people's
to be held late this year In Paris.
they would "consider a gradual posed to apartheid."
The study, which does not
cancer.
'
.
cigarettes.
relaxation" of sanctions against
On the Soviet Union, the heads
The EC leaders also Issued
constitute a formal EPA position
In particular, the groups · The estimate of 3,800 JuDi
So~th Africa "when there Is clear of state "underlined the interest
lengthy statements on the envlr- on passive smoking, also said
to studies · suggesting cancer deaths caused by passive
pointed
evlilence that the process of of the Community In the succe5s onment, drugs and racism, exsmoklilg Is based on· 24 stUdies
Monday scientific evidence "Involuntary smoking" Is rech~nge
already Initiated of the polllical and economic
pressing"deeprevulsion"at last
"strongly Indicates" that smok- sponsible for 50,000 deaths a year done,by different research teams
continues."
·reform Initiated by President
month's desecration of Jewish
Ing by parents- particularly the .·. from heart disease and all ' In eight countries.
·'
.
.IJ'he wl)lingness to. lift sa ne(Mikhail) Gorbachev."
graves In southern France.
mother - Is associated with ~ancers.
studies
comP.re
lung
The
key
,
lions step-by-step, contingent on
They declined . however, to
On the Middle East. the EC
Increased respiratory illness In
cancer rates among women who
John
Banzhaf,
execu
tlve direc!utther reforms , was a slgnlfl- approve a Franco-German prop- leaders said "all channels of
Infants.
live with husbands who smoke to
tor of Action on Smoking and
~ant softening of the EC position.
osal for urgent financial ald.
dlato!we and negotiation should
The Tobacco Institute critic- Health, an an tl-s·moklng group; those women who have non• It represen\Pd a compromise
Great Britain objected, main- be kept open" but there was no
Ized lh!" study as "speculation said that broader health Impact . smoker spouses. Eighteen stu6etween Britain's call to remove taining the money would be direct reference to last week's
without an adequate scientific of passive smoking would be dies found wives of smokers bad
~II sanctions and Insistence by
wasted unless the .Soviet Union decision by the United States to
foundation." It said the findings reflected In a' 'technical compen- higher cancer rates than women
Ireland and Denmark that they Initiated free-market reform s.
suspend talks with the Palestine .were not supported by previous
living with non-smokers.
dium" of passive smoking stu"You shouldn't act in a precipi- Liberation Organization.
remain until the dismantling of
research on passive smoking and dies · now being put togetherby
The Tobacco Institute charged
apartheid is "irreversible."
tate way without study, without
On Monday , the heads of state
probably would not hold up under several federal agencies, Includthe
studies did notnotaccountfor
; Sanctions imposed by the EC in seeing what the needs are." set mid-Decem_ber starting dates
scrutiny 'by EPA's Scler\tlflc Ing the EPA.
other
factors that might cause
fo_r para llel conferences on mone- Advisory Board, which will
t9861nclude a pt:Ohibitlon on new Thatcher's spokesman said .
lung
cancer,
such as occupation
In particular, Banzhaf said the
tnvestments and a ban on i!ft· ·
The. president of the EC execu- taty union and closer "political
view the study for .technical compendium would lnclllde a
and
lifestyle.
ports of South African iron, steel · tive Commission, Jacques De- . union ,'· which may lead. to a
accuracy In preparation for any study by Stanton Glantz, a
But the EPA report said at
And-gold coins.
lors, will visit the Soviet Union common currency and joint
final EPA findings.
least
one study from Japan
researcher at the University of&lt;
;; "Quite clearly things are mov- next mo~th to begin the fact - foreign policy in the 12-nation
Anti-smoking
advocates
llalied
explicitly
sought - but did not
California at San Francisco, that
r
'
West European bloc.
estimates total passive smoking find - other explanations for.
higher cancer rates among wives
deaths at 50,000. Glantz's study
of smokers. It also said no other
estimates 32,000 heart-related
deaths and 18,000 deaths from all factor could account for the
similar findings from several
cancers, Including lung cancer,
they'll go, but It Is clear that they
: WASHINGTON !UP! I -Abor- . chipping away at a woman 's In abortion.
different. countries.
Banzhaf
said.
Bill Baird, the birth control and favor parental involvement.
t[on rights activists said Su- right to abortion .
"No alternative explanatory
EPA
officials
dented
the
50,000
"The court 's decisions have abortion rights advocate . who These parental decisions are life
Preme Court decisions upholding
variables
for the observed assoestimate
would
be
Included
In
the
of
11arenta l notification laws for ominous· Implications for abor- spearheaded fhe drive to a 1979 and death Issues In the
cla
lion
between
environmental
technical
compendium,
saying
tion rights." said Marcia Green- Supreme Court ruling in favor of children and families."
r(llnors have " om_inous Implicaand
lung cancer
tobacco
smoke
the
estimate
was
largely
based
berger , managing attorney fo r minors in a Massachusetts case,
The National Conference of · on heart disease studies that had have been Indicated that would
tions" while anti-abOrtion forces
the National Women's Law Cen- ca lled the rulings privacy Catholic Bishops, a strong voice
declared a "victory for family
not been reviewed by federal · be broadly applicable across
ter.
" By a slim majority, the violation.
In the anti-abortion moilement,
llJlity."
studies," the report said.
officials.
"Minors may go through child said the court endorsed "the
·'While the court's rulings Mon- court has placed cruel obstacles
The Tobacco Institute claimed
"EPA
has
not
evaluated
the
In the Path of young women birth without parental involve- legitimate Interest of the parents
dlly. on statutes enacted in
19
of the 24 studies repilr ted
possible
links
between
passive
seeking abortions."
ment. They can even place a of a pregnant adolescent. ... The
Minnesota and Ohio generated
relative
risks tbat were · not
smoking
and
heartdlsease,"
said
In a 6-3 ruling by Justice child up for adoption. Minors can result Is a victory for family
eiJlqtlonal reaction from both
statistically
Bob
Axelrad,
director
of
EPA's
. slgDiflcaiit.
.'
Anthony Kennedy on Monday, be treated for VD and drug unity."
s)des, they also opened the door
upheld
the
Ohio
parenthe
court
Roger
Evans,
a
lawyer
with
addiction without parental involfer-further challenges.
; In New Jersey, abortion oppo- tal notification law . In a second vement and can use contracep- Planned Parenthood, said the
fomrrn)'
ruling by Justice John Paul tives without parental involv~ ­ future of a constitutional right ·to
r(ents promised to renew their
a n abortion appears to rest
l'(lsh for a parental consent law, · Stevens, the court upheld por- ment," said Baird.
"-s:
tions
of
a
similar
law
from
Robert McFadden of the Ad heavily on .Justice Sandra
a"nd· in Louisiana, the state
II am to Mid. Sun.·Thurs.
Minnesota.
Hoc Committee In Defense of O'Connor. "The handwriting on
Senate was set Tuesday to begin
II am to 1 am Fri. 6l Sac.
The court sanctioned require- Life, said the rulings put abortion the wali is that ... Justice
debate on a measure to outlaw·
ments .that Include a 48-hour "on an equal looting" with other 0' Connor Is the ,,siylng vote on
abortions In most cases . The
walling period and the notiflca: surgical procedures.
what flies and what doesn't fly."
[l)'oposalls essesntially designed
long
as
tlon
of
both
parents
as
"I don't know of any other said Evans.
a~ a challenge to the· the landSince she joined the Supreme
mark 1973 'Roe vs. Wade Su- . there is a legal system In place medical procedure on a child that
for minors to bypass their Is performed without parental Court In 1981, her long and
p:teme Court ruling that legalized
· parents.
consent. I don't think a school carefully phrased opinions on the
a:l&gt;ortlon.
.
Such a system could allow, for nurse can put a Band-Aid .on a topic have been d lssected by both
·· The plan, which proposes to
example, a judge to decide If a child without calling up a parent. sides of the Issue seeklqg Insight
b11n all abortlons except If the
·
girl is mature enough to make the It 's rather unprecedented that · Into which way the court was ·
pregancy endangers the wom· ·
a
bortlon decision herself.
people would want this kind of leaning.
an's life, would be the toughest
of
all
states
require
About
half
On Moriday., In a concurring
surgery oil a minor without
allortion law In the country, If
some parental Involvement In letting a parent know," McFad- opinion In the Minnesota case,
enacted. The Louisiana House
the abortion decision of minors. den said.
O'Connor reiterated her belief
akeady has passed the measure.
Statistics show that over 1
Susan Smith, a lobbyist for the first stated In 19&amp;'1 that any
'
million teenagers between the National Right to Life· organiza- regulation that does not "unduly
·The latest high court decisions
ages of 15 and 19 . become tion, said the decisions were burden'' the right to abortion can
continued a process begun last
pregnant each year. About 40 "sympathetic to~parental Inter- .stand If II serves a "legitimate
JIIIY In Its rullilg in Webster vs.
percent of those pregnancies end ests. It Is still not clear how far state purpose."
Reproductlve Health Services cit

sym-

.

r·

European leaders soften position
regarding South African reforms

.Study: 3,800 lung cancer deaths
are caused by · passive smoking

-re.

$upreme Court upholds consent law

Ills

992-2124

I

-,,.,._
1/,-

.......

~-

•

___...,_ .

pledge to balance ·
in trade talks with Japan·
I

Senate to vote on flag amendment

.-

off~ials

U.S.

Bush, congressional leaders ·meet on budget
WASHINGTON CUPI) -Amid
fears that bipartisan budget
talks between the White House
al)d Capitol Hill are breaking
down, President Bush and top
congressional leaders met Tuesday In an attempt to spurchange.
•Tuesday' s breakfast meeting
a( the White House followed a
s~sslon on Monday between Bush
·a nd R e publican bud get
negoti ators.
"I think that the purpose (of
Ttresday's bre11okfasn Is to dis·
cuss how ·serious the preslden t
, feels a bout these discussions,"
said one GOP congressional aide.
" ! don't know If It's another
feeling-out exercise."
Among the leaders who met

The Daily

June 26, 1990

·•

b~dget

TOKYO (UPI) -The United promised to cut its budget deficit consensus on the budget deficit,
States told' Japan It will try to put and attack Its low savings and he said.
Its budget Into the black as Its IJ\vestment rates to rebuild Its
"We describe how the In ten lion
part of the bargain In trade talks, ~ompetitlveness .
of the administration Is to extend
U.S. officials said Tuesday on the
The talks were supposed to the Gramm-Rudman-Hollings
flniSij Tuesday but they will Act beyond 1993, after which we
second !lay of negotatlons.
The U.S. plan Involves amend- Continue for at least one exua would reduce outstanding goverIng budget-balancing leg!Alatll)n day and .possibly longer as the mentdebt by the amount equal to
to provide for budget surpluses two sides seek agreement on the Social Security surplus," he
after 1993, said a senior Bush terms for a final report In time sajd.
administration official par!icl· for· the · Economic Summit of
The act contemplates a bal·
paling In the negotiations.
industrial Nations next month In anced budget by ·1993 but the
It will also Involve using Hou~ton, the official said.
United States will now aim at a
surplus funds from the Social
He questioned whetlier negoli" budget Surplus In succeeding
Security fund to pay off federal atioris would end In time for the years, he Si\ld.
"
debt, said the official, who the report to be ready for the
briefed reporters on condition of summit's opening July 9,' but ·
U.S. anti-trust and product
anonymity.
characterized the talks as good
liability laws also figured In the
The plan was presented to exchanges In which progress was
discussions , he said, along with
Jatjan ·during the second day of being made.
deregulation of U.S. export
talks in To)cyo on broad meaTuesday's discussions largely
controls.
sures to correct the $45 billion concerned America's efforts to
. He said there was progess
trade Imbalance between the two strengthen Its competitiveness, ·made on a numl).er of Issues.
nations: The talks make up the he said.
lncluding'the U.S. bUdj!et proposlast. round of a yearlong elfort
"We focused on the actions
ills and Japli11's plans to dereguealled the Structural Inipedi· which the U.S. govetnment ha.s
late _Its distribution system.
men_ts Initiative.
·
taken tO continue to reduce tbe
Disagreements, he said, were
In April, the two sides pro- budget deficit 'of · the United
mainly confined to mahers of
duced an Interim report on the . States, which Is our pattoftheSII
timing.
·
Initiative In which Japan.pledged process," the official said.
But Japanese news . rElports
to reform Its distribution system
The U.s:· side tried to lm press
said the two sides still differed on
and take other market -opening upon Japan the Bush ~dmlnlstra ·
the level of Japanese public
measures and the United States lion's effort to g_aln a bipartisan
works spending.

Bu,
s
iness
Services
------FOIIVR IIOtiZ
TANNBIG

OPEIIINO SOON
Call Now "j'o Milko
Appointment

' 949-2794
30 .Stssions-530
Co. Rd. 21
Wallh F• Sip•

RACIIU, OHIO

FREE ESTIMATES

Ta.. the pain out of
pointing. '
let us do it for you.

209 Sotrtil 4th St.

VEIY IEASONAilE
HAVE IEFEIENCES

Mkllll-.rt, Oh.
"LOW IIKDMI IICIMI"
'

'I

3-21-•10-ttn

992-6803

FLATWOODS, ROAD
POMEROY, OHIO
1/1/1 mo.

.

61

MAINTENANCE &amp; IEPAIR
1361 Po..U St. IIIM.-t

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

,
3

6
10

Monthly

Galli~ or Mlton co~nti;. mut~

Melg,.
:~1,

Ov9r 111 Wordl
Rote
'
.20
14.00
.30
16.00
.42
$9.00
.80
&amp;13 .00
.05/dly .
51 .'30/ dly

Words
16
16
15
16
15

Days

'

IA&lt;r• &amp;--.n.lflst..l

RATES

. bro ~en uPdiVI\Yill bt ch•g«l

be pre·

...,~ •.- 10GiYdiscount
tor adt Plfd in advance;
·
..WIV and Found 1di uneltr 16 wo,ds will be
~

no ch•oe.

•

1-Ctrd

ell ciP'ttaiiMters ts double price o1ad c:oit.
only u•d.
.
:
··
'
not retpontiblt for errors etter first d~ . !Check'
first' dll'¥' ad funs k1 pape,j . (:all befor. 2 :00p .m
publi c.tiort to makt conact ion.
•Adl th-' must be paid in advance ere .
·,·· ·' Cltd -ofTh~nka
.Happy ActS
In -Memoriam
Ytrd 51111

4 - Giveawty ·

63-Afhiqull.

5 - Htppy, Ads
6-Lolt end Found ,..
7 - V~rd Sal a (p~id in advtncel
B- Public Sel• &amp; Auction

65- luHdinv Suppli•
56-Pets for Slle
·

•

11 - Halg w.,ted
1 2 - Situltian Wanted
.
.1·3-lnaur-nce •

DAV BEFORE PUBUCATIO.N
-11 :00 AM. SATUROP.Y
~ ,2 ,00 P.M . MONDAY

' . tHURSDAY PAPER .
FRIDAY PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

1 4- Busin•• Training

ArooCode 614
441 - Gtllipolit

317-Ch•hire •
381-Vfnton

ZU-Rio Oren de
211-GuYin Ditt.
143~ Arabi 1 Din
319-W•tnat

992 - Middi.Ort
Pomtroy
9815-Ct'l•ter

843 - Port .. nd

247-L.,art Falla

941 - Racine

742 - Autltnd

667 - Caolville

.

;;' 0 f
Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
The following wero recelved/prepored by the Ohio
Envlronm- Proteotlon
Agencv 'IOEPAi Iaiit - Eifectlve dii1M of flnol IC·
tiona end 181uence det• of
propooed octlont _lnd of
drift action• ore lltllttd. FIno! ~Ieino moy be oppootod.
In -tng, within 30 dlyo of
thedlteofthlo notice, to the
Envlrorlm.ntot Boord of Review. Rm. 300. 238 E.
T-n St.. Cotumbuo, Oh.,
43211. Notice ofiiiVIPPNI
ohlill be fled' with the dlr ...
tor within 3 doyo. .Pro-d
- n • wllbecomeflnol un1811 1 written ed(udiOIIIon
requllt Ito oubrnltted
within 30 diYI of the loeuanoe dlta: or the director
rov-/ withdrew• the pro•
poood action. A.., penon
ml'( submit commenu •nd/or 1 mllltloig rogordtng ony
drift octlon within 30 doyo
of the dlt&lt;l lndlceted. "Ac·
tlon", u uoed obove dOll
nat indude r-lpt of 1 v•l·
fled ,Q"'ptotnt. If llgnlflcen1
public llttec•• exllte. • public m-1111 moy be hold. At
to •flY octlon, Including r•
Clipt of verlfted compfllnto.

_."'I

.

[r HI"IJfl'l IIIII"
71 - Autat for lilt
72-Trwct&amp;t for ....

Hf'.il

Mason Co., WV
Ar11 Code 304

•sa-Leon

34-Busin•s Building~

773-Maaon
812-New Haven
Btl- Letart

'

35.:...Lat1

t

. 4-15-16-lln

SELUNG
OUT
MOVING! .

1FORIVEI

SER~ICE

TANNING

Wt can rtlltlir cittd re·
core radlaton ontl
heater c.-11. We con
Jllso acid lloil and rod
eut rldilttan. Wt also
repair Gas Tanks.

IIOW OPEII

Coli Now To Moke
Appointment

949-2794

SPEtiAL

30 Sessiorls-'30
Co. Rd. 21
Watch Far Sirs

PAT IILL FORD
992-2198

· RACINE, OliO

Mlddlepon, Ohio
.

1·13-tlc

SALES AND SliYKE '
F•tory Authorla ..
S."ico Cllll• F• Most

IW!n ...

OPEN MON.-SAT. 10 to 5

S'IIAWROWBS: Dworf
&amp; Td; PIMPAS GlASS:
Pink &amp; Whitt; FUSOU.
IASim, HERS and
MOaE.

614-742-2772

R. L
TRUCKING

PURSUIT
Airline

SALES &amp; SERVICE

•GRAVEL
olJMESTONE
•FILL DIRT
•ANYTHING
AT ALL

m,mc

ALL 'IUIIS

"

ll.f9·7

Iring It In Or

"Your
connT-:tlon

• All
Typea of

Trove!"

a -- - _

985-4422

.,,,_,

We

Pldl Up.

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE
992-5335 or 915·3561

Acroa ,,_ P.n Office
117 L Soc. '-•Y

·POMROY

Public Notice

82- Piumbtnv • Huling

.

NOTICE TO BIDDERS ,
84 -:_ EIKtrical· Refripetkln '
Tho ·Bo•d of Ml.,.lon of . USED APPUANCES
85-General Hauling
the Mot• 1.oco1 ~
8t-Mobila'Home R1911W
90 DAY WAIIAIOY
trict dltirlll to ............
WASHERl-$100 up
48-For L••····· ·····81!17I-!1Uipha.tlllt'Y···
bldl tor dw lallowWig:
DIYEil-$69 up
·
·
1. fllllt .._ _ ,.
llfiiGEIIATotll-$100
2.
Oltollne
on
d
Ott
ProPubliC Notice
Public NotiCe
Public Nollce
IIM81$-GII·Dtc.:-$U5 up
FIEIZEI$-$125 up
'3,
TirOl
end
Tubet
on t,.. 8th dey of ,..erch, leto, on lhird st-. end oxter Dllltrlct
liCRO OVEN$-$71 up
4. Fire Extin~P~Ither .ln1 89o. be docr•d lnvllld tondlng
11-vlte, OH.
width -trly tproctlon a flop oln
end let 11lcle.
KEN'S APP.UANCE
E"-cttve d-'1 8/18/10.
61 foot end 8 I n - to the
In order fO be co.....,ed,
You lrt further notified
Thta fino! octton not 111•
ohlld Lot No. 134
SEIVICE
. . - by PlopOted ectlon thee you m•Y. . hive eom-.
uidVII-IIelngthellllll ott ....... bldl ..... be r•
-edlntheTr...,rer'iOf.
992-5335 or tiS-3561
lind It eppeoloblo to EBR. ctolm or lntarlllt In the p._tv dtlaibed In Volume
PIIHtipobUfll Project· Wotor· prooeodtn• which ore lied 132. Page
Mllgo County fl&amp; 320 E111t Molt! ltr.ot. P,
Acr- f . - Pill Office
0 . Box 212. Pom•"''· OhiO,
tine Welt on SR 439 end TR herein. You ere required to 01oec1 Racordl. ·
.POIIIIOY 0110 ·
tho ComJMII"'
143 from SR 329 Md onower
Deed Relorence : Volume on or before I 2:00 o'clo'*
tb/30/'19'11n
noon
on
Tutldly,
July
24.
within
twenty-light
128)
Atheno County TR 38 June·
203, Pogo 479,
Motgo
19SO
.
.
tlon.
·
doya otter tt,o lilt· publico· Counly Oeed Reoordo.
The Bo•d of Edulllllon
tiO!I of thle Notice. which
The vltoge ,...,_the
JUNE 20
wil be publlohed O!ICII ...h righl to re!ICI ony or oil bidl r011n101 the right to ICCIPI
willie lor otx .111
and to weive eny informal!· , or .....,. IIIIV •d oft bldl•
PubliC Notice
Jene flY, Tr_u_ ·
- . . Tho IMt publlcotlon till In bidding.
Fred Hoflmon. Moyor Melgo Local School Dlltrlcl:
IN THE COMMON PLEAS Will remain on the 3 11t dey
320 Eat Moln ltrwt
of'Juty, 1880, ond the twenVillllll of Middi'!Port
COURT OF MEIGS
CUSTOM IUIT
P.O. Box 212
tv·elaht 128) diYI for on • t6l 22, 29, Ill 6, 12. 19.
COUNTY. OHIO
HOMES I a:r.AGES
hdring wll comm•ce on 28
~"!'!~·
41788
PROBATE DIVISION
181 ,
.,At l111111n
Prictl"
tturt dote. lnth•-•ofyour
SUSAN WADE, -' 11 ..
Plllntlfh lollure to an...W or Olher·

Stop In and See

o•

DALLAS SAYRE AT

up·

.-,cto

PAT HILl
CHRYSUR-PL YMOUTH

-In•

DODGE ·
399

n.

BISSELL
.UILDERS

.,•-•tve

-va.-

PATTY VANCE, tho nomed
Eucutrix of the E-e of
Mrory Crlckmon, Dec...ed.

It....

1

oet..dlnto

D--

CMeNo. 2ee73.
NOTICE BY PUILI~TION

"'*- -· -'

TO:
Tho
Law. f!l••t of tCJn.
end Llgllt- of Mar; CllakDeceaed, thtir Eucutort. AdmlnlltrM- Cu~
!lent. Alllgno. or G--o.
end tile Unknow:n - · lit
M't¥ per1on ~rrley obtain ,_. Law, Nut of Kin, Dtviotlce of further octlono, end .,d Llgllt- of Hobert Hal,
eddlttonol lftformotlon. Un- Clntan Hoi. S - Hal. Dt'
1•• oth-lu provided In vtd Hilt. Lucy Hilt. Roole f•·
notice of portlculllr octlont, guoon, Leo Hilt. H - Hal,
ott communi-'- thai! be -Eucutoro,Admlnlln·
olll1 to: · H-1111· Cleric. ton. Cultodlono. A \1., or
OEPA, P.O. lo~ 1041, Coli Guanttonl. . Addr- u"'
UR!bUI. OH. 43211-0141 known Md D&lt;nild Ha!t. Lucy
AdPh. 1114) 144,2111. Con- Hall. Rolle
'
lUll ORC Chop. 3'741 end llreo•• u'*nown. .
You ore hlrlb!' notified
OA&lt;;: Chopo. 3741·47 end
tturt you hiVe been ~~*ned
3741-llor -lremento.
Drift NPpEI ...1'11)11 Ra· Dtfendolltoln the HIIOn .,.
hewot - lllbject 'to Revtaton titled luoon Wad&amp; II 111..
VRIIIII of Rutlind - R ut• Plllntlfll, vo. Potty VIlle&amp;
the nemed
lllllhl
~WWTP .
Prapooed to b e - of Mlln Illite of Mory Crlat11n.,.,
Die IMed, II II., Dlhn"Streit
lllla. Thli llltlorl .... ......
Rutlllld T-nohip~ Oh.
No. DIU.
Pullllc-dMaa/22110• oootgned
RIMivtnl - :
Lltt111 end to -.!In• In 1111 Court
ofCom-fiiMiofMIIto .
Latini C.....
FIOII!Y Deurlpllarl: Munlal- c--,, Ohio, Pralli:te Dl¥1prot-UIIIIIr 0 .1 MOD
llon. the proyor of till
Permit No. OPAooOBZ/CD "'"'"' c~e~n ..... tturt till pu..
................. ofpf-llld fiOitld Loot Wit llld T 'of MIIY Crlalu_, ...
1;111 ......... ...
odmltted to PIOIIIt•
TuPIM!t. Ptotno-a-tor WI·

mon,

Fer.,-.

e.-

c-

c-

-eel.

........

,Grid.~

of .ct.,. ·
..,,..._by

11y the Olllo. Rulet

PraatduN.
clet.Jit witt
be rendered
ogolnllt you end for the i'ellef
dlmonded tn the Complaint\
Dated Jhio 21 It dey of
June, 1880.
. .
•
. Lone K.' NltMiroed, Clerk
Itt 21:. '
.
.
171 3, 10, 17, 24. 31, lite

PubliC Notice ·

BULLETIN BOARD
BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE .
,4:30P.M. DAY BEFORE .
Pl]BLICATION
-

PUIUC NOTICE
81~ wit 1M ...c.tved It
Mlddllliort ":~N,t·Ohio
237
"-lt.,•M
41710, ullll 3 P. . July 1 1

•lhd ....

"*':

949-2101
or 1-. 949•2160
· Dar .. Night
NO SUNDAY CAW

•

'

5·16-'90-1 mo •

I and J CONSTRUCTION
GREG lAlLEY
•NEW HOMES •SIDING
•GARAGES
•REMODELING
•GENERAL CONTRACTING

A Great Conibination"Quality and ReaiWiablt Prices"

WE GO THE EDRA iluJ.....

992-6110

•..011110

c.o ...4-111-7104

Must love animals, work
flexible hours and provide
l·own transportati~n ..
· Call lor Interview

I

mo. pd.

TRI·COUNn RECYCLING

OffiiS I LOCAIIONS TO SIIVE YOU....
POMEROY, OHIO: Rt. 7. I.R . 143

992-5427 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
992-6505 5 p.m. ·"9 p.m.

.

OHIO:~-

10. S.R. 143
NEW HOURS:
POMEROY: 9 e.m.·7 p.m. 7 Dey1
ALBANY: 10 t.m.·l p:m. I Dtya, Cloaad Sunday
PAYING AS OF TODAY, MAY 29, 1990
•1
IOC per lb.;
ALIANY,

'

W1111,

,.... . . . . . . . . . . _ 0 1

....... the hilt of Lei
No. 134 Itt ,.._. .....
Third "dJtkin to "'" ,....
of MldJttl Dr\ Mtlgo COUtlly,
Ohio. beln!p ,. .... 01

s. Tlllnl, •••••••
992-6421

Includes 4 bedrooms, big kitchen, huge
family room, 2 ga11ges, 3 baths, rented
3-room epartment, 40' x 120' firm buildIng, pond, over 40 acres fenced puture
land and rented mobile home.

MEIGS COUNTY.
HUMANE AGENT
'NEEDED"

•

Public Notice

1110 tor tt~eiOIIowJne

PH.

'.

PUBLIC NOTICE
lyroauoo 11111111 Couilcll
wll hold I DUbie -inA
on the 1111 luC\-' on July
I, 1111, at 7 p.m. at the
muntolpot Buldl"" Third lt.,
SyrocuM, OH. AJ oltll•t
-weloometa-.
Janlcellwoan.
Clarii·T-urer
·
VHitfO of lyroou•
fll ~~~- 1tc · •
. • ..

100.

•cROWAYI .
OY.JN RIPAlt·

.. 31-t mo.

It-

6-5-'91).1

· Aok for Kendll

~!SIIINCI

949-2969
8'J-Eac:MFitinl

4,.2161

(6141 742-2027

,,,., "'·'"'

Sot. 9·5
ClelodS.O.

44-Ap~rtment tor Rent
' 46 - Furnithed Aaoma
41 - &amp;pac:e for Aenl
47 - WJnted 10 Rent
•&amp;-Equipment for Rtnt

,

NO SIINDA¥ CAllS

CHEnD; 0110

IUSIES PIIOIII

•UGU IIDGI
SMALl. IIIGINI
CIMJII '

81 --Homt·lmproYemenu

or 1-. 949.2160

Res-tlon!Ticket•

-~

16141

ld§.IMI

FREE ESTIMATES

161 North SeCond
Middl.,,,,
457.0

. ..11·10

w.,,..,

4 1 -Hou·ltl ror Rent
42 - Mobfle Hoin• for Rent
43-Farml for Flatu

New lomtion:

, EVE~NGS

1

·'

PARTS AND SERVICE
For-Molt 2 end 4-aycto
on gin•
Stock Porto for Homotito,
WeodNtor, TecumHII, ·
Brlggo 6 Strotton.

We C...., Fla..,_ lupptl•
Your Phone
BU.. Hore

992-2269

Acr1111

38 - Raal 1Me

,

BILL SLACK

••s.

PI, 949·2101

IEPAII

Gutters
Downspouts
G
Cl
.
utter eantng
Painting

"Fraa EotimatOI"

Paulin's HilllltwHn
Rutland and Rt. 554

PLUMBING &amp; HiAnNG

•fiREWOOD

'79-Cimp .. &amp; Motor Homtt

ROOFING

~TRAVEL

•uGHT HAULING

71 - Camping Etuipm~~nt

, 33-flmtl for lilt

Mow•tl L

NEW -

DAVE'S SMALL
ENGINE REPAIR

PH. ~92·3&amp;-?-!~.

RIM and .
IEMOVAL

-.a••t•

mo.

BISSELL
SIDING
CO.
••• ._...,

ANGIE'S
GREENHOUSE

SIIRUI &amp; TREE

71-lolfl &amp; Moton for late
71-AU1o ,.,. . .
77-- Auto Rep•r

32-Mobite Hom• tor ltle

676-Appla Gtava

$1816

' OPEN: MON.-FRI.
10 A.M .-8 PJ\11.
Or By ""'~ojn!nllnt

, 73-'v..., • 4 vvo·,
74-Mo•orcvet•

I II

31 - Homn 1er ...,

671- PI . Ple•anl

9)7-luffala
'

I

,_

Stop &amp; Ca•pFr.. Eititllottt

CALL
992-558tJ

QNOUICINt
NEW'LOCATION

,_,.,, 011.

SPRIIIIO SPHIAL

1
I-,::t:~:~•I.Qra4n
1
Ferdi:llr,

.

Classified pages 'corer the .
telephone exchanges... ··.
Meigs County

I 1 - FlriJ' lqw.,....,t
82- Wimtd ta Buy .
63-Livettocll

16 - Sct\ool• &amp; Instruction
1 1-Radio, TV &amp; Cl ,._,..,

:- fgg
;:~ : ~~~.:'e\vo~v
2 :00P.M . THURSDAY
- 2 :00P .M·. FRIDAY

Slit or Trade

Form ~IJiiJiitPs
6 llot!SI!II.K

~I![VICI'S

. '

MONDAY PAPER

58-Fruitl ~ V . ..Cibl•'

........

•G•apt
oCw¥1ato

Residential &amp;
Commercial

·

:IJJIWtttllllln.

ClEAN; lUIE I Tm

Mlf~hendill

57-Music:al.lnttrum.ntt
~9-For

1·6141 992-7143

oi

( llrplllYIIJt'IJI

cept - cl•sified displ.,, But in•• Card and tt911 noticu) ·
will also appeer in the Pt . Ple•ant A_
e glner and the· Galli·
polis Oaity Tribune. ruching oV.r 11,000 ham•.

~~EJ~t'svo~~'::PeR ""

64-MiJc.

9-..W••• to luy

•A clanHilld advertiNftl'_, placid in TheD1ity S.ntine&gt;l (I• ·

COPY DEADLINE -

61 -Hou111hold Good•
52-Bportlnt Goo•

2 ~ 1n Mamory
3-Annoucamtn11

511 S. Fourth Ave.
Mlcllllt""', Ohio
RESID NTtAL and
• Tronoport Vehict• •
Farm Equipment . ·
Heevy Equipment, Etc.
FREE ESTIMATES
24
SERVICE

VCR CUNIC ..

'

'\

POWERWASH
SERVICE

Hou . . • Mobile Homea

MIDDLEPORT,

• The
Area's ·Number ·1 Marketplace.
."'

915-41

COMMERCIAL SIDING

Buy· Sell
Trade
367~05~,.

'

..........

Heating, Cooling,
lefrlgot;ettion

.~~- ~~-

. · ·VIC'S
BODY SHOP
·

(61

BISSELL &amp; IdlE
CONSTRUCTION

•VINYL StDINQ .
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

.111111101 lmiiOI

992·5042

•

•

5· 11-'90-1 nto.

liNDA'S
PAINTING
&amp; co.

GoodR-'•
T.L.C.
27 Yro. Exp.
Ref..-•-

HUMPHIEY'S
CUMATE
CONIIOL
Sonia

SPECIAL

SIDEUNES
SPOIQ CARDS

Classified

7

181 N. IND AVE.
MIDDLIPDIIT
112-1n1 , , . , .

31C

�'

Page- 8- The

Dailv

Ohio

Sentinel

PomeroyMidclePort
···-- Ohio-

KIT 'N' CARLYLE~ by Larry WrliJit

LAFF-A-DAY

Announcements

.

~nll'ltnt

44

. ..... .o ---

for Rent

3 Announcements

Television
Viewing

' " r/

1

~

The Daily Sentinei- Paga 9

'

8

TUES.. JUNE 26

45

WOit
tAM I
Rearrange lett•rs of
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1:00 &lt;Il Hanlc:allle And

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McConnlclt

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48 Space for Rent
~

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loll, MARCIE
I-lOME ...
TODAV WAS OUR LAST DAV
OF SUMMER SCHOOL ..

.

eo Alldj Grllllth
0

WOIIcl Today
I!) He-Man

THE WATER IN THE
DRINKIN6 FOUNTAIN
WAS ALWA'1'5 WARM

DID '1'0U LEARN
AN'1'Tf.IIN6 '?

1D Chartea In Charve
1:115 (I) lloworfr llllb•aa
1:30.di Ill NIC Nlglllly Nellie

CJJlAt.
I

. (jj 8poii8Laok

Req. I'M ••• ,..

e~AiCNewaQ .
lD lody Electric
(!) H·1 eo- Q

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ANCKK
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6 pup~ llolher Ito llyborton
Husky and Fll.,.,......_,, C
tp 5 woelca old. Eotlnt puPPf
fj&gt;od. 814-912-33111.

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Yard Sale
GalllpOH~

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a VICinity

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POSTAL JOBS $11,31111.-J,
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Story (PI 1 01 2) (2:00)

II)) PrlntaNIWI

s bo

:IIIW7WIICI4

I!) Murder, Sha

Services

'
*-'
INIOI. dock. " '
""""h.

I,IJI;. RE(Y&lt;U::

(R) (2:00)

HIS GARBAGE:'

1:30taa •~ 'rha Wonder
Yoara Q
9:00G()l IB·In Tha Heat 01
Tha Night A former boxer

-h

lor

~ Clllll. O.p a Rot.
lloq'd. Nepllo.i114-441-111t.

llhldlopo~ (IIMr

= .._ ...

llokla Jr. HI.,J. PI.IJCII!. 114- a , _ 1 1iotJ1 S17lllilo. o111oo
112:'1121.
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MEEKLE AND WINTRHOP

... .......
- · $120.
bod wllh
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good
-

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REHTTOOWN

CA.U.. 555 -oJ 5I!. .. '

11t4tl3111

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...... ....,, dOOIII~

=

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Schools&amp;
Instruction

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132,100. .1*281-

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Rolrlall'- $lUI por - . II
cu. '11. - · $111.10 por
-¥1'1111 Ill. 141, 4
mlloa oil Rt. Jc.nlllllry.Opon 7
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REME.MI!IER·,

AND THEY

52&gt;-ol58 .. CAU-

'WONDER

IT. RI6HT~...

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I

'lebycak11' CIS Tuaaclay

Movla (2:00) C
II)) Llny King 'llval

WHY I'M

i1J ludwalaar I'Naanll:

Ne:tJROT"ICJ

Tuaaclay Nlgltt Flghla
Ill Nalhvlfla Now
1:30 Ill II~ Coach Q
10:110 (I) 7110 Club With Pat

/

ca

Robertaon

D &lt;Il IB Quantum Loap
Sam defends a Southern

.

~---JualofiR

18 Wanted to Do

THA'n; 5!5~0158 ... CAL.L
.555-01~ .. ,

I

-

.-, .

blackmails the Malia In return
for hla silence. (A) Q
·ma 8!1lR-neThe
Connor family competes In a
Halloween horror
comeetlllon. (R) C
lD (j) Giving lip lha Ca111l
This program reports on tl)e
difficult ISSk of relinquishing
U.S. power in a country born
of U.S. expansionism and
nurtured on U.S. dollars.
all • 0 MOYIE:

a-Apl,tum.,up .. -...

...._

black woman accused of
In 1957. (A) Q
!ll thlrtyaoinothlng
A tamponory shalceup at the
agency makea Mlch881
Elliot's bosa. (A) Stereo. Q
CD Newewatch
(!) P.O.V. Startling account
of a subterranean Federal
prison In Lexington, KY .
murder

•a •

BARNEY
I'M .HAVIN' LUKEY'S
BOSS OVER FER
SUPPER TONIGHT,
LOWEfl,Y

HEY, MAW II

I HAVE MINE

•

EVER' BLESSET

GIT BACK TO
YORE DADBURN
WEED IN'!!

&lt;NISHTII

(1 :30) c

110 fllaw Twilight z-

IIIII

IIJI Evening Nawa
1D Nowe
•10:20(1) MOVIE: San Antonio

.._.

unblocl&lt;od a
polnlod. 3ic.a1Wollttl.

(2:15)
10:30 (J) Malar Laagua Be-ll
CD Railing Klda

Phon• 304--871-418'1.

•o11onnv Hill Show

Empl oyment Services

-··-·
11

Ill Crook I ChiiH
OMijarLeaguaiiMbaH
11:110 (I) lio-n

Help Wanted

e&lt;Jl • a •~ iiJ 111

. .

'or

a birthday gilt Send lor your Ast;;;. CAPRICORN.(Doc. 22-Jan. 11) It loolcs
Graph predictions lor the year ahead by like you might have to alter your plana a
mailing $1 .25 to As1ro·Graph, clo this bltatthlatlmeinordenoaccommodale
newspaper, P.O. Bo• 91428, Cleveland, people with whom you are involved. The
OH 44101 · 3428. Be sure to slate your changes will bu worthwhile.
zodiac sign.
'
AOUAIIUS (Jen. 20-Feb. 11) ASIUme a
BERNICE
LIO (JuiJ 23-Aug. 22) Measures can be more dominate role today II you're In·
0 AIHIIIo Hal
BEDEOSOL
taken allhla time to upgrade your earn· volved. with persons who are having s
IIJ.._,.ne
'
lng potential, but you 'll have to use your hard time trying to resolve a difficult
i1J Mlamf Vlca Crockall and
lngenuUy and resourcefulness In order · matter. Your Input could be very
.Tubba are outwitted by a
10 bring them inlo being.
.
•
conatructlve.
'
smooth country lawyer.
YIRQO (Aug. 23-lept. 22) Thlsls one of PISCEI (Feb. 20-Moorch 20) This Is a
Starao.
lhose unusual days when your social good day to Iron out matters which
Ill Cltunlh . _ ltatlon
contacts could bu more helpful IO you should be dlsculllld with one with
11:30 (I) MOVIE:-Tha P8l'llda (2:00)
commercially than the people with whom you're cloleiy UIOC!aled. Frank()l Ill . . 01 Carlen
whom you usually conduct buelneea. neea will =~~111811 lhe alliance. ·
·
Starao.
Play your aces.
A•l (
21·r\prl 11) You are
UIIIIA (Sept. 23-0ct. 21) Don't let small pr-tly In a good achievement cycle
Htbecks disturb you, bec:auee your 10 lhltt your empllaals to your moal
June27, 1110
Gl
c..t
, chances lor succesalufl)l doing som• . Imeaningful encleav011. II you apply
' thing Important you've been wanting lo ·yourMif properly, you'll like lhe way
Tonight
A number of changea are llktlly In lhe do look better than you lhlnk. Be hope- · things tum out.
year ahead that could produce lldvan·
lui and - l v e.
TAUIIUS (April :111-1bJ 20) Social In·
1ageous spln-offs. Don't get rattled II ICORPIO (OcL J4-Mo¥. 22) If Your ex- vol-ta wil serve to lllmulalo your
1
things do nol appear to be going your peotatlona ara kept within reatllllc ,_.appealing attrlbutea today, so let
'way Initially. 1!'1 the final reaulll that • bounds today _thay will have marvelouo lhe roal you emwge. Happenings wilh
G1 MT.: -, P.l.
count.
chances of being fulfilled. Strtva to be a lrltnda could prove to be not C!flly fun
11our1
CANCER (June 21.,jg!J 21) Something llllllonllry, nola wllhlullhlnker.
Ill Na ..lllght
b u t - -ardlng than Ulllal.
Interesting lnight tranepiro today thai IAGITTAIIIUS (Nor. 11-Dec. 11) Your • G l - (MIJ 21...... :10)
• • 'Willi r( 011 Lata
dowill cause you to revtae your opiniOn ,...
Nlfllll Tha Pelrly Oatu
mllerlal ~ look txlremely en- rn11t1o proJect• you've neglected to fl.
gardlng a penon you know aoclally. Tlla ' couraglng
backon 1 cometoaa McPike.
at 11111 time, eapeclally In allu· nal!ze to your U11ai1Cllon can be contranalormlltlon will be pGIItlve on be1tt111 atlont that pertMI to your-- Male· eluded ellectiMiy tO&lt;My II you mike
C11ma llao'J Old Frlende.
of both parties. C. new, I real yoursell .l o · lng more money Is a lllrong poaalblllty. them priority con-..a.
Dead Ends Stareo.

ASTRO.QRAPH

Ala . you II+ live In JTPA oklor worllor
PfOII'IIm con · - In lind~

~=mo.~.~:Y..~"NV

21170 ... call1-304-272·!h12 ....
lor M,., Ctork.
AVON I AN Araoo I Shlrlay
spoora, 304.e?l-14211.
ilabvolttoir nNclod In my""-·
11o il ,..,. of oge. 12 hour ohlft
- - Rolli-. 114-112-

••

I.,.

CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS 39 Radio part
1 Actress 40 UneK·
perienced
Capshaw
5 Military 41 Gaelic
setting . 42 Ar,~glo·
9 Asian ·
SaKon slave
river
43 Pallid
10 Belgian
DOWN
city
1 Done lor
11 - over
2 "Love· in Lom•ro v·estlerclay''s A.ns•nr
(study)
3 Make
12 Originates
a change 13 Passover 28 -to lhe.
14 Vase
4 Before .
feast
jive
15 "All Aboul 5 Editor's 15 Building
(aware)
"
mark
exlension 30 Dull
18 O'Neill play 6 Bel 21 Fuss
finish
17.Asian
7 Party
22 Belween 32 Dismay
game
del and jkl 33 "Oz" co-star
. holiday
18 Permit
8 Church· 23 Fight
38 Wheat
19 Bad guy
man
24 'The Parils bristle
20 Reception 10 Orange
. of - •
39 Goddess
room
variety 27 Small role
.22 Ballpark
r;~rr-,.-.
entrance
23 Hurried off
25 Teulonlc
sea god
28 Roman
statesman lrt-+--t-:
27 Stylish
29Congo
Bantu
30 Pearl
-Bailey
31 Big dean
34 Balkan
country
(abbr.)
35 Elec. unit
36 Arab
garment
37 Procurator
of Judea

e

RXUXY

11J;=,!;1Q

JRMXPP
OXEYA

1121

CIIYPTOQUOTE

JRTXYAEGX

I K .I

AK

EPG

QMXPPSRD

ERIAOSRD

OEUX

·A 0 X

OXEUXR'P

K R

I KJV.

JRTXYAEGSRD. - MSHOAXRQXYD
Yut•. .J'• C.,.teq_..t HAPPINESS IS 11iE
' RESULT OF DISCOVERING lliAT YOU DO NOT
HAVE TO HAVE WHAT YOU WANT.
JAMES
FEIBLEMAN

s-at

..

f.ZI-H

I-ll

eo ""

\

NORTH
+QJ96

Many times it is right to kill an es·
Y A 86 S
• Q6
tablished side-suit winner in dummy
+Q98
by letting partner ruff, even though
declarer will overruf!. But that ap- WEST
EAST
proach is wrong when it fails to set the
+A KS3
contract.
Y!O 7
YQJ4 2
When South passed North's jump in· • 10 9$ 2
t873
vltatlon to game, he marked himself 4AK6 532
+14
with a very minimum opening bid.
SOUTH
Now place yourself in the West posi·
+10742
lion after the opening lead of the king
•Kes
of clubS. East follows with the seven,
t A KJ4
either a singleton or a doubleton. If
+J 10
West continues with ace and a club,
Vulnerable: Neither
East will ruff and declarer will overDeater:
South
ruff. Declarer will then proceed to
force out the ace and king of spades. Soutb
W..ot
East
Eventtjally South's good diamonds ·
Pails
Pua
will take care of two of the small
Pass
All pass
hearts in dummy, and the contract
will make .
Opening lead: + K
There is a good case for West to
switch to the 10 of hearts at trick two. ' -- - - - - - - - - - - '
First of all, it may not be necessary
for East to ruff even if declarec start· plays a heart, the defen~ will take
ed with J-10-4 of clubs.' If East holds five tricks. If West contmues clubs,
A·l0·7-x or K'10·7-x in trumps, he will nine tricks will be !Jlade.
- ·
score two natural trump tricks any·
Lesson: Even when your partner ·
way. Butlf he holds strength in hearts, can ruff the suit you have led, &amp;e:
it Is likely that the switch to hearts . aware that the best defense may stUI.
must be made immediately. If West require attacking another side-suit.

.

2:0011 ==~Tonight

,.

I IIIII

UNSCRAM8lE ABOVE lETTERS
· TO GET ANSWU

One letter stands for another. In this sample A Is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters •.
apos~. the length and formation ol the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are diff~ent.

IIJE
......
. .....

"Steal the Van Gogh, you idiot, not the
stuff In the sale behind IIIII"

. V bv fill ing in the missing words
"--' you de.elop from siep No. 3 below.

AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGFELLOW

i

-·

I

DAILY CRYPI'OQVOTES- Here'a how to won It: ·

Naw1 . ·
lD Tha ltnrggla
Damocrac:y • An Upclata
Palrlck Watson travels to
Eastern Europe and the
Soviet Union wllera
democracy In undergoing a
chaotic and uncertain rebirth.

AVON • All. ~~II Morllyn

ccklnty,

Wroto

Murder Through The l-ooking
Glass
Ill Calobrlflll OHataga
Country muaic superstars
Tha GaHin Brothers, Jimmy
Dean, and Holly Dunn Invite
host t:ortanne erook lor a
personal look at their lives.
ID MOYIE: Tha Lonely O_
uy

,.....
' _

BAKE 'SI-ICJ~0'

I

or -

Q

1B as Tlma To C.re

- , . . . . . - - · · 304-175-

PHA'l"SCXX3H 'S

9095.

Antiquo 0&lt;111W. Excelllfll oondl·
tlon only, Prompt poymont. 114992-5657.
Wontld Hondo V-15 llogna,

NO , ALLEY OOP! THOSE 11-RE
THE TWIIIJ MOOfiiS 01' GORP.. .
ANTOSE AIIJD PUPPO!

EEKANDMEEK

All-rio, S bo~roaono. - · Fuml- ~ IIZIOdo a IR,
Mualclil
S1
W¥.
~:"4':;
ollor ~~on. lllpollo.
lniiJ'\111*111
Booltke~lng/Accountlng,
Irick houM, a room., corMr a~- ~ 1 and 2 bed- ........ In ....... Ullllwl FUfO
Hotllttloe
ont, 101, Choolnlll oncl Smltll Ill, raom aport,.;. 11 VI.... nltuno - - ·
' * - Quality ITunlna.
..............
•JaiJand . Rlw..-ao
SWAIIJ ,
, Trao- llooodor_o,._0«175-' 111Ac- wllh otrlp or cory Alrllno tmll, ta&lt;
Tolllor
lnlnlng,
~
oonofo or llkoo. Coif colloct 2111'1332.
Ape~-• In llhldlo-. F""" AUC'TlOII .I FURNITURE. 12
1182.&amp;XT olllr 7 p.m. •-lnp.
OIIWISt, --·-I~
........ It
PI
LIIMI Ronch o1y1&lt;o , U - . 3 or 4 . .. Col ~·7711. EOH.
Bedroom eulo In whHo lor girl. ·...~~~anoe. . 1y Soh a ala Jo.. ~rooa-'':i/~~~~l-1 112 ,bolh. Nloe 2 IR, ~'I'· U:lllmo.' . =~~~h~l :;:om
58 , FNitsl
No pt1e. 114 111 1031.
..
... ollloe :1107 C o - An,
SM-448-11113.
moiOJ'8. Rlchlrd 01 a1'QI-OO
Sundoy colll pllall. 1*-'

'

I

AI $11.00. COli T - FREE
DDiorCat lag 1 . . . . . . . .

=lolo.
-

wanted to Buy

Junk cars with or without

'

t

- n g -lorN, .,..

11175 &amp; 1111 Oollla County y..,..
boolc. Alao, tll77 - . COunty
yearboOk. 1-100-422-4171.
11171 ond 11177 llolgo High
Sci-' yoorboolco. 1811 oncl
11171 Oallll County yoorboolco.
1--..2241?1.

'

. From 44

2 l d ouuu~ GrNr rto.d, fuH
FliNII, z Iota, ... to . .

Wlpplo ~

l
- -Ohio, Kentucky,
oononce
""' • Wool
·VJrgtnll, -m-1715.
CAlL • IIOGG8 MICTIOII lEA·
VICE. AUCTION£ER: DAVID
IIOGIIS ........mo.
_ Calto'o Auction llonolco, Bulo
talo, wv. u...Dh~ .....
Woo1 V1111lnlo. :10 yoora a·
perlence. For ~r .... cllll us.
Golclon Cooto 304-«17·22111 .,.
J11por Cooto 304-1137-2121.

9

Unlta.

31 Hom• for Sell

Rick Pol,_; -lon CoonponJ

now

....., .....
I

as

e ())

, ·~' '

RPal Estatr

Public Sale
&amp; AuCtion

8

lVI~ $1NCf.

c.mpna

UIIIMW....._.-a4.

=.!:;;- =...:=(!;.

.....,alll lkNI•

Rvo--Juno21211.11o.m.·7

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WOLfl T - liDS. Cam-

lumft-.
roll
boolco:
Rill"'~
Cokley and o...y
much;--.1
. •

Yood oat&amp;

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a

f'UT Mt IN TOUCI'/
WITtf !'fALITY, AI"'P
-. ~'VI TIEN C 0 t4FIIJEP
...........

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1"'......., 2 1 f t . - - -

Vll'd. S2ll por
Ill• utllllloit a dopoolt

Clviii•L!..*··114-4

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....... IJ1'4UU.

· Aoln
-lldoySalurdor. :lith ond :!Mh. llioo
otll'o II ........ County -

P.svcHJAT/Zis;

fYIY

'

.....

.. ft. C11 lau&amp;l c,.n,., -:·.~~:
....; oilld. -MW ~ . . .'

11t 111 . . .

Pomeroy,_
Mlddllporf
&amp;VIcinity

e

MoiOI'Homll •

,._, -

-

'

Auto Repair .

71

~

mobile horne,

~

1211.

-:n
,..........
. ll!lllnt!:=bul·..:"::'
...
Quill,

Ull fer_ ...

t·-~t:lll

"""""' · -

s_...

a

cuss gets hold of a hu~
cache of cocaine. Stereo.
· Ill Mualc Row Vldao
1D Abbott And Co-lo
7:05 (I) Joflaraone
7:30 (J) Family Faud
(J) Mlljor L.oaauo 111111'-11
18 Entarl8fnment Tonight
11 &lt;ll Mama'• Family
llJ •
111 Jeoperdyt Q
M"A'S"H
·
IIJI Cronflra
0 Night Court
7:35 (I) M$r League 1111-11
1:00 &lt;Il MOVIE: Tha Parada (2:00)
111 Matlock The
husband of a famous author
is accused of murder. (A)
Stereo. C
• • G (J) Who' a Tha
lloa?C
.
CD (!) fllova Journey acrose
the Panama Canal to recount
a story of human drama. Q
cr1J Raacua: 111 A New
Year's Eve fire strikes a
crowded resort hotel. (A)
Stereo. Q
IB 0 Walenbarg1 A Hero'l

•

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SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
, .u
DQctor- Local - Hutch ,.. Kidnap - CHILDHOOD
Quote from a wise man: •when you finally get back to
your old hometown, you find it ':Yasn't the old hom,e you
missed but your CHILDHOOD;:.·- - - -- - -----,

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Granny says that ~le
who are discontented with
what they have in this world
S AM R H y
willneverfindaneasy ·····.
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VURQ E I

EVENINO

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�Page-10-The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday. June 28, 1990

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Becker,.Lend) . open Wimbledon play Monday with victories .)

WIMBLEDON. England
(UP!)- Boris Becker and Ivan
Lendl, co-favorites whOse play
fell short of their status Monday ,
overcame unexpected chal·
lenges from obscure opponents to
wln first -day matches at

BECKER EYES BALL -

Wimbledon.
Becker, the defending cham·
pion. struggled with his service
and his (ootlng In opening play on
Centre Court. The best he could
manage was a 7-6 (7·2), 7·6 (74),
7·5 triumph over Mexican quail·

fter luis Herrera, who is ranked
199th tn the world.

for a· Wlmoteaon crown wllll a
3-6, 6-4, 6-3, 6-4 victory over
Christian Minlussl of Argentina,
ranked No. 116 and playing his
first grass-court tournament of
the year.
Becker and Lend!, each listed
by a London top bookmaker as an
11·8 favorite, had trouble adaptIng to conditions at the All
England Club. The 22-year-old
West German fell to hls knees
tour times In the first set.
'·'It almost seems like there Is
too much grass on it," he said.' 'It
ts almost too good of a court."
At the French Open, where
Becker was also tbe second seed,
he failed to advance to the second
round. Mindful of that disap·
polntment, he would not express
displeasure with his erratic play
Monday, saying, "l'in content to
go through."
In the first set, Becker had 10
double-faults and faced a set
point on Herrera's serve at 6-5,
4().30. But the three-time champion known for his Competitive
heart blasted a backhand service
return winner, broke Herrerra
two points later and finished the
tie-breaker with a pair of aces.
Lend!, who skipped the French
Open to give himself two months
of uninterrupted grass-court
practice, did not play up to the
form which he shoWed two weeks
ago at the Queens Ciub iourna-

Lend!, the top seed, is seeking
to become only the fifth man to
win all four Grand Slam tourna·
ments. He ~g~n his 11th attel!lpt

Boston ends jinx, wins 10-8;
:regains. top spot l. in AL East
By PAUL DEFEDE
UPI'Sporls Writer
While Dave Stleb' s wild streak
In the first Inning helped put an
end to his night, Jody Reed
helped Boston end another
streak.
Reed's solo homer In the sixth
Inning snapped a 7-7 tle to halt
,Boston's 15-game Fenway losing
·streak against Toronto and lifted
the Red Sox Tuesday night Into
first place in· · the American
League East with a 10·8 victory
.over the Blue Jays.
• Boston, which entered the
:lour-game series between the AL
;East front-runners 1-2 game out
of first, had not won a game
against Toronto in Fenway Park
since August 10, 1987.
"I feel better thai the streak
:Was stopped here," Boston Man·
:,ager Joe Morgan said. "Reed
.was dynamite as usual."
• With the score tied 7·7 and one
out In the sixth, the 5-foot-9-inch
Reed lined a pitch from Willie
Blair, 0-5, just ,o ver the left field
·wall for hls third homer.
:. Lamp, 1-2, worked 51-3innings
to gain the wln,
Asked If It was a fastball from
Blair, Reed said with a smile,
"Of course, the ball has to
provide some of the power."
But Steib, the ace of Toronto's
staff couldn't power his way past
the first Inning.
Tralltng 3·0 In the first, Boston
rallied for six runs In the bottom
of the Inning against Stteb.
Stleb didn't retire any of the
seven hitters he faced and
allowed six runs after yielding
Jour walkS and three hits.
"It was a fluke that Stleb was
that wild," Lamp said. ''Now we
'llon't have to answer all those
questions about the streak."
Stleb offered an explanation on

his short outing. ''Walks, balls hit
In the right place and getting
behlild In the count (hurt) me,"
Stieb said.
"We never talked about the
streak," said Toronto manager
Clto Gaston. "In the past. before
the streak, we haven't played
that well here."
Twins 9, Rangers 1
. At Minneapolis, !)colt Erickson, making his first major
league appearance, pitched six
strong innings and Kirby Puckett
belted a three-run homer to lift
Minnesota. Erickson, 1·0, scattered four hits for Ills first major
league win. John Candelaria
notched his third save. Mike
Jeffcoat. 1-3, allowed eight runs
on seven hits, in 5 1-3 innings to
take the loss.
Indians 10, Brewers 5
At Milwaukee, Brook Jacoby
drove tn a career-high five runs
with a homer and three singles to
power Cleveland from a 3-0
deficit: Tom Candlotti, 8-3, al·
lowed five runs and eight hits In 8
1·3 innings. Chris Bosto, 4-~.
allowed eight runs to absorb the

loss. Bosto, who was 3·0 In April,
has won just once In hls last 11
starts dating back to May 5.
Athletics 4, Detroit 3
At Oakland, Bob Welch became the major league's first
12-game winner notching his
ninth straight win to lead Oak·
land. Welch, 12·2, . hasn't lost
since May 5. Dennis Eckersley
worked the ninth for his 23rd
sa.ve. Rickey Henderson, homered, tripled and singled and
drove In two runs for the A's, who
snapped a three-game losing
streak. Dan Petry, 5·5, took the
loss.
White Sox 2, Angels 0
At Anaheirtl. Greg Hibbard
combined with Bobby Thigpen on
a shutout and Carlton Fisk belted
a home run to spark Chicago.
Hibbard, 6-4, scattered eight hits
over 8 1-3 tntngs. Thigpen recorded the final t;wo outs for his
major-league leading 24th save.
Mark Langston, 4-8, - worked
eight innings,. gave up both runs
to take the loss. · Fisk's sixth
homer of the year moved him
within six of Johnny Bench's
all-time record for catchers.

830
Pick-4
4915

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Vol.40, No.288
Copyrighted 1190

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. Wednesday. June

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. COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) Ohio House Speaker Vernal
Riffe's Republican electionopponeilt accused the Wheelersburg
Democrat Tuesday of corrup·
lion • . art;Ogance
and abuse . of
.

BUllE_TIN BOARD
BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30P.M. DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION

with another National Football
League team.
The 5-foot-9 Flu tie was drafted
by the Los Angeles Rams ·ln the
11th round of the 1985 draft.
Flu tie opted to play with the New
Jersey Generals of the United
States Football League before
starting ·his NFL career with
Ch lcago, playing one season witn
the Bears before moving on to
New England.
The Lions say Flu tie may play
as early as Thursday In an
exhibition game against the
Edmonton Eskimos.

3-FAMILY YARD SALE
RAIN OR SHINE .
909 ABERGALE LANE
FRI., JUNE 6 &amp;
SAT, JUNE 7

FOR SALE
1983 DODGE TRUCK
LOADED

000-0000
FRESH PEACHES,
TOMATOES, BANANAS,
. WATERMELONS

with John Van Volkenburgh (riKht), engineering
consultant, al the policy committee meeting held
Tuesday In McArthur.
·

... ..

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For All the Flowers, Cards
and Gifts I Received While
I Was Ill.

SARAH

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NO MAnER WHAT THE REASON MAY BE•• ~
"Y AID SALE", "AUTO
FOR. SALE",. "PUBLIC
'
NOTICE", "MEETINGS'' OR "JUST TO SAY
SOMETHING SPECIAL"USE THE DAILY
SENTINEL BULLETIN BOARD,;
STOP IN TODAY AND HAVE YOUR ADVERTISEMENT
, PLACED IN THE BULLEnN BOARD.

.

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WyaH, BeckJ Jacb; lind Bow, EmDI Parne, Troy
Broou, J01b Lynch, Jenalfer Mergan, Mlebael
Dorst, TreYor Back, Jaeob Smltb; Jrd Row,
Coaches. Terry Wyati, Kellb Lyneb and Troy
Broou.

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many signs wttn Riffe's name
along the roadways it looks like
'Burma-shave' with a stutter."
"Every politician likes to see
Carson said Short was being
his name spread around, but · used as a spokesman for the Ohio
V~rn Is 'the only one 1 know of who.
Republican I;' arty.
•
has his name .fiash~d up on a
"Any di§CU.ssio!J of ,i,he Issues-tlieater-type "marquee" at ·· tax- should be done In Scioto and Pike
payer expense," he said.
counties,'' said Carson. "The
Short said 'Rtffe' s name apspeaker would be glal! to discuss
pears on the marguee for 3 Issues in the distrlct : The Repub·
seconds every minute, or more
!lean Party has been using
than half a million times
negative campaign tactics on all
·
annually.
levels so far this campaign
''His name Is plastered all over
season, and this Is just another
this building," said Short, "In
example of that."
letters ranging from a couple of
The news conference was
Inches to several feet In height.
called to coincide with Riffe's
So far, I've found 77 places where
birthday party, which Short said
his name Is on the walls. And
reportedly was expected to net
down In the dis trlct, there are ~
the speaker more. than $500,000.

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2 Sections. 16 Pagea

1990

25 Centa

A Multimedia Inc. New1paper

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Stall.
Instead of coming up with a
decision on whether to allow two
firms to expand solid waste
landfills In the Athens, Gallla,
~ocklng, Jackson, Meigs , and
Vinton County (AGHJMV) Solid
Waste Management District, the
Solid Waste Polley Committee
voted to' delay a decl$lon until
further exaintnallon by, a special
slx•person committee made up of
one person froin each county In
the district.
,
The solid waste policy commit·
tee met last night In a special
session to review proposals presented by Mid-American and
Klllbarger. The companies are
seeking approval from the ~om·
mlttee to apply for waivers from
the moratorium against landfill
expansion until a district plan is
approved by the state.
·About 7S people atte.nded the
meeting, held at the Vinton
Co'unty Community Building tn
McArthur.
John Van Volkenburgh or the
SCU Engineering Consulting
Firm discussed difficulties In
starting new landfllls. He salfi It
would take maybe two year~ to
get a new facility Into operatlon
beca11se thenow of water around

the proposed landflll site will
have to be examined.
Van Volkenburgh said that the
current life expectancy of the
district's three landfills Is about
five to seven years and added
that In a year and a half, the only
landflllleft In the district will be
the Gallla County Landflji.
Committee chairman Dale
Nel\1, Jackson County Commls·
stoner, asked for someone to
make a motion to waive action on
the original proposal until
further discussion. The mOtion
was made, seconded, and a vote
was made to waive the original
motion- to grant the waivers to
expand the landfills.
Committee members from
Meigs County, Richard Bailey,
Salisbury Township Trustee,
John Jacobs, assistant county
health commissioner and M;uf·
nlng Roush, county commls·
stoner, voted to waive the original motion until fur1her
examination by the soon,to-beappo!nted . sixth person, fact ·
finding committee.
Chairman Dale Neal said the
people serving on the new committee will receive notice of their
appointments by Thursday .
The new committee will examine the Issues and make a
recommendation to the Solid

Waste Polley Committee.
The county commissioners of
Athens, Gallia, Hocking, Jac:k·
son, Meigs and Vinton Counttes
formed the AGHJMV Solid
Waste Management District to
develop a comprehensive solid
waste management plan for the
six county area. This was done tn
response io Ohio House Bill 592
which becave effective June,
1988,
Ohio House Bill 592 calls for
each district to prepare a plan to
be approved by theOhloEnvlronmental Protection Agency. The
plan must examine existing and
projected future solid waste
quantities and composition, as
well as exis ling and projected
landflll capaclly. It must also
evaluate methods for Increased
solid waste reduction, reuse acd
recycling, and decreased dependence on landfills.
Three commissioners from
each ooun ty serve as the dis·
trlct's board of directors and a
!)lstrlct policy committee .has
been set up to oversee all aspects
·of the pian's development ano
use.
Nexi meeting or the policy
committee will be held July 11, 7
p.m., In Jackson. It is open to the
public.

$5 million judgn1ent sought·
Raymond and Leigh Canter,
Racine, are seeking a $5 million
judgment from Dravo Corporation, Pittsburgll, Pa., in an action
filed in the Meigs County Court of
Common Pleas Tuesday.
The suit stems from an Aug. 31,
1989 Incident at the Apple Grnve
Sand and Gravel Plant, operated
by Dravo Corporation, In which
Raymond Canter suffered severe
injuries to his left leg when It was
pulled into a conveyor known as a
"tall pulley" while he was on
duty at the plant.
c;::antet alleges that Dravo
Corporation allowed a dal)gerous·
condition to exist on the plant
site, that being the backing up
and falling of sand from the

'conveyor equipment, which the
employees had to clear away.
A safety guard, which had been
placed over the tall pulley to
prevent human contact with the
hazard, had allegedlq been removed by Dravo Corporation and
on Aug. 31, as part or his regular
duties, Canter contends he was
required to work next to the
unguarded tall pulley hazard.
According to the complaint,
Canter suHered sevare pain,
emotional and mental distress,
permanent Impairment of function, loss ot enjoyment of life and
permanent disability, as well as
incurred medical and hospital
expense and lost Income.

VOTING ON A MOTION - AGH,JMV Solid
Waste Management PoUcy Committee members
Manning Housh, Melp County Commllsloner

(left), aad Richard Bailey, Salisbury ToW118111p
Tniltee (rlpl), vote to waive a motion l!iRDtlagwalverslo companies_wishlag to explll!d landfills.

.

Gee named new OSU _president
COLUMBUS. Ohio &lt;UP!) -E.
Gordon Gee, president of the
University of Colorado for the
past five years, was . nained
Tuesday night the president of
The Ohio State University,
succeding Edward Jennings .
Gee, 46, resigned Tuesday
afternoon , at UC and. flew to

Columbus where met with the
trustees.
''I am prlvlleged to come to one
of this nation's leading .public
research and land grant lnstltulions,'' Gee said in a late-night
news conference lrl Columbus. "I
cherish the challenge and look
forward with great anticipation

to working wtth all commlted to,
this place. Together. we ' will
weave and reweave our lnstltu•
tlon fabric for an even brighter'
future."
•
Gee was accompanied by his
wife Elizabeth and daughte~,
Rebecca. He prefers a bowtle to 4
Continued on page 6

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THANK YOU

000-0000

•

tnat comes from unchallenged
power. ,

Unive.rsity of Rio Grande breaks
ground for $2.45 million dormitory

NOTICE
There will be a meeting .
held on Thurs., June 12
to elect officers at
John's Restaurant.

3 BR, Kitchen, DR, LR. Must
sell now. Best offer.

r

"It Is shame!ql that we have·a
·system ,that allows one person to
accu!"ulate !'nd abuse power In
die "wa:y Vern Riffe , has," Phil
Short said at a news conference
In front of the new slate office
bulldlng ,. bearing the speaker's
name. r
"It's not my Idea of Democracy when special In teres IS give
literal!)' millions of dollars In
carnpalp donations to a man
who needs to spend very little tQ
be re-elected from his small
southern Ohio district." said
Short. "But those ·who have paid
the price.. get what , they want
from the legislature.
\'We need.• new taws to stop
these kind of corJ,'Upt practices,"
he. said. ','Campaign reform
needs to, come to Ohio, and it
needs · to start In the state
Leglslatul-e. But more impor·
tant, we need to remove the man
wlio has become the very symbol
of what's wrong at the Statehouse
- Yern·Riffe, " ,
· ~itfe .apollesman Kent Carson
sald;tb,e spealier was out or town
and llad not seen the full text of
Short's remarkS.
"He wants to respond personally," said Carson, "but he hasn't
had •tlrne.to do that."
SHort said· the Vern Riffe
Center for Government and the
Arts
Is .evidence
of the arrogance
••
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Solid waste committee
votes to delay decision

power.-.

EXAMPLE: 111 $5.00 PER DAY
112 $10.00 PER DAY
113 $15.00 PER DAY
THE BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE IS
4:30P.M. THE DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION

.

Partly cloudy tonight and
Thursday. Low toniKht In mid
60s. Hlp Thursday In upper -1

Page4

DISCUSSING LANDFILLS - AGHJMV Solid
Waste Mana1emeqt Polley Committee Chairman
Dale Neal (left) discusses environmental Issues

YOU CAN PLACE YOUR ADVERTISEMENT
FOR AS LOW ·AS S5.00 PER INCH.

1982 ENGLAND
MOBILE HOME

I

Daily Number

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FINI8R SECOND - 'lbe Middleport Ran1en
fiDllbed Ia second place In the Big Bend T-ball
Tounament held al Racine. Pictured are, first
row, left to rll!ild, Stefan Stamper, Ben Bookman,
Andy Hysell, Ashley Fields, J011hua Clark, Tara

ousted from
Wimbledon play

Riffe accused of corruption.
.
Sh
by Republican opponent 0 rt

Doug Flutie signs with CFL team
VANCOUVER, British Columbia [UP!) - Doug Flutle, a
former Helsman trophy winner
and former NFL quarterback
with t,he New England Patriots,
signed a contract Monday with
the B.C. Lions of the Canadian
Football League. .
The contract ts for one year
plus an option.
·
Flu tie, who won theHelsmanln
1984 while at Boston College,
spent the last three seasons with
the Patriots. He was released
after the 1989 season by the
Patriots and was unable to sign

said. "I just didn't do anything, .
basically. As tar as improving, I •
think I could Improve everything ;
- my return ... my move, my ·
volleys, my serve, my head, I :
guess.''
Paulus was dispatched 6·2, 3·6,
6-4 by 19-year-old Sarah Loosemore of Britain, to the delight of,:
the Wimbledon fans.
'·
Pat Cash, the 1987 Wimbledon :
champion who needed a wild· :
card Invitation to return to the scene. of his finest hour, fought :
his way back from a 2·1 deficit In '
sets to overcome Soviet qualifier :
Dimitri Pollakov 4-6, 7-6 (7-1) ; ·
5-7, 6-4, 6-1.
Also advancing was No.7 Brad :
Gilbert, who survived a rugged ·
6-1, 3·6, 4·6, 6-1, 6-2 test from
Yugoslavia's Bruno Oresar. No .. :
10 Jonas Svensson, who reached
.the French Open semifinals,
outplayed France's Fa brice Santoro 6-4, 6-3, 6-2.
·On the women's side, two-time ··
finalist Hana Mandllkova, In her
last pro tournament as a singles _
player, barely avoided a first- •
round departure, flghtlngofffour ,
match points and outlasting
Italy's laura lapl 6-3, 3-6, 11·9. •
The other seeded winners, all :
of whom advanced In straight :
sets, were No. 9 Jim Courier, No. •
11 Guy Forget and No. 15 Henri
lecontt), and on the women's
side, Nb. 7 Katerina Maleeva. :

The Daily Sentinel
Is Introducing A New
Service Now Available.

play l~he Wimbledon Lawn Tennis Champions.
Becker won lo advance to second round action.
(UPI)

West Germany's

Boris Becker bits the ball al!ialnst Mexico's L. E.
Herrara Monday In their malcb on the first day of

ment, in which he downed John
McEnroe and Becker In straight
sets.
Lend!, who played the first
match on Court No. 1. was
tentative In his opening set
against Mtnlussi.
"I had trouble for a time with
my timing, the ball bounced
much lower," he said. "I knew
(the court) was going to be softer
than Queens but It was softer
than the (Wimbledon) practice
courts."
But against Mlnlussi, the topranked player was able to rely on
hls powerful serve and service
return to fl!SCue him after he
dropped the first set.
lend!, Wimbledon's top seed
'for the fourth time, could not
break Mlnlussl's serve' In the
opening· set, but the two-time
finalist improved hiS return and
broke hiS opponent twice In the
second set, the second time In the
lOth game to even the match.
Yannick Noah of France and
Barbara Paulus of Austria, the
16th seeds in the men's and
women's draws, were the tourna·
ment's first upsets. Noah, the
former French Open champion,
lost to , 18-year-old qualifier
Wayne Ferreira 6-4, 6-3, 6-2, a
South African who at No. 176, Is
ranked 149 notches below Noah . .
'.'I couldn't move to the ball, I
cOuldn't read the return," Noah

Ohio Lottery

McEnroe

University of Rio Grande officials broke ground Tuesday for
construction ·of a $2.45 million
dormitory to provide additional
housing for the university's
growing resident student
population. •
The project Is scheduled for
completion by July 1, 1991, and
officials anticipate run occupancy by the fall of that year.
"With the completion of this
dormitory, the university will be
better prepared to serve the
needs of Its resident students,"
. Dr. Paul C. Hayes, president of
· Rio Grande, remarked. "As. the
university continues on a path of
enrollment growth during the
decade, it becomes vital to
Increase the housing opportunities for the anticipated increase
in students who desire to live on
campus. This structure represents . a large step forward tn
meeting that need."
The dormitory will be built on .
the site of a gravel parking Jot
behind Holzer Hall, facing East
College Street. Designed by
. ~.

Cincinnati archltecl E.A. Glendening, the structure will be four
stories 't ali with 29,500 sqjlare
feet. Officials said the dorm Itory
will house up to 150 students.
Rio Grande Vice President
Herman L. Koby, Ph.D., said the
building will Include double
rooms and seven six-person
suites. The suites will contain
three double sleeping rooms and
a common llvtng/study area. The
projected con_structlon cost Is
$2,450,000, and the total budget Is
$2.8 million, Koby said. '
~tanned as a· coed facility, the
dormitory will be separated Into
two wings, with separate res·
troom areas on each wing, "and
therefore, can easily serve as a
coed dorm," DeanS. Brown, vice
pre~ldent ror Student Services,
said .
When the dormitory Is opened,
It's expected that Boyd Hall,
which Is currently coed, will
become all-female, Koby added.
Financing for the project was
arranged through the sale or
economic development revenue

b(;nd$ through the Gallia Coul)ty
Comtnunlty Improvement Corporation, with the permission of
the Gallla County Commission• ·
ers. The CIC made the bond sale
proposal to the commissioners,
who lent their approval.
"Because we feel education Is
an Important recruiting tool for
Industrial development, we want
to do everything we can to help
the university," explained Jeffrey E. Smith, who was president
of the CIC at the time or the sale.
"The cooperation of the ere and
the Gallla County Commissioners led to the· successful private
placement of $2.7 mtlllo'1 in
economic dev~lopment revenue
bonds tor the consiructlon of the
dormitory."
The new dormitory will be the
fifth on the Rio Grande campus
and first new housing facility
erected In more than 20 years.
The other dormitories are Davis
Hall, opened · In 1957; Mo!llton
Hall,l~62; Holzer Hall, 1966; and
Boyd Hall, 1967. Existing dorms
accommodate 500 students.

,_
GROUNDIIREAKING CEREMONIES venllrofBioGraadelllldBioGrandeCommaalty
College olflclala dig In dllrlnl grolllldllre.._
eeremoales 'l'aeld&amp;J on cunpu. From left lo
rip&amp; are Paul Malzlg, p.._.dl!llt of the UnlvereitY,'s Ieard of Tru&amp;eel; · Pamela Smith, vtee

~
'.

~

of·tile
Board nfTriiReea;
...,_,. ·tlahlw•1 of Rio Grande p. .ld=t;

•·ulnl . W_..,.ol, p._ldenl . of llle BGCC
Board of TiU8te•; Bennu Koby, lao Grande :

vtee p._ldent; 11!11 Jell Smltil, repreaeatlng the :
Comrnlllllty Dnprovemenl Corporation.
•
~

. .

I

•

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