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                  <text>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
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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

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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

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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

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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

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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.
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Ohio

Commentary
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111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
· D_.VOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF TilE MEIGS.MASON AREA
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~~ ~._-.- •........,c:::l.o=o
~v

ROBERT L . WINGETT
·Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Ge!leral Manager

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publlsher/ ControUer
A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers AssociatiOn.
LETTERS OF OPINION ar~ welcome. Tiley should be less tlian 300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be pul!·
llshed. Letters shou-ld be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personalities.

·

The issue lingers;
Foley stands out

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I

By ELIOT BRENNER
WASHINGTON (UP II -The flag amendment as a legislative issue
Is over and done with, at least for this session of Congress.lt failed Ina
debate that honored the House and saw ·speaker Thomas Foley
emerge as a quiet leader.
.
:The matter will not, however, die out as quickly as an election issue.
;Witness the National' Republican Congressional Committee, which
In an exercise of its free speech rights immediately after the vote
bj!gan to send out news releases accusing Democrat opponents of the
amendment of "flag wavering."
•Whether defense of the Constitution and its BUI of Rights will carry
n)ore weight with voters than defense of the flag remains to be seen,
but the rapidity and glee with which Republicans seized upon the
issue may have had a hand In the amendment's demise.
· 'While leaders asserted during the debate the matter was not a
political one, not a partisan Issue , many of the 115 members who
walked Into the well of the House tO' speak made It clear they had that
II) .mind. Many said so.
.
.
•Rep. Vic Fazio, D-Callf ., said before the vote that· Republican
etforts in support of the amendment and against Democrats had been
"yery counterproductive."
.
·The talk of 30-second sound bites, of hoping to Jose by a single vote,
ot pressthg Democrats on the Issue In elections, said Fazio, was the
" kind.of hyperbole that turned stomachs."
·Some members, he said, succumbed to political pressure ;md felt
uncomfortable with the pro-amendment vote they were casting.
: "They are doing some mea culpas ... on this Issue because they
don't feel comfortable with the pressure that they have succumbed
to, " Fazio said.
:And after the debate, House Democratic leader Richard Gephardt,
0 -Mo., said no one lost in the ·vote, just negative campaigning.
:·'What we defeated was a rather homely form of politics that wUI
sacrifice anything -even our hallowed Constitution.:... ·to air an ad.
defeat a candidate or grasp for power. When this kind _of negative
politics is defeated, all Americans are winners," he said. .
·But because politics ts politics, the issue wtll linger until the
election.
.
;There was, however, another kind of winner In the House's vote.
·It was the House Itself.
.
:The body closest to the people, the one most easily swayed by
opinion tti·a t can change like the wind shifts, debated the issue- one
that easily could have degenerated into a shouting match - In a
reasoned, rational and intelligent matter.
To be sure, there were a few who trivlallzed the debate, and the
pOlitical undercurrent was there all the time.
:But the day of debate produced some of the best speeches heard In
tl)e hall In years, and the founding fathers would have been pleased at
l)ow the House was faring, even In the era of the30-second sound bite
ahd television.
&gt;And there was one man who made a mark both for himself and on
tlie Institution, Speaker Thomas Foley of Washington.
:Amid all the calls to politicize an ISsue as serious 8lJ amending the
CiJnstitution, Foley declined to make it a Demohatit Issue. He
preferred Instead to merely state his position and tellthosewhoasked
hpw he would vote. He worked the issue quietly, In keeping with the
quiet style that has left the Impression that he Is a reactive speaker,
J!Ot an activist as were his recent predecessors.
,
··
' It was hts ' impassloned and emotional. address to the House asking that the Constitution and Bill of Rights written by former
members of the people's chamber be left Inviolate- that closed the
d!"bate.
· Minutes later, the House by 34 votes refused to delve back into the
Blll of Rights.

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~ Berry

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s .w orld

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Page-2-Thit Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport. OhiO
Wedf1811.day. June 27. 1990

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Williams' .· overthrow allows
Reds to top Giants 3-2 in 12

Why is IRS right evef! when it is wrong
WASHINGTON-InJune1988,
Tangllngwlthtbe!RSc!oesnot
Alex Council of Pfafftown. N.C.. normally have a fatal outcome.
kUled himself, blaming his fate But many taxpayers who squa~e
on the Internal Revenue Service. ott with the tax man experience
He left a note for his wife'Kay: "I losses and repercussions that
have taken my ltfe in order to last a ltfetjme. Challenging the
provide capital for you. The IRS fearsome monolith, even when
and Its liens which have been .you know you are right, can be
taken against our property tile- overwhelming and, In - some
gaily by a runaway agency of ou r cases, Impossible.
government have d.rted up all
A congresstopal Investigation
sources of credit for us. So I have recently concluded that the IRS
made the only decision I can. It's . wrongly assessed penalties to 1.5
purely a business decision. I hope million taxpayers In 1988. The
you can understand that . I love IRS admitted that was true and
you completely, Alex. "
vowed to do Its best to clean up
The Councils had been fighting the booklteeptng errors that led
a running battle with the IRS for to those unwarranted penalties.
nine years. Four months after
But that Is little consolation to
Alex Council's death, Kay Coun- taxpayers who think they have
ell went to court using the money paid their due and fall an IRS
from his life Insurance,' and she audit anyway, If It happened· to
beat the IRS. The judge barred you, would you accept defeat and
the IRS from collecting the pay the money or would you
$300,000 In taxes, penalties and stand ilp to the IRS?
Interest that It clalrried the
II you chose the latter, plan on
Councils owed.
spending plenty of money. ·Con-

Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta
,.
.
·
gress passed a Taxpayers' BIJI of Paul Zimmerman that the IRS
Rights two years ago m~king It can be "very coercive.'' He
easier for you to go to court and add_ed, "Even If you win your
stop' lte IRS from bleeding you case In court, you Jose by paying
dry when you know you are In the court costs. "
right. Tax court Is one place that
One provision In Armstrong's
you are guilty before proven plan would put an end to a bl(of
Innocent, and the law stU I makes IRS skullduggery - the use of
taxpayers come upwlththe court tax accountants' to rat on their
costs.
clients.
Some senators recognize the
Unltke lawyers, accountants
advantage the IRS has and they , are not bound by confidentiality
have tried to shift the odds requirements with their clients.
toward the taxpayer. Most re- The American Institute o( Certicently Sen. Wllllam Armstrong, fled Public Accountants deplores
R-Colo., Introduced a series of the practice, but It happens
"Fair Play for Taxpayers Btlls." anyway.
.
Theyprovldefprtaxpayerstoget
A St . Louis man recently
their expenses back if they win djscovered, after he was Indicted
their 'cases, allow taxpayers to by a federal grand jury o.n six
sue the ms for carelessness. and counts of tax evasion, that his
make the IRS pay the same accountant had gone to the IRS
Interest rate as the taxpayer with the damning Information. In
would on disputed taxes.
return, the accountant got a
Armstron~~; told our reporter
break on his own tax problem.
teammate Matt WIUiams during Tuesday night's
game In Cincinnati, which the Reds won 3·2ln 12
Innings. ( UPI)

COLLISION -Reds shortstop Mariano Duncan
grimaces In patn as San Francisco's Gary Carter
sUdes hard Into second base on a single by
•

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~NIC.~ERY WAR&gt;.:

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Baseball's dark side comes to light
in stage portrayal of late Ty Cobb

fMRION&amp;4RRy
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~Q4"tER.
·., n.-::CIItiiiWI
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.
A solid record ·of accomplishments
·
,
Sen. ]an Long
The first half of the 1990
legislative session Is over, with
legislators of both parties proclaiming · mal or accomplishments on a number of fronts.
While I am disappointed that
we haven't taken advantage of
tremendolls !Jpporturilties to pass
drug enforcement and campaign
reform legislation, I share the
view that there is a lot to be proud
of In the achievements of the
General·Assembly.
Prior to adjourning last week,
we passed a bill, HB 588, th!lt
should help make sure that
futu~e governors hayetbe tools to
root out corruption In state
government. The bill formally
establishes the Office of Inspector General In the governor's
office. Until now, this office has
been operating under an execu-

tlve order by Governor Richard sul'¥ere approved in the June
Celeste.
session. One measure, H:B. 826,
This bill gives the Inspector would help stabilize )he state's
general's office subpoena pow- unemployment Insurance sysers, which It doesn't currently tern and hopefully prevent a
have, and makes the governor's repeat of the early 1980s, when
appointment of the Inspector the system went broke and the
general subject to Senate conflr- state was forced to borr.ow $2
· matlon. An 'Important amend- blllloil from the federal government also was added In commit- m~t and pay more than $200
tee giving extra protections to mllllog In Interest.
whistleblowers, those who report
Other Important bllls cleared
waste and wrongdoing.
for the governor's signature
Overall, the bill is an Important Include H.B. 580, which would
step toward ensuring that al- reduce to f!ve years from 21 ·
leged wrongdoing by state em- years the time probate courts
ployees and otflcers Is tho· m4st keep records and H.B. 837,
roughly Investigated. The House another blll cleared for the
Is expected to add Its okay to the governor's signature, would albllllater this summer so It can be low victims of drunken driving
sent on to the governor for his accidents to collect from a
signature.
federal victims reparations fund.
Several other Important mea-

New farm hill moves forward
In that it Isn't a subject wltl!.
which everyone Is particularly
Involved, concerned, or informed, ongoing Congressional
efforts to forge a new five-year
!arm bill · have treated with ·
relative Indifference by the press
and by the public at large. I find
this unfortunate because the
farm bill does concern more than
just the farmers of America, It
concerns all of us as taxpayers .
and consumers In a very slgnlfl-.
cant way. The tax for the
five-year farm blllls expected to
run slightly over $50 billion, no
small .change by anybody' s
count. How· thiS money Is to be
spent Is at the heart of the debate
over this legislation.
The current farm bill expires
this year. At first It was thought
that the new farm bill would be a
dl.stlnct departure from · past
farm bUis and call for major
policy changes in · the nation's
priCe suppc)rt and nutrition programs. B11t more and more it is
looking like the bills currently
working ihelr way through the
House and Senate will be basically a rehash of current farm
policy. The reasons for this are
twofold: first there Is no money
available for any major policy
shifts; and secondly there appears to be little sentiment for
change on the past of farmers.
The Bush administration, In
particular, bad hoped that any
new farm bill wou)J1 not undercut

Overall, the past 18 months has
produced a record of accomplish-..
men! of which we can be proud.
Working In a bipartisan fashion,
we have passed laws that benef!t
all Ohioans, including the passage earlier this year of a capital
Improvements blll that provides ,
money for Important projects In
southern and southeastern Ohio.
Hopefully, we'll be able to
expand on this record with more
achievements between now and
the end of the year.
I
If you have questions about t
these btlls or any other state '
matter, don't hesitate to call me,
State Sen. Jan Michael Long, at ,
(614) 466-8156, or write me at the i
Statehouse, Columbus, Ohio 1

i

43215.

..

Today in history

ments business, and the grouchy
old man on the verge of death are
each unique and able to Interact
effectively with one another, but
all share Cobb's arrogance and
utter contempt for the likes of
Ruth, the fans and even his own
teammates.
·From time to time, Babe's
giant race Is projected on the.
· backdrop to remind Cobb that the
nation did not particularly share
his conviction that he was the
greatest.
Also casting doubt Is Oscar
Charleston, a Negro League
contemporary whose ·style . of
play was enough to earn him the
unwanted nickname of "the
Black Cobb."
Charles ton, who joined the Hall
of Fame posthumously In 1976,
appears now and then to haunt
Cob!) and remind the Georgian
that he ·could have settled the
ar~u ment over who was thl!,
better. ballplayer had he not
refused to play In an exhibition
game between some black stars
and his Tigers.
"You don't know what anger
is, " said Charleston after a futile
attempt to get Cobb to even
acknowledge theN egro Leagues.

r-------------------~

Conseco deal to be announced today

Cong..
Clarence Miller

One ottne environmental advo- significantly reverse the decline
our country's call for an easing of
trade-dis to rUng agricultural cates' more ambitious· Initia- In U.S. soybean acreage under
subsidies at the ongoing Uruguay tives, to require farmers to k~ current market conditions.
In conclusion, the blll that the
round of trade·negotiations, but records of their pesticide use and
House
Agriculture Committee Is
reduce
their
use
of
agricultural
from all Indications this wtll not
sending
to the House floor,
chemicals
in
polluted
areas,
be the case. As most of you no
though
It
freezes most support
failed
to
pass
muster
with
the
doubt are aware, farm products
Iev:els,
Is
essentially
an extension
Committee.
The
Committee
bill
constitute one of the most prom·
of
existing
programs,
programs
does,
hOwever,
call
for
voluntary
Ising areas of export for the
which
some
In
Congress
feel need
programs
In
this
regard.
The
United States, as we struggle to
to
be
changed.
Toward
this end
bill
as
It
now
.
committee-passed
bring . better balance to our
there
Is
an
effort
underway
by
stands
will
not
Impose
any
International trade accounts.
urban
and
conservative
additional
mandatory
·controls
The administration's efforts to
enhance our potential In this on farming practices, but at the members to amend the blll when
regard will be made that much same time It doesn' t do away it comes to the House floor .- This
more dl!tlcult It we continue our with any .of the more stringent coalition of diverse political
proviSions of the 1985 farm bill Interests plans to attack the bill
own present level of subsidies.
such
as the swampbuster pro- on the grounds tllat it provides
Ope area In which significant
gram,
as some farmers had big payments to wealthy farmers
change was anticipated, but
and subsidizes crops such as
·
hoped.
heretofore has been it!lllted, is In
peanuts and ·sugar that they
It
was
also
hoped
that
relief
tor
the area of environmental and
maintain
do not deserve to be
hard
hit
soybean
growers
could
conservation controls. Cognizant
protected
from
the open market:
Into
the
bill,
but
be
Incorporated
of the growing public concern for
wlll succeed reWhether
they
,
again
budget
considerations
go!
protecting our nation's natural
mains
to
be
seen.
But onethlngls
In
the
way.
The
bill
po,es,
resources, and with the produccertain,
this
farm
bill, like past
however,
create
a
su,bsldy
protion of ·farm produce free of
farm
bills
will
impact
our lives In
gram
called
.
a
"marketing
loan'!
health threatening sprays and
a
numbl!r
of
ways
so
all of us
tor
soybean
growers,
but
most
·
additives, a number of legislashould
have
a
marked
Interest
In
acknowledge
that
the
program
tors viewed the renewal of the
following
tts
progress.
·
wUI
not
be
generous
enough
to
farm bill as a means of stepping
up safeguards In this regard.
However, when environmental
and conservation advocates realIzed the success of a wholescale
By United Press International
offensive was Improbable, they
Today ts Wednesday, June 27, the 178th day of 1990 with 187 to
joined with farm Interests to
arrive at a series o! .comprom- follow.
Ises, which while upgrading
The moon Is waxing, moving toward Its first quarter.
The morning stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Saturn.
controls did so In a manner that Ill
acceptable to those who make · The evening star Is Jupiter.
Those ~rn on this date are
their Hvelfbood off of the land.
, under the sign of Cancer.

••

1,

By HILMER AND~RSON ·
. "! took baseball like a man
SAN DIEGO (UPI) - Contem- takes a wife," Cobb says.
porary baseball players are
But Cobb's furious personaHty
supposed to be heroes. role in the play takes those fine
models for children who IO&lt;&gt;k up qualities to levels of intensity
to their wholesome AU-American that give the viewer a ·new
·
values :
appreciation of g o od
But this Is a fairly recent sportsmanship.
profile for the practltioner softhe
The show Is as much a baseball
national pastime. Players from history lesson as It is a character
basebaJI's golden age In the first study of a personality who
half of the 20th century were dominated everything around
often portrayed as hard - him in his prime, but inevitably
drinking, tobacco-chewing lout's faded away .
.
who excelled at a rough game
Cobb played center field for the
. Improper for polite sportsmen. · Detroit Tigers for 24 seasons
In society circles, baseball play- beginning In 1905. He won 12
ers ranked down with actors as batting titles during that time, .
undesirable potential husbands compiled a .367 career batting
for well-connected debutantes .
average and stole 892 bases.
Hall of Farner Ty Cobb epitomH'ard slides with spikes aimed
ized the indelicate qualities as so- · at the infielder's belly became
.elated with baseball's· salad Cobb's trademark, but he was
days. But his game skills made overshadowed in the 1920s".by
up a handbook any coach would Babe Ruth, whose gregaAOus
want to instill in young ball person;~.lity blended perfectly
·
player.s.
wltli his effortless hor:ne run
Cobb played the game with stroke to give him the popularity
courage, flair, confidence and Cobb felt he deserved. '
most of all sklll, characerlstlcs
The play features three actors
commonly attributed to the on stage ai the same time, all
greats of the game.
portraying Cobb at different
In the Old Globe Theatre's Urnes of his life. The young Tiger
production of Lee Blessing's play star, the middle-aged mllllon~lre
"Cobb," baseball fans will see a boasting of his shrewd ln~t rampaging Innovator wlio boasts
of being the man who took
'baseball by storm and kicked It
Into the modern age.
"I took a rustle folk art called
OAKLAND, Calif. (UP!) baseball and applied the science The Oakland Athletics have
of warfare to ti," the ghost of the called a press conferen~e fpr 10
Georgia Peach brags as the a.m. PDT Wepnesday, and are
one-act shOw begins. " And-It fit expected to announce the signing
like a hand In a glove."
of outfielder Jose Canseco to a
In the play , Cobb claims to be •multi-year contract.
the first member of baseball's
The contract Is believed to be
modern age. The one who turned for five ·years, worth more then
the corner and took the game $20 million. That would make
from a quaint contest played by
Canseco the highest paid player
gents tn string ties and handlebar in baseball, surpassing !'lew .
mustaches into the slashing,
York Yankeesfirstbasemanbon
llne-dtlve game played by later · Mattingly's flve·year, $19.6 milheros like Pete Rose, Jackie · lion deaL
Ro,blnson and Rickey Henderson.
Oakland General Manager

Scoreboard ...
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Chicaf~:o ...... .... ...... ..... .."
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. 81111 Fr.uci*!O (Wibton 3-0) at Cl~ltt­
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Cln•lud at Balllmore
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Tnu ....... ,.... ............. .31 .fl .-131 - 15
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draft.

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lllltlet - NamedCariDatllflsullata•t
athletic •lrH\or lor hciiiiJ

.,....,,erneat.

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••

Sandy Alderson has confirmed
Canseco's new multi-year d~al,
but declined to reveal how much
it \vas worth.
'
'
Canseco, who took Rookie of
the Year honors In 1986 and
claimed the Most Valuable.
Player award In 1988, is playing
under a one-year contract worth
$2 million.
Canseco Is batting .313 wi.th 20
home runs and 50 RBI this year.
A• sore wrist and a recent back
Injury have sidelined the Oakland star fpr 16 games.

Sports briefs

Baseball
Ternubo Seto drove In four
runs and Eijl Ochlai and Katsuhito Osaka combined on a fourhitter to lead Japan to an 8-Q
victory over the United States In
game three of the Japan-USA
Baseball Series . Japan's third
straight victory gives them an
insurmountable 3-0 lead in the
best-of-five series . ... Outfielder
Willie Ansley of the Columbus
Mudcats In the Southern League
(AA) was named. Minor League
Player-of-the-Week

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MASON, WV. ·

CINCINNATI - The Cincin- and came around on Morris ' the sixth when Maddux walked
nati Reds, rolling towards an NL two-out plnchhlt double.
Spike Owen with the bases loaded
·'San Francisco just didn't · and Larry Walker stroked a
West pennant, had used all or
their position players when their execute on that bunt by Reed,
two-run single to right, making It
bench came through In the 12th and we did ," Plnlella noted. 3-0.
Inning to spark a 3-2 victory ove.r " And that was the game."
Pirates I , Ph Diles 0 - At
"I don't get that many oppor· Pittsburgh, Jay Bell singled
the San Francisco Giants that
extended their victory streak to tunlties," Reed admitted, with a home Jose Lind from second
laugh. "It was a pretty good bunt base with two out in the eighth.
four.
· Herm. ' Winningham, who · after he'd thrown me a rast ball Rookie Scott Ruskin. 2-1, picked
, scored the decisive run with none over the plate. I practice bunting up the victory In reliefand fellow· ·
out In the 12th following a costly a lot and It really helped rookie Stan Belinda recorded his
miscue by Giants third baseman tonight."
seco nd major-league save.
Matt Williams, credited · the
Elsewhere In the National Bruce Ruffin, 5-7, su!(ered the
League, Montreal downed Chi· PhiJlies' fourth straight Joss.
reserves with the triumph.
"We jus) find different ways to cago 6-5, Pittsburgh blanked
Braves 4, Dodgers 2 - At
win because of the chemiStry on Philadelphia 1-0, Atlanta Atlanta, Steve Avery, 1-1, earned
this club," said Winningham, dumped Los Angeles 4-2, ·San his first major league win by
who Jed off the 12th with a single Diego shut out Houston 7-0, and pitching seven strong Innings. It
to deep short. "(Hal) Morris New York slammed St. Louis 8-6 was the left-bander's thjrd major
drove In the tying run and then In lllnnlngs.
league appearance. Joe Hesketh
(Jell') Reed laid down that
Expos I, Cubs 5 - Expos' recorded his third save. The los~
perfect bUnt that actually won It rookie catcher Jerry Goff, pinch went to Mike Morgan, 7-6.
hitting to lead off the ninth
tor us."
· Padres 7, Astros 0 - At
In the 12th, Mariano Duncan Inning, blasted a 3-2 delivery off Houston, Dennis Rasmussen
followed Winningham's base hit reliever Les Lancaster over the scattered nine hits and Blp
with a single to -right that sent . right field fence Tuesday to Roberts stroked four hits, IncludWinningham to second. That power the Expos to a 6-5 victory Ing three doubles to lift San Diego '
brought up Reed with Instruc- over the Chicago Cubs .
to victory. Rasmussen, 6-4, Imtions to move the runners up with
Goff stepped to the plate proved his lifetime record to 7-1
batting .158 with three hits in 19 against the Astros In recording:
a bunt.
Walling on deck to pinch hit for at-bats. The shot off Lancaster, his third complete game ·of thB
winner Randy Myers, 2·2, who 5·4, stymied a Cubs' comeback season. Jim Clancy, 2-8, took the
hurled the final two Innings, was from a 5-2 deficit.
loss .
pitcher Rick Mahler. Reds manReliever Dave Schmidt. 3-0,
Mets 8, Cardinals 6 ( lllnn.) ager Lou Plnlella had only a flowed a two-run double to Mark
hurlers available In the dugout.
Grace In the seventh and an RBI
"I was told to advance the double by Shawon Dunston In the
The Daily S~ntinel
runners or hit a (swinging) bunt eighth, but still gained the
victory.
·
if their pitcher (los~r Mark
(USPS 145-flll )
Thurmond , 1-P cnargedfrom the . Dunston's double to d~p left
A Dlvlllon of Multimedia, Ja c.
mound," said Reed. "But he apparently was touched by a fan
didn't charge, so I bunted to third near the basket that marks a
Published ·every atternO(JI., Monday
throogh Friday, 111 Court St .. Pobase." Williams grabbed the'ball home run, prompting Cubs manmeray. Ohio. by the Ohio Valley Pul&gt;-- !..
and overthrew wm Clark at first ager Don Zimmer to question the
Ushtng COmpany!Multlmedla, lnc.,
Pomerov, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-2156. Sewhile Winningham and · Duncan call .
cond d8ss postage paid at Pomeroy,
"I don't know. I heard two
were circling the bases.
Ohio.
"I saw him make the throw versions," said Zimmer, who
Member : United Press lnternattonaJ,
after I got to third and never Implored second base umpire
Inland Dally Press Association and the
stopped when I saw the ball Fred Brocklander to ask for help
Ohio !'fewspaper Assoclat ion. Na tional
rolled off Clark's glove," Win- on the calL "Somebody said it.
Adver tl!!ilng Repre5entattve; Branham
Newspaper sates. 733 Third Avenue.
ningham. remarked. "So I just wasn't a home run . Somebody
New York, New York 10017. .
kept gplng and It wasn't even said It hit a kid's glove and
POSTMASTER: Send ad&lt;ftss chanll'!l
bounced back. If that's the case, I
close at th.e plate."
to
Th e Dally Sentinel. ll1 Court St. ,
"! just ·made a bad throw, don;t think a kid could reach over
Pomeroy, Ohio 4:&gt;769.
ttiat's all," Williams admitted. the basket.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
· Expos starter Dennis "Oil
"I threw the ball into the runner.
By Carrlet' or MotiW Route
I lost the game for us and I have Can" Boyd, seeking his first win
One Week ............. .................... ..$1.40
One Month·.. ... .............. .. ........•. ..$6.10
no excuses for that throw."
since May 23, left the game after
One Year .... ............................. m .80
Almost lost in the fral)tic finish six Innings with a 5-2 lead .
SINGLE COPY
Steve Frey pitched the ninth
were the 11th-Inning ejections of
PRICE
Reds third baseman Chris Saba tor his fourth save.
Dally .. ... ... ............ .. ............. 25 Cents
Ryne Sandberg smacked his
ami pitching coach Stan WIJllams
Subscribers not deslrlngtopay thecar·
National League-leading 22nd
by plate umpire Bob Davidson.
rter may remit in advance dlred: to
The Dally sentinel on a 3, 6 or 12 month
"I don't want to say anything hOme run and Andre Dawson hit
basls. Credlt wUl be given carrJereach
about It," declared Saba, who his 18th, both solo shots off Boyd
week.
had struck out in the lOtn. ''I in the sixth. That cut the lead to
Np subscriptions by mall pennltted lo:
didn't say one word to Davidson 3-2 after the Expos scored three
·areas where home carrier servlee Is
and I was running to my position runs In the top of the Inning.
available.
when he -stared ljt me. "I said
Tne Expos scored twice more
Mall Suboerlolloow
nothing and suddenly he was In the seventh off starter Greg
IDihle Melp County
13 w~e ~s ,. ....... ..... ,................... $19.24
thumbing me from the.game.
Maddux and reliever Paul As1'That was when I went crazy,
26Weeks .................... .... ... ....... S37.96
senmacher on a sacrifice fly by
~2 Weeks ....... ............ .. ...... ....... $74.36
because I had no beef with the Junior Noboa and an RBI single
Outside Melp CountJ
13 Weeks ....... ........................... 120.80
umpire," Saba added. "Then, he from Dave Martinez to make It
26 Weeks ..................... ............. $10.30
·waved goodbye to me, which I 5-2.
52 Week• ....... ................... .-....... 175.40
thought was real professional on
Montreal scored three times In
his part."
Myers restrained Sabo, and as
he departed the Reds third
baseman extended his middle
finger In a gesture he later
explained as indicating the Reds
were In first place. Williams also
I
I
was ejected.
Danny ·Jackson gave the Reds·
a fine seven-lnnlng ·erfort, allowIng jUst two hits l!"hile striking
I Located In Mason,_WV 304-773-5300 I
out four and walking two. Rob
Dibble blanked the Giants for
I
.Is Proud To Announce Their
I
three Innings before Myers
earned the victory with two
shutout Innings.
"I felt good," said Jackson. "I
Under New Ownership
~
was getting my fast ball over, but
my slider wasn't as good as I
I
I
would have liked. I got a slider up
and In to (Kevin) Mitchell In the
1
I
first Inning and he knew what to
do with It" Mitchell launched his
JARRELL SARGENT AND STAFF.
19th homer to put the Giants In
front, 2-0, as they collected just ·1 Door Prizes Bowll Clame FREE With Coupon I
four hits all night.
The Reds got one back In the
:
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:
second on Eric Davis' solo shot, ·
his ninth, and tied the score In the
seventh when Duncan singled

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GRAND OPENING

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SECOND HALF 1989 REAL ESTATE TAXES
EXTENSION GRANTED

Closing Date

o:-

July 1 0, 1990

1) On first day of month following second half
closing, interest is charged- on unpaid balance of
delinquent taxes from previous year for period of
time from preceding D~cember first to that day.
2) On December first, each .year .intere~t is charged
against the full unpaid balance of taxes for period
·of time from day established i.n (1) abov~ to date. .
'

FAILURE TO RECEIVE .LL DOES NOT AVOID PBW.n &amp; INTEREST
·. '

OHice Houn: 1:30 to 4:30PM Monday thru Prlday
·
PlhhW·Numlber- 992-2004

Meigs County Treasurer,
G•org• M. Collins
•

�Page-4~The Daiy

Wednesday. June 27. 1990

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio.

Sentinel

England soccer team PQSts 1-0 overtime win over. Belgiurn
By MORLEY MYERS
UPI Sports Writer
ROME IUPI) CUPI) - Their
Injured captain was back home.
And hundreds of their rowdy fans
were soon to follow, having been
tossed out of the country by an
Italian magistrate.
All the · same, It was an
exceptional night of soccer for
England Tuesday.
David Platt, a substitute,
scored· with less than a minute
left to give Englan!l a 1-0
overtime victory over Belgium
and a spot in the World Cup
quarterfinals.
"It was marvelous. for me to

come In as a sub and win the when thre~time winner Italy
game," Platt said. " He !Manplays Ireland In Rome and
ager Bobby Robson ) decided to
Argentina faces Yugoslavia In
Florence.
put me on 15 minutes before the
On Sund-ay , It's two-time
end of normal time and I got the .
goal right at the death."
winner West Gerll)any against
In the day's other second- Czechoslovakia In Milan and
round game, Yugoslavia edged
England against Cameroon In
Spain 2-1 In overtime In Verona
Naples.
In . Bologna, England and Belbehind two goals from Dragan
Stojkovic . .Yugoslavia reached
glum seemed headed for a
penalty-kick shootout. But then
the World Cup quarterfinals for
the first time In 28 years.
England won a free klc.k. Mid"I can't tell you how wonderful fielder Paul Gascoigne chipped
the ball ahead and P)att swiveled·
It feels," Coach lvlca Ostm said.
90
degrees to volley home his first
The day's two games comgoal
for England In his eighth
pleted the second roun9. The
appearance
for his country.
quarternnals start Saturday

But 246 English fan• were
unable to join the celebrations.

They were deported atler runnlllg battles with pollee and

Alomar's clutch single gives
Tribe 5-3 win over Orioles

Italllln fant earUe'r 'I'Iaelday In
the northeast seaalde reaurt of
RlminL·

McEnroe upset at Wimbledon
By FREDERICK WATERMAN
UPI Sports Writer
WIMBLEDON, England
CUPI) -John McEnroe made an
Inglorious exit from Wimbledon
Tuesday, losing In straight sets In
· the first round to Derrick Rost$gno, a player ranked 129th In
the world.
: The thre~Ume Wimbledon
champion fell 7-5, 6-4, 6-4 In his
first appearance at a Grand Slam
tournament since his expulsion
from the Avstrallan Open In
January.
: McEnroe, 31, has not won a
n)ajor title since 1984. Against
Rostagno, he never sustained the
bi-Utlant shot-making that made
' h1m one of the ·finest players In
tennis history .
The No. 4 seed could not ret urn
~ostagno's serve consistently,
occasionallY netted easy volleys
ahd struggled to pass his everattacking opponent.
McEnroe, who has played just
. gne tournament since February,
:said he has not trained suffl•Clently to return to the pinnacle
:of his sport.
• "ltcamesonaturattomeforso
:long," said · the former top: ranked player, who used to laugh
;about being on the Haagen-Dazs
~ ~~tb;;t.~'now I haven't given It
• Although he is theoldestplayer
: 111 the world's top 50, McEnroe
:said age Is not the ollstacte.
• ''I'm not convinced I can't do a
:helluva job at this," he said. "It's
:Just a matter of doing It (the
•preparation) ."
. Rostagno, 24, maintained his
· ~ composure throughout the Cen' tre Court match. Last year at the
; U.S. Open, the Los Angeles
' np.tlve lost to second-round oppo~ nent Boris "Becker despite having
~ ~t'two-set leadanda palrofmatch
. ~ Ji!llllts. This year, In eight of his
~ pl-evtous nine tournaments, Ros~tegnO tailed to survive the second
•"iiound.
::;·. When Rostagno was a . tee;'lillger, McEnroe was one of his
t heroes.
''It was definitely my dream 10
years ago to play on Centre
Court, and there I was , and
t McEnroe was there," he said.
; McEnroe joined a growing lls,t
' of upset victims at the All
: England Club. Also losing In the
~ first round Tuesday were French
' Open 'champion Andres Gomez,
• the No. 5 seed, and No. 6 Tim
' Mayotie.
. The top seeds on the women's
: side - Steffi Graf, Martina
· Navratllova and Monica Seles: all made quick wo.rk of their
; overmatched opponents, none ot
l the three favorites surrendering
! more than three games.
• No. 12 Jennifer Caprtatt, H
: years old and 89 days, became
: the youngest player to win a
: match at Wimbledon, eltrrtlnat' lng Helen Kelesl 6-3, 6-1. Caprl1all, a semtftnatlst at the French
: Open, Is also the youngest seed In
' Wimbledon history.
• , . Gomez, who hoped his first
•Grand Starn title two weeks ago
. : would provide a new " sunrise"
· ; for his career, lost 6-4, 6-2, 6-2 to
1
American Jim Grabb.
·
i Mayotte, a Wimbledon quarterflnaltst last year, was ousted
'by Gary Muller of South Africa
:4-6. 7-6 (7-1), 7-5, 6-3. The
IAmerican, who has recently had
;a back problem, has failed to
:reach the second round in his last
·
:tour tournaments.
Minor upsets In the women's
•draw Included the dismissal of
: ~o. 6 Arantxa Sanchez VIcario,
who lost a rugged' 1-6, 7-6 (10-8),
:9-7 battle to Betsy Nagelsen, and
·No. B Manuela Maleeva, who lost
:In straight set.s to Sarah Gomer of
'Britain. No. 9 Mary Joe Fernandez withdrew because of a knee
Injury.
, Among the men, No. 12 Pete
·Sampras lost In five sets to
:chrlsto Van Rensburg of South
;Africa and No. 14 Petr Korda lost
·tn four sets to Israel's GUand
'•Bloom.
: Graf opened the second day's
,play on Centre Court, where she
:needed just 51 minutes to dls:patch fellow West German Ctau·dta Porwlk 6-1, 6-2. The top seed,
:seeking her third consecutive
;Wtrrtbledon title, had too much
•power and the answer for ever.y
' offensive tactic of her opponent.
' Graf took two weeks off after
,finishing runner-up at the French
ropen to ready herself for her
•Wtrrtbledon.
'

''I've prepared very wen I
think/' she said. "I'm very
eager. I'm very, very eager."
Navratllova, In pursuit of a
record ninth singles crown, required only 45. minutes to dispose
of France's Sophie Amtach 6-1,
6-1. The No. 2 seed Is tied with
Helen Wills Moody at eight
singles titles. The No. 2 seed
joked and smiled throughout the
match.
" It's easy to have fun when
you're whining easily," she said.
Seles, the 16-year-old Yugoslavian who won the French· Open
with her baseline .g ame, used an
occasional serve-and-volley at tack against Sweden's Maria
Strandlund in a 6-2, 6·0 victory
lasting 49 minutes.
Seles, however, had more on
her mind than tennis. She awaIted word on the World Cup
soccer game between Yugoslavia and Spain. Yugoslavia won
2-1 In overtime.
"I was getting the score all
through the match from one of
my friends who sat behind me,"
she said.

Gomez seemed in a hurry to
complete his openmg round,
smashing groundstrokes In . a
hit-or-miss fashion, glvlngGrab'q
every opportunity to come to net.
The clay•court star from Ecuador said he was discouraged by
the fast play on grass.
"I like to play on It but I just
don't feel comfortable ... I come
here bu ti know I'm not one of the
favorites," he said.
Grabb, ranked No. 49, Is. a
serve-and-volley specialist who
was a first-round loser In five of
his last six Grand· Slam events.
He rarely had to play three
successful shots to win a point
against Gomez. Grabb won · his
first 11 . service games, not ·
c)ropping serve untn he h~d built
a 4-1 lead In the third set·. ·
"Jimmy's got.agood game for
here,:· Gomez said. "He's got a
big serve and he moves well at
net."
Other women to advance to the
second round were No. 5 Ztna
Garrison, No. 11 Natalia Zvereva, No.·13 Jana Novotna and No.
15 Ros Fairbank.

WE WIN! - Ei!1land'1 David Pllit I ( rllhl) Is
con1ratulated by teammate Steve BuD after Platt
scored the overtime 1oa1 that 1ave En,;land a 1--0

victory over Belpum Ia lbeaeconcl nadofWorld
Cup action Tuesday nflht Ia Bolopa, Italy. (UPI)

'

' ' DOUBLE PIA V - Baltimore second bueman
Bill RIJiken I~ over lbe Indians' Sandy Alomar
atter throwinl q, flnt to retire Feltx Fermin and
'

The ·Daily Sentinel·
Is Introducing A New·
Service Now Available.

"The Bulletin Bostd

about his job In a quiet, profesByBOBKEIM
sional manner.
.
UPI Sports Writer
Jacoby 's a steady player who
·' CLEVELAND ""- Listen to a
. radio talk show and Inevitably
doesn't complain, who doesn't
·the call will come.
badmouth the city, ·the stadium
Someone has . a trade, and
or the fans, who gives the same
Brook Jacoby Is the bait. Oh, they · effort whether Its April or Sep:may want to package Jacoby
tember. He doesn't have great
with a couple other players range at third. arrd he's too short
Bud Black also Is menUoned
to be an Ideal first baseman, but
frequently ...:.. but Jacoby Is the he's more than adequate at'.
No.1 man.
either position and has made just
Jacoby's been ·a popular choice three errors thIs year.
of armchair general managers
· You may have noUced that he
'ever since he hit 32 home runs In hasn't complained once about
i987, 12 more than he has hit In being·asked to fill In at first while
any other major league season, the Indians struggle to find a
and despite lower numbers the permanent soluUon at that
past few seasons, people seem to postuon.
want nothing more than to trade
He's solid at the plate and now
the quiet third baseman.
he's hitting the ball as well as he
·l Some trades are ridiculous, has at any point of his career.
some are Intriguing, but all end . Going Into Tuesday Jllght's game
with Jacoby going to another at BaiUmore, Jacoby. was leadclub.
Ing the club with a .315 average
· What did Jacoby do to ·the with nme· homers, 32 runs batted
people of Cleveland that made In and just 26 strikeouts In 238 at
them so anxious to send him off to bats.
another town? Nothing· but go
Trade Ja&lt;;aby? The Indians

&gt;

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

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CAPRIATI FOREHANDS- America's Jennifer Caprlatt hits a
forehand shot to Canada's Helen Kelesl during the second day of
the Wimbledon tournament Tuesday, Capri at! beat Kelesl 6-3 &amp;-1.
(UPI)
.
.
'

L
I,

·~~

king For A
Bargain??

·-_,.,.

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Plumbed lOCI Wlrwcl forwaftlf• dtyer. at... door with
stOfTTI, 1.t" shuttlfl, upgrldl carpet lrld pa:t, 15cu. tt.
2 door rtfliQttllor, center ihel"• In ~ltcnen
cabinet., It! 011tfl)l. vlnyl.-lrtlng, dtllwred to silt,

bOIItct IOQitnt,,

trtn:mea

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No one wm confuse Jacoby
with Mike Scbmtdt, but he's no
I;llil Bradley, either. You rememberBIHBradley (no, not the
basketball player and senator),
he set a club record for errors by
third basemen with 43 In 1908.
While the general public is
anxious to trade him, obviously
Hank Peters and the Indians like
htrrt just where he ts. Certainly
they'Ve considered \\'hat they
could get for Jacoby - his
market value now Is high -but
he's probably worth more to the
team Ill Cleveland than he would
be In a trade.

\
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·lOCAnONS
PH. 446-0699

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4:30P.M. DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
'

FOR SALE
1983 DODGE TRUCK
LOADED

009-0000

1982 ENGLAND
MOBILE HOME
Kitc~en, DR; LR. Must
. sell now. Best offer.

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ought to hold on to him for all
they're worth.
This guy Is the kind of athlete
the city needs. Jacoby played
junior college ball in California
and lives there In the winters, but
he's never once threatened to
demand-a trade out West or to
just go out there via free agency
once hts contract expires.

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over the last two and one-third :
Innings. Dennis Powell laated ·
6-2-3 Innings and fell to 0-2·.
'
Alllletlcs 3, 'filers t - At
Oakland, Calif, Felix Jose scored
the go-ahead run on an error to
lead Oakland. Scott Sanderson, ~
9-4, worked the'flrst six Innings to ·
pick up the win. Jack Morris, 6-9, •
went the distance for Detroit and :
took the loss. Dennnls Ecker~
pitched the nlllth for his 24111
save.
Rovals 4, Marlnen I
White So'! H, A~,ell ,t

manager Frank Robinson said.
" It 's not just the men left on
base. We don't seem to make the
most out of the opportunities we
have. ''
Elsewhere In the American
League, Boston zipped Toronto
3-0, · Minnesota edged .Texas 5-4,
New York crushed Milwaukee
8-2, Oakland nipped Detroit 3-2,
Kansas City rapped Seattle 4-1
and Chicago knocked California
11-9.
Red Sox 3, Blue Jays 0 - lilt
Boston, Carlos Quintana hit a
two-run home run to power
Boston to Its fifth straight win.
The Red Sox, have won nine of
their last 11 and moved 1 ~
games ahead of second place
Toronto In the AL East. Wes
Gardner, 2-4, surrendered two
hits tn six tnnlllgs. Jeff Reardon
notched his 12th save. David
Welts, 5'2, absorbed the Joss.
Twins . 5, · Rao1ers 4 - AtMinneapolis, Gene Larkin
tripled home a run and scored on
Gary Gaettl's sacrifice fly In the
eighth tnnlllg, to lift Minnesota.
Texas lost Its fourth straight
game. Juan Berenguer, 5-l,
gained the win. Rick Aguilera
pitched the ninth for his 18th
.save. Despite throwing his fourth
straight complete game, Kevin
Brown, 9-5, took the loss.
Vankees 8, Brewers 2 - At
New York, Steve Balboni
knocked In two runs, Including
the tie-breaker with two out In the
seventh inning, and Matt Nokes
added a three-run homer to lead
New York. Reliever Lee Guetterman, 5-2, allowed only one hit

By PAUL DEFEDE
UPI Sporta Writer
Stan Jefferson first walked,
then ran and the Cleveland
Indians continued their warpath
on American League Eastern
DivisiOn ·teams.
Sandy Alomar's bloop single ·
scored Stan Jefferson In the ninth
Inning with the winning run to
send Cleveland to a 5-3 victory
Tuesday night over the BalUrnore 0(1oles.
··
It w.as Cleveland's third win In
a row and eighth In their last 11
games. All have come against
eastern division teams.
Although the Indians have
recleved timely hitting and good
pitching, It was Jefferson's baserunning that helped.
·"Speed Is wonderful," Cleveland manager John McNamara
said. "Jefferson was a big part of
tonight."
.
Pinch-running for Ken Phelps,
Jefferson proceeded to steal
second and third base to set up
Alomar's RBI.
"If I get a jump, I can go,"
explained Jefferson, who Is
. seven-for-eight In steal attempts.
''Our· club Is being aggressive on
the bases."
Oriole relief pitcher Joe .Prlce
made the pitch he wan ted to
Alomar. "Fastball up and ln."
Price ~ld .
"What made me sick Is then I
started overthrowing."
Price walked Jerry Browne
with the bases loaded to force ina
fifth run.
Doug Jones, 4-2, got the win tn
relief of Greg Swindell, who
struck out six In six and two-third
Innings butts winless stnceAprll
29.
Pete Harnisch. 7-4, took the
Joss.
''Timely hitting has been the
big thing," McNamara said.
"Winning In the late Innings
shows character. It Instills a
positive attitude. ''
Which Jones showed.
"Finding a hole (with a base
hit) Is lheoniyway they aregolllg
to beat me," Jones said, who
gave up an eighth-Inning RBI
single to Joe Orsulak that forged
a 3-3 tie.
·'We have pitchers who won't
roll over and quit," added Jones.
The Orioles have lost five
straight games and 11 of their
last 13. ·
"We always seem to do. some
Utile thing to give away a run or
·two In a ballgame and It winds up
costing us a ballgame," Oriole

• 0£ armchair
• managers
:Jacoby ·popular chOICe

,

!

'. complete the double play In the &amp;eco"d b!nlill of
TUesday night's game ln. Baltimore, which the
. Indians won 5-3. (UPI)

The Cleveland Beat:

11

YOU CAN PLACE YOUR ADVERTISEMENT
FOR AS.. LOW AS SS.OO PER INCH.

The Daily

Ohio

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

AT

2 year Certificate of Deposit
$5000 minimum deposit

CHAPMAN SHOES
STARTS THURSDAY. JUNE 28 AT 8 A.M •
SPECIAL THURSDAY HOURS 8 A.M.•-6 P".M,

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

SPORT · SHOES
&amp; DRESS FLATS "

wo••·s

DRESS SHOES

co•••

; _. CON.

%

Effective Annual Yield

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NlTUilliZER

: . lUDinONS
' NATU..AUZII

..

•
I

TENNIS· SHOES

•u
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•

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ZIPS

as

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

WOMEI'S·MIN'S ·
CHIUHIII'S

· THUISDAY
JUNE '21
..

O.U. SUM.I BAND
CONCm
7:00 P.M. en C..rt St.

SUMMER ·
SAND4LS
HANDBAGS
I-SHIRTS

ITl imited Tune Offer! Get the SavI.!::!J er's Special at any BANK ONE
offre in Athens, Perry, Hocking and
Meigs counties.

.I

,.

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'·

;

. ..

AIT IN THE PAB

'•'

Court St.- 6 to 7 p.nt.

CHAPMAN
SHOES:'
• PO. . .Y'S QUAun .OIITOII
'.

.,

8.

GIOUP..OF WOMEN'S

UIGI GROUP OF

THANK YOU
.
For All the Flowers, Cards
· and Gifts I Received While
I Was Ill.
SARAH

.

•

BANK ONE, ATHENS. NAIA f'AIIT 0# 1'NW CA-I'IAM
At,.,._ Ohio

.

\'

"

..

Memllet FDIC

'.

-

J

�Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, June 27, 1990

-=---Area deaths--- .Residents should be on alert for ticks
:Ivan Gallaher
: Ivan Glenn Gallaher, 81. of
:Brlmestone Road, ·coolville, died
'fuesday morning In Hospice of
bayton at Dayton.
: Born March 1, 1909, in Shin.ston, W.Va., he was thesonofthe
:iate Asa B. and Mary Drain
·Gallaher. He was retired from
:stahl's Nursery and he also
;served in the 622nd Engineering
pivlsion, U.S. Army, World War

2.
: He is survived by his wife, Ruth
.(:umdlff Gail&lt;lgher, three sons,
:Coleman of Coolville, Galen of
·Wakeland, Ohio, and Joseph of
:wmard, ·Ohio; one daughter,
:Evelyn Midkiff, Dayton; seven
~randchlldren, one greatcrandchild, two sisters, Thelma
Minor, Shlnston. W. Va., and
·Madelyn Clutter, Elyria.
: He was preceded In death by
'his first wife, Norma Weaver
~allaher, .1984; one son, one
!laughter, three brothers, one
ilster.
: Funeral services will be held
.Friday, 1 p.m. at the White·Biower Funeral Home with the
:Rev . Phil Ridenour officiating.
:Burial will be In Bethel Baptls t
:Church Cemetery. ·Washington,
!1. Va. Friends may call at the
funeral home 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
Thursday. In ·lieu of flowers,
eontribu !Ions may be made to the
;Hospice of Dayton, 324 Wllmlng1on
Ave.
Dayton, Ohio. 45420-1885.
' 'i
.

:Kenneth Davis

.·-

.• Kenneth ' Addison Davis, 69,
·.k u tland, died Tue~day morning
lt Holzer Medical Center.
:: Born Nov.15,1920 In Dexter, he
;was a son of Gladys Thomas
·Davis and t!Ie late Worley Davis.
:He served as manager of the
Rutland Department Store since
1949. and was a member-of the
.!&gt;exter Church of Christ. He was
-a World War II Veteran, a
:lifetime member of the Ameri:can Legion Eli Denison Post In
•fl.utland, a memberofOhloState
'Highway Patrol Auxiliary, and a
lifetime member of the Disabled
'! merlcan Veterans. He was a
graduate of Rutland lfighSc-hool.
; Mr. Davis is survived by his
•wife, Clara Jeanette Gibbs Da:vls, a daughter, RosaleeJeanette
:Hood, Orange, Calif.; two sons,
·{toger Lae, Pickerington; and
:Rodney Kenneth, Westerville; a
~ster, Mary Holter, Long BotQlm; three brothers, Ronald, of
~xter; Robert, of Middleport;
"and Clyde, of Rutland; and seven
:grandchildren. : Servltes will be held Thursday
;tlt 1 p.m. at the Rawllngs-Coats·Fisher Funeral Home In Middlei;ort with Rev. Paul Taylor
.afflclatlng. Burial will be in Miles
i~ametery.
·
:• Friends may call at the funeral
;~~orne today (Wednes.l!ay) from
..6-9 p.m.
.

.

E. Evans
,.
.:Emerson
80,
.

: Emerson E. Evans,
of 73
:t.ocust St., Gallipolis, d~ Tues·aay. J.une 26, 1990 at his resl:aence. He was a Gallla County
:entrepreneur.
:: Born Sept. 10, 1909 In Cadmus,
•lie was the son of the late Lewis
.S;. Evans and Bertha 'Keller
·Evans.
; Surviving iS his wife, Evelyn
:rope Evans, whom he married
-Aug. 26, 1931 In Ironton, Ohio.
:Also surviving are three sons,
;Merrill L. Evans of Gallipolis,
J:)an E. Evans of Canal Winches,ter, Ohio and Larry E. Evans of
.Citra, Fla.; a sister, Ruth Bow-

i
'

f

..

man of Orange Park, Fla.; 13
grandchildren an!l four great
grandchildren.
He was also preceded In death
by two siSters, Alma Hutchison
and Gertrude Howard; and six
brbthers, John Everett Jr., Ben,
Alton, Stanley, Chauncey L. and
Lester K. Evans.
Associated w,lth Ohio Valley
Bank for 43, he was also chair·
man of the board of Bob Eva.ns
Farms from Its beginning In 1953
until 1971, . at which time he
became an advisor (o the board
ot directors.
He 'helped organize the Ohio
Valley Health Services Founda·
lion ;~nd was selected Gallia ·
County Man of the Year In 1976 by
the Southeast Ohio Regional
. Council. Instrumental In the
establishment of Rio Grande
Community College, the college ·
of business management was
named In his honor In 1982.
He was also a member of
Morning Dawn Lodge 7 and was a
32nd degree Mason.
A member of First Baptist
Church ior more .than 50· years,
funeral services · will be conducted there Tnursday, 2 p.m .•
by the Revs. Archie Conn and
Alvis Pollard. Friends may call
on the family at the church today
from 7 to 9 p.m.
Burial will be in Mound Hill
· Cemetery and grandsons will
serve as pallbearers.
In lieu of flowers, contribu !Ions
may be made to the Emerson and
Evelyn Evans and Sons Founda. lion In care of the University of
Rio Grande.

Samuel

~mold

'

Samuel Nelson Arnold, 80, of
Syracuse, died Tuesday evening
at the Veterans Memorial Hospital Extended Care Unit after a
long Illness.
Born In Pomeroy, the son of the
late Effie' Finlaw and Edgar
Nelson Arnold, he was in the coal
business and the heating and
plumbing business until he
retired.
He Is survived by his wife, Ruth
Canack Arnold; two sons, Sa· ,
muel Jr. and , Patrick, both of
Belpre; a · daughter, Dorothy
Fisher of Torch; four grandchild· .
ren, Matthew and Andrew Ar·
nold of Belpre, and William and
Elizabeth Fisher of Torch· a
brother, Walter, of. Holiday,
Fla.; three sisters, Madge Smith,
of Holiday, Fla., Nancy Clark of
Cincinnati and Virginia · Blazewlcz of Pomeroy. He Is also
survived by several cousins and
nieces.
He was preceded In death by
three brothers; Ralph, Edgar
and Paul, and one sister, Bernice
,
Evans.
Funeral will be held at .2 p.m.
Thursday, at Ewing Funeral
Home. There:will be no calling
hours .

License issued .
A mar-r iage lice~ has been
, Issued .In Meigs Probate Court to
Nathaniel Junior Carpenter 51
.'
Long- Bottom, anp Marlene 'Kay
Barp!tt, 33, Rutland . .:•

Tick season has begun and the symptoms .pf Rocky .Mountain
Meigs County Health Depart- SpotteQ Fevl'r.
ment joined State Health DirecRocky Mountain Spottl'd Fl'ver
tor Dr. Ronald Fletcher In urging Isn't a large health problem In
all Ohioans to take precautions this' area. According to Connie
against Rocky Mountain Spotted Karschnll&lt; of thP Meigs County
Fever and Lyme Disease, both of Health Department, one case of
which are carried by ticks.
Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever
"During an average year, has been 'reported In Meigs
somewhere betwaen 20 and 40 County over the last year. Only
Ohioans will contract Rocky five cases were reported during
Mountain Spotted Fever or Lyme the years betwl!f'n 1964 and 1986.
Disease as a result of contact
Lyme Disease Is characterized
with ticks," Fletcher said. If you by a ring lesion developing within
encounter altlck, be aware of · a month at the·site ox a tiel&lt; bite.
flu-ltke symptoms such
head- Anyone h\ving these symptoms
ache, fever and aching muscles , who has 'also had contact with
and possibly a rash. These are
•

as

...;..___ Meigs· announcements_.- - WIC dates announced
Pickup days for WIC coupons
at the Meigs County Health
Department are Thursday and
Friday, 9 to 11 a.m. and 1 to 3
p.m.; July 2 and 3, 9 to 11 a.m.
and 1 to3p.m. and make-up days,
July 9, 16, and 23, same hours.
'Immunizatton dates a.t the
health department are July 10
and 24, 9 to 11 a.m. and 1 to 3 p.m.
Trustees to m~et'
.
The Lebonan Township Trustees will meet at 7:30 Friday at
the township building.

Flshlnr derby
The Meigs County Fish and
Game Association will have its
annual fishing derby on Saturday
from 8:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the
clubhouse on Texas Road .
Those participating, ages 15
and under, should provide their
own pole and ·balt (no minnows) .
There will' be prizes and free
refreshments.
The also· :.viii be a chicken
barbecue for members In the
evening. Those attending should
bring a covered dish or $15.
Trash haulers meeting
There will be a meeting of
Meigs County trash haulars on
Thursday at 7:30p.m. at the old
RC Bottling Plant on Mill Street
in Middleport. The public Is
invited. .
Group to meet
The Pomeroy Group of AA and

Diss61ution fded

NDEROSll
STEAK BOUSE

•

Continued from _p age 1

•

.

111 Second St., Pomeroy
YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1868

93 COLUMBUS ROAD
ATHENS, OHIO

•••••••••••••••••••
• HURRY/ Coupon £cpim 718/90
CHARBROILED :

.

.

P.AdluwOurAI·You&lt;an;EatGnmrJBuffet•

at"-~····pdce, ond loron/y49¢

-. ·~aNJane~w.d ..........
ani/iJiitlc ,' -t. wifll this t:ollpOtl. ,.,,wow

•••••••••••••••••••
•••••••••••••••••••

ry p~otection
.

'

..
'

9
.leg Quarters ••••• :~. 4· &lt;
$ 79
Rump Roast ••••••••• ·1
Drumsticks ••.•••• ~~ .. 49&lt;
CHICKEN

. U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS BEEF LB.
TURKEY

HURRY/ Coupon £cpim 718190
CHARBROILED .

.,.

.

; Meigs County's Common Pieas
: Cgurt Judge Rick Crow Is quite a
tennis player.
Judge Crow attended the
summer seminar of the Ohio
~- Common Pleas Judges Associa.: tlon held at Quail Hollow near
: Painesville this month.
, Judges know that all work and
, no play makes for.a dull.judge, so
.&lt; they held their eighth an 0ual
. Ohio Common Pleas Judges
,.Association tennis tournament In
conjunction with the seminar.
•. The judges play doubles and
· ~ this year's winners were Judge
••Crow who teamed with Terrance
~O'Donnell, 14 year old son ·of
;,Judge Terry O'I;lonneil. Ter. ranee played as Judge Crow's
• teammate as an alternate since
~the judges were short one player
: for the tournament.
;~· With Judge Crow and Terrance
" emerging at the winners, Judge
'• Harry,Jaffe of Cuyahoga Cpunty,
. who servad as ".tennis commis~ . sloner" for the tournament, sent
'along word congratulating Meigs
!tcounty for sending such a great
1 tennis player to the seminar.

-....------

~~. Some days you get the
.•~orne days the bear gets

bear;
you.
-Quite a few people in Meigs
:. county have found over the past
~ lew days that It's not easy to get
~the bear. Do keep smiling.

•.''

PONDEROS«:

,,

···---~-~-----~---·

•1910Pandlroll.lnc.

'

·Gallipolis
. . Upper River Rd.
(Across from the Air;pott)
•

.
'

.

$

.

...

·.

Cube Steak •.••.L!·.... 249
· P?RK
. .
.
$ 79
lom Chops .•••. .'~•••• . 1
U.S.D.A. CHOICE BON~LESS CHUC~a. $ ·
9
7
Beef Roast .......... . 1

CINCINNATI (UPI) - In a
-'plea bargain arrangement, Cln(clnnatl Bengals defensive back
Lewis Billups pleaded guilty
• Monday to t)IIO charges Involving
• a gun.
· Billups pleaded guilty In Hamilton County Common Pleas
, Court to a pair of m!Bdemeanors
- aggravated menacing and
·..vnproper handling of firearms In
motor vehiCle.
In return for the misdemeanor
guilty pleas, a felony charge of
carrying a concealed weapon
was dlsm4Ssed. ·

.a

••

lunch Meats ...••!'~.

$

29
1

1/4

SUPERIOR-: 12 OZ. •PKG.-

·

Frank1e W•eners ..••. 99

(

.
.
·49(
Toma t oes •••••••••.• ~ ••
lB

$169
0
•
2 Vo Milk.............. .
KOR_AFT
J
.
•
•
$1
9
9
range u1c~
FLAVORITE .

.

GAL,

·'·II·G·A·L.

Heinz Ketchup •••••• 99(
32

oz.

$11 9
Ice Cream .••••• .':::~. · .

DAIRY LANE

BANQUET

SACRAMENTO

; Billups pleads ~ualnJ
fJo ftrearms charges

.

FLAVORITE ASSORTED

BUCKET ·.
-------You'll probably want to send a ·

--------

'

..~~~ ·

~------~

The ·communlverslty Bana,
' which we all seem to enjpy, will
• be performing on Court St.,
• beginning at 7 p.m. Thursday
' evening. You are ·to take your
own folding chair- that ls,lfyou
, . plan to enjoy the· concert tn
comfort. This is at least the
: fourth annual appearance of the
• band, out of Ohio University in
· Athens, In Pomeroy . The appearance if made possible through
Bank One sponsorship.

Southeast Imports

~~~~~--~

.

.

BUS. 592·2497
HOME 247~4772

I

PRI.CES EFFECTIVE SUN.; JUNE 24 THRU SAT., JUNE 30

,.,. And Meigs County young peo... ple will again have an opportun·
;; ity Saturday to take part In the
2 annualflshing derby ofthe Meigs
: County Fish and Game

i

$12500 PEl MONlH' .

.INSURANCE

Hosp(~ ·news

a . m .

:
; card along to Mrs. Arlie (Trecle)
l Abbott, Rock Springs area res!·
' dent, who is undergoing observalion and treatment at the Holzer
&lt; Medical Center lnGalllpolls. The
i room number Is 421B. You'll
~ remember both Mr. and Mrs.
' Abbott for their excellent wofk
'' they did In redoing furniture at
: their · home over the years.
1 You'll also.--remember them for
: being such nice people over the ·
.: years.

$599500
ASk FOR
BILl .HUPP ·• ,,·

o

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY. OH.

Saturday.
To participate
you do have to
be over 10 years old and there will
be special prizes awarded during
the tournament as well as trophies. Entry fee Is $3 a person
and all proceeds with go to the
Meigs Coi,lnty Cancer Socle\y.
•. There is no advance registration
- just sign in upon your arrival.

,.

lOAD£D

DOWNING .(HILDS
MUL~EN MUS.SER

1

8 AM-10 PM

t

1987 Z-24

.

You don't have to be a, golfing
pro to do well In Saturday's
upcoming miniature goif to\lrna- .
ment to be held
·
at the Hartinger
Park in Middleport beginning

STORE HOURS
Monday thru -Sunday

' Ins at 8:30a.m. and ends at 2 p.m.
• lt will be held at the association's
~ clubhouse wHich Is located near
: Chester on the Texas . Road t there Will be signs posted to get ·
the young people to the desig·
i nated location.
!
Young people must provide
; their own fishing pole and bait7 and no mlnnow.s allowed. Free
l refreshments will be provided
• fpr the youth and ther~ will be
: various prizes awarded to them .
, ; In the evening, membersofthe
~ association wlll hold a chicken
j barbecue for members only an!!
; those attending are to take a
i covered dish or they can pay $51!
they don't provide the covered
; dish. ·

Gee named...

p~m.

Golf for
'fun-ding'
ACS unit

i youngsters 15 and younger, beg-

four calls Tuesday

11:36

Beat"of
the Bend

=As;~~~=~~:i. free of charge to all

EMS units have

~.

Veterans Memorial
Tuesday admissions - John
Ord, Racine, Martha Burns,
Pomeroy; and VIolet Riggleman, Pomeroy.
Tuesaay discharges - Leora
Strom.
.

licks shOuld seek Immediate
posed to t.lcks in Wisconsin,
medical attention.
. Minnesota or states aiOIIJ tbe
Karschnlk said no cases of
east or west coasts.
Flet~her said anyone going
Lqme Disease have ever been
reported In Meigs County. If
Into woOded . or weedy areas
there would be any cases,
should wear light colored clothes
Karschnlk added, It would be so ticks are more visible. He also
because someone traveled out of
advised tucking pa'llts lep Into
state and brought the !115ease soek top$ and to c hP&lt;;k lrequently
back with them.
for ticks.
,
Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever
If an attached tick Is found, the
Is carried by the American Dog recommended method for remoTick - common throughOut vallS to use tweezer~ or• paper
much of OhiO. Symptoms may . towel. G~;~~p the tick close to the
develop between two and 14days , skin and SlOwly pull straight out.
after contact and the rash may Wash hands and bite area tho·
appear within a couple days of roughly with SQIIP and water.
Questions about tick-~_lated·
fever. Faver usually happens
within two weeks.
diseases should contact · the
Lyme Disease Is carried by the · Meigs County ,· Health Departdeer tick, which has not been ment at 992-6&amp;26.
found In established populations
In Ohio. However, one deer tick
was Identified in Butler County
William R. Capehu:tJr,., Syra·
last June.
cuse,
and Candy K. Capehart,
While Rocky Mountain Spotted
Pomer,
oy, have.filed lor a dlssolu·
Fever is common In . Ohio,
tlon
In
the Meigs County Court of
Fletcher· said Lyme DISease Is a
Pleas.
Common
problem mostly for people ex:

necktie and was precented with a
scarlet and gray bowtle which he
put on before meeting the media.
A search committee .studied
applications from about 150 candidates before narrowing tile list
this past weekend. The ' nine
trustees cast a unanimous vote
Tuesday evening to hire ~e.
He Is expected to earn $155,000
Units of the Meigs County . a -year as president of a university that has more than 55,000
Emergericy Medical Service re:
students and regional campuses
sponded to four calls for assistand research faclllltles In seven
ance on Tuesday.
1
other Ohio cities.
At 10: 04 a .m . the Pomeroy unit
was called to Route 33 for
Michael Salser who was taken to
O'Bleness Memorial Hospital.
The Syracuse unit, at 11:22
a.m. went to Chester for John
Myers who was· -transported to
Veterans Memorial Hospital,
and at 4:02 p.m. the unit
responded to a call on Route 33
for Mabel Moore who was taken
to Pleasant Valley Hospital.
The Racine unit transported
Victoria McCoy from the fire
station to O'Bieness Hospital at

.. ;,:·

'

Al-Anon· will meet Thursday at 7
p.m. at theSacredHeartCathollc
Church. For more information
call 1-800-333-5051.
Auxiliary J!leetlnr
The Fraternal Order of Eagles
2171 Auxiliary will meet Tuesday
at 8 p.m. Members are to 'p ay
dues. There will be a potluck and
bring all donations for Patty
Ward's fire shower.
Rummage sale
•
The Fraternal Order of Eagles
2171 Auxiliary will have a rummage sale Saturday through July
7 at 222EastMalnSt.lnPomeroy
from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Trustees to meet
.
The Uutton Township Trustees
wlll meet Monday _at 7:30p.m. In
the Syracuse Municipal
Building.
Smorgasboard dinner
There wlll be a smorgasbord
dinner on Sunday from 'noon. to 2
p.m. at the Lottrldge Comm.unlty
Center, on County Road 53, five
miles west of Coolville. Cost Is $5
for adults and $2.50 for children
·
under 12.

The Daily Sentinei- P&amp;Qe 7

Wednesday, June 27, 1990

oz. 99&lt;
·ce
oz.
69
(
TV Dinner •••••••••••••
Tomato Jul ••••••••
. 10-12

46

••

OIL or WATER

ST ARKIST TUNA
6
•

·:.~z.

2I '$1

Gooll Ootlw At l'fttll't S.,. V.t.
Geed SUII. June 24 thru Sat. June 30

SUNSHINE

20 ll.
lAG

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�Page- 8-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio.

Wednesday, June 27. 1990

..

,OOK

ALL OF OUR
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THREE

Todd Clay, Aaron W!lson, and
John Van Reeth, are Meigs
County residents who will be
performing In the fifth consecutive Ohio University Communi·
vers!ty Band Concert Q!'l Thur.s·
day at 7 p.m. .
.
· ·
.The concert, sponsored by ·
Bank One, w!ll be held on Court
Street In Pomeroy and Is free to
the public. Director for the .
cOncert is Ronald P. Socclarelli.
Joan Wolfe and Millie Midkiff,
co·miUit&amp;en or Ban~ One's
Pomeroy olfiCe, encourage area
~ residents to attend. They suggest
bringing lawn chairs or blankets
for seating. .
.
"We're proud to continue this
summer ·lradltlon, especially
during lh!s sesquicentennial
year," says Mrs. Wolfe. "We're _
looking forward lo a lovely
evening,'' she added.
Commun·lverslty ban.d
members are adult co'tlege and
high school musicians.

Gene Johnson ·Chevrolet·
Oldsmob!le recently ran a conlest for free tickets to see the new.
Tom Cruise movie.. ''Days of
Thunder" as part of their "Days
of Thunder" promotion. The
following people are to pick up
lhelr free tickets at lhe dealer,.
ship at 1616 Eastern Ave. , Gall!·
pol!s: Kenny !son, Vinton; Linda
Lane, Carl Sanders, Bill Qual.ls,
Sharon Clifton, Jill Carter and
Peggy Stewart, all of Gallipolis;
Linda G. Clarke, Letar(, W.Va. ;
Doris Deal, Steve Miller and P .J.
Chapman, all of Polnl Pleasant,
W.Va.; Donald Casey, Bidwell;
Joe Morgan, Pomeroy; and
Roberta Pauley and Judy Nibert,
both of GalllpoUs Ferry, W.Va. ·

ODOT clears
25,000 miks

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GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

Famili
Medicine

•

FOOD BUYS AT
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OSCAR MAYER

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TheOhiQDepartmentofTransportatlon recently coUected 2~5,
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spring Utter pick-up and tree
planllng program - pushing the
program's total over the one
mUI!on mark.
In Its sixth year, the six week
beautlflcallon program created
1,565 jobs for Ohioans a.nd
· cleared 24,926 mUes of roadside
·
throughout the state.
"This is a wln-wln program In
which college students and un· ,
employed workers receive part·
time jobs and motorists travel
along a clean and natural road·
side," said Director Bernard B.
Hurst. "Litter can be hazardous
to our workers and equipment ~
in its absence we save tax
dollars."
Tree seedling totaling 285,050
were also planted by workers
with the help of the Ohio
Department of Natural Resources' Civilian Conservation Cor-ps.
Besides adding to roadside scenery,, trees reduce erosion and
provide. needed cover for
wildlife.

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Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

'

. ClEARANce ·

INCLUDING SWIMWEAR, SHORTS, TANK TOPS,
SUMMER SLEEPWEAR, SHORTSETS and SUMMER ACCESSORIES

By John C. Wolf, D.O.
Aaaocl.-e Professor
ol Family Medicine
Olllo University CoUege
of Osteopathic Medicine

Ohio U. Communiversity Band to play

'

GIRLS', INFANTS' &amp;TOTS'

~edicine...

Family

... By Dr. John C. Wolf

Question: II recently sprained
my ankle. I was at a party and
had had a few drinks, so I decided
to take a cab. As I walked from
the cab to my house I slipped In a
John C. Wolf, D.O.
mud puddle lefl over !rom the
Associate Professor
recent heavy rains we've had. I
of Family Medicine
went to lhe doctor the next day •
iil!d he said I · had a sprained
ankle but without any fractures . lnte11se, you may need to have been damaged. This is what most
·
What Is ~n ankle sprain?
your ankle Immobilized with a people call a broken bone.
Answer: First, let me congrat- spl!nt, ba 0 dage or cast. This
A fracture is usually the resUlt
ulate you for your decision to holds the ankle bones in proper of a twisted ankle or a sharp blow
take the taxi lnslead of driving position so that the ligaments will to lhe ankle. Ankle fractures
Y!IUrself home. I'd much rather heal. In addition to lee packs, typically are quite painful and
be advising you about your aniQe your doctor may have to perform require emergency mec!lcal
sprain than be giving your surgery to repwlr the damage.
treatment. A doclor w!ll have to
· mourning spouse advice about
The application of cold and evaluate whether surgery Is
how to-deal with grief If you had heat to sprains is. often a subjecl necessary to reposition the bones
died In an auto accident as a people find confusing - In part into their proper position. Either
result of driving under the because doctors have changed way, a cas( is usual)Y applied so
ln.Quence,
· the!t advice on tills subject over the ·ankle can heal. .
All~le spr,a ln ·Is the term we.use
the years. Here's the current
·Jn treating many ankle lnjur·
to describe a condition where ' . thinking: during the first 48 les, your doctor will recommeud
some or all of Ihe ligaments In the hours af(er the sprain, Ice Is of yo11 keep the ankle elevated as
_ankle become torn. These liga- some benefit to reduce the much as possible. Usually, this
ments connect bones to other swelling, but don't overdo the Ice. means lying down and keeping
bones in the ankle and help to It should no be used more than 20 · the ankle several Inches above
siablllze the jolnl by holding its minutes out of each hour. Heat on the level of Ihe heart. Four or five
parts together. Although the the Injury may make it feel p!llows placed under the foot will
ligaments are quite strong, they
better after the first two days. often do the · trick. Sometimes,
can · be stressed· beyond their Care must be taken to avoid people don't elevate their arikle
normal limits - causing pain, burning the skin with a hot wa(er high enough. That actually can
swelling, bruising and an unstabottle or heating pad that is too delay healing and lead to the
ble ankle.
.
.
l!ot. As with lee, heal should not accumulation of fluid in the
In a ·mild sprain, only a lew of be used for more than 20 minutes tissues. Remember, you must
the fibers of the 'ligaments are out of .each hour.
elevate the foot above the level of
t~rn, and the .pain may. be
Question: What's the dlfter· the heart. Jusl putting Y!Jur foot
bearable aild walking still p&lt;lss!· ence between an ankle sprain up on-a stoolls no.t enough.
!lie. For this type of sprain, ankle and a fracture?
elevation and an lee pack may be
Answer: Ankle sprains are not
Family Medicine is a weekly
all that's necessary to gei relief:
the same things ·as ankle frac- column. To submit questions;
More serious sprains require a
tures. While a sprain involves an write to John C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio
doctor's attention. It you have Injury to the ligaments that hold University College of OsteopainJured your ankle so badly lhat the bones together, fractures thic Medicine, Grosvenor Hall,
you can't walk or the pain Is
mean the bones themselves have Athens, Ohio 45701.

ONE
'

Pomeroy-Middlepon, Ohio

June 27, 1990

MEIGS RESIDENTS TO PERFORM - Todd Clay, Aaron
Wilson, and John Van Reeth, laft to right, are Meigs County
residents who wlll be perfonnlng In the lllth annual Ohio
UniverSity Communlverslty Band Concert on Thuruday. The
concert Is free of charge to the public.

VALASSIS

COUPON VALUES

VALASSIS

VAN CAMP -

16 OZ. CANS

PORK ~N
BEANS
LIMIT 3 WITH $10.00 PURCHASE

3/89(

HAMBURGER or HOTDOG

~~~~INA8LCOUNT2 I

89 (

REGULAR, MUSTARD
or SOUTHERN STYLE

POTATO.·SALAD

49(
PER LB.

CORNER OF GENERAL
HAmNGER
PARIWAY &amp; PEARL STREO
.DDLEPORT

ft2·3471

i CAIDIW AIFIUA'IID SII'IIIIAim

.

110•s -

.Daily 6 AM-12 Midnight
Sunday I AM·l 0 PM

�Wednesday, June 27, 1990

,Page- 1 0- The Daily Sentinel

Rabbit Romp planned

Feed grain contract .
.adjustments are possible
Producers w!lo were prevented
from planting corn due to flood·
ing will be permittedtowithdraw
their contracts without l!qul·
dated damages !! they meet the
· flooding requirement. acccord·
ing to information from the
Meigs Agriculture and SoU Can·
servation Service.
· This is an option that could be
used if the apreage would go to a
different crop. The producer stUl
has the option to transfer to the

Nearly a thousand rabbits are
expacted to be entered In the
''Moonlight Rabbit Romp", a
rabbit sbow sponsored by the
Southeast Ohio Rabbit Breeders
Association to be staged Saturday night at the Meigs County
Fairgrounds.
Early check·ln time Is 8 p.m.
for Callfomlas, Dutch. HoUand
Mini Lops, Netherland Dwarfs,
New Zealand, and Rex K. For all
other breeds. the checkln time is
10p.m.
..

option- if they are unable or
choose not to plant all of their
permitted acres.
Producers are also reminded
that July 16 Is the final date to
certify grain crops or If no crop Is
planted to certify conserving
crops, such as hay, to protect
their gr'aln bases.
The ASCS Office Is .now located
at 33101 Hiland Road. The phone·
number has remal~ the same,
992·6646.

Overbrook
celebration

People in the news-__,

I

an

Barry trial continues
WASHING'rON ...iUPI)
Mayor Marion Barry must walt
until key prosecution witness
Rasheeda Moore appears at his
drug and perjury trial for the
jury to hear the rest of his
tes tlmony to a jlrand jury in
which he denied u!llng cocaine.
Jurors heard parts of the tape ·
of Barry's January 1989 testlm·
ony ol) TUesday, but defense
lawyer R. Kenneth Mundy said
he was upset the defense would
have to walt until Moore testified
Wednesday to play what he
considers Important parts or the
tape.
"The jury Is hearing right
today what the government
wants it to liear," Mundy said
Tuesday.
"Why should we walt until two'
days after Rasheeda testifies
befo•e we put our stuff In?"
Mundy .said. "I don't want to walt
until she's done testifying before .
we play our portion of the tapes ...
to put in contexl what the ·
government put on today."
Moore, a one-time model and
the mayor's former girlfriend,
lured Barry to the Vista Hotel
where he was arrested Jan. 181n
an FBI-pollee sling operation.
Her testimony will allow

.

•

'
•

Mundy to play the remainder of
the grand jury testimony In
which Barry denied being In·
volved In cocaine with Lewis, one
of his chief accusers.
·
The jucy and lawyers used
headphones Tuesday to listen to
the tapes of Barry's Jan. 19,1989,
grand jury testimony, In which
he allegedly committed three
counts of felony perjury.
On the tapes, Barry characterized his trips to Charles Lewis's
Ramada Inn room the month
before as innocent visits to
"chit-chat."
Lewis, a former city worker
and convicted drug dealer who
reached a plea bargain with
prosecutors, testified last week
that he and Barry shared crack
at the Ramada on Dec.l6, 17,19
.
and 22. 1988.
Barry faces 14. counts, includ·
lng three perjury charges that
accuse him of lying to the grand
jury when he said that he never
knew Lewis was Involved with
drugs or talked to him about
drugs; never gave cocaine to
Lewis ()r received cocaine from
Lewis; and did not receive
cocaine from anyone at the
Ramada in downtown
Washington . .

.

.

KOUNTRY KITCHEN

Located Across lhe Str11t Fr0111 No- National lank
Third and P10rl Str11t In llqcl111

DAILY SPECIALS

OPEN MON. THRU SAT. 1:30AM-8:00PM; SUNDAY 8 AM-3 PM

WEDNESDAY

THIIISDA Y

BBO BEEF RIB .... '4.96 SPAGHETTI .. : ...... •4.86
180 CHICKEN .... '4.76 LASAGNE ........... '4. 86
l'

bankers
come to

the rescue
.NEW YORK (UP!)- Domild
Trump's bankers came to his
rescue with a $20 million bridge
loan that allowed him to meet a
casino bonds payment deadline
and avoid personal
bankrupcty . .
The loan approved TUesday is,
In effect, an installment on a $65
ml!lion .bailout package that will
defer much of Trump's bank debt

for up to five years .
said.·
Deal.'
"It's a great victory ," Trump
The bridge loan wired to
"It's been a great experience
sahl In a telephone Interview . Trump's batik account helped
for me and I'm glad It worked out
"We're really happy. It 's been him meet a midnight TUesday so well," he said. "It 's been a
great for the banks and great for deadline to make a $43 million great day and It's great to have
us."
payment to holders of some this behind us and It's going to be
But the victory came at a price, high-yield " junk bonds" back)ng great to get back to work.''
albeit one most people would one of his Atlantic City casinos.
A bank source said Trump's
gladly pay: As part of the
Had he missed that payment, seven major U.S. creditor banks
agreement, Trump must tighten he would have defaulted on loans and a consortium of about 60
his belt and live on $450,000 a . backed by Trump' s Castle and foreign banks with stakes In his
month, among other restrictions . Probably would have lost that
loans approved tbe bridge loan at
"Remember, I came from casino to creditors. Such a
4 p.m. The bond 1rustee, First
Brooklyn. 1 can live any Illes tyle default would have set off a chain Fidelity Bank of New Jersey,
1 want," the 44-year-old devel- of defaults that could have forced said It had received the overdue
oper told ABC News.
him to seek bankruptcy
payments late In the day.
Meanwhile, The New York protections.
Cooperating In .the Trump
Times reported the deal has a
Trump himself seem exhllar·
rescue mission were Cltlcorp lind
far-more humbling cost. Trump a ted by the marathon negotla· Chase · Manhattan - the two
will have to cede management lions that preceded the bridge largest U.S. banks · - with
control over his inultlbllllon· loan agreement..
Bankers TrllSt, Manufacturers
dollar. ~mpire, at leas I temporar·
"I enjoyed it, actually," said Hanover, and three New Jersey
lly, to his bankers, the newspaper Trump, author of 'The Art of the _!~~~outfits.

Most of the banks had agreed to
the deal by last week, but Chase
and C)tlcorp had to negotiate and
jawbone until hours before the
deadline to persuade the last
foreign banks - West Ger·
many's Dresdner Bank and Societe Generale of France ..:. to
sign on.
Aslu!d about his next moves,
the magnate declined to say If he
would begin to sell off assets to
reduce his debt. "We have five
years," Trump said. "You'll sell
and buy and do other things -It's
a business."
Trump dismissed the notion
that·he might have overextended
·himself by nonstop acquisition of
bl&amp;·ticket "trophy" properties,
airlines and casinos, blaming his
financial position on ·a "credit
crunch" tbe United States.

He warned , "II Inierest rates
aren't allowed to come down
substantially, we are going to
have a deep recession."
The llth·hour • bridge loan
ended 'the crisis, which over the
past foor weeks put Trump Into
nonstop · talks to avoid
Insolvency .
Revenues.trom his lhreeAtlan·
tic City casinos, Manhattan hot·
els Including the prestigious
Plaza on Central Park, the
Trump Shuttle airline and other
properties fell short of his crush·
log obligations.
The clock started ticking June
15, when Trump admitted he
could not come up with $43
million in bond payments. After
notification by the bond trustee,
he had 10
to pay and avoid
legally u~.1aum"1g.

A Juty 4 celebration will be
held at Overbrook Center In
Middleport beginning at noon
with a picnic. Entertainment will
be provided by the Sugar Run
Travelers. There will be turtle
races and wheel chair races.

By WILLIAM C. TROTI'
United Press International
KID GOES HOME: The New Kid in the intensive-care unit
checked out of a Saratoga Springs, N.Y., hospital TUesday and
went hOme to his parents in Boston. Donnie Wahlberg, 20, one of
the New Kids on the Block, will miSs some ofthesinginggroup's
· . shows while lle contin ues to recover from injuries suffered when ·
he fell through a stage trap door (juring a Sunday night
performance. "He's not going to Detroit," said spokeswoman
PattY Webster. ••He's going to Boston to stay at his parent'.s
house and may be back on the tour at the end of the week or the
beginning of next week." Wahlberg's Injuries -a cutonhischln
that needed six stitches and bruises on his arms and chest weren't all that serious but he was put In the Intensive-care unit
so he could have some privacy from the horde of fans who
besieged the hospital with flowers, cards and calls.
BRUCE .AS BILLY: Bruce WIUis wants to play in "Billy
Phelan's Greatest Game." Willls, who has been shooting a role
in "Bonfire of the Vanities," says he's Interested In the role of
Billy, a small-time hustler who gets caught up in a kidnapping,
if someone makes a movie of the book, one ofWIIllamKennedy's
stories about ·his hometown of Albany, N.Y. Kennedy told the
Albany Times Union he was ''happy that Willis Is on record as
)'Ianting to do it" but said Willis probably won't be available
until late fall or next spring. "He's a very fine man a,nd a good
actor and I'm delighted that he even looks a little !ike Billy
Phelan in my imagination," Kennedy said.
RUSHDIE'S CHARITY: The Iranians have condemned
Salman Rushdle to death but nonetheless the author of "The
Satanic Verses" has donated $8,600 to the victims of the
earthquake that devastated Iran. "It's quite clear that at the
moment we should be thinking only of the humanilarian Issue,
which transcends all other discussion, " Rushdle said as lie
made the donation from hiding to a fund organized by a British
newspaper, The Independent. "I wanted to join The
Independent and the hostage families and m;&gt;ny other other
people In their appeal for contributions toward the needs of the
Ir~&gt;nlan earthquake victims." The Indian-born writer went
underground in February 1989 when Ayatollah RUhobh
· Khomelnl put a price on his head because he felt "The Satanic
Verses" was blasphemous to Moslems.
MICHENER'S CHARITY: Author James Michener and his
wife, Marl, have bestowed more money upon the University of
Texas - $:l million In gifts and pledges to encourage writers. ''I
am totally commlted to helping young writers." said Michener,
who donated $1 nlllllon to establish the Texas CenterforWrlier.s
four years ago and earlier contributed $100,000 to the UT Press
Endowment. "Several existing programs have distinguished
records and it would give me enormous satisfaction to see the
Texas Center for Writers at UT become one of !he nation's best.
I am devoting my energies and extra income to that purpose."
Michener bought a home in Austin when he began work on his
novel ''Texas' ' and accepted a lifetime professorship with UT In
1983.
.
GLIMPSES: Sieve~ Spellberg and Andrew Uoyd Webber are .
going to collaborate for. the first time by making an animated
film based on Lloyd Webber's hit musical "Cats." The joint
venture was announced Monday by Tom PoUoc!l, chairman of
the MCA motion pictures group, and Casey Silver, president of
production for Universal Pictures ... "L.A. Law" stars Su111111
Dey and Corbin Bernsen are the hosts on "Campus Rape," a
20-minute film produced by the rape treatment center of a Santa
Monica, Calif., hospital. :rhe film, which will be distributed. to
colleges Ill the fall for their orientation programs, also features
actress Kelly McGillis discussing her. own sexual -assault eight
years ago ... An Atlanta judge ordered Maynard H. "Buzzy"
Jackson 10, the 19-year·old son of Mayor Maynard Jackson, to
complete a jail sentence for shoving his 30-year-old girlfriend to
th~ ground despite
apology. Young Jackson had served only
six days of his 45-day sentence when he asked to be released.
The mayor had refused to pay his son's bond.

Judging will begin .at 9 p .m. All
rabbits must be permanently
tattooed In the left ear. The entry
fee is $2 per animal and $1 per
animal for fur.
Ribbons and trophies ·will be
awarded to In each class with
special awards to go to thebes to!
breed and best opposite sex olthe
sanctioned breeds.
Rabbits will be coming from
breeders not only In Ohio but
several states in the midwest and
east, according -to Sandy Carna·
han, show secretary. Further
Information may be obtained
from Ms. Carnahan at 949'2711!.

Trump's

The Daily Sentinel Page-11

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday. June 27, 1990

.Revival set ·
The Spiritual Faith Church ·a t
Antiquity will hold a jwo night
revival on July 29 and 30 at 7 p.m.
with Rav. Thomas Smith. The
public Is Invited to attend.

ON TOUB -;- Su111111 Bailee wolf of Pomeroy dl.lcus8es tbe annual
European concert lour wltli All Ohio Slate Fair Youth Choir
Director Glenville Davia Thomas. Saoan and tbe choir will leave
.June 28 lor a !1 day concert tour of Wales, Englalld, the
Netberlallds,, France and Swl&amp;zerlalld. She Is the daughter of Gary
and Patricia Wolf of348U State Route 7 and a graduate of Eastern
Wgb School. She Ia a member of Chester United Metholat Chuftlh
and a 10 year member of 4-H.

POMEROY - Vacation Bible
School is going on at the Hillside
Baptisl Church on Route 143
through Friday from 6-8 p.m.
nlght)y. There are classes for
chUdren ·age two through 14. The
pqblic Is invited to atte.nd.

Denise Edwards, age 17, Cav·
bridge, will speak at the Spiritual
Faith Church on Route 338 In
Ant~ulty on Sunday at 7 p.m.
The 'public is invited to &lt;~!tend • ..

MINERSVILLE - The Wild·
wood Garden Club · will meet
Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. a !'the
home of Kathryn Miller.
THURSDAY
TUFPERS PLAINS - The
Tuppers Plains VFW Post 9053
will meet Thursd.ay at 8 p.m.
Members are urged to attend and
meet the new state commander.
S,YRACUSE, -!The Carleton
College · Trustees wlll meet
· Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the
Syracuue . Municipal Building.
Alllmembers are encouraged to
attend.
MIDDLEPORT
The
Wpmen's Fellowship of Meigs
Cgunty Churches of Christ will
meet at the Bradbury Church on
Thursday at 7:30p.m.

Sea Your Friendly Kroger Stare For Detlila

Roush reunion

CHESHffiE . - The Gallla·
Meigs Community Action
Agency will hold Its regularly
scheduled meeting on Thursday
at 5:30p.m. at the Guiding Hand
School in Cheshire. The public is
invited to attend and provide
community input.

The· Susan J. and Leonard
Roush reunion will be held
Sunday at the Star Mill Park In
Racine with a dinner at 12:30
p.m. All family and friends
·
welcome.

Fresh
Broccoli
Bunch

POMEROY - There will be a
planning meeting of the Commii·
tee for the Historical Drama of
Meigs County on Thursday at 7
p.m, In the Pomeroy VIllage Hwll
Auditorium. The public is Invited
··
to attend.

CARPENTER - Mt. Union
Church, located off Route 143 on
FRIDAY
County Road 14 is having vacaRACINE - There will be a
tion bible school through Friday . special song service at the
from 9-11:30 a.m. dally. For Fellowship Church In Racine on
· Information contact Mildred Friday at 7 p.m. Featured
Workman at 742-2185 or Nancy singers w!ll be the Gabriel
White at 698·3411.
Quartet.
RACINE - The Southern Lo•
cal School District will meet at
the high school on Wednesday at
7 p.m.

A Winner In Every
Store Of A Family
Vacation For 4 To
Myrtle Beach, S.C.

Guest speaker

Commun,ity calendar
WEDNESDAY
POMERGY - The Pomeroy
Church of Christ will have bible
school through Friday from 6: 30
p.m. to 8:30p.m. nightly. Dlrec·
tors are Barbara Fields and Pat
Thomws.

..:.

POMEROY - There wllll;lf a
cookout at Rupe' s camp site on
the river bank for members of
Preceptor 13fta Beta Chapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority at 6 p.m.

c

NO ONE BEATS TI-llS PACK BY

D.O. STUDIO.

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IH YOIJH Pt\('f(/\(il

DON'T MISS THIS ONE

SATURDAY
MASON - The See family
reunion will be held Saturday at ,
Route 2, Greer Road, at the home
of the late Earl See. Those
attending should hr'ing a covered·
dish.
·

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on Delivery
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12 Jumbo
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16 'Half Size
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POMEROY - The Bells and
Bows Squares Dance Club will
sponsor a dance om Friday from
8·11 p.m. at the senior citizens
center. Caller will be Dale Eddy
and the dance is open to all
western dancers.

·ET ONE

U.S. Inspected Holly Farms

· F ·e r Parts· lb.

NOW

WILKESVILLE - There will
be a smorgasbord supper on
Saturday from ·s. 7 p.m. aw the
Wilkesville Pythlan Hall In -11\'11·
kesville. The public Is lnvlteil to . '
attend and the cost Is $5 for adults
and $2.50 for children.
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Thursday, June 2 8
Court Street,. _Pomeroy, Ohio
The Public Is Invited To This FREE Concert
.Bring Your Fol~ing Chairs For An Evening of Relaxation
· and Beautiful Sounds.
·

BANKEONE.

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Child ·abuse advisory board
declares national emergency

HOSTED CUB SCOUT OLYMPICS _ Cub

Pack 235 of Chester. David Anderson, pictured,
center front, received the overall performaoce
trophy. Others of the host troop were, top, Adam
Thomas·, bottom (left to right), Steve McCul·
Iough, Anderson ·and Jared Warner.

.,_ Ia 1 p
p k •• h
d th ...clrl 1
e .... c
......u 0 omeroy ac ...9• oste
Cub a--ut Olympics on June 16 -• the Met- High
""v
·
,..

Sebool at the field and track area. About 80 Cub
• .;....~ com...,.•d In the various events The
_v....,_ ,...~
·
tl)vellng trophy lor the outstandlna pack went to

. ks 10
. t he. news
:. tr

'

l

.

.

Teens all wet after stealing van

SHIRLEY. N.Y. (UPI) Three teenagers who stole a van
tor: a joyride leaped from a
bridge willie belnK questioned by
pollee and had to be rescued by
flsjlermen, authorities said.
The trio siDle the van, which
was parked In front of a Shirley
ftortst with Its keys In the
Ignition, and abandoned It Tuesday near tile Smith Point Bridge,
said Offlcer Linda Cicalese, a
spok~woman tor the Suffolk
Co_unty pollee.
.
A pollee officer spotted tile
three boys as they walked across
the bridge, hilt they leaped over
the rail, landing in the Smith
Point Inlet.
The soggy teens were pulled
from the water by two nearby
fisherman, who turned them
over to pollee.
.
Nicholas Slawinski. 17, Robert
Milazzo, 16, and a 15-year-okl
whose name -was not released
were charged with unauthorized
use of ·a motor vehicle, Cicalese
said. ·

·- --

Bear cavorla In Winder
WINDER, Ga. ,( UP!)- What 's
a 1 ~-year-old bear to do when
It's mating season and he's just

WASHINGTON (UP!) - Tile
soaring number of child abuse
andneglectcasesnowrepresents
a " national emergency" and tile
nation's Ineffective response con·
stltuttes a "moral .disaster," a
federal advisory board said
Wednesday.
Despite the natlon's avowed
aim to protect children,
''hundreds of thousands of kids
are starved and abandOned,
burned and severely beaten,
raped and sodomized, berated
and belltlled," said the . U.S.
Advisory Board on Child Abuse
and Neglect In Its first report.
''The board has concluded that
child abuse and neglect In the
United Slates now represents a
, national emergency," acrordlng
to the 15-member panel, which
was established by Congress In
1988.
·
- "Notonlylschlldabusewrong,
but tlie .nation's Jack of an
eftectlve response to It Is wrong.
Neither can be tolerated. To.-"
gether they constitute a moral
disaster," tile board said.
The number of reported cases
of child maltreatment skyrocketed during the last 15 years.
There were an estimated 60.,000
cases In 1974, 1.1 million In 1980

£.

not. up to the task? Well, one
Perestroika paves ·way for
150-pound black bear decided io Soviet Rotary club
.
spend a few days cavorting Yiith . PORTLAND, Ore. (UP!) It's tough to be head of the
the community of Winder.
After two days of trying to ' , Moscow Rotary Club, especially
capture the elusive bear, author!- at lunch time.
"Our problem Is a number of
ties finally cornered him In a
briar thicket Tuesday and shot _ shortages in the Soviet Union.
the animal With a tranquilizer For example, we have trouble
gun.
organizing a good lunch," AlexThe bear, which was tagged in andr Tar.navskl said Tuesday
Fannin County In 1989, promptly while attending his first Interna:
dozed and now will be carried tlonalRotary Convention.
"It's not understandllble for
back to the mountains of northeast Georgia, far away from Westerners, ,b ut they're .real
.
·organizational problems and we
Winder.
State biologist Kent Kammer'
need to solve them," he said.
Wilen the Berlin Wall began to
meyer said the bear likely fled
the mountainS because older-and fall, Rotary Irlternatlonal, the
bigger bears refused to tolerate service club- for business and
him during the mating season.
professional leaders, wasted no
"He's tolerating people a little time making a move into Eastern
more than he should be," Kam- Europe, hoping to promote "In·
mermeyer sal d.
ternatlonal goodwill."
Winder pollee began their
Tarnavskl, president of the
quest to snare the bear about 7 Moscow chapter, came to Parp.m. Sunday, but It was Tuesday tland for the Rotai'lan's 90th
before they completed their task. international convention. He and
"To be honest,J was surprised the presidents of Rotary chapat how quiet he could be," said ters In Budapest, Warsaw and
Police Chief Jimmy Terre\!. Prague were Introduced Tues. 'He'd be rig~t near you and t~e (lay to 20,000 conventioners. All
only way you d know is that you d . were welcomed like they were
see tne topoftb.eweeds moving .' long-lost relatives.

NEW YORK (UP!&gt;_ Imelda
Marcos "has committed no
crime but loving a man for 35
years, raising his children" and
rec.elvlng "lavish gifts," her
attorney argued to a jury In her
federal racketeering trial.
Gerry Spence, the former
Phllllpine first lady's flamboy·
ant country lawyer,ln an lmpas·
stoned plea Tuesday, portrayed
Marros as a wife who was
unfamlllar with her husband's
dealings and who was not a thief.
Marcos, 60, is charged with
fraud and obstruction of justice
for allegedly plotting with her
husband, ousted Philippine Pres·
!dent Ferdinand Marcos, to dlvert more tllan $200 .million
stolen from the treasury In
Manila Into fraudulent real est·
ate and art Investments In New
York and aroun!l tile world.
The trial was expected to
resume Wednesday with closing
arguments for Marcos's co·
defendant, Adnan Khashoggl.
Khash(lggl, 53, at one time one
of the world's richest men and
also allegedly Involved In the
Iran-Contra scandal, is charged
with .obstruction ·of justice and
fraud for allegedly helping the
Marcoses b.l(!e the purchase of
four prime pieces of real estate In

Manhattan.
The jucy was expected to start
deliberations Thursday; after
goverrunent rebuttal and tile
judge's charge on ·the law. · ·
''There Is· no crime In being
wealthy ... spending money,"
Spence said. "There's no crime
In buying jewelry, real estate In
New York. She has committed no
crime but loving a man for 35
years, raising hls children, (recelving) ills lavish gifts.' '
Spence agreed with Charles'
LaBella. an assistant U.S. at !Dr·
. ney prosecuting the case, that
Marcos should not get a sympathy vote because she became
Ill three times during the threemonth trial.
Marcos, in black mourning
clothes, stared at a blank page In
a book In which she had been
writing and sketching during tile
trial. Once, when Spence was
listing Items bought by the
Marcoses, he said "even shoes,"
and Mrs. Marcos looked up and
smiled briefly,
·

. ~sslstanceandoutreach,"Walsb.

sa,l~hls

· l$ especiallY true of
schools Serving our poor child·
ren, who, because of the stresses ,
of poverty on family_and communlty_. life, -a re seven . times
Ilk 1 be 1 1 of b
more
e y to v ct ms a use
and neglect.'~

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finest public instlt\ltions," he said.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPII - E.
"I have been honored to serve the
Gordon Gee, president of the
University
of Colorado, and to enjoy
University of Colorado for tile past
the
support
and friendship of the
five years, was named Tuesday
Board
of
Regents
and the faculty,
night !!!~~slderitofTheOhioState
·
staff,
and
students.
untve-rsn'¥ ;••succealng E:awl~ril
"Moreover,
Colorado's.
business
Jennings.
·
community, the leadership of tile
,Gee, 46, resigned Tuesday afterColorado General · Assembly, and
noon at
and flew fo Columbus
the governor have been lnstrumen·
where met with the trustees.
tal in forging a bright future for the
"I arii privileged to.come toone of
university, and I am personally
this nation's leading public regraeful
to them for their support of
search and land grant Institutions,"
ed.
u catiorin Colorado.
higher
Gee said In a late-night news
"Elizabeth
and I wlll continue to
conference In Columbus. "I cherish
maintain
our
home near Breckenthe challenge and look forward with
ridge
(Colo.)
The University of
great anticipation to wprking with
Colorado
wlll
remain
an important
all commlted to this place. Together
part
of
our
lives,
and
we
wlll follow
We will weave and reweave our
Its
great
achievements
with the
institution fabric for an even
same
commitment
and
affection ·
brighter future."
that
have
guided
us
for
the
past five
'Gee was accompanied by ills wife
years,"
he
said.
Elizabeth and daughter Rebecca.
Gee was born In Vernal, Utah, in
He prefers a bowtle to a necktie and
1944.
He received a bachelor's
was precented with a scarlet and
degree
In history from the Univergr-ay bowtle which he put on before
sity
of
Utah
In 1968 and a law degree
meeting the riiedla.
In
1971
and
doctorate in education
A search committee studied ap·
·
from
Columbia
University In 1972.
plications from about 150 candiAt
Columbia
University,
he was a
dates before narrowing the list this
Fiske
Stone
Scholar
and a
Harlan
past weekend. The nine trustees
·
Kellog
Fellow
.
cast a unanimous vote Tuesday
Gee served as an assistant law
eyenlng to hire Gee.
at the University of Utah In
dean
.He Is expected to earn $155,000 a
1973 and 1974, the became a Judicial
year as· president of a university
Fellow and senior staff assistant In
tliat has more than 55,000 students
the chambers of the ·Chlef Justice of
a!Jd ·reglonai campuses and re·
· the United States .
se,a rch facllllties In seven other
He was associate law dean and.
Ohio cities.
professor of law In the J. Reuben
,Jennings will remain at Ohio
Clark Law School at Brigham
State and will become a finance
Young University from 1975 to 1979.
professor this fall.
In 1981, after serving two years as
"The opportunity to be affiliated
dean
of the law school at West
with one of the nation's leading
VIrginia
University, Gee was elepublic research and land-grand
vated
to
president of that state·
Institutions Is a challenge of considsupported
Institution.
erable appeal," Gee said Tuesday
He
became
the 15th president of
In a s talement released In Boulder,
tile University of Colorado on July 1,
Colo. ·
1985, and helped that Institution
"At the same time, l leave the
become recognized for the quality
University of Colorado with great
of·
Its teaching arid research
regret, tor this university has ·
programs.
clearly become one of the country's

T SALAD ...............................,

(BWS587t)

have had to ratify the plan by the
same margin.
Tuesday's Senate debate took
note both of the constltut~onal
questions at stake and of the
political nature of the Issue.
Sen. Bob Kerrey. D-Neb .. said
that "a wound has opened In
A!llerlca because of tills debate. It
wlll not go away . It Is regretable."
He urged the Issue not be used for
partisan pollti,al purposes.
Senate Democratic leader
George Mitchell or Maine, closing
tile debate for amendment oppo·
nents, said, "I oppose and condemn
the burning of the flag. I find It
offfenstve and Obnoxious .... But I do
not support changing the Constltulion. We can support the American
flag wltb.out~~anglng the American
Constitution.
Mitchell said It would be a "sad
Irony" If a handful of flag burners
got a monument to their cause
written Into the Constitution. The
latest Supreme Court decision was
· based on flag burning cases In
S~~ttle and Washington.
This amendment rescues the
Sill of Rights by correcting the .
Supreme Court's red, white and
blue blunder,". said Senate Republi·
can leader Robert Dole, who declared It was "a hoax" that the
proposal attacked the First Amendment. He argued that flag burning
was ·.:malicious conduct , not
speech as the Supreme Court has
held.
But ~n . . Dan Coats, R-Ind.,
argued, We do care deeplY about
symbols .... The support! have.seen
and heard for such an amendment Is .
undeniable. , .. Mostofalllcanseeit
In · the determination fixed In the
faces of our veterans."
· Before the final vote, the Senate
rejected two attempts to use the
statute approach to the question.
The first would have made it Illegal
to bum a flag if it would cause a
breach of the peace. The second
proposed to remove the flag Issue
from federal court jurisdiction.
In addition, a proposal by Sen.
Joseph Blden. D-Del., to amend tile
Constitution to allow Congress to
pass a special law making it Illegal
to burn, mutilate or trample the flag
was defeated 93-7.

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Business Services

Flag amendment fails .dealership

uc;

mic:oowG"te

$1~.66stomonthly'

iAli fl

~i:::~~J~un:a:2:7:·:,:9:9o::~::::::~~~~:i~-r~~~P~~~-~o~v~Mr·~~~"~~~~~o~hioi.~::~~~~~~~~~~~=~~~~~~~::~~:!,3~ ..

WASHINGTON (UP!) _ The
push for a constitutional amend·
ment to 'bail desecration of the
American flag has ended for the
year In Congress, but the Issue Is
likely to remain a burning topic on
the campaign trail.
·
On Tuesday, the Senate followed
the House in rejecting a proposal to
amend tile Constitution to ban flag
desecration.
The 58-42 tally to · pass the
amendment was nine votes short of
the two-thirds majority needed for
adoption. Seven Republicans joined
35 Democrats In voting against the
amendment, while 20 Democrats
ieamed with 38 Republicans In
voting In favor.
Slnce the House rejected tile plan
first, some Democrats charged tile
two days and four votes tile Senate
devoted to the Issue was a political
exercise led by Republicans to
generate fodder for fall campaigns.
In remarks b.lghllgb.tlng the poll·
ticlzatlon·of the Issue, sen. Edward
Kennedy, D-Mass., said the Senate
was being asl!-ed . to vote for a
constltutlol)al amendment In part
"because of concern over tile antics
of a few obnoxious protesters but
largely because of a partisan
campaign to misuse the flag and
abuse the Constitution for poll tical
advantage."
"Stlrred by fears of sound bites
and 30-second spots. members of
Congress who know better are
e~presslng a willingness to sacrl·
flee the Bill of Rights tor what they
hope will be a benefit In the polls,"
said Kennedy who added, "We
re~pect the flag niost- and protect
It best -1-o when we honor the
freedoms for which It stands."
· . ' The amendment was thrust betore Congress when the Supreme
Court declared flag burning a
protected form of free speech. It
was the second time tills year the
high court Issued such a ruling.
The amendment offered to both
the House and Senate read: "The
Congress and the states· shall have
power to prohibit the physical
desecration of the flag of the United
States."
If Congress had approved the
measure by a two· thirds majority In
each house, three-fourths of the
nation's state legislatures would

forservtceswlthoutmoreresour·
c~s to support training, technical

5HAliP
1-cv. ft.

....

'.

and 2.4 million cases reported
and Implementing a compreb.en·
throughout the 1980s.
slve national program for pre''There are reaSO!JS to believe venting and treating child
that even that number Is· just a maltreatment.
fraction ottb.e actuallncldenceof
-Health and Hum11n Services ·
child abuse and neglect. Surveys Secretary Lollis Sullivan -with
consistently show that large governors, mayors and county
proportions of cases !lf suspected executives - should develop a
child maltre11tment remain unre- process to 'generate plans for
ported," the report said.
communlty,based prevention,
One·. case that became a na- Identification and treatment of
Ilona! symbol or child abuse abuse and neglect.
Involved disbarred, millionaire
-President Bush should ad. NewYorklawyerJoe!Stelnberg, dress the nation and declare the
who was convicted last year of child abuse problem a national
manslaughter In the beating emergency. Federal, state and
death of his Illegally adopted local officials should provide
6-year-old daughter, Lisa.
sufficient funds for child abuse
The board faulted tile existing and neglect efforts.
child protection system as a
-A tederal data collection
poorly coordinated web of agen- system on chUci maltreatment
cles that , If more efficientlY should be established. ·
,
operated, could have prevente&lt;l
-There should ~ minimum
child -abuse tragedies. ·
educational requirements for
T!le advisory board . r.e com- child protec'tlon system
mendeda31·Polntplantocombat caseworkers. ·
maltreatment aild abandonment
Debor!lh Walsh, as_soclate dl·
of children. Steps Include a new rector of the American Federa·
strategy to curb child abuse, a lion of Teachers and an advisory ·
presidential declaration of the ·board member, saki a multi·
crisis and more resoUrces.
disciplinary approach Is necesAmong thereeommendatlons:
saryalidthatschoolscouldplaya
-Congress s_hould direct an
major role If given adequate
appropriate research agency to funding.
determine the cost of developing
"Schools will not be able to
·
} respond to the growing demand

Deiense winds up in Mar0.OS tria
----------------

••

Staten Island couple
.~Degedly killed by
their adopted son
·· NEW YORK ( UPll -The decapl·
tated and mutilated bodies of a
· Staten Island couple were found In
their blood-spattered home Tuesday nlgl!t, and an adopted son apparently Interrupted by another
relative - was arrested. pollee
Sl\ld.
Officer Fred Weiner, a spokes·
man ·for pollee, said detectives
found the torsos of Thomas Camerlengo an!l his wife, Ann, both 73, at
9:01p.m., on the floor of a finished
basement of the private home.
Their heads were missing, and the
elderlY man's legs ·h ad been cut off
as well. '
Their allapted son, 1'Jiomas
Camerlenco, 27, who lived with his
parents, was apparently caught

.

\

during tile grisly dismemberment
by the couple's nephew, who lives
next door, Weiner said.
The nephew's name was not
immediately released.
"The nephew saw some blood,
and there was a brief scuffle,'' S!llld
Weiner, adding that Camerlengo
was captUred by uniformed officers
shortlY after.
Pollee described a gruesome
scene Inside tile couple's comfortable home In the Willow Brook
section of Staten Is land.
. ''The male torso had Its legs cut
off, and one leg was lying nearby.
The other was found outside," said
· Sgt .. Tina Mohrmann, another spokeswoman for pollee.

-ualUNT...,....toiii&lt;1W.
lnveSim&lt;nt t!IK «c ured hy
mOOd hom&lt;. stan i n~' ' S I J.~I i&gt;.
R&lt;.,in )our current joh
CJII D11n Hickman
Toll Fr« 1-XtXl-hJ)-\In71l or
Collect ol ;-)'19- 1711.

/"9
~
.,...,.,

' .Stop In and Set

VIC'S
IODY SHOP

DALUS SAYlE

992-6103
FLATWOODS, ROAD
POMEROY, OHIO

AJ

PAT HIU

i.ciC'iiKiil

,. 11 "'""'"'"" '" ••.,,;,.,, r'"M'~ " " '-'

CHIYSUI-Pl111011111
DODGE
. 399 S. lhlrd, llllldle••rt

SPORT CAIDS
Buy· Sell
Trade

t

367-0511

0

MIDDLEPORT
2 story
brick home on 2 lott ·wijh 4
to 5 bedroom~ 2~ baths,
wood ftoors, N.G.F.A. furnace. Garage, carport and
IS'x25' storage shecl. PRICE
REDUCED $41,900.00.

Call Now To Make
Appointment

30 Sessions-'30
c-. ld. 21
Watch F.- Signs

RlCUtE, OHIO

POWIRWASH
SERVICE

fowth ln.

HARRISONVILLE - One
acre lot, 7 room, 3 to 4 bedroom home, carpeting and
carport $26,00Q.OO.

HENRY E. CLEI.AIID

OUR SALES VOLUME HAS
BEEN GDOD AND WE STILL
HAVE BUYERS LOOKING
FOR MEIGS COUNTY PROPERTY. IF YOU WANT TO
SELL, CALL CLELAND
REALTY TODAY!!!

We Ne.. Llttlngtl
1990 Ohio Housing
l11ue NolO( Available.
FIXED RATE 7.711%
111 yr .. 8.25%
through 30th yr. Call
Cleland Re•hy today.
We will help you find
• qu•lifled home
from our exitting
inventory.

718 N. 2ND AVE.
'MIDDLEPORT
!112·2178 .

"'"'

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE
CENTEI
SELLING

OUT

.
..

FOR SALE

'0

,_

One Of Racine's Nicest Hom t'\
Includes 4 bedrooms, big kitchen, huge
family room, 2 garages, 3 baths, rented
3-room apartment, 40' x 120' farm buildIng, pond, over 40 acres fenced pasture
land and rented mobile home.

. c.u

949-2969

•'

&amp;·31·1 mo.

UNDA'S
PAINnNG

BISSELL
BUILDERS

&amp; co.

CUSTOM IURT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"lt ........-1t Pricts"

Take the pain out of
painting.
_let us do it for you.

PH. 949-2801

111111101 11111101
FREE ESTIMATES

. VERY lfASONAILE
HAVE IEFEifNCES

K and J CONSTRUCTION
GREG BAILEY
•NEW HOMES •SIDING
•GARAGES
•REMODELING
•GENERAL CONTRACTING

'

A Great Combination"Q~ity

or R11. 949·2860

WE

Day or Night

·NO SUNDAY

.

and leasonoblt Prices"

GO THE EmA MIU .....

992-6810

(6141 985-4180
tl-18'!10·1 mo.

EUM HOME

...

FREE
ESTIMATES

•-&amp;a-dfor
Cltll-

~·· ... -IPROFE:SSIIONALI

' ·''~

INSTALLATION

Good Rot•
T.L.C.
27 Yrt. Eap.

up

Refer.,ce.-

992-5042
209 South 4th St.

M"'::~~-~Oh.
~OUNTRY

MICROWAVE
OVJN REPAIR

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE

,_..,,Ohio

Pick Up.
992·5335
lcrou
217

or 915-3561

Palt OHko

It. 33 North of .
1·12·'11-tfn

WANT ADS bring
Vacation Money

992-2

I0/301'891f11

•Mobile lfome

992-7479

IISSBL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION

····-·
·-·ling
•Garfilii
•Camplete

SALES lND SEIVICE

hlri••

Faci•J ...
Sorwlca (1111• F.- MHt
tnl

MIDDLEPOIT
VCI CLINIC

IUINTENANCE I lfPlll

1361 ,.• • s..........

..,•

Stop&amp;Comparo

SER~ICE

Wt can r~ ciild re·

R. L
TRUCKING
C.STD, OliO

Sl'ltlll SPECIAL
CLEAN, LUIE &amp; TESJ

heater cor&amp; Wt can
also acid ltoil and rod
lillt radiators. We also
rtpalr Gas Tlllks.

S1816

PAT HILL FOlD

•GRAVEL
•LIMESTONE
•FILL DIRT....
•ANYTHING

CDI't

992-21
Middleport,

. PI.U_.G
New loGtlert:

161 Nartll S.Coed
••••put, Ohio 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE

••

' l•
0

. •.

. !

985-4422
1-11

•VINYL .SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

. ''

' '

..

;,
,•

NO SUNDAY CAUS
4-1&amp;-18-1111

unw..t....,
,_,.,, 01!.

PARTS ANIJ SERVICE
""' Moot 2 and 4-cycte

NEW- REPAII
Gutter•
Down1pout1
Gutter CIOilning
Pei"tlng
FREE E~mMATES

3 FAMILY YARD
SALE
SAT., JUNE 30
SUN., JULY 1
MON., JULY 2
RAIN OR SHINE

DEXTER ROAD • CO. RD. 10
1 Mile from langsville
FOLLOW SIGNS .

949-2168
W-'tO-I•o. (14.

Sllni&amp;TIEE
TIIMcM
I.OVAL

•LJGHT HAULING
•fiREWOOD

BILL SLACK

992-2269

EVENINGS

.. 12·10

r. .

·'

or Ill. 949-2860

ROOFING

HUM:'HIEY'S .
CUMAR
C01110L

...... c......

~=·.
Rllldentllll •
Commen:llll

' CALL
992-5519

5-ll-'90-l mo.

•

"

PH. 949-2801

Must love animals, work
flexible hours and provide
own transportation.
Call for Interview
992-5427 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
992·6505 5 p.m. • 9 p.m.

'

0

BISSELL
SIDING
....._ CO.

Howanl L WrltoMI

'

'

"Freo Eltlmtll81"

NIIIOfllelllt
IIEW LOGATIOII
DAVE'S SMALl
ENGINE IEPlll

j

..

A"( ALL

5-1·1 mo.

MEIGS COUNTY
HUMANE AGENT
NEEDED

',

.

Fr• Edlmat•
915 ...473
667-6179

rad111ton and

...... fr•Moi--11 ..1

OPEN: MON.-FRI.
10 A.M.-8 P.M.
Or By Appointment

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

.

' •'

1-31·1 rna.

(614) 992·7843

BULLETIN BOARD

•

MIDDUPOH

laws From Post Office
.POIIIIOT, OliO ·

MOBILE
HOME PARK
•Mobile Home!'
Rental•
•Lot•A•n\1111

..

788 •• 2nd

992-5335 or '15'3561

ALUIAIES
Iring It In Or We

.P..f!!ll

SEARS

KEN'S APPliANCE
SERVICE

"lOW

. 992·6191
Jean Trusseii ... 992·266C
Mae Hupp ........ 949·2257
Jo Hill ............985-4466
Office.............. 992·2259

. ALBANY, OHIO: At. 110. S.~ . 143
NEW HOURS:
POMEROY: 9 •.m.-7 p.m. 7 Day•
ALBANY: 10 •.m.-6 p.m. 6 Days, Ctoled Suridw,o
PAYING AS OF TODAY. MAY 29. 1990
#1
90¢ per lb.;
Cans, 35¢ per lb.

Sat. 9-5
Claoed $yn.

POIEROY PIKE - Focty·ooe

ANTIQUITY - One story
home with 3 bedrooms and
coallurnace. Would make a
great summer place, has 3
lott including river lrontage. $9,900.00. PRICE RE. DUCEO.

-nt.."''"""jr~;

HO•s: • .., t-7

acres plus a 1980 Uberty mo-

POMEROY - Everything
Goes - All stock &amp; equipment. building and RTound.
I double hump greenhouse.
ASK FOR DETAILS.

1

MOVING!

POIEROY - PRICE REDUCED - This handicapped accessible home,
ramp ways, special floor
coverinl!. specia( bath fi1·
turet etc., all designed '!fith
the handicapped in mind. 3
bedrooms. fireplace. basemenllarge modern kitchen.
$34,900.00.

bile home. Beautilul view, 2
car g1rage, porch on 3sides, 3
storage buidings, and bll'n. 2
good sized bedrooms, bay
window, equipped kitchen.
Real privacy,. PRIC£ REDUCED $32,000.00.

OFFEIS 2 LOCAnGNS TO SOYI 101•••
POMEROY, OHIO: Rt. 7. S.R. 143

OPBIINO SOON
SPECIAL

=::;

Til-COUNTY IECYCUNG

FOIEYR IIONZ
TANNING
949-2794

•

992-6421

~::;;:;::;:;;_:;~;;=;;;;;:5·;1~6·';90;·1;:mo:
· ::·

5-21·10-1

E./Mir.W
POMEROY,O.
.,2·2259 . .
REEDSVILLE
- Would
make aROOd hunting lodge for
hunters. 23 acres w~h 2 mobile oomes. 3 to 4 bedroomt
I bath, carpetinJ wood·
burner &amp; F.A.B.G. fieal. With
extra hookup for cam~.
$18,90().00.

..

•
•
•

•

r--~A~N~GI~E'~S---. ._,;

GREENHOUSE

Rutland I I I 554 ·

Paulin' 1 HIU lletw""

Rt.

••
OPDI MIIN.-SlT.IO te 5
STilWR.OWDS: Dw.t '; :
I Td; 1'-lS AlSSo .. •
1'W! I Whltr, FUSOU,
•
USIIITS, IIE.IS ~ • l
1101(.

•I
'•

•

614-742-2772

sa

11110.

,,.•.

fOIEVO IIONZ .. • •'

.

MOW

CeiiN-

.....

Appolntnwd

949·1794
30 S.lli••-•30
Ce.IIL II
IACINI,

~

•' I
\

....&gt;'....
•

-·

• ~'t.

...

...• .
. ..

-~
....,..,..,
~'

.....c::ro •. l
•·21·' ... 1

r(

..

�LAFF·A-DAY

Announcements

44

32 Mobile Homes
tor Sale ·

27, 1990

Wednesday, June

Ohio

Page- 14- The Daily Sentinel

Apanment
tor Rent

vans a 4 WD'a

73

KIT ' N' CARL\'LE®by Larry Wriabt

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

,..I.'AtJT u~~ IT~
l'.¥. FOU.OWI~TH~~'1

3 Announcement&amp;

:..
·"""':. - ....r~
ieiollonohlpo,
- .,

MAIJW. VJ/o. 'T'...

GOLD

CREDIT

flbooallsl ~ 101 muoll IO
• 1'14 •• ISOf
IIIII. fa!!t1
or24..-.

CARD

Vlulllulei"Caa'd praniMd, no

::.:.~o=~=- -·
GOLD

CREDIT

~

1:00 ()) llardCII .. And

IICCDI'IIIIIII Q

ea

-

-·

~-. CA, .... ~ llol. ·~

IZINew8

lnalde The fiQA Tour
ID Degranl High Michelle
finds her father Impossible to
live with, and wants to move.
(!)

Llll. very loW
·-

~L
111112. 1,111111 · ~­
cotlelll oOnclllon. $1110. 114-411\2•

0...,

Nicely lurnlllhod mobil homo, 1
mite below town, owwtooklna

~~~

!lllleo, lUll .... 1124.

0

f

low to form fou r ~ mple -d1.

.(J) • • • (1) 91

1-

GIY811WBY

Rearrange '-tters of the
0 four
ocrambled word• b.

EVENINO

-llonlllllll 100 Good ~.
suo.oo
......,.

No T-ooiftll on Gerold
Hodgoo tond on S.ncl Hill Rood.

'::~:~:~' s~~o\l~-l££~s·

_ _ _ _....:;;._;;;; loolltoil ~, CLAY I . I'OILAN

WED .. JUNE 27 •

74

CARD

- r d P!l!illood no
_ ...... depaolt 1-..atel. co. lillie 41.110 IM.

4.

Television
Viewing
•

-~~
Bol 1043, Qol.
llpolla,
011
.

141, CllUCK .• JUST TlolOU61-1T
. I'D DROP 8'1', AND LET 'lOU
KNOW t'M ALL fi.IROU61-1
WITI-I SliMMER SCIIOOL ...

~ Rucllng Rainbow E;1

AiiNT MARION WAS

l DIDN'T KNOW
'{OU I-lAD SEEN
GOIN6 TO SVA\ir&gt;\ERI
SCIIOOL ..

RIGili.. NEIJER MARR'(

tDIID AndY Grllfl1h

AMUSICIAN AND N~V~K I
ANSWER TilE VV~II&lt;. .. I

IIJHe·....

ll))

I
.

Wotld Todly

0 Cllarlel In Charge
1:05 (I) ......, HHibiUiea
1:30 e (J) rB NBC Nlghlli Hewa

1.-L.....JL......I-.1-

3-2·1 Cantact E;l

Auto Pan••

:::7:7 .. ..-.-Hal...

AceeBBOrlea
Orond Prix -loo

-lor-·-«1110f11h.

Tx20' ftllbocl

:

wllh ...
Aloo - ·All_..,.,..
CIH oftor 2:00 p.m., -77S-

Gallipolis

81ooplng
trollor-

&amp; VICinity

-.MioonWV.

'=A~Ll~Y::-ord~S.;_,ioe:...:.:;M;;.uot~lle:-:P:-old:-:-:-ln

.

46 Space tor Rent

. Advlnce. DEADUNE: 2:00 p.m.

: till doy boloN till tel le to MI.
, Sundly odMion • 2:00 p.m.
Friday. - y odHion • 2:1!0
I p.m. Sltllrdoy.

Rentals

R-:13,Country
- · -oiP_..,.
.......
~. Nl)lolo, porto, ..... Coli

114-1112·111'111.

0.-'• Vorloty I
• Shoj&gt;, 1411 Elotom

!

fumHyr11
A... Buy,
• SOIIIJid Tr8cll • .._ pri-. 114-

.

....
.,..,.-::&amp;l:.ra•ahaft
.

011 .. ...,.. In otock

.... -

.,..- . - -

--··

:-om

::NMII., Q•!lp 11. N1w • UMd

IUmMuro, ~::...

...

I

. (I))

ooll, tr.do, I:GO.a:GO
S.LtiU ......

_,a,

-

!!.... .!!!~'!'. ..

63

Hoot......

Merchandrse
HoU11811Qid

Pomeroy,

Goods

Middleport
&amp; VICinity

o- I

. . - ZZ3 r1t1o -

3"

::r-1~···~

53

Antiques

.._
... - a l a ....,
LivM'
%

------- YfJ, :r. HAve .f'Trc#CY luN$·
~-- wtt.J. ;you &amp;trrt-P.
"'

• . Solurdly........ · .., ....
•, .., ohlnl. ,...,. Sr 7 p : Ohio. ht 1n ftY8 Point• and
Chollw•.

: SalurdoJ.
lloln ... -ah
· ~rldayo
onc1 Bib. a•

1231114

--I!Wtlng
-..a

~n-.
p.m. on Frldttr-

2322.

alai •

~

=-""L:="'
much;--- ;1.

~

~
~

;

Alhono "cn=L~--------

..r .... All

111 p.m. wllh _

};

79 . C8mpera &amp;
Motor Homel

~-1.7

111. C,~.l laM~......
111, .., oona.lned lnelde

I

.....

hoy

..... tiOii\a .._. _ , J -

on-. o-r

- • to ,..nd

81

-3410

r'A.~:=~·
I

Home

71 Auto• tor Sale

!lll!uolloy-Juno 30.
7 Nailb. Turn · light ot
Wlllpplo- 1 - . . . - .

c-.

~

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

1111
11MGI244.

LAlly 10 .... lor 111011111 ~
laclj, Rl. , ............. ..
q.nd,I14UNtlt.

"*"' ....

f:.::!_lnllGood
lor

F---Col-1·
IIGBn I
llnj.

or

.•

R£(Cr(lltJG C£mt.R

U.-llllllollll lllalllno ~
,. . LoCII ....... tumllt.d.
dey

•-• - -

CD lllcliard Tucker Opere
Gala Brig~ Ninon host• the
13th annual Richard Tucker
gala recorded In Lincoln
Center's Avery Fisher Hall.

In my

,..... tow. 304:

(1 :001

o..r notcl truoll clrMro, min~
mum a yro - ' - • 23 yro or
older, homt · • I .-._ cleut
!l!tvlng......., ak lor Lonnie or

2"1

_llondj~.

llla-6:111 llflor 7 p.m. • - • -

Junk con

wtlh · or

wtlhout

- - · CillO
Rlchl!nl
!kindly
plollo.Georgo-no
1'14,U&amp;o

110111.

Cklllo
Antlq,. or new. Excellen1 condttlon only. Prompt "'ymont. 114-

182-eeet

Mlgno,

W!lnlod Hondo Voe5
PhoniiDH71-46111.

Employment Serv1ces
11

Help Wanted

mother. Stereo. E;l
It~:;~• .ooog1e Howur,
(f) Aniettcan l'fllyltouM Till&amp;
two-perSOn play Ia about a

em

~~hiSr

lifted. Pclllllono lncluclo -

rallolal'), Uft1'880Und1 Ruclur
modlctnL Contaot ~~~­
~:: Pll., WV 304-171-4340.

31 Homes for Sale
Z

bed-,

Weldl11g "-•m o1 T!~niJ
-lloilal
Oeto You TINt
SkilL Welcloiw oro hlahly eld~
led workerw. Rec.lve h tnlrts
Ina to IIIII highly-old~
loil-ln
_,....,
... ,..,.

Be-_

Clll the Atkin

E+~e•tiol•

Roonng

-

OIHI' Aoatl, tuff

equl=

ElWill

---.
____ .........
MoNOn

11111

- . FuiiJ

.....

Codllloc

..............~·--''!!'! -~~'".!!... low

Iouth "-h, lolldcl'-t (nMr
Molae Jr. High). $31,000. 114-

d1111 01c11 CUllom Cruller,
loeded, ............ """' good,

11:1'7323.

l3c--:ol-r.-ro"n'-c h-,-IIH-_-tur-,_--, -CA,
pnge, tun bAHment. Price
- - · 1--0310 or 3181112.

000- -

lnlorlor.

cle- beginning July •h. You
"" ........ "' ....... ftnan.
old to llllp pey lor JOUr
Col and uk - . t ooir
lid-.

=:,-:.':..com:::v-:::-

1111.8802.
'
S.pllo Tonk PUftllllna tiiOL.9illla
Ca. RON EVANS ENTERPN!SU
Jlobon, OH 1.a.637-IIZI. r'

'

I GOT A CHECKER
, GAMe ON WtTH
L.UKEY TONIGHT IF
HIS WIFE WILL

HERE HI
CDMES

NDWII

LET HIM OUT

·

11om.

II ·Zoa,-m,--

Cl~er'•Pit!mbl!1g

=-

.....

OOVE-ENT SEIZED ..nlola
, _ .,... l'oriiL .._ .....

ElectriCIII •

W I - , lllr. l\000
T~- Take
-

m 441 4411

Your-. ( 1 ) - Ext.
~--· .
Rlnoh~U-3«4

7-

- PR,
LR,..1
$41,ooo...
.... 112 b!!lh.
32 Mobile Homes

Two
olllfwnllllillt lrMI
ten Rot T......... 104-11111111

tor sale
1.2 ...... 2 lrel-. wll loll
logathlr 01 laplllltO. tM,OOO «

PAI&amp;ICBI
Instruments
COncMt Cklolltr Tllnlna. How

mUe ollor.l14 441 1111.
121SO mobile homo wllh 11110 ·

lend. - ·
loon en;! lrtlllt. 30W71-7111.
12xSO will! ,_, -lion. 3
ICrM m4. WHI OOill'dl r llinct
iclciHion U -

Ailll . . alloul"ollll". .

_ , . . . 114-lU.ftMo"'tlnga.

- aood
12144,
rop11lra
nu4•'·
comp- ...
, _ , 304-1711-iG'aa , ••:GO Pll.

1m ,..,.._ Wll...,.-

114 ... 2111.

1171 12d0. 2

.

0

~~ec~...... Flilr

aMpe, wtth IPPiw
• ate~
t14-246-&amp;llll nt-m doyo oi

114-1112·2247 -~-

=•

tltl
Jill ........
181IOUildl
..........

"I wonder why lhey never gave him the
palent on his Immortality potion."

.v

82

. andHootlng
Pourlh end Pine
. O.lllpolll Dlllo
.... 4tl 'JIIII
I

mlleo.

WITH A
CLASSIFIED AD

12:001 s -.
aD He!IIWIIIe Now
0 MOVII!: On Tile
Range (1:00)
9:30 G (J) IZI Dear John John
feels jealous when Kate
starts daUng his father. (RI
(0:301 Stereo. E;l
e a e (I) IINwlller Place
Matthew helps a senaltlve,
withdrawn young•'- to
overcome hla lear. Stereo. g
10:00 (J) 700 Club With Pat
AGblitlan

Sam leapa Into the Hf41 or an
Illinois det)ay. (RI Stereo. E;1
8111 II.(I) Cltlria llaclt
Siareo. Q
CD Na-111111
9 eiiJl 41 H014rt CBS

.

Matchmaker can help you to under·
stand what to do to make the relallonSltlpworlc. MIIIS21oMatchmlker,P.O,
Boa 81428, Clav.llltd, OH 44101-3428.

son you m1gn1 De &amp;Die to make some·
thing erduous look easy today Is be·
cause you'U have aome valuable pasl
. . . , . , _ upon which to draw lhal
LIO ( - D-Auf, II) Prudencl Ia othlfl may l!lck. ' ,
called tor today In tile IMMgiiMIII ol 'AQUAIIIII (-.IH'elt. 18) There Is a
BERNICE
yoUr , _ H ,au:,. lhOpplng and . !*lllilllty you 1111¥ racelve now or In the
BEDEOSOL
can't
lind wl*t you WMt at lila right WfY ...,. future -'h!ng of worth
•
price, lleep - - , . until you c.ri.
tllat 1181 lOng beert due you. Hpertalna
VIIGO (AIIIJ. D-llpt.ll) Tlla typ1a ol 'to IOIMihlng you've condHIOned yourIOGIII ~ lhat .,. likely to bl lila ... not to expect.
,
moll pleMwalllltor you today will bl f!IBCIB (PaiL 20 Ml IIIlO) Oblervl·
thOle lhat IN tone down a bH, tiona you make today regarding lila true'
where IWIY from the mllddlng crowds mot!Wi o1 other8 could bl remarkably
with a wlllact frlllnda.
utute. HoweVer, It's bM1 to kiMIP what
.·.
..-A (lepl, D-Oot. 21) Today you're you aunniH to youl'lfll.
·
;,
likely to 1111 rltflhodlealln prooecl~ra 11 · ARII• (llarwiii1·AIIrtl11) Condition•
well 11 conac*"IOUJI abOUt your re- partllnlng to elgnlflcanll- contlntll
aponalbllltlel. ThiN lln't ~ Chanoe j'o '.rtnd In your fa- aglln today. KIMIP
ll.ne-.
yciu'R nealact or oonlu• your ptlolltlel. , moving In 1 dlractlon wMre the ellorta
.,
sCOIIPIO (Oet. M Nov. II) It bJI. lyou expend wiN gentrlta !he moat
P•tlence will bJI required In lhe ,_, "-youiOIIICCIItewltllyourmore aoocl.
.
alleadlor endeavan or .... ji.1111 you ambltiOua lrtandl today • opp_.j to rfAUIIUI (April • ..., 10) In ~IIIIOP
hope will lead you to more lbundant e1r- thOle who are more tmiOioul. Compan- 111111tt. today where you 1teln a pOIItlon
cum._ Your PIOQI- Sltoukl 1111· 10111 will hive aatrong lnlltllnce on the to 1 1 IUihortty, ·1111 cognlra.ll ol
atelldy, but It may not bl epeac~y.
outcome !JI_,IS.
the ltlllttla of lhe 0111n. U• a ftrm
CAIICIII (oiUIIe .,......., II) Your bJ1. IACIITTAIIIUB (IIOW. 21 Dec. 111 You hind, but 11G1 a '*'ICIIICI 1111.
lll'lllor wiiiMm you lila,.....,.. of your PO IIlli a unique attrtllute today lor Qlldll CIIBJ 11 J
. , Flnilnclll
.-n today"~ know IUCIIy wheN making rnuc1t lrom m •a- Circum· · .corodllflll•toetrllllll arJhl I el of lila
• you ltalld• Pllllllelll lllllttlla. .. _ ' ~ From .... CI'IIINII that Of'*' fllniiW llllllllilrl 110111111 111111011 to llllp
what you have tO ~ayhallllartngoflln- 1g11ore. you might IMI able to bllce a full · '*~~lila ltOiitlllolcl budglllntllct. lx·
eerily and Iouth. Trying to pa1c11 up 1 •oar.
·
captlonl might- the COOkie jar to

1•

bi'Oken rontance?_ The Altro-GriPfll CAJIIIICORN (Die. ?J-.Ian. 11)rhe rea-

,,

crumble.

N•

.J4 2

out

tAJ764

+Ata 42

.J

EAST

WEST
.AK9&amp;5

'

Although South reaily bad nothing
extra lor his .jump rebid of two no' trurnp, be thought he bad the right val·
.ues .to go on when responder-North Invited slarn. North had shown !I
diamond· suit and strong support In
clubs, and had cue-bid a spade control.
South liked having only K·5 of dia·
moods, plus the top club cards (K-Q-J),
so be bid sill. Then, to show that be
could play the cards u well as he bid
them, he made an overtrick on a crilaCJ'OIIS

f.!'l·ll

squeeze.

Declarer ruffed the king of spades
lead in dummy, played K·A of ella·
monda and ruffed a diamond with his
jack of clubs. This was a necessary uri·
blockln1 play just in case West bad
started with 10-x·x·x in the trump suit.
He then played K-Q and ace of clubs.
The two 10od diamonds were cuhed,
od which South discarded a heart and a
spade, leaving him with Q-1 of spades
and A·K alone in hearts. Tile dummy
had J-4-2 of hearts and the laat'trump.
What could Weat bold? U he came
down to A·9 of 1J18des and only Q-10 Q!

10 43
• • 73
• Q 10 3
+1063

.Q1095
• 982

+7

.SOUTH
.QBH
.AKS
tK5
.KQJ5

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: South

s....
I+

Welt

,.

Norllt

Eul

Pass
It
Pass 3+
Pass 3•
Pass
~•
All pass

3.

2NT

3N1

Paa
Paa
Paa •
Paa

Opening lead: • K
~-..,..,......,...,.-------_;~

hearts~ .declarer would cash A·)(. of
hearts, dropping the queen. U he lf.ept
the Q-10-9 of hearll and the lone s()ldf
ace, declarer would come to tile bear/
ace, ruff out the ace of spades, and re
turn to his band with tbe otber bigl
heart to 9CC!re the 13th trick with thl
spade queen.

·cROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
38 Untied,
1 Stallone
as laces
film
39 Gaelic
$ Surrealist 40 Coward
painter
Gorbachev's
9 Frankfurt's negative

4'

, ' river
DOWN
.. 10 Rousseau 1 Loving
work
2 Simpleton

12 Desirable 3 Spy's
13 Mexican
task
slate
4 Three
11 Rub out 26 Bucolic
15 June
In Roma 14 Vase
27 Horse type
beetle
5 Forsake
handle
29 Reagan
18 VIa
8 Love.
16 Sleigh
Cabinet
17 Mover:s
In Napoli 1.9 lack
member
vehicle
7 Waterfall 22 Stare
30 Succinct
18 Term of
(Scot.)
24 Fancy Dan34 Convene
office ·
8 Old radio 25 Melrlc
36 Card game
20 Written
program
weight
37 Biddy
letter
.21 Boy Seoul's
llem
1.--1--1--1-22 Earth
goddess
23 "Falstaff"

rcile

24 Sire's male
25 Scanning

pattern

·21 Little

Susanna
28 Country
(Lat.) ·
29 Humble
31 Art (lat.)
32 Before
33 Egyptian
deity
35 Novelist,
Norman37 Present

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES- Here'• how to wort It:

1127

explores thllnue of

ceniOrahlp.
•liD New TWIIglll z-·
(I)) Evening N OMen
10:05 (I) MOYII: Tlla Lelt·Handed
Qun (2:151
10:30CD Artleta Of Amat1ca
(!) ..... Adrian: Tilt Molher

T-OIIIcnntDII An
inaplratlonal portrait ol Siller
Adrian lllrratt and her work
to help Olhera In her
community of Scranton,

Penna=··•

eo

........
o=•=

11tow

Ill CIOOk • Clla•

11:00()) ......

e&lt;Jl • • •em
eo,.,.... ....

iiJ

•

V1oe Crockatl

~ 1111 aon; Tubbl,...
tor .... willow of • Clruglord.
e Con• nit• Willi btnalt
1D Colli till' Ten1aM
11:30 (J) IICMII 11w C. II I

• 2. . . . CI:OOI

e&lt;Jl ...... or c:.atno.

(J)

NORTH

By Jamea Jaeoby

Larry King Llvel

IIJ MOVIE: CuriOIItr Kllla

Rc4ory or oebll tool clrllllng.

Plumbing a
Heathfg

-

mYOUR POCKET

=

ll))

G (J) IZI Otlalllulll Leap

C!pllol:tl,
1'144··---....

JOlt DOllARS

Tllllar

.,.-=:!LI,IIaok
....tpm.with-

o t t - to !Ogl-lor

IATIIRIO DUSt

!lfcllnl,

St:IOO.f1WIII.1tl4.

Center

"SIITRACT.. THOSE n.l

and

corporate llkeovere Is a
back~nd lor murder. (R)
Stereo. g

Orand Prix 11,1100. 21' loll roo1o iielnttcl. Froo H l l ~ .. mpor 11,100. :104- Frill ll'l!b, 304-7D-1111. .
·.

RIOipliOitiol · DIIIIM: - n l , 2 loti~ lo IllTyping, Llghl Bookk11plng • -~ :104-271or 304aGmpuiM Op. 114 441 3543 Aak 111-'~o~~~tw.
lor Torry
3 bo-..., fMM!11 dock. 171
Sklllo get you jobo. Tho Aclul

and an IICII'IIss.

9 ..~~• . , Jalla And Tlla
F - Old money and

Real Estate

1111 l'ord - r .:'JI no.

r

Reggie and Mitchell com()lte

to buy a preHntlor their

'1'01-l 0\N Hei..P ME
' Willi, l'EDD'(.. .

RADIOI.OOY TECHS. "ART _.

wllh lllriD or cory
pond8. or a.IIM. Call collect 21a.

8:00 8 (J) 1Z1 8lnQir And Sane

r'v&amp;. GOT A ~~W-­

1111.

Ao-

aOnBtqa

MORK

gllto, - · F!M ln. F,_
ouoollo&amp;
FIW
lralnlng. No ool·
locitl11g or cloiJnry. AIIO booking
po!lloe. ClllllondJ hJ.247.307'1.
POITAL JOII $11,312-487,
121/Vr. hlrina. CoN (11 UMtiOO Ext. I4Be2 for cunwll

Wanted to Buy

n-•

An art
history professor decides to
leam to drive. Q
91 •a Nonnal Ule Q
(!) Trying

proll. Own
Woot Yltalnla. 30 _ . a· -Po!l~llno
De!lonoo. 1ar JOU!' •
ean .._ 7110. FIM gift. A-. 1114-1112·
~ Cillo 3CJ4.137.2271 or
Jupor- 3CJ4.137.2121.
Po!l~lme job. Oo!!w.o-lei"J8,

9

· 8:05 (I) MOVII!: Tell Tlllm Willie
loJ II H. . (PG) (2:00)
.
1:30 (!) Mlljar Lugue IIHbJIII
~(I) Head Of The ·

e

~ ~ IM(I"AL./.IA.ASil&lt;/.1 FOOD J.

nlghl.

77S.a2441.

c.oto.. ~-• . lluf.
-.
wv. ••
'Ohio .....

Comedy

liJ Murder, lhe Willie A
Very Good Year For Murder
a eon-11on With 01nen
0 MOVII: Pride Of Tile .
Ptalna (t :001

WATERPRDOFINO

~

IZI UniCIIYIId
Myalerlle A report Of

OPriiUHe•a

IIARMINT

402 llg Block.

e (J)

II]) Wlleribllrg: A Hero'l
S1ory (PI ·2 Of 2) (2:001 E;l

21.......,

Ylrd -

7:35 (I) lulord And Bon
1:00 (J) MOVIE: Tlla Cortlcan

i

Tran sportatiOn

Ylrd ulo. - - Wlpple Rood.
I'M ......... JUne 21 llld

IDNitlllfCourt,

humorous Insights Into the
events of the day. Stereo.
91 e a Tille Ia Amarloa,
Chlille Blown, Pl'l 4 (0:301

_,__ _ _ _..:,._ __

Click, 304- -

II)"C!Mellle

(!)

Serv1ces
bale

IZI oleoplfdWI Q
IIJM*A'I"H
,

roSpecialMark
Ru1HII
Russell oilers

Good
-·
""· You ploll up.
S
t . -...
1~1411.

-

I

ea

5t e

. _.

~..,...,,~.

• . e• (I)
8 'lntertalnMnt Tonight
,._.1 1'111tlly

sightlngs of a large aquatic
monster In Canada. (RI
Stereo. Q
(!) Mlljar LUQtll IIUbal
Mqazlne
8
(I) Qrowl!1g Pain• .,

or 304-f78.1 ....

Hay&amp;Graln

7:05 (I)...,.. • •
7:3o • (J) 1'111tiiJ l'llld
(!) Home Run Derby Eddie '
t./loittMwa vs Henry Aaron

........ (2:001

Q

ram drltd. . - 1n\r.M 1nd
gooo1 11m. t~.'!.'l'· :1414 ... 3ao.

~

· - · Counly Rood
.' .......
J2•nd21.AIIdQ'
am,
. ...........
nl
- ..........

Tn!•olhoi'
-lo
..... 31'11.....
... -

lt."1:11a.~~':-J::

Houro: II.T.W. 10:00 Lm. to 1:00
P:..Z
Suncllr 1:00 to 1:00 p.m.
•
·2121.
T~ pold. Old tumn ...
cu
qulfto,
orlonlo~
polntlnal, Iori, or on!IN lillie
ooll ooiTIOt 3041213271, or 304-

llmlly ,.... • ... .FrkiiY.

l"fOT $If PoWN,
THEN.

~

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

MH~IIUIL 114 IN

1124 I. Mlln 11-, Pomonoy.

wv

Llvllltock

II 4

Buy or HR. Rlvorlno Anliquu,

~.

Mualc R- VIdeo

1D A1111ott And Coltello

'"t'

•...

one more

MonerUne

iiJ Mltlllll VIce Tubbs wanls .
to prove hll Old New York
cop Plotner Ia clean. Stereo,

·a

2 !!¥!- .. , •. ~·. - "

-

Squee~ing

IZI WIIMI Of

.liD Night Court

--111. -··

_

-~_yard

po!te $1100. I14-24UII1. ·

" " - · 304 4111727:

Finl

IIII&lt;M. _ . , -

v.ry .._ a

Trll--

IIIUI

eC

I

BRIDGE

Fortune

!O)Ocii!I-TO-IIIId T7 Aul ·
'•
«lllqUI!O -~~ wsco, Z24C =~~.;.;:.;o;_;R;_;.e::pa:;:;:.lr:.........,.,.-

: liridgo In
Frlcloy llld
•, ..
SOturdoy.
·
rol..r, achooi.U. c ........
•

.' •

to

i 1ca....OW a ...,_,ra. King
I (J) PM Magazine.
(!) lportiCent8f
• a IIIII* Edlllan
'CD (f) MicHell Lehrer
Ill

lor

No-THI- 1N4 F«d 1'W!lta!boll, ..,.. ol!1gle.l14-448- 1'le.
~j 1171 A8ll r..-. Wootom Uillty bocllor ahort ..... ""~
...1.
I
UQO. 1~ 2 b1drocm,
""" eoo .....tlon Dloilrtot w11 Ford.
Iuddy mciblle Homo, 14110. 114_ . . , - thrMh July 112•'M71.
•
11, 1MO.I I II.I rvlng ~ ~ht to

· Clolhlo, top;

1314th.
uolllpollo.
Northup. _ _

-

IIU!N

1111

1

' ~~:=-:-c=:::---:-­

1 tumM'"~

bra.....

u1e,

Complete the chuckle quoted
~Y filling in· the miu ing words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

SCIAM I.ITS ANSWEIS
. Qui~r - Knack- Niece - Marshy - CHAIR
· Granny says that people who are discontented with
what they have in this world will never find an easy
. CHAIR.
,.--..;...·~~-----.

-~
• (I) c....m Affair

IIUdgol ~a -..._ 30 do_p
AI
rypoe,
Jl!n
..
-~~"';.r~4:~,n·
to
1
_
,
,
_
,
1!11
. . . . Qalll
j
I WAIN
IIM-24WI77 or 114WCTION I FURNITURE. · 12 ,_....
--auoodllnn
a lm.,-....
Buy,
Fur-

, 44W221.

. ; Juno 21, -

-

lrollor1 -

Q

llflllo UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE lETtERS
V
TO GET ANSWER

6:35 (I) Andy Gllllltll

Rooms

J.--1

llflllo PRINT NUMBERED LETTER S IN
~
THESE SQUARES

0 Newhlrt

fuml&amp;hed ·

~ -····· uponyou."

U N YJ R I

l--.,1.;6_:;1.....:...,1::....;:.;.1....:...,.1~

lt~:=::g
a Top card

, 7:0o

. . . . .•
"Being overweight," s ighed
-----.--·-~.....,my sister-in-law, "just sort of

I

~Uic::C Hews E;1

(!)

I

,H y s K A
4
h,-T1. ..;,I ;;;,n
. l5:....:.;.
l-1 ':.:

~ llpotiiLook

1110.

15

The

lpanac

1aar

AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW
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,
apostrophes, the lelllih and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
·

.

CRYPIOQUOTE
6-21
D

HYPL

SDA

ZTTV

D
OQL

PDSL

.U T 0 Q

DNL

D
UK

VDJEQP
ZTTV
D

X T L P

HYPL

SDA ;

LRJDVVK

XV ·

, ftt l N 0 l X.- P T .IN G l

Y•••••.,••

DO

T UP G J N L

C.t,l•ll•etea NEVER UNDERTAKE
ANYTHING UNLESS YOU HAVE .THE HEART TO
ASK HEAVEN'S BLESSING ON YOUR UNDERTAK·
lNG. -LICHTENBERG
' 0 11110 by !ling F..... Syndltlle. InC. '•

�·Page-

J6

The Daily Sentinel

Tough abortion
bill to face veto

Wedneeday. June 27. 1990

Pomeroy Middleport Ohio

Central Park wilding ·attacks described
NEW YORK (UPI) - A gang
of youths on a "wilding" ram·
page through Central Park at·
tacked blcyclls ts and a homeless
man just moments before police
say a female jogger was raped
and beaten witnesses testified.
Tu sd.
ed
'
Th e te~ tl mony
e ay open
the prosecution's case in the trial
d
aga Inst three teenagers accuse
in the gang rape and assault of

·
· ·
the 29-year-old Wall Street In·
vestment banker.
.
Testimony !rom two male
joggers who were at tacked In the
park were expected when the
trial resumed Wednesday in
state Supreme Court in
Manhattan
·
It was not known if the woman
jogger herself would testify Her
h·
·
name as not been used by the

BATON ROUGE, La. tUPI)bill through the Legislature beThe bill lawmakers hope will
fore the session ends on July 9.
become the nation's most restric·
A special " veto session" of the
live abortion law must head back
Legislature has never been held,
to Louisiana's lower house before - accordi ng to the Public Affairs
facing an apparently lnsurmoun·
Research Council of Louisiana.
table veto bat tie with Gov. Buddy
which keeps such records.
·
Roemer.
The state Senate approved the
bill 24·15 late Tuesday after
almost five hours of often soul·
Your Independently Owned,
searching debate but a minor
LOW-PRICED
amendment was added to the
SUPERMARKETS
House·backed blll, sending it
back to !lie House where it most
Iikely will be .approved.
Even with that approval, the
Legislature does not have the
votes to override the expected
veto by Roemer 1\'hO has said he
would veto any abortion blll that
had no exceptions for rape and
Incest. The current blll has no
such provisions.
After the vote, Donna Moss, a
spokeswoman for Roemer, said
the governor would have no
comment on whether he would
sign or veto the measure until he
had read it. " His position has not
changed," she said.
Roemer has 10 days to sign the
bill once it has finished iegisla·
live action, and each chamber of
the Legislature then would have
to give two-thirds approval to an
override.
There has not been a successful
veto override in Louisiana his·
tory , and indications are that the
Legislature would have a hard
time brfi&gt;aklng that trend.
The blli passed the ali-male
Senate by only 4 votes over bare
majority - 2 less than the 26
needed to override a .gubernator·
tal veto. The House voted 74-27,
only four votes more than would
be needed for a veto override.
At least three Senators and five
members of the House have said
that while they voted for the bill,
they would vote against an
·
override.
Under the legislation, any
doctor perform lng an abortion
would be subjeci to a flne of up to
$100,000 and a jail term of up to 10
years. The only exception in the
proposed law would be If toe
sw unn
woman's life were endangered
GUII'A'
by the pregnancy .
TillEY
Moments after the vote was
announced, some angry abortion
lL
rights advocates walked out of
10-14 ......
the upper chamber with tears
streaking their laces.
·: women are going to die for
what happened In this place
today," ' said a l)adly shaken
woman, whO was Immediately
surrounded by friends . .
But most of the 100 spectators
who who crammed into the
public balcony wlldjy applauded
the Senate after the vote for more
than one minute.
"This Is the most important
day in Louisiana since Jan. 21,
1973," said Sharon Fontenot, an
a bortion opponent, referring to
the Supreme Cour!'s landmark
Roe vs. Wade decision that
legalized abortion on demand.
During debate on the bill, Sen.
Mike Cross, a · co-author ol the
measure, told his collea gues that
abortions are rlpolfs. "The doc·
tor walks in, tries to make the
woman feel at home, " Cross
said. "He says something like,
'Hey honey. where do your
mother and father think you are
today?'
"I ask you what kind of man or
woman would reach Inside a
... .
woman and kill an unborn child?
.. . What kind ot' man would slt
back and not try to stop the
killing ol unborn children ol this
nation?" Cross asked.
I LB.
Opponents tried three times to
PKG.
amend the bill to include excep·
tlpns for rape and incest, but
each rider was defeated by more
than 10 votes.
:
"The ques lion is whether we
are drafting . into this bill a
loophole big enough drive 5,000
a bortlons through, " argued Sen.
Ben Bagert.
·
That argument was countered
by Sen. Jon Johnson. "! don't
have a right to say to the women
of this state when you should or
should not have abortion, and you
know what gentlemen• You don't
have that right either," he said.
Rep. Louis ''Woody" Jenkins,
the author of the bill, said he
expects the measure will be on
Roemer's dl'sk "by Thursday,
for sure." If so, the governor
could wait until July 7 either to
vl'to or sign the measure lntolaw.
Should he veto it , the Leglsla·
ture would have two days to
override the action or desper·
at ely a t tempt to move another

edt b
f tb
t
f
al ecause 0
e na ure 0
th~~~a\':teMalone. J5. said he and
hi fl
p t 1 1 De
ld
m

no~ e:;:e, w~:n~:e~ ra~~~~~~he

f pe th
th
d
1
gang 0 you s as de coupb~
s~
along hothn a tak n em
eye e
throug
e par .
Malone and hls fiance were
ked 1
among nine v1ct1ms attac
n
th
k AprU i9 i989
•A •
~-erimoon 111 pdar on
uu ng a ran om cr 1me spre., -

BIG BEND. •.••••

I

·

known as "wilding" -In which a
female jogger was gang raped,
beaten. and left lor dead.
.
As tHe couple rodethelrblcycle
bullt·for-two north on the Eas! •
Drive near 97th Street at about
9. 12 p m Malone noticed t-he ·
~ ths"s~~ding In grass
~
Yu
·
When the couple got to within
100 fee1. the youths crouched in •
"basketball-type stances." Ma·
·
1one sa ld . ·
- • ~

491~.

PICK·4 ticket sales totaled
$231,322, with a payoff due of
$129,600.

845
Pick-4
2027
Super Lotto
6-9-18-21-.25-25
Kicker 941085

Page4

Partly cloudy tonl1ht.
Chance of rain 20 percent.
Parlly cloudy Friday. Rip In
upper 801. Chance of rain te

•

PRE·HOLIDAY
Vot.40, No.289
Copyrighted 1880

2 SeC!iOnl, 18 PlgH 26 Cents
A Muhimedia Inc. New.-•

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio. Thursday. June 28. 1990

Annexation petition is

OK'd by
2°/o MILK

79

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PlASTIC GAllON
MRS. DeWJNE MEIGS VISITOR - Fran
DeWlne, wife of Congressman Mike De Wine, l)let .
"1th Meigs County officials Wednesday and
toured the Meigs County Courthouse. Cong.
DeWine Is tile J,tepubllcan candidate for lleuten·
aa&amp; 1overnor. Mrs. DeWine plays a big ,part In
every DeWine eampaiiJII and she h88 designed
and puhllllhed aeven campaiiJII cookbooks lnchad·
ln1 tile pneelllle had wllb her :vesll:rday, "FamUy

BOUNTY PAPER TOWELS

!!_@~ID~ :fjre Department.~lans
'~.!gger . a~d better' celebration

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Favorites." This cookbook was a joint elfort
between Mrs. DeWlne and Janet Volnovlch, wife
of ·Republican candidate for governor George
Volnovlch. Mrs. DeWine's daughter Illustrated.
lbe cookbook. She Is pictured discussing her
campaiiJII cookbook with Meigs Co.unty Commis·
stoner Rich Jones, left, and Meigs County
Treasurer George Collins.
·

On July fourth:

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By JIM FREEMAN .
Sentinel News Stall
The Racine Fire Department ,
with the cooperation of the
Racine Park Board, Is planning
what one firefighter has called a· .
"bigger and better" Fourth of
July celebralion.
In years ' past, the festivities
were held at the junior high. This
year, the activities are being held
at the fire station and Star Mlll
Park.
The parade will form at South·
ern High School at 9:30a.m. The
fia&amp; raising ceremony will be at
9:45 a.m. at the high school, with
the 'Parade starting at 10 a.m.
There will be one category for
the parade fidats this year:
best-decorated float. A $50 cash
prize will be given to the
first-place float with the second
and thltd-place floats receiving
$30 and S20. Racine Home Na·
Ilona! Bank donated the money
for the prizes.
The parade route Is as follows:
!roll) \lle high school down Elm
Street (Slate Route 124) towards
town, through town on 'Oilrd

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Street, up Vine Street , left on worn. Race registration and
Fifth Street (State Route 338)
waiver forms can be.plcked up at
and back towards the high school Suli Fun Pennzoil ln Racine, or
on Elm Street .
.
from Jack Lyons, until race time.
The lire department will have
There are two age classes for
a barbecue at 11 a.m. at the {ire
the "anything floats but a boat' '
station.
,..1race: eight to 16, and 17 and over.
The Park Board has invited f-Trophies will be given to first·
flea market operators and arts place winners in each category.
and ·crafts makers to set up Plaques will t;&gt;e awarded to the
booths at 'the park.
seco~d and third-place winners.
A kiddie tractor pull wlll be
The kids ' games start at 1 p.m.
They will Include the greased held at 4 p.m. at Star Mill Park.
pole, egg toss, balloon toss and · There will be two Weight classes
bubble-gum blowing contest. for the pull, 35 to 55 pounds, and
There will also be a dunking 56 to 75 pounds . First and
booth and a sawdust pile.
second-place winners In each
The Ladles ' Aux:lllary are clas s wlll receive trophies. There
holding games from 1 p.m . to 5 Is a $1 entry fee.
p.m. at the fire station.
Free entertainment Wlll ·be
One of the more Interesting offered at the park until fire·
events this year will be the works time. Those •attending
second "anything that floats but should bring lawn chairs. Play·
a boat" race. The race wlll take ground equipment is available
place at 2 p.m. at the Racine for the kids.
Launch Ramp.
A teen dance wlll be held at the
Race rules are simple - a fire station from 6:30p.m . to 9:30
boat, or any other manufactured p.m.
watercraft, may not be used; the
The fireworks display wlll be at
floating device must be human· 10 p.m. at Star Ml\1 Park.
powered and a life jacket must be

Environmental group decries GM's··
efforts to block Clean Air laws
DETROIT (l/PI) - A non·
profit environmental group Wed·
nesday charged General Motors
Corp. led the industry lobby in
spending over $2.8 million since
1981 to block strong, effective
.. federal Clean Air legislation. ,
·· The Public Interest Research
Group ln Michigan tPIRGIM)
cited ,reports filed with the
Federal Election Commission
showing the giant au tomaker
sjlent more than $1.8 million In
lobbying Congress against rev!·

sion of the Clean Air Act from
1981 through April1990.
GM's Political Action Commit ·
tee also made over $1 million ln
contributions to congressional
campaigns during that same
period, the Ann Arbor, Mich.,
group said.
PffiGIM has started coliectlng
signatures to urge congressional
leaders and President Bush to
pass a 'strong, effective Clean Air
Act. More than 160,000slgnatures
are expected to be collected

nationwide within the nex:t two
weeks.
The House and Senate Clean
Air bllls are expected to go to
conferen~e committee
this
summer for final reconciliation
before being sent to Bush for
signing.
· "For more than a decade. GM
has deployed a fieet of high·
priced lobbyists to oppose lower
tox:lc emissions standards," said
Andy Buchbaum, PIRGIM's program director. "We're calling on
GM to get back on track w)th
Clean Air."
''There are several versions of
the Clean Air act now ln Washtne·
outdoor activity will be uncom· ton, and. some are a lot stronger
than qthers," PffiGIM spokes·
forblble for most people.
The higher moisture contl;'ht ol. man Karen DeCamp said. ''GM
the air will also keep morning has · aenerally supported the
lows about 5 degrees warmer weaker compromises that makes
than normal. Lows FridaY morn· It lmpoaslble to bring air quality
tng will range from the mid 60s back within health standards." ·
north· to around 70 south.
GM spokesman · William
The weather service said there
Noack, who noted PIRGIM made
will be a good chance for showers
the same allegations last
and thunderstorms over most of
summer, said the money spent
the state Thursday night. On
by the au tomaker on lobbYinr
Friday there wlll be a good
was to "represent our Interest in
chance for thunderstorms In the
this argument to our elected
south and showers and thunder·
officials.
storms will be likely In tht north.

Rain in Ohio forecasct

Withe...-

Br NM!onal Weather Service
·Another round of showers and
thunderstorms Is forecast .to
lljOVe across the Buckeye State
'thursday night and Friday.
The atmosphere was very
moist to the west of Ohio early
1 Thursday morning. The moister
. air will work Ita way east through
Frld!IY, brln&amp;lng Increasing
chances of ahowers and thunder·
storms to tlte alate.
With the humidity on the
upswing and hlllh temperatures
from tile Ill north to around 90
south Thunday IUid Friday, the
· National Weather Service saidj

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COntmlSSIOD

The property included ln the
The Meigs County Commls·
stoners voted to approve a area which the v!Uage of Syra·
petition for the proposed annexa· . cuse plans to annex: ls for a
proposed low-to-moderate In·
tlon of five acres of river front
properly to Syracuse at a meet· come housing project. Annexing
the property will make It easier
lng Wednesday afternoon.
for the builders of the proposed
Wednesday morning the com·
mlssoners viewed the property. project to obtalri village ulllltles.
In the afternoon a public hearing · lt was reported.
The commissioners also voted
was held on the proposal with no
ol!jectlons ·being .heard . . It was · to accept a bl.d for road materials
after that during the regular from Asphalt Materials Co.,
meeting that the commissioners Marietta.
The commissioners announced
by unanimous vote gave their
their Intention to construct proapproval to the action.
jecis funded through the Com·
The annex:atlon proposal nowl·
goes back to Syracuse VIllage munity Development Block
Council for additional action, and Grant monies Including public
after that to the Secretary of restrooms in General Hartinger
State for final approval before Park, Middleport; paving the
London Swimming Pool parking
the acreage actually beeomes a
part of ihe vlllage.

HERITAGE HOUSE.

Lottery numbers
CLEVELAND (UP!) - Tues·
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numbers:
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PICK·3 ticket sales totaled
$1,133,705, with a payoff due of
$428,030.
PICK·4

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lot, Syracuse; and resurfacing
Salisbury Township Roads T·50
and T-189 (Zuspan Hollow and
Silver Run ) from the Gallia
County line to County Road 345
for a distance of .58 mile.
They also voted to accept bids
for building materials needed for
the proposed projects and to
accept bids for the resurfacing Qf
Sutton Township Road 100 from
the Intersection of TR-102 to C-28
(Mile Hlll Road) . for a total
project length of one mlle.
In other action, the commts·
slon set July 6 as the date to hear
a proposal for a brine permit for
dust control.
The commissioners also set
July 11, from 2 p.m . to 3 p.m., for
the 1991 county buqget hearing.

Marcos case ready for jury
NEW YORK tUPI) -The U.S.
District Court judg~ In the
racketeering trial of Imelda
Marcos and Adnan Khashoggl
Thursday began lengthy lnstruc·
lions to the jury of seven women
and live men before giving them
the 3-month·old case.
Marcos, 60, tormer Phlllpplne
first lady , Is charged with fraud
and · ~tructto.l\. C!J j!'S}lc~ !'?r
allegedly ~JlOt~'WJ!ll',.!)llr :J:i:ttt';,,..
band, ousted Phlllppiile Pi'esl·
dent Ferdinand Marcos, to divert .
more than $200 million stolen
from the treasOi')lln Manila. 1•·
They allegedly put the funds
Into fraudulent real estate and
art investments In New \'orkand

around the world.
Khashoggl, 53, ls charged with
obstruction of justice and fraud
for allegedly helping the Mar·
coses hide the purchase of four
prime pieces of ·real !?State In
Manhattan .
The jury was ex:pected to start
deliberations late Thursday af·
terooon, following Judge John
Keenan's 84-page charge.
In clrisiiiUr.illmerrts Wednes,
d~Y, ''JUiliS!ioggl's attorney told
jurors there was no evidence to
J!lake a felon of the former Saudi
Arabian&gt;arms dealer.
"Khashoggl didn't do anything
but lose on thlswholethlng," said
James Linn, ln his final. summa·

lions ln U.S. District Court ln
Manhattan.
"Is he the kind of guy who ls
going to secretly buy multlmU·
lion dollar buildings that are
losing a million a month?" asked
Llnnofthemanoncebllledasone
of the world's richest.
Linn's style differed markedly
from that of flamboyant Jackson
Hole, Wyo. ,attorney Ger.ry
~~e. ~Jll:esentlng Marcos.
' He said there just was no
evidence to back up' the govern·
ment's charges.
"So let'S' try them on·llfestyle,"
Linn said the government pol\·
dered, then·decided, "Why don't
we?"

S~preme

Court to decide on
l¢vel of prosecutors immunity
WASHINGTON &lt;UP!) - The
Supreme Court, preparing for its.
new term ln October, agreed
Thursday to decide the level of
immunity prosecutors !I ave from
civil suits Involving charges they
violated the constitutional rights
of suspects.
The justices wlll hear argu·
ments next fall 111 a bizarre case
brought by Cathy Burns, who
was charged with the attempted
. murder of her two children after
a deputy prosecutor allegedly
authorized police to hypnotize
and question her about the crime.

Two pollee officers lnvestlgat·
[ng a shooting at Burns's home In
1982 said they ~ere given permls·
slon by Deputy Prosecutor Rick
Reed ol Delaware County, Ind.,
to hypnotize and question Burns,
although the practice of hypnosis
w a s . u n Ia w f u I I n t h e
investigation.
Under hypnosis, Burns made
statements that the offlcers
interpreted as evincing a multi·
pie personality and that her alter
ego was responsible for the
shooting.
The officers said they obtained

permission from Reed to arrest
Burns, who was a reserve police
officer at the time. A day later ..
Reed and the officers obtained a
searthwarrantforBurns'shome
by telling the judge Burns
"confessed" to the shootings .
After Burns was charged with
attempted murder, various psy·
chiatrtsts who examined her
found she did not possess a,
multiple personality. They said
she feared losing !ler children
through pending child custody
hearings and was potentially
suicidal as a result .

'

Court rules municipalities .may help
landowners prepare for annexation~
COLUMBUS, Ohio &lt;UPI) -The
Ohio Supreme Court ruled Wed·
nesday munlclpalltles may as·
sist landowners in processing
petitions for annexation and
spend municipal money to do it.
In a separate case the justices
held that attorney Kenneth
Baker must complete an 18·
month monitored probation pe.
riod and be subject to random
and unannounced drug testing.
The unanimous annexation de.
cislon was written by Justice
Robert Holmes, who said terri·
tory may be annexed to a
municipality In two ways: by
petition of the city or by petition
of landowners.
The two are not mutually
ex:clusive, lie said.
The ruling came In a petition
by landowners to annex 118.7
acres of Miami Township to the
city of Moraine. The petition was
approved by Montgomery
County commissioners and af·
firmed by two lower courts. '
Evidence showed the agent for
annexation was Peter Kuntz,
vice president of P·K Lumber, an
owner of real estate wltbln the
annexation area.
Moraine aupported the annexa·
tlon effort by compensating the
attorney rep res en tina ian·
dowllers and by obtaining tbe
services of an eng~Deertna flrni
to prepare the property map.
The city al10 hired a consultant
.
~

to prepare a report on the effect
He refused the packet at first
of annexation on property values but later accepted It outside a
in the area and paid for the legal restroom when approached
advertising required for again. ·
•
annexation.
The exchange was observed bt,
Nothing In state law prohibits . a~r undercover police officer whomunicipalities from engaging In followed Baker Into the rescooperative and mutually benet!· troom. The officer tried to
clal annex:aUon activities, said apprehend Baker, but he res·
Holmes.
lsted, apparently not knowing the
The ex:pendl lures were not officer's identity.
•
unlawtUl becau·s e they were for a . Baker then apparently flushed- :
public purpose, he added.
the package down the commode: •
In the attorney's case, Baker
He was charged with assault
attended a eoncert In March 1988 and resisting arrest. In June;
at the Richfield Coliseum, where 1988, Baker pleaded guilty tri ·
he was offered a packet he assault and to a reduced charge&lt;
believed to contain Illegal drugs . of obstructing official business. ::
.

.

·.

•,

New state minimurn·Wfl8e law signed :.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Gov. Richard Celeste signed ,the
state's new minimum-wage law
Wednesday, Increasing base pay
to$3.80 per hour and to$4.25after
March 31, 1991.
Before passage of tiJe
minimum-wage bill, sponsored
by Rep. Ross Boggs, D-Norlb
Andover, and carried ln the
Senate by SeQ. Robert Cupp,
R·Lirna, Ohio's base pay was
$2.30 per hour with certain
ex:ceptlona.
The federal minimum wage of
$3.35 per hour was railed to $3.80
April 1. Under federal law,
employen mutt pay the federal ·

!/

mlnlmum wage.

•
.•

•

tf, however, th~ state min•:
Imum waee IIVould be higher than:
thl! federal minimum wage: •
employers covered by state:
requirements and employeri '
subject to the federal law waul(!
have to pay the higher state:
minimum wage.
•:
The new Ohio Jaw also prohJb. ·
its employment of people 16 or 11:
years old before 7 a .m. Mondaytilhrou&amp;h Fridays, after 11 p.m::
Sundays through Thundays and,
after 1 a.m. on Fridays and •
Saturdays when school Is In
session.
•

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