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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
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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

$

I

l

&lt;

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

' With Coupo•

-~ ·
-

LIMIT 2 WITH .COUPON. GOOD·THRU 6/20/90 . .

IEGUlAR·BUN SIZE All MEAl ·

KAHN'S WIENERS

..

BUY ONE, GET ONE
LIMIT 1

coER.I.~iEu

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FOODUND

HOT DOG

Margarine
Quarters

AND

HAMBURGER BUNS ..

~

ASST. VARlnlES

PRINGLES

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:

ROLL .

~- -~""·"'

'~

TIDE
DETERGENT

"0$
39

89

oz.

lOX

••

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.
'

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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

.1 '
· --- ~

..

• •
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·
day's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers:
·
PICK·J
830.
PICK·3 ticket sales totaled
$1,133,705, with a payoff due of
$428,030.
PICK·4

Daily Number

I~

69C

~·

·

Ohio Lottery

Coleman
top NBA
·draft pick

.. ..·,_ ..... _ ······-

..

·•

'\1 ""'

'

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.
•

�-.

en
·
tary
.
..
.
m
·
Com

·.

Page-2-TheDailySentinel ·

Mets run winning.str~k to
•
nme; face Reds ·t his evening

•

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
Thursday, June 28 . .1A90

------=================~~;-+7-7~~-------____;.~~~··
'
;:::=
Jack Anderson

The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Slreel

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~lh
· Bm~

,..,_,L.,-......-.~d~~

~v

ROBERT J,. WINGETT
Publisher

.
CHARl-ENE HOEFJ,ICH
General Maaager

PAT WHITEHEAD
Asslslanl Publlsher/Conlroller

S&amp;L
•
•
h
f•
. cnSIS as trmS wary
-

WASHINGTON -The savings
and loan criSIS ha' given commercial banks the jliters, but
consumers are the ones who will
suffer from that nervousness.
Consumers enjoyed a lending
hinge for most of the 198(ls. Total
consumer loans such as credit
cards, auto loans and revolving .
lines of credit skyrocketed by 35
percent to $716 billion from the
end of 1985 to the present.
But with the boom came a

small bust for the l)anks. Delin·
quencles on consumer loans rose
by 14 percent last year alone. The
bariks are souring on tbem as the
erionomy shows signs of weakenIng. Consumer lnstallment'loans,
l'"rtlcularly home equity loans,
are still relatively easy to get, but
that easy climate may change as
banks look ahead to a possible
recession.
The pendulum at banks Is

undoubtedly swinging from excessive laxity to excessive stringency. Now federal regulators
are beginning to worry about
banks circling the wagons and
saving their loans tot only
blue-chip customers.
The situation grew dire enough
to require a recent closed door
meeting among the nation ' s top
banking officials from the Fed·
eral Reserve Board, the Federal

A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should he less than 300
words long. All letters are subject to editing an&lt;! must be signed with
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llshed. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personall·

ties.

Mandela's Harlem
visit recalls Fidel's
By J.EON DANIEL
UPI CHIEF CORRESPONDENT
NEW YORK - .Anti-apartheid hero Nelson. Mandela may have
allayed some anxieties by assuring his American hosts that South
Africa's freedom struggle Is not wedded to socialism.
But the silver-haired revolutionary has proved himself as a .
determined fighter for radical change by spending 27 of his 71 years
behind bars in the cause of racial justice.
It should not' be forgotten that Mandela Is the de facto leader of the
militant African Natlonal Congress, which Is allied with the South
African Communist Party and ls committed to nationalizing
Important Industries.
In his first speech after he was released from prison in February ,
Mandela called for a "fundamental restructuring" of South Africa's
economy .
But Mandela told 11 writers and editors from The New York Times
'thursday In an exclusive Interview that the ANC supports state
participation in the economy only to the extent needed to redress
unfair economic disparities between whites and blacks.
On his triumphant visit to New York, Mandela stood firm when
asked why he supported Yasser Arafat, leader of the Palestine
Liberation Organization·, as well as Moammar Gadhafi, Libya's
leader, and President Fidel Castro 9f Cuba.
.
"One of the mistakes some political analysts make is to think that
their enemies should be our enemies," Manclela sald. ''That, we can't
and will never do."
Mandela said the ANC supports the PLO demand for a homeland
but not to the exclusion of Israel's right to exist.
Predictably, that failed to satisfy many In New York's large and
powerful Jewish community whO criticized Mandela sharply for
~mbraclng Arafat, Gadhafl and Castro as "comrades In arms."
· Asked about the ANC's refusal to abandon guerrilla warfare
against the government, Mandela sald Pretoria's use of violence
gave the congress "no alternative but to resort to violence. "
Now, he sald, the government should "help us move away from the
atmosphere of conflict and coercion."
In predomll;uintly non-white Brooklyn and ln Harlem, the heart of
black America, Mandela found himself preaching to the choir in the
mean streets of neighborhoods grievously afflicted with drug-related
crime.
.
.
Hordes of blacks greeted 'hlm by ralslng their right fists skyward
and chanting "Amandla," the Zulu word for pOwer.
As Mandela addressed the adoring crowd ln Harlem, some leaned
to hear him from windows of the Theresa Hotel, where Castro stayed
during his 1960 New York vtslt for the opening of the 15th session of the
United Nations.
· Castro led the Cuban UN delegation In a walkout from Manhattan's
Shelburne Hotel, where he claimed his party had been mistreated,
and moved Into the Theresa. He praised the Theresa, calling it "a
humble hotel, a hotel of the Negroes· in Harlem, that sheltered us."
·:nurlng that visit, Nlklta Khrushchev and Castro met tor the first
tfme when the late Soviet premier paid a surplse visit to Harlem and
embraced Castro, calllqg him a hero who had given his people "a
l)etter life."
· That Harlem meeting helped a·lot of people resolve their doubt over
whether Castro's goal was a communist Cuba.
:. Mandela's Harlem vlslt three decades later probably will prove to
hllve less political significance.
But, despite some typically strident disagreements. New Yorkers
came together to dispel the false notion that the Big Apple is rotten to
Its core. They did It by staging a love fest for a genuine hero.

..

Berry's World
~
.. .....

"I can explain this."

and Dale VanAtta

Deposit Insurance Corp. and the
Comptroller at the Currency.
They are all between a rock
and a hard place - encouraging
availability of money to consu.mers while pressuring banks not
to make any riSky loans. The ·
banks are obviously Jtstenlng to
the latter.
Federal Reserve Boar~ officials recently surveyed the nation's banks. More than half
responded by saying that they
have tightened their standards
for lending to small and mediumsized businesses. And l!lmost 30
percent of the banks said they
had trimmed the size. of credit
Jtnes to businesses with annual
sales of from $50 mU.llon to $250
mlllton.
Against the backdrOP of this
credit crunch, Federal ~ellerve
officials have been wary about
tightening credit In a · move to
raise Interest rates. Even though
at times the economic strnals
have pointed to increased infia·
tlon, the Fed knows very well the
riSks of squeezing the economy
any more.
Slower economic growth, or
even outright recession, are.
among those risks. The United
States has weathered plenty of
downturns, but tbls time, the
specter of a massive commerical
bank failure lurks behind that
recession. The savings arie··loan
bailout will severely stndft the
patience and pocketlxll*s of·
American taxpayers. They don't
need a bank crisis on top of a
tbrlft crisis.
Some experts warn that a
recession could wipe out the
capital of 20 percent of the
nation's commercial banks.
Combine that with the wave of
bankruptcies that would come In
a slow economy, and the nation's
banking officials have ·plenty to
be worried about.

Reunion and other reflections
Editor's Nole - On May 17
Pomeroy Attorney Fred Crow
was one of 551awye.r s honored lor
50 years In the profession during
the Ohio Stale Bar Assocla&amp;lon's
1990 Convention held In Dayton.
There he was presented .with BD
engraved plaque commemoratIng his long service. That was
followed by a weekend of enjoya·
ble alumni reunion acltvliles, a
lime spent reminiscing with
friends and reDecllng oD by-gone
days.
By FRED CROW
Pomeroy AttorDey
1940 was a special year for me
In that I graduated from Ohio
State Law School. On the 19th day
of May , 1990, I attended my
fiftieth alumni reunion together
with many other OSU graduates.
This reunion Included not only
graduates of' the law school but
many other colleges. 'rhe banquet honored all graduates of
OSU. I was the only one representing the College of Law .
However, I did see a great
number of Individuals I had
known on campus. The speaker
was Wllllam'Saxbe, former U.S.
Senator, Qhlo Attorney General
and Ambassador to India. I have
known Bill Saxbe for many
years. He certainly has not
changed 41xcept for his appearance.. His down to earth philosophy on various Issues has not
changed. He now practices law In
Mechanicsburg. His wife, Dolly,
was there with hlm. My late wife,
Eleanor, was a friend of Dolly'!\·
I also saw Esco Sarkkinen, an
All-American In 1939. We really
had a nice 45-mlnute visit dis·
cussing ex-football players,
coaches and friends. He now
weighs 280-300 pounds. He Is
more than slightly overweight.
Esco is doing some scouting for
the New England Patriots team,

but ls not coaching now. Sark ln
his sophomore year was my
substitute ln 1937.
After the meeting was over,
there was a dance at which the .
band played all old,;tlme m.u~tc.' '
This was good to hear. Alsooneof
the highlights of the evening was
when approximately , 12
members of'the OSU marching
band played OSU songs. In one
part all of the graduates attend·
ing were asked to join ·tn some
kind of strange dance patterned
after Script Ohlo. Nearly everyb·
,ody at the party got Into the act
except myself. I did not !eel-like
acting like a 20-year-old. I
watched.
Nearly every man there was
gray-haired or bald and most of
them could hardly walk, let alone
dance. There was such confusion
on the dance floor. I do not know
how some of them got around
each other. As I viewed the scene
I thought "how old these crea·
lures appeared to me." Later, I
looked In the mirror and knew
that I was one of them.
·Earlier at noon on Saturday,
May 19th, I attended a luncheon
honoring the graduates. There
was a speech given by Jean Wald
Reilly pointing out the changes
which occurred between 1940 and
1990. She relates as follows: "In
1940 most of the students lived In
private housing, fraternity or
sororily housln·g. Today the residence halls are coed. In 1940 this
was prohibited. In 1940 there was
1,200 acres of ground ln OSU.
Today there are 3,300 acres .
There were approximately 13,000
students in 1940. Today OSU has
53,000 students. On all OSU
campuses there are 59,000 stu·
dents. In 1940 thetultlonwas $24 a
quarter. Today It Is $730 a
quarter for undergraduates. In
1940 there was pracucaliy no
financial ald given to the stu-

dents. Today ti5 percent receive
some financial aid yearly. In
1940, students social events were
much larger attended than
t'oday ."
In 1940, big bands prevailed.
Today tHere are small combos
playing animal music. In 1990,
there are many older, students
than there were In 1940. In 1990,
there are many women's Intercollegiate athletics. In 1940,
women were supposed to be
ladles Instead of athletes. Earner
football games were attended by
approximately 60,000 to 65,000
.fans; now It ls In excess of 89,000.
In the ol days, doors had enough
room to seat large behinds
comfortably . Today you have to
sit on someone else's lap or else
In an aisle.
In 1940 the Neil House and
. Deshler Wallick housed nearly
all the after game .c elebrants.
Neither hotel is ln existence at
the present time. In 1940 there
were no tailgate parties. Today
you are not fashionable unless
you are Invited to one.
There was no minimum wage
In 1940. the average work wage
was 40 cents per hour. A new
Ford car cost $700. A one pound
loaf of bread was eight cents and
a three bedroom home cost
around $3,900. Eggs were tO cents
a dozen. Movies were In their
hayday and winning the
academy awards were: for best
picture, "Rebecca"; best actor,
James Stewart; best actress,
Ginger Rogers. Among the most
popular songs were "Blueberry
Hill", "You Are my Sunshine"
and the "Last Time I Saw PariS."
On the world scene: Germany
Invaded Norway, Denmark, Hoi·
land, Belgium and Luxembourg,
and Winston Churchill became
Prime Minister of Great Britain.
The OSU 1940 graduating class
has seen the following during the

Intervening 50 years: World War
II, the Korean and Vietnam
Wars, the development of televl·
slon, calculators and computers,
the Salk Vaccine discovered.
Neil A_rmstrong 'f~l~l'~ on the
moon. Medicare bi!gi!n to pay.
18-year-Olds were.glven the right
to vote. Alaska and Hawaii
became the 49th and ·50th states.
The percent of Americans living
on farms decreased from 23 to
two percent. The largest day on
the New York Stock Exchange
Increased from 4 million shares
In 1940 to over 200 million ln 1990.
Magazines ln the United States
grew from 460 to over 2,000, and
radio stations from 862 to 9,000
and the population In the United
States doubled.
In Meigs County In 1940 deeds
were $2, wills were $5 and ·
mortgages cost $3 dollau. There :
were 10 attorneys In Pomeroy ln '
1940. Today there are 15. Dlvor- .
ces In 1940 were unheard of; at
the most. one was filed per month
and a divorce was a disgrace.
Today a divorce or dissolution Is
the fashion. Fifty years ago
nearly all the women wore ·
dresses In public; today the
majority wear blue jeans or
shorts. Now It Is difficult to
determine the sex ol a person by
her garments. A man and a
women living together In 1940
would have been · arrested for
adultery. Today lt is accepted
without serious consequences.
Radio was the vogue In 1940.
Today It Is TV.
The entire weekend at OSU
was varyenjoyable.lt makes one
wonder If we have gone forward
or backward In our moral life. As
one wag put It "a sign of the
times." I know one thing and that
Is there has been a lot of water
passing under the Ohio River
Bridge.

.,

Disaster looms on chemical alley

~~
~. 1!i!) 1990 by NEA, In&lt;.

''This is an EMERGENCY! We're running out
of MAP PINS. "
I

TEXAS CITY, Texas (NEA)Even a casual observer can
quickly sense the anguish of the
people living In the communities
bordering Galveston Bay, the ·
San Jacinto River and the
Houston Shlp Channel by observ·
lng the signs posted throughout
the area.
First, there are the "HC" signs
at the edge of many roadways.
They Identity the. special routes
designated for trucks calli'Ying
hazardous cargo ranging from
lethal Industrial chemicals to
toxic waste.
Then, there are the "Warning"
signs posted on the chain-link
fences surrounding the storage
tanks, flare stacks and catalytic
crackers operated by Union
Carbide, Amoco, Marathon,
GAF and lesser known firms
such as Sterling Chemical and
Hill Petrol~um.
Finally, there are the "For

:.

Sale" signs In the front yards of
so many area homes - an
Indicator that their owners can
'no longer cope with the chemical
waste pits adjacent to housing
developments, the acrid odor of
unknown compounds released
from Industrial units directly
across the street from child-care
facilities and the constant threat .
of deadly fires or explosions.
Along the banks of the 50· milelong network of.waterways that
links Houston wlth the Gulf of
Mexico Is the densest concentra,
tlon of petrochemical plants and
oil refineries In the nation. Hall of
the country's petrochemical products and 15 percent oflts refined
petroleum products are produced here.
While consumers everywhere
benefit from that work, tbose
living In the area pay a high price
In terms of unremitting threats to
their health and safety. Along

one stretch of Interstate 45, for cupational Safety and Health
example, seven waste pits con· Admlnsttratlon fined Phillips
talnlng styrene tars, heavy me- $5.7 mllllon, alleging that the
tals and other lethal compounds flrm was guilty of· 566 wUlful
are situated directly across the safety violations. Phillips denies
highway from the middle-Income those charges, but, If Phillips ls
neighborhood.
the best, the episode raises
"This Is one step up from questions about safety standards
mldnlrht dumping," says one elsewhere In the industry.
concerned mother, Bebe Using.
The moat recent calamity
She Is among a growing number occurred about 50 mues offshore
of area residents critical of what In the Gulf of Mexico In mid·
they .c haracterize as an unres· June. A Norwegian supertanker
trained and Irresponsible petro- carrying 38 million gallons of
chemical Industry.
crude oil was wracked by a series
Those critics claim that pro- of explosions and tires.
ducers determined to maximize
In Texas City, a massive 1987
profits cut corners; endangering spUI of 15 to 2!1 tons of llydrotluoboth plant workers aDd those rlc acid at a Marathon Petroleum
llviJ:Ig nearby. This charge Is plant produced cloud of. toxic
rejected by the American Petro- vapors that hung over .the city,
leum Institute, which says "first required the evacuation of 3,000
and foremost, the Industry's panicky residents and drove 800
abiding concern Is the safety of people to area bosplta~ for
Its workers."
treatment of burning throats,
The federal .government's Oc- eyes and skln.
,}

a

"I used to think that I had·tohlt,
By. DAVE RAFFO
home runs ," Strawberry said..
UPI Sporla Writer
· For a third-place team, the " Now I know that's not the case.
New York Mets are certainly I'm using the whole field and that
making their mark on the Na- makes me a ·better hitter,.''
Cardinals starter Joe ,Mational League.
,
Frank VIola became the NL's grane, 4-10, took the loss. He
first ll·game winner Wednesday allowed five run~ on 10 l!lts whlle
night, pitching the Mets to a 5,2 striking ·oui . four and walking
·
victory in St. Louis. Darryl ·two. ·
Keith Miller , playing for InStrawberry extended his hitting
streak to 16, second highest in the jured second baseman Gregg
league this year. New York ran Jefferies, had two hits and scored
Its
winning streak to nine twice for New York .
In other NL games, Pittsburgh
games, matching the NL high for
1990 and s(llndlng two short oft he edged Philadelphia 5-3, San
Francisco downed CinclnnatiS-3.
club record.
The Mets might not be third In Chicago beat Montreal 5-3,
the NL Eastfor long. They are a Atlanta blanked Los Angeles 4-0
halt-game :behind second-place and Houston pounded San Diego
Montreal and within two of 9-1.
Pirates 5, Phlllles 3·
first-place Pittsburgh. The PI·
At Pittsburgh, Wally Backman
rates , however, have held ground
wlth .a four -game winning streak drove ln two ' runs , Including the ·
seventh-inning tie-breaker . .and
of their own.
The Mets have won 16 of their Sld Breearn added a solo horne
last 18 and and are 19-7 since Bud run to rally the Pirates · to a
.Harrelson replaced Davey John· three-game sweep of the Phlllles .
Bob Kipper, 2-1. pitched two
son as manager.
"I don't have anything bad to one-hit Innings ln relief of strugsay about Davey," VIola said. gling starter Walt Terrell. Bill
"But It seems this team is pulling Landrum also one-hit the Phtllles
together a little more than when over the last two innings to earn
his 11th save. Keri Howell, 8-5,
Davey was managing. "
· Viola, 11-3, scattered four hlts took the loss.
Glnnls 8, Reds 3
while walking four batters and
At Cincinnati; Matt Williams
striking out two. J{e retired 12 of
13 batters he faced between the drove In four runs to back the
second and sixth Innings and four·hlt pitching ofDpn Robinson
pitched . his · fourth complete over eight Innings and help San
Francisco ·snap a four-game
g;~me.
Strawberry went 3-for-5 and losing streak.' Robinson , 3-1,
slugged a two-run single for a 2-1 struck out two and walked two
lead In the filth. He had one hlt to before Steve Bedrosian came on
left, one to right and one up the to work the ninth. Tom Brownmiddle to push his average to .302 Ing, 7-5, gave up six runs and nine
after a slow start.

Matt WIWams sin1le In the . fifth Inning of
Wednesday's game against lhe Red!! In Clncln·
na&amp;I ..The GlaDis won 8-3 to trim the Reds' NL West
lead to 10 games. (UPI)

BUTLER ALL SMILES - San Francisco's
Brett Butler Is all smiles as he greets teeammate
Riel\ Parker
a&amp; the plate .after tbe.lwo
.
. . . scored on a

Robinson, Giants topple Reds, 8-3
'CINCINNATI (UPI) - If veteran righthander Don Robinson Is
anything, he's a gamer.
Robinson, who Is attempting to
battle ·back from Injury and
coming off just two days rest,
held Cincinnati scoreless for
seven Innings Wedne~ay on the
way 'to an, 8·3 ·.san Francisco
victory. The' win prevented the
. Giants from belhg swept by the
National League West leading.
Reds:
"I wanted to go out there and
do It, because we couldn't afford
to get swept," said the 32-yearold Robinson.
·
•'I just thought It would be
better to go back home 10 aut
than 12 out," he added. "I knew
Trevor (Wilson) was hurt, and he
was supPQsed to pitch, so I told
Roger (Manager Roger Craig)
Mon~ay that I wanted to do It and

he said we would talk about it. I
was j.ust atrald he might change
his mind."
Although Robinson had thrown
80 pitches ln five Innings ln losing
to Houston just last Sunday, he
was almost unhlttable through 7
23 lnnlligs.
'
"That guy's something spe·
ciai ," said Craig. "He kept
saying, 'I want to pitch against
Cincinnati,' and the way he said
it, well, anybody who Willits It
that bad, that's going to glve him
that much more of an edge."
. Matt Wllliams provided Robin·
son with plenty of offense,
driving in four runs. But after the
game Williams wanted to talk
about Robinson, not his own
heroics.
"He's .a gamer;" Williams
said. "He could pitch nine
innings and come back the nexi

•

Scoreboard ...
C1~~elliaMI&amp;l

Majors
BJ

New \ 'ork,nlrhl

Ho•!lloaatPhU.delphla, nlpc

Chluco"' Su Dlep, nllbt
PIIIAAUflh at San Franl'III«'O,

U~lll'd

Prn11lnk'r•llom.l
-'MERICAN LEAGUE
E~l

Tum

.

St. Lo• Mal Lo11

'

W I. Pd .

AnKe~e;,

nl~

nl11ht

Gil

Boll.ton •••••. ..•••••• .•••• •.•: •.-&amp;2 29 .:it! -

Tomnto ............. ...........n 33 .1111

2....,

Clrwl•d .. .•.. .. .. •.•. ......3-1 3i .-1116

'H 1

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Ddrok ..... .. ................ J5
BalllmGI'&lt;'i ......... ......... Je
Nt'W Verlt .......... ......,...:li

37 .n1 tll.'r
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-10 .H.f IO h
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25 .1311 28 .113-1 -

w.. .

Oaklud " ....................n

California ... .••.•........ .•..:J";_ 31 .aoo
suul.. ...:................... ..." ~" ..ase
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T9u .............. . ....... ... ..S'l -II .-l:tll
K••- ru y ................. 30 .ao ..a !I

81-t
101/'t
to ~'t

l.a

W.&lt;r

We-dnHday lk!l.uU~~o
Det roll !t Oakland .a
n1Cap !i, Callfonld

Mllwaukrr 5, Nf'w York .a
BaiUmol'f' &amp;. Cln('land S. ltlnnin!l&gt;l

BoMoa I, Tennlo I
Trxut.MiaartJCU'l [
Stldlle S. KanfUUI flty 2
TIIIUrNI Q Gam

Mtiwau ... l'(R.tllr..oal -1) •t Nl'wVork
(l.toaryl-18) , I : Hp.m.
Tnu (\\1U S-!1) at Mln.-flol.l. ("'f'll t
l-J), 1:15 p .m.
o ...
(Nippifr 0-1 ) at Baltlmol'f'

rt••

(Ballard I·KJ, 1 :U p.ln.
Kan!IU Clly \Sabf'rhll(ta S-7} !U
S('idllf' (8w111n 1-11 1 3135 p~ m (l1rmrnt~ll-3).

II-&amp;)

1111 Botllon

7:3:5 p.m.

....

NATIONAL LEAGUE

" ' L Pet . GB
PltWla~h ..... ,. ............-1! Z8 .fiKI Monln&gt;!d .......... ...........4% 31 .5» II..:
Nt&gt;Wl'orll ........ ........... .at tt .514 :

PltUadt"lphla ...... ......... .3-1 31 .IM .
{llil-a~ .......................3t H .t05 U

14

10

HI

II ~

ll 'lt
1'7 h

Pltllbuf'l• S. Phtld!!lpNa 3
A&amp;lan&amp;a .. ,IA11Anplellt
BouMoa I , s .. Dlep I

N.w l'ork 5. St . lA••!
Thund.,- 0all'l8
Molin• (Sm... U) al Chtcqo
tllet.eld 3--'71 , !:• p.m.
s.. IM~ (WIIIl•• 1-1) at Ho~a~&amp;on
(Portcal t-'71, t:•p.m.
O~~el•nMI (RIJo 1-1) at New l ' ork
(Goode~~ I-I), l:• p.m;
Pit...... , (Drabek 1-J) .. 81. Louift
(Tewlubul')' I-t), 8:16p.m.
Gamt~~

Add&amp;a a1 Mn&amp;rul, •••

SpeKW of 8&amp;a11f0 ...

Oakland - Slped olltll~drr .lOIN!
Ca•wco lel-yur co•ntt thro1111111tw.
PallburJh- Op«olll'd o•tdtler loin
plos6 and piJetlrr O.IC Balr to
Jtuffalo •f r.wr.uo•l Le.,... 11\-'AJ:

c..

r-tcalled Orll bll8l'man Or ..ndo Merced
from Buffalo.
St . Lo .. .t - Sl~d plkb#r Donevan
Bukf'lball

.

...

MIJwaUil.-f':lll ~.ttlr, nl1hi

P'PMIQ

At .. nta - Opdolll!d, pllclwr To..,Ca.ttUio t-o Richmond ofthe-lnkr•Uonal
Leaape (AAA ): reulled pitcher Kent
Mer.,.r from Rkhmoll:l.
Clllcap (NL)- Aclh-llh-d plkhl'l' BUI
Lo .. . from th e ·ti_.Q' dlu.hled liM!:;
oplloned picher Jof' Krarmt.r 10 Iowa ol
lhf' American A811otlalla. j A1\A ),'
Clf'Vellllld- Reulltd pitchrr CllarfeH
~MD' from Cunton-.-\Jiron of EMiern
Lt&gt;ape (A r\ I.
lnclu ..oiiM ( AA.A) - Ac,dretl co rtlral't of -.ve Hrcbl from Sh,.vtporl of
TI!'KM Lupe (AA) to t:omplfte t,.dl'
betM'en Molltreal alii Su FrandM:o.
Molltn-lll - Plac.-d r.Ml'll1tr Knln
GrOM oniWJ9' dNW.d lsl; , . ,.h... d
ce,;nt&gt;t •fplt.chet- Howard Fanner (.rom
ln4lanapoll" ol Amerk .. A..ocllllen
(AM): 8lped draltrr pitcher Ktaa

o\lla•ta- Tr. .e41 Nos. II and 28 dNfl
plcklllo Golden Sial(' tor Nu. 1~ , 31 aad

Oaklaald at Torol'llo, nllh1
California aL flnflallld. nl_.t
New \ 'ork Ill Chkuo, nla:hl
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San Dlra:o ........ .............31 34 .111
San Frand&amp;eo ·.... .... ,....37. ·SI .501
Loll .-\r!JtltM ................. 35 3'7 ..till
Holllltoa ..... ......... .........3G U .U1
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Tn&amp;H at Bofllen, nla:ht

Tum

Transactions

Chk-qo- Namrd Herb Brow• ~•t·
ant co.cllaad n-o1111.
Clt'\•eland - Traded lhl' rl1thl111 of
forward !Mefuo Ro.-.nllo Phoenbt for
Ute rldWII lo cenlfr Mil• BaWc.
Er .. (WIL) - Erk N""~Wn~e from
Voun.-sfowa: n-lellllt"d ~~:wud Je,..han

Wal,..r.
HouMon- Trltdt-d Ill~ rla:ltbool forwa~
Alf't! Kft....,. k) Miami fer rl1lli• lo
paar• Da vt&gt; lenwrAOn aad Carl
HPrft'ra .
Ml.-nl - Traded Kttry s,.rrow lo
Sacnmeuto for thl' rl1ht11 lo lll'COnd·
roD pick pard Bimbo Colel.

Or••• - Tradedsecolll·round •ran

ptckll 11[1 ltD and • • to Sullie for

arreetna: lo .,... on Dennis koU wllh

se••·plek t1 lilt btl.
~a&amp;lle

_. Traded rta:t. . -. forward dud

.Beatehler'to New .ler.,- fer all'ftl•ll•

,..,onDennlaScoUwtt• Unipkkv'! 1"'

Gralt.

c.u.,.

Alfnd- Nuned &amp;evla .lonH bukd·
, ball coaclL

San FruciiiC• - Maouncetl rnlpa·
ll•n of A..letlc Dlredor Failller Bobul
Sunderlllllut
Football

Allanla- Sfped_wlcle recriwrfMacrJ

Bal~

to.l·'J".• roll&amp;ract; Slpetp.-.r
lk-ott .......... twe l·,e•
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Gtnl.NicMtt.

day and want the ball again. He's
that kind of guy."
Robinson. 3·1. struck out two
and walked · two before Steve
Bedrosian came on ·to work the
ninth.
Tom Browning, 7-5, who gave ·
up six runs and nlne hits over 41·3
Innings, called Robinson's feat
"amazing," adding that "It
shows how strong he ls,,'"'Whoever says you need four
days of rest Is crazy," Browning
maintained. "When you're big
and strong like him, what does It
matter?"
Reds Manager Lou Plnlella,
who rested three regulars, Eric
Davis, Chris Sabo and Joe Oliver,
called Robinson's effort
Impressive.
"In this heat (83 degrees at
game time~ I didn't think he'd go
as far as he did.'' ·
Williams contributed a two-run
single In the fifth to glve the
Giants a 5·0 lead and his two-run
homer In the ninth capped the
scoring. Robby Thompson drove
In two for the Giants who
salvaged the final game of the
three-game set and snapped the
Reds' four-game winning streak,
The Giants took a l·Oiead In the
second Inning when Williams
was hit by a Browning pitch and
Greg Litton singled him to
second. Gary Carter's single
loaded the bases and Williams
scored when Thompson
grounded Into a double play.
San Francisco upped Its lead to
3-0 ln the fourth when Clark
singled, Carter doubled and
Thompson followed wlth a tworun triple.
The Giants made lt 6·0 ln thl!
fifth, chasing Browning. Brett
Butler and Rick singled before
Will Clark walked to load the
bases . 'wmtams followed with a
single, scoring Butler and
Parker and Litton doubled to
score Clark.
The Reds averted a ·shutout ln
the eighth when Paul O'Nelll
belted a three-run homer, his
lOth of the year.
Wllllams' 15th homer In the
ninth scored Clark, who had
reached on Barry Larkin's field·
lng error.

(USl'S U5-1811)
A Dlvlslon of MuttlmediL lac.

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Genalo leads
·PBA toumey
RIVERSIDE, Calif. (~I) Don Genalo of Perrysbuq, Ohio,
maintained his lead Wedllesclay
night after two rounds of the
Prof..slonal Bowlers Assocla·
tlon $145,000 Kessler Classic.
Genalo, of Perrysblu'g, Ohio,
has won six tournaments but
none In the last four years. He
averaged 240.5 for his 12 aames
with a plnfall of 2,887 - 141 pins
ahead of Wayne Webb, a 17-tlme
cbamplon and former PBA
Player of the Year from Beaumont, Texas.

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy, Ohio t5769..

$5 million project beg, ...'
Monday.
By any name', Azinger plays
this course well. In 19!WI he tled
for third. In 1987 the Bradenton,
Fla .. pro !Ired a 15-under-par 269
and beat Wayne Levi by a shot.
Last year, Azlnger zinged Levi
with a chip-In birdie on the 72nd
hole. Levl.subsequently missed a
birdie putt for a tie on the on the
final hole.
·
Thls year's event features 11 of
the Top 20 money winners:
Azlnger, Levi, Mark CalcavecThe $1 mllllon tournament will chia, Gll JV!organ, P,e ter Ja·
have a new look next year. ' cobsen, Jodie Mudd, Steve El·
Eleven new hOles are planned klngton, Tlm Simpson: I.:arry
wlth seven others renovated. The Mlze, John Huston and Tommy.
layout will. be known as TPC Armour 3r~. First .prize Is
River Hlghhinds. The bulk of the $180,000.

CROMWELL, Conn. (UP!) No golfer has won the Greater
Hartford Opim two straight years. Beginning Thursday, Paul
Azlnger gets his chance.
If the two-time GHO champ
can follow up his 1989 victory
over the stadium course 10 miles
south of Hartford. he'll become
the llrst repeat winner since the·
PGA began coming to thls area 38
years ago when the tournament
was called the Insurance City
Open.

h.its over 4 1·3 lnnlligs.
Cubs 5, Expos 3
At ·Chicago, Ryne Sandberg
smashed two home runs; ra ising
his league-lea-ding total to 24, and .
Jeff Plco improved to 4-0. Loser :
Kevin Gross, 8.5, left In the fifth •
Innlng when he was hit on his :
right hand trying to bunt.
Braves 4, Dodgers 0
At Atlanta, John Smoltz
pitched a three-hitter and Greg
Olson belted a homer to lead the .
Braves. Smoltz, 5-6, struck out .
six and walked none. Tim ·
Belcher, 5·6, allowed six hits over ·
flvelnnlngs .
Astros 9, Padres I
At Houston, Jim DeShaies
scattered seven hits over 7 2-3
Innings and Glenn Wilson.drove
In three runs. DeShaies, 4-5, '
surrendered one run while strlk: :
ing out four and . walking one. ·
Astros reliever Juan Agosto
made his leaglle-leadlng 42nd·
appearance by pitching tM
. ninth. Loser Bruce ·Hurst, 4-7,
allowed four runs on five hits
over four Innings.

to The Dally sentinel. W Court St.,

Azinger defends.GHO title

Toronlo (stottk'myrr

Robert
Walters

The Daily Sentinei-.Page- 3

Ponaoy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday. June 28, 1990

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Thursday, June 28. 1990

The Daily Sentinei-Page- 5

White··Sox record seventh
• •
wm In row to pass Athletics

HEATH CONGRATULATED~ Detroit's Mike
• Heath (right) Is congratulated by Edgar Romero
• after
hilling a solo homer In the ninth Inning of
.

.

Wednesdll)' night's game · ;1galnst the host
Oakland A's. Heath's deep drive gave the Tigers a
5-4 victory. (UPI)

led off the ninth Inning with a Chris Hones slammed his first
horne run to lilt Detroit. Winner major-league horner in the bot·
Mike Henneman, 4-4, handed tom of tbe tenth Inning with one
Oakland Its sixth loss In nine out to pide Baltimore and snap a
games. Heath belted a 1-2 pitch five-game losing streak. Hones,
off reliever Todd Burns over the who was recalled June 4 from
left-field fence for his second AAA Rochester, made Greg
homer of the season. Burns, 2-1, Olson, 4-2, a winner in relief.
Hones' blast came off the third
had come on to start the ninth.
Cleveland pitcher, Sergio Viii'
Brewers 5, Yankees 4
At New York, Dave Parker had dez, 2-4.
three hlts,lncludll)g the 2,500th of
Rangers 9, TwiDs 2
his career, and Rob Deer drove In
At Minneapolis, JuUo Franco
three runs to lead Milwaukee. drove in four runs on three hits
Bill Krueger, 4-3, pitched 7 2-3 and Nolan Ryan pitched seven
Innings, scattering eight hits to strong Innings to help Texas end
pick up the Victory . Jimmy a four-game losing streak. Ryan,
Jones, 1-1, lasted 5 2·3lnnings for 7-4, gave up a run on three hits In
New York, allowing seven hits the first Inning but settled down
and five runs.
to retire 16 of toe next 19 batters.
Red SGx 9, Blue Jays 3
Kevin Tapanl, 8-5, took the loss.
At Boston, Carlos Quintana
Mariners S, Royals 2
went 3-for-4 and Luis Rivera's
At Seattle, Jeff Schaefer's
two-run single keyed a six-run two-out single in tbe eighth
fifth tnlilng to lift Boston.to their Inning scored Edgar Martinez
sixth straight win. Mike t;Jod- · from second pacing Seattle. With
dlcker, 10-3 allowed three earned one out ln the eighth, Martinez
runs on nine hits, walked one and walked and took second when
struck out six in seven innings. Tracy Jones singled off loser
Boston chased Jimmy Key , 4-3, Mark Davis, 1-4, for his third hit.
by scoring six runs In the fifth to
Mike Jackson, 3-3, who took over
take a 9-2 lead.
for starter Matt Young in the
Orioles 8, Indians 3
eighth, picked up the Victory by
.
10 Innings
retiring all three batters he
At Baltimore, rookie catcher faced.

APRIL ALF.-\RANO
UPI Sports Writer
Along with winning games at a
surprising rate, the Chicago
Wllite Sox have avoided losing
perspective.
The White Sox' seven-game
winning streaks has lifted their
league-best record to 44-25, putting ChiCago four percentage
points ahead ofOaklaild ln.the AL
West. · The Athletics, who have
lost $lx of their last nine, stand at
44-26.
.
"So what? It's June 27," White
Sox Manager Jeff Torborg said.
"You can't think about lt. The
minute you think about It, lt
doesn't come to fruition. "
Ron Kittle's two homers Wednesday lifted ChiCago to ·a 5-2
victory over California: compte!·
lng consecutive three-game road
sweeps of the A's and Angels.
Kittle ran his season horner
total to 13 with smashes ht his
first two at-bats, giving him
three straight going back to
Tuesday. Kittle became the
fourth White Sox player to horner
in three consecutive at-bats.
But Kittle also keeps from
getting too excited.
"I've been stinking so bad, I
was lucky to hit the ball," he said.
"It's a streak I've gotten Into.
Everyone who hits home runs
gets Into a streak every now and
then. I just tOQk some !)lee easy
swings. With Chuck Finley out
there, you don't count on giving
up hot:ne runs."

·In the NBA draft

Finley, 10-4, had won seven of
his last eight decisions before
giving up four runs on eight hits

•
•
k
Nets rnake CoIeman fIrSt p1c ;k~~;~:~ti~.Ja:eh~~e'~~~

.:

t

Becker and Graf advance at Wimbledon

'.1 · '

Rockets
By IAN LOVE
UPI Sports Writer
NEW YORK (UP!) - Unable
·. to come upwlth a better package,
: the New Jersey Nets Wednesday
: night made Derrick Coleman the
·· No. 1 pick In the NBA draft .
,: The Nets had entertained
: offers for veterans and draft
;: choices from around the league.
; But, In . the end. New Jersey
. decided the 6-10 All-America
· ·forward from Syracuse was
enough of a prlze ln his own right.
- Coleman finished as · the
: NCAA's all-time leading re•
: bounder and as Syracuse's an-·
;llrne leading scorer. He joins a
Jearn that finished with the ·
. league's worst record, below
. even that of the expansion
: orlando Magic and Minnesota
:Tirnberwolves.
• . "I'll be playing .ln a nice
: arena," Coleman said. " I hope I
€an flU the stands. I've always
had confidence In myself. ''
, • The two-round 54.-player draft
· at the Jacob Javits Convention
:center featured an early run on ·
:guards, with three of the firstflve
; picks coming ou·t of the
Dackcourt.
- Seattle took point ·guard Gary
l'ayton of Oregon State with the
§econd selection. The SuperSon:Jcs, who finiShed at 41-41, hl)d just
·two chances ln 64ln the weighted
:lottery to have t.ts logo drawn.
Denver selected point guard
ChriS Jackson of Louisiana State
!"'th the third pick, Orla ndo took
Dennis Scott of Georgia Tech
fourth and Charlotte selected
:mth and chOse shooting guard
:Kendall Gill of Dllnols.
· The Magic had to do some
fancy maneuvering to land Scott.
~attle and New Jersey both
agreed not to select the 6-8
swlngrnan, allowing Orlando to
'ave a shot at him. The Sonlcs
tecelved second-round draft
picks ln 1993 and 1995 from
Orlando. Seattle then gave New
iersey Its second-round choice,
which turned out to be Jud
Ileuchler of Arizona.
: "! heard all sorts of numbers
a11d rumors and then names,"
Scott said. "! even heard I was
No. 1 at one point. When lt
h;.ppened and I was No. 4 It's the
Dest feellng ln the world. I think
frn ready for the NBA."
! Completing the top 10, it was:
l\lo. 6. Minnesota (Felton Spencer
of Louisville), No.7. Sacramento
iLionel Simmons of La Salle),
No. 8. Cllppers (Bo Kimble of
LOyola Marymount ),, No. 9. Ml·
ami (Wlllie Burton of Minnesota )
&amp;nd No. 10 Atlanta (Rumeal
Robinson of Michigan).
; Jackson was the first 'earlyentrant to be selected -and was
tl)ought to have dropped in the
draft because of doubts a bout his
~efeilse.

• "I'm very pleased to be taken
fhls high,'' said Jackson, who left
4fter just two years at LSU. "It's
Mite a dream come true for me
and whatever they ask me to do,
I'll do my best for them.
.;"I have no regrets about
~vlng school · early and if I
thought It over and had the
ibance to do It again, I would."
: Tbe draft lacked quality centers and tbe first pivotman did
iot go until Minnesota took
Spencer at No~6- The next center

•Ire Jamerson

off Finley .to lead off the game,
the first time ln 78 career starts
Flitley had given up a homer ln
the first Inning.
''I know he dldn · t have his best
stuff and he was fighting himself
real hard," Angels Manager
Doug Rader said of. Finley.
Eric King, 8·1, scattered four
hits, struck out four and walked
five over the first 71-3 htillngs for
the win before wilting in the 100
degree heat.
In other AL games, Detroit
shaded Oakland 5-4, Mllwaukee
edged New York 5-4, Boston
pounded Toronto 9.-5, Baltimore
beat Cleveland 6-3, Texas, __
slammed Minnesota 9-2, and
Seattle defeated Kansas City 3-2.
Tigers 5, Athletics 4
At Oakland, Call!., Mike Heath

Kessler, who llkely would have
found lt hard to fit into Houston's
loaded front-line lineup. "I was
there Monday, but I thought they
needed help ln the backcourt."
Kessler, who averaged 21
points and more than 10 rebounds
with Georgia last season, said he
believes he can help the Heat.
And Miami certainly needs It,
having won won just 18 games
last season.
"! like Miami with all the
beaches down there ·and everything," he said. "They need a lot
of help, ,and I think I can give It to
them."
Robinson Hawks' top pick Rumeal Robinson said he hopes
to supply the kind of guidance
that will make the Atlanta Hawks
an NBA champion.
The Hawks made the sturdy
COLEMAN CONGRATULATED - Syracuse's Derrick ColeMichigan guard their first pick in
man, a ~-10 powerforward,lscontratulatedbyNBACommissloner
Wednesday's draft.
David Stern alter he was chosen by the New Jersey Nets as the first
' ''They need a point guard, and
player overall in Wednesday's NBA draft. (UPI)
they need ·a leader," said Robin·
son, who ls 6-2 and weight 195
was not taken until Sacramento and Southeast Conference each pounds and. hopes to fill the bill.
used its third pick of the first produced four first-rounders.
Robinson is known for his
round to take 7-foot Duane
Houston acquires Jamerson - . knack of winning games and
Causewell of Temple at No. 18.
Houston made Alec Kessler the championships, having led Mich''I am surprbed some to see 12th pick ln the NBA draft Igan to the 1989 NCAA title with
some of the 7-footers drop." said Wednesday, but the Georgia two clutch free throws In the last
New York general manager Al star's tenure with the Rockets three seconds of the final game.
Bianchi. ''Those are the kinds of was short-lived.
Former . Atlanta coach Mike
picks where you are damned if
The Rockets promptly traded Fratello, who commentated for a
you do and damned If you don't." Kess)er to Miami in exchange for new sports cable network,
the Heat's first round pick, Ohio praised the Hawks decision to
One big man to drop was
University's
Dave Jamerson, select Robinson:
Dwayne Schlntzius, the 7-1 cenand
their
second
round pick, Carl
"If the Hawks get Rurneal
ter who quit the Un iversity of
Herrera
of
Houston.
Robinson,
they wHI definitely
Florida team. NBA teams ques ti"
!thought
it
was
really
strange
have
Improved
the team," Fraoned his weight (280 pounds) and
that
the
Rockets
took
me,"
said
tello
said.
his attitude. San Antonio took a
chance on him with the No. 24
choice.
''Everyone was afraid of him."
Clippers coach Mike Schuler
said. "People saw his senior
year, the shape he was In when he
I
.
I
came to Orlando (for the draft
combine) . They didn't know
what they 'regetting. It's unfortunate. He has the physical skills.
I Located In Mason, WV 304-773-5300 I
But will he come In and
contribute?"
:
Is Proud To Announce Their
:
The depth in the·draft came at
small forward and at shooling
guard. In ali, 13 forwards, ·n
guards and just three centers
Under New Ownership
went ln the first round.
1
1
The Big Ten produced five
1
1
first-rounders, Including three
from Michigan (No. 10 Robinson
to Atlanta, No. 13 Loy Vaught to
the Cllppers and No. 16 Terry
Mills to Milwaukee) . With Sean
Higgins of Michigan picked by
I Door Prim Bowll Game FREE With Coapon I
San Antonio as the last pick ln the
draft, four players from Michi:
Special Ratea For Church Groups
:
gan's 1989 NCAA champion team
were selected.
Th"i;y\tlaitt!c Coast Conference

BECKER RETURNS FOREHAND - West Germany's Boris ·
Becker stretches to return ·a forehand to Australia's Wally Masur
during their second-round ~atch at Wimbledon Wednesday.
Becker, seeded second, koocked olf Masur f&gt;-7 (li-7), S-2, S-3, 6-2.
(UPI)
•

A the.ns rallies to
top Meigs Legion
Athens scored four runs in the
end the game.
,
Meigs scored 2 runs In the filth
eight inning to come from behind
Inning to break a 2-2 tie on a
to defeat Meigs 7-6 in American
single by Wright, a double by
Le!llon action Tuesday night at
Jason . Hager and a single by
Atliens. With the wln Athens
Terry Reuter. Meigs extended
takes over first place ln the Eight
the lead ttl 5-2 in the sixth and
District League wltn a 8-1 record
after
Athens cut the lead to 5-3 ln
(17-7 overall) .
the
seventh
Meigs scored a single
Meigs slips to 7-13 overall and
run ln the eight to make lt 6-3
·
3-5 ln the league.
With Meigs leading 6-3 heading setting the scene for the Athens
,Into the eighth Cory Corrigan led comeback.
Terry McGuire led Meigs with
off the Inning with a single, Izzy
a
pair of doubles , Terry Reuter
Ollver cut the Meigs lead to 6-5
added
a pair of singles, Chris
with a home run over the left field
fence. Brock Toadvlne than Stewart a double and a single ln
foUowed with a single and stole addition to Hager's double. Corrl·
, second before losing pitcher gan and Toadvine had two
Jason Wright came back to retire singles each and Oliver's homer
the next two Athens batters. led Athens.
Johnson the third of four
. Meigs than committed two costly
errors to score Toadvlne and Athens pitchers picked up the
Brent Hartman ·who reached on win, Decamlnada whow.lllattend
the first of the Meigs errors to · Ohio University to play baseball
score the tying and winning runs. picked up the save. Decamlnada
Hank Cleland led off the ninth was. seeing his first acjlon since
. for Meigs with a single off of early June because of an Injury.
winning pitcher Roy Johnson, Jason Wright was the starter and
after Cleland stole second Scott loser for Meigs despite turning ln
.Decarn!J)ada came on to replace a good performance.
,il'ohnsom. Matt Finlaw reached
Meigs will return horne Sunday
first on a Athens error but afternoon to host McArthur in a
·Decamlnada .preserved the win pair at 1: OOat Meigs HighSchool.
: wtth a strike out and a fly out to

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

LOOKI

I MfiSOH LfiHES

: GRAND OPENING

I

Saturday, lana 8IJdl alii:• a.m.

I
Stop By And Say Hello To
I
: JARRELL SARGENT AND STAFF. :

~----~!!:~~~-----J

In other result s on the men's
side, No. 7 Brad · Gilbert of the
United States, No. 10 Jonas
Svensson, Sweden, and No. 11
Guy Forget , France, all ad·
vanced to tM third round, as did
American Derrick Rostagno,
who upset McEnroe tn the
opening round. Rostagno, ranked
No. 129, eliminated Jeremy
Bates, the only remaining British
player ln the draw, In four sets.
Pat Cash, the 1987 champion
and a wild-card entrant this year,
also advanced ln straight sets.
Advancing among the women

were No. 5 American Zlna
Garrison, No. 10 Helena Sukova
and No. 13 Jana Novotna, both ot
Czechoslovakia.
Defending men 's doubles II·
tllsts Anders Jarryd and JohnFitzgerald were forced to retire
midway through thelrfirst-round
match Wednesday. The doubles
partners colllded while going
after a shot and Jarryd injured a
r ib. Because ihe Swede could not
continue, opponents Jonathan
Canter and · Bruce Derlln advanced to the next round.

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:
I

overwhelming ln the final two
sets, as he won all nine service
games while dropping just tlve
·
points.
Afterwards, the second seed
said he was not worried about
Masur's strong start, ''He could
not play the whole match like he
did the first set, otherwise he
would be ln the top 10 almost."
If the men's seedlngs had held
up, McEnroe would have played
Becker in the semltlnal. AlthOugh the West German may be
the prime beneficiary of the
American's departure, he regretted t.he loss of the three-time
winner.
"He ·has a past here ~~ond it's
never good to see him go (out)
early ... he makes Wimbledon a
bit more special," said Becker.
On the women's side, French
Open titlist Monica Seles, the
third seed, rallied from a 4-l
deficit (n the second set to post
her 34th consecutive match victory, a 6-3, 7-5 second-round
triumph over Camille Benjamin
of the United States.
The 16-year-old Seles has been
on the pro circuit for less than
two years but said her experience made the second-set
comeback easy.
"Last year, if I was down 4-1, I
would have paniCked a llttle blt ,"
she said. "This year, no." In the
French Open final, Seles won the
first set against Oral by saving
four straight set points. She has
now won six consecutive
tournaments.
Former U.S., Australlan .and
French Open champion Hana
Mandllkova, who announced before Wimbledon that this would
be her last singles tournament,
was dispatched 6-3, 6-3 by American Ann Henrlcksson.
"I felt relleved and I felt sad."
said Mandlikova after the final
point. The 28-year-old said that
declining motivation ls the cause
for her retirement.
Twelfth seed Jennifer Caprlatl, the 14-year-old who on
Tuesday became the youngest
player ever to win a Wimbledon
match won her second-round
pairing with France's Julie Halard 6-2, 7-6 (7-2 ). The American
sensation, often cited as the
sport's next great player, was
hailed Wednesday by Mandlikova, who said, "She's not a
champion yet- but she has that
little something extra In her."

~

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

:

WIMBLEDON, England
(UP!) - Defending &lt;;hamplons
Boris Becker and Steffl Graf,
Immune to the upsets which
swept through Wimbledon's opening ll'ays, Wednesday put their
grasscourt skills on display durIng second-round victories.
Becker combined precision
passing shots )Ylth his powerful
serve to overcome Australia's
Wally Masur6-7 (5-7) ,6-2, 6-3,6-2.
Graf . relled more upon her
baseline consistency, only occasionally venturing to net during
her 6-3, 6-0 defeat of 92nd- ranked
Meredith McGrath of the United
States. ·
Graf hM dropped only three
games In each of her first two
matches, which lasted just 51 and
44 minutes. Her last two tournaments, t[)e German and French
Opens, were losing causes o~
clay, ln which she twice lost
straight-set finals to Monica
Seles. Graf, whose slice backhand was especially troublesome
for McGrath, Is happy to be on
the fast grass Of the All England
Club.
"I'm glad to be back, I think
you can see It, " she said . "It's
different for me to be here, it
seems that when I go onto the
court, that I'm a differen t person. I enjoy lt very much. "
In Wimbledon's cipenlng two
days , three of the women's seeds
and a record six men were upset,
among them No. 4 John
McEnroe.
Becker, de$plte dropping his
first set io Masur, was confident
he· would not join . the list of
·surprised victims.
The Australian's game is wellsuited to grass, he had trained
hard for Wimbledon and ln the
first set he was the equal of the
thi-ee-tlrne champion. Through
the first 12 games, each man held
serve. The decisive mint-break
came on the lOth point of the
tie-breaker, when the West Ger man double-faulted , giving
·Masur a 6-4 lead. After a Becker
serVIce winner, Masur took the
set with a volley winner.
In the second set, Masur failed
to hold serve and his net-rushing
tactics were bold but increasIngly ineffective as Becker consistently stroked passing shots
down the sidelines. In each of the
final three sets, the defending
champion won four of the first
.five games. Becker's serve was

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near your home. We'll provide you with the
exact location of underground power lines.
You'll find more life-saving facts in our free
safety booklet. Call us. 992-3786

1990 CADILLACS ·
SALE

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1'flfl!f OHIO

Cl1990 A"'rlcao Electrlc'Power

1990 METRO

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CHEVROLET-OLDSMOBILE-CADILLAC-GEO, INC.
301 EAST MAIN
,,

992·6614

POMEROY I OHI.O

�Page-6-The

Daily

Pomeroy. Middleport. Ohio

Sentinel

Thul"'day, June 28, 1990

Ohio fishing report

The Daily Sentinel-Page 7

Pomeroy-Middeport, Ohio

Thursday, June 28, 1990

Community calendar

Smallmouths abOund .-in Hocking Rive~ near Nelsonville
.

By United Press International
The weekly fishing report, from
the Ohio Division of Wildlife: ·
SoutheMt
Hocking River - Smallmouth
bass can be caught near shallow
riffles. between Sugar Grpve and
Nelsonville. Imitation crayfish
and j lgs w!Lii twisters should be
used, Flathead and channel
catfish are being taken from
.&gt;orne of the deeper pools near
·
Athens.
Caldwell Lake - This 12·1lcre
lake, and nearby Stewart Lake,
In ·Scioto Trail State Park near
Chillicothe offers good flsh!ng.for
blueg!lls, channel catfish and
largemouth bass lip · to six
pounds . Fish shoreline cover for
blnegllls and bass. Night·
crawlers work well wllen fished
In bne to three feet of water, but
try deeper water for channel
· ca!flsll.
·
Southwest
Rocky Fork .Lake - Muskles
up to 40 Inches can be taken by
anglers trolling large crankbalts
.and spoons .In 10 to 18 feet of·
waier. An occasional walleye Is
picked up around the Kelleys

.

slonal walleye or saugeye can be
Cove and south beach areas.
·Largemouth and smallmouth - picked up from deep water near
the dam.
bass up to 20 Inches can be found
O'Shaugnessy Reservoir primarily In the lower end of the .
Largemouth
bass averiiglng 12 to ·
lake around weedbeds ..
15
Inches
can
be caught along the
Ohio River - Conditions are
entire
western
bank around
Improving around the Markland
brushplles
and
fallen
trees. Blu·
and Meldahl pbols and In areas
egllls
and
crappies
are being
where tributary creeks enter the
taken
In
shallow
water.
Boat
river. The Meldahl tallwaters al
access
Is
very
limited.
Neville provide excellent fishing .
opportunities for while bass,
Northwest
9ar p, freshwater drum and chan·
Paulding Reser. voir - · Good
0el catfish. An occasional hybrid . catches of saugeyes averaging 10
striped bass Is also caught In till$ to 12 Inches have. been reported
area. Largemouth and spotted from all areas by anglers using
bass, crappies and channel cat· small spinners and redworms.
flsh offer good opportunities Yellow perch are being taken on
around . the Meldahl pool In redworms and minnows fished
Clermont, Brown and Adams along the bottom In 18 feet of
counties.
water. Bluegllls"averaglng six to
Central
seven Inches are belng caught
Alum Creek Reservoir -Crap· along the shoreline on worms
pies and largemouth bass are fished beneath a bobber.
being caught along the shoreline
Clear Fork Reservoir - Mus·
and In shallow coves along Africa kles averaging 30 Inches are
Road and the Ohio 36 bridge. being caught In deep water neat
Nlghtcrawlers fished beneath a the dam by anglers trolling large
bobber In two tofourfeetofwater spoons and Splnnerbalts. Crap·
around submerged Umber and pies averaging 8 to 10 Inches are ·
brush piles work well. An occa- . being taken from shoreline.areas
with submerged structure.
Nortbeli8&amp;
Tappan Reservoir - Channel
catfish averaging 15 Inches are
being taken at night on checken
livers, shrimp and nlghtcrawlers
fished along the bottom. Largemouth bass up to 24 Inches are
don't play the course that well.
available to anglers fishing areas
''But 1 changed Irons a couple with fallen trees and submerged
. months ago and my short game brushplles.. Rubber worms,
has Improved. )'ve beim playing small Spinners and night·
bet!er and hopefully I can keep crawlers work well. Crappies
the ball rolling, so to speak."
averaging six to eight Inches can
·A victory Is worth $90,000, with be taken on minnows.
.
$55,000 for second and $40,500 for
Welllngton Reservoir ..,.. Blu·
·third.
eglll fishing should remain good
King has added Incentive. all summer with good opportunl·
After winning the Dinah Shore, ties for beginning anglers.
she can pocket a $1 million bonus Crickets, maggots, small worms
for completing the Grand Slam and nlghtcrawlers can be used
with victories here and In the successfully to catch these pan·
U.S. Women's Open and LPGA, fish In shallow water. I,.arge·

shallow ·water during early·
morning and early-evening
hours on a variety of live and .
Imitation balls.
Lake Erie
Western basin walleye anglers
are scattered over ·a wide area.
Some limit catches are being
reported from the West Sister
Island and Toledo shipping chan·.
nel areas. Some anglers are
trolling deep-diving crankbalts

..

r===~~:::::~m;ou~t~h~ba;ss;!c!a!n~b:e;.,;;ca:u~g:h~t~In~
4 •
•
\"il Iii H.\Wit; 1 * • •

• I

is .ruled

restricted
free
ol

·,:~ICHFIELD,
I

A&lt;reQ(

...,

Ohio (UP!)
Cleveland forward John "Hot
"
ROd"
Williams was ruled Wed·
~day to be a restricted free
aient subject to right of first
r~tusalln favor of the Cavaliers.
~;rea m · officials said they are
p;~eased with the ruling.
.
·
~ :·we have tried to reach
a:greement on a new contract
~th John's agent," said Gordon
C:imd, Cavs CO'Chalrman. "In·
dlled. we attempted again to
1i'ch agreement during the
ll!:rlod between the hearing last
~ek and the decision today . Our
l~st offer was rejected this .
Iii,Ornlng."
.
: ,c avaliers General Manager
,:ayne Embry said the club
would co ntinue efforts to sign

.

Adolph's ·
Dairy Valley

'
992-6669
'
253 NORTH SECOND
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Brogan-Warner

Insurance

EAnMAIN

992-6617
214 EAn MAIN ·

PMIOY, OHIO

POMEROY, OHIO

Pat ·Ifill
Ford, Inc.

992·2196
461 SOUTH T111D
_,DUPORT, OHIO

Middleport
Trophies .··
,992-,121
SO RIVERVIEW
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Each summer, day camp pro- they relate to others.
Fees for Big Bend Summer
grams are an Introduction to
basic outdoor skills for more than Day Camp are $12.50 for regis·
4,000 girls !n Black Diamond Girl tered Girl Scouts. plus $2.50 for
Scout Council, of which Meigs an optional overnight stay . A $5
County Is a part. Camps offer · late charge will be assessed for
girls the opportunity to partie!· registgatlons submitted after
pate In daytime outdoor activl· Monday, and no registrations
ties while working on badges, . will be accepted after July 7. In
· addition, girls and adult volun•
crafts, games and sports.
Girls enjoy a camp atmos· Leers may order camp tee shirts
phere with other girls their ages at $5 for girls .sizes and $6 for
as they learn new skills and gain adulls. Tee shirts are also an
self-confidence. Camps are optional expense.
For. more Information a bout
planned and carried out by ·
volunteer committees with coun· Big Bend Girl Scout Day Camp,
parents may call Connie Collins
ell staff training, support and
supervision. The programs are at 992·6315.
"Come join In the fun In the sun
designed to support the goals of
girl scouting by helping girls at Forked Run," Collins says.
develop their self potential as

UDIES, NATURAUZil, HUSH PUPPiiS
.
&amp; JUIILD
DRESS AND CASUAL

·25°/o
OFF
LADIES SANDALS

25°/o OFF
WING TIPS

\

AND DRESS BOOTS 200fo OFF

•LA GEAR

Swisher-Lohse
Pharmacy ·

Ewing
Funeral Home

992-6611
SS5 PARK
MID.DLEPORt, OHIO

992·2955
112 EAn MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO

992-2121
10• MUtiEIIY AVE.
~lOY, OHIO

Downing, Childs
Mullen, Musser
Insurance

992-6491
716 NORTH SECOND
· MIDDLEPORT,-eHIO

oti'
~~ettelers

992·5141 . .
261 SOUTH SECOND
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

POMEIOY,OIIO

.
'

TUPPERS .PLAINS - The
TUppers Plains "VFW Post 9053
will meet · Thursday at 8 P·lll·
Members are urged to attend and
meet the new state commander .
SYRACUSE - The Carleton
College Trustees will meet
Thursday at 7: SO p.m. at the
Syracuse Municipal Building. All
members are encouraged to
attend.

Pleaser's
Restaurant

25°/o
OFF

HOOD
FAMILY
SHOES
POMEROY
21 0 EAST MAIN

POMEROY -The Fraternal
Order of Eagles Ladles Auxiliary .
will have · a rummage sale
Saturday through July 7 at 222 ,
EastMalnSt.lnPomeroyfrom9 .
a.m. "to 4 p.m.

PRESCRIPTION SHOP

MIDDLEPORT The
Women's Fellowship of Meigs
County Churches of Christ will
meet at tile Bradbury Church on
Thursday at 7:30p.m.
CHESHIRE - The Gallia·
Meigs Community Action
Agency will hold Its regularly
scheduled meeting on Thursday
at 5:30p.m. at the Gu!dlng Hand
School in Cheshire. The public Is
Invited to attend and provide
.community Input.

JUST A REMINDER THAT WE AlE
NOW IN OUR NEW BUILDING AND
INVITE YO~ TO STOP IN.
Plenty of
Convenient Parking
on the Side
· Parking Lot

STORE HOURS;
Monday thru Friday
9 A.M.·S P.M.
Saturday
9 A.M.-3 P.M.

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

1 MONTH

$3 QOO

OPEN 7 DAYS

PRESCRIPTION
SHOP
992-6669

.

SANDY'S VIDEO &amp; TANNING
RACINE, OHIO

25~

North S•ond Avt.

Middleport, OIL

.'
.

FREE-SPIRITED· AND FUN-TO-DRIVE
.

1990 PROBE GT

1990 ESCORT GT

1990 LX MUSTANG

•,

Farmers Bank
Ul
Savings Company
992-2136

221 wmSEDOie
. PCI EIOY, 0110

••

Member FDIC

•'

·Meigs
Tire Center

Blue Streak

992-2101 .
242 WIST MAll
POMIIOY, OliO

992-7075
172 NOITH SECOND
•DIIPORT, OHIO

Cab Co.

,"THIS A.D SPONSORED BY THESE FINE
· COMMUNITY MtNDED BUSINESSES" ,

$10,730

••

'
••'
•
•'.

••
•
'

'

•I

-·
BANKSONE.

$9,335

AFTER REBATE

.

AFTER IEBATE

Eecort GT 2-Door Hatchback
OxfOrd White
Sand Beige Cloth Sport Buclutte
Speciel Velue Pecklge 330
•AM/FM 4tpkr. itento/Caaette
•Tinted Glelt
•Speed COntrol
•lntervel Wlndahleld Wlpera
•THt St•rlng WhHI
•Rear Window Defrolter
•LightaSecur!ty Group
•Manual Air Conditioning
1.9L EFI HO Engine
Front Llcenae Pill Brecket
&amp;-Speed Manuel T111nRxle
,
P1915/80HRX11i BSW Tlrel

199.0 Musung LX 2-Dr. Hetchbeck ·

"•

•

·' Tonight's

POMEROY ...:The Meigs .
County Fish and Game Assocla· .
tlon will have Its annual fishing.,
derby on Saturday from 8:30
a.m. "to 2 p.m. at the clubhouse on•
Texas Road. Participants fur· ·
nlsh own pole. Ages 15 and under.
There will be a chicken barbecue .
for members In the e~enlng. ·
Bring a covered dish or $15.

POMEROY - The Bells and
Bows Square Dance Club will

"Summer Special"

949-2025

DANVILLE - There will be
weekend services at the Danville
Church of Christ on Saturday at .
7: 30 p.m. and Sunday at 10: 30
a.m. and 6 p.m. Denver HDI of·
Foster, W.Va. will be the
speaker. The public Is Invited to
attend.
·•

WILKASVILLE -There will
be .a smorgasbord supper on
Saturday from 5·7 ·p.m. at the
Wilkesville Pythtan Hall In Wll·
kesvllle. The public Is Invited to
attend and the costls $5 for adults
and $2.50 for children .

I·

SCHOLARSHIP AWARDED . - The Alpha Delta Kappa
scholarship was recently presented by Becky Triplett, \lice
, president, right, to Tracy Norris, center, a 1990 graduate of
: Southern Hl&amp;h Scbool. Tracy Is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Darrell Norris, left, of Letart Falls. The presentation was made at
· the annual scholarship dinner of the national teacherS' sorority
. held at Sonja's Country Kitchen.
·

sponsor a dance on 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.

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 bring a covered
·
dish.

'

·~

Bright Red ..
Tlteniu ni Cloth aucket Seats
Spliciel Value Group
· •PowerEqulpmMit Group ·· ·
Power Lock Group
Duel Electric Remote Mirrors
Power Side Window•
•Front Center Armreat
•Styled Rued WhHII
•Splltld Control
•AM/FM Elec. Radio w/ Coaaette/ Ciock
Cuatom Equipment Group
'Air Conditioning
'Dual llumlnated Visor Mirrors
2.3l EFI OHC 1-4 Engine
Front Ucenae Plete Bracket
Flip Up/Open Air Roof
Automatic· 0/D Trenemlaalon
P196175RX14 BSW Tlr11
Front C.nt11 Armreat - Credit

;

$14,645

Ami REBATE

1990 Probt GT 2-DOOI' Hetchback
Twilight Blut Nletalllc CC
Titenium Cloth lluolult Stats
2.2L Turbo 14 S.O.H.C. Engine
Front UCenR Plate B111cket
Powar Wlndqwa
AUto. Overdrive Trenamlltion
P2015/IOVR115 Performence tire•
Speed Control
Manuel Control Air Conditioning
Elec. St-o Ca11ettt w/Pt11mlum Sound
Power Door Locka

(Tax &amp; Title Not Included)

.

Summer Concert
·Band Is
Sponsored By...

PAT HILL

Eighteen Thousand People Who Care.
BANK ONE. ATHENS. NA t A I'AATO, ~CAIIINQ TIAII
Alltena, Ohio
Uembw FOIC

992-6254
\J

POMEROY - There will be a
cooko.ut at Rupe's camp site on
the river bank for members of
Preceptor . Beta Beta C)lapler,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority at 6 p.m.

.liquor stores to close

.

'

•
'•

.

,

992·2174
500 EAn MAIN
P-lOY,· OHIO

Fisher
Funeral Home

992-2057
691 WEST MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO

;: Sports briefs••
:1
Marathon

Fruth
Pharmacy

u-.IIIS.COA1S

212 EAST MAll

OFF

Smith-Nelson
Motors, Inc.

30 lUll Of QuAlRl UtVKE

. 992-3715

MEN'S TENNIS SHOES
•CONVERSE
0~ .
•ROSSINI

0

Valley Lumber
and Supply Co.

992-2342
Ill EASJ SECOND
POMEIOY, OliO

MEN'S FLORSHEIM

20

POMEROY -Vacation Bible
School is going on at the }{Ills ide
Baptist , Church on Route 143
through Friday from S-8 p.m.
nightly. There are classes for
children age two through 14. The
publiC Is lnvlted·to attend.

N"'VV'J~

20°/o OFF ·

2
5
°/o oFF
ALL OTHER FLORSHEIM DRESS SHOES

FRIDAY
RACINE - There will be a
special song service at the
Fellowship Church In Racine on
Friday at 7 p.m. Featured
singers will be the Gabriel
Quartet.

POMEROY - There will be a
planning meettngortheCommlt·
tee for the His torlcal Drama of
Meigs County on Thursday at 7
Director John R. Hall of the p.m. In the Pomeroy VIllage }{all
Ohio Department of Liquor Con· Auditorium. The public Is Invited
trol announced today that all · to attend.
state·liquor stores, agencies and
departmental offices will be
· POMEROY - The llomeroy
closed on July 4 In observance of group of AA and AIAnon will
Independence Day.
meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the
.Sacred Heart Catholic Church.
Call 1·800·333 - 5051 for
Information.
Winners In TUesday's Ladles
MIDDLEPORT - The Meigs
League at Jay Mar were Mar·
County Trash Haulers will meet
garel Follrod low gross and low
Thursday at 7:$0 p.m. at the old
· ·putts; and ne1Jble Sayre and Ada
RC Bottling Plant on Mill Street
Nease who tied for low net.
In '. Middleport. · The public Is
, Tee-off time on Tuesday wlll be
Invited to· attend.
8:30a.m. Instead of 9 a.m.

•ALL OTHER U GEAR AND IOSSINI•

••

I

Meigs County Girl Scouts have
just a few days left to register for
the 1990 Bli Bend Girl Scout Day
Camp Program. This year's
camp Is a weekend adventure at
Forked Run State Park near
Reedsville. Camp Director Con·
nle Collins, Syra~se. Is encou.
raging scouts to "se.nd tho~e
· registrations In as soon as
possible because the deadline Is
Monday."
Collins and several other area
scout leaders have been Involved
In training sessions In prepara·
lion for the big weekend July
20·22. Camp will start at 5 p.m.
Friday and continue through 8: 30
p.m. Sunday, allhoughnotallage
levels of scouts will be permitted
to stay overnight.

Jr----------"1 ·--....;.-------· r-------o-o-o--,
Prescription ·
.Shop

'

Fun in the sun at Forked Run

THE PUBLIC IS .INVITED . TO .THIS FREE CONCERT••• BRJNG
YOUR FOLDING CHAIRS FOR AN EVENING ·OF RELAXAnON
. AND BEAUTIFUL MUSIC.

. 992-3671

~lllams .

..

'

COURT .STREET
.

pool aears Ito target. The younpters joined
· friends In trylag to keep cool on a muggy day.
(UPI)
.

•

TONIGHT AT 7:00 P.M~

Anders9n' s
Furniture

.'

. • ,More than 1,000 runners from
li!prope and Africa are.expected
Lhtake part In Kenya'sMombasa
.~Jtternatlonal Marathon July 8.
~'i' marathon Is the east Mrlcan
~mtry's only major event of Its
lolnd.
••
Soccer
:Thousands of Belgian fans
!!!lYe their World Cup team a
r~lng welcome at the Brussels
altport. Belgium lost 1·0 to
EQgland TUesday In the second
rotmd.

.

RONALD P. SOCCIAIELL, CONDUCTING

~adley

~illiams

·; COOLING OFF ,- Becky Pezzuto, eight l!lld
Grant McCullough, six, both flinch as w~er tbey
lobbed at each other wblle standing In a wading

,

.

'

THURSDAY
POMEROY ·- .The Pomeroy
Church of Christ will have bible
school through Friday from 6: 30
p.m. to 8: 30 p.m. nightly. Dlrec·
tors are Barbara Fields and Pat
Thomas.

CARPENTER - Mt. UniOn
Church, located off Route 143 on
County Road 14 Is having vaca·
lion bible school through Friday
from 9-11:30 a.m. . dally. "For
Information contact Mildred
Workman at 742·2185 or Nancy
White at 698-3411.

·THE OHIO UNIVERSITY
.
CONCERT BAND

992·2556
570 WEST MAIN
POMEIOY, OliO

t:~·'?~lways key on the rnajors,"
said. '·'And I really want
tO". ):le Inducted Into the Hall of
~me so lfl could pick a win this
~auld definitely be one oflhem." ·
: Bradley plays well on a long
c:$;turse with fast greens, and
\Yes"tmount ~ults her style. But
!fatty Sheehan, Betsy King and
&lt;:teen are out to give Bradley a
tQ~gh. tline.
·
~ sheehan Is second on the
'I ···
'
.
.
money list with earnings of
$297,474 and has won twice In 12
'tournaments. "Besides myself,
Patty Is going to be the one to
bElftt," Bradley said. "She's had a
grleat year and she' i going to be
tough. "
Sheehan, who said she Is tired,
was optimistic but uncertain ·
a~ut this weekend.
: .rm not sure about how I'll
d$:" Sheellan said. "The slopes
art; severe In some respects and I

and tla.shy spoons In 20 to 35 feet forward spinners tipped with
of·water. Successful drift-fishing nlghtcrawlers and troiUng deepreq ulres the use of weight. diving crankbalts and spoons.
forward spinners, or night· Walleye catches are .averaging
crawler harnesses, drifted on the 19 to 'EIIncbes. Other good areas
bottom around t.he Islands and In Include ~en to eight miles
the reef complex. In the central northwest of Redbrook west of
· basin, walleye fishing Is best the commercial nets, five toetght
betweeri Mentor Lagoons and . mile&amp; north-northeast of Euclid
Fairport, six . to seven miles Creek and four to eight miles
northeast, In 35 to 65 feel of north·northel!st of the Cleveland
water. Anglers are using weight· Intake crib. .

POMEROY, OHIO

Bradley seeks fourth
tanadian LPGA title·.

• •
.
:;".fl:JTCHENER., Ontario (UPI)
~·hen LheLPGA Tour comes to ·
¢1nada, Pat Bradley makes
teServatlons lor · the winner's
Mle.
·
::Bradley. a three- time cham·
t11tln of the du Maurier Classic
'fld the LPGA's all·llme money
winner, heads the field In this
~ar·s du Maurler Ltd. Classic at ·
'festmount Golf and Country
¢.lub.
·
::The $725,000 Classic Is one of ·
the LPGA's four majors and the
liine Canadian stop on the Tour.
:..Bradley's
.north of the
border
haveefforts
been
. particularly
Jtnpresslve because this tourna·
ment moves each year. She
Cnlshed second to · Tammie
Green at Beaconsfield Golf and
t;ountry Club In 1989.
• ''This Is ·quite the challenging
~urse," Br~dley said Wednes·
~ay after playing a Pro-Am.
")!The ttee lines and the wind
twirls are tricky, and there are
lltlle lies In the fairways that If
§au aren't concentrating can
cause big problems."
~Bradley has won three tourna·
nlients this year and · leads the
11.lO money list with $310,055 ~ter 12 events. She needs lour
"';ctorles to qualify for the LPGA
~all of Fame- and Intends to get

.

.

461 SOUTH THIRD
,

'

992·2196-

MIDDLEPORTI OHIO
. ..

' '

�Page 8-The Daily Sentinel

Pomerov-Midcleport. Ohio

Thursday. June 2p. 1990

-People in .the _n e w s - - - - - - Reception .honors local.OES member
He alSo was jumping out of an
By WILUAM C. TRQTI'
FBI planned to raid her home.
airplane. Cruise says hiS skydlv·
United Pl'elltl International
BANNED OVER BEEF: k.d.
ing carne as a surprise to the
laq' s songs have been banned movie's director Tony Seotl and
VANNA WINS ORDER
from a Lexington, Neb., radio NASCAR driver GrqSaeka, who
AGAINST FAN: ''Wheel of For·
station because of her and-beef was Cruise's stunt double. ''Tony
tune" letter-tumer vuina White
won a court order Wednesday to
bias. "Under no circumstances and G~g decided one day at
wlll anyone on this stall be Daytona that they were lfOing to
keep an Obse$sed fan from
allowed to play any music by k.d.
coming within 150 yards of her
parachute Into the midst of the
lang until such time as she set, surprising the crew," Cruise
for the next three years. White
publicly renounces her ties with said. "Never mind that Greg
had !!led papers saying she
People for the Ethical Treatment never had jumped before. I was
feared for her llte alter Incidents
of Anbnals and her fanatic walling In the plane when they
Involving Roger Davis, who was
described as a former mental
and-meat philosophy," station got on. I told them I was .Just
patient. Davis wasn't in the
KRVN said In a statement. lang, along for the ·.r tde but actually I
a 1990 Grammy winner, will Jump quite often. When they got
c9urtroom Wednesday but the
judge pointed out that he had told
appear In TV commercials for a ready to Jump, they saw I had a
PETA-sponsored · campaign chute on too. I said, 'Guys, I'm
the court he planned to stay away
from White. White's ·troubles • called Meat Stinks. •'If you knew going too. I hope I make it."' .
how meat was made, you'd
with the man started in April
MISRA DANCES AGAIN:
probably lose your lunch," lang, Mikhail Baryllbnlulv, who re)A/hen Davis, dressed in fatigues
and dog tags, disrupted a taping
a vegetarian since 1981, says In signed last year as artistic
of "Wheel of Fortune. " "(He)
the commercials. "I .know -I'm director of American Ballet
jumped up screaming that my
from cat tie country. That's why I Theater, will be one of the
boyfriend was a dan~rerous man
became a vegetarian. Meat dancers Involved In the White
stinks and not just tor anbnals Oak Dance Project, which will
and bad man, associated with the
Mafia, and that he, the man,
but for human health and the begin an 18-clty national tour In
would protect · me," says a
environment."
Boston Oct. 24 and ending In St.
document signed by White. She
CRUISE FALL: Tom Crulie Louis. The company Is being
later learned that Davis had been . was doing more than driving fast spilnsored by Baryshnlkov Protelling her associates that he was during the filming of "Days of lductlons and the Howard Gilman
going to marry her and that the Thunder," his new race car ep_lc.
Foundation.

By BOB HOEFLICH
I can't cope. I can't cope. With
or without my soap, I just can't
cope.
I tell my
neighbor, · Annie
Chapman, that
· her lawn looks
· great.
She's
. pleased. I ·go a
&gt;··
step further - I
tell her the lawn and her flowers
look like something out of a
. magazine. I ask her who takes
care of these things for her.
Annie says she does all this
herself.
I'm miffed. Annie
makes me feel like a lazy.
careless slob, Unable to cope, I
lecture Annie about over exer·
lion and heart attacks. Far be It
from me to promise to do better
In keeping the neighborhood up.
I open the mall. My Insurance
'company has sent a bill. The
Insurance company reminds me
In a curt manner on the bill that
this is the only statement I will
receive and If I don't pay by the
due date, I shall .be cancelled.
This puts me Iinder streSs. I have
lots of Insurance and ·get lots of
bills from the same company and
'always bearing the same state. ·ment. I wonder whate_yer happened to the days when an
Insurance company sent ·a reminder It you misplaced a bill
and didn't get .It paid by the
. designated date. I vow to shop
-around to see If there Is still In
exls tence an Insurance company .
which might send me a reminder
If for some reason - you know,
like crlticaltuness, complete Joss
of sanity or death - I might not
meet the due date. The note has
been a part of the company's bills .
lor years, but all or a sudden It
galls me - I renew my vow to
shop around.
My mall brings not one - bu.t
two letters from Social Security
employees - somewhere In
Michigan. You know. That's sort ·
or · like somewhere over the
· rainbow. One ·advises me that I
have been underpaid and will be
getting a sizeable check (well,
sizeable to me) by a certain date.
The second advises me that I am
· being penaliZed beeause f am''
part-time worker and I will
receive a check tor $4 on the
same certa!n date. I telephone
the Social Security Office In
Athens.
By the way, this Is long
distance now - the toll tree
,number for Meigs Countians has
gone by the wayside.
The
telephone call doesn't produce
,m uch help so I sit down and write
\WO letters - one of each of the
two employees - somewhere In
Michigan -after all, we Golden
Years people are_ pillars of
strength and patience so why
should wrlting a couple of extra
letters to seek an explanation for
the Inconsistencies be ·a
problem?
Dragging through all of the
detail further convinces me that
my coping skllls are getting
pretty dull. Incidentally, the $4
check arrives - nothing from
employee-number two.
I fully realize that I am out ·of
step with the world when I think
about the Columbus bank - the
one that advertises on the televl·
slon . about the Red Carpet
Treatment. I stress out at the
'bought of lt. I direct an Inquiry
to the bank.
Three weeks later . I have
received no answer.
I then direct the same Inquiry
in a second communication. Two
weeks more pass and no answer
arrives . .Into the bargain I did
ask In the second letter if the
!allure to answer the (irst Inquiry
was a part ot the Red Carpet
Treatment. Dear Abby, did I do
wrong? Should I try one more
time under the theory that the
third lime's a charm or should I
feel that being ignored means
that I am truly an average
American citizen and am being
treated like an average Ameri·

~~-··
il

can ciUzen.
Oh, and did I tell you about that
Lancaster restaurant?
Last
week lour of us entered the
relatively new establishment In
the evening after a long hard day
. - twoolushadstartedourdayat
5 a.m.; the other two at 6 a.m.
We looked forward to really
.relaxing over .a gOC)d meaL 1'here
were three booths at the front of
lhe establishment - all \lnpccupled. We asked ilwe migbleatat
one of them ~ seemed like It
would really be nice to have a
little room so that we could
stretch out.
We were q ulckly advised that
the booths were being saved for
parties of six and we were
hustled to the back or the bus. The
table was crowded but the food
was good. As we made our exit, I
noted that two of the three booths
In question were occupied by
parties of four. I felt .my back
bristle at the sight. Since I can't
cope with such circumstances,
I'll Just have to patronize other
restaurants on future vlslty to
Lancaster. Taking my business
elsewhere Is one of the tew
remaining weapons left for those
of us who just can't cope.
Before yo11 become completely
convinced of my paranoia, let me
point out that allis nollost. The
mall also brought a very pleasant
note from a sales person, Betty
Stanley, of the Penney Store at
the Vienna Mall. She had earlier
served us when we purchased
some draperlesat that store. The
note thanked us for our patron·
age, Invited us to visit the store in
the fu lure, and advised us that
she would look forward to serv·
lng us in the future. Gads- note
like that In 1990? We were
Impressed. In fact, I was so
impressed that I want to go back

matrona and past patrons of
Evangeline Chapter, !lO year
members, district officers. dis·
trlct representatives, grand page
to the grand officers, grand page
and grand aids to the deputy
grand mat rona, honored muons,
former grand appolniments, and
past matrona and past patrons
from other chapters.
Bea Kuhn was escorted to the
East by her husband, Robert.
Tiley Introduced her family of
t~ee daughters, seven grand·

chUdren. hiS brother and wife
from Vlr~rlnla, sister and husband. !rom New York, and Mr.
and Mrs. Jeff Miller from
·
Virginia.
The French City Sbrlnetts
Clowns from Gal Upolls and OES
chorus entertained for the even·
lng before retl'esbments were
served In the dlnlna room which
was decorated In black and
white. Refreshments Included
sandwiches. reliSh plate, cake,
coffee, and tea.

FOR,T LAUDERDALE.
(UP!) -When there's no res·JBu·
rant around and cold sandwiches
just won't do II, road crews
Interstate 95 roast their
wrapped lunches f.n steamring
mounds of wet asphalt.
"It really cooks as well as
microwave," said Bill McCo1'd,
senior roadway Inspector on
I-95 expansion project.
Paving workers wrap hot
pork chops or leftovers
three 'l ayers of aluminum
bucy the packets In a mo111nd
300-degree asphalt,the
Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel
Wednesday.
The steaming asphalt, which
has the consistency of wet
Is so hot it doesn't stick to the
and workers can easily wipe
away.
"It usually takes a lot ot
and pepper. When It's cooking,
the juices start coming," said
Reggie Akins, a )iaver for Weekly
Asphalt Paving. "I told my wife,
she think's It's crazy." ·'

.:·sTRESS - This aophlsllcated computeriZed
atreu teet equipment bas .been Installed at
Veterans Memorial Hospital In Pomeroy and will
be put Into aae this week. The equipment,
lealurlq a treadmill which Increases In speed as
well as elevate~ durtnc seven different stages of

w..
$5995

PDIINC
lOW

12111

Kill

r- -~------- --.-------------

1

~~8-~F'8r

·

Was

·sg9?

was ·

$5995

IN MEMORY- Scolt Lucas, admtntstrator.o,
V-elei'&amp;llll· M.l!ll'Jir!al ~O!Ipllal In Pomeory, pres·
ents a P!llqlie i~~JIIn. .Jesllle White, presldeDt of .
lhe _b~ltal:~ Women·~ Auxiliary In memory of
11le
ll'r~. J. Bewetson of Pomeroy. The
p~ue which wlll·han1ln the hospital lobby pays

$699~

, ......... 111••

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

.J - ....... ..._ '"'"""""',._..

w..
I

$7495

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

fllir• Inc Our

...

Slack II 101, V-8 llf1l, 111:1 oir, htllllf
.... Ill· pb, AIM'IIilllo, 3(41an, lUI
link. (IIUDII, lllding IW gilla.

Barry's lawyers

'1411

. E.O.M.
SPECIALS
...............-'

a

.

.

'

LAIGE ASSOITMENTS

Baskets

30°/o
BlASS FINISH

10110

Floor Lamps

PIN~

OAK

Bunk Berf

ssaoo

Porch Rocker
oren~7900

$189° 0
·.·

.IIIIFGD
1111a

''

CONGOLEUM
VINYL CUSHION-FLOR

...,.

__ ...

S1ockM8154, 4 "'~. 41(11111 • •
AIM'U ..... 112 .., pldup, gaugll,

...
,... ,..

w..

$6495

· · ··Fall

S1dc:k 115731, Y-8 eng. 4 ljll8d trn,
lllnd trn, Ill. pb, AM1'M ..... ,..

LINOLEUM

n,puge~.

49 S.. Yd.
S1l1 $5
SYLVANIA J9i' RDIOTE

AUTOMATIC
WASHER

Color TV

$3590°

O•lr
I

•

•

"

~

'

Slack INI81, 2 dr, hnlop. I oyi q

,_., lir,llllo trn,jll. pb, .. CllliH,
Al&amp;1'll ..... llpl, IWIII h,

bucMt . . . . . defog.

$299

W•
$14,800

.--

, •II.DAYS UME All CASK "LOW MONTHLY PAYMENTS
'TO

STORf HOURS

Monday
9:30-1:00

Tuesday-Saturday
9:30-5:00

IIW
110,111

ROPEilAIGE CAPACITY

.

I

llrfii"NK ~

• . FIIINITUIE, APPLIANCES. TV'S, FlOOI COVERING

992-3671

DOWNTOWN

,,
.

OliO ·

.. . . ,,.

•--"·

~

.........,_

IIIIFGIIDP

·· · ·- ~ -~-·

·-··

IDW

'11.4•

S1ock 11371, ....., IIIQDtl. 4 wheel
d!M,I~q, r.ctiir,-,lll,pb, pdl,

llt,CIIIIH,Mmllllllit,MIIIollpl.,..
Iiiii, whitl 1111111,
dt-

fag,gqa

Was

$!185

budoll-, IDW

....

1-LIICILI
LIC

Slack tt5510, 2 dr, IWdlap, V-8 q
111:1 lir, 11110. Ill. pb, pw, Ill. pdl, ..

-·w..

CllliH, AIM'UIIIIIo, · - -bucUI

IIW

$17,P95 . . . . .. .

WASHINGTON (UP!)
Cross-examination of the former
model who said she used cocaine
"more than 100 times" with
Mayor Marton Barry and a
videotape ·or the mayor's arrest
In an FBI sting will shed new
light on the case, Barry's lawyer
said.
Lawyer R. Kenneth Mundy
said .d amaging tes Umony by the
mayor's one-time girlfriend, Ra·
sheeda Moore, would be offset
when she returned to the ~ltness
stand Thursday during which
time the videotape_ allegedly
showing Barry smoking crack
cocaine would also be shown.
Asked by reporters If he
thought Moore lied on the witness
atand Wednesday, Mundy rep·
lied, "Yes." He said the video·
tape, will show Moore Initiated
the alleged drug use .
The testimony from Moore,
who Jured Barry to the Vista
International Hotel Jan. 18 as
part of an FBI-pollee sting
operation, and the videotape are
the most damaging are the most
damaging evidence against the
mayor.
Local television stations were
gearing up to show the tape In Its
entirety the , J110rnent It was
entered Into evidence In court,
bu I large amounts ot profanity
might force them to edit It
considerably.
In testimony Wednesday,
Moore, dressed entirely In black,
said she and the mayor were
lovers from June 1986 to June
1988, but COI!tinued using drugs
together lor another year after
breakbjg up, often smoking $100
worth o1 crack In a single sit ling.
"There was so much drug use
during that time, and I was losing
myself," said Rasheeda Moore,
39, who tesutled she also used
opium and marijuana with the
three-term mayor.
"He talked on several occa·
slons about the need to stop using
drugs," said Moore, adding that
Barry once said he was "ad·
dieted" and needed· to get his
"spiritual life" together.
Asked how often the two used
cocaine during the three years,
Moore testified, "More than 100
Urnes ...
Moore once brought Barry
cocaine to his office at City Hall,
she testified. On other occasions
the mayor's security officers,
mem)Jers of the District of

_ _......

........

..

·

ALL ODDS
.&amp; ENDS
DISCONTINUED!
ALL FLOOR SAMPLES MUST GO!!!

tribute to M"'. , Hewetion BN, a long-Ibn¥
operaUng roo. .rse at the ilot!PitaJ, who was 1'
sti'ong supporter of the auxiliary. Friends and
reiatlves have contributed over $1,700 lo the
auxiliary's scholarship fund In memory of Mrs.
·
Hewetson.
'

1•

. no

, ~) 99 sa-::.::;~.;.:::
., . . 0

DOORS OPEN AT
9:00 A.M. TIL 6:00 P.M.

.......
c•a

II am to l am Fri. &amp; Sat.

Large
·Pepperoni
Pizza

.

MINNEAPOLIS (UPil - The
Unlver$11y of Minnesota baS:
canceled the sexy dan.c e line that'
has performed at men's $porting
events for many yean.
.
One · official complained of,·
"Inappropriate clothes and Inap- :
proprtate moves. "
:
Another official said the dance.:
Une, made up of young women,.
"doesn't send' society the right
message about women.''
.
Members of the dance line :
voiced dlsappoin tment . and one; ·
said the group would be willing tO&gt; :
change their at tire and their:
routines.
•
One female student, not a
member of the group, called the ·
dance line a "sexist display of :
women."'
·

Slaclc 115'101, 2 .............. wheel
diM, 4 ~ .... - iir, -.Ill. pb, till,
AIM'Mrldo.

lim to Mid. Sun.· Thurs.

:

Dance line ousted .:

s-u-a,amu

992-2124

.

9 HOURS ONLY

•
•
quest~on w~tness

Columbia pollee, helped her get
Mandela .
cocaine, she said.
Moore, who now lives In Los
Barry has pleaded Innocent to
Angeles, testified that Barry
three felony counts of perjury, 10
often stopped by her home In
misdemeanor counts of cocaine
Washington at all hours to use
possession and one misdemeanor
drugs with her.
count of conspiracy to possess ·
·Barry freebased cocaine In his
cocaine. If convicted of all
own kitchen, and smoked the
c barges he faces a maximum 26 . drug with her In the bathroom of
years In prison and $1.85 mllll~n
his home, Moore testified.
In fines .
She also named 15 homes Prosecutors revealed during a
lnclu~ing her mother's on Moth·
bench conference with U.S. Dis· · er's Day 1987 - four hotels and
trlct Judge Thomas Penfield
one business location where they
Jackson that Moore has been used drugs.
under a federal witness protec·
One time Barry's "body
tlon program after someone put a
started shaking" and he almost
$100,000 contract on her life.
passed out alter inhaling crack,
Barry, 54, appeared to listen she said. "After he finished the
Intently during Moore's testlm· · hit he said it was a really great
ony but showed no emotion. At hit," she said. He took more
one point Barry looked at his crack " right alter that."
wife, Effl, who was sitting in
Speaking In a husky voice,
court, and she shook her head Moore testified that she-broke up
side to side.
with Barry in June 1988 becau$1!
Later Wednesday Barry ap· l ·'l .was being eaten up with guilt
pea red at a . rally for Nation of ' because of the adultery. He told
Islam leader Louis Farrakhan · me It was divine providence that
where he was warmly greeted as we were together. He told me t
he climbed on the same stage had to learn to separate my
where he was applauded the · religious and spiritual beliefs."
n!ght before at a rally for Nelson ·

TV's - VCR - Washers
Dryers - Refrigerators • Microwaves
Ranges - Freezers - Dishwashers
Air Conditioners

I

•
s

D

T

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Ex;oltc llatr tS sprcea upwkn fabulous
footWear by ConntQ SI)Ofl You can1

go wroilg thts Spring il you ea ten the
Canbocan sptrit olthis d1amat1C

cotlechon

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SUCH AS CAR STEREO SPEAKERS,
TAPE DECKS, DISC PLAYERS, VCR'S!

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MANY ITEMS BELOW COST•••
DON~I MISS THIS ONE
htrif~_gt hOU$,t

iott's

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SHOE PLACE
N. 2ntllve.
, ~,

992-5627 .

il

. .DGIPLAU

Middleporl

•

~

'

conaultlng with astrolOgers and •
following every solid lead or tip.
''We can't overlook anything,"
the commissioner said. "Any:
possible direction that comes up.:
we have to follow It to Its logical- :
conclusions."
•

tesdng, will be used as a diagnostic aid In
cbecklllg patients for coronary arterial problems.
Dr. Mark 0. Brown, who will direct tesdng of
patients, and Kim Shamblin, head of the
hospital's radiology department, are pictured
with the new stress test equipment.

...
.....
$2995

Hoous:

the lour victims were shot.
The gunman boasted about the
shootings In six notes to news
organiZations and pollee. and
apparently knew his victim's
astrological signs, listing them
on some of the notes.
Pollee Commissioner Lee
Brown said Wednesday the task
force or 50 detectives working
from an office In the Brooklyn
Navy Yard Is using a new pollee
comp11ter, designed to aid detec·
lives In special Investigations.
Detectives investigating the
1988 murder of Pollee officer
Edward Byrne pioneered the use ·
of the new personal computer
with special software, said Chief
of Detectives Joseph Borrelli.
Byrne was shot to death In
Queens while guarding the home
ot a witness In a drug case.
Brown, who as public safety ·
commissioner In Atlanta over·
saw the lnvesdggation Into a·
highly publicized series of child
murders from 1979-1981, said the
com puterlzed system was developed by the pollee department
for use In major investigations.
Brown said Investigators were

SATURDAY, JUNE 30th ONLY

Was

, Pick-up Only! .

NEW YORK CUPI) -A pollee
task force hunting for the city's
" Zodiac killer" was on alert
early Thursday for the mysterious gunman who has stalked
and shot four men, one fatally.
But authorities said although
the previous shootings have all
occurred In the pre-dawn hours
on four separate Thursdays 21 or
42 days apart since March 8, the
Zodiac probably will not at tack
again until at least July 12 - 21
days after he shot and wound~ a
homeless man sleeping on a
bench In Central Park.
The task force was to concen·
. trate on Central Park and the
Brooklyn-Queens border, where

Asphalt gourmet
food for the road

and buy a whole pile of draperies
even though we're out of bare
windows at the moment.
Ot course, the Icing on the cake
came when I learned that the
space telescope which cost tax·
payers - that's you and I, my
friend- about two billion dollars
Is detective. · Human error, 1
believe they call it. Thill sets well
when the Admlnlstrailon Is about
to break a campaign promise of
no new taxes. God knows, tbe
present ones are quite enough.
Why Is It I have the feeling that
many or you are encountering
experiences similar to mine
these days? It's 1990 and we're
pretty modern. Perhaps, that's
an excuse to break the basic rules
of consideration for others.
I know I mentioned that I just
can't cope. Butdldlmentlonthat
I'm still smiling?

I

Zodiac task force is on alert

\

~

I don't ·need it...

Beat of the Bend

' .

Grand visitation trom the
Wol'lhy Grand Matron and a
reception bonorlnlf the Grand
Organist or the Grand Chapter of
Ohio Beatrice Kuhn was held
recently wltb 226 Order of the
Eastern Star members from
Ohio and West VIrginia
attendlna.
Worthy Grand Matron Mary
Porter and Wortliy Grand Patron
John Matusky were presented ac
honorary membership to Evan·
gellne Chapter by Beatrice
Kuhn. Max Porter and Sally
Matusky were presented
honorary·membership byRoillerl
Kuhn .
Guests Included a past
patron, grand officers
spouses, deputy grand matrOita,
grand representatives,
man or arrangement, wm·th•

The Daily Sentinel-Page 9 :

Pomeroy-Midcleport. Ohio

!~

�Page

10

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy

ThursctaY. June 28. 1990

Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, June 28, 1990

Witnesses recall their terror, anger during wilding rampage
NEW YORK (UP!) -Victims
attacked during a "wilding"
rampage In Central Park described their terror and outrage at
a pack of marauding youths, at
least one of whom kept grinning
during an unprovoked beating.
One of the witnesses was
at tacked after a female jogger
already Jay naked and comatose
In a pooJ · of blood, the most
~eriously wounded ofthe victims,
authorities contend.
· The testimony came Wednes. d;tY at the trial of three teens
ae~;used of the rape and beating
of the 29-year-old female jogger,
a Wail Street investment banker,
during the April 19, 1989,
rampage.
The defendants, Antron
McCray, 16, Yusef Salaam, 16
and Raymond Santana, 15, are
the first of the youths accused In
the attack to go on trial. Each Is
charged with 13 criminal counts,
Including attempted murder,
rape and sodomy, and If con-

victed, each faces a mal!imum
sentence of five to 10 years
Imprisonment. All three were
juveniles at the time of the
attack.
_ John Loughlin, the last person
to be attacked in the rampage
and the most seriously Injured
next to the woman jogger, was
scheduled to testify Thursday
when proceedings resumed In
s tate Supreme Couri In
Manhattan.
"I was terrified. I thought I
was going to die," said Robert
Garner, 30, of London, who was
forced off a running path and
beaten by the gang at about 9: 25
p.m. that nllzht.
Garner said about 20 black and
HlspaJIIC teenagers surrounded
him at the northern end of a track
around the reservoir at about
96th Street, hit him In the back of
!lie head with a rock and
manuevered him down a small
embankment.
"There was one of the group.in

particular who was hitting me In
my arm, my right arm. I got by
the face and torso, ' ' Garner said
him. I was just sprinting as fast
In a thick British accent
as I could," Lewis testified.
A corporale researcher for
The assault on the running path
British Airways, who was living
around the· reservoir about 9:30
In Manhattan at the lime, Garner
p.m. on April 19, 1989, came
said the youth punching him
Immediately after the attack on
"had a grin on his face. He was
the woman, who was dragged off
smiling."
another running path about a
The attack on Garner came
quarter mile north, The woman
moments after the group hawas ·beaten In the head with .a
rassed . another male jogger,
metal pipe and a rock and left for
Oavld Good, 34, \vho was hit In
dead. ·
the leg with a 3-foot-long b~anch
Lewis was the gang's fifth of
thrown by one youth.
. nine victims attacked In the
The wounded Good sprinted
moonlit 'p ark during a random
away, and s.ald he ~houted back
crime spree - known In local
angrily to his assallan t.
slang as "Wilding. "
.
Good encountered the youths .
Lewis said he was running
moments after they charged
around the northern end of the
another man jogging aroung the
reservoir track when he noticed
reservoir, David Lewis, 31, a
two black youths about 11 years
commercial banker.
okl crouched "In a football
' 'I just panicked. I ran by them
stance'' In bushes alongside the
and I tried to get by the person
path.
Immediately In fro.nt of me,"
!'l said, 'You want to race?"'
recalled a shuddering Lewis.
Lewis tes Ufied.
"As I went by him, he hit me In
"They said, 'Yeah, we'll race

Heat jokes tum to nightmare

In front of them.

all right.' I turned my attention
back to the path In front of me.
That's when I saw more of them.
There were about five bodies
coming out of tl!e trees."
He said one youth, larger than
the rest, blocked his path and
then 's truck him as he sprinted
past.
Earlier Wednesday, a woman
tes Ufled that the gang tried to
pull her off the back of a tandem
bike.
Patricia Dean said she w.as
riding with her fiance, Gerald
Malone, and noticed a group of
teenagers lunge Into the roadway

GLENDALE, Calif. (UP!) broke out, jomed Jennings and
When the temperature In Los neighbors on his roof for several
Angeles rose to an aU-time hours, hosing down and beating
record-high 112 two days ago, out sparks.
Julian and Betty Jennings
It was minute--tQominute, and
laughed with their fr iends from several times, as houses burst
the comfort of their air- Into flames all around them, they
conditioned home.
thought they had lost the battle.
The next day, during several But hours later, the white frame
hours of terror, they fought with house's neat shutters still stood,
garden hoses, brooms, shovels - the roses and bougainvillea still
·and every other available re- bloomed In the garden.
Hut next door, across the
source to save their quaint,
street,
up the hill, and behind the
colonial-style house, while all
home,
smoke still poured from
around them heat- and windthe
charred
ruins that only hours
fueled fires raged.
The suspected arson brush fire before had been elegant 1920s
that erupted late In the afternoon Spanish Revival bungalows,
Wednesday. spread quickly, sleek, glass 1950s homes and
'fueled by strong, dry winds and a post-modern mansions. At least
second day of record heat. It 34 homes were either destroyed
swept Into quiet, affluent 1\elgh- or seriously damaged, offiCials
borh.oods, forcing normally said.
"It didn't take long," Jennings
placid residents to feats of
said. " We've ·seen lots of fires
heroism.
"I'm not sure If our house, dance along the ridges, but this
which we've called home for one came down on us."
His wife, Betty, said, "You
30-somethlng years, would still
be here, If It weren't for a kid have oo Idea what It's like If you
named Eric Martinez , who don't see or hear it. It's thunderdoesn't even llve around here," ous. The wind, the fire. It's Just
Julian Jennings said as he stood unbelievable. Yesterday we
In his delicately landscaped front thought the heat was funny, like
everyone. It's not funny
yard,
Martinez, who was working In anymore."
Brushflres In Southern Califorthe neighborhood when the fire
nia, an unavoidable fact of life,

"They were making animal
noises, grunting," recalled

Dean.

She said three teenagers
grabbed her from the right side
and one grabbed her from the left
and began pushing at her
shoulders and pulling at her legs.
''They almost ripped rneo!fthe
bike," said Dean. "I was terrifled· so I sllirted pedaling very
hard!'
· Dean said the reason the
youths couldn't pull ller from the
bike was that she was hooked
onto the pedals with toe clips.

SPRING VAllEY CINEMA
446 4524

. : ..
IIOW.IOWIIII
AlDAY thru THURSDAY!

Mand'ela in Miami amid controversy

110 ,ASN:S.'

brother," she said. "When you King Jr. to honor the father of
shirts and sold 300 copies of a
; : MIAMI BEACH Fla. (UPI) reject him, you reject us. That's America 's non-violent civil
·.,ZUbllant crowds beating drums collection of Mandela speeches
very deep."
· rights movement. He again,
)md wearing African garb ga- at $4 each.
The controversy steeled re- however, refused to renounce
Mandela arrived at Miami
1hered Thursday to greet Nelson
solve in the black community to violence In his own country's
&gt;.fandela, showing enthusiasm International Airport just after
give Mandela a warm welcome. struggle for racial equality.
midnight about two hours_ late
lliey hoped would make up for a
Oona Davis, a 22-year-old
.)inub by city officials upset by due to an overwhelming welcome
student from Pembroke Pines,
In Atlanta.
: ~andela's prQoCastro stand.
got lip at 3: 45 a.m. and made the
. The South African anti·•• Mimdela was to speak Thurs: day morning at the Miami Beach . apartheid leader's visit to Miami 25-mlle drive to the convention
center.
was the shortest and potentially
;:t:onvention Center to theAmerl"I wanted- to come out and
)lan Federation of State, County most controversial trip on his
show my support. It's a once In a
eight-city u.s. tour to raise
tnd Municipal Employees, aclifetime cahnce. I'll tell my kids
money for his organization and
~rdlng to the latest schedule.
and grandklds about It," Davis
: : By 9 a.m., a mostly black lobby world leaders for con;¢owd of s toad five and six people tinued trade sanctions against said.
Davis said the political conPretoria ' s white-minority
;~p behind the barricades
government
troversy had tarnished Miami's
·'ai"Ound the convention center.
The only official welcome In Image.
:~any wore African colors of
.
"Even Boston, the most racist
:l-'_ellow, green and red. Some of South Florida was extended by
Opa Locka Mayor Robert In- city In the United States, gave
•lire women wore traditional
gram, Dade County's only black him a welcome. But he comes.
African 'dress - long wrapped
mayor. At a city commission here and gets treated like dirt,"
.skirts and dresses with matching
meeting . Wednesday, · Ingram Davis said.
; headdresses -and swayed to the
read a proclamation making · Said Linda Dixie, 42, of Miami,
; beat of wooden drums.
Thursday "Nelson Mande1a
"I think he (M;mdela) is a very ·
· The crowd roared and saluted
Day" In his city.
brave man. To the Cuban com:as busloads of delegates arrived
The controversy In Miami munity, we say you have your
· and lined up to go through the
erupted earlier in thewe_ek, when opinion, but we support him.
security checkpoints.
About 100 protesters also ga- five Cuban-American mayors, There Is a lot of racism in Miami,
Including Miami's Xavier Sua- .and the United States and I'm
. thered and were Isolated from
here because I support
; the prQoMandela crowds by po- rez, jointly denounced Mandela
for his failure to comdemn Mandela."
: lice. Several members of the
human rights violations In Cuba.
Miami has been the scene of
·Cuban Independence Party carThe declaration came amid a racial strife several times In the
: ried signs that said, ''Human
:Rights for Blacks and Cubans growing political rift oyer laSt 10 years. In the latest violent
whether community leaders Incident, blacks took to the
·;roo." ·
should applaud Mandela 's work streets In anger when Hispanic
; , One protester, Manuel Alayon,
against apartheid or rebuke him officer WIUiam Lozano caused
:· ~.was escorted away by five
· pdlice officers after parading for his support of Cuban Presi- the deaths of two· blacks In a
: pilst the prQoMandela crowds dent Fidel Castro, Palestine predominantly black neighborLiberation Organization leader hood last year.
:~avlng a sign that said, ·"Mr.
Yasser Arafat and Libyan PresiLozano has been convicted of
• Mandela, do you know how many
dent Moammar Gadhafi.
manslaughter In the deaths and
: p!!ople your friend Castro has
On Tuesday, Suarez appeared Is out on bond pending an appeal.
·killed just for asking for the right
at a press conference with black
Eddie Cohen, a Jewish man
:to speak as you do here?''
; The crowd booed him vigor- and Jewish leaders and extended who was among 200 well-wishers
a welcome to Mandela, but said who gathered at (he Alexander
' ously, bu I remained calm.
he would not he honored with a . Hotel looking to get a glimpse of
: :AFSME officials estimated
;6:000 would hear Mandela' s proclamation or given a key to Mandela Thursday. He said II
the c ily of Mlam I.
was unfortunate that south Flor· speech Inside the convention
Johnnie McMillan, head.of the · Ida politicians had adopted a
: center - Including 5,000 delehands-off policy toward Man, gates and their families, 300 Miami chapter of the NAACP,
inylted guests from Mlamml and called the snub a sl.ap In (he face dela, especially In light of all the
to black citizens.
racial strife the area has
: 700 members of the news media.
''He Is part Of us. He's our suffered . .
·, Vendors hawked Mandela T"It's just unbelievable what
we're going through down here,"
he said. "The city of Miami is the
only place In the world that won't
recognize this man. You know, In
this city Bart Simpson Is more
recognizable than Nelson
•
Mandela."
. TOKYO · (l,JPI) - Texas bus!Among Pickens proposals
On Wednesday Mandela vi. nessman T. Boone Pickens Thursday was one he termed an
sited
Atlanta and stood solemnly
: stormed out of the annual share- anti-greenmail amendment
at
the
tomb of Martin Luther
holders meeting of Koilo Manu. fl!clurlng Thursday In frustra•lion at being denied a place In the
·Japanese company.
, Pickens, who owns 26 percent
: of Kolto, Japan's largest auto
· parts maker. called the meeting
'. a farce and said the company
:treated American shareholders
: w:tth contempt
· He threatened to present his
experience to the ·Houston sum. mit of advanced nations next
:month as proof that Japan's
FRESH PEACHES,
·.corporate system is closed to
·outsiders.
TOMATOES, BANANAS,
; :At the shareholders meeting,
WATERMELONS
:Pickens sought passage of seven
·resolutions, including one that
:would Increase the dividend paid
'on ·Kolto shares and another that
. would give him four seats on the
:board of directors.
1982 ENGLAND
. ,After. three hours of heated
MOBILE HOME
·debate, Pickens' dividend prop:osal was voted down.
3 BR, Kitchen, DR, LR. Must
: :During subsequent discussion
sell now. Best offer.
Our molt excitina Girl'11 Hiah
·of his proposal on board
Sc:hool Cu ru.,. ;n !OK
000-0000
members, Pickens told company
vdlow .,ad is now available at
l'lresldent Takao Matsuura,
• $25 IIIVi.np.
';Your meeting has turned Into a
Offe.&lt;d excluol..,ly by R John., lol.
,sham. This .meeting Is a farce
·a'nd we no longer want to
:participate."
: , He and 33 other American
·s,hareholders then walked out.
· Afterwards, all seven of
.
Pickens' proposals were voted
down by large margins.
: · Pickens has been fighting for a
;place on the Koito board ~ver
·since he bought a 20 percent
:stake In the company In Febru:at'Y 1989.
The company's management
accuses Pickens of simply Intending to force them to buy back
-the shares at a higher price, a
;practice known as greenmail.

TODAY 7:00,9:10 .

FRI~! 7:00,9 :10
SAT.I:00,3:!0,7:00,9:10
SUN.l:00,3:10,7:00,9:10

fllfi)AY thru

STARTS TUESDAY, JULY 3 BRUtE WILLIS tn "DIE HeRp

2~

SANTA BARBARA, · Calif.
south of Corona abOut 60 miles
, (UPI) - A rash · of explosive east of Los Angeles. The fire was
·fires, fueled by winds, triple-digit started last week as a controlled
heat and arsonists, erupted
burn and flared up Wednesday,
across Southern California, des- said Tom Ramsey of the Califortroying more than 300 homes and
nia Division of Forestry. About
Injuring more than 32 people.
400 firefighters battled the blaze
. Santa Barbara was blanketed In· heavy brush and grass In a
by thick smoke from a 3.500-acre sparsely populated area.
arson fire that destroyed at least
Another six houses were des280 posh homes and businesses
troyed in the Chino Hills area of
near U.S. Highway 101 and State San Bernardino
In another
Route 154 on the western outdeliberately set fire.
skirts of the city.
Barbara Gaughen of Santa
The SaiJta Barbara blB+e beBarbara, said, ." I went outside at
gan at 6: 02 p.m. as a brushfire at
6 p.m. andthere was no more sun . State Route 154 and Painted Cave
because of the smoke and ashes.
Road in the San Marcos Canyon,
"II Is so thick It looks like we' rein
northwestofthecity . llwas "still
thick fog.''
burning actively" early Thurs.The Los Angeles suburb of
day and there were noes limates
Glendale also was hard hit . of when It would be contalnted,
Eighteen homes In a hillside
said U.S. Forest Service fire
neighborhood dotted with manInformation officer Susan
sions worth $500,000 to $1 million
Mockenhaupt.
each were destroyed and 16
"It was arson," Mockenhaupt
damaged.
said. ''There are suspects. An
Investigators said both fires
Incendiary device was found. "
apparently were the work of
Sheriffs.- deputies, however,
arsonists .
·
said there were no Immediate
At least i2 houses were dess~spects In the case, although
troyed In a 2,200-acre brush fire · possible wltnesses were

-

"The Bulletin Bos,d"
YOU CAN PLACE YOUR ADVERTISEMENT
FOR AS LOW AS SS.OO PER INCH~--

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

-Report targets incompetent
doctors, state med boards

a

'BULLE_TI BOARD
BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30 P.M. DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
3-FAMILY YARD SALE

FOR SALE
1983 DODGE TRUCK
LOADED

.

000-0000

•

FRI., JUNE 6 &amp;
SAT, JUNE 7
NOTICE

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

000·0000

1

RAIN OR SHINE
909 ABERGAlE lANE

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

SARAH

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

..

I

.J

most often strike in rural areas.
·destroying ranches and thousands of usually unpopulated
acres.
Wednesday's brush fire consumed only · several square
miles, but It hit hard In the
middle of suburbia. It was so
pilwerfill that flames jumped the
8-lane Glendale Freeway, swept
up a second hillside, Igniting
more homes.
Shocked residents stood stood
silently as a 3-stnry home,
perched on the edge of a cliff,
came tumbling down Into a
neighbor's swimming pool.
Only the 2-story fireplace of
another home remained standing
afer the flames · ripped through.
Nothing· except ashes and a
s tunnlng view of the new downtown Los Angeles skyscrapers
r.emalned at another home.
Further up steep, winding
Foxklrk Street, a dozen Romanstyle stone statues surrounded
smoldering limbers. ' 'That-used
to l)e one of the most beautiful
homes you've ever seen,'' said

Verona Shoemaker, a neighbor.
Steve Rupp, who lives In the
neighborhood, said, "You can
anticipate something like this
when lt 's this hot, this dry, for
this long. The hills are a
tinderbox."

,.

-{. ~
. ·~r.1;;rf ., '

HOMES DES'tROYED - Fire broke out In an
exclusive section of Glendale on Wednesday.
Thirty-four expensive homes were either destroyed or dama1ed as an arson suspected fire

raced up a hOly residential area of Glendale. Here
residents watch as a ·fireman puts out the last of
the Oameil that deslroyed this home. (UPI)

Fire raVages Southern California

The Daily· Sen.tinel
Is lntroduc:ing ·A New
Servic:e Now Available.

: Pickens fails to participate
: in Koito management; leaves

P0014WOy-Middleport. Ohio

f

·~·

WASHINGTON (UPI) -Most ,
state medical boards .are more
concerned with protecting doctors than the . public and the
system ·could be Improved If
details on the dlsclpllnay actions
were be made public, a report
said Thursday.
' 'I'he report -by Public Citizen,
an organization ~olinded by consumer advocate Ralph Nader,
found that an estimated 2,600
formal disciplinary actions are
carried out annually by states
against doctors - meaning less
than 0.5 percent of all doctors
face sanctions In any year.
The report listed 9,500 disciplinary actions ranging from fines
to license revocations taken .
since 1985 against 6,055 physicians and 837 c hlropractors,
podiatrists and dentists.
' "Far too often, despite their
clear duty to protect the public,
state medical boar11s see their
primary responsibility as protecting so-called 'Impaired physicians' from public exposure,"
said Nicole Simmons, who wrote
the report.
She said Increasingly, the
"definition of 'Impaired' covers
·doctors who may be drunk on the
:'job, strung out on drugs, insane
or habitual sex offenders ."
The report Included Information on disciplinary actions taken
by 41 states, the District of
Columbia and three federal
. agencies. ·
· · The main offenses listed were:
mlsprescrlblng drugs. accounting for 16.4 percent of disciplinary actions; noncompliance
with professional rules, about12
i percent; criminal conviction, 10
• percent; drug and alcohol abuse,
9.2 percent and practicing without a valid license, 8.9 percent
Nearly 3 percent of thedlsclpll. nary actionS Involved sexual
. abuse of a patient.
Simmons said It often take~
years for a doetor to be disciplined as the result of a patient
complaint and frequently, the
: penalty amounts to a slap on the
. wrist. She said mos.! disciplined
doctors are never removed from
medical practice.
The report made a number of
recommendations for Improving
: the protection of patients.
Among them, It said Congress
· should require state medical
boards work with other state
a,eneles and the federal Drug

r

. Enforcement Administration to
Identify and punish doctors
guilty of malfeasance. The D;EA
licenses doctors to write prescrlptions for controlled
substances.
In addition, the report said a
national data bank the federal
government plans to put Into
operation In September to collect
information about doctors who
are disciplined should be opened
to the public.
Plans call for the data to be
released only to certain government and medical agencies.

ques tloned.
.
The flames crossed U ,S. 101,
which was Closed bY the California Highway Patrol, destroyed a
railroad trestle and pushed Into
the posh multi-mUllon-doUar resIdences of Hope Ranch, which
Includes a golf course, located on
the hlllsldes above the Pacific
Ocean.
, The fire also spread further
Into the San Marcos Canyon,
burning wooden A-frame houses
In the San Marcos :rrout Club.
"Everything was .just .perfect
for 'this fire to start," said Santa
Barbara · Sheriff's deputy Jan
Bullard, referring to 40·60 mph
Winds, four years of drought, the
arson device and an undergrowth
that last burned In 1955.
She said the brush burned "like
gasoline" and flames crossed
U.S. 101 "at a frightening rate."
The fire also raced through
Tuckers Grove County Park, a
portion of the Los Padres National Forest and a County
~ Sheriff's Honor Farm, housing
263 prisoners. About 200 Inmates
were evacuated to the County
Jail at 7:30 p.m. The 'county's
garage,-with .much of the county's .fleet, also was destroyed. • .
"It's not just one direction of
travel and not just one major hot
spot," said Bullard.
About 300 firefighters battled
the blaze, aided by 200 other
personneL About 100 pollee, who
earlier worked to evacuate
neighborhoods , spent the night
patrolling burned-out homes and
streets, darkened by electric
outages prO&lt;Iuced by burned
power poles.
There were no deaths and only
about a dozen mitior Injuries
reported ~ mostly from smoke
Inhalation and minor burns,
health officials said. Five shelters were set up to house people
who lost their h_omes or were •
unable· to reach to their
residences. ·

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�Page 12 The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, June 28, 1990

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Business Services

Senate"passes housing bill to help nation's homeless
,WASHINGTON iUPI) - The significant step toward ... com·
Senate passed the first major bating the conditions of homehousing bill in a decade that HUD · lessness, hopelessness, despair
Secretary Jack Kemp said will and poverty that has taken place
do more in the fight against In this town since the war on
''homelessness, hopetesness, poverty 25 or 26 years ago."
The complex bill, which authodespair and poverty" than any
rizes $18 billion for fiscal 1991,
legislation passed in 25 years.
.The biil would create more Includes some old and tried
housing for the very poor and, at programs. discards and consoll·
the same time, give low·. and dates others and would write Into
moderate-income famliles a Jaw innovative experiments such
chance to own their own homes as the home-ownership plan.
But the bill. in an effort to
under a new program proPQsed
assure the financial so11ndness of
by President Bush.
The Senate approved the bill the popular Federal Rome Ad·
ministration mortgage insu96·1 Wednesday and sent it to the
rance program, would increase
H9use, which is ready to consider
the amount of up-front money
a · more costly and ambitious
needed by requiring two-thirds of
housing bill. Sen. William Roth;
the closing costs in cash and ·
R·Del., cast the only negative
increasing the annual premium.
\Ole.
The Mortgage Bankers of
Kemp said, "This is the most

predicted, .:'! believe we can look gram, shifting it from population
Participants in the compromAmerica said the compromise
and
need
to
just
population.
That
ise
negotiations also had praise
forward
to
1
million
new
ho·
between Sen. Alan Cranston,
would
have
benefitted
growing
for
the new !lexibUity the bill
meowners
by
1992
..
.
among
the
D-Calil., and the administration
Sunbelt
states
at
the
expense
of
would
give to states and local
low
and
moderate
incomes."
on FHA loans would eliminate
Senate
Banking
Committee
the
industrial
North
where
povgovernments
In meeting housing
between 75,000 and 150,000 firstChairman
Donald
Riegle,
Derty
is
higher,
particularly
in
needs.
time homebuyers who would be
Mich., said the bill wo11ld provide large urban areas. ·
The bill would consolidate 10
unable to come up with the extra
$3.1
billion
to
fund
an
additional
Sen.
Alfonse
D'
Amato,
R-N.
Y
.
•
current
housing programs into a
upfront costs.
lowand
moderate-income
hous·
blasted
the
idea,
saying
that
single
block grant program
" It effectively closes the door
ing
and
would
Increase
the
is
a
factor.
so
Is
while
population
called
HOP,
the Housing Opporto home ownership .to thousands
of
affordable
new
homes
number
PQverty
and
housing
overcrowdtunity
Partnership,
and deor American ...tainilies," said
to
nearly
274,000
by
available
Ing.
lie
said
the
money
Is
"not
emphasize
expensive
construc·
Warren Lasko, the association's
Intended for one ·s tate that tion by allowing such
1993.
..
executive vice president.
The
compromise
proposal
doesn't
have a need as great."
alternatives as rental assistance
The legislation, stalled last
calls
for
spending
a
bout
$18
William
Diefendorfer,
deputy
vouchers for low-income
Friday, was revived Tuesday
:
biUion
in
1991.
some
$4
billion
director
of
the
Office
of
Managefamilies.
when I)emp, Crans ton and about
more
than
the
Bush
administrament
and
Budget,
said
he
was
In addition, the Senate negotia10 senators closely involved in
tion
proposed
in
its
budget.
A
bill
particularly
pleased
that
the
tors
agreed to President Bush's
the bill reached a compromise
White
House
aide
said
the
extra
adopted
the
administration's
pofundlt\g
request, $240 million
full
acceptable to the administration.
cost
was
acceptable
because
a
sition
of
ensuring
the
continued
in
1991,
for
the
ROPE program to
Kemp, who demanded and got
variety
of
policy
goals
were
met.
of
the
mortgage
insurance
health
middleand low-Income
help
more money for the Home
The
Senate
rejected
55-44
an
program
of
the
Federal
Rousing
people
buy
houses.
Kemp said It
Ownership and Opportunity for
amendment
that
would
have
Administration,
whose
capital
would
let
250
public
housing
People Everywhere program,
required large banks to cash had slipped from about $8 billion communities vie for. selfgovernment ch~ks for the poor in the early 1980s to $2.6 billion In . ownership. .
and 54-42 an amendment that 1989.
If the authorizing measure is
would have created 50 housing
The bill seeks to reduce high
passed by the Senate, funding for
opportunity zones in the poorest FRA mortgage default rates by
the bill would still have to .be
areas of the country.
establishing higher premiyms approved·through the appropriaThe Senate cleared ~way a (or low down payments · and . tions process. Beyond ·that hurpotential roadblock when it de- would require borrowers to pay
dle, which the senate negotiators
feated 63-35 an amendment by two-thirds of the closing costs in
expressed confidence in overSen . Phil Gramm, R-Texas, to cash. The HUD secretary would
coming, would be compromise
with a $28 billion housing bill In
NATO, and said once unification change the formula for allocat· also be empowered to adjust the
the House that is opposed by the
takes place he would like to see ing money under the Community premiums·to meet changes In the
administration.
Soviet troops leave what is now Development Block Grant pro- economy.
East Germany.
But he said NATO's mission
would not change significantly
because of recent changes in
Eastern Europe and the Soviet
Union.
•
·'What is clear is that the threat
has changed," he said. "It is
therefore ill our interests to also
change and to reflect on the type
of defense that is necessary to
adapt to the change in the
threat."
lie said he was not certain a
formal treaty reflecting those
changes Is necessary.
"It Is possible to make it clear
. that between what remains of the
Warsaw Pact and a transforme&lt;i
NATO there will no longer exls t a
reciprocal threat. Such a declaration could reassure everyone. ''
On the Middle East, Bus.h said
he thought it was unrealistic to be
believe that if only Washington
pressured Israel, a peaceful
solution to the region's problems
would be found. But he admitted
POTPOURRI SCENTS
to "a certain disillusionment"
with Israeli policy in the occu·
pied territories.
Bush said, "The declarations
FAMILY SIZE
by (Israeli Housing Minister
Ariel) Sharon renouncing the
WITH PEANUTS
SUMMER MEMORIES FIOI'als, wann amber and a touch of the Ortent.
massive settlement of Soviet
DRIFTING PETf.LS Exotic norals, bayberry and cinnamon.
Jews In the occupied territories
10
MEADOW FLOWERS qassic couutry·Cresh Cr~n and :~pice.
gave me some hope. We will
always defend the rlghl of Jews
to emigrate, hut to settle them In
the occupied territories does not
· ·s~rve the peace process."

FOIEVEI IIONI
TANNING

Is

'
j

'

judicial as well as political
barriers.
French President Francois
Mltterrand and West German
Chancellor Relmut Kohl urged
earlier this week the adoption of
an emergency $15 billion aid
package to help the faltering
Soviet economy. The proposal
was rejected at a summit meet·
ing in Dublin of the 12 Eutopean
Economic Community member
countries.
"For Americans, it is difficult
to understand why Cuba continues to receive $5 billion each
year from the U.S.S.R." he said.
"Wouldn't the money be better
used to directly help the Soviet
people?
"If the U.S.S.R. wants to save
$5 billion. she can start there."
:aush said the best way to help
the Soviet Union was through
investment by Soviet and Ameri·
can businessmen in joint ven·
lures as has already been done to
help Poland and Hungary.
lie said he did not thlnk Kohl's
strong support for massive economic aid to the Soviet Union was
the price Kohl had to pay for
Soviet support for German
unification.
"I do not have the cynical view
of those who make those accusations against Helmut Kohl," he
added. "I think that the Chancel·
lor has a deep interest in the
reforms and for the prosper! ty of
the Soviet Union."
Bush reiterated his position a
unified Germany should be
treated like any otfier member of

LONDON (UPI) ~ Delegates
at a conference on ozone depletion launched a 15-member committee Thursday that will spend
a multi-million-dollar fund
akned at halting global producticin of chemicals that are des·
troylng Earth's natural shield.
Industrialized and developing
nations were each allocated
seven seats and the 15th place
will be taken by a nation selected
ol) a rotating basis to chair the
E!Cecutive Committee of the
Multilateral Funding
Mechanism.
Laupers Jan Brinkhorst, directo.r of the environmental directorate of the European CommunIty, said ·two seats would go to
E!Jropean Community, one each
tO' ,the United States, the Soviet
Union, Japan, Australia or New
Zealand. and the European Free
Trade Association of Scandanavlan nations.
:Developing nations had not yet
decided which countries would
take a permanent seat, but a
decision would be made before
the conference attended by 75
nations ends on Friday Jle said.
U.S. delegation leader William
~illy said Washington would
p~ovlde 25 percent of the fund,
which Is slated to be between$160
mUllion and $220 million. Britain
pledged $9 million on Wednesday, and the program is being
admlnister.ed through the World
Bank and the United Nations.
The 10-day meeting Js the
second gathering of the 59
nations that have signed the 1987
Montreal Protocol, and was
aimed at hammering out a clear
sttategy to halt global production
of • halons and chloroflourocarbons, chemicals used as aero·
sols, refrldgerants and foams.
Scientists believe. the substances are gradually destroying
beits of ozone, which sit a bout 20
mUes above the Earth and block
out' cancer-causing ultraviolet
light.
ReillY gave an upbeat assessment of the meeting. ,
"We are extremely pleased
with the degree of cooperation
arid wide concensus on most of
the basic issues," he said.
"Three years after the agreeloo

m·e nt on the Montreal protocol,
we are moving to conclude in
favor of a full phase out of CFCs
by the end of the century."
But the moves to galvanize all
nations to work together to avert
the possible ecological disaster
have become mired in the
trappings of interna'tional
politics.
India and China are refusing to
sign the protocol because they do
not think they will be adequately
compensated for banning the
chemicals in the world's two
most populous nations.
Indian Minister of State for the

EUM HOME

1 - 1 1-dFor

Senior Citiz- and
Good Rot•
T.L.C.

"At

CLEVELAND ( UPil -No one each and another 5,185 had four
held all six of the winning of them for $75.
numbers In Wednesday's Super
The Kicker portion of the game
Lotto jackpot worth $3 million, produced the numbers 941085,
bringing Saturday's jackPQt to $6 and one player has that number,
million, Ohio Lottery officials good lor $100,000.
said.
Eight of the $532,537 worth of
The winning numbers were 6, tickets had the first five numbers
9, 18. 21, 25, and 26.
·for $5,000 each; 47 had the first
Out of the $2,789.150 worth of four for $1,000; 459 had the first
tickets sold, officials said 120 had , three for $100 and 4,1305 had the
five of the numbers for $1,000 first two for $10.

40o/o

A BIG
OFF
ALL SUMMER FOOTWEAR
By Connie and Buster Brown

heritage house
THE SHOE PLACE
•

992·

209 South 4th St.
Middlepoft, Oh.
"LOW

I

''

'•''

.

POWEIWASH
SERVICE

511 S. Fowth ln.
llilldlepert, Ohia
RESIDENTIALond
COMMERCIAL SIDING
Hou . . • Mobile Homea
, Transport Vahlctos •
Farm Equipment •
Heovy Equipment. Etc.
FREE ESTIMATES
24 HR. SERVICE

61

ELF iN"THE COMPANY - Keayon Chin, a
technician wltb GTE Government Systems Corp.,
teslll a priated circuit board on lhe company's
Extremely. Low Frequency (ELF) reclever lobe
'

placed aboard Navy submarl11es. The receiver
provides for receipt of messages by subs cruising
hundreds of feet beneath tbe ocean's surface
where ordinary radio waves cannot penetrate.
'

~C

deregulates di~po$~1 of
·some radioactive waste matter
.

Pil. 949-2101
or Res. 949·2160
Day cir Night
NO SUNDAY . LALLl

USED
90 DAY WUIAIIIl
W~HER$-$100

up

SER~ICE

We can r~ir tiild rt•• radiatars and
heater carts. We can
also acid boil asid rad
aut radiators. We also
repair Gas Ta.. s.

PAY HILL FORD

992-2198
Middleport.

MIDDLEPORT
VCR CLINIC

{Acr•• tr... Htinen Jhrift St..)

992-7843
SPRIIIO SPECIAL
CLEAN, LUBE &amp; TEST
(614)

SERVICE
992-S33S or US-3561

S1816

.

.

'

SPORT CARDS
Buy· Sell
Trade

. 367-0588
5-21-'10-t

VIC'S

BODY SHOP
992-6803 .

FLATWOODS, ROAD
POMEROY. OHIO
6 / 1/1

Anllable for A Limited Time OniJ!

BULlETIN BOARD

A-1

BADMINTON SET STEAK
SAUCE

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

PEPSI
PRODUCTS

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

$499
24 PACK CANS

PRICES GOOD AT MIDDLEPORT STORE ONLY
Quantities Are Limited.

New location:
1" North Slcond
MMWioport, Ohie 45760

Your Phone
Bille Here
""""'- . IUSINESS PHONE
16141 992-65!0
,IIEStoENCI PHONE

MICROWAVE

O~EN

PlUMIING

SALES &amp; SERVICE

HORS: M·f 9-7
Sot. 9·5
CIDiod 5•.

REPAIR

ALL-MAKES
Bring It In Or We
Pick Up.

lEN'S APPUANCE
SEIYICE
992-5335 or 91S-3561

16141 992-·7114

.... a-wt

.,Free Eltimetea"

NO SUNDAY

CHESTER, OHIO

FrH Estimates
985·4473
667·6179

8-31-1 mo .

•GRAVEL
•LIMESTONE
•FILL DIRT . ..
•ANYTHING
AT ALL

985-4422

Phone
992-6491

••

NRC officials said they would
tightly control the number of
ell;efptiol)' granted to guard

Middleport
•·

I.;

to all.
Harlan end Aileen
Wehrung

Residential &amp;
Commercial

CALL
992-5589

...

5-11-'90-1 mo.

MOW OPEN

'

'

Appointment

949-2794
SPECIAL
30 Sesrions-•30
Co. Rd. 21
Watch Far Signs
OHIO .

GREENHOUSE
Paulin's HilllttwHn
Rutland ond Rt. 554
OP£NMON.-SlT.IOtoS

SliAWnOWERS: Dw..-f
&amp; Tall; PAMPAS GRASS:
Pinlc &amp; Whitt; FUSCIIA,
BASKETS, HERIS and
MORE.

6.14-742-2772

I and J CONSTRUCTION
GREG BAILEY
•NEW HOMES •SII;&gt;ING
•GARAGES
•REMODELING
•GENERAL CONTRACTING

.

A Great Combination"Quality and Reasonable Prices"
WE GO THE EXTIA MILE.....
992-6110
OHIO

COUNTRY
'
MOBILE
HOME PARIC
•Mobile llome

.'--1!!!1

.

•Mobilel4aintl·
Rotll•l• .
•Lot! Rtn\llls-

992·7479

lt. 3:1 Nerfh af
•-roy, Oltlo

FOR SALE
One Of llacine's Nicest Home\
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 ffnced pasture
land and rented mobile home.

Call

..

mo. pd.

1' 12-' ...tln

Til-COUNTY RECYCLING

OffiiS 2 LOCAnoiiS TO SEIVE YOU-.

POMEROY;' OHIO: Rt. 7 &amp; S.R. 143
ALBANY. OHIO: Rt. 50 &amp; S.R . 143
NEW HOURS:
POMEROY: 9 e.m.-7 p.m. 7 Daya
ALBANY: 10 a.m.·ll p.m. 8 Dayo. Clol8d Sundoy

PAYING AS OF TODAY, MAY 29, 1990
#1 Coppll' 90¢ per lb.;
Aluminum Cana, 36¢ per lb.

Stop In aiid S..

•.

786 North
Second Ave.
Middleport

Heating, Cooling,
Refrlger,ation
Service

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

I. L
TRUCKING

Stop &amp; c-pare

HUMPHREY'S
CLIMATE
CONTROL

Coli Now To M•k•

BISSEll &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION
•Complete
lomodiUng

BILL SLACK

FOREVER BIONI
TANNING

PH. 949-2101
or les. 949-2160

•Garag~s

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL
'LIGHT HAULING
'FIREWOOD

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION •

Across ,,_ POll Offko
217 E. S.C. Pomeroy
I'OMIIOY •,;&lt;:i-o. .....

•New Homes

FREE .ESTIMATES

tl-12-9ci tfn

Wo C..-y Flehlng S,.ppll•

MOVING!

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

EVENINGS

POMEIOY, DHIO ·

OUT

NEW- REPAIR

992-2269

Aa-011 p,_ POll Offko

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE
CEmR
SELLING

ROOFING

6·5-'90-1 mo. pd.

RANGES-Gas-Eitc.-$125 up

lEN'S APPUANCE

6-11-1

949-2168

MAINTENANCE &amp; REPAIR
1361 Powoll St.,lli....orl

FREElER$-1125 up
IICIO OVEN$-$79 up

a

Howard L Writ..l

DRYER$-$69 up
IEFRIGERATOI$-$100 uj

949-2969

WASRINGTON (UPI) -Amid
Public Notice
against the possibility of excesCurtiss also said the radiation
"heated disagreement" within
.~ive cumulative doses , but some · exposures permitted under the
NOnCE OF PUBLIC
the agency over its safety, the
·within the agency questioned
HEARING ON THE
policy would be roughly 10 times
ORANGE TOWNSHIP
Nuclear Regulatory Commission
whether the NRC had adequate
than the Collective dose from ali
BUDGET
announced a new policy deregu- safeguards.
releases from all 105 operating
Notlcolo horebygivonthlt
on the 2nd dey of Julv.
lating disposal of certain lowRobert Bernero, director of the
U.S. reactors in 1986.
t990. It 7:30 o'clock P.IIK..
level radioactive waste deemed
NRC's Office of Nuclear Mateo public hoorlng witt be hold
Bud_g_et ~repered by
non-hazardous.
rial Safety and Safeguards, readNRC Chairman Kenneth Carr on the
Townlhlp Tru1tee1 of
The "below regulatory con·
ily acknowledged the turmoil rejected Curtiss's concerns the
Orona• Townahlp of Motga
cern' • policy would allow nuclear
within the NRC over the policy, about "excess" ntalth effects,. County, Ohio. for the next
aucceeding ,fiecal year en~
plant operators, hospitals and
saying: "There has been dis- . saying there were large uncer- ing
Oecon\ber 31. 1991.
other generators of very lowagreement, 'eve n heated tainties about health risk ana·
Such he"ring will be held
tho offlc:o of tho C lork.
level radioactive waste to ask the
disagreement."
· lyses estimating cancer deaths ••
Dorothy Colowoy. ·.
NRC for exemptions from fedAmong others, NRC Commis- from very small doses of radiaDorothy Cotowov.
Or1ngo Townthlp Clllk
eral niles requiring' disposal in . stoner James Curtiss, in a partial tion delivered to · large
181 28. 1tc
dumps with stringent environ·
dissent to the NRC decision, said populations.
mental safeguards.
the collective radiation dose
Public Notice
The exemptions would allow
allowed under the new policy
Carr said the ·PQiicy would not
PUBLIC HEARING
waste generators to send slightly
could cause between five and 10 endanger the puillic because the
NOTICE
radioactive materials to regular
"excess"- or above expected- agency would grant exemptions
The vtttoge of Middleport
municipal trash dumps or even
cases of illness each year.
only to products posing dangers will hold • public heerlng on
recycle them In consumer
."I view this level to be ~quivalent to "exceedingly tho 1981 Budgort on July 9,
1990, ot 7 :30 P.M . In the
products.
unacceptably high," Curtiss small" radiation risks faced council
chamber• M 237
NRC officials said Wednesday
wrote.
. everyday by Americans.
RICI St .. Middleport. Ohio.
that wastes potentially qualifyAll citil:1n1 ere welcome to
ottend.
ing for exemptions would include
Jon P. luck
piotectlve clothing worn by nu Clerk-Tre•urer
clear plant workers, medical
Viti 191 of Middleport
instruments containing small
181 28 1tc
amounts of radioactive material
Public Notice
arid slightly contaminated bodies
of laboratory animals.
PUBLIC HEARING
The NRC adopted the policy
NOTICE
despite protests from environTho vtltoga of Middleport
wilt hold a public h-tna on
mentalists and several states
July 9. 1990ot7:30P.M .In
who said exemptions for numerthe council chambero at 237
ous wastes could result in large
Race St .. Middleport. Ohio.
cumulative radiation doses to the
PurpoH of the hllring Ia
to receive comment from
publiC. Maine, Minnesota, Ver·
cltkono on a propotod Spomont, Iowa and Virginia already
clol Houolllg Projoat to be
have taken action against the
oubmlttod to tho Ohio Dept.
new NRC 'policy.
of Development under the
FY 1 980 Comprohonaivo
Environmental Protection
Houalng Progrem.
Agency. o,tlicials, who had
The vlllege propo. . torestrongly criticized earlier draft
quwt t92.300 lor tho pur·
versions of the NRC policy.
poao ol oootortlng LMI ,.~
dlnU In the purcll•e of
reserved . comment ori final
hom• wHhln the •PIIII•·
product.
AI ctllzent ere welcome
The policy could save the
to enend and written com·
nuclear power Industry $50 milmenta mey be meiled to
Movor Fred Hollmon. 237
lion a year in dlsPQsal costs
DEXTER ROAD · CO. RD. 10
Roce
St.. Middleport, Ohio
because up to one-third of Its
45780. AP com"*"• muot
I
Mile
from
langsville
low-level waste could receive an
be recolvod by 7:30 P.M.
FOLLOW SIGNS
exemption.
July 8. 1890.
Fred Hoffman, Mayor
However, industry officials
Vll191 of Middleport
have not decided whether to seek
ill 28 1tc
exemptions, citing concerns it
might anger the publiC. Industry
1 card of Thlnkl ·
officials were to decide Thursday
whether .to seek an exemption.
RIVER JUNCTION
NRC health risk analyses show
AT OLD TOWN CAMPGROUNDS
Thenki to all
deregulating one waste stream
SAT.,
JUNE
30-6:30
P.M.
tho••
frlenda and
would pose a maximum lifetime
Bring Covered Dish &amp; Eating Service
relative~
for the
cancer risk of one In 2,500 to the
Meat &amp;Drinks Furnished
lovely floWers
most exposed individual. In
$1.00 Admission Per Person
and carda
contrast, EPA guidelines say
oburvlng our
Superfund toxic waste sites
should be cleaned up sufficiently
50th wedding
to limit lifetime cancer risks to at
anniversary.
least one in 10,000.
Best wl1he1

$2999

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1-31·1 mo.

SIMILAR TO PICTURE

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lOWE

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N. 2nd Ave.

"'

conn:~tion

992·2

CUSTOM BUll
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

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MIDDLEPORT

BISSELL·
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1614) 742-2027

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RACII~E. OHIO

99&lt;

51699

INSTALLATION

30 Stssions-•30
Co. Rd. 21

DRY BREEZEs··

"Before we get into a situation
wliere we break the protocol, it is ·
better to see what we want," said
Gandhi, who Is attending the
conference as· an observer.
"Either you ease up on our
obligations, or you tighten
yours."

::::::-.::.:::1PR OFESSIONAU

949-2794
SPECIAL

. mz&amp;nL

Enviornment Maneka Gandhi
said $40 million siated for India If
it joins is not enough because by
New Delhi'"s calculations, the
South Asian nation would need
about $600 million to retool Its
CFC-producing industries .

FREE
ESTIMATES

Call N- To Moke
Appointment

~e~ .

Committee set up to halt production
of chemicals hurting ozone layer

FENCING

OPBIIIIO SOON

Bush suggests Moscow stop
aid to Cuba, save $5 billion
PARIS (UPI) - President
Bush indicated In an Interview
publiShed Thursday he opposed a
French-German proposal to give
economic aid to the Soviet Union
In hopes of "saving" leader
Mikhail Gorbachev and said
MOscow could save $5 billion a
y~ar if It ended subsidies to Cuba.
·Bush also told a group of
European and Japanese journal·
lsts he did not believe a formal
non-agresslon treaty between
NATO and the Warsaw Pact was
necessary, butsaid a declaration
that the threat between the two
mllltary blocs no longer exists
m)ly be useful. .
·The president was asked if the
United States would join in a
proposal by France and Germany to provide economic aid to
the Soviet UniOn and whether it
was possll!le to " save" em:
· battled Soviet leader Gorbachev
with money.
·' •j do not think that the question
of · economic aid to the Soviet
Union should be stated in terms
of •savlng ot not saving Gorbachev. !!'hat is up to the Soviets to
decide," Bush said in the interview published by the French
dally Le Figaro.
"You know my position. It Is to
firmly support perestroika and
thom to say that we think
GQrbachev dolng a good job,
'but not to go any further. It is not
for us to tell the Soviet Union how
to resolve its problems.
"We Americans would have
problems lending the Soviets
m~;&gt;miy ... , " Bush said, citing

13

The Deihl

DALLAS SAYlE

..

AT

PAT HILL
CHIYSLII..fll.YIIOtrTII
DOIGI
71e N. 2ND AVI ,
MIODLII'OIIT
. .2-2171

f

3995.~·..···"
992-6421
5-16-'90·1 1110.

.
'

.

�_,

.
~age-14

The

Middleport. Ohio

Sentinel

Areo

alngleto

-~·
for .
relallonshlpe,

44

32 Mobile H011181
for Sale

LAFF-A-DAY

3 Announcements
oHio . '!!'lilly

llpollo, OH 45831.

GOLD

CREDrr

CINndo,

Alo

HNrt... rch, P.O. BGI 1043, Gaf..

2

._

-Ford ....... I ..,IIIII,-

1111,

•

__ __

~,1_

CARD

r,...PI
_...,_, -.. •

VIII/Mottorcord guo10nlood, no
ucurity dopooll , t.aoo.M3-1100,
tel, co. bill• $40.50 fM.
GOLD
CREDrr
CARD
· Vlii/Mottorcord guor1ntood no
... urhy ~opoelt t-M3-SIOO
Ill. eo. 111118 4UQ leo.
No T,..paulng on Otrald
Ho&lt;lgoo i..,.t on Sond Hill Rood.

RentJh

llrik

~

.. pq . ..

--CR

.., .......~

. . . . .? . . . .
"~T.:.•

••

.

a

Fumlehed
Rooma

DlgMt

•

GilA NT
'

(l) Club Cot•'liCt

lll Ra #ng Rainbow &amp;;I

·ll

COME WITHIN ONE FOOT OF
Ti-115 BLANKET, 'I'OV STUPID
DOG, AND 'I'OO'LL REGRET IT
FOR TI-lE REST OF '(OUR Ll FE!

RoMie""'""'. -"'-h.
1111
' ·.
-:7·1110.·----~.

-.-wv.

~mple

tlio
bewords.

2

(!) • dL llllr Thoo""rDIII04tltlhlllrltedod

.0.

.......... -ns.

CLAY I. !'OU.UI

I~1 F LI EINu1"I

eiJl ••&amp;;le«JJ •
eo .....

124. I a - - ""' .._
..... pluo _,
--.tte-Utl.
.
•
Kll• bl ..... 1.000 ....... Ex•
_ ..lloo••.,... ~

"""''"" illll 1-...t-7711 1111.
AIIM. : M -

·" ·~

low to lorm fou r

I:OOa'oc":!lal r And

1100. ......

~

loarro1190 lottoro ol
0 four
oaamblod words

EVI!fiNG

··--·~ .....

41 HOUIM for Rent

141io4

THURS.. JUNE 21 •

saN.-• · hiNactaadln

Giveaway

4

-

....
'::~:~' S~ll4llA-~i.~s· ....

Television
Viewing

73 Vans I 4 WD'I

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

' llgnlllcMI
wrlle:

The Daily Sentinel-Page 16 •

Pcx:n-oy-Midtlaport, Ohio

BORN LOSER

KIT 'N' CARLYLEe by~ Wript

Apanment
for Rent

Thursday, June 28, 1990

Thursday, June 28, 1990

•

.

e GD AndV Cltllllth

CLOSE ...TWELVE
AND A I-IALF
INCI-IES!

1-..;E;...-;.;D,. .;v...o;;...;;c,.....~
· l...

Ill World today
OHHian
D ClwiH h1 Chaoga
1:01 ([) • • ..., Ill• •1..
1 :301(J) 0 NIC NlghtiJ

COl
I:CIO .........
Aloo1. . . ·--

N1wa

(I) 8pa'11Laak

e(l) eloclre llectllc
«&lt;I ABC ..._ &amp;;I

48 Spice for Rent

A fellow train passenger
asked where I WOiked. When I
1-...1...~-__,___,___," told her the IRS she sighed,
.-----------.:.-. "Gee. thafs loo bad. 'ybu had
T I QAC U
sucha---·--·1'

15 j1 I I

_

IG

1--.1.;,
.7....:,.1...:!..,1;.:.....:;1.,.:':.,...1~

Complete tho chuckle quoted

1..-.l.'--J..-.L.J.-J..--I

by filling in the missing words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

(1)1 'iL_~~ &amp;;I

0
•• Call 111nr
.TopCaod
0 Nawtoen
1:35 ([) Andy Cltllllth
7:00gJ_I c a - . Mrl. King

il&amp; (J) PM Mlgaalna
(!)~

e.
(- Edltlc!n
(l) (!) MacNal Lalnr

For Lease
0

..........
• eo a
,_
e

•

e (II CurNnt Altair

&lt;&gt;

Chow, port Lib pupo

GD Night Court
111 MaMwlt•

=·
.
.
.
.
--=-·." " "·
--'"'-·-r
=::JTM-""":i ... houH

to Employmenl Services

1114-317·'1234.

--------

olelntng.

Yard Sale

FrM

..

-

In ftndlng
lor ,...,
101'.

.o. to• m. w- wv

·;=R:o=

,

D A1111ott And eo.t.tto

&amp;

Wo'l

e

. TffAT~ THt J.t.IT TIMi ~ c;o TO Tiff
~LI. GAME ON ~AT My I
.
•

.

.

····. '

ee Em.t'lllnllllll Tonight·
.e (JI Ma11111'1 Family .
Ill eo • Ja~petdpl &amp;;I
eo Malar Ll~~~t~•

..
·-\If')

Bllllbll

TO

-lorl3.00por - - - ·

258711 or Cll 1.-m.lltZ lor lira. ClortL

7:05 ([) Jall8nonl
7:30 (J) Family l'lltd
Cll tlud ~ Dlredftlll

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

l&gt;llto,
Rood.
IIIII ...
llolooo-.
114-

-

...,._.-

~

--COl.- do.""

.,... 118+ ""'· In -

..-y,

t

0 Miami VIce Crockett and
Tubbe etumble onto an inf1nt

..........:~........ ar:w:
....
you. ~· Ill 1154.

~"'

'fc1

Wheal 01

Ill Coomlra

CD Night Court

STADIUM

Fi1131lCIJI

i

~

-'&gt;
Buiii'IIU
Opponunlty

7:35 ([) 8anlard And Son
I:OOIJ) MOVIE: Tha Mall! 01
Zano (2:00)

•
I

eand(J)Elvin
• COaiiW - - Theo
are thrlllod when

.

·Hl!fii!l!!!i"

Rlloy JICklon 111111. 4Rl

Cll Mutcla Magaatna
Nallonel Qeograplllc
(l) HomalltM Subcontracton
put the ftnlahlng touc:hn on
lht houll.

ee
YES! NETTING U6 IS

THEIR. SECONI&gt;MOIT
FAVORITE PAATIME I

e (II ChatHa A P!lmpered

housawlfe continuea her
huaband'a Work tis a bell
bondsman alter hi dlft. &amp;;I

(!) llomati!M Watch the

inltlllatlon ollloorlng, die,

ca'*- ltld vanltloa.
Ill

e0

(R) (1:00)

gp,........

""'ch

-·-----

Sol8: 1 112 lnl.ou! 211.
F~., Sol. H . A~

coueh I eMir, HolM lnt
mloc.

I VIcinity
Yard Sor.,
• K 21,
- Lot No.
Homo
Porlt.
FrkloyKJuno
31,
1:00 lilt 3:110 PM.

-1

2 ludn II I, GI'Mf' Road, ful

-..rn.rt,

2 kll•, ... ta lp-

130,-,.. ...........
~~~~... 1 1 1 Ext. Y.uea.

- -273-ZCMM
1'111-12?1.

-

3 'lladuowr=. 1001. dloiL 111

t""!_ng

_,......_

..

~ot~m~;ln~-t-~~~~~Oo~·~;~ll~w~
-Of·

Pomeroy,
Mlddlepon
&amp; VIcinity.

UM11 appi.,DII, T.. Mtl. ODen

Port~lmo

South

or

2 A_, AJI., tum., up ot - · I Lm. 10 I
....-lor 1. ~~:p. llol.
lloq'cl. No ...... •

304-

Saturdoy. Juno 211-311.

Frldll!',
1-? Aoln

-u- .......

Fou"" MlddiJparl (n..r

GOOD

llolao Jr. Hlghl. $31,000. 114-

w.--.

-~

INO!to jWoiiL OWn

clc&gt;lhlng,

-·

..... loll, ... cfiiolro.
-.vhutdl. glooo
...,... Coli 114-441-1.143 I:DIIp.on.
PICKENS FI,IA NITURE
Newt''aad

l.!tiM"

JOBS

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

__

"---Wit-

llodgo lloalliii ....... .,.,.
~

lA-7. low
nolloo,ono-.~

11'11 - . . . , -

=.
-

*··

Chow cavo11orJ.. 4

Petl for S&amp;le

56

1

•

J

•

4

~·· ooldng .,zoo. .....

1 ..............lo, 2 ,.. old 110.

-

- - - ...100. -

MC Aog. - - .J":~
lwb.
t4 ••
!II'old.
• - - ..

1 112-

r=

XR100,-

... _

--

0 MOVIE: dto·nnd With A

w-

Maniaci
(2:0(1)
(II Huh* Now
1:30 (J) • I'M &amp;;I

e

-. .... .._,rune
._._
.... "'*' __
wOrk. •• • . .

A-

10:00-IJ) 700 Club Willi Pat

gll!ld,

Rabtt'IIIOR

eiJl 8

-CouwLS,-wllh-

lnl-.

. . . . . . .le.OOO
. . . . .-Jpno.

' ·

w

12

&gt;

BARNEY

--

::¥:,, ''
~ .... Mel ..v•
'
:
Saptlo Tonk Pu..ma 110 Qolllo ,
itoollo ...plolod-

-

Ford

-r

•

.roc-., OM 1~

.;ra.....
optlono,
ftrno.

- ••- 1110 ........
1M

•

S..YIID
lerwtoe, ;:
aaari'i'!' CNIIl Rd. PMa. ~-" t
.....- olckup, ond clollorooy. ..... ' '

~.
An 1~.....

.....

Public Sale

t ',

...

.- ~

GorH " clraltod; during
lurlouah ha ai!Changn
idlntltTea with 1 man. &amp;;I

eONawTw... tiZD Clooll • ChaM
11:00 Ill lotlnan

' eiJl e• e«JJ.

ASTRO.QRAPB

eOOONiwa

lor your Aslro-Graph predlctlonl today CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.....,_ 11) ObjecClliiiiUITOIIIIId
by mailing $1.25 to Aatro-Graph, c/o tlv81 !hat are meaningful to rtlU today
GD AIMIIIo Hal .
this ne&gt;,.paper, P.O. Box 91428, creve. could be )uat lha opposite lor ,.,_..
land, OH 44101-3428. ee aure to atate with whom you'll be lnvolvecl. Trying to
0
VIII Croclcatt
BERNICE
your zodiac lign.
pn !heir support could be a HtrCUIMn
dellntll Caattlo when he'a
BEDEOSOL LI!O (aiJI D-Auo. 22) ee aware of your teak. •
lmp(lcaled In • drug dial.
llmltatlonl today ltld don't attempt to AQUAJIIUI (oiM. .....,_ 11)Utually
hrea.
do more then you can caml-bly you rnlilnhlln 1 rathlt' optlmlltlc outD Atlliaret..~DDIIIIO Muafc 111011
miNIQ8. Projects that overlap could be 1001&lt;, but loday your prO)ectlonl might
11:30 Ill MOVIE: Tha Mall! 01
, _ _ _ _ _ -dents walling to h8ppen.
· be negative. Thll COUld..,......,.•
VlllGO (Aug......... 22) Don't blame your ellectlveo mind prodUCtivity.
others Wyou Incur IIOIIMI 1orm o1 ftn.,_ NCU (Fell. • " ,., •1 II two
hNO.
clalloae today; 11 thlnge go wrong. 11'1 frtendl or yours haw • rllo
Ilk~ to be your doing rather than · today, 1M
...rut you don't ·
lhtlrl.
gil caught In the middle.,
01
LIIIIA (s.pt. ta.oor. Dlln ord« to lui- · with whOm you lkle, you I be wrong.
. J - -. 1•
111 your amllltiOIII &amp;11111today, !hare Ia a -'-1 (lllnlh lt-Aplll11) ar- ytlllr·
poullllllty you might not be u oonald· , ..., tor IIOiiMI JICIIIIbll turbullnOe In
·
' lt'lte o1 othtlrl u you llhould be. lnMtt- your OlllotCMIIII NlatiOnlltlpl today. In·In the year ahead you mlghl have to toltlvlty oaukl.,..t.llrong r.«lngl 01 ur d,...,.wloo . . IIIII u.lllly ..............
m- - a l lmponant declllonl thai will
t~IM 10 .t thla trme.
,
wll!._~ a dl~:,ka:".....~~_:; aeON 10 (001. M Nor. Zl) lllll II ont T
lAid •
I II) II you lgcu~-·-·
,_
·~•.... 01 t - dayt when you oauk1 ~ .-.prapll'mai"II'I ... PIGIId Min ,
_'of letting leu wiN hilda maka.JIIdg- ...oldebleCOf'IIPIICeltonloryourMIIbr your._..to(lll=done~,the ,
menta lor rtlU·
acang flt'll and thlnlelng Iller. Put the iiiUita oaukl be - I l l 10- T 11:00(1)1---, .....
CANCIII1"""!11.....,22)Proparllm- .....,.,empllrrl onthelln..
~!lmllodollrlglll.
lng IIIXtietiMIIY -'hll today. II you IAQITTAJIIUI (lllw • he at) (lllf
11'1 belt not
try to INinU c:rltlcll m.n.. to a IIMd lamD• you Ilea, but iuiow from expe. to IIIIW ...... , IMI dlt 1111\1 ralala to
eM-,P.L
p..-tutery, your allorta COUld r1anoa lu poor tndll rllk might try to your l i t - Ufl to - Llidy lui* or
eOAIIarMtNn
·
lor-.-y - · Get • Jump on llflt br un- put the bill on you today. Don't rotn ' cMa today. She oaukl 1M aiNtotalt
dlnl8ndlng the lniUtioM which . . Mrthlilll rtlU cen't aflord to 1011.
IICikle whll'l you . . ooo-ned.
ogo_,lng you In the year ahaad. Send .
·
.
\,
I

U'••-•
ext......, ......,ca-

f 'l I' II ••

-ion Cornpony
auc:Uona, n-

Uoo ..,.,.....
l.loonood Oh!!r., ~"!,U&lt;ky, Wall

•..
on
2 from ..._. oly
wat•, .-.. TV, no down ,.,..
_,., d ftno- M,OOO. r:uOy

11...-..

K&lt;oylor, -.-.mt.

20 to 10 - " '

Lolort--

end 111m •-"'"· 1'111-7713.
!

"I have almost enough line to
the
water. I'm wartlng· ror high tide."

.,

:;I:.OC:...orc~Eii

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

:r,nr;-ro.Q

'S

VIrginia. 304-u~roo.

""I

.,..

.,

II:Z::.n...._

..........

tKQt14
.KI54
EAST

WEST

By Jamea Joeoby

.JB .
.K71

tA 713

tiD 52
Today's deal is an illustration of de- .QI097
fense as the bardest part ol the 1ame.
Even tlloqb East held three prime

1 ~:"~~),~e~ ~~~~~~=

•Au

.

and poor intermediate spot cartla.
South ~pted in bear II, and North
railed to pine. West led tile king of
spades, 1111d declarer ducked In dum-·
my- a good play. Wbat next?
EveatuaUy West led a trump. He
reuoned that declarer held a soUd
trump suit. H East held A·J·X·K in dla·
moods, the suit would not set up lor
enough tricks for the declarer, provid·
eel he was prevented from enjoying a
spade rulf in tlwnmy. Declarer played
low from the North und and won the
nine of hearts as East play~ the seven. Now came the jact of dlamondl.
East could no longer stop declarer
.from makinglO tricks. Of West's possible plays, switching to a heart was
the worst.
H West continues spades, East will
grab the ace of diamondl as soon as
. the suit is played, cash the club ace

1-1....

••n

• KQJOU

SOIJTJI

•uz

.AQJtH3

tJ

•Jz
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: East

Soodo

-·

Nardo

3•

Paa

••

Elll
l'ul
Allpua

OpeniD&amp; lead: • K

IIIII force dummy with a tlllrd spade.:
That will ,make the king of bearll !be·
setting trick, since declarer ~I no
loqer be able to lineae aplnlt it
twice. U West switclles to a club, East
will win the ace rlgbt away IIIII thea
play a secoild spade, IDteadiDi oace
apin to force tile dummy as 110011 . . ·
he takes the ace ol diamonds.
After the heart nrltcll, it was urd
for East to unlle lbrollcb IJ'"Iilnt
teeth.

CROSSWORD
!Jy fHOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
••
1 Copier "
1 - avis
blade
2 European
river
8 lnlend
· 10 Regard
3 Prospective
lovingly
4 Mining
11"-,
lind
Come Back 5 Lie
to Me"
8 Table ilem
13 Renala7 Ship's diary
&amp;Town
sance
fiddle ·
In MA.
22 Wing
33 Type of race
14 Atllca's
9 American
(Lat.)
34 Brazilian
marketpianist
23 Also not
bird
place
12 Unskilled 25 Greeting 35 Star
15 -you
17 Yellow
In Pompeii
In Celus
kidding?
bugle
26 Performed 38 Always
18 Aglow
19 Long
27 Grecian 38 Conceal
18 This day
poem
delly
39 Sharpness
division 29 Discredil 40 Get
19 Catlike
together
carnivore 20 Vestige 31 Medii.
21 Tomorrow 21 Floor
Island
42 Emmet
In Tampico covering
(abbr.)
44 Aphorism
24 Ukraine
legislature
28 Peerless
29 Boat holsl
30 Paslry
goody'
31 BoH a party
32 Speechify
34 Soul (Fr.)
37 Be wrong
31 Dress

concern
41 Adversary
43 Out of
the way
45 Boxing
site
48Mooch
47 Bohemian .
48 'Bfrd
sound

DAILYCRYP'OOQU(n'ES-Here'abowC.wonll:

O=""•

...

.

NOiml

BRJDOI
Worst possible
choice

e

•

I Auction

oorto- ...,...

eO Wolf Tony'a lila Ia

threetenlld when • vengelul
killer II parollcl. Stereo. &amp;;I
D I!Venlng..... I
10:05 ([) MOVIE: UI'O lolrmlle
(2:00)
10:30 (l) IIMaalaattal•rpDIIIIIIIDI 'T'helift

r l'l &lt;.~tJppii•

'

Empire.

8

I

.,.... ,.

Refrlgll'ltlon

N•-atah
·ill World WllhOut WaHa
Speclallata cllbete tha

'

eortor'a
Ptumlolng'
ond -Ina
Fourth
and PTno
Gall..... Ohio

Electrlc8l •

S'tereo.lJ

(l)

break-up ol the Soviet

..... ... .'

lnlurinol ...... '

Plumbing 1
Heating

I

•

-::,_-.. ·-~
... Dirlcol, fiiU!itliliig
.... . • '

•• pi d. tt4411-111t.

...

~

Davt.

....... Gil

111
""""""
-·
- z.a. wind
ne, - olr.. 11,iiiil
inlleo.
Nope.
Tllto
,........ .,.. ... .... ......

:_te;oR(JI MM..;.. Live

IT'S DAYS LIKE THIS
THAT MAKE ME
WISH I WAS
-""'?'7&lt; A DADBURN
.t:Hit:lt.EN
THIEF II

Co. RON EVANS INTEAPRIBU: •

- Ill 000

Quanun Llap
Sam leaps Into the lila ol a
retarded doCI&lt; worker. (R)

!!ofory or oololo tcool drifting. • ,

-

..... ••«tmdG, *• aOIIiift't

~

as 1.1nv Kina 1.1ve1

t,.JP /

El-

- - . ...,_,, Pl'lcool to
ooiLI14-ti:UIIII IIIIJIImo.

lUck Poo-

1

d1W3 Oklo CUllom-·

111111 ........ -

now

Teaspoon loami that hi has
e daughter and that ahe Ia
deed. (R) Stereo. &amp;;I ·
(l) ill MyltlrJI Rumpale.la
due to appear bllora hll old
heed ol Chambers. D
e~~Z WlMguy !nareo.

EVERYBODY

oondldan. Mil. 114 281 till

-

• a e «11 Younellldara

ITSMORNINS!
THE. t:lo\'M'J OF
A NEOW~Y!

1113 Orond '"" . , _ 21' 0111

114417-0111.

Vlclao
Ill WHd AIMI1oa Lum tl)e
dlllerencee betwMn the
WOOd duck and lha hOoded
margan-. &amp;;I
• On Stage
t:O(IeiJl ea.-. Woody's
glrlfrilnd'l molhar tnlikal •
pass at him. (R) Stereo. Q
(!) Top Ra'* loelng

;

............... Cloilclo' Win• - ""' Orondo, OH Coli 11424H1Z1.
1113 - · ... onglno,
21.1.001!
miiiL Povotl1 13200. 114311 5I Nor • IOQ.

lvlng. 1 - 2
room .,_,.....,_ • Vln.at
Illond
Aoolt-o In
'F I "oport. From
""- CoiiiM-ta-mt EOH.

Ohio. Chonalnt ...... glrto
clc&gt;lhlng, noWbom to olzo lr~ Infant ....,. cl&lt;!lhlng and Blg·aird

a·

e

Nllll ......- . 3CI'4-

"""

Don't Danca (AI (3:0(1)
8:05 (!) MOVIE: Bannucla
T"rlangt, (GI (2:0(1)
1:30 (J) D DIIIMnt World &amp;;I
(l) Sneak PN.rewt Oou

l'LL /J£V£R U10D£13T'AkJD
£C()I-X::I/V\ICS. ...

-.~ 114112 3244.

_D.IIP-Inl--,

·-wta.

.

, ·aundlng
SupplieS

D MOVIE: Tough Quya

Fully-,_
.... "'"""
-.
thw, Woll
low

Juno 31ltlo I 1G 3. a.-no,

1010'-

dining·room ou11o • aoot1

55

a ""*'-' Mualc 111011

~~~--101 fllollmo guannlN. Local Nfw•.a• fumt.hed.
Fr:oe a l l - Coli 1· '
-~ day ot nlghl.
ling.
.

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\

Page 16-The Deity Sentinel

Pomlroy-Mickleport. Ohio

·u. S., Japan reach

Thuncley, June 28, 1980

•

'

Judge. O'Brien processes .40 court cases

trade agreement today

Forty cases were processed In Hocking, $25 and costs, no David Lawson, Straitsville, $300
Meigs County Court by Judge medical cerUflcate; Franklin and costs, 10 days In jail, theft;
Patrick H. O'Brian on Marcus, Ann Arbor, Mich .. $25 Donald Paul Wilson, Middleport.
Wednesday.
an(! costs, speed; James E . $20 a,nd colits, speed; Terry L.
Marlin R. Haynes, Proctor- Bach, Warsaw, Ind., $25 and Nelson, Ml!lta, S145 and costs,
ville, $23 and costs, speed;
costs, safety violation; Pearl N. overload and Billy C. Eudy,
Edward E. Furney, Belmont, $25 McManis, Soutb E!loomlngvllle, Mineral City, $25 and costs, no
and costs, no medical certlfl· $25 and costs, safety violation;
medical certificate.
cate; Prlscllla.R. Riddle, Pome- Mark E. Jones, Elizabeth,
Also, Edgar P. Stalclep.
roy, $20 and costs, speed; Dale W.Va .. $25 and costs, no medical
Dover, $25 and costs, no medical
Riffle, Pomeroy, no operator's certificate; Chartsse M; Sculva,
certificate; ~elly L. Shank, Malicense, costs and 30 days In jail San Diego, Calif.. 123 and costs,
rietta, $28 and costs, speed;
speed; .R onald H. Bearhs, Pomeconcurrent with (lther charges;
Deborah Cooke, Pomeroy. t24
Norrnan L. Deem, $10alidccosts, roy, $25 .a nd costs, no medical
and costs, speed; Christine A.
unable to stop In assured clear certificate; Da,vld M. Stanley,
Patrick, Middleport, $10 and
distance; Bryan J. Wolfe, Ra- South Point, $51 and costs, safety costs, stopped on roadway;
cine, $25 and costs, safety viola- ' violation; Ira )':. Boone, III, Linda D. Ferrell, Pomeroy, $75
tlon; John D. Wardllng, Jr .. · Belpre, $18 and costs, speedine; · and costs, three days In jail,
Albany, $20 and costs, seat belt Nathaniel J. carpenter, Long · . suspended upon proof of valid
violation; Carl E. Snyder, Little Bottom, $21 and costs, speeding;
operator's license within 60days,

"

TOKYO (UP!) - The United
States and Japan agreed on a
historic package · of economic
reforms ThurSday designed to
cut the chronic u :s. trade deficit
'and open the Japanese market to
·
more foreign goods.
A year of negotiations on the
broade~t economic agenda
tackled by the two nations ended
In success, Prime Minister Toshlkl Kalfll .. and U.S. . trade
negotiators said.
In Washington, President Bush
said the commitments contained
In the accord would "have a
positive effect" oil both economies and "be beneficial for the
entire world."
Bush welcomed Japan's readk
ness to reduce Its trade surplus
with the United States and hailed
the outcome of the talks as "an
ImPortant framework In which
the underlying causes of trade
Imbalances can be removed."
Bush 'repeated his (letermlna·
lion to address Japanese concerns about.the U.S. economy by
working with Congress to streng.then public and private saving
and reduce the federal budget
deficit.
U.S. Trade Office Representa·
live spokeswoman Torte Clark
said, "Overall, It's a good package. Ws not as much as we had
hoped for but Is headed In the
,right direction."
The talks, originally scheduled
to end Tuesday, had entered their
.fourth day with a breakthrough
looming.
·
Kalfll had · called President ·
'Bush late Wednesday to offer a
compromise on the major stickIng point In the Structural ImpedIment Initiative talks- Japan's
spending on public works
projects.
The negotiating teams then
worked untll 5 a.m. Thursday.
After a slx·hour break, they
resumed talks at 11 a.m., hoping
that a final dratt of their
recommendations would be re-

leased shOrtly aner noon.
In his telephone conversation
with Bilsh, Kal!il reportedly
offered to budget $2.86 trl!Uon for
public works over the next 10
years, an Increase of about $100
billion over previous o!ters.
The United States Is pushing
for more public works In Japan
as a way to stimulate spending,
Increase Japan's Imports and
contribute to a reduction In the
$50 billion annual u.s. · trade
deficit.
Despite Its great wealth, Japan
Is far behind most Industrialized
nations In terms of public Infrastructure. Only 40 percent of
Japanese homes, for example.
are connected to sewer lines.
The United States was expected to pledge to bring down Its
bUdget deficit, Increase spending
on education, Improve the competitiveness of Its Industries and
Increase savings rates.
Jy United P~ International
the National Weather Service
U.S. officials said Bush made
Century-mark
·
temperatures
·
s
aid.
an Important contribution to the
were
predicted
(or
the
Southwest
Storms with pea-sized hall and
talks bY.announcing Tuesday he
again
Thursday
where
at
least
50
mph winds ra:ked tbe Dakotas.
would consider new taxes to cut
seven
deaths
and
ra,glng
wildSIOIIX
Falls, S.D., reported 2 %
the federal deficit. His tax
fires
were
attributed
to
the
Inches
of rain and three-fourths
statement ran counter to his 1988
searing
heat
and
air
so
dry
one
of
an
Inch
of hall in three hours
campaign pledge not to raise
could
almost
scratch
a
match
on
causing
street
flooding that left
taxes, and analysts viewed the
lt.
water
above
car
bumpers. .
move as politically risky for his
Temperatures
remained
near
The thunderstorms extended
fellow Republicans, who are
record levels Wednesd!IY and the
Into Minnesota and Iowa through
running this year in congresmidsummer-style heat showed western Wisconsin.
sional races.
Humboldt County in north
Bush was sa!d to have talked of no signs of a,batlng. The National
Central Iowa was hit by storms
his new stance on raising taxes - . Weather Service predicted a
"very hot" day for the Dallas,
with 60 mph winds and to the
a step the J apane!ie have been
Ph98nlx
and Las .Vegas, Nev.,
southeast, In Bla,ck · Hawk
advocating for years - and
areas.
County. more than four Inches of
asked Kalfll .to take an equally
The unrelenting temperatures
rain fell in an hour, causing Elk
courageous move in reforming
were responsible for three deaths
Run Creek to over(low Its banks
Japan's econpmy through inLos Angeles and four in the
flooding roads and threatening
creased government spending.
Phoenix area, medical au thorihomes.
The final report was expected
ties said. One of. the California
Utilities throughout the
to call on Japan to widen its
dead was a 4-year-old boy who
Southwest and Southern Califormarket to foreign goods by
crawled into the back sea,t or his
nia worked through the night to
reforming its complicated distri·ramlly's
car and suffocated In the
prepare for another day or high
bution system, curtailing Its
back seat.
electricity demand and firefigh"Japan first" bUsiness practices
Six prisoners died earlier this
ters planned the · next steps · in
that exclude foreigners and use
fighting a fire In the Tonto
week
fighting raging wildfires In
more of its 111asslve resources for
tinder dry forests.
.
public works projects Instead of , National Forest ·in central
. Arizona.
Temperatures soared al;love
private lnves lment.
Lubbock, Texas, recorded its
100 degrees Wednesday In Ariz18th ·day tlils month . of 100.
ona, Southern California, Nev- ·
degree-plus temperatures. setada, Texas, Colorado and South
ting 11 50-year-old record, but life
Dakota, the Nationa~ 'Weather
Church and famerly .,VQI'ked for
went on for residents.
Service said.
Hazel Stewart
the Martha While Mills in Hun"This Is the worst heat wave
The mercury climbed to 118
tinglllll.
·
.
.
.
.
I've
experienced
In
my
20
to
.
30
degrees
In Phoenix, shy of
Hazel Stewart, 45, of Bidwell,
He
was
preceded
in
dealh
by
a
years
of
lMng
here,"
said
Tuesday's
all-time record of-122
died Wednesda,y evening at the
son,
Bobby
D.
Hughes.
Dalbert
.
West,
a
landsca,per.
degrees,
forecasters
said. The
Holzer Medica,! Center !ollowlng
Additional
swvivcn,
besides
his
"But
I
got
used
to
the
heat.
It
humUdlty
was
only
12
percent
for
a,n extended Illness.
parents,
include
his
wife,
Faye
doesn't
bother
me."
most
or
the
day.
The
state
record
Born In James town, Ohio, she
Is 127 degrees.
was the daughter of ~e late (Deal) Hupes; three daughters, · The Big Bend town of Lajltas
KM!y
n.:tcr
and
Penny
nckett,
registered
a
state-high
109
deIn downtown Los Angeles the
Joseph T. alld. Hue! Mhie em.:
both
of
Chesapes'x,
OH
and
grees
Wednesday
and
I~
other
temperature
climbed to a record
She was a homemaker and
Dreama
Edmunds
of
Ashron;
five
Texas
cities
broke
the
century
109
degrees
at
the Civic Center.
attended the Centenary United
A National Weather · Service
Christian Church; ·
· sons, Jason
Michael and Danny, mark.
statement · Issued Wednesday
She is survived by her hus- all of Ashton, Billy L. of Lesage
While the Southwes 1 was dry
warned
people to "slowdown and .
band, Larry Eugene Stewart, and Brady G. of Chesapealx; two
and hot, the Plains received
avoid
direct
exposure to the sun
Bidwell, a son, Charles Joe sisters, Bllnche McComas and Inez
another . dose of
late-night
as
much
as
possible. Dress for
McGuire, GalUpolls, five broth- Villars, both of Ashton and two
thunderstorms Thursday that
summer
and
drink plenty of
ers; Leslie, Joe, Jr. and Marcus brothers, 1bomas and Garland, raced across Iowa, North and
non-alcbollc
liquids
... (and!
Cox, all of Galllpolls; Howard both of Ashton.
South Dakota and Minnesota,
check
on
friends
and
relatives
Cox of Columbus, and Ray ~ox of
Serviceswillbebeldat 1:30p.m. dumping more than 2 Inches of
that
live
alone
during
the day,
Cheshire; five sisters, Shirley· . Salunlay, June 30, 1990 at the Balls rain on some areas and causing
'
especially
the
elderly."
Speakman of GalUpolls, Mildred Chapel Church with the Rev.
streams to overflow their banks,
Dyke of Washington Court Bobby Ray officiating. Burial will
House, Betty Bufkin of Louisi- follow in the Balls Chapel
ana; Martha McNeal of King-· Cemetery. The body will be taken
ston, . and Nancy Stewart of to the church an hour prior to the
Bidwell; two grandchil~ren, service.
A chance of showers and
South Central Ohio
Brandon and Charles McGuire of
thunderstorms Saturday and
Partly cloudy Thursday night,
VISiting hours will be at the WilGa)Upolls; apd her mother-in- coxen Flllltlal Home on Friday,
with a, low near70. Chance of rain Monday. with fair weather on
law, Edna ·stewart or Pomeroy.
Is 20 percent. Partly . cloudy ·Sunday. Highs will range from
June 29 fi'om 7-9 p.m.
Besides her pa,ren ts she was
the mid 80s to the low 90s
Friday, with a chance of showers
preceded in death by three ·E amest Walker
and thunderstorms, and highs In Saturday and Sunday, and from
brothers and one sister.
Earnest Earl "Jimmy" Walker the upper 80s. Chance ofralnls40 the low to mid 80s on Monday.
Overnight lows will range from
· Services will be.he.l&lt;l Saturday 74, of Point Pleasant died Wednes: percent.
2 p.m. at the Rutland Free Will day, June 27, 1990 at Veteran's
the upper 60s to the lower 70s
·
Ex~nded Forecast
Baptist Church with the Rev.
Saturday tbrough Monday
through the period.
Paul Taylor officiating. Friends =~ in Huntington after a shon
may call at the Rawllngs-CoatsBom Dec. 18, Ic.its, he was the
Fish~r funeral home, Friday, 2 to
son
of the late Earnest E. and
4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
Norma Ann (Austin) Walker. He
The Meigs County Health De- disease-carrying mosquitoes · to
was a riv~an and a country and partmentha,s
Edward Capehart
joined State Health breed by draining water from
western smger. He spent sevCllll Director Dr. Ronald Fletcher in objects
such as tires, cans,
POMEROY · Edward Earl years in Nashville and California
cautioning resldei!IS about the buckets, toys, eave troughs,
Capel1an, 47, Pomeroy, died
He is survived by one daughier
expected larger than normal tarps and tree cavities. MosquiTUesday, June 26, 1990, at ·the NechJ. Thorpe of California;
mosquito populations over the toes breeding In these areas
Overbrook Center in Middleport. .
sons, Richanl Walker of florida
state due to the heavy rainfall include species carrying
Bom Jan. 19, 1943, in New f.¥ie Lee Walker of California and
and flooding.
encephalitis.
Haven, W.Va., he was a son of the ~liffonl Walker White of CaliforTo protect against mosquito
tate William Henry and Opal n~ one brother, Harry Walker of
"While
we
expect
a
greater
bites,
Fletcher advised the folCleona (Lieving) Capehart.
l'iiiSbll!fh, Pennsylvania aDc! three number or mosquitoes this year, lowing: avoid being outdoors
Surviving are his wife, Ruby L. gnnlcllildreo.
.
most are hpected to be floodduring peak biting hours (around
Capehart; three sons, Wayne L.,
There will be no visitation hours. water mosquitoes, Which are dawn and dusk); avoid weedy
David E. and Ronnie A.. all at The body will be .cremated and
home; two daughters, Lisa A., at burial will follow at a ·later date. pests but do not carry disease," and shaded areas where mosquisaid Fletcher. ··However, some toes rest during the day; wear
home, Nonna J. Lyons of Letart, Arrangements are being made by
people may suffer allergic reac- long-sleeved shirts and long
W.Va.; five brothers, Garland Clyde the Wil~olten Funeral Home.
tions from these bites and shOuld pants -light-colored clothing is
Roush of Mt. Gilead, Ohio, Delben
take precautions."
less attractive to mosquitoes;
L. Roush of Guysville, Ohio, WilFletcher
said
Ohioans
can
help
use repellents according to maliam R. Capehart. Middleport, .Jr.
reduce
the
opportunities
for
nufacturer's
instructions. If an
win C. Capehan of Houston, Tx.,
allergic
reaction
is suspected,
and Buford L. Capehart of
discontinue
use
.
.
Coolville, Ohio; three sisters,
Juani~ N. Abbon of Point Pleasant, Dal~ stock prices
W.Va., Ruth M. Thompson of (As of 10:38 Lm.)
Veterans Memorial
Bolivia, N.C.• and Lenora J. Mc- Bryce and M11rk Smith
ADMISSIONS
- Roy Pierce,
Knight of Pomeroy; and four or Blunt, Ellis 4 Loewl
A case flied In 1988 against
Racine;
Rosalyn
Stewart, Midgrandchildren.
former
Meigs County Sheri!!
dleport; GladYs Tuckerma,n,
Funeral will be Friday, I p.m., at Am Electric Power ............. 29%
Howard E. Frank has been
Middleport.
the Foglesong Funeral Home in AT&amp;T .................................. 3
dismissed.
9
DISCHARGES Clifford
Mason with Martha Robinson Ashland 011 ......................... 35
A dismissal entry in the case of
Lambert, Thelma Grueser.
officiating. Burial will be in the Bob Evans ........................... 14
Hobart A. Barker, et 111. versus
Union Cemetery at Letart, W.Va ..
gharmlng Shoppes ............... 10
Howard Frank, Sheriff, Metas
Friends may call this evening
lty Holding Co .. .. .. ............ 14%
County, Ohio, et al. was signed by
from 7 to 9. p.m. at the flllltlal Federa,l Mogul ... :..... :.......... 18%
Judge DOnald A. Cox of GaiUpolla
home.
Goodyear T&amp;R .. .. ...............30%
Meigs County Emergency and flied earlier thls month. The
Heck's ............... , .......... .. .. .. ...3
Medical Service until responded entry dismisses all Claims
BradieHughes
Key Centurion ......... ...........12%
to two calls on Wednesday. At agalnat the final defendant In the
'
Lands'
End ................ ......... lS~
5:07 a.m., .Rutland squad was case, former deputy Brian BisBradie Lee Hughes, 51, of ASh·
dispatched to Meigs Mine No. 2 sell. Charges qalnstFrank were
1011, died Wednesday, June 27, 1990 Umlted Inc .. .. ........ ............. 24
for Sandy Signs, whoo was dis- dlsmlued earlier this year.
in Cabell Huntington Hospital fol- Multimedia Inc .................... 77
Rax Restaurants .................. 2%
According to Meigs County
patched to O'Bieni!BB Memorial
lowing a 101111 illness.
Robbins
&amp; Myers ................ 22%
Hospltil. At 2: M p.m., Pomeroy Prosecutor Steven L. Story, the
Born May II, 1939 in Ashton, be
unit was called for Gladys case arose from an incident
was the son of Jess and Lora ~~oney's Inc .......... ...... .. ..... 14%
ar Bank ....... ...... .. ............. 22
Tuckerman, who was trans- occurlne on December 21,1987 •t
(Waugh) Hughes of AshiOII. He
ported to Veterans Memorial' Harrisonville during the Melp
was a member of Balls Chapel Wendy's lntl .......... ;......... .. .. 6')1
Hospital.
Worthington Ind ................. 24~
Local Teacher's strike.

Heat tvave death toll climbs
to seven .in Southwest states

In

--Area deaths--

s...

- - - - - -· Weather _ _ _ __

Wildfires destroyed homes and
ravaged forests In Arizona, New
Mexico. Texas, Utah, southern
California and New Mexico as
relentless sun turned undergrowth to tinder. In Santa Bar·
bara a, wall of names destroyed
at least 380 hOmes- some worth
up to $1 million - and was still
raging over 3,500 acres Thurs·
da,y. Authorities blamed arson.

Divorce granted.
A divorce has been gr.a nted to
Rebecca Broderick and James
v. Broderick 1n the Meigs County
Court o! Common Pleas.

no operator's liCense; Arthur
Davies, Wheeling, w.va .. S2Und
costs. speedlna; Christine A. ·
Patrick, Middleport, $75 and
costs, three days In jail suspended, six months probation, no
operator's license; Tony Adams,
Athens, $35 and costs, fallllre to
control; Sheldon R. Capehart,
CooMUe, $75 and costs, three
days In jail suspended upon proof
of valid operator's llcenJe Within
60 days, credit for. time served,
no operator's license; Sherr! A.
Walker,. Rutland, $250 and costs,
three days In · jail, 60 ciays
operator's llceniM! suspension,
suspension of $150 of fine and jail
sentence upon completion of
Residential Treatment Pro- .
gram, DUI; $31 and costs,
speeding; Jane Moon, Middleport. $1()() and costs on each of two
charges, restitution on each of
two charges, and two years
probation, passing b&amp;d checks; ·
. Terry R. Foster, Racine, $35 and
costs, failure to control; $75 and .
costs, three days In jail suspended upon proof or valid
operator's lice~. $75 and costs;
Richard A. Hysell, Pomeroy, 90
days in jail suspended to time
. served, two yearu probation,
unau tborlzed use of vehicle;
Robert Halley, Cheshire, $10 and
costa, hazard zones; Shaun Sand·
ers, · Oakland, $23 and costs,
speeding; Jeffrey , S. Mintz, .
Pomeroy, costs only, no fishing
license; Charles D. McMillan,
VInton, $25 and costs, fallu.r e to
control; $15 and costs. failure to
display reglsln!tlon.'
Forfeiting bonds were Jeffrey
Yeauger; Jane Lew, W.Va.,$380,
OWl and Steven Nowell, ·Sr.,
Leon, W.Va., $55, no medical
card.

Ohio I.Dttery

Mets make
it 10 in
a row, 54

Daily Number
919
Pic.-k-4
0336

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...
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Frid8y, June 29. ·1990

Yot'40, No.290
Copyright-.! 1990

ART IN THE PARK- Judy Werry, rl1ht, and
Betty Stivers were among many who enjoyed last
night'• Art In the Park displays In Pomeroy's
Court street mini p11rll, Several local artists

Heat wave
•
•
contr.n;ues
ln
Southwest •

1'17 United " " - lntenadotuil
- u 112 degrees· caa be consi-

'

Five were fined ~nd eight other son, Pomeroy, · $375 and' cost,
forfeited bonds In the court of DUI, and $63 and costs, driving
Pomer.oy Mayor Richard Seyler under suspension; a,nd James P.
Tuesday night.
Hayes, Pomeroy, $375 and costs, .
Fined on four charges was DUI.
Sharon Johnson, Pomeroy, $63
Forfeiting bonds were Clyde
and costs, disturbing the peace, Wright, Jr., Parkersburg, w.
$213 and costs, assault, $213 and Va., $66, PUCO "fety violation;
costs, trespassing, and $50 and Herma,n Grate, Rutland, $43,
costs, delinquent parking tickets. · assured Clear distance; Edward
Becky Large, Pomeroy, was
Rlj.msburg~ Rutland, $63, expired
fined $375 and costs ·on a DUI registration; Donna,.. Wilson,
charge, $63 and costs for driving :?omeroy, $47, speeding; Michael
without an operator's license, Swisher, S)ncuse, $43/~~sured
and $43 and costs for going the clear distance; Rebecca Rife
Middleport, $S1 speeding;
. wrong way on a one-way street.
Others fined were Arthur Peborah Rothgeb, Gallipolis, $51,
trie, Middleport, $63 a,nd costs, speeding; John Tuttle, Racine,
PUCO violation, $66.
disorderly conduct; Tim David-

De:

rmee

Hospital news

Case dismissed

EMS has 2 calls

. -.,. ····-

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

~

- -.-·-· »•·-'---;.., - ···~ -·"' .•.
'

··· ~-·-······.

·-- --·--- ··--·----·-··- ··-

' ENIOYED BY ALL -Angela WIIAon, alon1 with several other
you1 folk, enjeyed Tbunday nla:bt's concert of the Ohio
lllllvenlty Commualverslty Band. Despite the w11rm tempera·
t - the concert was attended by approJdmately 300 people.

• AMIFM caaeette
• Luxury Group
• caat Aluminum
Whee II

·Floor Mall

2 Soctiont, 14 Pegoo 211 c-1
A Mull-• Inc. - -

Only

813,111*

. • Dealer ReWina Albite, Tax, Title Extra

·························-····

I

COLUMBUS, Ohio &lt;UPH :- abandoned his long-held antiMelinda Swan, a Celebrezze
Ohio's gubernatorial candidates abortion position hi favor of a
spokeswoman, said Thursday
have stated their positions on pro-choice stand.
the candidate does not believe
abortion legislation In response
During a news conference
that any state legislation Is
to questions by the Ohio Right to announcing the switch, Celenecessary to protect a let us af(!!r
Life Society and the National brezze said a pregnant woman
viability.
~
Abortion Rights Action League- should b~ve unrestricted access
"The s ll!tis tical evidenCe
Ohio.
to abortion until the fetus is
shows 98 percent of a, bortlons ire
Republican George Volnvich viable. after which the rights of
performed between the first ,.nd
said he would sign legistatiot~ to the fetus shoul(\ Ol!twelgh the
21st week," Swan said. "The
prohibit a oortlons for sex selec- rights of the won\an.
remainder generally are pet-.
tlqn. He also said he would sign
"Governme11t policy should formed because the mother's lite
bills to provide that the'husband allOw a woman to choose to have Is jeopardized," she said.
' ·
Is notified If his wife requests arid an abortion up to the time whj!n a
abortion, and legislation reqlir- fetus Is deemed medically via·
Votnovlch. responding to :01e
lng parental consent before abor- ble," the attorney general said In
Right to Life Society, said he•rid
tions on minor girls ..
running mate Mike DeWIDe
response to the Right to Life
"have supported pro-lite piMia.
Democrat Anthony Celebrezze questlonna,lre. ·
·
Jr. told the groups he favors
lions throughout our careerl.
He also said he would oppose
unrestricted access to abortion legislation requiring viability
Our public policy ~n abortion' is
and would veto any legislation testing after the 20th w~k of
consistent with our personal
attempting to regulate it.
beliefs. This will be reflected In
pregnancy. Volnovjch said he
my actions as governor."
Both candidates responded to a would sup~rt such testing.
seven-part questloMaire from
the Right to Life Society, and
&lt;::elebrezze responded to an 18qliestlon survey from the abortion rights league.
Curt Steiner, a spokesman for
Volnovich, said the former Cleveland mayor (lid not respond to jhe
league's questionnaire because
MANSFIELD. Ohio (UPI} Prosecutor James Mayer,' In
"It was our impression that the
After
deliberating
for
2%
hours
·his
closing arguments, called
NARAL group had already made
tbeo
jury
in
the
Dr.
John
Boyle
a thief and a I tar. "a heater
Thursday
Its endorsement. Given our posiBoyle
Jr.
murder
trial
went
by
day
and a killer by night." He
tion, under no circumstances did
home
without
reaching
a
ver'lllct.
said
the
defendant had lied to bts
we expect to receive their
The
Rlcblaad
County
Common
girlfriend,
his son and others
support."
Pleas
Court
jury
·Will
return
.
concemlna
his military service,
Celebrezze answered "yes" to
lllllfiiiDII
to
try
ap!ii
to
nw~
.~..
~
.Jrfgaf
be ab0111o11-rtgllts lftp ques·~tm
..
fl
,dHISIO.
...
ta
G~Wol·-the
,.':;~~~·
,
.-;
..
~·
~
,~'
..
··~·
tlon: •UWou~ you pledge to veto
most b~rre murder cases tried
Several prosecution witnesses
any legislation which would
in
the
Ohio
courts.
.
'
testified
Boyle had told them he
restrict a,ccess to abortion for
The
47-year-old
Ml!nsfleld
os.
·
was
·
a
VIetnam
War veteran
Ohio women?''
teOpath Is a,ccused o! soffocatlng when he was not, that he had
· He also told the league, he
his wife, Noreen, Dec. 31 . and divorced his wife when he had not
would seek to repeal a state law
burying ber body under .the - and that h'e was several years
prolllblting the use of tax money
basement of a new horne be had younger than be actually was.
to pay for abortions for poor
bought near Erie, Pa,.
In his closing arguments. dewomen, would oppose "Informed
.
rense attorney Robert Whitney
consent" legislation requiring
The doctor testified he had no : · said Boyle's stories of military
that women seeking abortions be
exploits were not proof
given Information about fetal Idea who killed his wife and tha,t
development and would' 'appoint someone else must have burled , murder. He said the doctor mal!e
enough money so he didn' t havequalified pro-choice Individuals her body beneath the basement
to kill his wife for that.
to positions In which policy of the bouse.
The prosecution contends
Noreen Boyle flied for divorce
decisions could affect women's
Boyle schemed to kill his wife so
Nov. 17. Pollee discovered her
right to choose abortion."
llocly Jan. 25 burled under a
The abortion issue has been a he could aVoid a cos~y divorce
and.
marry
his
pregnant
girlconcrete
floor In the basement of
controversial one for Celebrezze
the doctor's Pennsylvania home . .
· since last -December when he trieiul, Stierrl Campbell, 29.

Jury fails. to reach
verdict in Boyle case

dlspJared their work for the pabtle. 'lbe art
display ,vas a project of the Pomeroy Merchants
Association.

Mosquito population up this year ·

Stocks·

•

Ohio candidates state
positions on abortion

Five fmed in mayor's ~urt

• Auto
• Air Conditioning
• Power Windows
• Power Locks
• Rear Defrost
• Power seats

perce~~t. Runld Slit...,,
Hlp I• mid at. Cbuee II( 1'111•
10 pereent.

Page3

Middleport Court news
Several persons were fined on
Others fined In the court were
multiple c~arges when they Pa,ul Wilson, Shade, $25andcosts
appea,red Wednesday night In the on each of two charges of
court of Middleport Mayor Fred disorderly manner; . Danny W.
Hoffman.
Kuhn, Middleport, $425 and
jerry L. Rice, Gussell Point, cOSta, and three days In jail on a
was fined on four charges includ- · OWl charge.
ing $425 and costs witb a three
George ·J. VIncent, $10 and
day !all sentence on a OWl
costs, expired operator's licharge; $20 and costs, speedlna;
cense; Belinda . R. ·Roush, Dex$25 and costs, failure to control ter, $25 and costs, open conhis vehicle, and $25 al)d costs,
tainer; Kenny E. Ours,
disorderly manner. ·
,
GalUpolls, $25 and costs, expired
David L. Givens, Middleport operator's license; Michelle Wilwas fined $425 and costs and son, Shade, $25 and coatB, disorgiven a three day jail sentence on · derly manner; Dreama D. Bell,
a OWl charge, and fined $50 and
Pomeroy, $10 and costs, running
costs for no operator's license;
a stop sign. Tnnja Sj1J118r, Midand Robert L. Riffle, Racine, was
dleport, $425 and COI!ts .and three
fined $25 and costs, disorderly days In jaU on aD~ cl\arge, and
manner. and $50 and costs, open
Perry Jarrell, Lan~vllle, $25
•
container.
and costs, disorderly manner.

Panly cloU7 illllfiM lAw
nlll •

Dell' 'lt. Cba8ce ol

dered relief, residents of the
Southwest could breathe easier
Friday · as marginally cooler
temperatures possibly mixed
with some thunderstorms were
moving Into the region.
The area, which has baked for
day~ under a searing early
season heatwave blamed for
seven deaths, eli~ted a, change
In weather for the weekend.
Phoenix hit 118 degrees Thurs·
day, a r.ecord for the day, and
'l'ucson suffered under· 113 degrees, bUt Increasing cloudiness
was expected to keep temperatures at lower levels with the high
In Phoenix expected to reach 112
Friday. the National Weather
Service said.
'
Las Vegas continued to sizzle,
posting a 109 Thursday and
anticipating 110 Friday, about
eight degrees above normal.
In so.uthern California, the
thermometer began tilting
downward, hqverlng between 100
and 110, after record midweek
highs and was expected to drop to
the mld·80s under hazy skies In
Los Angeles.
Sizzling heat In Texas, where
Laredo bas recorded 45 days of
100-plus degree temperatures
this year, shOwed no signs of
easing Friday and an excessive
heat advisory remained In effect
for much of the northern part of
the state. .
The hot weather hampered
efforts · to quell thousands or
acres of wildfires In Guadalupe
Mountains National Park In west
Texas and the Gila National
Forest in southern New Mexico.
The heat wave prompted the
mllltary to dispatch four firefighting C-130 airplanes to help
battle a wlld!irethat destroyed at
least 400 homes In tinder-dry
SOuthern California.
The searing heat was blamed
for three deaths In Los Angeles
and four In the Phoenix area this
week, medical authorities said.
Five prisoners and a supervisor died earlier this week fightIng a nre In the Tonto National
Forest in central Arizona.
Strona thunderstorm• bit the
Plains early Friday with winds
up to 73 mph, floOding and
marble-sized ball.
Tbe atonn system raked north·
~ Illlnoll, knocldna down ·and
uprooting trees up to 7 lnchea In
diameter and tlownlna poww
llilel. The stonn 1110 1111-thern
WIIC:cmlln wbenlllmll dumped
31ncbel on rain on the Mlhraulree
area llltd baU on Dodpvlllt.•
Rochester, Mlna., received
2.25 lnchel ot rain and Sttwart·
ville to the anutb got l.T7111chel.
Continued oa paae 10

q,e."""

·:or

Bikers donate $1,000 for equipment
Thanks to a $1,000 donation by
the Meigs County Bikers the
Rutland Firemen's Park now ba,s
new playground equipment.
The bikers donated the money
earlier In the year with the
agreement that it be used to
purchase playground equipment
tor children who use the park in

.,. -

Rutland. It was also agreed that
the equipment be Installed before
July 4, as It has been.
This move has been a project of
the Rutland Fire Department
Ladles Auxiliary and the equipmentis In place thanks to the help
of the firemen who saw to the
installation.

.....

• 11 . . . .., oavtenell..,lli

tllla..... ftt t

-.....

The donatiOn provided enough
money to purchase the wood to
construct two teeter totters, a
merry-go-round, two sets of
swings, and a lunate gym set.
In '8ddttlon to the playground
equipment .Steve Lambert has
constructed several benches for
the pArk to be used by ltnlalton.

hutltu.. l

In IIIuftlll
• ............... 111. ..., ••1,.

.................. c. ,,.....

. . • _._. ,. , . ,--------w -

'

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