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Ohio Lottery

'

Illirioi8

PICK-3
630
PICK-4

shocks USC
team, 14-13

4087

Super Lotto
9-10.13-14-17-31
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4

Partly cloudy tonight. Low
near 85. Chance of rain .20
percent. Wednesday, partly
cloudy. High In mid 80s.
Chance of rain 20 percent.

•
Vol.40, No.84 M

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio; Tuesday, September 5, 1989

. Copyrighted 1989

•

2 Sections. 1 2 Pages 25 .Cent a
A Multimedia Inc. Newepaper

Bush to Present anti-drug battle plan tonight
WASHINGTON (UPI)- Pres·
!dent Bus will announce his $7.8
billion a tl·drug plan Tuesday
that will seek to do what two ·
decades f federal efforts failed
to achle e - · reverse and ulti·
mately
In the · war against
narcoti .
.
Bus s comprehensive stra·
tegY, ould provide a 30 percent
h e In federal antl·drug spend·
ng and cover a struggling
battlefront - treatment, law
enforcement, education and
Interdiction.
The president summoned con·
gresslonal leaders to the White
House Tuesday to give them an
advanced briefing of his plan. He
will also likely seek to stem
crltlclssm that he still Is not

devoting nearly enough funds to
combat an ever·rlslng tide of
narcotics and drug·related violence In the United States.
Bush, just back from a threeweek vacation In Kennebunkport, Maine, will publicly present
his battle plan In a 20-mlnute ·
nationally televised speech from
the Oval Office.
Afterwards, Sen. Joseph
Blden, D-Delaware, will give the
Democrats' response. Blden's
Senate Judiciary Committee will
open a series of congressional
hearings on the plan Thursday.
Blden · has complained that
Bush Is conducting a limited
Vietnam-style war against narcotics, "one fought Ol\ the cheap,
financed on the sly, with no clear

objectives and ultimately destined for stalemate and human
tragedy."
He and others note that Bush 's
proposed $1.9 billion Increase In
federal anti-drug spending would
only match the amount of money
that Congress authorized last
year but which the administration has not yet allocated.
As drafted by federal anti-drug
chief William Bennett, Bush's
congressionally mandated plan
would make fundamental shifts
In U.S. anti-drug policies that
during the Reagan administration were focused primarily on
Interdiction.
Administration sources said
the new strategy s~ks to hit all
fronts, Including:

-Funneling an additional $200
million to state and local Jaw
enforcement agencies, and providing $1.5 billion in new prison
construction.
-A 49 percent Increase In
federal spending on drug treatment to $950 million.
-Raising spending on antidrug programs In the Education
Deparlment from $355 million to
$392 million.
-Placing new emphasis , on
cracking down on casual users
through a variety of means,
including revoking drivers' licenses and denying them federal
student loans.
-Trying to smash International drug trafficking rings with
Increased attention to snaring

middle men, such as pilots,
money launderers and couriers.
-$300 million In additional
economic and limited military
aid to help Colombia, Peru and
Bolivia bat tie the world's biggest
cocaine cartels.
Those three cocaine-ravaged
nations now receive about $162
million In U.S, assistance, not
Including the $65 million In
emergency aid that Bush announced last month foilowing a
wave of assassinations In Colom·
bla by drug lords.
Much of the criticism of the
overall Bush plan Is directed at
the price tag, $7.8 billion, as well
as the refusal of the administration to give the military a more
active role In the drug war.

Critics note that the pJ.:oposed
$1.9 billion Increase In federal
anti-drug spending Is roughly
equivalent to just four stealth
bombers, and say much more Is
needed to have a significant
impact.
They are also upset that the
Pentagon has not been fully
enlisted in the battle. The Pentagon's only contribution In
South America Is now confined to
helping provide training and
advisers to Colombian, Bolivian
and Peruvian forces.
The Bush. administration has
said It would consider sending
combat troops to a drug-ravaged
nation, but only If the foreign
country asked for them. Thus
far, It says, none have.

23 die on Ohio's
roads during long
holiday weekend·
By United Press International
Authorities say at least 23
people were killed In 20 traffic
accidents across Ohio quring the
long Labor Day weekend, with
four fatal accidents being reported Monday.
There were four •atal accidents reported Friday night,
' ,., ..
. se,ven Sat11rday and five Sunday,.
Authorities said the most
deadly accident occurred Sl,lnday when Mark E. Szlber, 33,
Saybrook, and passengers Terry
Lynn Szlber, 29, and Rachael
Szlber, 11, died as Mark S?iber
failed yield while entering a
township road in Geauga County
from a private driveway.
Also kllled were:
Friday Night
the afternoon. The day-long activity was the project 'of 't he Rutland
Mansfield: Meggen C. CumFire Department and the Ladles Auxiliary. (Additional pictures on
mings, 22, Cleveland Heights, In
page 7).
a two-car accident on Ohio 13 In
Richland County.
Mansfield: James Shuler, 25,
Bellville. in single-vehicle accident on a ·Richland County road.
Steubenville: Edward Lucas,
judicial system has been virtu"It was a tremendous flr~­ 51, Flushing, when his car hit a
ally paralyzed by the cocaine flght," airport employee Felix utility pole along U.S. 22 In
cartels.
Duran said. "The glass of the Harrison County.
Monday morning, a ' gunman
windows and the doors and stores
Mount Gilead: Tyrone Sumpsprayed automatic weapon fire
were destroyed by bullets."
ter, 25, Columbus, standing beIn the airport at Medellin. A
Thousands of Colombians have side his car, killed when another
businessman was killed before
been killed by cocaine traffickers car crashed Into him and his
the pollee kllled·the gunman.
since the late 1970s, Including an vehicle on a Morrow County
Col. Felix Camero, subdirector attorney general, a justice mlrils- road.
of the National Pollee for the ter, 220 judges and judicial
Saturday
Massillon: Roy E. Cooper, 46,
Medellln area, 150 miles northw- employees and scores of
est of Bogota, said 12 people were policemen.
Brewster, when his vehicle,
slightly wounded In the 7 a.m.
Eight U.S. A-37 observation going the wrong way on a
shooting.
and attack jets arrived Monday Masslllon street, collided with a
"A sqbject arrived ina vehicle,
afternoon In Barranqullla, 425 truck ..
Cleveland: Andrew Sopko, 16,
a red Renault, and got out at the miles north of Bogota, to be used
only door _that enters the airport In the cocaine war.
In a one-car accident on a
and he began to shoot IndiscrimiTwo C-130B cargo and troop Cleveland street.
Cleveland: Lane Kettering, 38,
nately with a G-3 gun," said transport planes landed Sunday
Camero.
under extremely heavy security Cleveland, when his motorcycle
Pollee said it was not clear In Bogota.
struck a utility pole along a
whether the attack was drugJeeps, small boats, arms, Cleveland street.
related. Medellin has been the communication equipment and
Fostoria: Thomas R. Ray, 28,
Site of some 20 bombings since other material are to be shipped
Fostoria,
after he collided with a
cocaine cartels declared 'far on to Colombia over the next few
truck
while
riding his motorcycle
the nation Aug. 24.
weeks, the embassy official said.
on a Fostoria city street.
Sandusky: Steven M. Kinney,
...... ,

S'IQCET SCENE - There were plenty of crafts and lots of food
aanual Rutland Block Party Saturday. Besides all the

for ule, 4here was a variety of entertahunent throughout

I.'V
.~

•.

I·

.
.'

i~

,BOOPTA. Colombia (UPI) U.S:•li'eJicOpters and bulletproof
v~!J · were en route'to Colombia
to
~h~l!r,nbattled nation fight
lt~,;.~ :(l!l j&gt;Ol\'V~;fful cocaine
c~~ ~Tif~ScJiy' - the same day
Pre~ldel\t Bush was to launch his
billlon-do!Jar offensive against
Illegal dt,Q8$. ·
Authorities' said Tuesday that
four bombs exploded In Medellln,
the city that Is headqu!lrters to
one of the cartels. On Monday a
gunman spr~yed the Medellin
airport lounge with automatic
weapon fire killing one person.
Police said two bombs went off
Monday .night In bank offices, one
In a warehouse and one In a police
post and four people suffered
minor wounds.
Five UH-1 helicopters were to
arrive Tuesday morning alon~
, with bulletproof vests to protect
judges. The third shipment In
three ' days was part of the $65

help

'I

officials await U. S. 'copters
'

million emergency aid package
Bush announced Aug. 25 In
response to the cartels' declaratlon of "total war'' on opponents
In and outside the government.
The declaration followed the
Imposition of a state of siege by
President Virgilio Barco, who
acted after the cocaine gangs'
assassination of Colombia's leadlng presidential candidate.
The new helicopters, shipped
aboard C-5 cargo planes, were to
arrive only hours before Bush's
nationally televised speech on
the drug crisis. ·
..,
"(The helicopters) will be used
by the an tl-narco.tlcs · pollee,"
said a U.S. Embassy official.
"They can be used to transport
material and personnel."
The bulletproof vests are to
protect judges, who have been
named as targets for assasslna!Ions, threats and bribes. Some
Colombian officials admit the

17, No!Walk, after being struck
by a hlt-sklp,~rlverwhilewalklng
on a towns~lp road In Erie
County.
Akron: Ray Perdue, 30, Akron,
In a one-vehicle accident on a city
street In A'kron.St. Clairsville:
John W. Miller, 36, Bellaire, In a
one-vehicle accident on a county
road when his truck went off the ·
road and hit a tree.
Sunday
Toledo: Edward Sheets, 38,
Toledo, when his vehicle struck a
fb;e hydrant and u tlllty pole
along a Toledo street. ·
Cambridge: Marjorie S. Heise,
35, New Concord, when she failed
to negotiate a curve on state
Route 146 In Guernsey County
a·nd lost control of her
motorcycle.
Chillicothe: Cheryl A. Griffin,
36, Logan, following a colllslori
with another car on state Route
1591n Ross County.
Chardon: Mark E. Szlber, 33,
Saybrook, and his passengers,
Terry Lynn Szlber 29, and ·
Rachael Szlber, 11, when Mark
Szlber failed to yield while
entering a township road In
Geauga County from a private
driveway.
Cleveland: Ray A. Mononen,
44, Mentor, in a one-car accident
on Interstate 90 when his car
went off the road.
·
Monday
Ashland : Kirk A. Wolfe, 43,
Elyria, in a single car accident on
Interstate 71 In Ashland County
when he lost control of his car,
which hit a guard rail. skidded on
its side, landed on its top, and
rolled onto Its right side.
Piqua: Virginia Hulme, 82,
Piqua, in a two-car accident on a
Miami County road.
Toledo: Branden Monk, 22 '
months, after being run over by a
truck on a Toledo street.
Painesville: David Reynolds,
39, Paines.ville. and Lisa Anderson, 26, Painesville, when their.
vehicles collided on a c01,mty·
road.

. Local news briefs- EMS 1.4nits have ·busy
Hurricane Gabrielle
Large crowd·on ha~ for event
weekend with 29 calls · gaining momentum
r·

.

A la~ge crowd was on hand for the first annual Rutland block
party staged Saturday by the Rutland Fire Department and Its
Auxiliary.
·
Entertainment during. the day was provided by the Meigs
Band under the direction of Tony Dingus, the Rainbow
Cloggers, the Belles and Beaus Square Dancers, and Wyoming
. Wolf Band.
Numerous crafts were on display and for sale, games
operated throughout the afternoon and evening, and a variety of
refreshments were served.
Proc~s will go Into Improvements at the Rutland Park,

Units of the Meigs County Wyllls Hill for Gerald Arnold who
Emergency Medical Services was taken to Veterans Memorial
MIAMI (UPI) - Hurricane
had a busy three-day weekend Hospital.
Gabrielle, the most powerful
Rutland was called at 6:35p.m. storm of the 1989 season, churned
answering 29 calls for assistance
to Salem Center for Alan Osley . through the Atlantic with 130
from around Meigs County.
Saturday at 1: 14 a.m., Pome- Osley was Llfefllghted from mph winds Tuesday and forecasroy was called to an auto Salem Center to Grant Hospital, ters said Its movement during
accident on Route 33. Carl Columbus.
the next two days would deterMiddleport Fire Department mine whether it threatens land.
Thomas was transported from
the scene to Veterans Memorial at 7: 32 p.m. was called to a car . Gabrielle, 1 mph from being a
fire on Middleport Hill. Owner of Category 4 or "extreme" hurriHospital.
~
Middleport at 11:16 a.m. went the car was Terrance Conlin.
cane, was expected to roar north
Racine at 8:56 P,.m. went to of the Leewards and other
to Mulberry Ave. for Marie
Dudding who was taken to Route 124 for Frank Lemley who Caribbean Islands Wednesday,
was transported to Veterans when It was to encounter a high
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 12:05 p.m., Chester Fire- Memorial Hospital.
pressure system off the North
Middleport went at 9:35p.m. to American coast.
Department responded to a
$tructure fire at the Short resi- Page St. for Bud Darst who was
Its reaction to that system
denCe on Route 7. Firemen were . taken to Veterans Memorial would determine whether It
back at the station by 1: 35 p.m. Hospital. At 11:08 p.m., Middle- would move further north or turn
Gladys Short was taken by port was called to the Mlddle1Jirt back toward the Florida coast,
Tuppers Plains EMS to Veterans Lunch Room forElmerBlalr~ho said Bob Sheets, director of the
was treated but not transported. National Hurricane Center In
Memorial Hospital.
.
·
Pomeroy at 1:05 p.m. went to
Continued on page 12

Jackson man injured in mishap
A Jackion County man was airlifted Saturday evening by
LlleFlliht to Grant Medical Center at Columbus from an
acCident In Meigs County. ·
Tbe Melp-Gallla Post, State Highway Patrol said Keith A.
Outley, 26, Jackson, was Injured in an accident at 6:30p.m.
Saturday on SR. 124, about two mlles east ofthe Jackson· Meigs
Couty line. Tr~J14!rs said Ousley's car went off the road on a
curve and sJanunea Into a tree. Damage was minor to Ousley's
Continued on paJe 12
..

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---,--.
)

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_ ,..

__·-

._....

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Miami.
"The real question Is what's ·
going to happen after those twQ :
days," Sheets .said. "Most of our
models Indicate that it wlll turn :
toward the north and miss us. ·
Some of our models show It
turning back toward us."
At · 6 a.m. EDT Tuesday, :
Gabrielle was centered near
latitude 20.5 north, longitude 57 :-- ~
west, or about 360 miles nor· ·
theast ilf the northeasternmost :
Leeward Islands.
Gabrielle was moving toward .
the northwest at 13 mph and was··expected to continue on that path
for the next 24 hours.
The hurricane's eye was expected to pass to the north of the ·
Leeward Islands.

'

.

I

•

�Commentary

Page-2-The

Tuesday, September 5, 1989

DailY Sentinel

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS·MASON AREA

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..

Pomeroy-Middlepoot'•. Ohio
Tuesday, September 6, 1989

ROBERT L. WINGETT
. Publisher
PAT'WHITEHEAD
Asslslant Publisher/ Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

LETTERS OF OPINJON are •elcome. They should be lesslluoa 300
wordo loar. All letters are sublecllo edllllll and mulll be olped •lib
name, addressiUid lelepboae IIIUIIber. No uaslpled letters will be publlsbed. Leiters should be Ia (ood 1881e, addressing Issues, not persoaall·

ties.

Celeste fights
lame duck status
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter

drlll presses, lathes, milling
machines, kitchen equipment
and a lot of other material Is ·
being sent to the ocean floor,' '
Broomfield declared.
In an Jnltial probe Into the
Navy's ship salvaging practices,
a Pentagon Inspector general
estimated that the Navy had sent
$17 million worth of valuables to
the bottom of the ocean by falling
to strip the ships before sinking
them.
What's the excuse? A Marl·
time Au thorlty official told
Broomfield's aide that the things
left on board enhance the "underwater museums" created by the
sunken ships. In other words,
scuba divers and bottom fish love
them.
The Pentagon doesn't just sink
your tax dollars. It crushes them,
too. The Pentagon's Inspector
general Is now Investigating

COLUMBUS. Ohio IUPil - Although Gov. Richard Celeste
technically has been a lame duck ever slnce his second term began in
January 1987, he assumes the political definition of a lame duck as of
Labor Day .
Like It or not, that's the official openlng of the 1990 political season,
a nd Celeste cannot be an active player. The Ohio Constitution forbids
him to seek a third consecu tlve term.
The governor Is concerned that what he accomplishes from now
until he leaves office in 16 months will be obscured by political events
beyond his control.
Celeste Wants to leave office with as good a record as possible.
Because of misadventures during his first term, he was losing at
halftime and needs a strong finish to come out on the positive side.
So Celeste has been meeting with Statehouse reporters, trying to
convince them that his -administration has meant more to Ohio than
government scandals, a~d urging them not to forget about him In the
next 16 months,
"I think I've ... been a heck of a lot better and more effective and
we've done a lot more than what conventional wisdom has
described," he said. "It becomes a concern to me, because there's
pressure to do other stories and cover other folks who want to sit in the
.
governor's chair."
As always. Celeste has education and eldercare a t the top of his
agenda for the remainder of his term.
He said he will be working for implementation ot the education
reforms adopted by the General Assembly earlier this year. An
oversight commission mu st be selected and standards set by the state
Board of Education.
And the governor will be riding herd ()f the Ohio Department of
Aging to expand community services for the elderly who cannot live
alone but do not need nursing homes.
Celeste is trying to spur the Legislature Into action on his bill to
create a new Department of Recovery Services to fight alcohol and
drug abuse.
The Senate plans to move on that bill in October, but the governor
wants fas ter action to take advantage of the Inertia anticipated when
President Bush proposes his drug abuse program this week.
The Re publican-gominat~Senate is not likely to give Celeste what
he wants; senators have insisted the recovery services should be
carried out by existing agencies, avoiding a new bureaucratic layer.
Finally, the governor will be·concentrating on housing- providing
home loans tor young first -time home buyers, and trying tu furnish
places to live for the homeless.
Celeste said he plans to participate in a march on Washington for
the homeless m October. He also will be chairing the host committee
for a benefit concert for the homeless by Stevie Wonder in New York
m November.

Letters to the editor
Boosters praise SHS supporters
It's time for an update on the
work efforts in the past month by
the Southern High Boosters.
First on the agenda will be a big
"Thank You"! Thank you people
tor being concerned and for your
support. You ' ve demonstrated
that you do care about the
athletic progra ms in Southern
and that you're willing to help
win this batt le, but before I
declare victory, let me emphasize there's stili a lot of hills to
climb and we're counting on you.
. Many thanks and praise to the
Racine Fire Department and the
fine group of people who were at
the !Ire house at 6:00 am
volunteering their time and ex·
pertise. The chicken was delicious~ Not only did we appreciate
their willingness to help but they
were great to work with. We all
had a good time preparing the
meal and nex t time there will be
doughnuts for breakfast. It's
hard to estimate the amount of
chicken needed on any given day
and we fell a little short. For that
we apologize. We promise a
bountiful harvest for our upcom·
tng October 8th barbecue. Please
su pport the Fire Department's
Labor Day barbecue. They do
know how to cook'
Thank you to Mr. Bernard
Fultz. Kr9gers, and the Home
National Bank for the money
donated from the Meigs County
Fair Livestock Auction. We were
thrilled a nd gra teful for their
donations .
Thank you Jim and Becky
Anderson from Anderson's Fur·
nlture (or .your bard work efforts
with the golf tournament held at
JayMar Golf Club. With the
excellent help of Bill Childs- &amp;
Bob Freed a nice profit was
turned over· the Boosters. And

thank you to John Musser for his
additional donation.
We are grateful to the Racine
Gun Club for their donation to our
booth at the Meigs County Fair.
The booth was a new experience
for the Southern Boosters and it
took many people to make it
possible.
Once again my pen doesn't
know when to quit; so in closing
let me remind you to watch for
our future endeavors. Among
them are the car show In Racine
on Sept. 23rd and the auction
coming soon. We need donated
items for this. If you're like me
there's Items of some value that
you're saving, but you'll never
use, so toss It, just toss It our way.
We' ll have volunteers to come
pick up items and assist you. You
can also consign Items such as
vehicles, tractors, etc. Most
important of all there wUl be
plenty of good food. Homemade
soup and more. Look for more
details on the upcoming auction
in the paper. In the meantime If
you have any questions or
concerns call: Larry Circle 9492021; Denny Evans 843-5116;
Pam Diddle 949-2749.
This can be a fun day for every
one!

.

We have 6 home football games
at Southern this year. Come
enjoy the evening, relax and
have fellowship with your friends
and enjoy our refreshment stand
featuring fish tall sandwiches
and homemade vegetable soup.
Makes me want to go a day early
just thinking about It!
Boosters meet every 2nd Monday at 7 p.m. Southern High.
Come one! Come all!
Larry D. Circle
V.P.
Southern Boosters

Today in history
Today Is Tuesday, Sept. 5, the 248th day of 1989 wlth .l17 to follow.
The moon Is waxing, moving toward its first quarter.
The morning stars are Mars and Jupiter.
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus and Saturn.
Those born on this date are under the sign of VIrgo.

...

Majors

Navy sends valuable equipment to·
the depthS
]dck Anderson and Dale Van Aita_
WASHINGTON- Mothballed
military ships stretch across the
James River In southern Virginia like a floating ghost tow11. But
any ghost who lived there could
command one heck of a navy.
Not all of the ships are useless
· stell car asses as the Pentagon
would have you believe. Some of
them are monuments to waste.
A Pentagon Investigator recently Inspected the ships him·
self. He boardea the 40-year-old
Essayons and was stunned to find
a room full of never-used generator parts. The ship's dredging
pumps alone are worth $400,000.
Just two years ago, the "Es·
sayons," an Army Corps of
Engineers dredger. was esti·
mated to be worth $11 million.
Now It's waiting to be towed Into
the Atlantic for target practice.
"Perfectly good radar and
communications equipment,

allegations that Instead of selling
operable surplus jeeps, the Army
often simply crushes them.
One 25-year Pentagon veteran
told us that waste Is a way of life
In the ·Defense Department. "It's
not real money to them," he said.
"It's play money, funny money."
This source and others claimed
that each branch of the military
prides Itself on being able to
prove that Its budget Is not
Inflated. That means stockpiling
unneeded mater.lals so there Is no
money left In the till when the
budget year runs out.
Another tactic Is to clear the
shelves of usable equipment to
make way for new things. The
results can be seen at almost any.
of the Pentagon auctions held at
military bases acroSS the COUn·
try. Our associate Jim Lynch
visited a rec~nt auction at the
Army's Fori' Belvoir In Virginia.
Two massive warehouses were

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nuiiiMMhll'r !J.-13), i::U p.m.
~lUI Dteao fRa~~mUMNen Jl..t) Ill AlllllllM
7 1

:1·3)

' at

Hou~on { Rhode• 1-5), K: :15 p.m.
WednfolldiQ''" •••me~
rltllllui'Kh .Ill Monl~&amp;l, nlpi
st . LouiM al NPW York, nl~

l "hlup at Philadelphia. nl~
San Fnrlcblclo at Ahanta , nl~~:tll
Lo!! An~f'lll at Clnl'ln,.ll., nllfM
San DI••KO ld Hoau4on., nl~

College games
'fbls Mt•rk'!li
Ohio l "ollt•a-t• Foollt~l s, h..tu•·
By l ;lt«'d Prt&lt;s!li lrlll'rnalto ... l
SI&amp;IUrd.lt,\'. Srpt II

2. The members of Congress,
however, have no particular
expertise on th~ subject of what
Is and Isn't art, so It is perfectly
proper to leave this determlna·
tion to carefully chosen panels of
experts.
3. Once In a blue moon, one of
these panels wIll rna ke a
mlstatke.
4. When this happens, It is
better to overlook It than to
a bollsh the panel system and let
Jesse· Helms try to specify, by
statute, what Is "Art" and which
kinds of It may and may not
receive federal subsidies
Thus put, the argument Is
considerably more plausible. But
It Is, I believe, mistaken
nonetheless.
To accept It, we are required to
·assume that the artistic panels
that recommended federal subs!·
dies for the Mapplethorpe and
serrano exhibitions merely made
a "mistake." But I am Inclined to
suspett that their mental processes were a bit more complex
and devious than that.
It Is, ot course, possible lor a

panel of experts simply to
blunder. A friend of mine ruefully admits to being one of those
who, some years ago, authorized
a federal subsidy to a poet whose
entire poem consisted of the
single neologism "lighght:"
But the experts behind thes
Serrano and Mapplethorpe exhlbltlons cannot, I think, plead
Innocent misjudgment quite so
plauslvly. They must certainly
have known that Serrano's "Piss
Christ" and Mapplethorpe's gra.
phlc Images of homosexual sadomasochlsm would be profoundly offensive to many
millions of people whose tax
dollars would be spent to display
them. My guess Is that they just
didn't give a damn.
In the first place, they were no
doubt bettlng that most of these
exhibitions would be In places
where such "art" Is common·
place and nobody would dream of
objecting to it. (And Indeed It has
been argued In their defense that
several galleries In New York
and elsewhere displayed the
photographs uneventfully before

The mpment I stepped timidly
Into my first college art class, I
knew I was In lor a wild ride.
I was wearing a navy blue
dress and pumps, and my hair
was done In a neat flip that
Annette Funlcello would have
envied. As It was 1969, and most
of the kids were from bigger
cities and already knew what
Wl!S what, they were wearing
some of the hippie trappings that
would set the style at the college
for the next several years.
On the walls were drawings,
palntlngs and prints I didn't
understand, and my art teachers
talked about concepts I couldn't
comprehend any more easily. It
was the first of many shocks that
would perplex, frighten, anger,
excite and awe me. The experiences broadened, my horizons In
ways that would enrich my life.

I only lasted one year as an art
major; I soon discovered my
greater talents were In other
areas. But I kept an art minor,
and, In spite of myself, gained a
much keener ability to enjoy and
appreciate art. Knowing bow I
resisted that education at first,
and how much pleasurelt'sglven
me later, I've always been a
reluctant censor of anyone else's
art.
·
Yet I can't help but empathize
with people Incensed that government art funds were given to one
artist whose work so patently
offends some, and to an art
gallery that organized a retrospective of the work of another
artist whose work offends just as
many.
I'm talking about the spitting
match over the $15,000 the
National 'Endowment tor the Arts

' "'

(NEA) gave to artist Andres
Serrano, and the $30,000 they
gave to the Corcoran Gallery,
which put on the retrospective of
photographer Robert Mapplethorpe's work.
If you don't recognize the
names, you'll probably recognize
the works that have raised the
hackles of so many, because
they've attracted considerable
media attention: Serrano Is the
guy whose works Include a
crucifix stuck In a Jar of his own
urine. The late Mapplethorpe' s
Works portray homosexual erotIca and aailomasoc:hlsm.
The exhibits so enraged Sen.
Jesse Helms that he Introduced a
bill that would prohibit federal
.grants to art that be considers
"obscene and Indecent" - according to_his description, that Is

Ohln ( nll~:•tt:t' t-'••othall ~·oft'S ,
·
Slllurd~y
Ea.-.wrn Mh·h :lfl, K••nt Stutt• 7
'folt"dO 'n, Ohln l ' IX
Kllll••r!li li. ('lodnratlli {lit•)
Vtratnlu 'f••• h :!1, All ron :1
Mal~tt• :Ill. \ 'ounr;Ktu" n S11111• II
.fohn l11rrnll :!fl, SliNl'· Rufi.-Jo til
Dt· n~on li. "u,\'nl.,.hllr'JI' 0
ft•nlnd Stat•· ll:t, ( !rhana t1

William Rusher
Washington's Corcoran ·Gallery
reversed, In response to a public
outcry, Its own decision to do so.)
Moreover, If a bunch of phlllstines got wind of things and was
shocked, so what? Itn't It the
privilege of the cognoscenti to
offend the masses every now and
then?
·
Not (Is the answer) If they are
spending the masses' own l\ar·
dearned money to do it. That Is
the key point that the National
Council's defenders are so dill~
gently trying to overlook. No

·Prep S('Offtl
Ohlu lll1h )it·beul FnOlhWI llt'!oiulb
S!d\lrdll,l' . Svpl "f~
Allwn"'.!i, Par•·rMhurw " ' " 11 .
Avon!~. n .. l.uthf'rlln \\t•,.l i
Rl•a~:hwood 1-1. tlall'!'l Mlll~o~ H11.'-'kn It
Rl•l"(':.t. o'nldp&amp;ark :.!i, Parnw ~ornwndl' fi
c·an ( 'C' 111, Povt·r !I Htl !
'
( 'an Mt·IUnk'\ :u. ,\Jir (iurDt.Jtl ttl (oil
(lt• St .JO)I('ph JW, \ ' nu'MOIIM'V 'j
C"it•COitn~llf' U . F. l11• Mha•' 1:1
( 'lt• 1 nh'tr" ¥1, f•llh!fi Mill fUlmv11r n
('11• !'II la:mllu'&lt;~ :S:i, E•t·lld 21
Du.y fhum-.ful11'11,.. 1!1, llu,\' ( 'urr~tiiiJ
E ('llnlnn !!J, KlnJ;K 1J
EIHh• M Hi. Loruln Sfludtwl.-. 1!1
t'ranldort ,\dt•nu tt rort" NO~II
G "\lilt• (;urf'd :.!H. \\'j•lr ( M'\ ' 1 Mudl1nna

doubtthemassesknowles~about

art than the experts, but nobOdy
Is 'arguing t/lat the "art" of
Serrano and Mapplethorpe ought
to be suppressed. The cry of
"censorship" Is a r~ herring.
What Is at Issue Is whether
taxpayers must finance the benefactions of an artistic mandarainate, howeve~; offensive these
may be. Keep the art panels, by
all means; that as public servants they owe a decent respect
ot the sensibilities of the public

Be sensible ahout U.S.-backedthe;;(

~

Ohio scores
.'

.'

"Wh!lionhul'!l: 21. fo'ro;lorl•

car••

State.

oil•.

Transactions
~porta Tran•cUOIW

Faeth all
D11llas - Cut Oeofenstve tat!kle Chuck
Ehln, llnehacll.w Gre11 Gilbert, defenlllve end Ton;y Slmmo-. ofteDIIve &amp;ackle
Scott AdiUTIIJ, ll~~ebacker Jc.d carier,
u.~ end Keith .JenMap, llrhl ead

\\r)«hl ud ILLir lllel, wlje rtcelver!f
Walle-r stult.Y ud PtiiUip ~pe. 111111
elldsCIIatiM.erudMII'It&amp;eel,luUt.ck
P•l ou Car nih, r•••• b..::k Darl')t
Harrll, of1MIIn &amp;llcklelefllAic•, n&lt;Ntr
tackle .Jerry Boyanlc)•, deten•ve end
Mark HaiL linebacker Totld Howard, and
cor•rttack Mickey Sulton.
ledi1MPtll8- CUt Mde recelnrMMU

Bo••· r111Ulln1 batk Geollt Woll!lley,

defe1181ve lllfman Wilt Huortll, otlenllhf:
laekle Ben .Jf'fferaon. q..,lerhack

WII,Ynf' ,JoluMon, oftflllhe llnrman Dan
McQuat .. detemlve b~kCh•cklrMIIIer,
n-.M" tackle Dave I'Unlltll, delen•h••
hatlu! t'ral r8wope and 0111'~ WaMhl n.loa. linebacker Ronnlt Waallhln,rton:
placed Hnehakft'M Phillip Brown and
Ttm ( 'rawford on lnju~d retterw.
NY Giants- Cut Mde ~eelwerM PhU
McConkeo), Sbtcy RohlnMOn and Fr~tnlt
Miotke. n..e taeltJH Bnld Henlu! and
Mike Lamhft'ctll, car••utuackli W~nr
Hadclx. aad A.J. Greenr, lal'lde lb.vt"
P•pp. dele1t1n elll LH• Cele, llnrbackn- Lt'fQ' Ellellae-. klckl'l' BJor•
Nlttmo and puaer Bill)' Smith; p'-ct"d
r ...nlnr h~c:k .Joe MorrtM on lnj11red

"1•nddln IR

81111 FranttMo - CUI tadd,. Davf'
CUIIt&amp;)', cornt'l'llult w.,_. Davlfl, tt~~:llt
f'nb Marie Gehrln« and Rod .JonPt&amp;,
ll~bKII.el'll o\ftt.nlo Go"" and Ron
HatSty, de-feltlllw lacldl! MateGoMilWIJ.
wlclt recth·'t'rK T«ry Gre-er IUid Wallftr
MUrraJ , 11afet~ Tom llolmoe lllld
,Jo .. ny .Jaclclon: placed lneh.~ek" Rlld
Ell18oa on Injured re&amp;Hw.

NATIONAL FOm"IIALL LEAGUE ,
lfteJUiarSfoMOn)
Su.tQ'JJ Gamet~
Clntln ... IMU::hlca«e, I p.m.
DallaJJ at Nt'W Orh!an11, I p.m.
LA RlmMa&amp; Ar•t.a. I p.m
Phee•h at· Ott roll, I p.m.
San Franci~~CG 111 Jn•Milpolllt, 1 p m.

Tun .. 8Q' at Grua Ba)' , I p.m.
Hou,.on at Mlnnet~ola, 4 p.m.
K11n!!!MK City at De•wr. -1 p.m.
Ne"· F.nP&amp;IIdlll NV .JH•. -1 p.m .
&lt;'lt'\lehlftdat Pll ..... llh,-lp.mSan Dle110 Ill L.4. RaldK•. -1 p.m.
lhlflalo a&amp; Miami, -1 ,.m.
ScaUk• at Philadelphia. -1 p.m .
MOndQ''II G•mll'
NY Gilllt&amp;Milt Wuhl._o • • ll p.m .
Sund.Q, Mll'pt . 17
NY deh at Clrvl!land, I p.m.

Dalllllll 1&amp;1. Alan&amp;a, I p.m
Li\ R&amp;ldPr11 W Kan~ CIIJ!. I p.m
Mlaml~o~t NI!W En ll:ll&amp;nd, 1 p.m .
Nf'W Or~afl•al Grt't'• B4y, I p.m
PhUadl"'phlllMf w.,.Nn~on. I p.m
I"'IUIIhurwh at flndruatl , 1 p .m .
Bet rGU at NV Olanta, -1 p .m .
PhOf'nb: at ~lillie, -l•p m.
Ml n~ata at c•tcqo. -1 p.m .
HouMon at s.,. Dlep, .&amp; p.m
lndlanapoiM 111 LA H!Urut, .&amp; p.m.
!iian Fraad!MlO at Tam .. Bay , -1 p.m .
Mo..t.,-, St"pt. II
O.nwr al Buff..o. 8 p .m.
'I'U•IMIIO''• Sp.ts CalflHiar

Boxlnr
Hf'MV)'W"t'l&amp;ht!l

U ria FIJ WPiafltM
Shdellnr, Nn. - Mlchafl f"llrh_, ... vs.
.Jo•· Lut.l Htor"'na

Tennl11
Ne_. \ 'ork - U.S. Optn

Ml"f'llltll"'

Mard•ny, Swltzt&gt;rknd- M'otld Frcftic)t .. C'h 11111plorNipM

BOULDER, Colo. IUPI) was a little nervous. He told me
Colorado quarterback Darlan after the. first bit It would be
Hagan, dwarfed behind a huge downhill, and he was right."
offensive line. proved to be a big
Hagan's 4-yard TD scamper
man on the field Monday bight.
with 12: 2(1 to play In the game
Hagan ran for one touchdown, effectivelY. put the game out of
passed for another, and set up a reach.
third score with a long run to lead
Ken Culbertson's 29-yard field
No. 14 Colorado to a 27·6 victory goal In the third period accounted
over Texas.
for the only other points In a
Hagan, who became the star· second half dominated by both
ter this spring when Sal Aunese defenses.
was diagnosed with' Inoperable
Colorado's defense, after limit·
stomach cancer, rushed for 116 lng Texas to a pair of first-half
yards on 14 carries behind a field goals, allowed only a
Buffaloes' offensive ltne that handful of first downs In the
averages 273 pounds a man.
second half. The Buffs also
Hagan also threw for 95 more sacked Texas quarterbacks five
In his firsi collegiate start, times.
completing 7 o( 12 passes.

Sarah Overstr~et

--spOrt&amp; briefs-'-

'

'' IHagapJ played well all
night. We 'had a lot of trouble
tackling 'him," Texas Coach
David McWilliams said. "He
hurt us both. with passing and
running."
Aunese, who has undergone
several months ol chemotherapy
and radla t ion treati'nen'l's,
watched the game from a private
stadium box.
•The offensive line got me
pumped up before · the ·1ame,"
Haaan said. "Sal talked to ~e
before tbe game and I IBid him I

MEIGS GOLF TEAM PICTURED WITH NEW
GEAR - The Melp GoH team Is carrying new
golf bags tbls se1111on. Th maroon and gold bap
were purchased with the generous donallons from
sev.e ral local businesses. Coach John Krawsczyn
and his team thanked Pat Hill Ford, Downjng-

MHS golfers

SalinI
' The American Eagle !rom
Philadelphia won the Mayor's
Race tor the Esperanto Cup,
finishing the approximately 3mlle course off Gloucester,
Mass., in 1 hour, 20 minutes and4
seconds.
Triathlon
Glenn Cook of Britain won the
Vienna Triathlon In 1 hour, 48
mlnulel, 21 seconds. Janet Wendie of the United States won the
women's division In 2: 09:06.

ChUds·MuOen-Musser insurance, Powell's Super
Valu, Melp Veterinary Clinic, Frank Herald
DrDIIng, Jaymar Coal Co., and Bank One.
Pictured left to right: Tim Peterson, Nathan
Brown, Jay Harris, Phil Hovatter, Jamey blttle,
Mike VanMeter and Chris Knight.

•

r,n fourth place after

.
By DAVE HARRIS
The Meigs Marauder golf
team, under the direction of
Coach John Krawsczyn, is in
fourth place In the Tri Valley
Conference after the first two
matches .
Last Monday the team traveled to Oxbow Golf Club to take
part in p. tournament. Alexander.
which had not fielded a golf team
in the TVC prior to this year; won
the first event with a score o!l77.
Only two points separated the top
three teams as Trimble finished
In second with 178, Federal
Hocking third with 179.
Meigs finished In fourth with a
score of 186, followeil by Belpre
(197) , Vinton County (226),
Nelsonville-York (233), and Well·
ston (258). Miller will field a
team this year but did not
compete in this event. '
Meigs freshman· Jay Harris
finished with a nine hole score of
42, and that was good for the
fourth best score In the field of 38.

Other Marauders taking part
was Jamey Little (45), Tim
Peterson (46), Phil Hovatter
(53)', and Mike VanMeter (55) .
Other Marauder golfers In the
tournament were Nathan Brown
and Chris Knight. Capturing
medalist honors was Brian
McPherson of Federal Hocking
with an even par 35.
Belpre's fourih place finish
marked the first time the Eagles ·
have lost in more than 50 TVC
matches covering a two-year
span.
On Thursday n igbt.
Nelsonvllie-York hosted a match
at the Ohio University Golf
Course and the Federal Hocking
Lancers came home with the win
with a low score of 183. Alexander
finished in second with a score of
192, followed by Trimble (195) ,
Meigs (201), Belpre i202), Vinton
County (209), Nelsonville-York
1217), Miller 1222) and Wellston
(261).
Jay Harris finish ed with a 44.

He started out his round with 2
-birdies on the first three holes,
but ran into trouble on the par 4
fifth hole. His 44 was again fourth
lowest In the field of 43 golfers.
Other Marauder scores were
Jamey Little (51), Tim Peterson
(53), Phil Hovatter (53), and
Mike VanMeter (57). Once again
McPherson of Federal Hocking
was the medalist with a 1 over
par 37. '
1
According to Coach Krawsczyn, out of bounds on the right of
six of the holes contributed to the
high match scoring average of
54.2
TVC GOLF STANDINGS
o\fter 1st 2 Mat ches
TEAM
POINTS
Alexander

.. ... . . .

Federai · Hockin ~

..

...

.

. 15

. 14

Tr imbl e-.. . .. . ............. ...... .. .. ...... 13
Meigs .. ........ ... ......... .. ................. 10
Belpr£&gt;
.. . . .. ..
.... .. R
Vinton County
.
..
.. . 6
Nelsonville-York .. ............................. 4
Wellston ...... .... ...... . .. .. .... ...... ............ 1
M11ler

. . ...

... . ... ....

.. ...... 1

Marshall Invitational women's race
. c~..a
_ :mpions~ip ·won by Rio' Grande
Only in Its third season. the
women's cross country program
at the University of Rio Grande
appears to be coming' into its
own.
The Redwomen ran all the way
to the championship of the
women's division race of th~
Marshall Invitational Saturday,
with freshman Renee Peck placing first and senior Mary Dowler
following at second.
Peck, the 1987 Ohio track
champion in distance runnihg
1who came to Rio Grande from
Liberty Union High School in
Fairfield Countv. finished the
Marshall course ·at the Glenbrier
Country Club near Huntington
with a time of 18:59. Dowler's
time was 19:13.
Also finishing for the Redwomen were Bonnie Evans. 20:04,
Debbie Gray. 20: 42; Becky
Webb. 21:40, and Atsuko Yamasaki. 24:16. Approximately 24
runners competed in th e
women's race. with Rio Grande

scoring 22 points, Marshall 36
and Glenville State 63. Women's
teams from Moreh ead State ani:i
the University of Tennessee·
Chattanooga failed to finish with
complete reams.
"Since this was th e first season
for the women's program. a nd to
see them come to th e championship of the Marstia illnvtt a tiona I.
it wa s very exci tin g." Coac h Bob
Willey remarked. "It was their
first team trophy, and they were
pretty excited about it. They
couldn't believe it .
"The girls just ran great, "
Willev added.
Ear lier, W,iJJey's Redmen competed in thf' men's division race.
with JUnior Mark Cline finis hing
first at :l3rd place with a time of
27:34. It was tile first race Cline
had participated in for Rio
Grande since an auspicious debut during his freshman year
Injuries forced him to sit out th e
1988 season.
"Everybody there. with th e

------""'!Sports

briefs----~--

By United

~ress

International
Baseball
Rip Sewell. 82, immortalized
when Ted Williams hit his
famous blooper pltch for a home
run In the 1946 All-Star Game,
died Sunday In Plant City, Fla .
The former Plttsburgli Pirate
played 13 years In the majors. He
had both legs amputated ln...t972
but continued to play golf. His
funeral Is Wednesday. ... A
medical technician who treated
A. Bartlett Giamattl has re·
signed because of statements he
made to The Boston Globe. David
Bell, who performed CPR for
more than an hour Friday In an
effort to save the 51-year-old
comm issloner, told the Globe
emergency personnel might not
have tried as hard to revive the
patient If he had been 98. He also
commented on over· the:counter
medication Glamattl may have
been taking.
Basketball
Tekka Markkonen, a 6-9 center
from Finland, has enrolled at
Kansas and will play this season.
Markkonen played In the Seoul
Olympics and In the recent World
University Games,
Golf
Payne Stewart Is the PGA
Tour's leading money winner at
$823,292. He ~,followed by Tom
Kite (F84,614) and Greg Norman
($723,930).
Hone Racing
Stelnlen, which won Sunday's
Arlington Million against 12
American and European
runners, Is the leading candidate
tor the 1989 Eclipse Award grass

championship. The 6-year-oid
horse was left off the original
Million invitation list because he
appeared to lack the stamina for
a 1 Y.·mile stakes .... Delaware
North, the only potentlallnvestor
Interested in · rescuing bankrupt
Canterbury Downs In Minnesota,
had an association with repu ted
mobsters that resulted In a
criminal conviction In 1972. Delaware North, a family -owned
business based in Buffalo, N.Y .,
also owns Boston Garden.
Soccer· ·
Argentine great Diego Maradona returned to Italy, having
already missed two games of the
Italian League season because of
a contract dispute. His Napoli
club plans to fine hlm up to half
his $1.5 million salary. ... A
24-year-old British · fan. apparently under the Influence of
alcohol and LSD, was feared
drowned after falling overboard
when violence erupted on a Nor.th
Sea ferry

SPRING VAll [Y CINEMA
446 4524

.

·..

The Eastern Eagiettes High
School volleyball team opened
the season with one win agai nst
two losses last week, including
16·14 and 15-9 triumphs over
league foe Han,nan Trace.
Eastern dropped 15·10 and 15-6
battles to TVC non-league foe
Federal Hocking in its opener.
Carrie Morrissey led the Eagles with 5 serving points , while
Toby Hili was credited with great
front line play as well as great
play !rom the floor. to score 3
pomts. Hill also went 3 for 5 on
spikes.
Tabby Phillips had three
polnts, Lorrie Baker had points
and one clean spike, Lee Gllllllan. Mandie Harris, and Tiffany
Gardner each had one serving
points each.
Jeni Pierson had 12 points for
the Lancers , while Mary Max ·
well had 6, and Michelle Shanks
3.

two rounds ·of conference action

Slatf'll.._., Nn.- RIQ' Mercer \OK, Dlno

Hnm*''

Colorado downs Texas, 27-6 ,

"

just about anything anyone of
any philosophical bent might
take offense at.
I think Helms Is way off base ( 1
usually do) with his bill, but he .
sure has a right to be mad. I'm
not too crazy about theldeaolmy
tax- money funding art that
sickens me and a sizeable tlirong
of m~ fellow taxpayers.. That
doesn t mean I want to censor the
artist; withholding government
funding Isn't the same thing as
censorship.
Former U.S. Senator Tom
· Eagleton, now . a newspaper
columnist himself, knows how •
the system works. He predicts'
that by the end of the year the
legislature will have moderately
reduced appropriations to the
NEA.

ArtiOna, llayklr, Fre~~m SlUe, lllln6l8,
ln•IM. Iowa, Kenl..::ky , MltiiiiU st.,
Norll
Sl., Olllo st. , P'ltbtlui'J"h,
So all Car
Wulll•l'oa. W_..lallon

reMerve.

llowllqGrt•f'll Oil &amp;ud C~o~roHna f n) '
''vu~t*n Sl ad &amp;IIKU&gt;rn Mldlll(l&amp;ft tn )
IU•nt S&amp;a&amp;r Ill 1\kron 1n)
Ml.mlat Purdut&gt;
Ohio Unhn"IIJ .a lo•a Staal!•
.o\WII•d llt hiMin ·W ... Iall'l •l
C'apl&amp;alt~t · lfotb.-aJ fW Val
H••l ... lltor11M Ollv.rl (MII'Iw)
Hlraarw llt t:'Wtr Rr!u•tv.•
.Jnhn Varrall at Kt•nyon
KlliMmaiiNI fMh.· btlll MW'h'(l.a
Mou• (i•lo• iU Allr. . .ny I Pill
Mti•Wi•lllllm at l 1rftiUia
Ohio Northt.oraal Mrlan 1Mlt•h)
Olt.rtu•l• al 01111• " 'f'lllf')lun
1\llMonl !Milt-h)-al "OOHIPI'
Ohwll•~tl Thltof (PaJ
lb.y ton u.t "lllt.&gt;ntwr R
IUuft( on u.t Tiffin
ft•nlrul !o\talf' 111 llllllOI!Ii Sl&amp;6l1• ( n)
Ruff:.dost:att•lalt"lndiOl,'
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~~

II. Texll .\AM (H)) ..... ......... .......... 11'7
II. "HI Vlr,tnla ( 1-8) .. . .................. 1!1
14. i\lahuna(l.f) ............................ 111

linebacker KenTipJIIIS.
GrHII a.., -Cui q•r&amp;ertlacltlll Rudy

Pltltllura:ll 7. Phlladelpllla5
1'\le!ld._v'M Gamt"S
MUift'al !Peru HZ) 1&amp;1 st. Lolot,.
i DeLH•IHIJ.I p.m.
fhlcaa:o (UIIIIN:Ided) W NN \ 'ork
I Frrr~~ndn lf-3). 7: U p.m .
Pitllllu I'Kh 1Hulon 1-7 J a.t Phtllildel·
pNuiCombMIH J, 7:3S p.rn .

...

11. Pe11aSta&amp;e (0..(1) .... .... .................. %!7
II. Colorado tf-0) .......................... ... 14!1

Aathuny Jeii!IJ, delenllve 'ackle Jefl
Roth, olfmalvf' tHk., Rick)' SIP.r,
rvnnln• hack .Ju Mor T.uMJ•u 1 and

Aalelet~7,

su Die co It, AI lana 1
St. LouiN -1, Monlrul I
Otlcqo a1 New York, nl ...
SuFI'IInciKeol, Undn•IIK

''

At1blltn (t-tl .. .. ......... ................. .. 111
I. Ml1111l 11-11 ...... ......... ........ : ......... .11.1
•. Mlc:lllpn ill) tf-QJ ..... .................. .413
1. UCLA tHJ ............... .. ........ ......... 341
8 . AriiM . . (1 .. ) ........ ... ....... ... .... .. .. 2HI
t. aenwoa 1I·IJ ............ ................... Z1!
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7
7

(htt!llnal.l .......... ...........l6 71 .182 13 .
l.oK An~eM ..... ,..,,.,.,,6$ 7t .-174 l.f
Allanta ........................IS Kt .1&amp;1 ~-~

,,

I. Nehru .. Ill fD·fl .. ... ........ ........ .. SII
3. SoullllenCal 1I) (1-1) .. ....... .......... 1111

4

NPW Vork .......... ..........7t l-1
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PMUibura:h ... ....... .........M 7&amp; ,-141 ll'tt

..

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• · Ge411Jta (1-1) ............................ ..as
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Oi~~ltl~'!-~~ :c =.P·:~tlnez

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NATIONAL IEA.GVE

'
Lo11

"*'

p•a1111 h-.ed oall polatl lorUr• place,
ll lor
etc:. •· VOIInc bue-d on
a:ames lllr!MII h 8 ....... ..,. •

15. Syrae~~ .. (1-tl .......................... ... :11
lt. f1orlda81. II·II ........................... .SI
11. Brllhun YOUIII ( 1·0) ...... .. ....... ....l i

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~a:n

ol C.acltel Top It .

foo&amp;b&amp;ll ,.. .. p, wkh r etold aDd
flr•·plare
I• parenlhMr a, tolal
eoUe~

Bo!lton II, Oakland s
Tut!MIIQ''A Gam~
Clt'Yelan4 (Farr~ll 8-11) at Baltknore
(MIIacklt-J2J, 7:" p.m.
KUI• CltJ !Gordon 16-SI 1U Dehvlt
Cltlt1 :1-3), 7: ss p.m.
Toro.-o 1Stelbl4-1) ld ( 'blcap(Ro..en-

San Dle,o ...................71! t5
Hou!ton ............. .......J ..'71 ts

ao....

' lakr_.lo_.

TGron&amp;o S, Ctlica•o:

.

Upprr A.rlltllf,on 17, DIIY Be-l moM 13
H'M"ft'8 IFK 35, TuKky Vl&amp;lley 1-1
Whe-el IWVI Cent 11, &amp;1-.all'f' ,John 1

UPI ratings

W L Pl•t, GB
(11icllKQ ..... ...... ..........77 te .Si2 St. Louhi ........... .... .......7S II .SSt I 'AI

A number of defenders of the
National Endowment for the Arts
have tried to shortcut the recent
controversy by contending that
" America will survive a $15,000
grant to some artist who photographed a crucifix Immersed In a
glass of his own urine."
With all due respect, that Isn't
the issue. America will Indeed
survive this particular act of
sacrilege. It would also survive
the slaughter of an entire kindergarten class, but that would
hardly justify the act, let alone
excuse using tax money to resent
a prize to the killer.
Those who want to defend the
use of taxpayers' dollars to
finance exhibitions of such "art"
as the above-described Serrano
photograph, or the homoerotic
pictures of the late Robert
Mapplethorpe, us to put forward
a more complex tine of argumen-.
tation that goes roughly as
follows:
l.It Is altogether proper for
Congress to appropriate tax
~ollar as to encourage various .
kinds of art.

Norll HillS I Pal U, f"lllrftl"'dl
Pttf'l'ttburt Sprtnrn U!lbon n
Saadlrsky St ~bry 1-1. ftt"mallt oloe J
Shaker HIJI•. Cit C"en Cat hi
Sou ..la-•nl8. Sehrlllftl
St Cla&amp;rs\'llle n. ltellall't' 1-1
8&amp;-euhen\'llle CC-II. (Oiihodon II
'IJ7I N'~e-w 13. AnthOny Wqnf' o; (oU
Tol Scott 11. Tol Ll hlley I

11ic

0
Kaklaad ........ ....... .... .H:l S5 .101 -

team tops
Wildcats

Nlloo•. UeEI

1

s

f'Velan . ...................113 n ..... u·~
New l'ork ................. ...l:l 78 40 It%
Detroit .......... ...•...... •..U Kl .314 !S
an- Cily .. ... .... ... .... .HI 57

volleyb~ll

McD•-.Jdtx. Rlcllmo_. Hlh I
McMt"chtn (M'VI Doultue J!, fl f'ryr o
Mld'flrid CIU'dlnal II. Ledpmonlll

"""'

Cal ifornia ........ ...........7R 5I
Texu .......................... '21 IS
Mln~ut. .............. ....... 1H
~ Seattle ..... ....................ill 111
Chlc~asu ....................... SII '711
MOndiQ' 'IIIIeJIIIh
Texa. R. Mlp~no&amp;al
Detr... I, KUs8 Cit)' I
NI"W Vorkt, California 1
Baltlmon! I, Of"Veland 4

Eastern

~ f'blltfr •• Z•es Rfwt•f'IUtil '7
Lfmon-M•t~t~t II, Dq C'ol Wt!~ J.1
Uma1J, DQ O..flhar 1
Mar~11 Ca&amp;h •• Mlllt-"',.rt :1

Br Unlll&gt;d Pr~ti ln~t-rraUonaJ

packed with computers, fax
machines, unopened electronic
equipment and office furniture.
Outside , a fOotball -field-sized
parking lot was littering with
more of the same. Four 15-foot
heaps of computer equipmentmonitors, keyboards, printers sat out In the open, awaiting the
next rain. No telling how many of
them would have lit up If plugged
ln. Fort Belvoir officials told us
the computers would be sold by
the pound or shipped to another
military depot. .
As evidence that It llfesn' t only.
squander things on the nickel and
dime level, the Navy has an·
nounced Its Intentions to mothball 100 F-18 fighters to make ·
way for new models. Most of
them are far !rom the end of their
touted life expectancy. The Navy
says It plans to use them again,
after It gives them a rest. Don't
hold your breath.

Tax-backed art can be respectable

The Daily Sentinei-Page- 3

I

.

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

exception of Glenville State, was
a Division Iteam, bu tl felt we did
well." WlliE'y remarked.
Winning th e race was West
Virginia University's first tea m
with 43 points, followed by
Eastern Kentucky, 56; Kent
State. 64; Marshall . 91. UT-C,
14R; Morehead State, 1!i3; Virgin'ia. Military Institute. 170; Rio
Grande. 2:&gt;0: WVU second tea m.
264; and marshall's second team.
339. Glenville State failed to
fimsh with a full team . Approxi mately 80 runners were involved
Other individu al lini shing
times for Rio Grande were
posied by .James Peck, 28: 19 ;
Doug Horne. 28 . 20: Rusty Edens.
28: 43; Scott Lafferty, 28: 54; Bob
Fritz . 29: 21. Bob Ferguson,
29: 31: Brad Shannon . 29: 45;
Vince Fatica , :!0·17 ; Matt Ba ·
ge'nt. 31 : 26: and Brian Kimblt&gt;.
36:05.
"I think everyo ne r:ave an
overall good effort to the races.
as stiff as the competition was ...
Willey sa id "Everyone rose to
the occasion . I see a bright.future
a head. if we can keep everyone
healthy "
The men's and women's tea ms
will par ticipat e in the Wittenberg
lnvitat ional in Sprinr:field on
Friday. They will face ru nners
from Wittenberg, Ohio Northern
and Defiance, Willey sa id .

4

In the win over Hannan Trace,
sophomore Lee Gillilan led the
way ·with a fine 14 point effort.
Lorrie Baker had 10, Mary Jo
Reed 4. and Carrie Morrissey 3.
Morrissey and Toby Hill dominated the front line . going 4·6 and
4-7 respectively .
Christy Short, Nicole Swain,
and Tammy Thomas each had
three for Trace, while Tanya
Short led with 10 points overall. ·
Kim Triplett and Tracey Jenkins
had two each.
In a thriller with Meigs,
powerful Meigs swept to 15-5 an&lt;'l
15-7 wins after close starts in
each.
Gillilan led the Easterners
with 9, Lorrie Baker had 1, an,d
Toby Hlll2.
Heather Hovat ter had 3 for
Meigs, Tricia Bear 13 to lead all
scorers, Jennifer Taylor 3, Kelly
Douglas 4, Tara Humphreys 3,
Kim Ewing 3, and Kelly Smith 1.
Mandie Harris was 1·2 and
Stephanie Otto 1-1 on the front
line s plk ing.
Ea's tern ho sts · Southern
tonight .

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Family Practice

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'I'

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,.

'

�Tuelttay,,September 5, 1989

Ohio :

Giants overcome eight•run
deficit 'to edge Reds 9-8

PLAYERS COLLIDE- In the fifth Inning of
Monday night's game In Cincinnati, Reds
SJtortslop Mariano Duncan grimaces In pain as he 1

coUides with left fielder Ken Griffey. The two
were attempting to field a hit from Jose Uribe.
The Giants edged the Reds !HI. ( UPI)

Illinois rallies to ·down USC .14-13
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -With
redsh!rt freshman Todd Marino-

vlch starting at quarterback, No.
3 Southern Cal played conserva-

with a sensat ional rookie season

in which he caught a career-high
67 passes for 1,009 yards and led
the Bengals to the Super Bowl.
Co llinsworth qu ic kly became one
of'the most popular athletes ever

"They all did a super job,"
Fields said. "Shannon Huston

The Reds rolled -to that 8-0 lead
and kayoed San Francisco starter Kelly Downs in the third by
scoring once in the first,. fiv.e
times In the third and adding
single runs In the fifth and sixth.
The Giants started their comeback in the seventh with solo
homers by Clark and Terry
Kennedy and made It 8-4 In the
eighth on Laga's two-run blast.
That set the stage for the ninth
when San Francisco collected six
singles to go with an · error by
third baseman Chris Saba, as 10
men went to the plate and no
fewer tpan three pinch hitters
came through.
In other Natioilal League
games:
Dodgers 7; Astros 5
At Houston, Dave Anderson
scored on a wild pitch by Mike
Scott "to cap a two-run seventh
Inning to lift Los Angeles. Mike·
Morgan, 8-11, the third of five
Dodger pitchers , got the win and
Jay Howell notched his 26th save.

~
.'

Scott, 18-8, allowed five hits and
five walkS In seven innings tor
the Astros, who have dropped
eight of their last 11.
Padres 10, Braves 8
At Atlanta, Jack Clark drove In
a career-high seven runs with a
grand slam and a three-run
homer In the eighth that lm·
pressed Atlanta manager Russ
Nixon. "I thought that one was
going out of Fulton County. Not
the stadium, but•the county,"
Nixon said. Pat Clements, 3-1,
earned the win with one and
two-third innings of relief. Mark
Davis recorded one out for his
35th save. Joe Boever, 4-7, took
the loss.
Cardinals 4, Ex)ltl8l
At St. Louis, Pedro Guerrero's
RBI s lngle spar ked a sixthinning rally that kept St. Louis
1~ games behind Chicago In the
NL East. Jose DeLeon, 15·11,
scattered five hits over seven and
one-third innings and won his
fourth straight decision. Dan
Quisenberry got two outs for his
fifth save. Dennis Martinez, 15·5,
suffered the loss.
Cubs 7, Mets 3
At New York, Ryne Sandberg
homered and Rick Wrona
stroked two hits and drove home
two runs as f!rst·place Chicago
handed New York Its fourth
straight loss. Rick Sutcliffe,
14-11, scattered seven hits over
five innings for the victory. Les
Lancaster went four· Innings tor
his sixth save. David Cone, 12·7,
was the loser.
Pirates 7, PhiiUes 5
,At Philadelphia, Gary Redus,
Bobby Bonilla and Dann Bllardello each had two doubles for
Pltisburgh, which snapped a 5-5
tie with two runs in the sixth. Bob
Patterson, 1·1, was the winner
while Bill Landrum pitched the
ninth for ·his 22nd save. Mike
Maddux, 1-3, took the loss.
•

RACINE DEPARTMENT STORE

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Pomeroy, OH.
992-2342

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Be,.,.., We llav~ Helpfd Oth.... to G;..,,.
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FORD

461 S. Third

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CHRYSLER
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Cltleeto

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992 •2196

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S20 TO WINNER . .

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The Daily Sentinei-Page-5
-~
.. U!'!'N!'!'D!"E!!'!R~
P"

EWING
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for Kansas City and gave up Fred
Lynn's 300th career home run . .

IT'S,THE ONE

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·Hulett's clutch homer gives
Orioles 54. win over Indians

Rio volleyball team ·
nets three wins
Th e undercl assmen playing for
Coach Palsy Fields· vo lleyball
team at !he Univers ity of Rio
Grande are no longer a question
mar k.
I~ opening season action this
past weeke nd, fr es hman Michelle Spears helped the Redwome n go .1-0 'wilh victories over
Moun! St. .Joseph, 13-15, 16-14,
J&gt;-11. 11·15 a nd 16-14; Lake Erie,
15-6. 15-8 a nd 15-5; and Siena
He i'ghls 1Mich.) , 15-8, 15-8 and
15-7. All matches were played on
the Mount St. Joseph ca mpu s.
Rio Grande played MSJ on
Friday and the other teams on
Saturday.
"You a lwa ys know wha t to
expect from your upperclass·
men. but the work of our
freshman players was a pleasa nt
suFprise," Fields com mented.
She added that it was Rio
Grp nde's fir st-ever victory over
MSJ. a traditional vo lley ball
powerhouse in Dis trict 22 , a nd
the.Redwome n's toughest match
of fhe weekend. In each game,
Rio Grande st ruggled to come
from behind for Its trio of
victories , a nd had to pull from a
9-2 disadva nta-ge in the final sel
to post the crucial third win.
Fields received good performances from her players, including Teresa Zempter, who had 1.6
kills; Shelly Hoop, 12 kills; and
Shannon Huston and Michelle
Spears, who had seven k!ils each.
In addition, Hoop had two serving aces, six digs and 1,2 block
solos. Spears recorded seven
digs and Zempter came up with
five block solos. Setter Robin
Sharp had five block assists.

lead, seven games, on the
second-place Houston Astros,
who lost Monday.
·"It looks like they just wanted
it more than we did," said
Interim Reds manager Tommy
Helms. "We had our three ~t
relievers (Dibble, loser John
Franco, 3·7, and Norm Charlt,gn)
In there, and we couldn't get the
job done. It was a nightmare, one
of those games when things just
didn't work out."
Todd Benzinger, who had three
of the 13 Reds base hits, Including
his 16th homer, .called It "our
most disappointing loss ·of the
season," adding that "our only
role now. is that of a spoiler and
we couldn't even do that
· tonight."
.
As .an afterthought, Benzinger
noted wryly that "we beat their
first team and then we lost to
their second team.' '

lively and relied on its defense.
The strategy worked- until six
minutes remained.
That's when Jeff George took
over, throwing for two tou'chdowns to rally Illinois to a 14-13
In Cincinnati.
upset of the Trojans Monday
Through his first six seasons, night In the season-opener for
the lanky 6-5, 192-pounder aver- both schools.
aged 62 catches a year and piled
George, beginning his second
up 35 touchdowns, He enjoyed season with the Fighting Illini
four 1,000-yard reception seasons · after transfer!ng from Purdue,
a nd was named to the Pro Bowl combined with Shawn Wax on a
three times.
' fluke 53-yard scoring play, then
However, Collinsworth was found Steve Williams for the
hampered by injuries the past winning score from 20 yards out
two seasons and gave way to with 2:19 remaining ..
younger, quicker receivers like
"Jeff was sensational in the .
· Eddie Brown and Tim McGee. second half and made all the key
Collinsworth scored only one plays," Illini coach John Macktouchdown over the past two ovic said. "He exudes confidence
wards was ejected in the first
By ERIK K. LIEF
years and last season caught just as he showed with the way he
inning by umpire Jim Joyce.
UPI Sports Writer
13 passes.
No one has more appreciation Edwards · argued that starting
pushed us down the field ."
Breech, 33, had been Ci ncinnaIllinois needed less than two tor being part of a pennant race pitcher Greg Swindell should
ti 's place kicker since 1980, but minu tes to move 80 yards in 10 than Baltimore substitute Tim have got two strikeouts.
has suffered back problems in plays to go ahead for the first Hulet(.
Instead, the Orioles made it 3-2
recent years which hampered his
Hulett, whowascalleduptothe
time: Wax absorbed a punishing
In
the firsi,!nnlng and took a 4-3
ability to kick long field goals.
hit to contribute a tough 21-yard Orioles on Aug. 23 to replace the lead In the third Inning on a
Rookies cut besides Childress reception in the march as the Injured Bill Rlpken, cracked a
two- run home run by Cal Ripken,
were Richard Carey , a corner- Ili!ni beat theTrojansforthe!irst game-winning home run off
his
19th of the year. The homer
back from Idaho; Chris Che- time in 10 tries since 1935.
Cleveland reliever Rod Nichols
was
the first for the Orioles In 58
nault , a linebacker from KenAfter winning . 17 straight with two out in the ninth Inning innings.
tucky ; ftichGicewlcz, a tight end games against Big Ten oppo- that produced a 5·4 Orioles'
Elsewhere In the American
from Michigan State; Cornell nents, USC lost for the four th victory .
1
League:
Holloway, a cornerback from straight time to a foe from the
The win enabled the Orioles to
Yankees 2, Angels 1
Pittsburgh; Ken Moyer, a tackle Big Ten. The Trojans entered the stay within one game of the
At
New
York; Don Mattingly's
from Toledo·;. Kerry Owens, a game 14\12-po!nt favorites.
first -place Toronto Blue Jays,
sixth-Inning
homer lifted · the
linebacker from Arkansas. a nd
George completed 27 of 43 who also won Monday night . Yankees to a sweep of their
Todd Ph!lcox, a quarterback passes for 248 yards with two against the Chicago Whit ~ Sox.
four-game series and fifth
from Syracuse.
.
While Baltimore has won five
touchdowns and one intercepstraight
triumph. Clay Parker,
Placed on the Injured reserve tion. He said an Illinois rally was stra ight games at home, Cleve4-4,
scattered
six hits through
list were tackles Joe Wal ter, Rob
land has lost eight of 10 games.
nothing new.
seven
and
onethird
Innings and
.Woods and Kevin Simons and
"It feels good to contribute and
"It's just a matter of confiDave
Righetti
earned
his 21st
running back John Holifield.
dence," he said. "We had to come play," said Hulett, who has save. Jim Abbott, 11·10, allowed
played second base as Blll
from behind all las t year." ·
four hits and one earned run In
Mar!novich, the first freshman Ripken "remains on the disabled seven and one-third Innings.
quarterback to start a USC list. "Right now, this home run
Tigers 5, Royals I"
season since at least World War stands out the most, but I could
At
Detroit,
Doyle Alexander
II. went14 for27 forl20 yards and play my whole career and not marked his 39th birthday by
have a chance to be in a pennant
;
one interception.
allowing three hits over six and
race.''
The USC IE_l{J-hander se,t a
two-third
innings to help Detroit
It was the first game-winning
played well and Michelle Spears high-school yaroage record at
win
Its
fourth
straight. Alexnearby Capistrano Valley High home run of Hulett's career.
Is a pleasant surprise for us.
ander,
6-16,
walked
two and
"(Nichols) threw three or four
"One reason why we didn't do School in Mission VIejo but was
struck
out
four
and
Mike
Henneused cautiously in his college f~stballs In a row which I fouled man earned his sixth save. Bret
so well in the fir st match was that
we made a lot of serving errors." debut. The Trojans managed just off, then hung a slider over the Saberhagen, 17-6, took the loss
nine first downs and converted plate," added Hulett, who has
Fields observed. "After we got
around that problem. we played just I of 16 third -down batted .293 with two hoine runs
and nine RBI In 13 games since
opportunities.
much better ."
joining the club August 23.
Although Lake Erie was
· Hulett, who also had two
"much improved" from last
"We
didn't
block
or
run
well,
singles,
m11de Mark Williamson,
season , in Fields' estimation, th e
and
we
relied
on
our
defense
too
10-3,
the
winning pitcher in relief
Rio ladies were able to suppress
much,"
USC
coach
Larry
Smith
as
the
Indians
lost their fourth
the Storm's offensive threat.
said.
"
I
felt
Todd
did
very
well.
straight
game.
Sharp " hustled well" to keep
Nichols, 3-4, had retired 15
!he match under Rio Grande's He didn't do anything to hurt us."
Said
Mar!noVlch:
"We
dldn'f
batters
In a row until Hulett
con trol, Fields said , while Hoop
win.
That's
a
sign
of
how
well
I
provided the heroics in the ninth.
recorded eight kills, Zempter
played
."
"Rod did a great job but th!RBS
had six and Spears had five.
like
this happen In baseball,"
Sharp had two servi ng aces and
Given
the
No.
1
job
when
Pat
said
. ex-Oriole Mike Young,
eight digs. Hoop and Chris
O'Hara
s~ered a knee Injury,
whose
pinch hit RBI single In the
Williams had 10 digs apiece and
Intercepted
by
Mar!novlch
was
Inning tied It 4-4.
eighth
Huston added nine. Zempter also Henry Jones In the final two
Cory
Snyder J:lad the fourth
netted five block solos.
minutes
and
USC
was
unable
to
four-hit
game of his career with
The Redwomen had fa ced
on
its
final
get
past.
midfield
three
singles
and a double,
Lake Erie during the 1988 season, possession.
including
a
two-run
single in the
and defea ted the Storm in the
The
Trojans
lei!
13-0
on
Marcus
first
Inning
that
helped the
opening round of district playoff
Hopkins'
37-yard
TO
run
with
his
Indians
jump
to
a
3-0
lead on
action at Blufft.on last
blocked
punt,
and
field
goals
of
36
rookie
Dave
Johnson.
November.
HEAliNG &amp; COOUNG
Indians manager Doc Ed·
Against Siena Heights, "a nice and 37 yards by Qu!n Rodriguez .
tea m that did a lot with the quick ,
Efficiency and
attack," ·Fields said, Zempter.
had seven kills, Hoop five and
Wgh QuaBty
Williams four. Huston and
Spears recorded three serving
Make This One
aces each and Sharp added two.
r
of Our Best
In digs , Williams led the way
with 11 , while Huston and Hoop
-- Buys.
OFF
had 10 each. Rio Grande's
defense shone with Zempter's
contrlbu tlon of four block solos
and three block assists apiece
from Hoop and Sharp_
OFF
The Redwomen return to action Tuesday at Shawnee State
University, where they face a
3RD SIRIEI
RACI., OliO
stronger Shawnee squad at 5
949·2100
p.m . and Cincinnati Bible at 7
MAmRCARD-YISA-GOLDIN IUCDYE
p.m

Bengals release Collinsworth
CINCINNATI (UP!) - Cris
Collinsworth, one of the most
popular players In Cincinnati
Bengals' history, was cut by the
club Monday.
"Crls has been an important
part of the franchise over the
years, but' there comes a time
when cold, hard, tough decisions
have to be made and you make
them," Bengals coach Sam
Wyche said of the elght·year
veteran wide receiver. ''Cris has
taken a lot of hits and we thought
some younger guys could hold up
better."
Another vetera n cut as the
Bengats reduced their ros ter to
the NFL limit of 47 was pla ce
kick er Jim Breech, who lost his
job during the ex hibition season
to free agent James Gallery.
The Bengals als~ admitted
they made a mistake in drafting
guard Freddie Childress of Arkansas in the second round.
Ch ildress · reported to training
camp weighing 374 pounds ; 34
pounds overweight.
Collinsworth . 30, was Ci ncinnati 's second-round draft choice in
l981 from Florida. Beginning

CINCINNATI (UPI) - There
was bedlam In the San Francisco
dressing room. Almost as though
the Giants had clinched the
pennant or even won the World
Series.
. Players were screaming and
· high-living and with good reason,
·because the Western Division·
leading Giants had just come
from eight runs behind. at 8-0 to
nip the Cincinnati Reds 9·8 with a
five -run explosion in the ninth
inning Monday night.
"I'll never forget that game,"
said manager Ro~r Craig. "It
was unbelievable, incredible,
and what made It so amazing was
the fact that so many different
players contributed to the win.
"I'd have to say It was the most
rewarding game I've ever man- ·
aged, -because (Tim) O'Leary
·was pitching so well, throwing·
the ball 95 mph, that I decided to
give some of my. regulars a rest
and save them (or tomorrow's
game. But those guys came in
there and just never quit."
Craig called on 25 players, with
third ·baseman Matt Williams the
only regular to go all the way.
And one of the heroes for his club
was first baseman Mike Laga,
recalled from Class AAA Phoenix last Friday and making his
iirst-ever appearance tor the
Giants. Filling in tor Will Clark,
all Laga did was hit a two-run
homer In the eighth and single In
the winning run In the ninth off
reliever Rob Dibble. '
"It's amazing, just unbelievable," observed winning pitcher
Ernie Camacho, 1·0, who struck·
out the side in the eighth inning.
"Everyone was roaring when we
came Into the dressing room, and
I guess some of us needed a
sedative."
In winning their fifth in a row
as they move closer to the
Western Division pennant, the
Giants opened up their biggest

Tu~~~amber5, 1989

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By The Bend

Connors sweeps· Edberg in U.s. Open .

LENDI. UPSET- Ivan Lendlls not happy about his return of
An!lrel Cbesnokov's shot In the llrsl set of their U.S. Open match
Mond~ In Flushla&amp; Meadows, N.Y. (UPI)

Fabi cops Mid-Ohio race
"If AI (former teammate AI
LEXINGTON, Ohio (UPil Holbert,
who died In a plane
Teo Fabl edged AI Unser Jr. by
crash
In
Columbus
last fall) had
nearly 5even. seconds to win the
still
been
behind
us,
we might
CART Red. Roof Inns 200 at the
have
made
It
sooner,"
Fab!
said.
Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course
"
We
just
went
ahead
In
the
Sunday, his first Indy-car win
direction
he
had
pointed
out
to
us ,
Since 1983. .
made
II."
and
we
finally
The win was the result of a
Scott Pruett, driving the
gamble by_Fab!, the pole-winner
Budwe!ser-Truesports
Lolawho drove the Quaker State
March-Porsche 89P to Its first Judd, finished 19th, while Ohioan
Bobby Rahal finished 22nd.
win of the year:
Fab! had to win the pole
On his second pit stop, team
position
with a backup car, after
manager Derrick Walker dehe
crashed
his primary ride
cided to give Fabi only a half a
Saturday.
After
the crew worked
tank of fuel. .Fab! had lost the .
Saturday
night
to replace the
lead to Unser 10 laps earlier. But,
he
responded
by leading
engine,
riding on . new tlres and only a
all
but
12
of
the
84
laps.
half-tank of· fuel, Fab! took back
Unser, who Jed from the 48th to
the lead shortly after his pit stop
the 58th laps, saw Fab! come out
and cnlised to a 21-second lead.
Fab! made a final, pit stop on so quickly from the second !)It
tile 75th laP to take a few drops of stop (where Fab! got only half a
fuel, came out of the 'plts with a · tank of fuel), he thought Fab! had
four-second lead and won the been holding back.
"I'd watched hlrn all through
84-lap race by seven seconds .
the
early stages ·and he was so
Michael Andretti was third,
straight
in his movements,"
while CART series leader EmerUnser
said.
"After the second
son Fittlpaldi was fourth, Inran
away, I thought
stop
when
he
creasing his ser!~ lead over
he
must
have
been
saving the car
Rick Mears to 22 points, 155,133.
and
holding
back.
"
Mears was sixth, behind Penske
Unser added: "What they did
teammate Danny Sulll!van.
was really' chancy. Our next race
Fabl said the Win " was a long at Elkhart Lake (Wis. ) Is a real
tlrne coming. I never expected it fuel economy run, so I think we'll
to take this long."
all be filling our tanks there."

NEW YORK (UPI)- Jimmy
· Connors, who needed lntraven·
ous fluids after his previous
match, Moriday night upset thlrd
seed Stefan Edberg 6-2, 6·3, 6-1 to
advance to the quarterfinals of
the U.S. Open.
Connors domlriated despite beIng penalized a point and a game
for verbal abuse of the umpire
during the second set. He hit a
ball In the direction of chair
umpire Richard Ings and argued
with hlrn. Connors was penalized
the sej:Ond gameoftheset, giving
Edberg a 2-0 lead.
''Something was said and
something was said and Instead
of Jetting up, I kept It up, which I
shouldn't ·have .done, " the 37year-old Connors said.
The 13th·seeded Connors won
the flrst of his five Open titles In
1974. Against Edberg, who Is 13
years his junior, Connors com·
b!ned steady groundstrpkes with
timely rushes to net.'
"He plily!!(l quite well, " conc,e ded the • Swede, a former
champion ·at Wimbledon·and the
Australla'li Open. "I felt quite
strange tonight .. I dJdn't hit the

ball well at all.
Ro5ewall reached the round of
"My serve was the biggest eight at age 39 .
problem," Edberg said. "I
Ivan Lend!, under Intense
couldn't serve and I couldn't pressure for almost four hours,
rally from the back of the court. I won the final tour games to pull
didn' t have much working for me . out a flve·set victory on a
disputed point over Andrei
- that's the end of the story. "
Connors, the overwhelm lng Chesnokov.
favorite of the more than 17,000
In a match that started tn
vocal fans at stadium court, said, sunshine on the Grandstand
"I love playing here. "
· Court and ended under the lights
On Saturday, Connors' l7th op a cold rilght, Lend! perseblrthday, he sUffered Severe vered, 6-3, 4-6,1·6, 6-4, 6-3, to set
cramps from h!U.OWer abdomen up a quarterfinal duel against
to his feet during the final game Tim Mayotte:
of his vldory over Andres
Earl!er, Steff! Graf, as close to
Gom~. A team of seven doctors
Invincible as any athlete has
and trainers worked for more · been during the last three years,
than two hours on the Floridian. · swept the final 10 games ·from
who was suffering severe Ros fairbank for a 6-4, 6·0
dehydration.
victory. Gra! has . reached the
final of the last nine Grand Slam
In the quarterfinals, Connors events.
will meet slxth seed Andre
Agass!, a semifinalist here last
Agassl, a setnlflnal!st lasf year year, crushed Jim Grabb, 6·1,
who has not lost a set In this 7·5,' 6·3, and Mayotte, playing In
tournament. Agassl beat Coli- his 11th Operi, made it to the
nors In · the quarterfinals last quarterfinals for t)le f!r~ttlrne by..
year In their only career !)eating French Open champion ·
meeting.
Mlc.hael Chang, 7·5, 6·1, 1·6, 6-3.
Connors 1$ the oldestquarterfl·
Lend!, the top· seed, won
nalist since 1974 when Ken despite committing 73' unfqf(:ed

Southern Mississippi, last
ranked In 1981 after upending
Florida State, cracked the ratIngs with a 30-26 triumph over the
Seminoles Saturday. The decision sent Florida State from sixth
to 16th In the ratings.
Louisiana State tumbled from
No.9 to No. 19 after lostngis-16 to
No. 12 Texas A&amp;M. The Agg!es
and the Golden Eagles were the
only two new members of the Top
20 this week.
Teams ranked second through
eighth were Idle last week.
Nebraska retained Its No. 2 spot
with 526'polnts and one·No. 1 vote.
Nos. 3, 4 and 5 were within five
points of each other as Southern
COil re~e!ved one more point than

Auburn - causing them to
fllp·flop positions - and four
more than Miami. The third·
rated Trojans received one !!rst·
place vote.
Michigan, with eight firstplace votes a~d . opening the
season Sept. 16 at home against
Notre ·Dame, moved Into the
sixth SPQt vacated by Florida
State. The WolverJnes were fol·
loWed In the Top 10- by UCLA,
Arkansas, Clemson and Penn
Slate.
Voting ~as based on games
through Saturday.
The Fighting Irish captured
632 of 660 possible points as 44 of
the 50 coaches voted on the
holiday weekend. They were
named on all but one ballot and
received no vote lower than
fourth while grabbing 34 first.
place votes. ·
Colorado moved up three spots
Into 11th. Texas A&amp;M makes Its
ftrst appearance In the Top 20
slnCI! coming off probatiOIJ, West
VIrginia stayed 13th after a 35·10
victory over Ball State, and
Alabama and Syracuse each
moved up a place to round out the
top 15.
No. 16 Florida State received 56
points after claiming 509 In the
preseason voting and Brigham
Young moved up a spot Into 17th

Tu~~~amber5,1989
•

errors, against 42 for his oppo:; ·
nent, and putting In merely 50'
percent of his first serves.
•
The !Ina! point of tbe 3-bo\lli·
45-mlnute thrnter came on
Chesnoko.v forehand that was
called wide, although the 16th
5eeded Soviet said minutes later:
''Yes, lor sure, the ball was ln.· ~
"In the end, I was ju~t so
aggressive be ~uldn't keell
passing," said Lend!, a finalist
this champiOnship the last seven
years. "I had to be aggresslv~
because he was not missing." •
Mayotte Is · .wlnle_ss In 13 iii;
tempts against Lend!, althougll. ·
he Is confident he is ready to
change his fortune. ·
·
After falling behind two sets tq
one, Lend! broke serve In the first
and third games of the fourth set!
only to give one back In the fourt)l
game on two unforced errors. ;
Lend! managed to hold the rest
of the set, serving three of his·
total 12 aces In the final game. :
, Nter squandering two breal{
points iii each of the first and fifth
gaines of tbe 'final set, Lend! go{
the !lec!s.lve break In the sevent!J
game on two volleys and two
sharp Sfrvlce returns. ·
· '

- -·

.'

Page~7

·-

•

reunton held

a

The annual reunion of the
descendants of Earl Jacks and
V!rglnla Morrison was held recently at the Jack's homestead In ·
Rutland.
Following a noon luncheon, a
fruit basket was awarded as the
door prize · to Janet Grbnes,
Bradenton, r1a.
Recognized and presented
gifts were Bill Gatchell and Ethel .
Priddy, oldest man and woman.
Music was provided by P.J. of
Lancaster, and Jack Cleland of
Rutland.
Attending were Russ and
Marie Mozingo, Rutland; Mr.
and Mrs. Raymond Brown, Scott
Brown, Tim Brown, David;
Rhonda, and girls, all of Lancaster; Gwy. JoAnn, Lar.ry, Rebecca, and Tony Jacks, all of
Salem Center; Wlll!atn. Carolyn,
Misty, Shaunda, Taunda VanMeter, Ro11 M(lrr!s, Middleport;
Ethel Priddy ,' Middleport; Max!ne and Clarence Jordan, Pdmeroy; MarUyn; Charles, Chu'ck,
and Shane, Rife, Wellston; Tony
and .,Je~~etta Chapel, Rick and
Sandy,. ,:.Scott and Brittany
Chapel, Pomeroy; Robert Foley,
Tammy Capehart, Chester; Cha·
rles and Nellie Cleland,. Lancaster; Pattt, Hershel, and Jennifer
White, Racine. .
· Robert and Pam Wharton,
Lancaster; Randy, Lori, and
Nickolas •Mozingo; Lancaster;
Eric Mozingo, C)leena,Andreonl,
Rutland; Janet, Lew, and Lewis
Grimes, Florida; Leota Edwards, Ripley, W.Va.; VIrginia
Hess, Leon, W.Va.; Gerrie Harrison, Baltir.note, Md.; Pat, Cindy,
Penny, Patsy; Patrick Ae!ker,
Tim Bissell, ·Pomeroy; Evelyn
Wade, .. Springfield; Rusty Mo·
ztngo, Debbie and Zach Borach,
Angel and Ryan Kelley , Rutland;
Mike Kelly, ·Lancaster; Mr. and
Mrs. John, Gearbig, Wellston;
Rusty !lftd Teresa Patrlc,k, W,ellston; Bill and Rhea GotSchttll,

at

.Newcomers. crack UPI's Top 20 - ratin~
NEW YORK (UP!) - The
Southern Mississippi Golden Eagles, whose goal was to Inch Into
the Top 20 for the first tlrne In
eight seasons, needed one week
to leap. in at No. lSon the strength
of an ·upset ·that sent Florida
State tumbling.
The UPI Board of Coaches
ratings released Monday refiected the surprises of the flrst
week of the season and Notre
Dame's readiness In the Kickoff
Classic as the Fighting Irish
rema!.ned In the top spot they
have held since last Halloween.

The Daily Sentinel

after routing New Mexico. Geor· tngs because of probation lncludl{
gla, which dropped three places Cincinnati, Hollston, Oklahoma
to No. 20, followed Southern and Oklahoma State.
•·
Mississippi and Louisiana State.
Iowa and WashlngtQn, 19th and
•
20th In preseason voting and Idle
LEGAL IOTICE
last week, dropped out of the
I
ranklngs.
·'It just tickles us to ~eath to be
The Public Utilities Com·
,
In the top 20," said second-year '
mission of Ohio has set lor
So"Uthern Mississippi coach Cur·
public hearinll Case No.
ley Hollman, who last year
89·102-EL·EFC. to review
managed a 10-2 record and an ·
the fuel procurement prac•'
tices and policies of Colum·
Independence Bowl victory.
',
bus Southern Power Com''I told our y\)ung men that once
pany, the operation of its
the season started, If we could
•
Electric Fuel Component
gradually Improve as a football
and related maner!t. This
team we could Inch our way lntu
hearing is scheduled to · :
the top 20 bu I II would take a week
begin at 10:00 a.m. on
at a tbne.
September
5, ~989. at the
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"Young men get frustrated .
of11ces
of
the Pubtic
They want that. recognition."
Utilities Commi$Sion, 180 · •.
Southern Mississippi glves InEasi Broad Street, ' Columdependents seven berths In the
bus. Ohio 43266-0573.
ratings. The Southeastern ·con·
terence has four ranked teams.
All interested parties will be..
"We want a good sound progiven an opportunity to be
gram that Is recognized by
heard. Further information
everyone In the country," said
may be obtained by con·
Holman. "Our players are ex·
tacting the Commission.
cited about being In the top 20 and
!t Is a compliment to them, the
ones who have worked so hard.
When you defeat a great football
program like Florida State, you
get at lentioti."
'Schools jnel!glble for the rat-

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People in ·the news

Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Pierce, Jackson; Mr. and Mrs.
Leroy Kessinger, Florida; Joe
and Mona Andreoni, Rutland;
Mr. and Mrs. Danny Jacks,
Mitch, Deena Jacks, Shade; Mr.
and Mrs. Allen Jacks, Crystal
and Keilach; Mr. and Mrs.
Randall Gibbs, Rhonda, R.J.
Gibbs, Gena Gibbs, Rick Burchfield, Juanita Clark, Baltimore,
Md.; ·kD. Hess, Leon, W.Va. ;
Mr. and Mrs. Danny Lambert,
Bridgett, Danlelle, Melinda, Da·
n!el Lambert; Clair E . Swan, Jr.
and Susie Swan, De&lt;ter.
Dick and Helen ,Jacks, Springfield; Junior and Sandy Jacks,
Springfield ; Fred, Connie,
Evelyn, Diana, Sheila, Hope
Neace, Mona Jean Jacks, James
E . Fish, Jr., Langsville; Ml·
chelle and Stephen Will, Pomeroy; Dan William, Gallipolis;
Alena and Jack, John, Justin
Cleland, Rutland; Elizabeth,
Jacklyn and· Jessica Floyed,
Dexter; Carol and Delmas Gaff,
Langsville; Linda Swan, Danny,
Missy Walker, Rachel and
Mickey Hutton, Marty Hutton,
Rutland; Ken and Donna Shelley, Kenand A.J . Hurst, Janette
and Marvin Jacks, Pomeroy;
April MeG raft, Rodney .. Tim,
Pomeroy; . Marvin and Mark
Kill!ngback, Pomeroy; Rhonda
McGra!t, Billy, . Eric, . Keith
Jones, Diana Slglar, Ruti'a nd;
Tony McGraft, Becky Ph!lllps,
Margaret and Chester Johnson,
Langsville; Beth, Rocky,
Amanda, and Cory · Johnson,
Langsville; Belinda VIrginia,
Michelle, David, Sissy. Lucas.
Wellston; Wanda and Bud
Thorpe, Woodbridge, Va.; Eric
Thorpe, Judy Kay King, Rutland; ·Mr. and Mrs. Allen ,Jac.ks
and children; John Hankla,
Rutland.
Next year's reunion will be at
the same place on Sunday, July
29.

Ladies. Auxil~ry meets
Homecoming, with the district
pastor from Rutland, was an·
nounced for Si!pt. 17 at the recent
meeting of the Mount Moriah
· Church·of God Ladles Auxiliary.
Dar~iJ Stnlth' lllid the MoUn·
lain Top Singers will perform
· and dinner ivll'l begin a·t ·noon.
The meeting was opened .with a
prayer tequest.. Ann Findley

By WILLIAM C. TROTI'
United Press International
OSBOURNE CHARGED WITH THREATENING WIFE:
Heavy metal -s tar Ozzy Osbourne Is accused of threatening to
kill his wife. Osbourne, 40, wa~ 11rrestedSaturday night after his
wife, Sharon, called pollee · to Beet House, their 10-bedroom
mansion about 30 miles outside London. Because of British law,
·few details of the matter are known but Osbourne was charged
with threatening to k!Jl Sharon and making her afraid that he
would carry out his threat. On Monday a judge freed Osbourne
on the conditions that he stay away from Beel House and not
contact his wife. The couple have been married for seven years
and have three children.
JACKSON'S COMEBACK: Kate Jackson says she Is
recovering nicely from the modified mastectomy she
underwent two weeks ago. ' 'The surgery was
complete
success," th&amp;former "Charlie's Angel"sa!d. "My recovery has
been amazing. I really can't believe Ifeel so well. !think that it's
such an Incredible thing that they can do the reco~~Struct!ve
pl&lt;\stlc surgery right at tne time, so you don't go through this
Incredible trauma that I think women had to go through up until
recently." Jackson recently bought a house back home In
Birmingham, Ala ., and on Saturday will be one of 16 people
honored with a spot on the Alabama Walk of Fame, even though
she won't be able to attend the ceremony.·
ELECTORAL NAME GAME: There's a sequel to " Kramer
vs. Kramer'' but it's an Iowa election, not a Hollywood movie.
Cedar Rapids Parks Commissioner David W. Kramer Is
running for re-election against David J . Kramer, a railroad
signalman. The railroad man says the confusing name game
might force people to pay more attention to the race and le·a rn
something of city government. DaVId W. says David J. was
encouraged to run by another political rival.
RUSSII\N RAVES: The _Soviets seem to have enjoyed Van
Cliburn's return. "We found him and we haven't forgotten
hlrn," the Soviet magazine Ogonyok said Sunday In a tribute to
the pianist. Cliburn, 54, '"on the first Tchlakovsky International
plano competition In Moscow 31 years ago .and In July he
returned for the first time In many years,!)erform!ng with the
Moscow Ph!tharmony, the same orchestra that accOII)panled
hlrn In his moment of triumph. "We remember the first
Tchalkovsky competition ever In 1958 when the Iron Curtain
was slightly raised ... and word was that an 'Incredible kld from
Texas' had come," the tnagazlne said. Wheri Cliburn performed
In Moscow anQ. Leningrad to- raise 'money for a monument to
Tcha!kovsky, the great pre-RevolutiQn composer who wrote the
music for "Swan Lake," " the grey shone In the famutar mane of
hair but It was still the same Van," Ogonyok said.
GLIMPSES: The Boston Herald Monday carried a picture of
Rep. J011eph Kennedy, D-Mass., with his arm bandaged In a
sl!ng but there was no explanation of wha1 happened to hlrn. The
congressman was a Kennedy clan gathering that Joan Kennedy
called to celebrate her 53rd birthday and raise money for her
son, Pa&amp;rlck, 22, a state legislator In Rhode Island. The guests
also Included Joan's ex-husband, Sen. Edward M. Kennedy,
D·Mass. , who shpwed up with an unidentified woman ... You'll
eventually be able to get more than a meal at Dick. Clark's
American Bandstand Gr!ll In Miami. Clark announced plans
last week to build the 9,000-square-foot entertainment and
restaurant complex In the city's Bayside Marketplace. The
restaurant, · expected to open In December, will feature
recording·studios and a rock 'n' roll gift shop, Clark says, and It
. could grow Into a chain.
·

a

PRIZE WINNER - Mark Murphey, admlnlstra&amp;or of the
Overbrook Center, presents Susan White, of Lon&amp; Bottom, with a
digital blood pressure cull which she registered for at the Meigs
County Fair. Her winning ticket was drawn by Overbrook Center
resident Ruth Bennet. The blood pressure cuff !NBS donated to
Overbrook Center by Contlnulty of Care, courtesy of Greg Kaylor.

Community calendar
TUESDAY
RUTLAND -There will be a
.tent meeting Tuesday through
Sunday at 7:30 each evening at
the Pine Grove Holiness Church
Yard . The Rev . Tim Hamaker
will be the evangelist an'd Rev.
Steve Manley and family will
provide the special music and
singing. Pastor Ben Watts Invites
the public. The church Is located
off Route 124 through Rutland on·
Route 3'25 and Rolesville Road, or
six miles from Vinton off Route
325.

7:30p.m. at thehomeoftheclerk,
Barbara Hannum.
POMEROY - The Ladies Auxiliary Fraternal Order of Eagles
2171 will have a meeting on
Tuesday at 8 p.m. All members
are asked to bring a covered dish
for the potluck dinner.
SYRACUSE -David Woodrow
·a nd the New Life Drama Company, a Christian drama minis·
tries , w!ll be at theAsburyUn!ted
Methodls t Church In Syracuse on
Tuesday at 7 p.m. The- public Is
Invited.

POMEROY -The Meigs Local
Band Boosters will meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. In the high school
band room.

LETART ...:The Letart PTO
will hold a meeting on Tuesday at
7 p.m. at the school. All parents
are urged to attend.

MIDDLEPORT .:..The Middleport ·Lodge 363 F and AM will
read the scriptures from John, · have · a regular meeting on
WEDNESDAY
Tuesday at 7:30 p.m . to work In
chapter 14.
MIDDLEPORT -The Pomethe fellowcraft degree.
It was decided to have a
roy Lodge 164 will meet on
cookout and hymn sing lln Sept.
Wednesday at the Middleport
10 at 6 p.m. 'T he Mountain Top
REE.DSVIL~ -::T1le Q~tve • :re!flple at 7,: 30.p.m. y.'ork.ll! F ,C.
Singers will perfomi. ' •
Degree. Itefreshments w1ll
Township trustees will have a
During the week of Oct . 1·7 the regular meeting on Tuesday · at
follow.
churCh will be holding revival
with Evangelist Joe Goodlow of
.Middletown. Services w!ll begin
at 7 p.m. each night.

Qt«Jte of the day
By United Press lnterJJBtlonal
At Milan's Malpensa airport,
the weeping brother-in-law of
Sergio Gerllnl and his young
wife, Patr!z!a, learned his rela- · •
lives were were among the 151
people killed In Cuba's worst
airplane crash :
"To think that I went to Cuba In
May and advised them to make
the trip."

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----Alfred notes--:
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Sisters in
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sltuatton

Dear Ann Landers: A while
back you printed a letter that
knocked me off my feet. It fit me
to a T. It was from a reader who
wondered why a wife would stay
with a man who bad another
woman on the side and pretend
that she d!dn~ t know what was
going on. Your correspondent
closed by asking why .a wife or a
sweetie was willing to settle for
.. half a "Phoney Baloney! ' ·'.. '

,,

CALL 742-2511 FOR ALL YOUR

The Alfred United Methodist tlon Center In Parkersburg,
Church will hold Its annual W.Va. '
.
Homecoming on Sept. 17 with
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Keaton,
regular service In the ·morning, ~ accompanied by their son, .- Bob
and a basket dinner at 12:30p.in . . · and family, of Long Bottom,
Afternoon services w!ll begin at at tended the Keaton reunion at
1:30 p.m. featuring Gospel Notes Williamstown. W.Va. recently .
of Lancaster. The pul)l!s In
Chad Lewis, Santee, Calif., has
Invited to attend.
been a guest of his grandparents,
ShuHnsand Ulrrlembersorthe Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Stearns .
church and the comm·!lnlty tn- Donna Stearns, ·centerville, Va. ,
elude Osie Henderson • 'Garner · also visited her parents. Lewis
Griffin, Clara Follrod, Ruby went home with Ms . Stearns for a
visit.
Burke, Lester Keaton. Jim Kelly,
and Wenda Williamson.
Guests of Garner Griffin were
Ruby Burke Is receiving therhis nephew and wife, Mr. and
apy at Western Hills Rebablllta- Mrs. Charles Powers, Dayton.

Ann
Landers

SWING YOUR PARTNER -Members of the
Belles and Beaus Square Dancers were among the
pei'formers on Saturday at the first annual

JOHN A. WAD.E, M.D. Inc:

ANN LANDERS
"1989. Lo• ............
Tl"""' S•ndiNA• 1M
c..... ~~ndlr....

cn

, . PUASAIT YA"IY IIOSPRAL

Plttsbur&amp;h
Dear Patient: You have more
"sisters" out there than you
know. Read on:
· From Des Moines: I'm stick·
lng \Y~th my 'Phoney Baloney for
the follow!ftg reasons.
.. Financial security.
ResptlCiab!llty.
I have asked mysel.f the same
'
He's great with the children.
questio!l. Here is my. answer:
I
love my In· laws.
. I .h ave 21 years Invested In my .
man I am seeing Is a
The
a varstt, d1eerll!ader
marriage. My husband Is a
'fabulous
lover.
Melp
Scbool, went Into the water of the dunklniJ machine aa
• pr.om!nent professional man,
From
Boston:
I
stay
with
my
'
someone
succeulully.hlt
the bullseye target at the first annual
wei) respected and admlred by
husband
although
we
are
no
block
party
held
In
Rutland
Sa&amp;urday. The cheerleaders
everyone. Our children are In
In
Jov~ . He left the
longer
co-spon110red
the
event
which
was
quite an attention getter during
college. We have a beautiful
priesthood
to
marry
me.
The
·
the.
afler110011.
home and are considered a loving
· hl!millat!on of a failed marriage
couple.
would be extremely painful for
The woman "Bob" has been him. Also, Ann, I have a great
·. seeing for nine years works for deal of guilt and I don't think I
• him. She has had two !ailed could handle more.
From Grand Rapids: I stay'ln
marriages and her whole ilfe Is
this
marriage because my bus·
' lier job. I do not hate her: She Is
band
and I have been together for
.taking nothing away from me.
AT ONE lOW PIICE
25 years and It's euler to keep It
She and Bob are never seen
going than to break It up. My ·
tOJtetber In public. Tuesday night
ADDitiONAl ITEMS
husband and I are good friel)ds.
II tllelrs (Inlier apartmen~), so I
*1.70
COVIIS lOTH PIZZAS
Period. I was never crazy abbut
. play cards with tM-girls.
DEUVDY IIU
sex. and In recent years It has
.. ·I have Bob's name, his child·
•. ren, tbe respel!t of the common· · become a nuisance. I am glad
that he has one decent partner
lty and more than enough sex.
and
doesn't run around. The
. One of ithl!lle years Bob will
woman
he sees Is a widow who
dedde ~1!-l)l!d enou~h outsJde
992-2124
I
next
door. (Vecy convelives
aetlvlty'tnd that will be.the end of
nient.) She Is gratefuL He Is ..______w_E_n_a_a_IN_.....,_POM
__n_o_Y_,_OH_Io_ _,l ·
lt. 'All I have to do II walt .
satisfied. I am content.
Meallwblle, I am - 'Pulellt ~n

NOW .AT DOMINO'S PIZZA
Gn 2·GIEAT PAN PIZZAS

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Rutland Block Party sponsored by the Rutland
Fire Department and Ladles Auxiliary.

.....,...

$1 0''

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. RUTLAND BOTTLE GAS CO.
. 7 42~25 II

~EORGE GRATE, MANAGER .

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RUTLAND
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Domino's Pizza

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Thanks To FARMERS BANK
and. FOREST RUN CEMENT
ILOCK for buying my lamb
at the 1919 Mligs
County Fair.
THANKS Dr. David
Krawsnyn for all your
help with my lamb this
year•
B~lie Pooler

Ell, NOSE I IHIOAT
GENEUL ALLEIGIST
"WE U~E IUR.I AIDS"
(304) 675-1244

As of Septem~er 12th we will no
longer be at the Middleport office.
We sincerely thank all our clients
fo-r their past patronage and look
forward to seeing you at our new
location.
Please come and visit us at our
more spacious and comfortable
office in Athens. Wf:J· have plenty
of convenient off-street parking.
R. CR~IG MATHEWS, D.D.S.
530 W. Union Str11t
Athens, Ohio 45701
Toll Fr• 1-8oo-527-0922
592-1483
We'll all be there, too. Janet, Rhonda, Ton a, Paula

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�Pege-8-The Dail Sentinel

Tuesday, September 5, 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, September 5, 1989

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Exxon spill brings unemployment, tunn(oil) in Alaska .
ANCHORAGE , Alaska &lt;UPil
- Labor Day s.a w the biggest
workforce - the Exxon Valdez
cleanup army - tolling In Alaska
since the trans-Alaska pipeline
was built and unemployment
plummeted io lis · lowest level
·
since then.
The Exxon Valdez oil spill, an
unparalleled environmental dis·
aster for Alaska, created a
tremendous economle boom on
the verge of bust ancj creating
turmoil In towns enjoying the
benefits.
·
. State labor economists coined
a phrase, "economies In turm(oll) ," to characterize the
situation.
Exxon has begun lay-offs in Its
11,000-person cleanup army to
complete a pullout by Sept. 15,
but the summer oil spill economic boom should not turn bust
for another month, economist
Neal Fried said.
Just like the oil spill, where the
. environmental impacts may

take years to measure, econo·
m.lsts will be studying Impacts
for years, Fried said.
Shortly after filling up with
Prudhoe Bay crude at the Valdez
oil terminal, the tanker Exxon
Valdez ran aground March 24 In
Prince William Sound, spewing
nearly 11 million gallons of oil
across southern coastal Alaska.
The oil industry was slow
responding to the spill but by
April was amassing a huge force ·
or workers, pushing Alaska's
double-digit unemployment rate
down to 8.5 percent.
May's unemployment. rate of
1..1 percent was the lowest for
that month In 15 years. June
dropped to 7 percent, lowest
£1nce peak construction of the
trans-Alaska pipeline in 1976.
July set a new historic low with
6.1 percent unemployed. Alaska ,
wl th one of the highest unemploy ·
ment rates in the country, edged
closer to the national rate. The
official August rate will not be

available for al,lother tlilo weeks.
Not only ~ i d unemployment
.drop to levels unseen since
pipeline construction, bu(Frled
said the Exxon ·cleanup was
" analogous to a giant construction project" in its Impact on the
overall economy.
He estimated splll payroll at
well over $100 million and said
the cleanup economy Is-oUerlng
economists new benchmarks.
Since half of Alaska' s popula·
lion lives within 50 miles of
Prince WilHam Sound, where the
oU spilled, waves of workers
from Anchorage and nea.rby
towns rushed io get high-paying
cleanup jobs. ·
The population or Valdez, spill
headquarters, quickly doubled
and doubled again. rn the Valdez
and Cordova communities most
affected by the spill. unemployment went from 14.5 percent in
March to 2.9 percent In July.
''The promise of high wages for

ullskllled work tur~ed Valdez
Into the employment mecca or
the state and. to ·a lesser extent .
the nation. The news media
provided the largest 'help
wanted' sign Alaska had e~r
secured," economists Fried and
Holly Stinson said in a report.
Exxon paid $16.69 per hour.
With overtime for 12-hour days
and s~en-day weeks, many
collected $1,800 weekly paychecks, not far below the average ·
Alaskan's monthly wage.
Payroll analysis showed that
perhaps one-fourth of the
workers came . from outside
Alaska. The state Department or
Labor 8ent letters to every state
discouraging workers from comIng to Alaska. The state told
Exxon and its contractors to hire
locally, giving preference to
' lhose who lost their livelihoods
' because of the spill.
Fishermen unable to fish because of oil In the water were
hired by Exxon along with
another 8,000 · workers, Fried
said.

Turmoil came when workers In an analysis.
lower • paid jobs quit to take
The spill's , economic Impac t
Exxon jobs. ~mployers found it has been felt well beyond Valdez.
so hard to replace them that state The port of Anchorage has been
job offices recruited statewide busy receiving supplies, Includfor jobs In Valdez, Cordova and Ing 800 tons of weekly groceries,
Seward and offered fr ee distributed to the cleanup force ,
transportation.
boosting marine transportation
Child care centers In splll 37 percent higher than last year .
communities - . needed more
Several tiny subsistence native
than ever with parents working villages went from near-zero
on the splll - had a hard time employment to zero
sttaylng open because no one unemployment.
But, Fried said, unlike a giant
wan ted to work for what had been
the standard wage. Businesses construction project such as the
hac;! to raise hourly wages in a pipellne, no one knows what will
futile attempt to compete with happen after · this month's rnasExxon. .
slve layoffs. Exxon has steadNow. llflth Exxon jobs ending, fastly refused to commit to
it will be difficult for these future work and the dlsas trous
small-town year-round employ- spill that led to a summer boom
ers to keep their wages high, but offers an uncertain future for
just as difficult to lower them, fishermen and the Alaska
Fried said.
eConomy . .
.
· "It's possible that employers
Fried and Stinson said, "There
may be left with a more perman- is a shadow hanging over this
ent Increase In the cost of doing quick and painful economic shot
business because wages don't in the arm provided. by on
usually fail as rapidly as they cleanup doll.ars."
rise," Fried and Stinson said In

Thontburgh urged ·to ·speed
medical marijuana decision
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Attorney General Richard Thornburgh, warned that seriously ill
patients could get caught in the
cross fire of "war on drugs," was
asked to promptly resolve the
issue of making marijuana available for medical purposes.
In a letter to Thornburgh
o~tained by United Press Inter·
natinal, Frank Stilwell, lawyer
for the Alliance for Cannabis
Therapeutic, said Monday that
the Drug Enforcement Admlnis·
!ration - which falls under
Thornburgh's jurisdiction- has
been dragging its feet for a year
on the issue of rescheduling
marijuana to make it available to
LABOR DAY RALLY- Some of aboutlOO,OOO
street of Detroit, a traditionally highly unionized
cancer, glaucoma and other
city, chant and sing songs to spectators lining the
labor union members and supporters who marked
patients.
parade's route. (UP I)
Labor Day 1989 wtth a parade dowu the main
.
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"As the 'war on drugs' escalates, seriously ill patients wlll be
caught In the cross fire," the ·
letter to Thornburgh said.
NEW YORK (UP!) - Amerl· land, but those countries cannot
the population iS eligible to "Under these lntolerableclrcumcans are becoming increasingly increase their blood export levstances. DEA has a responslbil·
donate blood.
dependent on Europe as a source els, so New York will soon begin
A decline in community spirit ity to seriously 111 patients to
of blood for transfusions follow - importing from the Netherlands
in many regions and the expense resolve this matter in a speedy,
ing surgeries. accidents and as well, the newspaper said.
·of collecting blood are the main good-faith fashion."
cancer treatments, a published
The Detroit area has also been
factors contributing to the dePresident Bush is to unveil his
report said Tuesday.
using some imported supplie~ . crease in domes tic supplies, the anti-drug abuses trategy on Sept.
Imports of foreign blood supp- Dr. A. William Shafer, executive
newspaper said.
5 and patients' rights and marl·
ties, although still relatively director of the American Red
.rn some instances, importing Juana reform groups such, as
• small. are increasing because Cross' •. Southeastern Michigan
blood supplies from Europe is ACT fear that those now using
the United States is no longer r.hapter, told the Times.
less expensive than collecting · marijuana to , treat . their glauable to meet all its blood
blood domestically. For in· coma or reaction to cancer
Nelson Groh, an official with
transfusion needs from do"mestic the American Red Cross in stance, the New York Blood chemotherapy could become
supplies, The New York Times Washington, told the Times that' Center pays $57 tor every unit of targets of tougher enforcement
reported Tuesday.
his group projects It will import blood It collects in Europe, actions by government.
For some time, regions of the 30,000 units. of blood from West compared to $75 per unit for
The letter also accused the
United States with a blood s upply Germany's Bavaria region this domestic supplies.
DEA of flouting a 1982 U.S. Court
surplus have shipped extra stock year. Those 'units will be distribIn the early 1980s, when disclo-• of Appeals order requiring the
to ar eas facing shortages. How- uted to Detroit, Wasington D.C., sures that the AIDS virus could agency to file quarterly reports
eve r. in recent years surplus and the Wilkes-Barre and Scran- be transmitted through blood with the court on the long- ·
blood has not been sufficient to ton areas of Pennsylvania, Groh transfusions appeared, blood do- pending case seeking to reschecompensate for all shortages, the said.
rtations dropped by about lO dule marijuana from a Schedule
Times said.
I controlled substance - consi·
Blood transfusions, a critical . percent In the ·New York area
part
of
American
medicine,
are
Dr.
John
Adamson
of
the
Ne~
.
dered
the most dangerous drugs
The New York area has been
needed
by.
about
2
percent
of
York
Blood
Center
told
the
with
no
known medical uses -to
the greatest importer of EuroTimes.
a
Schedule
II drug, which would
ea.ch
year.
In
recent
Americans
pean blood so far. Of the 12
for
·
blood
has
years,
demand
However,
blood
donations
In
make
It
available
for medical
million unit s of blood transfused
risen,
while
the
number
of
in !his country each year, about
the New York area have begun to
use.
280,000 are imported from Eu- Americans who donate blood has increase, although homosexual
On Sept. 6,1988, DEA Adminls·
rope, including more than 250,000 remained steady at about six men and other people with a high trative Law Judge Francis
units imported by Manhattan's percent of the population, the risk of developing AIDS are Young, after two years of courtTimes said.
New York Blood Center.
asked not to volunteer blood, ordered hearings, ruled that the
Approximately 40 percent of Adamson said.
prohibition against marijuana's
Most of the imports have come
from Wes t Germany and Swit zer·

U.S. turning to Europe for blood ·

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Marcos struggles with internal bleeding
HONOLULU (UP!) - Former
Philippine President Ferdinand
Marcos, hospitalized in critical
cond.ition s ince January , Wilr·
sened durin g othe weekend when
his blood pressure dropped and
he began bleeding internally, a
s pokes man said .
F amily spokesman Roger
Pey uan sa id Monday that Ma rcos's blood pressure went " way
down'" and he had been bleeding
for two days in the in tensive care
unit at St. Francis Medical
Ce nter.
"All the vital signs rapidly
cha nged to a very al arming
leve l:" Pey uan said. "I under·
s tand the doctors were working
ha rd on him las t night and earlier
this morning."
St. Fra ncis offic ials, however ,
said they had not downgraded
Marcos's condition.
P ey uan said he unders tood
Marcos's co ndition had improved by Monday night. He said
he did not know what treatment
doctors gave Marcos, but no
surgery was involved.
Imelda Marcos spent much of
her time in the hospital Sunday
night and later Monday, Peyuan
said.
Ferdinand . Marcos, 71, has
been in the hospital since Jan. 15 ,
when he was admitted for treatment of lung ailments. He earlier
had two week-long hospital stays
In December for treatment of
congestive heart I allure.
•
The exlled leader lapsed into
critical condition May 15 and
suffered massive heart, lung,

and kidney failure two days institutions to buy the buildings,
later .. He has undergone emer- which were listed at $300mllllon.
gency operations several times.
Marcos was hospitalized sevMarcos's transplanted kidney eral times shortly after the initial
- which has been his only indictment In October. Arter his
functioning kidney - was re- extended hospitalization began
moved June 29 alter his body In January, prosecutors agreed
began rejecting the organ . His he was too Ill to stand trial but left
condition was de~cribed as semi· open the possibility of trial if ·he
comatose _at that time.
recovers.
Imelda Marcos flew to New
Marcos has been in the hospi·
tal' s Intensive care unit, depend- York for arraignment last year
ent on a respirator to breathe and and was released on $5 mllllon
requir ing daily kidney dialysis. ball put up by her friend, tobacco
Doctors have said his prognosis heiress Doris Duke.
is very poor.
Khashoggl was arr:ested April
Marcos and his wife Imelda · 18 in Switzerland and extradited
have continued to ask the Philip- ·• .
pine government to allow him to ·
return to his homeland todie. The
Aquino government has refused,
saying Marcos's return would
threaten national security.
Preslden t Corazon Aquino earlier refused requests to let
Marcos go home to bury his
mother, Josela Marcos, 95, who
died May 4, 1988. Her body has
been ·lylng jn state In the family
home since that time.
Marcos's health problems
have halted his prosecution on
federal racketeering charges.
The Marcoses, Saudi Arabian
businessman Adnan Khashoggl
and' seven others were charged
with embeZzling $345 million In
Philippine government funds to
buy prime Manhattan properties
between 1972 and 1978.
The defendants are accused of
transferring the Illegally obtained . funds Into the United
Stat~ and defrauding financial

to the United States July 19. He
pleaded Innocent at his arraignment and was ordered held
without bail.
·
· Marcos and his wife Imelda
arrived In Hawaii In February
1986 after his 20- year regime was
toppled by the civilian-backed
"People Power" mllltacy revolt
that brought Aquino to power.

medical use was "unreasonable.
arbitrary and capricious'.' and
recommended that DEA Admin·
istrator John Lawn reschedule
the drug to make lt available by
prescription for patients · with
life- and sense-threatening
diseases.
•'The evidence in this record
clear)y shows that marijuana
has been accepted as capable of
relieving the distress of great
numbers of very ill people and
doing so safely under medical
supervision," Young said In hi!&gt;
69-page ruling.
The Issue ofresc heduling marl·
Juana to make It available as
medicine has been in the courts
and federal bureaucracy since
1972, when the NatiOnal Organl·
zatlon for the Reform of Marijuana Laws flied a petition with
the Bureau of N arcoHcs and
Dangerous Drugs - now part of
DEA- seeking rescheduling.
Young's hearings, which began in 1986, were the result of a
court order issued inl980 . In 1982,
the CO!Irt ordered government
agencies involved · In the case,
Including the DEA and the
Department of Health and Hu·
man Services to file the quarterly
reports.
DEA filed ·lis last quarterly
report In 1984 and has not·told the
court of Young's hearings or his
ruling and recotnmenda lion, a c. cording to the letter.
'.'Because . of outdated DEA
policies, · tens of thousands of
desperately ill patients are needlessly suffering," the letter to
Thornburgh said. "These pa··
tlents - now forced to lliegally
obtain marijuana they medically
require - could l;leneflt from
Judge Young's historic decision,
yet DEA has taken no action on
this important public health
matter.
"We have attempted to show
good faith while awaiting DEA 's
decision," the letter added.
''During this time, we have made

one request- that DEA abide by
a 1982 U.S. Court of Appeals
order which requires the agency
to file quarterly· reports on this
matter with the court."
But the letter said that despite
a June request from the court,
"The Department of Justice,
represented by DEA, continues
to Ignore the Court of Appeals
order - as it has since December
1984.
" Moreover, I have received no
response to my letter of May 10
from DEA regarding this matter," Stilwell said.
· "We must, therefore. Insist ,
that DEA Immediately comply
with the 1982 Court of Appeals
order requiring quarterly public
disclosure, :• ., St iiWfi'll's letter
said. "We also urge your office to
encourage DEA to address lt.s
legal obligations under the Con-.
trolled Substance Act to respond
to Judge Young 's decision in a
timely manrer, and to articulate
a final ruling 'In the Matter of
Marijuana Rescheduling."'

Jackson
endorses Forbes
CLEVELAND (UP!) - Jesse
Jackson · has endorsed George
Forbes in the long-time council
president's run for mayor of
Cleveland.
Jackson, speaking Monday
during the 21st Congressional District Caucus Labor Day pfc,
nlc; called Forbes "the next

mayor:"
"He' s a man I met several
years ago, an able lawyer and a
City Council . leade~." Jackson
said .. "He's consistently toughminded and tender-hearted and
Is qualified to lead the 'c ity· and
the state."
Forbes Is one of two blacks In
ihe five-candidate field . The
other black candidate is state
Sen. Michael White.

WHY YOU SHOULD

INVEST IN A
CENTRAL TRUST

6 MONTH CD.
NOW!

If you've been

is available for a
holding back wait·
limited time only.
ing for a great rate,
For more 'in for·
. this is it. But you've
mation contact
QQt to act fast.
your near.est
This offer from
Central Trust office
Central Trust
ar cal a. lj ils 446-4902
. . . . .pilOt 992-6661

THE CENTRAL 1'RIBr CCMB\NY
1llt ~ 77wii.AoltM """" 1/tJpfJtn.

1UBTRACf THOSE THINGS
8ATIIRINGDUSt
.AWDOUARS
TOWIIPOCKE1

IN
Til
UttlflfDADt

WITH A
CLASSIFIED AD

Wordo
16
16
16
16
16

4-Give.wly

·

7-V•d Slle fpllid in •dv•ncel
8-Public: Sele. Auction
9- WM'It.ttoBuy

.

Houaehold Goods
SportW.g Ooodt
Antiques
Mlsc. M•rch~ndise·
56 - Building Suppli•
56- Pets ior S1le
57- Mulicel lnttruments
58- Fruit• • Veget•bl•
59-For S•le Of' Tr•d•

Employn11~nl

Sen1inelle~t ·

Sr~r VI: I'S

Farm Supp l;es
&amp; llvt:sluc k

1 1 -Help W.nted
12- Siluetion Wented

. 81 - Firm Equipmeru
62 - Wented to Buv
83- Livettock

1 3- lneur•nce
1 4- Busln•s Training

1 &amp;-Schools • Instruction
11- Aedio. TV • CB Repeir

84-H.,- &amp;. Grain

17.!-Miscllllneoua
18-Wanted To Do

65- Sted &amp;

·

F1nancia l

pages cover the

22 - Mon~

liB-Vinton
24&amp;-Rio Gr1nde
258-Guv-n Oltt.
643- Arebi•·Dist.
379-Welnut

1715-Pl. Pt . . .nt
458- Leon

843-PorUind
247-Let•rt F•ll•
949- R•cine
742- fh•ttend
887..... Cootville

773-MUon
882-New Hwen

985- Ch•tor

...

Reol Eslale

M11onCo .. WV,
Are• Code 304

992- Middt.,on
Pom•ov

to Loan :

23-Prof•liOnll 81rviC11

following telephone exchanges ...

31 -Hom• for Sele

32-Mobllo Hom• lor Sole
33- Ferms tor Bile
34- Busln•• Buldings
36-lots • Acreege
38- Reel EU•te Wented

5711- Appte Grovo

811-Letert
937-Buffelo

41 - Hou..S tor Rent
42 - Mobile Homes for Rent ·
43 - F•rm• for Rent
44 - Apertmem for Rent
46-Furnilhed Rooms
48 - Spece for A1nt
47-Wanted to Rent
48-EqufAmtnt for Aen1
48 - For Leae

· let Retultt Fast

DOZER
SITEWORK • ROADS
CLEARING

NEWlAND
ENTERPRISES

4·.25-tfn ·

1·13

A HOME?

MODULAR HOMES
SINCE 1970

...,.._..ltanc:h, Cape Cad &amp; 2 Story
MODEl OPEN DAllY MONDAY THRU SATURDAY
I :00 P.M.-6:00 P.M. or Call For Appointment

FAMILY HOMES INC.

614-992-2478
P. 0. Box 207
Panteray, Ohio ·
. Locatty Qwned 8o Operated by Bill, Steve 8o Kevin Pullins
9-31 -' 19- 1 mo.

7-11·'89-tfn

TRI COUNTY
RECYCLING
rous Metals, Plastics,

78-Auto Parts &amp; Acc11.ari•

77-- Auto Repair
78- Camping Equipment
79 - Cimp•a &amp; Motor Honies

Stainless Steel

(PAYING TODAY
AUG •.30r 1989)
CLEAN, DRY
ALUMINUM CANS
41 &lt; per lb.
Ill COPPER.-.......90• II.
112 COPP£R ......... 75' lb.
RED BRASS . .........SO• II.

nuow ·auss ... 4o• n..

Scrv1ccs

RADIATORS ......... 3 5c lb.

. 81 -- Home Improvements
82---Piumbiftg &amp; He•ing
83-Elc~ltinl

84-EIKtrical

HOURS
7 Days A Week
9 a.m. -7 p.m.

Aeftigerltion

85-CJen••l H1uling
86 - Mobile Home Repair
87- Upholstery

REPAIR

•GRAVEL
•LIMESTONE
•FILL DIRT
•ANYTHING
AT ALL

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
CUTIING &amp;
WELDING

St. Rt. 338
~etart Falls, Ohio

We Buy All Non Fer·

71 - AUtol fOr Sele
72- Trucka for S•le
73- Vana .• 4 WD ' s
74- M01orcyCIII
75- Bo•t• &amp; Motors for Sale

R. L. HOLLON
TRUCKING

(614) 667-3271
Grant A. Newland

I

F•r1~izer

B&amp;W
GARAGE

247-3522.

At Jet: S.R. 7 &amp; 143

· On The Bv· Pass

8-36· '89- 1 mo.

8-21-89-1 mo.

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDip!G
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO~·
New"- hilt

_iW!!EI:

· {!~&lt; ,.

~EG

'

I. ROUSH
GENERAl

•

CONTRACTORS

.

. COIIERCI At.

RESIDENTIAL
•CUSTOM KITCHENS 6 lATHS
•EXTENSIVE REMODELING
•VINYL SIDING 6 AOOFINO
•METAl BUILDINGS
•NEW HOrf'ES

Public N otlce

NOTICE TO TRUCK
DEALERS:
In acc«irdance with aection 307.86 of the Ohio Revised Code. oealed bido will
be received by the Boar:d of
Meigs County Commiaaioneraf,Court Houle, Pomwoy,
Ohio 45769, untH 1 2 noon,
Sept. t 3. The bido wHit hen
be opened It 1 P.lll!.onSept.
13. -1 989 end read aloud for
the P.,rchuu of:
TWO NEW t 990 SINGLE
AXLE DUMP TRUCKS
ONE NEW 1990 'h TON
MODEL
PICKUP TRUCK
WITH 4 WHEEL DRIVE
Bid apecificaitiona may be
pickad up ot the Meigo
County Enginur' 1 Office or
the Melgo County Commie·

ing.

3. No portia! setowill be i)·
IUad.

AH bido to be ocoomponlod by 0 bid IOCUrity in tho
form of a Bid Bond given in
iho name of the Owner In •
specific amount equal to
100%oftheaumoroumo bid
e~eecutlld On AlA Document
A310, 1970 Edition or a
cuhler'e check payable to
the Owner equal to 25% of
the tollll oum or oumo bid.
Tho Owner rooorv01 the
right to reject any or an bide
and to wolve Irregularity in
tho bidl ond in tho bidding.
.No b l - may withdraw
hlo bid · within thirty 1301
doyo oftao the actual dote of
alon•• Office.
The Moi1111 County Com- the opening thereof.
Upon award of contract.
mission•• may accept the
loweot bid, or Hlect the belt IUCCOiofu( biddor will be robid for the intended pur- quirod to oubmit a Perrfor·
pose, and- r•erve the right m.,.., Lobor ond Moteriot
Poym.,. Bond giVen in the
to accept ·or reiect any or
bide and/or any. part thar• n...,. of the Ow- In a epoclfic omount equal to 100%
of.
.
of the Contract Suin or a
Mary Hobltetter. Clerk
ceohler'e. check ptiyable to
Board of Melga County
the Owner equal to 100% of
Commi•fionen
.
the Contract aum.
181 28; 191 5 2tc
(81 23, 29;. 191 II. 12, 4tc

,u

PubI ic Notice
INVITATION TO BID
NOTICE TO RE·II D
Notlcolo glilen heroby that
Middloport
Prubytorlan
Church. 1S~ North Fqurth
Streot. Middleport, Ohio,
will accopt I;Hdo for the lottowing project:
Roof R.,;tlr and Roptoco·
mont, Mlddtoport lhubytorlon Church. 113 North
Fourth Str!Ntl Middleport.
Ohio 45110, O!IOO;:'dll to
Dra\1\(lngo Md B
cotlone prepared by Merll T.
Epling. Architect, 423 Sa·
cond Avenue, Gottlpotts,
Ohio 411131.
lldl will be rocolved for:
t. Oenenl TrodM Contloct.
Sealed bidl wMI be received it the Architect' a of·
flee untl T-dey, Septom·
ber 19, 1988 ot 2:00P.M.
lido rocolved ofter thlt
tlnie wit not be OCc:epted.
Bide wll be oponod Md reod
aloud It that time Md It that
ploco. lntorooted pertlol ore
lr\~lted to attend bid opon-

ll'l
" aecuro ooplol
. · lddora mrry

of the prcipoHd Contract
Document• frqm tho office
of tho Arohlt.ct .....,ning
Auguat 2Z. 1118 on tho fo~

towinG belle:

1 . Orur oopy of tho Project
Monuel p1ue oat of the
ONwlngo upon poym.,. of
Uti.OO ....... Additional
oopluG8nbeo--.edupon

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On Augult 16. 1889, in
the Molgo County Probete
Court. 'C:..e No. 28348:
•-·len0 F - 8894 B

~

on.

•

rond Str-. Wortilmgton,
Dhlo. 4308&amp;, oppolnted
Admlnlotllltril&lt; of tho Ollete
ot David J. Goodwin. de· , --•
c:iiMrrll, IIIIa of ZOO ._ill'
Strut, Pomeroy, Moigo
County, Ohio, 46719.
E · Judgo
Buck,
· · Robert
Probate
Lano K. NHMiroed, Clerlt
181 22 29 "'I R 3tc
'
; 'u a,

Notice

LEGAL NOTICE
' Offera wHt be received at
the office of Barnard V.
Fultz,
Attorney at Law,
111 'lz Wut Seoond Str-.
Pome&lt;oy, Ohio, until Friday,
September B.
19B9, at
10:00 A.M. for theput'Chaoe
of the r••t 01teto owned by
Edloon
Hobetltter, Do·
ceMed, and situated on
Rooe Hill, Saliabury Town·
Meigo County, Ohio,
conoloting oh 1· 11/ 10 acre
lot on which there is aituated
a elx room reoidence 13 bedroomil, living and dining
room, kitchen) both. baument. fuel oil furnace, car·
port and bern. The r ..l •tete it
eppraiaed
at
t27,000.00. Bldo may be
oubmitted either in writing
.or in P••on· at the time of

-- -- ..

·--~ ":""- ----·~ ---· -:-'"

+
,.

Troln ID .,. ol&gt;roteulonot

Train for c.reer~~ln

.sfr R! fAHV
FXf' UTIVf •;rc
·WOHU PROCl :)SOH

.fiiNANCIA( AID AVAIL
. ..JOB PLACEMENT A

·Aifll.Nt"S
.CPUI~~!-

THI\vl L

l JN [

:~

1\(;~NC,fS

• 110111 tmJIIY/1111. TltANII1I
-FINANCIAL AID AVAIL.
.JOB PL.ACEIIENT ASSIST.

A.C.T. TRAVEL SCHOOL .

•.L awn Mowers

Real Estate General

608

E . Ma inllllili

EVENINGS

Gardens

4 / 6/89 / tfn

8 · 17· , mo.

WANTED

LINDA'S ·
PAINTING

DEAD OR AUVE
•Washers •Dryers
•Range •Freezers

IIITERIOR·EXTERIOR

FREE ESTIMATES

•Refrigerators

Take the pain out of

"Must Be Repairalile"

painting. Let me do

!(EN'S ,APPLIANCE
SERVICE

992-~611

614-985-4180

JONES TIRE
CENTER

WATER
SERVICE

SWEEPER REPAIR

1,000 GALLONS
POOLS, WELLS
CISTERNS .

MARTIN'S
FURNITURE
and MORE

Call Anytime
992-2371

222 East Main
POMEROY, OH.

.~INCF,:

' 969

192-5335-985-3561
We Service All Makes
.5·4-89-1 mo.

8/ 4/89-tfn

• New 8t Used Tires
•Custom Pipe Bending
•Oil Changes

•Grease Jobs
•General Chassis·
Maintenance
•Computarired Balancer

992-3897
St. Rt. 124
Middleport. Oh . .

All MAKES AND
MODELS

992-6872

5/ 13/19 Hn

6-16-tln

ALLEN'S
1-600 GAUON
WATER SERVICE
UMESTONE
SPREAD
DIRT HAULE.D
992-5275

11·1111

MOBILE
HOME PARK
•Mobile Home
Parts
•Mobile Home. ·
Rentals

•Lot Rentals

992-7479
Rt. 33 Marth of
Pontiroy, Ohio
.

1·13-'P-tfn

POMEROY, 0.
992-2259
PRICE REDUCED- RUTlAND- 3 bedroom, ~at h. frame
home. Would makea good rental. $16,15000.
NEW LISTING - PORTlAND - SHARON ROAD - MINI
FARM IN THE COUNTRY -In Soulhern District. 14~ Acres,
· I Y, story house w~h 4 bedrooms. 2k1tchens. 2·baths, 21iving
rooms, carpet, natural gas heat. garden and welt water.
$39,500.00.
.
NEW LISTING- POMEROY- Older home with 2 bedrooms,
I bath. lront and rear porches screened in. Has N.GJA
heat On approx. I acre ol ground. $10,900.00.
MIDDLEPORT- Commercial build1ng lor a place ol Busi·
ness. Calf for more details. $49,500.00.
LETART AREA- Approx. 2 acre mini farm with small barn,
fencing to the sheds, plus a 1978 modular unit w~h 3 bedrooms, satelt~e dish. 2 good garden areas. Drilled water welt.
$17,500.00: MAKE OFFER.
.
MIDDLEPORT- Nice I floor ranch hom e located on a good
street. 3 bedrooms, · bath, nice. level lot $23,000.00.
RUTlAND - LOIIG STREET - I floor house; 3 bedrooms,
balh. Needs some repair. $7.900.00.
MIDDLEPORT- 2 un~ Apartme~t Building in Middleport.
good rental income. Good neighbolhood. OWNER WANTS TO
SELL NOW. $24,900.00.
TUPPfRS PlAINS - Very neat 3 bedroom ranch w~h al·
!ached garage. I acre of ground. FmHA approved.
$39,000.00.

DOmE TURNER ............... :.............:.............. 99 ·5692
JO Hlll ......................................................:.Us-4466
OFFICE ......................................................... 992·2259·'

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

3 miles off of Rt. 7
at Meigs Memory

DUSn st. STIACUH

HAULING

'HElM·~. CUIAND .............. .'........................ 99~·&amp;19!
JEAII TRUSS£ll ..........,................................. 94t.2HO

_..

•Chain Saws
•Weedeaters

6-s-·19 -tfn
r--·-.~--~~-~,

'

____ ___
'· ..___

•Riders

Hen. ....,._ Pomoeno Bch. Fl.

oece•od.
18) 30, 31; 19) 1, 3, 5, 6

a....

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL
ENGINE REPAIR
PARTS &amp; SERVICE .

it for you.
VERY REASONABLE·
HAVE REFERENCES

(Next to Hill Top GrOC8fY)

Ex.ecutor of Eltete of
Ediaon Hobatatter.

•u.oo ..., "'·

••

.

Doted: Auguot 28. 1989.
Jem01 W. Hobetottor:

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On Augulll 22, 1989, in
tho Mal1111 County Probate
Caurt. C.• No. 21318.
Edna Triplett, 404 laol"''
Sti'MI, Pomeroy,
. Molgo
County, Ohio. 411718, ~ed Executrix of the
little of ClarMCO
doceaood. leta of 402 l.aotill'
Streot. " - - ·
Moip
County, Ohio 411711.
Robert E. luck,
Probato Judge
~nt K. NuMir-. Clerlt
181 21: (1111. 12 3ta

Project Menuol end Draw·

.

ule.

LEGAL NOTICE
Pursuant to tM appropriate provlolone of tho Uni·
form Commaoclot Code and
the term• end oonditlono of
Security Agr_r_t doted
februory 18, 1984, bel·
w_,
TRIPLE C HYDO·
BLAST, INC .. Debtor. and
tho Wood County Bank end
loter, 'Augult 20, 19B8, U·
algned"to the U. 9. Smelt Bu- •
oinau A.d mlnlatrotlon. Sa·
·
cured Party, default having
been m-In payment ofthe .
lndobiHnuo aecured thor·
tby~ IIIIo Agency wit eel It
publlo -Ion •• of debtor' o
equipment Md lnvMtorv It
Jim McCutcheon Auction·
oerlllf Compony, Old St.
Mary 1 Pike. Ptrllaraburg.
Virginia. It 10:30 A.
M. on September 25, 1989.
(91 &amp;. 12, 2tc

6/30/ttn

3 Announcements

at ice

•n'g~ in good
within 30 doyo of bid open-

742-2455
Salem St.
Rutland,Oh.

•FIREWOOD

:1-rl·tfn

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

MORRIS
EQUIPMENT

•LIGHT HAULING

992-226!

.

LAWN MOWER REPAIR

•SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and RE ·
MOVAL

PH. 949-2801
CA~

•INTERSTATI IATTERIS

8 -23-B9- 1 mo. pd.

BILL SLACK

NO SUNDAY

•ZEYOR TRACTORS . .,
efCHO PRODUCTS ·' ·
~OWARD ROUVATORS
•YARDMAN MOWERS

985-4422

• .. Free Estimat81"'

or Res. 949-2860

MORRIS .•
EQUIPMENT

CHESTER, OHIO

5-25-"89-ttn

P11blic Notice

417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
or at
Veterans Memorial Hospit'al
.Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy, Ohio

Roger Hysell
Garage

DUMP TRUCK
Sand-Stone-Dirt ·

POMEROY OHIO

Tr;mspnrtot;on

21-Busin•s Opportunltv

INivment of
2. o.t!Cielt wll be , ..
!undid upon .......... of tho

•'

Ov'' 1 6 Wordl
•
.20
$4.00
. 30
$6.00
.42
$9.00
.60
$13.00
.0&amp; / doy
t1.30/ day

51 li25354-

6 - Heppy Ad1
&amp;- lott..,.d Found

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
' -l1:00 A.M. SATURDAY
MONDAY PAPER
-2:00P.M. MONDAY
TUESDAY PAPER
- 2o00 P.M. TUESDAY
WEDNESDAY PAPER
- 2o00 P.M . .WEDNESDAY
THURSDAY PAPER
- 2:00P.M. THURSDAY
FRIDAY PAPER
- 2 :00P .M. FRIDAY ,
SUNDAY PAPER

367-Ch•hire

16141 992-

· 5·2&amp;-'88-tfn

Merchandtsc
. 1- Cerd of Th .. ks
2-ln Memory
3- Annoucementt·

COPY DEADliNE -

448- Gallipolis

•S!DINCI PIIONI

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also Trltttlllttloa
.
,
PH. 992·5682
or 992-7121

Cenified licen•ect $1'\op

Rate '

...,.,.•• adl .

cept - cl•lified diap~.,, lusln•• Card and legel noticlll
will 1lso 1pp._ in the Pt. Plea1nt RePter end the GeUi·
poli1 01ity Tribune, N.ching ovt~r 18,000 hom•.

Meia- Countv
Aru Code 614

IUSINISS PHON!
16141 992-6550

Rt. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

"!&gt;DC" VAUGHN

z

Your Phone
Billa Hera

SYRACUSf, OHIO

CALL 992·6756

Licensed·Clinical Audiologist
::t '614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2104

£~,bla

Mo11 Foreign end

Aepain

~

We Carry Fi•hing SuppliM

8-1· 1

Certified Mechanic

~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

SALE5 &amp; SERVICE

llllidlllopart
992·2725
.

~lASE

10
Monthly
""''.'""'·oo conMcutNe runs. brokenupd.,swill bech11ged

In M1mori.-n

AruCode 614

Ntw '-tien:
. " ' North St&lt;ond
Middl.,..,t, Ohio 45760

169 N. 2nd

l1rt C Service
All Major lo Minor

1
3
6

•free .cis - Give.way and Found ads und• 15 words will be
run 3 dav• at no ch•ll•·
. ·
•Price of 1d for an CIPilall•ten t&amp; double price of ad coat.
•7 point lfne type only uMCI.
·
•Sentinel is not r81ponsible for errors1fter first dav. (Check
fdr error~ tint d-., ad runs in papet). C..l before 2 :00p.m ..

G•lli• County

PLUMIING &amp; HEAnNG

KAY'S
BEAUTY SHOP

Dom81tlc Vehid•

Dayo

outside Meigs, Gallia or Maton counti• mu11 be pr•·
paid.
•Receive $.50 di•count tor ad.l ~id in advance.'

.

WALK-IN WELCOME

· Television listening
· ·Dependable Hearing Aid Sales &amp; Senrtclll
CJ 'Hearing Eva! uations For All Ages

RATES

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to S P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

Classifi~d
.
.

':!trv Sept. 'I, 1989 ·
10% OfF Au PERMS

Now

VAUGHN'S
AUTO - DIESEl
SERVICE

'

•A clettifled ectveniMmM't1 placed in The D1IIV

MEET THE
STAFF
PERM SALE

.

• The Area's Number 1 Marketpla(e
.

,

Business Serv· ces

.

Classifie

dav ah• publie.. io" to m•e Correction.
*Ads that m!Jit be peld in edvenca 1re
Cerd of Th.,!d

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 9

_______

-- -- - ----·..

BISSELL
BUILDERS '
CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

SUN'S

TANNING
21/t Milts Out New
u- ld.
in Rutland, Oh.

Call for Fall Spu ltiJ

4-16-86-Hn

1·24-'19· 1 mo.

APPAlACHIAN
WOOD STOVES

.. Carp•t•, Oil. Off 143

698-6121

I 224 E. MAIN ST. I
.I .
992-9976
;
I THUIS. E.B. 6:45 P.M. I
E.B. 1:45 P.M. I
I ' SUN.DOOI
PillE
I 2 H.D. . FREE w~h couj)On and, I
'l ·pun:hase of min. H.C. Pack- ' I
~ .age. lim~ 1. coupon per cus- 1
per bmto sesSion.
1 tomer
Wi Pay •so.oo Per Game 1
•I Om 110 Peaplt '65.00 I,
:1
Ptr Game
I
1 ~dOOS-32
nnn ·I
.W.------~~~.J.l

liP

"At Reasonable Prices"
· PH. 949·2801
or Res. 949-2860
Day or Night
NO SUNDA 'f CALLS
60 DIFFERENT WOOD
8o COAL STOVES,
tN6ERTS 8o FURNACES

I

1
BINGO
·1
I POMEROY ·EAGLES I
1
CLUB
I·

SUSAN COLEMA!W
742-2778

RADIATOR
SER~ICE

We can repair and re.
core radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid bail and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

PAT HIU FORD

1st visit FREE
-Possibly more.

.GEARY'S
BODY SHOP

P.

SSO
St.
Middloport, Oh.
. OPEN
7 :30 A.M.-5:00P.M .
8-23-"891 mo.

992-2196

Middleport. Ohio ·
1·13-tfc

Announcements
3 Announcements
Adoption:

Financially Meure

couple, one from Wut VIrginia
wish to adopt one or two lntan18
and give them 1 happy fulure bt
· legal adoption, call collect 1·

9f3-749-.3698.

DAVE'S ·,
SMAU INGIIE
REPA"Ia ·~. -

DRY CLEANING
SERVICE

ltcat.l at Yaley L.-.r
ln~ltptrt. Oh.

OFFERED AT

PARTS AND SERVICE
For Moot 2 end 4-cycte
englnea
Stock Parta for
Hom.Ute. W-utor,
Tecumolltl, lrlgp 8o
Stratton.

PH. 992-3922

6·21·'1 lfll

Fabric Shop

......
.....
.
s...
992·2284
POMEROY, OHIO
~

ltlllle"

I+ I mo.

.

NOTICE, Allo 41d will boat oti
local competllora prucrlptlon
prlc11, g''" ua 1 ctll, 814-441-o
1840 "'304·675-t824.
No Hunting or Trtsepusing on
lho prope~y or Holllo lraed.

Signed Ernie Grimm.

Roduco aoto and tool wllh Qo.

captulea end E·V.p
"Water Pilla" at Fruth Pharmacy.
8111

4

Giveaway

::'lplu, 5 - otd. 114-441- .
small 3 """" houu, Lun*r ·
'"' II oomeono toeno • 114..1141-2784.

-n.

"•l

&lt;·

�' I

Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel
6

LAFF-A-DAY

Lost&amp; Found

42

LOST· Biock ond ollvor tomole

8

· Lost: 2 Welker Houndl. Blacl!&amp;.

white and ttn. 1 malt, 1 ftmali.

2br, unfurnished mobHI home,
Control hoot, &amp; oir, no polo, S185
por month. $100 dopooh. 814446-3817.

614·992-~:zt.

Loll : Male Sch01u~, 1oM In
the Pomaroy Elementary School

114-8U-

Lost: Slborian H"'ky. Block ond
whitt, blue ayn, wolt~lkt
8 YNrl

old,

aMWWfl

to Mitzi. 614·949-2345.

7

Yard Sale

Rain, Shine! 5 112 mllee. from
Holzer Hosphal on 1150, lind 11
Help Wanted
housaJ.. t e&amp;M .Auto Pons.
Lots
mens unifOrm work
pants, ahlrta, 111 slz•. WameM AVON I All Area·• I Shirley
clothing,
houMhold . good. spoo.., 304-1175-142t.
Some toola.
INARUT
,
51amlly Sopt, 5-7·8. 188 Gartlold Tired ot minimum wogo?
Ext. Good clothing wom•ns, Iori~, dead end )obe. We're
girls, boys antique crown collec- looking for a llw-ely people who
flon, dlahea,. lnow tires, lott want more &lt;M of life then juat
misc. ltemt. End t1bte, cotfH getting bril Earn while you learn.
tablo.
_(114) 2111-8422
911189
Qnlyl
Conlonory CioHcl Tun. a Wed.
l'ownho-. H . 4 tlrn, Eoglo Lorolno c,.,. Oporlfor, Drog
GT, 15'\ auto, radio, tapea. LIM. Salary de~t on ex:·
T,ruck running boarda, JHP pertance. Apply 11 JeiCo Inc.,
Stopo, ll~hl bor, truck·bodrollu, US Rt. 33, Lotort, WV 304-8911:~aU,::r~:.~· Men't 8c~:~·=~ :31::1~1 ·:..______________
Levi's, Ieana cord• (32d3, Matur. lady to care for elderly
34x30x32).
Woment coati, lady In my home, day and night,
clothll, alze 10, 12. Morel
ref'lrencee raqulred, 304-675344 7
ALL Yard Salol Muot Bo i&gt;old In : .:..::.:..·- - - - - - - - - - - - .J;dvanct. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m. Par1 time church organist
U1e day before the ad Ia to run. and/or chlor dl~tor, 304·273Sunday edition • 2:00 p.m. 2302 or Nnd rnume to P.O.
Friday. Monday ediUon • 2:~ Box 81. Ravenawood, WV
p.m. Saturdlly.
26164.

Largo First limo, 1 tomlly Yord
Sale~ Sept 7-8. 9-5, rain or
s hine, ltam• Include cunaln~
large size clothing, whatnotS,
small electric organ, glassware,
bedding, lamps, large &amp; tm.ll,
A.C,. mirrors, lawn chall'l, drnsing table and Iota morel29 Vlnton~troot.
·
Rod, RMII, toOls, quiHs, curtolna, what-nota, Mo,.l Sop!. 4,
5, 6. 322 Spruce Sf. Ext.
Stpt. 4,
Porter.

5, 8. 2 112 miles Eut ol

Yard Sale : Sept. 8, 7, 8. e-.5, at
123 Fourth Ave.
Pomeroy,

+,:,.:.:=-:----::--::---:--

Will clean houH $5.00 par hour,
call between 8;00 and 1:00,304576-~833.

:Wc;o:.,rt.:.::.ll::..,hi. om-,-.-:1!1:-m-u-p-,-to
$100!day. People call youl 714240-6498 Exc L·t .
12 ·

an e
W• caN tor elderly and han·
dlcapped In our home. 28 yeara
experience. LPN on call. Low
Income home. Caii614-H2-6873
aher 7:00 p.m. for more intor·
matlon.
Schools

&amp;

Instruction

&amp; Vicinity

.RE-TRAIN NOW!

family. Sept. 6th. and 7th. 9-?
Rain or shine. Bieyelll, motorcycle, toys, games, large
woman's clothes, living room
suite, much more.
Sept 6th,7th. Crew Rd ., Mhind
Fa1rground. All size nice
chlld_re~ clothing, toYs, Home
lntenor. 10:00-3:00.
wanted to Buy

Complel.l households of ·furniture II antiques. Also wood &amp;
coal haaters. Swain's Furniture
&amp; Au ction, Third &amp; Oli\le, 614446-3159.
Four 16 Inch Stock wheels for
Ford truck. ca 1161 4-9 92 .3640 .
Furniture and appliances by the
piece or anlira household. Fair
prices being paid. Call 614-4463158.
Junk Cars with motors, $50 &amp;
down. wto motors, $25 &amp; down.
Richard George, 614-388•9095.
Junk cars with or without
motors. Call Larry Lively 614388-9303.
Quilts
Pre 1940 quilts. Any condition.
Cas h Paid. Cai1814-992·5657 or
614·592-2461.
TOP CASH paid tor 1983 modal
and newer used cars. Smith
El uick· Ponliac, 1911 Eastern
Av&amp; ., Gallipolis. Call 614-44&amp;.
2282.
Used tumltura and household
appliances. Phone 6.14•742·
2048 . .

1

SOUTHEASTERN
BUSINESS
COLLEGE, 529 Jockson Plko.
Call 614-446-4367. Reg. No. 8611·10558.
18

9

Situation

W 1d

15

Yard Salt In Chester. 1 mila off
At. 7 on Sumner Rd. Dean

wanted to Do

All type concreti work done,
~tlos, sldewalka, garagn, etc.
614-446-6691 eveninga, and
614~46-8913 ahemoons.
Babysitting In Chrlsllan home.
Ret. &amp; dayc:are exp. Rodney Vii·
lage II, call ahar 3p.m. 61 4·2459252.
Babysitting In my home.
Ra~aonabl• rates. Have ref.
Moats PfOYided wukondo, dsy
evening. Mitchell Rd. 614-4468002.
Chlldcare In my home. Clean &amp;
loving anvlronmenl. Reasonable
ratn. Cheshire area. 61 4-367·
0658.
t-telp with the eldtrly In their
homo, doyo only. 814-448·2427.
Mist Paula't Day Care Center.
Sate, aHordable, c:hlldcare. M·F
6 a.m. • 5:30 p.m. Ages 2'A·1D.
Before, attar schoof. Drop-Ina
walcome. 614-446-8.224.
Remodeling Interior, eKterlor
roofing,
concrtlt
painting,
work, electrical· 1. plumbing.
Exp. Haa referenc:es. Pleas• call
aher,Sp.m. 614-256·1611 .
Root painting &amp; coating; trailer
roof1, housn, &amp; barns, frH ••

tlmato. 614-379-2320.
Financial
21

Business
Opportunity

INOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
recommends that you do
Used furniture by the place or business with people you know,
entire household also salllng. ·and NOT to sand money
through thl mail until you have
614-742·2455.
lnvntlgatsd the oHerlng.
Employment Services
Real Estate
11

Help Wanted

2 nurses aides, shop clark, . Inquire at Odds and Ends Shop,
Middleport.
AVON - All areas, Call Marilyn
Weaver 304-882·2645.
COSMETOLOGIS,TS. Now $alon
Opening. Guaranteed · wagas
plus c:omm. paid vacations,
manager, slyllstt nHdld. 814682-7018, anytime.
CRUISE SHIPS Now hiring all
· positions. Both skilled and un·
'skilled. FQr Information -Call
615·779·5507 oxt . H656.
Couples and Individuals for
business of your own. Local
Amway distributor Hlistalou
tor spl1ndld opportunity. 14·
992·75U
EARN MONEY Roodlng bookol
$30,000/yr. Income pot1ntlal.
Ootollo (1) 805-887-tOOO Ell. Y·
10189.
Eam money typinQ at homa.
$30,000/Y,ear lr;.comi potential.
dotollo, (1)805-887-6000 Ell. B·
11805.
Experienc.t body man, pr1fwr 5.
yea111 experlinc:l, Pow111 Body
Shop, ~75-7950.
Experl.need electriell countu
aal•peraon, for a Southuttern
Ohio ollctncol dlotnbutor, Sond
resume to Bor cia Bo1 011, Oalllpollo Dolly Trlbuno, 82$ Third
A••·· Galllpiotlo, OH 45Ut.

•

44

Apartment
for Rent

1BR unlum. opt. Rongo &amp; rofrig.
ldod. Walor, ..wogo r,.~·
, pold. Dop. &amp; Rot. 61 4
;

.

31 Homes for Sale
3 Mdroom brick ho·-o
•• ·With
lar,..
lot, Mid Way o•vo
11 . ·. Now
3Haven. Good Cond. 304-n35881 .
3 bedroom ranch, 2 112 baths, 2
car garogo, nlco nolghborhood,
1amlry room with fireplace,
clou to tlamentary a&lt;:hoOI,
$92 ,000. Po or Ho Ig ht I, Pl. Pit.
~-675-131 •

~

1987 Dan'tlllle, total electric
14x70, heal pump, 3BR, 1·112
bath. 814-245--9244 anyllma,
245-9877 oftor 6.
2 bedroom, 1980 llblr1y. 14x52.
All electric, tumlah.c:t. $5to0.
&amp;14·992·7471._

Repon..nd double whitt,
1983 Harton 24x40, $12,500, or
1979 Hamilton Houta, 24x55,
$12,500. Kanauga Mobile Home
Sotu. 114-446-9662.
12x60 mobile home aoma fur·
nlture, lot 90x100 flat lot on Sun
Valley Drive, ready to moVe lnlo.
Priced negollonable 614-4468005.
.

EplaodN
• (J) Ill

QNewa

n...

Household
Goods

iiOO.

Gracloua living. 1 and 2 bed·
roo,n apartmanta at VIllage
Manor
and
Rlvarslde
Ap1rtment1 In Middleport. From
33 Fanns for Sale
$184. Coil 814·992·7787.
Now accepting •r.pllcatloN tor
2 bedroom apt, ully c~rpeted,
appliances, water and trash
plckupt provided. Maintenance
tree living close lo shopping,
banks and schools. For more in·
Business
34
formation call 304-882·3716. E..
qual oppor1unhy housing. Sec·
Buildings
lion 8 accoptad.
Apar1ment house tor sale In One bedroom furnished apt,
Pon;1eroy. All maJor re:r.alrs Point Ptauant, very clean, no
done . $66,500. 614-992-720 .
pots, 304 _675-1388.
35 Lots

&amp;

PICKENS FURNITURE
tllw/Uood
Strow lor oalo. tt.l50 boiL Off
Houoohold lurnlohlr~g. t/2 mi. Ill dtoo tor ulo. $2110. 114-04io
~rr~:t, 4%. Pt-nt, wv. 3059 ..... 5:30p.m. ·
swAIN
Whllfchol,. • now or .. od. 3
AUCTION a FURNITURE 82 whHiod otoctrlo ocootor. Coli
0it.. St., Gaftlpollo. NEW 5 pe. Rogo,. -lcil,"1-ti00-8B5-2104.
wood group, $339. Ll•lng , _ ,
55
Building
au~.. $199-$599. Bunt&lt; bodo
wRh bedding, $249. Full OIZI
·suppll-.
mattre11 I fou11datlon atartlt1g
$99. Recllnare atartlng $9f. Block,· brick, ....r ~p.., wlnUESD Bed1, dresaara, bidroom dowa, llnttll, etc. ctaude Wlnsulln. O..kl, wringer wseher, a t
AI o -•- OH ~-· at•
complete line ot used furniture.
an, 0 ra.-,
_.. ..24 121
NFW Wootorn booto $35. : :;;:5-8:;;;;;;:,;;·------------Workbooto S18 &amp; up. (SIMI a 56 Pets for Sale
sen too.) 114-446-3159. .
;.::.._~:.:;:;,.:.;;;.:..:::::.:;.,.,...,,.,..
Sofaa, chah, lovewat,
2 good Rabbtt ..............aa.
11ove1, cattn tabln, 11m, 7 3584.
marbJB window 11111, portable
T.V. 614-892·7841. Louloo DIIOri. . AKC r'lltoto..d Dolomotlon
pupploo bOm Aug1, 3 mol• a 4
Tablo w/2 ohol,., hoophol bod, tomotoo, $200. OICI1. 304-1182·
chast d!'llw•r, wood chairs, 2- 2881.
wood door1, washll'l, tofl
ritrlgerator, full alze bed AKC; malt miniature plncher 2
w!ch11t
drawer
wlmlrror, yr. old. Obedience trained.
dohumldlller, twin bod, rocllno Champion Sired. $400.114-2511chalr, call after 5. 614-24&amp;-0171.
1021.
Used 1 pplianeee. W•hera, Dalmatian pupa 4 wltll liver
dryers, tang••i refrigerator., spota 1 with black, all can be
microwave ovena. Ken'l Apoo AKC :filtered, 3Q4.882-227t
pllanca, 217 E. Second St., _aher 4: PM.
Pomeroy, 614·Q92·5335 or_814- Dragonwynd cattery kW~nel.
W-3561.
Peralan,
Slam••
and
Valley' Fumltura
Himalayan klnana. Chaw lhtd
New and Ulad turnltuN and ap- Mrvice. 614-448-3844 after 7
pllancaa. Call 814-446-7572. p.m.
Hou,. 9-5.
Fish Tonk, 24t3 Jackocn Avo.
Whirlpool outo. Woohor . $150. Potnt Ploount, ~-1711-2063, tO
614-367-1!234.
gat ut up $14.99 ond 10 got
complete $43.25.
,

Acreage

Privata
modem
tumlshod
eHicienc:y apt. With garage &amp;
1 acre lots Galllpolla Ferry, city storage. Water paid. 61~46wator, 304·675-2722.
8720.

L

53

Antiques

Buy o.r still. Rivarlr-.. Antlquee,
1124 E. Main StrHt, Pomeroy.
Houro : M.T.W. 10:00 a.m. to 8:00
p.m., Sunday 1:00 ·ID 8:00 p.m.
614·992·2526.
For Sale: Antique BraD · Bid.
614-146-7372.

12 acres land on Long Hollow Regency, Inc. 2BR, apt., new
Road, 304-895·3929.
plush · carpet, new paint,
utllltlat, parltally paid. $175/mo.
50 acres, 5 milea an Rt. 143, off Call 304-675-5104.
Rt. 7. Freo gas. $20,000. 614· ,:=::..:,::.:...:.:.;..::.::..::..._......,_.:..
992-6239.
Tara Townriousa Apll, 2 br.; ~112 batht, CA, dlshwashlr, di•
65 ecru.~. 912 lb. toba cco base posal, private Inclosed patio, Top Cash paid. Old tumfturo
qultta,
arlantal,
timber, uallipolis area. on 218: po~, playground. Water, sewer, • euboardt,
paintings, toys, or ontlro oototo
$25,000. 614·256-1560.
' trash rncludod. ~tartlng at
call collet:t 304-525-3275, or
86.4 Acru. Located 1!2 mile $289/lno. Call 614-367·7850.
304·523-6854.
North of 554, 6 mUtt West of Twin Rivera Tower-Housing for
Chashlro. Woodod • hilly. 10 tho Eldon H ndl :op-d 8 nd 54 Miscellaneous
acres. Cleared land. Borders on Disabled. y, L~a~ed· - near
Van Zant Rd. 011 well with In· downtown
Point .. Plaa~nt,
Merchandise
come. FrM gas for resident. phone 304-675·6679. Equal
Solid, 20x40 barn. No house. Housing Opportunity.
Bordered on S-West and North .,-.,---"c...:::=:..c...:..c._..,.....,. 1978 Monte Carto $750. and
Sides by rec:lalmed strip mine. Unfurnished, 3 room bath Saxaphone $400. 304-675-3098.
Parfecl otr hunting. Lots of downstalra, Days: 614·446·7572 Aluminum storm door tor u.le.
dHr, . grouse and turkey, or Evenings: 614-44&amp;-1980.
30 ' 112 lnchn wlda, en. 31n.
$29,500. 614-146-1822 or 446tong. Now $25. 114-992·8937 or
9591 .
Upstalf! 1 unfurnished apt. Car·
814·992-6083.
petMt. No pets, lnq~o~ire at 300
Approx 25 ecres, good house Founh Ave.
8andUWI 1 table UWI1 plantrl,
site, county water, half mila off ;_;.;;;.;.;._;_.;.::..,___________
jolnlo,., ohopa,., lolhHI ..,..
Rt. 2, uo,ooo. 30H75-2749.
45
Furnished
dera, dust collectora, drll prwHO, Bluo Rldgo Mochlnory ond
Ashton, bnutltul one ac:re lots
Rooms
Toots, 304-882'3538.
with river frontage, public wattr.
Clyde/Bowen, Jr. 304-576-2336. Furnished . etflclaney,
919 Far Sale • Concrata and Pla111c
Second
Avenue,
Gallipolis.
All eeptlc tonko. All olzeo. .RON
Ash1on, Ia rga building Iota, utllitlas paid, share a bath.
EVANS ENTERPRISES, Jockmobila homes permittecf, public $135/mo.
614-446-3945.
sen, OH. t-800-e37·9521.
wattr, prices reduced, Clyda
Bowen, Jr. 304·576-2336.
Roome for rant -week or month. For Sole Sopt. only. PRO-Mix
par
bolo,
oloc
For Sale: One acre Iota &amp; 5 acre Starting at $120/mo. Gallia $12.00
Greenhouu Su-'IH ln11111
wooded lot, 7 mllu North ot Hotol. 814-1411-9580.
$29.00,~. tloto $33.011 Coso. Kon &amp;
Holzer Hospital. 614-388.a649.
SIHplng rooma with cooking. Ed't urHnhouae. 1571 Evana
Rei. Jockocl1, OH. I14-211S-3453.
Woodland, 132 acrn, $35,000, Also tralltr IPICI. All hook-ups.
Rt. 7, below Eureka, Call 614- Call after 2:00 p.m., 304--773For
8111: Hll and here, 12 .1pd.
H51, Maeon WV.
446-4418 aftor 7 p.m.
Huffy blcyciH. Adun ownod.
Llko now $80 ooch. &amp;14-44146 Space for Rent
6888.
Rentals
Commercial •:race, 1400 sq.ft. Used Woodbumor llovoo, choln
·c omer Secon and Plna. Ample saw,
acanner, 38 apeclal 870
part.lng. Call 614-146-4249, 44&amp;- ahotgun,
whltllall bow. 11~
2325,
or
4411-4425.
41 Houses for Rent
1845.
•-d rooms, bath , new 1Y
2 .,.
decora
t d 1
-2•
• • c ean, n1 ee. &amp;1•..-5858
:.::.:~·7---:---...,.--::---

Country
Hom• Park, Warm Uoml- Wooclburner,
Route 3 3,Mobile
Ngrth of Pomarnu,
... Saw min enLots,
·-~
$75. Fuel ollltoYe.
rentals, parte, aaleL Call
614.f92·7471.
..Ina, Dozer wench. 814-3U-

r

3br., houea with attachld
nara:r
CA 1 n0 ~ •- &amp;
1
II'
1
- · u.ip,
f'l ,
roq' . 31 Chllllcotho Rd. 814446·25839-5, dally.

3 br.l1 112 baths, brick I lramo 4br., bl~ovot, 2 . botho, ll•lng
rancn, with little ovar 1/2 acre room, larg• rec room, Famll~
toe. 6 mllll from town, on Rod· room, 11rge 30X40 garage
"'1 Plko. 814-245-5233.
located Rt. 325, NortN, Rio
3br., home, tun beeement, 2 Granda, $500/mo, 3br, bl-level, 2
flreplac:n, 2 mi. from town, call baths. family room, located on
anytime 114-440-7125.
Brent Wood Dr. $450/mo. 3br,
ranch In Spring Ylltoy Aroo, 2
3BR, 2 both, gorogo, 2100 oq. ~· balho1 largo roc. room. Good
112 acre1 pool, cttl echools, aru t500Tmo. Security O.potlt
$70,000. •14-245-937 .
&amp; rotoronco roq'd. Wloomon
Ro~l Eototo. ltol-44&amp;-3144.
·
3br., 2 bath, 1 outbuilding, 2 112
miiH South ol Golllpollo, 4' 2 Mobile Homes
l37,000. 114-14t-&amp;591 or 814-460997.
for Rent
3br. Tudor atyle houH. Eet In t4 &amp;5 2 b
-• 1
kllchon. FR, LA. 2 lull botho.
x
r., tocot~
n
Laundry room. 2 eat garage, E\la~r.an&amp; Waah• &amp; dryer
pool. 1f2 acree, VA approVed, hook-up
ceble T.V. 814-44&amp;.
city' ochooto. Rodnoy 11 ._2411- 3197 or 114·2411-$223.
8897.
1988 9unohlno Trollor, 76x14.
Sale Or rant. e mllu Mat at
I room houoo on St. At. 7, Roclno on At. t24. &amp;14-949-2072.
below Raccoon Bridge, 3 batha,
new vinyl aiding, 3 garagn on 2 bedroom mobile llama fur.
.09 ICI'H. 814oo448·1211 01 sM nlshed, wuher 1 dryer, •''·
Gerrett Wat~ 114 mi. above prlv1t1 lot, MaAOn, 304-7735751 .
Roccoon Brldgo.

=----•

I '

--suo

St... 1or
bolo. lt4448-1111 Evonlngo: 114-441171 57
_ ..:_ ____~--------TransportatiOn
71

Autos for Sale

1971 - · 450 Sot, ounroof. All optionL Now_ p~lnt.
Looko, runo .. ry good. 115,000.
114-371-Zltl.
.
1918 Oklilmobilo, 350 ~lno, &amp;
Torut co11111ng t .. ttor. 81Hpo I.
11W87·1'MI.
1878 Camero. llua,
miiH. 514-11811-3374.
1978 Otdo Cutleoo.
448-3187.

80,000

1980 Ch... lmopll Stotlon
Wagon, air, crullt, automatiCI
extra cl ..n (In•• ar) Dl•a
.$2800.114-256-1984.
11180 Chovy Monzo. Excollent
condhlon. Bt,OOO o~glnol mlloo.
$1200. Moy bo 011n ot Ellis
Sohlo 8om-5pm, Mon • Sat.
Evonlngo ond SUndoy ol 104
,
Wright St., Pomeroy, OH.
tll80 Ford Tllundorblrd, ·~
cond., cruiM, $1 !500; 1964
Chovrotol Bolelr, 4 door, $11500.
Phono 304-1175-4811.
·

2 PH.. SPI opooko,. Black
Widow oqutr.pacl $1110. Will Not
Jow. 304-67 -4tl0 bolwHn 1:00
ond 5:00PM.
Conn Trumpot. S71. lt4-317·
0205.
Individual
.,
IIMOftl,
lloglnnoro, oo"- . auttonll.
Brunlcerdlo Muoio 114-4460871 Jot! Wlmotey lnllructM,
&amp;t4~4&amp; 8077, llmftoil _,lngo.

1111 VW Robbll Qood "'"'
motor. Qood cor. $1300. Will
t,.dolor Conto. &amp;1-·1052.

1982 Cllovy Covlllor.llody, lntorlor, oxc. high mllool:i ~ood .
I:Cflool, won: car. It 8 81
onori:OO
Aogoncy

oi-u!M, All

Soxopho!11. Oood cond. $250.
&amp;14-245-1.182.

5

S8

t983 Pontile Flrobtf!ll. toctory

Fruita

&amp;

r, . utra

1

Cor)

ciHn,

dlnal
114-$1984.

000.

141IVOOf(.iAC, 12tH, 1... DodgO
D-100 P truok, rwd, $3995.

Vegetables

tll84 Floro, $4,300. AC, Cruloo,
luna. Plc:k your own. $8, AM..fM cnutte, dl whMI, PI,
bushel. Start Monday morning outo, 304-11711-1331.
B:OOo.m. 814-Mi-2t83.
1984 Otdo
4 CYI., AC,
Conning tomat-.
Picked arulae, tlh wh•r. AM·FII l'ldlo, ·
54.110, pick own, $3,00 buohol. CIIHttl, IUn-roiof, all powar,
Sw_. peppa.. and grHn 114-985-4211.
boonL Raymond Rowo 114-247·
t985 Cllryotor Yorkor, good
4292.
llhopaloodod, 304-t71-21':t2;
Dunrovln Fruit Farm. Appteo,
grapoo, _ . , _ honey, op. t985 Dodgo Chorgor, AC,
plebutter, mfec. ftema. Hours: AMIFII Lou---. laW 1111llu,
Dolly H. C l - Mondoyo. At. ctoonJ3800,11W88-t1217.
881 Sout- of Atbony. 11'- 1985 Ford M!llllong .QT. 8.0, 302
5911
-82118.
tnalna. T·Top, A1C all - · ·
G,_ boone. You ptok. $1.00 11{-9111 llt7.
'
'
buohot. John Hill, Lllllll Falto. 1981 Plymouth Rotlont 4 door,
514-247-2142 or.J14-247-3042.
btuo, 4 ~ cyt, outo, P8, PB, air,
Hor~o Form1 St. Rt. 124 . AM.f'M.104'1711-82tl1,
Po~lond. Pte• your own. Hot! 7.::::-c:,~...;;,=~-=---~
Au,_ Bluo Loko gr-. boono, 1911 Chi~ 8poctru~
$11.00 IMiohot, 1orn11doora, roct, I opoed; low
buehel, PIIIPIIS 11.00 bulhel. :~::o:.rc:o ~:
Picking
houro:Mon.-8ot.8-ll, ~_. 82.-.
Sun. 12..,. Bdng own conloin.,.,
·
tfll Moll!. Lynx, auto. a olr,
~
R--~~tor
_
,
PI
k
12198;
1MI FOrd
·R ~ _ _, _
0
1115 Muotong
821198j
1987$1898;
Pont.
your own or NOdy olokod.
I'll
1
~~ lorry Potoll. IIW411n~ un:!in '{':..,Dodcr.
$76Do; 11114 Llnootn Mort. VII,
$8198; tiM Uncotn Cor,
141por ohapo~ Pont. BunTlluntllrblrd
bini· 1tll
F Ifill S11pp111•"
iiiis;1t11Comoro541ft; .l a
D MGioro Hwy, 180 N. lt4-446&amp; ; 1'.,!\t,ff)l k
tlll or 114-44N118.

an-.

n.oo

n.=:

=:• 1

!11 Farm Equlpmn

lnlomll- ,._,
......,.._No. -.lnl, ituol1
1174
CUmmlnl, -

......... -

Ul
tllw, .. - .

loa tnllor. 114-

MH2Illorl1~111. '

hoa. ......

47,- - ·
te:I'IO. 110 . . wtth ltuih
hot. $4210. 11 I - IIZI.
N.H. 711
hood. J.D.

'

=----.. .

1117 Cui- !lion!. ... - . .

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

- , autL, dortt litue _....
13,000 tlllloe; ...-

1MI GIIC I . . . . . loot truolt

~x:.ot lforriii'LI1~
ODd.. lull lnloolod. 110

- -· - - - -

CIOVIJINMIHT .IZID Vohlol11
llllttt .100. -o••
Coo ill•...:•:~

_j

~ J: G{lAfJIIATEP ·

fi!AG-NA

F~M

CVM '·

'I

LUMP'(

THf

$CHOOL
liA-~ P

OF

f'tiDCftJ, .

I

IDI Croullre

IIJ) Major League Bnebtlll
II)) Pnlfaalonal Tannle
ill Tap Card
7:35 (1) MajOI League Blttebtlll
1:00 'lJ Ubolrty • The LlttiH The
Llttles help their French
cousins rediscover the true
meaning or freedom altar
they crash land on Uberty

Island. (1 :30)
II (2) 8l Mllttock A

construction contraCtor is
accused of murdering a

~e~~:~l
Boclybultcllng Junior USA
Championship froltl.
Oklahoma City, OK, Woman
• Mlxad Pa!rs Competition.

(T)
(I) II (I) Who'a The Boea?
Tony catches Samantha
giving a lrlend answer's to an
exam. (RlQ

0 I J Cycle, wo now borw oyllnden, fllllt Mrvlce tor bortng and
pt.ton delivery, Gary Klnntlrd,
304-6711-118$.

ill Pnleldant l lira. Butlh

Talklng Wltll DaVId Froat
This Interview with President
and Mrs. Bulh reviews ttie
tirlt - n months In offtca
and cover&amp; the major events
of the Bush administration,
(1 :00) . .
. •. ... '

75 Boats &amp; Motors
1972 t7 ft. Stomaft Tri-Hull .
Boot. 1~5 HP, Evlnrudo Enalna,
comptllo lop, now uphotolory.
113500. Coii ·114-2M-1311 ottor
7:oop.m.

~

&amp;

.IIJ) MOVII: Amazlna·

ltarlae: The Movla (2:00)
1DJ PnrnaN••

Ford Sll•or Spoko factory Mogo
wlchromo oontoro lnd boouty
~nao. size ld1/Zo15 lnchoL
30(-682-3401 or ~-773-1581.

ill Converoatlon With Dinah
8:30 (I) II (J) The Wonder Vearo
Kevin recalls an
unforgettable visit to his .
dad's business otflge. (R) 1;1

campers&amp; .

Ill Crook • Ctulu
9:00 II (2) Ill II &lt;ll 1111 II (12)

Motor Homes
10 112 lruck compar. $100. Coli
ohor4 p.m.l14-44tl-40tl.

Q .flritlldant lulh'a

AddreuQ
· (I) 'Piofelltonalloltlng
&lt;D · l!lltruaala For

MORI(MEEKLE AND WINTRHOP :
·'#E.U..,
IN AWAY

OO'TQ.I~

ANY.PE~
ANDY~

I

I KA-YE·...

.:..'=;
-

countries wl1osa
democracies depend on
prellt'IC8 of mllilal)'. Q
(!J L.My King Llvel

MY /1/o.CWo, ~DID
FI6+-4T Ll~ 01.15
ANDD0'35!

ta NotlhVIIIe Now

1:30

._.,,dna

Ron'o T1l Sorvlco,
In ·z.nnh otoo Hrvli:lna moOI
ott.r bl'lntle. Houle 01111; lito ·
oomo oppllonco rwpolrw. wv
~-571-23911
Ohio 114-4412454.

BARNEY
l

LENT
SNUFFY TWO
DOLLERS

YOU

[MADE TH'
VARMINT DIG UP ·

WHAT

A COSUiiNIR

??

::Z: '

SWEEPER ond lOWing, moohlno
.. polr, po~o, and oupiltlel, Pick
up and delivery, Dnll Vacuum
Cleaner, one bllf mile . up
Ooorg• Crooll Ad. 114-4410294.
"

•

10:20 Cll MOVIE: Midway (PG)

c/

-

BERNICE
BEDEOSQL

&amp;

..

Refrigeration
Rootdonllol
., oommon:llt
wiring, now ., rwpolrw.
Uconlod lllclrlolon. - . . ,
Etectrtcol, :104-1711-1781.
Hauling

J a J Wllor -

· Swimming
~~-·-·Colt 114'

wa.....:...·.
WOiOi' H"""!!l.
- b t l ...... vor- dt•

oounto, 1,000 to 4,000 oepochy,
•tern., PGOIII, Welle, etc. can
304-671-2t19
.
Upholstery

,

Uphollfortr~g wtcln(ll1 :::""' .... 24 y..ro.
Tho
In
lurmturo
=-.:.2;..~ lqW75-4t84
-rey'o

.•

.Q65
.QJIOII

•au

Since South's opening two-spade bid
promiled a siz-card suit and about &amp;10
points, North might have
three ~rump, which had an
I ••,., ,,; .... tricks available. When he bid
.,ades, be put South to some
I sUf':~!test.::;~ltut declarer pa.ued easily.
I
opening lead, decla~ can
cou-.t 1&gt;JDe top tricks. To find the elttra
trick, be ean look to the diamond
strength In dumniy or to dummy's
heart sull Two tricks can be taken In
diatn~ds If declarer finds West with
or Q-10 and plays the
lsuilt rjglii. But a trick can be developed
in hearts If the suit divides 4-S In the
defenders' bands. On lh.is particular
deal, declarer is able to go both ways.
South won dummy's club ace and
a heart trick. Tbe defenders
a second club and declarer
i-ufll!d a heart. He played a spade to
dummy aad ruffed a third heart with
the nine of spades. U either opponent
showed out of hearts at this point, de-

The Astra-Graph Matchmaker lnslantly who gains the most.
..-Is whiCh Signs are ;omanttcally PIICII (1'811. »"n ch 211) Your luck
perfect lor you. Mall $2 to Malchmakar, will be greatly enhanced II you keep evc/o this n~aper. P.O. Box 91428. arythlng In proper balance tOday. Be
Cleveland, OH 44101· 3428.
·
neither o-ly aggreeatve nor ""duly
LJaiiA (llepL 2S-oot. 2J) Keep a low complacent, your winning route II down
prpflle todey, becaU• you'll be able to the middle or the road.
function more ellectlvaly by handling ARIII (......., 21·Aprll11) Co-workers
sHuadons from behind the scenes. If Will mirror ';JO&lt;Jr moods todey If you
you llep out In thtl open, yoo miQhl get show them you're tndullrtous and tunclobbered.
.
,
blftoul. ()nee you get on a roll, lhey'll,
SCORPIO (Oct. 24 Nov. "121 Your real· . automatlc*ly fait In llep wHh your page.
11181 eph'lt will ~ happier around outgo- TAURUS (April 211 . . , 211) In 111111lng, gregarious people today, ao try not Ilona where you find you...rt In a monato get Involved wHh people wl1o take gerial role loday, bend .,_ bacl&lt;w.ds
themeaiYea or lite too eerlously.
to be jull and fair. Your actlona wHI win
IAGIITTAIIIUt (Nev. Dee. 11) Yoor you loyal IUIIPOf'l8t a.
poulbll"lel tor lulfllllng your ambitious _ _ . (..., .,...,... 101 Give hOUHobjectivMIOdey look better than u!IUal, hOld ,00 ~ maltlt'l lop priority
even If the goals you eatabiiSh are mora. tod8y, ~ If you.
there Is
IOmtllhlng major that neec1e attenllon
difficult than usual.
CAJIIICOM (Deo. aNa 11) You w11lcltyoucanputbacklnptaperardor. !
hiM 1111 fiCulty lor ac:curlhlly llzlng up CANCIII (,._11-.lulr 8) In ltdcltlon
the qualltlelln
todey. AddHIOnal- to your otlllr - · your diplomacy
ly, you're
a good learner and you'll and tact can lllet:11vely bl t!eed to your
lator ellactlwly uae the positive things advanhlge today. Whan you tta'fl on lhe ·
you saw In them.
charm, all wtl atart purring.
•
AQUAIIUI ~--~eb.11) Tllarewlll LIO(.Iulrii-Aug.B)You'reatllunctor :
btl IOtiMI Important llhlltn In conditiOns lavorable financial lllf)eCII tnnd benellts 1
tttlclng PI- todey Initialed by outllde can be derived tOdey lhrough IOIIMI I
In~. Regardleu ot whom or what type ol partnerlhlp arrangement. AIIO- ·
aulhoB lhem, you're apt to be the one. data with money mai&lt;en.

a

Your greatea1 su__,. In the year
.,..d •re likely to come from slfuatlon•
you paraonally direct. T"- endeavors
rnlgllt llart out small In 110111 liD and
lignlfleanCe, bUt they could grow to real

=-c~~ 23-lepl. l2) T~ey,li you

youillll In a maanlnglul lnvolvanwrt that IPPIBt'l tO no com·

lind

mending olllcw, don't btl halltant to
111p tn and 1ttk1t oMrgll or matten yourAll. You'K clo a good JOb. Know wllare
10 lOOk foi rom- and you'H nnd H.

,,,,

r..r

.r.o

opaera

.

'

~

'

.

.

EAST

•Kt08t

SOUTH
.AK10943

.7

t7 32
.872

Vulnerable: Neither
South

Dealer:

•'
Welt

Soolll

:•

(2:12)
10:30 II (J) 8l NBC Nawa lptelal
The R.A.C.E .. Part 1 Of 2.
Bl)'ant Gumbel explores the
national attitude on rage
rale,tiO!lS and how It has
changed or remalnad the
same over the years, (L)
&lt;D P.O.V. Aecountad Is the
uhtold tale of a handful of
Jewish youth&amp; In Vllna. (2:00)

'i

IIJ) Iamay Mlllw Barney
' and 1111 t 2th precinct are
designated as a special

squad.
181 Nowl

Pus

c•

'

'

EUt
Allpau

Opening ·~: • Q

'

.

.

clarer could still draw trumps atld~
play up to the A-J-9 of diamonds. But
everyone foUowed. So a aecoDd spadewas led to dummy, and ODe more heart·
ruffed bi&amp;b- Tbe last heart was now ·
good, and declarer could draw trumps,
and get to the good heart with the ace :
of dlamoads.
· •

by

THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
1 Powerlul

44

one
6 Cowboy

45 Liberated

Recording .
medium

·~ .

DOWN

La Rue
10 Guam's

1 Nored
cartoonist,

capilal
' 11 Sacred

Thomas 2 Film crilic,

site

James-

13 Passover

3 German

meal
14 Vassal

cily
4 Wallet

15 Plaslic peg

bill

, Yesterday's Answer
12 Convey

27 Breed
of dog

17 Familiar
verb form

29 Shade

16 Floor

5 Tavern

18 -

empl_oyee
city
31 Essay ;
6 Persists
23 -weevil
moCII

coveri~g
Avtv

19 Approaches 7" 21 Actress
Balin
22 Never
(Ger.)

20 Oklahoma

of green

..About 24 Seafood · 32 Knowing

Eve
.
delicacy
( 1950 ftlm} 25 Server
8 "Ice on
Zebra"
wheels

about
38 American
playwright
37 Lack

•

39 Doze off
41 And not

30 Butt
against
31 Magnetic
induclior:l
device
33 Frost
34Caubeen
35Galn
38 French
river
AOAbsurd
42

Myth.
Trojan ·

' king
43 Smithy 's
place

DAILY CRVPTOQUOO &amp;I- Here's how to work II:

..

9/5

. .

AXYDLBAAXR ,
Is LONGFELLOW

One letter stands for another. In this sampie A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are a 11
hints. Each day tile code letters are diffetent.
CIIYPTOQUOTE

9-5

ta On Stage

11:00 Q) I a - Zelda The Great .

. (J) LJglit!ar Bide Of &amp;poltl
Hott Jay Johnatona
lnMrvlewa two celebrity
sports guests eech week as

well 11 unique and humorous
• I()OI1InO • - from around

the woitd. (0:30)

0=,.,..
oV.C.

Nortl!

·,

CROSSWORD

.

tDIIvenlng Nawl

&amp;

RaAWolorlorvloo. olo1 -.wotlo. lmmadlo~t.Otlti or
~,w- dotlvory. Colt 304-

By James Jacoby

•u
.KQ115

28 Gripped
29Buddy ·

.

. scjuad.

Coltlf'o Pknnbtrlg
.· and Hilling
Fou~h ond Plno
Ootllpollo, Ohio
&amp;14-14t-3888

85 OeneiJII

WEST
.752
•AJa

• ... Jt

.AK5

fftNewa
Prelldent l

a.m.,

Soptlo Tonk Pumi&gt;lng~Jto~Gillie
Co. RON EVANS ENTERPRISES,
Jac"-, 011 1-537-9521.

Electrical

In pursuit
trick 10

Elliot makes a last-ditch
effort to win Nancy .back . (R)
Mro. Buill
Tatlclng With DaVId Froet
This Interview with President
and Mrs. Bush reviews the ·
first seven months in office
and covers the major events
of the Bush administration.
(1 :00)
l!ll · • (12) C.ndld C...,.,.:
Eatllatl Ealf Allfin 'Funt
hoSts this spacial wl1icl1
takes a hilarious look at
America's eating habi\S as
captured by his Jegenelal)'
~lid cameras. (RI
•liD
Millar 9amey
and the 12th precinct are
, designated 11 a spacial

1-~11

NORTH
.QJ
.10602

23 Word
( 1968 film) 26 Spanish
bel?re leg
9 Poor one
seaport
or lick
24 Impassive&gt;
27 Card game

~

Rolory or cabt• tool drlllt,.. '
Moot wells completedPump ooteo ond ...teo,
185-3102.

84

or

!2J Uln The Haat
The Nlgllt Chief Gillespie is

Robertaon
(I) G (J) thlrty!llllt18lhlng

BASEMENT
WATERPROORNQ
Uncondftlonat lltotlmo guo,.nIH. LoCal rwlwroncH lumlohod.
F - 11ttmotoo. can cotr.ct 1·
114-217-0488, cloy or nlghl. R •
a e r a l a '• e r n e n t
Wotorprootlng.

Plumbing
·Heating

e

·

kidnapped on his tirsl night
home. (R) Q
10:00 CD 700 Club With Pat

Home

Fifty Tro• Trlmml"'l.r... otump
.. mo.at, cotl304-11711-f!»t.

BRIDGE

Demoo,.~Y-fumlile

'

Improvements

82

Mora Parlact Conalltutlon ·
IItty Clt'lham

.• • a

Accessories

87

~101-

I af,P.Alf·~rdyl 1;1

•

gro..

dull)p trollor dh
roolta. I
N.H. l!loltor. 7 II. DUll
11 .....

----··-

I

o,._
ttl. ..... "'"""'"

::...~ -=!~·=
"Why did you buy one made out of clear ·
plastic? You know I can't stand the sunl"

1981 Plymouth llllont. 4&lt;11',
PUll, euto lrone, AC, ,.., -

IJ8GO.I1t81UI1.

(I) E-lnllllt'lt Tonight
G (I) USA TC!day
.

304-571-2t18.
1085 H1rtey Da..,l8on, lOft tall,
Hke naw, extra chrome, 15500.
114-245-8818.

Services

answering machine: "Hello, no need to explain , you
know how this machine works ." Message received: "Hello,
this Is ths finance compll!!}f&amp;nd you kn_!&gt;w. how WE WORKI"

Cincinnati

IIJl Andy Ortllltll

¥11111.

1978 Compar, 14 tt. olelpe I,
ltove, fumac~ refrlaafator,
good oondHion. •1200. 3b4-773-

Packet - Gouge - Widow - Endure - WE WqRK .

011

Lehrer

0 My Slater S.m
ill VldeoCountry
7:05 Cll J.rtaraon1
7:30 II (2) Family Feud
00 MaiOt Lettgue Bnebtlll
.Magazlna (0:30)
·

olclo plpn, 1111 S1oexf or lrodo
for c.tr ar ~HI• of aqual

11182 Comoro V-6, T·Topo, 304.
.

~ MacNeil/

~ ·'

S.CRAMUTS ANSWERS

IDJMonayttna

11171 100 Yomaho Slrootblkl,. 2
cycle. Ntw tl,.., new chain, exc.
cond. $350. Pnco tlrm. Sortouo
lnqulriao only! 814-14t-7872 o~
tor 5:30 p.m.
·

575-s~t.

Olda
Ill
1982
Broughom AC, - ·

&lt;D

•liD WK11P In

1975 Hondo 08 750 F.
Wlndohleld, 0111 pnr., trunk,
crulae, new tian_.y, naw
au•penslon, ucallenl condftlon. 1983 CR 480 Hondo dl~
blko. l!lcollont condition. loth
adun ownod. u..t - · 1971
Supor Blotto V. W. Good condftlon. lt4-tlt2-tt44.

81

Q

NwiHour
1111 • (12) u WIMel or
Fortuna D

Motorcycles

5361.

1111 llorcury Lrn• ototlon
wagon. front whM drive, aood
waik ear, 1.1,000. 3oc.-aa2-l258
lftlf 1:00.

Instruments

.uwn!IOOo ...

11181 GMC S/4 ton, 4 whlot
dn .., &amp;14-4411-2&amp;18 .. -..7a1725•

Rox Rabbho. 514-441-86~
Musical

~IGHf A~ WW. ~T r:J..V

tll81 Ford Bronco II, 88,000
mlloo. 5 opood.lt-1-441·7720.

1m Hotldoy Vocotlonor, 111~
oontolnod. $3000. lt4-112·7471.

~~~. plete

O
the chuckle quoled
.
•
.
.
•
•
_
by filling In the missing words
'-...1.--.I...,~---'-....J;........t vou ·develop from sfep No. 3 below .

e (J) PM M...zlna
()) 8poft8Centar (0:30)
(I) e (I) Curren1 Altair

11185 Plymouth Voyogor, 4 .
cyllndtr1 air, AMIFM, orUJ• •
moro, toko o•or poym11'11L Colt
In ovonlngo &amp;14-388-6873.

79

(12) CBS Nria

,--1 ,
1 V.

~- ;.IL:._A:.;. I. :.;R'-T~ Ii- iyi. .:.=E-1.---11

I

IDI Sflowtllz Today
IIJl Jtflereona
6:35 t;IJ Andy Grfflitll
7:00 CD Ftllher Mufl!hy

1182 Ford E-250 van, M,OOO
mlteo, 11 n Squoro &amp;tom Lowo
alumn canoe aood ~d.
$250.00 tlrm. 304~11-2031 ollor
1:00PM.

Auto Parts

e

BM

ellll '-- eonnac:t1on

'

Groom ond SUpply Shop.Pol
Grooming. All brMda. All .tyl11. t981 Chovy Chotlon $4!50; 1977
lam1 Pel Food Dealar. Julie Chovy Monto Corio, $350; 304571-2815.
Wobb. Coll814-148-0231.
1111
Dodgo Mlrodo, '87,000
Pu~ lor Sole: $80. R'lltlltorOd Chow lnd roglotorod tior· miiH. psJAJr cond. Powor win614-367·
dor torrlor: 1 wkl. otd. &amp;14-2411- dowo, tin wttlll.
7677 onor 5p.m.
5957.

57

&lt;D Body Electllc
~ 3-2·1 eon.ct Q

;~~-~~7~~~·~~~
· ---------- ;

76

I

Cil 8 (J) ABC Nawe Q

for Sale

S295. 514-

Nawa

p

Old maid lo friend : "If I
could
combine the quelilies of
5
my lwo beaus, I'd be happy.
L---'--'---'----1...--1
. One Is rich, handsome and
~-------~---...., witty, and lha oiher wants Ia

c.-. ........

iJ) Sportal.OOk (0:30)

1981 Yamaha 1SO Vh·•at&gt;Hirlly,

tl73 Plymouth Duller, 1 cyttnd•, automatkl, 18,000 actual
miH, ,ood . . - . 1750. 8t4o
448-004 oftor 5p.m.

moo.

L;~====~:::::::::==J:~26~7~-~6~14-1=4;6-80::;38;·::;:;;;:;;;=.J
76 2 7 49
:5:..:
:..:·:.:~:.:'·---.,-,--.....,.- SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

3 bedroom houu, Jefferson
Ave, Pt.Pit. 1300. month, 304-

Hoy lor ooto. Right out ol llold,
UD a bole. In bilm, 11:25. 8t4t85-4291.

·

1

11189 OMC St•p Sldo holt ton
truck. V~, Vortlc engln., AM-FM
at. .a oon.tte, 114-742-2402 or
73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

Q

6:05 Clllla¥er1y HlllblltMa
8:30 (J) 8) NBC Nightly

l!ll

.
1

;:.E...:.R;,...

ill A-rtcan Megazlna

11181 Chovy P.U. outo, 14498;
1188 D!'dgO D-10, oovo llko now;
1985 Fori! l!•"ll"' P.U. o.-o,
$3895; t 1182 ~o Ro- P.U.
$1285; 1118$ Foid Von $Hili
tm Chovy p.U.; t984 N-n
414 .47,000 niln; 11184 I 1951
StO Bluo,.; 19811 XLT Bronoo
II; 1179 Ford F2!50, 4x4 $2198. I
I D Motorw1 H.,Y. tee! N. 114441-6885 or o14-148-6189.
.

2

3

Hltppy Daya
IIJ) .._
Of Life

t981 Ford F1150, 4x4, :JOO.a
cytlndor, 4-opood, !11W tl,_ I
.......... good Xhopo, $1150. 114379-2182.

74

• (J) 9l • (12)

~Reading Rainbow

II))

I
1

I I 1I l
......;.:M...:.A;-H:.:...
-11 ,
.~ 1 I I 1~ .
u
y I!
1-i-l-;.,.l:;._;..;l___,.
1

•I]])

IT'S ONLV TI4E FIRST DA"f
OF SC&gt;IOOL.AND I'YE AlREADY
LEARNED SOMETI41N6 ..

lAM I

BRICES

()) " - Run Dettly
(DRamona(NR)

. 1978 Dodge Cullom tiO, 1750;
tranmnlaalon, 3044757437•
11179
Ford
Dick-up,
302
Automotlc w~h llr Cond. 114441-7720.

Merchandtse

o••

Furnished apl, aduHt, private
antrance, 304-675-2257.

•

1:00 CD Bonanza: The Lim

Sc,.r.

R.D. only wontod. 18 hou,.Z
wMk. W.I.C. counullng. Ill
County Hoolth Dopl. 1Jt4- •
1121.
Wanl to urn .ome extra
money? Why not ull houu of
lloyd. No eupplln to buy. No
cotr,ctlng. No delivering. FrM
$300 kR.lolow hiring tor lilt. 814446·7002.

Middleport

VARD SALE . SEPT . 7, 8, 9 at
405 Page St .• Middleport . 9 a .
m .-5p.m .

31 Homes for Sale

TUES.. SEPT. 5

"OlD

PUULII

Roorrongo lanors of
four scrambl.c:l Word• below to form four simple words.

EVENING

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
So1n and cholro priced . lrom
$395 to $9H. Tobleo $150 ond up
to 1125. Hld...-!Mdo 1380 to
$595. Roell,_ $221 to $375.
Lompa $211 to $125 • .DinottH
$109 ond up to 14$1, Wood .
loblo w-11 ohoiN $215 to $715.
Dftko $145 up to 137&amp;. Hutchoo
$400 &amp; up, ~unk comptoto
with mattren $285 and up 10
$395. boby bodo lt10 Milt- 1-::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;:::-r:::::::::~
"" or boX oprlngo flill or twin 1
$78, tlrm $88, ariCI $98. o....,
61 Fann Equipment
sots $275 I up, King $3150. 4
draw.r chH1 $68. ou., Clblneta
8, 8, &amp; .10 gun. Boby moll,..on
David Brown 881 Farm tractor
$35 &amp; · $4~. Bod t .. m.. $21, For Solo: Pool tobto $100, 43hp,
PS, dol. w~h ulld &amp;'
Ounn Slzo $35 a ki11Q lromo $11,!500 BTU' air - 1 ' - ,
outtor $3NO. 114-44l$50. Good ooloctlon of b .J oom 1,1211.114 441 8253.
D813.
suites,
matal
cabln,ta,
hoodboordo $30 ond up to $15. For Sale: WoOd burner, fllhlr
90 daya uma u caah with ap- lto'tle;, llkl new condition a11o
proYiil crwd~. 3 mi. out Buto•tno brick pad, 114-211-1414.
Jlm'a Form Equlpmont Sr. 35 W.
Rd. Open t A.M. to 5 P.M. Mon,
Galllpott.,
Ovor 110 now 2111~
Klmblll Coutols Plano, one
thru Sot. Coii614-44S-0322.
trooJon. Shonnln uooCI
Owno&lt; A·t -lion, Uoed vory d!Mol
&amp; Toll City dining room chalro, lntto
Hoophol bod h1na Ford lnd Maoooy ForguOuHn Ann aytle, eolld mahoQ. cronk no. J.C. Hlmalno ilolloon trac:tars: 4', 1', 1', T KlngKutl•r
ney, fabric Mats, very nice; ~­ "'" blko 150. 114'371-2774 .. rotory mowora. Mony uoed
bruoh hogo lrodod ln. 114-4411uch. 304-875-1504. .
1144711-2410.
1777.
County Appllanco Inc. Qood Lorg• -.1 &lt;look, .oholr, $1150;
uHd appllancits, T.'v. ettl. Open c ..a.mon 12" ..... now, 110- 63
Llve!llock
8 o.m. to 5 p.m. Mon ..Sot. 8t4- CMIOriM, $710; Honda 121" I -:-=:==,---:-:;._--..,---448·18~•. 127 3rd. A•L Qol. whHI $7110 now; 14" drill proM ATTENTION ·H - Ownoro,
lipolia, ut1
112" cop. $1150; Ill H.P. More, Point Pluo Ia now corrylng to•lt.
l!lc. cond. $11100. .114 411 3191 Point J&gt;l,uo, 2415 Jockoon A....
QE,17.2 cu ft whlta refrfgaratDr &amp;14-14t-7315 ohor 7p.nt.
Point Ploount, phono 3Q4-t711wllco ·mokor, 4 yro, 304-6~537$
4084.
oftor 5:00PM.
lro'!.. Junk farm oqulp.
man , n ••novt Pll tor periL 64
Hay &amp;Grain
GOOO USED APPLIANCES Porn.roy ar.L 114-2.......
Washers, dryers, retripr_-on,
1!10 - d round boiu, good
rangoo. Skaggs Applta"coo,
ml~od hoy, $15; 114-3711-2751
Uppar Rl•o! Rd. lnldo Stono
ovenlngo.
Croll Molol. Coil 814-441-73118.

~h-"

M

TIIAT IWLY

•

72 Truckl for Sale

2br., mobile homllr dep • Nl.
roqulred. 814-146·0527.

n '"•• ~ 2 ""·• o a • 1ec.
woohor &amp; d!Yor h--up. Dip.
roq'd. $250/mo. &amp;14-388-B311 or
114-446·8004.
.
·

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 11

Television
Viewing

Autos for Sale

QQVERNMENT 8EIZ£D VohlciH
trom $100. FordL MoroodoL
ComnH. Cllovyo. Surptuo.
Buyoro Outdo (t) 1011-887-1000
Ext. 8-10189.

51

.. "After all these years I've
Gallipolis
finally taught Alfred to speak Troll"
nlco cloon untumlahod,
&amp; Vicinity
,.toroncH roqulrod, Routo t out
~o,..,~=-~·ot...,....,R_oo.,..d_on_rta_ht_._304......,.a_ra3 tomlly Gorogo Solo: So.r!J:.3, t=:&lt;:Jn=ly:':w=l:t:e:n=y:e,I_J_e_d_a_t_._,____ _
4. S.turdty, Sund1y,
. y,
:-:U 1u
•· f I I ·

Pom8roy-Middl~. Ohio

5,1989

September 5, 1989
71

2br., tumlohod, ~oblo, olr con•
dltloned, bt~ullful rlvtrvlew In
Kanauga. Fotters Mobile Home
Pork, 614-448-1602.

Fumlshld hountrailtr, for rent.
3 mllae on At. 7, AC, quiet
neighborhood $17'!1/mo. Pl.,.
~oposh. &amp;14-146-7075.

.

Carport Solo: 157 Woodlond
Drive. Sept. 4, 5, 6. 9-? Small
lablo. W/2 chol,., Now c,.ft
ltams. Boys, tHnl, adult
clothing. LOt• of goodlet. _
Entanainmant Canter, clothing,
hand garden tool1, lawn mower,
antiquesJ Tun, Wad. Juat
beyond umbo Contonory.

KIT N' CARLYLE~ by Larry Wri1ht

for Rent

dition, wuhorldryor. $235. por utii~IH lncluclod. Air conmonth pl1,11 ~pcatt and utllltfaa. dltlonod. UOOJrnonth. Coli 11'992-5545 7:ooo.m.-4:00p.nt. or
'514-992-7479;
11....,2-t341ovonlntiL
2BR tum'ad wnh w11her I
dryor, 112 milo E. . ot Po~or on Qno ocro tol, ... . _ . . - .
city wolor, Gatllpotlo l'wry. 304554 . 614-388-11963.
&amp;75-2722.
.
.
2BR,
lurnlshed. . $250/mo.
tnlter apacB, AU• · 1
$250/dapotlt. 2 peraon max. oc- Two
curnncy. No ~11, water, aewer Locuot Rood on right, 304475!
paid. In city. Rot. Roq'od. 514- 1078.
446-3671 ot!or 8:00p.m.

German ShephardL antwera to
"Cody". Fritndly. Heward! Loet
In Hav~~ H;~Xht•, 304-882·2210
or6148.

tuturet.

46 Space

Office or omoll bull.- · 2 bedroom fuml1hed, air con- for rent In Middleport. AU

LOST-22ncl ~ .ietfo,.on, omall
bugle, 17 years oki, brawn &amp;
white femtle. Nledl medicO..
R41Wordl ~4-675-7342.

Of

Mobile Homes

Tuesday,

for Rent

Found •round S.cond a Pine
Street, Male Brown Puppy. call
S)4-14t-23$8.

... lr'll. 814-.192-6078
2178.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

Cll ·• ~Hall
(J) •
eo(1.....
IIIDl
:00)
Brolhar's

~~~'!'.::Stereo.

11:30 Ql lntan Oaath Woru
Than F1te
• (J) Ill Nawl

w

ENTWA'Y

VSUVV

TNFU

WQQSFWDU

TWA'Y

QUFDWMADC.

MY

TSQL

DLWA

w

FSJCWFJ
"' .

OM~BMA _V
Y_.•r••r'• C.,.t. . .otea I'D' NEVER TRY TO
LEARN FROM SOMEONE l DIDN'T ENVY AT LEAST
A LlTn.E. IF I NEVER ENVIED I'D NEVER LEARN. BETSY COHEN

..,
··,.

�..

,

.

Pomaoy-Midclaport, Ohio

---- LQCal ews briefs... - . Continued from page 1
. 1975 C!levrotert Camaro.
Ousley reportedly suffered a serious visible Injury. A
spokesperson for Grant Medical Center said Ousley was
admitted to )he hospital. This morning his condition was
reported as·stable.
·
Anotber one vehicle accident was reported In Meigs County at ·
9 p.m. Satwday In Columbia Township on CR. 'J:T 1.1 miles east
of CR. 1.
·
'
Troopers said a 1981 Ford pickup truck driven by Steven c.
Russell. ·30,
Dexter, .went oft the road, striking a tree.
Damage was heavy _ No one was Injured;
The ~trol cited Russell for failure to maintain control.

Plan 5-K run Sept. 16

'·

TuBI!iey, Sept.-nbar 6, 1989

'

.

.

Winter cold front moves across Rockies
and Georgia early Tuesday .
dumping more than 6 InCites of
rain in some areas r as. a 'wintry

By Untied l'ress laternatlonal
Heavy summer tbunderstorm~
rolled across portions of Florida

No one claims winning lotto ticket
CLEVELAND (UPll - No
tickets were sold with· all six
winning numbers. to claim the
jackpot in Saturday evening's
Ohio Super Lotto drawing.
The correct numbers were 9,
10. 13, 14, 17 and. 31 . The prize In

--Meigs

Area r~m;rs' should. start preparing tor the .5-K Ruri In
Middleport which will be held In conjunction with the
Middleport Block Party on Sept. 16. The run will start at 9 a.m .
and ·PJ'e'registratlon costs $6. Registration on the day o!the race
Is $7. For more Information, contact Mlck Davenport at
992-:t434, or pick up an application at Locker 219 In Middleport.

next Wednesday's drawing Is an
estimated $9 million.
.
Lottery officials said 168
tickets were sold with five of the
six numbers, for payoffs of$1,000
each. And 7,381 tlcilets had four
of the six numbers, to win $75
apiece.

area announcements___

Meellris tonight
Racine Village . Council will
meet tonight (Tuesday) , 7 p.m.,
at Star Mill Park.
Open house at school
Open house at Pomeray Elementary School will be held 7 to 8
p.m . tonight (Tuesday) and
Racine First Baptist Church Is having a mortgage burning
tomorrow evenln.gs. .
ceremony Sunday . Dinner will be held at 12: 30 p.m. , followed by
Easlera.Star observ.an.ce
.·
the ceremony at 2 p.in. The public is invited. There will be no
Evangeline Chapter 172, Order
evenln&amp;.service Sunday.
·
of Eastern Star, Middleport, will
observe obligation and lnstructlon night for new inelnbers on
Thursday .at 7: 30 . p.m. The
worthy matron asks · all new
members to attend the meeting.
A brother and sisters preceded
Virgil Hatfield.
Officers are to wear street ·
In death.
dresses. At 6: 30 precee!llng the
He was a member of the
Virgil Hatfield, 64, or Patriot
meeting, the past matrons will
Star Route, died Monday at his Church or Christ in Henderson,
serve a potluck dinner · for all
residence. He retired from the W.Va., and Post 4464 VFW, and
members who are to ·bring
Chevrolet Garage after 36 years was a World War II Army
covered
dishes, Including meats.
veteran.
of service.
Drinks and tableware will be
Services will be conducted 2
Born Dec. 4, 1925 at Jamborle.
provided.
p.m
., Thursday, from WaughKy .. he was a son of the late
Girl Scouts to meet
Lawson and Marjorie. Hall Halley-Wood Funeral. Home,
Meigs County Girl Scout's Big
with Eugene Zopp and Russ V. · Bend Service Unit will meei 7
~
Hatfield.
He married Mary Scott on Moore officiating. Buriartollows
p.m. Thursday evening at the
March 3, 19.50 at Paducah. Ky .. In Ohio Valley Memory Gardens.
Pomeroy United Methodist
Friends may call at the funeral
and she survives along with a
Church.
home,
3 to 5 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m ..
son, Ricky Hatfield t&gt;1 Pomeroy;
Homecoming Sunday
daughters, Mrs. Dick ' (Mary Wednesday.
The United Faith ~hurch, on
Flag presentation will be by
June) Valentine of Gallipolis;
.
four grandchildren; four sisters, Post 4464 VFW.
Pallbearers will be Eugene
Mrs. Alice Belcher, Fremont,
Valentine,
David Valentine,
Ohio, Mrs. Ida Hurly, Chicago,
Ralph
Bennett,
John Milhoan,
Mrs. Arvellne Morgan, RushJohn
Jackson
and Harold
ville. Ill., and Mrs. Delphia Allen,
Montgomery.
·
Lakside. Ohio.

Church plans mortgage burning ·

_....__·Area .deaths--

EMS squads...

the Route 7 by:pass, :Pomeroy,
will celebrate. homecoming this
Sunday, starting with Sunday
Scllool at 9:30a.m., followed by
church at 10:30 and a · basket
dinner at12: 30 p.m. Agospel sing
will be held at 2 p.m. 'featuring
the Joyful Aires, from Winfield,
W.Va. , and 'Jan and Kathy: from
Syracuse. Thepubliclswelcome.
·p lan Homecomlns
Homecoming will be celebra ted this Sunday at the Chester
Nazai:ene Church. The afternoon
serVIce wlll .s tart at 1: 30 p.m.
with. the Charity Singers from
Souihskle, W.Va. Everyone Is
welcome.
•
Hymn sing slated
A hymn sing will be held
Saturday, starting at 7:30p.m .,
at the Hazel Community Church
in the Portland area. The Grubb
Family wlll be featured. Everyone· welcome.
Plan square dance
The Pomeroy Senior Citizens
are sponsoring a square·danceon
Friday from 8 to 11 p.m.' Music
will be proVIded by the True
Country Ramblers. 'f.hose attending are asked to bring sna&lt;;ks
for the snack table.

cold front was expected to begin
Its move across the ·nortbern
ROckies.

The National Weatlter Service
said thunderstorms formed overnight In the unstable, humid air
near a. · statlo.nary iront that
·.extended across northern FlorIda and soutbern Georgia to the
central Gulf Coast regioQ.
Forecasters said Sandlewood,
Fla. , was drenched wlth~ .6 ;s
Inches of rain on Monday, with 2
'.4 Inches J ailing .in a one-hour
.
period.
Jacksonville Beach, Fla., was
hit With nedrJY 7Jnches (jf ral!l 'OJI
Labor Day .
·
:

Shuler releasesd
on probation
An entry confirming sale and
ordering deed and distribution
has been flied In the Meigs
County Common Pleas Court
foreclosure action of Farmers
Bank and Savings Company
against Ricky J . Morris. et at
Upon recommendation ' of the
sheriff, the prOsecutor and ·the
defense counsel, the court lias
released Martin Shuler from the
balance of a prison sentence and
given ttim credit for jail time
previously served. Shuler has
been · placed · on thr«:e years
probation.
A action to determine custody
has been filed in an action by
Tony Ray Jones, Rutland,
against Judy Faye Waddell,
Morehead, Ky . .

·Hospital news
Veterans MemoriAl
SATURDAY ADMISSIONSNone.
SATURDAY DISCHARGESAlice May, Brenda Randolph,
James F . Kelley, John Hlte.
SUNDAY ADMISSlONS - Timotby Burgy. Byesville; John
Bohram, Middleport.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES James Heaton, Leona Krautter,
Edna Leach.
MONDAY ADMISSIONS John E. Houck, Pomeroy; Paul
J . Grady, Racine; Jeffrey L.
Thornton, Racine.
MONDAY DISCHARGES None.

Ohio'. Lottery

Evert

PICK-3
100

Page4

•

Stocks ·
Dally atock prices
of II: 38 a.m. )
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Bluat, Ellis 6 Loewl

•

~As

Vol.40. No.I&amp;
Copyrighted 1 981

Am Electric Pqwer ... ... ... .... 30\i,
AT&amp;T ............ ; ..; ......, ......... .40\lo
Ashland on ...... oi' •• ••••, . ..... ... 38;s
Bob Evans :.•....... ~\ ..... ~,~~.,.~ ... 15%
Charming.Shop)IE!s,, ....;~.'::,:.:, .... 17 . ·
City Holding Co ......': •.-; .... .... 15~ ·. ·
Federal Mogul:·..... ·~;·... .-:..::.·~ .... 26 ··· .' t
Goodyear T&amp;R , .................. 53~ ·'
Heck's ... :.... .'... ....... ...... .......... ;s
Key Centwlon ....................12%
. LI!-JidS' EJ;id .......... ............... 27~
Limited Inc ............ ,. ..........37%
Multimedia Inc ...................105
Rax Restaurants ............ .-..... 2;s
Robbins &amp; Myers .... ............ 16%
Shoney's Inc .. . , .............. ..... 12%
Wendy's Inu .:.. ....... ... .. ..........6
Worthington Ind .... .......... .... 24

.

9eeks divorce •:; · '

President urges unity in fight against drugs
WASHlNGTON (lJPI) ---,Pres· ·
!dent B11sl! Is urging a concerned
Congress, an angry American
public and a desperate South
America to embrace his $7.9
billion anti-drug plan so the war
against narcOtics can finally be
·
won.
"We need this grogram fully
Implemented - right away,"
Bush said In a nationally televised address Tuesday night that
was ·. also broadcast live · to
cocalne-ravagect·Colombla.
IIi announcing his long-awaited
strategy, Bush pledged to Ill-

crease the hattie on all fronts .·•. education, treatment, law en.fotcerftent and Interdiction.
· The Wl!lte House reported that
it received 339 telephone calls
within t.h e hour after Bush's
' address; 280 of them positive and
59 negative or neutraL
Regardless, Bush drew swift
criticism from mayors, pollee
officers and Democratic
members · or Congress that his
lnltfatlve does not provide nearly
enough funds.
Sen. Joseph Blden, D,Del ., In
giving his party's response, said,

"The president's pia~ , is riOt
tough .enough, bold enough, or
Imaginative enough to rn.eet the
crisis at hand.
"The president says he wants
to wage a war on drugs, but if
that's true, what we need Is
anotber D-day, not another VIet·
nam -not a limited war, fought
on the cheap, and destined for
stalemate and ,humari tragedy. "
Blden's Sena'te Judiciary Committee. is to open a series of
congressional hearings on the
plan Thursday. Federal . an ttdrug direct or William Bennett
.

.

A divorce has been granted in
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court to Connle'Chevalier from
Allen I&lt;. Chevalier.
· 1

'89 FORD TAURUS

awarded to tbe Winners. Elih&amp; spectal trophies
will be given away In addition to a first and second
In 17 classes.

·Trophies to be ~warded winners of
TtiinJ
Ann
~. ·. u aJ. ,car, Sh
. ow sept. .16
•

$13,400

Air,

$12,·500

auto~

tilt wheel,
AM/FM and

uuiH,

more.

•

...
•

•

SAYINGS OF

$392200

SAYINGS OF

'89 FORD TEMPO

$2 35600

'89 FORD FESTIVA
•
•

•

9295°0
AFTER lEBA TE
SAYINGS OF

.

Auto. Trans., air, tilt
wheel, plus much
more.
-

ONLY

$244200

$6975
SAVINGS OF

ALL PRICES AFTER REBATE -

4 sp., air, L' se~ies.

$851 00

.

•

...
•

Tax and Title Not IDcluded
'

NEW HOURS TO SERVE YOU BETTER

'

.

•••

$1.19

'

~

'

'

I

See Rick ToDiver, Jay HiD, Pat BiD or Dwight Hooker.·

I flfllll 5-15
Dolry Queen• stores ore proud IPQniO!'S Of tne Children's Miracle Network

TelethOn 'Nf'lleh benefit~ lOCal hOSpitals forchiiCJren .
TM 'ltademltk AM D.O. Corp.
e Rig. U.&amp;. P• . OI.. AM O.O.CorlJ.

.

..

.'

PAT HILL FORD INC.

461 SO. THIRD
'

...,

~·

,.,

MIDDLEPORT

992-2196
'

Numerous trophies will be experienced judges · with the
awarded in the Third Annual Car awards to be made about 4 p.m.
Show to be staged in Middleport
According to the rules of tl)e
on Sept. 16 as a part of the show, cars must be driven onto
Middleport Chamber of Com- the site on South Second Ave.
merce's annual block party.
which will be closed to traffic and
The show, to be held rain or parking that day. ·
shine, Includes 17 classes with
.Registration will be from 10
two trophies ·to be awarded In
a.m to 12 noon and the fee is $6.
each class. along with eight
Dash plaques will be provided lor
special trophies .
all registered cars.
Duane Weber and Craig VeA best of show award will he
made and the other special
noy. general chairmen · of the
show, loOk for about 150entrles in
trophies will Include best paint,
the show If the weather Is cool best engineer, best interior, best·
GM, best Ford. best Mopar. and·
and dry.
This year, according to Weber, · long distance.
the judging will be done by the
·The classes are production
showofficialsandacommlttee of
through 1939; production, 1940
through 1957; production, 1958

my r ight saying we need more
prosecutors, more law
enforcement."
Bennett said the Democrats
have a drug bill in the House with
a $6 billion price tag , adding. ''I
don't think people who have
recommended $6 billion are in a
position to criticize $8 billion as
not being enough."
Rep. Bob Smith, R-Ore., called
Bush's plan "tough as hell" and
said, . "I hope the Congress can
rise above partisan politics and
support this e!!ort."
Bush's plan- drawn up under

•

.through 1974, and production,
1975 and up; muscle car, 1963
through 1974, ,special Interest,
convertible, street rod through
1934, street rnd, 1935 through
1948.
Street machine, 1949 through
1962, street machine, 1963
through 1974, street machine,
1975 and up, truck, 2 wheel drive,
truck, 4 wlieel drive , Corvette,
through 1974, Corvette, 19'7\i and
up, and pro street/drag car,
wheel tubs required.
A first and second place will be
awarded In each class. The two
engraved trophies for each of the
classes along with the special
awa)'d trophies are sponsored by
local businesses.

· WASHINGTON &lt;UPil - Democnits responded to President
Bush's anti-drug plan by questioning how he truly Intends to
pay for it --: one of them even
suggested a tax hike may be
needed - hut the president's
drug policy chief said Wednesday It Is the Democratic-led
Congress tbat has failed to spend
enough In the past.
'•'Tallf-about money! ••·v.rmtanl"'"
Bennett exclaimed at a morning
talk with Senate Republicans .
"For years the Democrats have
been saying we need 'x' amount
of money- and coming out wiih
a good deal Jess than the
president proposed .
"There Is no philosophical
disagreement, there Is no substantive disagreement, on any of
the major points &lt;In Bush 's
plan)," Bennett complained.
"On all oft he things we proposed,

B~~Df~~~ti~~e~ :~~p~~~~o~~
nosubstantivecritlclsm."

ally televised anti-drug speech
Wednesday night but said they
feared tbat money from otber
social programs, not defense,
mlghtbeusedtopay!ortheplan.
Chairman Dan Rostenkowskl,
D-Ill., of the tax-writing House
Ways and Means Committee,
said Bush's campaign Is hopeless
unless the government has
enough money to pay lor new law
enforcement officers and programs for drug treatment and
education.
, Rostenkowskl suggested Bush
n\ay have to break an election
ple!lge of "no new taxes"tomake
hts strategy a success.
"Unless we are willing to
finance this war. we will fail, "
Rostenkowskl said. "Unless the
president supports the tax ln-

· · .· .
.
·
id
.
·
. . t e h t"t-s k tp ace .ent ;r:~s~i~!~;.~~:ht;::~:~s:!re:~
D epu t.tes tnves t tga
0

Six motor vehicle accidents
have been investigated since
Sunday by the Meigs County
Sheriff's Departmen.ton Tuesday evening, deputies
took a report of a hit -skip
accident at the Park&amp; Ride lot on
Route 7. The Incident took place
. sometlme between 5:50a.m. and·
2 15 m
: Ac~rdlng to the report, Mel· vln Mitchell. of Rutland, had
· parked his 1987 Pontiac at. the
parking lot around 5:50a.m. His
wife went toplckupthevehicleat
2:15p.m. and discovered.that an
unknown vehicle had backed Into
the left front of her husband '~
vehicle.
At 2 a.m. Monday. Randall
Pierce, 'o( Mason, W.Va., reported thi!1 he was traveling

south on Route 7 when an
unknown animal ran into the
oath of his 1988 Chevrolet . The
front of the vehicle sustained
moderate damage.

vehicle sustained moderate
are going to win."
damage.
.
Bush called for a $7.9 billion
No Injuries were reported.
program to pay for the fight
At 9:40 · p.m. Sunday, Ben
against narcotics at home and
Cop pick, of Pomeroy, struck and
abroad. He has made the plan a
killed a deer that ran Into the
priority on his domestic agenda,
.At 8 p.m. Monday on Chester path ot his 1979 Dodge. Moderate . but critics said he was asking the
Township Road 156 (West Shade damage was sustained by Cop- Democratic majorities In ConRoad), Troy McDaniel, Middle' pick's vehiCle. The accident gress to find . the money in
po rt, while operating a 1980 occurred at the Intersection· or existing programs, already hard
Chevrolet Luv, struck a 1976 ' County Roads 28 and 31.
hit In a time of budget austerity.
Chevrolet Nova owned by Tina
Another accident occurred on · Rep. C!larles Rangel, D-N. Y..
Basham and driven hy Thomas Sunday at 2:30 p.m. on private chairman of the House Narcotics
Gillian, of ~)est Shade Road.
property at the Five Points Committee, said Bush Is ' asking
· Sheriff Soulsby reports that Express. Chalrcy L. Webb. Congress to take $716 million
this accident was a result of a Pomeroy, puliett into the lot and . from otber federal accounts to
domestic dispute and the matter struck a vehicle that was backing cover the full first-year cost of
hasbeenreferredtotheprosecut- Into a parking space beside the the program.
ing attorney for possible building. The other car was
"To say that we've declared
charges.
_ . drtvenbySandraK. Wllfinger,of war and developed a domestic
McE&gt;antel's truck sustained Twinsburg.
policy and a foreign policy and
llgl\t damage while Gillian's
Moderate damage was sus· then we have to go back and
tained by Webb's 1978 Plymouth nickel and dime from the differ·~
whtie light damaee was listed to ent committees to raise $700
.
~ ·
'0 ~ ·
Wllfinger's 1977 Chevrolet million- it just doesn't seem as
Caravan.
though we're sincere," Rangel
Webb was cited for failure to said.
yield.
..
White commending the pres!.. .
At 6 a.m. Sunday, Robert D. dent on his strategy, Sen. Ed·
The state-by-state analysis Hensley, Pomeroy, was travel- . ward Kennedy 0-Mass., said It
WASHINGTON (UPil
Changes In tbe Medicare catas- · prepared by Families United for lng north on Chester Township fell short.
. "I believe that tbe president's
trophiC healtb plan approved by . Senior Action also found that In Road 404 when he struck a deer
each of the 50 states and In the
that ~an Into his path. His strategy seriously shortchanges
a House committee will raise
District of Columbia more people · Vehicle, a 1986 Nlssan, went off three ofthe mostcrltlcaltronts In
costs for a maJority of beneflciarwould
face Increased costs than
the road oti the left and struck a the battle: aid to state and local
Jes in Ohio ani! elsewhere around
pay
less
under
the
revised
tree.
Jaw enforcement .. . edUCI!-tiOn ...
would
1he nation, and.the bliaest losers
plan.
Moderate damage was listed to ·and treatment on request for
will be !Mse with Incomes just
The Medicare program cover- · · the vehicle. Hensley was not addk:ts :.. , " Kennedy said.
over the poverty line, a report
ContlnU~J "" :'Bge 7 ·
Injured.
~· . More crltlc.a l of the strategy,
s:Wd Wednesday.

Rep.ort say· Chan.UPS
, ould hurt poor peotn
r le
C

MONDAY, WEDNESDAY and FRIDAY OPEN nL 7:00; TUESDAY &amp; THURSDAY OPEN til 5:30 P.M.
SATURDAY OPEN nL 4:00 P.M:
•

chief architect or the strategy, is
to be the first witness.
Bennett, in appearances on
network· television Wednesday,
countered criticism that Bush's
plan does not go far enough.
"Well, this is ver:V Interesting
coming from the Democrats,"
Bennett said. ·'I would comment
that for a couple of months I have
been criticized by some for
emphasizing law enforcement
and judges and prosecutors ...
and then I go to bed last -night
realizing that Joe Blden speaking
for the Democrats has moved to

orders from Congress - would
increase feder al anti-drugsj)endlng in flscal1990 by a record $2.2
billion, raising It to the level that
Congress approved last year but
that the administration failed to
fund .
It would also make fundamen-.
tal shifts in policies that during ·
the Reagan admln.istration were
foc)Jsed primarily on Interdiction, which has snared, at best,
one in 15 drug shipments .
Bush seeks to increase emphasis on cracking down on street-·
. Continued on page 7

Democrats
question
financing
of plans

.,,

'

2 Sections, 14 Pogeo 26 Cents
A Multimedio Inc. Newopoper

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Wednesday. September 6, 1989

RD-:1

"LOADED"

Partly cloudy tonight Low In
mid 60s. Chance of rain 20
percent. Thursday , partly
cloudy, high in upper 801.
'Chance of rain 20 percent.

PICK-4
1810

_c_on_t_in_ue_d_l_ro_m_pa:.....:;g_e_I_ __

Sunqay at 1:01 a.m .. Middle- was taken to Pleasant Valley ·
,port :-vas called to the poUce Hospital.
department for Doug Starcher
Pomeroy was calied at 5: 03
who was treated but not . p.m . to Cherry Ridge Road for
transported.
Timothy Burgy to Veternas
Pomeroy : was called at 3: 10 - Memorial HospitaL
Syracuse at 6:41 . p.m. was
a.m. to Page St. for ·Dorothy
Roush who was taken to Holzer called to Arnott's Trailer Court
Medical Center, and at 9:45a.m. for Edward Smith who was taken
to Butternut Ave. for John Hauch to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
to Veterans Menuirtal Hosplta.l.
Middleport at 7:32 p.m. transAt 2:46 a.m. , Racine went to ported Kenneth Mohler from the
Portland Road for Bl'll Berry to pollee aepartrnent to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. At 8:12p.m. ,
Veterans Memm:tal HospitaL
. Tuppers Plains· at 3:23 p.m. MlddleportwascalledtoPageSt .
went to Route 7 for ·Harold for John Borham who was taken
Richards ~ho was treatedbutnot to Veterans Memorial HospitaL
tral)sported.
.
Tuppers Plains at 9:02 p.m.
Racine at 3:17p.m. went to Hog transported Joyce Ritchie to St.
Hollow for Jeff Grady who was Joseph's HospitaL
taken to Veterans Memorial
Pomeroy at 10: 37 p.m. was
Hospital.
called to the Pomeroy Cliffs
Syracuse at 3:23 p.m. was Apartments for Opal Cummins
called to Minersville for Edward who was taken to Pleasant Valley
Robinson who was taken to Hospital.
On Monday at 11:48 a. m. ,
Veterans Memorial HospitaL
Pomeroy at 4:32 p.m. was Tuppers Plains EMS was called
called to Chester Road for to a tractor accident on Scout
Kenneth White to Veterans Mem- · Camp Road. Jack Kennedy was
orial Hospital.
taken from the accident to Holzer
Middleport was called at 6: 34 Medical Center.
p.m . to the Middleport Lunch
Racine Squad 28 at 1:04 p.m.
Room forRohbieCionch who was was called to an auto accident on
taken to Veterans Memorial Fifth St . and transported June
Hospital, and at 6:36p.m. to an · Newmanfromtheaccldentscene
auto fi re at the Dave Ross to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
residence on Zuspan Hollow Syracuse assisted at the scene
Road.
and transported Bill Newman to
Pomeroy was called at 7: 51 Veterans Memorial HospitaL Rap.m . to the Amerlcare Service cine Squad 24 transported RaStation lor Bruce McElroy to chel, Randy , Andrea and Cody
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Hysell to Veterans Memorial
Rutland at 8:28 p.m. went to Hospital.
Route 124 for Cheryl Wilford 1¥ho

'

.

•

12-lholloiy ~ ..

'

. '

PRESIDENT GEORGE BUSH
Ron Brown, chairman of the
Democratic National· Committee, said: "President Bush has
said enough to start skirmish,
hut to win the war on drugs we
will need heavy artillery. Americans want action, not speeches.
And however much applause, It
was a speech about a strategy for
a no-win war."
Sen. Joseph Blden, D-Del.,
representing his ' party In a
nationally broadcast response to
the president's program, sald the
plan "Is not tough enough, bold
enough, or Imaginative enough to
meet the crisis at hand.
''The president sa:rs he wants
to wage a war on drugs, but If
that 's true, what we need Is
another D-Day , not another
VIetnam -not a limited war.
fought on the cheap, 'and ·
destined for stalemate and
human tragedy," Biden said.
Speaker Thomas Foley, D·
Wash. , was more cautious. sayIng any program will require
time to be effective.
"I've said many times, 'I think
It 's g01ng to be many , many
years, ... he said. ,
Foley said Bush proposed that
about $156 million be taken from'
an unspecified Defense Department account to pay for the
program, but t,he rest of more
than $700 mlliion that wlll be

a

needed will come from domestic
programs.
.
"We'll find the resources, I'm
sure," Foley said.
Echoing the concern over
funding was Houston Mayor
Kathryn Whitmire, president of
the U.S. Conference of Mayors: ,.
"Because ot the enormity of the
drug problem, we must be
concerned about the Impact of
this strategy, or any strategy, If
It is not backed by adequate
federal resources, If it Is not ·
equipped to get those resources
to where they are most needed,
· or If II takes funds away from
other badly needed programs
and services In cities. "
. Rep. Bob Smith, R-Ore., called
the program "tough as helL I
hope the Congress can rise above
partisan pqlltics and support this
effort."
Bush al so found support from
Republican Gov. Michael Castle
of Delaware.
-" The time has come, and the
public d~mands, that we 'work on
this problem and not politlze It,"
Castle said. "Money Is not the
complete answer. If Congress
feels that more ·money Is needed,
then I think Congress should
come forward and try to determine where they can get more
money ."

Local news briefs
Williams withdraws from race

'-

John T. (Jack) Williams, longtime Syracu se councilman, has
withdrawn as a candidate for a seat on Syracuse Vllla'ge
Council, Jane Frymyer·, Meigs Board of Elections director,
reported today. Williams currently serves as president of
Council.
With Incumbent Williams withdrawal from the November •
ballot, and lour !our-year seats to be filed, the field now consists .
of Kathryn Crow and Kenneth E . Buckley , incumbents, and
Jerry Aleshire, Sr. , James E. Pape, Teresa M. Tyson-Drummer, and Kathleen M. Fryar.
Filing as a write-In candidate for the Southen Local Board of
Education Tuesday was Carl Robinson of Racine.
Resident have until Sept. 28 to file as write-Ins
November ballot.

Survey results are announced
State Rep. Mary Abel, CO-Athens) said that res ults from her
Meigs County fair questionnaire Indicated that the top three
areas of greatest concern listed by participants were the
elderly. roads and highway, and educational finance Issues
The questionnaire asked poll partiCipants to choose th~
Issues they felt most Important from a list that Included
agriculture, environment, elderly, helping low-Income citizens
.educational finance, and rOillds and highways.
'
Abel said that she was pleased constituents took the timet
answer tlte questionnaire since the information received i~
always useful In legislative discussions and helps better
represent the area.'s concerns.
·
Continued on page 7

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