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Page-12-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

VVednesda~August10,1994

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2 Sectiono, 12 Pagee 35 cenll
A MuiUmodio Inc. N-opopet'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, August 11, 1994

EMS puts lid on release of squad runs

Publisher says
public's right to
know violated

By JJM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
The Meigs County Emergency
Medical Service enacted a new JXllicy Monday prohibiting the release
to The Daily Sentinel and other
media of EMS squad runs. Mean -

Gambling
initiative
fails to get
on ballot
COLUMBUS (AP) - Seems
riverboat casino gambling just was
not in the cards for voters in the
Nov. 8 election. But they will have
to deal with four other constitutional amendments.
Two petition drives for riverboat
gambling ended - at least for this
year - when backers were unable
to meet Wednesday' s deadline for
filing petitions.
They needed 347,765 signatures
of registered voters. In addition, the
names must have reflected 5 percent of the voters in the last gubernatorial election in each of at least
44 c: the state's 88 counties.
Voters will decide four constitutional amendments.
Three that the Legislature proposed would place state government's financial backing behind a
prepaid college tuition plan, cut
about two years off state appeals in
deat.h penalty cases and guarantee
certain rights of crime victims.
A fourth amendment that was
proposed through petitions would
repeal a penny-per-can tax on soft
drinks that legislators imposed in
I 992, and prohibit any similar
wholesale taxes on food in the
future.
Developer Alan Spitzer of
Lorain and Buckeye Extravaganza
Inc. said they would get back in t.he
casino ballot game next year.
"We ran out of time," said
Anthony Giardini, a lawyer working with Spitzer.
"We'll just keep on going until
we hit our goal of a half-million,
put them in the bank, and wait until
next year to file," Giardini said.
He recalled that was what happened when Spitzer flfSt proposed
a ballot issue in 1989. Petitions had
to be held over for filing in 1990,
and voters subsequently rejected
casino gambling.
Giardini believes voters' views
(Continued on Pa~e J)

while, Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
publisher Robert L. Wingett SJXlke
out against th e new policy this
morning, saying it viol ates the people's right ID know.
A member of the EMS board of
trustees brought up the legality of
publi shing th e names of peopl e
·treated or transJXlrted by the EMS
and the location to which they were
transJXlrted, EMS Director Robert
Byer said Wednesday. The presumption was that the information
is privileged.

-Byer said he scm a lener, at the
request of th e trustees, to Meigs
County Prosecuting Attorney John
R. Lentes asbng for advice, Byer
said. On July 25, Lentes se nt a
reply.
Lenteswroteinpan:
" I believe that in order to limit
any chance in having a liability
problem, it (is) probably the better
course of action not to give news
media a daily li st of names and
addresses of patients to whom the
squads respond.

treatment at the home."
A standard JXllicy of The Daily
Sentinel is not to li st the age, street
address o r medi cal co ndition of
partie s identified in emergency
runs.
Member s of the board of
trustees vot ed unanimously on
Aug. 3 to implement the new policy, Byer said. The board consists of
two members from each squad and
one mem ber from eac h fir st
resJXlnder unit.
Voting for the policy were Bill

Prostate check clinic scheduled
Screening list
may include 30
more residents
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Senlinel News Staff
A prostate screening clinic
has been scheduled for Sept. 14,
jointly SJXlnsored by the Meigs
County Health Department, Veterans Memorial Hospital, the
Council on Aging and the
Riverside Cancer Institute.
Meeting Wednesday with
representatives of the agencies
to plan for the screening clinic
was Ann Loocktan of Riverside.
This is the second year. for
the prostate screening program
to be held as a pan of a national
study currently involving more
than 200,000 men - an amount
increasing in numbers as more
are added each year.
Locally, all but three of t.he
61 men evaluated last year will
be returning to the clinic for
another examination. and blood
test to determine PSA (prostatic
specific antigen).
Results of last year's screening showed 12 abnormal
prostates, 26 normal and 23
enlarged. Several of the participants have since undergone
treatment.
Thirty additional men will be
added this year_ The examinations arc free and any man over
50 who currently has no symptoms of prostate cancer may participate.
Appointments are to be made

PLANNING SESSION - Men over 50 withoul symptoms of prostate cancer may participate
in a free screening lo take place on Sept. 14 at the Meigs County Health Department. Appointments are to be made there by calling 992-6626. Meeting Wednesday to plan the screening were.
sealed, from left, T.C. Ervin, R.N., Health Department; Diana Coates and Linda Friend, Council
on Aging; Norma Torres, R.N., Health Department; Ann Loocktan, Riverside Cancer Institute;
Rhonda Dailey, R.N., Veterans Memorial Hospital; standing, Jon .Jacobs, Health Department
administrator; and Cecelia Lisle, VMH lab supervisor_
with· ihe Meigs County Health
Department, 8 a.m . ID 4 p.m., at
992-6626.
The examinations will be
done by Dr. Scott Blair. M.D.,
oncologist, Riverside Hospital;
Dr. Mel Simon, urologist,
Pinecrest Urological Clinic; Dr.
Shrikant Vaidya urologist,
Pleasant Valley Hospital; and
Dr. James Witherell, family
medicine practitioner, VMH.
Blood work will be handled
in t.he laboratory at VMH. Writ·

ten reports on the evaluation
will be sent to participants four
weeks after the examination.
Pro state cancer incidenc e
increases with age, reported
Norma Torres, R.N., health
department nursing director. She
sa1d some connection has also
been made to high fat dietary
content. Now the second largest
cause of cancer deaths in the
country, early diagnosis and
treatment of prostate cancer
results in a high cure rate, Tor-

res said.
Each year, more than
120,000 men arc diagnosed as
having prostate cancer.
The warning signs arc a
change in urination patterns lasting two weeks, frequent urination, especially at night, persistent pain in the back, hip, pelvis
or thoghs, burning sensation during urination, inability to urinate
or difficulty in starting urination, weak or interrupted urine
flow , and painful urination.

Lambert and Joe Struble . Middle port ; Wa yne Lyon s and Gene
Lyo ns, Racine; Mar y and Eber
Pickens Jr., Syracuse; Chairman
Ebcr Pickens Sr., Syracuse; Roger
Win ebrenner and Marsha Elliott,
Rutland; Terry Deem, Tuppers
Plains; Shawn Baker and Dorse l
Th omas, Middleport; Faye Westfall, Reed sville; Jim Gas ton,
Co lumbia Township.
" You don't see SEOEMS
(Southe ast Ohio Emergency Medi (Continued on Pa~e 3)

Holiday
parade
slated
Nov. 27
Holiday promotional activities
were discussed at a brief meeting
of the Pomeroy Merchants Association Wedncsday in the Bank One
conference room .
During the meeting conducted
by James Anderson, president, the
group set Nov . 27 for t.hc annual
Christmas parade and open house.
The poss ibility of purchasing
additional village decorations was ·
discussed with Anderson to check
into what is available.
I 1 was noted that the Christmas
banner project for downtown
Pomeroy has been completed. The
banners were purchased with proceeds from the ornament sale over
the past five years carried out by
Bank One. Pomeroy, employees.
Ander son suggested that the
grcup encourage building and business owners to outline their buildings in white lights for the holiday
season.
There will be no duck derby at
the Sternwhcel Festival, it was
decided.
A back to school promotion was
set for the weekend of Aug. 31.
The next meeting will be held on
Sepl 14 at 8:30 p.m. in the Bank
One conference room.

Eastern Schools launch campaign for levy approval
By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News Starr
The Eastern Local School Board
began the work of winning a levy
campaign at its monthly meeting
Wednesday night.
In November, residents will
vote on a two-year, 4.4-mill renewal levy that will raise $154,689,
Superintendent Ron Minard said.

The current levy is 5 mills, while
the new one will be rolled back to
generate t.he same level of funds.
"It's crucial for the district
because we're running on a very
tight budget," Minard said. "I want
to concentrate on t.he entire community. We do well in Chester and
Tuppers Plains, but we don't do
well in the Reedsville area."

Fast raises Inmon health worries
COLUMBUS (AP) - After 10
days of fasting outside the Statehouse, Billy Inmon likely is lightheaded and weak and has low
blood pressure and bad breath, a
dietitian said.
"If you were to walk up to Billy
right now you would probably
smell a lot of acetone on his
breath," said Shirley Kindrick,
director of the Comprehensive
Weight Management Program at
Ohio State University Medical Center.
Acetone is a breakdown product
of fat, and Inmon's body may be
feeding on its fat cells by now, Ms.
Kindrick said.
Inmon, 47, weighed 2I6 pounds
when he began his fast Aug. I. He
said Wednesday that he weighed
192 pounds.
The ideal weight for a man of
Inmon's age and height- 6 feet
- is 184 pounds, according to
statistics Nationwide Insurance
uses for standard-issue life insurance policies_
Ms. Kindrick said most of t.he
weight Inmon lost the first week
probably was water, but now his
body could be stressing its muscles
...:.. including the heart- to get
protein for energy_
After four to six weeks of fasting, the body begins consuming

" .. .!would advise as a new JXllicy to merely indicate to the press
th e number of ca ll s th at we re
resJXlnded to, th e village or township where the res ponse went to ,
and whether it was a medical call, a
fire call,orwhatevcrgenericemcrgency was involved. I think in no
in sta nce from now on should you
give out the name of the perso n
who is involved, the address of the
person involved , the result of th e
call, including whether there was a
tran sport to a medical facility or

BILLY INMON
more of its stored fat than muscles.
"This has to do wit.h how long
he can last," Ms. Kindrick said.
"A person who •s obese can last
much longer than three months."
Inmon could be risking a bean
attack.
"That"s the very dangerous
thing at the very end, you could
have sudden death due to cardiac

arrest from the electrolyte imbalances," said Dr. Mary Jo Steiner,
director of nursing for the Franklin
County Board of Health. Electrolytes conduct t.he electric charge
that makes t.he heart beat
Other hunger-strikers have gone
without food for longer than 10
days.
Dr. Jack Kevorkian fasted for 17
days in a Michigan prison in
December 1993. He consumed
only juice and vitamins while
protesting t.he law banning assisted
suicide.
Rep. Tony Hall, D.Ohio. fasted
for three weeks in 1993 10 protest
his colleap!es' decision to eliminate fundmg for his Select Committee on Hunger. He lost 23
pounds.
_
Bobby Sands, an Irish Republican Army prisoner, died after going
76 days without food in 1981 ,
Ms. Kindrick said she would
never recommended fasting to
someone who is overweight. She
said she worries that people will
hear about Inmon's weight loss.
and decide 10 fast.
'• You hear about these sujlplemenlal fasting PfOifl!"S and we do
run one of those,' she said. "But
people are being given protein to
preserve the protein loss and force
the body just 10 lose t.he fat."

At 7 p.m. on Tuesday, Aug. 23
at the high school, a levy support
committee wiU meet to discuss tactics. The district is seeking contributions, since no taxes can be spent
on t.he levy campaign and the fund
currently has $93. The district will
send 2,315 mailers to local homes.
This mailing cost more than $300
in 1992.

The last levy passed by just I
percent and this effort will need to
recruit the supJXlrt of as many people as possible, Minard said.
"We're not trying to fool anybody. We're trying to keep the
same amount of dollars," Minard
had !Did The Daily Sentinel previously. "We need to show we are
not wasting any money, and if we

are, I don'tlmow where."
Board President Ray Karr said
the district will ask for the same
amount of tax money.
"We lost almost $100,000 this
year in open enrollment," Karr
said. "Nobody's had a raise for the
last three years."
The district has removed itself
(Continued on Page 3)

-First-time fair exhibitor

Thelma Hayes or near Chester, right, decided to enter her sunnowers in the Meigs Counly Fair
Rower show this year. Assisting her is fair board member Addalou Lewis. While Mrs. Hayes had
been a regular fairgoer through the years, she said she jusl never exhibited anything. ''It's about
lime, don't you think?" said Mrs. Hayes, who will turn 82 in Oclober. She went on to reflect
aliout coming to the fair in a horse and buggy. (Sentinel pholo by Charlene Hoeflich)

�'·
Thursday, August 11, 1994

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street

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

ROBERT L. WINGETI
Publlsber
MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Daily Preu Association and
lbe 1\merican Newspaper Publisher Association.
LETffiRS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be leas than 300
words long. All lener. are subject to editing and mus.t be signed witb name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned !etten will be pubhsbed. Letlen
sbould be in good taste, addressing issues, net personalillea.

L.------------------------.1
The Stealth agreement

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, August 11 , 1994

By DAVE SKIDMORE
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - While Congress in sJcamy midsummer focuses on
health care reform, a crime bill and President Clinton's Whitewater problem , trade legislation affecting nearly all U.S. businesses and workers ts
quietly advancing.
.
.
Negotiated under the ausptces of General Agreement on Tanffs and
Trade, the 22,000-page accord was signed by 123 nauons m Apnl m Marrakesh, Morocco.
The pact took seven years to negotiate and for three months con~­
sional committees have been ponng over a proposed btll pulling 11 m
force. And although it touches virtually every segment of U.S. tndustry tn
some way GATT barely seems to have registered on the public.
" Vote.;, have no idea what's going on. It' s the stealth bill to them,"
I
said pollster Celinda Lake.
A survey of 1,000 adults she conducled for an anti-GA TT gTOUj) found
only 42 percent had even heard of GATT and only 14 percent Sllld they
had heard a lot about iL
But both proponents and opponents agree that GATT, the most comprehensive and far; rcaching global trade agreement ever negottated,
deserves Amencans attenllon.
.
..
Supporters sec it as a crucial tonic to future economtc gro~th. Cnucs
ranging from conservallve commentator Pat Buchanan to liberal con,;umcr advocale Ralph Nader fear the new international entity that is being
created to enfonce the agreement.
They say the World Trade Organization ~ill spawn an army of bureaucrats in Geneva with the power to rob the Umted States of tts soveretgnty.
On the plus side, GATT slashes trade-inhibiting tariffs by an average
of 30 percent and eliminates tariffs altogether in some areas, such as pharmaceuticals. And for the ftrst time it covers trade in services and protects
intellectual property rights such as patents.
The Clinton administration cstima!CS that 10 years afler the pact takes
effect, the U.S. economy will be $100 billion to $200 biUion larger as a
resuh of expanded uade.
.
However, not everyone wins. Studies indicate it could cost as many as
250 000 jobs in the U.S. textile and apparel industries. And environmental
and 'consumer groups fear the World Trade Organization willllressure the
United SialeS to rcwrile its laws on everything from food labeling to truck
Millions of American working
safety.
..
. .
moms
got a big Bronx cheer from a
Because the special "fast-track procedure f~ rattfymg GATT does
Michigan
judge last month,
not permit amcnd~~nts to the tmplemenllng lcgtsl~llon, con~~ss10nal
committees arc wnung mock btlls to stgnal the Cltnton admmtstrauon although they might not have recognized themselves.
what lawmakers will accept in final legislation.
When they saw the headline ,
The prime points of contention are the administration's plan to offset
"Father
wins custody of baby from
the nearly $12 billion in tariffs lost during the ftrst ftve.y.ears of the agreecollege-student
mother" they may
ment and on its request for fast-track authonty for addiuonal trade agreehave
thought
Judge Raymond
ments.
Cashen
was
aiming
only at college
Congress should finish drafting the mock bills this week or next,
students
.
But
listen
to what he
allowing the administration to submit legislation before lawmakers break
for the summer and clearing the way for House and Senate votes by the wrote as he wrested 3-year-old
Maranda Ireland -Smith from the
fall.
mother
she'd lived with since birth:
The deadline for ratification isn't until July I, 1995, and GATT critics
"There
is no way that a single
hope to delay the vote, buying time to rally grassroots opposition. The
parent,
atte~di~g an academi~ proagreement's low visibility means it's tough going for them.
The business coalition pushing the accord, the Alliance for GATT gram at an msutuoon as presllgmus
as the University of Michigan, can
Now, has been airing television advcrtise~~nts showing a GATT baseba~
player hitting "a home ~ for Amenca. Pat Buchanan countered thts do justice to their studies and the
weekend with 1V and radio ads accusmg Clinton of stampeding enact- raising of an infant child.''
Suspend for a moment the sinment of the World Trade Organization.
gle
parents you know who are sucOpposition in Congress so far remains scattered. Sens. Jesse Helms, Rcessfully
rearing children while
N.C., and Robert Byrd, 0-W.Va, have raised the sovereignty concerns.
college, folks. Judge
attending
Other lawmakers are trying to proleet home-state industnes: Sen: Ernest
Cashen
obviously
can't see from
Hollings, D-S.C., for textile mills;, and Rep. Collin Peterson, 0-Minn., for
his lofty perch atop the Twilight
· dairy farmers who face a big subsidy cut.
But the GATT opposition lacks many of lite high-powered lawmakers, Zone. Maranda's mother, Jennifer
Ireland, probably has more free
such as House Majority Leader Richard Gephardt of Missouri, who battime for her daughter now than she
tled unsuccessfully ID defeat lite North American Fnec Trade Agreement
will when she actually starts her
· Texas billionaire and fonmer presidential candidate Ross Perot, who
,
career.
I had more free time when I
debated Vice President AI Gore on NAFfA, hasn't had much to say abo~t
was
a
college
student - an honor
GATT, although his grassroots organization, United We Stand, Oj)poses tl
Organized labor, which bitterly opposed NAFTA, ts offenng only
.
token resisl.lnce to GATT.
"There isn't the same kind of energy and urgency that there was wtth
NAFf A," acknowledged Mark Anderson, the AFL-CIO's trade expert.
Conservative activists such as Phyllis Schlany and Lyn Nofztger, noting how Clinton claimed credit for NAFfA, have been arguing RepubliWASHINGTON - A year ago,
cans shouldn't give Clinton a pre-election boost by approvmg GATT.
President Clinton spoke in calm,
But so far most Republicans have paid more attention to their tradition- reasoned tones about how all sides
al allies in the business community.
in the health -care debate were
.:..__
"seeking a good that helps all
iDITOR'S NOTE - Dave Skidmore covers economics, banking,
Americans.''
taxes and trade from Wm.bington ror Tbe Associated Press.
Today, Americans are just as
likely to hear a hoarse, a~itated
Clinton railing against Sinister
forces that want to deny people
medical care. Or his wife criticizing a GOP senator's "political

Republican gains, enough perhaps
to establish an "ideological maJOnty" in Congress or, at least , an
"ideological blocking force ." And
this leads to some crucial questwns
for Presid ent Clinton, and for
America.
Curio usly, a lo ss coul d give
Clinton an opportunity to gove rn
along the lines of hi s 1992 campaign themes. Remember, thts was
the candidate who promised that
there would be Republicans in the
Cabinet who said both liberals and
conserv~tives were "brai n dead,"
and that he was a New Democrat
who would break the gridlock with
some co mm on se nse from both
parties. Instead, he appointed a
Democratic team tilled well to the
left, and has tried to govern typically by getting enou~h Democrats for
a majority . (Except on NAFfA.)
Diminishing the numbe rs of
Democrats in Congress could present Clinton with a golden opportunity . In slcad of governi ng fro m
"the left in" - that is, putting
·

together a coaltl ion th at includes
the lcft·wtng Democrats, he could
govern from " th e center out ,"
putting together a coaliuon of centrists from bolh the parttes. That
could yteld an array of tough-mrnded cen trist programs. on welfare,
on the budget - and on crime and
health if they do not pass thts scssian - just to begtn a very long
Ji st.
There are two key sets of questions behtnd thts thought. Would
Clinton do 11~ Would liberals let
him do it? I think Clinton could if
he wants to. It could both save his
pres idency, and set a better direc tion for Amenca.
But what about the Republi -.
cans? Would lhey play ball? The
temptation, among the GO~ parti sans, would be to say we ve g?t
Cli nton on th e ropes and let . s
stym re htm everywhere. Then •. m
1996, we gettt all - conservattve
government tn the Congress and
the prestdency.
.
That would be tcmptmg. And
probably fooli sh. Wtll Marshall,
president of lite ProgressiVe Polley
Institute (a centrist Democratic
think tank), is co ncerned that
Republican gains "might not yield
cohabitation but obstructionism."
Congressional expert Norman Ornstein of the Ameri can Enterprise
Institute says that is indeed a possible scenario, but it would be "selfdestructive'' for the GOP, as voters
began to understand what was happening.
Politics plays strange tricks. It
may be that afler the midterm elections, the burden of proof about
breaking gridlock in a tough and
sensible way will be as much on
the Republicans as on Bill Clinton
and the Pemocrats.
Ben W~ttenberg, a senior rei·
low at the American Enterprise
Institute, is the host of the weekly
public telnision program,
"Think Tank".
(For inrormation on how to
communicate electronically with
tbis columnist and others, con·
tact America Online by calling 1800-827-6364, ext. 8317.)

Single moms: Beware of backward judges
student, like Ireland - than any of
the successful working mothers I
know now.
Here' s the sec ond kick in the

Sarah Overstreet
collective mommy hiney : Judge
Cashen awarded the child to her
father primarily because the
father's mother will be able to care
fur the girl at home. Ireland hired a
licensed day-care provider who
cares for her own children and
three others.
The assumption that a child will
automatically be better cared for by
its grandmother in her home , than
in an adequate day-care facility, is
absund. While my mother worked, I
was cared for by neighbors with
children and a couple of wonderful,
older teen-age girls. I loved it and
thrived.
New York Times columnist
Anna Quindlen, herself a successful working molher, calls Cashen's
decision an "outrage." She quoted
a study by lite Families and Work
Institute finding that "children are
not more likely to be securely

attached to providers who are relatives than to non-nclativcs."
It's amazing how close to home
major news stories can come sometimes. A young woman I've been
close to for years, an honors sophomore with a scholarship, is preparing to bring her 3-year-old when
she goes off to college this fall.
During her freshman year her parents cared for the toddler, but this
year the girl believes the time is
right for her to assume major
responsibility for rearing her
daughter.
She has carefully planned and
budgeted both time and money .
She won't be participating in all the
activities she did last year, nor will
she have the social life she did.
She's grateful for her freshman
year's experiences, grateful for
what her parents have done for her,
but eager to bring up her own
daughter. She became pregnant by
a boy she loved when she was·
barely 15, and it has been a miraculous thing to watch this lovely
child/woman rear her child patiently and lovingly.
Yet even before Judge Cashen
struck, she and her parents worried

that the support which will help
pay for the child's care might bring
heartache: If the government ,goes
after the father to recoup some of
its expendinares for which the child
and mother arc eligible while the
mother goes to college, might he
seek custody so his mother can care
for the child and he won't have to
pay child support?
E"Cn though the father bas paid
no child SUP.port and his contact
with the chtld has dwindled to a
card and small gift at Christmas
and birthdays, would some judge
decide that a grandmother the child
doesn't know could do a better job
than its mother and a day-care
provider?
Is this the way we reward a single molher for going to college so
she can adequately provide for ber
child, rather than slaying on the
public dole so she doesn't risk it7
Sarah Overstreet is a syndi·
cated writer ror Newspaper
Enterprise Association.
(For information on bow to
communicate electronically witb
Ibis columnist and others, con·
tact America Online by calling 1·
800-827-63M, ext. 8317.'

Everybody's doing it

Berry•s World

opportunism.''

Indeed, demonizing the opposition seems to have become de
rigueur in the health-care debate,
with troubling portents for the
debate just gelling under way on
the House and Senate noors.
Clinton's critics have been at it

for months, accusing the president
of hatching a Big Government
takeover, of tryin~ to deny medical
choices to Amencans, of radical

NancyBenac
socialist leanings.
Both Clintons have responded
with new intensity in recent days.
Clinton told a crowd in Michigan over the weekend that "violent
extremist interests in this country ...
are trying to keep health care out of
the reach of ordinary American
working people."
.
First lady Hillary Rodham Clinton a day earlier decried "rightwin~ radacal idcolosues who don't

Today in history

~~
0 1184 by NEA. Inc

By Tbe Associated Press
.
Today is Thursday, Aug. II, the 223rd day of 1994. There are 142
days left in the year.
Today's highlight in history:
On Aug. 11, 1965, rioting and looting broke out in the predominandy
black Watts section of Los Angeles. In the week that followed, 34 people
were killed and more than 1,000 injured.
On this date:
In 1860, the nation's farst successful silver mill began operation near
VirginiaCity, Nev.
In 1909, the SOS distress signal was fli'St used by an American ship,
the Arapahoe, off Cape Hatteras, N.C.
In 1934, 60 years ago, the flfSl federal prisoners arrived at lite island
prison Akatraz m San Francisco Bay.
In 1942, during World War II, Vichy government official Pierre Laval
publicly dcx:lared that "the hour of liberation for France is the hour when
Germany wins the war.' '

think people should have health
care in America."
On Tuesday, she accused Sen.
Phil Gramm , R-Texas, of "ranting
and ravin~" and "political opportunism" m claiming that Democrat-backed bills would lead to
socialized medicine.
Do Clinton's critics really want
to deny medical care to sick kids7
Does the president really want
to engineer a socialist takeover of
your doctor's office7
Of course not.
But overheated rhetoric that vilifies the other side is inevitable
when the United States tackles an
issue with such huge social, politi, cal and financial implications.
"That's always been part of
American politics," says Henry
Graff, a presidential historian at
Columbia University. "Your enemies are scoundrels; your opponents are a combination between
Attila the Hun and the village
idiot."
In the short term, the combatants want to stir people up to push
Congress their way.
In the long run, their dire, overwrought predictions eventually will
be largely forgouen.
Graff said the ferocity of the
Clintons' lan~uage "tells us that
they are runnmg in 1996 already
and the stakes are enormous.''
That helps explain the intensity
of the opposition, as well.
Nonetheless, the sharp words
flying back and fonh do not bode
well for nmsnects of binartisan

compromise in Congress. ·
Kathleen Hall Jamieson, dean of
lite Annenberg School for Communication at the University of Pennsylvania, said it was troubling that
the practice of impugning the
opposition's motives had "migrated" from special interest groups'
TV ads into the broader public policy debate.
"The assumption that the other
side lacts good will and integrity
has been one of the disturbing
aspects," she said. "It creates
polarized positions in which com·
promise is not possible. It makes it
extremely difficult to create a
bipartisan consensus.''
Senate Republican leader Bob
Dole of Kansas, responding to
Clinton's accusations about violent
extremists, groused that the chance
of finding a solution ''would be
greater if tbe increasingly harsh
partisan rhetoric coming from the
White House and its allies would

s"\~'t the Wbite House apparendy
bas decided that !here is little 10 be
lost in attacking an opposition that ·
is itself so prone 10 lliiiCor.
"It's like Harry Truman said, if
they're going to keep telling lies
about me, I'm going to start telling
the truth about them," said Paul
Begala, a political consultant who
advises the White House.

Friday, Aug. 12

Associated Press.

Deputies probe accidental shooting

Accu -WeaU1er~ forcca&gt;t for daytime conditions and high temperatures

A 20-year-old Langsville man was treated for minor injuries following an accidental shooting Saturday nigh~ Meigs County Sheriff
James M. Soul sby reponed.
Kevin Berry Howard, son of Meigs County Commissioner Janet
Howart Tackett, was accidentally shot in the leg around 9:35 p.m.
while passing a handgun to his co usin, Josh Howard, at the cousi n' s
Couerill Road home. The .22-caliber bullet entered the leg and
lodged below the skin, a report stated.
No charges were ftled, Soulsby said.

MICH

IToledo I 83° I
IND.

4-year-old takes joy ride
A 4-year-old took a joy ride Wedne sday nigh t, causi ng light
damage to lite vehicle, accord in g to the Meigs County Sheriff' s
Department.
Jean Simms, Florida, parked her 19'11 Chevrolet Capri ni a
Chester Township driveway when the youth knocked the ve hi cle
out of gear and it ro lled backwards across Bissell Road and struc k a
fence post, records show.
No one was injured in lite accident.

•

Pomeroy man charged in theft

WVA

Ice

A Pomeroy man was charged with stealing a carburetor from a
FarmaU tractor in Reedsville, according to the Meigs County Sher·
iff s Depanment.
John Hawk, 24, Mulberry Avenue, allegedly lifted the carburetor
from the James Osborne farm on Partlow Road. After questioning
and giving conflicting statements, on Wednesday Hawk signed a
confession. reports staled.
Posting bond, Hawk is due to appear in the Meigs County Coun .

Sunny Pt Cloudy Cloudy
~ 1994 Acru-Wealtler, ll'lC.

Via Assooatod Pross C raph1csNat

Area man reports damaged window

Cool, damp weather dispels
expectations of 'dog days'
By The Associated Press
a.m.
What happened to !he dog days
Weather rorecast:
of August'
Today
... Showers likely and with
Forecasters say Ohio's wea ther
will be mostly cool and occasional- thunderstonm s possible north and
ly damp throu gh the nex t week. cen tral. Scattered shower s and
Exce pt for Sa lurday, wh en iL's thunderstorm s south . Highs in the
70s.
expected 1.0 be warm and humid .
Tonight...Considerablc cloudi Showers and thundcrstonns arc
ness.
Lows in the upper 50s and
likely both Satu rday and Sunday,
lower
60s.
Ll1 e Nauonal Wc.1ther Serv ice smrl.
Friday ... Partly cloudy. Highs 75
Temperatures will drop back into
th e 70s on Sunday and be the same to 85.
Edended forecast:
on Monday, when fair sk ies arc
Saturday
... A chance of showers
pred icted.
or
thunderstorms.
Highs in the 80s.
The rain today is expecLcd to
Lows
in
the
60s.
move out of the state overnight,
Sunday ... A chance of showers
lea ving a dry day on Friday.
and
thunderstorms. Highs in the
The record- high temperature for
thi s dale at th e Col umbus weather upper 70s to the mid 80s. Lows in
stat ion was 98 degrees in 1944 the 60s.
Monday ... Fair. Highs in the 70s.
while the reco rd low was 48 in
Lows
in the upper 50s and lower
1967. Sunset tonight will be at 8:35
60s.
p.m. and sunr ise Friday al 6:4 0

A Racine man reported a rock was thrown up from another ve hicle Wednesday, breaking his rearvicw glass window, according to
the Meigs County Sherifrs Department.
Roy Marshall , Racine, was driving east on State Route 124 when
the rock hit the glass in his 1994 Chevrolet pickup truck, reports
stated.

Man hurt in 4-wheeler accident
A Pomeroy man was injured recently whe~ a four-wheeler
nipped on top of him , according to the Meigs Cou nty Sheriff's
Department.
Roger Jeffers, 47, Highland Road, was riding on private propeny
when he was injured in the leg, back and face, reports stated.
Pomeroy and Middlepon squads responded to the scene.

Man faces probation hearing
A Middleport man was returned to Meigs County to answer pro·
bation violation charges in the Meigs County Coun of Common
Pleas, according to the Meigs County Sheriff's Department.
Ty Herman, Middleport, returned from Highland County Tuesday and remains in jail pending his hearing, records show.

(Continued from Page 1)
have chan?ed .
"They vc had a chance to see
mher states do it successfully . In
1989, they only had our word on it.
In 1994 , we can sho w them one
example after another," he said.
Giardini sa id he wanted up to
I 50,000 more names than the minimum number necessa ry . Extra
names arc needed to offset signatures challenged during checks of
petitions at county election boards.
Rick Lertzman, president of
Buckeye Extravaganza, said circulators had gathered more than the
minimum signatures required on
his petitions.
However, Lcnzman was unsure
if the petitions met the 44 -county
requirement. As a result, he said

(Continued rrom Page I)
cal Service) runs, Holzer (Medical
Center) admissions or Gallia County (Emergency Medical Service)
runs in the paper," Byer said in
support of the decision.
backers will hold on to the petitions
In addition, there have bee n
in anticipation of filing next year.
incidents where the name reported
"We're disappointed," Lertzwas not the name of the person
man said. "However, we can hold · treated or transported, Byer added.
these signatures. We have a large
"We strongly disagree with the
investment and we don't want to adoption of such a policy," said
lose that investment by pulling in
Wingett. "It is a t~xpayer-s uppon ­
something that has a chance to be ed service and ·.~~ maintain th e
in val idated. ' '
The Buckeye Extravaganza
amendment would authorize three
riverboat gambling pilot projects:
on the Grand River at Fairport Harbor, east of Cleveland; the Black
River in Loram, west of Cleveland;
and on the Ohio River at New
Richmond , east of Cincinnao.
Spitzer's amendment would permit as many as three casinos on the
Black River in Lorain.

Eastern Schools levy push ·
(Continued from Page 1)
from the loan fund and wants to
stay out of the fund . Because being
in the fund freezes improvements,
so much money must be dedicaled
to repay the debt, Minard said.
In other business, the board:
• approved changing the open
enrollment deadline from Aug. 15
to Oct. 7, Minard said.
Previously, since the deadli ne
was so early, students could not
transfer into Eastern if they didn't
like other schools. If students enroll
by Oct. 7. they can go to school
tuition-free. Last year, the dtstnct
lo st about $100,000 in formula
fund s due to students leaving the
district, Minard said.
• heard the superinlendenl spent
$1,4 20 to purchase a used Ohio
Department of Transportation van
for the district's maintenance .
• hired three teachers: Angela
McGuire, Chester Elementary

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 113-901)

(\Jblished every Bflerooo n, Monday U\rough
Friday, Ill Court St .. Pomeroy, Ohio by the

Ohio Vall~y Publishing Company/Multimedia
he ., Pomef'{:y, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992 -2156
Secon;J clasa postage paid at P&lt;lmeroy. Ohio.

Member: lbc AiiOCiatcd Preas, and the Ohio
Newspaper ASJociation, National Advutiling
Repreaentatil'e , Branham NewspJpet Sale&amp;,

1

733 Third Avenue, New York , New York
10017.
POSTMi\STER: Seod :Midrest changea.to The
Daily Sentinc:l, Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.
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SINGLE COPY
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Sublcrll)en aot deliriq to pay the _carrier ~y
remit io advance direct to The Daily SeDliael
011. • three, 511 Of 12 mDDlh bull. Credit wlll be
l)iveo carrier each week.
.
No IIJbiCriptlo,. by mall permitted 1D oreu
where home carrier llf'Vice i&amp;availabte.
Mall SuboajplkMu

lnaldoMe'-'Coun11

l; ~= ::·::::::::::::: ::::::::::::::::::::~Hi
~ ~:~:::~: : : : : : : .: ·: : : :·: : : : :::.:Ei:~

kindergarten; Tina. Kelley, Chester
Elementary disabled/handicapped;
and Kirk Reed, junior and senior
high social studies.
The resignations of substitute
teacher Mary Bush and Chester
Elementary head cook Sandy
Bowen were accepted. The board
hired the following non-paid assistant football coaches: Shawn Bush,
David Hawthorne, Roy McBriney,
John Sheets and Jared Ridenour.
• learned that Minard and the
district treasurer arc looking into
changin$ insurance carriers.
Nationwtde Insurance and other
brokers have been contacted,
Minard said.
• agreed to send at least one
board member to the Ohio School
Boards Association's Capitol Conference Nov. 14-16.
• finished work on a new sidewalk in front of the high school.
The district plans to end a
drainage problem at Chester Elementary that has lifted tiles in lite
school gym. The repairs could total
$3,000 to install a 50-foot cwb and
an inside drain to remove water.
The athletic boosters will pay for a
new fence at the end of the high
school parking lot to make ticket
collection easier, Minard added .
• made no motion on adjusting
the salary of three secretaries not
covered by the current conuact.
• set the next meeting for 6:30
p.m. Sept. 14 in the high school
library.

Announcements
No dinner tbis montb
There will be no evening dinners at the Senior Citizens Center
for the remainder of August, it was
announced today. The next dinner
wiU be held on Sept 8.
Southern players to practice
All seventh and eighth graders
interested in playing football for
Southern Junior High School are to
meet at 4 p.m. Monday at the high
school field. All those participating
need 10 bave physicals and medical
release forms prior to practicing.
For more information, students
may call Coach O'Brien at 9922381.

Mason County Fair
FRIDAY, AUG. 12
9 a.m . . Fa1r opens
I0 a.m. - Open Mason Co unty Youth Horse Show
II a.m. - Pet parade
1 p.m. - MasLcr market showmanship
I p.m.- Peda l tractor pull
2 p.m. · Oance contest
3 p.m .~ Baillie &amp; til\: Boys
4 p . m.~ Livestock sales
4:30p.m.· We -B-Clowns
5 p.m. · Pomt Pleasant High School Band Concert
7 p.m · Modilictl fi eld Wllk tractor pu ll
9p.m. · Baillie &amp; the Boys
II p.m · Gates c lnsc

Pomeroy mayor's court
The follov.·in g Gh l'\ were heard
John Ward, Mtdrlleport, 51 13 plus
in the Pomeroy ,\1al ur 's Cou rt of cos ts for public intoxicatton, S63
John Blacttnar Tu c'lia v.
plus costs fm Llllurc 10 comp ly;
Fi ned were: MtCh i1cl Mulford
and Rtchard Long , Pomeroy, $63
Pomeroy, $31 3 plu s cos ts ro; plus cosLs fur dismdcrl y rmnner.
rcsisung arrcSL , S&lt;i3 plus costs for
Forfen ctl "ere : Alberto A
disorderly conduct, S 11 3 plus costs Rodriguez, Pomeroy. S1.' l lor puh:
for public tnto.&lt;tcation. 52 13 .plu s lt c tn loxtclli o n: Robert Jam es,
costs for menacing threats; Michael Ractne, SK ' for no ope rator s
Porter, Pomeroy, S500 plu s costs license, SK1 lor failure to maintain
for •mpcrsona tmg a police olltcer; ' co ntrol; William Wam sley. Ga J.
Ronald Prtdemorc. Pomeroy, S63 lipolis, $K3 fnr m;.ccurc load; Denpl us costs for failure to comply; ver Fry, Ravenswood. W Va .. S6H
Raymond Ltt chftcld, Rutland, $63 for spe ed; and M. Jill Rcynolcls,
plus costs lor fai lu re to com pl y; Long Bonum, S66 for speed .

Middleport mayor's court
The following cases were heard
in the M1ddlcport Mayor' s Court of
Dewey Horton Tuesday.
Fin ed we re: Michael P. Mul ·
ford , Pomeroy, $200 plu s costs for
asS&lt;Jul t, $100 for menacing threats.
S 100 for disorderly manner; Larry
E. Powell, Middleport. $25 plu s
cos ts fo r runn in g a stop s ign ;
Avary E. Jeffries. West Columbia
W.Va., SID plus costs for expired
tags; Judy Freema n. Ma so n.

Dissolutions,
divorces filed

The following actions to end
marriage were recorded recently in
the Meigs County Common Pleas
Court of Judge Fred W. Crow lll:
Dissolutions asked - Jane
Johnson and Kenneth A. Johnson,
both oLPomeroy, Aug . 5; Terri
Lynn !Ones, Pomeroy, and Tony
Ray Jones, Olive Hill, Ky., Aug. 9;
Jesse Glen Barnhart Jr. and Dottie
M. Barnhart, both of Albany , Aug.

GALLIPOLIS - Ne t income
for Lhc second quarter of 1994 of
people have a right to know about Ohi o Vall ey Bane Co rp . wa s up
the squad runs."
$ 11 5,900 compared to the sa me
"We, like others, appreciate our quarter a year ago. Ohi o Vall ey
volunteers and the service they p ro ~ Bane Corp. is a one bank holdin g
vide, but this is not the issue . ll ts a company with Ohto Valley Bank
matter of the peop le's right to it s subs idi ary whi ch opera1cs
know," he added .
offices in Gallia. Jackson and Pike
"Publication of infonnation con- Counties in southern Ohio.
cerning emergency runs has always
Net income for the second quar·
been popular in The Daily Sentinel. ter of 1994 was $601,500 com·
We have already rece ived several pared to $485,600 in the seco nd
phone inquiries about their absence quarter of 1993. Net income per
from publication thi s week," he share was $.82 per share in the secsaid.
ond quarter of 1994 compared to
"The ques tion nee ds to be $.69 per share for the 1993 second
asked, " Byer said, "do you want quarter. The 23.8 percent increase
people to know you are not home? in net income and the 18.8 percent
Do you want your misery adver · increase in net income per share for
the current period was due primari ·
ti sed in the papcrT'
Byer urged people with ques- ly to improved net interest mcome
tions concerning the new policy to and a decrease in provision for loan
losses.
call him at 992-6617.
Net in come for the six month

'l'

period endmg June 30, 1994 was
$ 1,177,600 or S 1.62 per share com.
pared with $%9,900 or $ 1.37 per
share a year ago. This 21.4 percen t
increase in net income and 1H .2
perce nt increase in net income per
share was also due primarily Lo
rncreascd net tntcrest income and a
decrease in provision for loan losses. All earnings per share arc
adjusted for the stock split of April
27, 1994 . In 1993, the Bane Corp.
adopted FASB 109, "Accountin g
for Incom e Taxes." The required
adop tion was effec tive for fi sca l
years beginning after December 15
1992. This acco untin g c h a n g~
dec reased nel income in 1993 by
S74,600.
Sharcholders of the record dale
of July 25, 1994 have been mailed
a deposit notifica1ion or chec k of a
cash dividend of S.3R per share as
declared by ~1 e board of direc tor s
on June 14, 1994 .

KANAUGA DRIVE-IN
FRI., SAT., SUN.
TOMMY L£E JONES,
SUSAN SARANOON

9.

IN

Dissolution granted - Susan
M. Cummons and Jerry Lee Cummons, Aug. 8.
Divorces granted - Peggy D.
Pryor from Anthony C. Pryor, Aug.
5; Jcttie Jewell from Walter B.
Jewell Jr., Aug. 8; Hugh Mcllwraith and Velma L. Mcllwraith,
Aug. 8; Floyd T. Cummins from
Sandra E. Cummins, Aug 8.

THE CLIENT PG-13
AND
MACAULEY CULKIN, TED DANSON
ONE
ADMISSION 12.00
446-()923

IN

ETTING EVEN WITH DAD
U6-1088

IN IHE

IIMY-

Hospital news
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Wednesday admissions - none.
Wednesday discharge
Eleanor Blaettnar, Pomeroy.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Dlstbarges Aug . 10 Rebekah Tidrow, Jessica Willet,
Ronda Miller, Cindy Jones, Taylor
McGoon, Gwendolyn Carter.
Blrtbs - Mr. and Mrs. Terry
Brandau, son, Wellston; Mr. and
Mrs. Michael Craig, daughter, Bidwell; Mr. and Mrs. Donald Harden,
son, Oak Hill; Mr. and Mrs. Jackie
Northup, daughter, Gallipolis; Mr.
and Mrs. Clyde Rollins, daughter,
Leon W.Va

W.Va., SIOO plu s costs for disorderly man ner by into .&lt;ication;
Rtchard SLcwart, Micldlepon, $ 100
plus costs for di sord erl y manner;
and Darrell L. Craycraft. Cheshire,
$25 plu s cos ts for run ning stop
sign, $ 10 for left of ccnLer.
Forfeited were: Patnc ia Brown
Racine, $60 for improper back ing:
and J. Roy Jams , Cheshire. $64 for
dtsorderly manner.
·

OVB's second quarter
earnings post increase

EMS bans squad run news

Gambling initiative fails

Ouloldo Molp C.W.IJ

EDITOR'S NOTE - Naa,cy
Benac covers tbe Wblte Houe'
and healtb-care reform for Tbe

The Dally Sentln$1-Page-3

Local News in Brief:

OHIO Weather

GOP gains could help Clinton
There is grow ing conse nsus selves from the president.
among electto n experts that th e
Beyond that is the gene rally
Republicans will not only pick up accepted theory that the party out
seats in Cong ress this fall , but do of power picks up some scats in
so in bi g numbers. There is even
talk of Republicans actuall y capturBen Wattenberg
ing the Senate (they need a gai n of
7 seaLs) and of a slim chance of the
GOP ga ining majorit y contrq l of any event. And one rece nl poll
the House of Representative s for shows that, for the ftrst time in a
the ftrst time in 40 (1) years. (In the long ume. more Americans (by 46
House they would need a gain of percent to 45 percent) wou ld vote
for a Repuhlican than a Democrat
40 seats.)
The factors presented in the (USA Today/CNN/Gallup). Add to
landslide scenario arc many. There that the tdea that the most activ e
is, no doubt, a ferocious anti -Wash- part of th e electorate at thi s point
ington mood in a place that Wa&gt;h - seems to be the Religious Right, a
ingto n call s "out there ." Because bastion of Republican strength, and
more incumbents are .Democrats, parttcularly valuable in low turnout
this should help Repub licans. Pres- off-year elections.
Now, my sense is that this landident Clinton's approval ratings arc
low. and the drumbeat of Whitewa- slid e theory wil l probably prove
ter hearings on television tsn't overstated. Don't count on Bob
· hclptn g. Republi ca ns, naturally, Dole be ing the Majority Leader of
the Senate or Newt Gingri ch the
hope to " na tionalilc" or "Ciin - new Speaker of the House . (My,
tontze" the individual congressional races. Some Democratic candi - that sou nds strange to the car ... )
Still. there arc likelv to he soli d
clatcs arc already di stancing them-

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

irii~-

r-----"

NOW SMOWIMCI! ~

THE liTTlE RRICRU
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THE MRU
I
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The Daily Sentinel

Sports

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Cleveland, Chicago secure
'post-season' playoff berths

Thursday, August 11, 1994

Page-4

Bagwell suffers hand injury
in 3-1 Houston win; Reds lose

IIRF.\KS l 'P DOli!ILE PLAY -C incinnati's second baseman
llret Boone jumps over Los Angel&lt;·s' Tim Wallach after breaking
up a double pia)' in the fifth inning of Wed~esday n!ght'~ ga_me in
Riverfront Stadium. The Dodgers rallied m the nmth mnmg to
down the Reds . 6-J. fAP)

lly TOM WITHERS_
Associated Press Wnter
If there' s such a l.hing as a welltimed injury, Jeff Bagwell's gol
one.
Bagwell, the NL's lcadingMVP
candidate, broke a bone m h1s left
hand when he was hit by a pitch
Wednesday night in the Houston
Astros' 3-1 win over San Diego.
Bagwell, who broke the same
hand lasl season, will be sidelined
l.hree 10 live weeks - just in time
for l.he players' strike.
·'I hope l.he sucker lasts three to
five weeks, al least," Houston
manager Terry Collins said.
Bagwell, the majors' RBI leader, was struck by a pitch from
Andy Benes in lhe third innin~. He
left in the flflh inning after taking a
called third strike , and was taken to
a hospilal for X-rays.
When he got bac.k to the
Astrodome, his hand was in a split
10 protect a fracture in the fourl.h
metacarpal bone . Last year, he
fractured l.he fifth metacarpal bone
in l.he same hand.
"I can ' I believe this happened

Scoreboard
t\UICI

n;au

t..ca~;;Ut:

East Division
W
....... 70
..... tl3
.. .. . . .54
.. .... ... .54

Ntw York
Balumort
T oro nto
0011lm
Detroit

t.

41
49
bO

61
........ 53 61

PeL
.625
563

GO

7
17

.474
.470 17 lf2
.465

lH

Central Division
W
Chicago
.. .. ... . .67
Clcvel.md
..... .. .66
Kan~~ Gty
.... ... 64
Minnesota
........ 53
MLlwauk.te
... .. .. 52

L
46
41
51

Pel.
.S93

GB

.5 84
.557

I
4

60

.469

14

62

.4!i6 I~ 1(2

West Division

M____ Mw

L
PeL
... ... .52 62
456
.. . .51 62
451
.48 63
.432
California ..........47 68
409
Wednesd.ay'li Gamii'JI
Cleveland S, T oronl.o 3
Chic• go 2. Oakland 1
Deuoil4, Milwauka:: 0
Baltimore 8, New YoU I

Texas
OU.lar.d
Seatlle

CB
lfl
2 l(l

5 l fl

Minnesota 17, llOi!!llOO 7
Se.aule 3. Teus 2, 10 innings
Califomia l K.ansu City I
ThursdJy'l Games
TorontD (Hen·.gen 13-8) at New York
(Perez 9-4), 1:05 _r:m .
Milwaukc:c (Wegman 8-4) 11 Detroit
(Moore 11 ·10), I :15 p.m
BI)Stoo (Scle S-7) 11 Balumore
(Rhodes 3-5), 7 : 3~ p.m .
Scatlle (Johmon 12-6) a1 Oak.land
(Darling I 0- 10), 10:05 p m

Only gamCi
l' rlday's

~ehMuled

Game~

Toronto (Stewart7 -8) at New YoD;
(KamieniedU 8-6), 7:05p.m.
Milwaukee (Scanlan 2-6) at Cle••e\and (.\1artinez 11 · 6), 7:05p.m.
Cslifomia (Leftwich 5-10) al Detroit
(Gullicksoo 4-5). 7 :05pm.
Bostoo (Hesketh ll-5) 11 Baltimore
{Mussin• 16-5), 'l:3S p.m.
Minnac:u (Mahonca 9-5) 1t OUcago
(Pemtndez 11 -7), 8:05p.m.
Texas (Rogers 11 ·8) 11 KIJIIU City
(GubiC7.17 -9), 8:05p.m.
Seattle (fleming 7-11) at Oakland
(V•n Poppcl7 -10), 10:05 p.m.

National League
East Divi~ion
W
...... 74
Atlan1.1
...........67
NewYari
.. ..... 55
Philodelphi.o ....... .ll
florida
........... 51
Montreal

L
39
46
57
61
63

PeL
GO
.655
.593
7
.491 18W.
.46l ll 1/2
.447 23 lfl

Central Division
WL
.. 66 47

Cincinnati
HouslOO

. 66 48

Pittsburgh
SL Louis
Chicsgo

..... .52 61
........ .52 61
.........49 64

PeL
.584
.579
.460
.460
.434

GB

PeL

Chicago (F~tcr 3-4) It Lol Angeles
(Henru...-6-6),10:0l f .m.
S111 Franciaco (Swift 8-7) 1l Sm
D.C@O (Smdc:r1 4-8), I 0:05p.m.

GB

.504
478
3
.457 5 1(2
.397 12 1(2

Colorado
...... 53 6J
Ssn Diego
.. ...... 46 70
Wednesday'' Camca
San Francisco 5. 0\ic:ago 2
Monu-eal 4, Pituburgh {)
New York 6, Ptulade\phia 2
SL Louis 12. florid• 4
Los Angeles 6, Cincinnati 3
Howtal 3, San Diego 1
Colorado l , Atlanla 0, 6 inninga, rain
Thuraclay'a Games
Loa Ans.ela (Mirtincz 11 ·7) at

Cincinnati (Rijo 9-5), 12:35 p.m.
San Diego (Hamilton 8-6) 11 Houstoo

(Swindell 8-81, I :35 p.m.
Allanu. (Msddul 15-6) It Colorado
(Pa.intu 4-5), 5 :0S p.m
Sl Louis (fewklbw-y 12-10) at Aondl (Rapp 7-7), 7:35 p.m.
New York (hcone 4·3) It Phila del·
pltia (Valenzuela 1-2). 7:35p.m.
Montreal (Henry 8-2) 11 Pittsburgh

(ZSmith 9-81. 7:Jl p.m.
Only gama &amp;c:hedllled
friday's Camu
New Ycrl (Smilh4-10)atMonbW
(Hi1116-l), 7:3l p.m

IOI; Belle, Cleveland, 101; Fnnco,
Chiugo, 98; Sierra, Oakland, 92;

Canscco, Texu, 90.

.

lllTS-Lofton, Oeveland , 100, Molitor, ToronLO, 154; Belle, O~eland, 14~ ;
Thomu, Chicaao. 141; CKipken, Balu -_
more. !40; Knoblauch. Minne~ll, I 3~.
lhC'I'gl Cleveland, \39; PalmeltO, Bahtmore, \39; Puckeu, Minnesoll, 139.
DOUBL.ES- Knoblauch, Minn~cta.
4S; Belle., Clcvd.and, 3S; Thomu, Ollcago, 34; Fryman, Detroit, 34; Lorton,

TriRSICilona
BASEBAlL

American Lague
C HI C AGO WHITE SOX- Reu signed Steve Worrell and Tim Moore ,
pitchers, from Prince William oC the Carolina l...elgue to Birmingham of the Soulhcm League.
NEW YORK YANKEES--Optiooed
Sterling llitchcocl., pit.chcr, to Columbw
of lhe lnttrn~tiooal League.
KANSAS CITY ROYALS - Re leued Dan Rohnneier, outftelder, from
Mcmphil ol the Sou !hem Lc:asu&lt;:.
MINNESOTA TWINS- Optioned
Dsvc: Stcvcru, piu:her, lO Sail Lake City
or the Pacific Cout League.
TEXAS RANGERS - Op1ioned
James Hurat, pitcher, to Tulu or lhe
Tuu League.
Nallonal League
C INCINNA Tt REDS - Oplioned
Kevin Jarvis, pitcher, 10 lndian•pulili of
the Amcric1n Associ1tion . Cd1ed up Rob
Dibble, pilcher, from lndiatllpolil ..
NEW YORK METS - Opt10ned
Jcromy Bumitz. ootficlder. and Fernando
Vim. infielder. to Norfolk oflhe lntemal ional League . Ac1ivued Ke vin
Mc Reynolds, outfielder, snd Jeff McKnight, infielder, from the 15 -day disabl~
h~t.

t' OOTBALL

Nation• I Football Leaaue
CINCINNATI BENGALS - Waived
Donnell Johnson llld Chuck Bradley, of.
fc:nsive linemen; lake Kelchner, qua.rte.rback; Ryan Benjamin, NMing back; Elbe rt Turner, wide receiver , and Jc:y
Phillips, dcfmsivc: baclr. .
CLEVELAND BROWNS-Signed
Doug 011wsoo, guard.

DAllAS COWBOYS- Waived Ken
Harril, wide receiver.
.
KANSAS CITY CIDEFS- Wuved
David Treadwell, plac:ck.icker, and Ru.ss
McCullough, offenaive lineman. Stgncd
Tom Neville, guard, and Troy Ridgley,
defensive taclle.
LOS ANGElES RAIDERS- Waived
Rickey DU.on, defen~ive blck, lJld Jame~

Hill. rumina bod. R.-ol!&gt;'ed l.ala Ridley, defensive back, and Tim Rolhcr. de-

feruivc end.

MlAlwD OOLPl-DJ\S-Signcd Rmnie
WoolfOlk, linebacker, to alhru-year cootract.

lf2
\4
\4
17

West Division
--·---wW L
Us Angeles
.... .57 56
San Fnnc:isco .... .55 60

Jlowton {l--l.arnacll8·5) 1l Atlanu
(Mcrdcr9-4), 7:40p.m .
Phil1delphia (Munoz 7·5) al SL I..ouiJ
[f ewk&gt;bwy 12-t 01. I :3l p.m.
Cincinnati (Schcwt.k 7 -2) at Col·
ondo (H.uria 3-12), 9:05p.m.

NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS-Ac·
quircd Leroy Thompson, runntng baclr.,
from lhe Pittsbur~h Sleelers for future
considmtions. Rclin&lt;{Uished the righu to
Leonsrd Russell, runnms back .
IIOCKEY
Natlon•lllockey League
DALLAS STARS - Receiv«&lt; Peter
Zeul, center, 1nd Grim Manh1U, right
wing, from Ute Toronto Maple Leafs as
compensation for 1igning Mike Crug,
right wing.
FLORIDA PANTHERS - Signed
Bob Boughner, defenaeman, 10 1 multi )'CU C:Ofllr.ICI .

PrJTSBURGII PENGUINS-Signed
Joe Ozicdric, left wing.
VANCOUVER CANUCKS-An·
nounced lh1t Pst Quinn, prcaidcnt snd

general manager, will relinquish his duLica
u coach. Named Rid Ley c01och.

Leaders
AMERICAN LEAGUE
BATTING-O'Neill, New York,
.364; Belle, Clevebnd, . 357; Thomu,
Chicago, .353; Lofton, Ocvelsnd, .349;
Molitor, Toronto, .344; Boggs, New
York, .341; wam. TeUI, .329.
RUNS -Thomu, Chietgo, 106;
Lofton, Oeveland, lOS; Griffey Jr, Seattle, 92; Belle, Cleveland, 90; Phillip&amp;, DctroiL, 90; Canseco, Teus, 88; Knoblauch,

Minne.sou, 85; Molitor, Toronto, 85.
RBJ - PuckeU, Minnesota, 112;
Carter, Toronto, 102; Thoma&amp;, Chic1go,

Clevela nd , 32; Bu:rga, Cleveland, 32;
P1lmeiro, Baltimore, 32; Puc.kea, Min·
nesou, 32.
TRIPLES- Uohnaoo, Oticago, 14;
Coleman, Kanua City, 12; I..dttJn. Onoland, 9; ADiu:, Milwaukee, 7; McRae,
Kamas City, 6; Polonit, New Yorlr., 6;
White, Toronto, 6.
HOME RlJNS---Oriffey Jr, SestUe,

39; Thomu, Chicago, 38; Bcl.lc. Clcv~
land, 36; Ct.n~cco, Te.tu, 31; Fieldc, Do-

21; MVauglm, Bottm, 26; Csrter,
Toronto, 26; CDavia, Califc:mia, 26.
STOLEN BASES - Lofton, Clcve hnd, 60; Coleman, K1n111 City, 50;
Nixon, Bonoo, 42; Knoblauch, Minn~
ta, J!i; ByAndenon, Bahimore, 31;
ACole, Minnesota, 29; McRae, K.Jnau
City, 28.
PITCI-ONG (12 Deeitions)-Bere,
Chicago, 12·2, .851, 3.81; Key, New
York, 11-4, .810, 3.21; MC!trk, Cleveland, 11·3, .786, 3.82; Mussina, Dalt.i·
more, 16·5, .762, 3.06; Cone, K.1nn1
Ci ty , 16·!1, ,762, 2.94 ; MPcrCJ:, New
lrOit.,

Yort, 9-4, .692. 4.03; McDondd, Ballimon:, 14-7, .667, 4.06; RJduuoo, Seattle,
Wegm~n,

12-ti . .6fil. 3.31;

Milw•ukcc, 8·

4, .667, 4 .35; Sandenon, Chicago, 8-4,

667,l.09.
STRIKEOUTS-RJohnson, Scau.le,
189; Clcmau, Boat.oo, 168; Finley, Cali·
fomi1, 141; Appier, K.anau City, 145;
Hentgen, Toronto, 143; Cone, K.anna
City, 132; Bcrc, OUe~go, 127; IMcDow·
ell. Chicago, 127.
SA VES-LeSmith. B•ltimore, 33;
MonLgomery, K.an&amp;u City, 21; Apilcn,
Minncaou, 23; EQ:cnley, Oakland, 19;
Ayal1, Seattle., 18; Hall, To101no, 17; Fc:t·
ten, Milwaukee, 17; Ruutll, Ocvcland,

Howard's single off lsmacl Valdes
(3-1 ). The Reds were 50-0 when
they led after e1ght mnmgs.
Karros hit his 14th homer off
Jeff Brantley (6-6). and Raul Mondc si followed with a triple. Dave
Hanson's pinch -s ingle off Chuck
McElroy pu l the Dodgers ahead,
and Los Angeles pulled away on
[lrcll Butl er's RBI double and
Dclino DeShields' run-scoring sin gle.
Todd Worrell pitched the ninth
for his l ith save.
Rockies I, Draves 0, 6 innings,

The Mets rallied in l.hc eighth
with a two-out rally off David West
(4-10).
Expos 4, Pirates 0
AI Pittsburgh, Pedro Martinez
beat Piusburgh quickly and quietly,
pitching six -hit ball over 8 2-3
innings.
Marqui s Grissom homered to
start a three-run third inning.
Martinez (11 -5), involved in
two previous brushhack incidents
against Piusburgh, benefit ed from
three double plays in l.he first five
innings w win hi s fifth consecutive
start.
Moi ses Alou went 4-for-5 and
drove in two runs for the Expos.
Denny Neagle ('1-10) gave up
eight hits and three runs in five
innings.
Dodgns 6, Reds 3
At Cincinnati, Eric Karros' leadoff homer sparked a four-run ninth
inning rally that cndeC: Cincinnmi 's
late -inning invmcibilily.
The Dodgers rallied after
Cincinnati took a 3-2 lead in the
bonom of the ei£hth on Thomas

AVOIDS TAG . Cleveland's Kenny Lofton dives back to first
base before the late tag of Toronto's John Oierud during Wednesday night's action in Toronto. Tbe Indians won, 5-3. (AP)

rain

AI Denver, Kevin Ritz and
Steve Reed comb1ned to shu! out
Atlanta through six innings and the
Rock1cs earned their first home win
ever against the Braves.
Dante Bichcuc doubled in the
game's only run off Tom Glavine
(13-9).
Despite struggling, Ritz (5-6)
hlankcd Atlanta lor 5 2-3 iMings,
allowing six h111 with five walks
and six strikeouts.

Regular baseball
season to end after
tonight's games
NEW YORK (AP) - Base ball's most exciting season in years
will almost certainly come to a halt
after tonight's games.
Talks between players and owners broke off Wednesday and no
further meetings were scheduled
before Friday's strike deadline.
Management negotiator Richard
Ravioch still insists on a salary cap,
311d union head Donald Fehr says
players never will accept one.
"We will continue to hope that
maybe, as Don put it in l.he meeting, l.hat lif$hlning will strike and
one of us will have a good idea that
can bridge this gap in the next dayand-a-half, " Ravitch said after a 2
1/2-hour meeting . ' 'I'm not opti-

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Mitchell, Cincinn1ti, .327; Jcffcricl, St.

Low., .32l: Piau.a. Loo Anaclco, .322:
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RUNS-Baswell, Houuon, 104;
Gria10m, MOiltreal, 96&gt; BOild., S~n Frv~ ­
cisco, 89; Lankford, SL Louia, 81; Biqio,
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HITS - TGwynn, San Dieao, 162;
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Bondi, San Fnnciaco, 37; McGriff, At·

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Fehr, saying the atmosphere
reminds him of the 50-day strike of
1981, was even more gloomy.
"At this point. I see no reason
to believe anything of significance
will occur today or any time
soon," Fehr said. "Nol.hing else is
scheduled."
Even before Wednesday night's
games, Cincinnat1 Reds players
already were wearing T-shirts l.hat
said: "On Strike."
A walkout would imperil the
final 52 days and 668 games of l.he
regular season. And it would
threaten the World Series, which
has been played annually since
1905.
"Of course the siruation is distressing, no question about it,"
executive council chairman Bud
Selig said in Milwaukee. ''I'm still
very much a fan at heart. But we
are where we are because we have
economic problems that should
have been resolved long ago but
were ignored or repressed.' '
· Both sides spoke as if baseball's
eighth work stoppage since 1972
already had begun, but neither was
willing to predict when talks would
resume or when the $1.8 billion-aYC!U industry would restart.
'"A strike isn't the end of the
prOcess- it's lhe midpoint," Ravitch said.
-Fehr said there wasn't any
neeessity 10 have additional negotiations right now.
· "There's no reason to have a
mee)ing just to say you had a meeting," he said.
With no progress at the table,
players made plans 10 go home Friday in what would be the fust midseason interruption of baseball
since a two-day strike in 1985.
Some clubs that are off today said
they wouldn't uavello the sites of
Friday's games.
Dodgers manager Tommy
Lasorda gave his end-of-season
speech after Los Angeles bea:
Cincinnati 6.. Wednesday night
"He just thanked us for pulbng

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17.

Sports briefs
HOCKEY
British
VANCOUVER ,
Columbia (AP) ~ Vancouver president and general manager Pat
Quinn, stressing he wanted to give
more allention 10 his front-office
jobs, has stepped down as coach of
Canucks and handed the position to
assistant Rick Ley.
This season Quinn led the
Canucks to the Stanley Cup final s,
where they lost in seven games to
the New York Rangers. He was
hired as the Canucks' general manager and president in 1987. and
appointed himself coach during the
middle of the 1990-9! season,
replacing Bob McCammon.
TENNIS
MASON. Ohio (AP)- Topseeded Sergi Bruguera and Boris
Becker advanced in the $1.72 million ATP Championship.
Becker beat Cristiano Caratti 76 (10-8). 6-3 in a second-round
match, and Bruguera defeated
Andrei Cherkasov 6-1, 2-6, 6-1.

to me two years in a row," said
Bagwell. ''I'm going for all 10 fin gers and a couple of toes."
Steve Finley homered and Darryl Kile (9 -6) pitched six strong
innings to lead the Astros within
one-half game of first-place
Cincinnati in l.he NL Central. The
Reds lost 6-3 to Los Angeles.
Benes (6-14), who hit Bagwell
with a fastball, was upset to hear of
the severity of the injury.
.Tony Gwynn went 1-for-4 with
a single for San Diego and is batting .391 .
Finley, who missed Tuesday's
game with the flu, broke a 1-1 tie
in the fifth with his 12th homer.
Elsewhere in the National
League, it was : San Francisco 5,
Chicago 2; SL Louis 12, Rorida 4;
New York 6, Philadelphia 2; Montreal 4, Pittsburgh 0; Los Angeles
6, Chicago 3; and Colorado I ,
Atlanta 0 in a rain-shortened game.
Giants S, Cubs 2
At Chicago, Man Williams.
whose chase of Roger Maris' home
run record is Jeopardized by the
pending strike, hit No. 43 and
added a two-run double for the
Giants.
Williams, ending a 1-for-12
slump, drove a pitch from Willie
Banks (8-12) over the wall in rightcenter leading off the second.
William VanLandingham (8-2)
won his fifth decision in six outings.
Cardinals 12, Marlins 4
At Miami, Omar Olivares
pitched seven innings and hit his
l.hird career homer.
Tom Pagnozzi hit a two -r un
homer and Olivares followed with
a solo horner in the sixth inning to
knock out Dave Weathers (8-12).
Olivares (3-4), who had a 10.54
ERA in his past four outings,
allowed nine hils and four runs,
three earned.
Ray Lankford had l.hree of the
Cardinals' 14 hits. including a
bases-loaded triple. Ozzie Smith
added four hilS and two RB!s.
Mets 6, Phillies 2
At Philadelphia, Joe Orsulak
singled in the go-ahead run in a
three-run eighl.h-inning rally to lead
Bret Saberhagen and the Mets.
Saberhagen (14-4) allowed one
run and six hits in 7 1-3 innings.
John Franco pilehed the final I 2-3
innings for his NL-leading 30th
save.

1·800·837·8217

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-5

~

I ot It&gt;

' .....
~

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Shadow roll )&gt;JOn Wednesday
night's feature at Scioto Downs.
pacing the mile in I :59 and paying
$24.40,$7.40 and $8.
Royal Success finished second,
returning $4.60 and $4.20 and
third-place J D's Scandal paid
$6.20.
A crowd of 2,668 wagered
$220,386.

him in the position he' s in, manag er of the first -place club in th e
West." Dodgers first baseman Eric
Karras said. "Hopefully we'll hear
another farewell speech this year.''
The Reds moved up the
timetable for their team picture by
several weeks, snapping it Wednesday. Player representatives 10ld
teammates not to work out during a
strike.
"The best thing to do is just lo
gel away and realistically nol prepare to play," California Angels
pi ocher Mark Langston said.
Teams prepared, too. The Texas
Rangers said their 150 fuli-11me
employees would have their pay
cut 10 percent starting Sept I if the
strike is still on. The cuts could rise
to 15 percent, team spokesman
John Blake said.
Nothing new was said during
the bargaining session, ·auended by
a dozen players from the Baltimore
Orioles, New York Yankees and
Philadelphia Phillies. Lawyers
involved in l.he talks said Yankees
pitcher Steve Howe and Phillies
pitcher Cun Schilling gal into l.he
most heated exchanges, challenging management lawyers who insist
the industry is losing money.
Players dispute management's
contention l.hat a minimum of 12to-14 teams are losing money.
"Make no mistake, this is primarily a dispute between the own. ers," Fehr said. "The large-market
owners and small-market owners
could not agree on how to change
their agreements, so they agreed to
lake it from l.he players."

- Sports briefsBOXING
WEST PAITERSON, NJ (AP)
-George Foreman's scheduled
fight with Michael Moorer for the
WBA and IBF heavyweight championships is off because l.he WBA
refused to sanction the fight, promotcr Dan Duva said.
Duva said the WBA would strip
Michael Moorer of his title even if
he fought l.he 45-year-old Foreman
only for the IBF title.
Foreman and Moorer were
scheduled to fight for bol.h belts on
Nov. 5.
TRACK AND F1ELD
HELSINKI, Finland (AP)Sonia O'Sullivan, a former Villanova runner from Ireland, easily
won the women's 3,000 meters at
l.he European Championships
O'Sullivan won her first European tille in 8 minutes, 31.84 seconds.
Also, Russia's Lyubov Gurina
became the oldest female gold
medalist ever in the European
Championships by winning the
women's 800 meters.
Gurina. 37, beat Natalya
Dukhnova of Belarus in a photofinish, both clocking I:58.55.
GOLF
HOT SPRINGS, Va. (AP) Defending champion Jill McGill
posted a pair of 3-and-2 victories al
the 94th U.S. Women's Amateur lo
advance to 1oday's round of 16
against England's Lisa Walton.

By MIKE FLAM
Associated Press Writer
If the regular season docs not
resume after a players· Sirike. the
Chicago White Sox probably won 't
mind. The same goes for the Cleveland Indians.
The Texas Rangers may not be
quite so happy .
Both l.hc White Sox and Indians
won Wednesday to ensure themselves of spots in the expanded
playoffs should the remainder ol
the regular season be canceled.
Chicago's 2- I win over Oakland
gave the Whi te Sox a one -game
lead over Cleveland in the AL Central, a margin Ihal can'I be closed
before a strike because bol.h learns
have today off.
Texas, meanwhile, lost a chance
10 "clinch" th e AL West when
Seattle heat the Rangers 3-2 in 10
innings. Texas is only one-half
game ahead of the Oakland Al.hielics, who play Scallle wnighl in the
last game before the players·
planned walkout.
A viclOry would pul the Al.hlelics in a tie with Texas, which also
is off today.
"We knew Cleveland won, and
we knew we had 10 win," Chicago's Jason Bere said. "We knew
Oakland was going 10 play us
tough because they're in a race
wil.h Texas. We knew what was al
slake."
Though Chicago's win locked
the Indians in second place, they
clinched the wild-card spot wil.h a
5-3 victory over Toronto.
"We played like it was the last
game,pf the season," said Cleveland's -Dennis Martinez, Friday's
scheduled starter. "But I'm going
to keep in shape in case we come

Lofton stole his 59th and 60th
bases for Cleveland.
Juan Guzman (12-11) fell to 0-3
against the Indians l.his season after
going 6-0 against them in his first
three seasons.
White Sox 2, Athletics I
AI Oakland, Julio Franco drove
in Chicago 's fir&lt;:r run :lnrl &lt;:ro rrd

the go-ahead run on a wild pitch
from Steve Ontiveros 111 the founh
1nnmg.

Bere (12-2), who hasn ' t lo st
since June 18, went 5 2-3 innin gs.
p11ching with runners on base in
every inning butl.hc lirsl.
Ontiveros (6-4) pitched a fivehiLLer, but continued 10 suffer from
lack of run support. In his six starts
smce the AII-Sk1r break, Oakland
has scored just 17 runs.
Mariners 3, Rangers 2, 10
innings
At Ar lington, Mike Blow ers
homered in the lop of the I Oth on a
2-0 pitch from Tom Henke (3-6). II
was his ninth homer of the year.
Bill Risley (9-6) pitched I 1-3
innings of scoreless relie f and
Hohhy Ayala pitched the lOth for
his 18th save.
Tigers 4, Brewers 0
At Detroit, David Wells (5-7)
pitched a three-hiuer for hi s fir st
career shuto1H and fifl.h complete
game this season, and Cecil Fielder
drove in two runs.
Wells' previous low-hit game
was a five-hiller. He set a team
high wllh eight strikeouts and
retired 15 straight baners at one
point until Greg Vaughn hit a two out single in the ninth inning.
Milwaukee's Ricky Bones (109) is 0-3 in three starts at Tiger Stadium.
Orioles
8, Yankees I
back."
AI
New
York, Rafael Palmeiro
In other AL action, Detroit beat
drove
in
five
runs with four hits as
Milwaukee 4-0; Baltimore routed
New York 8-1; Minnesota crushed · Baltimore routed Jimmy Key (17Boston 17-7; and California nipped 4).
Palmeiro had two singles, a twoKansas City 2-1.
run
double and a three-run homer
Indians 5, Blue Jays 3
while
Ben McDonald (14-7) held
At Toronto, Jason Grimsley (5New
York
to five hits. He struck
2) won for the fourth time in five
out
two
and
didn't walk a bauer in
starts, allowing seven hilS and two
7
1-3
innings
before leaving with a
runs over six innings.
mild
cramp
in
his right forearm.
Jim Thome had three hits, Omar
Twins
17,
Red
Sox 7
Vizquel scored twice and Kenny
AI Minneapolis, Kirby Puckell

Broadcast outlets
scurry for alternatives
By THOMAS J. SHEERAN
Associated Press Writer
'If the boys of summer strike it
could lead to reruns of autumn for
Cincinnati
Reds and
Cleveland
radio and television
stations
where
Indians baseball is a staple for fans .
The extensive broadcast networks of the Reds and Indians
stretch across Ohio and into nine
other states.
If the strike occurs as scheduled
Friday, some stations will use the
first programming gap for special
reports on the walkout and the
respective teams.
An extended strike could wipe
out the chance for an Interstate 71
World Series. The Reds are in first
place in the National League Central Division and Cleveland is one
game behind the Chicago White
Sox for l.he American League Central Division lead.
SportsChanncl, a cable TV network that broadcasts l.hc Indians in
northern Ohio and Reds in southern
Ohio, plans to replace baseball with
tennis, auto racing and soccer.
SportsChannel serves 2.5 million households in Ohio and part~
of New York, Pennsylvania, West
Virginia, North Carolina, Tennessee, Kentucky and Indiana.
"In the summertime it's our
marquee programming,'· said
David Kline, vice president and
general manager of l.he Clevelandbased network. "The pro teams arc
the backbone of any regional sports
network."
WLWT-TV in Cincinnati,
which has broadcast Reds games
for 35 years •. could miss 14 night
games and will return to NBC's
regular prime time lineup in the
event of a watkoul
The Reds' flagship radio station,
WLW-AM, will replace baseball
with expan«l,ed ESPN radio and
replays of not'!lb!e past Reds games,
including the final game of the
1990 World Series in which the
Reds beat.the Oakland Athletics.

The Reds' radio network
includes more than 70 sta11ons _111
Ohio, West Vlfgm1a, Vlfgm.'a·
Indiana, KentuckY, North Carolma

singl e 10 open the ninth off Tom
Gordon (II- 7) and Bo Jackson singlee!. Both runners advanced on
Go rdon's wild pickoff throw and
J.T. Snow was intentionally
walked.
Bi ll y Brewer ca me on to strike
ou1 pi nch-hiller Rex Hudler before
Di S;~rcina greeted Rusty Meacham
with his third hi I of the game.
Chuck Finley ( 10-10) scanered
eigh t hits in h1 s seventh complete
game.

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

•

-

DISPLAYS SIGN- Thirteen-year-old Jordan Marsh holds up
a sign carrying a message for the Colorado Rockies and Atlanta
Braves as the two teams squared off in Denver's Mile High Stadium Wednesday, one day before the strike deadline set by major
teague baseball players. (AP)

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Thistledown results
NORTH RANDALL, Ohio
(AP) - Rachele's Princess won
lhe $9.000 Rination Purse at Thislledown on Wednesday.
Rachele' s Princess, ridden by
Rodrigo Madrigal Jr., was the
favorite 10 win the six-furlong race.
Nucella attempted a challenge with
a mild rally and passed Northern
Babette to fmish in second place.
The winner returned $3.60, $3
and $2.40, while Nucella paid $4
anct $2.60. Northern Babette finished in third place and returned
$2.60.
A crowd of 3,171 wagered
$465,995.

drove in seve n run s with a grand
slam and a three-run homer.
Puckeu tagged Scou Bankhead
(3-2) for his sixth ca reer grand
slam to stake Jim Deshaies (6-12)
to a big lead. Rich Rowland home red twice for Boston.
Angels 2, Royals I
AI Anaheim, Ca lif .. Gary D1S arc ina drove in both California
runs, in cludin g lhc game-winner
with a single in the ninth .
Tim Salmon beat out an infield

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�Page-e--&amp;6--The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, August 11, 1994

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Rwandan refugees protest extortion by peacekeepers
llv BRIAN MURPHY
ASsociated Press Writer
COMA, Zaire - Thousands of
Za irians demonstrated and set up
roadblocks thi s morning in downtow n Coma , say ing the y were fed
up wi th thieving so ldi ers sc nlto
hel p in the Rwandan refugee cns1s.
At lcaSI six tra cto r-trail ers
bnngmg rci!Cf supplieS to nearby
refugee camps were stranded at the
border becau se they were unab le to
navigate throu gh the makcsh1ft barricades.

Confusion
surrounds
nuke talks
GENEVA (AP) - High level nuclear talks between the
Ullltcd States and North Korea
hav e bee n throw n into un ce rtainty , apparently because of
liisaercc mcms over what to do

wllh~ 8.000 spent nuclear fuel
rods be ing held in Pyongyang.
Ch ief negotiators Robert L.
Ga llucci and Kang Sok Ju on
Wednesday abru ptly cancelled a
planned evemng session without
cxplanat•on and left further
ne gotiation s to techn1cal
experL&gt;.
The sessions would only
resume ··as warranted by the
results of working level discussions." according to the U.S.
mission.
The negotiations, which
started last Friday, are aimed at
oetting North Korea to open its
~ uclear facilities to fu ll international in spections. The U.S .
miss ion expects the talks to conclude by Friday evening.
Central to the talks are the
8,000 spent fuel rods .
Pvongyang says it needs to
b&lt;igin reprocessing them by the
end of the month before they
start to give off harmful radia tion. Western experts say reprocessing would leave North
Korea with enough plutonium
for five nuclear bombs.
The United States wants to
send a technical mission to help
the North Koreans prolong the
life of the rods, staving off the
need for reprocessing.
The down -grading of the
talks to expert level would seem
to imp! y the two sides had hit
serious problems in agreeing on
the terms of such a U.S . mis-

sion.

Some refu gee s joined in as
about 5,000 townspeople filled the
sueets, throwing rocks am! taunting
police after a Zairian soldier shot
and killed a local man who had
boen changing money on the black
market.
''T hrow the so ldi ers out ,''
protesters chanted as others carried
a wooden stretcher bearing th e
body of the man shot Wednesday
ni ght.
Demonstrators said they were
tired of robberies and extortion

comm itted by soldiers called to
Goma la st month to keep order
after nearly I million Rwandan war
refugees surged over the border
into th ei r commun ity, fleeing
advancing rebels .
The Hutu refugees are afraid the
Tutsi-led rebels. who now control
Rwanda, will reta liate for the massacre of up to 500.000 people ,
mainly Tutsis, by Hutu militias and
the Rwandan army since Apri l.
Soldiers ftred in the air at least
twi ce today to send the protesters

sca tt ering, but th e c rowds
regrouped eac h time . Demonstrators threw signposts, debris and
two-foot chunks of volcanic rock
onto a mile-long stretch of the main
road through town.
Goma has become increasmgly
tense since the refugees arrived in
mid -July. Most have been moved
to a half dozen camps miles away
from Goma. But thousand s of
refugees still live in traffic circles,
dborways and almost any other
ava•lable space the town of 80,000.

Soldiers have been stealing
goods and extorting money from
aid organizations, refugee s and
anyone else possible in the town
and at the airpon. They have been
seen helping themselves to relief
supplies unloaded from the 30 to
40 aid planes landing each day. .
Money also has become a sensitive issue as prices have soared and
the value of the Zairian curre ncy
ha s plummeted in the city now
flooded with dollars brought m by
aid workers, journalists and other

foreigners.
In an almost entirely dollar-driven economy, it now costs 2,000 of
the local notes, called the Zaire, to
buy a dollar, almost twice what it
cost last week. Refugees and others
who need Zairian money trade with
the black market money changers.
Meanwhile, in the largest of the
refugee camps, the United Nations
today suspended food distribution
because another man was beaten to
death in a melee that erupted while
food was be in g handed out

Gutted high school recalls 1960s raci~l _
unrest .
By DAN SEWELL
Associated Press Writer
.
WEDOWEE, Ala. -:- A while
pnnc•pal rarls agamst mterracml
dating. An arson ftre guts the h1gh
sc hool. Civil rights groups go on
the march and the Klan makes liS
presence known . Federal agents
and reporters flock to town.
,
Scenes from the Summer of 64
in the South are Wedowee's 1994.
·,
. 1h 1 b
A con fronta t1011
a . egan Sl
months ago over mterrnc•al couples
h · ked
h. h h 1
at .th e •g sc oo prom as Jer .
th1s sleepy Alabama town w1de
ak
aw., e. •
. bef her "e thbefore
R v.
, We ve thbeen
We ve seen rs
ore,
e e ·
Joseph Lowery , prcs•dent of the
Atlanta-based Southern Chnsllan
Leadership Conference, sa1d after
.
· h bl k
'd
d
mcetmg Wit
ac res•. ents a~

.· · · , . . · ·. . .
CIVIl nghts acuv•sts he•e..
."It ccrtamly sounds hke some thin g ,t,hathad h ap~e n cd •n ~~ e
1960s .. smd Pam Tray lor, 28. It
doesn I sound ~~~ e the Wedowee
where I grew up.
.
.
Ms. Traylor, who IS wh•~· was
among dozens of Randolph oumy
H•gh School alumn• whoi h~v e
stopped by the sch;rl srnce t th as
gutted early Satuhr 81Y· Mored ahn
20 funeral wreat s •e out.SI e t e
charred s.hell. 1
"We ve a way s gotten a 1ong
eat here," said Ms. Traylor, who
gr
b G
. h' h
teaches at a ncar y corg•a 1g
school. ·' This was something that
. 1mme.
was blown out o f proporuon
diatel ."
Wi~h refrains that ec ho the '60s,
other whites have blamed "outside
.
,
d th
d' f
.
agitators an
e me 13 or sur•

0 • J • hospitalized for illness

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Jailed his home wasn't immediately
double -murd er defe ndant O.J. returned.
Simpson was on a suicide watch
Simpson fell ill today and wa s
rushed to a hospital for reportedly during his first week in jail, but
for treatment of stomach pains , Martin said the hospitalization had
nothing to do with a suicide try.
authorities said.
Simpson left th e downtown
Men's Central Jail at 4:05a.m. and
was expected to return to his cell
later in the day, said sheriff's
Deputy Bill Martin . No details
were offered.
"Mr. Simpson was re moved
from County Jail this morning pursuant ib a court order. He is undergoing medical treatment at a local
hospital and is in the constant company of sheriff's security personnel," said Martin.
The name of the hospital wasn't
disclosed for security reasons, but a
source speaking on condition of
anonymity told The Associated
Press that Simpson was taken to
Cedars-Sinai Medical Center with
stomach pains.
The Sheriff's Department
referred calls to Simpson's attorney
Robert Shapiro. A message left at

rin civil unrest. Two-thirds of the
g . 800 ·d
h't
tow;osb Bu~~·. ~nt;c~~c~ 's ~·hool
administrator aud fri end ofembat ti ed
ex-principal
Hulond
Humph ries sa id opposition to
Humphries 's temm ed from local
county politics and had nothing to
do with race but was uickly
seized upon by,civil rights ~oups.
But leaders of the black protest
depi ct years of subtle discrimination and slights finally coming to a
head over Humphri es' threat 10
cancel the spring prom .to block
interracial dating One mrxed -race
·
student charged that Humphries
called her "a mistake"
· Supporters
of the 25-year principal say
Humphries' remarks were distorted
and that he was only trying to
avo,·d studerl' vr'olence
•
·
Many blacks were stunned when
the school board, with only one
black member, voted 111 March to
reinstate Humphries after a twoweek suspension.
The SCLC and the Ku Klux
Klan both had planned demonstrations at the high school Saturday,
before the fire struck.

Lowery sa1d Wedow ee rsn t
unique, that th ere are other scattered outposts barely touched by
the civi l rightsadvancemcntsofthe
1960s, when the brutal Freedom
Summer of 1964 and th e Bloody
Sunday of !965 spurred passage of
the Civ il Rights Acts and the Voting Rights Act.
The sc hool board on Monday
voted unanimously to reass ign
Humphrie s to an admini strative
.
post, appomt a black woman to a
new assistant principal position and
.
.
fmd oth er way s to •mprove race
relaoons.
Th e move ca me three days
before a hcanng on a Ju st•ce
Department complaint again~t
Humphries and the school systems
treatment of mmontles. The hearmg was canceled and u1e s•des Will
negotiate to try to avoid a trial.
But pro.t.est leaders , wh~.Iast
spnng ran Freedom Schools for

black students boycottmg the h•gh
school, rcmam wary. Lowery smtl
they want to"see the fine print."
Humphne s 111 the pa st wa s
acc used of having blacks and
whites ride separate buses to vocationa! classes and disc_iplining
blacks more often than wh1tes.
He faces new legal probl ems
with a black television cameraman
who says Humphnes assaulted h1m
during Saturday's school fir e.
H
h · d · 't
ump nes emes 1 ·
ln ves t•gat ors
concluded
Wed da th h fi
nes_ y a1 t e ue was set.
Earlier, two female students
hed
. d f d ra1 ·
·
watc . state an e e mvcsllgators ds1ft through
the
d b
h ·debns . They
·
won ere a out t Clf upcommg
seniOr year, i•kely to be s p~nt Ill
mobrle classrooms. and where the
Homecomrng dance would be held.
"I ·
· h
h.
ld
,JUSt Wls ever7t mg wou .
stop, said Nikki 0 Neal , who IS
black.

As of September 1, 1994 the Pomeroy Health Care located
at 224 E. Main St. Pomeroy, Ohio will be closing. We
apologize for the inconvenience to our patients. We have
found it impractical to continue maintaining the Pomeroy
office due to harassments by a few local individuals. We
will continue providing full service at the Mason, WV. office.
I also at this lime want to thank the persons who have so
aggressively rebuked the terrible and untrue statements
regarding my practice, my. wife's selling of her pharmacy
corporation to Rite-aid and the like. Again terribly untrue
and cruel. We will look forward to the close relationship as
always with our friends and patients. And again we
apologize for the inconveniences.
All medical records will be forwarded to our Mason, WV.
office, located at:
Westmoreland Family Care Center
Rt. 1, Box 44-B
Mason, WV 25260
304-773-5333

Dr. Danny &amp; Kim Westmoreland

Thursday, August 11,1994

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-7

Waitress gets even with bad tipper by inappropriate behavior
' Ann
Landers
" 1994, Los Angeles
· nmcs Synd.ca1c and
'- Cr eetors Syndoc.atti

Dear Ann Landers: My husband
has lunch at a Chinese restaurant at
least once a week . He a! ways
includes me along with several
fellow workers. and the restaurant
is quite informaL
"Franlc" is not a great tipper, and I
often must remind him to leave
so mething for the waitress.
Sometimes he does, and sometimes

he doesn't Now and then, others in
our party will leave the tip.
This past week, Franlc received a
phone call from a fanner waitress at
this restawant rll call her "Beth."
Beth told Frank that while she was
still employed there, she saw Franlc's
waitress spit in his food before she
served him. Beth said she confronted
the waitress, who told her flat out
that Frank was a lousy tipper and it
was her way of "getting even."
When Beth repor1ed this waitress'
behavior to the manager, he said,
"What do you expect me to do?"
Beth was so upset, she called the
health deparunent and repor1ed it.
When the manager found out, he
ftred Beth. The health department

has yet to investigate the restawant
Both Frank and I are
dumbfounded Should Frank go back
to that restaurant and complain?
Doesn't a restaurant have to abide
by ceruun standards?
Frank is a very well -known
businessman, and I don't want to
bring undue ridicule on him because
he isn't a good Iippa. But I don't
think his failure to tip justifies such
abominable treatment What would
you do, Ann?-- STill. WASHING
OUT MY MOUTH IN FORT
WORTH, TEXAS
DEAR TEXAS: Firs~ I would not
return to a restaurant where I !mew
a waitress had spit in the food for
any reason whatsoever.

Second, I would call the owner

and intervene on behalf of Beth and who the author is. but I hope you
make an effort to get her job back. • will print it anyway . -- CARL IN

in ow everyctay living. I don'tlcnow

4. I will pursue a mission greater
than myself by making at least one
pelson happy that he or she saw me.

TAIWAN
DEAR CARL: I appreciate your
contribution. 'Thank you so much.
Here it is:

5. I will not tolerate self-pity,
gossip or negativism -- from myself
or from others.
Forget to savt! some of yow fa -

Third, I would infonn the owner
that I will not be dining in his
establishment as long as "The
Spiner" is on the premises.
Fourth, I would tell Frank that
from now on you will auend to the
lipping. Fifteen percent of the check
is considered good. If you want
excellent servire, go to 20 percent
Dear Ann Landers: I am a U.S.
citizen living in Taiwan. I read your
column every day in the China PosL
While going through my desk, I
came across something that might
interest your readers, since we all
need a lillie positive reinforcement

Now when calling from home you can save 10% on toll calls
within the 614 area highlighted on the map.•
Check your phone bilL You may be surprised at how much you're paying for some
calls from home. You'll probably be surprised to learn that you now have a way to save
on these calls. Now when you're calling from home, just dial 10-ATT first when making
a toll call within the 614 area, and you can save 10%.
DiallO-ATT + 1 + the nwnber as you usually do. It's that simple. You can dial
it right now. No need to sign up. No monthly fee.
If you have questions about whether or not 10-ATT applies to c:ans you ~ake, call
1 800-282-4212 ext. 80010. We'll let you know if you can start savmg 10% nght away.
AT&amp;T is bringing quality and savings even closer to home.
JUm'. Your lhle Voice:"

•s;1vc.' tOO-t. on h1 lb of S2~ or It::-;~ C:ompan~ to Ohio B&lt;.·lr, toll schcdult: B. Suhjt:d
f(J billin~ a\ailahility Not ;~v;~ilabltc' in M1. \.1-: mon. Fn:derickwwn, Danvi lle, Gambier.
Marunshur)J.. UliGJ, Homer. Jnd Cc nil'rhu~ :.tre a.'i. Promot1on ends IO/ j~/94 .

ATa.T

ANN LANDERS®

e

t99•, Creators Syndicate

Cops to petty &lt;?ffenders: The party .is over!
Police officers
enforce quality
of life on beat

QUALITY OF LIFE- New York City Police Lt. Bob McKe~na,
lower center, pours out an unidentilied mao's beer Saturday mght,
July 23, 1994 in New York's Greenwich ymag~. In the Village and
other neighborhoods throughout the c•ty thts summer, a fresh
army of beat cops is busy delivering a_stern message to peo~le who
drink, urinate and generally make nUisances of themselves rn pub·
lie: The party is over. (AP photo/L.M. Otero)

OU lists honor students
Thirty -two Meigs County student s were li sted on the spring
quarter dean's list, according to a
relea se from Ohio University
today.
To be named to the list, a stude nt must have earned a grade
point a"erage of 3.3 or better on a
sc;ll e of 4.0 for th e quarter and
have earned 16 hours of credit, 12
of which were taken for a letter
grade.
The students making the dean's
list were Michelle Winebrenner,
Racin e: Nancy Nally, Pomeroy:
Tonna Villamor, Shade: Shawn
Bu sh, Racine : Steven Barnett,
Reedsville: Susan Wolfe, Pomeroy:
Tanya Meadows, Portland: Cheryl
Pape, Syracuse: Robyn Stout, Syracuse; Lisa Day, Tuppers Plains.

Andrew Law. Lootvrlle: Sean
Mitchell, Coolville: Suzanne Clay,
Chester: Jennifer Stephan,
Coolville: Keith Spencer, Long
Bottom: Maurisa Nelson, Middleport: Robby Wyatt, Middleport:
Amy Warth, Pomeroy.
.
Bruce Maier, Pomeroy: Davrd
lhle, Racine: Heather Davenport,
Pomeroy: Jamey Holter, Racine:
Janelle Williams, Racine: Julie
Hill, Racine: Kathryn Ihle, Racine:
Kevin Tooker, Shade: Leigh Redovian, Pomeroy: Lori Stuart, Shade:
Mark Murphy, Reedsville; Melanei
Van Meter, Racine: and Michaella
Jones, Racine.
Jonathan Merritt of New Haven,
W. Va. was also made the dean's
list.

By TOM HAYS
Associated Press Writer
.
NEW YORK (AP) - Late Satwday night. Greenwich Village. A
1.5 liter bottle with a twist-off top
and a label reading "soft, luscious
red wine."
It was everything th e skinny ,
26-y ea r-o ld Harl e m man who
called himself "J. Rock" needed
for a good time. Surely, no cop
would bother interfering. Not in a
city that averages 2,000 murders a
year.
Rock was wrong.
As he walked up the avenue,
Officer James Patterson snatched
the wine bottle away in mid-swig
and slam-dunked it into a wastebasket.
"You don't drink in front of
me," Patterson bellowed. Rock
slunlc: off, muttering, "Damn."
In neighborhoods across New
York this summer, a fresh army of
beat cops is busy delivering a stem
message to people who drink, uri nate and generally make nuisances
of themselves in public: The party
is over.

The poli ce crackdown on socalled quality -of-life offenders is
geared to fulfill Mayor Rudolph
Giuliani's vision of a new civili ty
in a city not known for it s goo,d
manners.
During last fall's election campaign, Giuliani made an issue out
of ridding the city of "squeegee
people" - the often aggrcssi ve
panhandlers who wash windshields
of cars stuck in traffic .
Now Giuliani wants police to
target graffiti artists, prostitutes,
johns, winos, reckless bicy cli sts,
truants, noise polluters, sidewalk
book salesmen who block pedestri ans, homeless people who take up
residence in parks, and small-time
drug dealers and users.
In March, police launched a
pilot enforcement program in
Greenwich Village, the famed
haven of rebelliou s intellectuals
which in recent years has become
home to vagrants and rowdy barhoppers. Residents and shop owners welcomed the cleanup.
"When I came to the Village in
the '60s, there was no urinating in
public," said Honi Klein, direc tor
of the Village Alliance, a business
group . "Now they 're peeing on
brownstones.
"It's sounds corny, but we need
to start showing that we live in a
decent citv."

Anned with noise meters, night
visio n scopes and other new
devices, officers have cited more
than 2,300 minor offenders in
Greenwich Village since March .
Most were g ive n summon ses or
desk appearance tickets.
If they fail to pay fines or show
up in court on time, officers will
show up at their doors and arrest
them, police officials warn .
"It's not going to be just writing
a piece of paper so we can ge t a
stati sti c th at we did this," sa id
Polic e Co mmi ss ioner William
Bratton.
The logic behind the effort is
found in a 42-pagc police "s trategy" titled "Reclaiming the Public
Spaces of New York," which at
times reads lik e a soc iology term
paper.
Dec laring that "a decent soc•cty
is a society of civi lity ," the docu -

Entry forms are now available
for the 1994 Middlepon River Festival queen contest. The contest is
open to all single women from 1621 as of Sept. 17, who live in or
attend a Meigs County school.
The Middleport River Festival
will be held on Sept. I 7 and will
include a three-on-three basketball
tournament, singing groups and
crafts.
The 1994 queen will be
crowned at noon Sept. I 7 on the
stage, succeeding 1993 Queen
Penny Aeiker. The first meeting of
contestants will be at 2 p.m. Sunday at the Middleport Arts Council
on Second Avenue in Middleport.

KEYBOARD CLASS
A 15 hour course in keyboard ing will be offered through the
Adult Services Department of Gallia-Jackson -Vinton JVSD in
August and September. The course
will be held Wednesday evenings
from 6-9 p.m. on Aug. 31, Sept 7,
14, 21, and 28, at the Buckeye Hills
Career Center campus in Rio
Grande.
The course emphasizes proper
typmg techniques and is expecially
useful for novices or for those who
wish to increase their typing speed.
The course costs $35. Interested
persons may register by sending a
check or money order (made out to
Gallia-Jaclcson- Vinton JVSD) to:
Adult Services, Gallia-JacksonVinton JVSD, P.O. 130X 157, Rio
Grande, OH 45674.

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Entry forms are available at
Middleport businesses and from
quecn's committee members. 1-'or
more information, contact Merri
Amsbary at 992-4247 or Niese!
Gerard at 992-6736 or Penny Aeiker at992-2576.

LEGION POST
The Racine American Legion
Post 602 recently elected new officers. Paul Casci, Drew Webster
Post39, installed the new officers.
The officers are commander
Roger Hayman; flJ'St vice president
Jay Lance: second vice president'
Clarence Bradford; chaplain Don
Manuel; service offrcer Bill
Finkenbinder; sergeant at anns Pete
Bearhs; adjutant John Ray Hunnell;
treasurer Tom Diddle; trustees John
Stobart, Richard Gillbride and Tom
Wolfe,

· Dtak II' wal Jllml
Features hghled keypad and redtal
In grav. almond or wh11e '"g 2999 NJ !.I!Sr6o

CORRECTION
The name of the winner in the
pretty baby contest 0 to 3 months
reponed in the Sunday, Aug. 7 edition of the Sllllday Times-Sentinel
was misspelled. The correct
spelling is Shalin Comer.

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CARD SHOWER
A card shower will' be held for
Dorsa Parson in honor of his birthday Aug. 16. Cards may be sent to
Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilitation Center, 366759 Rocksprings
Rd., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

lP

33%11f

No limit!
Stock up!

PENNY AEIKER

--Society scrapbook
OUGRADUATES
Eight Meigs Coontians were
among the 2,364 students on the
Athens campus of Ohio University
who were candidates for degrees at
the end of spring quaner.
In the group were Carol Brewer,
Middleport, master of education:
Kevin Tooker, Shade, bachelor of
arts: Sharon Birch, Racine, bache·
lor of science in nursing ; Kyle
Davis, Pomeroy, bachelor of science in industrial technology:
Matthew Baker.Middleport, bachelor of science in sports science:
Arthur Roush, Racine', bachelor of
special studies; Max Blake,
Pomeroy, bachelor of science in
communications; and Melanie Van
Meter, bachelor of fine arts.

ment argues that signs of disorder
- graffiti, open cra ck dealing,
muSic blasting from crui sing cars,
aggressive panhandling - embolden more dangerous cri minals and
make law-abiding citizens prisoners in their own homes.
Research shows that "when the
level of publ ic order is low, the
level of VIOl ent crim e goes up ,"
sa•d Thomas Repetto, head of the
watchdog group Ci tizens Crime
Commission , and staunch advocate
of the plan.
Thanks to a recent hiring spree,
the department will number 32,000
officers by the end of the year big enough to fight crimes large
and small, Repetto said.
In the Village, where thousands
of visitors crowd the streets each
weeke nd, police say they'v e
reduced robberies by 50 percent the
first half of this year.

HARVEST

Contestants
sought for
pageant

Dial it and save.

vorite Ann Landers co/IUIIII..!? "Nuggets and Doozies" is the OIISWer.
Send a self-adJressed, long, bllSiness-size envelope and a check or
money order for $5 (rhi$ includes
postage and handling) to: Nuggets,
clo AM Landers, P.O. Box 11562,
Chicago. Ill. (1)61 UJ562. (In Canada, send $6.)

Five Votes of
Confidence
Today is a new day. Henre:
I. I refuse to be shackled by
yesterday's failures.
2. What I don't know I will no
longer allow to intimidate me. I will
instead view it as an opponunity.
3. I will not allow othess to defme
my mood, my method, my image or
my mission.

211~rM- 857

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ELIZABETH MONTGOMERY
Marine Lance Cpl. Elizabeth M.
Montgomery, daughter of Charles
E. and Chnstine Montgomery of
Crown City recently reponed ror
duty with Marine Aviauon Logistics Squadron 39, 3rd Marine Aircraft Wing, Marine Corps Air Station, Camp Pendleton, Calif.
She joined the Marine Corps in
July 1992

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1

�Thursday, August 11, 1994
Thursday, August 11,1994

Citadel woman undaunted by coif

.f

CITADEL CUT . Shannon Faulkner, second
from left, of Powderville, S.C., walks to the fed·
eral courthouse in Charleston, S.C., Wednesday,
Aug. 10, 1994 with her attorney, llob lllack, left,
her father Ed Faulk n er and attorney Val

Vojdik, right. A federal judge later ruled again
that the Citadel may shave her head when she
enrolls as its first woman cadet. (AP Photo/Lou
Krasky)

lly llRUCE SMITH
Associated Press Writer
CHARLESTON. S.C. (AP)Losing her long brown locks won' t
weaken Shannon Faulkner.
"I'm not backing out. The on ly
thing that can happen to keep me
out is a court stay." Ms . Faulkner
sa id Wednesday after a Judge ruled
for a second time that The Citadel
may Shave off her hair when she
becomes its first female cadet.
US . Di strict Jud ge C. Weston
Houck said there is no law barri ng
the all - m~li c mi litary sc hool lrom
g1v1ng Faulkner th e buzz cu t
required of all first-year cadets . He
ru led the same thing last week, but
was asked to reconsider
Ms . Faulkner, who fought in
co urt for 18 mon th s to jo1n the
corps, is ex pcct~d to receive the cut
when she reports on Monday.
"I have said before I will have

my head shaved," said Ms.
Faulkner, who admitted she
wouldn ' tlike it.
The Citadel argues the haircut
strips away indi viduality as cadets
begin life in the corps. But lawyers
for Ms. Faulkner and the J usuce
Department argued it would add to
her Jsolation as the lone woman m
the corps and doesn't mirror the
requirements for women in the military.
Houck orde red The Citadel last
month to admi t Ms. Faulkner into
the corps, rulin g its all -male admis·
sions policy unconsllt utional. The
school has asked the 4th U.S. Circui t Court of Appeals to block her
entrance.
The judge said there was no evidence Ms. Faulkner was in danger
of bei ng harmed or se xually
harassed . He also asked that U.S.
marshals make su re his order

Is urinary frequency abnormal in 5-year-old child?
lly PETER H. GOTT, M.D.
DEAR DR GOTT My 5-ycar·
old son has rcccn dv started fee ling
the need to urinate every half hour
and sometimes more duri ng waking
hour s. Unnalysis d1dn 't reveal
infection, and h1s pediatrician feels
he will outgrow the habit. In the
meantime, he's taking Ditropan to
desensitize the bladder. Are there
further tests I should have run by a
speciali st or is the pediatrician on
the right track?
.
DEAR READER: Some ch il dren do develop bladder spasms
that lead to frequent urination. The

ca use of this is unknown, but
Ditropan is appropriate medication
for the problem.
If. with in a few weeks, your
son's symptom has not improved
sig nifi can tl y or disappeared,
request a referral to a urologi st
because. in some cases, unnary
infections may not be evident during routine urine testing.
Also, some chi ldren with uri nary frequency suffer from inherit·
ed malformati ons of the urinary
sys tem, which can only be diagnosed by X-rays and other special

Doug las R. Daniel, regional
president for Star Bank. announces
that Tom Meadow s has accepted
the position of vice president of
commerc ial lending for Star Bank
in Gallia County.
Daniel said , "Meadows has a
vas t expe ri ence in co mmercial
lending, not only as a banker, but
also as a businessman." He added
he is glad to welcom~ Meadows
back to Gallia County. He IS more
than able to serve the credit needs
of the area," Daniel said.
Meadows said he is elated about
returning to Star Bank and being
able to serve the commercial needs
of community.
Meadows has been general man-

tests .
Final ly, make sure that the pediatrician checked your son's urinary
sugar: Diabetes, a common di sorde r, often causes frequent urination.
To give you more information, I
am sending you a free copy of my
Health Report "Kidney Disorders." Other readers who would
like a copy should send $2 plus a
long, self-addressed , stamped en velope to PO. Box 2433, New York,
NY !0!63. llc sure to mention the
till e.

DEAR DR . GOTT: I read your
recent article on res tless leg syndrome and fee l I may hav e an
answer for other sufferers - vitamin C tablets. One or two of these
provide relief every time for me. Is
there a placebo effect or does this
remedy really work?
DEAR READER: The cause of
restless legs is unknown. but the
affliction can be a torment for
unfortunate victims who experience uncontrollable twitching and
uneasiness in their legs night after
night.

·Since I mentioned thi s condition
in a previous col umn, I hav e
received scores of letters from
mterested readers. who suggested a
variety of "cures ," including
sleeping alone, using sweat pants at
night, taking calcium pills, eating
bananas or yogurt. avoiding caffeine-containing soda , using qui nine tablets or aspirin, taking vari·
ous prescription drugs and an overthe-counter compound called Legatrin.
All I can say is that true restless
legs sy ndrome docsn 't respand to

Older Ohioans need assisted living option

Meadows
accepts
banking
position

TOM MEADOWS
ager of Polan and Allied Realty for
the past year and a half. Before that
he was an officer at Star Bank and
vice president of Diversified Management Meadows has a Bachelor
of Arts and a Master of Ares
degree from Morehead State University

Older peop le often need some
assistance medical and otherwise.
to get along. Some whom are quite
frail need a nursmg home placement whicl1 can cost about $22,000
per year in Med icaid dollars.
For older Ohioans who do not
ne ed as much care as a nur si ng
home, the state has been designing
another op1ion called assisted living. In thi s progra m, people who
need some nurs ing care but not at
the same leve l as a nursing home
would live in their own apartments
in a center. This would reduce cost
about 30 percent or about
$! 5,400.00.
The state would pay for 1,300
people under a Med1 ca id waiver,
an d others who co uld afford so
would pay their own way. It was
originally hoped this new program
could begin July I.
Strong lobbying from the nursing home indu st ry temporarily
derailed this program when a provision was introduced in the House
which would have limited skilled

numng care in a&gt;S islcd- living centers which would have negated the
purpose of the program.
Now a co mmi ss ion will study
the iss ue a nd attempt to reach a
compromi se th at is acceptable to
all interes ted parties. Of co ur se,
what should be held uppermost in
mind is that all o lde r Ohioans
should hav e as man y options as
possible, depending on ~1e ir medical condition and degree of famil y
support.
An ex ample is the popular Passport program that allows el derl y
people to get some 17 services in
their own homes such as personal
care, home -delivered meals. homemaking and respite. PASSPORT is
able to keep a person in their own
home at about $8,000.00 per year.
Ass1s1ed living is an alternative
filling in between Passport and
nursing homes. There will always
be a need for nursing homes but
their also exists a real need for less
ex pensive choices of care for our
older citizens. In addition home -

based programs such as Passport
and assisted-living keep the elderly
independent much longer.
For additional information
please contact the Area Agency on
Aging at 614-374-9436 or 1-800833-0830.

Reunion policy
With the family reunion season
quickly approaching, many will be
submitting articles of fam ily activities for publication.
To ensure prompt publication,
the Gallipolis Daily Tribune
requests that a rticles be neatly
typed and double spaced for easy
editing. Reunion items should not
exceed 300 words and must be submitted within 30 days of occurrence.
No exceptions will be made.
All material submitted for publication is subject to editing.·Articles
will be published as soon as possible.

-----Community calendar----The Community Calendar is
published as a free s~rv.ice to
non-profit groups w1shmg to
announce meetings and special
events. The calendar is not
de signed to promote sales or
fundraisers of any type. Items
are printed as space permits and
ca nnot be guaranteed to run a
specific number or days.
THURSDAY
EAST MEIGS - Open house
Thursday 7 p.m. at Eastern High
School to meet new band directoi;:
Eastern High School and junior
bigh students and parents interested
in band invited to attend.
RUTLAND -

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

tttt111t1111HntHHffH1ff1t1ffH1'fi

Missionary ser-

vice 7:30p.m., Thursday at Hysell
Run Holiness Church. Speaker
Mike Thompson.
POMEROY - Meigs County
Public Library Trustees special
meeting Thursday , 1:30 p.m . at the
library.
POMEROY - Eastern High
School golf team practice at Meigs
County Golf Course at 9 a.m.
Thursday.

8 p.m. Bring items for fair booth.
POMEROY - Pomeroy Group
AA, 7 p.m Thursday, Catholic
Church, Mulberry Avenue,
Pomeroy.
SYRACUSE - Big Bend Girl
Scouts make up judging Thursday
at 5:30p.m. at Syracuse Park near
tennis courts.

FRIDAY
LONG BOTTOM - Hymn
TUPPERS PLAINS - The sing, 7 p.m Friday. at Faith Full
Tuppers Plains VFW Post will Gospel Church, featuring Mountain
meet at 7:30 p.m. Thurday at post Top Singers.
home.
SATURDAY
ROCK SPRINGS - Rock
MIDDLEPORT - The SouthSprings Grange meeting Thursday, ern Statesmen will be featured as

BURLINGHAM - Burlingham
Modem Woodmen, meeting Satur·
day, 6:30 p.m. southbound park on
U.S. 33 ncar Darwin. Camp to furnish sandwiches and melon.

SUNDAY
POMEROY - Song fest at fairgrounds Sunday, 7 p.m., to open
Meigs Cunty Fair. Soecial music.
group smging. Sponsored by Meigs
County Ministerial Association.

Heimlich creator blasts Institute of Medicine's rejection
CINCINNATI {AP)- The doc· to the institute 's report summary.
tor who devised the Heimlich "The committee concluded that
maneuv er to clear the throats of rescuers should flfSt use mouth-tochoking victims has lost another mouth resuscitation."
battle as he lobbies to have the
The American Red Cross and
technique used as the first treat· the American Heart Association
ment for v1cl!ms of ncar drown- carne to the same conclusion earliings.
er. And Heimlich also has argued
On Tuesday, the Institute of the issue with the Red Cross.
Medicine, a branch of the National
The committee's decision
Academy of Sciences, weighed in
means standards adopted in 1986
against Dr. Henry Heimlich, the
Cincinnati surgeon who piOneered for treating near-drowning victims
the abdomen-squeezing maneuver will remain in place at least until
animal studies prove that the Heim.
in 1974.
" The committee found insuffi· lich maneuver works, said Michael
cient ev idence to support the Stoto, director of the Institute of
propo si tion that the Heimlich Medicine 's division of health promaneuv er is useful for cleanng motion.
" If that group wants to collude
water from the_lungs," according

Crow celebration scheduled
Mr. and Mrs. Raben H. Crow,
1181 College Road, Syracuse, will
celebrate their 50th wedding
anniversary from 2-4 p.m. Sunday
with an open reception at the Carleton School , Syracuse.
The observance is being hosted
by their sons and daughters-in-Jaw,
] 1m and Pam Crow, Pomeroy, and
Bob and Ruetta Crow, Syracuse.
The honored couple have five
grandchildren, Lori and Robby
Crow, and Meredith, Wesley and
Carrie Crow. and two step-grand·
children, Christi and KeUie CoUins.
Mr. and Mrs. Crow were married on Aug. 14, 1944 at the Mid·
dleport home of Mrs. Dorothy
Roller and the late Malcolm Roller.
The wedding was pe!fenned by the
Rev. Ralph K~
Mr. and Mrs. Crow are co-own-

with the American Heart Associa- tion said it follows recommendation, that' s their prerogativ e ," tions of the American Heart Association's Emergency Cardiac Care
Heimlich said of the institute.
Heimlich
perfected
the Committee.
In 1986, Heimlich convinced
abdomen-squeezing, upwardRed Cross to recommend the
the
thrusting motion to clear the throats
of choking victims. A national maneuver as a backup method. But
medical journal dubbed it .. the he says the agency has not taught
Heimlich maneuver," and his the use of the maneuver despite the
policy change.
·
name became a household word.
The maneuver is not mentioned
But within a year, Heimlich and
the Red Cross began arguing over in the 1992 Red Cross first-aid .
whether the maneuver should be handbook. It is in the 1993 version.
the first resort to save people pulled ·' Red Cross spokesman Roy Clason said his organization has been ·
from the water.
Heimlich says thousands of peo· teaching lifeguards and piiillllledics
pie have died because the Red to use the maneuver since 1986,
Cross refuses to change its policies. although some of the earlier trainThe Red Cross and others say ing materials use the term "abdomHeimlich spouts theories with no inal thrust" instead of "Heimlich
scientific evidence. The orgl!fliza- maneuver.''

ers of Craw's Family Restaurant.
Before her retirement Mrs. Crow
was employed as a reporter with
The Daily Sentinel.
The couple requests that gifts be
omitted from the observance.

Amity Billfolds
Mens&amp;

Wornens "
1/2 Price
SUNGLASSES

LOVE,
RITA

614-367-430:2
Ampa, Gultara, Strlnga,
Keybo•da, Druma,
Plono &amp; Guitar l.e..ona.
Cheahlre, Ohio
. .

Lose Wtlrjlt Ukt •erlr(
Guaranteed
Lose Pounds and Inches
Natural Herbal Tablets

1·800·796·6321

D. GEARY'S
AUTO BODY
992-2096

550 Page Sl, Midchport

FroeEotim1121n1n

14 Foster St., Mason. WV.
August 12·13
Large size men's &amp; women's
clothes. Lots of everything.

F&amp;A TREE SERVICE
Topping, Trimming,
Removal.
FREE ESTIMATES
25 Yearo Experience
992-4447 or 742-2360

""'m

most of these antidotes. (Nocturnal
leg cramps, a separate condition ,
may, however.) Most experts still
recommend Elavil (an anti-depressant) with or without Sinemet (a
drug used to treat Parkinson's disease).
Nonetheless, if something as
simple as vitamin C works for you,
go with il
Copyright 1994 NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.
{For information on how to
communicate electronically with
this columnist and others, contact America Online by 'calling l·
800-8Z7 ·6364, eKL 8317 .)

tomorrow
LAST DAY
MIDDLEPORT
MERCHANTS'

SIDEWALK
SALE
Big $avings!!!

Buy 1 Carleton
Greeting Card
&amp; Receive a can of
pop foronly

9¢
Alarm Clocks

Zippo
Lighters

ofT

Candy Bars Timex Watches
ONLY34¢

HAPPY BIRTHDAY
"GARY" .

PETER.

20% ofT 30%
Reg. 50¢

SOUTHFORK INN
SHOW BAR
Bachelor and Birthday Parties
Welcome. No Cover Charge.
(304) 675-5955
GIRLS ·GIRLS· GIRLS

~

1/2Price 30% ofT
Women's
Complete Stock

STAR GUITAR ·

DR. GOTT

Prices Good
til Monday
ust15

special singers Saturdar. at 7:30
p.m. at Ash Street Freewill Baptist
Church in Middleport.

RACINE - Music at the Star
Mill Park , Racine, Saturday , 7
p.m. Bring own lawn chairs.

admitting her is carried out "fully,
fairly and peacefully."
The haircut was meant to dis courage her client, Vojdik said,
pointing to "S have Shannon"
bumper stickers and T-shirts with
the legend '' 1864 Bulldogs and
One Bitch" being sold. The Citadel
mascot is a bulldog.
The Citadel has not approved
the bumper stickers or shirt s,
spokes man Rick Mill said, and
Vojdik acknow ledged Ms. Faulkner owns one of the shirts.
Sociolog ist Michael Kimmel of
the State University of New York
at Stonybrook, said the haircut
would make Ms. Fau lkn er stand
out more.
"S he will simultaneously be a
cadet who doesn't look like a cadet
and a woman who doesn't look like
a woman." he said.

30% off

News Hotline

2

DIVE'S
SWAP SHOP
BUY-SELL-TRADE
Something New For
Melga County
Tuea. Thru Sat. 1-6
Name Brand Toole,
Tova. Fenton.
Come and See.
One mile out Rt I 43
from Rt 7.
B/1111 mo.

News Hotline
Sentinel992-2155

I.

\

HEATING &amp; COOLING
RSES &amp; EPA
Universal
Certified Sales,
Service &amp;
Installation
Free estimates.

992-7434

Gutters, etc.

Howard L. Writesel
ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

742·2443

949-2168

Ron's Pomeroy
Home Repair
Specializing in
Winterizing
Homes, Roofing,

111111 mo.

~ 1&amp;104 TFNI

.9l 'Ioucfi of

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
•Room Additiono
·New garagea
-Electrical &amp; Plumbing
·Roofing
·Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting also concrete

crass

-~

Custom Winaow Coverings
Blinds • Verticals • Shades
It's not just a way to

Shop At
Home
Service
Day Or
Night

work

(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, ~h1 ~oo?. nn

cover a window

It's a way to
light up a room
992-5311
1-800-BLIND-11

483 REECH ST. MIDDLEPORT OH

BINGO
EVERY THURSDAY
EAGLES
CLUB
IN POIIEROY
6:45p.m.
Special Early Bird
$100 PayoH
Thlo ad good for 1
FREE card.
Lie. No. 0051-342
11/K"'l.Mn

In Memory
"GONE BUT NOT
FORGOTTEN"
In memory of
EMMA D.
JOHNSON,
who passed away
fo urteen years ago
1oday, August 11 ,
1980.
Sadly missed by all
her family.
Loving Daughter,
Bernice Lovallev

FOR SALE

FOR SALE

Riding Mowers ,
Weed Trimmers.
Brush hog, Bale
spears, Bale feeders,
Boom poles,
Parts &amp; service
Morris Equipment
Side Hill Road
Rutland, Ohio

New

742-2455

Manco·Go Karts
3 H.P. &amp; Up
Parts &amp; Service
Morris Equipment
Side Hill Road
Rutland, Ohio

742-2455

LINDA'S
-PAINTING &amp; CO.

Water hauling

Howard
Excavathtg-Co.

Interior &amp; Exterior
Take the pain out of
painting. Let ua do it
for you. Very reas enable.
Free Estimates
Before 6 p.m. leave
•message.
After 6 p.m.
614-985-4180

Backhoe Service

Bulldozing &amp; Backhoe
Service•
Complete House &amp;
Trailer Sites

3/2S/94

Action movies, staying calm
help save Mississippi youth
By GINA IWLLAND
Associated Press Writer
BATESVILLE, Miss. {AP)Her father's love of action movies
and her own level head helped
hon or student Lindsey Michelle
Dye survive a 14-hour ordeal with
an escaped killer.
Dye, 17, was kidnapped at gunpoint from a conv enie nce store
Tuesday by Kelly W. Drott, who
escaped from a Louisiana prison
where he wa&gt;· serving 2 I years for
manslaughter in the death of a 19ycar-old woman.
Police said Droll, 27, and a girlfri e nd who helped him esca pe
asked Dye for directions. Then he.
pulled out a .357 magnum and
forced his way into Dye's black
199 1 Camaro, driving off as the
girlfriend followed in another car.
"As coolly as I could I stayed
calm and tried not to do anything
that would make him nervous,"
reca ll ed Dye , sa fe at home
Wednesday in Batesville. "I knew
if I made him nervous he might do
something rash ."
For 2)0 miles, Dye discussed

music with Drotl, bandaged his
wounds, and kept calm - even
when the killer shot his girUriend,
Robin Duvall, in the face as she
tried to hide the other car in a Mississippi field. Duvall was in critical
co ndition today at a Memphis,
Tenn., hospital.
The odyssey ended with a chase
over back roads early Wednesday
when Dye purposely swerved her
car into a muddy ditch near Dard·
anelle, Ark ., about 70 miles northwest of Little Rock. Droll put a gun
in his mouth and killed himself as
police approached.
Lindsey, who wants to be a doctor, sa id she learned the driving
trick from her father, Walter, who
loves action movies.
"We watch all the same ones," ,
he said.
Drott escaped with another fugi·
tive Sunday from a minimum-security prison in New Orleans by
spraying a guard with pepper spray
and scaling two razor-wire fences.
Duvall drove the getaway car,
authorities said. The other fugitive
was ca ptured without incident

Tuesday.
An Arkansas law officer finally
caught up with Dye and Droll
shortly before midnight Tuesday.
Drott told the teen to move over
and drive as he started shooting out
the window .
"She put her seat bell on. which
she doesn't always do, and took
off," said Ron Darby . who
employs the high- sc hooler part
time at his insurance agency. "She
was driving about 90 miles an hour
when she turned the wheel s ... and
threw the car out of control. The
car crashed. She hung on and went
along for the ride.
"It was win, lose or draw right
there , and she prevailed," Darby
said
Walter Dye. who bought her the
car as an early graduation present,
rushed lo Arkansas with his wife to
pick up their on Iy child.
They left the sports car behind.
" It is only a car. She washed it
everyday. She loved it, but now it's
got bullet holes inside it," he said.
'Til never drive it again," she
said.

Interracial prom controversy
causes '60s-style confrontation
By DAN SEWELL
A~~ociated Press Writer
WEDOWE E, Ala. {AP) - A
white principal rails against interracial dating. An arson frre guts the
high school. Civil rights groups go
on the march and the Klan makes
its presence known. Federal agents
and reporters flock to town.
Scenes from the Summer of '64
in the South arc Wedowee 's 1994.
A confrontation that began six
months ago over interracial couples
at the high school prom has jerked
this sleepy Alabama town wide
awake.
"We've been here before.
We've seen this before," the Rev .
Joseph Lowery , president of the
Atlanta-based Southern Christian
Leadership Conference, said after
meeting with black residents and
civil rights activists here.
"It certainly sounds like some·
thing that had happened in the
1960s," said Pam Traylor, 28. "It
doesn' t sound like the Wedowee
where I grew up." ·
Ms. Traylor, who is white, was
among dozens of Randolph County
High School alumni :ovho _have
stopped by the school smce ll was
gutted early Saturday. More than
20 funeral wreaths lie outside the
charred shell.
"We've always gotten along

great here," said Ms. Traylor, who
teac hes at a nearby Georgia high
school. "This was something that
was blown out of proportion imme·
diately."
With refrains that echo the '60s.
other whites have blamed "outside
agitators" and the medi_a for stir·
ring civil unresl Two-thrrds of the
town' s 800 residents are white.
llob Bugg, a retired school
administrator and friend of embattled
ex-principal
Hulond
Humphries , sa id opposition to
Humphries stemmed from Iocal
county politics and had nothmg to
do with race, but was quickly
seized upon by civil rights groups.
But leaders of the black protest
depict years of subtle discrimination and slights finally coming to a
head over Humphries' threat to
cancel the spring prom to block
interracial dating. One mixed-race
student charged that Humphries
called her "a mistake." Supporters
of the 25-year principal say
Humphries' remarks were distorted
and that he was only trying to
a void student violence.
Many blacks were stunned when
the school board, with only one
black member, voted in March to
reinstate Humphries after a twoweek suspension.
The SCLC and the Ku Klux

Klan both had planned demonstrations at the high school Saturday,
before the frre struck.
Lowery said Wedowee isn't
unique, that there are other scat·
tered outposts barely touched by
the civil nghts advancements of the
1960s, when the brutal Freedom
Summer of 1964 and the Bloody
Sunday of 1965 spurred passage of
the Civil Rights Acts and the Vot·
ing Rights Acl
The school board on Monday
voted unanimously to reassign
Humphries to an administrative
post, appoint a black woman to a
new assistant principal position and
find other ways to improve race
relations.
The move came three day s
before a hearing on a Justice
Department complaint against
Humphries and lhe school system ' s
treatment of minorities. The hearing was canceled and the sides will
negotiate to try to avoid a trial.
But protest leaders, who last
spring ran "Freedom Schools" for
black students boycotting the high
school, re!Jiain wary. Lowery said
they want to "see the fine print"
Humphries in the past was
accused of having blacks and
whites ride separate buses to vocational classes and disciplining
blacks more often than whites.

Welding class held at Buckeye Hills

Have a hot news tip
or
story suggestion?
Call the ~

MORRISON'S

The welding program at Buck·
eye Hills Career Center is designed
to teach high school students the
skills needed to obtain employment
in the welding trade. Student study
is concentrated on passing the state
certification test and on fabricating
parts from blueprints.
In the welding program, the student has the opportunity to learn

the following: i) oxy fuel welding
and flame cutting, 2) shielded
metal arc welding, 3) gas metal arc
welding, 4) gas tungsten arc welding, and 5) plasma arc welding.
Students that complete this program at Buckeye Hills Career Center and pass the state certification
test are now working in fabrication

plants, maintenance welding, and
m the construction industry.
Additional information about
enrolling in the Welding program
at Buckeye Hills Career Center can
be obtained by contactiJg your
high school counselor or by calling
Buckeye Hills Career Center at
245-5334.

GRACE

ODALift WINDOW SYSTEMS
• Custom Made
• Solid vinyl
replacement

Driveways, Septic

windows

Systems, Water 6 Sewer

ENTERPRISES

lines, land Clearing

• Free Eslimates

Trucking: Limestone &amp;

Fill Dirt, Top Soil
Reasonable Rates
Estimates

992·4103

• $200

Call For Details

992-3838 '"'·" '

COLLINS
ENTERPRISES
.Carpentry
•Painting
C•Power Waahlng •
clean• all exterlora
with high preuure
aprayer
•Reaoonable Rateo
•20 Yeara Experience
•Frea Eotlmatee

985·4473

985-4181

71221\W

212311 mo. Dd.

TRI·STATE K·9
ACADEMY
TUPPERS PLAINS
Basic obedience.
law enlorcement,
personal protection.
kennel service, pups &amp;
young dogs for sale.
Rottweiler &amp; Shepherd
Stud Service
By appt. only
614-667-PETS

,,..,,

'VISIT OUR SHOWROOM'
110 Court St. Pomg ~c·;. Oilio
"Look for the Red and While Awning"
992-4119 AI Tromm Ow•er 1-&amp;0o-291-5600

ROBERT BISSEll
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes
e Garages
e Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

."

·~

W-...'
)\

DOG
GROOMING
All BREEDS

by

. .•...

Susan Gilmore

••• . 992-5316

~~l)\

1/

~

~·
'·"''

0

Q 11

71 &gt;2111'

Installed

Announcements

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
Augu111 11th_,

Home
Improvements

Pirates Cove fNturtng Pizza ·Large Yards Sale 1 Moving
lues -Sat, 1569 Neighbor·
Speelal: Two 12 Inch Pizza'• :Sale,
hooct Ad .
With Evary1hlng, $12.99. FrM
Local Delivery, 614-388-9823.
T1111
Subdivision
Addison.
Saturday, August 13th, 8-4 P.M.
Pirates Co ve Opan From 8 A.M.
Children's
Clothing,
Canning
To
9 P.M. Monday
Thru
Jars, Misc., Household Items.
Thursdey, 6 A.M. To 11 P.U.
Friday And Saturday, 1().6 Sun·
Pt. Pleasant
day, 9819 Stata Route 160, Vln·
ton, 614-388-9823.

&amp; VIcinity

Plratae Cove Restaunnt Under
New Management Featuring
New Dally "Spec lalsl 614-38&amp;-

33151 tuppy Hollow Rd.
lllcldlaport, Ohio 45760

NewHomea,
Addltlona, Siding,
Painting, Garagea,
Porchea, Pole Berne
Call Uo For An Eadmata
614-742-3090
304-773-9545

TOP SOIL,
FILL DIRT,
LIMESTONE
Delivered
Locally

992·3838
81411 mo.

11/Wn

4
2

Aulomatlc

Washart,

N08d

Pump All

Cal Weste111 Auto
992-5515
Free Estimates
Residential, Commerci;ll
and Industrial
&amp;-~1

Specializing in Custom
Frame Repair
NEW &amp; US£0 PARTS fOI
AU lUllS &amp; MDOOS
99HOllOI
992-SSS3 OR

lOU fRU 1-IOG-141-0070
DARWIN, 01110
71311D11TFN

nu

t.-Famlly Yard Sai•MIIIer St.,
u..on.
Aug 12-13, 8am4pm, rain or ahlne.

wv.

Yard Stile, Frl &amp; Sat, lucas Ad,

Giveaway
Heal

18t Inlier or right, back yard,
rain mova1 ln1lde.

Ropalr, 6929

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

Stale Route 588, Gallipolis.

2 Kittens To Good loving
Homes Utter, Tr~lned, No Fleas,
614-446-2393 Aher 2 P.M.

3

4 Kittens , 614-446-7732.
8

Weak

Kltlans,

Old

LHiar

Female, halt Bugle-half Cocker
Spanlal
housedog,
good
w/c hlldren. landlord says one
mu st gol 304-675-2709.
German Shephard type puppy
to a good home, 614-992-7562.
Iri s roots to giveaway,
2653.

614·94~

Kllten To A Good Hom•, 614·

379·2552.

Kittens, 614-446-1610.
Killen, To Good Home, 614-379-

2585.

26 v... Experience

Roofing, VInyl Siding,
Porchee, VInyl
Replacement
Wlndowa
For Free Ea1lmate
Call 742-2303

LIMESTONE,
GRAVEL

&amp; COAL

Reasonable Rates

Rafr1gtrator to giYIIWiy, nHdt

troon, 614-1112·2m.

Siamese mother cat with 2 kit·
tons. 304-6711-3TJ2.

Lost &amp; Found
Found: Jowotrt Uuot ldontlfy,
4111-641·5773.

Oottlo

County
Falrgrounde. &amp;danhty And Cltlm
At: Gallipolis Cl1y Pollco
Dapartm1nt.

7

712011 mo. pd.

314193 I MO

IISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614-992·7643
(No Sunday Calls)

Rd.,

9:ocmm-

5:00pm. Lois to go through In·

1-tops, ti14-949-24n

v-a,

All Yard Salea Must Be Paid In

Advance. Deadline: 1:00pm the
day before lhe ad Ia lo run,
Sunday edition- 1:OOpm Friday,

Monday
Saturday.

edition

10:00a.m.
'•

Family yard sal• August 12·1 3J
9:00am-3·00pm. 337'05 Hllana

Rd., Pomaory, Ohio.
Moving sal• August 13 hm3pm. 1'19 Broadway, ~eclna.
Fumltura,
appllanc..,
household goode, clochu.
Thursday and Friday, August 1112il behind fairgrounds on Crew

Two miltS out Sumner Rd. In
Chesler, Tripp residence, baby
clothn, woman's clothn, lott

of mi!IO. Augus112-1J, 9am-5pm.

S

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Rick Poaraon Aucllon Compeny,
full lima aucllon.. r, complete
auction
service.
Ucansed
fl58,0hlo &amp; West Vlrglnto, 304·
773-5785.

Found: Keyo A1

Yard Sale

Joe N. Sayre

SAYRE TRUCKING
614·742-2138

13

A . 10am-4pm.

Klltlrit : 3 • 4 Month Calk:oe I
Black. 614-448-0865.

6

HAULING

Yellowbuah

August

Trolnod, 614-367-7120 A nor 4 P.M. eluding • 1992 camaro RS,

Young rool1ers, G14· 985oo4288.

Price
Construction
Co.

family,

Racine,

Free fill din. 304-675-2023.

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS

5110 Milo Off

1

9823.

KINGS'

121h~

,35 On Llh t"Ork Hoad, ClottMI,
Anllquo Fuml1u111, 19611 GMC
3 Announcements
Truck, Air Compreasor, 250 8
Chr\sllon lody, whl1e, blonde Cyllnder Engine.
hair, wt.t35, aooklng mote Chrltllan companion 40.55 yeara ol i.t.ugull 11thl121h, 11-5, Butovltto
age, wrlle wllh addreae to: The IPtko, 7.10 lllo Beyond l.oyne'a
Dally Senllnel, PO Box 721-C, Fumhure, -Low Prtces.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45760.
.Frldoy, Sllurday1 9-5. Atron
:From Windmill At Bob EYina
MID YEAR RESOUITION
7 -Q.y Diet Plan. loee Erceu )Farm, Clothes, B&amp;W l V. Grl8a
lbsl=or Good. I los1 20 lbt . In ~Trlmmtr, Bike &amp; Etc.
5 Wh . Eallng Right Wl1hout IHII 325 From Rio Grande Than
Dialing. 3 Min. A.cordMt Met- ;554 2nd Driveway On Leh ,
sage. $1.95 !Min. Must Sa 18 To
~ hura -5al.
Call. 1-900 -255-5533.

AuctlonMr Col. Oacer E. Click,

LlcenH I 754-94 I Bonded,
304-89$-3430.

9

wanted to Buy

Clun l.ote Model Corw Or
llodoto Or - .
Smhh Buick Pontiac 11100
Eootom Avonuo, Ootttpotlo.

Truckl, 11187

GallipoliS
&amp; VIcinity
2997 11111 CrNk Rood, Auguot

111h, 12th, 13th, a~. Old Booko,
Dllhll, Furniture, Etc. .

ator.nr.,.,
p-.
old llmpo old
momotorw, old eloelca antiquo
Decorated

1umHute.

w.111..._

thor·

Atvorlno

Antlquoo.

RuN Moore, owner. 114-882·
2528. We buy ._.ataa.
3 Family: Thurm•n. Auguet 12thl - Don't Junk hi 9 ..1 Ue Your Non-

13th. Clothla1••tnhm1 Sl- Ana ·wol1dng Uo}or Applloneoo,
Up. Lorge "omena Ctothlo, CoiOI T.Y.'e
Aofrlgeroloro,
Mono Clothing lt.nd P1on1y 01 F_..,., VCA'o, Utcrowovoo,
Others! Crane, Home lnlertor, · Air Conditio~. Wuhere,
Turbo OroRI Vldoo O.mo With 2 Drt~l Copy Uocht-. Elc.
Otsco.
114-l00-12311.
4 Houuh- 4 Coulllloa, 2
Sto1n1. Thla bne II Blat U . Old clglrlt11 Ugtnoro, milk bot·
llltn North 01 Hoapl11l On teo .till, f0un1atn pono, lllvonn111,
Turn Atgh1 On Coun11y Lana 'nwllloo, , . _ , . , mogulnoo.
1366, Lodloot '?hlldrono aot11- ·Stu Ware ond Slor Tnli h-:
lng, Houoonood, Whi1-Noll, Ooby Uor11n,l14-etl2-11141.
5a1urdly, June 13th,....
Wlnled To Buy: Junk Aut01

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

ALL Yud -

llual Be Pold 1n

Adnnco. DEADUNE: 2;00 p.m.
1111 doJ bololll 1111 od Ia to Nn.
SUndoJ odHton • 2:00 p.m.

Fr1doJ. Monday odftlon • 2:00

p.m. Soturdly.

With Or WithoUt llolon. Coli
Lorry llvefy. 814-31&amp;-11303.

Top Prlell Pold: All Old U.S,
Colna, Gold Rlnaa, Stiver Colna,
Gold ColnL

U.T.S. Coin

Shop,

151 s-nd Avonuo, O.ltlpotiL ·

�Thursday, August 11 , 1994

Page-10- The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentlnei -

Page-11

ALLEYOOP

NEA Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER

I Children
5 Mad dog 's
disease
11 Spartan slave

9

J &amp; D's Auto Parts and Salvage,
also buying junk cars &amp; trucks .
304-77'3-5343 .

1972 Buddy 2 Bedroom
S.le, 614-446-1400.

For

1988 14x70 Royal Cou, 2 br,
hut pump, porch Included,
1001100 lot In Middleport,

Employment Services

$15,000, 614-g&lt;l2-7223.

11

304~75-6653 .

AVON I All Areas I Shirley
Spens, 304-675-1429

Back Of Naw Haven, below
Haven
Heights,
3br.
w/appllanees,
wasl'lar/dryer,
5.881ac., $13,500, tarme available. 304..a82-3503.

- -- -

All areas. AVON aarn l ng pos-

sibilit ies equal your capabilities ,
free
produ ct w1tM
sign-up .
Marilyn 304-8ll 2·2645 or 1-800992-6 356.

LIMrTED OFFER! Now t4x80
only make 2 paymanta, no
paymtnts after 4 years 1 trae
deUvtry &amp; sat up, owner !mane·

Applications Are Being AccBpted For The FollOW ing Pan-Time

Poslllons:

lng ovollablt. 304-755-6566.
NEW BANK REPOSI Only 4 toHI
Never lived In, atilt hal new

S UPE~V I SO~

!TEACHER - Degrao In Ed u cation And 1 Vea1 Prevlou5 E:.periuru;e Working With Children

home warranty, free dallvary &amp;
Ht up, owner financing avail·

Required.

able. :104-75S-11111.

EVEN ING TEACHER

- Hig h

Jng With Children Required . Asaocla te Degree Prvte rred.

Hours For Both Poshlons Monda y Through Friday 5:00 -10:00
P.M. No Benef its. Deadline For

35

·· Ho w,:OOut cove rage ag a&lt; ns l da mage lo lhe
car 11 11 ge ts h1t by a me leo r?

Sctlool Diploma Or Equiva lent
And Prevlou. Experience Worii-

11

18

Help Wanted

Positions Avai lable August 23,
1994.

Send

lnter111
Liner And
Resume To PhVIIII Mason,
Dlrtctor 01 Human Resources,
University Of Rio Grarlde, P.O.
Box 961il, Rio Grande, OH 45674 .
AA IE EO Employer.

As ~r Article 9, Tranat.ra and
Vacancles 1 S.ctlon 8 , of tht
NegotlatiiO Agr ..ment ~wMn
the MLTA and the Board of

Education{ lhl Molgo Local
School D strict Is posting lho
following vacancy for tta regular
teaching staff: Tucher at Meigs
Junior High School.
Attention mature Individuals
witt'! 1x1ra time on tiMir hands. If
you•,..
a
retired
Hnlor,
hous.wlte/husband, etc., you
may bl lust the person we'rt
looking tor. McDonald's Rg..
taurant locations In Henderson,
~V and Gallipolis, OH currently
has full and part-tim• positions
available betwMn 5am-11pm.
We're ex1remely tlaxlble about
tailoring houra to fit your needs,
in-house training program so no
experience is raqulrea, competitive waoes. paid birthdays ott,
tree unlfonns, automatk: rata
Increase In 90 days, very liberal
paid neatlon plan ... evan for
part-timers. If lntareated, atop
by McDonald'a of Henderson or
Galllpollt and pick up an appllcaUon.
Autism ServiCIIi C.nter, Huntington saeklng Individual to
woi1t approximately 8 hrs per
wMk In Pt Pluunt, New Haven
area •• Porsonal C.r11 Attendant. Outl• Include working In
ellanl'a home &amp; ualstlng with
dally living tasks &amp; transporting
10 appolntmenta, 14 year old

client whh physical dloabllhles.
Mult have a car and rvalld
driverw license. Reimbursement
tor mlluga. Finlbla hours.
Send rHume to: Personnel, P.O.
Box 507,

0507.

Huntington, WV 25710-

AVON $$ SALES

Wanted to Do

tional. 1-501)-742-4738.
COOK WAN"ITD

Pinecrest Care Center Is Look·
lng For A Cook With Ona Year
Of Dietary Experience In Haalth
Cara Setting. Must Be Able To
Wortl Soma WMklnds And
Holldaya. Supervisory Skllla,

Knowttdgo Of Dlotory R•
qulremenla, And commun iCI·
tlon SkUll All Euentlat For
Thle PoeiiiOfl High School
Graduate p,...,ad. Apply In
Person 8:00 A.M. To 4:00 P.M.
Wtokdoyo. E.O.E.
Dairy Farm Helper Must Have

Experience Wltl'l Mact'llnery &amp;
Milking
Cowa
Ref&amp;r&amp;oces

Prtllfrod,
814-245-6047
Evtntngo.
oancersl Top pay, 19 and older,

no nldty. 304-675-59M Tammy.

Eam -Tho&lt;IAndl Slunlng En·
• " - · Rush $1.00 Namo. Ad·

d,..• Stamped Envelope To:
Hall'l Enterprl11s, P.O. Box 152,
Applagrove, WMt VA 25502.

Eaay Wortc.l E1e.llent Payt AIHm"hll Products At Home . Call

Toll F,.., HI00-461-6566, Ext.
313".

Eligible Gentleman Looking For
Lady, Compinlon, Friend. 614-

446·1201.
Full time J»BOO fQr yard work &amp;
Pllin11ng, Pluaant Valley Apts,

1151 Evorgr- Or, Pt PH, WV.

HomoC111Aid11
Hom• cars aldH n.aded for
homo viiHt In the Gallipolis
arM. U1y lead to full-time posl-

tlon with bonofho. Coli 614-58114171 to apply.
lmmedlata O..nlnga For Part
/FuU Tlnw R~. ShiK Suporvloor.
COntpotltvo Willi~. Dllftrontlal

Whh Exportonco. &lt;GUll Opportunity Empioyor. Contac1 Tho
Olrac:tcw Of Hurslng, PlnecNil
Car• Cent11, 11tf Pinecrest
Drive, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631,
614-446-1112.
lmmtdlott Oponlngo Avoltoble
For Cortlllod Nurot Alcloo. CompothiYe Wogoo, Dlfforontol With
Ex~. Sign on eon ..
Avollolllo, Equol 0-rtunlly
Em~or. ; Contoct Tho A..._
Of Nursing,
C.ntar, 170

Plnocrwt Drive, Gatllpotlo, Ohio
454131 114-446-1112.
LOOKING FOR CHILD CARE?
CCRN .child Core R•our..
ftMWCirk le A Fr• Communtty
Servtco Which Woutd AAiot
You In Locltlng Core To Moot
Your · Coli l.all0-577-2278
To
We Con Help.

S.-

llaJnlenance JCourlar Po.hlone

Avolloblt, A&amp;&gt;t&gt;ty: OJ,1o Volley
Bonk, Moln ·Office, 420 Third

A.....,., Galllpolle, OH 45831. £..

quol Opportunity Employer.
•~enanee

man needed

Meigs County Board of MRIOO ·
sc hool •ge lnltruc1or needed to
tuch at Carleton School. Mul1
hav&amp; current valid Ohio Dep't. of
Education latching c:ertilicate
and have or be aligfble to obtain
Ohio O.p't. of Education multi·
handicap~ cartlflcatlon. Send

rooumo by August 16 to : Car-

laton

13~0

School,

Carleton

Stroot, P.O. Box JOT, Syracuso,
Ohio 45779.
Nlld Babyahlor In My Homo,
Mature Non-Smoker, For 1
Child, 814-448-4619.
Needed- babysitter for two
children In my home or Darwin
area, raferancas necessary, call
614-6Q6..t~S:l, leave me9Sage.

Will babr,sll, family 1trnosphart,
Greenbr er Estates, any hour.

304-6TH686.
Will do bac khoe work, 614-0925858 or 614-992-3173.

at

- o y Nurwlng a Rohabltotlon Corner. Dullll lnciudo:
kooplng rocordo, conducting
fill • -goN:y drlllll'trolnlng;
Py to day malnlan1nce &amp; Inter·
ection with ccntr-.ctora; opera..
t~ of ama.ll on-aile NWaga
plont. Wogo &amp; bontiH pac:ksgo
II complltltlve. Send r•uma or
olltiiY d 311758 Rocksprtngo Rd.,
I'OinOroy. Ohio 45789. EOE.

mor-

21

mont, $26,500, 8~9~002.
Sondhltl Rd., 2Toc. (woododl
NVeral

building

11111.

1971

mercia! garage 28'x36', county
water. Somerville Realty, 304675-3030 or Jean Cuto 615-

36

INOTICE I
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
recommends that you do business with people you knowhond
NOT \c send money lhroug the
mail until you hav&amp; lnvestiaated
thCI offering.

Nice lamlty ntodo th,.. bodroom home to rant or buy,
$35,000 rwngo. Prtftr Chollor
area, bul wDI consider other.,
614-w.!-8738.

van/flatbed division, profitable

$2115/Mo. 814-:IM-15211.
Bodroom Hooat 41 Cllltllca4ho
VENDING ROUTE : Won1 Got 2Rood,
Gollpolll, Full B . - ,
Rich Quick. Will Got A Steady Corpoled.
Gu Furnoct, No
Cash Income. Prtced to Sell. 1· Ptta, •2SO/Mo.
$200 Dtpotlt,
800-120-€182.

Craft Shows, $6,500. Or Trado

WMkly
~.utram,

card

Houses for Rent

2 Bodroom Flrot A..nuo.

llpollo,

Sto..,

Go~

Rofrlgorwtor,

Reference, O.~MW~e, NO Pat1,

1..... 3Q4...675..38t2

lho Federal Fllr Housing Act
of 1g&amp;&amp; which makes Nllagll
to advertise •any preference,
limllaUon or c:batrrVnaUon

based on race, c®r, ralglon,

P&amp;rson To Llv ... ln Housework &amp;
Cooking,
6
Days
Weak,

Raferences Required, 614-4464926.
ReS1auranl Ugrs.·hlgh nourly
rala, paid
'i'acatlon,
free
uniforms, tree food, and many

This naw.paper wtl not
knowtlngly IICIC8fll
advertlsemenls for real....,e
whlcllls In vlollllon of lho tow.
Our readerl .,.. hlnlby
lnformo&lt;l thai all d-Ings

fringe

benlflta, very
,.aaonable
hospUallzation
management
ax·
avallabla,

1&lt;111ertlsed In lhls - r
are available on an equal
opporturjty buls.

porionce hlghll.. doslrablo but

31

Homes for Sale

Someone to milk cowa, hourly
wage, paid vacatlon1 send
nama, 1xperianca a reterancn
to P.O. Box 312, Henderson, WV

'"Kick Mo While I'm Down"l
OWner Must Soil Now! "Lot's
Talk Buslnoso"l Boautlfut, L.trgo
Two Story On Corner Lot. 118
2St08
Main SC. Pl PIIINnt. Thr•
Town of New Haven will be ac- Btdroomo lWo Full Bothl,
cepllng appllcaUona for th1 KHchon, Dining, Uvlng, Family
position of pcllea patrolman 1 Roomo. l.trao Utility Room. Afr
appllcatlona can be plckH up at Condhlontd: $61,8oo.oo. 814446~.
C~y Building, M·F,II-4:30.
3 bedroom, all electric home
13
Insurance
Spring
Avtnut,Pomeroy:
AMERICAN
NATtON_A_L-IN-- $30.000, 614-002.a-t3 or 614m-7304.
SURANCE
VICKIE CASTO, AGENT
3 bedrooms, ~112 bath1 2
HOMEOWNERS • AUTO DIS. flrwplaeea, full biMrnent, heat
COUNTS
pump w/CA, carpeted, PIIUO,
UFE &amp; HEALTH
gorwgo, ~ .i!'!L Horton St,
304-586-4257
Mooon. 304-lr,___
3br. rondl wldoctc, ftnced yard
move In cond., owner anlloW
18 W ted t 0
,-,,_,_a_n_;__;_..,.o.:....;;_O;__ to ooll... $58,000, Mllon Rd.,
Babyslttlng
In
My
Home, Camp ,;ontoy. l n t - porty
coli colloct 216-864-1221.
Choshlr11 A:roa, Gt4-3tl7·7849.

Georges Portobtt Sowmllll don~

haul your loge to tha m II Juat

Cltl ~75-1057.
man,

lnterlor/axtarior

pointing, light houllng • co,..
pontry. Auto body worli a point·
lng. 304-89S-3630 or 30W757595,
Mill P1ula'a D1y

c.,.

Center

45ac., woodad, approx. 6ac.
county watar, reduced.
5.24 ac., Juet a lew mlnutn hom

c:leared,

town coupty wotw, booutllul
bulldlna-o'iil. Somorvltlo Rllfty.
304-il'~ or 875-3431.

Spocl- mld•ntry homo, Rol~
lng Acr• Subcllvlllon, opproL
2400 aq.n., 3-4br., 2 112 both
family room, malnteN.nca trM
•xt•lor, t.val kit wlpl1mary
lonct, 80'o. Wot_, R..
Company, 304-175-3431
Two etory home Sixth Avenua,
Middleport- 4 BR, ttvlng room

n,

M·F 6 A.M. -6:30 P.M. QuoiHy dining room, khc~-=
Loving Care For All Children room, both &amp; 112. full
Our 11 G01.l. Part-lima, Full- glaoaod In porch, goo fumoce:

Time Fad. Anl1t1nce Available.
Call For Information Or Vlalt. ln.
fant IToddlar 814-446-6227. p,..

School,
Schoolsgo,
School, 8t4-446-B224:

BU

woodbumer,

large

•or•

building, now point ond roof,

$36,5011; 814-TC2-27110.

32 Mobile Homes

Prot.aslontl Traa Service, 30
Vtars Experlenee, 614--)U-.9643,

for Sale

614·361-7010.
.
Oualhy CIHnlng Alfordobto
PriCIIS, Ono Tlmo /WIIkly
tBIWtokly, Y•ra Of Exporltnco,
F,.. Estlmdoa,l14-379-21g&lt;l.

1m t4xTU t11llor; 21' round
tbovo ground owlmmlng pool
IYirythfng lnctudod· ( - , :
5350.
•

OuatHy Ctoonlng AI Alfordoblo
Prien, One "Time, W•ldy,
Bl-kly1 Monthly. &amp;tlmatn, u14-379-2181.

Sun Volloy

Nurw~ _

School.
Chlldc:are 11-F lam-1:30pm AgM

2-K, Young School A"' During

Summer. ! O.p par Weak MinImum 114-446-3587.

1187 Alvorvlow 14110 Tolll
Eioctrlc: With Host Pump, 3 Bodroomo, 2 litho Unl1lmlohtd
Set On Rtnlod l.ai, ......,. To
Mo.. Into, Locatod 7 Mlloe On
SA !~Coli Altar 1 P.M , 11438t... r&lt;, Or 8 - -1117 Schun 14'1711' With Ex·
Pllndo loHed wtlh utru,

rafr~or

Ilion,

.........

-rolllr. Sot up In 011111 Cnolc
Will Babyalt In My Hom1,
cornw lot. WIH nol ool an
Chnhlro Aru, 114-317-1541 on
IIncl contrwcl. $11,500.00 114RefertncH Avallabll.
24UOI3

aalal

46

$125. :!04~75-11964 .

SIHplng rooma with cooking.

•rc• on river. AU

Space for Rent

3 Room Office Suitt Whh
Privata Toilet In Modern Ara
Proof Bldg. Call Morris Haaklna
814-446-26'Jt Or 614-446-2512.
MIJ1\Irt Rontol • Storago Unho,
5xt0, 10110, 10115, 101120, 101130.
304-1171&gt;-2460.
~ Wanted to Rent

Merchandise
Household
Goods

GOOD

USED

APPUANCES

for Rent

Waaharw, drylrli, refrlger1tc:n;,
ranpe. Skagga Appllancn, 76

2 Bedroom•, Air, Cl~ Aval~

Vlno St-. Call614-446-7398, 1·
800-4911-J4g&lt;J.
LAYNE'S FURNrTURE
Comploto homo lumls~l~i:;

Maytag wringer washer w/pump,

2 Purabrtd Atpl111 Bucko~ $40
Each; 1 Roglottrod Alpine ~uctc,
Mini bllndl and drape~, 6' pallo Black &amp; Whht sao, 614-256door, 6' window black, 614-992- 6265.
6137.
2 Voar Old Black 1o Whht Pony
Murray 16 Hoi'H Riding L.awn And Al80 Quaner Horna, 814Mower, Runs Good, $700, 614- 3711-2838.
388-11028.
3yr. otd Rogloterod bo7
Now 5x8 Tlmborwoll UtiiHy Thor~~ksSciiMTroller, $1,300, 614-3711-2152.
rvllle,
Yl. 304Nice 24' Abova Ground Pool, All 815-4232 ovonlngo.
Now $3,000. Stop tn And Toko A LIYIItock Htutlng, Anytime,
Look At It At: 81 Porch St-, Anywh111. Producer11 Hllloboro
Konaugo, 814-448-7473.
Evory Monday, Colt Trlppto
Crook
Trucking, Chuck WitPlnlllurgh Polntt l;llllng
point $T.g&lt;J gol. Lotox rodwoocl llama, 114-2U-5011.
or codor otoln u.gg got. Point Ono cow rudy to 111.. col~ 1
Pt .., 304-1115-4084.
holfor due to hove coif; 1 holler
cal~ 1 Htrfanf Bull 2 711. otd; 3
Rafrtg•alora, SlovM, Waehan
BNgll pupo 2 112 montho; 1
And Dryer~, All Reeondltlonacl
Boaglt pup ii monlha; ti14-992And Gaurontlldl $100 And Up, 3221!1-1114-3:17-1913.
Will Dollvwr. 814-116H44t.
STORAGE TANKS 3 000 Gollcn 64
Hay &amp; Grain
Upright, Ron Evono EntorpriHI,
Good Allotfl Hty, Novor Boon
J.cklon, Ohio, 1-800-537·9528.
Wot, U.fiO A Bolt, Colt Aftor 8
Tandy DMP 133 Dot-Motrlx P.M. I14-446-10112.
prtntor, $75. 30~S-3125.
Squtll bolos. h.ZS to $2.00 por
WATER UNE SPECIAL: 3/4 Inch bolo, ollatlo, clovor, orcllord
200 PSI $1U5; 1 Inch 200 PSI gruo. 304-11711-31180.

$32.50; Ron Evan• Enterprt..a,

814-286-5930 Jackson, Ohio

55

Building
Supplies

Hourw: Mon-Sat, a.s. 61

0322, 3 mlloo out Butavllle Rd.
Froe Dttlvory.
Block, brick, IIW'I' plpoo, wll&gt;dow., lintels, etc. Claude WI~
Ou11n wotorbod, $1110, 304-1115- tora,
Rio Grlndl, DH Coli 1145598.
24~2t
SWAIN
AUCTION a FURNrTURE. 82
Olivo St., Gollpotlo. Now 6 Ulld
fumhuro, ~~~~4\1 :"''m &amp;
Worll boott. 6
511.
VlfY nice ook dining toblt, 8
Chal ... W/rniWI CUih~ tlrgl
china coblnot, $11100 Ooru. :104875-2484.

53

DONALD SMITH ASSOCIATES:
room $35G/Mo.
- · Dopoolt,
~umlohod,
No
Pita,
614-717- FINE ANTIQUES- Amorlcon 111
c:hlnt, art gtaa1 altvar, tumHure:
4345.
McCoy Ronvll•o. etc. COLLECTIBLE"S- prints, postore, tooto,
2
All
Eloctrlc,
pottery, crotko, boxto,loro bot•
$250/Mo. 114-381'7802.
tin, books, toyo, otc. ALWAYS
2+ ocroo, mobil homo wlfront a BUYING ARROWHEADS. Top
bock pord1oo, 2 car gorogo, R1 dollar pold. Ono pleco or ono
35, Southlldo. ~ ·~ hundrod. APPRAISALS, 40
tor 5:30pm.
yurs experience. Buy or ull.
PIUII call614-11112-2822.
3 Bodroomo, 2 Bltlw, Noor Por·
tor Aru, On 110, "'-"· You 54 Miscellaneous
Ply UtiiHioo, 614-:iaa-ttll2.
Merchandlse
Nice 2 I 3 bodroorn mobile
homoo In Mldd'-", 114-1111211 Nlnttndo Topoo; Fult Slro
5858.
Com Cordor Works, 1 Yur Old·
n Compoct Disco, 177 Popor:
44
Apartment
back Bookt 614-446-7081.
for Rent
150,000 BTU Gu Furnaco
60,000 BTU Gaa Fumue,

56

Pets for Sale

Sho/4'::

Groom lnd Supply
G&lt;oomlng. Julio Webb. 81
0231.

Plmporod Poll by Sonya, dog
=~thing, olt brHdti.
1011011 dog UMII, $1g&lt;l.l5.
Pllnt Plus, 304-1175-4o84.

Antiques

$4(10/Mo., W""'!, Dryer; 2 Bod-

i

2 AKC Roglatorod llall Golden
RoirwiYOII, I Wttks otd 114-

446-6811.

I

2 Yoar Old Rod Htolar Ftmolt
Dog, 814-3711-28311.
AKC
Roglstertd
Boxor
pupo,fll- ond brtndloo, bolh
poronta on proml- champion
poclg.... 814-742·2201.
AKC Roglsttrod Chow aPuppy, 10 Wtoks otd, Shoto,
WonMd By Votlnarlon, 814-3888438
•
AKC
roglltorod
Mlnlattwt
Plrwchlr, 304-e~718 or 8751231.
AKC Rlalalerod Poodle, whlo,
hill Ill tholo. - -' 11411112.:1508.

Ulld 3 Ton Pocksgo Air eon. AKC Rogloterod Wolmo11ner
dHiont!1 1 UHd Elac1rlc: Fur- pupploo. 304-1175-7".110.
nace, Melli Door Fn~m•, .._
oortod Sluo, 814 418 8308.
Colll/0 Pupo, Purebred, Fomoto,
814-2!41-1051.
1185 9-10, Grwvoly, rwcllner, 1181 Floh Tonk 1 Pot Shoo, 2413
Ford 4X4. 30W~82.
Jocklon Avo. Point P!Ouont,
304-IIYS-1~81.
2
Dnftlng
To-.
1
Wood,
1
304-871.:1013.
1b&lt;. duplex. 21Jr. I 11Jr.1 oltor- Sttol With 1.ot Droworo 1 L.troy
dtblt 11111, uttt11• t... Sot 6 Drawing Supplloo, 1 ~ lloto umbnllla Cockltoo, NOO
eluded. 30W75-4tOO or 1711- 256-11411
lncludoo utnt llrat wrought
Iron cogo,lt+tt2-llf14.
2051
2 l.twn Mowen: Brlago And
S1ronon Engine, 20 lneli ClaMic Roglll- B.- puppiH,
$70, 22 Inch Munay $120 Colt $121_,, 114-lll2·751l
Aftor 8 P.M. 114-441-12U '
Roglll- milo Chlhuchuo, 1
2 01o1orcyctoo, 0111011 an 11... yr. Old, $100, 114-311'7M7.
wOOd llrwllloca, outlidO unM Ac' Roalll-.. s~; . .lt JIUJIIIY,
boy's clothll liD 4 111m, Dodali u1i1orM1ft
roglltlrwa
porta, lmd motorc..... fOr ~~- -~ kltton a-· ...ft
""''· Hondo, ond
1110111 ....,_, .. _
' ••,. """"
yord lito n..... 304-e'l$o420L
colt
2bdnn. opiL, Ioiii oltctrlc, op- 23 cu. Ft. Frtorer SilO, 114-446- 58
Fruits &amp;
pliOMOI fumllhod, loundry
4141
Aft•
8,
Or
On
Wtokondo.
Vegetables
room loollft1011 to oc:ho&lt;il
In ton. Al&gt;tlllcm- ...l - Air CondHioner tor Sole, olio
It: Vltii!IO ·o..... Apll. 141 or Woshor, Drvtr1 •• Rolrlgonltor, CoMint Tomot- P Buthol.
F111rar colt 114--1238.
Plcll Your OWn1.Bring Own Conclll6144t2·371l EOH.
lllner. Don Hot Forma 4111115
Stolo Route 338, LoloJ1 Folie, 011
2br. IPI. S37lhno. rift Blind rift ldng-otu wltlrbod
on 1 Willi; cou for detaliL 814-24J.2532.
•rr'uoae and •• u111aa... slept
304.e71).2366.
CoMing lornatooo, S3lbulhel,
MWty "t)~a=~~~
ID boxii 14 . .mory, bnJnd 111c11 your own, brl~;ie-;
or 304- Collor
loiMr, Gono Devil, 1
Fumlohocl E.........._ .,__ _ now, $43.85, 14-1112-11166.
Ut-~ ~·~ ...,.,..-, • - - CoN Dovll 20.4 lour- J:5::::::::::;.~=7tOIIII:::_:;:OOO.:..:.:~WI:,;,I;IIomo=
- - .--, lhlrW lot~:: drl.. dhchor, hyd11wlo-tront
- - Ohio - · a.-.d An..L. Glilpollo, I
bock RU blado, IXcolltnt concfl.. 1118 or iWez:niL ' •~
uon.
r11c1
to
won..
azsoo.
eM::::..:::..:.;.;,.:.:=..;;::::
___
7
I
Fumlohocl APift"*lt 2 Bod- 11112-11!14.
59 · For Sale
$2115111o. U111111H Plld,
Swing 811, sao, • or Trade
701 Fou1h Awe.. 0 a111pcll• ~
1=-:-:-~~...,....,....
......,.AI•7PJl
'
I Plootlc Septic 1111 John DooN Lnm 'IIKW,
fumlol1od ~ 1 Bod- Concrllt
1 300 Thru 2,000 0111- 12 HP.._ __~ Conclllon,
- , tDt1 SoOond A..- . CW- T1nks
Ron ~VIM Entoi'DIIool. ~- Ootd nrwo. Extnl Iloilo, tooo;
111Jo11o. $210111o. UtUftloa Plld, oon,
OH 1-IQO.II:J7.0121. •
Or TtM1 Far Orovolv 01 EAIUII
1'14441 441Ufl• 7 P.M.
Vo1ut, 114-M1·1013 A«• I P.ll.

rn:;;;

--2107.

=·

:-=::-"""=':"'-,"';;_ill;;;·------

Annual Chalneaw cheln

hool&lt;..,po. Co I oHil Z:OO p.m.,
304·773-665t, Moton wv.

Laundry, 814-388-mll.

42 Mobile Homes

1 lnd Z bodroom oportmonto.
lumllhod and unhrmllhod.
-urfty doDOOit nqullld, no
poto, 8~-2211.
lbr. lportrnll'll, B o l - Add~
tlon. newty ,.,o dalad, no pet•.

Electric

t9113 Troc1or Botorw, Blado,

45

Raclrw.

Foot•'•

Bueh Hog, $5,000, 114-446-3040.

Farm Equipment

Chain Sow bora • cholna to lit
French Provlnclal dlnlngroom almoet any uw. BaM prk:le In
set, tabla, 6 chairs, ehlna, $500. araa. Side,. Equlpment 304Set 14" wheals &amp; tlrH for S-10 615-JII21 or 1-1100-277-3917.1
truck, $100. 30HT5-4034.
Ford Molfllon dloool tractor,
Garden Mums: Yellow, White, $2350. 304-e7S-5218.
Orange And Purple. TayiOJ's
Berry Patcl'l, Ken Road, 614·245-- MIOMJ Forg._, T035 TriCtor
9047.
Whh B.. h Hog, And Btoclo,
$3,850· Mlnoy Fervuoon 85
Gaa cook stove, excellent c:on- With Ptow And Cultivator, And
dltlon, 814-742-2518.
Pool Holt Dlggor, $3,g&lt;l5; 135
King Brand COla &amp; Woodbumer, MaiHy Ferguaon Olesal, With
Wllfi Blower, Like Now, $150, Loader, $6,350i 614-286-6522.
614-446-1637.
Livestock
63

Corpot $5.00 Up VInyl $4.411 To
$8.50 In Stock, 614-446-11144,
lloltohln Corpoto.

obll, OVerloolllng Tho Ohio
Rlvwr, In · Konougo. Oopoah,
RolortnCM Roqullwd.
Moblll Hcmo Porte, 814-446-11102.
141180 2 Br, 1 mlto South ol
Eurtka, on SL Rt.7. No poto,
lllortncoo.11W56-10811.
1gag Sunohlno tl'lilar In Rutland, 2 br, coli lot tppolntmont,
814-112-IIV:IS.
2 Bedroom Troller, $250/Mo.l14446-11166.
2 Bodroom, Total Eleclrlc:, 1 112
MIIN Goltlpotll On Stoto Routo
588, $211C1111o., $200 " ' - " ·
R o - Roqullld. I~
3411
2 ao-.., At;, No Poto,
Dopolit
And
Rolorwlcoo,

Dry walnut lumber, 50 cent1 par
Jenning•

=-·

1

61~

1002 Buick Regal, loaded 814902-4137.
I

THAR'S OL' SNUFFY'!

• Q fi 5 4

(pref.)
28Actor -

50 Entertainer
Paul 51 Sewing
i mplement

52 Fisherman·s
basket
53 Preoccupy

54 No ifs . - or
buts

DOWN

Estevez

Q

JOFumed
33 Circuit
34 Bagged drinks

1 Court game
2 Born earlier

7 Nip

35 Jacob· s son
37 Calif . airline

3 Whistle sound

8 Monogram part

11 Harm1

4 Map abbr .
5 LP speed

9 Author
Umberto -

14SIIppery
fishes

6 Fragrance

10Japaneoe
money unit

15 Forerunner of

1002 Convertible LaBaron, tow

BRINGIN' HOME
TH' BACON!!

I t

I •

1 NT

Pa s~

24
3 NT

CIA
t 6 Actress Weld
20Futlle
22 Here (Fr.)

Pass
All pas.-,

23Former

Japaneoe

Opening lead : .. 5

atateaman

25Born
260verturn
27 Range (abbr.)
29Defaca
30Hwy.
31 Roman bronze
321nhabltents
36 Typa ol duck
370uakes
38WIId
39Pag-.:...
Heart
411rritates
42Adjusted
properly
44 Nest o1
pheasants

Finesse
for success?

V~

By Phillip Alder

Benjamin Di s ra e li . sa id. '"The secre t

Vlpor

V:l'
LS 4 DR. Porloet :
Shopo AMIFU radio. Culltto '"'

of success is co ns ta ncy of purpose ·· In
ot her words. de termmc yo ur goal a nd
keep pluggi ng away until you reac h it.
In bndge. the goal is to make a ll th e

1ncl Dlac changer. $16,000.00.814--4467500
.. .

PEANUTS

White Uncoln Town C.r 1988
Loaded! Automatic, Uathl;
S.ata, E•celltnl Condition, 1

1-11 , OlJCK . SORfN TO

OWner, 80,000 Mllto, $7,000, 814448-4425.

72

Trucks for Sale

LATEL'{ .

SLEEP .

LISTENER .

614-i92-7546

aher

4:30pm.
1987 Rongor, STX $3,200, 1185
Chivy 112 Ton, $2,600, 814-4468158.
11187 S-10 Au1omatlc 110,310
Milos $4,500, 8t4-446.0V24.

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

19110 Nl01an pickup truck, Ale,
with 1 capi\ $3500, 814-".112-2082
evenlnga, aymond Cotterill.
Chevrotlt, Ford, Doclg• pickup
bedt. Short or long. No rult .

304-e7H266.

73

Vans &amp; 4 wo·s

1977 Jeap CJ-5, 304 standard
$2500, 614-m-

transmission,

5532.
1998

Dodge

Car1van

V-G

Au1omallc, O.llva'l Van, NO
Wlndowo, $2,100. 14-258-1618
814-256-1252.
.

1989 Dodgo Ram Van 110,000
Milas, $4,000; Con Bo Soon At:
Gallipolis Dally Tribune, 825
Third Avenue, Gallipolis, 614·

BORN LOSER

446-2342.

'l

1991 Ford F-150, Good C&lt;&gt;ndi-

Motorcycles

TD '&gt;II Bf\C.K. At-IC&gt; 1&lt;£/A.I Nl
NYJJ\ TH£
.--.

tor Sale

Fnme, Must Sell, $1,000, 614-

446-4781.

1981 Chryallr Cordoba 1500,
614 441-6f58.
1881 Eldundo Cadillac $2,100,
good ...... ~-.

Hl '(. NA.l l ' 'WAN NA

Hhp onglne wllurbo prop,
$3150 nog. 304-87S-7718.

COM£. OVER. "'ND

Ru N 1 HR.OUG~

1985 Olastpolt, 17ft opan bow,

76

1117V CMY. 4 - - 304-8711-1502.
1117V Pontile Formull Flrtblrd,
451 high porlomJo,_ orlalrw.
Atoo, hiovy dlltJ cor tl'lltor.~
815-7815.
1117V Pontile llrlnd Prix, Blacll
On Bladl,- Brokoo,l Tr1n1.,
Undtr 100,000 Mltto, Exceltont

BIG NATE

16ft. Bayllntr bowrlder wJtraller,

t564.

2720 All• I P.M.

2.5

cyl,

full
$5,200. 304-e7S-58t5.

~PRINKU:R c'~--

TH (

ln.

TIWII07.

t1181 Hondo avtc 4 Door, so.nroot, 114 ue • •·
·
11181
MUIIong
LX,
.,
100·
614441-tlll.
..,
f
11181 Olda Dolto 18 4 Doot: PS
PB, PTW AC I Cytlnclor ' oc'
114 441 4Ai3. t
t
I

350 or 400 turbo tranamlalfona
uHd or o"erhauled, guarantMd
Pleasant.

'

Budglll PrieM Tranaml11lona,

&gt;.J

whHia ndlators floor ma.t1,

. ...,, .

....."~·

'-1" ~,

Ulld • rwbuln, oil typot,stlrt·
lng ot $89; ownor 614-24o-5677,
814-3711-2935, 814-3711-2283.
Now goo tanks, 0111 ton truck

.,1,

I•

out-.
.........

AC,~,

the king and sw1tc hed to a heart. With
th1 s lie of I he cards. South co ul d no
longe r make h1s contract.
True . th e lead looked as th ough it
was away from t he king. bu t suppose
South rises with th e spade ace. plays a
club to his ace a nd co ntinues with the
10. planning to ove rta ke w1th ei th er
dummy's jack or king How can he go
down ? He ca n'l. Whatever the layout,
al the wors t Eas t wins with th e club
queen and the defenders cash three
s pade tn cks . So uth always win s at
least one s pade . one heart, two di a ·
monds and five dub s .
Only finesse when it IS safe or nee ·
essary.

t\HI

\\~\\

II

J\IS1 CRI&gt;-(1\S till:
~~ 1\E.\-1. 11 ...

•

·-

....

HONt;~ I 1 11-\IN\\ II'S
' 1\\~1'3 R\151·11,
O?RAI-I!
11M~ '1'DiJ SiOPWORR~IN

~Cl\l'R~ SQ
1\00\11 RESPE.CiiN'
Rloi-\T'
'10\IR MAN t&gt;,Nil ~IARI
RE';PELitN' YOURStLf

-81---------~,~
Home
Improvements

. ..
:
~- •

BASEMENT
·- '
WATERPROORNG
Uncondhlonot tllellme guonon- tH. Local r...,.nc.. fumlahacl.!':

Coli 1-llll0-287-o571 Or 114-231' ~
0418 Rogora Wot-flng. &amp;- · •
llblllhlllli711.

C&amp;C

Gorwl'li

,..

Homo .,

~~~::~~=~~::::==~~p~re:;dlctrons ioday by ma111ng $1 25 lo Astro·

Mal.-...,... waiiPIJ*', ltorm
- . , roollng and complolo
homo repolr, camplota window
....lr, _ , . -lng lnd
mOIJIII liomt ,...lr. For tno M- .~
tlrNte 0111 CMI, 114-112~.
,,..

Graph. clo lhis newspaper. P 0 . Box 4465.
New Yo rk. NY 10163. Be sur e 10 stale

ASTRO·GRAPH

effons on meamnglul goals •n
1 cycle
The more stgml•cant. the better Btg expec·

your zodrac s1gn

tattons ca n be gratthed '" thts lime frame 11
you have the determmatron

VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept . 22) Your besl

PISCES (feb. 20-March 20) Slrrve

asset today rs your ability to tmprove on the
ideas of assoctales. Even if whattiley have
to oHer ts good going tn. you can ma~e it

mainta1n

a

ph1iosophrcal attitude today .

regardless ol what develops II your out·
look tS posit1ve. negatrve s1tuatrons can

bener

comfortably reversed.

fllllho,

UBRA (5epl. 23-oct. 23) Conditions look

fill Ell-•114-387-41811.
Ron'1 TV Sonk:e, _..lzlng
In lanlth oloo oonldng moot
olhlr bnJndl. coli•. oleo

el(lremely promtSing for you at this hme. as
far as your hnan c tal tnlere st s are co n ·
cerned . Keep searchtng for ways to add to
your tncome or holdingS. Lady Luck ts Will·

ARIES !March 21-April 19) Today
most stgnlfant benefits m1ght come
arrangemenls that are not of your ma1k1no I

Klt-.o

Windon. lnlur.d,

4

~.:.

·

.'

~'Your

1ng lo help.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Endeavors
you create or manage today have excellent
chances lor s u ccess. but don "! e xpect
Rome to be built m a day What you're
deahng w1th could have long·term possibili-

wcmrthday
fnday. Aug. 12. 1994

- · fllllllln'o HNIIng And Coollna.
or111100.
814-1411-2844
llllllllatlcn And Sonllco. Elfl
Cortlllod. Rooldontlai, Commw-

Even though you mJght have to overcome ties .
some obstacles, substantial material SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 2J..Dec. 2t) Friends
growlh is Indicated tor the .year ahead. m1ght requesl favors of you today they
Keep trying and don't settle for second dare not ask of others . They know you're a
best.
compassionate pe•son ..no will help d at all
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) As you approach poss1ble.
the luWillment of your expeclations today, CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Your popyour luck could be significantly magnified. ularity among your peers i s tracking
Be delermined to produce desirable upwards . Even thOse who have recenlly
resuns. Gel a jump {)11 tffe by understand- treated you w1th rndifference may do an
Ing the inlluences governi.ng you in the about ·lace and shower you with warmth
year ahead . Send lor your Astra-Graph AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Focus your

clll.l~66-t8t1.

84

soldier

49 - Mlserablea
52 Symbol for
calcium

CElEBRITY CIPHER

Ce teourv C•pl"leo rryp tog•am f. ;ve cr ea1 eatoom q...ol aJoon~ by r ~mDtJ~ pe~lt• Pit~1 ,m(] P•fiSPn t
Each 1(&gt;11('1 PP!he copheo &lt;; l dnds to o ••no1h('o
~
l eq..,,,,~

roa"r ,-:..,,.

X

S KG

TAGCGV

V T S

T Z

ENC

SKETI)LK

KTVYXCL

V T T E

AGTAVG

NCV

N C V

Z T E

N

S K G R

V G Z S

PCTU

S K G

s

FBI S

0 G

UT

VXYYVGR

Inc

11

_':'_u_~z_Dt_~~-'_S.:_©.: ~~~c~.- ~ t~Ss

WOlD
GAM I

0 lour
Rearrange letters of
Krombled words
low to lorm four words

I GOFERA

I I I II I

I

CA NKK

I

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

•

e

PR INT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUA RE S
UNSCRAMBlE ABOVE L£TT ERS
TO GET AN SWER

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS

Neuron - Mucus · Jerky · Govern - CORNER
Overheard in office e levator: "Our new boss wi ll never
be successful He has not learned that cornering people
1s not lhe same thing as getting them in vourCORNER ."

....

•

Services

RtpllCII'IIIIIC

a.:'3'e ::f

© 1994 1l v NEA

47Yoko48 Confederata

.\1

~

otc. D if. R Auto, Rlploy, WV. :104372-3133 or t--.:zn-9321.

Roollng,

2.2

my's queen . Howeve r . East won with

8 • 30 doyo. 30W75-48110, Pt

Turbo. Now
Cot dllooo,l2,700,.
IIPPIIa,_ repolro. WV
1111 GEO ~ runo __. -304-67t4218
Ohio 814-446-2454.
high ltllllgl:~ · - ·
1117 Plymouth Sunclonco, 82
Plumbing &amp;
111,000 Nllla, maroon Heating

cvl.
:1100
doyo

1'1E XICAN

DINNE"P... 1 11 LL BE ,._
~OT MORE FUN THAN
SOliE LAME SPRINKLER.'

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

r:!'.:'

~M!'"' -·· $1700. -

PB, PI,

AUTHENTI C:

to~.

11181 VW Ooll I Spood All
101,1!4!0 1111oo, Good shojii' Cultia Home lmr.owmtnta. No:-:"
$2,-, 114-446-7823.
• Job Too Bla Or roll, YIIN Ellbn Oldor IN-r
Addllono, Fowldollono,
11181 Ford Tompo, ....,.

~~.

THEN A.fl EP.. 1HAT . HI S
nOTH ER 15 (QOK I~~ AN

1"1'1 Mf.[l i NU TECD'f'
HE A~D I HAVE
STAR. PR.ACli C.E '

-

1882 otdomobllt 18 R - ,
M,ooo Millo. All ,_.,~
Ctton, ww Toks auno,
Or
Pool T - In Tnldo. I
64t1
1883 BulcJI l.t Sobor Um"td,
Zdr., 33,000ml., •5500 llrm. 304-

PREVIOU S SO LU TION ··one way 01 anol her you have to se rve human 1t to
be occastonally nappy . no one 1s always happy · - Gregory Peck
Y

AHANDFUL
OF CASH
IS BETTER
THANA
GARAGE·FUL
OF STUFF

75 Boats &amp; Motors

tm ~Coronot u,ooo
orlglnot m
4t\,.., loll
of new pert1,
tlrm. :J04-I7S.
tml lkxlge Aapon, Slant I Engine, Runa Good, $415, 114-371-

46 Mountain lake

sacrificing I a nd to defeal all th e co n·
tracts you defend It is 1mposs 1b le to
do this all the lime. of course, but yo ur
constancy of purpose s hould be In s uc·
ceed wheneve r possible
Wes t lea ds t he s pa de five agains t
your contrac t of three no -trump . How
wo uld you plan th e play'
Many Wests would produce a weak
JUmp overca ll of two hear&lt;s . But d
North ·Soulh bu ys lh e cont ract . that
bid would make it ras 1er for th e de clarer to read the cards.
East migh t have competed with two
hea rt s. bu t withou t an honor 1n th e
.s u1t. he didn 't want to e ncourage West
to lead a heart .
Plac1ng Wes l with th e s pade km g
for h1s overcall. South called for dum ·

•.

Chav
4
board/outboard,

m or, -

~----

"'

wi'INI drive, new front tire, 111·
new engine ona year ago, $1800

Honde Super Sport 400cc, 4cyl.,
8apd., $650 OBO. 304-117$-4452.

'84 Chryollr Now Yorll•, 2.211tro
tu.rbo1 p. w - , PS, PB, tift
w.... lront - 1 drt... 88.000
mlloo, good cond"lon. coli 114W-411R •H•IIpm.
1966 llorcury C,ctono GT, $700,
814-38B.all28.

L.tllorcn

R£110\&amp;..i?.. ~Yn\1116
AAYMCJR£.. 7

CX..C&gt; Df\'(~ 7

'87 Vamaha Warrior, 350cc, 21

814-992-I!St~

""

t.JK/1.1'5 10 REMI~l ':l.£
~tH' t.Jiirn YOU CAN'\

Q\, (.()ME, (IN . ISt\i II t-IIC.E.

(»..lXJ\T£1&lt;., Tl-\f.R£ I'&gt;
1-1011\tN.G w:J:) m~Y
GROWl N6 OLD I

Uon, CO Playar, XLT Package
614-44~352.
.

74

8. 1/

'·

..4:&gt;.--.4&gt;.--

cond. 304-1175-111117.

Autos tor Sale

1t11 c...,_

ALWA't'5 A GOOD

111711 Ford f ·150 V-II Aulo, 54,000
MIIH, $4,500, 614-3711·21101.
1884 Ford Ft50, 4x4, 351 V-11, 4
1paed,

con tracts you d2clare 1 unless you are

1 LIKE TO TALK TO
'(OU BECAUSE '(OU'RE

ON M'{ MIND

WAKE '{OU UP. BUT I

COULDN'T

I'VE 11AD A LOT

1983 Honda Shadow 500cc, exc.

Transportation
71

A form e r Brili s h Pnme Mini s ter.

mornlngo.

0

'

Claire

45 River arm
47 A Wright

Vul nerable: No rth ·S oulh
Dea le r South
South
West North East

BARNEY

304-117~148

61

I

26 Diplomacy

t K .J 11 ~ 2

10M Bar.n., aqu1, tlnled wln-

Diamond Sopphlll Ring $200,
614-446-2504 Laavt Mn11go.

Evan•

25 Promontory
271 n1ermediate

4 A I0

21,wuml., lake over patmantt:

foot. 304-882-38n .

41 Athletic
buildings
42 Those people
43 Actress -

do~1 hlldllght covera, decals

Mason County Ftltr Wotk Only
Whoalchalr &amp; Chargor, Good Sldo11
Equipment. 304-417S-".1121.
Chair, Llko Now, 614-4~7.

51

Nice 2 or 3 bedroom hctu.. In

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

24 DraH agcy .

t 9

AIU 8n4
•A

Au1ometlc, Loodtd, 1?,.000 Mlloo'
$1,2SO, 814-256-1818 ur 614-256:
1:152.

Rafarenen Required. 51.4-4464425 Evenlnga.

dop, no pots, 304-11711-!1182.

All real estale llCIV'Mislng In
lhis newspaper Is subjed lo

sex lamllal starus or nallonal
or1gln, or any lntentlon to
make any sucll protarence,
llmtlallon or discrimlnalbn:

Vord Work Windows Woshod
Guttorw Ctoantd Light Hauling,
Commarlcol, RnldOntlol, Stovo:
614-446-414ll.

dopoah, no poll, 8t4-aV2·5724.
Unturnl8hld Upttalra Apanment
3 Room1, Bath, W1 Cedar Straat,
VlfY Cloon, $3001Mo. Wotar
Paid, 814 388 8000.
VlfY Nice 3 Bodroomo Second
F~•• OVerlooking dtv Pork,
$30UIMO. No Pott, DopooH &amp;

New condition, 3 t.drooma, ret,

Part-Uma
Veterinary Asst.,
profer
experi&amp;need
person .
Send resume: Box R·9 1 c/o Pt.
PltaMnt Register, 200 Main Sr.,
Pt. Plusant,"W't/25550.

Handy

41

54

2

• 9 8 2

SO LITH

2181, l.aava Meuage.

1083 Pontiac Gr11nd Am

2 1 Roman 3

"K J 9

:t

• 2

mll11. 30W75-IIT8T tftor 5pm.

$2cJO

Conltruc:tlon Wot1tara Welc:cma,
Fraa
Efficiency
Kitchen,

THE HfAD

fish

E.~ST

¥ K J I (I i ·l
I I Q I0 8 7

1002 Black Ford Aeroetar Van

apa"ment,
uliiHIIO pold, :;~~to periling,

Furnished
Rooms

Bti(J::. Of

WEST
AS :!

11111 Dodgo Spirit ES, 4 Doer, 8
Cyllndw1 _1.ood..t, Good Condi·
tlon, $5,w5, 614-446-2300.

bedroom

mo.,

r:V, ~Mt.WHAT OF AIJ
E.~RRT OJ lHE BA:J:::S
Of IWMUJ 5 H£AC6

•/KUO\V 'rOU HAVE..
A \..t.RY W.U.y

•

43,000 Mllu, $12,500,

18 Hubbub
19 Hawaiian food

4KJ~8 73

under

-3152.

5

Answer to Previous Puute

brother

17 Encountered

• A .\ :!

D2C1.

$232-$355 . Coli 614-9V2-585g.
EOH.
Nice 2 Bedroom, 4 112 Milos
From Galllpollo, Chy Schoole,
Stove, Ratrlgerlto!1 Water Furnlahod, S:ZSO/Mo. No Poto, 614446-B0311.
Nl&lt;l 3 br. opl. In Middleport,
814-192-5858.
One &amp; two bedroom apt, 125
Cole Sl, Mlddloport, Ohio, 814192-TSt1.

Camp Contoy, 3 bodroom, 2
bothl, $300. pluo deposit, 1 yr

settlements,
rldlr
tlmt ho1111. 1~00.~

Ganeral Malnlentnce, Painting,

living. 1 and 2 badroom apertmanta at Vlllaa•
Manor
1nd
Rlvenlila
Apartment• In Middleport. From

~P.M.

system,

not required.
1 us bl your
employer of 1at chcHce. Please
Mnd litter of lnterut and
,.,uma to Box A-29, clo Pt .
Plaaaant Register, 200 Main St.,
Pt. Plaaaant, WV 25550.

Gr~c:loue

Roaponliblo
Proflsslonat
2 br. - . US3/mo, plus Couple Looking For Vory Nlca 3
ulltHioo, $100 deposit. 304-e75- Bodroom Or t:orgor Ho..o To
5515.
Ront. Muot Bo Gciocl Condition,
3 Bod_, In Goltlpotle, 114- 614 446 4034.
~003, Or 814-446·14011 2 P.M.

Real Estate

P1rt-tlme delivery person, min·
lmum w1g1, no banetlts, 30hrl.
appro1. ~U75-21n batwaan

other

Rentals

for A 5·10 Blaur. 614-367.0508.

flatbed, Nm percentage of
grou r1venue pulling company
fnllal"' or pulllng a.vn trailer,
health lntUlanee wl dental &amp; vi·
slon avtllable, base platH
avalla~ll,
bob-tall lnsuranc.
tuel

Hpotlo, 814-446-31145.

Al.o trAit...

6~.

av•llable,

$185/Mo. 9UI Second Ava., Gal·

vlaw,

• ti

EEK &amp; MEEK

1gag Eocon 4 Door Stollen
Wagon, Automotlc1 4 Cylinder
Air conditioning, "11/Fll" RtdiO
CUootto P~r, CIII'!, .. GOOd
Condhlonl
ng Poy un. 304875-6855.
tgn Pontiac l.tMana, AMIFM
Rodlo, Coli AHor 5 P.M. 814-446-

Efficiency
U~lltloo Paid,

614-446-1580.
Sltoplng Roomo $15 Per Ooy.

T-Sh lrt, Hat, Jacket Bualnese.
Two Presses, 1992 Trailer With
Llghta, Carpet And Inventory,
Set-Up For Ball Teama, And

Ownar!Operators

Fumllhod
Downotolrw, All

Wanted

New Terminal
Cardinal Freight Carriers Inc: . 11
hiring
experienced
owner/oparatora
tor
tha

C..rdlnal Fralght Carrlera 11
hlr1ng etper1anced OTR's to run

wv.

Real Estate

Needed: C.r Audio Installer And
SataiUte
Engineer,
Bob's
Eltctronlca, Upper Route 7, Gallipolis.

242t

1br, 11111 to Ubrory, porl&lt;lng,
heat, air, rafel11nca ,.
qulrod. 814-446.(1338.

~1-1

Coleman

$1,000.
eacn
Se~ ~~Cera, New Haven'

central

Rooms tor rent ~ weak or monl:h.
Starting at $120/mo. Gallla Hotel.

Dry Cleaner &amp; Laundry In Gal·
llpolls Aroa. Establllhtd Van
Route. Excellent C&lt;&gt;ndHionl 614682-1302, 614~82-3199 AHar 6
P.M.

pay program, accurate w&amp;akly
satllaments, medical Ins. avail·
able, rtdar program and time
home, no up front money to
~ .. on. Call Boyd, 1-800.22().

e~~ra

14g-2481.

Opportunhy

614-448-2568.

Fumlah8d

8 II

Mtro, high mil~ $g&lt;l5, 11ag
Chivy Cortlca LTZ $4,215. 11110
Chivy Lumlno Euro SSJ!D5. 1DII1
Chov S-tO $4)00. 1g•, Chivy
Btazor loodtd $4~00. Flvo old

Apartment,

rtvar

acre tot, 20x40 building whh
renovated one bedroom apart·

Call

Autos for Sale

lNI Dodge Shadow, gOOd
IChool Cllr $1,65. 1981 Gao

EOH.

River prcperty nNr Syracuaa,

Wtnted to buy- two or more
acrn, aultable to build on and
clote to a blacklop road, 614-

Business

movlea.

675-5253.

3431.

Financial

l

TVfo

Fadtral mobil nome and ccm·

Will do housekeeping,
nlngs. 304-675-4149.

lil.lm-6pm.

Potentlel $200 -$2,000 Monthly.
Fantastic Dlscountsl Benefits!
Flexible Hours. Territory Op-

tant O!ractor
Plncreat Care

g92-T562.

&amp; Acreage

5.32 acras, $13,160. 8.14 acrwa,
$14,570.
Rayburn
Ad,
r..sonabla rastrictlona. lnfor·
matlon mall.d on requ.... 304-

Applic41tions August 17, 1994.
Mature dependable babysiUar
noaded to care tor four yuar old
&amp; new born In my home, call atltr 5 :00 or leave message, 614·

Lots

11

BEAUTIFUL AP~RTMENTS AT
BUOGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES 538 Jackson Plks
trom szi2 to $285. Walk to shop
Nlcely

1988 Oak Wood molble home,
14xTO, 2 bedrooms, exc cond,

Help Wanted

EVENING

. KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Apartment
for Rent

Wanted to Buy

12Nobleman
13Take apart
14 Feeling
15 Ja zz player -

ctestinalion
40 Superlative
end ing

•

but still provide advantages untquely

to your character
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) If you have
make a dlffirull deCision today , return to
friend who has oHered you wrse adv1c'' 1

previously . This person has a lot
soluttons 1n his/her storehouse o f
edge

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Adequate
should be ava1lable today to aSSist you i
handl tng a difficult development

thought you 'd have to manage on

own.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Because
you're rather bOld and enterprising today,
others might feel you are taking risks you
should avo1d . However , you'll be well
aware ol your limitations and govem your
actionS accordingly.
01994 NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN

!THURSDAY

AUGUST 11 I

�r

2-The Dally Sentinel

Ohio News in Brief:
Sting operation nets fugitives
CLEVELAND - Authorities have arrested 62 I rugitivcs in the
past th ree mon ths by lunng them into a sU&gt;te office building with
bogus promi ses of mcreased wel fare benefits or tax refunds.
The people, all wanted in C leve land on felony charges, were
among 5. 100 fugllivcs mailed offers of h1 gher benefits or $I ,000
' 1ncomc ta x refunds, state offi cwl s said Wedn esda y. Some of the
fu gllJ VC&lt; we re wante&lt;l for murder, r'dpe, arson and kidnapping.
"The lure of money is temptin g bait," said Ohio Auomey General Lee Fi sher.
Authorlli cs used the fu gi ti ves' la tes t known add resses for the
mailings. Those respondi ng were told to report to the buildm g in
Cl eveland, where they were arres ted.
"F ugiti ves 011 til e run , being compe nsated by swtc or county
funds - it slinks and the public doesn't like it," said Cuyahoga
County Sheriff Gerald T. McFaul. He was re fcrnng to fugitives who
continue to receive welfare benefits .
The we lfare and tax refund sting was the third of its kind in the
pas t year in Ohio. Authorities arre sted 432 people in the earli er
stin gs in C leve land and Co lumbu s. Th e fug itive &gt; had been sent
noti ces that they m1g ht qualify for pa yments as part of a class action
laws uit.
The st:lte attorney general and aud1t0r offices and the Cuyahoga
Co unt y sheriff' s department directed U1c latest stin g.

Floss escapee back in jail

,

SOUT H C HARLESTON, W.Va.- An inmate who braid ed
minty-waxed dental noss into a 20-foot rope to freedom smiled and
joked when he was captured five weeks later, police said.
Police caught Robe rt Dale Shepard on a bru shy hillside Tuesday
after he alleged ly robbed a pharmacy in Mineral Wells, Trooper
B.D. Adkins satd.
" He sa id , ' My God, l can't beli eve you caught me ," ' Wood
County Shcnff Ken Merritt said .
Shepard had escaped while awaiting trial for allegedly robbing a
post off1 cc. Now he 'II likely face more charges of escape and robbery , poli ce sa id . He also has convJCtJons for manslaughter and
armed robbery .
Shepard was returned to the South Central Regional Jail, the
y=·old , $ 12.5 million jail where on June 29, he outsmarted cameras, walkie -talkies , intercoms, computer-controlled doors, vtdeo
mon itors and more than 60 guards to become the first escapee.
Authorities said he climbed up the rope and cut through a fence
wi th a hac ksaw blade. After the escape, noss was removed from the
jail store and the Regional Jail and Correc tional Facility Authority
voted to inswll razor wtre above recreatiOnal areas.

Murder suspect will get bond
DAYTON - A woman awaiting a retrial on charges she killed
her ex -husband and his girlfriend must be allowed to go free on
bond, a state appeals court has ruled.
The 2nd Ohio District Court of Appeals on Wednesday overturned a lowe r court's dec ision to deny bond to Susan Daws of
Frankl in .
In setting a $ 100,000 cash bond, the appellate court noted that
Mrs. Daws had remained free on $ 150,000 cash bond while her ftrst
murder trial was pending.
On Jvly 27, the appeals court reversed her conviction in that trial.
The court found that Montgomery Co unty Common Pleas Judge W.
Erw in Kilpatrick did not allo'w sufficient testimony from a psycholog ist about battered woman's syndrome.
Kilpatrick sentenced Mrs. Daws , who was convicted on two
counts of voluntary manslaughter, to 23 years in prison.
Afte r Kilpatrick denied Mrs. Daws bond pending the second
trial, her attorney, David Chicarelli, turned to the appellate court
again. Prosecutors are appealing the reversal of her conviction to
the Ohio Supreme Court.
·
"We do not view granting bond to a criminal defendant whose
conviction has been revel'lied and the case remanded for further proceedings as an act that in any way interferes with the ability of the
Supreme Court to review our ruling, " the appellate court said.
Battered woman 's syndro111e. often is cited as a defense by
women charged with crimes who say they struck back only after
y=s of abuse by their partners.
.
Testimony from two psychologists was divided as to whether
Mrs. Daws fit the pattern for the syndrome. She claimed she killed
her ex-husband, Dwayne Daws, and his girlfriend, Karen Houseman, on July 16. 1992, in self-defense. She said she feared her husband because he had beaten her in the past.
- The Associated Press

activists
press ban
on tourism

Page 4

POMEROY, OH.

1·800·837·1 094

SUMMER SELL DOWN
1994

!

CONVERSION VAN

1994
S·SERIES
PICKUP

tlt11

$8999
1985 FORD F150 4X4 ............................'6995
Only 47,000 mllea.

1992 S160 EXT. CAB PICKUP ........... '10,495
1989 CORSICA ...................................... '4995
1993 NISSAN 4X4 EXT. CAB ............. '13,495
1988 BUICK LESABRE ••" ..................... '4495
199~ CADILLAC FLEETWOOD ......... '13,995
1991 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME •••••••• '8995
1991 CHEV. CAVAUER ....-................... '5995

Good Selection
of 93 &amp; 94
Program Cars.

Hurryl
They Are
Going Fast!

Vol. 45, NO. 71

3 Sectiono, 52 Pageo 35 cent.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, August 12, 1994

Copyright 1994

Poolside pleasure

49

ORDERS NOW BEING TAKEN

A

Multimedia Inc. N.,...p.oper

EMS relents on no news policy
lly JIM FR.:F:MAN
Sen tinel News Starr
Emerge ncy ru ns of th e Meigs
Coun ly Emerge ncy Medical Servic e will once again be published
in The Daily Se ntinel after Prosecuting Attorney John R. Lemcs
notified Emergency Services direc tor Robert By er thi s morning that
the runs arc a public record.
EMS enac ted th e no new s
release policy Monday morning,
prompting Ohio Valley Publishing
Co . publisher Robert L. Wingett to
speak out saying it violates the people's right to know.
Meanwhile, Lentes said he was
given inad equate information
before he sent a letter to EMS earlier advising them to halt the news
release of EMS run s.
Lentes said he was under the
impression that EMS issued a press
release listing the calls. Instead ,
The Daily Se ntinel calls EMS for

GET ANY IN STOCK CAR OR TRUCK AT 5
~:::ICE
•• •
OR ORDER ANY FORD, LINCOLN, OR MERCURY TO
YOUR SPECIFICATIONS AT NO EXTRA CHARGE!

the inform ation.
"They (EMS) sent me a one paragraph lettet and they didn't tell
me thi s ba ckg rou nd stuff when
th ey asked for an op inion, and I
gave them a ge neric o pinion ,"
Lentcs said.
"That' s the difference," Lentes
said. referring to the EMS providing the information without request
versus the request being initiated
by the press.

" Und er (t he Ohio Rev ised
Code) it says very few th ings arc
not public recor&lt;ls an y more. And
th eir runs, as they arc supported by
th e publ1 c tax dollars, arc public
rccorcl," he said. " ... As far as what
th ey put in th eir logs, that 's not
ph ys 1cian -pati ent (privil ege) and
wh ile they can't give 11 out. if you
ask for it, you can have it. "
Le ntes co mm ent ed th at he is
always try in g to keC4J eve r yo ne

"Under (the Ohio Revised Code) it says very
few things are not public records any more.
And their runs, as they are supported by the
public tax dollars, are public record."
Prosecuting Attorney
John R. Lcntcs

aware of th e Sun shi ne La w and
public records laws.
"The pu hi 1c reco rd s law is so
broad ... that you can giv e information out un der (th e Oh1 0 Revis ed
Code) wllhnu t be1n g sued because
you arc rc~uircd 10 do it by law
now," Lcntcs sa1cl.
Bycr said a member of the EMS
board of tru stees br ought up the
legality of publishing the names of
people treated or transported by the
EMS and th e loca ti on to whic h
they were transported. The pre su mption was that the information
is privileged.
Under the current arrangement,
The Daily Senti nel will pick up
ac tual copies or the log instead of
calling EMS for the inform ation .
This morn ing the new spaper
picked up information on emergency runs dating back to the time the
policy was initiated. (See related
story- "EMS logs 41 calls")

Trustees await more library branch bids
1994 LINCOLN
MARK VIII

1994 LINCOLN
TOWN CAR

2 Dr., V-8, auto., Climate
Control, PS, PB, PW, PL, Pwr.
seat , tilt, cruise, keyless
entry, leather, much more.
While, low miles.

1994 LINCOLN
CONTINENTAL

Signature Series, V·8, auto.,
Climate Control, PS, PB, PW,
PL. Pwr. seat, leather Interior,
much more.
TWO TO CHOOSE FROM

Signature Series, V-6, auto.,
Climate Control, PS, PB, PW,
PL, Pwr. seat, leather, moon
roof, etc. Green.

$29

949

$27,449

$28,449

1994 MERCURY
COUGAR XR7

1992 CADILLAC
SEDAN DEVILLE

1991 EAGLE
TALON

V·8, auto., A/C, AM/FM cassette, PS, PB, PW, PL, tilt,
cruise, traction assist, low
miles, more.

V-8, auto., Climate Control,
PS, PB, PW,PL, tilt, cruise,
Pwr. seats, leather Interior.
White, low miles.

TSJ Turbo 4 WD. 5 speed, air
cond., PS, PB, PW, PL, tilt,
cruise, AM/FM cassette, red.

LOCAL TRADE
MUST SEE

$19,949

SHARP

$12,949

1991

MUSTANG G.T.
S.OL V-8, 5 speed, air
conditioning, PS, PB,
PW, PL, tilt, cruise,
AM/FM cassette, sun·
roof, more. Low miles.

350 V-8, auto., AC front
rear, PS, PB, PW, PL. tilt,
cruise, AM/FM
ca11ette,

m~r~t6,m949

414 GMC

$16,995

ent1ne

Prices Quoted Include Reba1e Where Applicable. Tax, Title &amp; Fees Extra.

CONVERSION VAN

1994
'12 TON

high in the upper ~{)o, .

•

s19,43365*.
ORDERED UNITS
NO EXTRA CHARGE

Low tonight In 60s, partly
cloudy. Saturdlty, part ly sunn)',

5-12-16-18-37

·'

lARGE SELECTIO~
STARTING AT••• ~

14 TON 11TIARA"

tl\11

0407

By
Mark Ill &amp; Universal

3

.

Pick 4:

•

''VAN''TASTIC.. VALUES!

WAS $13,774
NOW

$12,499

128

-$49 OVER INVOICE MEANS •••

GEO TRACKER

12664

Pick 3:

GUARANTEED BEST BUY IN AMERICA

di scrim ination .

"Bas ica ll y, th e boycott sti ll
stands, until the iss ue has finally
bee n resolved,·· said Caro l Lippman, spok es woman for Gay and
Le sbian March Activist s/AIDS
Coali tion to Unleash Power.
The Ci ty adm ini s tration and
Equal Rights. Not Special Rights, a
coalition that backed the amendment, were preparing to appeal a
judge's ruling overturning the ban .
Lawyers on both sides of the issue
have predic ted the dispute will go
to the U.S. Supreme Court.
U.S. Distri ct JudgeS. Arthur
Spi ege l on Tuesday ruled that the
ban - a cit y charter amendment
approved by voters Nov . 2 - is
unconstitutionally vag ue and violates the right of homosex uals to
participate in the political process.
Gay -rights advocates had sought
to overturn the amendment, which
barred Cincinnati from enacting or
enforcing law s based on sexual ori entation. It also eliminated sex ual
orientation as a basis for discrimi nation complaints under a human rights ordinance the City Council
enacted in 1992.
Tourism officials on Wednesday
began trying to recoup convention
bu smess lost before Spiegel's rul ing .. Three conventions canceled
and five more were on hold.
"We 've lost approximately $19
million to $20 million so far that
we know of," said Dan Lincoln ,
vice pre sident of th e Greater
Cincinnati Convention &amp; Visitors
Bureau. "We hope that it will
remove that as an obstacle for picking Cincinnati as a convention
site."
Tourism bureau officials
declined to identify the five organiza tion s said to be awaiting the
court case's ouu:omc, but said they
could be worth $20 miUion in revenue between 1996 and 1999.
The tourism bureau called all
five on Wednesday to tell them
about Spiegel's ruling, bureau
spokeswoman Beth Charlton said.
Lincoln said the next step is to
show convention planners that
Cincinnati welcomes everyone.
Gay-rights advocates argued
that the amendment violated their
right to lobby government repre sentatives for any legislation that
would benefit gays, lesbians and
bisexuals.
Lincoln said Tuesday' s ruling
will not affect the status of the
three groups that canceled their
planned 1995 conventions in
Cincinnati and moved them elsewhere. Those were the American
Library Association, American
Historical Association and American Speech, Language and Hearing
Association .

Ohio L o tt (TY

Buckeye 5:

C INCINNATI (AP) -G ay rights activi sts still are pursu ing a
tour ism bo ycoll aga in st the city
eve n though they go t what they
wanted - the overturn of a ban on
laws protecting homosex ual s from

DON TATE MOTORS, INC.
614·992·6614

Dodgers
blank
Reds

Gay rights

1990 FORD E1 SO
CONVERSION VAN
V·8, auto., front &amp; rear atr
cond., PS, PB, PW, PL, tilt,
crul1a, AM/FM cassette,
more. Only 44,000 miles

$13,449

1988 ,CHEV. ASTRO
RAISED ROOF
CONVERSION
4.3L V-6, auto., A/C, PS, PB,
PW, PL, tilt, crulee, AM/FM
caas., much more. 68,Q,OO
mlll8,949

1990 PONTIAC
GRANDAM

1990 GEO PRIZM
4 DR. SEDAN

1989 BUICK
REGAL 2 DR.

2 Dr., 4 cyl., automatic, air
cond., PS, PB, PW, PL, tilt,
crul1e, Kenwood AM/FM CD.
Clean car.

4 cylinder, air conditioning,
PS, PB, P. locks, AM/FM caslatta, rear defogger, 44,000
mllea.

Automatic, air conditioning,
V-6, PS, PB, P. locke, tilt,
cruise, AM/FM cauette,
more.

$6,949

s6,749

s6,949

Mark Dailey, 11, chases bis 4-year-old niece Whittney Johnson with hili skateboard Thursday afternoon. The two Pomeroy
residents enjoyed the afternoon as summer nears its end. Neither jumped in the pool Thursday, however. (Sentinel photo by
George Abate)

By GEORGE A !lATE
Sentinel News Starr
Th e Meigs Co unty Library
Board of Trustees have postponed
accepting bids for its new Racine
branch .
Wesa m Construction was the
only fum to post a bid when library
officials opened bids Thursday.
The Chester-based company
offered a base bid of $395,000.
" It exceeds our estimated cost
by more than I 0 percent, which
was $244,700," project architect
David Reiser said. '' I'll talk with
the construction company to sec if
there wa~~ny reason for this high
csumate.
The inflated estimate could be

due to time constraints on getting
lower offers from subcontractors,
Reiser said. But, the original estimated cost included the prevailing
wage rate , so this could not cause
the discrepancy, he added.
Another round of bids will be
accepted at I :30 p.m. on Thursday,
Aug. 25. The lack of bids - when
at least six construction firms asked
for blueprints - could be due to
the difficulty or ge tting bond bids,
he added.
Other firms that may bid during

,.

th e nex t sess io n could inc lud e
Home Creek Enterprises and A-OK
Construction.
But Re1se r sa id the al ternate
costs of extra services will help to
serve as a benchmark for tl&gt;e next
sta ge of bidding. Alternate costs
proposed by Wcsam inc luded:
• saving $3,000 by repl ac ing a
concrete parking lot with blacl: lop .
• sav ing $19,600 by eliminating
patio landscap in g.
.
• sav ing $400 by rcd ucmg the
size of trees.
• add in g $5 ,000 for an alarm

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Cincinnati joins other baseball
cities for job action intervention
By LAURAL KARPANTY
Associated Press Writer
CINCINNATI - Labor Secre·
tary Robert Reich told mayors of
major league cities during a teleconference to continue pressuring
players and owners to meet.
"They do have a responsibility
to the fans, public, and cities
they're in," Reich told 18 mayors
and city representatives. They were
lobbying the Clinton administration
Thursday to intervene in the
ballplayers' threatened strike.
.
The public officials said a strike
would disrupt local economies.
"There is a tremendous amount
of public investment at risk from

the baseball strike, " said Todd Partun e , a Cincinnati city council
member.
Portune and Arlington, Texas,
Mayor Richard Green arranged the
last minute telephone conference.
The call included Reich and
officials from Cincinnati, Atlanta,
Phi ladelphia, Miami, San Francisco, Denver, St. Louis, Baltimore,
Boston, Detroit, Chicago, Min neapoli s, Oakland, Calif., Anaheim, Calif., Kansas City, Mo .. Los
Angeles, and Arlington, Texas.
There are 28 cities with major
league teams.
The cities were hoping to persuade the Clinton administration to

pressure the owners and players to
settle their issues without a strike,
Portune said.
"They simply don't want to
solve this before the strike begins,"
said Philadelphia Mayor Edward
RendeU.
Rendell suggested the administration get the ownel'li and players
to talk directly , bypassing the management and player representatives.
Reich repeated the administra tion's position that mediation services and arbitration were available
if both sides wanted them. He said
he had made some proposals about
procedure that could bring both
sides to the table, but that those
su£~estions were confidential.

/:

. I

convention of the 200,000-member
National Association of Police
Organizations. which strongly supported the crime bill.
''A majority of the House
attempted to take the easy way out,
but they have failed the American
people," Clinton said after lawmakers surprisingly rejected a procedural resolution, thus preventing
the House from voting on the legislation itself. "And now I say to
them, the easy way out is not an
option."
"I want them to come back
tomorrow and the day after that and
the day after that, and to keep coming back until we give the American people the essential elements
of this crime biU ."
With polls putting crime as the
No. I issue in this election year,
Clinton had lobbied ferociously on
behalf of the bill, which would
have fulfilled his campaign pledge
to putiOO,OOO more_police officel'li
on the street.
The six-year legislation also
would have banned many assaultstyle ftrearms, provided billions for
prisons and crime prevention, made
more than 50 additional crimes
subject to the death penalty and
allowed life sentences for some
third-time felons.
House Republican leader Raben
Michel of Illinois called it an
"unholy trinity of pork, posturing

and partisanship."
In bloclcing the legislation, 167
Republicans and 58 Democrats
voted against the rules governing
debate and voting procedures. Voting in favor were !98 Democrats,
ll Republicans and one independent.
Democratic gun-control opponents objected to the firearms ban,
and about l 0 black lawmakers
rejected the bill because it expanded the death penalty and did not
include a provision making it easier
to prove racial discrimination in
capital eases.
Clinton indicated a willingness
to compromise but said any bill
must include the 100,000 police,
the assault-style fireanns ban, a ban
on juvenile ownership of handguns
and life sentences for those who
commit a third violent or drug
felony.
.
"It will take a day or two to
clear the air," said Rep. Charles
Schumer, 0 -N.Y., chairman of the
House Judiciary Comminee crime
panel and a leading advocate of the
bill and its assault-style weapons

ban.
Clinton blamed the National
Rifle Association and the Republican leadership for the defeat while
defending the I 0 black lawmakers
who joined them for taking a
"principled position" against the
death penalty.

...
,i

I

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'l

front Stadium. The signs, which read "The Fans
Lose Again" and "The Boys or Summer, Boys of
Greed," were later conr.scated by ushers. (AP)

FANS SPEAK- Two fans held up signs
expressing their thoughts on the impending
baseball strike Thursday at Cincinnati's River-

Democratic leadership scrambles
-to resuscitate defeated crime bill
ByCAROLYNSKORNECK
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - With an
angry President Clinton exhorting
Congress not to fail the American
people, House Democrats are vowing to salvage a $33.2 billion anticrime bill torpedoed by gun-control
opponents.
Democratic leaders met with
White House officials late into the
night Thursday searching for some
way to revive the legislation and
rescue Clinton from the jaws of the
worst legislative defeat of his
administration.
"We hope next week we 'II be
voting on the crime bill," House
Speaker Thomas Foley, D-Wash.,
told reporters after the Capitolliill
meeting.
Foley gave no hint how
Democrats hoped to placate an
unlikely alliance of gun-control
opponents, conservatives and black
lawmakers who blocked the bill
Thursday on a 225-210 procedural
vote. But he said they would be
discussing strategy with House
comminee leaders on ''how the bill
wiU come up again. "
Clinton scheduled a Cabinet
meeting this morning with the
administration's legislative agenda
upset not only by the crime bill
vote but by further difficulties in
advancing health care reform.
Later today, Clinton was flying
to Minneapolis to appear before a

system .
• adding $2 ,500 by increasing
the foundation size.
• addin g $ 12,720 by installing a
sprinkler system.
• adding $2,700 by using automatic doors .
The library does not have to
mstall automatic doors to comply
with the Americans with Disabilities Act, and does not intend to add
a sprinkler or alann system si nc e
the other libraries do not have these
amenities, library officials said.

Strickland joins dissenters
in killing crime proposal

AFTERMATH- U.S. Rep.
Charles Schumer, D·N.Y., spoke
to reporters Thursday after the
House defeated the crime bill on
a procedural vote . Democratic
leaders are working to revive tbe
bill in some form . (AP)

'The NRA, which lost assaultstyle fueanns ban votes in the Senate and the House, most recently
when the House passed it by a 216214 vote in May, called Thursday's
action a "step ahead for real safety
and genuine security."
"We Americans want precisely
the opposite of what politicians
offered them," said Tanya Metaksa, the NRA's chief lobbyist. "We
want prisons, not pork; police, not
em~ty promises; crime-fighters, not
social workers."

By KATHERINE RIZZO
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON Ohio's
Republicans voted the party line
and Democratic dissenters stuck to
their guns as the House defeated
the crime bill.
Democratic Reps. Louis Stokes
and Ted Strickland joined all mnc
of the state's GOP lawmakers to
help defeat, 225-210, the resolution
that would have brought the crime
biU up for a House vote Thursday.
Freshman Strickland voted
"no" because of a pro -gun
promise he made during his 1992
campaign.
Stokes was part of a bloc of
Congressional Black Caucus that
took a stand against more than 50
new death penalty orfenses in the
bill and a decision to ax from the
final version a provision making it
easier to prove racial discrimination in capital eases.
An angry President Clinton later
told a news conference that he
understood the logic of the Black
Caucus membel'li "whose opposition to the death penalty was so
strong that they could not overcome their personal opposition."
"At least they had a principled
position," Clinton said.
He had harsh words for the
National Rifle Association, which
opposed the assault-weapons ban
included in the bill, and praise for
the Democrats who previously
voted with the NRA but strayed to

.

support the crime bill.
"There were 20 fewer
Democrats voting against the rule
than those who voted against the
assault weapons ban , so there were
20 Democrats, probably 30, who
said, 'Okay, I lost that fight, but the
safety of the people in my district
is more important than my view on
this particular issue, and certainly
more imponant than my killing this
bill on a proceduml vote.'
" They were very brave . They
stood up and took a lot of heat.
Strickland, who helped defeat
the bill beca use of the assaultweapons section, said, ·: with the
exception of the one provision ... I
would have been an enthusiastic
supporter" of the bill.
"I was rooting for the crime bill
to pass in the sense that there was a
lot in there that I like and support,"
he said. "! feel bad about what
happened on the floor."
Strickland was one of the recipients of high-level lobbying in the
final days before the vote. Attorney
General Janet Reno made a personal pitch, as did other administration
officials.
Reno also unsuccessfully
appealed to Republican Reps. Deborah Pryce and John Kasich, both
ofOhio.
•
Both had voted for the assaultweapons ban when it was -a stand·
alone bill, but said they wanted a
House-Senate conference committee to come up with a bener bill .

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