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.•

Page-20-The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, May 23, 1990

IY--Middlitport, Ohio

REG. SJ.99
.,

.Dodgers

RUFFLES
'

Cubs, 4-3

Super Lotto \
.
11-13-21-22'-3 I ·34

..

8 AM-10 PM

Vol.40, No.211
Copyrighted 1980

I

By BOB WEBSTER
UPI Bushtess Writer .
WASHINGTON- The nation's
economy grew at a sluggish.
ariilual rate of 1.3 percent, or
$13.9 billion, during the first
quarter .and Inflation topped a
9-year high at 6.7 percent, the
Commerce Department reported
Thursday.
The department's report is
preliminary and reflects a
downward revision of0.8 percent
from last month's estimates of
gross national product growth
and an0.2 percent Increase In the
price Index. Tne lin!ll report is
due next month. ·
'
During the fourth quarter,
GNP grew at an annual rateofl.l
percent, or $11 .2 biiUon.
.
The GNP fixed-weight price

'·

USDA CHOICE BEEF BONELESS

s.

Ru·mp .Roast •••••••L:..

DIET RITE

9
7
1

or

$ 69 R. C. COLA
2 LITER BOTTLES
., Beef Steak·...... ~•••• 2

. BUCKET CUBED
'

. .

.HOMEMADE • .

·

.

Sandw1ch Spread ••• ~~.••
.•::, .

CUBED

79&lt;

(

99 .

.

.

ARMOUR

LB.

LEG QUARTERS

5 ()Z. CAN

Chicken
49&lt;
Chicken •ti·~:~~·:;;)249
SUPERIOR
. '
.oz.
Baeon •••••••••••••••••••• 99&lt;
LB.

..

.

·

·•

'

.

'

.

'

.

.

r '

•

12

.

·.- s1·s2

....
mim1't!ornman~er; ~iSli'l&lt;!! illlm·

DUNCAN HINES

mander, county commander and
post commander. He is a veteran
of the U.S. Marine Corps and was
on active duty during the Korean
War.

'

MIXES

:

.

.

CAKE

.

•

·.

18-18.5

oz.

•

CHICKEN

FLAVORITE

2°/o Milk ••••••••••••••
PLASTIC GALLON

·DRUMSTICk.S·

99&lt;

•

HANGING ROCK GRADE A

..

· Large E
.ggs •••••••••••• 59&lt;
DOZEN

·ZEST A
'

.

•

KEMP 5 QUAin PAIL
&lt;r

.

.·crackers.~ ..... ~ .. !~ ....

.

'

' •

.·I. ce Cream ••••••••••••

CHICKEN··
THIGHS

.

·

··

°

~...........,.................._..,~...........................,_,l~~~mn;~!'!'t"r~~~.•-.~'S 1

BIBB

CAMPBELL'S , ·

DOMINO SUGAR·

TOMATO SOUP .
ID.75 OZ.

3·1$1

5ll.
lAG ·

$169

BATH TOWEL
or

oz.
. 136
-,

1
BATH
SHEET
Onlr at Powlll'sS..W
,1IGood
__________
_ Yalu
Good Thru Sat. 111ar 26, 19,90

G..,1 Only At Powlll'1 5441• Yalu
GOIII Sun.. Illy 20 tiii'U Sat, Mlly 26

Good Ollly At Pow···· S.,. VU,
Good Sun. Mtty 20 tin S.t., May 26

...

·- --·---·
•'

-

J

crirrie and drugs on "the mls·
guided social policies of the
1960s" and on ''family breakdown" caused by the collapse of
family values.
"We have got to get even
tougher on crime and dru'gs,"
said the vice president. "We need
tough new Jaws," he added,
citing the president's crime bill
now In the Senate.
"Let's resolve to spend a little
more time worrying about the
rights of the victim and a little
less time worrying about the
rights of the criminal."
On other matters, Quayle said:
-It is difficult to balance the

eD\1ronmental concerns and the
economiC needs in an air polJU·
lion control bill, but the admlnls·
tratlon's Senate·passed bill is
"as good as we can do."
,-The fact that Taiwan has
urged the United States to
upgrade Its trading status with
mainland China Is a point in
favor when President Bush decides that issue later this week.

Former Meigs County resident ·

Cooke to head Australian division

lB..

0 OFF

BurUngham Services
Memorial day services wUJ be
held at -the Burlingham Church
Monday at 1: 30 p.m.
'The honor guard from Fenney Bennett Post 182, Middleport w111
be . joined by the youth of the
Burlingham camp of the Modern
Woodm!ln of America for the
cemetery service.
Guest speaker will be Madelan
Poston, a former prisoner of the
Japanese during World War Il at
th~; Sh···Th~&gt;~~s :u.nJ~~r$1!¥ a~ ·
Internment Camp In ManU!'.
Music will be provided by
Denver Rice, Frank O'Brien.
Laura Guthrie, and Floyd and
Colleen Brlckles.

'

'2' I $1' BANQUET-28-32 oz.
Lot sa Rop ••:.'!~.... · · · Family Entrees •••• $14 9 ·.~: -PO-W--E·-LL'-;~~~;~;
'

declln!! of $~4.6 billion in the
fourth quarter. Industries In·
valved in !rade and the manufac·
turing of non,durable goods also
·saw slimmer profits during the
quarter.
.
Financial companies posted a
profit gain of $7.5 i)illlon in the
quarter after profits slipped $4.3
billion In the previous quarter.
Profits also Increased In the
durable manufacturing, trans·
. portatlon, public utllltles and ·
non· manufacturing industries. .
Real · pers11nal consumption
spending increased $15.9 billion
during the quarter, compared
with a gain of $3.6 billion In 'the
previous quarter. Purchases of
durable goods, those blg·tlcket
Items intended to last three or
,more years, increased $15.3

••

••
'

•'

Tom Cooke. foriJler Meigs
County resident and son of Mr.
and Mrs. Kenneth Cooke of
Middleport, has been named
Director and General Manager
of the Australian subsidiary of
Lallier Business Systems World·
wide. Inc., formerly HarriS/3M
Company.
Lanier Worldwide globally
markets, sells and services a
sophisticated line of office equipment and business communica·
lion products including copying
svstems, fa~slmlle units, laser
ridnters, dictating equipment,
document processing systems
and telephone systems. Annual
revenues exceed $1 billion and
theyoperateoutofl,600locat!ons
to service customers In more
tb4n 50 countries worldwide.
.Cooke, a graduate of Meigs
School and Ohio Unlvetslty,
ted his career In 1911) as a
es representative In Daytona
Beach, Florida. Since that time
he has held. positions
In corporate
.

!

.

.

.
.
·

sales training, sates manage- Trent, will be relocating from the
ment, District Manager In both Chicago area In July to Sydney,
Milwaukee and Chicago and Australia.
Region Manager in boftl Detroit
at\d Chicago.
For the last three years he has
been the Midwest R,eglon Man·
ager for Copying Products b~sed
In ChiCago with responsibility for
sales, technical support, and
administratiOn for 12 midwestern and western states with key
dlstrlbu lion centers In Pitts•
burgh, Detroit, Chicago, and
'Denver. · ·
·
·
In this new assignment, Cooke
will report to the Intercontlnen·
ta1 Division and have responslbll· ·
ity lor all direct product sales
di.9trlbut1on, dealer distribution,
direct and dealer techniCal sup.
port services. maJUllement In·
formation systems, marketing,
administration, and cu1tomer
support services.
He and his wife, Beverly
(formerly Beverly Brainard of
Bridgeport, Conn.) and son,
TOM COOKE

A Muhimedlo Inc. NOWIPIIPOf

rll"St

quarter ·

billion after slipping $16.1 bill\on falUng $7.1 billion In the fourth
in 'the first quarter.
quarter. Investments in non·
About two-thirds of the first· re21dentlal buildings gained $1.4
quarier gain came from In· blllion after slipping by $100
creased motor vehicle sales, the million In the previous quarter.
department said.
Residential fixed Investments
Purchases of non-durable Increased $4.8 billion after dec·
goods decreased $7.1 billion after lining $500 million.
Increasing a slight $300 million In
Purchases by the federal gothe previous quarter.
vernment of goods and services
Services expenditures In· Increased $1.9 billion after fa!Ung
creased $7.8 billion in the first $2.8 billion. National defense
quarter compared with a gain of purchases slipped $600 million
$19.3 billion In the fourth quarter. compared with a decrease of $4.4
Home heating expenses slipped billion In tile previous quarter.
$13.1 billion after gaining $8 Non-defense-related purchases
bUlion In the fourth quarter.
Increased by$2 .3 billion from an
Jn other components qf . the Increase of S1.7 billion.
GN.P, real non-residential fixed , Sales during the quarter in·
Investments increased by $8 · creased 4.1 percent, or $42
b!Uion In the first
after billion, after gaining 1.1 percent,
or $10.9 billion. in the fourth

quarter. Business Inventories
took away $28.1 bllllon from the
first-quarter change In GNP
after adding S300 million In the ·
fourth quarter.
During the quarter. businesses
reduced Inventories by $5.9 billion alter increasing their stockpiles by $22 .2 billion worth of
goods In the fourth quarter.
Gross domestic purchases, the
nation's purchases of goods and
services, gained 0.7 percent, or$7
billion, in the first quarter after
Increasing 0.1 percent, or $1.4
billion in the fourth quarter.
On the trade front, the nation
imported $40.4 billion more than ··
it exported ... during the first
quarter, an lmpr?vement from
the fourth quarter s Imbalance of
$47 .2 billion.

Contract hearing
scheduled May 30
by commissioners
hearing to renew a contract
permitting brine application by
J.D. Drilling was set for May 30
at 1 p.m. durtng Wednesday's
regular meeting of the Meigs
County Board of Commissioners.
Other matters Included: ·

' A

..,

'AlOMA!' ~~JR;L

Weather ·

heads back
· I•dent' s position
· • to nornuil
Q.uayle defends pres

CANTON, Ohio iUPI) - Vice believes.there will be a $90 billion
President Dan Quayle.said Wed· natural growth In revenues with·
nesday that the-federal govern· out a tax rate Increase.
ment Is spending enough money
He S!lld that although m111tary
on · education, and that any spending reductions will head the
''peace dividend ' ' should be used list In helping , balance the
to ·keep the national defense budget, "the president continues
strong and balance the budget. · to support an adequate Invest·Meeting with reporters follow· ment in national defense."
"Let us not forget that We have
lng a visit to a high-tech steel
factory. Quayle defended Pres!·. peace today because we have
dent Bush's position to negotiate Invested in national security," he
a budget settlement without any said.'
"I think funding in education Is
pre-condition that higher taxes
will or will not he part of the adequate," said Quayle. "We're
solution.
·
spending more money for educaLater, addressing a Republl· tion at the federal level than
can fund -raising dinner, Quayle we've spent in our entire
declared: ."The dividend we've history."·
earned from our national secur- · The vice president told an
ity is peace itself." lie said .estimated 400 Republicans at the
research on the Stmtegic De· $250-a-plate dlnnt;"r that quality
tense Initiative should be con· education, choice, accountability
tlnued because "a 'strong Arner· and parental Involvement are at
least as Important as the amount
ica is a safe America."
of
money spent. 1
The vice president was asked
about a possible tax hike In view
Quayle won applause from the
of the fact that the projected cost audience when be called lor
of the savings and Joan bailout "tough new laws" against
'
plan has been raised to $130 criminals .
blllion next year. Quayle. said he
He blamed the Increase in

69&lt;
lettuce ................ 2/Sl

He also serves as a trustee of
the A!Jierican Legion Buckeye
Boys State and acts as the acting
secretary of date In the election
of state officers.
Joe Struble w111 serve as
master of ceremonies and Jerry
Rought will serve as parade
marshal.
At 11 a.m. members of the post
will be at Sacred Heart Ceme·
teryi 11:30a.m. at RockSprings;
at 1 p.m. at Memory Gardens; at
1:30 p.m .• at .cliester•Ceroeter~ ' .
at 3 p.m. at Hemlock GT&lt;l\ie
Cemetery and at 41p.m. at Wells
Cemetery.
·
1)..11 persons and groups are
invited to take pari in the parade.

· · Drew Webster·Post 39, Ameri·
can Legion wlil open its Memorial Day services beginning with a
parade at 9 a.m. on Monday.
Memorial services wlil be held
at 16 a .m. on the parking lot in
Pomeroy.
Guest speaker at Pomeroy and
Chester services w111 be Thomas
L. Gabel, past · national vice
commander of New Knoxville.
Gabel is a member of· Washing·
ton Post 444, New Knoxville.
':f?.abetr~~~ 1~1!r,v~d · ·a~.:~~pan ·

.

.

index, a . measure jot lnfl;ltiOn, .
re,acbed 6.7 percen . durtng the
first quarter, the highest reading .
since 7-,7 percent In the fourth
quarter of 1981.
During the fourth quarter, the
price Index gained 3.6 percent.
About half of the first-quarter
increase was attributed to higher
load and energy prices in Janu·
ary after December's unusually
cold weather .
,
The department also reported
a prellmln~ry $1 ,9 billion !Jt
crease i.n first-quarter corporate
profits to an annual rate,of$287.8
biUion. This Is an •Improvement
from the fourth quarter's decrease·of$9.3 billl~n.
Pr.oflts for non-financial corpo·
rations slipped $700 million in.the
quarter, an Improvement from a

Memorial.Day services to
begin with ·parade Monday

$) 99. ~ork Stttak ..... ~~.•. $269. ... VIENNA
.
Round -Steak........ . . .
SAUSAGE
•

.

LOw

2 Sectiono, 12 Pogu 21i Cent•

Pomeroy~Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, May 24, 1990

GNP grows sluggish 1.3 % in

132 OZ. BOX

.

Partly cloudJ loaJcbt.

ill tower :101. Partly cloudy
Friday. H11h In 708. Chance of

rain fO

RINSODETERGENT

.

--·---

..

..P.OIIEROY, OH.

· .. _ .

..........

99&lt;

298 SECOND ST.

CHOI~E .~EEF...

....

6830

CHIPS
10 OZ. PIG.

" STO~E HOURS
Monday thru Sunday

,:

Daily Number
618
Pick-4

slip by

POTATO

...

Ohio Lottery

By United Press International
Slowly but surely, Ohio's
weather is heading back towards
normal for the month of May .
Under general~y sunny skies,
temperatures Thursday morning
were mostly in the low to mid-60s,
and were headed lor highs in the
70s - close to normal for this
time·of year.
. It will be partly cloudy Thurs,Aa)l night and Friday, with a
r Chance .of showers In the south
Friday. Lows Thursday. night
will be In the ri1id-40s to low 50s
and highs Friday will again be in
the 70s.
There's been a Jot of rain In the
Buckeye State this month- 4.79
lnch~s through Wednesday in
Cleveland, which is about 2 1h
in!:hes more than normal.
But If you think that's an
exceptionally high amount, you
have a short memory: rainfall
for the month of May i989 totaled
9.17 Inches, the highest May total
on record .
Looking ahead through Mem·
orial Day, there is a chance of
rain Saturday and Sunday, while
Monday will . see clear skies.
lilghs each day will be In the 70s
and lows in the 50s.
The drying weather pattern
will help ·Ohio's farmers, . as
outdoor work should proceed
Thursday and Friday. However,
. a developinl! storm In the Great
Plains shoUld bring some scat·
tered showers to OhiO Saturday
and Sunday.
Light dew should fom• overnight as mercuries fall
between 47 and 55. Sunshine will he
more limited Friday. and a
scattered shower Is possible late
In the day In the south.
Scattered showers should become more numerous Saturday
afternoon and linger into Suooay.
These showers will likely suspend fieldwork for about 24 hours
as scattered rain is pQsslble
throughout the day Sunday. Tbe
preclpltatlop should leave the
state tate Sunday, allowing fair
conditions to prevail Monday.
The slx-to-10-day forecast lor
Tuesday through the lollowirlg
Saturday Indicates nearnormal
temperatures and above-normal
precipitatiOn across the.state.
On the early morning weather
map, liJgb pressure extended
from the upper Great Lakes
through' Ohio to' the Atlantic
Coast.

to

-A resolutton of participation
was passed by the commiSsioners endorW!g thte economic developmeill activities of the Buck·
eye Hlils . Hocklng Valley
Regignal DeYelopment District.
The resolution states that the
commiSsioners actively support
and currently participate in the
.
activities of the district.
-A request to transfer
$1,166.09 to workers compensa·
tlon and $2,200 to engineer's

expenses from the Meigs County
liighway Department account
was approved .
-The board accepted a bid
from Boggs Pest Control in the
amount of .$740 lor termite
control in the old courthouse
building in Chester.
In other matters, 01 request
from Phil Ro.berts. County Engl·
neer,. ~ac&lt;;!epted.' (O advertise
lor bids lor various grades of
asphalt concrete for the Meigs
County Highway Department.
'Roberts reported that due lo
recent rains, dust control on
county roads has not be4!n
completed. He also said several
of the roads .are In need of
grading before dust control can
begin.

Clean air blll passes
House by 401-21 tally
WASHINGTON iUPI) -Con· smoggy cities now lace "very,
very stern inconveniences, In·
gress took another big step
eluding
such things as getting to
toward cleaner air with House
work
and
taking your car for a
passage of legislation that would
Saturday
night
drive."
halve acid rain emiSsions, limit
However,
Dlngeil
added, "the
' toxic releases from factories and
publiC
wanted
it
and
I think the
cut smog-causing pollution from
liouse
responded.
'
'
cars and industry.
Jubilant environmentalists
The far-reaching clean air bill,
said
the House bill wol!ldgofar to
approved by a 401-21 vote Wed·
better
protect the ·health of
nesday night. would Impose at
Americans.
least $21 bllUon per year in
"We're having a small celebra additional pollution reduction
tion
here, •' said Melanie Griffin,
costs on a wide array of Indusspokeswoman . at the Sierra
tries, ranging from giant cbeml·
cal and steel plants to the corner · Club's Washington headquartei'S. "I •think Americans can
dry cleaner or gasoline station.
breathe easier for thiS."
While praising the bill as a
With the Senate having passed
sound prescription for improved
Its clean air blll last month, the
air quality, House leaders said It
spotlight now shifts to a Housewould infliCt economic pain and
Senate conference committee,
major lifestyle changes on
where legislative leaders wlll try
AmeriCans.
to work out differences between
"I think everyone Is going to
the two chambers.
find clean air is not free," said
Although the conference Is
Rep. John Dingell, D-Mich.,
expected
to be dllficult, the
prtme sponsor of the bill, who
House and Senate bills are
warned the legiSlation likely
similar In many Important rewould cost thousands of jobs and
drive up prices of many consu· ; spects and legislative leaders
hOpe to send Bush a clean air bill
.mer items .
before the fall . .
lie also said people llvlitg In

·Local news briefs
---.-...
'
Pomeroy Council signs ordinance

Pomeroy VIllage Council, In special sessiOn Wednesday
evening, signed an ordinance for a flood variance for
McDonald's Restaurant. The proposed location for McDonald's
Is next to Pizza Hut, on property now occupied by the old train
depot.

Deputies probe·complaint

An Illegal entry ot the Rutland Elementary School complaint
Is being Investigated by the Meigs County Sheriffs
Department.
Accordlne to the report, scbool offiCials notified the sheriffs
office Wednesday morning they discovered someone had been
In the bulldltli durtlli the night. Some change and keys were
reported taken from a table tn·the kitchen. The keys were found
later on the roof by a custodlari. The case Is sWI under
lnvesti~ratlon.

Rutland plans Fourth celebratiOn
There will be a pie bakJna and cake decoratlna contest at tbe
·annual Rutland Fourth of J~¥y Ox Roast.
Continued on page 12

.•

- -l

_.,.,, _

�:C ommentary
The Daily .Sentinel
Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO 1HE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS·MASON AREA

~~
~v
ROBERT L. WINGE'lT
Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Mapager

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller
A MEMBER of The United Press Internailonal, Inland Daily Press
Association and the American Newspaper PubliShers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be pub·
: llshed. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personall·
ties.

•..

'

Ohio
Page-2....;.The Deily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Midclap«t, Ohio

Thumllv. Mev 24, 1~90

Endorsement hurts

preside~~:t

:·.~%~~;~~ dJ:::;:1:~~ at!~:t~~~~~~Yb~o:J!~~~~~~~~~~~~~t to
; : In his war on drugs and flag burners, Bush looks like a man
: ·swaiting flies with a baseball bat .

:: Letters to the editor
·.

Appreciates support

: : Dear Editor:
. The Rutland Fireman's Auxll·
:: iary would like to thank everyone
• . .who helped to make our recent
: l&gt;akesale a success. This Is

screen: "Congratulations to SMI
and my friend Paul Meyer In the
contribution you are making In
helping Individuals to achieve
their lull potential.- Thl\Dk you
..
very muc h.
A White House source told us
that taped video segments are
occasionally done by the vice .
president and president when a
company or a trade association
makes a reasonable request, but
that the videos are not to be used
as promotional material.
When SMI-USA solicits fran·
chlse buyers, It tells ·them In
writing that the company has no
"tying arrangements" with public figures toendorseor advertise
the product.
. . .
' . .
Nevertheless, SMI-USA bas
go~ten plenty of mtleage out of
Bush's endorsement. Our associate Tim Warner talked to some
SMI-USA franchise holders who
said they bOught Into the deal, in
part, because of Bush's message.
And they are not universally
pleased with the outcome. ·
·
Selling anything, Including
motivational program packages,
Is always an Iffy proposition.
Some sales people do well, others
go under . ·
,
Mark Basher of Pbtladelphla
told us he also got Into SMI·USA
after seeing Bush on tape in 19S8.
He claims to have lost between
$56,000 and $60,000.
Bobbl Pierro of Oklahoma City
also saw Bush and was convinced
to join the SMI-USA famtly. She
and her husband gave up the
" business In 19S8. They say they
got so far Into debt !hey couldn't
keep up the mortgage on a
70-acre plot of land on which they
were planning to retire. .
:

Camp~s

cry: Think alike, or lea~e
· .

Cultural diversity, yes. Political diversity, no. This is the
motto of the modern university.
From hundreds of academic
hamlets, college presidents
make lavish bids tor !he services
pi the best mln_orlty and ·female
scholars. Undergraduates,
meanwhtle, ·must sit thrOUgh
courses In "cultural awareness"
and sensitivity even though most
escape four years of study with
out taking a single ciass In
Western history,
'Some of the . most zealous
insltutions even try to outlaw
critical remarks about other
cultures tn order to make their
campuses all the more Inviting to
diversity .
Yet let just one truly unorthodox Idea raise its unruly head,
and the same university pres!·
dents will exorCise the devti in
public, often with an apology to

those who took offense.
The latest two schools to banish
unpopular thought are Rutgers
and the University of Northern
Colorado. Each had Invited
Linda Chavez to speak at their
commencement ceremonies. At
each, students and faculty• protested the frivltation,1hreatenlng
disruptions -and soon the offers
to Chavez were yanked.
The reversal In Colorado was
parttculary ironic, because
Chave7; grew up In Denver (she
still recalls the playground
taunts of a few Anglo punks), and
she Is a veritable model of
minority achievement. ·After
reaching a top position with the
American Federation of
Teachers, she went on to the U.$.
Civil Rights Commission and the
White House Office ot Public
Liaison under the Reagan adminIstration. Today she provides

. Vtncent Carroll

everyone who enner baked or
bought. Your support Is greatly
appreciated.
The Rutland Fireman's Aux .
Kimberly Willford

This is an election year

"For the sake ofthe taxpayer, I
hope this thing turns out better
than some ot the Indications now
seem to show," says Robert 0.
Hunter Jr., ' the Department of
Energy's former research
director.
Before resigning In a dispute
over the SSC last autumn, Hunter
predicted that It would Incur

.,massive overruns" and ac-

I

..

'

'

•

REME.N\&amp;ER WHEN l
SAlt&gt; "~E~D My L\?S?"
•

\
'I

U. S. tennis team 'defeats West Germany

..

DUSSELDORF, West Ger·
World Team Tennis Cup.
Steeb immediately lost hiS
many ( UPI) - Jllm Courier .
Courier, folloWing up )lis per- serve In the first set, giving the
upset Carl·Uwe Steeb 6-3, 1-6, 6-3
fonnance In leading the U.S. to a Amerlc~n a 3-1 lead, and was
Wednesday, leading the United
2-1 .w in over Spain on ·Monday, ' unable to convert seven break·
States a '2·1 victory over West
took advantage of his opponent's points afterwards : Courier,
Germany in the $1.3 mtlUon
mis'takes II) posting the victory .
ranked 17th In the world,
sparkled with his superb forehand and frequent net attacks.
Even after he gave away the
second set with many unforced
mistakes, Courier seemed In
control when he broke Steeb's
first service In the final set.
Courter then learned liP with
Ken Flach to take'the series with
Majors
Baa lMe., taeite. 1-f) aa Nnr York
a doubles victory, beating Boris
I·VIolll7·1l. 1:M p.m.
BJ tlnlted Preu lnter ... loaiJ
AllaDta (CiarJ 1·!1 &amp;I Phlladelpllla
Becker and Eric Jelen 6-2, 6-2.
UIERICAN LEAGUE
ca.rnat-4),1:Up.m.
Eul
Ear ller, Becker delivered a
Pr.ldwGarMt
Team
W L Pd. GB'
R....n .. Cl1teqo
56-mlnilte
tennis Jesson to a
llllrnukee ...................~t 11 .MI 8M Dlep a1 New York. nlp.t
Bolton .........................tl IR .1. t~
s..
Praaa.c.
at Pltbba rah. nlpt
frustrated
Brad
Gilbert in post·
Torollta ~ ............... ,.....If ll .Ill I~
play
ing
an
easy
6-1,
6-1
'triumph over
OewiMHI ....................11 tt .m t
.Uiu&amp;a .. Pldla... ,Wa, niJht
NCAA rules ~
Detretl .......................... u .w ·~
Oll;d•.._l .. M. .ire .., alpt
the world's fourth-ranked
New York .................... ll 11 .II! I
anyone connected with an atLol' All . . . . . st. Lollla, .....
player.
BaJUmore .................... JT tl ·•• 1~
hletic program to co-sign a
•
We__,., 8parta'l'ruMdiO•
Playing mainly from the base·
OUIAII . ........... .......... JT II .tit player's
loan. However, Miller
Cltlcaco .......................11 It .111 1%
line, Becker was In control
C.llfontla - rtaee• ..,.,. buemu
said
hi!
believed
the NCAA was
Mlue~ulta .................. .11 II .5. i
Jadt •wen •• tHII' 411Mtlle• 111.
throughout the match, calling his
St!lltlll ........................ .!t tl .lit 1'%
retnacd\'e laTHadQ.
making
exceptloiJs
for Propst·
Calilorula ....................JI U .4. 11
own performance ''nearly
llAIII . . (:It)' - Aetl\laied pic! ber ltewe
lion
48
players.
·
Tnu ...... ....................IT 21 .415 114S:
Crawlo-.. lr0fl1 11-.IQ lll•bled UM;
perfect."
Kan~~a~~ aty ............... .. IS U •.•
II%
placed ulcller Bolt lo011e o• UdiO'
''There was a lot of loud noise
'WedeeldlQ' Res"l•
d... ...,. •• ,.
"It doesn't happen that often
Kan!'IU ChJ4 , Belton 1
that
this (Proposition 48) ·was
Bultle - Pvft!lliliiM'd ukher P.hU
that you beat the No. 4 6-1, 6-1," a .
Chl-:ap I. Baldmon! 3
Sl.ro from CAl prJ of the P adftcCout
·
racist
anq the historic black
Dehtdl. I, Texa• 1
jubilant Becker said. ·
Lfla;pe (AAA)* optloneilplteherGe~~e
New Yo'rk U~ Mlnnes•o
Hurb lo Calp.r)'.
schoolS
wer~ ·u p In arms about
In other matches on the second
Oakland It, Mllwau ~e 5
Teua - PIIKiaued pitcher l•hn
this
ruling,"
Miller said. "It
Seattle 4, Oeveland I
Hoawr lrcMn Ollaltoma Cit)' of lhe
day of the tournament, Spain
CalllorBia s. Toralllo t
American Auoelalln lAM).
appearel!
to
me
that something of
beat the Soviet Union 2-1 .
· TbniQ' Games
Bullelllall •
an
exception
was
being made tn
Mllwlllllr:e ff'ller 1-tJ 11 OakiPd
eew R•,.. ICaAJ - Rnewrd
·spain won both singles
(8&amp;rwarl1'-1 J, 1: II p.nL
col&amp;ract If Coach Gterae Wlllllaktr lor
securing
aid
for
Prop
48 people."
matches, with Sergio Bruguera
KUJU CM.y CG•IIIeu 1-U aa Jtoston
(Ciemtllt H), l:llf,m.
Miller
said
he
talked
with an
Cohabla (C8A) - •Nuned Gary,
overwhelming Alexander Wol·
Cblcap (McDowell I-I) U Balllmore
l'ownUs~eiL
·
NCAA
official,
whom
he
would
cnw. MJ, T:SS p.m.
kow 7·5, 6-3, and Jordl Arrese
' •
C.llop
Teua (...... f.!) at Bet roM (Tuaaa
the
official
not
Identify,
but
Mlc:W ...\8taie- Namf'd Stu Jop...
winning the decisive second
S.t), '7:11p.m .
.. .......... h. .ftb . . ec.-:b.
refused to give him !l written
N~ Yerl' &lt;"'IU 1-.1} at Mln!llr'!llota
match over Andrej TscherkasFHiball
(AediPr•ni-J),R: ISp.m:
opinion.
LA a.m.- Slped quarterb~~~tk Rick
sow 6-2, 4-6, 7-6 . '
Clft'dan41 (Far~l 1-11 a&amp; Sultlf!
~~
.
Miller said he advised a coUege
(YOUfl..f),II:ISp.m.
Nn. - Awarded ltN Super Bowl to
TGftllio (Wellll 1-t) a&amp; CaUf•r••
trustee to guarantee the loan.
Allan &amp;a.
(McCulllll t-1), II: IS p.m.
Names omitted
Robert Morris officials have
hld~J Gamet
TIMII'IMIII' Sports Calendar
ClllcaKO M DftroK. •IIIli
refused to name the trustee.
C.llep Baleball
(\o8&amp;oa at Mlnaeao&amp;&amp;. nlllll
NCAA DI-vision r · rertonal
Boyd made payments on the
In a picture publiShed last
New l'ork at K•n•Ciy,•llli
c~M~r'pptonelllpa
BaiUmore at Teua, niCfll
week In 'The Dally.Sentinel', two . loan ' with federal education
Baall;etbal!
. Mllwalkf!UI CaiUornla,nl.,_
NBA. Collerence Fl•t•
names were Inadvertently omit. grants and money he earned In
Clnrlah
No II"""" I!ICIIe•Jed
· . ted the picture of the Racine the summer, but last summer he
To,...oat~ ......... ~~o••
Bold••
Mlddlew-eiP&amp;•
Reds number 1 team. Pictured,
fell behind and the bank collected
NAnONi\L LEAGUE
lr~ne, CalK. -Alex a.,... no .John
ArmiJo
but not listed as being In the three $355 payments from the
SliP" Fe.ahenrt'l&amp;lll•
Tum
"' L Pet. Gil
picture was Jamie Rizer, while
trustee.
fttstJ.Jih ...................tt II . • Lu Vf'pll, Nev. - Kid Alceem Yll.
MemaF1orM ·
PhUaclelpllla .. - .• ~........ .1! HI .111 I
Boyd did not know the loan was
Chris Gilbride was absent from
Melllr....................... %1 18 ,Ill S
,. ... , weuer-I.W•
the
picture.
guaranteed
or the trustee had
Nfl"'f Vertt ........... ......... ll It .Me 4
Lu Vepo. Nev. - Vl~ut PhWipoYil.
J

•••

._

r

Cbleap ....................... lt II .411
St. Lolli• ...................... l1 II .41$

5

A IMvloloo of Mulllmedl., lac.

Publ!shed every allernoan, Monday

made the payments, the NCAA
and Robert Morris President
Edward Nicholson said.
Mllier said " he became concerned about the loan last year
when the NCAA toughened Its
Proposition 48 requirements.
·'I talked to people at the NCAA
and got utterly confused from
what I was told then," ,Miller ·
said.
.
Miller last year Initiated an
ln·hQuse Investigation of the
and he submitted a
resignation •• director

iliii::~:~~~l=bl~o=ut~co~me

said. •
in
to

Member: United Prer.oln\ernotloDal,
Ialand Dally Press A~crlatk)nand the
Oblo Mewap1_per A.s1octatlon. Nat tonal
AdvertJstna Repmeatattve. Branham
Newspapt!!r Sales, 733 Third Avenue,

New York, New Yorlr: 10017.

POStMASTER: Seud adchu changa
to The Dally Sentinel, ll1 Olurt St .•
Pomeroy, Ob~ e700.

SUJI8CliiPTION aATI!S

By Carrier or Ma&amp;cw Rollle

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Subecrtbers notde~irlngtopay thecar-

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Su Dte~ ......... :...... .... 111 U .-1ft
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Sll'l nan~ .............11 !-1 .....
JIOIIPII.on ....................... u !I .9'76
· We4inelldll,t' Rew•b
Lo8 Aaplf!"A -1. Cblcap I
Monlr...l .a, 811'1 Dllf1l0 I
San Fraad.eol, 8(, Lo'*' I
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1111111._ Wort4 Te..n C•t
IIMIIM Welit. call. -NCAAIMvillonl

0 ..............

Edmonton needs one more win for Cup

YOU
MlSR'EAt&gt;

.

·EMt• .._,'7"--....:c.'·

...

,,
I

•

I. LOOK through newspaper!
2. REMOVE your new C!)ior insert!
3. OPEN right side up!
4; CHOOSE the items you need!
5. ARRIVE at the nearest NATIONWISE!
6..SAVEBIG!

•
We.&amp;tr.a JMw....n .,_."
Saa Dlepa&amp; DaljiU,I:IIp.m.

'

BOSTON (UPI) - Faced with
elimination, the Boston Bruins
must now look I!J Cam Neely alld ,
Craig Janney to do for them what
Mark Messier did for Edmonfon
- raise their game whim the
team needs it.
.
Edmonton leads the best-of·
sevenserles3-land, unless Neely
and Janney break their slump _'
Thursday night, the season will
probably eod with the Ollera
skating 'the Stanley Cup around
Boston Garden.
,
"Our key players were outpliyed by their key players,"
Boston·'coach Mike Milbury said

·after· Edmonton's 5&gt;1 victory In
Game 4. ''1'11ese guys have been
:p'retty good all year long, and we .
.dO n.e ed more production from
them In the il)81-scortng dePI\rt· ·
ment. It just hasn't been· good
.elioueh to keep us in games.''
A SS-goal scorer In the regular
season, Neely has taken 20 shots
In the -series and oot. one has
beaten goalie Blli Ranford, Janney'does not OWil asmate point in
the Jti!!rles. Perhiips .he never
reco~ from the dehydration
he suffered In Game 1. Maybe he
lacks the experience to cope with
the checking.
.
i

FACTORY AUTHORIZED SERVICE
Goldstar ,
Samsung
Saundt-'gn
Zenith

Funai

Symphonic

KTY
Philco

Etllll'son
S.hintom
Multi Tech
Scott

WE REPAIR ALL
~

HOME

Syl•ania
Mltgna•ax
GE
RCA

.,.

. :III'II'Hb
u " -..................................
l!9.:H
.................................. a.n.96

- ...... LPG/\ Cor ...

ll«•lrJ C\lp Fl•l
Ed,Oonloa Ill....,., 'ftiS p.m.

•rc:.-

-llaiiSvbe
llelp

...

Marietta, Ga. -llmUitonPGA Allaa&amp;a
Cb.III!IC
'
•
H•t•IPf

to

No o ' J tlptloDJ by mall permitted in
ar. . wbere borne carrier lft"VIce ll

CydJor
llarL I~' - h•r tf f&amp;ab'

Wa~t

~

The Dally Sn.tlnel on a 3, 6or 12'ri1onth
bMa. Credit wUI be atvea carril!f' each

Mard•41tlr•

7

j

CU8P81fi.MI)

..........

ThMndar Gamel

' I

The Daily Sentinel

throogh Friday, 111 Court St.: Po·
mere1i, Ohio, by the Oblo Valley PubUshtna Companyi Munifnedlo, Inc..
Pomeroy, Obto 4!718, I'll. 992·2156. Second class poalaJe paid at Pomeroy,
Ohio.

Scoreboard ...

Saa Fran~l.co (Hammahr »l at 84.
Lolli• (:JWior.f.t),I:SI p.m.
Lo• Aa.li!A (Valna.ela Nl at C:IIIUifO (~Mitr $-II, 1:21 p.m . ·
Clncln.-tl l Robl11110nl·l J at Mont~ ..
COrOMI-1), l:a:l p.m.

I'

'

Owen from throwing to first &lt;JD a third Inning
fielder's eholce at Mon&amp;real Wednesday. The
ExJ108 won, 4-0 (UPI)
·

TAKES A ROLL - San Dlep Padre Mike
PagUarolo rolls Into 8ecolld aad slops Expo Spike

PITISB'LIRGH (UPI) ~ The
former athletic director at Ro·
bert Morris College said Wednesday he consulted a National
Collegiate Athletic Association
official before helping a basket·
ball player obtain a loan.
The loan resulted in the Robert
Morris 'men's basketball. program being placed on two years
probation by the NCAA Tuesday
and ordered to give back up 10
$186,000 In tournament money .
The Colonials also will be banned
next year from potJIS4!Jii
naments and
will haVIttli•~•

Reliever Paul Assenmacher,l-1,
yielded Daniels' eighth horne
run. Chicago starter Mike Har·
key made three putouts In the
fourth Inning to tie a major
league record.
Ghlli&amp;a I, Cardinals 1 - At St.
Louts, winning pitcher Bob
Knepper, 3-2, doubled home a run
and scored In a three-run sixth
Inning, helping the Giants snap a
four-game losing streak.
Knepper matched his longest
stint of the year by pitching six
and two-third Innings. Greg
Mathews. 0-4, allowed four runs
and nine hits In live and two-third
Innings ..
Astro. 1, Plraies 3 - At
Houston, Alex Trevino slugged a
two- ni11 pinch homer to ·snap an
elghth-!nnjng tie and lift the
Astros. With the score tied 3-3,
Jeff Baldwin drew a walk from
Scott Ruskin, 0-1. ·Trevino, hit·
tlng for pitcher Juan Agosto, 3-1,
slugged an 0-2 pitch over the
left-field fence to make It 5-3.
Ruskin surrendered four runs
and three hits over one and
one-third Innings .

-

Berry's World

·::T oday in history

,

Robert Walters .

cused the firm managing the
project of being "Incompetent."
Increasingly concerned abOut
soaring costs estimates, the
House earlier this month took the
extraordinary step of voting to
limit federal spending · to $5
billion, but even that price will
make the sse history's most
expensive single scientific
instrument.

Miller claims he checked
with NCAA on student loan

•

commentary for National Public
board has included such luminarRadio and the Canadian BroadIes
as Saul Bellow, sidney Hook,
casting Corp..
Jacques
Barzun and Alistair
According to the thought pollee
Cooke - not to mention celebriat Rutgers and Northern Colorado, Chavez first betrayed "cor·
ties like Walter Cronkite and ·•
reel" thinking by· serving with . Arnold Schwa~negger. .
"The intent of the university In
the Reagan administration. Her
Inviting Linda Chavez," he said, •
worse treachery, bowever,-was
"was to be sensitive to cultural
to spend '14 · months with U.S.
English, a group that seeks to
diversity.... It Is clear that the
decision was bOth uninformed
establish English as the official
and gave the appearance of being
national language.
grossly insensitive.' •
It made no difference to her
Inviting a prominent Hispanic
critics that Chavez resigned In
woman to speak Is "grossly
protest from U.S. EngliSh after a
memo surfaced disparaging HisInsensitive" to cultural diverpanics' learning ability .viS a vis
sity? ThiS Is doubletalk- the last
refuge of a man who has •
Asian-Americans. Nor did It
besmirched the high academic
seem to matter that she )las since
modified her views on the need
mission of free Inquiry and the
for an official language.
open exchange of Ideas. Cultural
Even if she hadn't, U.S. Engdiversity Is fine, the university
lish Is hardly a collection of
has decreed. but only so long as
·
kooks. At one time or another Its everyone thinks alike. ·

Su·p er Collider not a superhero

1988 and now stands at $8 billion
WAXAHACHIE, Texas (NEA)
with. future increases likely .
- One local businessman has
The sse will consist of an oval
named his auto body shop Super
tunnel 54 miles In circumference
Co.IIider Collision Repair. A
surrounding Waxahachie. Inside
nearby restaurant proprietor is
doing a thi-lving buslriess in ·that ring, 150 feet beneath the
surface, physicists will guide two
Collider Burgers - a concoction
beams of protons traveling in
~of barbecue beef, melted cheese
opposite directions and acceler.
and fried onions.
..
.
atlng to a .phenomenal 200,000
Here ln the. rolling cattle and
: 'eear Editor:
from votes . .Then too, this is an
revolutions per minute - almost
cotton country south of Dallas,
•'
The gentleman from Dayton,
election year. ·
the speed of light.
everybody from honest entrepre: :ohio Is advised that the writer of
There are many cultural and
When those beatns meet In a
neurs to land speculators to
·:this Jetter did not involve Southeducational personalities avaUacontrolled colliSion at a very high
'fast-talking wheeler-dealers Is
: ern High School or any . other blethat the students would enjoy.
energy level, scientists can exlooking forward to making a
· • school In politics. Ohio schools
If we are going the one track
amine the sub·atornlc particles
profit off a Texas-sized piece of
: • :.are the biggest political machine way go all out and get Ted
- quarks and leptons, muons and
scientific equipment- a particle
• ·In Ohio. I know it and you know it. Kennedy or Mike Dukakls.
gluons, protons and neutrons,
accelerator known as the Super: · · Anyone running for public
Gayle Price
photons and bOsons - released
conducting Super Collider.
· office who makes any kind of
Portland, Ohio 45770
by
the force of the Impact.
·
Among residents of Waxah• public appearance is not running
The
sse
will
be
the
biggest,
but
achie, whose business district Is
It certainly will not be the only,
dominated by an unforgettable
particle
accelerator. The Fer·
one.·of-a·klnd Romanesque ReviTevatron
In Illinois and the
'mlll!b
val courthouse, the sse is viewed
Stanford
Linear
Accelerator tn
as an economic bonanza. For
,California
have
been
operational
people living elsewhere in the
since
1983
and
1987,
respectively.
country, however, the sse By United Press International
Perhaps more significantly,
financed principally by .the fed·
Today is Thursday . May 24, the H4th day o{ 1990 with 221 to follow .
the
CERN Large ,E lectroneral government from public
The moon is new .
·
.
Positron Coll1der ~Switzerland,
lu nds - will be a very expensive
The morning stars are Mercury. Venus, Mars and Saturn.
operated by a European scien·
project
of
dubious
value.
The evening star is Jupiter.
.
tiflc consortium, went on-line
The SSC's principal purposes
• Those born on this date are under the sign of Gemini. They include
are 'to produce an Improved last year. It Is far larger than the
· . French journal ist and revolutionary Jean Paul Mara! in 1743;;
two u.s. facilities, but the sse
understanding of matter and
British Queen Victoria in 1819; hostess and party-giver Elsa Maxwell.
energy and to Jearn more abOut wUI be much bigger than it.
·. credited with introducing the "scavenger hunt." in 18&amp;1; actress Lillf
"It considered on Its sclentlttc
the "Big Bang" many scientists
• Palmeri~ 1914; com~d.lan Tommy Chong of Cheech and Chong in 1938
merits, the .. . sse would be
believe gave birth to the universe
·:· (age 52!, rock mustcJan Bob Dylan in 1941 !age 49); actor Gary
relegated to the lower ranks of an
15 billion years ago.
Burghoffln 1943 I age 47!; actress Priscilla Presley, widow ofElvls
overflowing list ot Ul)met needs
Its promoters claim the project
Presley. m 1946 .(age 44); and singer Rosanne Cash in 1955iage35). ·
In and around American
also will advance technologies
science," says Daniel S. Green:
ranging
from
"the
Dick
Tracy
. •. On this date in history:
.
berg, editor and publisher of
watch with a tel~hone" to
:
In 1626, the Dutch West Indies Trading Company bought the Island
Science &amp;: Government Report,
magnetic resonance Imaging,
• of Man hat tan from the Indians, paying with good~ worth about $24.
an authoritative Washington,
which enables pliyslclans to view
:
In 1883, the Brooklyn Bridge was opened to the public, linking
. D.C., newsletter.
unprecedented
clarity
the
with
• Brooklyn and Manhattan Island . .
.
"The sse wlll not cure cancer,
inside of the human bOdy without
In 1983, the Supreme Court ruled private religious schools that · using either surgery, X-rays or wUI not solve the problem of male
practice racial discrimination are not eligible for church-related tax
even CAT scans.
pattern baldness and will not
'benefits.
Initially proposed by the De· guarantee a World Series victory
: In 1987, 250,000 people jammed San Francisco's Golden Gate Bridge
partment of Energy In the tor the Chicago Cubs, " says Rep.
• l!n Its 50th anniversary, temporarily flattening the arched span.
mld-19808, tbeSSCwasoriglnally Sherwood Boehler!, R·N. V .,
•
estimated to ~os t S3 billion to $4 among a growing number ot sse
: A thought for the day : Sin·ger-songwrlter Bob Dylan w~te, "We
billion. That price rose to $4.4 . critics in a budget-conscious
; :lJve in a political ~orld, where courage is a thing of the past.' '
billion In 1987, to $5.9 billion in Congress.

....-

By 8TEPHEN BUTilOWIIIU
what could I do," Hurst said. " I
UPI8porlll WI Iter
got behind him 2 and 0. I didn't
DenniS "011 Can'' Boyd ap- want to walk him, so I pitched
pears reju~enated In &amp;Montreal him down the middle an(! anybunifonn.
ody swinging a bat against a
"I tee! great now," said Boyd pitch like that would get a hit . He
after pitching a five-hitter Wed- gets his !lrst In the majors and
nesday to lead tbe Expos to a 4-0 !hat Inning did me ln. ·•
victory over the San Diego
Hurst left the game after the
Padres . "It shows that you can't fifth Inning. He gave up three
keep a · good man down. I have runs and seven hits.
Both of Boyd's shut&lt;&gt;uts have
good control. I eat, sleep and
drink baseball. I am.ready to go come against San Diego.
nine each game."
· "Boyd only !;las two shutouts
Boyd, 3·2, pitched eight sea· since 1985 and bOth are against
sons with Boston before signing us," Padres manager Jack
with Montreal as a free agent McKeon said. "He should mali
during the offseason. He re- our guys plane tickets. We just corded his second shutout of the are not getting anybody on base.
season Wednesday and ml!tched Each time I look at the scorehis 1989 victory total.
board, it seems we aredown4·0. I
Boyd Wl!S 3-2 In 10 starts with 'hope It doesn't keep up ilntll July
the Red Sox last year, spending 15."
120 days on the disabled Jist " Elsewhere In the NL, . Los
because of blood clots tn his right 4 Angeles defeated Chicago 4·3,
shoulder.
.
.
· San Francisco beat St. Louis 6-1
·Boyd also singled off fol'tner ~ · Houston outlasted Pitts·
Boston teammate Bruce Hurst,
urgh 7-3.
3·5, Igniting a two-run fifth
Do~gers 4, Cube S At
Inning. It was his first major
lcago, Kal Daniels hit a
league hit.
three-run homer with two out In .
Montreal. scored two runs In tbe eighth Inning to lift the
the fifth to increase Its lead to3·0. Dodgers. Tim Belcher, 4-3, gave
Boyd collected the !Irs! of four up seven hits over seven Innings
consecutive singles by the Expos for the victory. Don Aase pitched
that produced two runs.
out of a two-on, none-out jam in
·'"011 Can'. started a rally, but
the ninth for his third save.

lack Anderson and Dale VanAtta

.Swatting flies with·
·a baseball bat
By LEON DANIEL
UPI CHIEF CORRESPONDENT
WASHINGTON- Evidently frustrated by the stalling of its war on
drugs , the Ejush administration now has opened an offensive on
personal freedom.
But if civil libertarians are outraged by new federal anti-drug
policies, the American public evidently approves of the get-tough
approach.
.
·• ·
And Congress, spurred by a recent Gallup poll that shOwed 70
pe rcent support for President Bush's drug tactics, is expected to pass
quickly the administration's draconian anti-drug legislative
package.
. Fortunately, the le!!lslatlon stops short of an earlier harebrained
scheme t&lt;&gt; allow suspected drug planes to be blasted from the skies.
· But it gives the Immigration and Naturalization Service power to
deport without an appeals hearing aliens convicted of drug charges.
Secretary Jack Kemp of the Department of Housing and Urban
Development vows to evict public housing tenants suspected of- but
not necessarily charged with - drug dealing.
For the first time, federal prpsecutor~ plan to .use a 1988 law in
seeking t))e death penalty In a drug case against a Chicago man
accused of murder ing a federal witness.
' Local authorities also are getting tough on drug dealing in ways
that threaten freedom .
In Des Moines, police have asked hotel maids to save the trash of ,
suspi~ious guests. High school athletes and cheerleaders have l)een
tested for drugs in Alabama.
·
And so, depressingly, it goes.
"Thousa nds of 'Americans in the workplace have to submit to
search, without cause. by urinating in a bottle to prove they haven't
qone anything wrong," said Gene Guerrero of the American Civil
Liberties Union. " The war on drugs is coming home to ordinary
Americans."
·,
The administration's anti-drug package, introduced in Congress
Wednesday, failed to draw fire from Democrats.
.
; . Even Rep. Charles Rangel, often a critic of the administration on
; drug issues: went along, although the New York Democr11t did call the
death penalty proposal "immoral and ineffective."
, Some of the dopier ~trategies of the drug war were good lor a
guffaw. Remember the scheme to dispatch to South American
fungles swarms of coca-chomping caterpillars in an entomological
. war against cocaine? But there is -nothing amusing about big-stick,
: : big-brother government.
· · · The losing drug wars led by Presidents Nixon, 'Ford, Carter and
: • Reagan should have taught Bush thefollyofemphasizinginterdiction
· :• and law enforcement at the expense of programs to reduce demand
~ !)y providing treatment for addicts.
But this is the president who is hellbent on eroding the Btllof Rights,

Boyd blanks Padres;· Dodgers
edge Cubs on Daniels' ..homer

' ·

.

WASHINGTON- Back when endorsing a commercial prohe was just the lowly vice duct. It's the kind of advertisethe ~publican party $73,200,
president, George Bush helped ment that most companies would l!Ccordlng to Federal Election
out a milUonalre Texas Republi- k111 for.
Commission records. WUlfams
can businessman who Is a heavy
SMI-USA senior vice president told us that Meyer dido't ask
political contributor. Now, as
c;lla'ries G. W11llams told us !hat Bush to appear 011 the tape and
president,' Bush stands to be
the company edited Bush out of .t hat the· tape was made as a
considerably embarrassed by
the master copy of the video, at
"surprise" tor Meyer.
the gesture.
the requesf of the Wl!lte House.
Bush's mes~ge on the tape Is
In 1985, Bush made a videotape , But SMI·USA bas not recalled old . vague but supportive. The occaendorsement of Success Motiva- copies 'o f the video from all of its sion was the 25th anniversary of
tion Institute-USA, a company franchise sales people, and they SMI-USA: "I know all of you at
that sells franchises to people to are free to use it to plug their SMI will be In the forefront In
product.
distribute motivational tapes
keeping our country In a place of
and literature.
.
SMI-USA is owned by Paul J.
leadership and service that re·
Meyer Sr., a Waco, Texas,
At the time, the presidency was
presents the best of the American
only a gleam In Bush's eye. Now
businessman known for his ph1- spirit.''
.
SMI-USA has a tape with the
lanthrophy, Since 1981, Meyer
Then Bush does ll voice-over as
president of the United States
has given the Bush campai~ and
SMI's logo Is displayed on the

The

.

�Ohio

Portland edges.
Suns;
Blazers
..
·
.
•
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have 2~ advantage m senes
.

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l1l FRIDAY 1 :00

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l111 SUNDAY 4 :00

•

121 FRIDAY 7:30

BJ MotE B~
orlal Collaeum. to 19 ~es. The.
''We juat spoke our piece," he
lJPISpol'til 'WrUer
Sum have lOBI foilr times on the · said. "Then Coach (Rick) Adel· -·
PORTLAND, Ore. - In a
Blazers' court tbls aeason by a man got us fired up."
total ot six points.
·
·
Porter poured In 151n the third miserable fli'lt bait for the Trail
Blazers, the Portland team phoTbe best-of-seven series shifts quarter and the BIIW!rs out·
tographer was banished from the.
to Phoenix for games Friday scored Phoenix 41-32 to pull
basel!ne ·by referee Jess Kersey
night and Sunday; but the Suns ~lthln 91-112 entering the final
· for yelllni at the officials.
are In trouble. Only seven teams period.
Too bad for blm be was not
have overcome a 2.0 deficit In
· The Suns opened the final .,
around to take pictures of ·one of . NBA playofts bislllry.
quarter by missiJIIi nine of their
!be greatest comebacks !n NBA
'This IB not the end ' of the first 10 shots. The Blazers,
playoff h!story.
world," Phoenix Coach Cotton meanwhile, ran off eight straight
TerryPorterpoured!n23ofhiS · Fltmlmmons said. The ·suns points to pull within 93·90 ·an
28 points !n the second half - · · have not lost three In a row Ibis Drexler's layup. And when Por!ncluding the go-ahead buket . year and we're not going to let It ter's 3-po!nter rolled around the
with 12.7 seconds left - as ihe· happen Friday."
' rlm and fell, Portland was within
Blazers erased a 22-po!nt deficit · The Blaz!!l's scored just 40 . 97-95 with 5: 38 left.
Wednesday night for a 108-107 points Ia · tbe flnlt half; coining
The Blazers stumbled badly In
victory over the Phoenix .Suns.
withbi one point of the franchise . the first half, making only 35
TheBlazersheadtoPboenlxwltb record tor feWW!It points before
percent of their shots v;hlle
a 2&lt;0 lead In the Weiterri halftime.
'
committing 15 turnovers. To
Conference finals.
Portland, which has won 14 of
epitomize their Ineptitude, they
. 'This was a great win for us,.. . the last 18 meetings between tbe
received a technical late in the
Porter said: "I can't say enouah • teams, Is 8-0 at home In the . half fcir having only four players
about. the 12 guys. in this locker . ·playoffs and 1·3on the road.
·-on the court.
·
·
room. It sh,ows that no matter · Tom Chambers, who led the ·. , Th.e ~)lout crowd of 12,884
whaf kind Q! lead they have we Suns with 28 points, hit two raul
vented Its frustration on officials
can come back."·.
:
shots to give Phoenix a 106-103
Kresey, Jack Madden, and· Paul .
Portland trailed 57·35 with 96 lead with !10.1 seconds left; but · Mlhalak. It got so bad that
seconds left In the second quarter Porter's fourth J..polilter of the
Kersey ejected photographer Art
and.59-41 at haiftlme,-butrallled • game tied It with 28.4 seconds
Gee sitting along the baseline
behind Porter and Jerome Ker· remaining.
with 88 seconds left !n the half.
Honaee•
first quarter acllon at Memorial
PRF8SURE DEFENSE - Blazers' Buek
Johnson was·fouled by Kersey
"The photographer was a part
sey, who scored 10 of his career
WWiams · (R) pula the pressure on SUII8' JeH
Coll~~eum Wednesday. The Blazers won, 108-107.
playoff·hlgh 29 points !n the final on an lnbounda play with '¥7.2
of the.entire working team of the
(UPI)
·
'
playoffs," Kersey told a pool
period.
seconds remaining, but he made
'D!e Suns were held tol&amp;po!nts just one free throw for a 107·106
reporter. "If he wants to make
derogatory statements to · tbe
on 6 of 18 shooting In the last Phoenix lead.
quarter. TheBlazersscoi'ed26ln
After a timeout, Porter nailed · officials, then he has to make
his winning lO"foot jumper over
them from the stands. And that's
By JEFF SHAIN
weeks," Wichita State Coach Conference title, thenwereeliml· the fourth perlod.
"This Is d!Hicult to take," Suns Johnson to give the Blazers-their ·why he was reJlloved from the •
.Gene . Stephenson . said. "But nated from the conference tourUPI Sports Writer
guard Kevin Johnson ;sald. "We first lead since the game's
game."
,
'
Wichita State, which won the baseball Is a funny game. I'd say . nament lri two ga!J:Ies.
Lost amid the chaos was a
College WOrld Series last year as we'd ~ a decided underdog In
"It's going to bedlfferentforus had a ch11nce but they did a good openl!,lg S!!COnds. Eddie John~on
job not quitting."
of the Suns missed from the
brilliant effort by Majerle, who
an underdog, finds Itself In the our own tournament here."
beCause of our youth and lnexpeThe Blazers' comeback stands baseline with two seconds left
sank 8 of 10 shots !n the first half,
same position tb!s weekend In the
The Shockers, down to just 10 rlence," Stephenson said. "The
including a pair of 3·po!nters.
NCAA baseball reglonals.
position players because of In· b!g thing is the confidence. The beside some of the best In NBA and time expired.
Clyde Drexler had 16 of his 20
Portland, despite missing 14 of
The Shockers, one of the jury, were the surprise winner In confidence level ofthen;eturn!ng playoff history. In 1948, Balli·
its first 17 shots, led 13-12 with
favorites ·for the national title • last year's College World Series, players has not been what. It more recovered from a 21-point points In the second half for the
halftime deficit to beat Phlladel· Blazers. Ke-.ln Johnson and Dan
three' minutes •left In the first
wnen .the season began, will be staving off Florida State In the should have been. •'
phla . . Portland now joins four. Majerle each bad 22 for,the Suns.
quarter, but the Suns closed the
the second seed In the Midwest elim!natiOI) round and defeating
Therefore, Stephenson will
other clubs who trailed by 18 at Majerlescored181ntbeflrsthalf,
period with a 16-4 run. Jeff ,
Regional despite being the tour- Texas for tbe championship.
start f!ve freshmen when the
halftime and went on to win.
'when !be Suns raced to a 59-41
Hornacek had a J..po!nt play In
nament host.
But attrition and Ineffective· Shockers face Georgia Southern
"On the surface, It doesn't look ness have hit W!ch!la State, In their . open!ng·round game
Portland extepded Phoenix's lead.
the burst that gave Phoenix a
five-year losing !Streak at Mem·
Four Blazers si&gt;oke durlng an · 28-171ead. TheBiazersshot6of23 '
like we have much of a chance which has won just one of Its last · Friday night. The Eagles will
· emoUonal halftime, including · from the floor In their lowest
because bur offense hasn't pro- s!x games. The Shockers won the counter with Joey Hamilton, the
Drexler.
·
scoring quarter of the season.
duced much In the last few regular-season Missouri Valley w!nn!ngest Pilcher !n the nation
• ·
· ··
·WJ.en.. Majerle · nailed a 3·

(t9THURSDAY 1:00 ·

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(31 SATURDAY 10:00

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(121 SUNDAY 6 :30

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(41 SATURDAY 11:30

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t23( SATURDAY 8;00

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(81 SATURDAY 2:30

1
(141 "MONDAY 7:30

CHAMPIONS

,.
t211 SUNDAY 8:30

l7l SATURDAY. 4:00
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(81 SATURDAY 6:30

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t21) FRIDAY 6:00

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(171 WEDNESDAY 6:00

(9) SUNDAY 1 :00

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(241 SATURDAY 7 :30

LOSE!' GAME (23)

t18) WEDNESDAY 7:30

126

Wichita State, ~stanford r~gional favorites

Strange using Atlanta asati-itne~p

Jlor
1

u.s. o.'rl,en· ----------~

By DAVID MOFFrr
. Strange Is concerned. He'll be ninth tournament so far this
UPI Sporla Writer
going after a record-tying third
year, says he has no feeling for
MARIETTA, Ga. (UPI)
straight U.S. Open championship how he'll fare this week.
· Gurtls Strange doesn'.t usually in thr~ weeks and he wants to be
"It's tough· to win somewhere
play In the Atlanta Golf Classic,
ready. ·
you haven't played much In the
but the U.S. Open lsneanii hand
· "I started thinking about it
past," he sl!l,d. "But I promise to
al}d he wants to get the kinks out · right after I won last year,"
give all my effort this week to this
of his game.
Strang\! said. "I owe It my best
lou.marne'\~ and try not to think
·..t can't remember the last shot. I've never had anything • about,
·
the Ojie.!}."
time I was here, '82 maybe," consume me -as much. It's not
The Atlanta Classic !s happy to
Strange said Wednesday on the fair to the · tournament I'm
have Strange uilder any condl·
eve of this year's $1 m!IUon · playing at !.be moment, but I keep
lions. The tournament is missing
Classic. "There's no reason other getting reminded a bout what is
this .year's top five money
than scheduling."
coming up."
winners -Greg Norman, ·Payne
Scheduling worked In the Clas·
Strange, who tied for fifth In Stewart, Mark Calcavecchla,
sic's favor I !.lis year as far as last week'·s Colonial - only his Paul Azlnger and Fred Couples;
~

Ohio fishing report;
.

.

By United Press Iaternational
redworms , waxworms and occa·
Here's the weekly fishing re- :~lonally on larval baits through·
port, from the Ohio Division of out· th e Ia ke. Crapp Ies aver.a gin g
Wildlife:
eight to 10 Inches are b"elng
--caught on minnows. Anglers
Southeast
should concentrate their efforts
Lake Hope - This 127-acre for both species In shallow to
VInton County lake offers good moderate depth areas containing
opportunities for bluegill, chan· submerged structure.
nel catfish and largemouth bass.
Central
Kokos!ng Reservoir- LargeChannel catfish in the 15 to 20
Inch range are caught regularly mouth bass up to 21 Inches are
by bank fishermen along the .being taken out of shoreline
SOuth end of the lake. Large- cover and near. dropoffs by
n{tluth bass up to 20 inches can be anglers using rubber worms,
o
rf
1
bbe
Caught
~ . n su ace urfs, ru
r n!ghtcrawlers and small spinner·
worms, nlghtcrawlers and small baits. Crappies averaging eight
splnnerbalts fished around to 10 lncht&gt;s can be caught on
h l!n
1 h
s ore e areas n t e upper end minnows fished In shallow water
o~ the lake. Bluegill and sunish
around submerged timber and
are available to anglers brush piles.
lal&lt;ewlde. ·
·
·
· Hoov~r Reservoir - Saugeye
:Monroe Lake - Bluegills are up to 17 inches are hitting jigs and
al,!undant In this 40-acre lake and
nightcrawlers fished around dro. can be caught on larval baits, . pof(s and extended points !n the •
redworms and waxworms fished nor\11·.. ttnd of the reservoir.
In shallow water near brushplle·s .· Channel catfish averaging two to
and timber. Channel catfish four pounds are being taken on
averaging 10 to 20 inch~s are Shad and soficraws fished along
plJ!ntiful throughout the lake.
the bottpl)1. Crappies averaging .
T~out fanciers may choose to use nine to 12 Inches are being taken
kernel corn or small worms to on minnows fished along shorQ
~
b rainbow trout. LargeClitC
line areas near the second .
m_outh bass also ca11 be caught on bridge.
w~s. spinnerbalts and small
Northwest
j~ fished around submerged
Clear Fork Reservoir _ A
'Chrisimas trees, which were
parade of boats Is carrying ·
pliced here last year as fish
anglers In ,search of muskies
&lt;:Qllcentrat!on devices.
around the dam. Trolling large
•
Soutllwest
artificial baits is producing muskle catches up to 24 Inches.
Acton Lake- Channel catfish
Ul! to five pounds are be!l)g
Largemouth bass veraglng 15"to .
caught on nightcrawlers fished
20 inches are being caught on .
al(mg he bottom. Best locations artificial lures In five to"six feet of
liJ!! the creek ,c hannels at the water containing submerged
northern end of the lake. Some brush piles.
crappleliaremeasui1ng131nches
Oxbow Lake - · Largemouip
aJIII can· be caught on minnows bassaveraglna15to16"1achesal'e
flllled !n 12 feet of water arlllllld
belq ·taken on nightcrawlers,
the shoreline. Largemouth bass
minnows and small sp!nne_rbalts
are· hlttlllg on four-Inch rubber
from shallow , areas lakewide:
:~s. along the west end of the
Bluegills averaging six to seven
""'
Inches also are providing fiShing
Rush Run Lake - Fish OhiO . .fun for anglers using waxwonns
bliieallls measuring up, to 10 and redworms In shallow water
ln(hes are being caught ·on .areas containing vegetatiOn and

•

----1M·---.
...•

, • -21.2ao-lnglno

=.. .,......, ...

• _,_,OUO,Edoi

yard Atlanta Counti'Y Club)
takes your f!IU game. You li•ve to
use every club !n your bag.~
Simpson· .oA(d- tha·t a'ltb ""h
, ~
o,..
there tsn 1 88 -!J~uch pressure

dliol

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• ·• .

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tEDGE TRI~IERS STARnNG AS LOW AS $239.89

.

'

?oint Pleasant, Addaville, Cheshire Bobc·ats, Coolville, Mason
VFW. Tuppers Plains Giants, ·
Hartford Braves, New Haven
Orioles, Mason County Bar Association, Fruth Pharmacy of
Point Pleasant, PVH Medical of
Point Pleasant and Nelsonville·
York.

post~nes .

purse bid for bout

DeilY Sentinel-Page

&amp;

Yankees. blank
Minnesota, 12-0
nine hits and five runs In 6 2·3
By APRD. ALFAKANO
Innings
for the loss.
UPISportl Writer
Tlpn I, Rangers 1
The Yankees had tp travel to·
At Detroit, Cecil Fielder In·
the Metrodome before acting like
creased bls major league leading
·
Bronx Bombers.
New York 'slugged six home home run total to 17 with a
runs and Tim Leary pitched a two-run shot In the third to power
four-hitter Wednesday night, the Tigers to their elg!lth victory
leading the Yankees to a 12.0rout !n nine games. Left-bander Brian
DuBola, 2-2, pltche&lt;t six Innings of
of the Mlnnf;!sota Twins .
It was their most borne runs In three-hit shutout ball for the
a game since the 1977 World victory. Left-bander Mike Jef·
ChampiOn Yankees .also hit six, !coat, 0·1, replacing disabled
July 5, 1977, and two short of the Nolan Ryan, took the loss.
Athletics 11, Brewers 5
team recoril set In 1939.
At
Oakland, Dave Henderson
Steve Balboni contributed two
bit
two
homers and a double for
homers to tile barrage, his first
four
RBI
and Rickey Henderson
two of the season In his lltb
·career two-home run game. slammed a three-run homer to
Balboni Is especially fond of the power the AthletiCs. Mike Moore,
Metrodome, accompltshmg his 4·3, gave up five runs on seven
last two-homer game there on hits over seven Innings for the
victory. Brewers starter Bill
Aug. 11, 1989.
Twins starter Tim Drummond, Wegman, 2-1, was bombed for
0·1. allowed two home runs and eight runs on se.Ven hits and tWo
reliever John Candelaria surren· walks in 2 2·3 innlligs.
Marblen 4, IDdlUI I
dered four more in 2 1·3 Innings .
At
Seattle, Erlk Hanson and
Balboni hit his homers off CandeMl
ke
Schooler combined on a
laria, a former Yankee.
flve·hltter
and Ken Griffey Jr.
"I've faced him before, when
slugged
a
two-run
double to help
he was with California," Balboni
the
Mariners
extend
Cleveland's.
said. "For me, I know I'm going
IOBing
streak
to
four
games.
to hit homf.runs. If I don't, I'm In
Hanson,
4·3,
scattered
five
hits,
trouble. But when I hit a ball
struck
out
nine
and
walked
aone
good,lt should go out. We've been
struggling lately as far as scor· In eight Innings. Schooler pitched
lng runs. When you look at our the ninth Inning to record hls 12th
line-up lh~re' s a lot of career save. Bud Black, 4-2, took the
loss.
homers In there."
• Angels S, Blue lays 4
Delon Sanders, Roberto Kelly,
At
Anaheim. Lance Parrish
Mel Hall and Jesse Barfield hit
the Yankees' other home runs to singled home Johnny Ray from
support Leary, 2·4, who struck second with two outs In the ninth,
out 11 for his first shutout since capping a four-run Inning to lift
the Angels. Toronto reliever
1988.
Duane
Ward, 1·2, fafted to hold a
Leary shut down Kirby Puck·
4-llead
entering the ninth Inning.
ett, who went 0-for-4 ending a
Scott
Balles,
1·0, came on to
five-game hltUng streak.
strikeout
Fred
McGriff with
"He did an exceptional job,"
runners
on
first
and
third and two
Puckett said, "but It's easier to
outs
In
the
ninth
to
pick up the
pitch when you have a 12-run
win.
lead. I think I could pitch If we ,
were ahead 12·0 and maybe do a
good job."
. Sports briefs
The performance was especially gratifying to Leary, who
lost. a shutout May 12 at Seattle
CoDe~re
when Ken·Griffey, Jr. whacked a
C. Robert Miller, the former
n!nth·lnnlng homer.
athletic director at Robert Mor·
"It's nice to get a shutout, ris College, said he consulted an
especially after what hapP!!ned NCAA official before advising a
In Seattle," Leary said. ''My goal coUege trustee to guarantee a
is to throw as hard as I can as loan for guard Andre Boyd. The
long as I can. I had some quick loan broke NCAA rules prohibit·
Innings in the seventh and eighth lng anyone connected wltb an'
and that allowed me to stay athletic program from co·
strong enough to finish the · signing a player's loan, and ..
game.''
resulted in the men's baskf(ball
program
being placed on two .
In other AL games, Kansas
years
probation.
City beat Boston 4·1, Chicago
Cycling
.
defeated Baltimore 6-3; Detroit
Luca
Gelfi
of
Italy
won
the
·
pounded Texas 5·1, oakland
stage
of
the
73rd
Tour
of"
sixth
pummeled Milwaukee 12·5, Seat·
tie edged Cleveland 4·1, and Italy at Fabrlano. Gianni Bugno,
who ledthemalnpackmostofthe .
California shaded Toronto 5-4.
way, retained the lead In overall
·
RGyala 4, Red Sox 1
standings he has held since
At Boston, Steve Jeltz singled
home the tie-breaking run and Friday's opening stage.
Soccer
Willie Wilson added a two-run
England ended Its unbeaten •
single In a three-run seventh
Inning to propel the Royals ..Brei run of 17 games, losing 2·1 to
Saberhagen, 3-3, last season's Cy · Uruguay in London. However,
Youna Award winner, allowed England Coach Bobby Robson
seven hits and walked none while welcomed the defeat, saying It
striking out five for his second was "a relief' combigbeforethe:·
straight victory and third com· beginning of the World Cup ·
plete game. Boston's Greg Har· finals. .. . AC t.fllan defeated·
Benflca of Portugal t-O to win Its
r!s fell to 4·3.
·
second straight European Cham·
While Sox 6, Orioles 3
pions Cup, giving Italy a sweep of
At Baltimore. Dan Pasqua
this year's three main European drove In four runs with two
homers and Eric King and two club tournaments.
TableTellllll
relieVers combined on a twoSweden came back from a 2-0
hitter to lift the White Sox. King,
3·0, walked four and struck out deficit to defeat Cb!na 3-2 and win
three with two-hit pitching over the World Team Table tenals ,
six Innings. BobbY Thigpen men's championships In Osaka,
pitched the ninth for his 12th Japan. Theoutcqmewasarepeat ..
save. Dave Johnson, 3·3, gave up of last. year's final.

..

MEMORIAL DAY SPE.CIALS

• cw•nigllc:bctlr..- .....

~~ Y~~.~~~~th~O.n:::

"--:
II~ to Mfd. Swi.-lburs.
II am to I am Fri. 6r S.:

~=

lng runner-up Point Pleasant
PSM, the defending fourtb·place
Hannan Trace Wildcats, the
Rutland Reds, the Gallipolis
White Sox, Elks, Indians and
Yankees, the Middleport A's,
Cardinals and Dodgers, the Ra·
cine Reds 1 and Racine No. 2
teai:ns, Green, People's Bank of

FREDERICK, Md. IUPI) - .
Former major' league slugger
Charile ''King Kong'' Keller, who
played on three New York
Yankees world championship
teams, died Wednesday at his
Frederick County farm . .He was
73:
.
·Keller, whQ earned his nick·
name for his. mammoth home
runs while playing with the
Yankees and Detroit Tigers, died
COMPLETES SEASON - The Melp Junior Adam Wyatl, Breat Smlltb, and Keith Darst.
of cancer at the Yankeeland
Hlp traek team re~ completed 118 se•on
Second row - Healb Hudson, Lee Henderson,
Farm he owned and operated
under tile direction of Head Coach Rick Edwards. Tracey Fife, Sam Cowan, Mellua Pooler, Amber
outside Frederick where he
Pictured, fl• •I row, left to right are Eric Waper,
Blackwell, Danlelle Scott, Erica Roble; Healher
raised horses.
He played the outfield for the
Melissa Wluong, LesUe Quallll, Jaclyn Swartz,
Hudson, Danlelle Crow, Jered HID !U'd Joey
Yankees from 1939 to 1949 and for
Daniele Gray, Edeena Rus~~ell, PhUllp Edmonds,
Barrett.
the Tigers In 1950 and 1951. He
· returned to New York to play the
1952 ·season with the Yankees.
Keller played on Yankees teams
Foreman appear !n a double
that won the World Series In 1939,
NEW YORK (UPI) - The King and Arum ..
He said the b!d has already header. Duva charges Arum 11nd
1941 and 1943. He also played on
World Boxing· Association's
the Yankees' ·AL championship
purse bid for the Buster Douglas· been postponed four limes and he King want the purse bid June 17
· Evander Holyfield heavyweight fears the fight will be worth less because they w!ll announce a
team In 1942.
Tyson· Foreman fight that day,
Keller hit .334 in his rookie year
championship fight has been as time goes on.
Duva was expected to win the stealing publicity from Douglas·
and had a lifetime batting
postponed from Sunday unt!l
average of .286, ,with 189 ))orne
next month, prompting Hoi· . purse bid for between $30·$40 Holyfield. He also suspects the
runs. His best season was In 1941
!yield's promoter to threaten million, (ierhaps by default. With WBC will strip Douglas' title If he
hOnors the WBA bid, and make
the possible excep(!on of Mirage
when the lefthander smashed 33
legal action.
homers and drove !n 122 runs.
Dan Duva, Holyfield's Promo· owner Steve Wynn, none of the the Tyson· Foreman fight a
Keller hit three homers, and
ter, said he was notified We'dnes· sport's other major promoters championship bout.
"That's good news," Aruni
batted .438 with six RBI and eight
day by WBA officials ·from planned to b!d.
Duva called Arum's protest said from Las Vegas whe11 told
runs ·In a four-game sweep of
Venezuela that the purse bid
would be held between June •'ridiculous." He labeled the about the purse bid postponeCincinnati In 1939.
After retiring from baseball,
11-17. Duva charged the WBA, litigation point moot because the ment. "I think that's fair.
Keller was Involved In harness
the rival World Boxing Counc!l purse bid rule Is aimed at settling There's a good chance litigation
racing for over 40 years. Fresh
and fellow promoters Bob Arum disputes between promoters. will be over by then, and the
And he said he told WBA legal Holyfield-McDonagh fight will be
Yankee, the 1970 harness horse of
and Don King with collusion.
the year who retired In 1972 as the
Under WBA rules, purse bids· counsel James Binns he would over."
When asked If he and King will
all·tlme trotter money leader
are held when a champion and cancel the McDonagh fight, but
with $1.29 million, was bred on
mandatory challenger cannot was told by Binns the purse bid announce a Tyson-Foreman fight
would not be held Sunday June 17, Arum said, "It's totally
Keller's farm and sold for $900
reach financial terms for a fight.
· a coincidence that the purse bid
before she began racing.
The promoter who makes. the anyway.
Duva also s~.ld the WBC plans was set for that day . But It's a
In 1989, Yankeeland Farm
highest bid wins rights to the
ranked lOth among harness rae·
fight, with the champion getdng to hold Its own purse bid June 17, good Idea."
ing breeders with his horses
75 percent of the winning purse . the day after Tyson and Geofie
earn!ng$1.85 mUilop. His current and the challenger 25 percent.
top horse was Choice Yankee, a
Douglas won the title with a
3-year-old filly. All the Kelter stunning lOth-round knockout of
horses carried the Yankee name.
Mike Tyson Feb. 10, and HolyFuneral arrangements were field has been the WBA's No. 1
not Immediately made public.,
contender for more than a year .
Douglas says he wants to fight
Holyfield In September but a
legal battle between King and the
Mirage Hotel and Casino In Las
Vegas, Nev., over promotional
rights to Douglas has prevented
the bout from being signed.
Arum requested the WBA push
24 PACK
back the purse bid because of the
pending litigation and because
·.
Holyfield's status as No. 1
•
contender could change after his.
IDI SPIQALS
.
June 1 bout against Seamus
'
McDonagh.
......J
''What they're saying Ia,
Evander Holyfield earned the
IIG. IIOW
right to fight for tbe heavyweight
:su9
c)lamp!OIIIhlp, but he baa 10 walt
lncleflnltely and can't earn a
living in the meantime," Duva
said on a conference call from hla
West Paterson, N.J., office.
Itt~ ~II
Duva claimed the parties were
In contempt of a restraln!n&amp;
' ..
order he obtained In New Jerlll!)'
State SuperiOr Court preveaUq
anyone from interferinJ with the
ft2·Hit
puree bid. He laid be piaU to
retlll'll to court Monday "to uk
NIIIOY,a.G !
11471YIAVL
protection" from theWBC, WBA,

WBA

OF PRICE, POWER AND
PERFORMANCE.

the tournament might escape
rain this week.
"It should be
od t
..
a go
ourna·
ment, said Simpson, whO beat
1986 champ Bob Tway on the first
bole of a sudden death playoff

In addition to the regular
awards, there will be a home
run-hitting contest on champion·
ship night, with the · winner
receiving a new baseball bat.
Teams scheduled to play In this
year's tournament are·.the defending champion Syracuse Hubbard's Greenhouse, the defend·

Former ·
Yankee
great dies
f.

Memorial Week
Special!.

1

.,

The directors of the annual
Kyger Creek Little League Tournament have announced that the
tournament has reached its cutoff limit of 26 teams.
However, rosters from teams
will be accepted and placed on a
waiting list In the event of a team
cancellation.

s,,.

!?

Hlghlandtown Lake- Channel
catfish averaging 16 to lB Inches
and small brown bullheads
prefer cut bait, chicken livers
and nightcrawlers fished along
the. bottom. Largemouth bass up
to seven pounds can be taken on
splnn~rbalts, rubber worm, and
nightcrawlers In 'Water of shal·
)ow to.moderate depth. Crappjes
and blueg!lls averaging seven to
nine Inches also provide good
angling oppor_tunllles q.ere. · '

Kyger Creek Little League .Tournament has its 26 teams

2016 Aul,,,, s,1.1

Surface lures work best
.for Lake_· Hope largeinouths

suNDAY 6:00

LOSER GAME (24)

po!nterandscoredoffadrlve,the
PhoeniX
·lead was a whopping
57-35 with 96 seconds left In the '
half.
·

going Into a 'tournament like the
and eight of the top 10.
"We've ~till got a good flellj,;. Atlanta Classic as there Is going
HUIIARD'S GIEENHOISE
said Class!~ d~!fendlng champion , Into a major championship, ·
Scott Simpson. "There are plenty ''that pressure bullds,go!ng down .
of fine golfers,here. It's just that the stret.ch of any. tournament.
"Sure, there's more pressure,
All IEDDING PLANTS
,some of the ones not playing.this
more distractions In the majors,
week have wider recog'nltlon."
3 PIS SJOI
Simpson offers hlrijaelf as an but when you find you~lf
lEG. SUO Flab NOW 'S"
example of an outstanding golfer battling for the lead on that final
liDDING GERANiuMs
back nine In any tournament, It
with a low recognition factor:
llG. '12 NOW S910
"I'd done well for almost a creates pressure wl!ether or not
.4 iN. GE""I· Itt. SJ.OO
.
decade. w!nn!ng a few tourna· you fell It before."
ISc u.- 10 FOf s710
Top two 1990 money winners
ments and making a good living,
4 IN. HARDY MUMS .... •1.00
but it wasn't until I won the U.S. playing In Atlanta this week are
NOW ISc •· - 10 FOI s7so
Open (!n 1987) that It seem eel' to No. 6 Jodie Mudd, who won the
make any difference. I'm much Tournament I'layers Champion·
10 INCH HANGING USIETS
better known now than 'I used to ship, and No. 7 Robert Gamaz,
lEG. 15.50 NOW $450 .
be .••
the Tour rookie who won at
lEG. 1611 NOW S$75
'l\lcson and Orlando. ·
But, even With thelr·success All SHRUREIY &amp; BEES
The only other entrant who has
Strange has won thosetwo Opens
20Dfe Off
and nearly $5.2 million; Tom won an official Tour event this
Sale
Ceotilull
llor..,lhNt Tile S..011
year
Is
Phoenix
Open
tltllst
Kite, also playing In Atlanta, has
Tommy Armour Ill, whose
earned a record $5.9 mUllan HUIIAID'S GIB. .OUSE
none of the Classic entrants has grandfather won the U.S. and
SUACISI, OliO .
the name recognition of a Jack British . Opens and the PGA
"2·5776
Nicklaus or even a Greg ChampiOnship 60 years ago.
0 n Dell 9·&amp;· Sun. 1-11
Norman.
"I think that's mainly because
there are so many good golfers on
submerged structure.
Nortlleast
our Tour," Simpson said. "When
Berlin Reservo,·r -This 3 650· Nicklaus was In his prime he had
·
•
only 10 or so, at the most 20,
acre lake offers an excellent . golfers to really worry about. If
population of white and black Calcaveccb!a or Azl
h d
crappies. Anglers should fish 1~
nger ~
®
areas of submerged structur .
en play!ng 25 years ago, they d
1
and near dropoffs In shallo
th
won a
more often than
water. Small jigs and minnows
ey
now.
work best this time of year
After attling the elements for
SmalimouthbassaveraglnglOt~ three we ks in a row, the PGA
18 inches can be taken on Tour Is I ok!ng forward to Its
softcraws fished in shallow wa- four-day run northwest of
ter. ' White bass averaging eight Atlanta. The weather foreca~t .
to 12 inches are being· caught !n Included no rain until late Sunday
·
and a 3: 30 p.m. edt television
THE PERFECT COMBINATION
orepesenrvow
.ra. ter thr_oughout the slgnoff for Sunday .offered hope

The

Pomaov MiMIPOft Ohio

1990 KYGER CREEK LITTLE LEAGUE TOURNAMENT

.

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lllundlly, May 24. 1990

1990

Thurwdlly,

'•

PEPSI

( -~.

$579

""'
•
.
~- -

·.""'

2 HOT DOGS

YEARS EARLY

AND POSSIILV SAVE THOUSANDS"
WITHOUT REFINANCING

•na•
POTATO CHIPS ·'

$100

Sl••·

NEW VIDEO'S COMING 50011••••
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hi r•_NtRIII ltftlltt"

BEACON

y

YOUR MORTGAGE

~

'WJ'

. DENNIS L HOCKMAN &amp; ASSOCIATES
'
'657 •GH ST.

614·9tl-7066
MIDILIPOII, a.O

.

. . . . . . ..-.ofyeniiHI~~~OIIyeurnbM?S sa
~

.. .

IleaL•-·-

.........._

__ _

.,

.'

�Thursday, May 24, 1990

By The Bend

The Daily Sentineli
•

'

~

•

•

i

~.May2~

1980

Paga I

Community calendar
THURSDAY
RACINE -The Racine Amerl·
can Legion Auxiliary will meet
Thursday at 7: 30 p.m. at the
legion home. Refreshments will
be served between 6: 3(1-7 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT- A mint quilt
class will be conducted by the
Middleport .Arts COuncil with·
Bunny Kuhl instruc.Ung on Thurs·
day at 6: 30 p.m. In the council
chambers. Call Marilyn Meter at
992·5983 or Sue Baker at992·7733.
RUTLAND - The Women's
Fellowship of Meigs County
Churches of Clu'lst will meet
ifhursday at 7:30p.m. at .the Zion
Church.
·POMEROY -The • Pomer.oy
Group of AA and AIAnon will
meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at
Sacred Heart CatholiC Church.
Call 1·800-333·5051 for
Information.
REEDSVILLE -The Eastern
Local SchoOl District Bowrd of
Education will meet In regular
session oil Thursday at 7:30p.m.
In ·the high school cafeteria . ·
POMEROY - Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapter, .Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority will meet Thursday at
the home of Clarice Krautter at
6:30p.m.
11JPPERS PLAINS -The
TUppers Plains VFW Post 9053
will meet Thursday at 8 p.m.
Officers will be Installed and a
potluck meal will follow.

be provided by C.J. and COuntcy
Gentlemen. The publiC Is Invited
to !ltlend. Bring snacks for the
snack table.
· '

SATUBDAY
POMEROY -A teen dance
wUI be held Saturday at the
Locomotion. The dance Is
planned to honor all graduating
seniors of all surroundlna scbool
districts.
RACINE -The Southern High
School Class of 1915 will have a
piCnic on Satlil'day at Star Mill
Park In Racine. Lunch will be
served at noon. For more lnfor·
matlon, call Tammy Hill at
949-2815.
.
BASHAN -There will be a
weekend meeting at' the Red
Brush Church of Christ' on
Bashan Road on Saturday at 7: 30
p.m. , Sunday at 10 a.m. and 6
p.m. with Denver Hill, Foster,
W.Va., as speaker. The public Is
Invited to attend.

SUNDAY ,
MIDDLEPORT ~Tbe Middleport Arts COuncil will sponsor
"Hat Extravaganza" oil Sunday
at2 p.m. In thedlntngroomoftlle
Middleport Masonic Temple.
Ticket price Is $4.
.
RUTI.AND - · George and
Debbie Pickens will be at the
Zion Church of Christ on Route
I43 on Sunday at 7:30p.m: Robert
E . Purtell, minister, Invites the
public.

MONDAY

MIDDLEPORT -There will
be a special meeting Thursday at
7 p.m. for all Meigs CQunty trash
. haulers at the tormer Royal
Crown Bottling building on Mill
Street next to the American
Legion building. All trash haul·
ers are ·u rged to attend.

CHESTER -Tbe Chester Volunteer Fire Department will
bave Its annual Memorial Day
chiCken barbecUe and other
festivities on Monday beg!Ming
at 11 a.m. at the fire house.

MIDDLEPORT- The Middleport Merchanis Association wtll
. meet · Thursday at 7 p.m. at
village hall In Middleport

Correaion

FRIDAY
POMEROY -The Pomeroy
. Senior Cft:lzens Dance Club will
have a round and ~quare ~
on Friday from 8-1}. p.m. at the
senior ctltzeu center·. Music will

'

Bridal .shower ·given
Rita Williamson Clarida, bride
of Bruce Clarida, was honored
with a surprise bridal shower
recently . .The couple was marrled May 11 at Marietta.
1'be event was given by Pat
Harmon and Angela SpireS. A
pink .a nd white "showered With
love" theme was used.
Refreshments were served to
Jennie Williamson, mother of the
bride, Charles Brian WlllliiJilllon,

Graduation party held Sunday

Jr., Inez Clarida, Brenda Pomtenki, Angle ~Cook, Retha
Gibbs, Joshua Spires, Mary
Lambert, Debbie Brown, Irene
Lambert, Denise · and Adam
Lambi!rt, PamMcKtnney,Kathy
Bush, Bonnie Jean Allen and
Kitty Pugh.
Sending gifts but unable to
attend were Lucille Lambert,
Anita HaJ tvandl and Juanita
Lambert
·

Becky and Roberta Napper,
1990 graduates of Meigs High
School. were honored with a
graduation party following gra·
duatlon ceremontes on Sunday.

Tbe girls are the twin daugh·
ters of Lena and David Napper,
Jr., Route 143, Rutland.
Cards and gifts were presented
to the honOted guests and re-

:

freshmenta were served to Mr. :.
and Mrs. Napper,' Margaret '
Hysel~ grandmother of the ·
twins, Beverly Napper, Steve ·
and Julie Stanley, -Bonnie Ar· ~
nold, Jeff Arnold, !(~thy Hess, :
Anna Grube, Wanda: Mohler, :
Sharon Folmer, , Betty DIU, ·
Bobby, Linda, .Bobby Lee, Mlsal, :
and Ryan Foster and Adam ;
Mar tin.
; ·

F
,
,
· . h ld aith Gospel Ladies Grcle meers :
Women's Auxiliary meet1no
e . TheFatthGospeJLadlesCircle Those attending were
· Verna ..
.
0

The Womens Auxiliary of
Named to the committee, "day
Vwterans Memorial Hospital
on
the town," were Libby Fisher,
met Tuesday at the hospital with
Mildred
Fry, Noma Moore and
Jessie White, president,
Betty
Sayre.
presldtng.
Presented award pins were
· The prQil'am on Alzheimer's
Betty
Sayre for 3,000 hours, Elsie
disease was presented by Sharon
,
Smith
50 hour patcli and Jessie
Wrlglit.
,
White
10,000
hOurs,
It was voted. to open applica·
lions for scholarships to students
of Meigs COunty Scboola and
Wahama Hlgli School. Named to
the scholarship committee were
Mildred Fry and Sharon VIckers.

held their May meeting at the
home of Bobble Reed with
Tammy Cowdery as co-hostel
th 1;,
Dev otlo ns en.titled "M
. o er
were led by .Sandy Cowdery.
Thirty-two abut-in ,calls were
made during th.e last month. The
door prize was won by VIrginia
Walton.
'

Ro
Dolly Reed 01
White, '
se,
• ane
•
Erika Boring, Audra Ruckman,
DorotbyRtebel,MaryAIIceBise,
Sandy Cowdery, Pearl Baker, .
Nell WIIIOJI, VIrginia W!iltOn, ,,
Margaret Ratguel, Emma Dlirst, ";
Pauline Jlaker Debbie Barrln· ·
ger and 'rhetrria Smith
·
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·
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Breslin is back,
with Ralph plumj;er
NEW YORK ~UPI)- Jimmy
Breslin was back in print Thurs·
day, and his syndicated column
covered familiar territory for the
Pulitzer Prtze.wlnnlna' journal·
1st: New York's working people.
· BresUn was suspended without
pay for two weeks by his parent
newspaper, Newsday, when he
derided a Korean-American
woman reporter with racial
epithets for calling one of his
columns sexist, and tbe'n rldtc·
uled the lnclden I on a radio talk
show.
T~ controversy cost Breslin at
least one newspaper, The Orego.
nlan of Portllind, Ore., which
dropped the thrlce-weellty column because of the flap. ,
·
But tbere wasn't hint of the
controversy In Thursday's column, wlikh detailed the busy
life of a character Breslin called
''Ralpll the plumber."
The column described how
Ralpll, who "wanted a flood that
needed Immediate fixing bY a
plumber," would hang around
coutructloilllta walllnJ for hoe
; operators to eut tbroulb water
pipes that , had . been l.ald

SATURDAY, MAY· 2(1th ONLY.

9.. HOURS ONLY

.·• DOORS OPEN AT
9:00 A.M. Til 6:00 P.M.

a

In the Baker.Roach engagemept announcement, Sunday,
May 20 It was Incorrectly noted
that Mbs Baker was 8 uaclute
ol C4llla Acadelily Jfllb SCbool.
She Ia a g•dnw of Pt. Pier nat
Hlp SchOol. --.,

'

ALL ODDS
&amp; ENDS

;

Zion Church to host missionaries

·Garden Club meeting held
arrangements lor tne Founders
The May meeting of the Ches·
ter Garden Club was held at the Day dInner held at Pomeroy
liome of Eleanor Knight with Elementary to klrk·off Pomeroy's Sesquicentennial.
Ruth Erwin as co-hostess.
The arrangements '!"ere later
One guest, Sally Gibson, and 14
members attended. Devotions displayed a t Trinity Church and
were given by Kathryn Mora. Holly Hill Inn.
Pat Holter pardcipated In the
Her topic was "help me realize
how lucky I' am." Rollcall was to !)ower show and Dorothy Karr
displayed quilts in the flowe r and
name a color or shade.
'l'he buSiness session was con· quilt show sponsored by the
dueled by DOrothy Karr, pres!· Winding Trail Garden Club on
dent . Projects completed since April 28 and 29th.
Attending the Region Jl meet·
the last meeting were a door
ing
held at Quality Inn, Nelson·
llanglng donated by Josephine
Hill to the Hee Haw Show at ville on. April 28 were' Maurita
Eastern High; Maidie Mora and Miller, Pauline Ridenour, Betty
Clarice Ki'autter made 35 table · Dean and Pat Holter.

sar..ota tackles bullocks ban
SARASOTA , Fla. (UPI) -City
commissioners have revised an
anti-nudity ordinance that had
banned skimpy bathing suits
after five beachgoers, three of
them tourists, were arrested for
displaying buttock cleavage. ·
The ordinance, passed in 1985,
requires residents to cover up
· what the Jaw called the ''anal
cleft."
The portion of the ordinance
"doesn't ma!&lt;e any sense to me at
all," said Commissioner Jack
Gurney, who joined two others In
voting to rewrite the law.
He said It was Illogical because
other public beaches did not
restrict bathing attire. But com·
missioners must still hold a
public llearlng before Tuesday's
· action becomes final, re-opening
a local controversy that filled
commission meetings five years . . WASHINGTON (UPI)
A casts to teeth from · modern
, ago.
··SCientist reported Thursday he l!orses that had been ridden and
The action caine after ·the found the flr~t direct proof that wlld American horses that had
arrests of four men and a woman
,
ancient humans rode horses never been ridden.
last week for wearing T·back . before the wheel was invented" I was looking for a technique
bathing suits on Sarasota's se- stallion teeth with bridle marks so you could say this horse was
cluded North Lido Beach. One of dallng nearly 6,000 years.
ridden, this horse was just
tbose arrested told commission·
A miCroscopic study of horse dinner, " he joked.
ers earlier in the meeting that the teeth burled about 4000 B.C. and
Anthony said he found mark·
arrests would discourage discovered In what Is now the lngs on the ancient horse teeth
tourists.
'
·
Ukraine In the Soviet Union, that were Identical to scratches
"What kind of message are we ·revealed scratches from a mollth and damage he had found on the
sending to people when we Invite bit, indicating the horse had been teeth of modern horses from ·
them to our community and ridden. said David Anthony of metal bits attached to reins used
arrest them within 24 . hours of Hartwick College in Oneonta, to ride them.
N.Y.
arriylng?" he asked.
"I saw exactly what I had seen
However, Bopnle Wagner, a
":rhlire has been previous on my modern domestic control
Sarasota resident , voiced a dif· speculation that horseback rid· , horses that I had studied earlier
ferent opinion at the commission iilg occurred this early . Thjs Is - a kind of wear that never
meeting: "I would appreciate it the first direct proof," said appears on wild horses.
if someone would tell me what Anthony, an assistant professor
"The chewing surface of the
tbe redeeming factors are In the of anthropology who presented tooth is all a braided and cracked
revealing of buns."
his findings at the International and broken. On a wild porse It Is
Assistant City Attorney Mike Conference on Archaeozoology.
quite smooth," he said. "I can be
The traditional view Is horseConnolly said he would a walt the
quite sure It wasn't caused by
outcome of the public hearing back riding developed between chewing a rock."
before deciding whether to prose· 2000 and 1500 B.C. In the Ukraine.
If the horse had been ridden, It
While there had been some would have been 500 to 700 years
.cute the five people arrested.
archaeloglcal evidence that rid·
· Americus back the penny .
before the invention of the wl)eel,
ing may have occurred earlier. which was believed to have
WASHINGTON ~(WI)
there was no direct evidence,
Americans like theit pennies occurred between 3000 and 3500
In jl!rS, In,piles on the,dresser, or Anthony said.
B.C ..
Anthony traveled to ·Derelvka
jIngling In thei~ pockets - and
"The invention of the wheel has
nearly two-thirds of them want to in the Ukraine last April to make
traditionally · been seen as the
, keep the one-cent coin in plaster casts. of the teeth rooted , first innovation In land transport.
In the skeleton of a stallion. The What we have is evidence that
circulation.
A Gallup survey released Wed· skeleton was found burled with
horseback riding preceded the
nesday also found more than two domesticated dogs, he said.
wheel," he said.
three-fourths of those questioned
Anthony was uncertain why
Anthony used a powerful micsaid proposals before Congress roscope - a scanning electron the jleople who lived In the
to eliminate the penny and round miscroscope - to compare the Ukraine then. known as the
cash prices up or down to the
nearest nickel would just be an
excuse .to ralae prices.
• - Gei\el'any speliklng, tlieGallup
WASHINGTON ~UP!) - .Es· son'Brennan Dawson.
Po Usurvey of 750 people over age
Ca)atlU,g
his anti-smoking cru"Most machines are In facto·
18 found more than half believe
sade,
Health
and
Human
Servl·
rles,
workplaces, In cocktail
wiping out the penny would just
be confusing. At ' the bo'itom line, ces Secretary Louts Sullivan lounges," Dawson said, "So It's
62 percent said they oppose would like states to ban ~lgarette not a primary or even a large
legislation to discontinue the vending machines as a way to source of underage pt.rchase."
Dawson said a ban on vending
penny, wblle 26 percent said they reduce the access children have
to
tobacco
products,
sources
machines
would limit adults'
would' fa,vor lt.
said.
legal
right
to purchase cl·
The survey was conducted
Sullivan
plans
to
present
his
garettes.
And
she said states
April 23·26 for Americans For
Idea
Thursday
to
the
Senate
ought
to
be
enforcing
their laws
Common Cents and has a margin
Finance
Committee.
which
is
banning
cigarette
purc
hases by
of error of 4 percentage points.
holding
a
hearing
on
children's
minors.
Donna Pope, director of the
Annual vending machine sales
group, said in a telephone inter· access to cigarettes. A focus of
the
hearlngwlllbethequestlonof
account
for 6 percent of all
view that results confirmed what
whether
It
Is
legal
for
children
to
cigarette
sales In the United
she knew all along - ''The
have
such
a
liberty
.
States,
or
1.69 million packs,
Ame~lcan .people want to keep
Forty·four
states
and
the
DisDawson
said.
their pennies'."
·
An official of the National
, One reason elimination Is be- trlct of Columbia have laws
Automatic Merchandising Asso·
ing considered is the cost of • proh'ibltlng the sale .of cigarettes
ciatlon could not be reached for
keeping tens of billions of the to minors, but enforcement of
comment.
cOins In circulation. Pope said it such laws is lax and Is made
,
more
difficult
by
children's
easy
costs the government between
six-tenths and seven-tenths of a access to vending machines.
United Press International
cent to make a penny, and the
learned
Wednesday Sullivan will
small profit "goes to reduce the
present
the committee with
amount of money that the go·
state
legislation - not
model
ver!U1lent has to borrow."
NEW YORK ~ UPI) -The New
federal
that
would ;remove
According to U.S. Mint ftgures.
School for Social Research Is
12.6.blllion pennies were minted cigarette vending machines. He
challenging the constitutionality
in 1989, up from 11.3 blllion In also will discuss a pilsslble
of a restriction attached to a
1988. A Mint spokeswoman said licensing system for cigarette
grant it received from the
12.1 blllion pennies wlll be sales.
National Endowment fo r , the
~'The beauty of this Is that
produced In the 1990 production
Arts.
states would do 11," said one
year ending Sept. 30.
The suit, flied In U.S. District ·
source, who asked not to be
Court In Manhattan on Wednes·
Identified.
,r
day, focused on a requirement
Sullivan believes the best way
' to curb youths' access to tobacco that grant recipients guarantee
their work will not be obscene.
MOSCOW tUPI) - Soviet would be to eliminate the. easy
The university's president
economiC planners, seeking to source of the cigarettes compared the requirement to a
calm fears about radical reforms vending machines.
oath.
The tobacco Industry strongly , loyalty
,. that faced parliamentary scrut·
"The New School for Social
lny Thursday , pledged an FDR· opposes \ he proposal, claiming
Research has concluded that it
like "New Deal" for millions of children usually do not buy
cannot accept a grant that
unemployed and a national refer· cigarettes · from vending
carries with it a llmltatton upon
endum on the shift to a market machines.
''The tobacco Industry doesn't
eeonomy. The plan, which awawant
kids smoking, but .. . 'the
Ited review by the Soviet ·P arlia·
men! Thursday , could determine vast ·majority of. vehdlng rna·
the fate of Pres! dent Mt khall chines are already In pla~es
Gorbachev's ''perestroika'' where kids don't have access,"
said Tobacco Insdtute spokeper·
drive for renewal.

Officers elected for the coming
year were Josephine Hill, pres!·
dent; Maidie Mora. vice presl·
dent; Maurita Miller, second
vice president ; Kathryn Mora.
secretary; Eleanor Knight, as·
slstant secretary; Twila Buck·
ley, treasurer; and Dorothy
Karr, assistant treasurer.
Presenting the program, on
edible, flowers , was Jean Fr!!d·
rick . She gave hints on Using
flower petals. A demonstrallon,
basket bouquets, was presented
by Maida Mora.
·
Door parlzes were won by
Maurita Miller and Sally Gibson.
Refreshments were served.

George and Debbie Pickens
will be at the Zion Church of
Christ , Route 143, on Sunday at
7:30 p.m.
Pickens Is the son of Mrs.
Delores Frank of the Long
Bottom area. Pickens and his
wife will show pictures and hold a
quesdon and answer session·,
The couple will begin new work

In J{enya, Africa In training for
leadership, Pickens leaves mls·
slonary work at the Ivory Coast
that entailed training leadership.
The public Is invited to attend .
winner
A comforter made by Ruth
Karr and donated to the Meigs
Association of Retarded Citizens
was won by Denise Williams at
the May meeting

People in the news

Greensboro, N.C., snack food
By United l,"ress Inter~ tonal
MARLA'S JOB: Marla Ma- company Is Introducing Morgan·
ples, the new spokeswoman for na' s Kissing Bandit Brand PeaNo Excuses jeans, says Donald nuts, featuring a pair of pursed
Trump gave his blessing to the lips on the package.
endeavor. Maples wore tight
Carolina Ftile Snacks co-oWner
black size 5 jeans and a white Phil Kosak says his company
T·shlrt with the No Excuses logo was looking for something differ·
to a New York news conference · ent to at !Tact the sports crowd to
to announce her new job and the Its products. and figUred the link
to the ches ty Morganna was the
topic of Trump naturally arose.
" He's absolutely suppordve, " way to do 11.
she said. "He thinks It 's a
Her reaction: "You usually .
wpnderful Idea." Maples said she have to be dead to get your name •
Sreani Stog culture, would have had reservations about the posl· on anything." Morganna claims
begun riding horses , which were lion because she didn' t want to be to, have · kls5ed · 30 , athletes,
commonly eaten duling that seen as cashing in on the Trump Including Pete Rose, Kareem
affair, but then the jeans maker 1\bdul-Jabbar and Nolan Ryan,
period.
agreed to tie the job to her in her career .
-''If you ever see what kids do to
ecological
concerns.
AIDS BENEFIT: Liza Min·
animals - they'll ride a dog- I
nelll
filled In for the alllng
"We
will
produce
a
commer·
suspect It originated as a form of
Elizabeth
Taylor as the star of
clal
and
print
ad
campaign
which
play," he said.
the
Art
Against
AIDS fund raiser
will
contain
a
strong
environ·
But the findings . could help
In
Washington
Tuesday night.
mental
message,
which
we
hope
explain how the Srednl Stog
Taylor,
who
is
recovering
from
to
take
a
will
Influence
others
people were able to survive In the
pneumonia
In
Los
Angeles,
sent
a
stand,"
she
said,
"because,
after
harsh environment.
check
to
the
gala.
"
One
day
we'll
all,
there
are
'no
excuses'
for
not
"Horses provided one of the ,
key elements neccesary to live taking responsibility for the fate be able to wake up and say, 'We
(lid it . We beat AIDS ,"' Mlnnellf
productively In the grasslands, " of life on our earth. " '
told the crowd. " And, boy,whata
To
prove
.It,
Maples
gave
a
he said.
·
day
that will be."
', .
$25,000
and
personal
check
for
"It enabled them to find good
JFK
PROFILE:
Tbe
first
John
.
another
$25,000
check
from
her
grazing for their herds and trade ·
F
.
Kennedy
Profile
In
.Courage
boss
to
I
he
Better
World
Society.
farther distances. It enabled
them to make allianc.es with The No Excuses job didn' t do Award will go to Carl Elliott, the
more varied groups. It' enabled much for the career of another former Alabama congressman
Infamous " other woman,'.' who was voted out of office In 1964
them to make war in ways that
Donna Rice. who faded away · because of his civil rights ,
were Impossible before.
advocacy.
:
after
her Gary Hart affair.
"You put together all these
Elliott,
76,
wlll
receive
the
·
ANOTHER
ENDORSEMENT
things and it revolutionized the
JOB: Morganna the kissing award from the Kennedy Library :
history of the grasslands of
bandit will now be known for Foundation In Boston. next TUes· ·
Eurasia. "
something
besides disrupting. day. the-73rd' anniversary of the
Anthony added that It might
sportlQg
events
to kiss athlet es. A birth of late president. The .
also help explain the spread of
awards includes a $25,000 stipend
language.
and
a trophy designed by Edwin ·
"A major resear,h question
Schlossberg,
husband of :
has been who spoke the original
'
Kennedy's
d11ughter,
Caroline, In :
MOSCOW iUPI) -Lithuania's
mother language. If the Indoeuthe
shape
of
a
snip's
beacon.
Parllamept offered to suspend
ropeans began in the Ukraine, as
NO
PICKET:
The
Jewish De·
many people think, the domesti- laws Implementing Independfense
League
didn't
follow
cation of the horse and the ence if Moscow would agree to
to
picket
a
through
on
a
threat
"interstate" negotiations on sebeginnings of riding could he)p
speaking
appearance
by
Chuck
D
explain the spread out from this cessiOn, but the vote falled to
area and the spread of the meet Soviet President Mikhail of the rap group Public Enemy at :
'Gorbachev's demand that the Harvard University Tuesday .
language with the people. "
Chuck D, whose real name Is :
actual declaration of independ·
Charles
Ridenhour. spoke at the :
ence be revoked or suspended.
Invitation
of a professor who
The resolution said Ills aimed at
" resolving through, negollatlons teaches a class about black
with the U.S.S.R. the problems -writers. The appearance galled
Sullivan, who see~ tobacco as a c~nnected with the strengthening regional JDL director Michael
major health thr11at and a cause of the restored Independent Li· Slomlch, who is among those who
consider PubliC Enemy's songs
·
of costly lung and heart diseases, thuanlan state."
to be anti-Semitic.
has had previous showdowns
''This guy Is promodng anti·
with the tobacco Industry during
terrorism," he said.
Semitic
his one-year tenure as health and
TOKYO I UP!) -The organlz·
"We're
disgusted
that Harvard
human services secretary.
ers of the Goddess of Democracy,
University
has
allowed
him to
He denouced as "blood mo· the floating radio station that had
coiJle
to
their
campus
with
his
ney" tobacco company sponsor· planned to broadcast probigotry
and
hatred
disguised
as
ship of athletic events, such as democracy messages to China,
freedom.
"
Leonard
academic
the VIrginia Slims tennis abandoned their mission Thurs·
Zaklm, New England director for
tournameqt.
day·because of a lack of support
the
Anti·Defamatlon League of
· SuUlvan also attacked R.J . from other Asian nations. a
B'.rlth, disagreed.
B'nal
Reynolds' proposal to test· spokesman said . The Goddess ,
"I
think
that Chuck D not only
market Uptown cigarettes to was scheduled · to leave Taiwan
has
a
right
to be here, butt hat It's
blacks, saying the tobacco com- for Japan Thursday' morning, but
he
be heard," Zaklrn
Important
pany was pushing a hazardous organizers decided not to make
said.
"Judging
by what I've
product on a vulnerable group.
the trip because Japanese offl·
heard,
I
don't
think
he disagrees
And he criticized Reynolds' clals said the ship would be·
very
much
with
what
we believe.
marketing plan for Dakota cl· unwelcome, said a spokesman
There's
a
big
difference
between
garettes that would target young and one of the organizers of the
artlstry
and
responsibility."
mission.
working-class women .

Horseback riding may have preceded
the whee~. researchers are saying

0

'

'

Democracy

Sullivan p(O,_po~s~;;cigarette machine ban·

DISCONTINUED! .

lnconeetly.

Quirks .in
the news

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

•

ALL FLOOR ·SAMPlES MUST GOIII
TV's - VCR • Washers
Dryers • Refrigerators • Miaowaves
Ranges • Freezers - Dishw,CI$hers
Air Conditioners
L

Radio abandoned

School challenges grant's obscenity condition

Do be polite to adults

Soviet 'new deal

Bur

Don't open the door to
MANY .MORE ONE OF A l{INifiTEMs ··
SUCH AS CAR STEREO SPEAKERS,
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Dailt Sentinel

Design, agrees with exisdng confidence of the ardstlc and
obscenity laws, It Is upset by the educational community In the
new restrictions arUsts must NEA," said Fanton.
agree to, as well as the endow·
ment's duplication of those res· .
trl~tions on notices sent to school
ARTS AND CRAm SHOW
officials Informing them that Its
GAWA CO. Jl. FAIIGICIUNDS
grant had been approved.
SAT. JUNE Z &amp; SUN. JUNE 3
''This approach has the unfor·
5Gmt boot.. stiU IYIIIII.. Ie.
lunate effect of chilling free
614-245-5363
expression and undermining the

STOP IN AND SEE OUR LARGE
SELECTibN OF JEANS AND BOOTS

strangers

When your parents and
that makes you feel uncomfortteachers tell you to be polite
able, say "NOI"
.
.
and friendly to adults,·they
And after you say "NO!", find
mean it And when they tell you an adult you can trust and tell
, not to trust strangers, they
what happened•.
. mean that, too.
·
Strangers have no business
So how can you tell when to askina you to do things. When
be nice and when not to? ·.
they do they're the ones
The moat important t:IUnQ to ..
the rules, not you. .
ranember is this: If an adult
you don't know wants )'Ou to · 1bla Mae• ~~. You By
open your door, or get in a car;.
or go for a walk, or do anythbig
·
lll Court eet, Pomeroy, Ohio

free expression, " University
President Jonathan Fanton said.
The dispute hinges on new ·
res trlctlons on artworks that can
be funded by the endowment.
The res trictlons were ap'·
proved by Congress after conser·
vatlve lawmakers protested sev·
era! controversial art exhibits,
including one by the late photographer Robert Mapplethorpe.
The law prohibits funds from
going to art exhibits that depict
homoeroticism and other sex
acts and, In the eyes of the
endowment, has no serious artls·
tic merit .
While the New School, which
Includes the Parsons School of

446-7112

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GallipolJs, Ohio
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Page-S-,-The Daily Sentinel

Ponaoy-Midcleport. Ohio

China bristles at
anniversary plans

..

·&lt;

BEIJING (UP!) - China bridled Thursday at plans by
overseas stud.ents to commemorate the deaths of democracy
advocates gunned down one year ago and voiced "regret" over
WeS'Iern calls to boycott scientific meetings In China.
Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Ll Jinhua restated China's
position that the army was crusljing a "counterrevolutionary
rebellion'' when It fired on massive peacefUl demonstrations In
or near Tiananmen Square last June 3-4, killing hundreds and
perhaps thousands.
Dissident Chinese students at U.S. universities announced
plans this week in Washington to hold massive rallies and
marches across the United States on June 4 to protest the
Ch1nese crackdown.
The students also u~ged U.S. citizens to remember the victims
by wearing white, the traditional color of mourning In China.
. Human right actvocates and leading science and academic
groups launched a separate attack In Washington t~is week on
Chlna:s hard -line policies, vowing to boycott all international
scientific meetings- !n China until Beijing grants dissident
astrophysicist Fang hkltl free passage from the country.
The renowned scientiSl and his wife took refuge in the U.S.
Embassy in the first clays of the crackdown.'iil.rrest warrants
were Issued forth! pair, forcing them to remain within the u.s.
compoun\1 .
·
·
The Chines'e spokeswoman lashed out at the boycott threat
saying Fang Is wanted for "counterrevolutionary crllnes " '
" As for Fang Llzhi, you all know he Is a crbnlnal want~d by
the Chinese public security organs," Li told the ministry's
·
weekly news conference.
"Should som~ people decide not to participate In scientific
activities m Chma because of the Fang LlZhl question, we can
only e]!press our regret," she said.
Li said protests against Chinese policy would · be
" mappropriate."
•
·
" With reg~rd to the fact that some people In other countries,
due to their 1gnorance of the truth of the Tlananmen incident
have taken some Inappropriate actions - we can only ~xpres~
our regret." she said.
· ·
, Li defl~cted without comment several other China-related
ISSues _ra1sed by loTI;!Ign journalist~ at the news confererlce;
mcludmg:
. -China's position on Taiwan President Lee Teng-hui's call
lor_ unprecedented dialogue between archrlvals Beijing and
Ta1pel.
-President Bush's expected renewal of China's most f~vored -nation trade status despite stiff opposition on human
nghts grounds.
-A Chinese dissident group's apparent abandonment of
plans to air pro-democracy broadcasts to China from the radio
ship Goddess of Democracy in the Taiwan Strait.

:· p ro• bases raIIy at
•..Phi
· 1• 1·pp•·ne Senate
.
:

'

·.- - MANll.A, E.hilippines (UPI); About 5,000 Filipinos called for
the renewal of U.S. b;tsing rights
at a rally at the Senate Thursday·,
saying tens of thousands ·of jobs
could . be lost if the military
·
facilities are dismantled.
Sen. John Osmena, in a speech ,
to the crowd, said he favored a
plebiscite to decide the future of
the giant Clark Air Base, Sublc
Bay Naval Complex and four
: . smaller Installations whose lease
· expires in 1991,
: ·: Osmena said Independent sur·
veys revealed 70 percent of
·- Filipinos support the bases and
are confident that if the Issue Is
.· submitted to a vote, a majority of
would support extending 'the
lease.

'

I

.

Several blocks away at a
square in front of the central post
office, Sen. Joseph Estrada and
Rep. Nikki Coseteng led about
150 anti-bases demonstrators.
Philippine and U.S. panels held
lnltiiil talks last week on the
future of the facilities mannetl by ·
·40,000 troops and their depend·
ents and Defense Department
employees.
.
.
Under the constitution, any
renewal of basing rights requires
approval of two.thirds of the
23-member Senate, where last
year a majority endorsed a
resolution calling lor the dlsmantllng of the bases in 1991.
"My colleagues in the Senate
should follow what the people
say," said Osmena. "This Is not a
dictatorship of the Senate. Let us
. find out the will of the people."
The pro-bases demonstrators
were mostly local employees at
Sports briefs
Clark and Sublc, which employ
Boxing ·
SOil)e 68,000 Filipinos.
·
Jerry Quarry's comeback at·
'fl!ey carried placards that
tempt has been pushed back to reap: "A big yes for the U.S.
- June 9 so the 45-year-old heavy- bases," "We love the U.S. " and
- weight can undergo additional "Put a stop to unjustified killing
tes ling to prove to Wisconsin of Americans." referring the
-officials he is fit to box . Quarrl'-· slaying of 11 U.S. nationals over
has fought only three times in 1':! the past three years by commuyears and not since 1983.
nist rebels.

Thursday, May 24, 1990

Thursday, May 24. 1990

Is not a concession," Bush said at
a news copference called to
announce the sensitive decision . .
''It is the basis . of everyday
trade."
Bush, roundly criticized for his
subdued reaction to the events a
year ago, said he made the
decision after weighing political,
diplomatic and economic
factors .
Revoking the special status, he
sal.d, which greatly reduces
tariffs on Chinese products,
would only "hurt the Chinese
people themselves."

for·occupied
territories: Baker
.

"I do not want to do that," he fled of the decision, some of
said.
'
whom are strongly critical of
Beijing's
human rights policies
Bush said he did not. base hls
continued
resistance topolit·
and
decision on recent moves by the
Chinese leadership, which he leal reform.
Noting that sanction$ he Imconceded ''are far from
posed
last year remain In place,
adequate, "
.
"Most lmportan t of all, as we Bush said the United States
mark the anniversary of Tlanan- . should not "lash out In outrage
men," Bush said, "we will that we all feel," bu'Unstead keep
continue to promote the reforms a "sober assessment of our
nation's · long- term best
for which the people of Tlanan,
Interest."
·
men gave their lives."
''Not
to
do
so
would hurt the
Announcement of Bush's dec!·
States,"
he
said.
United
slon was postponed until key
members of Congress were noll·

WASHINGTON (UPI) - Secretary of State James Baker In
a reversal of U.S. policy, said the
United States was ready to
discuss sending a U.N. observer
force to the Israeli-occupied
West Bank and Gaza Strip.
The Pales tine Liberation Or·
ganlzation has called for an
"International presence" In the
occupil!d territories In the wake
of violence that has taken at least
20 lives and cau~d Injuries to
more than 600 people, mainly
from wounds Inflicted by Israeli
security forces :
But Israel has historically
oppose9 !he presence of any
International force In the areas It
occupies or "within Israel's pre1967 bol'\iers, and the United
States has heretofore unequivocally supported that position and
been unwilling to talk about any :
change.
. ·
At a White House news conference Wednesday, Baker said,
"We would be prepared to
discuss the question of a U.N.
observer team If that Indeed
comes up at the U.N. Security
Council session," which Is scheduled lor Friday In Geneva.
Officials said the United States
would be prepared to support
such a force, depending on Its
mission. But It Is unlikely the

tlrne-wil-~~~ss~

possibility
of sending
an lnterna·
tiona!
observer
force
to the
territories, the site of violent
protests since seven Arab
workers were .killed Sunday by
an Israeli posing a soldier.
Baker's comments were ex·
peeled to create further friction
in the U.S. -Israeli relationship,
. which has been under strain
' since the peace process came to a
halt two months ago. Hospital
and Palestinian sources said 14
Arabs have been killed and
hundreds wounded since the
slaying of . the Palestinian
workers.

In Geneva, a U.N. spokesman
said Palestine Liberation OrganIzation leader Yasser Arafat
wou!d' aaaress ·a~J)e'Cial meeting
of the Security Council Friday on
Israel's occupied terrlto.-les. The ·
meeting was switched to Geneva
be~ause ihe State ~partrnent
Indicated It would not grant
Arafat a visa to speak at the U.N.
headquarters In New York.
Baker said In Washington the
United States would be "prepared to discuss the question of a
U.N. observer team If that Indeed
comes up at the U.N. Security
Council session" In Geneva Friday . The amloiiiicemeill was
seen as a victory for the PLO,
which had called for such a force
to monitor the crisis.
Officials· said that the United
States would be prepared 'to
support a U.N. force, but said it
wa$ unlikely Israel would allow !I
In the occupied territories.
Avi Pazner, spokesman for
Prime Minister Yltzhak Sham!r,
said Israel was firmly against
International Intervention.
"Israel in the past has al \VaYS
oppo.s ed such an ldea.'because It
constitutes an infrlngeme~tt on
our sovereignty and interference
in our Internal affairs," he said.
"We will discuss It with the
United States and explain why
we think they have to 0ppose s\lch
an idea."
·
Saeb Erekat, a Palestinian
professor of political science at
Nablus University In the West
Bank, who went on a hunger
strike alter Sunday's killings,
aalled the announcement "excel·
lent news."
'
"If Mr. Baker is sincere and
serious, we have taken a major
step forward," he s,liid.
- Israeli officials vehemently
deno11nc~ the killings, but otr
servers said the incident appears
to have reignited the stagnating
Intifada and fueled frustration
over Israel's refusal to allow the

Inclusion of the Palestine Liberation Organization In a stalled
Mideast peace plan.
Foreign Minister Moshe Arens
said Wednesday It was. wrong to
~ link the attack to Israeli policies
or the Mideast peace process,
and warned the criticism could
give Israel's'enemies a reason to·
attack the Jewish state.
Israeli forces maintained cur·
fews In much of the occupied
West Bank and the Gaza Strip
Wednesday and security In Jer·
usalem was tripled as thousands
of flag-waving Israelis celebrated "Jerusalem Day." The
festivities mark«cd the 1967 capture by Israel of the Old City and
Arab East Jerusalem from
Jordan.
In the West Bank, broken glass

sllght~v

wounded 10 British child·
ren when a tour bus was stoned ·
near the village of Belt Sir, Army
Radio reported.
. ·
Palestinian sources said at "
leas!' 10 Palestinians were
wounded during clashes with
Israeli soldiers, biJ I the violence
was considerably Jess than In
previous days.
President Bush telephoned
Egyptian President Hosnl Mubarak Wednesday to express his
"profound displeasure" over the
latest wave of bloodshed In the ·
territories, the Middle East
News Agency reported. On Tues.
day, he sent co~olences to the
families of the slain wprkers,
who were killed as they waited to
be picked for day labor jobs In
Rlshon Le Zion near Te!Avlv:

.

'Effective June 4, 1990
MANLEY'S RECYCLE CENTER
will be moving to its· new location
at 503 Mill Street (former Royal ·
Crown Bottling Building) across from
the new Amtrican Legion Hall in ·
Middle rt.

.

I .................................

"' , '• "

\

\

.~ I

•'

CREEPING PHLOX...................1/2 PRICE........REG.•s.sa.........;....Now•2.98

... VEGETABLE PLANT SALE ...
REG.

•1.50 A PACK

OR

''

•I' '

8 A.M.

'

•

'

PRICES IN .DR:CTI
NOWlHRU

MAY ~8, t994)1

••

NOON SATURDAY

6
10
Monthly

y

run 3 dlvs at no ctlltge.

.

,

for errou first dey ad runs in peperl . Call bflfore 2 ·00 p m
d.., lhet" public .. tOn to mike coHeet ion .
• Ads th .. musl be p1fd in. 1dv1nce are
CIPd of Tlunks
Ha,'p py A'd •

.

.

'
•'

.

-

•

12 - SituatiOf'l W1nted

DAY B£:FOAE PUILICATION
- 11 ,00 A.M. SATURDAY
- 2:00P.M . MONDAY

- 2 ;00 P.M . TUESDAY
- 2 '00 P.M . WEONESOAY
- 2 '00 P.M . THURSDAY
-

Meigs County
Are1 Code 014

Mason Co .• Wv
Aru Code 304

441-Gallipolis

112-Middlepon

-171 - Pt Plea1an1

387-Ch•hire
311-Vinlon

458-Lton

Pom•ov

511 - Apple O"tovl

911 '-Ch••r
143- .0n•nd

773 - Meeon

211-Gu,.n Dist

247-Letort Foils

882- Ntw HIVen

a42- Artbia Oitt
379-W.. nul ,

141- Aacint
742 - Autland

111- l,.tllrt

.

2400 Eastern Avenue
(ACI'OIS from K·Mart)
GaiUpolll, OH

82 - W1n1ed ro Buv
e3 .... ci-.-"toctt
54 - Hay &amp; Grtln
66- Seed &amp; Ftnililer

Busin•• Training
9choola&amp; Instruction
Radio. TY &amp; CB Repair
Milcellaneous

Rt!ol Fsla iP.
31 - Hom" tor Salt
32- Mob!leHom" for Sale
33-Fitms for Stle
34- Butin•s Buildings
35 - ~ Lott &amp; Ac,•eo•
38 - Rul hute Wanttd

HOURS:

Thurs. thru Sun.

10

PH. 949-2801
or ln. 949•2860

.

NO SUNDAY

UIIIDA'S

· EUII HOME

PAIIIIIIIIIG &amp; CO.

.._&amp;t...tf.,

lniiiOIIITDIOI

.

Senler Cltil- anil

llllteiCt.nups
&amp; Paintlna
.

of,..,.,••.•

FREE t;STIMATES

, .. plin ....
lA! ,. de II f• y...

VEIY IEASONAIU
IIAVE IIRIDKES

Aml6 P.M.

985-4180

Day or Night

NO SUNDAY

Ref••-

992-6873

209 South 41h St.

Oh.

,_,.y,

*SHRUB-&amp; 'i'ni:;,;
TRIM and REMOVAL·. o

I. L HOLLON
TIUCICING

*LIGHT HAULING

CHI$111, Olf!O

*FIREWOOD

PARTS AND' SERVICE
For Moll 2 ond 4-cycle

BILL SUCK

en gin•
Stock Porto far Hometlte.

992-2269

W~e~lhJ.

Tecumoeh,

St..Uon.

EVENINGS ·

•GRAVEL
•LIMESTONE
•FILL DIRT
•ANYTHlNG
AT ALL

915-4422
1

.

11m. Ulllln-M•• T""IP&lt;IrtAt·

.,..,110r1811on

lOWE
POWEIWASH ·
SEIYICE

s. fewth ••••
lllddlar:,t, ow.
RESID NTIAL and

511

COMMERCIAL SIDING

- - . - Mobile Hom•
- Trenoport Vohlcl81 •
Form Equipm•t Heavy ,Equipment, Etc·.
FREE ESTIMATES
24 HR. SERVICE '

.... pd.

n11
SIUS and

SEIVICE
742-3011
· •Tire Sale•
•Front End
Alignment
•Oil Change • Lll"

•Brake Work
IIAIII n., 111UND

Roger Hy•H

Garage

u~

lt.

-t "'')

, ..,.. oy 0111o

PUbliC Notice
. PUBLIC NOTICE
The following were ~­
ad/prepared by tho Ohio
Envlronm-1 Protection
Agency (OEPA) l•t - ·
Effective dlt81 of final IC•
tiona end ioiUinOII det• of
propoMCI octlon1 and of
dreft actlono ore ltlltad. FInal action• moy blljlpeolad,
in writing. within 30 doye of
tho date olthlo notlcl. to the
Environmental Board ol Re-

tor within 3 doya. Pr~
action I wll become fl~ll u,.
Ieee 1 wlittH ecljucHc.tlon
heerlng Nqulll • IUbmlttH
within 30 deye of the 11.,.nce dltll: or IIM1 dlroctor
-IMI/wlthdr-• IIM1 proPONd action. Any peraon
moy eubnllt

com-•••
rogllrdlng any

/or 1 meeting
drofl ocnlon within 30 doye
of thl dlta lnllcMM. "AD·
tklnu M Llaed
do•
not

?1 - AutoiforS81e
72 - Truck• for Sale
73 - Vans 6 4 -.vo ·a

.;=.T il~E~·
PURS.UIT

(614)
742-2027
"Your
Connection~

T;;.:~f tM
Travel"

Wt can repair tind ,...
IDI'I rarlitltan and

"t.,!f, ~:JD

Midcllaport •.Ohio

Home
- . •Mobile
1'11!11 . .

. 915

•Mobiieltoine'
R•n•l•
•LotoReng.te

Stop In and S..

DALUS SAYRE
AT

PAT HILL
CHIYSUI-PI.YfiOm
DODGI
399 S. llllrtl, llld••p•rt

\

I

'

mo.

MOIIU
HOME·PAIIC

1-13-lfc

-~ ·

4-11- t

coumy
.•

Miter cor11. Wa can
also ·add litlll and rod
aut r.alatan. We ahe
repair Gas Tanlct.

•1-, Rm. 300, 231 E.
Town St.. Columbua. Oh ..
43215. Notice of lny IPJIOII
ohalt Ill,flied with the dlroc-

992-'6421

5-1&amp;-'90-1

110.

fREE
ESTIMATES

992-7479
... 33 .......

, •••,.,,ow.

1-U-'..1111

·•oNz
TANNING :

OP-110011
Cell Now To Mike
Appointment

949-2794

SPEOIAL

30 Slllions-130
Co. lid. 21
W.tch fer Sips

RACINE. OliO

74 -Mo~orcvcl•

711i - B01JII &amp; Motors for Sale
71 - Auto Pttu • Acc•aori•
7?-- AU1o Repair
71 - Camp'lno Equipment
79-Camptti • (f1oror Homn

INSTALLATION

SEARS

7.. Ill. 21111 •

. .LIPOIY
SPr J 11

t

992

HUIIP-Y'S

CUIIAII COIIIOL ·:
....J.... c.......
lefrillrtltlo•
Serwlce

Ruldlntlal ..
Commtn:lal

CALL
992-5519

;

5-11·'10-1110.

como "

Mft

Sand-Stone-Dirt
(6.141 667-3271

~11 · '10-1

Act of 1tl4. • 'dleGrt·Ponwc ov ....
held on June 21.'1no _.
am•ded and the Ohio PubThe Yilt• lnvllll
7:30 P.M. In the -.nail
He T""'fl:"llod Gmt - · , _ ... lnt8..-1 ell_..... _. MI.._. W.
,.....
. - wll pro- public. prlviM. and .,....
vldelllev........... _
._,. - ' o r • Including leiiiHIIIforpuii!IGo...,ce In providing 1 pub- tiKI..,...._ Nglrdtnglhe
FIN Hoff!Mft, Meyer
lic
aervtoe far II'OPONdproJalt.

.... ;.fdent. of ....

DUMP TRUCK

614-992-6242

NJIIc Noltc;e
lion

NEWLAND
'
ENTERPIISES
Gr..tA.

.

ISJIWIIt .....
Dh.

DOZER
snEWORK - !tpADS

CLEAIING

Good Rat•
. T.L.C .
27Yrs. Exp.

;'lOW

DAVE'S SMALL
EIIIGIIIIE IEPAII

._...,

or les. 949-2860

3 r Ztl l01ttn

Prius"

...

BISSELL
SIDING co~·PH. 949-2801

949-2969

"At laa..

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
.
INSULATION .

"Free Eatlm81H"

HOURS: M-F 9-7
Set. 9·1: CloMCI Sun.

:i=~~~~.::,~:~ ...

Public Noltce
PUBLIC HEARING •
.
NOTICE
The VIII. . of M!Hewon
. II l!lplying to IIM1 0No Dlpartllllllt of Trln•porteltcM
for e.t opt allnt . . . . . .
............ lectloft11of

Tronsporl~lillll

41 - HouHI for Rent
42 - Mobill H~mft for Rent
43 - Ftrl"s for Rent
44 - A~rtrftent fo, Rent
41- Fu'rnishtd Rooms •
•e- lpan fot Rent

IIIIIIII......·,·-. Jo.rL•••
.

'i

APU. 1 TIIIU JULY 1

C.:: ·

I;Mill

937 - 8ufftlo

It ·
R,,.,1ft Fltf
·
vet

1

8 1 :.._ Ferm l!qulpment

141S 11 17-

21 - Bulin•• Opponunky
22 - Mont¥ to Loari
23 - Prof•sion-' Sen,.cet

.

187- Coolvllle

(614) 446-1711

For111 Suppl1~s
&amp; lilit:.)llld

13- lnturtnce

18-Wanted To Do

2 :00P .M . FRIDAY

A,., Code 614..,.

Salt~

57- Mullcallnstruments
58 - Fruiu• Veg«abl•
59-For'Stleor Ttade

Si'fVII'I!'

follmdnfl l'eli&gt;phone exchantze~ ...

241-Aio Grande

Phone

56- Pets far

1 1- Help Want.ct
COPY DEADLINE MONDAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAPER .
WEDNESDAY PAPER
THURSDAY PAPER
FRIDAY PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

Galli• Countv 1

773-5900

51-t-touseflold Good!'
&amp;2- SportWig Gooda
53 - An1iques
54 - M••c Merchendlll
55-8uild~ng Suppl••

[mplnynwnl

"A clluified adl,ertiHmenc pl.c:ed in The Dally Sentin .. "{e:.. ·
CIP1- ciMtitied ditpltv. Bulin•• Card and l19al nolieH )
will elso lppear in t~e Pt. Pte••nt Retltllr. lnd the Oalhpolll Daily Tribune, r. .chlng over 18.000 hom•

'

Open Monday•Saturday
8am-9pm
Sunday, 11 am-8 PI\'

Mr.rchonrli~P.

6 - Lost and Found
7 - Yard Slle (p .. d .,., a'dvancel
8 - PubltG Safe &amp; AtJ clion
9 - W•nttd to Buy

Classified pa{les· cotw the

Open Monday-Saturday
8am-9.pm
Sunday, 9 am-9 pm
Phone (304) 773·5721

15

5 - Happy Ads

Yard 5•1•

ln-MemoriaiTl

Ov'r t 6 Word•
•
.20
.30
/ 19.00
.42
S13.00
.BO
11 .30/ day
.05/ day
84.0D
86.DD

1- Cird of Thanks
' 2 - In Memory
•3 - Annoueements
4 - GiveM-ay

•Sentinel ts not responsible for erronafter f1rst diV !Check

•'•
•
•'
'

Mason, wv

OPEN:

I'IOIIIIm

GlASS CumtiG SIIVKI
Service
IIC
h • P.-ts
SerM,
........ Ihlen, Cllaill
Saws,WIIIIoat..,.

SER~ICE

':"'"------~-

•7 po1nt l1ne type only uMd

•

-

USDMOWIIS

4-25-tfn

II HDitlfl ';,;";;;_'

·Pr.i ce of ad tor 111 eapitell"teu 11 double puce ot ed co st.

''•

l/4 Mile North of
Pomeroy-Mason B .

,_,, .

AUTu :&amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Alee Trl••lnl..
PH. 992·5682
or 992-7121

tor conMcuttv. runs, broken upd.-,swill bect-t•v.d

"
,,
ads ~ Gfveawev and Found eds und• 15 WQrds wili be

\

'
'

3

:~••:0;·,. I 150 discount tor 1d1 p1id in ldvlnce

'''
•••

.',

1

l

..

E.

COIIIIIE'S
OHIO IIYEI
HIUS and
EYEIUmiiiGS

IIIIW YAIIIIIAI &amp; ECHO

Rate

Words
15
15
15
15

Days

Meigt, Gatlfa or r.,ason count•• must b~ pre·

1

•'

- FEATURED PRODUCE ITEMS -

EAGLE IIDGE

RATES

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992-21 56
MONDAY thru FRIDAY· 8 A.M. to 5 P.M:

'' .

NOW~I.II APICK OR •7.11 A FLAT
STRAWBERRY PLANTS....1/2 PRICE...NOW JUST 75' PACK OR ss.OO FLAT

21

SMALL EIIIGIIIIE
CElliTEl

"
• The Area's Number
1 Marketplace

·'

•

•10.00 A FLAT

992-5335 01' 915·3561
Acraa ,,.. Past Office

992-6110

CUS10M IUlT
HOMES &amp;_21AGES

.. "' ·-AliT\'

SEIYICE

WE GO THE

Classified',

•

(l~ .V.I.QRAW" COLORS OF IMPATIENS IN STOCK)
'

A Great Combination., Quality ·and IIIISOflable Prices''

BISSELL·
BUILDERS

USB» APPLIANCES

Iring It Ill Or W1
Pidllp.
IIIII'S APPUAIIICE

In

·~

I

AlL IUDS

•NEW HOMES •SIDING
•GARAGES
•REMODELING
•GENERAL CONTRACTING

.

WASHINGTON tUPI) - Neil
Five former Silverado officers of credit to show that _financing
Bush, the president's son, has and directors have agreed ' to was possible. Because the bid
defended hls actions as a director consent orders that prohibit failed, . the line of credit was
of a failed Denver savings and them from working In the sav- never needed or used.
aile· Ings and loan lnd\lstry without
loan'' and called. "frivolous"
t
"Ther.e was no conflict of
gallons that he has violated prior regulatory approval. None ·interest,'; Bush said. "I had no
federal thrift regulations.
of the executives admitted any financlal ·Interest or otherwise In
Bush, 34, 'appeared relaxed as wrongdoing. · .
Walters' .business."
the hearing began, joking with a
In January, theOfflceolThrlft
Bush said Silverado's board
battery of photographers and Supen&gt;lslon filed an admlnlstra-. voted unanimously to approve
waving to members of the House live complaint against Bush the loans ·to Walters, who he
Banking Committee on accusing hln'l of violating thrift describe«! as " the Donald Trump
Wednesday.
regulations, .
of Denve~."
...
At one' point, Bush joked with
The OTS Is seeking a cease and · · Bush also testified he ' was
the panel, saying: "I'm here desist order against Bush, under ·unaware of a July 15, 1985, ietter
voluntarily. !tried to make a deal which he would agree not to · from Michael Wise, Silverado's
with my mother where she'd violate thrift rules in the !utute. · former chairman, to Silverado's
·come here and I'd go to Welles· OTS officials have declined to preferred stockholders that said
ley. Only kidding."
Identify the rcules they al~ged Bush had agreed to abstain from
The committee li Investigating · Bush violated.
any board considerations involvthe collapse of Silver11do BankBush, called the OTS action ing Walters and Good .
Ing, Savings and Loan Assocla·
"frivolous," and said he was''I would not have voted.on any
lion of Denver. Bush, who lives In "baffled" by the agency's pur· matters had I made an agreeDenver and Is In the oll Industry, s'ult of him.
ment not to do so," he said,
joined the thrift's board In 1985.
Bush defended his vote to • adding tll,at ·he did abstain on all
· He ''t.:n. 'tour months before approve $106 million
loans to matters Involving Good because
government regulators took over . , business associates, Colorado he haC! an active financial Interthe ·collapsed Silverado in De• developers Bill Walters and Ken est In JNS Exploration.
cember 1988. Protecting the Good, wlio eventu1!lly defaulted
Bush said SilveradoIs managethrift's depositors from losses on the loans. A bank controlled bv ment sought· his presence on the
wasexpec.ted to cost taxpayers Walters had extended a $1 thrift's board for his expertise In
more than $1 billion.
million line of credit to Bush's oil the oil and gas Industry, vital to
At the time of its closing, company, JN;B Exploration.
Denver's economy, rather than
Silverado had assets worth. $2.2
GoQd 's company joined with because his father was then vice
billion and a negative net worth
Bush In a bid for an oU project in president.
of $264.8 mUlion .
· Argentina and needed the l l e t . t e l r l l • • • • • • • • • • •

NOTICE

4" GERANIUMS............:.........:................................REG. '1A9.......SALE PRICE'1.09
6' GERANIuMS"""'""""'"""'"''"'""""'""'............REG. 14.49....... SALE PRICE'3.98
5" GERBERA DAISIES..,..
REG. 13.98........ SALE PRtcE•2.49
6" NEW GUINEA HYBRID IMPATIENs:.....REG ••~A9......:. ......sALE'3.9a
4" NEW GUINEA HYBRID IMPATIENS.......s1.19 OR 10 FOR '1 0.00

GIIG lAlLEY

Bush defends. Silverado board role

$75.
Th.e Kicker portion of the game
produced the number 844271, .and
one player has that number, good
lor $100,000. Eight of the $572,482
worth of tickets had the first live
numbers for $5,000 each; 57 had
the first four numbers for $1,000
each; 509 had the first three for
$100and 5,186 had theflrsttwofor
$10.
The total Kicker prize payout'
was $299,760.

- POTTED PLANT SALE ...

step forward," ne said.
.
The Issue of an International
observer force was expected to
arise Friday when the U.N.
Security Council meets In Geneva. The meeting was. moved to
Switzerland after the State Department refused to guarantee·
PLO Chairman Yasser Arafat
wpuld be permitted to come to
New York.
Baker's statement was expected to create further friction
In U .S. ·Israell relations, which
have come under Increasing
strain since the stalling of thr
Israeli-Arab peace pr.ocess
Baker Is trying to mediate.
On Friday, President Bush
Issued a statement expressing
condolences to the families of
those Palestinians killed or
.wounded in violence and elCpress·
lng his ' dismay over the level Of
force used 'by the Israeli
military.
In the news conference, Baker
was asked about the Israeli
military actions and was asked If
the United States would consider
ending economic aid to Israel.
"We are not subsidizing re·
pression," said Baker, adding
that U.S. aid to Israelis based on
the close alliance between the
two countries and has never been
made conditional.

'

Saturday's jackpot to reach $6 millio~
CLEVELAND f UP I) - Since
there were no big winners In
Wednesday's Super Lotto jack·
pot worth $3 million, Saturday's
jackpot prize will reach · $6
million, Ohio Lottery officials
said. The winning nl!mbers were
11, 13, 21, 22, 31, and 34, with a
.
prize payoff of $447,950.
Out of the $3,027,890 worth of
tickets sold, Ohio Lottery officials said 86 had live' of the
numbers for $l,OOif ' each and
another 4,826 had four of them for

Israeli government would allow
. an expanded U.N. presence In the
occupied territories.
Avi Pazner, spokesman for
Israeli Prime Minister Yltzhak
Shamlr, reiterated Israel's opposition t() any U.N. observer force.
" Israel In the past has always
opposed such ·an Idea·because It
Constitutes an Infringement on
·our sovereignty and Interference
in our internal affairs," Pazner
said. "We will discuss It with the
United States and explain why
.we think they have to oppose such
an Idea."
Ruth Yaron, spokeswoman for
the Israeli Embassy In Washing·
ton, , said, ·'The responsibility for
law and order In the territories Is
the state of Israel's by power of
being the government authority.
"The presen.ce Of any inter.n at!onal .team ·would tend to Increase the tension In the terrlto. ·
rles and will not be helpf\11 !n
regaining calm and order."
But Saeb Erekat, Palestinian
professor of political science at
Nablus University in the West
Bank, who went on a hunger
strike to demand U.N. ,supervision after ·sunday's .killings,
called Baker's remarks "excel·
lent news."
"If Mr. Baker Is sincere and
serious, we have taken a major

•ciOWIYE
OYa IIPAII

K and J CONSTIUCTI.ON

'

Israel opposes U.N. tert·itories force
JERUSALEM (UP!) -Israel,
the target of International crlti·
clsm for Its handling of violent
protests sparked by the slayings
of seven Arabs, objected to
WashingtOn's willingness to con·
slder a U.N. force In the occupied
territories.
The army reported Thursday
that two Palestinians, an 8-yearold boy and a teeenager, had
been killed by gunfire. An army
spokesman said Mustafa al Fa·
jem was shot In the head
Wednesday by a gunman passing
In a car through the Gaza Strip
village of Ban!Suheila. The army
was Investigating the shooting.
Hamed AI Halhal, 15, was
killed during clashes with soldiers in the West Bank village of
Qibia. Palestinian sources said.
Scattered disturbances were
reported Thursday In the occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip
but the army lifted its curfew In
several towns.
A 5-month-old Infant' from a
Jewish set)lement was In stable
condition Thursday after being
Injured by a rock that crashed
through the window of his parents' car In the West Bank, the
army said.,
In Washington Wednesday, Secretary of State James Baker
said the United States fort he first

usiness ·Services

U.S. would consider U.N. force

Bush extends favorable .status
to China .
..

WASHINGTON (UPI)
Brushing aside concerns about a
lack of progress on human lights,
President Bush announced
Thursday the United States will
renew most-favored-nation tradIng status for China.
The announcement, foreshadowed by administration officials In advance, came shortly
. before the one-year anniversary
· of the Tlananmeri Square massa·
ere, where Chinese .tanks over·
ran pro-democracy demonstra·
tors In a bloody crackdown.
" MFN Is not a special favor. It

The Deily Sentinel-

-·

A ~ubllc "-lng wll be MAY

2~ ::0Mlddl"t

. 111M

�.Page- 10-The Daily Sentinel

Ohio

3 Announcements

on

4

Ho~

41

for Rent

Apamnent
for Rent

...,.,_

1117 CMwy. l/4 ton. 4 ..... M0.1Jplrd 1100• ...,...

1 an.d: 4li11hwlnd tumad -

·
npoiNd. I'!W17-0144 balore
1:00.

ldt-. ...

:.:::~~~~,and

~R., U.A., 11.,.
I
~WOIOiand

2 Ina~ ldtt.,. to _.t home.
814 411 M71eft•I;Jo p.m.

=.~:u··"'
For flent • ....: P IE'IIII .I Ind

..

................ S110'1no.,

Do-n 3 yn Old, fomala,
¥ttY ..., aolnG • lo¥tng. ~....
ShUnol, Will .bO amall dOg. 304-

- - · -s .. ..
4br
......
·aiding,
-homa,
. ....
- . - a ·IWfrlg.luaiDI

1'1'5o57115• .

~-·­
Jim HIM Aooid, ibr , _ ltouM,

For Cot U.V...: I wk. old ldl·
taM, ·~ colon • calllooata, 2
17113. to .
cloz:
....... - -

24

110rw 8nd

~~-

G_, ldtchan llnolaum 304-e75:M31.
K~an 7 _
... Old,_malo,1
hlna, whitt, 304-ln~-3021.

~==:d ~~--~-'

Thrw lad:'*'"' .wurna.t.d

:

01_.,..,.. ....... .,............... ..,... .......

houaaln

P-.y. - - n t l

tltorlp.M.

"Lemon-scented polish! Are
· d?l"

45

........

••Q•Cil

·-·--

11111......
.,.,...11Jt
tu .,.
--·
v.n
, ...Window
Dodgt

TJ 11 ... Van . . . . . . . ..
.

t11t.lll0

--.u:.:=nt-

tton, "'"" - ·

46 Space for Rent

· ll'fSTEAD OF 60tN6 TO

.
SliMMER CAMP, I'VE DECIDED
TO STA'I' HOME AND WORK
ON MV STAMP COLLECTJON.,

'

MOton:yclea
710 y - wlh tantna

74

-

--.
"' -..,.

11111

and--Oitnldalor~

1

't'Oll DON T 1-!AIJE A
STAMP COLLECT!

r.l ere 11 ,md 1se

6

11

18

Wanted to Do

:illr llolllla -·Rio Or-.

114-

.....11o1111a- .....,
ar 11o111a -

tor

,or:.q..e
.il]) •

up teenagers wreak havoc in
Miami.
Mualc Row Video

a

Yard S81e
Ju111 tat, ...1 Jolal
.
jlr!vata
drive,
~--·
..... dapiialt. No,.
•• pnlao,.cl.

·~ . .

far-·--__....,_

111-ry.l' _

2 Family: Friday, W: olr ...,. ~~~--far ._n Time
~ ~:!::
~-,.IIIIIUJ.
_ , W"U"rR
at holM.
N,., ..,._ ·
No
apoH•oaa
·
Colt 24
1·
_ _.,.,. .... Clpan
l\LL- -.11ua1 Ia Paid In hhoun,~~·~cl~#~'l~.......,~~-~:;.
~·.":"-.,.DI-·~
lhe
,
,,_ _ zta:aoto ~·.
·-· ~aid roaiW. 11u1t be

21

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

-Iori .t:'"· =..

-011

!II Cln:la
DriH. p- 114-.4-

bull~ phone. ..........7712.

NOT to aancl money ttw:ouan tha
maH untq ""' 111.. lnWatrzat8d

Full tlnoa LPN aac ........._ ahiR tllloKarlnz. .
ihiti t17'aO''ftN' 7:00,
•ffldaY, SM"""", M; Drtv-, po" time RN. day ahlft. Contaot' st•l
liulldlnz
ayatorna
•....,.. toe oalllil, IIMohall Road. Tam Halley, en Ha..n of Point manulutonr
a.vdlnz daa..,_
In-_, a.- Stlr!PI~I~~~~·~'~jOi;;;i;;i:iii-;;Ur aftlp
,W.tah aizni. All- lip hill.
ttr actv.tlalngi cllel• Mmlnei';
..., a~. 1-7 ·•
1'...- ampto- tnvwr daalgn
and .,;..,_na ·~
, - , Purchaaa tactory
Ave.
· - · dolla, home
.. ·
,.....,and-..
wlh
......
,. c-. dlnct at loW daalor prloa. Call
·11av1na IIIII: Fumllun a ani~ · """"" S.o-. W. ~
·llay "' ,
..._
.., ......
24. ·
nsClolhlni
-id,• "--IL
and - boatd and..
, _ dally
You
f1eJI EsLJlP
........ 1 homa, autdalooa and
.

.

--

s..-.

d-Ial,

own

=

Fttday llofU.
.
Yud IIIIa, 3 _..., llln 01
llltu~.

Ha-.

·

Porn. roy,

Joe-., Ohio ·
Oppol!......,.lini.....,...
.

Apartment
tor Renl

44

·-1. .
11-2.

phone

nllhld,

1413 aft~ .,.m.

114-171-7721 Ext.

:.:.,,..::m'"'a"'dlll-:-a-.-,-....,.,..
- ...
....,.,,....,lilo--,tor
""
'

Mlclclleport
I VIcinity

;,!';I

full-4tme
ahltt, R.N. Suporvlaot.
~~~
-and 24th. Rain .......... 1 wlh lUI-time~~

:....."ttl:!~ R101 . .Many

a

=- .

-lng, laundry

nlrli.

Woitar · •

:104.a71-4014.

3 laJ wen Mud !jl(ii""'d apta.
....~

Dllcat- 11111 Poktt PI I it. .

::....::uAJOO anl=....wlthpo~

up ....
Blvd.,

par.....,on_.,_
.
.. •
...
aat_...
on.....,..-.

_,.PUll. Ia
ind
.... 11Ko

=

. . . -and-·-

at.-

-

JaaparCaato~-

Public -lon: VInton County,
Wlllcovllle, OH, Sat. J..,.
tth at 1 :OOp.m., II KI'M, mare

or-· 2 MOly, .,._.,oft. SataiMt• .,...m, etolc.emm~ •ov•,
torma: 111% day of alicllon, for
lntonnatlon, SIS-424-1121. .

Rtck P.non
now

-ton
Compony
1ucllon1, n:•

booklrtg

..c:":._

Pttto- .....,..

tha dltlonnco.

Llcanaad Dh!!,_ ~-uckr, Waat
VIrginia, 104-Tno&lt;&gt;noo.

9

JAPANESJ SWORDS WANTED.

minimum. Tom
Wlntar, 117 Panon, Sp~nzllald,
HI. 12702. 21U:IU729.
Junk Clra with or wftho&amp;it
S300

molora. can l.alrl' Uvety iM-

311-9303.

.. Qultte

~

'*

Antlq.. or naw. Excalllnl cond~

tlon oniY. Prompt pr~ym•t.
1

112-aest

--rtora

Homei

D..

tor sa1e

POSTALJO.

8tart II 111.41,.
application Into.

far aaam •
call 7 dap

alal1dlng I I - and/0&lt;
tlmMr WMI tai' purchM8 In

KaMWha, Clblll, PutnfMn,
llaaon and Jaclwon Countl•
araa. Contaot Brown

Haldw..,.

Lumbar ~J.on- I, Frulara

..........

304·711-0413 bieJUnn 1;00 and
J:DO.

Help Wanted

w.-

AVON • All araaa, C.N Marilyn
:1114-112·2145.

In- .....

Improvements

1012)Q
Q!IOnllfage
'.
9:00
all Cheers Sam

e (})

AUtos tor sale

wonders if he should tell
Rebecca about Robin's
inlldelil)'. (R) D
·
(I) Top Rank 8oxtna

=. .

....,.._,... ,.. a.,...

Gallpolla, 011 ~--

~

55

Building
SUpplies

-.--.....
- . llrtolt, -

-

tora,
Rio Granda, OH Colt 11424Wt21.
.

58

Pets for Sale

IN
H16~ IN leG27 •.

-CUII-IIrouzltamlllaaol,
-

-

til HI-Now
8:30 e (}) all Wln(la Joe decides
to epy on Brian and Hllon
when they are loll alone. Q

::.::-~-11117 00... 1roc Z. -

lalld.-.

'lllurua LX t4.100.
Ootaun . _ Clio ta-1100.

Cha•-

1100. l'arda. llao dot

c........

Chawp.

...,.... -

..........

(1) . . . . . . . -.

............. •·•-oocl,...
Eat. .._

F·~~.=,-..= .

Haina '

........
.........
-.......
· --.
111 atr laat
, plUmbing
nee.

Rlflr• DII IMUI'IftDe oa.iiM '

82

wa- to hln: Ctaanlna ....,_
Ivory cthor -11. 114-:IN'IUI.
'

18 'Wanted to DO

35 Lots &amp; Ac1'811ge
O.J. Willa Rd. 2 plue · ......
(_,...ad} Wooded building

alta, 114441-1111.

Rrnl&lt;~l s

... ,..,.. ,._.,. R t' 1 ,

:100 .... ll, Pt.Pit.,WV.

41 . Houlea fOr Rani

---..--.Ha..
own,_,

I INdroono home In Hlrtfonl.
Qaallaal,llapoalt ,..,Nd,-~

Clot .. ~ ..,..... -

-.114-441~

....

HOW MUeH
DO YOU
NEED?

NOT EVEN FER

SDME .IUICY
•oSSIP?

f1!

/fiNuwawalch

(!) Under Fire
Ill
1t21 People Mllpzlne

On TV Take

•

.:::-•

-lndPlioa

lawler otters a guide to

114UI~Ohlo
83 Excavating .

-~~~Newl

OE

10:15 (I) MOVIE: Wltlta Llgtlbtloog

:::::=~~~;;;,;,::.;,.__,

(PO) (2:00)

TtanoldnG. ...... •• and
eleatrlc .... ,.. ...,.....,

10:30 (l) M I . , _ . Tltelltre Ulll

-*-nHIH
.........;.·-----Elactrtcliil &amp;
Refrlg11'8tlon

.

_
...... -....- .
r·-7··-

-Weill, ............
Blilama.
r
I I I I I - , .....

=. . . .

.R I I Willlr ltaovtoa. Poole, ....

1...~-·

~ dalloaoy. Colt-

~

..... lo 4,01)0

fiT

Upholatlry

....

Ill..........

II totI&amp;J'a
....
,..~=!nl
.....
.
Tha
.....

_ ...... 11:. ... - ... _
--~
r - . - . w IIIII . . . . . . .
iiiiil.. ...... -~ pofN, ... . Ill
7

a look II the

fifty moat belutlful people In
the world, I profile of
ioumlllat Paul Wynne, Jerry

--==~---ea:~
~·

~-.-Coli
.-... ....
· DIJIIolaontr.- ....
• wllh rltil•- to._ Co2'l

all L.A. Law Kuzak
represents a protesaor
accusld ol murdering his
asslallnl (R) Q
·
CD e (J) Primetlrne Live ·

e

PlUmbing I
Heating

................. Haull!!l
II I 11~11 ........... dJi!

Clilld -

.

.:

81 G.,..l Hauling •
11411.

~'

I'M FLAT
BROKE,
PAW

j

~·-.::-- llolllta

.....::':..¥-- ~"" 84
.

Rablltlon

e C))

Rd. Part-.
1~
-GID~ CNik
-Voo
-·
·
~':"~....... and .......,. 114- ;

-apla&lt;l. 114-1111.

~-IDD\\IttiDIII

-

10:00 (}) 700 Club Willi Pll

T·

~':':':·.~~
~-=-r'•:
poloa, 11,111111, .--.am.

ea

(2:00)

oil. 114-oMio
Sp.nl.
.
Ooraury, LTD. Aioio,

4 ...
llallid. 22,000 ....
R - (ICIOd.tMolll 17114.

VEAL FAAIII'OIIIALI or laaaa
""h' option to liu)l. 114-2*

likely suiCide. (PI 2 01 2) Q
Sletera Kate trl8s
' to have the loll she shares
with Mike put in her O!fn
name.
IIJ Larry f(lng Llvel
0 MOVIE: Jaclc'a lllell (RJ

l!ll

ELECm!C eeARD TRIMMER.

=:.:--pay

oj.

lllnd - - · P.O. loa tiS.

learns JuNus'a death was

lf4.446.

.

far ....._

TaaohaiS , _ ntra I, rallnd,
... 01 ....lnaa.

~t-15 INVENTED
'THE FUU.Y ALJ'It)'MTIC

DA..'Y

1 ..-.

..... (ICIOd WO&lt;k

cC.': ......

• ON THte

u, •
-.-.tow·car.·--,no
7111.

The Kid Is reunited with his
IQno..fosl brother. (R) Q
(lJ (!) Myllelyl Morse

MORK MEEKtE

-ltiii.ne
latter
....,,
•.• tina,
lit. ona

Proll. A-. -'7110.
- - l o r povfltOO. atMia.
Cal ·t.-.771111 (10.-ln)
or willa: PAIE-1170, Ill I. Un-ly,N.AuNn,IIOI42.
AN'• and LPN'•. Overbrook
Canter haa part-11,. poalllona
1¥1- .... ~ 3-1\ lnd 11·7

a CD e(J) YCIIInllllden

1111'1
.... - · - 1113 ..-On, good coild, 104171 11111.

' WHITE'BIIITAL DllECTORB
Ron . - - . 1210 laaond Ava,

.

P,.vllwa Qoea

VIdeo
(!) Wild Amllricll Exainlna
the natioil's lergest
gamebird, lhe wild turkey. (PI

TrJ nspo rt &lt;ill on

11117 Pantllo Onind Pill, utn
..._ tilt, olr, AMIFII - a ,

POSTAL SERVICE .lobe. Salary
to IIIK. Nallonoolda. Entry 1aYa1
poalt ..... Colt (I) IOI..._
exi.P·10111.
POSTAL SERVICE Jolla. Salary
toiiiK. Hatlonoolda~~=
- " -· Call (1)
'
Exl. 14512.

·--·

iil Sheik

Home

o.........
,_
· 81
~"t-' caM altar 7:DO

- --

- In • aUallty - . . . - .
F0&lt; "*" ........,._ ... latt;'
·
Employment Services ...,. •
• DlnMOI
m. fll ~

11

Full Access shares a behind
the scenes look at H1nk Jr : s
biographical home video Full
Acc8ss.
B:30 C2l all Dtfllrant Wol1d
Walter and Jaleesa Clash
over discipline in lhe dorm.

(R)g

I ..,,. hay io be cut, sot IG
-:1401.=~·_;__ _ _ _ _ __

-

-~~ JoN. 9tart at 111.41 an
hr.
aaon • lpllllcallon Into.
0111 7 daY! I a.m.-10 p.m. 1-211ll»ltt, Eil107.

chuckle quotad
. ._J.L......J.-.L. .....J
by flll;ng ;n the m;.,;ng -d•
1.-.L._L.
you develop from step No. 3 below.

$
•

he'

j~~:.~..~.-. : =.~~.&amp;=~

bellevaa he has interceptld
Helen's herQJn shipment. (PI

~

Graph predlcllona today by mailing IAGmARII.!I (Nov. 2J.Oec. 211 To$1.25to Aatro-Graph, c/o lhla new.pa· day II your mala does something that
per, P.O. Bo~ 91428, Cleveland, OH displeases you, H Is beet not to review
44101·3428. Be sure to Slate your zodl· this behavior tor the benefit of outeid·
ac sign.
ers. ThiS wtll only mMe a bad situation
BERNICE
CANCEl Coluna 21...lu!J 22) Instead ol worse.
.
BED O
viewing sltuatlona wtth logic lnd objee· CAJIIIICOIIN Cllec. 12-.1en. 111 Don't
E SOL
IIYIIJ today, you might resort to the un- be ratuctant to deland your polltton toproductive lu~ury ot emotionalizing. day II co--era try to palm off IMJir
This 111ndard of
-.·j r~albiiHies on you. You c:en only be
work.
·
• used you permit it.
LEO (.IUIJ.jW q· 5 22111 you are wtahy· . AQUAJIIUS (.len. ...,._ 111 A little
,....,Y today, there' I a ch1nc;e you. 1furl'* tloM'I the line you might be decould be drawn Into an undesirable ac·, nlad dOing or hrllng IOIMihlng you
llvil)' that doeS not _..., your beet ln-1 Wlnl II yqu'ra too exlravllgMI In the
t - t . Don't let comp1nlona dlcll!t. , p,_t. Don't IMm thii'-On the hard
your
1 way.
·
· VIIIGO (Aug. II-Sepl2 221 An Important! ' 1'18CI8 (Pall. :10 llaroh 1111 H tan 'INk•
..., 21, 1MD
, relltlonlhip could be Jeopardized today ,1y your family wtll c11er to you today
llyouarerebelltouarat.,.thlncooper·f ty o u - a Cflllky dllpoaltlon. MemJolnt ventureo look very promlllng tor 'aiiYe. Work with otherl, not l(lllnil bin ot yotlr hOullhold won't be In the
·
·
mood to pamper a bid .....,.
·you In the y8ar lhNCI, provided you Hnk thlm.
up a.pabll, lnduatrtoul penona. LIMA (a.pt, zs.OctL 211 Syst-lze . ·AIIID C._. 11-Aprt 18) Don't let
Lazya.-tatea!fOrl'tbeotany,.luut . Y.C!""- allorts today llld eatlblllh yourlmpu.--lal(lllnthlupperltlnd .
111.
In llllllotO/Ibll ~ Nothing produc- · today and ctlilll you to jump to • rooteU II (..., 21...._ :10) CompetHive live ........ II you procllld In I diiOr· ou. condullonl. II you 1111 Oil !ride, H
de\tllapmenll rnuet be r&amp;llllllallly . . ~lllhlon.
could be very dllllcuH to 1111 back on ,
....cl today, or . . you might 1111 In- 8CCIN'IO (Oitt. M Nu;, 22) KIIIP .,. 111(111n.
'
YOiveclln ulluatlanWherelhl oddln. erythlng outln the open end • uncom- ,JAUII• CAIIII :10 .. ; Jilt IJII.IIIIi'~
llald l(lllnlt you. Don't kid younell. . pllatdld • Pan IIIII, ~lilly In your you're rnttY good 11 g11t1ng 11111c1mum
o.t • jump an Hie by Ullllemlncllng lhl loallllnvoltl-* today. ~ or ml ge .,_the dOIIInl you epend, but
lniiUenCII WhiCh ... ao-ntna yoU In -.cr.t ~ could be lnterpt etld today oould be In tiCOeplton. Count
. · lhe yeM lhllcl. Send lor )'Oiif Altro- 1· M declltful by your~:
your peow.._ with ~-

me,....,_,

n

n

. .. . •

UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS
FOR ANSWER

I
r-u

. Carpet-Eight-Aloof- Tumull- TARGET
My boss once related this bit of wisdom, "When yo\1
aim. for perfection, you usually discover it is a movlrig
TARGET."
.
,....-----· ----....,

..,

BRIDOI

NORTH

.913
tAJS
•KJI75

Netherlands player Piet Bont made
EAST
three no-trump in todey's deal by cor.JIOI4
rectly placing the cards and the diatri·
.A 102
bution. After \hree passes, be bid one
• It 5
no-trump and North raised to game.
.AUS
East won the opening heart lead with
ltbe ace and·returned the 10. Declarer
SOUTH
Lpliayed the jack, and West won tile
.AQ52
.KJ4
qu!llln and cleared the suit. Next came ·
-.
tQ8'7 3
·the queen of clubs, ducked. A second
.Q!O
club weal to East's ace, and East led
the jack of spades. Declarer now had
Vulnerable: North-Sooth
enougb information to avoid the error .
Deale!': West
of playing the queen. East had shown
Wed
with two aces plus the heart 10 and the S..tl
Pua
spade jack, and would surely have
Pua
opened the bidding in third seat with a I NT
king more .
Opening lead: • 5
Sa declarer roee with the Stl'de ace,
played a diamond to dummy's jack
and began playing out the club sujt. Lo_r_w_as_oo"'·'"".m""·""ro""·-"'tbe=;.,liire,.
_
South discarded a diamond and a
ldai
SP'de on two 1ooc1 clubs as West abo and still had a 11111811 di•IDIIDd. aa-..
shed a diamond and a s.,.de. On dum· inl lbat the opeliln&amp; lead mlpt haw
th
been a spade If West had IIII'IA!d With
·
'·
my's last club, deClarer threw ano er four in that Billt, declarer_. off a.d
Stl'de and watched closely to see .
the
•which card Wes\ would relinquish. In with
q - of apadea, IIIII halllell
ood West llld to lead from the JC.t ol dll·
fact West DOW disca~ bla last I
lllODdl to pve SoutlllliDe tricb.
heart, and the key dectaton that South 1. _ .l«ddf'r- ".l«dd! • .._• .,;,
had to make was whether West had al· •J - , .. CUIIa.-·t- O'lttall-.
ready unparded bladlamond king IIIII loWIIII ·~~ 110- ...-.11
was left with
•II!' a small spade, 11 1 w - . , . p 'II 1 • .,.._ -

.

-.-.,.-.-....J.

tin'-

I

· ~·

L

CROSSWORD
t»y THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
1 "Them"
· monster
4 Bark
8 Venez.
copper
center
9 Chef's
need
11 Suburb·
anile's
·pride
12 Intense
lear
14 Memorable
period
15 Author
Deighton
. 16Moogai pan ,
17 Easy gait
19 Harem
chamber
20 Reluse
21 Winter
complaint
22 Hairdo
styte
23 Fashion
24 Deducted
25 Bujold
film
26 Allenllon
27Now
30 "Butter·
flies
-Free"
31 Nigerian
32 Family
member
33 Narrow
valley .
35 Subside

501515! .
Den The Way To
Go

• «D New Twllglll ztll e-tc I ChttM

11:001Jl8nrecnw I. Mrs. King

I w •• •

wing ·
DOWN
1 Macaw
2 Evermore
3 Beachboy's
hue
4 Aqueous 15 Comedian, 24 Dread ·
5 Candid
Jay 25 Vocation
6 H9ckey 18 Designate 28 Weiland
great
21 Perry
or
7 That's ill
of
. Panama
8 Seafood
song
29 Elysium
sauce
22 Biblical
31 Vase
10 Head (sl.) mounlaln
handle
13 "King of 23 lorre
34 Anger'
111m role 35 TIAy
lh!l - "
7

'•

AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGFELLOW

IDNewl

...,....

36 Succinct
37 Splril
38 ConStruct
39 Building

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES- Here's bow to wort It:

(!) Ry111 1

...

' for another. In this sample A Is IIRd
One letter stands
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Slrllle lelten,
apostrophes, the length.and fonnaUon of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letten are different.

Cll 111

(]) Belibel Tonlaltt

0="'VI...

• Gll AnaniO Hat

0

Filmmak• Ia
ICCIIIId ofntl.l derlng hia
Ieiding lady lor art's like.

.

CRYPTOQUOTE

5-24

StlnO.

-Uie.

~

PRINT NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQU"RES

· SCIIIAM-UTS ANSWEIS

Corned Beef And Cabbage

e

11117 -

101.

CGnipa!Mivw -

Q!1 Hank JR The Making Of

.......

loW-. 11.-: IIWII 1117.

........10p.m. 1·211--117-2111, Eat.

-a.

........ -

FRANKENSTANK
MEMLUON'S
PI.ACI! OF OIU&amp;IN.••

Servtces

1lll F1aro GTl~'

· ..,- Frae
. ...
and ratatl-.
alft.t o
10-IIK.

Wan18d

- .... -

..........

far

Wlnted to Buy

P1ylng

,_

'"-- -

I

0 Murder, She Woot.

SEAIIOfFOR '!HE

Quilter

.

0 Prtm&amp;NI!fl

64 .. ~. &amp;Grain

Ta T i n - ahotr- . lllltla. ftaral palo

Ollllpallll.U.. .,.., .,..._.
Rant .. - · ......... land
RbleGWI u•t•,~...•larv A: .1i
- · -' 01 ...
4llr
homa,
vlnvl
...... • mila, .... 013.aiUaal aiding,
. ......
on F~ llay :ISi.ll
..allloo..
..,ann lll.m.. a
- · · - I nlltz., lual Dl
10o.m. only.
aalll114-3714111.
EARN MONEY Aaadlng Booul
130,000fyf lnoorn. patentl•l. LEASE WITH OPTION. Laop
now hlllnz (1) eos.aar-eooo Ell. llmlly homa aata on 3 Four to alx bad.._ lour
Y-10111.
.......- . lnaround ~ 11:;[
4
Naad mollvatad
tor
rapid
._.....
_..... aatn'aiiM-Mt-2130"'
3214.
Qualify .... boo and ......
lant ..,~ - . and
l'ftlftiiMIML Ful tralnlna. For 32 Mobile
lntervJRr,
304-34a..a210 If

--·

(2:30)

.•• AND 'THEIR
SUII&amp;IiCIJENT ·

1a Fonl. L Ptnt ooncltlon.
All
Ill
11112nd - · 11200.

dopa-· far

Qoklln C.Mo 3C)4ol3'7427l or

"
" :1811.,
Nonnal,
llh - on
ca-.
totally
rad_,.lad
lnalda. c - unlumlaliad.IM111 . . .

~ohlld!!!"'~-~~114!!!:1!:!•!;!11!!1!:_1. .:..:.:.::

--~---.114:MI'41U.

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dltlanni
o
f- I n till

Waat VIrginia. :sa pan aa·
pertence. l=or ~ .... Cll ....

IM1'111 ...,.._

AllltiiJr.-;

7'1

Road". Wlloh "" a1gna M:; •••• r •·
poa111on
211....,_ 2nd. I Lm... p.m. anlalilo
major aor¥tca
-~~~.. for· ao•lfOIII. 114- - - Non Ml~
MWM
!nz iloaAion
to _,han'

Clllo'a Auction Se'rvlca, Bullalo, WV. L...,_ Ohio and

_..., ...,.._. on

plano. 1aa - , . cattllanazar

-.-r..~-- :::...":::71~0-:rllpclla,

PubUcSSie
&amp;Auction

._

Pftlaburg Palnta,

=-~··

c...

8

I loaM._..

PIANO 1'011 BALE. W.-;
111111111_ ..,., to teke on

lima R.N. poaltlon and lllll~lme
....... _ . , . - T~ LP.N.'a. Contact lha Dlnalar fll
~dina cijulpMorll~ - " ' I Pll-aal
Canter,

Rt. 7 .., tr S2 "Eagle R"'-

a

Quarlar Hone, - · bay with
.._, I,_,. old. 304 111 11n7.

,,.... fUmllflld, ,.

..._ wv.

e

. . 1111. .

~~~~

biJ;oucu: hauet, finished
wKh 41h bOd-,

electrical systems work and
how to work with an
electrician. Q
(I) Fathei Oowllng .
Myaterlea The D.A. is killed
and an attempt is made on
DowHng's lite. (R) I;!
l!ll •
41 Hours Q
.illl MOVIE: The
Mancllulilli Clndldltl {PG13i

MotorHomaa

, _ _ u-.ln B..,a, 114-

,.
quiNd da-'1 nqulnd, Uppor
River i\ci, At. 7. 111 ..Ht4o.

3

f·34-

• ""'tty HlA, llle.

1111 Frolic 11 ti, ACAIC, goa,
lllr - . 30W71-

2llr lpollmae=!..'"::...

work,

7:35(1) Major LAeguelaMIIIN
8:00 (]) MOVIE: lllltr Oozen: The
Deadly Mlulon (2:00)
• (2) 1211 eo.by 8ltow Cliff
is lell to tend to Rudy,
Vanean and OIIYII . (R) Q
• • National Geogl'llplilc
(lJ (!) IIDIIIIIIme Learn how

campers I

79

1 ~:~ 1 Upaloln,_Fur-

-laa - - - montha
'""'
tlllltl
DillYtoqual""
Iliadllmllad
_appllcan4a. Can .114-112-3711 EOH:

,

OJ Croutlra
ID Major L1111ue laaabll

C f VIITH TV
-rHAIIe~

a ••••-• - . tor ,.... c.r-

I NEED HELpl
.
PT • lt,DOO mo., FT • 11,000

mo.· -

&lt;"" •

" •

-----.
t=no
""'"'--- -·

- - t o lila .-11 and
.1a1aa, D14 • U1l • daoalcp:n•~ of 2 lnclwld..la
=~AM. Friday and
":':'~~-'=
- 1rtv1a Vanllatar at (114~
Yanl 1a1a, 2110 J - A.._, 7101
. ., P.O. Bo~E=

'

D CD Enmtltinment Tootlght

a (J) M-·• Family
l!ll • a 1211 Jeopardy! Q
e«D M"A"I"H
·

f.iCtfTIOf'll
..

lrlandalolp In • limlly pliaN. lleaulna alllltty to
_... ~vlnz a1111r. and •

Pl. PI llll!nt
1 VIcinity

olilna, 212 Ook 81., -

.

__..you

I

/iN,P·
MIR-1 IT &amp;,OULP
"'/..\"' INTf~Ft~t

. IIIOIICEI

to ::....,~ton
lay - · ·
VALLEY PUILIBHING CO.
11. OHIO
.......
thatyou
·""'know
do - and
and I YMN Old lnd 1 - r ..._
, _ with
poopla
1

:DO IIIIa

'fftill¥ llft.moon. CIMnlng out.

r:..-

. ID Abboll And Coi1ello
7:05 Cll Jafleroonl
7:30eCJJ Family Fauci
(]) Lldleu 1'10 lowteru Tour

'"UCJ&amp;.i'

Bualneu
Opportunity

=

.......,
-..
FridaY. _
,. • 2:00

fCNOW. IT

1'01\~1\t

"""" 241, ...,., -114-~

:att.

THI

se.e"'
*
.
{
l.e&amp;f'CJI'e

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)ICN •• '-oW ...... 2""'-outllt.

DUGNOR
~--·-·."
.
1--Til,;-::1;....:::..,1,:;·:.....;1"'':.:.,.1---1 G Complete lila

By James Jaceby

OJ MO!Miylllll
0 Mllml VIce Three doped

1n

441 1011, 114-211-1771.

lilt-··-·.-.-. .

Wlteal 01

Court Q

town, no pita,- I • " ' oald. ................ Will
be aWatlalila- Junellh, 114-

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity .

L..

NlweHour

nnt

ar,

I I .1 I' I .;:;

Of Education: What WIN It
(I) 8portaCenter
8 CD 8 (J) Cui'Nnl Affair
CD (!) MacNIH IAhNr

=
.::r· ..... -'·
lloli--.-on

KALYE

"That's a pretty
slope," I remarked to
5
agent showing me ranch prop--'--.L.__.J.L..._.L.__.J. L', arty. "In real estate," he
.--------.smiled, "we say ~ has good

. D(2) More You Know Future

Lost &amp; FOund

I

ENB A G ~
1--r--T.,.:;..,o;-:;--1

.

ID Hlll(lln' In
1:35 (I) Andy Qrllftth
7:00 ~ Scarecrow I. Mrs. f(lng

untii:DO• .

1 1 1 1

I
r

(l)Ctubc:-1
(!) RM&lt;IIng Raillllow.Q
• Gll Andy Grttlltlt
OJ Wol1d 'today

DigHt

(!) 3-2·1 C-.ct Q
111 etDC88New8Q
eilll
'"""'• Compariy
.Top Card

a,.--::'.:::r:!'..:-":.:t.:

1

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111

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42 Mobile Homes ·

HlRDOC

(I) ludwal- T1loroughbrad

ew
ea.,....

8:05 (J)Ievarly HlllbiHI11
8:30§ (2) all NBC Nightly Nuwl

s.... chain ttnk- 152 .n ..,. you rna . .
tor ....nt
Two
4fth~~~4~
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- · 114·1'124117 .. 114-'JII2.

.... ---l111'
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THURS.. MAY 24 •

I:OO~IIeAnd .

11111 4 - Drtw,_K.a ....-.,,
080. 10M11-7dl allar

- - ..... · - 0 1 -

O four
laorr"""" letlors of the
oc:rol!ibt..r words below to form lour
wordo .

EVENING

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Roams ·

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73

Giveaway

~ .,::•:•:::=:u.~

Television
Viewing

Ml 1()0 ICIOOI~l

KIT 'N' C,ARLYLE~ by Larry WrJaht

LAFF-A·DAY

No TrMpothoot Loo va._ "llouta on.; Cof·
tagaviHa, W.V..

Ohio

thursday. May 24, 1990

• AIM!toln Mullet lltop

BPIY

D ComeciJ ToniCihl

11:30

e (}) e'"' Of C.raon

I•E'B

YJVD,
OUM

• • ~catL..­

IIIgllt Sunn; IFYMtiCI for
munllr. ~ lhl'l pregnant
wltll VInnie • ..,,

...........

1011 ....

,11:110 (J) IICMI: . . . Tile
IIMdlr I Milian (2:00)
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-DCOSYDQYOTV

y,,....a,•e Crtpl••••lel FOLLOW LOVE AND IT ·

. W1U. FLEE; FLEE AND IT WD.L FOLLOW THEE. OLD ENGUSH RHYME
~

1

e tiiO·.,., Ktna , ................ tnc.''

�Local news

briefs-~ 1

Continued from page 1 .
. Cakes and pies must be in place by 1 p.m. and will be judged
and auctioned-of! at 3 p.m. Prizes for pies are $25 for first; $15
for second; and $10 for third, and for cakes the prizes are $50 for
first: $25 for second; and $15 for third.
There also will be contests for the kids and adults through out
tile day ' such as egg toss, three legged-race, bubble blowing, ..
and others. For the adults there will be tobacco splttlng, a
mouchtache conies t, cow calling, and others. Prizes wlll be
awarded In hoth.
For more Information on the activities contact Joan Stewart
· at 742~2421 or. 1\lmberly Willford at 742·21031

Chicken barbecue planned Moncfuy
The Chester Volunteer Fire Department will be having Its
annual Memorial Day chicken barbecue on Monday. The.
department will be serving 900 halves of barbecue chicken, 130
pounds of spare ribs, and 100 gallons of homemade Ice cream.
Serving begins at 11 a.m.
There also will be a garden tractor pull and flea market.

Squads have ·13 runs·
Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical ServiC'e re· ·
sponded tp 13 calls for a~slst.ance
on Wednesday .
·
AI 2: 48a.m. the Tuppers Plains
Fire Department responded to
an auto fire on Route 7. The
vehicle was owned by Cathy
Ritchie.
At 3: 41 a.m . the Racine unit
responded to a call on Dewitt's
Run Road for Pam Pierson who
was taken to Holzer Medical
Center.
The Rutland unit at 3:46a.m.
went to Meigs Mine No. 31 for
Frank Caldwell who was transported to Holzer, and at 8:26a.m. ·
the unit was called .. to Myers
Road for a bUs and car accident
In which Rusty Hanning, Laura
Arlx, Jason Arlx, and Dusty
Smyers were transported to
Veterans Memorial Hospital. Debra Karnes and Juanita Lambert
refused treatment.
The Pomeroy unit at 11:43 a.m.
went to Condor Street for George
Kaufl who was taken to
Veterans.

At 1: 25 p.m. the Racine unit
responded to Bas han Road for '
Sadie Trussell who was transported to Veterans. At 3:14p.m. ·
the unit and fire department
went · to Oak Grove Road on a
motor vehicle accident In which
Brenda Ash was taken to Veterans, and at 5:34 p.m . the ulnt
went to Route 124 for Florence
Baer, also taken to Veterans.
The· Middleport unit, at 6: 09
p.m. went to Beech Street for
Madeline Moore who was trans·
ported to Veterans.
At 7:21 p.m. the Rutland unit
went to Route 684 f9r Delores
Donphue who was taken to
Holzer.
.
The Racine unit, at 8:31 p.m.
went to the parking lot of
Southern High School for Julia
Hensler who was ta,ken to Holzer.
At 9:26 p.m. the Mlddldeport
unit was called to Race Street for
Dan Druckenmiller who transported to Veterans, and at 10:33
p.m. the unit went to South
Second Street for Homer Moodlspaugb who ·was transported to
Holzer.

Stocks

Dally stock prlee1
(As of 18:38 Lm.)
Bryce aad Mlll'k Smith
of Bluat, Ellla II ~wl

I

Soutll Cealral Oblo
Partly cloudy Thursday night,
with a low In the lower 50s. Partly
cloudy Friday, with a chance of
showers, and highs between 75
and 80. Chance of rain Is 40
percent.
·.
Ex*eaded Foreeaat
SaturdAJ tbrqb Moaday
A chance of ra.tn saturday and
Sunday, with fair weather on
Monday. Highs will be In the 70s
each day, with overnight lows In
the 50s.

Am Electric Power ...... .. .... .29'ft
AT&amp;T ..... ................... , .... .... . 43
Ashland 011 .... ........ ............. 39
BOb Evans ................ ........ .. 13%
Charmtna Shoppes .. ... ......... 11 ~
City Holding Co .... .... ..........14%
Federal Mogul... .. ............ .. .21%
Goodyear T&amp;R ........ : ......... ..34% ·
Heck's ... ... ..... ... ................... 3'ft ·Correetion
Key Centurion ....... .. ...... , ..... 14
In Wednesday's report of the
Lands' End .. .. ...................... 16
Limited Inc .... .. ..... , ...... .. .... 48~ Meigs Local SChool Board of
Multimedia inc ...................81~ Education the name of Josle
Rax Restaurants ....... ..... .. .... 2Yt Morten should hilve appeared as
Robbins &amp; Myers ................).6~ Josle Morton.
Shoney's Inc ............ .. ,... ..... 14~
\
Star Bank ... .. ........... ........... 20~
Wendy's Inti. ........... ........ .. .. 5% To end marriage
Worthington Ind ..... .. .... ...... 23~
A dissolution has been granted
Leonard Lee Van Meter and
The planet Neptune radiates more Janice Lee Van Meter In Meigs
County Common Pleas Court.
heat than It receives frqm tbe sun.

•

Gallla Christian SChool · will
graduate five seniors on June lin
a 7:30 p.m. ceremony at the
school, near Cheshire. Weather
permitting, the ceremony will be
held outdoors, acco.r tng to school
admlnlstraror Cynthia Langona.
Guest speaker · ~¥ill be Rev.
Debl Foster of Cbeshlre, minister of th~t area's charge In the
United Methodist Church. Foster
Is a graduate of the :;eminary In
· Delaware, Ohio and lives In
Cheshire with her husband, John.

Hospital news ··
I

Veterans Memorial
Wednesday admissions
James Fisher : Middleport;
David Mills, Pomeroy; Sadie
Trussell, Long Bottom; Florence
Baer, Middleport: and Madeline ·
Moore, Middleport.
Wednesday dlscharg~s Clara Osgood , Terry Hutton. and
·Larry Patterson.

charges, and mandatory trash
pickup districts a threat to their
, livelihood.
Meeting Thursday night .In the
OVP News Staff
''
old Royal Crown building.on Mill
Meigs County trash . haulers Street, 11 of Meigs County's
have organized In a first step collectors formed the Meigs
toward fighting certain regula· County Association of Trash
tlons propoSed by tlie · multl- Haulers.
They elected Dennis Carman
COUJltY SoJid Waste Management
Dl~trlct.
of Carman's Refuse Hauling,
The haulers consider a number Rutland, president; Roger Manof those proposed requirements, ley of Manley's ' Trash Service,
including flow control, sur- Middleport, vice president; ShlrBy.CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Sentinel News
Staff .
'

'

ley .Jeffers of · Jeffers Trash
Service, Pomeroy, secretary:
and Henry E:blin of Eblin's Trash
Service, Pomeroy, treasurer.
The association's goal Is to
serve as a nucleus for what they
hope will develop Into an organlzatlon:representlng all six counties, Athens, Gallla, Hocking,
Jackson, Meigs and Vinton Coun·
ties of the District Solid Waste
District. Haulers In those coun·
ties wlll be contacted and a joint
meeting arranged as soon as

•Deluze accommodatiou for two adults at the MJrtle Beach Bilton • Welcome split of chabllt • Jl'tnt
morntnc continental breakfut for two • Complimentary ~ens fees dally for two adults at the Rl,rer
am, Golf~ Country Club (cart rental required) • Children oceuplDg same room u parents stay free.

· By United Press International
i!lr will move In with thls 'frontal
After a brief taste with sunny system and keep overnight lows
weather, showers and thunder- In the upper 50s and mld·60s.
storms .were to spread Into the
Saturday will see periods of
Buckeye State Friday evening.
rain most of the day , with some
Light rain was already falling thunderstorms possible, and
in extreme southwest Ohio Frl· highs In the 70s. The rain wlll
day morning, while the northern persist into Sunday, but Monday
third of the.state still bad sunny and Tuesday should be clear.
skies. Highs Friday were to Highs will be 65 to 75 Sunday andreach Into the 70s.
In the 70s Monday and Tuesday.
A warm front will settle over Lows through the Weekend will
the state Friday, With showers ' be mostly In the 50s. ' ·
and ' thunderstorms associated
With light winds Friday, spraywith the system falling ovel' most ing conditions were good, and
of th~ ~tate. Rainfall amounts of since the forecast calls for only
a quarter· inch to an Inch can be llght rain, the chemicals should
expected by daybreak. Warmer
be absorbed welL c•

'

F·SERIES XLT

FINANCING AVAILABLE TO

Stock

QUALIFIED APPUCANTS

N0.527

UP TO~ MONTHS

Two arrested

SJJ,

•• LIICILI,.,. CU

-. TIUIR HAULERS ORGANIZE - The Melp
Coim&amp;J Association of Trash Haulers was
orpallled TbursdAJ niJbt and ofOcers owere
elee&amp;ed. They are, lefl to right, Deooill C_a rman,

president; Roger Manley, vice p!Wideot; /ibil'ley
Jeffers, Secretary, and Henry Eblin, tre-.silrer.
The Melgs'County group's goal is to expand lato a
district-wide association.

BENJAMIN PERRV

"SAVAB.ABLE"

l.lft·tftr Trend

Car Of The Year

. IICDI,...,.

MAKE IT ARULE...
USE WANT ADS.

Stock 113310, 2 door, c:aupt, toni wheal
drive, 4o:yt IIIII. hllndlnltn, Pl. pb, ·~

...
....

cruU,Al.IIFiliadio,ltnollpl,lldilitiM,

AM-

bucket - . -window dllag.

TOOl.

Store to cl011e
Dlreclor John R. Hall of the
Ohio Department of Liquor Control announced today that all
state liquor stores, state llquor
agencies and departmental otrl·
ces will be closed Monday In
observance of Memorial Day.

WAS
$29,810

872180°*

A judgment has been rendered
In Meigs County Common Pleas
Court In favor of The Florshelm
Shoe Company against Grace M.
Whaley, VanVranken. Inc. !Hartley Shoes\, et al, for $3.686.09.

Soncfest
A special service of singing will
be held at the Mt. ' Hermon U.B.
Church located on Texas Road at
7: 30 p.m. Sunday. Singers will
Include Mrs. Andrea Powell,
Russ and the Southern Hills
Singers, and singers from the
church.

ties must go ,Into landfUls In their
respective areas , and that
Athens and Hocking waste must
be disposed of in a landfill in one
of those counties.
· Although Meigs Countv is not
the only county with some waste
be landfiiled outside the district,
most of the haulers at last night 's
meeting use the ERO Landfill in
West Columbia, W. Va. because
of sheer economics and the travel
distance Involved.
There was a \'ariance Issued to

IIDIIICIC '
................,.,.frJ.. ..., ..
·.

IICDRIJI.LI
Stockl131i0, 2 door, hntwhlal~ 4cyl
eng, 5 siMI tn, Jll, ~
AMIFU !Mio,
••., ~radilllill.
-. window

Stock13012,2doar,4whlal=crlena. .
/IIA6U
•....,

w.

$11,899

nu

IIIIPDID

::w

PROBE

w..
$141,!195 .

...

buc1!411-. -

'11,111

Local news briefs

,

$8995

Stock 113310, 2 door, caupt, ..... whlal
crleng. lir, ........ "'· pb, tit,
llidlo, radillln,
dltag, gqea.

... .
•••DIY

LIVELY DISCUSSION- Dennis Carman of Carman's Refuse
Hauling was emphatic Ia bill recommeodalloa that If lhe
slx-(!OUDty Solid Wute Maaagemeat District passes Jepslatlon
lbat tbreateH the livelihood of amall haulers that the newly
orcantzed Melp County A8110Ciatloa of Trash Haulers take
appropriate Iecal actloo.

5 Ifni ....

IIW

Was

...

818,111

711101m
StOclc
1134111, 4 door, ...,

•Was
$11,2!15

...

w11111

.... :::.:.: ...

:r.,•cr~~

~cnill,

the pilllcy commUtee's · resolution, Manley pointed out, regard·
lng "cost effectJv~ness " but the
hauler said that se~ent was rtot
clear as ·to whether U applied to
the trash collectors or the dis trict. Several of those who have
been attending the meetings said
they were !nclJned to think It
applied to the district.
However, according to Manley, even If tlie legislation being
considered by tlie District InContinued on page 12

More rain on . way to Ohio

'·

Includes ~r Da:gs and Three Nights of ...

$15,662

Meigs announcements

possible, It was decided.
A lively discussion on the
district's proposed legislation
was held with the major' concern
centering on flow control and
liow It will affect not only the
haulers, but trash customers.
The management district's
policy committee has already
passed a resolution specifying
that waste generated In Gallla
and Meigs Counties must use the
Gallla County landfill, that trash
from Jackson and Vinton Coun-

.'

WAS

'

The Bradford Church of Christ
will have a Vacatlon Bible School
kick-off program Sunday evening at 7:30 p.m. The theme Is
·"Island ill lhj! Sun" and "Living
in the Warmth of God's Love."
Vacation Bible School will be
June 4-8 at 9 a.m.
Garden club lo meet
The Rutland Garden Cluj) will
have Its regular meeUng on
Monday at 7: 30p.m. at the home
of Mrs. Albert Woodard, Langsville. The program will be on
lllles by Mrs. Jack Robson, Mrs.
Vernon Weber, and Mrs. Ruby
Diehl.
·

Meigs County trash haulers fonn association

NOW

The Eastern Local School ces, lnstructlonai supplies and
District is currently preparing a materials, excess costs and
Title VI·B Flow-Thtu project equipment.
Anyone Interested in. addl·
(education of the Handicapped
Act , part ·B, 94-142) for tl)e tiona! information about the
project or In offering suggestions
1990-91 school year.
Project expenditures will In· , for consideration should contact
elude personnel, pupil tuition , Mary Price at Eastern High
contracted professional servi- SChool 985-3329.

2 S,ctiona. 18 Pagn 26 Con1s
A Multimedia Inc. New opapor

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, May 26, 1990

StOCk No. 509

Eastern Local preparing proj~t

VB8 klck·off

Vol.40. No.266

1Copyrighted 1990

WEATHER MAP - A frooCaliiJStem moviaclato lbe Ceolral
Plal111 will ceaerate llbowers over mucb of· tbe Nortberll Plallll
duJiac lhe morular boun oo Frida¥. DuriJI( tbe coune of tbe dAJ,
very atroqlbll"denlonns wlllllllel)r develop over a larce )llll'tof
lhe alldoa'a mldHclloo. GenerallY dry and mUd coadldOJ!II Will
prevail over tile easten and westera 1tales ud temper~~&amp; urea will
110ar welllnlo tb,e 90s from Texas wesllalo lhe Calllorala Desert
BecJon.

'

Judgment granted

Low toallh* Ia mid 108.
Chance of raJa 10 perceat.
Saturday, hlp II! mid 7ts.
Chance of ralo 90 rcent.

•

Stay 4 Days In
Myrtle Beach On Us!

'

'Daily Number
131
Piek-4
9862

Page4

'

graduation set June 1

Ohio Lottery

Oilers
capture.
Stanley Cup

Weather

·Gqllia Christian school

Valedictorian of the 1990 graduating class Is Benjamin Perry.
He is the son of Michael and
Sberyll Perry of Gallipolis. He
will attend Bowling Gree State
University In the fall, and his
actlv!tles at Gallla Christian
include being a student council
officer two years, and holding the
lead role In three school plays. He
is the recipient of the Holzer
Cli.nic Science Award and the
American Legion Award.
Other members of the gradual·
lng class are Timothy Hively II.
Roger Redman, Amy Weatherholt and Michelle Wellman.
Gallla Christian School was
founded in 1976. and educates
grades klngergarten through 12.

Thursday. May 24. 1990

Pomeroy-Midcleport. Ohio

Page 12-The Daily Sentinel

-

·-

10,111

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.SIC1,!195

•

' No paper Moncfuy
The Dally Sentinel will not be pub! ished on Monday. May 28, In
order to permit employees to observe Melljorlal Day. ·

Court House closed Moncfuy

-

'

Meigs County Common Pleas Judge Fred W. Crow III
announced today his office and all other county offices, with the
exception of the sheriffs ·office, wlll be closed Monday In
observance of Memorial· Day. Offlces will re-open Tuesday at
the usual 8:30a.m. hour.

Feeney Bennett schedule.listed
· r~.e American Legion Feeney Bennett Post 128, Middleport,
bas announced the following schedule for Memorial Oay
weekend.
·
The post wnrmeet Friday at the hall at 5 p.m. to place flags on
the graves.
'
The post will meet Monday at 8:30a.m. and will leave the hall
at 'S: 45 a.m.
Tbe post will travel to the Middleport levee . at 9 a.m .,
Middleport Riverview Cemetery at 9:15 a.m., · Bradford
~ontlnued on page 12

HAULERS CONCERNED
- There wa8 a llvely dllcusslon on bow tbe association
. will baodle now cootrol directives from the l!ix-(!OIUIIy Solid
- Waste Manacement District
by tbe 11 Meigs County truh
haulers at Thursday alrht's
meeting. "cer Manley of
Manley's Trash Service, wbo
has attended many of the
Manacement Dlllrlct's meet·
logs, presided al tbe organlza·
tloaal seslllon. ,

Deputies of the Meigs County
Sherlff's Department arrested
' two .Individuals
Thursday
'
.
evening.
Larry Bishop, Reedsville, was
arrested for the Washington
County Sheriffs Office. He .Is
lodged in Meigs County Jail
pending a hearing since Washington County Is not an adjacent county. Also arrested was
Veronica Adkins on a bench
warrant from Meigs County
Courthfor failure to comply. The
report stated that she posted.
bond and was released from
custody.
Sheriff James M. Soulsby said
Wednesday morning that around
5:30 a.m. Ravenswood, W.Va.,
pollee were pursuing a motorcycle from that community. The
cycle crossed the Ritchie Bridge
Into Ohio and went west on Route
338 continuing on Apple . Grove
Dorcas Road.
The cyclist lost control at the
Intersection of Manuel Road and
the driver fled from the scene on
foot. The vehicle, which sus·
talned light damage, was lm·
pounded. The Ravenswood pollee
later reported that the operator
of the cycle, Bll~v Joe Thompson,
21, Preston Street, Ravenswood •
was located, arrested, and . appeared In court ln Ravenswood.
At 2:50a.m., on Wednesday, a
1976 Chevrolet was destroyed by
fire on Route 7 at Tuppers Plains .
· According to the report, the
vehicle, owned by Kathy Ritchie,
Long Bottom, was parked along
Route 7. The Orange Township
Fire Department responded to
the scene. The report went on to
say that Meigs County Deputy
SCott Trussell, who had observed
the vehicle earlier, arrived on thz
scene and observed Gary Jordan
sitting approximately 10 feet
from the burning vehicle. Jordan
was arrested for disorderly conduct by Intoxication.

by

Planting operations will probably be curtailed by precipitation
Saturday and lingering wetness
on Sunday may delay fieldwork
Into early next week.
The latest weather map
showed a weak area of high
pressure along the Middle Atla,ptic Coast. A low pressure system
was over Kansas with a warm
front extending northeast Into
Iowa then southeast Into Keri·
tucky. A cold front traile9 from .
the low Into New Mexico. The low
will move to .e astern Iowa ,b y"
Saturday morning with thewar!n
front pushing north Into the Ohio.
Valley .
•

Meigs deputies

An investigator for the State
F.tre Marshal's Office was called
to asSist on th~ lnves tlga,tlon.

Cause of the fire is listed as
undetermined. The case Is still
uncter lnvestlg'atlon:

'

Taft 'hypocritic~) on issue
according to his opP.nent
COLUMBUS, Ohio tUPI) Secretary of State Sherrod
Brown said Thursday his Republican opponent's new-found Inter·
est In voter registration Is the
height of hypocrisy.
Brown told · reporters at the
Statehouse that Robert Taft
fought against Increased registration as a Hamilton County
commissioner and a state legislator, and only converted to a
proponent after he dropped out of
the governor's race to pursue the
position of chief elections officer.
''There Is nothing- I repeat,
nothing in his past that
!nd!c!J,tes any Interest In,opening
up the political process," said
Brown, a Democrat. ••If Republican bosses had not made him run
for secretaty of stae, he would
still be opposed to voter
registration."
Taft announced a voter regis·
tration plan last week, saying net
registration has Increased by

'Only 88,000 during Brown's eightyear Incumbency and has actually declined by 211,000 In the last
four years.
Brown ~aid his office has
registered more than 1.5 million
voters since 1983, "expanded the
use of mali-In voter reg.tstratlon
forms, and Ohio Is noted nationwide as having the best voter
registration programs in the
country."
Brown said Taft voted against
mall·ln voter registration when
he was a member of the Ohio
House In 1977, and helped enforce
a county policy against solicliation when a voter registration
coordinator at a Cincinnati food
stamp distribution office was
jailed In 1984.
Brown also said that outside of
the board of elections, there Is not
a single county office In HamUton
County that provides voter regis·
tratloil services, despite the fact
Continued on page 12

PUCO trims gas rate hike '
Collimbia to file new tariffs, or
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) rate and service schedules, reThe Public Utilities Commission
flecting Thursday's decision by
,. of Ohio (PUCO) Thursday
May 31.
trimmed $1.4 million from the
Mot.lons for rehearing In the
rate Increase It had previously
Columbia
Gas rate case were
granted Columbia Gas of Ohio.
filed
by
the
company, tbe City of
In ruling on a mellon for
Columbus,
·Industrial Energy ,
rehearing, or reconsideration of
Cpnsumers
and
the Office ot the
the co~lsslon' s Apr115decislon
'
c
onsumers'
Counsel.
In addition
In tile case, the PUCO was able to
to
the
$1.4
rnUllon
reduction,
the
substitute lower actual price
CommiSsion
also
questioned
a
Information for the higher price
$19,000
advertll!ng
expense.
Tbe
estimates which had been used In
PUCO wlll·meet with the parties
calculations. 'lbe reduction afIn the' case to detennlne whether
fects tbe company's working
the expense was Included.
capital allowance for gas stored
The Commission's AprD 5
underground.
declll!nn bad granted Columbia
The average Colwnbla Gas
customer will see his or ber · an Increase of approximately
$11.4 miWon. Tbe company had
monthly btU drop from $51.21 to
Contlnued on page 12
$50.63. The Commission ordered

OLDBST HONORED- Maade Beta of Blp Sine&amp;, MNdlepert,
wilD _ . , dlllned ller ltlat blrt1ldQ wu lfwta lftCial
recopllloa at tile ,Sealor ~ Ceater durtar &amp;he moaWy
bh111U, •taner. lllle WM ac-puiM lo t11a oblerYallee 1J7 her •
aleee, Eva RobMa. Mn. Betupeadl tile wba1W•IDColambuawttll :
reladves and tben r e t - 1o ber Middleport bome eaciiiiUIIIIIIer. ·

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