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Pqa D-B-Sunday limes-Sentinel

-

Pomeroy-Midcleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant. W. Va.

August 12, 1990

In London, Ohio Sept. 20

Manzey family, Pomeroy, will be
honored at Fann Science Review
By JIM FREEMAN
Tbnes-Sentlnel Staff
POMEROY- A local farming
family has been listed as one of
lour runners-up for Ohio's top
conservation farmer of 1990 by
lhe Ohio Department of Natural
Resources, Division of Soil and
Water Conservation, and ThP
Oblo Farmer magazine.
Richard and Patty Manzcy of
Pomeroy will tie honored at a
public ceremony on September
20 at the Farm Science Rev iew
near London. They will a Iso be
featured In the September Issue
of The Ohio Farmer magazi ne.
The Manzeys' have pra cticed
many techniques including con·
tour strips, grassed waterways.
!ish pond management. no-till
planting. and development of
pipeline and livestock tanks to
conserve soil and water on their
365 acre farm.
Several grassed waterway s
were cons b'ucted on the Manzey
farm. Grassed waterways arc
guUeys formed Into parabo lic
shapes !usually by bulldozer!.
and topped witth grass. The
grass helps to keep soil from
washing away. It also serves
another practical use: the grass
on the grassed waterway ca n be
harvested and used for cattle
feed .
The Manzeys' also practice
contour farming: planting crops
in alternating rows following the

co ntour of the land. Currently
they have corn and alfalfa
growing In rows.
The practice of planting no-till
corn helps to keep valuable
topsoil where II belongs.
One of the more Interesting
features of the Manzey farm Is
1he fish pond management program. The fish pond is fenced to
keep lhecattleout. Thecattleget
water from a pipeline running
from the pond into a water
tro ugh.
The Manzeys· also follow other
conserva tton pr()('edures such as

exc luding livestock from woodland, hayland and pasture management. timber stand improvPmenl. rotational grazing, residue
management, hay land and pas·
ture renovation and establlshmenl. and soil testing.
According to Mike Duhl of the
Meigs Soli and Water Conserva·
lion District. Richard and Patty
became cooperators with the
di strict in May of 1982. They are
cu rrently in their second long·
term a greement with the
district.
Richa rd does all of the work out
in th e field mcludlng construe·
lion of waterways, ponds, clear·
i ng brush and maintaining his
bulldoze r. Duhl said. Also, ac·
cord ing to Duhl. he has modified
some of his farm equipment to
make it more elficient. Pat
handles the books and ensures

Ohio Lottery

Reds hold .on
to defeat SF
Giants, 6-4

l'lck-3: 711
l'lck-4: 3817
Cards:
7-H; ~-C; J-D; A.-S
Super Lotto
14-30-31-32-36-43
Kicker 892612

Page 3

the long-term agreement and
conservation plan practices go
according to schedule.
The Manzey's originally de
clded to practice conservation to
save soil, time and money. and to
Improve the appearance of the
farm, according to Duhl.
Started in 1984, the Ohio
Conservation Farmer Awards
program is designed to recognize
farmers who are doing an out·
standing job of conserving soU,
water and related natural resources. The program is coordinated
by ODNR's Division ot Soil and
Water Conservation and sponsored by The Ohio Farmer
magazine. Nominations are ac·
cepted each year between Janu·

•
Vot.41 . No .70
Copyrighted 1 990

FENCED·IN FARM POND- Richard Manzey
poses with Ills lenced-in !arm pond. The pond has

been fenced In to keep cattle out. CatUe can still
get water from a pipeline-connected trough.

CAIRO, Egypt (UPII -Saudi
Arabia turned away an Iraqi oil
tanker Monday In a sign a U.N.
trade embargo was working
against Iraqi leader Saddam
Hussein, who stepped up hi s
attacks against Arab opponents
and Egypt's leading role in the
fight against him.
A day after the United States
announced it will begin blocking
Iraqi oil shipments, Egyptian
Foreign Minister Esmat Abdul
Meguld held talk s with the Soviet
ambassador to Egypt and Assist
ant Secretary of State John
Kelly, who met with Syrian
officials last week In U.S. efforts
to Isolate Iraq .

IITrDTUrDIIIf
ntntn~
BETTER BY DESIGN
/

••len •

H"EFFICIENCY

HEAT PUMPS
Far Molile &amp; Manulachred Hames
Tho now P.C.S.D. Hut Pump t...
tun11: 100% 2-YJ. porto ond loboo
warnntv: 100% 6-YJ. portundloboo

warranty oo the compr•IOI'. outdoor motor end rwerling valve; de•igned and engineered to fit mo.t
late model tnterthorm. Col"'""" t!o
Mill• furM&lt;ti.

French

Modtl f'UD

PresldPnt

Francois

Mobile Home Heating/Cooling
Safford School Rd.•Gallfpolis, OH.
lnlorttwm, Coltman &amp; Miler Factory l'ar!1 &amp; Sorvi&lt;t

A Mason County woman was
kllit'd Sunday when the ca r In

MIDWAY TAKING SHAPE - Late Sunday
afternoon the carnival rides were In place on the
Rock Springs Fairgrounds and almost ready to
provide a week of fun lor Meigs County lairgoers.
While one worker was busy checking seats on the
ferris wheel, several others took a break from

,, l
. {'* "

. ..i. t.

Tomato field may be bad
ATLANTA. iUPII - Federal
and state health officials are
trying to find a field of contaml ·
nated tomatoes that may have
sickened thousands ol people in
four Midwest slates.
Doctors treated more than 100
eases ol salmonella, or food
poisOning, in Minnesota, Wlsco n·
aln, Illinois and Michigan last
week, but a health officia l In
Minnesota said there were 6.000
to )0,000 unreported cases in his
state alone of people who may
have become iiltrom eating the
contaminated tomatoes.
"Onlyaboutl percent tofthese
cases 1 are usually reported ...
said Dr. Oscar Holm. Minnesota
stllte epidemiOlogist, who Is
coordinating the lour-state inves·
ligation with help from the U.S.
Centers lor Disease Control and
the Food and Drug
Administration.
Holm said in a weekend Inter·
· view there have been no reported
lata lilies from the illness but that
14 people in Minnesota remained
1\ospltallled out ollhe 66 known
cases in that state.
The outbreak originally was
confined to Minnesota, II Unois
and Michigan but Hobn said new
cases were being reported In
WllconJin.
•'•A field lull of tomatoes was
iomebow contaminated," said
. Dr. Robert Tauxe, an epidemloi·
· Qlilt with the CDC. "This did not
bappen In the klrehen."
TauR and Holm said they
don't know where the !leld is and
II II not lmown 11 the search is
~"&lt;· COIIflllld to the four states.
;}·l
Holm 11ld the probe ol the
~;~-·L outbreak that started In July
"' ImpliCated raw tomatoes "very
___ .a...,.....

st rongly " .
"It Is som ewhat unusual to
thmk of sa lmonella being Iran ·
mill ed by a vegetatlle," Tauxe
sa id . " It usually Is a problem
wi1h raw meat."
There are about1.500 varieties
ol sal monella bacteria bu I they
al l rause th e same kinds of
symptom s - abdominal pain.
fever. diarrhea. nausea, vomit ·
ing and dehydration.
Salmonella normally is trans·
milled by ingestion of food
contamin ated with feces of In·
fected animals; also In eggs and
egg products. meat and meat
products. and In broiler chickens
a nd turkeys.

work in the heat. The rides wfll operate Tuesday,
Thursday and Friday Irom t lot: 30 p.m. and from
6 to II p.m. The schedule on Wednesday, Kiddie
Day, Is noon to 4:30p.m. and 6 to II p.m. On
Saturday the ride schedule Is noon to 5 p.m. and 6
to II p.m.

YEAREND
CLEARANCE
NOW IN
PROGRESS!

ATTENDS CREDIT
SCHOOL - Mike Francis.
Collection MaD"'er of Ohio
Valley Bank In Gallipolis was
amonr; 7f Oblo bankers who
recently atteaded the 27th
annual Ohio School of Consu·
mer Credit held on the Kent
State University campus,
Kent, July 8-13.

Lottery numbers
CLEVELAND iU PI) - Fri·
day's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers:
Plck-3
976.
Pick-3 ticket sales totaled
$1,372,459.50, with a payoff due ol
$2,554.194.50.
Plck..f
6400 .
Pick-4 ticket sales totaled
$256,933.50, with a payoff due of
Cards

Two of hearts.
Three ol clubs.
Jack of diamonds .
Three of spades.
Cards ticket sales totaled
$1~5.889. with a payoff due of
$1!1 ,000.

crisis, calling far the uncondl ·
tlonal and immediate wlthdra·
wal of Israel from the occupied
territories and removal of Sy ·
ria 's presence In Lebanon before
negotiation s on "ar rangements "

for Kuwait co uld tlegln.
The United States and Israel
re jected Saddam's plan, which
also called for the end of an
eco nomic boycott against Iraq,
removal of U.S. and foreign
forces from Saudi Arabia and
replacement of those troops with
a U.N. -organized all-Arab force
exc luding Egypt.
In the first major test of U.N.
sanctions against Iraq, Saud)
Arabia turned away an Iraqi
Co ntinued on page 10

lost control in loose grave l.

Offic ia ls said the Walden car
over tu rnl'd, k tiling Mrs . Spradlin
and s lightly injuring her daugh·
ter , 9·year·old Brandon Spradlin,
and Wal\1!3;l's 13-year-old son,
Randy Walden . Both children
were treat ed and released at
Pleasant Valley Hospital in Point
Pleasant. W.Va .
Walden. Durst, and Am y
Durst. 32, were not injured
A Ga ll ipolis woman was killed
and a Gallipolis man was se·
riously injured in a one ·car
acci dent Saturd ay a ft ernoon on

State Route 7. acco rding to a
re port fr om the Ohio Stale
Hi ghway Pat rot.
Gus ta Hay man. 69, was fatal tv

Injured when was throw n from
the car that her son. Charles Cox .
27, was drivin g.
Cox wa s north bound In Clay
Township. one mile south of
Clipper Mill when he went off the
left sid e of the road. s truck a
ditch and went airborne. The 1982
Dodge Ari es then rolled several
Limes before coming to rest. Cox
was also ejected from the
vehicle.

The two were nol wearing seat
belts.
Hayman was transported to
Holzer Medical Ce nter by Gallla
Coun ty EMS where she was
pro noun ced dea d on arriva l.
Cox was tra nsported to Cabell·
Huntington Hospital IW Va. ) by
a Heal thNet heli copter with hea d
injuries. He wa s reportl'd in fa ir

co nd ition In th e hospital' s inl t·n·
slve carr unlt Monday

Levy was quoted by the radio
as saying "Jordan was walking a
ti ghtrope" by giving assis tance
to iraq and possi tll y allowing
goods to rea ch Iraq bv wa y of
Jordanian terri tory .

Safety factor improved at
Meigs sheriffs department

Israeli off icia ls have repea l·
edly warned .Jordan against
allowing fraql troops onto Its
ter rlt orv, but they have been
amb igu ous about th e sea port of
Aqaba . During the Persian Gu lf
war, goods a nd su pplies were
lru cked from the Gulf of Aqaba
port through Jordan to Iraq

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
A re novation project at the
Me igs Co un ty Sheriff's Depart ·
men! not only gives the off ice a
face llft but Increases the safety
fa ctor for those who work there

reported .

Sheriff .James M. Soulsby
expla ined that before the renova ·
lion , the di spa tch er sa t with his
back to the window and the

tr r wi re IX' strung and l hr Law

En forcement Automa ted Data
Sys tem b e
rtl'connec ted.

mo v"P d

and

doorwa~·

into thr dispatchf'r 's
In addillon to the new diS
office With the new office patc her' s desk and th r metal
a rrangeme nt, the di spatcher door, Mas h insta lled new floor
now ca n SP&lt;' each doorw ay tile through out the dispat cher' s
every day .
office and hallwav.
A rearrangement ol the dis · leading in and ou t of the office.
The project is a part of an
The
m-.w
siPPI
door
also
crea
tes
pat cher's office will keep th ose
ongoi
ng re nov ati on project that
an
unus('(l
po
r
tion
of
th
e
old
cond ucting bu sine ss at the she
So
ul
sby
hopes ~· ill co ntinue 1n
corr
ido
r
which
So
ulsby
antl
cl
·
riff's department away from thr•
months
and
.vcars ahead
pat
es
Pve
n
t
u
all~'
converting
Into
prisoners area. In addition , In
So
ulsby
say
s that the nex t
stallatlon of a new steel door a booking room .
pro
jec
t
b
e
in~
planned for the
According
to
the
Meigs
Counl
y
Inside the en trance to the depar t·
sher
iff
's
department
will be work
men! will allow pris oners to be Co mmis sione rs Offi ce, the
in th e cell area . including fresh
tran sported in and out of the work . whi c h was done by C.R
office without routing them Ma s h ro nstrucrton of Pomeroy. pai nt , new srrrrn s and glass on
cost the co unty approxima tely th(' wind ows, new door s and new
throu~h the di spatcher' s offl re.
$10,11!XI While the or iginal bid light fixtures .
thu s Increa sing securit y .
Th e sheri ff also sta ted th at the
was placed at $8,600, the metal
door required by the state jail rece nt renovation work wa s thr
In spector cost an additional first work to be J)f'r formPd sincr
lhe term of Sheriff James Prnf
$1.4011
So ulsbv Indi cated that much fill In th e late 1970's
According to So ulsby, iht•
re -wiring was ne-cessary for thr
PAINESVILLE , Ohio IUP II co
unty jail now mePt s minimum
renovallon
ft
required
that
new
Followers of a cult leader are
sta
te stand ards for jail facilities
expected to provide detai ls or phones be Installed , new compu·
how they helped their leader kill
five members of one family In
northeastern Ohio.
Eight people who had joined
the Reorganized Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter Day Saints that
Jeffrey Lundgren was leading
An escaped prisoner from the Mei gs Co unty J ail is in the
have agreed to testify In the
custody of the Wood County. W.Va authori ti es today following
aggravated murder trial of
his ca pture Saturday morning.
Lundgren, which was to begin
David Persons escaped from the custody of the Meigs County
Monday with jury selection.
Sheriffs Deparb'nent while performing a work detalllhere late
Prosecutors Indicated five of
Wednesday evening.
them have agreed to testl t'y In
A deparb'nent spokesman sa id today that Peroons was
exchange for reduced charges.
arrested on Saturday in Parkersburg on esc ape charges which
The defense has asked for a
are pending in Meigs County Cour t stemmi ng from his
change in venue, claiming the
Wednesday escape.
conviction ol Lundgren's wife on
Persons was serving a slx ·onth se ntence In the co unty jail on
charges stemming from these
assault charges at the time of his escape.
killings wtll make II impossible to
Continued on page 10
seat ann impartlal jury.

HUGE

$112.600.

on U.S. 35 just north of He nder
Ma so n County s heriff' s
department.
Kimberly Ann McMellon
Spradlin. 33, West Columbia.
WVa .. was killed about 1:1 0
p.m.. a Mason County sheriff's
di spa tcher said.
Deputies said a car driven by
Kenneth Walden , 40 , West Columbia . W.Va., was traveling
south on U.S. 35 when his vehicle
approached stow traffic and
attempted to pass othe r south·
bound ve hicles.
A pickup truc k driven by Alan
Lewis Durst. 36. of Point Plea·
sanl . W.Va .. was attempting to
turn left off the highway as the
Wald en vehicle was attempting

JERUSALEM iUPI J - Israeli
Foreign Minister David Lev y
Monday warned Jordan's Kin g
Hussein aga inst a iding President
Saddam Hu ssein by a lklwlng
goods to be transported across
Jordan to Iraq, Israel Radio

MERRY -GO-ROUND READY- Joe Westfall who has been with
Bale• Bros. Amusement Co. of Wintersville lor the past 18 years
returned to Meigs County again this weekend. His job is to get the
merry-go-round ready lor the lnllu• of youngsters starting
Tuesday when the lair gets underway .

which s h r was riding ovrrturned

to pass In an attempt to avoid a
collision . Walden steered his car
off the left berm of the road and

so n, W Va .. accord i ng to thP

Israel
•
Issues
•
warnmg

GMC:i-RUCK

'

Mtlt errand dispatched a fresh
naval co ntingen t to the Persian
Gull and announced he would
se nd special envoys to meet with
leaders of 24 nations to present an
Initi ative to end the crisis trig·
gered by Iraq· s Aug. 2 conquest
of Kuwait.
The French aircraft carrier
Cl e menc eau. the missile
launcher Colbert and a canting·
ent of 2,650 troops and technl·
cla ns left the port of Toulon to
bolster French naval presence
part of an armada of U.S. led
multinational forc es deployed In
a show of force against Saddam.
The developments come a day
after Saddam announced an
Initiative to end the Persian Gulf

Two area residents ·killed in
auto accidents over weekend

BENNEn'S

..

26 Canis

A Muhimediaa Inc _ Newspapet

Iraqi oil tanker turned
away by Saudi Arabia

' w, ~~fPf~~&lt;&gt;'' ·. '. ·' &lt; :"'l;jl

STOCK TROUGH - This slock trough Is connected to a
leadlnr; from a fenced-In larm pond. This allows cattle to drink
water from the pond wlthGul messing up the pond.

1 Section. 10 Pages

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio. Monday, August 13, 1990

CAll 1-800-872 -5967
446-9416

CONSERVATION FARMER RUNNER8-UP - Richard and
Patty Mun.ey, Pomeroy , were one of lour runners-up for Ohio's
Con~ervatlon Farmer award . They are shown here on a grassed
waterway under construction on their farm . The Manzeys' will be
featured In th" Seplemb&lt;er issue of The Ohfo Farmer magazine.

Low tonight in mid 60s.
Chance of rain 30 percent.
Tuesday, partly sunny. High
near S5.

SAVINGS!

Murder trial
starts today

Hurry

..--Local news briefs_,

While
Seleetlon
Lastd

Esroped prisoner captured

.

SMITH GMC TRUCK
CENTER
135 PINE ST.•GAWPOLIS

(614) 446·2532

NEW DisPATCHER'S OFFICE - The newly
renovated dispatcher's office at the Meigs County
Sherllfs Department Insures Increased safety

and protlucllvlty lor the operation. Deputies
Danny Leonard, lett, and Mark Boyd were at work
last week In the new hwlllty.

Get Quick Results! Place A S5 Per Day 'Bulletin Board· Advertisement In The Daily Sentinel Classified Section.

'

I

�Monday, August 13, 1990

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO mE INTER EilTS 01' THE MEJG8-MASON AREA

Ar;b.

~m~ M""\......r.....--rt~c::~,~
~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publlsber

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Geueral ManaK••

PAT WHITEHEAD

Asolslam Publloher/Controller

A MEMBER o!Tbe United Press international, Inland Dally Pr.,s
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. Tbey should he less than 300

words long. AU letters are subject to editing and must he signed wllh
namE', address and telephone number. No unsigned letters wtll be published. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Lssues, not personall·
ties .

Did Ferguson bail
out Celebrezze?
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Slalehouse Reporter
COLU MBUS- In a clever move befitting a 16-year vetera n of the
Ohio political wars, Auditor Thomas Ferguson has defused a
Republican assaull on Democratic gubernatorial nom inee Anthony
Celebrezze over a scandal about borrowing sta le property for
personal use .
Or has he?
Ferguson held a circus-like news conference last week to a nnounce
that after weeks or eye-straining legal research and intensive
Impartial auditing, BOTH Celebrezze and his Republican rival,
George Volnovlch, wert&gt; equally guilty of tht&gt; privat e use of
gowrrunenl vehicles.
The audit of Celebrezze was precipitated last spring when The
Cleveland Plain Dealer published a report showing that the attorney
general used vans, trucks and trailers owned by his agency to haul
race cars around the state In pursuit of his personal weekend hobby .
Celebrezze got wind of the newspaper report, and reimbursed the
state $700. After his audit, Ferguson said the attorney general should
pay back $552.20, and possibly as much as $6TI. 75 If further
documentation becomes available.
No, said Ferguson, Celebrezw won't get a refund of $22.25 "unless
he applies for it ." Will he ask for tt• " I wouldn't think so," sa id
Ferguson.
Now. how did Volnovich get drawn Into the fray ? Well, afler the
trailer seandal broke, the Celebrezze people dusted off a 1985 Plain
Dealer story about personal use of a city car by Volnovlch and his
wife, Janet, when he was mayor of Cleveland.
Ferguson seized on this and announced In the Interest of fairness, he
would audit both cases at once and release the resull s
simultaneously .
The Volnovlch camp howled foul, saying the two cases were In no
way similar; that Volnovlch had been assigned the police
radio-equipped city car for security In lieu of a cruiser and
patrolman, that It actual(y saved the city money, and that he
regularly reimbursed the city lor all Instances of personal use.
Nevertheless, the audit found the ex-mayor guilty of an $8,606.43
Indiscretion - curiously, the same amount to the penny that
Volnovlch reported and repaid .
Ferguson said security lor the mayor could have been
accompUshed by putting a telephone In Volnovlch's personal car.
But the auditor also was hard· pressed to explain with a straight
face why be never questloned the Volnovlches ' use or the car until
Celebrezze got Into difficulty. He had audited the city every year
since 1981 wltbout once mentioning lt.
Ferguson said be decided to audit when he first learned of the flap,
which was wben !be Celebrezze camp resurrected the old newspaper
article. Why didn't he do it whe n the story appeared In 1985• "We
don't see The Plain Dealer every day ," he said.
Hardly likely. Employees or state office holders are hand-picked to
comb Ohio nl'Wspapers dally for campaign fodder , good and bad, and
Ferguson Is an old hand at this game.
Ferguson did nothing In 198!1 because Volnovlch was not running lor
anything then except mayor. and especially not lor governor against
Ferguson's tlcke1.
The consensus around the Statehouse Is that Ferguson, by linking
the Ce lebrezze and Volnovlch Indiscretions , has made It Impossible
tor the Republicans to continue to hammer the attorney general for
Improper use of state ve hicles without drawing return lire to th e
former Cleveland mayor .
But the GOP may re.urrecl an old weapon: the Three Amlgos. That
one comically portrays Ferguson, Celebrezze and Secretary of State
Sherrod Brown protecting eac h other and Gov. Richard Celeste
during the la st e ight years, a nd It certainly appears thai' s what
Ferguson d id for Celebrezw agai n last wee k.

Berry's World
~OW

LONG

1-\~VE.

YOUR R£Fl.EXES
BE~ LIKE
~~\S'?

SINCE

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Congress balks on act
WASHINGTON- A handful of
drug companies have cornered
the market on medicines lor rare
diseases. You can thank the
federal government lor giving
them the monopolies in the first
place. Now you can thank George
Bush and Dan Quayle for Inter·
ferlng with an attempt to Insert
some much-needed competition
in the market.
Since 1983, the Orphan Drug
Act has granted monopolies to
drug companies that develop and
sell drugs to a limited clientele
The rallonal e In Congress was
thai a company might not go to
the expense or developing a
life- sa ving dru g II only a handful
of people needed it. Dru g com panies needed incentives.
Under the Orphan Drug Act,
the Food and Drug Administra tion approves only one dru g for
use against a rare disease. The
company gets free reign over the
market for seven years, plus tax

breaks, and there are no price
controls.
The law did its job well . Before
1983, there were only 10 drugs
classified as "orphans" with
limited demand. Today there are
more than 300 needed drugs
because companies have a profit
motive to develop them.
But a few of the orphans have
abused the government's good
will. Their parent companies are
reaping millions of dollars and
promoting the drugs to treat
other conditions that are not so
rare. The estimated annual sales
of Just one orphan drug total
some $200 million .
The National Organization of
Rare Disorders. whi ch helped
write the original orphan law,
now charges that some highly
profitable drugs taking advan·
tage of the monopoly don't need
such protecllon.
To stop the abuses, Rep . Henry
Waxman, D·Call!., who spon·

Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta

sored the original orphan drug
law, and Sen. Howard Metzen·
baum, D.Ohio, cooked up an
amendment. It said that any time
there were two or more com pan·
ies simultaneously developing an
orphan drug tn a race to be the
first to win FDA approval, there
would be no monopoly granted.
The competition was evidence
that there was enough profit
motive that the drug could stand
on Its own.

Quayle Is chairman of the
administration's Council on
Competillveness. In June, the
council circulated a letter among
drug maker s opposing the reform of the Orphan Drug Act.
The letter bypassed the normal
1'\'hlte House c hannels, Including
the Office of Management and
Budget. "Quayle was all over
this from the beginning," one
Inside source told us.
The Department or Health and
Human Services sent a memo to

Waxman, tactfully reminding
him that Quayle was opposed to
the changes. The memo was
circulated In the House on the
day the language of the bill was
finalized.
At the same time, the National
Organization for Rare Disorders
heard through the grapevine that
Genentech was threatening to
scrap development of a drug to
treat cystic fibrosis If the
changes went through. Genen·
tech denies it ever made the
threat.
But the rumors and the pulled
strings had their effect. The
House watered down the reform
measure to continue the monopoly for existing orphan drugs and
those In the approval pipeline.
A tough battle Is expected on
Ihe measure In the Senate, but lor
I he moment , Quayle's Council on
Competitiveness appears to have
won a victory against
compel It ion.

l.

LEF\R.NE.D t\OW
M\JC.~ i\1E Sl. L
SCANt&gt;A\..1~

GOING TO
COS\ ME..
~

I

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Twins defeat Blue lays 54;
Indians hand Tigers 9-5 loss

Monday, August 13, 1990

By PAUL DEFEDE
LPI Sports Writer
Allan Ander son re lied on hi s
teammates' aggressive play un ·
til the last au 1, which he had to get
himself.
Anderson, who leads the Amer ·
1can League wllh th e most losses
over the la st two years t25),
scallered 10 hit s in pitching his
third complete game of the year,
leading the Minnesota Twin s to a
&gt;A victory over the Toronto Blue
.lays.
Anderson. who won for the
third lime on the road this season
and improved to 5·15, s truck out
four and didn't walk a batter.
"We scored early and th a t
hasn 't happened a lot." Ander ·
son, who normally doesn't rr ·
ceive that luxury , sa id. The
Twins have scored just 32 runs in
his 15 losses.
Minnesota scored three times

in the first and added two more in
the thi rd fo r a 5-0 lead ovPr
GE1TING READY FOR OPENER - The
defending Division IV State Football Champions
Wheelersburg Pirates traveled to Marauder
Stadium Saturday morning to scrimmage the
Meigs Marauders. Junior tailback Terry
McGuire Is shown picking up yardage against the

tough Pirate defense In the two-hour scrimmage.
Wheelersburg came out on top In the contest, but
the Maroon and Gold was abh• to hold it's own
against the state champs. Th e Marauders open
the season against .the Ga!Ua Academy Blue
Devils, August 24, at Gallipolis .

LeTs see...
THATt Two

(WILD~ AND
ON€ IR~SPI1NS\B~

ADULT

Toronto .
·'They were

aggressive

to-

day", sa id lo si ng pllcher.Jimmy
J&lt;ev, i -6, who faced only 17
baiters, allowing all five runs on
nine hits .
"T hey hit a lot 'of first pitches
and didn't let me gel theco un l in
my favor."
Dan Gladden opened the first
by hilling a ball In front of left
fie lder George Bell. After Bell
was slow In ~citing to the ball.
Glad den raced lor second, test ·
ing Bell's arm .
"We know George's got a bad
w1ng". Gladde n sa id . " I thought
I'd lake advantage of it."
"Thai firs t hit got us exc it ed,"
Andl•rson sdid. " lt s tarted us

going." Gladden sto le third and
came home on GaryGaetti's RBI
sin gle . llrian Harper scon•d
Gaeltl with a double and scored
on Gene Larkin's single.
Minnesota made 115·0 on Shane
Mack's two-run scoring singlE' in

the third .
After Minn esota's offensive
attack produced the lead, the
defense protect ed it .
"You've got to grve the rest of
the team a lot of credit."
Anderson said.· 'It was their play
behind me th at was th e ga me . Wr
made the great defensive play s
to win."

In the sixth inning, Junio r
F'elix doubled and scored on Tony
F'ernandez's one-ou t RBI double
to cu 1 MInnesota's lead to 5·2. llut
Fernandez, trying to stretch his
hit Into a triple, was thrown out
bv le ft field er Gladde n. II proved
cost ly when Kelly Gruber and
Bell followed w1th s in gles.
"I saw th e tToronlo) roach
hold him up and he stopped
sli ghlly." And erson sai d. " II was
a perfect throw thai got him out.
II was one of th e big plays of lh r
ga me.
Another big pia~ - ror Ander sun
wa s manager Tom Kelly's deri sion t o IPI him finish !he game .

With lhP Tw ins tra ding 5-2 in
the nlnth, To ron to sco red twi ce
on Pat Borders two-run ho m er .

his 14th home run of the vear
The bla st p rovo ked Kelly to
visit Anderson at !hP mound.

"Norma lly when he's coming
out. I'm goin g out ." Anderson
sa id .· 'He asked me how I felt and
I sa id fine.
" H e sa id ·t know you can gC't
him out and then hr sa id to thr

TAMPA, Fla . tUPli - Quar·
trrback Jeff Carlson thre w lo r
108 yards and one touc hdown and
rook ie Steve Ch ris ti e added three
Fie ld goa ls to lead the Tampa Bay
Ruccanrrrs to a 30 ·17 victory

over thr Cinc innati Bengals in
the Nallonal Football League
rxh lbitio n opener lor both learn s.
OOPS! - Indians second baseman Carlos
Baerga bobbles a hard·hil ground ball off the hal
of Detroit's Larry Sheets in the eighth Inning of
Sunday's game In Cleveland, which the Indians

Who will dominate the Middle East
lights. Where, they demanded to key military or economic targets
know, was the mllilary threat - would almost certainly fall .
that could justify retaining the Eco nomi c pr ess ure on Iraq
B-2 "Steallh" bomber, or those might theore tically be enough (It
hugely expensive carrier forces, Is terribly dependent on Imports
let alone a Space IX&gt;fense I nitta · for just about everything but oil),
live' And lo , one appeared right but the boycott on oil exports now
before their eyes: a fanatical . under way Is likely to be porous,
Moslem leader with a million- and a unilateral blockade by the
man army, a ca pacity lor cheml· Unlled Slates might merely
ca l warfare. a nd a declared antagonize valuable allies.
Intention to become a nuclear
Nonetheless , Mr. Bush's depower.
clared Intention deserves reAt this writing, the most spect, If only because he wouldn't
striking aspt&gt;el o f the crisis is have declared It unless he
President Bush' s apparently se- seriously believed It has a chance
rious det er min a tion to drive of succeeding.
Hussei n right out of Kuwait and
Th at was because the Soviets
reinstall the Em ir. Almost no- knew very well that the nallons of
body who has commented on the the Free World were absolutely
s ltuallon sees how this ca n be dependent on Middle Eastern oil.
done.
Not Ihe United Slates Itself, to be
Deployin g enough American sure; but the economies of
ground forces to do It would be Western Europe and Japan
enormously dl!llcuil . Planes and would grind to a hall In a matter
ships alone - even tr used of weeks II Middle Eastern oil
effectively to bomb Baghdad and was denied them. To seize

If you're a regular watcher of
TV news, you can't have missed
comedian Roseanne Barr' s singIng of "The Star-Spangled
Banner" a t a San Diego Padres
game in late July.
You may have felt. like a lot of
outraged fans and viewers, that
screeching like a pe t parrot bein g
attacked by a dog Is not the
proper way to perform our
national anthem. You may have
thought that grabbing her crotch
and spitting were disrespectful. I
think all of that Is true, but In this
case I think maybe we're blamIng the wrong person .
First, Barr didn't ask to sing
the national anthem. She wa s
invited to do so by Padres
otrlcials because it was "Work·
ing Girls Night" at the ballpark,
and they believed Barr's TV
persona Is the epitome of a
"working girl." Some of us
working girls might argue that,
but It's their ballpark.
Second, Barr wasn't Invited to
sing because officials knew she
really has a way with a ballad.
She was invited lo sing because,
again, officials believed she
epitomized their theme o' the
night.
And third, the kfnd of humor
Bar displayed that night - .
:parodylne ballplayers• propea· •
·slty to scratch and spit - Is the :

kind or thing she does lor a living.
!! you Invite an opera star to sing.
you expect him to bell II out and
maybe break some glass in the
press box. That's what he does. lf
thf" Padres brass wanted

some~

one to bow and blow kisses, they
should have either called Flor·
ence Henderson or given Barr
some limits : "Hey. Roseann e,
uh, none of that stuff you do In
your act, OK? Just sing the song
and get off. "
Anyone's who's ever per·
formed solo before a gradeschool assembly can empathize
with what happened sbortly alter
Barr began to sing: Barr started
orr in her normal singing voice
and the crowd began to boo. As
her panic Increased, her mind
frantically searched for a course
of action: "Just cut my losses,
stop singing and get the heck off
the field? Try against all odds of
nature to raise the notes an
octave and throw In a little
vibrato? Or do what I've always
done In an awkward, terrifying
situation - be Irreverent and
hope It's funny?"
Personally, I've heard the
national anthem delivered almost as badly by people wbo
purported to be IIOod alqers.lt's
a devO of a 10111, hard to execute
musically with lyrlca that don't
make enough logical senae to
(

Anderson did , by getting Gil'·
nallr n Hill to ground out to end

the game
In other AL action. Ci&lt;•vf'land
caged Detroit 9-5, Kansa s Ci t y
downed Milwaukee 7-1. Oa kland
whipped New York b·l. Balti
more pounded Cal tlorni a 11 b,
Bos ton sunk Seatt le 7-2 and
Texas at Chicago, Wds postponpd
bv rain .

· Indians 9. Tigers 5 - AI
Cleveland, Carlos Baerga two·
run ba ses -loaded single highligh
ted a six-run Indian tift h and Alex
Cole had three hils and two RBI
to guide Cleveland. Tom Ca ndi·
otti, 12 7, went seven and two
thi rd innings for the win . Doug
Jones earned h is 31s I . Jack
Morris, 9-15, allowed e ig ht runs
a nd walked eight to take the loss.
Royals 7. Bn•wers I - AI _
Kansas Ci t y. Tom Gordon
pllched a five hitter and Danny
Tartabull hit a two-run home run.
to fue l Kan sa s City . Gordon, H·H,
pitch ed his sC'cond consecutive
com plete game. Jamie Nava rro,
3-4, gave up seven runs ovrr

three and two third innings to
take the loss .
t\'s 6, Yankees I- AI Oakland,
Ca li f., Mark McGwire hll a
three· run home run to help Bcb
Welch become the major's first
19-game winner. Welc h, 19·4. won
his third straight. Rick Honey ·
cull fini s hed up lor his six th save.
Mike Witt, 1·5, las ted ju st one and
two third innings for the loss .
Oakland improved 10 9-0 agai nst
f'ew York thi s year.

SAruROI. Y/5UIIDAT 'W(IJI(S(lo\f

Bengals drop 30-1 7
battle to Tampa Bay

Iraq's Invasion of Kuwait Is the
first really major International
developme nt since the end of the
Cold War, a nd Its consequences
are going to be correspondi ngly
large.
On the Washington TV ta lk
shows the Sund ay after the
Invasion, various liberal journ a l·
lsts expressed the opinion that
President Bush's luck had a t last
run out. Maybe so; but If It Is tru e
that thi s country Is teetering on
the brink or a recess ion , and t hat
the upsu rge In the price of oil will
push It over the brink, whom are
the American people likely to
blame for the recession : George
Bush or Saddam Hussein •
Or tak e Defense Secretary
Cheney. Amid all his t roubles In
the Middl e East, he must surely
feel just a tiny bit grateful to
Hussein lor the liming of hi s
stroke. It fell just as the Pentag on's critics In Congress were
preparing to cu t out Its liver and

ump. hl· can gPI h im out can't
he'"?

.-.SPEC I~ SL.M:R 6AIIIIiAIPI

William Rusher
control of the Gull, therefore,
was quite simply to launch a new
world war.
Hussein may be gambling that
Washington will, however grudgIngly, let him get away with the
seizure of Kuwait , provided he
doesn't try to add Saudi Arabia to
his list or conquests. But by his
Invasion of Kuwait, he has
opened the whole question of
who , In the post-Cold War era, Is
going to dominate the Middle
East.
Hussein is determined that It
shall be the Arab nations, with
himself at their head . Washington prefers a much looser arran·
gement, In which It can play a
role through Its Arab friends .
With Moscow ellectlvely sidelined as a major player in the
game, the wise money has to be
on Washington.

promote easy remembering. I
love It, nevertheless, and belt It
out as loud as I can any time I
have a chance. It' s been my song
about my country for as long as I
ca n remember, and even though
I don 't always remember the
words exactly right, the Images
those words call up or the rockets
glaring and bombs bursting and
the nag still waving over the
"la·hand or the !reeeee, and the
hooooome of the braaaaaave"
still give me a knot In the throat
just when I need evefything I
have to hit that high "freeeee."
Some have suggested we adopt
a new national anthem, some-

won 9·5. Baerga had troubl e locating the hall at
first, but he recov ered In time to mak e th play at
first. ( U PI )

Edberg beats Gilbert
for ATP championship
MASON , Ohio iUPII - Top·
seeded Stefan Edberg proved
Sund ay why hL' d&lt;•sPrves to be the
top ra nked ployL•r in the ATP
with a co nvi nc ing 6·1. 6 1 victory
over No. 4 seed Brad CilbPr ! in
the fin als of the $1.3 milli on
Thriltwav ATP ChampionshttJ.
Earlier this week Edberg u nof·
flrially bt&gt;eame the No . I pla yer
in the ATP computer ranklngs
when he defeated Michael Chang
in a th ird rou nd match . The
rdnking will bt&gt;come or liclal
Monday.
On Sund ay the 1'1-ycar-old
Swede dominated Gi lhcrt from
the sta r t.
" He !Edberg! did everyt hing
well "Gi lbert sa id after thr loss.
"Us~ally, whe n I play him , I can
n'lv on gel ling some points off his
Iori' hand . The difference was he
was thumping his vo lleys ...
Edberg took advan tage of

serve and r ~pea led ly placing
perfect volleys over th e n~t .
But 11 wasn't ju st Edber g's
volley thai won th e ma tch.
J-:dberg made only 12 l irst
serve prrors o ut of ·U sPr vPs
delivered for a 7] (X'rccnt fir s!

Sl'rvt• accuracy rate.
He also returned 32 of :JR or
Gilbert 's servrs for an 84 pC'TTf'n!
sPrvicP retu r n accuracy ra! P.

a llowing Gi lbert to hold sPrvl'
two of seven games.

The rtnal match, which only
la s ted 51 minutes . was th e second
shortes t fin al of the year in the
ATP. tThe shortes t game was
Gilbe rt over Christo Van Rrns·
berg In the linals at Or lando in
1\pril.l

Grady captures title

Carlson, who spen t l as t season
on thP developmPnfal sq uad of

the l.os Angeles Ram s before
sig ning wllh Tampa l:lay as a lree
agrn l. compl eted 11 of 1~ pa sses
while pla _v ing the tina! th ree
quarter s.
H C' thr ew one

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 ·4524
~ 1~

·~ ..;:1\' ~fp~: ·

BAR!OAIPI *TIN(ES SoiJ !SUII ' W£0 .
!lARCAIN NIGHT l\.J(~~
{OHPl "GHJST " )

in IC'I"CC'p tio n
Chri stie. a roukil' from Wi lliam
&amp; Ma rv who is c ompPting with
incumben t Donald l gwebuikL'.

AUGUST to tbru,.

I:~~~'~"~"'~'~"~ ''~~~~~..~·;;;::;
w.~~
r

'W)'l'&amp;:fLIMfl!ll

added field goals of 'J4, 34 and 11
yards.
Tampa Bay running back .John
Harvey had four r&lt;'crpt io ns for
111 yards.

!f~l t!il®

Ci ncinnat i took a :~-0 IPa d with

9:03 left in the open in g quarter
\.\-'he n rookie David Browndykcof
LSU kicked a 2)·ya rd fif'ld goa l.
Ta mpa Bay nnswered with a

Continued on page 4

BIRMINGHAM. Ala. tUPli Wa vnt&gt; Gradv tried to take a
tow.· key approach to being in the
l!'ad In the PGA Champion s hip
bL~'8USP or what happened JaSI
vea r in thl' Br lti sh Open.

· "U ntil I hit tllf' sc&gt;cond shot on

1he 18th gn•en. I I ried not to gel
ahead of myse lf. " the Aust ralia n
said a fter hi s thrrp-sto kP victo ry
Sundav . "1 v.:as ver_v d isap-

poin ted with th&lt;' Br it ish Open last
vear and fl'f'l fo r tuna!&lt;-' to ha vP
~·o n todav _..
Grady.· w hose onlv previous
\'iC!ory on thr U.S. Tour was last
vear ifi !hr WC'stche ster Classic ,
~as the third · r ound leader in the

1989 Britis h Open, but wound up
losing In a playoff 10 Mark
('a lcavecch lJ.

·' I think totiav was ;•l ottoug hf'r
bN'aUsP of tlw.nw m or~· o f Troon
tSco tland where lhl' 'R9 British
Open wa s playrd.l ... (;rafl.\· said

Gilbert' s wf&gt;ak spr vlcp rrturn .

Sould we rethink Roseanne's bars?

.

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

cha rgi ng the net on near ly e\'ery

Sarah Overstreet
thing eas ler to sing, something on
the order or the terminally dull
and plodding "America the
Beautiful. " I'm !our-square
against it. Can you Imagine
choking up over spacious skies
and fruited plain? How excited
and proud can you get for
crowning good with brother·
hood? To borrow a remark !rom
Barr and every ballplayer I've
ever watched, "ptooeey."
Poor Roseanne Barr deserves
us all off her back. And In my
opinion, anyone who wasn't sing·
lng along loud enough to drown
her out has no right to complain.

The Daily Sentinel
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On this date In history:

In 1889, Wllllam Gray patented the coin-operated telephone.
In 1961, East Germany closed the Brandenburg Gate and began

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By Un lied Preas laternatlonal
Today is Monday, Aug. 13, the 22~th day o! 1990 with 140 to follow .
The moon is In Its last quarter.
·
The morning stars are Venus, Mars and Jupiter.
The evening stars are Mercury and Saturn.
,
Those born on this date are under the·sign ot Leo. They include
social reformer Lucy Stone in 1818; sharpshooter Annie Oakley In
1860: Scottish Inventor John Baird, a pioneer in television technology,
in 1888; actor Bert Lahr In 1895; !lim director Alfred Hitchcock in
1899; goiter Ben Hogan In 1912 (age 78) and Cuban leader Fldl'l Castro
In 1927 (age 63) .

chan~

to Th (' Dallv Sentinel, 111 Co u11 St ..

O n~&gt;

Today in history

A Special Edit~on In
The Daily Sentinel
Thursday, August 2 3, 1990

Publis hed t•vrrv alter noon, Monda\'
th rrufjl'h F r tdav Ill Court SL , Po
mf'rffl . Ohio. by !he Ohl:&gt; Valley Pu~
llshln~ Compan~· ; M ult bnrtlla , _Inc ..
Pomerov. Ohio 4576Y. Ph . 992-2156. Se conrl cla ss post agP paid nt Pomeroy .
Ohi o.

Oullldr Melp Courd)'

EDBERG WINS TOURNEY - In a famiUar pose, a victorious
Stefan Edberg holds the ATP Championship cup aloft foUowl111 his
6-1, 6·1 victory over Brad Gilbert In the !InaJa of the nation's
third-richest tennis tournament at Kings Mills, Ohio. Edberg
coDected $1'70,000 of the $1.3 mOUon In prize money at the
tournament. (UPI)

ASK FOR BRIAN OR DAVE
AD DEA,DLINI
•

.

. 1·

ESDAY,
AUGUST
15, 1990
'
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''

~-

' '

., .

~..:.

\

I

�Page 4 The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Monday. August 13. 1990

Reds beat Giants 6-4 to boost
NL West lead to 5 1/2 games

...._J

r~

CINCINNATI (UP!) - Lou
Pmlella shook up his lineup In
hopes of shaking off the Giants II
"orked.
Hal Morris singled home a run
In Ci ncinnati's four-run fir st and
added a solo homer Sunday,
lilting the Reds to a 6-4 victory
over the San Francisco Giants
and a 5Y1 -game lead rn the NL
West.
Plnlella juggled hts lineup,
moving Enc Davts from cleanup
to l eadoff and rns ta llrng Todd
Benzinger In the No 4 spot.
Barry Larkin moved from lea
doff to third
" I'd been giving some consid·
eration to leading off with Davis.
because he has a good eye," said
Plnlella. "And Benzinger has
been making good contact in
practice, so he deserved a
chance "

"I ju st found out about the
change when I came to the park
today," Davis commented " It' s
not a real big Issue and II
certamly didn't change my tar
I!C S any "

The new lineup worked Imme·
dia tel y. and the Reds JUmped on
Scott Garrelt s for four runs in the
fir st lnmng DaviS and Paul
O'Neill opened with srngles and
l .a rkln, who wore a spec ial brace
on his left knee that was Injured
Sa turd ay night when the Will
Clark crashed Into him at second,
doubled home Davis After Ben·
zinger was hi I by a pitch, loading
th e bases. Morris singled home
O'Neill for a 2-0 lead
Chns Saba grounded mlo a
&gt; 2-.1 double-play , sending Larkin
10 thJrd and Benzinger to second
but Mariano Duncan and Joe
Oliver stroked RBI SJng les to
make ii40
" W e put runs on the board
Party and added a couple more,
and that was the difference, ·

·--

HIT B\' PITCH- Tht• Kt•d• ' Todd Benzinger is
hlt by an oil-target pitch hy loiants hurter Scott

Cincinnati, as Giants ealcher Gary Car~r looks
on at left The Reds won 6-4 to extend theor Nl
Wesllead to 5''• gam•••. (UPII

GarrelL~ in lhe first inning of Sunday's game in

Browns roll over Packers, 25-10
GREEr-&lt; HAY. W1s It.:Pii The C ieiPi&lt;~nd Browns posted
thru rn . , r Pxhib!lJOn srason v.1n
With

2~ 10

&lt;:t

\'IC'fO! \.' OV('f

lhf•

wrck commg 1n off &lt;:J win '
Thts v. as ClrvPland's srcond
gamr. but ftrst wrn Thl' Rrov.:n:-;
lost l HJ to ChiCago in the flrSJ

GrPPn Hay Packers and Coach

rx hrbrtwn

Hud Cd Json "ars he \.l.'tll takr 11.

l' oo tbal t Halt of F.JmP

rv en though somp of the plav v.as

Carson also sa rd ClP\'CICi nd's
runnmg gamp nePded wo rk ' to

sloppv
Rookie light end l\r11n Spnn
k iPs caug ht a t ouchdown pa ss
and rookie Jer ry.' Kaunc k1CkE"d

four f ield goals Sat urd ay nr gh t to
help lead the Browns to the
viet on:
·I Ihought we had two good
driws and that we knocked them
off the llnr "ith our first line. ·
Carso n sa rd
·1 l ear ned a long lime ago that
a wtn is a w1n 1s a wm I th oug ht

that the play of our speCial teams
was especially sloppy but that Is

so mething that Wlll take some
lime," he said "I t 1s easter next

gamC'

at

the

Pro

at tac k the holes JU sl "b!l quicker
dnd a l so sustain our bl ocks "

PackNs Coach Lind; Infante
sa rd a \Jrrrtv of Creen I3a\
P I ro r s madr thr d rtfcrence
'!\'o t takmg anr·lhing awav

lh (' l'XC&lt;'P IJOn of thP rntf'lf'i'P
t10n . lnt dn!r sa rd
Browns \f'trran r"jUJ.IIPr hack
i1C' InJ (' KoS&lt;.tl. who twJstpfJ an

Tom Brownrng. 12·6, went SIX
c~nd one third Innings for th ~
vlctOI y with relief help from Rob
Dibble and Randy Myers. who
gai ned his 2.1rd save, to help the
Reds pick up a game on seco nd

dnk l&lt;• 10 the ga me. hi I Sp1 inklrs
with a 2va 1d 'JD pa ss up thl'
m1dd!P to g 1vr thr Rrowns a 7 0
lrad rn thf' frrst qu.Jilf' r

place San Franc isco Crncrnna1 1
has won two of the rrrst thrre

I3ut Kaunr rrplarPd vP IPr.Jn

kicker M ci ll llah1 ra1 11 m thP
S('(' Ond quai tPI whPn R.1tu was
r oug hPd b\ PCJckers sa frtv Stan
Sr\ cr whllr aiiPmptrng a 4h y. 1rd

games of the four -game set lhal
finishe s Monday
Ga r relts , 9 9, gave up f1ve runs
on seven hit s 1n five rnmn gs
11alking two and stn klng ou1

liPid goa!, whJrh was wide 11ght
K au nr thPn PxtC'ndrd ClPVl'

f1 om Cleveland. I didn'J expect to
pia; this bad, but I feared we

l and's lrad to 1:1-0 with field goals
of 29 and 2J yards Thr PackPrs

would. · lnfantr s.1rd
Hr sa 1d howPver second vear

sco rr d late rn thP quartPI when
spco nd year qu.lf ti'I bdl'k An

qua i trrback Anthnnv Dilweg did
well making hi s first start In
place of holdoul veleran Don
Majkowsk i
'I thought he played so lid with

'ict id Prmella

non e
'II was a well -play ed game on
both srdes and Brownmg hung rn

then• , "lth Dibble and Myers
coming rn to close thrng s our. ·
s iad Ptnrella
Dibble was rnvolv ed in an
&lt;' Ighth Inning d isp ute when pl al c
umpire Ron Barnes called ball
fou 1 on leadoff hitter Gary Caner

lhony Dilweg, sta1 ling 1n placr•of
veteran hold out Don Majkowski
ran a draw up thP middle for a
7 yard touchdown
But Kaunc gave Cleveland a

16 7 lead Wllh a IY y;ll(] fiPid goat
m the third quai lrr Th1 • Pdckers
naJT O\\Pd thr ga p to 16 IOParly in
the fourlh on" :l6 yar d liPid goal
by Chns .Ja ckr Rot Kauric pu t

&lt;.t ftPr

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llac:, 14
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tt Jimmy 8pe~teer , Po till lac, t!

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Dick Trk:kltDorlt)' SriV'Of&gt;dPr

Pollllac. to

11. Da¥e Marcl..,lmS.uter . O!f'l'rolt&gt;t

Cl~~eln-

Ill .lo ... Aleundn', Ford. ~~
It llmlllJ MuM, ronOac, 33
40 , Gre18~~ekA, Ol1!¥rolet, u

~

flfth homer of the

season made rt 53 in the th i rd .

and Benzlngei singled and
scored on a Saba single for a 6-:l
lead in the seventh
Elsewhere In the National
League, Montreal beat Philadel ·
phia 6-3, Chicago downed New
York 10-2, Los Angeles belled
Atlanta 7-3, and San Diego
clubbed Houston 9-0.
E•pos, Cardinals win- While
the New York Mets and the
Pittsburgh Pirat es co ntinued to
spin their wheels Sunda y, the
st r eak ing Montreat Expos
downed the Philadelphia Phill!es
6-3 to draw within 5~ games of
first place
"Basica lly , lhe Mets and us
hav e played the res t of the leagu e
back into the r ace,., sa ld Pirates
manager Jim Leyland after his
club had been shut out6-0 by the
St
Louis Ca rdinal s to stay
one-half game behind Jhc Mcts
· M ontrea l IS hotter than heck
wp w okr them up '·
Dave Martinez drove' rn flvP
runs wr th a pa tr of two run
hom er s and a sr ngle and rook1r

Chns

Na bhotz

go1

hiS

fir st

maJor !rague dec rso n to send
Montreal to It s f1fth str arght v.rn

Nabholz. who wa s ca lledd up
from Cl&lt;~ ss AAA Indianapoli s
before the game. worked fl;e and
tv..o th11d rnntng s be for&lt;' givrng
way to Tim Burke. who picked
hiS 14th save
"Chm had good stuff and he
should tmprove hi s next ttmr
out. " Montn:-a! manager Buck
Rodgers sa td " Hi s record rn
lndranapol!s 10-61 dorsn't mran a
thing bec(l usr he proved hr can

pitch
" I gurss I am the designaled
Phillie&lt; plt chei ... said Nabholz ,
who has go lien bolh of his star ts
against Philadelphia · I think I
t hll'W brt ter I he las I !ImP I f acl\d
lhcm m Philadelphia 1a no
dPci sion on June II 1 I had belle!
control then But it helped to b&lt;•
up fivl' 1 uns "
·our pit ch ing Is gett ing
strongrr both tn starting and
rel iev i ng. " Rodger s SJ id
'W&lt;'
are still i n thr rarr ..

Cubs 10 , Mets 2 decJs ton and

a

A bad

ternblP outing b\

Frank Viol a helped th e Ch1cago

Wat krn s Glrn I ntrrna llonal r acP
track to ta kr ht s first V.\11 In 0\('T'
.1 vPat
·S£&gt;cond \\' a~ (,poff Bodrnf' rna
F01 d Thundrrbll d BodrnP o f
Jultan. N C. wa~ tn\ oh ed \\l th

i{udd

111

thr ear ly spm He edged

k 1cked a '&gt;"·Val d liPid g11al w ith

Special race slated
at Skyline Friday

In thr sf'rond h&lt;J!f . Car lson
lhrev. a 12 ya rd sronng pass to

llghl end Ron Hall toputtheBucs
In front 2•1lft l'hmtie added 1110
field goa ts
The ll&lt;&gt;ng.1 Is closed the scoring
With a ~ y,Jll! touchdown run by
John Holifield with 2· 00 remain ·
mg In the game

ThiS Friday night Skyline
Speedway In Stewart, Ohio will
fea ture a Sportsman Invitational
race payi ng $300 to the winner In
add! tlon to running fu II program s
In th e Lat e Model s. Semi-Late
Models and Street Stock
divisions
Also, the JMCA modifleds will
j oin theSkylineshowona regular
basis lor five classes of action
packed fun . Because of a rain-out
there will be a double feature m
the Street Stock Division all one
one regular admission Children
under 12 are free.
Andy Bond won last week's
late Model Show over brother
larry Bond, Bob Adams, Jr., Bill
Childers and Scott Wolfe.
Three McDonald 's Restaurant
cars finished In the top live.
On Friday September 7, Sky line will feature the gtan t Late
Model Invitational race sponsored by Valvollne. The race
pays $1200 to win and $100 to start
and Is labeled the "Valvollne
Just say 'NO' to Drugs race.
Races are at 6:30 when warmups being and actual racing at

for an estimated $2 3 million He
caught 86 passes last year for 9
touchdown s and was named to

Motorcycle Racing
A trio of Georgia riders doml
nated the WesternEastern Road
racers' Association Formula
USA National motorcycle roadrace at Road Atlanta. Scott
Russell o! Morrow, Georgia
captured first place In his second
Formula USA race of the season
on a factory backed Kawasaki
ZX-7 Mike Smith of Canton took
second, 3 42 seconds behind Russell, and early leader Mike Harth
placed third

8· 30

•
'

Monday, August 13, 1990

/

Page-5

Ten free Colorado Blue Spruce
trees will be given to each person
who joins the National Arbor Day
Fo undation during Augu st.
The free trees are part of the
nonprofit foundation's Trees lor
America campaign.
"Colorado Blue Spruces were
select ed for this campaign beca use of lhelf many uses in the
home landscape." John Rosenow, the foundation' s execu tive director. said. "They lend
beauty tolhelrsurroundlngsw!Jh
their sliver blue -green color and
compact conical shape. They can
be used as Individual ornamen

After s tart ing the season with

Pntsburgh is havrng its own

problems
The Ca rdinal s pound ed out .J
sea son h1gh 17 hits to hand lhl'
Pirales Jheir fifth stra ight los s
·We are dead right now." sa id
Lrvland af te r watching his club
get handcuffed by Bob Tewks
bun·. 7-.1 "We're flat. moving

bad laSJ yea I down thl' stretch,"
sa 1d Todd Zr ile , who had five hils
in th e sc ne s and three RBI in St

lowpd four srng!cs en routr to hr s
f1rst mJjor league shutout and

"" '
\..

''

CONQUERING THE ROCKS
concrete slabs near lhe Rock
grounds may not seem very
grown-ups, hut Imagine what

eompiPie ga me LIIIiquisl, 3-8.
was &lt;~cqUired In a Ju ly 12 trad e
with Atlanta San Dtego has won

tim e spent II you wish to gt'l

l b of Its last 21 games
Dodgers 7, Braves 3 - At
Atl anl a. Hubic Brooks belled a
th ree-run hom e ru n to help J im
NPidling&lt;'I ea rn his first major
il•aguc vic10ry In hiS third start

Ohi OAssocial IOn of Ga rdl'n Clubs

Jrm Go!! Par ned his second save

mean s giving a smdrl appt.•.Jr

To m Gt avinr. 6-9. took the loss

ancc,

winmng ribbons , said Janet
Bo lin. former president of the

Mrr we ant! llul Stncklm In the
la st tu r n of tll r sf'vr n turn tr ack

He hPid up tilt• n•s t of th e field,

hrs voungPJ b1 othr r BrPtt. dr l\ r nablmg H:udd to pull away a nd
1ng ~ Bu! ck l{f' gal h\ ~vC'r a IlPPI cru tsf' to LJ h ~ 4 second margm of
a t thP c hPckPrPd fl ag
v trton.
Thr f1r st wrn of t hf' ~t'JJ for
Po lrsrttrr D&lt;~!e Earnhardt took

that attending lo these de tails
ribbon at all
To prepare exhibit s. M1 s 13olm
had these sug gestion s
Dl sbudding : should IJe done
wPII m advanC'P of thr show to
allow scar~ t tm P t o hPal. Thr
bud m smgles !tkE' rosrs, ztnnia s
and dahlias v.-tll cau sP thP f'XtrJ

strength to go the main flowei

vou can't mak P rt to Su nda\
~ rrv1ces He's got a n answr1 for
you1 ever:- excuSC' .

"Peaplr ha vP

bet•n makmg

da y a nd when It's your da}. 11'..,
Hurld' s rrammate. Greg
yourdav,' sa 1dRudd.whowon1n Sdcks. brought ou r the lirsl

excuses to God f01 a long timr, ·

1988 at tht• upstaiP \cw York ca utionperiodofthrdayw hrnhr

wdsn'l his fault

road coursr
'Cin.umstanc es rrctsht'd hr s Lumina at th erndof
ju st line up fo r \OU on a grvPn tht• ba ck &lt;:;.~rarght on th e 2.4 mill&gt;
dav ·
coursf'

Eve bi.Jmrd the st' I pent Moses
Jold God he couldn't handl e the

Snlpl'S

sa id

" Adam sa id it
it was Evr's

leadPrship beca u se hr ~Nasn't

a

good talker '
For those who sav thrv l ike to
steep tall'. tile hPad of Jhe
Farwt•ll C'hu1 r h of Chnst coon
t('rs with a pronHsf' to pro\'id4' a
co t for snoozi ng
For thosC' who sav thrrhu rc h IS

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

too cold, Snipes ha s plenty of
blankets F01 those who com
plain the building JS too hot, he
rem inds them hi' has fans

\\WE HAVE HEARING AIDS"

people who sav thcv ran' I hear
his sermon, ,111 d cotton balls arr

TUESDAY
NIGHT
SPECIAL

COMIIINiltiONDtNIIER ONLY
(Dining Roam Onlyl

Served with whipped potltoeo, chi elton
gravy, cole 1l1w, hot roll 1nd tK..tner.
Son'l, no oubatltutH lkCept bevtrtge
with oddltionol prl.,...

FOI JUST

$325

NOW FEATURING HOMEMADE DINNER ROLL

- CIGW'S

YIESTAURANT

I'H. 992-,.32 "
I'O.IOY, OH.
Featuring Ktntudly Fried Chicken

about sundown aflt•r th e planl s
have absorbed the gr eatrSJ
amount of nat ura l s ~gar 1n therr

gives the judg e somelhing to
Preparation·

thr life of th e

flower rs m th r stem Contrar v to
many opinions. water is not

absorbed from the sides of lhc
ste m , but fr om the bottom
Opening up or exposing th e wat e1

If you an• cutting sunflower s.
zin nras 01· as tl'rs I I is best toea 11v
a r andle or lighter to thl' gardPn
to sear th E' ends of the stems i.lS
soon as you cut thPm
Woody

stems

should

bt•

pounded with a h am mn on thP

end of th e stem to break up l hl'
tissues in Uidt'r for them to takr
up water
Hardenrng oH this is .1 wa1 m
~atrr, cool ait techniquE' whtrh
allows v.arm water to mov e into
th e stems faster whtle cool arr
diOund thr flowPr slows down
Pvapor oil I on from thr ti ss ues
NPVC'I put hardenin g flowPrs In

tl'mprrature changps

bottom rs

Foliage can be cleaned with a

crucial for extended life Carry

11nsP of onr third vinegar to
two -thi rds w.tter applied with a
sot S(XlngC' ur ny lon to rPrnovf'
spra~. soi l and somP mrldPw
No waxing. oiling, w1nng 01
su pport s arP dllowr&gt;d on hotticul t 111.1 I sp&lt;'t tmPns

tubes at the stem

l 'Our watrr to tile gardrn when
vo u arC' gat her in g you r flow ers
Be verv CarC'fu! not to br uisr th P
flowf'r hrad. !rcn rs or strm Li sr
.t sharp cutt ing knife or sllrars to
CU! 10 3\'0id Cl ushing WaiN !UbP S

Front scats a1r ava1lablr for

provrded for t ha sP who sa v hr

talks to loodlv
Surrogate rplatives will be
available for olhPrs who beg off
wllh the excuSf' of visiting
relatives.
For lhOSf' who say they'd
rath er

worshrp

out -of -doors,

Snipes has some shrubbery and
turf . Those who say they'd rather
be fishing are gtwn a fish bowl to
gaze at.
·
And last but not least, for the
people who say they only at tend
church on the big holidays like
Christmas and Easter, Snipes
will pullout the Easter llllles and
poinsettias .
Happy hoofers tap dance down
34th Street
NEW YORK iUPI) - More
than 5,000 hoofers, from en thus!·
astlc children to elderly vaudeville veterans, packed a Manha,t ·
tan street to form lhe world s
largest tap·danclng line.
This year's version of "Tap-0Manla," sponsored by the
Macy's department store chain,

rng of the Pa st Cou ncilors' Club
of th e Cheste r Cou ncil No J2J
Da ughters of America held at her
home with Elizabeth Haves and
l·:s thPJ Smith as co- hostesses
E rma Cleland presided at the
meetmg and rl'ad Psalm I The
Loid' s Prayer and pledge to
Amrrtcan flag were given in
un i son Mrmbers answerC'd rol l

call bv reading a poem
Games were conducted b1
rave Kirkhart and Ethel Orr and

Sandra Wh rtr

Belt) Young Belly Denny. Lit
tlan Demosk y, M,tr \ K Ho ltt• r
.JoAn n Baum . IIII a B.rii.IId . .rnd
Ada BISsell

at Carnf'gU' H all in NPw York on

r nough

!J.27 1
for

d.t nC PI s Sunda:v.
a wor ld record .

Ma cy·s satd .
Thlil bPa l out thP rrcord of
~.877.

set l ast vear at the annu,tl
Ma cy ·s e1rnt . according to the
r;u lliness Book of World Record s

For '1 0 mmutes, tappers clad in
bright orange T-shh ts and wear
1ng Styrofoam boa l er s palkPd
.l~th StrPPl In fi on t of the Pnlill'
length of th r fl ags hip Macy·s
stOil'. tappmg to · Can dv Man"
and' If You Could See Me No11 ,"
tunes made popular b\ !ht• lc~lt'
Sammy Da1·i s Jr

comp leled

before

phy s!r,JI

beginning

practicr lnt erf'strd studl• nts in
sf'venth and r1ght gradt., arr al so
tn\'l ted to attrnd Contact .J 1m

Oliphant at 992 &gt;Riti fiJ I more

Mechan1ra.l g un s s pl'WPd
multi colored d1scs on!o the

cheering crowd lined up in unt idv
rows ou tsidP the mammoth
sta rr
T ap
·captar ns" mar
sha!£&gt;d 20 mf'mbrr tea m s into d
sf'mblancP of ordrr

G1na Rilcv , 1&gt;. a dancer sinc e
agP 1, said most participant s
sf'empd to know what they wcrl'

doing . or at least had learned the
steps during a morning practice
that began at 8 am
"Most of them don 't know how
to tap," she sa id "But t od c~y it
wasn't th ai hard, just so me basic
steps
" It's like a puzz le with a
million different pieces," added
a companion, Andrew LeMin, 17
"O nce you put it all logethei, it
becomes like a universal step ,
and you can do anything "
Susan Rosenblat I and Ger
trude Schnur said their young
daught ers per suaded them to
make the trip Into Midtown
Manhattan from the city's bo
rough of Queens.
"!love to dance, but you don't
have to know how to dance," said
Rosenblatt, 40. "Some people
were really Into II. But no matter
how much you fumble during
rehearsals, when the music
starts. you just go 'oomph.'"
Shnur. 65, said the dancing
exhausted her.
"Our feet were burning, achIng," sh~ said. "But now I lee!
better."
I\

-

Thr•

tru sl l'l'S

Chester

\\Ill

m rrl
l o ~· n

a m r lon supp&lt;.• r un Monda\
alb 111 p m al tho• Meigs Count\'
F ai rg r ounds nl'al

bu ildinA -

thP gt ang e

Follo"ing

dinne r.

mf'mbcrs Will pn'Jh1rt' thf' Mod
rr n Woodsmt·n booth fm tht ·
M r 1gs Co unt\ Filii

bul stopped at 2 'J6 am. Satur
uav He had pla;Pd 14~ games
well he!ow thf' nf'cPssa r:v scorr

l3EDI-'ORD -

Tht• Bl'dfm cl

Town shrp Tru stf'PS wr!l mPrt
Mondav at thr town ha ll ,tl 7 p m

for a 24 -hour prnod listed by the
currrnt edi tion of (;uinnf'ss
" He w&lt;Js h avr ng mu scl P
spasms . b.1ck pa1ns and torr a

Amrrlca n \ "etP rans &lt;Uld auxJ I
1ar v will have a picnic Monday at

Ihomb op&lt;•n.' q Jd Brit Pa tIa ske.

6

m~1nagcr

' He

of thP bowlmg a!lry

just

tou ldn 't

go

on

anymme
KnublauC'h. a pharmacist at

WaukPshd MPmm Iat Hospital.
11as selcciPd fm WKLH radio
~ilation's contest that asked lis-

IPners "What would you do for
$lii .IIIKI''" - a prize he did not
win
The 1adlo station wilt select
,mother challenger to vir for lhe

$10.111XI

DARWI N

:10 p m

-

Tht • OISabled

at Jhe roadSide park on

J1out e :n nPar Darw in R1rng a
r ovrred d ls h

L [ BA'WN - The Ll'banon
Township Trustees will mc•et In
specia l sesson Mond.1 y at 7 P m
at th e township garage
TUESDAY
POMEROY - Th e Pomerov
Flam e F ellowship will meel
Tuesday at i .JO p m at the
Senior · Cit lzens Cr ntrr Th e
speaker will be !Jill Cadle,

992-2124
Hoan

\\.!'!::..__.!::-- ___J

II am to \ol1d )un -Thu"
l I .1m to I am Fn &amp; Sat

Plek·d~ Only!
LARGE

1 ITEM PIZZA
ORIGINAL STYli I $599
PAll 01

tung and Sandi a While

of Anlilla ls rr lrasrd thr tape
ciJrmmg 11 showl'd BProsini
bra!lng h r" oranguwns back
stJ gP at th r Sli:lrdust Hotel

·Thank 10u I am so happ\ to be
rn Amcr led.· thP Czechoslovak
1mm!grant sard " 1 was used as a
pawn ro m&lt;Jkl' mom'y 1 for

rr n'" nus &lt;~d c
Ch.trdrt r r " t or
Jrs us." fm dgt·~ -t 1'2 I'ut ·"&lt;l..t\
rhrou gh Fitd.t\ c~t h .m p m
nlg thl\ undr•1 th1 clltl'rlron of
Ht ll Bnmn f.ro\t' t'll\ \pro
gram v.J IIIH \ ht '!d Sunda.\ Jl tl W
am '1'1,ulspniidtlnn \VIII br fu 1
nt shPd drHI mmr rnform rl tton
m,J\
lu • obtalnt•d b\ c,JII!n~

PO MEROY
Th l' £lu1
lmgham Mode r n Wooosml'n 11 Il l

:tti,q 22 bowling scme to earn

,1n~l cumpliPfl a ~cOif' of 26.111.

li on had been damaged af Jer
l't•op l&lt;' fo1 th r E thi cal Treatment

HAC!r-il' - Tho• ILwi m' I'Jia
Jt•nt· ('hurl'tl writ ho ld ,, 1 h!ld

H

Monday at i :wpm at Jhe
hal t

a noll ce m the

ell. (,oldie Fred

r rirk BPit\ Roush . dnd gupsts.
Honnrr L&lt;.tndf't s 1\ndiPd li ar

at hi&lt;'I PS mu st ha vr

h&lt;cl \ r

and

thr Kilgore event will be his !lrsl
co mplete solo recital since 1978.
MONKEY SUIT: Las Vegas
animal traine r Bohby Beroslnl
will be co liec llng $4.2 million
from anunal rights activi sts
because of a '"crrlly made
vid eotape A j u rv made the

PF. T ~ 1 I knoll I was allacketl

sp.Jsms and blisters and worse .
sli lt ctrctn ' 1 managr t or ark up t llr

$10,1l1KI

Nc ~

prrform ing l'dl'l'£'1 at thP White
Hous£' rn DecPmbel 1987 and has
!Jiavi.'d sl'IPction s from his solo
rqK'rtoirr at
private fund ·
r,t\&gt;.:,[ng t'\l'nts and a s encores for
his orehPstral appearances, but

awa r d Sat urd a\', agreei ng with
Brr os1nr's cla im th at his reputa

Mrddlrpor r ThP puhltt 1.., lrl\ rtPd
Jnd rPfrrshmt ·nt s v..1ll tw ..,,,, \C'd

CHESTER

Guinnf'ss Hook ol world records
Knohl.tuch . .l~. of Waukpsha
heg.Hl howling ..it Ham Fnday.

Whrlr. L or.l DamC'v.ood. Man K

POM EROY - Cro;s I'ounl1 ~
pr ac tice for Meig s Hi gh Schoo l
~ I ll begin Mond a\' at Yam Al l

Township

RowiPr m l-.ses record
MILWAUKEE iUPlt - J im
Knoblauch suffered cuts. back

I.- , m.J Cl eland. Mac ~cPcek .
Ada HI&lt;sr ll. Ethel 01 r. Faye
Ku khai t. E I~Cabeth Hayes, .Jean
F'1ederi ck. 1-.s thrr Smilh. Alta
Ral laid . Opa l Ho llon Thelm a

Community calendar

rnrormat ron

dre~·

Co ld rP F1 rdl'lll'k won th r door
pr iZPS
Rrf1Pshmrnt s v.rrr sf'rved to
1 .1ur.t \ll,w NtrP. MarCia Ke lle r.

Holl er. l nzv

Simon will teach a songwrlt!ng
class and perform songs from his
upcoming album, "Rhythm of
the Saints." at the Evian Music
Festival on New York' s Long
Island Sept 2 S1mon will be
joined by Ray Charles , Miles
Davis, Donald Fagen of Steely
Dan and Tal Mahal. The fe5lival
was organized by Simon's
brother Eddie, who owns a radio
station in the area ... CBS JS
planning to air two hour s of the
Farm Aid concert held back In
April in Indianapolis The Aug 25
broadcast will feature Elton
John, Guns 'N Roses, John Hiatt,
Bruce Hornsby, the Soviet band
Gorky Park and a joint performance by Krls Krlstofferson,
Bonnie Kaltt and Jackson
Browne
ClffiUKN CONCERT: Plano
virtuoso Van Cliburn will give his
fir st full length solo recllal In
more than a deca de this October
In Kilgore Trxas, his boyhood
home Proceeds from the recital
benefit the llarvey Lavan and
RIIdla Bee O'Bryan Cliburn
Scholarship, nam ed for Cl iburn's
parents, at Kilgore Junior Col·
lege Cilburn also 11 Ill perform
this season with the Lincoln,
Nrb , Svmphonv on Sept 21, the
Leningr ad Phil harmonic at
Brookville . NY on Oct 27 and
wll h Jhe New Y or k Philharmonic
Mal 1 Clibu rn. o6, IPvlved his

.

draft s. direct heat or sunlight
nrver subjrct thrm lo abrupt

Quirks in· the news _____

{' ndPd a st•ason lo ng w1nless But Ru stv \\' a llacr, la st \'E"ar s
st reak for th e four l c11 HPmlT wk wrn nPI . ctwr gpd from th&lt;• ·fourth
M otor sport s tra m
posi tion tn pdss h rm rn thp ninth

(304) 675-1244

Ga tht't tng 11 rs best if vou c an
cut your flowers in !a IP afternoon

r.1using 11 to grow and bC' much

Rudd wa s "' " '' h $5&gt; IKJU II al so the IP.Ill .11 tlw start of the race

JOHN A. WADE, M.D., Inc.

ChaJlottP Grant

offtce

.JP&lt;Jn F'rPderJck was rn sta !lrd
as secrrtarv at thP recPnt m ePt

wnich ca nv life to the flowt'I

r valuate vour cultural practice

Minister lake~ no t•xruscs
FARWELL Mich tUPl i
Don't tell I he Rev Tim Snipes

' You JUs! keep plugging,.," ' \ lap

brt IPI

vour fl owers for PXhlbit as th1 s

removal of all but lht• terminal
R.udd got thl' jump on thermal
rPstart . whrn Alan Kulwtckt,
who lrd br1rf!v clunng the race,
wa s un ab lP to ge t up to raring
spi \rd

Esther Sm II h. recording secre·
tary, spok e bre1fly concerning
State Session at Toledo on
Sunday through Aug . 22 Mrs
Smith will be rn stalled Aug 22 as
the stale coun cilor of Ohio. Mrs.
Smith IS th e second from the
distncl. Dlstnct J:l, t o hold th at

th ey look likt•

f lower s She also soggL•sled cor
rect labeling as the flower s a1r
cut particularly If scver,Ii exhib

clean,

ca n mean th£&gt; bluer .1thcr lhan no

cauuon prriod ra m e after an
rnc rdPnl br twern Sarel va n der

to

upright , smart appeo1ance to

Mrs Bolin said that g1onming

th e :U-vcar old Rodd
The tatter stages of the race
final yellow flag

impressive

perky. standing

and co-cha irman of thl' fail
show s

it s arP to be made and stJf"ssf'CI

The

through the eyes of a child. Here, 5-year-old Carl
Brewer of Middleport demonstrates his rot·k
t ... N. concrrle slah) clbnhlng talents.

- 'rhe pile of
Springs Fair·

11s sues. Plants with little or no
stem follage may be cot in the
morning or afternoon. The length
of the stem should be In propor
lion to the flow er head Do not
remove the fo liage on the stem of

It v.-as th r ll th carerr win for

shaps

National A1b01 Day Foundalion.
lOll Arb01 Avt•, Nebraska Cilv,
Ncb b84JU by Aug 11

Past
Councilors
meet
OAGC gives tips on show preparation
Pr r p&lt;:~r ing specimens and [ll
r dngpmen Is for the Mr1gs ( 'ou nt y
Fair flower shows Is voluahh..,

wrrP sl owrd by num erou s mi

$10 member ship

Lu ra Dampwood wa s pran1st

Pledges to the Christian and

lo sses · ·
"Those' guys t Pirates I hurt us

Al
al

send

contr lbu t ion to Ten Blue Spruces.

fo r the mcetmg
Attendmg were Mae McPeak,
Betty Roush. Evrretl Grant.
Ma1 ria Kt •ller . Dorothv RIIchie.
.Jean Fredcr ick. Esthei Smith.
L01a Damewood. E IJzabclh
Haves. Dor1s Gr uest•r Erma
Cl~land. F:thel 01 r. F'avo• Kirk
h.~rt, Opal Hollon , Thelma While

American flags \.\-ere glvPn.

Padres 9. Astros 0 Hou ston. Derek LJIIIquist

foundation and t o rrretve the free

trl'es,

Several announcements werP

nol p!lchmg. not catching the
ball Th al IS what adds up to

II SP('ffiS

living Chr istmas trees ...
The trees will be sh tpped
postpaid at th e right llme for
planting in Septe mber or October
with enclosed planting mstruc·
lion s The 6-1 2 in ch trees are
guar ant eed to grow, or they will
be replaced free of charge.
To become a mPmber of the

made at the Ieccnt mec tlngoflhe
Chester Counc11323 Daughters of

slav.- . not crisp We're not hitting,

ha rd against them There's still
lhe third pla ce spot to shoot for ..
And the f11 s1 pia"' spot. too ,

tal s, an energy ·savmg wtnd ·
break . a privacy screpn or as

Chester D of A meets
America wttll Dorts Gruesc r ,
associate councilor prPsidmg

Louis ' " three gamr swee p "We
wantPd to come tn he re and play

I"""~~~e£e ....I

Free trees to join
Arbor Day group

seven straight wins, the left hand er has struggled Since the
All -Star break , Viola has won
just two of six decisions, 11ilh a
4 l7 ERA
The M ets, however, hung on to
their slim divi siOn lead because

Rudd takes Watkins Glen flag
WATI\II'S GL EN . NY •t.:Pfi
- Rick; Rudd, dri VIng a Chcv
rolet Lu.m ma. got I he Jump on th e
fteld on the fmal res tart. three
l aps fr om the end. to \\'In thP
$:J53,297 NASCAR Budw e1ser at
the Glen
Rudd. o t rhrsapeakc \ ' a
came bac k f1 om a sp in on lap 10
of the 90 tap . 219-lap race at

The Daily Sentinel

Cubs pound New York 10 2,
sending the dlvt slon leaders lo
Jhelr sixth loss In their last nine
games.
With the score lied 1 I in the
second Inning. Shawon Dunston
and Domingo Ramos singled,
putting runners on first and
third Joe Girardi grounded to
third baseman Tom O'Malley,
who threw hom e instead of tryin g
to go around the horn
Bot he left Dunston tIme to
scramble back to third , !raving
none out and the bases loaded .
Chicago went on to score four
runs In the Inning and pin the toss
on Viola, 15·7

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

_ _ Sports briefs - -

n.., ..,n. 71

II

Wrdr rC'CP IVP I Oannv Pl'Pb!ps
ra n J r Pvrr "f' 10 y,u rl s for a
touc hdov. n and lhf'n Chr ISl iP

I he NFC Pro Bowl squad.

U. .I D Mrl&gt;ullle, PoMil&amp;C. ~
U Hut 8h~ckU11o &amp;.lid., 112
U 8atf'l van der Merwf', South Air• ,..

1t. Rid: WI!Mn. OhtunDbllt, 30
U . Tommy RlgiM. Oldsmobllf',
34. Rei ICy Wlllact. PoMiac, "
U .. DeTrtke Cop~!, Cht\'nlld, U
11 Riel Wart, Pelilac, 4!
n Om• IUmbriiUih. 41

N t.o•••.r•u•rslll

~aniMep

r ..u,, Po !Ill&amp;(·, Ill

Ill Rh'hartl Ptlly, Ptullac. !Ill
II 0.\'ry Alllaon, l'"•nl. Ill
lt Oalf' lar"'U, Ford 118
Z1 Harry (Oanl. Oldllmobltlo, 1\5

IZ1 ,

"~' n

n••••"

Lo.

T"ry La-.o•. OltMmohllf , H
u Htrrll•• Marllll. OlcttmobUt. 90
It Bobby HIIBn, lr . Bukk. KB
17 lblf'

lea d

Ing of holdout wtde recei,er

II

'•

twr cr to takr a 1710 ho lftrmP

Ma 1 k ra r rtl'r loa 3· year contract

12 Btll Elllou. t-'onl, 110
ll Keh Mor011-0, OldltmohUP tG

-•••

San Francisco s Robb y
Thompson hit a two out solo
hom er. his 12th. to make II 4· 1 In
th e seco nd, and the Giants scored
twice ln the lhlfd to 1ra11 4 3
Brett Butter si ngled and took
third on Will Clark's smgle
Kev1n Mi tchell's ground rule
double to left scored llutler and
put Cl ark on thlfd . Gary C.11 IPI s
sac nfl cr fl y scored lta• k

Thr B uc s announced the sig- n.

II ..\Jan Kt~lwlrkl , Ferd 80

) I

Pllllllllf'lphl11

lhll

t_

. .. ...,,.,
"" "',,
~

ll\lf'flllf' "prrd)

! fO..nl! Hodlnr Fonl. M
l ftro-tl RudiJa'. Bukk, !H)

Toro•• at (Ilk aco. •Ifill
Tnu Ill

Had~

m,..

lr\'rllroftd IIIJ:IIi
,tl Drrt ,.. , nl•hl

r nforcf' tt ..

half

I Klt·ky Rudel ( hl"\'rold . IN). In I ttl

o1.! (

Mllwauk~r

wln••r'~

4 ya rd touc hdown run from ru n
n1ng bark Lars Ta l e for a 7 .1
lead, capp mg a 73-yard. 13 play
dnvr that con sumed 7 ~,o
After rookie Ha ro ld r;, Pi'n
from So uth Caro lina had a .I va rd
touchdo11n run for the llrngals
wllh o· o7 left In the sreond
quart er. Tampa Bay str uck

e1ghl sr ('o nd s 1 Pm ,Ji ni ng in thr

re!i!ulL~

K..,.ultM
Budwl'llll'r at Itt!' Glrn
,\1 "atklrw; hlrn 1\ \
.\u• I ~
ll ~U&gt; d wllh 1)11•' oi l¥ lap eompl1&gt;tt'd

\uto

and
(alllnnUa

al

•

NASCAR

1111

IJ.oMon tHarm t.-.f 1 ;at IIMklllnd l"lll'll
,.,,.1111;1 IG t l pm
B•itlmorr 1\lorMrMid lfll at !'l l' illllo

~t'IU"IIInlrlUI

".._..hJfti{IIIM •\~ri'Pd 10 lfrrlh "'l(h
lt n~• halkf't HM\In ( a ldwf' ll on d .I yo · ~~r
• 01nlt111 I

1Dibble 1 did it about five limes.
noted the Giants man ager ' 'I'm
not saying he throws a sp ille r .
but the rule 1s tha t you can 1 go to
\'OUr mouth And as long as that s
d lea gue r ule we' rp gomg to

Co ntinued from page I

-

Rogrr

prrssurr gamr. II wa s a }Okr ·
Cra ig saw 11 dlffcren tlv 'HI'

Bengals ...

o\, lil'dlo•d pill hl'r ~~ · ~
pl~1 1•d ph&lt; h1't' l••rry Rl&gt;f'd on
Wlll~"'"lor til&lt; purpo!IC' of ~:lvln~: him hi~
u,. o .-llllo!KII N"h·~ .. n t ' un1 1... o ~ R••h *""d pk• hl'f'
\11..., H11mmllkt'r r 1•1 ldlo d ouiiiPid..r
klt·k JIIU'III'r from J'hot· nl~ of th• · l'adll•
I n.a~l f A' 16,(UI' l o\ o\1\ I
Fo••h:&amp;Jl
' ''" llrk·an- ~ \l[n•••d tnll'rm~ ~llh
1111 kif' Man 8rot I;
..., .Uik - &gt;o;j J:ftf'd HIW'hao J. ~r Oat ro-n

'~""'

Oakbt.ncl i

Olf'(ll nl.r;ht

Rm•lno
(oanhwr

'ltiiYt iiUioro I

II} ~

\lnrtr•·aJ

;U !'I lin

nlrhl

~~~ r-.1 w.,~ ~pori• Tr.1n ... , '"' rJOo
RAAf'h:&amp;ll
llaltlmun· - R1 oIUIPd 1 lito hf'r I hr 1~
lfoth.. lr0t11 Koi hl..,tl'r ol tho lntl'rnll
Ilona! IA' II«\Jf' 1,\AA )
"'nt pllt'hl'r
\U, kf')' \\,..,.tlln lu K,,. lwllll'f

';

Kan..,.llll
( allfornh

Lolli~

T ran~act ion~

-

Tt,ll.-

1.. 1 n&gt;~~: ht

PJ ck cr quaJ ti' Jb ar k M1kr Nor
sPt h 1n thl' frn.t ! p !av of the game
and JPtUJnPlllt % va rds for a
touchdown d S t1mr ran out

nlrhl
t'r lln&gt;h•tO Ill Phlblokfphl;a niJ:hl

1 lno.lnnatl~tl Sl

Browns Safet; Ellis Dillahonl

a !so mt PI crph'd a pass from

JAJ~ \111{1'1"" Ill !'l:fll \ urjj

Iii

MUwauk~•·

Alhln~

29 ya1 d frrld goat

lhl•uJ:o

.u

iiJI•IuoonOI, IIUpm
TuPMh,v (.anw..,
Ho...ton ;al { hw llCO
I'UI..tluf"Kh Ill "-IJ.,nla !

-

Te,..nh&gt;

~.,.,

!!'imollaKII).l iCipm
Hoii:'ICon IPOrt~Cai l!!J

manager

Cr aig c laimed the Reds hurler
was going to hi s mouth The walk
r•ven luallv led to a tun, when Ed
K1ngery si ngled home Robbv
Thompso n to make 11 6-4
"I never touched mv mouth,
sa id Dibble "It washotandlwas
ju st wrptng the swra t from m\
face II 11as a stupid call In a

th e game out of rrach wrth a
n•ll rJa,tu.on I!), 7 l~ p m
t.e~ ,\JI .. If'!&gt; I ~ aii' OJIJI'III I 9 J ~I

Grants

Morris'

By The Bend

S('\'PI r l v · ThP

~·l· r

lllct assrsst=&gt; s

PF.TA $2 million. wh iil' PETA
tll\l' ~llgaiU I .Jrannu• Rausch v.r!l
lw trqurr cd to pa\ Sl mi!!JOn and
formrr St.udusl d,1nn•r Ottav ro
( ,rsm undo \\ho :-;hu t thP sPnPt
\ tdPOI&lt;.ipl' Wcl S ~l sst•sst • d $1 rml
Iron rn dam a ~t 's A PE T A l&lt;IW\PJ
,,I\ s hi' WI!! ,IPI::M'dl

G UMPSES ·

Kt•vln

fostner

pld v Hntu n HtHKl in t hP mm tP
P11nt'l' of Th1rvf'o;, · but hr's a
lrttll ' Ulll ' i.JS\ cibOulthPW dldfObP
th,i! c ·o mP~ v.rth th r roiP . · Ill rnd
tJp 1n tr ght ". \ ou'! l knov. !herr
11a" onr hrtl of c1 battle.· hr told
f&gt;Pnp lr' mdgJIInt&gt; · And I ' m on I)
\U II

tilin g them on rn the serurrt v of
1! ,\l{H !Sil 's \ 11 .1.1· - I ill' I Ia!
S1·nro1 ( 11 1/l' n " \.\Ill
ho ld ,J fr• t•h !oorl PH '""u r~ · r!inl('
on Tut •.., d,n f r om ](I o1 m to noon
dl 1)1 !' IUH flllOUS('

''"on' lilt ·

f' ( IMI !WI

Tlw

Meigs

Coun t\ Ho dt d ol I !t·&lt; lion s U.Ill
mf•t·t Tw · ~ d .J\ .1t ·l lOp m ell t hP
of fl lt' on 1Vkch clnlt Stn•t•I tn

Ponwr

O\

R- \ Cii'il. - Th l' H,tCint • l.otlgi·
4h1 F &amp; t\M \~ I ll mwt Tu P.., da \ ~1t
j Ul p m AI! m &lt;·mlwr s d i"P urg1 \cl
to at te nd

m\ o\.\ nov. n honw so I r an bP thr

Jud gt··
Th1 'rr ts a truer
hrl\\ 1 ·rn Tippt&gt;r (;orf' and thr
mu stc 1ndu "t '' Corf'. thr wlfpof
S!· n AI (,on· . n Trnn . and oncr
tht • h'dcit·r of c1 nat!Dnwldr
&lt; 1mp.11gn fo1
m&lt;.~ndatory warn
111g t.dw l" on 1 Pc:ord s. now says
rt.., up to p.11 rn ts to monllor tllr
mu ..,Jc thl'u c hrld rr n hrar GorP
"!X'.tkin g rn Nash,.. ll lr at thr
\c~tr n n ~ll ( nnfrrrncr of St ai r
l.t·gts l.!t UI{'"i l;.~ s t wrek, al so said
..,ht · I" .., alr sf tPd w ith thr warning
L•bP! s rrrordrng compa nies arr
\O lunt &lt;l nlv at tac hing 1o rrco rd s.

r.rpcs and compact discs.

VVestern Southern
Insurance Now Is
Offering Maior
Medical Coverage
In Addition To Our
Life and Annuity Plans.
STOP BY AND SEE THE
WESTERN SOUTHERN
BOOTH AT THE
MEIGS CO. FAIR
•STEVE GRIMM

•HOWARD PARKER
•JIM ELIAS
\.

---- --- ----

•MIKE WElfORD
•KEVIN IROOKS
•RANDY WHITED-MANAGER

�Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, August 13, 1990
Monday, August 13, 1990

Fate of trapped Americans remains unsure
WASHINGTON IUP!i - As
American military might poured
Into the Persian Gulf region, the
fate of an uncertain numbPr of
American civilians hung over the
U.S. war of nerves against Iraq
like an ominous question mark .
Barred by Iraq i authorities
from leaving. as manv as 3.500
Amerlcans in Iraq an-d Kuwait
have emerged as pawns and
possible bargaining chips in th&lt;•
tense showdown Presid&lt;•nt [lush
has engineered with Iraqi Prf'si dent Saddam Hussein .
In a bid to avoid anv further
inflammation of an ah:eadv ex plosive situat ion, U.S. offlcia l s
have taken pains to not so und
unduly alarmed about their
safety or raise the spec tPr of
another Middle East hostage

crisis.
Abdul Amir ai Anbari, the
Iraqi ambassador to the United

Nati ons. sai d on the Al:lC News
program "T hts Week with David
Brinkley" that all foreigners
were being detained for "&lt;Juite
understandablp' · reasons with
his co untry on a war footing .
"We an: in a state of emergency," he said, "a nd we have to
makl' sure that everyo ne is not
only safl', but to know what wa."
he doing there . But evenlua llv
thr_v will be all released."
·
Thill wus only the latest in a
senrs of ambiguous signals from
thr Iraqi government since the

Americans, like tens of thou sa nds of olher foreigners, fo und
lhemselVPs stranded by the Au g.
2 Iraqi takeover of Kuwai t.
F ur ther confusion came from a
Radio Baghdad broadcast. mom torrd by U .S. officials, that
"co mpetent authorit ies" had
been inslructed by the Iraqi
gover nment " to exert efforts to

facilitate the travel" of foreigners in Kuwait. There was no
immediate ev idence, however,
that exit aven ues had been
opened .
"This Is a long way from
saying the roads are open, the

airports are open. visas are
available or anything else," said
a Sta te Department officiaL
F'or their part, U.S. officials
have underscorPd Bush's determination to proll'cl Amerieans

livPs, a commitment that on
thrPr prPvious occasions has
drivrn him to send American
troops in to r-risis situations,
while be ing care ful to not lay
down sp{'cific markers for

art ion.
Na tional securPy adviser
Rrrnt Scowcroft acknowledged
on the CBS News prog ram "Face
the Nallon " that hoslages "have

been a neuralgic Issue In Ameri can politics on previous occasions"- first in Iran and la ter in
Lebanon - and sa id, "We're
trying to handle It In a way that i t
does not become thai."
"It may," Scowcroft said of the
current confrontation, "but I
don't want to forecast that, nor
say how we will respond."
Secretary of State James
Baker said on ABC that prohibit·
ing the Americans from leaving
"runs agai nst all International
behavior norms," bu I drew a
certain degree of encouragement
from the fact that U.S . citizens
had been treated the sa me as
other foreigners.
"They've not been permitted to
leave, but they haven't been
mistreated." he said, "and no
SpPclfic demands or requests
ha ve been made for permission

Eleven America ns, including a
10-yea r -o ld Ca li fornia girl, were
allowed to cross the Iraqi border
into Jordan on Saturday after
several un successful at tempts.
Except for the the girl, Penelope
Nabokov, they were all staff
membPrs or dependrnts from the
U.S. Embassy In Baghdad.
Despite reports of counter terrorist forces In place along
with other American troops in
and near th e Persian Gulf. U.S.
offic ials held out hope the waiting
game being played ou t againsl a
backdrop of a massive buildup of
military forces along the Saudi·
Kuwaiti border will l ead to
freedom for the Americans and
other foreigner s under I raqi
conttrol.
Compl icating the sit uati on wa s
the lack of a precise estima te of
how many Amer icans may bf'

for thrm to leave. ''

Involved. Although U.S. officials
lhought there were 3,000 Amerl ·
cans In Kuwait and more than 500
in Iraq In the Immediate aftermath of the Iraqi Invasion, the
State Departmenl was able Friday to co nfirm the presence of
on ly 1,600.
A repor ted deal Sunday for the
release of most of the 8,700Sovlet
citizens in Iraq and Kuwait

Classifie
,

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992-21511
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY
POIICti S
'Atl' tntl~ul c Mct~t~. Goll•il u&lt; M~~un fullulte-. ftHt ~l llu [)It~
ttNI
·n,.,,.,wt· S. ~U rl osctu onl lo• .nl~ p.ttd "' .ut~.ot•o: t!
'I ll't!,nl~
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fUll] 11;~~ ;tl 110 f: f't iti~JC
'P,cc ul ,ul lot all C,)Ji tl il l I !!litH~ • ~ tln uhlu ~111 0.:c uf .ttl t:IJ~I

raised questions about any conditions the Soviet governme nt may
have met and what , If anything,
the development could mean for
the trapped Americans .
Scowcroft, however. doubted
the Sov1cts would mule their
cr itic ism of the Iraq i invasion or
back away from a U.N .-ordered
l rade em bargo. The Soviets
"have been very supportive" of
the U.S. -Ied ca mpaign against
Iraq, he said, "and we set• no
reason that should changr•.''

IN PL;\CE - l i.S. troop~ disemhard from ttwir ain•raft on th t&gt;
ground in Saudi Arabia on Friday . ll 1PI)

Arabia's vast desert last week
were somber and professional,
but worried their gas masks
wou ld be useles s aga inst Iraqi
Back in th e air, Taylor said he
chemica l weapons, a pilot said.
Chris Taylor was flight eng;. sca nned t he Sa udi fron tier a nd
neer on a DC-10 World Airways across lo what he believed to be
jcl that transported. 246 elite Kuwait, but saw no evidence of
soldiers Thursday to Dhahran. a the Iraqi military buildup on the
Saud t city sandwiched between border that has left the world
th e walers of the Persian Gulf preparing for war.
" II was just desolate. Sand
and the sa nds of the desert. about
looks
like sand," he said. "Bu t
200 miles fr om the Kuwaiti
thi
s
was
early in the opPration.
border.
"The
a
Irs pace bPtween Spain
Taylor said Sund ay he watched
and
Brussels
was j ust full of
as lhe ex hausted troops piled
onto trucks at the ai rpo rt and military aircraft , though, " he
were driven int o the wasteland. sai d. " II was ju st an unbelievable
where. he was to ld , they would b~ amount of military traffic."
The Military Airlift Command
housed in bunkers built as shelter
- ordered to st• nd Amer ican
from the searing sun
troops Into Saudi Arabia in case
"They loaded ont o trucks and
Iraqi
troops mas sing in occupi ed
tlwy jusl disappeared in the
Kuwall
inva de th e oil -rich king
horizon." Taylor said in a teledom
charterrd two World
phone Interview from hi s hom e
Airways
DC -IOs to transport
ou tside Washington, D.C. "Thev
m
embers
of the 82nd Airborn&lt;'
went off In to the desert."
·
from
Pope
A ir Force Rast•, N.C ..
"They were stressing they
to
Dhahran
.
wer~ afra id of thp chem icals,"
Taylor
,
a
so rt of h irPd gun in
Taylor sa id of the sold iers. · 'They
the world of transport , had been
al l had gas masks, bu t there was
flying Malaysian Moslems to
a know ledge. a fpar, that tha t
Mecca in Sa udi Arabia for the
was not going to be enough."
Iraq is b&lt;•licved to ha ve a Hajj, the venerated trip to the
holy city of Islam that all
Moslem s hop&lt;.• to make at least
oncP in their llves .
Taylor. who joined the plane in
Belgium, said the US troops

Jury considers theory of 'acting.
.tn concert ' tn
. Central Park rape
NJ-:W YORK rU P!i-The jur,·
in thr casr of thrPP .\'ou th s
arcuSf'd in thf' gang rapl' of a
Cr ntral Pa rk j oggPr L&lt;., ronsi df'l
ing whrthrr pf'op lf' whoromrnil &lt;1
cr im r togrthrr an-. P{JU&lt;IIly
guilty, nomattrr v.:hatthf'ir IP\'f'\

of p.;utkipat io n
Thr ju r~' of 10 mrn and fw()
womrn askPd .Ju stlrP Thom ;p,
Ga lligan during l hf'ir fou n h da .\ ·
of drlibrri:.ll ions Sunrl.a.\· tu ' 'X
plaln thr thrir of "a('ting in

conrPrt" to rummit a nirru•.
Df' l ibrra 1ions wl'rl' sc hPdu IC'd
1o rPs umr in sLif f' Supn'rrtl' Co ur1
in Manhattan at lOam Mond ~l \'
Two of lhf' h' l 'llLi grr~ - HJ.\'
m ond S;1n t ana ;trl d r\ntron
McCra_v - ga\ · ~ · \nir!l·n and
vldf'otaprd ('ll nft•ss ions :r bout

subdutng 1tw \'irtim whllt• others
rap&lt;'d hr r i n Cr ntral Park on
April 1 ~. 19K9 . McCra y said in a
s wtrmrnt that hP rlimbed o n top
of thp wom an. hut only feig ned
int rrcoursr .
The third vouth Yu sef
Sa laa m - madP incriminating
stalt'mrnts but m•v pr gavr a
signt'd or \·idP01Jpt•rl confession.
"L\'('Il i! onra pprson is re spon·
sib lr for ~m pPr ct•nt of thr act and
anothPr pPr.so n just 1 JX'fCC'nt, in
thpryr.-, olthr law, thrvarf' bo th
ti[Ua ll_r g u r lt~·." J us ti er Thomas
C:JIIi-gdn told thr jurv in statr
Su prt&gt;nw Court in Marihattan.
" :\ltpn· prPs t•ncp' · at thr scrnt·
of .1 nmw. howr,·t•r, dors not
nlctkt • ;1 pPr..,on guilt.\ · of commlt ·

considerable arsPnal of inter nationally outlawed chem leal wea pons that President Saddam
Hu ssein used against civilian
populations during the eight ·
year Iran · Iraq war.

wPn' in full combat gear and
spent much of the flight being
briefed with maps and eh&lt;Jrt s
projPc iPd on lhP planp' s movie
scrren .
"The mood was vPry professi onal , a nd wt•ll -organized ," he
said . "ThPn' didn't scpm to be a
lot of you ngpr guvs . Thry were
thr• &lt;'lite"
Taylor said one uf the commanders caml' int o the cockpit
during lh&lt;' fli ghl and usl'd lhP
radio to ordr&gt; r morf' minPs and
Pxtra truck'i to \)(' st&gt;nt 10
Dh ahran.
Thprr wen• ft_•w Saudis at lhl'
Ohi! hra n airpor t, wh ic h st•rvps
military a nd commf' rTia l pla nes.
Ta .v lor ~a id . Americ a n ofricer s
dirPctrd lhP o1x•ration from an
a i r ·r ond i 1iont •d ht•adq ua r trrs
bu ilding Ihat had advancC'd rom
municat ions equipnlPn t ancl soda
mac hinrs.

Sa laa m. I n, San tana. I\ and
MrCra,•. IIi. ""' charged as
adult s with rape and allemptrd
murd('r in thr at tack on the
JO ..vrar ·old invt•stmf' nt banker .
Th e ~' arP accu sed as parr of a
gang of op to :lO you ths who
allegedly rampagc'&lt;i through the
moon lit park, ra ndom ly atta cking ninf' \'ic tim s.
Th e judge. meanwhile, sent
word to Sa laam's mother t hat
she wou ld rontln ue to be banned
from the court room, ('Vf' n when
thP vt•rdicl is announced. He was
rrspending lo her letter apo lo~iz ­

ex}X'Cf('d l o prm·idr· t_ll'ldils of

how they hrlp&lt;•cllht•rrlradrr kill
f ive membPrs of onP lamil\ in
northeastern OhHJ
Eighl prop It_· \~·ho Ju inl'd d I'Ult

led by .ldfrr\ Don l.und grPn
have agrrrd to t rs tJt~ - fo r lhf'
prosecuti on at
Lundgrrn· _..,
murder trial. whwh wa s 10 tw gin
Monda y with jur_
v .&lt;.,t' lf'&lt;'IIOJI
Lund~Trn wa s d lay min r&lt;.,!P r
for the Reorgo~nin·d Churrlr (If
Jesus Ch ris t of l.attrr· Day Saints
at its histori c J:-,o -vf'ar -old IPmplP
In Kirtland. butlf'ft SP VPr; l l .v t·ars
ago, tak ing mllrr than a t\(17.('n

Trstirn (l fl .\' &lt;JI hpr trial indi ·
t'&lt;J !Pd tlw sla yings werp ordNrd
h,v hf'r hu sband as a purifica tion
n tual to pn· ~a rc for thr sPco nd
l'om ing of Christ
l.undgn•n ha s plradrd inno·
tTntto f ivl' co unts of aggra\'a l('d
murdN w i th drath pPnalty sprc i·
fi cat io ns Jnd fi\'(' co unt s of
kid n a~ing

!li s son. Damon . 1 ~. is thf' nrx t
srhf'du lrd for trial, and on
lhl' samr c harg-rs as his fa t her
('o urt rreords indicatE&gt; th at
1f'stimony fr om follower Richard
~~m·

I : llra nd cou ld br thr strongest
ilgJ inst Lundg ren .
l:ln1nd ha s admllled hr hrlpPd

foUower s

arrcs tr d in California.

of ttw f[]rml'r ru It
members hil vr ;lirrady piPadl'd
guilty to lrasse r r hargps in ttw

Barge dumps oil into channel

Apri1198!1 slayings of Oennis and
Cheryl A\WY and their three
young daugh ters. Their bodlt•s
were discovcr('d buripd in a barn
at the cult's farmhousP ln
January

J-IOU STON iU Pl i - Crews
pumped oil Monday from a barge
that buckled as II was being
loadrd and spilled more than
2l.UIKI gall ons of crude Into the
Houston Sh ip Channel.
" They're now taking the oll off
tile harge ," Coast Guard Seaman
Charlrs Decker said Monday.

Five

The defense has asked for a
change In venue, claiming the
conviction of Lundgren's wlf&lt;' on
charges stemming from !he
killings will make It Impossible to
seal an Impartial jury.
Common Pleas Judge Marin 0.
Parks has looked Into the possi bility of using courtrooms In
Clnclnna ll and Co lumbu s. but
has said he will try to seat a jury
In Lake County first.
Lundgren's wife, A l ice, one of
13 people Indicted In theslayings,
was convicted last month on f lvP
count s each of kidnapping and
conspiracy and compltclty lo
commit aggravated murder.

The barge was taking on a load
of crude at the ARCO Petrochemical Co. dock when II buckled In
about 10 feet of wa ter Su nday
leaving the middle resting on the
bottom of the chan nel and both
ends up In the air, offi cia ls said.
Coas l Guard Lt. j.g. Amy Kritz
sa le! co ntai nmen t booms were set
up soon after lhe 10 a.m. accident
to keep the spill fr om spreading.
The accident occurred days
after crews finished cleaning up
a 700,000-gallon spill In the ship
chan nel that occurred when a

tanker hit lwo barges .
The chann el was not closed,
"but we have asked sh ips to
move at the minimum safe
speed. so as not to agitate the
booms and not allow the oil to get
out, " Kritz said . "The oil has
pretty much stayed In the dock
lng area. There Is som e sheen lng
outside the area."
The spill was being c leaned up
by ARCO and Garner Environmental of Houston, Kritz sald.
The barge was about 75 percent
full of No.6 cr ude, a moderately
heavy grade, when Its middle
buckled In about 10 feet o! water
and one tank ruptured, dumping
an estima ted 500 barrels Into the
wa ter, sa id Kritz. She said the
tank had a capac ity o! about4,000
barrels and the entlre barge
holds about 15,000 barrels.

tO

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Monthly

15

20
30
42
60
05 1 day

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Announcements

Word:~

$4.00
$6 .00
$9 00
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Raote-s OHC lo t O.:Oil:!illCUitve run~ Urulo~t&lt;n updif\' ~wo lf Loe d'"'\l'~
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COPY Ol AD liNt

Sli NDAV PAPER

&lt;'OI 'f'r t/11'

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DAY' 8UORf flU81 !CA TIO N
II OOAM SA1U tlDAV
') 00 PM MONDAV
l 00 PM 1U ESOAY
'1 00 PM W fD N£ SDAY
'l 00 PM THUR SDAY

Gathil Coun t~

991

Gall•pohs

61~

Pt

Pomt'I'OV

456

leoo

9 8~

CttMier

5 16

Apple

843
147

Portland

Ma son

949

74]

Ractne
RuU.artd

713
882
895
9)1

£&gt;67

Cooh~t lle

Ch•h11e

388 V'1nloo
245
256
643
379

M;a,son Co WV
Are it Code 304

Me-•gs Caunl.,.
A&lt;eil Code 614

A ttl ~ Cadc 614

446
367

t•.rdlllllgf'L .

Rm Gra"dtl
Guviln D1s1
llrabta O"t

Walnul

Moddlot!!po&lt;l

l elart F;~II s

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lnstHa nc~

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IJu~onn~

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Schools &amp; IIISI Itoctuut

16
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MIHCII.alle&lt;lll ~

!11

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W.anttul Tu Ou

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

lcldrl

]]

Muttt!Y to lo.tn

Bull .. u

]J

Poules~oun.t l S !!l~' lct:'&gt;

The Guiding Hand School is now accepting applications for pre-school en rollment ages 0·5 . Classes start Au ·
gust 27, 1990. If your child has a developmental disability in any one or more
of the following areas , you may be eli·
gible for pre·school services.

WH0-0-0-0
can help
you?
CLASSFIED
. ADS

Physical Development
Skills:

tnr ' s O'ffice .

William R. W ickline,
Meigs County Audit or
18)13. 11c

local Government Revenue
Astittence Funds) :
County: 40%. 8171.608.

Salem . 10 19% .
$13.107 .50, 83,980. 19 .
Sali1bury
5 99% .
87, 706.00, 02,327. 92 .
Scipio
7 99%.
010.277 62, 03,105.20
Sutton . 6 . 79%.
88.734 04, 02,638 83 .
TOTALS . 100 %.
8128,831 .00 , 038,863 50

Public Notice
PUBilC NOTICE

8128.831. $38,883 50

The Meigs County Budget

Commission ha1 completed
its apportionmentl of Undivided Local Government
Funds and County Undivided Local Government Re venue Auittance Fundi for

1991 .
These eslimetea ere based
on projections of the Ohio
Office of Budget and Man agement and are ntimates
of the amount• that will be
received by Meigs County .
Following is a complete
breakdown {Percentage. lo cal Government Funds. and

Arabian Desr•rt . a high-tech
archeologica l effort has pierced
cascad ing sand dunl's to n •vPa l
what ma y bP the rpmnanl s of a
lost civ ilization .
Using computer r nhanrrd
radar Imag-es tran smit 1Pd from
spa ce, sc IE'n ti s ts ha V&lt;' u ncovPrrcl
clues In Oman's Rub al Khall
deser t ro the buria l plac&lt;' of a
legendary society believed to bl'
the bustlin~ hub of the world's
frankincen se t ra de 5,001 yPors
ago.
K nown as Ad, the civiliza tion is
chronic led in the Koran and
mentioned in the tales of " Thr
Arabian Nigh ts," among others
Thf're are indirec t references to
the region In the £Jible . It is likl'iy
that the wise men who borr gif ts
to the Infant .J rsus carril'd
frankinc ense trad ed !h err.
Members of a Cal ifornl a-bas£'d
scientifi c expedit ion claim this
summrr to have dtscovered links
to Ad literally burled in th e sa nds
of time.
"The clu es are tantal izi ng,"
sa id George Hedges, a Los
Angeles a1torney and part · tIme
rxplorer who is a member of the
expedit ion sponsored by oil mag ·
naiP Armand H ammer and
barked by the Jet Propulsion
Laboratory In Pasadena The
expedition. included an arc haeo l·
ogls l . a geologist. a computer
scientist, a documentary film ·
maker and renowned British
ex plorer Sir Ranulph Flennes, a
eo-leader of the project.
Hl'dges sa id his crew surveyed
geo logical eviden ce of a burled
trail thai was likely one of the
routes used by camel -riding
frankincense lraders. He said
they also stumbled upon whal
may be arUfacts from Ad.
Hedges sa id he hopes the
now -barren land ol high-rise
sand dunes eventually will yield
the once-thriving city o! Ubar, a
main frankincense shipping cen·

'

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Aulu P.trh 1'. Ao • , ...,.,,.,.,~.
Aulu Ro: p .tu
f: .twp11Hj £ '1"'1"'"'"1
C.HIIj•l! l ~ &amp; M llll " ... ... .... .

Services
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H,"''''HI

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Muhol, • llumt' flo·p'" '

HI

Uplllli&gt;lt~ty

Townships · 30% ,
Corooretions : 30%.

8128.831. $38.883.50.
TOTALS . 100%,
$428.770. $129.545 .00 .

]TOWNSHIPS)

!CO RPORATIONS!

Bedford · 8 . 18 %.

Pomeroy · 38 . 80 % .
849,908 83, 015,079 .04
Middlepor t. 39 .01% .
850,178 95. 015,160.65.
Ra ci ne . 6 . 79% .
87,447 . 73, 02,250 .20 .
Rutland : 7 . 93% ,
010.200 .44, $3,081 .87 .
Syracuse : 8 . 47% ,
• 10.895 05. 03,291 . 74 .
TOTALS ' 100 % ,
$128.631 .00, $38,863 60

010,522 .02. $3,119.03.
Chester : 12 . 17 % .
., 5, 854.39. u. 729 89
Columbia :

7 18 %,

$9,235 . 71, 82, 790 .40 .
Lebanon ·

9 . 98% ,

812,837 37, 83,878 58
Letart :

4 . 79 %.

88.18142.81,86156
Olive :

9

78%,

812,680 . 11 , 83.80086
7 . 78%.

ter operated oy the peoplP of Ad
and described by advl'nturer
T.E. LawrPncf' as "lhe Atlant i s
of the sands ."
"This wa s an tnrtial shipping
point for frankincense. which
was an extrem&lt;'lY im por tan t
trade commodity in the anctent
wor ld and found markets as far
away as China and Rome ...
Hedges sa id .
Frankincense, an aromatic
res in produced from the sap of
trees Indigenous to East Africa
and 1he Middle Eas 1. was once a
cowted incense . It wa s used by
em pPrors and co mmon folk alike
in cere monies and re ligiou s
rtluals. includi ng imperial proCC'sslons and crrmations.
The Ads' lucra tive trading
soc iety lasted roughly from 3()()()
B.C. to the l si century A .D. It
died a victim of econom ic,
pollllcal and clima tic forces th at
coincided wi th a drop in demand
for the fragrance and the rise of
ChrlsUanlly. which preached
burying bodies Ins tead of burn·
lng them .
Even tually the villages of Ad
were burled by encroaching tides
of sand. which now rise like
mounlalns 200 to 600 !eel high.
Although historical or scholarly writings on th e subject are
scarce and many - because of
the lack of ruins- though !the Ad
civiliza ti on was mythical,
members of the expedition had
always believed the Ads li ved
somewhere In the sprawling Rub
al Khali desert.
Space-ace technology made It
possible to try to pinpoint the Ad
city and trade routes.
Unlike British explorer Bertram Thomas, who had tried In
the 1930s to map t he area but
gave up after finding himself
Isolated amid the sand dunes
wit h no water In sight, the team
was able to use sophisticated
computers and radar Images
generated by sat p.Illtes as th eir

"W(• &lt;lJ.lJJ li t•U nrw tPchniquPs to
hrtp ddinP whNr ~·(' shou ld

beg in lookrng." sa id Rona ld
Blum. a sPnior S&lt;'il•ntist at JPL
who joi nf•d thP rxpedition "It's

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16141 99!-6550
'IIIDENCE PHONE
16141 99!-1754

4 16·86-tln

For Old &amp; New Roofs. Shingles
Repairs, Gutters
Building and Remodeling
Wj• (;uoranlt't' lour lo\a1i~fa(·tinn

FREE ESTIMATES

JOSEPH D. JACKS
7 - 20 1 mo

I

HOT SPRING
SPA

Writesel

ROOFING

yllllr ·

)(~~ [). 1\' -/\ - Y( .i r

Gutters

j(cr '"·"

TAl-COUNTY RECYCLING
OFFERS 2 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU ...
POMEROY. OHIO : At. 7 &amp; S.R . 143
ALBANY, OHIO: Rt. 50 &amp; S.R . 143
NEW HOURS
POMEROY ' 9 a .m .- 7 p.m. 7 Days
AlBANY: 10 a.m. -5 p.m. 6 Days. Closod Sunday

Gutter Cleaning
Painting

PAYING AS OF TODAY, AUG. 10, 1990
#1 Copper •1 per lb .
Clean Dry Aluminum Cans. 35¢ per lb.
Clean Auto Radiators 44C lb.; Batteries S 1 ea .
Yellow Brass 40C lb.; Alum . Sheets 40C tb

FREE ESTIMATES
8-7-' 90-1 mo

614 992-5114

COUNTRY
MOBILE
HOME PARK

'""""

t\l il('rt( ,l" 1-' .1\'llflrl

•Mobile Home

Pllrt.Jh lc ~ r: . 1

P..t!qs

BAUM
LUMBER

I ln11 .I

CHESTER

Tu(1i11~

•Mobile Hom6
Rf"rttnls
•lot• Rentals

. 992-7479
lt. 33 Nerth of
Pomeroy, Ohio
1-12-' 88-tln

985-3301
8-9·1 mo.

614-992-2328

We Say What We do. We

Do What We Soy.
36 YRS . EXPERIENCE
7 23 t mo

Real Estate General

USED APPLIANCES

William A . Wick line
Meigs County Auditor
{8 1 13. lrc

compass .

Now's The Time to Find Out.

168 Norlh Second
Middleport, Ohio 4S760

Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CAUS
L.

and Snow?

&amp; HEATING

New location:

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949·28110

NEW- REPAIR

Public Notice

$61,818.00.

LOS ANC;f:LF:S iUP I I - On
lhP frin gP uf lhP windswrapt

THE DAILY SENTINEL

PLUMBING

"A I Reasonable Prim "

;,-"~
· ..... ·--...
..
..
···~..q _, •••·' .'

Space images po~nt to lost society

Teaching your children the ABC's is line, but you also need to
teach them about druQ abuse and the special
importance oft he letters NO.· Teach them the drug
alphabet early in life, and help them from becoming another
statistic in America's fastest growing
disease- - drug and alcohol addiction. Let them learn their
ABC 's in school, but teach them their "NO'S" at home.

/H
JY

~,.,!,

V,tro&gt;ll.tlW() ,

Is Your Roof Ready For Another Year of l&lt;e

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

Cognitive
Development ; and
Self Help Skills.

Public Notice

Orange :

THE MOST IMPORTANT
LETTERS WHEN IT
COMES TO DRUGS

17

Mt15tl:ar ln ~ ltwtll:nl'

~, 9

BISSELL
BUILDERS

Howord

810.007 49. 83,023 58
Rutland
9 . 18%.
811,808 .33, $3.587 .87

m

/6

s ,,l ,.

t,. ,

l111 tk~

Mon M~r ~ h .tn&lt;lo~c
Bu iltlm \1 Suppl"~
Pt!l~ II" S .-l e

949-2168

will onty reflect the new
co n1truction that has been
completed in 1990
The value• may be 11iewed
at the Mei gs County Audi -

Q

~G

51
!:Jfl

Downspouts

The changes in 11aluations

'

!J!)

Op1101 I \IIIII&gt;

Social. Emotional. or
Physicial Maturation ;

For more information concerning this
FREE SERVICE call 367-7371 from B
A .M .· 4 P .M .

completed .

/!J

Aucu~ f t!i

HouSOJh n ltl Good~
S p u otm g Goodo

!J 4

t •• ~,
tllthH•

B siness Services

Help Wanted

Areas include: Language, Speech,
Vision , and Hearing
Skills;

11aluations in Meigs County
for tax year 1 990 h" been

/1
II
/)
14

to • Rt!Jll

Merchandise

•~uemam•
Uu smeu

~l., . ,t ~I

,..,,,""

]I}OP M fRI DAY

11

Public Nollce

--

fit,,~

r ......... q

]I

G~,

lliH(j rltl i EJIU I,I

r-tuu ~us "" Rent
Mutult' HonloH r," n,.,,l

46
49

Pltt&lt;"iHll

New

W.mtodt"H " ~

l ·~• ·, too k

I:®IQtl

HelP W;~nllltl
Solua lton Wan t tJO.I

Gouvo~

Ui

G:l

oq

Space lot Rt! l ll
lfllolnl o:d I~&gt; R1~111
f'lloUIHtoc lll IOI Ao ~n t
r m it!;lSto

6716.16 of the Ohio Re ·
11ind Code. the change• in

-- --

l ui &gt; &amp; AuoJet~l'
flt~o~l I s hlu VVanlc~ d

41

(,'fll\\i.fi···f flll~l' \

h 1 l,uuo l '1"'1'",."'

Hu~UH~~ llutld o tHt ~

46
4f

PUBLIC NOTICE
Following Section

- - -- - -

~.olo ·

I "''"~hcd Room ~

C.utl ol

1:00-5:30

--

llotiii·S lur Sale
M u lJtl" Hoonu~ l u1
f ·""'~lor S..t lt~

45

POMEROY SENIOR CITIZEN CENTER

--

Real Estate
II
J/
.i J
JI
\',
Jli

A.p,triiiWnl lut Ht•ul

THE BEAT GOES ON WHEN
YOU GIVE BLOOD THRU
RED CROSS BLOODMOBILE
WEDNESDAy I AUGUST 15

ing fur hrr outburst on Aug . 6.
whPn shr screamed " Liar~ '· at a
prosrcu lion wi I ness.

gag. blindfold and ti e each of the
-~ vrr, s and heI ped lead four of
lilrm in to th e barn one by one. He
sa id he did no t help take Karen
into ! h(' barn because another
member, Ronald Luff. swung the
b y&lt;'ar ·old girl over his shoulder.
Another c4 l t member. Gregory
Winship, has admitted thai he
ran a chainsaw ou tside the barn
during the k illin gs to cover up the
sound of gunshots.
In th e months after the killings.
thr eu lt moved to West Virginia.
and later to Missouri. Some of lh&lt;'
follower s were arresled In Mls
sour!, and the Lu nd grens were

3
6

Ovet 1 5

Rate

15
15

44

rHIDAV PAP! R.

Cult leader's murder trial to begin
PAINES\'II.I.L.Ohto &lt;uf'l rFollowrrs of a cult IPadf'r .tn·

Words

t

'S t~ l\ltHt.~ ·~ 11111 rt!sponstble hH t!tlot ~ .tht~ r lu~t tl il\l

TtlUASO~V PA P ~H

I

Oays

'liJi!ltll litH' lypt~ unl~ u!O,.d

TU ES DAY PAPER
Wl ON~ SDAY' PAPE:R

li ng that crimr. ht• said.

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

47
4)

MONDA 'I' PA.PtR

" It was a well -oiled opPralion,
vrr y well-lhoughl out, vrry professional," Tay lor said.
"No one was ready to fight," he
said of thr troops, tired after
I hei r long flight . ·'They basically
looked beat."
From his experiPncP s with the
Hajj, Taylor knew the Saudis did
not allow photographs, so he had
a fPl low crew member shiC'ld his
camera while hr look plclurrs of
the U.S. tr oops in formation ,
poring over maps and load ing
onto trucks. He sold the photo
graphs to United Press fntrrna
tiona! when he retur nrd to tht•
Un iled Slates the following day .
Tay lor sa id World Airways, a
struggling airl in e with 10 DC-10
charter planes. was sr·heduied to
f ly in more of the rstlmall'd
&gt;0.000 t roops the Uniled Stales is
deploy ing to Saud i Arabia.

The Daily Sentinel- Page- 7

RATES

ICht;d•
lm '~ '"" ~ l11sl dil)' ad ruus nt pitpml C olt ln·ltne 7 OOv '"
,,...,. .tilt•• p ubh ca lton I n m~k,. cotlt Cll"''
•l),d~ th.tllllU SI bt~ pi.. d "' ddlldOlLO: on••

U.S. troops somber, fear chemical weapons
IV ASH IN GTOK (UP[ I
Members of the 82nd Airborne
Divis ion who flew to Saud i

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

CiNA . ~ ""- , _ ._._

205 NORTH SECOND AVE .

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
OFFICE 992 -2B 86 1HOME 992 -5692
DOTIIE S. TURNER. BROKER
RACINE - Redu ced- On adeadend street Great pl ace lor
[ htldr en. th1s 2 bedroom rnohrtr homr• has a nrce yarrl Rr

du ced hom $13.500

90 OAT WARRANTT
WASHERS- liDO up
DRY£R5-I69 up
,
REFRIGERATORS- liDO up '
RANGES- Gas-Elec - 1125 up
FREEZERS- 1125 up
MICRO OVEN S-179 up

SER'IICE
We can repair and remre rodiolors and
heater &lt;ores. We &lt;an
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Go• Tonks.

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
~92-S33S

PAT' HILL FORD

or985 -35 6l

Acron From Post Offiu
POMEROY, OHIO

992 -2196
Middleport, Ohro
l\3 tlc

10/ 301'89 lfn

NOW ONLY 112.500

\mpossi blf' to sParc h lhP whoit'

dPsPrt. so wt_• hf'lpt•fl to target lhr
approximate lfK'ation for thr
arc haPo logists to start looking "
Studvi ng s;Jtel iil e !apograph)
i ma~es gpnerat Pd h:v compu ter.
Blom and .JPL. assls lanl director
Charles Elachi werr able to
disUngul sh al leas! one 100-yardwlde hoof-troddPn path lyi ng
under tons of s&lt;Jnd, which thry
brlievp was unr in a nPtwork of
roads 1hat cut armss the desert.
" I t 's vcr~· suhtlt• TllC' ground
ha s been worn orway PVN so

sl i ghtly into the desert floor. "
Blom sa id "We found modern
t racks and anciPnt unPS. The nrw
ones go around tht'duncs. thr old
unes go under them "
Although the Ad team had been
planning for six yrars to explore

the rl'glon , l hl'y had not intended
to st art C'XCava t i ng until January
1991. Bul !hey stum bl ed upon 900
pollery shards and fllnl plecrs
and the trade rou te during a
thrE'r-wePk "rpcon naissance" in

July .
Because of high -powered de·
sert winds. lhe learn could not
stay longer and left the ar tl facts
with the Oman Department of
National Heritage until the expedition returns.
"We hope during the main
expedi tion that we can definitely
prove these legend ary people
exis ted," Hedges said .

RUTlAND - Smrl h Run Ad - Beautrlu l s! arl. app101 4
acres o! vacant gro unrl l'l'rth a rlup, wr.ll. ba 1n. stock tank. and

rs lenced
POMEROY -

1

13.500

Chesler Rd . - ? lo is. newer hom e. 2 bed

room s and 2 decks AssumabiP loan l'lr th a ~ mJII payment
Call tor more deta1l s1

MICROWAVE
OV_EN REPAIR
All MAKES

We

CHESTER, OHIO

MUST SEE 144 .900

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

co&lt;neJ store Has 6

992-5335 or 985 -356 1

•GRAVEL
•LIMESTONE
•FILL DIRT
•ANYTHING
AT All

Bring It In Or
LET ART - Mar ntenance free E&lt;teiiOI. 4 bedr ooms. 2 baths
3 srllmR porches. and a dmrn r. room Nt ce b•~ level yar d
Fenced a1ea wrth biHn lot an rm als. and a tree house !01 ch rl

dren
MIDDLEPORT -

Hr stollcal

lookrn~

apartment s up and another st ore down Start vuu• own bus•
ness Ha s lot s ol toom . and has an 1ncome Call for more de ·
tarls1

NAYLOR'S RUN - Beau trhtl vtt'W. CO! nP r lot Wllll2 15 acres
Has natural gas ac ross !he road, elect r• c available. Older dr.·
veway
onv '6.000
PEACH FORK RO . - Showcase krl chen. burl! rn drshwashet.
Je nn ·Arr range. oven and mrcrowave Three bedrooms. full
basement. and lot s of brg rliCe

tu~es

for

~hade

sttl mg on 2

JUST 1 36.000

p1et1y ams

WE NEED LISTINGS

11

R'L L. HOLLON
1RUCKING

Help Wanted

Pi'k Up.

Across From Post Offi,e
217 E. S..., Pomeroy
POMEROY, OHIO

985-4427

3/6/' 90/ tln

111 ·90 tfn

•VINYl SIDING
•AlUMINUM SIOING
•BlOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
Free Estimates

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
Now Homos l11ilt

"Free Estimates"

PHYSICAL THERAPIST WANTED
Position available at Americare·Pomeroy Nurs ing &amp; Rehabilitation Center. Position inv.olves
treatment of geriatric patients wtth pnmary
emphasis on neurological and orthopedic ad missions.
The facility has excellent ancillary and nursing
support 101 a true team oriented rehabtlttalton
philosophy.
Contract candidates will be considered. salary
competitive. If interested contact:
Mary Mason, MS, SLP, CCC
Rehabilitation Coordinator
Care Enterprises
500 West Wilson Bridge Road
Suite 245
Worthington, Ohio 43085

PH. 949-2801
ar Res. 949-2860

985-4473
667-6179

NO SUNDAT

5 31'90 tin

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL
"LIGHT HAULING

•FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK
992-2269
USm RAILROAD nES
8-12-90

Announcements
3

Announcements
AOOP'TION

We'd love to ahare our hNrtl I
hem• with lnflnt. Will otfw love,

wannth I aHectlon, llnanelally
NCUfl, lata Mlp NCh oth•l
Utdlcai!Ligat txpenHI paid,
CaU coiled Evanlnp, 201-4272346.
Fumhure Sale Now In Proareu
at Flair Fumhurt, GlliTpolls

Forry, 'f:.::v._ _ _ __

�Page-8- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

3 Announcements
-ADOPTIONSpoclol

-•otl.. rour ....,

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

LAFF-A-DAY

fomlly
lnd ..

llolfy llnonco. 12,1100. uklnv

llnvto? You 1._1d bo roodlna
- Hotllno
- .. . . . . . .
llnaloo.
-~~- Boa 104S,1lof.

-ton•,

-•u

prlcl. ~75-v22 .

'•

s....

1ruo lrlp,
doy Aug. 11, Pltt-h 11 CiQo
clnnatL S:ll. trip tlikot. Buo
doporlt Point Pfo- 1:30 All.

lrlvot,

45

111:1 ......... Ifill Nova. -

-1111.

41 Houses lor Rent

ll431 .. - - .

3 roomo a bath portiltly turnlohld, loco114 In '"""' a14-

Giveaway

4111-4108, .. fiWN-2'1110.

•

72 Truck&amp; lor Sale
ftll fold t Till Truofl wllh lo1G
R. Bod. Eac. Cond.
f;2IOO. ....... 0181

A-lot---.
If---.-

liMping_,.

Television
Viewing

71 Autos lor Sale · :

Furnished
Rooms

t~:~1~ IIUO.

Rentals

~RUOIJC...-7Sfl.

4

kiT 'N' CARLYI.U., Lury Wrtpt

Apartment
lor Rent

Ono ..,. 1r1llor lol wllh county :-;--,-.....,.;;:....:..;:::.:::..___,_"""

MI-3U11M.IIory Ellyn ond Cttuc-.

•

44

The Daily Sanmei- Paga

Monday. August 13. 1990

• - · 11pllc tonk 111&lt;1 -lrlc 1br, llom't4 opt, - - &amp;
hoolo ... On blo&lt;k lop I&lt;IOd. dlyer, In VltOon, IM-44W121.
P1rtlolly t.,...... Owner wta por-

• ehonco. Col -

........ CIII

~.A~13.1990

EVENING

fill QIIC Dump lnJck. .....
ooncl, t1.JGO, ... 246-8087.

-

Hotlf.

1m 1 ton Fenl lnJck. bod. lUGO.-- or hi-

with~

Alao trailer ...,.a. An Mok-upa.

CoM 1ft1&lt; 2:00 p.m., -~

MON.. AUG. 13 •

'=~::' S@~~lA-~t~S··
:::
S&lt;lltH tty
POU.AJf ....,:;...__ __
ClAY I .

O four
Roorrongo lonors of
Krambl«&lt; WOJdl
low

10

46 Space for Rent

WI-N BOTHER 10 WRITE?

Commorclol Sian .._ At. Sf
Wool. a14·24~

511E'LL NEVER REMEMBER
VOU .• '(()U'RE TI-lE KIND OF
PERSON WHO 15 EAS't'
TO FOR6ET ...

11M'fOUR COUSIN,
AND EVEN 1

I

LIPSIT

I

p II 0

I

tho

beform lour almpll; words.

I

s0

1MO 1 ......-ton Dhlwolll. 4
-tit a drlvo;
ton.1MI 5-10, IIIIo - ·

SMI, Muon WV.

I

SARPG
1--rl:....:;...:l
~5.-=..-,~:.

1 1

_ _ •

.

I've always wondered why
when there are two television
programs I like they are always

.-

I
' I I I e Comp....
!,

L-..1.-...J...-L.~--'

REMEMBER '(()U .

9

L 0 C EE R

II I
8

on ----- oleachother.

a

-od

tho chiKkl•
tho milling -d•
you develop from IIOfl No. 3 bolow
~y lilling in

PRINT NUMBERED .
LETTERS IN SQUARE;

I'

6 FOR
UNSCRAMBlE lETTERS I
ANSWER

IIIIIIII

SCIIAM-I.ETS ANSWERS
Kaiser - Money- Hound - Oullint- SHUT ONE
Advice my mother gave me, "Before you marry. keep
yourtwoeyesopen and alter you marry, SHUTONEr

BRIDGI

NOIITB

.KQ

Postpone
the decision

lmf7fl. - ..... Clfl HP, ~~ .....
~
COft'IDlll• top ....
Colt lltwi6-1Hi lllor :00 p.m.

Hou. ao.t.M' At. a•- 1172
engiM,
1,000S5CI
................
11' 111 t10I. 1514471-21110.

Yard Sale

7

wl-.

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

--

1flll CoMI!o St~; ' " '

- ; 11M
Odd!
.,. ttn&amp;Mtt;
,..CM\Of
Foril

AU. Yord Saloo Ill Plld In
........... DEADliNE: 2:00 p.m.
tho dor boloiW lho 111 11 to ""'

Aoro.,.

...,..
._
..

~-eta

~;
loii
coca. f1t t41 0111. ..,._..
17111.

SUncfoJ 14111on - 2:00 p.m.
, __ Mcwidol odltlon • 2:00
p.a&amp;oourdoy.

NOW ON IALEII

=-.

55

--lng.

... holt .... olr
•
,,.,., onachod gorogo. 20
mtn- " - AthlnoL 1 ·112
mlfoo
to lllolgo
·
Ro....,_
ond High qulrod. IM-aeUISJ.

112 botho, -

tnnnfl.
All 1\a - · · cfolhl~rth to 7 ,...,

z..-

Humpluoyo
Road. llandoy,

Judy

lfi!I OI.

J2 po.
mtlo from Rutlond. Pl,aatJ; H&gt;r
S.le ar ,._.: I ' ' cam houM

Public Sale

Alcfo PMIWOO -ion Company

oow booking ouetlona, u.
C)lffence makn: the diHerenca.
L - Oh~ Kontuelly, w..

Ylrglnlo, 304-r n-1785.

W.rtod To

Someone lo lay outdoor carpt4
on ClmMI.tape. ~~

Addn,..,.~IV4 -

1n Noolhup, a roomo &amp; a
both, t14 Hl24tl.

.... ...I "" _ . . , ....., In

~lo ... , -......

15

llur:

Lacty to ... '"

··-1

Pol1t~toy,

_ _'!"'_"!!!,_I

w......... c.re..

Wanted to Buy

a.w

Ad. In
1·4.000. 114-IIJ-72117.

on

&amp; Auction

Junk Autoo
wtth or wtlhout rnotora. C.l
Un'y LMIJ..... 111 a;Q,

•

Schools &amp;
Instruction

Help wanted

11

~,500

-

CA£DIT CAADI

ttvu

appllclf\one -

ntUf'ldl y,

1 :00-UM:Ii.

18

Wanted to Do

Child ..,. prowldod In rny fifo
Grandt Home. daye. Exo. cere,
wr/NMDMRN MtM. I'M-241-

Pizza su- . _ !ISIG.
" " - OaiMp;;ij., Oho. Apply ln
""phono cotho ptoaae. ~R-ill C...
_l....,tho-of1flo
............... bolng -~~~II _ . ,. llatio,.... ......... tho
Unto In Clalllpoflo ... eoune.w.w. AcztJ .... c.r.
port~IIM hot~.
and Homo. 24 houro coro, tounctry,
a llttndl a ft onty!
k lot ,... tncl homl cookM . .11.
IIIII
Wt promiM lendw lwtng car.
eM our .......... For ....,.
AVON I AI A'"' I Slllr1oy ••
Info c:.~ll :J04...II5..3I3 or ,...
........ _.'IS-,.21.
1-!IS ond Ilk fo&lt; Judy.
llt;dl• In !"l' hDm&amp; Alo ...., Pauc.'t , _ C.. c.tl•.
~·a

_.,., 111111 bo 1n
.., _ _ , _ _

tC1H

mob! .. homt

Furm.Mcl 2 room• I

CINn. No

• ClOy

...

:..""t attln
.....

""'*UI,~

.....,.. 1n '"" -

....,..,. 4111112.

F - - Apt, &amp;07 s_.., Ave,
O.atlr:ll:t S225; Utll"l• pUt
tbr,
e u11att• 7p.m.

polo,

13001mo.

l., aooot eond,

10 1HI'5.. .

on

OOJill(f(,:m( ~m.

&lt;PMMrm£ eRAI::iffi
roo 114 oooJ

1-...

TIRAY TRAVIL TMfURII
CLOIIOU'I1

no_,....,

AI ...ao to 10 II Ifill-'
Pkaa

LJE!RAI(y,,.

"'"'--

prlcoo

,.....
...,
IR'IINIS CA.W'ER IAWI
AIC. lony -

lor """' 20

Fb:ld ,... fiMnetnQ 1¥111....
On
81. AI. 7 Nonh II 8t. llf. \IIIII.
~ 10

Services
Home
Improvement a

~HING.

4 -

Ml Yl. -

114-fG.

,""" ' ............'..... ' .

SWAIN

AUC'T10if I RJRNITUIIL II
011.. Sl., ClatHP'*.- . , _
fumltUfO, holt-. •
-boola. I-.31H.

•e:IJ'=-.
.
'at
r u::::·t.mlll.-

Ca:;ttu..._...._ ... . ,
I

I

riiGAnL

- -

wfth room

IrS OOtN'
A IAN6-UP
JDB,MISS

'IIJD HtiO,fi.IIINI'I tf
I JEST COME OVER

t15-17!11.

TO SEE HOW YOU

LIKE YORE NEW
MAII.·DRDIR
SICILI.IT II

-=

ttn Hille-. 14l70, olfl&lt;.
Ooto of
111MO 3:00p.m.
·-2201.

---Ful. . .

1012.

NDS'IIt

121tl. 2

CentNI Air a,....._
15111
"r oppotrtrnont

"" K l - - 2BR, uc.
-

- -·

-

"'"""' 7V'l14' Corpot 3

l a d - 2 Iota., o.idaii
T~l_~nlrel Ak, Total Eleolria

·--

..., -Corio ... .........,,

112

lhorp. 11100. 114•0.000
rs:a.,
ttt -.au•

ASTRQ..GRAPH

eo... ,,....._

'BERNICE
. BEDEOSOL
~...

Of

OWihiWOJII

85 General H.,llng

a •

"v I 'm
,,

f ,!1111 SUIJP~''"
.~ ~ l.t')!:JC~

chaoes. Know - . , to IDol&lt; tor ro-

mance and yoo 'll find If. The AotroGropf1 Malchm&amp;ker lnlllntly which ligna are romantically perfect loa
yoo. Mall $2 to Malchmoker. c/o lhla
newtP81*. P.O. Box 91428,
OH 44 10 1·3428.

c-.

VIRGO (Aloe- 2:1-lept. 22) VOUf greal-

gratification loday w1n
• come 11om lltuallona - · you use
yoor monlol p r - mxl roooun:efuf.
olf periONII

nou to clrcumWinl obatactes.
LIMA (lepl. JI.OeL Zl) Your curioeHy
could bl rlfhlr lntlflM today and thlo
might molco companlona """ uncorntartable, eopeclllfy Kyou QUHtiOn t11em
about laue !hey don't want to dlacuaa.

~
-

llldinour
.........
llloofrfool,-tJa.

LIDIRIIdl
lilting,
-

J

..

=.~-:&amp; a,aaa ....

........... --.
_,_Col_

........ tltl ........

...... 14, 11180

, _ by pride In your wort&lt;.
AQUAIIIUI (Jon. 20-Foll. 111 Today
you could bl organtzed and melhOdlcll. but only up to • t:lfloln l&gt;(lWII.
Aller that you might ....., things you
lhoUfd bl tlklng care of up to chanco.
PtiCES (Fob. • llar&lt;ll •1 Vau'l b1
rather popullr with hionda a n d - today ond 10m11 may _ , gravilale to
your piKe uninVIted . Make the drop-Ins

1811

IICcomed.

10---t.

AlliES ( - 11·Aprll1t) TlteJe lsr,-1
muc1t thlll'l NQiy
your an.,..
uon today, - • you'l bl both c:unoua and ub•r~
When
· you loam ~ n will bl dllllcult to

keop to vourtfllf.

10011'10 (Oat. at-Moo. 22) Yau lhautd oTAiiRUi (Aptii.II-IMI...,, . . VONI bill
be rather comloot- In ~dol loa phGII8I golnltaclay ...
lltuatlonl todl)l. boWl" K )IOU ~ ~ lfUiy lo bl.._.. toftlt tohlcll you ...
your ettrlbutn P&lt;-'Y h will tlke . , · lheCiy t..-. Focut an u- .,..
oxc.p1lon&amp;lfy stwp llcl-..ry ta better 01-lng tot. ' * - I n flllcls

you....,,_
IAGmAMII (..... 21 I * 111 .... iiiMI ..... It 'In I . , Tho bulilr
you nlfiCIIIo, . . 1111t1r , . n tiiiiV
pondlt~ lllarta lltOuld
to lunaltofl. Oool, be IINitl to - an
IICIGry tot
will b e - more
- . 1 I IC 5 IS llu ftc 1P flllr,
t-ltiiiW',.Wi 9 710-atUIIIo .
youlnldll'l.

"*'

.............
.....
,....,..,..t...

\Cfll •c.-tiWsllr•IJIOU . .

l ?laotat~til -

"Hold this up to your eer like 1 ll'llhell.
Listen ... you can hear the ~I"
I

+KIOII
.AJIOI
t A 10

.....

40insect
41 German
river

state
(abbr.)
II High spo4
10 Expect
12 Lay away
13 Loftier
15 Also
16 Porker's
place
17 Written
letter
18 Carte Mam
20 Calerpillar's
hair
21 Stage
musical
22 Infuriated
23 In lull
swing
25 Meter

DOWN
1 Celer~y

2 Influence
3 Glib
4 Bethel

seat
5 Import

6 On the

toad

7 volatile
8 Eloqueni
11 Wobble
14 Well·
named
wr~er

16 Biblical
mountain

27 Trumpet
kin
30 "Beau

111 Plu vious
20 Italian city
23 Turkish
coin
24 Col.
Hogan's
confine·
men!
25 - Lou
Renon

•

31 Anes·
thetic
33 Fine
cotton
36Scion
37 Prior to
(p~el.)

(Brrt .)

114-86-m~

to bobyofltlna In rny homo
Ape: "'J I ... Hwt

--

W ITIU.IT l:ill2

HELP.

tu I II diP.

- · EIIIOflont

I CAN 00 "ll-IAT

-.
... __
Aft,..._
- a..,
.........

=-

SOUTH

-

5 Pur~an

lHf.Y JJSr ClltJI?tlT
sr.: eu6 rn::M "H.

:::; ~ u.- o.a.o. ,,.. =.::Ja,_Ohlo

2BM.

,,. 118 0331.

~.::~~·

101-"'- •--

11M YW -

U'±t' p 1, Ohio, S..ch II. One
-.,.., tumlthod apt., da~d
&amp; ,........., roqulrad, 304-W-

~'

...........

- T-lop, - · aooot ......
tlon.

o.,. Colf:e,._•,_
...

.,....II_,_
-

-

Ref.

l dop. roquiNd. ........ IS18.

chllcfron. no

~L ~L Pl.

1-19-r', US1W

--·

phln IIIII OOIOoined, -

-low mlloo.
duol-elr.
.......

~-·
· ..... -- ·~a.

Gooclllallf• "
14
boby o1 In '"I' hootto, IKC

-

--.,.......

~h.

J~Mt.

-·-...

Qldo 0tooao,

-~~
. . SIOO.I1141NZTl

anoo

. . -.eon
~lllra.

-

+1017SI

When the king of diamonds was led, :
+KJ4
declarer ducked. Weal oootinued witli
VUlnerable: llotb
a second dlamoad, Eut diJeardin&amp; I
Dealer: South
low club. Declarer woo and played ·
dummy's A-Q of spades, oo wbich East Soofll
Norfll
played lite seven and the three-spol.j 1 NT
P
au
INT
AllWhen declarer played 1 thlnl spack! ;
!rom dummy and Eut followed with
Openlnc lead: +K
the nine, the pnl7Jiem wu wbelber to
play East lor an orl&amp;lnal ?ooldin&amp; ol in lhe key suiL Today'• Soulll M*ld
lour to lhe jack. Flna1ly declarer ~ then bave m-tain knowJedct ol wbat
clded that Eut - lryin&amp; to &amp;Jve tilt to do. Four rumt11 olltear11-ad tell
imJOi ion ol bolillttl (our canis in lhe declarer that West beld lour betlru to
suit when in l1ct Weal btld lite jack. So be&amp;iD wltli. Three rotlllda of dllbl
South went up with the kllll of spades. waald lllaw thal Weal beld only two.
Wbeo West lbowed oul. declarer bad And West wu already ~ to uve
only 11 trtcu and bad to coocede the bad n... dlamaod&amp; oriciDallr- nat
leaves roam lor only twa lplldes. So
WI trldr. to Eut's spade jack.
Declarer fltmked en elemeotary deelarer COitld play dummy's A-Q at
teat of declarer play. Wbell JOU bave spadelaad, oo U..
all the trtcU butooe, play aut aU lhe apinlt Eut's jack wilb ablolute
side-tuits belon makJnC your declaioo m-tainty.

ACROSS
1 Fastener

EEK AND

.. - · Toyat1 Oot'-

addiUon on hatf ICrl IGI, 3M-

111own

....... on. - · 0n&gt;p4no
"I IW.IM 1411224.

..... U KJOif ,,_, I I .. 111011 -

.,._'IHhbtlp.M.

---~

12152, 117!1, 1br, with pe&lt;ell, AC,
bl ...., on Thomoeon foW..
low lld.l2,500. 114-311'1-78113.

:-~ -m·..~ .:" -·•"*"•
_,

Ct~

. . - . . . . ,.,.., homo .. - .

BEAIJTfFIJL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES. liS&amp; Jadloon Plilo
I
from 11a-. Walk 1o
f14-4111-2Sil8. EOH.

Goocl ~,_!!!,.,_ outo, N,OOO
- · ..,...,..ns oftw f :OO

e~~n

Ev""'"C

- -- I·Sdoyopw-L
I: ........:OOp.OI. 114-2-37.

-as•

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

-1011 Ell. 02!124.

-·-·:1645.
..._Ina

GoY

Ro-.

11&amp;3 -

Nlcofy Fum't4 SmaH houoo,
aar-ge,
no1
tutlabte
tor

_
.............y .....all
AIM ,..uly fof NO dopOall
VtSMIC and cuh ~Chane. tAVON • All 1reu, C.ll .....llyn

-lon.

-

Pll.

lln;:l101 wfth buc:Utoww,_ 2 ar
~~~"'r· clocll, brick pot,.. ....
fub
utlfltr bafldlna, 1117 Ook
Orin 114-441-o4121affer lp.m.

Schooll. &amp;M-3:51

rfghl front
ofllf. 1M-3M-

Apte. tn Pomeroy and Mkld""*'. C.ll H2-7811

OraeiOUI living. t and 2 bedroom oportmanto II VIII.
Minor
lftd
Alverakl•
"'""monlo In 11\ddlooorl. From
Site. Coli 114-fl!l2·ml EOH.

__ ..__=·-

-

...
• FlroOinl,
&lt;, ...

'KQJtl

by THOMAS JOSEPH

1:00

~' 2Bfl. nolngJail.,
..,._,..
on
•.114 Jll em.

-

Two ...., homo with Mt -

I04o41W7II5 -

1111 Dodgo Omnl 024, 1100.

Fum..._. Efflcleney, $17!5,
Uti\Hioo Pold, Oal!lpofla. 1114446-4418, an., 7p.m.

v. ..y ....... 3br, s botho,
=T dlnl..1,-~~

Employment Services

11:"-

·-1-1&amp;08.

1

For Sale: :S bedroont houM on

p.m.

Apartment
lor Rent

••u

•

CROSSWORD

1t?l l'ofd -..... 1100. runo

35 WHt Apt 2br, 1 blth, private
tnc:IOMd pt~Uo, clo.e to groury
.. orte l •hopping center, water,
.._.., lruh provldMI, $265lmo.

""" Siloetyte,
..... - 2
colonlll
4 bedroome,
botho, .,........,, ....... &amp;
othtra. lulklnaecta, In
ground
·
l:oft
SomorvtiiO
Reatty,IOM'JS4030 or 17W431.

Uotom ctothlnv and homo In,...,_
Aoo4 behind tho
...,._10-?pm.

r ..octar. -...cloy. u

44

"-M ,.

Rain-.
Tundor thru Thundoy. Aug. 14

'J

thlnl......, ,._

C8mptl'8 ..

"" llotol lulok, - ......
~~--a.-..._.

Country Sll'llna. 4 blctieotna, ~

r.

15. ,

Building
Supplies

MolorHomea

141
AI.
Tu_.
Plalno, Ttuoana. - . . _

9

Hlt.P

At. 7 (oerooo

Acceuorlle

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

8

f'LIA$E

YAIIAIIA

Auto Part• &amp;

YIRI Solo, Aug 14 ond 15, 1:00
til ' · F - s~ ~ traitor
por\,lllooon,WV.

Roeb-

-

from I t - ) Gdlpollo, 011. ....
tti2Qt

Pl. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity

Yord 9....

ATTITIII&gt;I
"OILIM

WAVE..-RS. - . Po•o,
ftc I
leMoe.. ArftAo.

8101 IIARI

IWT
+U71

' •u
I 76 I

Declarer based his play lor stx no- 1 +t 1
trump on his ability to win a fiiYCho- ,
l01ical ballh! wllh Eat. Too bod. Simple arllbmelic would bave served him ·
better.
I

for Sale

.

; WI!ST

.

75 Boats &amp; Motors
Transportation

tl7112
+AQI

By JIIIIH Jacoby

Cl_., ... .,.

I-lUI

+AQ4

_..

atatlla • •

·190 )GIIIII?. Tl?iMo _.. liP till yow
IP tltl
tl-

!:a

26 Mr. Musial
27 Canal ·
(Sp.)
28Wan
29 Osage or
Temple
32 Waprti
33 Snoop
34 Seize
35"A-In
the Sun·
37 Egg on
38 TroR
39 Anatomi·
cal
network
DAILYCRVPTOQUOTES-He~'sbow to work It : 8-13
One letter stands lor another. In Ulis sample A is USt~l
for the three I.'s, X lor the two O's, et.c. Sirtf!le letlers.
apostrophes , the length and lonnation ollhe words arc all
hints. Each day the tode letters are different

CBYPTOQOOTES
II 0 A
V Z
J S Z

KQ N
RXZ C J
VK

RZUCQA

IOMMXAT

GXJS

S D Pl

KQNUCZMI.

D

QA

z0 uJ s

XA

MQPZ

KQN

GQA'J

CXATMZ

DN.ISQU

S D R ·

UXPDM

NAEAQGA

Yu'nba'•Ctaeltt 'tllHEENDOFWISOOM
IS TODIIEAMIBIENOUGHTOLOSE 1HE IJRUM
IN THE SEEKING OF rr. - a••a..M FAWCNER

�Page 10-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

. Local news briefs... - - ,
Continued from page 1
Sheriff James M. Soulsby reports that Persons will be
transferred from the Wood County Jail to Mason County, w.Va.,
where he also faces c har ges . He will then be ex tra dited to Meigs
County .

Pyatt found guilty on charge
Amy Elizabeth Pyatt, 21 , of Ravenswood, W.Va. , was found
guilty of Involuntary manslaught er Friday a ft ernoon In th&lt;'
death of her Infant son In November. 1989.
The jury took more th a n five hour s to delibera te at the least
possible guilty verdict In the case, which Included a
re-co nvening In the courtroom lor clarification about th e
two-count murder indict m ent, after lour hours of deliberation
with no decision .
In a signed stateme nt made to Chief Ed Speece of the
Rave nswood Pollee O.,partment, one of his sergeants and a
West VIrginia s tate trooper, Pyatt confessed to giving birth to a
baby boy around midnight on Nov. 21. 1989, when Pyatt Is
alleged to have given birth to a baby boy In the bathroom of her
grandmother's apartment a nd left It there for a while before
wrapping him in a toile t tissue wra pper and throwing him ou t
the window. The Infant was found outside the apartment on Nov.
28, 1989.
The maximum penalty Pya! t co uld receive will be one yea r in
the county jail and a S1 ,000 fine.

Middleport pool closed this week
The Middleport Pool a t Genera l Hartinger Park will be closed
during this week due to the Meigs County Fair. The pool will
resume regular hours, noon to 5 p.m . on Sunday . Th ere mus t be
at lea st 10 swimmers at the pool by 1 p.m . for it to remain open
the remainder of the day , acco rding to Roger D Willi ams.
Middleport recreation director.

Fair parking reminder issued
Meigs County Fair pa l rons this yea r can park at Meigs Hi gh
Sc hool and be taken by bus to the Rock Springs Fairgrounds .
The Middleport United Pentecos tal Church Is again this yea r
handling the parkin g for the fair and report that the bu s will run
continuously from the high school to the fai rgrounds fr om 6 to 11
p.m . Guards will be posted at the high school lots to wat ch
vehic les. The last bus will run from lhefalrgounds to the sc hool
parking lots at II p.m ., It was reported.

Iraqi ...

Conti nued from page 1

t~nker attempting to loa d oil
Monday fr om a ter minal a long
Its Red Sea coas t , the British
Broadcasting Corp. reported,
quoting s hipping sources. Th&lt;•
tanker was dented perml'5ion to
dock at Yenbo , west of the
Moslem holy city of Medina .
The closure of Saudi ports
leaves Iraq with only two possl ·
ble outlets , the Jordanian port of
Aqaba and Iraq 's tiny sea ou11et
In the northern gu lf.

Faced wit h the econom ic iso la·
lion and the military buildup
a round his country, Saddam
launc hed his so-called " peace
Initiative" Sunday. war ning of
high cas ua lties In the event of a

war .
Iraq 's ruling Ba ' ath Party
newspaper Monday criticized
U.S. reJection of Saddam 's Initiative and said Iraq was determined to fight and win .
The newspaper wrote In an
editorial t he rejection showed
that Washington lacked respec t
lor human rights because It had
failed to push Israel to withdraw
from the occupied territori es.
The newspaper said the Arab
natio n stood behind Saddam
" until final victory is realized ."
Saddam has declared a holy
war on the Wes t and urged
uprisings against Arab lea&lt;jfr s
he described as corrupt. In
announcing his Initiative Sun ·
day. he also said that If the U.S

Lottery numbers
CLEVELAND ILJPII - Satur·
day 's winning Oh io
numbP rs :
Pl ck-3

Lo ttery

711.
Pick&lt;!

ticket sales tota led
$1.502,39~ . with a payoff due of
$4,335,121.5()
Pi ck-4
3847 .
Pick ~
ticket sa les to ta led
$279,&amp;39 . wit h a payoff due of
$372.700
Cards
Seven of hearts .
F ive of c lubs .
Jack of diamonds.
Ace of spa des .
Cards ticket sales totaled
$248.999. with a pa yoff du e of

$143.030.
Super Lotio
14. 30, 31. 32. 36. 43 .
Super Lotio ticket sa les tota led
$3,897 ,325.
Kicker
892612.
Kicker ticket sa les to taled
$698,213.

administration failed to accept
hi s proposa ls Iraq would
"strongly res is t with force ... It s
aggressive plans."
Iraq also has stepped up
criticism agal ns 1Egypt s ince the
Arab League decided Friday to
deploy a pan -Arab force to Saudi
Arabia and the Gulf. Muba ra k
was the first to send troops to the
region.
Mond ay, Sa ddam sa id In a
sta te ment car ried by the Iraqi
News Agency that Iraqis should
treat all Arabs equally regard ·
less of their rulers' at tl tudes
because " man y of I the leaders !
are of foreign choos ing."
"They are our sons, brothers.
and suppor t them In th e face of
treason and deviation." Saddam
sa id .
In special Wtekend broadcast'
on Iraqi Radio aimed at Egyptian listeners , Iraq had urged
Egyptians to rise up a nd hi t
" lmpertallsts and Zionist Inter ·
ests everywhere on Egyptian
soi l."
The broadcasts. sim ilar to
progra ms Introdu ced after the
la te Egyptian Pres ident Anwar
Sadat visit ed Jerusalem In 1971.
urged Egyptian s to stop fore ign
powers from passin g through the
Suez Canal and to defend the
Isla mic holy c iti es of Mecca and
Medina from desecration .
The a ppea ls called on Egy p
tlan s to eva lua te Mubarak 's
a ctio ns. allowing fore ign fleet s to
use the wa terwa y to "Invade
Arab lands a nd conquL•r our
brothers ." Foreign ships hav e
passed throug h the Suez Cana l on
th eir way to !he gulf , Incl uding a
French fri gate on Monda y .
" It Is paid agentry and !rea ·
son," one broadcast sa id . " I t Is a
conspiracy and a betraya l of thr
Egypti a n people, of Egypt' s
conscience and of Egypt's role.
Ca n this go unpunished while we
watch Arab destiny be ing dete r·
mined at th e hands of agen ts?'·
O.,splle an es tJmated 170,000strong Iraqi force In Kuwait.
Ca iro Radio re port£&gt;d a group
ca lling Itself the KuwaW National Resistance Movement announced II would step up a !lacks
within the occupied country . Iraq
has denied a report II had
executed the former spe aker of
the Kuwa iti National Assembly,
Ahmad Saadun.
The Issue of whet her foreign er s may leave Iraq and Kuw a it
remained cloudy Monday . Iraqi
Fore ign Minister Tariq Azlz sa id
late Sunday all foreigners " were
safe and secure"

--Area deaths _ _
Trecie Abbott
Trecte Katherine Abboll, 80, of
Rock Springs Road In Pomeroy
died Sunday at Overbrook Center
alter an extended lllness.
She was a cook, seamstress
and a furniture upholSterer .
Mrs . Abbott was born o n
August 7, 1910 In Trimble, the
daughter ol Wesley and Katherine Rainer Sharp.
She was a member of the
Rocksprings Better Health Club,
the Rock Springs United Methodist Church and the United
Metllodlst Women.
Surviving are her husband,
Arlee Abbott, Pomeroy; two
sons, Edgar "Bud" (Jane) Abbott. Pomeroy, and Horace

(Grace) Abbott, Pomeroy; two
brothers, Ernest Sharp and Ha ·
rold Sharp, both of Canton; two
sisters, Norma J ean Sharp and
Flossie Cantor, both of Canton;
fi ve grandchildren and nine
great -grandchildren .
She was preceded In death by
her parents, three brothers and a
sister.
Funeral services will be held
on Wednesday at I p.m . at Ewing
Funeral Home with Rev . C. J .
Lemley and Rev. Katherine J .
Riley ol!fclatlng.
Burial will be In Gravel Hill
Ce metery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home IJom 2-4 p .m . and 7-9 p.m .
at the funeral home.

Monday, August 13, 1990

Showers hold off in Ohio over weekend
By United Presslnternalional
In a switch from the normal
Ohio weather pattern of the past
severa l weeks , rainfall held off
until the start of the work w eek
Monday .
Shower s and thunderstorms.
s om e with locally heavy rain,
began moving across the Buck·
eye State ear ly Mond ay. At
dawn , the leading edge of the
showers extended from central
Lake Erie to southwest Indiana .
Widespread light rain was also
falling In that part of Ohio west of
a line !rom Erie, P a., to Clncln·
nail . The weather system responsible for the rain activity was a
cold fr on t that extended from
central Lake Erie to cent ra l
M1ssourl.
In the northwest, rainfall
a mount ed to around I Inch , with
the rain continuing to fall. No
rain had fallen by dawn In the
southeas t butt he area was beset
with patchy dense fog .
E lsewhere In the state, rainfall
was general ly limited to less than
a quarter-inch. Morning temperatures were mainly In the 60s .
The rain was expected to
dlmlnlsh west to east Monday

across the state, with the show ers lingering through the evening
hours in the eastern counties.
Highs were to be mainly In the
70s . except In the south, where It
was to reach the low 80s.
Tuesday will see partly cloudy
skies. while there will be a
chance of showers on Wednes ·
day . Thursday and Friday . Highs
will be In the 70s and 80s.
R e adings may In c r ease
enough Tuesday to push the
livestock sa fety Index Into the
alert ca t egory over the
southeast.
Soggy field s wlll cause de lay s
In fruit and vegetable harves Ung
through Tuesday, and although
dri er weather could develop for
harvest activities Tuesday,
damp weather may return for the
.pe riod Wednesday t hrough
Friday.
Dri er weather may develop on
Tuesday for spraying, where
fie ld s a re firmer. Winds will be
variable at around 5 to 10 mph .
Co nditions will be marginal to
poor for hay curing much of this
week. Humidities were to be high
Mond ay, but may lower briefly to

Squads respond to 12 calls
for assistance over weekend
Un it s of Me igs County E me r ·
gency Medi ca l Services responded to 12 calls for assistance

Nunn . She wa s taken to Ple as ant
Valley Ho s pit a l. Pomeroy unit
was ca lled to Second Streel at
II : 31 p.m . for Kevin Dugan . who
was tran sported to Veterans
Me morial Hospital.
On Sund ay at 3:28 a. m ., Mid ·
dle port sq uad was r ailed to South
Fourth lor Tony Lillie. Lillie wa s
treated but not transported . AI
3:46 a. m .. Pomeroy squad wa s
ca lled to North Front Street for
Angle Ferguson. Ferguson went
to Ho lzer Medical Center. At
11:30 a .m ., Pomeroy squad
wentht o Second Street for Daisy
Blakes lee. Blakeslee was transported to Holze r Medical Center.
At3 : 57 p.m. on Sunday, Racine
squad was ca lled to Bucktown
Road. Courmey Jones wa s transported from there to Holzer
Medical Ce nte r. Racine squ ad
was ca lled to Stlve rsvll le Road al
10:28 p.m . for Billy Brewer.
Brewer was transpor ted to Plea
sa nt Va lley Hospita l.

over the weekend .

At 4: ~5 a.m . on Saturday,
Pom er oy squad was called to
[),ad Man's Curve for Ve ra
Ha yman . She was transported to
Veterans Memorial Hos pita l.
Pomeroy squad was ca lled to
Kroger on Ea s t Main Street at
9:53 a. m . lor Bruton Smith .
Smith was taken to Veterans
Memori a l Hos pi ta l At JO· 48
a.m .. Rutland squad wa s di s·
pat ched to State Route 124 for
Cory Reed . who was treated but
not tra nsported.
AI 5: 05 p.m. on Saturday,
Ra ci ne unit went to Buck low n
Road for Shirley Abels. Abels
was tran spor ted to Vrtrrans
Memorial Hospital. Syracuse
squad went t o a motorc ycle
acc ident at6: 06 p.m . Steve Nease
was tr eated but not t ra nsported.
Mldd leport sq uad wen t to Beech
Street a t 6:37 p.m . fo r Margaret

- - - Meigs announcements---be having a hom eco m ing reviva l

CAA fre e clothing day
Th e Gal lt a Meigs Co mmuHil y
Avllon Agency will have a free
clothing day for low lncom &lt;•
JX•rsons on Wednesday from 9
a.m . to noo n at the old high school
building In Cheshire.
Meeting cancelled
There wi ll be no meet ing of 1he
Rac ine American Legion on
Thursd ay due to the fair.
Homecoming
The Hazel Communit y Church.
located between Long llollom
an d Portland, will have a homl'coml ng Saturd ay feat uring the
Ga briel Quartet and J imm y
Ga bre ll . The public Is lnvlt Pd to
a !le nd.
Meeting place change
Th e Meig s County 40 &amp; 8 will
not m eet at Abe Grueser's ca mp
but will meet at the legion ha ll on
Tuesday .
ltev lval
The Zion Ch urch of Chris t wil l

on Friday and Saturday at 7:30
p.m and Sunday at 2 p .m . with
Dav e Lucas, Operation Evangel Ize, as evan gelist. Steve Cornw ell
will provide musi c. A carry In
d inne r will begin at noon on
Sunday.
Dorst reunion
The annual Dorst r eunion wi ll
be he ld Sund ay at Lancaste r F air
Grounds beg inn ing at noon .
Dance lessons
The Belles a nd Beaus Square
Dance Cl ub will hold dance
lessons a t the Me igs Co unty
Se nior Citi zens Ce nt er on Aug. 20
fr om 7: 30·9: 30 p.m. Lesson are
free of cha rge.
Rutland Council to meet
The Rutland Village Coun cil
will m rc t in regu la r session on
Tuesday at 7 p.m . a t the c ivic
center .

Judgments granted

Stocks

New Hampshire to southern
Kentucky, then west to the High
Plains by early evening. High
pressure that was over the upper
Great Lakes will move to central
Lake Michigan during the same
time frame. By late Tuesday , the
front will reach the East Coast
a nd the high will move to the :
eastern Great Lakes.

'.

·•

UPI
WEATHER MAP - A cold front will sweep through the
Northeast, bringlnft rain to much of New Enrtland . The trailing
edge of tlw front will trlner S&lt;:atU.red thunderslonns In the
central Plains. Another cold lront will move across the Upper
Midwest, causintt showers and thunderstorms lnlo the Great
Lakes region by tonlfthl. Scattered enninrt thunderslonns will
develop across much of the Rockies. ( UPI)

------Weather----Soutll Central Ohio
Tonight , mos tly cloudy . A
slight c hance for showers . Low60
to 65. North winds 5 to 15 mph .
Chance of rain 30 percent .
Tuesday, partly sunny. Hi g h
near 85.

Extended Forecast
Wednesday through Friday
A chance of showers and
thunderstorms each day. Highs
will be In the 80s and lows In the
60s .

Am Elect ric Power
.28 1; 1
AT&amp;T.. ...
. .. 34\',
Ashland Oil .
..32 1;4
Bob Eva ns..
. .. 1,1\j,
Cha rming Shoppes . ......... BY,
City Holding Co .. ... .. ......... 1 5~
FedPral Mogul.
.... ... 16
Goodyea r T&amp;R . . ....... ... 24\i,
Key Centuri on
.I P;.
La nd s' End ..................... 15
. ....... 19 11,
Limit ed Inc.
Mutllmedla In c ..... ......... ... 60 '1.
Rax Res taurants
.......... l h
Robbins &amp; Myer s ......... ... 20
Shoney 's In c ...... .............. 13';4
Star Bank ..................... 17';.
Wend y 's Int i. ................... 5%
Worthingt on lnd ................ 21%

The Meigs County Health De- . ous baby cushions. Lawson said .
these Infant pillows are about 24
pa r tme nt . In cooperation with
inches long by 12 1nches wide. are
the U.S. Consumer Product
made of quilted fabric and
Safety Commission and the Ohio
loosely filled wllh plastic foam
O.,partment of Health, warns
beads or pellets and resemble
consumers not to use any infant
small "bean bag" sacks.
bean bag cushions and stro ngly
Since Infants are unable to roll .
urges consumer s with these
over by themselves, they can
dange rou s baby pillows to return
suffocat e when the pillows conthem to th e retail store where
form to their faces .
purch ased for a full refund or
Since the announcemen t of the
exchange, said Dr. Margie Law ·
reca ll action earlier this year ,
so n, Meigs Co unt y h ea lth
only 11.5 perce nt of the recalled
commissioner.
Infant cushions sold have been
In April. 19!Ml, the U.S. Consu returned from consumers for a ·
mer P roduct Safety Commission
refund or exchange offered by
milia ted a nationwide volunt ary
the
reca lling companies accordrecall of near ly one million infant
to
the health department.
ing
bean-bag pillows !rom II manu ·
For
further information con ·
facturers and two retailers becernlng
the product recall, resicause of a serious sulfocalion
dents
may
contact the Ohio
hazard to babies.
O.,partment of Health at 1614)
To date. the CPSC has received
466- 145() or the CPSC Hotline at
re port s of 29 infants , aged three
1·800-638-2772 .
months and under. found dead
ly ing fa ce down on these ha za rd ·

No

winner

has

rais£&gt;d

jackpot to Wednesday to at leas t ·
$9 million .
In thi s weekend's acco mpanyIng Kicker game, no tickets had
the number 892612, and the
$100 ,000 went unclaimed.
Bu t eight ti ckets had the first
five number s, good for $5 ,000
each ; 62 had the first four for
$1 ,000 each: 625 had the firs t
1hrec lor $100 each and 6,299 had
thr firs t two for $10 each.

thf'

The 1990 Junior
and Senior Fair Schedule
MONDAY, AUGUST 13
7: 00 P .M .-Weigh-In Steers , Lambs, Swine
'7 : 30 P .M. -Opening Night ServiceMeigs Co . Ministerial Assn.

TUESDAY,AUGUSTI4
9: 00 a .m .-Admission will be charged at gates
9: 00 A.M. -Draft Horse Show
9:30 A.M.-4-H Horse Show
1: 00 P.M.-Flower Show Judging
1: 00 P.M.-Judging 4-H Rabbits
2: 00 P .M.-Judging Sr. Dlv. Poultry
3: 00 P.M. -Judging 4-H Poultry
4: 00 P .M. -Kiddie Tractor Pull - Hill Stage
5: 00 P.M.-Talent Show- Hill Stage
'7:00 P.M .- Demolltton Derby
8: 00 P.M.-Junior Fair Swine Showmanship
and Judging
9:00 P.M.-Midnight Cloggers-Hill Stage

Courthouse lo cl08e
The Meigs Count y Courthouse
will close Thursday at noon so
that employees ma y allend the
Meigs Co unty Fair .

.

,.

Hospital news

DOWNING CHilDS
MULLEN MUSSER
•

' - Grandstand Attractions

SEE YOU THERE!

INSURANCE

'

111 Second St., Pomeroy
YOUI INDEPEIIDEIIT
AGENTS SEIY.G
•Gscoum
I
SINCE 1168
···-·

'

~

ad mtn stratlon In 1955 from Mount
Union Coll ege In Alliance. Ohio. and
was awarded a master's degree In
retailing a year later by the Unlver·
s lty of Pitts burgh. Rio Grande con ferred upon him a masters In pul~ic
se rvice In 1981.
Mutng h as been a member and
c hair of the Board's Buildings and
Grounds Committee . member of the
Committee on lhi stee Nominations.
member and c hair of the Finance
and lnvesiJnent Committee. and a
member and chair of the Executive

Commlltee . He was elec ted Board
Pre sident at Its June meeting.
Among his numerou s community
a ctMtles. Mutzig ha s been Involved
with the Jackson County Con~nu ­
nlty lmproverrent Corporation. servtn~ as Its pres ident tn 1963. He has
been an acttve member and pa st
president cl U1e Jackson RUM)' Club
s in ce 1963: was named the Out·
s tanding Jackson Jaycee of 1965:
was the choice for J ackson County's

Paul B. Mutzlg
Man of the Year for the Sou theast·
em Ohio Re14!ona1 Counc il In 1968
and 1978: a rrember and j:I\St IJ'esldent or District 5 of th e Ohio Sav·
lng s and Loan League: and t he
Jackso n Chamber of Corrunerce
Man of the Year In 1978.
Mutng a nd his wife . the fonner
Sa rah (Sally) Parry . re s ide In
Jac kson and are th e parents of
lllree children . Lee. Sara and Dan .

s tate ca pital Improveme nts budget.
University omc lals are gotng ahead
with planning for the annex to the
Physical Education Ce nter.
Rio Grande VIce Preside nt Hennan
L. Koby. PI1 .D.. said Interviews wlill
s lllie ·recorrunended architects be ·
gan In mld ·s ummer. placing the
potential bidding date Htlate spring
or early summer 199 1.
Th e 28.0C&gt;O squ are foot ann ex W'd S
o ne of two projects for the Unlver ·
s lt y Inc luded In Gov. Ri c hard
Ce les te's capital Impr ove me nt s
proposal for 1990 9 1.
The oth er proposal was a new din ·
lng h all. TI1e ::tnnex to Lyne Ce nt er
will otrer r lassroom. om ce and ac ·
tlvlty •rea for tl1e ca mpu s

In s ide sports as badmlnlnn . te nnls
or volley!Jall . Th e annex wtll not
conlll!n any s pectator fa cilities.
The committee. toured buUdtngs at
Musklngum and Wilmington colleges. Ohio Wesleyan University and
the So uth Wes tern C lly Sc hools In
Grove City.
·we vis ited Urese sc hools because
they had buUt such fa c Ulties In the
last flve ~ars. and becau se three of
th e m had been additio ns to older
facll lll es." Ko by explained. "Th e
space for our annex Is prlrnarlly for
Ins truction and acade mic purJlOS"S .
and wil l play an Important part In

Koby SH ill a ronunit ter &lt;tj)(X&gt;Inted
tu p1oposr. llw JJJ.akt•up ullllt' annex
ll ::t" n·c(J1lll11Cnclccl It lncl tH"If' th rt&gt;f

complctccl by the St nnmer of next
war. !lu' loll cou ld hr flt li.;; ht'Cl hv fall
or wt nt n of 1992
Nar niTI ,l.! &lt;-l .;; lrnil ::~r rDntll liHrr lor ll w
ditlltJg ll,tll will I:M.' drlrtvt•d Jttltillall.
!\nil\' ...;aid lluwt ·vt·r . pidlrllillMV

and li_Q JII f' d Jo t (I(
f&lt;id~~ ~· /\vt·rJJJt · and

r• ·1 o rttr tlt ndrttlon&lt;.,

'--.\1 1" 1"1

lirl''IIJU JII '-,.

t•lgh t

(4J

\()

fac td ty Of

fin: -. . fi H II ld((i\H' \IJ;:tJI COUf l ". &lt;I
y..,•l,gllt !ittir1 g and t'."~Wn 1-;t• roorn. fll l
.1croht1 d ;J tllt ' at1·a and fl. lllultlpllr

The Meigs County Library and
Its Middleport bran ch will close
al l d ay Thursday to permit
employees to a ttend th e Meigs
Count y Fair. Th e regular schedu le will be maintained by the
book mobile.

An action fo r dissolution has
been filed In Meigs County
Common Pl eas Court by Janice
Lee Danner. of Racine. and
Darryl 0. Danner. GaiHpolls .

Paul 0 . Mutzlg, President of the
Ja ck.son Huildlng Loan &amp; Savings
Co.. has been named the new Prest ·
dent of the Univers ity of Rio Grande
Board of Trus tees .
Mu tz lg. who s ucceed s Da niel H.
Whlleley. M.O .. as President. ha s
served on the board stnre 1980 and
ha s chaired several of Its commll tees.
"Mr. Mu tzlj.! brln~ to his position as
Preside nt of the Boord the qualities
of leade rs hip a nd sound economic
se nse." Dr Paul C. Ha~s . President
of th e University. corrune nted . ·we
a re pleased to have an Individual
with his experience and knowledge
playing a part tn the future development of the University.·
Mutztg has led Jac kson Building
Loan &amp; Sav1 ngs s tnce 1989. aHer
serving 23 years as the firm's secretary -treas urer. He ha s been associated with the company for 28 years.
A native of Pittsburgh . Pa .. Mutztg
received his degree In business

~~e l~! ~~~F~~th~~~~~?c~~~ ~~~~~~*ua~~~j;tS~~~

Super Lotto jackpot on the rise
CLEVELAND 1UPI1 - No
ti cke ts from Saturd ay's Super
Lotio game had the numbers
pi&lt;·kect In the drawing. Ohio
Lo ltcry officia ls sa id Sunda v.
Sa turday's number s wher~ th e
jackpot was $6 million were 14 .
.10 ..11, 32, .16 and 43.
Agents so ld ~ ti ckets that had
five of the numbers. mak ing each
worth $1,000; and 4,445 with four
num bers . good for $75.

Mutzig Named President
Of University Trustees

New Phys. Ed. Facility. Dining Hall. Donn. Art Museum Included

Valley Artist Series

Meigs Library
to close Thursday

Dissolution sought

lnsidt This ,
Edition

Certain baby pillows should
be returned, officials report

In Me ig s Count y Common
Pl eas Court, Judgm ent s ha ve
bee n gran led in the amount of
$4,147.50 to Bank On e. Athens.
N.A . agal ns l Arc hie R. Stegall.
and o th ers: and In the amount of
$10,220.89 to Green Tree Acce ptance Corporati o n o! Ohio , In c.
aga in st Walter A. Ellis, and
oth er s.

Dally stock prices
(As of 10: 30 a.m . )
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewf

Veterans Memorial
Saturday admiSsions - Delton
Garnes. Wilkesville; Vera Hay .
man, Pomeroy; Kenneth E.
Hysell, Rutland .
SATURDAY DISCHARGES Leona Kraulter, Allee Walsh.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS
None.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES Frances Roush, Delton Garnes .

around 5() percent on Tuesday
before rain chances increase
Wednesday through Friday. Pan
eva poration rates should average around 0.15 to 0.2 inch
Tuesday .
On the early morning weather
map, the cold front thai ex tended
from Lake Erie to southwest
Indiana will extend from a low In

'S llldent actlvitles •

llte annex's proj ecterl cost Is
$2. 7HR.()()(). Knhy salrl. If lllridl ng Is

lndwatt·

HONOR ROLL EDITION

th t'

Include an ups tairs din ing ha ll
with the food preparatio n area on
the ground floor.
In the Interim. as con s tru c tion
gets underway on the $24milllon
dormitory behind Holzer Hall. the
University was awaitin g a building
pe rrnll for the renovation of Allen
Hou se Into t11 e Est her Alle n Greet
Mu seu m of Art
Once the permU Is oh!a lur-(1 Knhv

expla in ed. bidding will I&gt;&lt;' held .
po ssi bly In the fall . OfTi c lah are
lookin g at cornpleUOn of the project
In 1991.
In addit ion. two new pMkln~ lots
art&gt; plan ned . The flrst I"&gt; IX' !lind lhr
present j:&gt;;lrktr&gt;g II)( atlhe I::.I·: ll"v1'
l'e&lt;: hnlc•l Ca reers Ce nt er ·nr" lol
wil l he gr avel and l!glllt'(l. 1\ob\'
"&gt;a l&lt;l. cmd v.1ll pruvl(k " lkt&lt; ,. ltlf l:Y(J
ra r'-'
ll w 't'\OJ HI t·n!;1ih .t t:.r, ~ "' 1~n·•·&lt;l
()It'

(II
r tll l· ~·- · ·

( 111 IH "I

w,·,t

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