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                  <text>Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

Local news briefs ...- - -....

NAT'~~-~~~HER SERVICE FORECAST TO 8AM EDT-·~4-88 Inflat ion...

4D

Continued from page 1
2.2 miles north of SR. 124. Troopers saidCloist Teaford. 26. Rt. 1,
Racine, lost control and his car went off the road. striking an
embankment. No one was injured and there was no citatiOn.

EMS lws 8 calls Tuesday
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports eight
calls Monday; Tuppers Plains at 8:49 a.m. to Reedsville for
Diane Rockhold to Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 10:25 a .m. to Main St. for Malone Eblin to Pleasant Val lev
Hospital; Syracuse at 12:06 p.m. to Route 124 for Raymond
Canter to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Tuppers Plains at 2:28
p.m . to .Route 681 for Lela Cremeans who was treated but not
transported; Pomeroy at 4:21 p.m. transported Evelvn
VanMeter from an auto accident on West Main St. to Veterans
Memorial Hospi!al; Pomeroy at 7:26p.m. to Lincoln Heights for
Phyllis Vanlnwagen to Holzer Medical Center; Rutland at 8:21
p.m . to Meigs Mine No. 1 for CUffo.rd Pugh to·Holzer Medical
Center; Middleport at 9:07p.m. to Ash St. for William Backus to
VE&gt;t(&gt;rans Memorial Hospital.
Continued from page 1
State
...
other special privileges to busi - at Diles' Park to prevent horsenesses within the zone. Two
benefits of the zoning would be
t he waiving of HUD regulations
for activities in lhe designated
zones , and the expediting of
consideration of HUD programs
in the zones.
Mayor Hoffman told Council
that according to federal guidelines and regulations, Middleport
could esta biish a zone. He said he
has written HUD for establlshmenhprocedures.
Hoffman also reported the
village has received $3,500 from
the county commissioners for
one-third of the local match
needed' lor the operation of the
Blu10 Streak Ca b Company. Hoffman said he has not· vet. heard
from Pomeroy Village regarding
the reques t for Pomerov to also
share one· third of tiiP local .
match, but said he expects to
hear from them soon and pointed
out that Pomerov last vear
shared one-third of the ioc a I
match which was then $1 ,800.
The alternalives of barricading the horseshoe throwing area

shoes from possibly damaging
parked cars, or ellm lnatlng three
or four parking spaces In front of
the area in question, were
discuss.e d by council. although no
final decision was made.
A pre·construction meeting
regatding Middleport's Community Development Block,
Grant project to Install handicap
access ramps on village sidewalks has been scheduled for
10:30 a .m . Wednesday in the
county commissioners' office,
the mayor reported.
Finally. it was reported by
Councilman Bob Gilmore that
·Middleport's Mlni·Golf Course is
now open for business. This
summer's open!ng of the minia ·
t.ure golf course was delayed for
·some time .by construction problems. However, problems have
been corrected and Gilmore
reported that the course has been
open for two weeks. Hours at the
mini-course are 5 to 11 p.m.
Monday through Friday, and 1 to
lJ p.m . on Saturday and Sunday .

in non-defense communications
'equipment.
New orders for non-defense
capital goods were $35.4 billion.
jus-t slightly below the high level
of orders received in June.
Shipments of non·defense capital
goods were up 0.7 percent to $32
billion. Unfilled orders for nondefense cap ital goods rose 2.2
percent to $158 billion.

New orders for defe11se capital
goods lost month plunged 43.9
percent to $7.8 billion after a 68.7
percent increase in June. Shipbuilding and tanks accounting
for most of the volatilitv in June
and July .
·
Shipments for defense capital
goOds fell 2.4 percent to $8.5
billion and unfilled orders were
down 0.4 percent to $166.4 billion.

E:i:lSNOW

Kelli Taylor

Born at Albany, M was the son
of the late W.A. ·(Bert) and Ina
Ke lii Dawn Taylor, infant Martin Throckmorton.
He was a ·retired employee of
daughter of Stephen H. and
the
Delco division of General
Brenda Miller Taylor, MiddleMotors
in Dayton .
port. was born and died Sundav
A retired army veteran of
evening at Cabeli-Huntington
WWII. he was a member of the
Hospital in Huntington. W.Va .
Survivors include maternal Dayton VFW Post 9936.
Survivors include a special
gra ndparen ts. Robert and Judv
Miller, of Middleport; maternal friend, Esta Brlckles; and sevgreat grandparents, Leland and eral nieces and nephews.
He was preceded in death bv
Chris Haley. of Rutland, and
two
brothers, Herman and
Bonnie Miller, of Middleport.
Clarence.
The infant was preceded in
Services will be Wednesday at
death by paternal grandparents,
1
p.m. at the Bigony-Jordan
Wayne and Hazel Taylor.
Rev. Samuel W. Basve Jr. will Funeral Home in Albany with the
officiate at graveside s'ervices to Rev. Harold Berson officiating.
be held 10 a.m. Wednesdav at B11riai will follow lit Alexander
Cemetery.
Miles Cemetery.
·
Military graveside rites will be
Cecil Throckmorton
conducted bv the Albanv VFW
Post 9893. ·
·
Cecil Throckmorton, 65. of
Friends mav call Tuesdav
Davton. died Su nday at the from 6 to 9 p.m. at the funeral
Ma.g ruder Hospital in Port Clin· . home.
ton , Ohio.

~SHOWERS

-RAIN

FRONTS: . . Wann "Cold

. . Sialic . . Occluded

WEATHER MAP - A C()ld front curved from a low over
northwest Wisconsin, northwest Mluourl, soutlleul Kansas and
northwest Oklahoma lo eut central New Mexico. A warm front
reached from !lie cold front over aoutheasllowa acr088 southwest
Dllno.w and western Tenneuee. II continued through east-&lt;Jenlral
Alabama and southeast Georgia easllnto the Allanite Ocean.

Weather

Announcements

South Central Obio
Mostly cloudy tonight, with a 50
per.cent chance of showers and ·
thunderstorms: Lows will be
lrom 65 to 70 and winds becoming
west around 10 mph. Wednesday, .
variable cloudiness. with a 30
percent chance of showers and
thunderstorms and highs In the
low 80s.
Extended Forecast
Thursday through Saturday
Fair Thursday, a chance of
showers Friday and clearing
Saturday. Highs will be from the
m ld -70s to the low 80s and lows
from the mid-50s Ia the low 60s.

Plan picnic

Stocks
from page 1
Orders Jllor· · · -Continued
Dally stock prices
- - - - - - (As ()f 10:30 a.m.)

-Area·deaths---

Tua~day,

Pomaot Middleport, Ohio

Bryce and Mark Smllh
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl
Am Electric Power .... ......... 26¥,

AT&amp;T ................................. 24%
,Ashland Oil ............ : ..... .... .. 33%
Bob Evans .......................... 15%
Charming Shoppes .............. 13\i,
City Holding Co .......... ........ . 32
Federal Mogul.. ................ . .43~
Goodyear T&amp;R ................... 58¥,
Heck's ................................... %
Key Cel)turion .................... 16)7
Lands' End ................. ........ 27%
Limited Inc .............. .... ...... 20%
~ultimedla Inc .... , .............. 71'h
ax Restaurants ....... ........... 4\i,
Robbins &amp;·Myers ..... ........ .... 12 .
Inc ........................ 7\i,
s Int1 .... .. ...... .............. 6
Ind ....... ..... ..

RUTLAND - The Rutland
Fire Department will hold a
picnic Saturday, Aug. 27 at 6:30
p.m. at Rutland Park for all
firemen and their families. All
who helped at the Ox Roast and
Turkey Supper are also weicome. A training session for all
Rutland Fire Department
members will be Monday, Aug.
29.

Lottery numbers
CLEVELAND (UPI) -Manday's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers:
D!llly Number
786.
Ticket sales totaled $1,185,859,
with a payoff due of $756,46~.
PICK-4
0786.
PICK-4 ticket sales totaled
$195,157, with a payoff due of
$88,020.
PICK·4 $1 straight bet pays
$10,392. PICK-4 $1 box bet pays
$433.

.

August 23, 1988

ConTinued fran\ page 1

•

Major
Hoople
retums

The Federai " Reserve was
worried enough a bou 1 Inti a lion Ia
raise Its benchmark discount
interest rate lrom 6 percent to 6.5
percent Aug. 9 to try to cool the
economy and dampen domestic
demand .
Commercial banks quickly followed with a hike in the prime
Interest rate from 9.5 percent to
10 percent, and morlgage Inter·
est rates and store and bank
credit card Interest rates also
have climbed.
Some analysts expect anotHer
Increase In the discount rate 11
Ihe economy shrugs olf the last
one and continues to expand
while prices rise.

tobacco also rose In July, but the
costs of clothing dropped even
faster in July than they had In
June after registered huge jumps
In the spring, the bureau said.
Last month, the Bureau of
Labor StatiStics reported consumer prices 'rose 0.3 percent
despite th(&gt; drag of lower energy
and clothing costs.
Experts expected sharp increases ln.July wholesale prices
reported by the bureau .t his
month to be passed along to the
consumer fairly quickly.
Economists are worried by
signs of Increasing inflation such
as higher consumer and wholesale prices, brisk industrial ac·
tlvity and low unemployment.

enttne

Vot.39, ~o. 78

Trumka blasts proposed mine safety changes
BLACKsBURG va (UPi) _
United Mine Workers' President
Richard Trumka lashed out
Tuesdav ' at proposed changes in
federal· mine safe! ·re lations
calling them a step bacf':rom th~
1969 coal mine health and safetv
act
'The proposal
s · b 1 tel
shocking to us, ..w~e ~~~ ~n ~
speech at Virginia Tech's Institute on Coal Mi lng He lth
Safet and Resea~ch "ll ~es:
tro· e~ rotectlon aft~r ~otecuoX
]1 ignored the rl:hts of
mine~~ to have a safe work
place .,
·

The National Transportation
Safety Board, Washington, D.C.,
has released its findings in a Jan.
4, 1987 plane crash al Gallla·
Meigs Regional Airport, Gallipolis, In which a Meigs County pilot
suffered minor visible Injuries.
Glenn T. Crisp, 36, Langsville,
was treated at Holzer Medical
Center for lacerations to the
forehead. He walked away from
the crash and ensuing fire.
CriSp was flying a twlp-englne
Cessna 414, owned by Jim Mink
Chevrolet, 1619 Eastern Ave.,
-Gallipolis, and •was retW'IIing to
Ga!Upolfs from Columbus when
he , was forced to make an
emergency landing. The crash
occurred at 5:43p.m.
CriSp told aulhorlties he was on
his final approach for a !andlng ·
when his right engine failed and
when he attempted to restart the
engine, his lett engine· quit. The
pilot then attempted to land on
Farm Road but aborted the
landing when he saw a car
traveling on the small township
road.
The disabled aircraft came .
down In a field about 450 feet
south of the airport runway,
traveling about 124 feet through
the field before hitting some
trees behind U.S. Marine, 2150
Eastern Ave. The left wing and
landing gear were torn off the
aircraft, causing an explosion
and fire.

DRIVERS EDUCATION
CUSSES BEGIN
SDTifAHR 6
GliiiPOUS, OliO
44..06f9

Here is an excerpt from the
National Transportation Safety
Board'S report:
"The flight was established In

.'
••

•

•

.

Ettective Ann

The union leader said the
proposed relaxed standards
would Increase mine fires and
explosions and lead to more mine
disasters. He said wellventilated mines make good
economic sense because they are
less prone to fires and explosions
that can shut down tM operation
for months and throw hundreds
of miners out of work.
Trumka shook his finger at his
audience several times as he
admonished coal industry execulives and federal regulators to
give mine safety their highest
priority.

the traffic pattern when the pilot
experle'nced a dual engine failure. The pilot attempted to
restart the engines, but failed.
The pilot also failed to feather the
propellers which crealed an
aerodynamic condition which
allowed the aircrasft to descend
• taster than normal. The aircraft
crashed short oft he runway after
pulling up to avoid a coUision
with automobile on the road of
Intended landing. The wreckage
examlnalion failed to disclose
any aircraft problems. The exact
reason for the dual engine failure ·
was not determined."
The NTSB concluded lhat the
probable causes of the crash
were the loss of power, and
inadequate in flight planning and
decision by the.pllot In command
along · with improper aircraft
handling by !he pilot in command. Contributing factors
listed were propeller feathering
not used by pilot in command and
checkliSt not used by pilot in
command.
Damage to the aircraft. was
estimated at $15,000 by Gallipolis
fire chief Ray Bush. The plane
was reportedly valued at $79.000.
CriSp was the only occupant of
the seven place aircraft.
The Meigs County pilot was
licensed for both single and
multi-engine land aircraft. He
had a commercial license, with
an instrument rating, and a total
of 6,144 hours of liylng time
Including 702 hours of lnstrumenl
time. and 2,689 hours of multiengine time, Including 1,025
hour~ in a Cessna 414.

Local·news briefs-__,
Patrol reports injury mishap
The Gallla Meigs Post, State Highway Patrol investigated an
Injury accidenl at 4:18p.m. Tuesday In Meigs County on US 33
just east of SR 681.
Troopers said Roy Rayburn, 44, Texas Road, Gallipolis, was
headed east when he lost control. His car went off the road,
strlking ·a utility pole. There was minor damage.
'
Rayburn suffered a minor visible injury. He was taken to
Pleasant Valley Hospital at Point Pleasant. There was no
citation.
The patrol also investigated an accideptat the junction or SR.
7 and SR 681. The patrol'sald David Withrow, 25, Shade, Ohio,
s·lowed In traffic. His car was hit from behind by another car
driven by Earl Wellman, 39, Proctorville. No one was Injured.
Wellman was cited for failure to stop within the assured clear
distance. ·

Celeste proclaims canoe week
..
August 31' 1988.

Tbis offer expires

'

There is a substantial interest penalty for early withdrawai•Compoundcd

daily.

Call BANK ONE
for more information
992·2133 or
742-2888

Governor Richard F. Celeste has proclaimed Aug. 21-27 as
Ohio Canoe Week, a tribute to the state' s canoe livery Industry
and Ohio's nearly 247 square miles of inland l~kes, streams and
rivers.
Ohio' canoe liveries are an Important segment of the state's
growing tourism, an annual $6.9 billion industry, employing ·
139,000 Ohioans. Ohio ranks fourth In canoe livery numbers In
the nation.
"Canoeing provides healthy recreation and enjoyment for
Ohioans of all ages," Celeste said. "The Ohio Canoe Livery
Association provides opportunities to expand knowlege and
skUis In canoeing, outdoor recreation, history, and natural
history and promotes travel to and within the state of Ohio."

World star to be in Charleston
•

.

tM

,

. Eighteen Tholisand People Who·Care.
BANK ONE. ATHENS. OHIO, NAIONE PARt OF THf CARINO 'rEAM

Tom Eplin, who portrays Jake McKinnon on the NBC daytime
drama "Another World" will make a guest appearance at A
Taste of Charleston In Charleston, W.Va.
Eplin Is no stranger to the Charleston area. His parents are
Continued on page 8

----·---- - ~-

- -· - - - - - - -·-- -.....1

''The cost of prevention Is pointed debate with U.S. Bureau
much less than the compensation of Mines·. J?trector T S Ary, and
for' failing to provide a safe work David 0 Neal, a cling assistant
place." he said, referring to the secretary of the federal Mine
more than $22 billion paid to Safety and Health Admlnistraminers and their ·families In lion, which is considering the
black lung benefits since 1970.
pro~~sed safety changes.
"We prefer to work coopers0 Neal said MSHA was in the
lively for mine safety and health process of studying "the most
... and we don't want to hams!· testtmo;my we' ve ever had" on the
ring productivity or stand in the proposed rule changes and he
way of progress," Trumka vowed to go back and look atthe
added. "But we will tight to proposal, analyze it and come
protecl the lives, the limbs and back with some good regulations.
the health of the people . we
He turned to Trumka and said,
representin coal mines."
"If we don' t. I imagine he'd sue,"
At a news conference following , to which the union leader smiled
hiS speech, Trumka engaged In a and said, "You can bet on it."

NTSB releases
findings on 1987
crash at airport

Couples seek divorce

ua\Yte\d

2 Secti0n1, 16 Pa""ges 25 Cents
A Muttimedia Inc. Newsp1per

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. Wednesday, August 24, 1988

Copyrighted 1988

r,,;::==========;

Hospital news

Clear tonight. Low In mid
50s. Thursday, partly cloudy.
Highs in lower 80s.

•

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) sprayed In an attempt to control
Temperatures In the 90s last weeds and spider mites. Yellow,
week put more stress on this dried-up edges of plants are
year's already depressed crops. evidence the spider mites are
Scattered showers brought making progress. As much as 47
some relief, the Ohio Agricultu- percent ol the soybean crop is
ral Statlstfcs Service said Mon- rated poor to very poor.
day, but the damage was already
Most farmers were well Into
done.
their third cutting of hay while
Farmers had 6.2 days suitable some considered the second
to work the fields. and thev cutting to be a failure.
sprayed for velvetleaf and spide-r
Almost half of alfalfa has been
mites which were thriving in the through third cutting. The&lt;!ondlheat. Farmers also baled hay tion of hay improved somewhal,
and harvested apples, corn sil- ·but Is · still rated fair to poor.
age, potatoes, and tomatoes.
Pas !lire held about even, but Is
Soli moisture was rated at 70 rated poor. Hay and pasture
percenl short, 29 percent ade- supplies rated 29 percent very
short, 46 percent short, 24 perquate and one percent surplus.
As temperatures cbntlnued cent adequate, and one percent
high, the corn crop suffered. surplus.
Farmers continue to get hay
Corn maturation Is running one
from
outside of Ohio.
week behind average and two
The
sugarbeel crop remained
weeks behind last year. Corn
smut is a problem as weeds fa lr Ia poor_ Tab a ceo topping
oulgrow corn stalks in many continued and the crop Is rated
fields. As much as 59 percent of fair to poor.
· the corn crop Is rated poor to verv
Potatoes were rated fair as the
.
.
poor.
harvest progresses. Farmers are
Soybeans were barlev visible also harvesting tomatoes, cal&gt;
In some field as the velvetleaf bage, and dry onions.
and other weeds continued to

Two couples filed for dissolutions of marriage In Meigs
. County Common Pleas Court
Monday. Ray and Theresa VanMeter of Racine and Arlene
Collins of Middleport and Jerrv
Collins of Racine filed for dlssolu·
Veterans Memorial
. lions of marriage.
Monday AdmiSsions - Ronald
Roberta Ralrden was granted
..
Jeffers, Pomeroy.
a divorce from Daniel Rairden
Monday Discharges - Ryan and Denise and Dana Fick were
Adams.
gran led a dissolution. ·

Daily Number
551
Picl&lt; 4
8502

Page 4

High tempe~~tures
still hurting crops

thrive. Chemlc•ls were aerially

Ohio Lottery

Hak- kaff/

----- -

-------· - ··~~---· _....__

O'Neal, when asked why the members working in Pittston
rules were being changed. said . mines without a contract for
only .that work on the revisiOns nearly seven months.
was under way when he assumed
He said pensioners, who saw
his MSHA post.
their medical benefits cut off by
Trumka and Ary bickered over Pittston when the old contract
the use of diesel-powered equip· expired In February ,are particu ment In underground mines. with iarly frustrated , and he blamed
Trumka citing studies that sug· •that frustration for wildcat walgest diesel exhausts cause kouts last week at Pittston ~ines
cancer and Ary pointing to
m Virginia and West Virglma.
scrubbing devices that clean
Asked about the possibility of
diesel exhaust. .
an authorized strike against
On anolher topic, Trumka
Pittston, Trumka said union
chastlzed the Pittston Coal officials would consider job acGroup Inc. for engaging in
tlons only when such actions
bad-faith bargaining with the were in the best interest of union
union, which has kept Its miners.

School resumes
·at Southern and
Meigs Monday
Students in Meigs and South- reduced price breakfasts will be
ern Local School Districts will be $.30.
going back to the classrooms on
"The beginning of the school
Monday morning. Officials In year is a time to be on the lookout
both districts report that starting for 'footloose' areas," says Clarand dismissal times In the ence Pack, safetvdlrectorforthe
schools will be the same as last Automobile Club of Southeastern
year.
Ohio.
First day for teachers in the
The AAA spokesman refers to
two districts Is Friday.
the popular movie of several
Studenls and teachers should years ago. "'Fooiloose' spotlighanticipate increased meal prices ted the imagl' of dancing feet,"
this year.
he explains. "This year's
In Meigs Local, student 'School's Open' design also falunches al the elementary and cuses on feet.- the teet of young
junior high schools will be $1.05. boys and girls across the United
High school student lunches will States making the daily journey
be $1.15. Reduced price lunches Ia and from school."
will cost $.40. Teachers' lunches
Pack reminds area residents
will be$1.75 which Includes milk. that primary and elementary
Breakfasts in Meigs Local will age students may need to hear
cost $.75 regular~v or $.30 al the , and discuss new Ideas manv
reduced price.
times before they take on perln Southern Local, student sonal meaning. " Youngsters who
lunches will cost $1.25 regularly don't stop to think about safetv
and $.40 at the reduced rate. rules , or who take risks In the
Lunches for leachers will be $1.75 traffic environment, are acting
which includes milk.
normally regardless of the
Regularly priced breakfasts in danger they might put themSouthern Local will be $.~5 and
Continued on page 8

1

Rules changed·for submitting
applications for new facilities

DON'T LOOK DOWN- Employees of Danny's United Roofing
Company, Cohnnm,s and Athens, must have nerves of steel to be
able to work on the dome of the Meigs County Courthouse. Repairs
to the dome began after the company completed the Installation of
a new roof on the courthouse.ll was not until workers were pulling
on the new courthouse roof that architects were able to complete a
thorough Inspection of the dome. At thai time, structural problems
were discovered and the orl&amp;'lnal contract of $47,2'74 for the roof
was changed to reflect the costa of repairing the dome and adding
turbine venia to the roof. The problems with the dome were not
unexpected. With the changes, final cosll!l for the roof repair hav~
amounted to $&amp;1,0158. Architects on the project are from Burgess
and Nlple, Lid., Parkersburg, W.Va.

Middleport
•
rece1.ves
ODOT grant

The revised rules will simplify
details required In the applications for additions to existing
generating facilities, and for
Installation of new gas or oil fired
combustion turbines.
"These revisions will accelerate and streamline the permitting process for small additions
to our generating capacity.,

while keeping the certification
process the same," said OPSB
C:halrman Thomas V. Ch.f ma. ·'It
will also minimize the costs to the
utilities in preparing the needed
information presently required
in the application process. "
The chairman emphasized that
the public participation provi·
slons in the certification of these
smaller facilities Is not "affected, restricted or reduced in '
any way. Full public participation Is invited and Is as essential
in the revisions as in existing
rules. New and ' timely paths for
system additions are essential to
preserve the rellabllitv and in·
tegrlty of Ohio's ·e lectric
supply ."
Major utility generating or
transmlssioll facilities will not be
exempted from the current rules
or regulations.

Meigs Block Grant allotment
$106,900, up from 1987 total

The Village of Middleport has
received a $38,025 grant from the
state for public transportation.
The Ohio Department of TransportatiOn awarded the gran! as
part of the Ohio Elderly and
HandlcapJX!&lt;! Transit Fare Assistance Program.
Funds for the grant are provided through the Ohio Elderly
and Handicapped Transit Fare
Assistance Program to reimburse companies for fare revenue lou.
State Repre~ntatlve Jolynn
Boster (D-Galllpolls) and State
Senator Jan Michael Long (0 Circlevllle) stated that the grant
would enable Middleport to offer
reduced fares to the elderly and
handicapped public transporta(Continued on Page 8)

___________

The Ohio Power Sltlng Board
iOPSB) announced Monday that
revised rules for submitting
applications for new or expanded
minor electric generating facilities have been adopted. The
purpose is to expedite the availability of needed power from
small Intermittent sources with
low environmental impact to
avoid brownouts, blackouts or
any syslem Interruption due to
regulatory Impositions.

This year's Community Deveiopment mock Grant allotment
for Meigs County Is $106,900, up
from last year's aUotment of

$92,400.
Six groups were represented at
last night's public hearing to
discuss the CDBG allolment for

Beegle named
Southern Board of Education,
meeting Monday night In regular
sesslon . Without President Charles Piles, who has been Ill,
conducted the foUowlng business
matters.
-Voted · to' employ Robert
Beegle as • lhe Letart Falls
Elementary School principal,
and Kim Pb!Uips as the junior
high school voUeyball coach.
-Approved Larry Coon, Mike
Edwards, -Robert' Ashley, Karla
Brown, Victoria Diddle, Patricia

---- ~

I

-

·•

···-""

fiscal year 1988. The meeting was
held at the courthouse in Pomeroy. Present to gather tnlorma -

wtart Falls principal

Duf!y, Linda Fisher, Hetty Hut- studenl distribution.
chlson, Barbara Lawrence.
-Approved the updated verLinda Mancini, Ina MPadows, sian of the guidance curriculum
Nancy Morrissey, Lori Ritchie,
-Contracted with the Hall:
Dixie Circle Sayre, Linda Smith, Kimball Companv to assume
Ann VanMatre, Donna Wolf, responsibility for - the dlstriet's
Bryan Zirkle, and Deena Spriggs asbestos removal plan which was
as substitute teachers lor .the deferred from Oct. 12, 1988 to
1988·88 year.
· May 9, 1989.
-Approved the resignation of
-Accepted a welder which
Judltlt Cooks from herposlllonas was donated to the school bv
subsltute teacher.
David Grindstaff
·
-Voted to approve boundary
-Accepted A~drea Krawsclines within the school district to zyn as a kindergarten tuition
determine elementary school student.

- ·-------·-·-----·

..

�The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Comment
lll Court Street

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

~rb
~v

·

ROBERT L. WINGETI'
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

ninth with a single and one out
By LEN HOCHBERG
later, Brad Wellman and B!ll
UPI Sports Writer
When Jeff Russell of the Buckner walked.
Mohorclc entered and got the
Rangers told Manager Bobby
second
out, Inducing Bo Jackson
Valentine he was tired after
to
strikeout.
Pinch hitter Danny
pitching eight strong Innings, the
Tarta
bull
then
delivered a twotrouble started.
run
single
and
' Willie Willie
Texas relf!?vers Milch WilliWilson
followed
with an RBI
ams, Dale Mohorclc, Guy Hof·
single
to
bring
Kansas City
!man and Craig McMurtry combined to blow Russell's fine within 7-6.
Mohorclc Issued two walks performance In the ninth.
Russell · limited the Kansas to Kurt Stillwell and Kevin
City Royals to three runs on five Seltzer - to tie the score before
hits and left with a 7-3 advantlge. exiting.
Hoffman walked Brett to push
About 30 minutes later,'theTexas ·
bullpen quartet had surrendered the Royals In front. McMurtry
four hits, six walks - and eight· broke up the monotony · by
runs, letting Kansas City rally · unleashing wild pitch, then re·
turned to form by walking Pat
for an 11-7 triumph.
Tabler.
Wellman followed with a
"Jeff said he was tired,"
two-run
single to make It 11-7.
Valentine said. "It was the only
decision I could make. With a
Mohorclc, 2-6, received the
four-run lead, I figured we were
all right . But we ran Into big loss . Kansas City's fourth hurler,
Steve Far.f. Improved to 4-2.
tfouble.' '
'1 don't think I've ever seen an
Williams ran Into big trouble.
Inning like that," Kansas Citv
Mohorclc.ran Into bigger !.rouble.
Manager John Wathan said.
HQifmanand McMurtry .. .
Williams quickly filled the "They had a comfortable lead
bases. George Brett opened the and gave up six walks. That's

Senator fumes over missile probe

The Daily Sentinel

ISm~ ~._-r,,..,....,d,=

Kansas .City rallies io .defeat Texas, 11-7.

Page-2-The Daily Sa1tiNI
Poma'oy-Middleport. Ohio
Wednesday, August 24, 1988

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMBER o!The United Press International, Inland Daily Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETIERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300 words
long. All letters are subject to edltll~ and must be signed with name, address and
telephone num~r. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be In
good taste, addressing lssu(&gt;S, not personalltles.

U.S. lacked key ambassadors
because of senator's grudge
By MARY BETH FRANKLIN
WASHINGTON rUPil -Senatorial privilege is a powerful thing.
This is demonstrated by the grudge held by Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N.C .,
against a nominee for a diplomatic post, and how il delayed the
appointment of a dozen other U.S. ambassadors.
On the last day before Congress adjourned for its August recess.
Senate Republican leader Robert Dole o( Kansas noted that 13
nominations of" U.S. ambassadors around the world. as well as ·
several judges and federal appointees, were being delayed by a
nameless, faceless senator exercising his right to place an
anonvmous "hold'· on a nominee.
That, in turn, Inspired other "holds" by senators protecting their
positions or attempting to create leverage on other legislative Issues.
Nominees, who require Senate approval, are usually voted on in
block as a means of expediting the process. A hold on one can
therefore delay the rest of them unless specifically separated.
"This is a cruel project. It is nasty and it is vindictive," Sen. Alan
Simpson, R·Wyo.. said In reference toone of the judicial nominations
whose Senate confirmation had been delayed for over a year.
"Objections to t.hls nomination are being raised totally in an effort
to leverage ... with a result that a large number of nominees are being
delayed for reasons totally unrelated to the merits ·of their
qualifications, •· Simpson said. "We have to break the linkage and get
to some action."
Dole urged his colleagues to come to their senses and put away all
their little selfish Ideas about how they ought to run the world and let
these people go,"
He read a letter from Secret;lry of State George Shultz who cited
national security problems caused by the lack of American
ambassadors in key countries.
"In Central and Souih America. as well as other areas, our Interests
are being harmed by the prolonged absence of ambassadorial
·representation, " Shultz wrote. "If these nominations are not
confirmed before Congress adjourns, the situation will grow worse."
Hours later, Helms came to the Senate floor and reluctantly agreed
to let the nomination of Robert Gelbard as ambassador to Bolivia go
forward- but not until he got in a few licks.
Helms questioned Gelbard's rol~ in the "slanderous charges"
made against the North Carolina senator regarding an alledged leak
of classified information during his trip to Chile in 1986. He also
suggested that Celbard's claim of legal residency In the state of
Washington - that has no income tax - rather than Washington,
D.C., where he maintains a home, smacks of tax evasion.
Helms noted that upon his return from Chile " high State
Department officials Issued a false stltement to the press that I, or
member of my staff. had leaked critical security information to the
Chilean government, thus undermining United States policy In that
region. "
Helms said the allegation "was totally false and demeaning' ' and
noted that the Senate Intelligence Committee. after reviewing the
s!tuation, dropped its investigation for lack of evidence.
:•Because I had sharply criticized the policy of the (State)
department in this region, it is clear that the allegation was not only
ah attempt at character assassination, .but an attempt by the
department to intimidate its critics through slander," Helms sal.d .
· "Mr. Gelbard was in the thick of the bureau's rof Inter· American
Affairs ) operation at the time the slanderous charges were being
concocted," the senator said.
Secondly. Helms noted that "Gelbard's claim of legal domicile in
Washington state is flcticlous and whethere his non-payment of
Income taxes to the District of Columbia, where he resides, is a
violation of laws is far from decided . ... I believe that it Is a mistake to
confirm Mr. Gelbard In a position that will take himoutofthe Distr:icl
of Columbia at a time when the district may very well need to br'ing
legal action against him ."
After ·airing his concerns, Helms removed his hold, allowing
Gelbard, along with 10 other ambassdors, several judges and
n(lmerous federal nominees, to be confirmed.

WASHINGTON - Sen. Sam next Secretary of Defense If
Nunn, D-Ga., Is miffed by co- Michael Dukakls Is elected presilumns we recently wrote about a dent. If Nunn said black Is white,
controversial anti· radar missile the Air Force would lind a
he supports. The $100-mlllion diplomatic way to agree, and
plant to·build the Tacit Rainbow McGovern Is very diplomatic.
missile Is being constructed in
Take his statement that
Nunn's hometown to Perry, Ga.
"Those of us who have worked
Nunn, the respected chairman closely with Sam Nunn ... can
of the Senate Armed Services assure your readers that pork
Committee, Is unaccustomed to barrel politics on defense Is not
bad publicity. He Is fuming over his style." We cannot recall a
our suggestion that his life- single case when a high-level
saving support for the supporlfor Pentagon official was so bold as
the program had anything to do to charge openly that pork-barrel
with the old pork barrel.
politics were any congressman's
Our story came from solid
StyJe."
'
sources, and the facts · were
McGovern and Nunn both
double-checked. But we prom- noted that the Air Force orlgl·
Ised the senator we would Invest!· nated the Tacit Rainbow progate further. It's clear upon gram In 1981 and, on the record,
closer examination that the pro- has continued to support II. But,
gram, though it may not have off the record. the Pentagon has
begun as pork barrel, Is now been bitterly divided over the
swimming In lard.
missile's value and technical
While we looked deeper, Nunn performance. Top officials, esperallied his troops. The short- cially at In the Air Force, have
term, actlng·Secretary of the Air ..been quietly. Internally. opposed
Force James McGovern, came to to Tacit Rainbow for at least four
Nunn's defense. We sympathize years, according to our Pentagon
with McGOvern. On military sources.
Issues, Nunn Is widely regarded
The opponents of the missile
as the most powerful man on were told by the highest level
Capital Hill. He could well be the Pentagon officials time and
0

!fie

.

61RfR
--~

By lack Anderson and Dale VanAtta
program -advice of which Nunn
again that It was "Nunn's protold
us he was Ignorant. '
gram," so the Air Force would
The
story gets worse before It
have to swallow lt.
gets
better.
We've now found a
Tacit Rainbow had another
third
savior
of
Tacit Rainbowpowerful man In Its corner Victor
D.
Cohen,
deputy assist·
former ~sslstant Navy secretary
ant
secretary
of
the
Air Force for
Melvyn R. Paisley who made
tactical
systems,
another
figure
Tacit Rainbow a joint Air Force·
In
the
defense
procurement
lnNavy project in 1984 and 1985,
which saved lt. Paisley Is at the ves ligation. Cohen ~lded with
center of the FBI's two-year-old . Paisley In 1984-85 to save the
defense procurement probe, and program over the opposition of
Nunn didn't like the fact that we the Air Force's military commentioned his name and Pals- mander of procurement at the
time, Gen~ Lawrence Skantze.
ley's In the same breath.
Nunn may never have ~poken
"I have no Idea what role Mr.
with
Paisley or Cohen about the
Paisley played In the Tacit
program,
and we never reported
Rainbow program because I
that
they
conspired. But when
have never discussed the subject
Nunn
says
the Air Force and the
with him. To connect me In any
Navy
wanted
Tacit Rainbow, ~e
way with Mr. Paisley's alleged
actlvltley_ Is totally unfounded Is forced to fall back on dubious
company.
. and unfa1r."
We never said the two were In , Nunn claims he supported the
collusion. We did say that there program before the summer of
was more to the Pentagon's 19.86_when..ihe missile's builder,
public support of the program Northrop, chose his home town
than met the eye. In 1985, Paisley for the production plant. Noroverrode legitimate advice by throp tells us they spent a year
top scientists at the China Lake looking at 120 possible sites In 19
Naval Weapons Center In Callfor: states and Perry turned out to be
nla who wanted to terminate the the best place for the plant. Of
cpurse.
In an Interview with us, Nunn
conceded that Tacit Rainbow
production was going to help the
people of Georgia and that this
had done him no political harm.
For Its part, the Air Force Is well
aware how embarrassing It
would .be to the powerful senator
If they cut funding requests for
the Tacit Rainbow now and
disappointed the good folks In his
hometown.
Nunn was angry that we raised
any question about friends or
relatives who might have profited from selling the Perry site
to Northrop. He told us that a
cousin did own a piece of the
property, but had sold It at
"distress sale" prices to another
t man, who later made a profit
selling to Northrop. Then, In a
healthy bit of candor, he named
two Perry residents who made
good money on the land sales,
adding, "Both are friends of
mine."

This summer's drought and hot
weather have drawn attention to
a potential threat facing the
global environment. There Is
growing scientific evidence that
the earth's temperature Is rising
and that this rise can be attributed to what scientists have come
to call the "greenhouse effect."
The greenhouse effect is a
natural and generally beneficial
atmospheric occurrence, but
there Is Increasing evidence that
this condition has gone away due
in large part to the essentially
uncontrolled cumulative emis·
slon of· industrial-generated
· gases that have occured over the
last century or more. he greenhouse effect results from carbon
dioxide and other gases that are
discharged Into the air. These
gases when dispersed Into the
earth's atmosphere act to lock in
the heat resulting from the sun's
rays, preventing the dissipation
of that heat from the earth's
atmosphere. Because of these
gases, the earth Is warmer than It
otherwise would be. This warmth
In turn permits the growth of
vegetation, and life as we know
It, to exist. Without the green-

houseeffect, theearthwouldbea
wasteland of subzero tempera·
lures. Left to Its own devices, the
earth regulates and controls the .
density of these gases. The
oceans and forests absorb the
excess carbon dioxide and the
other gases formed, maintaining
them at stable levels and thereby
giving us relatively stable
temperatures.
However, many scientists now
believe that mankind has upset
this de.licate ecological balance.
Industry In the modern era has
increased the emissions of the
gases that cause the greenhouse
effect, such as carbon dioxide,
chlorofluorocarbons, methane.,
nitrous oxides and ground-based
ozone. Scientists fear that the
rise In the release of these gases
has been so great that It has
overwhelmed the earth's ability .
to remove them and as a result
the gases are contbtuing to build
up In the atmosphere. Scientific
studies have concluded that
carbon dioxide levels have risen
ln the.past 30 years In an amount'
equivalent to their rise over the
previous 200 years. As Industrial
growth and e!lergy use continue

to climb worldwide these emls·
slons can be expected to climb
even higher in the future.
Themostomlnousresultofthls
buildup of gases is a global rise In
the earth's temperature. Over
the past 100 years, worldwide
temperatures have risen by .
about 1.2 degrees Fahrenheit.
Furthermore, !!present trends
continue some scientists conelude that temperatures could
climb another three to nine
degrees by the middle of the next
century. The consequences of
such a temperature rise could be
quite far reaching. Higher
temperatures would cause sea
water to expand and the polar Ice
caps and glaciers to partially
melt. This would raise sea levels
by one to four feet, seriously
threatening our costal areas. ·
Moreover, our area ol the Mldwest would experience even hotter
temperatures and less average
rainfall than we do now. Such
conditions would unquestionably
jeopardize our area's agrlcultural potential.
What all of this Is telling us Is
that the heat Is on, both literally
and figuratively, to do something

about this problem. To halt the
temperature rise, the emissions
of the gases which cause the
greenhouse effect need to be
much better monitored and controlled. As much as we might
wish to, we obviously cannot
Impose a total ban on the release
of such gases, for to do so would
leave much of the world without
the means of production, produc-,
tlon essential to the world's
everyday existence.
However, we can conserve on
the use of products whl.c h create
the emissions that cause the
problem and we can search for
alternative ways to produce
which do not result In the release
of these gases.
The atmosphere belongs to all
countries. All countries are responsible for the problem and
!:lave a responslbllty to address
II. Only through an International
agreement of understanding and
cooperation can · we hope to
address the problem In a meanlngful 'way. And unless such an
effort Is undertaken soon, the
excessively hot summer of 1988
could become the typical
summer of the 1990s.

_
Sarah Overstreet
~ Let smokers vay health tax ____

•

Today in history
:'
By United Press International
'Today Is Wednesday, Aug. 24, the 237th day of1988 with 129 to follow.
:The moon Is waxing, moving toward Its full phase.
:t'he morning stars are Venus, Mars and Jupiter.
-The evening stars are Mercury and Saturn.
!rhose born on this date are under the sign of VIrgo. They Include
p-.neer Brltlsli abolitionist William Wilberforce In 1759; Joshua
Lionel Cowen, Inventor of the electric toy train, in 1880; English critic
a tid wit Sir Max Beerbohrn In 1872; ·Roman Catholic Cardinal Richard
qshlng, archbishop of Boston, In 18!15; country music publisher Fred
Rose In 1897; Argentine poet and au thor Jorge Luis Borges In 1899;
and Ohio State football runnlngbackArchleGr!ffln, the only two-time
Helsman Trophy winner, In 1954 (age 34).
·

STEALS SECOND - The Indians' Carmen Castillo, right,
modons for time out alter steal big second In the second lnnbtg of
Tuesday night's game against the Milwaukee Brewers In
Milwaukee. Brewers' shortstop D11le Sveum tags the runner for
reassurance. The Tribe beat the Brewers 6-2. (UPI)

Scoreboard ...

Voters In my Southwest Mls·
sour! city just voted down a
proposed cigarette tax hike of a
nickel a pack. I think they made
the ~lght decision.
It s not that I thlnksmoklnglsa
good Idea. But our city fathers
wanted to use the tax reven4e for
street wealntenance. I can't see
what smoking cigarettes has to
do with street maintenance,
unless you're figuring the cost of
picking up butts.
Taxing a product that one
segment of the population buys
and another does not, to fund
something that everyone uses or
needs, just Isn't fair. It's arb!trary, and usually decided upon
by the group that doesn't buy the
product to be taxed. Put another
way, It's a "sin" tax, a tax put
onto a product by a group who
believe buying the product Is a
sin.
Smoking ·c igarettes Isn't a sin.
Smoking Is a health hazard, a
practice that cos Is the nation $65
billion a year In health care and
lost productivity. (Source: Congresslonal Office of Technology
Assessment.) It Is an action with
a predictable outcome, a rnathematlcal probability.
The more you smoke, the
higher the probability that at
some point, you will need a
significant amount of money
more than If you didn't smoke,
just to keep you functioning

By United

•

""'"

......

Detrult

1'1

14 .Hii

.ne

n

w ...

Kl! .33'!1 30h

79 18 .8!2 -

Oakland

71 $4 .588 j
415 61 !i'20 I~
12 84 At2 16ih

Mtnll!tlot.a

Kan- fll)'
Calllornl•

56 &amp;K .Ut %1%
51 n .n&amp; ~.t Yt
Sl 7~ .4D:Ii Z"' ~

Toxos
Chlcaso

TuC11dM,Y'~ II4!K\M;8

New YorkS, Pakblnd4
Seatt~ at Baltimore, ppd., rain
Boston 10, Ca&amp;llfornl a 2
Cln-~land 6, Mllwau kl~ 2

Teroni.o 7. Chlcaao%
Mlnillelota 7,
Kan.w~·

~roll~.

10 lnnln~

WebMIIIf'" G.11.met1
!Lon1 4-t) v.t Toronto

Sol), U :35 p.m.

OakiiUid ISkwart 15·11) at New York
{Candelaria 13-7), 1 :ltfl p.m.

Clt'\leland 1Candlottl &amp;-Kl at Mllwau J.l!e

!Flier 5-tl. t:SS p.m.

Stll.cy

seatte (Lanpaon t-10 and Mooft' '7· 12)

'

at

t-1%)

Boston

Def;rok (TIUialla 14-7) at· Mln~Esota
(Tollwr U), R:OII p.m.
K·aa~ Oty (SaherhaK"en IZ..l:IJ at
Tn-ato {Wit15·11),8:35 p.m.
Thurtld 10''111 G1u1U!f~
.N- York aal Mllwaulcu•

N.4.TION.4.L LEAGL1E

New Vorll

W L Pel. GB
7S 112 .ISM -

PIUabu~~;h

88

Monlrul

Ufil.U29
81 82 .~!NI II

n

-1\f.

.5-111

Chlllaao
St. Louis

511 89 .UK 17

Phlladelpbh'

II'! 73

21

.~18

Los An pieR
San JqouciiK'o
Houflton
Clnrlnra!l

1! S3 .576 -

SanDiep

81 6-1 .-IKII II

8!1 Sfl .510
~ 511 .5-&amp;0
fi9 61 .MJK

.flit
KYz

. .a 112 .a.w 2!1
Tut'!!di\Y'" Ret~tlt~
Pftt&amp;bu ~~~~ 2, C'l nc·l ,.11 o
Cblcq:o I, Hou/!lon 3
Sl. Loubl 7, A.tiKnta I)
Sian .Diego 9. PhUadelpl\la I
NI!W \'ork5, Los An Kelt'~! I
Mo.lireal2, San Franclltf!o I, Ia lntlln~
Mo'eft!Kiay's (*am~
Hou!ilon I Ryan 9-! I) al Chicago

tight t'nds Alht'rl R!l't'tf', Mark Gehring

and Petey M~&amp;I*•· oHen!llvt• !(lard DM.,.e
Harbour, oftenlllve lllckle Carl Holml'-~
!lllld safety 'Todd Krumm; plllt'ed on
lnju_red re"en~ wide rt'celvers Erir
Y.artwr and Rod GN.-cn, rmnlng baacll
DMrr)'l M&lt;.ofllll, llneb1u:kerl\ Brian

(1\tadchu. 16-G), %~20 p.m.

RonnPr, Blalle PelerAon, Cecil ,Jal'kson
:.u~d Kenl"l".. Rohlni!Oa. ollenlllvt• pard
Rick Kehr, dr.ltnNivf' tat·k:lf Marll
l&gt;lu·ke.. •nil !llllet)' ,fii"Jf Dump!lon;
plll.ced(arl Mlm~ 11.nd wldl! n'CPI\'H Dalr
CtrlpPJ on non-foolball ~IMWd ln,lul')'llllt;
pla.red l'enle'r Ka)" Hltchc:ock on lhr
phy"'cally unatble to pt&gt;rfonn L!t.

Monlrf'al (MartlaM. 1·1·9) ut San
Franci!Mlo (llown111 13·9), ~:05 p.m.
Cinchtllltl (Browrdn~ 1%-IJ a.t Pltbihul"'lh (Dunne 1-101.7:15 p.m.
A.llanli1 IMahlj!l' 9-IIJ at Sl . I.Alli14
i.Del.eo•M-11), II : 35 p.m .
Phl.. delpllla I Palmer 1·K)atSanDiep
CWNIHDn JO-IIJ,If:05 p.m.
Nrw York (Ojeda K-12:) at Los 1\aKfit'!&lt;
(Hen.. ~r 17-7), 11:3$ p.m.
Thunwl~'!i Gaml'!l
fhJcqo M Atlanta

'
PGA this week

Transactions

By

llmo •loroll
Chlca~~:o !Nl) St.ootl sander .~on frM'I

•

'

'

l

.

Acttvated pll~·h(•r
80-d a.v t'mf'I'R'eN·y
lisa bled IIKt; pilwt&gt;d pltchl!r PMI Perryun
U4ay dllilllhll"dllllf,
Clnclnratl- Call~:d •P pitt her Kt-lth
Brown from NIIINiwiiiP ol !\merle an
As!'&gt;ocl atlun I AI\ A J; p ..u·ed pllt:hl!r ,Jose
RIJO on dlllllhled 11.&lt;11 ~trMt:IIW lo Au« .

"·

Mllwauke" - Plu• ·rd pllther MW"k
flt'ar on 15-d IU' dbw. hllld Ibill N.!l .--d l\l'
to A.u~. 2'!; rf'calll"d pitcher Chrl!l Bo!o!lo
from Denver of Pat:lfh: roasl l..PBI[UI.•
(1\AA.) .
/j ,., ,,;l"flm/1

Mlnn!!llota - Sl~dHIIIMus'll'lmW!Io
_..~IY' coachlnllf t•oNract .
f ,1/, ,1/i ,.

81c111l COII l! ~f' -Suspt'nd«&gt;d~ard Rkk
\\'IIIIIUTI!II.

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

C'l11c~t~~o- Kelf'IUI('d wid(' n&gt;t'l'iver l.t'W
Bar~. delen!!IVt' tuu·k EJD·pl Allen,

dt&gt;Jentilve tacklf' ,Jim 1\!thoff, ta.cklr!&lt;;
Mike Bar•rd aiKI Joel Portt•r, pu•er
Tomm)' Barllha.nU, wldl' recel~r .nm
Hockaday, lhtehaeker Will ·lot-on,
kieler Ttm Luhar, runnln1 hack M thony Mo11k'y, llghl end Bre•t Novo11elsll,y, ani dt"fotmdvll" find Kl'lth Smith I
.Mped pu!Hr Mo . . Robblllf'l,
Clndnlldl - Rele.-ed center Dave

tumlnlloiL
Detrult - Wa.lvt'd lf;"llrd Todd Irvin;
plaCf'd l.'6rlll'rtuwk Du•ne Gall..-y en
lnjul'f'd re~~rr~; pllaced tip;._ en.d David
Hill a. MW!ne_..cl nOI ftport.
Green Ba.r - KeleMCd Ctn~r Bill
Cherry: walvedMichat'IM~I.U; placf'd
n:celver PhWip Ep,. and linebacker
llrlaa Noblt •n re~terw-dld not l'f'ptlft;
placed lat·ldr Alan Vellll'~d. ruanln.:
haclua Kell)' Cook. Lavale Th..,...11 and
Pl&amp;rick Colllna, rt&gt;cl!tverw Dewe,. DoNUih and K~ PuleU, deftnlive hacll
lte•..th ol•beon. defet~..we crll Brent
Moor!!, ilhl encl Paul Pomfret Mid pard

TorntnY Rohlto. on lnJ•rf'd retene.

Bo. . O"e- WIU\'fd ll~~~&amp;baellen D11.vld

Spr... lllt. ,John Brandl')' and TW

Jeflenofto wl~ recelwer11 Mart~ Johann.
McDo•ld, ctlrla.Darrt•llon
and KeMII "11111, cornerhaclul E\oan
Cooper aad ToiQ' ~110me, deJenllln
eltd R.,to,. Caollll. c-rd Bftt Peterl'lmar 11. U1hl end 1\rrllle ol ... m and
, ...... , htetl&amp;a Mille Wl~l.- aiMI Chrill
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MlsslnM stau - Two Q1&amp;8tl!flen who
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Ttti! C'OUf'liE' - Tht' rat lrt:: of par-70 only

makes nrestont 111narrow lalrwa:v .. and
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falrwavs a lltUe thin In spOts and The
a;creeonS are fastt'r as Wf!ll. 'rhe 6~- yard
16111 holt' looks lmporil ni but h111 been thr
sta"E' of many mefTI()rablt' d\01.1. Tllt
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- f'Oos. 5. 7, J:l and J!l. wh..re pin
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Pa.~t Hl~tt:llghts Dents Wat.ton of
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in the-second round en routt' towtnNn-in
19114. Jack Nlrk.,.u! won the lr.uaural
exhibition In 1962. Stadlf"r ~nt :1!1 hole5
without a IJoAt'Y In 198().

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DllWIII!'J and Herbert RarrtM,

recdwr Mow Wea.Uu•r11.
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meroy, Ohio. by the Ohio Valley Pub·
ltshtng

SIUI Franch;cO - Waiwf'd N!fet.r Carlton Wllllam.Mon and pu .. er Ron Keller:
p•ced defeulwe tal·illt! Mike Hooper, •
df!lenilvC' end Pflt'r Kurler, co,...rb•d·
Cory Nlx9111IUHIIhM~biWkcr Todd Shell on
Injured re11.erw; ptaced Urht end Grell
Baty and linebacker Ken Man:blol on
minor tnjtll'f'd M!ICI'W,
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Ll'ster Wllllum~, John Hines and Lo)'d
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hacker- Rico Tlpt4n, Dl..,tdcb WIIM' and
Arthur While, oHeaiJI\'e pardlt Tim '
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I USPS tf5·iltl)
A Division of MaJUmedla, Inc.

punier Mlkt- Crowe and tackle: Da"e
Solon.
NV Glanll - W!Lived pllll&amp;er Scott

at Baltlmon! (BaHard 7-10 Alld Schmidt
1-S), !, 5:15p.m.
•
,
{Wtt I

six·Strlkrout, no-walk performance. In fact, he' s surprised
himself.
.
"I would be lying If I said I
wasn't surprised at my record,"
the rlght·hande.r said. "In spring
training, I said ifl was a ~tarter I
hoped to win 15 games. I'm
Continued on page 4

The Daily Sentinel

Froldln and defen!ll\'e hack Nell Gal·
hralth: placed llneha&lt;:kerDavld.W ard on
lnjuwd reserve: named Gu)' Morrin
as818taat offenslvli' lint coach; reachf'd
ten tat two aveem,.nl wtth Tampl Bay to
· t•de holdout wide recelwer ~ep•n
SU.rrtn1.
New Or~aniJ - &lt;:.It daht end Paul
Coflma•. guard Boh SimA, cornerback
Clarenee Nunn. qurllr!rback Ttodd s ...
toe, 11-.ebacller lee DeForut, reeelwrs

Cblcap

CaiUorala

. games In the National League
East, New York has won three of
four games. In ei,::ht games
against the Dodgers this season.
the Mets have· won seven.
Cone, 13-3, has been a pleasant ·
surprise for the Mets since he
was acquired from Kansas City
last season. Tuesday, he lmpmved to 13-3 with a nine·hlt;

True! ow.
New En Klamd- ReleWM!d kicker Tony

Cit,. I!, Teu.s 7

jMu8~1nan

Tuesday n!kht, leading the Mets
to their second straight victory
over the Dodgers at Los Angeles,
5·1.
Although the Mets have languished since the Ali·Star break,
New York has played well
· a.galnst key opponents. In the last ·
two series against the Pittsburgh
Pirates, who they lead by 4,1·2

Miami - Wlllved pant Sal Cesario;

63 63 .510 II 'lr
110 i6
13'/,

Clewland

Scaute

By GERRY MONIGAN
UPI Sports Writer
Against tl!e team they might
face for the National League
pennant, . the New York Mets
raised their performance to
wstseason Intensity.
David Cone allowed one run
over 7 2·3 Innings and Wally,
Backman drove In two runs

pllced l:enter Dwla;btStephe!Uron, pard
ChrtM Conlla. t11~ end Dan.John5ona.t
Julback Tern lrDWII on thl' pllf111C.. Iy
unable toperiOrm liM: placedllntb~~eker
Scolt NlcoM11 and lui hack Cb ad SU.rlr.on
IQ~ured re!U!I'w.
Mlnlll'aota - Releued punter• Grer
Coleman o~~nd Mlke Rice. Iackie Uo)d
Yaneey, wide ncelwer .lal11f!l&lt; Brim,
runnlns hack .. aurice Tumer. linebacker Paul McGowan, ccamerhack
~rrick While. defen~.,.e e.S Jell
Faalkner and 1111fety Nul Gurr;emos;
pllt.ced oil lnJun!d rtMrw ll•backer
Lt~nct&gt; Seller!!, ufetle~J Nonnan F1oyd
ud flekher l.ollilllen, taddl' Mlclr.IU!I
DurftUe and ruanlng hack Tony

%

Iii' Ill .545 5
84 f.1 .dG IO•!t

Mllwauke(•
Toroato

Baltlmo"-"

Mets hand Dodgers second loss in row

l'ftlef\'e.

" ' L Ph:l. GB
73 ~2 .5~ -

New York

'

,,

l"re~~1 ln~t-r 181 lo1111.l

AMERICAN LEAGUE

and/ or alive. This Is what smok·
The anti-tax sentiment In this product to be taxed. Tax cilng costs society as a whole !none country Is strong now, and excise garettes and funnel the money '
year: $22 billion In direct health· taxes are especially unpopular. directly Into health care, and 1
care expenditures -for cardlo· That's. understandable, because you've established a direct link
vascular disease, cancer, the proposed uses of these between cause and effect.
chronic lung disease -Including revenues have no relation to the
$3.4 billion In Medicare costs and ·
•
$700 million In Medicaid costs.
Which is why 1 believe cl- ·•
''
garettes should be taxed, and
taxed good - not to pay for
I
streets or the zoo or a new civic
•'
opera house, but so that revenues
can be funneled directly Into
'•
health-care system. Why should
the non-smoker be asked to foot
the health-care bill of the smoker
:- or receive less government
•
health care because smokers use
so much . of ihe health-care
!
dollar?
M!!dlcare and Medicaid bene!·
'
1
Its are being cut mercilessly as It
Is, as the sclssors-wU!lders try to
make funds cover needs. Think
what an extra $4.1 billion would
•
do. Thbtk what an extra $22
''
billion should do for private
Insurance rates - your private
Insurance rates.
'
If we taxed cigarettes and
•
applied the revenues to health·
care costs, It would mean paying
one's way, It would be Insurance:
•
Insurance for smokers that they
l
wlllhavehealthcareorsmoklngJ
related Illnesses; and Insurance
" ... Accordingly, here are the optlofll and how
'
that non-smokers won't be short·
th6y might have been handlfld by the follow'
changed later to pa:i for
Ing grNt movlfl dlrectora ... "
smokers .

's World

.-.nnlnr hack ,Jamee WIIIIMIM.
LA. R.,..- Wlll~ed runntnr hMt:k Jon
FraaclM and Millet)' F"'nk Wat~let;
placl'd delen~ve end Mike Plel and
· r ... ntng hACk Keith ,JulM'IJ on InJured

. Majors

The heat is on_________C_o~ng~._Cla_r_enc~e_M_ill_er '

...____

•,

1

amazing."
homered and Mike Greenwell
Elsewhere In the American
drove In his major league·
League, New York nipped Oak
leading lOOth run to power
land 5·4, Boston rocked Callfor· Boston. Mike Boddlcker, 10-14,
nia 10-2, Minnesota shaded De· earned the victory on his 31st
troll 7·5 in 10 Innings, Cleveland
birthday.
Twlhs 7, Tlsers 5
defeated Milwaukee 6-2, Torontc
trlppedChlcago7-2 andSeatt!eat
At Minneapolis, Kent Hrhek
Baltimore was postponed bestroked his second homer of the
cause of rain.
game, a two-run shot In the lOth
In the National League, lt was : off Mike Henneman, 6-3, to lift
Pittsburgh 2, Clnclnatl 0; Chi- Minnesota to its lOth straight
cago 9, Houston 3; St. Louis 7, · victory over Detroit.
Atlanta 0; San Diego 9, Phlladel·
Indians 6, Brewers 2
phlfll; New York 5, Los Angeles
At Milwaukee, Rich Yett, 8-4,
1; and Montreal2 , Sa!l Francisco scattered five hits over seven
lin 13 Innings.·
Innings to beat Bill" Wegman.
Yankees 5, Athletics 4
10-11, for the second ·tlme In six
At New York, Don Mattingly, 5 days. Paul Zuvella drove In two
for his previous 31, delivered a runs, Including the winner with a
run-scoring single with one out in fifth-Inning double.
the ninth for his first game,
Blue Jays 7, White Sox 2
At Toronto, Jesse Barfield
winning RBI since July 31.
helping New York stop a four- broke a 1-1 tie In the second
game skid. Dave Righetti helped Inning with a run-scoring ·single
blow a 4-0 lead before Improving for his 500th lifetime RBI, and
to 5-3.
finished the scoring with a
Red Sox 10, Angels 2
two-run homer lq, the eighth.
At Boston, Jim Rice, Rich Toronto's Jim Clancy, 7-13,
Gedman and Todd Benzinger threw 6 1-3 Innings.

Subscribers not desiring to pay the carrier may remit In advance direct to
The Dally Sentine-l on a 3, 6 or 12 month

basis. Credit will be given carrier each
week.
No subscriptions by mall permitted In
areas

where home rarriPr service Is

available.
Mall Subscription~
Jnsldt' Melp County
13 Weeks .. ........ ....... ...... .. .. ..... . S17.29

26 .Weeks ... .. ...... .. ..... ..... ...... ... .. $34.06
~2 Weeks .......... ...................... .. $66.56

SABO TAGGED OUT- The Reds' CbrlsSabo Is
tagged out by the Pirate•' Jose Lind as be tries to
steal second base In the sixth Inning of Tuesday

night's game In Pittsburgh. The Pirates won the
game 2-0. (UPI)

Ouhlde Mel~ County
t1 Weeks .... ,.. ... ,.. .. ....... ,,... ,,.. ,, , S18.20
26 WePks , ..................... . ...... ..... $35.10

; 2 Weeks ......................... ...... ... 167.00

Marauder golfers · r.-~~~~~~~~~=:
begin drills for '88
ROCK SPRINGS - The 1988
Meigs High School golf team
began practice Monday, August
15 at the Jay mar Golf Club.
Meigs ·returns five members
from last year's fourth place
TVC team. Returnees are seniors
Matt Baker and Scott Barton and
sophomores Joe Smith, Shawn
Lipscomb and Jamey Little.
First year gollers participating
for Meigs are sophomores Kevin
Taylor and Mike Van Meter and
freshman Phil Hovatter.
Matt Baker will be a strong
competitor for Meigs after sophomore and ·junior year all-league
honors.
Baker qualified th,is summer
for the State Youth Insurance
Classic and shot 83-86 In the 36
hole event held at Westfield
,Country Club near Akron. His
participation In the two day
tournament was assisted bv
donations from Pat Hill Ford,
Crow's Family Restaurant,
Davls-Qulckel Insurance, Jay·
mar Tuesday Men's League,
Meigs High Fellowship of Chris·
tian Athletes, Cella McCoy and
Don Stanley.
The Meigs squad, led by Baker .
and Barton, will begin TVC play
on Monday, August 29 at Oxbow
Golf Club In an eight team
tournament. The same elghtTVC
teams will be hosted by Meigs at
the J aymar Golf Club on Tliurs·
day, .S eptember 1.

Reils aall up Brown
CINCIJI.'NATI !UP!) - The
Cincinnati Reds Tuesday called
up minor league pitcher Keith
Brown and placed pitcher Jose
Rljo on the disabled list.
Brown, 24, was called up from
Class AAA Nashville, where he
had a 6-3 record and 1.90 earned
run average. Earlier this seasPII,
the righthander was 9-1 with a
1.42 ERA with Class AA Cbatta·
nooga. He will make his major
league debut Thursday night
against the St. Louis Cardinals.

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�•
Page 4 The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, August 24. 1988

Anchorage voters favor hosting 1994 winter Olympics
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (UP))
- Anchorage voters gave local
Olympics boosters a 2-1 mandate
to compete with European cities
for the 1994 Winter Games,
saying' 'yes'' to staging privately
funded $279 million Games but
agreeing to have the city liable
for any debt.
Final vote totals this morning
showed that Olympics "yes"
votes outnumbered "no" votes
34,480 (66 percent) to 17,760 133.9
percent).
A last-minute pro-Olympics
blitz • that saturated Anchorage
with ads, signs, media, and
grass-roots campaigning appeared to pay off with a surge of
support for the city's Olympics
bid In Tuesday's election.

"Anchorage savs, "Yes.' It"s
prepared lo put "on the Olympics,'" said, Anchorage OrganizIng Committee chairman Rick
Mystrom to cheering supporters
In a hotel ballroom where election results were coming ln.
" We're going to Korea," Mystrom declared, referring to the
meeting next month In Seoul
where the International Olympics Commit tee will select one of
four cities - Anchorage; Sofia,
Bulgaria; Ostersund, Sweden;
and Lillehammer, Norwav - as
site for the 1994 Winter Games.,
Failure to get a majority would
have doomed the bid by Anchorage, the only American city in the
running for the 1994 Winter

'

Games. But the AOC said all
along that it needed lar more
than a simple majority If the
American city was to have a
chance against strong European
competition.
Anchorage Olympics boosters
were elated- but surprised- at
receiving the much-touted mandate that will be used to impress
IOC decision-makers In Seoul
who pick Olympics host cities.
The AOC figures It will cost
$279 million to stage the Games In
Anchorage, and that the city w.lll
earn a $38 million profit.
Anchorage voters had to consider a long nine-part ballot
measure that asked .not just
whether they supported the
Olympics In Anchorage, bu,t

whether they support the city
signing a contract promising to
pay off any OlympiCs debt -an
IOC req ulremen t.
Just two months ago, a poll
showed Anchorage voters evenly
split over the Olympics funding.
Last week, a poll found 55 percent
support.
Anchorage residents supported the Olympics In a 1985
vote by a 2-1 ratio, but newspaper
exposes In April revealed that the
AOC withheld Information about
the city's financial commitment,
and that seriously undercut support. Mystrom said there were
days when he wondered If the
Olympics might fall to muster
even a simple majority.
Residents worried about AOC

Rimington hopes to join another team
CINCllliNATI (UPl) - - Fiveyear veteran center Dave Rim!ngton, released bv the Cincinnati Bengals.-4tter.1ie' flunked a
physical eX1iimllaiion. savs he
· hopes to join another NFL team.
"I want to keep playing, but it's
going to be tough to hook on with
another team." said Rlmlngton.
"Even though T feel good physically, when one team flunks .vou '
some others won't consider vou.
For rrie to get back in, it might
take a team that develops a
specific need at center."
Rim!ngton 's agent, Jim
Steiner. said he wilt be contact -

ing other teams for Rimington.
"Every team is different, "
said Steiner. "Look at joe
Klecka. He failed the Jets'
physical, but he continued to
play. Just because the Ben gals
don't pass him doesn't mean
another team wouldn't.
"Dave still wants to play and
he feels he can still compete.
We'll see if there's anv interest
out there for him and go from
there. There are several teams
that might be intere.s ted."
Although Bengals' officials refused to publicly dis'close exadlv

why Rlmington flunked his physical, tne 6-!oot-3, 288-pounder has
been hobbled parts of the past
two seasons with knee, ankle and
elbow Injuries.
"In the opinion of our doctors,
he has real risks if he continues to
play football.'' said Bengals'
assistant general manager Mike
Brown. ·~He is, of course, free
now to pursue a deal with any
other team. but we feel he should
take a doctor's advice into
consideration before making any
decisions.''
Said Rimington after his physi-

cal exam, "They gave me so
many X-rays, I !eel like I'm
glowing.''
Steiner said he didn't think the
Bengals were being vindictive In
releasing Rlmington. The 28year-o!d former Nebraska star
helped lead a players' strike last
season and was videotaped
scratching a replacement player'scarwitha key. He also was a
five-week contract holdout this
year.
While Rimlngton missed train·
ing camp, Bruce Kozerskl took
over as Cincinnati's No.1 center.

Integrity and about being
saddled with debts and thus
higher taxes. But the AOC
continued to Insist that Ancllorage could stage the games solely
with private money.
Mystrom apoliglzed for withholding Information about the
financial commitment and
launched an aggressive campaign to win back !Is support by
stressing that that the Games
would earn a pro!lt for Anchor-

' map.
age and put the city on the
The results showed the AOC
campaign worked, said a jubilant Mystrom, smiling ear-toear, and saying, "It's greater
than I expected. The support just
blossomed the last three or four
days. It's the Olympic spirit.
We're going to Seoul with the
message that Anchorage has
said, 'Yes.' Anchorage Is ready
for the 1994 Olympics, and that's
a good message."

PHILADELPHIA IUPI)
The Philadelphia Eagles will
start their fourth different offensive line combination In as manv ·
games Thursday against the
Detroit Lions.
Eagles Coach Buddy Ryan will
test fofiJier right tackle Reggie
Singletary at right guard, Adam
Schreiber at center, Ben Tambu.
rello at left guard, Matt Darwin
at lelt_tackle and, if he can learn
the Eagles' offense In two days,
Ron Heller at right tackle.
Philadelphia acquired Heller
from Seattle Monday for a
conditional 1989 draft pick, believed to be a middle-rounder,
"He's gifted, he's tough and
he's smart," Ryan said of Heller,
who started 56 of 58 games In four
seasons with Tampa Bay.
The Eagles were Interested In
obtaining Heller last April, but
Tampa Bay sent him Instead to
Seattle. The Eagles have lost
right guard Ron Baker for at
least the first six weeks of the
season because of a severed
tendon In his toe and center
Gerry Feehery to a knee Injury
.before training camp.
Feehery has returned to practice, but Is not at full strength,
moving Ryan to start Schreiber.
David Alexander, who took over
· at center when Feeherv went
down, was hlmselflostwlth a foot
Injury In the second exhibition
game.
Singletary and four-year veteran Ken,Reeves had been sharing
rlgbt tackle, but Ryan switched
Singletary to guard and said
Reeves has had an Inconsistent
preseason.

league start, but the Dodgers
remained 4 1-2 games ahead of
Houston and San Francisco In the
National League West.
In other games, P!tisburgh
blanked Cincinnati 2-0, Chicago
routed Houston 9-3, St-. l.ou!s
.ripped Atlanta 7-0, San Diego
clubbed Philadelphia 9-1, and
San Francisco nipped Montreal
2-1.
'
In the American League, It
was: New York 5, Oakland 4,
Seattle at Baltimore was postponed because of rain; Boston 10,
California 2; Cleveland 6, Milwaukee 2; Toronto 7, Chicago 2;
Minnesota 7, Detroit 5 In 10
Innings; and Kansas City 11,
Texas 7.

Har-rumph!

Who's No. I? In '88, it's Florida State
By Maj. Amos B Hoople
Fearless Forecaster

Egad, friends! College football
will really be great In '88. Yas, .
dear readers, the major national
powers are loaded, particularly
on offense.
Who's No. 1 this year? Our
pre-season choice Is Florida
State.
The Seminoles, under Bobby
Bowden, missed the national title
In 1987 due to a falled two-point
conversation. In Its only loss of
the season, FSU "-'as beaten by
the Miami Hurricanes, 26-25, who
went on to capture the
championship.
Now Florida State has a
powerhouse returning. It's led by
TB Sammie Smith, a sure Heisman candidate, ~nd a pair of
excellent QBs - senior Chip
Ferguson and soph Peter Tom
Willis. The FSU defense features
1987 World Almanac AllAmerican Del on Sanders. possl·
bly the best cornerback In the
nation.
Here Is the rest of the Hoople
Top 10 for 1988: 2.Nebraska; 3.
Southern California; 4. Michl·
gan; 5. Oklahoma; 6. Texas
A&amp;M; 7. Miami (Fla.); 8. Notre

Dame; 9. Clemson; 10. !:&gt;yracuse.
Two of those teams are ready
to get the season off to a rousing
start.
The No. 2 Nebraska Cornhuskers and the No.6 Texas A&amp;M
Aggies will clash kinthe sixth
annual Kickoff Classic on Satur·
day, Aug. 27 IRaycom-TV) at the
Meadowlands in New Jersey.
Jove! 'Tis a matchmaker's
delight.
Nebraska, under Tom Os·
borne, has a 51-10 (.836) mark
over the last five years. Coach
Jackie Sherlll' s Aggles stand
40-17-1 (.690) over' that period.
Nebraska lost some defensive
strengtn to graduation. But the
'Huskers figure to score a lot of
points. QB Steve Taylor is a
Helsman Trophy candidate and
center Jake Young, a 1987 World
Almanac All-American, anchors
the line.
Texas A&amp;M lived up to the
Hoople prediction last year and
won Its third consecutive SWC
title. They will make It four
straight in '88. They're solid
throughout, with a defense bordering on the superlative.
In a classic struggle, look for
Nebraska to open the 1988 season
by winning the Kickoff Classic.

24-17. Harrumph!
Southern Cal, our No. 3 choice
for '88, was the suprlse Pac-10
champ last season. With a whole
year to absorb coach Larry
Smith's system, the Trojans are
odds-on favorites to repeat.
Leading USC into its 100th season
is QB deluxe Rodney Peete. And,
as usual, a strong, strong
defense.
Bo Schembechler starts his
20th year at No. 4 Michigan with
all the tools to win the Big Ten
race. The Wolves are blessed
with a wealth of wide receivers;
John Kolesar, Greg McMur!y,
Chris Calioway and Tripp
Welbourned.
No. 5 Oklahoma has some
rebuilding to do. They also lace
the possible loss of versatile QB
Jamelle Holieway due to knee
surg.ery. But Barry Switzer Is the
nation's wlnnlngest coach, 14826-4 ( .843). 'Nut said! '
Why Is coach Jimmy Johnson's
Miami only No. 7? The Hurricanes won It all last year. But
they paid a heavy toll In graduation. Even so, Johnson's usual
hard -rock defense and the pinpoint passing of soph QB Steve
Walsh w111 give foes a headache.

excellence in the MAC.
champion Kentucky .
Und er Shrider, Miami built
"My last day as Director of
Millett Hall. home of the Redskin
Athletics at Miami Universltv
basketball teams , and the At- . will be Saturday, Dec. 31, 1988, '·
hletic Complex that includes
Shrider sa id In making his plans
Yager Stadium.
J&lt;nown. "I have known for quite
Shrider was head basketball
some time that 1986 would be the
.and baseball coac h and assistant
yea r. I am 65 years old a nd It is
'football coach at Gallia Academv
time I move on to the next
High School from 1949 through
chapter of my life.
1956. His 1953-54 andd 1954 -55
"By making the announcebasketball teaJTis won the Sou - mj!nt at this time it will give the
theastern Ohio League title, as
University ample tim e to adverdid his baseball teams in 1954 and
tise the position and select a
1955.
search committee. During the
He coached a t Miamisburg
next five months I plan to be the
High School one year after dirPctor as I have been for lhe
leaving Gallipolis.
past quarter of a .centurv.
After coming to Miami in 1957
"I personally feel I have been
as head basketball coach,
associated with the finest
Shrider led the Redskins to a
coaches and support staff in the
nine-year record of 126-96. He
nation. Miami is a great acahelped guide his teams to four
demic institution, has great
MAC titles and compiled a league athletic tradition and the most
mark of 76-34, which included a
beautiful, college campus I have
seen.
winning record over every team.
One of his greatest thrills In
"But even more importa ntly
basketball came in 1958 when are the people. The staff. faculty.
Miami became the first MAC townspeople, alumni and friends
team to win in the NCAA of Miami are quality people
Tournament as it defeated Pitt,
through and through, " concluded
before losing toe\ entual national
Shrider.

OSU linebacker ready for action
COLUMBUS. Ohio iUPI) Ohio State inside linebacker John
Sullivan could hardlv contain
himself, waiting for the Buckeyes to begin practicing In pads
for the first time today.
"Unlike maybe some of these
other guys around here,'' said
Sullivan, "I can't walt to hit
somebody. "
Before OSU opens the season at
home against Syracuse Sept. 10,
Sullivan hopes to have proved
that he's recovered from reconstructive surgery on his left knee
In October.
"It's something I've been waitIng for since the second quarter
of the Minnesota game last year,
when 1 was laying on a table In

the dressing room with ·doctors
standing around me saying they
dldn' t know lfl'd ever get to play
again," said Sullivan.
"I've proved everybody
wrong," he said. "I'm back, and
I'm ready to go ."
· Gary Blackney. who coaches
Ohio State linebackers, agreed.
''John's moving real well phys1cally," he said. "He's psychologIcally and mentally ready to go. I
can't see where he's lost
anything."
OSU trainer Billy Hill said the
recovEiry period for a player
coming off major knee surgery Is
generally about .12 mon!hs, but
Blackney said he's found that not
always to tie the case with

...

Barnes broke his left leg during
preseason practice last Aug. 25
and was on Injured reserve last
season. Wide receiver has been
. the Bears' deepest and most
competitive position this year.
INDIANAPOLIS iUPI) -The
Indianapolis Colts waived four·
year veteran linebacker Dave
Ahrens, wide receiver Kelley
Johnson, and nose tackles Willie
Broughton and Scott Kellar.
GREEN BAY, Wis. (UP)) Veteran offensive linemen Ron
Hallstrom and Mark Cannon say
they can be ready to play In the
Green Bay Packers' regularseason opener Sept. 4. despite
missing a month of training
camp. They came to camp
Monday after signing contracts.
Hallstrom, the Incumbent
rll!hl guard, signed a two-year
deaL Cannon, a starting center·
since 1985, signed for three years.
"This is basically the third
head coach since I've been here
and I've adjusted to every
svstem that's been here," Hallsirom said of new coach Lindy
Infante. "When It comes down to
It, it's blocking and tackling."
· NEW ORLEANS IUPI) -The
New Orleans Saints cut 10-year
veteran tight end Paul Coffman
and eight other players, IncludIng three draft picks. Coffman.
32, had played eight seasons with
Green Bay and two at Kansas
City before signing with the
Saints as ~ free agent.
"I have no regrets," Coffman
said. "I'll just go walt and see If
somebody would like to use me. I
think I can still play."
The three draft picks sliced
from the roster were guard Bob
Sims, cornerback Clarence Nunn
and quarterback Todd Santos.
Others released were llnebacker
Joe DeForest, wide receiver
Stacy Dawsey, punter · Mike
Crowe and tackle Dave Solon.
PITTSBURGH iUPI) .- The
Pittsburgh Steelers waived 10
players, Including two-way college star Gordie Lockbaum and
12-year veteran nose tackle Gary
Dunn.

Lockbaum finished third in last
year's Helsman Trophy after
starring at wide receiver and
defensive back for Holy Cross.
Dunn, 34, was the Steelers'
sixth-round draft t•hoice In 1976
and one of only four players
remaining who played In a Super
Bowl for Pittsburgh. Dunn made
. 45 tackles last year, best among
the team's defensive linemen.
The other veteran waived was
~~ckle Mark Behning.
CINCII'&lt;NATI (UP!) - Fiveyear veteran center Dave Rin;l;lngton, released by the Cincinnati Bengals after he flunked a
physical examination. says he
hopes to join another NFL team.
" I want to keep playing, but it's
going to be tough to hook on with
another team,'' said Rimington,
28. " Even !hough I feel good
physically, when one team flunks
you, some others won' t .consider
you. For me to get back In, it
might take a team that develops
a s peci!!c need at center. "
Although Bengals officials re·
fused to disclose exactly why
Rlmington flunked his physical.
the 6-foot-3, 288-pounder has been
hobbled parts of the past two
seasons with knee, ankle and
elbow injuries .
Said Rlmlngton after his physi- .
cal exam, "They gave me so
many X·rays, I feel like I'm
glowing."
MANKATO, Minn. (UPI) Running back Darrin Nelson
ended his holdout Monday night
after resolving his contract dispute with the Minnesota VIkings,
leaving Pro Bowl tackle Gary
Zimmerman and defensive end
Doug Martin as the team's
remaining veteran holdouts.
Nelson led the NFL last year
with a 4.9-yard rushing average.
The final piece of his contract
negotiating puzzle was believed
to be a $100.000 interest-free loan.
Nelson also reportedly will receive a $300,000 Insurance policy
to cover him In event of a
caree rrending injury.

Nelson said he did not receive a
contract extension, which had
been one o( the reasons lor his
holdout. Vikings General Man-

ager Mike Lynn has a policy of
refusing to extend contracts for
players who tiold out. Nelson's
contract, which expires after the
season, pays him $300,000 this
year plus a possible $50,000 In
incentives. Nelson was fined
$1,000 a day for the31dayshewas
not in camp.
PONTIAC, Mich. IUPl)- The
Del roll Lions waived guard Todd
Irvin, placed on Injured reserve
cornerback Duane Gallaway and
placed on reserve-did not report
tight end David Hill.

'MADISON, N..l . iUP)) -Punter Sean Landeta joined the New
York Giants for practice Tuesday, leaving Coach Bill Parcells
with two unsigned Pro Bowlers
and five worrisome areas on his
team when the club broke cam p.
"It's been the same every day
for the last two weeks," Parcells
said. "Special reams worries me,
solidifying the offensive line
worries me, the emergence of a
dominant wide receiver worries
me, now It looks !Ike the health of
the defensive line worries me,
the play of our linebackers
worries tne. A lot of things worry

,

football players .
"Not with these kids who are
super competitive and mentally
tough,'' said Blackney. "The one
thing about John Sull!van Is he Is
really mentally tough."
Sullivan had his knee rep&amp;ired
at the Cleveland Clinic.
"I'm not going to sit here and
tell you the road back hasn't been
rough," said Sullivan, "because
It has been. The people at the
Cleveland Clinic and hereatOhlo
State have all gone out of their
way to help me, to make sure I
did things right.
"They all told me to take my
time, don't hurry. Well, I have,
and now It's time to show my
stuff.

Nose tackle Jim Burt, coming
off surgery to remove two disc s
from his Injured back last
December, walked of! the field
·Tuesday suffering from back
pain. Erik Howard. battling Burt
lor the starting job, Is sidelined
with a hlp Injury. Rookie John
Carter is left as the lone healthy
nose tackle. The extent of Burt's
injury was not known.
Pro Bowl lineback~r Carl
Banks and tight end Mark
Bavaro are still unsigned.

'·

DON'T LET-WINTER
TAKE YOUR HEATI G
FORA
RIDE.
ELWAY SCAMPERS - Denver Bronco quarterback John Elway tries to break away from
Miami Dolphin linebacker Hugh Green (55)

KANSAS CITY, Mo. iUP))The Kansas City Chiefs waived
veteran punter Lewis Colbert
and two rookie free agents,
running back James Chambers
and defensive back Darryl
Gaines.
Colbert ptayedJ6 games in 1986
as a rookie and had action In only
two contests last season because
of a back injury. In i986, he broke
the team record with punts in a
season with an AFC·hlgh 99 and
ranked seventh In the conference
with a 40.7-yard average per
punt,

during a NFL preseason game earlier this month.
The preseason ends Sunday, and the first
regular-season games begin Sept. 4. (UPI)

Cleveland cornerbacks have good teachers

When temperatures take the plunge
..., this winter, your heating bills needn't
climb. Not if you're on Columbia's
Budget Payment Plan.
•
The plan averages your bills into 12
equal payments, so there are no peaks
and valleys because ol the weather.
Instead, the monthly amount stays the
same ... higher than you now pay in the
summer, but a lot lower in the winter.
Rather than ups and downs, your
gas bills stay on a smooth, aven track
all year 'round.
It's easy to be a Budget Payment
customer, too. All you do is pay the
"Budget Amount" on your August bill,

and you'll be billed that amount every
month. Your meter will continue to be
read as usual, and each month's bill
will continue to show the amount of
gas you used. A review in March determines if your budget amount needs to
be adjusted because of weather.
Another good idea; sign on for
Chec~ too. It automatically makes
your gas payment from your checking
account each month, so·you save time,
postage and check charges.
Join the Columbia Budget Payment
Plan. You'll take thll ups and downs
out of your heating billa ... and leave
the high cost of winter behind.

COWMBIAGAS

KIRTLAND, Ohio I UP!)- It's
no surprise to Frank Minnifield
that Cleveland's y9ung cornerbacks have been receiving a lot of
praise during training camp.
''They're In the best school in
America," Minnifield said after
,
practice Tuesday.
The filth-year defender out of
Louisville Is rtot j ustta!klng. Last
season when Mlnnlt!eld and
teammate Hanford Dixon
started In the Pro Bowl, It
marked the first time In NFL
history that two starting Pro
Bowl cornerbacks were from the
same team.
"It's the same thlngaboutwlde
receivers," Minnifield said.
"Everyone that plays with me
and Hanford and against me and
Hanford In thlscampwl!lbellef!t.
There are a lot of things they're
going to have the opportunity to
see \hat very few corners will

see."
The understudies are thirdyear player Mark Harper from
Alcorn Stale, second-year player
Stephen Braggs from Texas and
rookie Anthony Blaylock from
Winston-Salem.
Cleveland defensive backfield
coach Bill CowHer believes
Harper and Braggs could Ill!

starters on most NFL teams, and
he likes the wav Btavlock Is
coming along. For now , however,
they have to play bbehlnd Minnifield and Dixon, who have been In
the last two Pro Bowls.
Minnifield and Dixon gained
their reputations while playing
man-to-man defense with a lot of
contact at the line of scrimmage
when that style of play was not
very common.
"It used to be very d lf!lcult to
find another team to play bumpand-run so we could study wide
receivers against bump-and-run,
but now It has become more
frequent," Minnifield said.
"If you're going to play manto-man and you're In the Cleveland Browns camp, you're going
to have the opportunity to learn
the techn!q ues and some of the
Ideas of what we're trying to do
on the field that you couldn't get
anywhere else."
But while Harper, Braggs and
Blaylock are learning from two
Pro Bowl cornerbacks, Mlnn!f!eld and Dixon taught
themselves.
"We learned from each other,"
said Dixon, who Is In his eighth
year out of Southern Mississippi.
"He (Minnifield) leached me

things, and
things."

I

leached

HERNDON, Va, iUPI)- The
Washington Redsklns released
veteran kicker Ali Haji-Shelkh
and 16 players, and placed 13
players on Injured lists.
Haji-Sheikh, who has played
for three teams In five NFL
seasons, was Washington's
kicker last year, replacing the
Injured Jess Atkinson in the
second week of the season.
Haj !-Sheikh made 13 of 19 field
goals and 29 of 32 extra points In
11 regular-season games, but
&gt;onverted just 1 of 4 field goals
during the postseson.
Haj i-Shej)&lt;h was sharp in preseason. no¥tn!sslng a field goal or
extra point In exhibition games.
Haj !-Sheikh kicked an NFLrecord 35 field goals as a rookie
with the Giants in 1983. He played
three seasons with New York and
a ~eason each with Atlanta and
the Redskins .
The Redsklns earlier released
Atkinson, leaving .rookie Chip
Lohmlller. the team's top choice
in April's draft, as the kicker.

like his talent."
New England also has reached
a tentative agreement to trade
holdout wide receiver Stephen
Starring to Tampa Bay . Details
of the trade have not been
decided . Starring, who played
five years with the Patriots, was
also the team's top kickoff
returner.
Guy Mprrlss, a 15-year veteran
center who was waived Monday.
was named an assistant offensive line coach.
MANKATO, Minn I UP!)
Safety Neal Guggemos was cut
by the Minnesota Vikings and
Coach Jerry Burns also ·Said
Tommy Kramer will start at
quarterback In the team's final
exhibition game Friday night
against Miami.
It will be Kramer's second
start. Wade Wilso n suit·ted the
other two games.
Also cut were veteran punter
Greg Coleman. punter Mike
Rice, tackle Lloyd Yancey , wide
receiver James Brim, running
back Maurice Turner, linebacker Paul McGowan , cornerback Derrick White and defensive end Jeff Faulkner.

GREEN BAY, Wis. (UP!) The Green Bay Packers released
center Bill Cherry, who has
suffered from an unusual physical problem during training
camp, and waived punter MIchael Mancini. Cherry was held
out of several practices and
Friday night's exhibition game
against Kansas because of dehydration. Cherry also became
expendable ~hen holdout veteran center Mark Canna,~ signed a
HOUSTON (UPI)- The Housthree-year agreement with the
ton
Oilers cut 14 players. IncludPackers.
ing
three draft picks, and placed
The Packers also placed two
six
players on injured reserve.
holdouts, wide receiver Phillip
Among
those cut were linebacker
Epps and inside linebacker Brian David Spradlin
FOXBORO. Mass . tUPI 1
, a ninth-round
Noble, on the reserve-did not ·
selection
from
Texas
Christian;
New
England quarterback Tony ·,
report list.
wide receiver Marco Johnson, a Eason, recovering from offseaMIAMI (UPl) _ The Miami lOth-rounder from Hawaii; and son surgery on his throwing arm .
Dolphins placed Pro Bowl center linebacker John Brantley, a will be placed on injured reserve
h
12th-rounder from Georgia.
next week, the Patriots
Dwight Stephenson on t e physiannounced.
cally unable to perform list.
FOXBORO, Mass, IUP I)
Reserves Tom Ramsey and
Stephenson Injured his knee la te Bare-footed kicker Tony Frank- Doug Fluti'e are ft'ghtlng for the
I as t season.
"
backup' qua· t·terback 1'ob, bUt both
AI so pu t on th e Pup were lin, the NFL's leading scorer two are expected to make the team's
· con 1·m (knee) • ti g ht seasons ago, was waived by the 47-man roster. Steve Groga. n is
guard Ch ns
end Dan Johnson I back) and New England Patriots.
the team's starter.
The 5-foot-g Franklin, who
fu lib ac k Tom Brown (k nee ) ·
Eason suffered a shoulder
Miami waived guard Sal Cesario missed 11 of 26 field goals last
and placed on Injured reserve year, lost hi&lt; job to rookie Teddy ~eparation last season and nerve
linebacker scott Nicolas (knee) Garcia. Franklin had been critic- damage resulted when his arm
and fullback Chad Stark (knee) . ized for his short kickoffs. Ted was strapped down incorrectly .
Garcia. a fourth -round drafl
In March. he underwent surgery "
SEATTLE iUPl) _The Seat - choice. proved to have greater on a nerve in his forearm and
elbow but his recovery has been . ,
tie Seahawks cut Lester WIIU- kicking range than the veteran.
ams. a slx-vear defensive linePat riots Coach Raymond
slow. Eason ha s not pla yed In the
Patriots' three exhibition games
man, two-year tight end Andre Berry said of the FranklinHardy, first-year linebacker Garcia choice. "I decided to go andhispassesarellmitedintheir
with H , · ... ··~r' guv_ because 1 speed and distance,
Rico Trpton and llrst-year guard . - - - - - - - - - : _ _ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Tim Burnham .
This vear's draft choices cut
were safety Ray Jackson, linebacker Dietrich Wise and tackle
Rick McLeod.

me.' '

Richard G. (Dick) Shrider
announces retirement at MU
OXFORD. Ohio tUPI) - Miami Universit:---·
Richard G.
tDickl Shrider,
who began his
coaching career
at Gallipolis
High School in
1949. and who
kept the "Cradle
of Coaches" roc!Jii~
25 years. has announced his
retirement at the end of this vear.
Known as a compassionate
leader to all in the athletic
department , Shrider's 32 vears
have left its mark on Miami
UnivPrsity and the Mid American Conference.
Winning the battle lor Miami
and the Mid-American Conference to ramain in Divisio n I of the
NCAA is just one of the manv
things for which Shrider will be
remembered.
•
Shrider saw Miami' s intercollegiate athletic program grow to
11 sports for men and eight for
women . The Redsklns have captured 16 Reese Cups, including 14
in the last 16 vears, and one
Jacoby Cup-symbols of athletic ·

LAKE FOREST, Ill. (UPI) The Chicago Bears cut 12 players, Including wide receiver Lew
Barnes and defensive back
Egypt Allen, and placed three
players on injured reserve.
Barnes, a wide receiver-punt
returner from Oregon, had a
97-yard kickoff return Monday
against Dallas, but II was called
back because of a penalty.
He was the Bears' kick returner In 1986 and had a touchdown run of 85 yards on a kiCkoff
that season. He also made four
catches as a receiver that year.

Miami gets Its t!rst big test In Its
season opener on Sept. 3 - ·
against arch-rival Florida State.
Lou Holtz's Notre Dame appears ready to crack the Top 10
lor the first time since 1980. The
No. 8 Irish are top-heavy In
offensive backs. If •option QB
Tony Rice can complete enough
passes to keep opposing defenses
honest, the Fighting Irish could
challenge for the top spot.
Clemson, No. 9, Is the class of
ACC. Will QB Rodney Williams
continue to Improve? If so, coach
Danny Ford's Tigers could be
awesome.
Syracuse, No. 10, one of the
surprises of 1987, won't be able to
sneak up on anyone this time
around. The Orangemen will
need an excellent performance
from QB Bill Scharr, who replaces Don McPherson, to stay In
the Top 10.
·
Here Is the rest of ourTop20 for
1988: 11. UCLA; 12. Louisiana
State; 13. Georgia; 14. Texas; 15.
Penn State; 16. Auburn; 17.
Tennessee; 18. Iowa; 19. West
VIrginia; and 20. Pittsburgh.
It good to be back. Next comes
my first regular-season weekly
forecast Kaff-kaft!

The Daily Sentinei-Page-5

Eagles battle Lions· in Thursday night pre-season contest

Mets hand Dodgers ...
Continued from page 3
flattered the wav tne New York
fans have .taken.to me. I hope It
continues.
Randy Myers threw 1 1-3
hitless Innings for his 18th save,
and collected his first major
league RBI and extra-base hit
with an eighth-Inning double.
"They've been tough on us,"
Los Angeles' Steve Sax said.
"Vfe're pretty much the same
type of club, wit}! good pitching
with some pop on the ball. They
just seem to have an edge.
"Hopefully we can turn It
around and do better against
them If we can get them In the
playoffs."
Ramon Martinez, 20, lost his
first decision in his third major-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, August 24, 1988

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••
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�•

Page-6-The Daily Seminal

Pom«oy-Middleport, Ohio

Fires char· 3.2 million
By ROGER BENNETJ'
Uniled Press International
Fires that have turned much of
Yellowstone National Park lntoa

smoky inferno that has scared off
tourists by the thousands may
(urn out to be a blessing in
disguiSe, especially for the
bears, elk and moose who inhabit

SMOKE SIGNALS - Dense smoke 'r ises from
the wild lite near Lewis Lake In Yellowstone
National Park. Army troops have joined in the

-

a~res;

the natlon'soldestnatlonal park,
officials say.
Wildfires were raging Tuesday
over vast areas within a 375,000-

battle against several wildfires In the park that
have conswned over 370,000'Acres of timber. UPI

Federal guidelines for sentencing
declared unconstitutional by courts
By PAMELA A. MacLEAN
SAN FRANCISCO !UP!) The tough new guidelines of the
federal courts intended to make
sentences more uniform were
struck down bv the 9th' U.S.
Circuit Court oi Appeals as an
unconstitutional violation of the
separation of powers between the
judicial and executive branches
of government.
The decision Tuesday wi 11
govern in nine Western states
under the 9th Circuit's jurisdiction until a ruling, possibly next
year, by the U.S. Supreme Court.
The appeals co urt said federal
judges should not have been
allowed to serve on the sevenmember commission which
created the guidelines.
Requiring judges to sit as
presidential appointees on the
commission vio lated the constl·
tutional separation of powers,
the court held in a 2-1 decision.
Numerous cases challenging
the guidelines arose around the
nation. but Tuesday's ruling was
the first by an appeals court.
The guidelines, which went
into effect last Nov. l, were most
criticized by civil libertarians
and criminal defense lawyers,
who said they took discretion
away from individual. judges and
often resulted in sentences that
were unconscionably long.
Writing for the majority.
Judge Alex Kozinski. a conserva ·

live Reagan appointee, said,.
' 'We can prevent undue entanglement by the judiciary In the
operation of , the political
branches only by adopting a
clear-cut, prophylactic rule:
Congress may not, under our
system of separated _powers,
require judges to serve on bodies
that make political decisions."
Kozinski was joined by Judge
Melvin Brunetti, also a Reagan
appointee.
Judge Charles Wiggins, a
former U.S. senator and also a
Reagan appointee, dissented. He
said the Sentencing Reform Act
" does not offend the Cons tltution.
No branch o! government has
been negatively affected by the
allocation of power made by H."
Lower courts have been
sharply split by the issue. In Los
Angeles 2:l district judges dl·
vlded 13-10 to hold against the
guidelines.
In separate cases three federal
judges ruled in San Diego. Two
struck down the rules and one
upheld them.
The sentencing guidelines .resulted from a decade-long effort
by Congress to minimize wide
disparities in sentences given
defendants with similar records
convicted of the same crimes.
Under the guidelines. judges
were required to Impose relatively uniform sentences based
on several given factors. The

Wedneaday, August 24, 1988

judges could deviate from the
guidelines only by making specific findings of mitigating or
aggravating factors.
Tuesday's 9th Circuit decision
will put us " back at square one."
said Nanci Clarence, a federal
public defender In San
Francisco.
She said the decision will
create Immediate and complex
problems In crirn ina! cases In
which defendants have pleabargained and cooperated with
the government and are awaiting
sentencing:
The ruling carne In the San
Diego cases of Jose Gublenslo·
Or liz, who had be~n sentenced to ·
six months for aiding and abet·
ling the Illegal en try of an alien,
and of Raul Chavez-Sanchez,
who was indicted on five counts
of transportation o:f illegal aliens.
He was sentenced to18months in
prison, but thejudgelnSan Diego
declared the sentencing act unconstitutional. Their cases will
now go back to San Diego for
individual resolution.
Kozinski wrote that Congress
Improperly assigned executive
power to judges, and "the label
applied cannot mask the reality
that judicial officers are required by law to exercise both the
judicial and execu live power of
the United States, thereby under·
mining the actual and perceived
Independence of the judiciary."

Wedneeday, August 24, 1988

may be a blessing at park
acre perimeter In Yellowstone,
and dozens of fires were burning
In Alaska, Montana, Nevada,
Oregon and Washington as an
estimated 15,000 firefighters
battled blazes that have charred
3.2 million acres - an area the
size of Connecticut - since the
first of the year.
. Most of the acreage burned,
about 2.1 million acres, Is In
Alaska, but only a handful of
firefighters are still on the lines
there as most of the 30 or so fires
are being allowed to burn out.
The second detachment of
about 600 regular Army troops
from Fort Lewis, Wash ., flew In
Tuesday to relieve weary crews
battling the Yellowstone-area
fires . AbOut 4,000 firefighters
were on the lines. and If has cost
nearly $30 million to battle the
blazes so far.
On a brighter note, the Yellowstone fires are turning stands of
lodgepole pine into meadows,
which officials say will not only
change the face of America's
original national park, but will
provide riew food sources for Its
famed wildlife.
·
"We are witnessing a historic
event of epic proportions." said
park spokeswoman Joan An·
zelmo. "It will change Yellow stone significantly ."
. Park officials say the record
drought that is helping fuel the
Western !Ires Is more of a threat
to wildlife than the fires, to which
the animals adapt as part of their
natural environment.
"The long-range benefit for
wildlife will be enormous in
terms of regeneration and new
·vegetation," said Gary Brown,
assistant chief ranger.
Brown said the effect of the
fires on areas of old, matted
vegetation is much like that of
raking the weeds out of your
lawn. He said much of the
vegetation built up In the years
prior to 1972 when the "Smokey
Bear" theory dictated that all
forest fires be actively fought.
Brown said elk herds have
already been seen grazing In
areas scarred by fires that have
been burning since June.

One majorflrewas started by a
careless smoker, but the rest
were touched off by lightning.
The only Injuries to firefighters
have been minor In the Yellowstone fires, although one crew
member aboard a waterdropping helicopter was k!lled
last Friday when the craft
crashed while fighting fires In
Wyoming's Bighorn National
Forest.
"We have not lost any struc·
lures: there have been nolnjuries
to visitors and no fatalities, but
obviously the scene (for tourists)
has changed from what it was
two weeks ago to what 11 Is
today," said Anzelmo.
The biggest fire In the park, the
Clover Mist Fire, remained at
157,000 perimeter acres. An·
zelmo said It stayed within the
lines Tuesday, and was no longer
moving toward the once·
threatened towns of Sllvergate
and Cooke City, Mont.
But Cooke City was threatened
by another fire that grew 1,000
acres Tuesday to 26,000 acres.
The flre!lghtlng force was
!joubled Tuesday to 200.
"Evidently, ltls very threatenIng to Cooke City, only 3 to4 miles
away," said Dwight Field, a
spokesman for the Forest Ser·
vice. ''If the wind direction was
right, it wouldn't take long (to
reach the town). It has grown to a
good size and It just depends on
the circumstances."
Arnold Hartigan, public lnformatlon officer at the Boise
Interagency Fire Center, said
earlier reports that 80 percent of
the nation's state and federal
firefighters were committed to
the Western wildfires were
incorrect.
He said · more than 15,000
firefighters were on 'the lines,
mostly In Wyoming and Mon·
tana, but " we still have thousands, I can't give an exact
number, of firefighters in all
state and federal agencies fight·
lng Initial attack fires allover' the
country."

There are also 3,000 California
prison inmates who are trained
to fight fires but are not allowed

Poma-oy-Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinei-Page-7

No murder charges for woman 'convicted of tampering

to leave the state, he said .
So far this drought-plagued
year, Hartigan said, more than
65 OOO!Ires have been reported In
th~ United States, up from 45,000
fires last year at this time.
''There's no such thing this
vear as a non-dangerous fire," he
Said. ''The fire behavior Is
erratic and the conditions are
critical."
In Alaska, more than 30 fires
are stlll burning.
''They have a different strategy up there," Hartigan sa"ld.
"There are no roads, just miles
and miles of nothing. They try to
keep the fires away !rom anything of possible resource value,
and Mother Nature helps with
natural barriers such as rivers
and swamps. Most of what's
burning In Alaska Is black
spruce, which might have some
resource value if there we·r e any
roads to get to lt."
In Oregon, record temperatures In the 100s combined with
350 recorded lightning strikes
and hot, dry winds to send flames
racing across timber -and grassland In several areas. forcing
brief evacuations Tuesday evenlng irom several homes threatened by a fire that blackened 150
to 200 acres In the Deschutes
National Forest near LaPine.
Near Morton, Wash., hot, dry
weather and 20 mph winds
fanned a 40-acre wildfire at noon
TuesdaY Jnto a roaring, 500-acre
blaze by late Tuesday night, and
more hot weather was predicted.
A 450-acre fire was burning In
Elko County, Nev.

SEATTLE tUPil - The 90- bly not face state charges of
The prosecutor said he based
year prison term given the first r:nurderlng her husband and an
the decision partly on his staffs
i&gt;erson convicted or federal pro- "Innocent woman, King County recommendation that the case
duct tampering charges In a case Prosecutor .Norm Maleng said
was not appropriate for a possl·
Involving deaths amounts to a Tuesday.
ble death sentence.
·
•virtual life sentence, a county
"My "Conclusion fs that the
''Therefore, we do not face a
prosecutor says.
conviction and sentence In the . situation where state prosecution
Stella Nickell, who !aces tile federal case do provide subs tan· will yield greater punishment
same maximum sentence she tial justice and therefore we will since the sentence of life In prison
would have I! convicted on not file state murder charges at has In effect already been Imfirst-degree murder, will proba- this time," Maleng said~
posed," he sa Id.

Maleng said the families oft he
two victims support his decision.
Nickell, who was convicted
May 9, was sentenced to 90 years
In federal priSon for poisoning
bOttles of Extra-Strength Exced·
rin with cyanide. The judge
recommended the 44-year·old
woman serve a minimum of 30
years before being considered
for parole.

~

her own product tampering case,
was denied this summer.
Prosecutors accused Nickell of
killing her husband, Bruce, to
collect $176,000 in life Insurance,
and Sue Snow, a woman she did
not know, who Ingested the
poisoned Excedrln Nickell
placed on store shelves to make II
appear that her husband's death
was the work of a random killer.

If the federal convictions are
eventually reversed on appeal,
Nickell can still be tried on
murder charges In King County
Superior Court because there Is
no statute of ltmltatiQns on
murder, Maleng said.
A request for a new trial on the
grounds of possible jury tamperIng and misconduct Involving a
juror who had recently settled

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GOOD USED
WASHERS, DRYERS,
REFRIGERATORS, TYs,
GAS &amp; ELEC. RANGES

IN THE DELl-PASTRY SHOPPE
WHE~T. WHITE OR

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Meat Wieners .... 1-1b.FREEI

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Pita Bread ......... 1~~~- FREEl

(DOES NOT INCLUDE BEEF)

COUNTY
APPLIANCES

627 3rd An., Gallipolis
PH. 446·1699
HOutS: 8 A.M.-6 P.M.

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White Bread ....... 2o-oz.FREEI

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Kroger
Pancake Syrup ... 24-oz. FR.E E I

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THESE DRUGS
·1 DON'T HAVE
AGE :REQUIREMENTS.·

!~,.,

•
RISING EFFORTS - The Ferry Boat Ellis
Island, shown in this undated photo taken
sometime before it sank In 1968, Is scheduled to be
raised from the bottom of New York Harbor at

Ellis Island Wednesday after efforts to free the
boat from the mud Tuesday failed. From 1904
until 19M the ferry was In service at Ellis Island.
UPI

Black child returns to white ·parents
PHILADELPHIA (UP!) Five-year-old Raymond Bullard,
taken from his foster parent~ by
the city because he is black and
they are white, will go back to
their home within eight weeks
under orders from a federal
judge.
U.S. District Judge John Han·
nun ruled Tuesday that the
Philadelphia Health Department
acted unconstitutionally In rem·
ovlng Raymond from the care of
John and Marilyn McLaughlin
solely on the basis o! race.
"Making decisions about persons according to their race Is
more likely to reflect racial
prejudice than legitimate public
concerns," Hannum said.
Catholic Social Services, under
contract with the city Health
Department, placed Raymond In
the foster home of the McLaugh·
llns In October 1983 when he was
less than 6 months old. He lived

with them for two years
"A psychological bonding between Raymond Bullard and the
McLaughllns occurred during
this period," Hannum said.
In October 1985, the city
ordered Bullard placed In the
home of the Rev. Willie and
Elaine Williams, a black couple.
The department said It was Its
policy to have foster children
placed In the homes of people of
the same race.
The child has lived with the
Williams family since 1985, ~I·
though he Is visited by the
McLaughlin family .
Race was the sole reason that
the child was removed from the
home of his original foster
parents, the judge said.
Hannum said foster care placement'must t11ke Into account the
child's racial and cultural needs
and that the best Interests of th~
child are paramount.

Today grade school children as
young as eight and nine years
old feel pressure to try pot,
cocaine, crack and other drugs.
Street drugs don't haye age
requirements that protect your
children. Your children's
friends who use and sell drugs
won't consideli your children
too young for drugs.

You can't put age
requirements on street drugs.
But you can talk to your
children and help them remain
drug-free at every age.

~~

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COUNTY LINE PROCESS

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Kroger Late
Sour Cream ........ 1s-oz.FREEl

American
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Cheese Food ...... ~~~~: FREEl

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Corn Dogs........... 12.s-oz. FREEl
FROZEN

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Cookies ·
11-oz.

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Diet Pepsi or
Pepsi Cola

Duncan Hines

Voplait
Yogurt ................... . Pint FREEl

12-Pak 12-oz. Cans
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Kroger
Sweet Relish ......... 22-~z. FREEl

(NOT INCLUDED AS A BUY ONE--GET ONE FREE ITEM)

1NOT INCLUDED AS A BUY ONE--GET ONE FREE ITEM

Register To Win A 1988 Jeep Wran ler!
•Need not be present to win
•Final drawing from among~ customers
•Must be 18 years or older to enter
selected from each store wtll be held
•Taxea titles transfer &amp; additional charges not Included ·
Friday, October 7, 1988
·
•Drawlnga
aUglbllty for final drawing will be held weekly in each store.
• Complete details in store

.

for

Drap Jaap

-Ki.iio'iRiP'E,"ih.Eij:GivEA"w"AY'Ei!;Y'B'LiNK)

1
Entry Blank
I NAME
I
By Nearest
I ADDRESS
I
Kroger or Mail To: I CITY
STATE
ZIP
I
KROGER JEEP GIVEAWAV II :rELEPHONE
II
P.O. SOJOI002
ROANOKE, VA. 24CXI8
I Soo- Dloptoy FO&lt;
C•-· """" Eu.,.. ,_ Of Tho Kr- Co., Popol eo:;·
&lt;&gt;&lt; Thlit Alfillllll Art Not Etlgilllo To Win

992-2156

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The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street

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.•

Mountaan Top
Cherry Pie .......... 2s-oz. FREEl

Pomeroy, Ohio

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�Pqa 8-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

Wednesday. August 24. 1988

. . . 'Equal Access' begins Saturday

r--Local n~~ed~~i!!~--native Charlestonian's and he has an aunt and uncle who stiH
reside In the West Virginia Capitol city. Eplin has even
managed a whitewater rafting trip down the New River during
one of his visits to West VIrginia .
Eplin will be available for autographs· at Taste on Saturday ,
Aug. 27 , bet ween
· 2: 30 an d .• : 30 p.m ., an d on sun d ay. Aug. 28 .
between noon and 2 p.m.
Eplin's appearanc·e Is made possible by Kroger and Texas
Gold Ice Cream. .

Long Bottom man seeks judgment
Hobart Newell of Long Bottom ts seeking a judgment In Meigs
County Common Pleas Court of $3,212 from the Chester
Township Trustees .
Newell, a 22-year employee of the township, said his contract
specified accumulated sick leave days and vacation time. At his
termination in April, Newell said the trustees refused him
payment of 63 sick days and two weeks of vacation time
amounting to $3,212.
Lawrence Yeauger was awarded a judgment sum of $3,200
stemming from an accld~nt with Martin Chapman Dec. ll, 1987.
· Martin Chapman was driving a 19&amp;3 Oldsmobile which struck
a truck and tractor trailer owned by Yeauger. Yeauger said
damage to his 1971 Mack truck amounted to approximately
$3,000.

EMS has 8 .Tuesday calls
·Meigs County Emergency Medical Service answered eight
calls Tuesday, Rutland Squad 44at7:06a.m. toLarklnStreetfor
Muriel Foley to Holzer Medical Center; Syracuse Squad 33 at
8:51 a.m. to Amerlcare-Pomeroy Nursing Center for Charles
Blake to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Rutland Squad 44 at
10: 13 a .m . to Main Street for Rosalie Nichols to Veterans
. Memorial Hospital; Tuppers Plains Squad 86 at 10:47 a.m. to
Arbaugh Addition for Linda Boggs to Camden Clark; Racine
Squad 28 at 1:15 p.m. to Dusky' Street for Thelma Dill to Holzer
Medical Center; Middleport Squad 11 at 4 p.m. to SR 143 for
Geraldine Parsons to Holzer Medical Center; Pomeroy Squad 1
at 4:21p.m. to SR 33 car accident took Roy Rayburn to Pleasant
Valley Hospital; and Middleport Squad 11 to Broadway Street
'for Charles Williams to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

ALBANY -Equal Access will
begin at 12: 01 a .m . Saturday and
1,!60 phone users In Albany's
"698" exchange will start using
the long distance company of
their choice, GTE North Inc . said
today.
Resldentialandbuslnesscustomers will use the companies they
selected In a balloting process
conducted by GTE In June and
July.
Phone . users chose from four
carriers on the ballots- AT&amp;T
CommunicatiOns, LITe! Telecommunications, MCI Telecommunlcat!ons and U.S. Sprint
Communications, said Phil Ra·
mey, Athens district service
manager.
"Users will automatically be

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

colinected to their preferred
carrier when direct dialing
station-to-station calls to places
outside the 614 area," said
Ramey.
Albany exchange covers a
91-square-mlle area of Athens,
Meigs and Vinton Counties .
One-plus calls currently are
carried by AT&amp;T, he said.
Establishing Equal Access re·
suited from federal action to
promote competition In the long
distance business.
About 87 perc.e nt of the cu.sto·
mers tn Albany returned ballots.
Customers not returning a ballot
will remain wtth AT&amp;T, but that
may change.
'
Federal regulations require
GTE tomallasecondballottol66
users who did not return the first
one, he noted.
· That ballot will be mailed Sept.
26 with an Oct. 16 return
deadline. Customers will be
randomly allocated to one of the
carriers, and that company will
be Indicated on the ballot, Ramey
said.
·
"Customers may change the
allocation by marking a different
carrier on the ballot," said

Am Electric Power ...... .. .... .26i8
AT&amp;T .............. ...... .... ....... ..24%
Ashland on ...... .................. 34%
Bob Evans .......................... l5i8
Charming Shoppes .. ........ .... 13%
To end marriages
City Holding Co ...... .. ...... ... .. 32
Federal Mogul .... ....... , .... .... 43~
Arigella Marcinko of Pomeroy
Goodyear T&amp;R ......... .......... 58%
and
Robert A. Marcinko of
Heck's ......... ...... .. ... ... ............ 1
Tuppers
Plains filed for a dissoluKey Centurion .... .... .. .. .. .. .. .. 16~ ,
tion
of
marriage Tuesday in
Lands' End ............... ...... .... 26i8
Meigs
County
Common Pleas
Limited Inc ......... .. .... ....... .. 20%
Court. ·
Multimedia Inc .. ...... .... ..... .. 71~
. Naomi and Wayne Findlay
Rax Restaurants ... , .. '...... .. .. .. .. 4
were
granted a dissolution Tue·sRobbins &amp; Myers ...... .. ... :.. .. 1114
day,
and
a cas~ Involving Carla
Shoney's Inc .......... .... .. .. .... .. 7~ .
Sue
and
Randall Kimes was
Wendy's Inti ......... ........ .... ... 6'/,j
dismissed.
. Worthington Ind .. .. .. .... ........ 22

Ramey. "If they take no action,
the allocated carrier will begin
serving them on Nov. 5''
tie said they have until Feb. 23
however, to change their allo·
cated carrier
E freeAof charge.
Under qua 1 ccess, custo·
mers are connected to their
preferred carrier when they dial
"1" plus the area code and the
out-of-town number, he noted.
After the\ conversion. custo·
mers may verity their carrier by ·
dialing (toll fre e) 1-700-555-4141 .

School opens...
.selves In, " he says. "Adults who

have the benefit of experience
must. therefore, take the ·Initiative In helping to prevent a
dangerous situation ·f rom
occurring.' •
The AAA official pointed out
that traffic acidents kill more
children up to age 14 than
drowning, burns. falls and chok·
lng or ·poisoning combined. "TI)e
openln!( of school I~ a perfect
opportunity to see that these
accidents don't happen," urges
Pack. "Let's make It a safe
school year." ·
The "School's Open - Drl ve
Carefully" message is conveyed
across the country by AAA Clubs
in a variety of formats, Including
posters, bumper strips, placemats, newspaper, magazine,
milk carton and shopping bag
proof reproductions, TV slides.
public service announcements
and envelope stuffers. More than
1,800,000 pieces of material will
be distribUted during the 1988
campaign.

Ohio

Meigs...
rContlnued fran page 1)
tlon on this year 's CDBG program were representatives of
Rutland , Middleport and Racine
Vtnages, Scipio Volunteer Fire
Department, Olive Townshtpand
residents from Shady Cove Road
In Salisbury Township.
Again this year, up to eight
projects may receive a share of
the CDBG fundtng which Is
channeled through the county
commissioners from the Ohio
Department of Development.
· In the past, many different
entitles throughout the county
have shared in tile CDBG
funding.
However, this year, if state
approval can be obtained, the
entire amount of CDBG funding
will be used for only one project
- an elevator In the county
courthouse for use by the handl·
capped and elderly.
The possibility of using the
entire $106,900 for the elevator
was accepted favorably by those
In attendance at the meeting,
reported Mary Hostetter, clerk
for the commissioners.
Hobstetter said the commls·
stoners should know within a
week If the courthouse elevator
project is CDBG eligible. Others
who are Interested in the CDBG
program will be notified right
away If the money Is to be
earmarked for the elevator.
Projects funded by the 1988
CDBG program would be completed In !989.
Projects which were funded by
the 1987 CDBG program are
either under construction at this
time or in the bid process.

We Reserve The Ri&amp;ht To
limit Quantities

STORE HOJJRS
Monday thru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

THURSDAY
AUG.25
FRIDAY
AUG.26

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.
PRICES EFFECnVE SUN., AUG. 21 THRU SA

AND

.SATURDAY
AUG.27
ONLY
. BUCKET

.

$199

Cube Steak.........
.
F_LA~ORITE .· ·
. 89(
W1eners .••...••••••. ~B
CRISPY SERVE
(
Bacon ••••••••••••••••••• 79
FRESH PORK BUTT
$129
Steaks or Roast ••••
LB.

••

Annnouncements
Auxiliary to. meet
The Racine American Legion
Auxiliary will meet at the Legion
Hall Thl!rsday, Aug. 25 at 5:30
p.m. · to go .to the Mc.Cov's
restaurant In Ripley.
•

.

Boosters lo meet

LB.

$ S9
Chuck Roast •••••• ~~ 1
USDA CHOICE
.
. . La. $
9
USDA CHOICE BONELESS

The Racine Athletic Boosters
will have their meeting Monday.
Aug . . 29 at 7 p.m. at the high
·
school booster building.

LB.

.
11

Entertainment night
Free entertainment night will
be Saturday at 7 p.m. at the
Racine Vllage Shrine Park.
Entertainment Includes music
from the "Sunrise" Gospel
Group from Chester and the
Country Blend Band and others .
Refreshments will be available
and those attending must furnish
tl)elr own lawn chairs ..

A mortgage burniryg dance for
the American Legion Annex in
Middleport wll! be held Friday,
Aug. 26 from 8 p.m. to 1 a.m. at
the annex. The Mud River Band
will provide entertainment, and
the dance is free to the public :

I
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Chuck Roast........ · ·
USDA CHOICE BONELESS
Rump Roast .•••••:.-.$1 69
Chicken Livers ••• !·•· 49(

Mortgage burning

I~I
II
I
I

We will
redeem up
to 5
vendor
coupons

EHS boosters meet

(Maximum
value)

EAST MEIGS - Eastern At
hletlc Boosters will meet Thurs·
day, 8 p.m ., at the high school.

No cigarette
coupons)

Middleport...
(Continued (rom Page 1)
tlon users. Fares for eligible
riders may be reduced by onehalf the regular adult fare.
The village is one of 45 public
transit operators to receive a
total of $2.7 million In state
grants.
.
· This year. ·more than $11 .5
million riders are expected to
: participate in the program
· through the locl!l transit sysi terns.

YELLOW

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.
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3 Ll. BAG

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BROUGHTON'S
240Z.

Cottage ·cheese •••••

: Lottery numbers
; CLEVELAND (UP! ) - Tues• day's winning Ohio Lotterv
: numbers:
·
'
'. 551. . Dally Number
: Ticket sales totaled ·
; $1,174,393.50, with a payoff due of
• $434,739.50. (
;
PICK-4
• 8502.
: PICK-4 ticket sales totaled
:$200,062, with a payoff due of
•$90,149.
: PICK-4 $1 straight bet pays
;S8,256. PICK-4 $1 box bet pavs
·$344.
.
•

:Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Tuesday 'Admissions - Do·
: rothy Bradley, Bidwell; Wilbur
: Ashley, Middleport; Wlllard
. Bozer, Pomeroy; Charles·Blake,
• Pomeroy; and Shirley Roush,
; Pomeroy.
• Tuesday Discharges - Cha·
: rles Schultz; Eva Lawson; and
: Orville Hogue.

;pJan BOftballloumey
: A men's "softball tournament
•'Will be held Aug. 27 and 28 at the ·
:'Middleport Park. Entry fee Is $65
: and a softball. For Information,
· teams are to call Dennis Ault at
: 992-5760.

.
..

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soc

BROUGHTON'S

2°/o Milk

•

99 (

49
•.••••••.. ~~·. $.1

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BANQUET

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SMUCKERS

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NG THE
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One
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SURGEON GENERAL'S WARNING: Ouining Smoking
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with the
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limit I! ,. (OlioG.... atl'ow•'• S.,.Va~o
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:
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- I·

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Family
REGISTER TO
WIN FREE
GROCERIES

- ... -·---·- ---

-11- _ .. ---

�Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

:Poetry group
'seeking
entries
.
'

Ocrupational training
available
at BHCC
.

;There are still openings In
full -time occupational training
ptograms, -as well as in the
h~urly· classes, according to Jay
SQmmer·, director or Adult Servlc~s
at Gallia-Jackson-VInton
. JVSD . Registration continues
through Sept. 9, 1988.
Various grants and loans are
available to assist adult students
flhanclng their vocational trainlqg and education. One grant is
the single parent/ homemaker
gi-ant, which is a non-repayable
tuition grant for those who are
widowed, divorced, separated,
si)lgle head of households. or
whose Income has been affected
by long-term unemployment.
:For more information, contact
Dorna Smith, single parent /. homemaker coordinator,
Gallia -Jackson-Vinton · JVSD .
adult services 245-5336.

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio ·

Poets may send up to five
A trip to Hawaii for two is the
new Grand Prize In the American poems. no more than 20 lines
Poet ry Association's latest po&lt;" each. with name and address on
trv contest. There is also a $1,000 each page ot American Poetry
fi rst prize. Contest entry is free , , Association, Dept. CN-71 , 25() A
and everyone is welcome to Potrero Street , P .O. Box 1803,
Santa Cruz. Calif. 95061.
enter.
Poems are judged on original" Poets deserve more rewards
and recognition," said Robert Ity and sincerity. Every poem Is
Nelson. as sociation publiSher . also considered for publication.
Poems must be postmarked by
" New and little- knowri poets are
the ones we are looking for. We Dec. 31 to be eligible, and prizes
can give them encouragement will be awarded Feb. 28, 1989.
and a good start. "

'BIG BEND

but also helps Individuals develop a preventive attitude.
The local three-county project
serves Gallla, Jackson and
Meigs counties. It Is certified bv
the National Assault Prevention
Center In Columbus. Task' force
members wlll be selected and
trained to present assault prevention workshops to children and
adolescents, and programs to
a'dults which Include Information
on the problems of sexual assault
and Incest.
·
CAPS workers must complete

.CAP recruits
. Community Assau It Prevention Services are recr uiting
workers for the CAP task force.
CAPS provides workshops for
children, adolescents and adults
through Children 's Trust Fund
monies locally.
CAPS is a communitv-based
project that teaches populations
to recognize dangerous situations and to react appropriately.
It does not slmply teach skills,

20 hours of basic training prior to
Joining the task force. Regular
attendance at meetings Is required to continue with the
project. Work presenting workshops Is paid. II require• a
flexible part-time schedule durIng the week. Expft'lence workIng with children Is helpful.
Applications may be obtained
by writing CAPS. P.O. Box ;l07,
Jackson, Ohio 45640 or by calling
286-5076 Monday through Wednesday between 10 a.m. and 3
p.m .

Your Independently Owned
Low-Priced Supermarket

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES . PRICES EFFECTIVE WEDNESDAY , AUG . 24
THROUGH SATURDAY. AUG . Z7 . 1988. USOAFOOO·STAMPS AND WIC COUPONS
ACCEPTED . NOT RESPONSI8LE FOR TYPOGRAPHICAl OR PICTORIAL ERf\ORS

COUPON SAVINGS
FOODLAND SUPER COUPON
I

FOODLAND SUPER COUPON!

24 PACK

I . [~ ' MT. DEW, PEPSI FREE, DIET or
~~· t~ Pepsi Cola

•Army Pvt. First Class Arthur
W. Wiley, son of Larry L. and
Mary C. Wiley of New Haven,
W.Va. , has arrived for duty in
West Germany .
Wiley Is a rilisslle repairer with
tlie 8th Infantry Division.
1!is wife, Marcia . is the daughter of John R. Si.sson of Mason,
W.Va.
The private is a 1984 graduate
of Wahoma High School, Mason .

$499

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Umlt I w~h co~,...

ASST . VARIETIES
llrLiaMIIMI
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BUNKER HILL

Heinz Baby Food

1

.,l-

PRJZE WINNER - Store manager Don · Vaughan, center,
accepted the grand prize from Jim Sharp, director of retail
services for Cardinal Foods, right, and George Steel, merchandls·
ing manager lor Cardinal Foods, left. The grand prize Is a trip for
two on Cardinal's Bavarian Holiday lo Europe In AprD 1989.

Hotdog Sauce

·
.
Sl
~'1_.
.
4

•

~L¥ 5 Slf~i~
JARS

~:~

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Umit 4 wlth ceupen. Good thru S.t., Aug. 27 at
llgltM ru•a•d.

CANS

Limit 10 with cou,_.&amp; $10.00 or mart oddiit-1
pur&lt;hosL Good thru Sat., Aug. 21 at lig lkrul fa. . IMd.

I .

100 CT.
HANOVER

Outstanding student
announced at BGSU

Pork &amp; Beans

4cANsS1 00
U.tt C with

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I

1LB
BOX

I

Ji,artment has set the following
pfckup dates for September WI C.
T~e dates are Aug. 29-30, Sept.
1~ 2. 12, and 19 from 9 to 11 a.m.
and 1 to 3 p.m. The shot dates are
~pt. 13 and 27 from 9 to 11 a.m.
a)Kl1 to 3 p.m.

Zesta Saltines

•

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GOO&lt;! tloru Sat., Aug. 27 ot

24'®
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COLORS •

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Sl oo OFF II

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IVORY

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BROUGHTON

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Broughton's
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USDA ~HOICE BON-E-IN

NEW COKE•DIET

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$149
Plus

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FOOD LAND

oz.
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I

$599

i'

COLUMBUS
Cardinal cleanliness, displays, and perFoods, Inc. announced today the sonnel. Bonus points were
winner of its annual Old Fashi- awarded for store decor, employee dress-up contest for the
oned Anniversary Sale Merchandising Contest which was held Old Fashioned Theme and speMay 30 through June 11 : · cial events held during the
Vaughn's Cardinal, located in promotion. Vaughan's also
Middleport, participated in a scored points for support or
stDre merchandising and sales Cardlna't's new TV campaign In
conte$t for Cardinal supplied which commercials were seen on
stores throughout Ohio. Ken- stattops In eight Ohio markets.
Vadghan's Cardinal Is one of
tucky· and We$t Virginia. The
over
120 retail food stores which
competing stores were judged by
are
supplied
by Cardinal Foods,
teams from. Cardinal Merchandising and Operations and Inc., a lood wholesaler wit!)
offices and distribution center In
vendor 'Sales representatives.
·
Vaughan's Cardinal achieved Columbus.
excellent ratings for servi~P .

By JANE SUTI'ON
United Press IDieraa&amp;lonal
OUT OF BODY, OUT OF COURT: A Detroit federal judge
threw out a copyright Infringement suit filed by Peruvian-born
author Charles Silva against actress Shirley MacLalne. Sliva. a
self-styled UFO traveler who once claimed he saw his soulleave
his body, had accused MacLalne or using parts or his 1977 book
''Date with the Gods," In her best-seller "Out on a Limb. " H~
filed suit last December against MacLatne, Bantam Books,
ABC Entertainment and two ABC executives, seeking a share or
the profits from tl)e book and the ABC-TV miniseries based on tt.
Jilut U.S. District Judge Horace Glbnore ruled Monday that
most of the examples Silva cited as being similar to parts of his
book were "stretching the concept of similarity to absurd
extremes ...
BALES OF WOE: Stuntman Thomas Bahr, who plaved a
federal drug enforcement agent on the NBC-TV series "~llaml
VIce," was convicted or smuggling 39 tons or marijuana Into
Florida. A Miami federal jury convicted Bahr and six others
Monday of unloading three boatloads of bales, but the stuntman
Insists he Is Innocent. "I was just a good target for somebody
,who wanted to buy their way out or jail," he said. "I've had tons
or work. I don't need to do that." Defense witnesses Included
Robert James Foxworth, Don Johoson•s stunt double, who said
Bahr was too successful to get Involved In real vice. While
awaiting trial, Bahr performed as a stunt driver In the movie
"Ernest Saves Christmas." He also was permitted to miss some
court appearances to _work in "License Revoked," a James
Bond movie filming In Key West.
MOTOWN MAYOR: Stevie Wonder. kicking art an
eight-performance run at New York's Radio City Music Hall,
confirmed rumors that he plans to run for mayor of Detroit tn
1992. ''I was raised In Detroit," he said Monday, ·'and I believe
that I can make a contribution to the city that has given me so
much." A lifelong Democrat, Wonder said he- would not
abandon his music for politics . "I will perfortn," he said. "bull
will deal with my responsibility as mayor. I will continue to
write songs and sing them." Wonder kept a sold-outcrowd on Its
feet tor more than two hours, blasting through a selection of
familiar numbers spanning his 25-year career. Highlights
included a magnificent rendition of "You Will Know," an
electric medley of "Signed, Sealed, Delivered," "Ivy as Made to
Love Her," and a lengthy_jam on "Do I Do" that climaxed with

EACH

LB .

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MOUNTAINEER

Roll Sausage
LB .

9

1LB.
ROLL

3 LBS.
OR MORE

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By United Pre!IS International

---

.

Debale over 'Big Apple' origin
COLUMBIA, S.C. (UP!) Mayor T. Patton Adams and his
New York counterpart, Edward
Koch, are squaring off on
whether New York's nickname.
"The Big Apple." has Its origins
In a Southern . dance hall or
Harlem jazz clubs . .
Adams says he has proof that
"The Big Apple" came from a
dance performed by blacks at a
Columbia nightclub or the same
name a half-century ago. Koch
says the name was coined by jazz
musicians In Harlem.
The debate heated up Monday
when The New York Times ran
an article suggesting a Southern
link with the history or the
monicker. and the two mayors
have put up some hometown
Jason Rodney Black. a student · . _
cuisine
In a wager over the Issue.
at Meigs High School. has been
The Columbia mayor Is wagerelected Governor of the Ohio
ing 10 pounds of mustard-based
Junior Civitan Dis trlct. He was
barbecue that hiS' version of the
elected to the position this past
story Is correct. Koch Is risking a
spring at the annual district
New York -style pizza In the bet.
convention.
Koch appears willing to conBlack has recently ret unred
cede a dance called the "Big
from a Governor's Training
Apple" was performed In ColumAcademy at Georgia Southern
bia 50 years ago, but he said
College in Statesboro. Ga. The
neither side will be able to
training academy was held as
convince the other about how
part of the Eighth Annual Junior
New York acquired Its ·
Civltan International Convention
nickname.
activities which Involved teenA spokesman for Koch, Larry
age students from the United
Slmonb.erg, downplayed the difStates. Canada and West
ference of opinions.
Germanv.
"We're not disputing the story
.Jason: the son of Robert and
about the 'Big Apple' dance.
Connie Black, officially assumed
r
. Does It link up with the nickthe duties of Governor on July 1.
name? We're not sure," SimonIn his role as Governor, Black
JASON BLACK
berg said. "If these people want
will preside at district meetings.
to come up with their evidence.
country for all types of Illnesses . we'd
conventions !lDd other Junior
be glad to have them.
Clvitan projects and he will also Aid to these hospitals is one of the ' "Barbecue would be most
speak at · Junior and Senior organization's major emphasis welcome," Slmonberg added,
programs.
Civitan club meet lngs and seminJunior Civil an International Is "but we'd rather have a couple of
ars held througout the district .
hll.t.ers for the Met sand, just to be
On January 29, 1989, Black will
a World -wide yout~ service or- fair
, some pitchers for the ,
ganizatiOn that Is dedicated to
represent the district at the 14th
Yankees."
Improving the lives of those less
Annual Junior Civltan Sno-Do to
Adams says conjecture Is fine,
fortunate
through community
be held in Ontario, Canada. This
but
he has plenty of evidence to
activities and enhancing leader- support
is a snowmobile marathon to
his story.
raise funds for the Children's
ship and self-improvement skills
It Includes newspaper and
Hospitals of North America after
of Its members. It is also the magazine articles, photographs,
fastest growing youth service
which collected donations will be
and ora I ~!stories from those who
organization which Includes both lived
contributed to the local or state
during the Depression era
young men and women and is
Children's Hospitals In the Govcomprised or some 500 clubs and· - Including blacks who played
ernor's area. Las1 year, Junior
Civltan raised over $100,000 to aid
17,000 members In the United ·
States. Canada. West Germany I I
mor~ than five million sick
and Korea .
children In hospitals across the

Local youth elected
junior Civjtany · st_,_

and danced at the Columbia night
club and their white counterparts
who took the dance to the stage or
New York's Roxy Theatre In
1937.
The old nightclub building was
reopened In June to house a
Columbia catering firm, and
Adams said he was deluged with
material that proves his point.
Mailmen win lottery, continue
roules
PITTSBURGH !UP!)
Neither ran, sleet, snow or
Instant riches can keep 27 local
postal workers from delivering
the mall on time.
One day after receiving their
shares of a $20.1 million lotterv
jackpot, the mall carriers at the
Brookline Post Office In Pittsburgh delivered the mall as.usual
Tuesday on their appointed
rounds, said postal worker Harry
Dunn. a non-winner.
The workers pitched In $5 each
to buy 135 tickets, and they each
received their first yearly check
for $23,000 Tuesday. Pennsylvania Lottery spokeswoman Terry
Murphy said.
To keep the winning stub safe,
they mailed It back to themselves
and put It In the registered man ·
sa(e until turning It over to
auth\ltltles, she said.
The winners - who cal) themselves the "Brookline 27''- have
big plans for the future since they
won the July 27 Super 7 jackpot.
Murphy said .
Each contrlbu tor won a
jackpot share worth $746,718.33, .
to be paid In 26 annual
Installments of $28,719.93 before
20 percent for federal
wttholdtng tax.
Winner Ron Dedes, 35, said he
couldn't believe It . when coworkers called him up at 6:30
a.m. on his day off to tell him he
had won.
"Nobody could · believe it,"
Dedes said. "There's so many
things to do with it. Everybody
basically has the same Idea, a
new car or put the money away
for education, Invest the money
to have a little cushion."
C~rrler Nels Headland - who
is single- wants to take a cruise.

r,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:::::j

· ESCONDIDO , Calif. iUPI) Scientists at the San Diego Wild
Animal Park have determined
that the first California condor
conceived and hatched in captivIty Is a female, raising hopes that
the breed will be saved from
ex Unction.
The announcment was made .
Tues~ay, about four . months
after the chick was hatched, by
park spokesman Tom Hanscom.
There are no condors left In the ·
wild. The captive birds resjde at
the Wild Animal Park In northern
San Diego County and at the Los
Angeles Zoo.
BlOod samples taken last
Thursday at the park revealed
that the 4-month-old condor,
named Molloko, was a female,
the 15th now In captivity and part
of a breeding flock or 28 birds.

•

•'

•••

P'

'
t;:;t:··
.
;..-. J • .
'

CHECK THIS WEEK'S MAILER FOR MORE BUY ONE ONE FREE SPECIALSII
I

Han!ICom said Tuesday Molloko's gender could not be determined any earlier beca11se the
blood tests would have placed too
much stress on a younger chick.
~~ 1---- ------------ru

SHREDDED 12.19 II.
SUCED II.

COOKED HAM ••••••••••••••••••••••• $197
SUPEIIOI
BIG RED BOLOGNA ...........!.}... 99&lt;
SWIFT ECKRICH LUNCH MEAT
CHOPPED HAM ••••••••••••••••••L!•• $139
HOMEMADE
MEAT SALAD ......................L!••• 89&lt;
RAIIIO

UAR PAIKAY

MARGARINE ......9!.t~.~-... 79

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KRAFT 16 SLICE PROCESS

COOKING
APPLES ...........t~U:':~ S1.39

AMERICAN
CHEESE ..................... S1.87

"FRESH"

HILLEN DALE

"NEW'

SMALL EGGL...~.~.~t s1.89

CANTALOUPE ......1.t~!;...89 1
YELLOW ONIONS ...3..~!;.19'

•s. PAUL'S

BREADED FISH STICKS ......~~·•• S291
RUMS
EGGS NOODLES ................ ~~·•• S139

DUNCAN HINES

RTS FROSTING •••••••••••••• J~.2!••• $169

;

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GLUCOSCAI\I is the Blood
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~lltilltdtg

New York Times admits II ·
may have•been wrong
NEW YORK.IUPI) -Nearly
79 years after the New York
Times ran an article giving

credit to Robert Peary for
discovering the North Pole, the
newspaper printed an editorial
saying It might have been wrong.
The editorial. printed Tuesday
under the headline ''A Correction," came In the wake of
findings by the National Geographic Society that Peary may
have missed the pole by 60 '\Illes.
The Times said it baseil its
article of Sept. 7. 1909 on a wire
received from Peary saying, "I
have the Pole."

1

REBATE. ·

Condors have no external
markings that distinguish the
males from females.
Had Molloko been a male.
there would have been 14 males
and 14 females In captivity.
In any case, ·the higher number
of females available could mean
extra eggs I! natural mating does
not occur at a satiSfactory rate.
"It could work either way for
us ," Hanscom said. "If the birds
don't pair naturally, at some
point we may have to consider
artificial Insemination. In that
case, we would want as many
females as we could get."
Scientists Involved In the effort
to. save the huge. ungainly condor
from extinction are hoping that
the captive breeding program
will produce healthy offspring
that can eventually be released
Into 'the wild.
OQ.e of the perils or working
with such a small number of
birds Is that Interbreeding re·
suits In a weakening of the gene
pooP, scientists say.

Dedes said . Winner George
Mader will take his wife fo
Hawaii and pay off a car he
purchased after he found out the
group struck lottery gold.
"Everybody's just In a good
mood. It makes work a lot more
pleasant," -Dedes said .

11 1• oz. $12'
CAKE MIX •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

THE RIGHT CHOICE

Cnndor is ·a girl

Wonder climbing on his piano stool to sing the final choruses and
leaping dramtically to the floor.
CONTRACT CONFLICT: Actress Valerie Harper testified
she had not read the " convoluted" contract she signed for her
r ole In the TV show " Valerie." but "had a sense" what It was
about and was unhappy with lt . Harper, who celebrated her 48th
birthday In a Los Angeles courtroom Monday. said she was
pressured by producers to quickly sign the contract for the pilot
of the NBC series . Lortmar Productlons contends Harper and
her husband-producer Tony CacclotU broke their agreements
by repeatedly threatening to quit unless her salary-was,doubled
to $2.2 million. The production company Is seeking $300,000 to
$400,000 in damages tor breach of contract. Harper countersued
for $50 million after Sandy Duncan was hlre!I last year to
replace her on the series. She contends Lorlmar breached
several promises to her. includl.ng agreements to give her
creative control over scripts and hiring actors.
CLASSIC COMBINATION: A new album not only features
the songs of Woody Guthrie and Huddle ''Leadbelly" Ledbetter
but look who' s singing them: Bob Dylaa, Bruce Sprlnpteen,
Utile Richard, Pete Seeger and for a generatlonal.touch, Arlo
Guthrie. "Woody ... ·always wanted his music to reach a vast
audience and this record will give It that opportunity," said
Guthrie's friend , Harold Leventhal, executive producer or
''Folkways: a Vision Shared- A Trlbu te to Woody Gu lhrle·and
Leadbelly," which was released Tuesday by Columbia
Records. Royalties from album sales will go tDtheSmtthsonlan
Institution, whlch last year acquired Folkways from the estate
of Its founder, Moses Asch. Woody Guthrie and ''Leadbelly"
performed for the Folkways label. Arlo Guthrie, whose father
died In 1967 after a lengthy fight with Huntington's chorea. gives
what Washington Post music critic Richard Harrington callS a
"delightful rendition" of "East Texas Red," a song Woody
never recorded.
DIZZV BIZ: At 71 , jazz trumpeter Dizzy Gillespie still has his
old pizazz. He puffed up his bullfrog cheeks and blew for 2 %
hours at a weekend outdoor concert at the Cleveland ZOo. "The
Dlz" was backed up by a band of jazz heavies. Including
saxophonist Paqulto D'Rivera, trombonist Slide Hampton,
vocalist Flora Purim and percussionist Alrlo Moreira . At the
end of the concert. the crowd or more·, han 3,500 stood and called
for more be-bop.

Quirks in the n e w s - - - - - - - - -

/

8 O'Clock
Bean Coffee

Cheese
24

f)\')
....

'

$

a..t ........

-----------------------------------------J-------------------~---J

ASST . FLAVORS

HALF

Wlth co.,.. at ...

•

992-2156

.,

s1~~~ooO,F

.

pun 111. _. tnr11 at., Aug. 7 at l1g len4 fa. .lrlrl.

••
•,

•

I

Hot Shot
lnsicticides

•REG. •UNSCENTED

r~V&gt;mbers .
·;·;;

'

~

UMit 2 with , • ..,.... Good tllru Sat 1

•

'i ~I

.

White Potatoes

; "The Kind of Leaders God
l'ieeds" was the program topic
presented by Elizabeth Flck at
t6e August meeting of the
~lendly Circle Trinity Church.
Tolje scripture was from Exodus
1&amp;, "Moses was a gifted man and
GOd used him to deliver the
Iiraelites out of Egypt to the
ptomised land." Prayer by the
l~ader concluded the program ..
; Diane Hawley op~ned the busln)lss meeting with prayer. The
officer reporls were given. and
reports were made on the sick . A
card was signed for Kermit
W)llton . News of the Rev . John
Ilt$s, Gay Perrin, and the 50th
arlniversarv of the Rev. and Mrs.
Rqbert Hegnauer was shared. A
p)layer circle closed the meeting.
•Miss Flck and Mave Mora
si,-ved a salad courSe to H

•

u.s. NO. ONE

FOODLAND SUPER COUPON

CTN .

Fick addresses
c!t~_rch group

Canning Jars

I

89C~t!
~~~I

V.FW auxiliary meets
In July, the Women's Auxiliary
of Veteran 's Me'morial Hospital
did not meet in regular session,
but attended dinner at Dale's In
Gallipolis. .
: The August meeting will be a
familY picnic Tuesday, Aug 30 at
6!30p.m. at the roadside park on
the southbound lane of US33 . The
na;mtnating commiltee will annj:&gt;unce the slate of officers for
t~e coming year.

REG. SIZE KERR QUART

KEEBLER

L"" C .;,. '""~'""'

·: l'he annual Weaver reunion
wtll be held Aug. 28 at 1 p.m. at
the West VIrginia Farm Museum
at . the Mason Countv falr~rounds, near Point Pieasant,
VJ.Va. Everyone is welcome.
1;3rlng own lawn chairs.

.· :The Meigs County Health De-

&lt;0~11011

Nestea Tea Bags

FOODLAND SUPER COUPON

Weaver
reunion set
'.

Health dept. sets
dates,
hours for WIC
•

Merchandising contest
winner is announced

FOODLAND SUPER COUPON

~

The Daily Sentinei-Page-11

--People in the 'n e w s - - - - - - - - - -

ODLAND

In. the service

Julia L. Smith, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Donald Smith of Grand
Rapids, Mich., has been selected
as a new members of the
Outstanding College Students of
America. She was made a
member because of outstanding
merit and accomplishment as an
American college student. Smith
is presently a senior at Bowling
Green State Universltv. Her
~andparents are Mr. and Mrs.
~lvln Smith of Pomeroy .

Pomeroy-Midcleport, Ohio

Wednesday, August 24, 1988

0/ &amp;ee, P11c.

MEDICAL EQUIPMENT &amp; SUPPLIES
115 EAST MEMORIAL DRIVE POMEROY, OHIO 45769

614-892-2310

NORTHERN

TABLE NAPKINS •••••••••••••••••••• SJ69
HUNT'S SilK PACK

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4 PACK

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PUDDINGS ....................J!.2!••• S149

UNDIIWOOD CH.IY

CHICKEN or HAM .........~:: ·,u,.
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MAYONNAISE .~.............~:.2!••• S139
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DAn

··-·------ -- ----------:-:--- . - - -- - - -- -- - - - -- -----......j
&lt;·,
'•

�•

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

Quayle back on campaign trail

l !:Ill- (J/IA'M

·

IN A CROWD -

GOP presidential nominee
George Bush works the crowd at a capitol rally In
Sacramento, Calif., Tuesday as nearly 4,000

24, 1988

Wedneeday, Au~ 24, 1988

Ohio

people gathered to see Bush on his first foray Iiiio
6e Golden State since winning his party's
nomination. (UP I)

WAsHINGTON (UPH -Sen.
Dan Quayle of Indiana, today .
resuming his campaign as the
Republican vice presidential nominee, is digging in his heels with
some anger against questions
about his military record and
personal life.
Before his schedu led departure this morning on a swing
through St. Louis, Cincinnati and
Lexington, Ky., · Quayle complained to reporters waiting
outside his home that the questions have become "outrageous"
regarding certain topics.
"I'm getting a little bit indlg·
nant about just one bum rap after
another," he said with clear but
controlled anger . as he was
grilled for the eighthstralghtday
about issues that have saddled
his campaign as it tries to move
forward.
On the dominant matter , the
41-year-old senator released military records Tuesdav to bolster
his denial' that his powerful
family used influence to get him
Into the Indiana National Guard
in 1969 to avoid combat in the
Vietnam War. On anolher point,
which rose anew Tuesdav,
Quayle vehemently decried ·a
report linking him more deeply
with a 1980 congressional sex
scandal.
Quayle was at home preparing
speeches for what aictes said
would be a four- or five -day
campaign trip starting this
morning when he faced the
reporters who gathered outside
his home In suburban McLean,
Va.
He reiterated his assurance
that there was no undue influence
used in getting him Into the
Guard at age 22. and he spoke out
sternly against the published
report saying he proposllloned
lobbyist Paula Parkinson in 1980
when the woman - accused of
trading sex for legislative favors
- was sharing a Florida house
that he rented for a golfing trip
with congressional colleagues .
"That is an utter, absolute
falsehood," the married senator
declared. "I had nothing to do
with her down there. I had
nolhing to do with her before, and
I had nothing to do with her
afterward.
"And I think you ail are going

to have to be a little bit careful
about this, because it's totally
untrue. I've got a wife and three
s mall children. I hope there is
some respect and dignity for
things that I did not do before we
go rushing of! with all of these
so-called rumors. "
Parkinson, who posed nude in
Playboy magazine in November
1980, moved to Texas in 1981 and
lives in the Dallas suburb of
Mesquite under her malden
name, Paula Laham. Working in
a variety of jobs, she has refused
to discuss her career in Washington with reporters.
Late Tuesday, however, Playboy announced that anolher nude
p lctorla I will have Parkinson In
this year's November issue, and
the magazine released the accompanying text to avoid exaggerated speculation:
"When D.C. lobbyist Paula
Parkinson ... was asked about
rumors of hanky-panky with
George Bush's VP choice Dan
Quayle, she said she and Quayle
hadn't actually slept together
during a 1980 vacation in Florida.
'He wanted to, but I was there as
(former Rep. ) Tom Evans' date,',
she said. 'We flirted a lot and
danced extremely close and
suggestively. He said he wanted
to make love." '
Informed of the Playboy release, Quayle's press secretary,

DEAD OR AUVE

6-17-tfc

six states.
He has susta ined the drive
despite the shado'l' cas t by the
furor about running mate · Dan
Quayle, staunchly defending the
41-year-old senator from Indiana
even as questions persist about
his military record and personal
historv .
Quayle was one of the reasons

-At the helm... ---.,.....

sleaze," declared one of the signs

brandished as Bush approached
the factory gates. Upon touring
the facility, he was met at
several points by workers holding union-provided signs pledgIng support to his Democratic
opponent, Massachusetts Gov.
Michael Dukakls.
The vice president tried to
make the most of the situation,
however, telllng about 200
workers in unntnching remarks,
"I recognize that all of you might
not be with me , but I appreciate
very much your giving me this
opportunity, because this meeting itself re!lects ihe greatness of
America. 1t Is onlv here that we
are able to do lhiskind of thing. "
Later, after a warm reception
!row several thousand supporters In downtown Portland, Ore.,
Bush arrived at the California
Capitol to similar cheers and
reiterated his support for Quayle
despite suggestions that the
senator used family influence to
avoid the Vietnam War combat
by entering the National Guard.
"He will bring excitement to
this state and great asset to our
ticket, " Bush said. "I'm not
going to let some insidious
rumor-mongers drive me to
changing my mind. I'm staying
with Dan Quayle!"
Asked about new allegations
regarding Quayle's behavior
from Paula Parkinson, the
former lobbyist posing nude for
the second time In Playboy
magazine, Bush responded, "I
never deal In rumors , especially
if they're ugly and hurtful."
Quayle, before his scheduled
departure today on a campaign
swing through St.. Louis, Cincinnati and Lexington, Ky., complained to reporters waiting
outside his home that questions

.have become

~~outrageous"

re-

1U North Sec and
Middleport, Ohio 45 760

garding certain topics .
"I'm getting a little bit lndig-

.r:!,..,lll _

President Ronald Reagan holdll lhe Honorary Pon Pilot ·A ward
pretN!nted to him by the Port of Long Beach, Calif., Tuesday.
Reagaa wu presented the award after he signed the Trade Act at
tile port. Be lllhe fin I chief executive to be given tile award alnce It
waa presented lo Presldeal Eisenhower In liM. (UPI)

...

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COPY OlAOUIOl -

JIIDIOO~nA•U
TNI~I OAf .AI'I O

'"''"V'•"""

IUID•v•..,...•

CAMPAIGNING -Sen. Dan Quayle greets the crowds In one of
nant about just one bum rap alter
his
first outlngsu the vice presidential nominee of the Republican
another," he said with clear but
party.
Quayle embarked Wednesday for a four or five-day ·
controlled anger in reference to
campaign
trip. ( UPI)
Parkinson's claim that he propositioned her for sex in1980. "That
is an utter, absolute falsehood."
The heat of the spotlight
surrounding Quayle nonetheless
drew a surprisingly blunt reacCharles WiJliams
Katie Hart
tion from his Democratic counterpart, Sen. Lloyd Bentsen of
Katie L. Hart, 84, Route 2,
Texas . When asked at a new!f · Charles Parker Williams, 88,
Letart, died at 11:45 p.m. Monday,
592
Broadway
Streei.
Middle·
conference Tuesdav what he
would do in Bush's shoes, the vice port, died Tuesday morning at Aug. 22, I988, in the emergency
Veterans Memorial Hospital af- room at Holzer Medical Center,
presidential nominee shot back:
Gallipolis, Ohio.
ter an extended illness.
"Sweat."
She was a member of lhe Oak
Born
May
17,1900
at
Gallipolis,
Duka-kis, meanwhile, camGrove
United Melhodisl Church.
he
was
the
son
of
the
late
Frapcls
paigning in Beverly, Mass ,
She was the wife of !he late
and
Amanda
Williams.
responded to a Republican taunt
He was the retired owner and Henry W. Hart
by explaining that he vetoed a bill
Born April 23, 1904 in Letart,
operator
of Williams Trucking
requiring children to recite the
she was the daughter of the late
and
the
Middleport
Sohlo.
Pledge of Allegiance because he
Survivors include his wife, William E. I ohnson and lhe late
was advised it would be
Mary
Kathleen Williams; one Hannah Gibbs Johnson.
unconstitutional.
She is survived by one son,
daughter,
Charleen Cochran;
Dukakls challenged Bush bv
Wayne
"Stonny" Hart Jr., Letart;
seven grandchildren, Linda Noe,
asking reporters if "a seriou's
James Cochran Jr., Pat Coch· one granddaU!!hter, Kattinka Hart,
candidate for president" would
•ran,
Brenessa Phillips, Gene Gallipolis, Oh10; one sister, Freda
sign a bill the Supreme Court
Hood, Marl; Hood, and Phillip Edwards, Middleport, Ohio.
deemed unconstitutional, "how
Hood;
seven greatServices will be at 1 p.m.
can he be qualified to be
grandchildren;
and
several
nieThursday
at lhe Crow HusscU
president of the United States?"
ces
and
nephews.
Funeral
Home,
Point Pleasant, wilh
Asked if he though( the GOP
parents,
he
In
addition
to
his
the
Rev.
John
Icenhower official·
would keep pushing the pledge as
was
preceded
in
death
by
one
ing.
Burial
will
follow in the Oak
a campaign Issue, Dukakis said,
daughter,
Mary
June
HoOO,
three
Grove
Cemetery,
Letart
"The )tfghest form of patriotism
sisters
and
one
brother.
Friends
may
call
at lhe funeral
Is a dedication and commitment .
Services
will
be
Friday
at
2
home Wednesday from 7 to 9 p.m.
to the rule of law of the
at
the
Rawlings-Coatsp.m.
Constitution of the United
Blower Funeral Home in MiddleStates."
port. Burial will follow In RiverHELP WANTED
In Boston, a yallup Poll
view Cemeterv.
released Tuesday showed Bush
LABORATORY
SUPERVISOR
Friends may call Thursday
moving ahead of Dukakis 48
For
!llodern
fully
equipped physi·
from 2 to 4 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m. at
percent to 44 percent despite the
cta~ s off1ce laboratory. Qualifi·
the funeral home.
public's mixed feelings , about
cattons necessary: liT (ASCP),
Quayle. ·
~ell versed in instrument operaThe survey, conducted with an
lion and trouble shootin1. Comerror margin of 3 percentage
paten! in all lab areas. Excellent
points for The Boston Globe,
benefits. Weekends off. Apply in
WCVB -TV and WEE! Radio in
person to or call 446-9620, The
Boston, questioned 1,000 regisMedical Plaza, 203 Jackson Pike,
tered voters nationwide from
Gallipolis, betw"n 8:30 A.M.·
Aug. 19-21, just after the GOP
5:00P.M.
National Convention.
It confirmed the post convention "bounce" that Bush
aides had hoped for, saying 52
percent of those surveyed approved of Bush's choice of
Quayle while only 27 percent
disapproved. The poll found 36
percent more likely to vote for
Bush because of Quayle but 33
percent less likely because of the
controversy.

O.OYMIOII[ ""&amp;IC~T1 0H
IIOHO IAfUOOAV
- 11&gt;0•M •OO.o•v
~ 11

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ZDII~M

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------.
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J:"...... -

992~7321
'

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_....,._
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=--.=:r. . .

·~-

··-

Business

I

lmm MOVIES &amp; SliDES to
VHS TAPE
let us,onvtrt t'-"eoldMovies
I Slides over to easy YHS.

CALl AMY CARTER•

TAnoos bv Slaer

YOUNG'S

2 Lincoln Terrace
Pomeroy, Ohio

CARPENTER
SERVICE

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949-2860
NO SUNDAY CAUS

3-11-tfn

TRI-STATE
DRYWALL CO.
Complete

Orywall

Servi.e
FREE ESTIMATES
Reasonable Rotes
56 STATE ST.
GALLIPOUS, OH.
446·3487

8118/88

992-6857

or 101'5 lliCTRONICS
446-7390

1-3·11-1 mo. pd

11121'81-tfc

~ Ad dons

ROOFING

and remodeling

.-: Roofing and gutter work
~C~merete work
•
~ Plumbing and electrical
work

!FREE ESTIMATES)

Real Estate General

V. C. YOUNG Ill .
992·6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

"OOT THE F~ER FOR ANEW HOME,
THE,~LELAMO
STAFF.".
,.

[].

. ..

.

'

.

'

5 · Happy Ads

Hey
Granny
Happy
Birth•av
~·

N.EW LISTING - Here is a busi ness ready to go. Crafts olall
konds, stoc.k and equ1pment and an operating business. K"p
thos locat•on or move to your own' Call for details.
NEW LISTING- TUPPERS PlAINS -Very neat 3 bedroom
ranch with an attached garage I acre level lot. F.M.H.A. appoo,ed. Call lor appointment. $39,000.00.
POMEROY- Older 2 slory home with gorgeous woodwor~
lireplace and mce kilchen cabinets. 3 lledoooms, huge familY room. donlngroom &amp;equipped kitchen. Central air, garage
and storage DU1Id1ng. MAKE OFFER. $39,900.00.

.... Jltoll

FIVE POINTS AREA- 1 acre home sites. Eiec. and water
a'iiallle. Good location for your new home. $5,900.00 ea.

One of Amaica's lines!
W., llllllina II $13,800.

Grat eorninl porenrial,
will - iated'ac wirh
..-nt aiiployaaw:m. Jn..
· - · fully -.rod. If
you QUI JlUid- 01 mort•
pp a madd heme, coli
BiD Daridt. Toll free

&amp; Parll

NEW -REPAIR

Briggs &amp; Stratton

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

Wead Eater

VALLEY LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY

949-2168

992·111111

Tecumseh
Homelite

Jacobsen

Middleport, Ohio

"LET' GEORGE
DO IT"
HAULING

BISSELL ·
BUILDERS

FIREWOOD
OAK, LOCUST,
CHERRY

CUSTOM BUILT

$3 s

HOMES &amp; GARAGES

SAND-GRAVEL
LIMESTONE
FILL DIRT
985-4487

"At Reasonable Prices"

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949-2860

992-2269

ND SUNDAY CALLS

8-8-88-tfn

OFFICE ......................................................... 992·2251

Most

PAT HILL FORD

A/ C Service
All Major &amp; Minor
Repairs
NIASE Certified Mechanic

TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

992-2196
Middleport, Ohio
1-13-tlc

For_eign and

Domestic Vehicles

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL · SAND

CALL 992-6756
VAUGHN

ID·8·1fc

Wooden pallots on first..c::ome,
first· M:rv$ basts. Inquire in per·
son at Gallipolis Dlil',l Tribune
offfee. 825 Third AOJe .,
GallipoUs,

3 fem11le puppies. Cell after 6
PM, 814-446·9348.
PuppiH to give awey. Pan
Beagle. part Shetl.nd Sheep
dog. 4 females. :l metes. 0111
614·448· 4823 after 3 PM.
To give away · 4 long haired,
black • whitekitlenl. 8wks, old.
Utter train.t. Coli 614-2661114.

King size mattress Bl box
1prings, old but clean. to give
f/INay . Call614· 446-1324.
Black and tan. male puppy.
Around 12 weatcs old. Cell
614-992-7167: Cllte and smart.

3 month old Auetrali,..Shepard.
Female. 614·742-2507.

6

lost and Found

Lost; Aug. 11, bl~o~e topaz ring,
eKtra large blue stone with 6
small diamonds. At Centenary
Rd. Sentimental. Large reward.
Call 304-875-11 31 .
Found on Frid..,. in Albany. 1 set
of keys with 4 kev rings . Call

614-742-2451 .

Lost: Beagle Rabbh hound.
Apple Grove area. 81 4-247·

W•nted-LPN's tor private duty
nursinQ. If inlerested send re·
sume "with shfft tvtil.tHity &amp;
salary l"'tquiri!Jment " Gallipolia
Daily Tribune. Box Cia 188. 825
Third Ave , G1llipolis. Ohio
45631 .
Sales Rep. Wanted

For Geltia Cou'\tV to tell Memb"shipa in the number onetuto
club -AAA . Earn 60-75% com
mission. Ideal for pen-time or
rMired men &amp; wotnen. Twentv
minute pre!entation could make
you 824. Rete supplement to
your present income. Prevtous
18Ift up~~rience dosirftd, Telemarlceters are encouraged t o
apply. Send resume or worll.
nitDI)' to : A A.A. 710 WB!J .. St ,
Portsmouth, Ohio 46662. Attn:
Bob Bates .

RESIDENT MANAGER
COUPLES
We are I! leading apanment
management company .earch·
ing for a Resident Manager
Couple to work at a BELPRE,
OHI 0 1 mall apartment co mpleK .
We would consider a single
Property Manag ar but prefer a
RftSidllflt Manager Couple. You
must have good communication
skills. be able to kept accur11ta
nu:orch, do all malnten.nce
(inside &amp; out), and excellent
record of past accomplishments.
We offer a competativt cornpen·
sation package induding a 2

bedroom apartment with utili·
tiel. a 2
paid training
program and paid 1111cation. {This
poahion often no medical insu·
renee). If interested call 814755-6308 for inteNiew co nsideration fin Athens! o, •nd work
historv and salary requirements
to:

v..e"'

CARDINAL INDUSTRIES 4307

Donlyn Court,
Columbus, Ohio 43232, ATTN:
J. M.
Equal Opportunity Employer
Applicetlons now being ee·
cepted for aKperienc:ed nursing
assistants. Apply in p•son at
Scenic Hllls NurslngCenter. 536
Buckridge Rd .. Gallipolis. ·

3638.

_Restlurtnt manager. Local fast
food restaurant now searching
tor an aggreulve man1gertoadd
8
Public Sale
to our management ttMn. So me
&amp; Auction
expltl'ienca preferred . Send , rt·
sume or letter of Inquiry to ; Box
Rick Pe•son Auctioneef. \). Cia 167 care of The Daity
cen•d Ohto and Wen Virginia. Tribune, 825 Third Aw. Gellipo·
Estate. antique. f•m. liquida- lis, OH 45631
tion •las. 304-773-8785.
&amp;perienced lin'! Cook. Inquire
at The Down Under R&amp;ataurllnt
in person, 300 Second A \18
9 Wanted To Buy
Gallipolis, Ohio .
··
Wepaycashforlatemodel clean
used cars.
Jim Mink Ch..,,.•Oids Inc,
Bill Gene Johnson

814-446-3872

TOP CASH paid for '83 model
and nMM used cars. Smith
Buidt-Pontlac, 1911 Eastern
Ave., Gallipolis. Call 814· 446-

2282.

complete houMtholds of furni·
ture &amp; antiques , Also wood S.
coal heaters. Swein's Furnhu111
&amp;: Auction. Third &amp; OUve,

614-446·31 69.

Want to b11y: U.M furniture and
anttqun , Will buy ~tire housa·
hold furnishing. Marlirt Wade·
mever. 614-245· 5152.

Jun" Cars with or without
motors. Call Larry Uvlly -81438&amp;.9303.

Bab(titter needed : S yr. old. 3
PM · B PM . Prefer someone
w / children. Addison area. Call
614-387-7269 before 2 PM.
Hiring High Scho~ Students
Only forReferen ce At de position
at Bossard Memorial Libfary . 12
houra weekly / 83.35 hourly·
Prefer Gallia County residant&amp; .
Call 614 -446 - 7323 for
interview.
Hair Stylists . Across The Str•8t
stvling salon is saetdng one
additional stylist who is looking
far more than just another job,
Call Terri at 814-446-9610 far
d&amp;tails.
Government Jobs. $16, 040169,230 ye.er. Now hiring. Your
area, 805-687· 6000 Ext. R·
9805 for current Federal list .
McCLURE ' S RESTAURANT
HIRING . C~oks and waitresses

FurMure and appliances by the
pi8C8 or entire household. Fair
prices being paid. Cell614·448·
3158.

needed. Return as being telc an
1:00.4 :00 p.m. Tuesda.,.s and
Thursd..,., at 479 Jackson Pike
Gellipolia·whh:e hou• behind
McCiutes Restaurant.

~uvinq doity gold. sihmr coins,
nngs, Jewelry. lterling ware. old
coins, large currency. Top prices. Ed Burkett Barber Shop.
2nd. Ave. Middleport. Oh. 614-

Used valve grinding machine.
Call 614, 992·5974, '

RN with strong laad~rship and
org.,izetional ~kills needed for
the Director of Nuntng Position
at a skilled nursing facility .
Located in mid Ohio Valley area .
We offer• competitiwwagaand
benefh: package. Sendrest..meto
TheDaitySentinel, P.O. Box ?29
C, Pomeroy. Ohio 45789.

A dual sump oil pan to fit a Ford
302 motor. 614-742·2026.

WeiiMtf 304-882-2845.

W.nted to buy: Will buy •andktg
tlmbor. 3094-675·5328.

GET PAID for reading books!
1100.00 P• title. Write; PASE·

992-3476.

AVON • All areas. Call MMilyn

S 17T. 161 S . llneotnv.ey. N.
Aurora. IL 60542.

Employment
Services

SEMINAR
Interior Decorating Consultant
wfth Ce"lflcate and lnt:erior
Oacofllting Sewing Business.
Reservations. 304-523·5672,

11 Help Wanted
EARN EXTRA MONEY cklring
the Summar. Get out of the
houee . become a Daily Sentinel
,:.per cllf"rier. RoutBs open in
Mlddl&amp;port. Call Scott It The
Sentinel OffiCII at 614-992·

21S5.

Applications now being taken at
OBES in GallipoUs for ~a new
Pomeroy-Middleport Domino's
Pizza. Equal Opportunity Em ployer .

WAREHOUSE TRAINEES
Learn inventory and stock control. limited openings. Full p~~y
while training. If you are in top
Phvsical condition, undarege 28
and are willing to work hard-

... Call 1· 800-282 -1 384 ,

Need veterinary 11J55islant tor
gener•l office work TueldiV ..
Write Box C· 17, Ca ro Point ,
Pleasant Register, Pt. Pl enant , •

w__v.:.2.:.ss.:.s:.:o_._ __ _ __.:·• :
"HIRING"!Govarnment jobs . :
your area. $15.000.· S68.000. •

Call (6021838 -8885 EXT .
1203."

AVON , all areull Sh.irlav
Spears. 304-675-1429.
6 nurwas aids for private nome
duty In Leon area, S45.00 pM
day . phone 304-468·1577.

12

Monday·Thunschr,.., 9 AM · 2 PM

tor an Interview . Must be a high
IChool graduate.

•

Part-time Aegiuered X-ray
Technician. V•ied hours· No
weekflrtds, call, or hotidsvs.
Apply to tha Medical Plaza 203
Jackson Pike. Gallipolis be·
tween 8 :30-5 PM.

Have r oom in my nome fot ••
elderly laW or man. Country ~ ·
atmosphere, clo!JB to rown . 20 •
yre. experience Md plenty of
TLC. Call .anytime. 614-9493014.

Income T u Cla&amp;ll81 begin Sept.
8 , 1988. HMa is an opportunity

13

•

Insurance

•

to become a part of the taateal
growing inco.,.. ta« firm In the
area. Career-oriented persona.
colltlct DanTu. Inc. Tue. or

Call us for your mobile home
insurance · Miller Insurance ,

•
'
:

Wad., 10 AM -4 PM. Call 814-

304-882- 2145 . Alt o: Ruto,

•

•lnlid rt':':a-:B:1:7B:·=====::.+":o:me:_:u:'':·h:..:':'h,:=::::=:. ::.

•etevision Listening Devices
llependable Hearing Aid Sales &amp; ,,
Hearing Evaluations For All Ages
(!'
.

~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
a: ·Licensed Clinical Audiologist

~

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2104
417 Second Avenue. Box 1213
..; Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
. Mulbeny Hils. Pomeroy,

z

TIIPU P

MARCUM CONTRACTING

EXCAVATING

•Dozer 6 Beakhoe Work
•WUI Do Hauling With
Dump Truck

CHESTER, OHIO
•tiOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS • BATHS
•ROOFING
REMODEUNG
REPAIRS

•Wreck• Servia•

•Junk Yard Buline..

WANT TO IUT WIICIID OR
JUNK CAliS OR TIIIKK!

a.

-FlU ISTIMATISfor.., If ti.u••kos tall

i/

SYRACUSE, OHIO

992-3410

IIIOOLEPOR1- This 2 story home shows the work has been
done. Anice kitchen, lots ol closet space, 3 bedrooms. dining
room, 1 and 1/3 baths, level lot and a storage buildin~
PRICE REDUCED. $26,900.00.
HENRY E. ClELAND. JR . .................... .......... 992-6191
JEAN TRUSSELL. ................................. .......... 94~2&amp;60
DOTTIE TURNER ............................................ 992-5692
TRACY RIFF,LE ............................................ ... 94~2107
JO HIU ........................................................ 985-44&amp;1

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

We can repair and recore radiators and
heater cores. We can
also a&lt;id boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

PER LOAD
DELIVERED

BILL SLACK

Day or Night

SER~ICE

Giveaway

3-30·'87 lfn

1-18-1 mo. pG.

lETART- Like new inside and out! Completely remodeled
home on a large lot. Excellent condilion. Garag~ new roof,
new siding, 4 bedrooms, fireplac e. drop-in ranch and cellar.
MAKE OFFER. $27,500.00.

1-8!JO.,W6-5647

'•'

Authorized Service

4-16-86-tfn

Lo••·

3 Announcements

). JJ-'88· 1111

8· 8-1 mo. pd.

SR 7 - BElliNG RD . Approximately 19.80 acres, all m•·
nerals ang royalties lrom existing well. Approx. $15.00/ mo.
2 springs lor development. WANT $12,000.00.

Dulelle

'

SMALL ENGINE
REPAIR

Howard L. Writesel

PHONE DAY OR EVENINGS

9811-4141
GENERAL CONTRACTORS

Reference•

712211 mo.

~-'-'II

------·Gallip-olis ......... .
&amp; Vicinity
Moving Sale-Frl. &amp; S•t 9·1 R &amp;
R Trailer Park-Bultvllla Rd.
Mia-OWI\18, pr-ure canner,
pr•sura cooker· I qt.
'

----·--pc;·merov.......... .
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

o.orr
33134 St. At. 3
Auaust 25th

4:1:fo p.m .

1r1 d

'•

Bag salest&amp;nsThur. Aug. 25. Fill
grocery ba~ for S1 ,00. Meiqs
Hum11n Soc•e1v Thrift Shop,
Middleport

11

Thursday.

August 25 . 9 :0()-

4;00. 608 Fo1.1rth St.. NfWV
Haven Boys 10 •peed. girls
clothes. Atar l
Vard sate. 3 family . Wed. and
Thur . 24 Werwid Rd. Pt .
Pleasant. Na•VillagePiua 8- 1.

&amp; Vicinity
toyt,

Y•d Sale Aug. 25,28, 27. 3
Woodmont OrNe. behind PeoPI• S.nk.

P1Uo .... 300 Wrlaht It, Thur.
lndFri. 8· 4. SM. l ·f2. Items IPO

Y•d Sale. 801 28th StNet
Aug . 215.21,27 . Thr• family'.
C.ncelled If rllin wtll be toUow·

boy1 clothet,

•

····-········· ··-·--·· -··· ········

PQ,_.,..

.,,.,.,,
dlthoo.

..
,

...... PfPTeiiiiiiiif .... '~

21th. 9:00.
Skin . ..

numtrous to menUon.

2· 1f:"'ll·t'"

.

''Free Estimates''

8-12 I mo.

WIIIIAYS

'

Now Homos Built

Hours 10-4
Evenings by Appointment
2 miles toward Albany on
SR 681.
992-5083

lttw•n 9 a.m.-6 p.m.
ar loavtMtu-

I

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Gently used
consignment
clothing for
children.

614-742-2617

,,

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

SECOND nME
AROUND SHOP

:-:-r-r

':~"'·.:.~-

CLASSES STAn AUGUST 2m
ALSO ACCEmNG DAl CAll AGES 3·12
CAU

1-28·'88-tfn

f•r• Equip••••
Peril &amp;Strfl~l

----··--·=--

a-.......=.-..

... ....

Middleport, Ohio

;J: ='I,=

--...-.- ·--- ....
··-~

319 So. 2nd Ave.

Equipment Dealer

71---·: :t::r:... ......

··---·-

(JfJ«eJ eolhl!r rile
followinJ teJephone exchon,8'et ...

992-6282

8115/Hn

"-*-··--·""'
5:5""-e-

n--~••

11-ll-ll'l
··-·
- · ,.••tr.ao
-llf
...ao
o1.aa
IDA"'
" -1111
...Ill
ooo.•
ltl.lod
. .....
011.111
.....
.. WI"'
tU..
on.•
,._..
t IICIIItll
on•
- -·
N_ _ ,... _ _ _ ,..,, . . . ,. ..... .,.....

4

Four poppies, mlud breed. fairly
tmlll, at 1 cute ltage. 614-742-

CARTER'S
PLUMB.ING
&amp; HEATING

Mastic &amp; Certainttied
Vinyl Siding
Roofing
Seamless Gutter
Replacement Windows
Blown Insulation
Storm Doors &amp;
Windows
FrH Estimates
Call 992-2772

BOGGS

the park,

2025.

Authorized John
Deere, New Holland,
Bush Hog Farm

......
·--···-- -

• a~n

......... ,......,,,._.,,_, c.o_,..,,.,

,._,...,~--

NOW ACCEniNG FALL STUDENTS
FOR PRE-SCHOOL AGES 3·5

169N.2nd

INSULATION

·---·-- -.......
··---.. .__
........
.... .........
-........-...
.....-.........
_··.. .....
,... ..-......................

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY

KAY'S BEAUTY
SALON

J&amp;L

I'OI.ICIU

GINGERBREAD HOUSE
PIE-SCHOOL

NOW THRU SEPT . 3

16141 992-USO
RE5101NCI PHONE
(6141

Youlh Center In Beverly, Mass., durln!{hlsa!)nual
regional tour o! the state Tuesday. Dukakls Is on a
tw&lt;Hiay tour of the state and talked to youngsters
about alcohol and drug abuse. &lt;UPI)

121 00

Cut &amp; blow Dry
tgso

Pay Your Phone
and Cable Bills Here
IUSINISS PIIONI

IIDNDAT ttn r•AY I Ul to !i P,M.
I A.M. Until HOOIII SATVICIAY
(IOSfD SUNIIAT

, WITH fiiiSMooooooo·,.,, $1.69

For

We Carry Fishing Su~Jptil..(

ro PUCI Ati.ID au. ttt.n.u

$114

125.00 Perm

SALES &amp; SERVICE

U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
614-662-3821

CHUCK WAGON

BACK TO SCHOOL
STUDENT ONLY
SPECIAL

&amp;

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Area deaths

Alto Trana111ltslon
PH 992 5682
•
"
Or 992-712.1

HUDNALL
PLUMBING HEATING

feature

014-440-9152.

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

We Service All

ecron from

A&gt;A .•

Rt. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561

•..

mants. just ..wlk in It FIESTA
HAIR FASHIONS, 322 Socond

Garage

•Washers •Dryers
•Ranges •Freezers
•Refrigerators
"Must le Ropairablo"

VISITING YOUTH CENTER - Democratic
ptesldenllal candidate Michael Dukakls enjoys a
picnic lunch and tal lui to teenagers during a
project RAP program at the Myles McPherson

I

3 Announcements
Ne&amp;d1 perm? Try

When in California, talk to Reagan
Bush ran into his first lukewarm
audience since the convention
when he arrived at a Seattle steel
factory Tuesday . Skeptical military veterans and steelworkers,
some saying they have not fared
well In the Reagan-Bush years,
greeted him with , as many
protesters as supporters.
"GOP- party of privilege and

Annuu nce 111 en Is

IF=~,~V~A?N~T:::=:E~D:::::=nr~~~~~~~~;1
~ we
Roger Hysell olltheBESTb•ondo!Noappo&lt;nt-

David Prosperi, said, "Al l I can
tell vou Is what Senator Quayle
told· you previously. He had
nothing to do with Parkinson
before, during and after that
weekend." ·
Political rumblings a bout
Quayle's fu rure nevertheless in·
creased Tuesday, with The De~
Moines Register, Iowa's influential newspaper, editorializing
that Bush should dump Quayle as
his running mate and conservative Rep. Howard Nielson, RUtah, saying Quayle should with·
draw for the good of the GOP.
Bush defended Quayle vigorously at a steel factory In Seattle
and his aides suggested Parkin·
son was trying to promote
herself. Asked directly about the
latest allegations from Parkinson, Bush responded, "I never
deal In rumors, especl&amp;llY If
they're ugly and hurtful:"
In Irvine, Call!. , President
Reagan gare an emphatic "no"
when asked whether Quayle
should be dumped from the
ticket. Asked why not, he replied,
"Because he's a fine man and
well qualified."
And in York, Pa., former
President Richard Nixon
weighed in on the matter, urging
voters not to seize upon personal
issues, familiar territory for
him, but Instead to begin discussIng "real Issues" of public policy.

... , ... IIO"'Y hptO

ing the value of California's 47
electoral votes, he called the
Golden State "a first priority for
me."
Bush , who for 7 )!; years was
seen generally as a weak substitute for Reagan, has been upbeat
and on the offensive since the
Republican National Convention
last wee k, tak ing his message of
no tax increases and peace
through strength to almost exclusively e nthusiastic audiences in

The Daily Sentinei-Page-13

Business
Services

• •

IUUO.oi.YU···

SACRAMENTO. Ca!U. fUPI)
- George Bush has managed in
the last week to emerge from
Ronald Reagan 's shadow as he
seeks the White House on his
own. But with anolher shadow
trailing the campaign, the vice
president arranged to meet with
his boss today for a qui ck
political boost.
Stumping in a cr ucial electoral
state where former Gov. Reagan
remains popular. Bush set up a
private strategy session with the
president in Los Angeles fol·
lowed by a high-profile appe arance together at a public pep
rally.
"You'll see plent y of me in lhe
next 78 days," the new Republican leader told about 4,000
s upporters on the Capitol steps In
Sacramento Tuesday. Recognlz-

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

in" vreek.

1o

\
,

�.Page-14-The Daily Sentinel
15

Schools

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
46

LAFF-A-DAY

Instruction

COU.EGE. 529 Jackaon Pike.
Ohio lnttruettoMI Grent De ltd-

Reftrenen.

G.M. lll&gt;&lt;don. 614-446-8958

Babysitting ln my home. Acrost
from No rth Galli• High School.
cau &amp;14-388-909&amp;.
Will do custom

sew in g. Bridal &amp;

Bid\.WII area. Call 814-3888742.
Experienced babvsitter will do
babvshting in her home. Call

Yard care, bru!h anting.. light
ha~lln g. tometreetrimmingand
remowl. Bill Slack 614-9922289 evanings.

"I lo~e

32

44

Mobile Homes
for Sale

1974 O.empion 14dl6 t01al
electric. underpenning. Fur·
nist.d or unfurnlthld. Req to
mow. •e.soo.oo. 304-578·

2383.
S~e

of Aent-19M 2 8R , mobile
t'lome. E,Jrtt11 nice. Cell304-176-

7988.

Treil•andl.nd. 304-876-7889.

full time304-773-9152.

33

7279.'

tNG CO. tecommends· that vou
do businass with people you
~now. and NOT to tend money
through the mail until vou hBII'e
inWStlgeted the offBfing.

DISTRIBUTORSHIP

High volume route for sele in
Gallipolis . Average Income
815,000 to $40,000 Plus. Pert
\ime to tuK time. Sell for

016.200CIIIh. Coii1 , 80Q.82&amp;g 273 until 6 PM daifv .

Must Seii-T ·Shirt, Jacket end
Cap printing equipment, with
suppliers. VVitling
to train.
84000. Negotiable. Cell 614-

621 -2303.

Ow.n .,.our oWn apparet or stloe
store, choose from : Jean·
s·portswaar . ladies . men s.
Children-maternh:v. large tizes.
petite. dancewe•-aerobic. l)rillal. lingerie or accessoriea store.
Add color analysis . Brand
names: Ur Clairborna, Healtflte.lt. Chaus. lee. St. IWchefe.
Foren~ . Bugle Boy, levi. Camp
Beverll Hills , Organically
Grown. ucia. owr 2000others.
Or S13.99 one priee detigner.
mutti tieJ pricing discount or
family :!hoe store. Retail prices
unbeliewable for top quality
shoes normally priced from S19
to $60. Ower 250 bran da 2600
st.,tes. 817,900 to S29,900:
Inventory, training, fixtures, air·
fare, grand opening, Me , Can
open 15 devs. Mr. Morphis
812-888-1009.

Real Eslale
31

Homes for Sale

EleRJtiful Holcomb Hill, additio nllll lot. 3 BR .. Ca. Call

614-446-0338,

3 bedrooms, 2 baths. central air.
car port. acre plus lot. storage
bldg. Call even ings 614-9925477.
New siding. porch, and patio. 3
BR .. full basement, fireplace in

basement. Call 614-446-8899.
Hou.e for §lie or assume loan . 7
yrs. o ld. S109.00 month if
Cfllllifiod. FHAapprc'ol&amp;d. Across
from Meigs Co. Fairground!.
Approx. 538.000. Appraised at
$44.000. Call614-992-6784or
614-742-2211 .
105 private acrasw / easvaccess
Gall ipolis Ferrv. nENV t-tome als o
2 lots with wells. $70.000. Call
304-676-4631 .

3 bedroom home on 41ots. Greer
Roa!l. Hillview. 304-675-4018.
3 bed room, 2 baths, full finished
basement, new furnace &amp; c en-

tml a ir. garage. fenced yard.
Aslcin~ $62,000. 2414 Mt.
Verno"n A.\111. Pt. Ploasanl. 3046 75·1774.
Rt. 2. Apple Grove. Prime
loeatfo n w ill co nsider mobil e
home o r tr&amp;d f!: 304-576-2486.
HoU!D

3 bedroom home. 1 •t, bMhS,
carpete d. cantral air-heat. loca1ed ill Poi nt Pleasant. 304675-2702 or 3.0 4-576-2147.
3 bed room hou!IOI on 5 acrea, 2
car gl'lrage. b..,-n. machinery
shad , extnt septic system and
mobile home hook up. located
o ne mil e: from Phill ipSporn plant
on Broad Run RoMI . l etart , c all

304-882-2695.

lots &amp; Acreage

35

l•ge building loti,
mobh homes perm,..d, pubtic
water, alto rhler lott. Clyde
&amp;o..wn. Jr. 304-678-2338.
Ashton.

BeautifUl rhter lots one acre plus.
public Wlter, Clyde Bowen, Jr.

304-&amp;75-233e.

Two 1 eere lots with pi.J)IIc
water, Jerrys Run Road,
S 4.900.00 each. consider trade.

304-675-2383.
Hou~

Lots. one acre. Level woode!l,
cltywatM, Jericho Road. Owner
financing. Good terms. 304-

372-8405 ... 372-2578.

Schultz 12x65, B~e10
2 BR .. c ompletelv
furni s hed indudod- new plumbIng. underpinning. "'bJit. furnac e. complttt bedroom, leving
&amp; dining room, AC. retrtg.freezer, stove. mia-CMeve. kero.sene tieer:er, wash•·d,.,ar. EYflrvthing good to excel. cond.

Acrage with nice building sites,
6 miles off Rt. 87, 304-458·
1875.
53 ecres, 5 milea lrom Point
Pleasant, nt8Sonabfe. 304-676-

6018.

14•70. 28R. Mobile Home, .wll
10 w.ll c•,..t. 111 ltectrlc. Cell

814-448-1887.

Rental s

1979 GL 1ooo. ueo.oo. 304
875-7881 .

For •lt. 1 4 ICflll
Allege or l)lclllng.
ChiVy Van. New
brain•. runs greet.

949-2453.

'

76

' f
"

EVENING

'

1:00 (Jlllla Volley They Call her
oeu~an

• ()) Cll •
llllllewa

Parts
&amp; Accessories
Auto

41

Nicely furnished smeR house.
Adults onty. Ref. required. Plio
pets. Call 81 ... 448-0338.

PM.

2 BR . unfurnished, garage. 1
mlle-218. 5200 rent. S150dep.
Ref. One child. Call 614-4469686.

2 BR . house. located on 914
Third Aw .. S170 a mo .. S75
dep. Call 614-446-3870.
Haute for tent . 2 bedroom. Nice,
clean, natural gas. 614-992·
6868.
Glenwood-Nice -2 8R . brick. 3
c.- garege. ell elec., wood
burning fireplace. wall to wsn
carpet. Accepting 1 child. $320.
Huntington, 304-525· 7081 .
2 Bedroom houa~ . 304-6754480
eo 'or 53, betlo\llen
8am-4pm. Rent 8200. Security

••t.

dop.

lbedroom home. lui basement .

304-882-3394.

For •leor ~t~nt 3 bedroom. close
to schools, store. Ref. &amp; dop.
r9(fuired. 304-676-7281 .

3 bedroom home. 2211 Jackson
Ave, 304-875-1365.
'76 Chevv. 4.~t4 pick up, 3 inch
lift. bed rusted. high miles. must
see to appricato, t1 . 700.00.

304-875-2570.

6 room duplex. beeement. garage. private, nice location, 1714
Jefferson Blvd .. 304- 675·

3753.

42

G) lportiLook
(l) o.arout Junior High Q
(!) Dr.'Who The War Games,
Pan&amp;
• (I]) HIIIPJ Day•

of corn for
Also 1973
tirllll, new
fi460. 814-

1018how81z TOday
!HI Good 1'lmea
111 c:- e.,.••
.hndlngo

Coli 304-875-5104.

4006.

Modern 1 SR. apt. Cell 814--

44&amp;-0390.

Furnished 100 bloclc of 2nd
Ave., Gellipolis. Rent $230.
8100 deposit. All utilitiel ptid.
Wilt be open B-23-88. Call Jim
Blair at 614-379-2171 .
Furnithed 1 BR. apartmentRacine. Utilitietl. garage spece
included. Write Bolt 108. At. 3.
Racine. Ohio 45n1 .
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedroom apartments at Village
Manor and Riverside Apanments in l\lliddleport. From
$1 82. Call 614-992 -7787 .

EOH,

2 bedroom Apts. for rent .
Carpeted. Nice setting. la~ rdry
facilities available. Call 614-

992-3711. EOH.

NBW'Iy redecorated apartrMnts
available. Utilittes paid. 8225.
per montl'!, deposit required. Call
614-992· 5724 after 6:00 or

992-5119.

New 1 bedr~ furnished or
u nfumished apartments. One in
Pomeroy , one in Middleport .
Call 614-992-6304.
1 bedroom apt. in Midcleport.
S 150 per month plus utilities .
CAll 614-992-6645 or 614-

949-2216.

A{Jartmente for tent. 1. 2. and 3
bedrooms. Call 814-992-2403.
814-9g2-2181 or &amp;14·992·
2780endet kforJack 01 Debbie.
APARtMENTS, mobile homos,
house•. Pt. PIHAntiln dGallipolis. 614-448·8221 .
Beech Stroot. Middl11port, Ohio.
2 bedroom furrUshed epartment.
utilities paid. ~eferent'll . Phone

c•peted. epplienc•. water &amp;Ad
trash pl ..up1 provided. Mainta n enee tree llving clo• to shOPping, bankS and schools. For
more inforfnetion call 304-882-

3716. E.O.H.

Furnished 2 BR , Ca. cable. water
sewage paid. Foster' s Mobile
Home Parle. Call &amp;14-446·

3 bedroom garage apl, unfur·
nishedonJefferton. no pets. no
h .ld
1

h

304-676-2836

cafter8
ten.
Pone
:00.

Mobile Homes for ..nt. Evelyn's
Mobile Home Park. Kanet.lge.
Ohio. Call 614-446-0608.
2 bedroom mobile home located
Camp Coni..,. call 304-675-

1371 "'676-3812.

44

814-448-1423.

A partmant
for Rant

-.c.

e1 4-445-0338.

.

BEAUllFUL .&lt;IP... f\1MENTS "T
BUOGrT P~IC!S AT JACK·
SON !STt.TES, 538 Jlckoon

PUce tram t183 1 mo. Walk JO
shop lnd movt•. 814-448-

2511. E.O.H.

••..,

45

Fu.r nished Rooms

"'' ._.-~- - ··

SWAIN

NEW- 6 pe. wood group- 8399.
LNing room suites- $199-$699.

Compound Bow White Ttil II ,
light. quiver. Hun"blr .supreme,
arrow rest. exc 1h1pe ,

• 1,000.00. 304-675-3978.

2 fulv equippecl fish aquariums
whh delux
and lots of
axtna, 304-882·3369.

-.d

Sot. 614-446-1699, 627 3•d.
AV'Ii. Gallipolis. OH.

Ten fittle girls .tosses (size 4)
12.00. Atari 8111 835. 00 new .
Phone 304-.:117&amp;1484.

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

Wnhert. dryers, refrigerators.
ranges . Skaggs Appliances,
Upper River Ad. besi!le Stone·
Crest Motel . 814-448-7398.

06 Cl1arpillardoler. good cond,
304-578-2823.

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

Medium Buck stOYI. used 3
wintert. S250.00. Call 3D4-

675-233e.

55

Building Suppli~s

18870uwy Cavalier. auto., AC.
ANI·FM . .reo, , . . defrMt
11.800 mil•. Coli 814-38&amp;Cenning tomttoee . t4·. oo bushel. Pidl your own. Bring
coralners. Eugene Davia. 614-

247-3283.

Canning tomatoes. Pick your
own. Bring contain"". Wtv,.
RoM.•E. letlrt. Cell &amp;14-247-

22770&lt; 814-992·6405.

Cennlng tometoel. t4 buahet.

Woplck. 614-949·2671. Denny

Hilt Racine. Ohio.

u.s. No. 1 ..rge yellow FreHtone cennlng peach now avail•
~e. Bobl Market. Muon, WV.
Freeh from the ShM1edoah Val-

loy. 304-773-5721 .. 7736900.
canning
a.
plumbt IYIUable ate August.

"C"'• -·

F.11111 Suppl1e,

Building Ma"terials
Block, brick. sewer pip•. window•. lintels, e1c . Claude Winters. Rio Gr.ende, 0. Call 814-

/&lt;, LIV~SIOGk

Pets for Sale

Groom and Supply ShoJ)· Pat
Grooming . All breeds ... AII
styles. tams f&gt;et Food Dealer.
Julie Webb Ph. 614-448-0231 .

J 11o S FU RN1TURE
1 4 15 Eastern Aw.
4 drawer chett. S48. 5 drawer
Chest. $64.96. 6 pc. wooden
din neue seta. • 199. 95.

Drngonwvnd Cettery Kennel.
CFA Persian and Siamese kittens. AKC Ctlow puppios. NftW
Himalayan kittena. Call 614446-3844 a-fter 1PM.

PICKENS USED FURNITURE
Complete houl8hold furnishing~ .
'h mile out Jerricho.

304-875-1450.

AKC Reg. Golden Retriever
pups. The bestforklds. Available
11ftnr 8-21 · 88. Call nowl 614·

ViRa's Furniture
New sot. • chairs-one to fit
every budge~ . bedroom suits,
chest, wardrobes, bookshelves.
wood dinette sets. hutches.
weshefs &amp; dryers, deap fTflezers,
ttfl'igerators. r11nges. All furni·
ture is at low cost prices because
we heve no hidden cost. laya ways excepted plus financing is
av11ilable with epproved credit.
At. 141-Centenary .•;. mile on
Uncoln Pike. Open 9 AM -8 PM,
~on .- Sat . SUNDAY· 12-5 PM.
814-448-3168.

446·8253.

Sealpoint Himalayan - Persian,
female. Born April 18. 1984.
Excellent pel. Clll 614·446-

9477.

AKC En glish Springer $panlet
puptlie!l. Onl"t4 3 left . 814-9882 6 2 1. Jackson

40 uaed tractors to eho011 from

equfp!"':l!nt. Largetrt •lectlon in
S.E . Ohio.

'

3 BOSIOI'I Terrier puppiaa. 8 wks.
old. Shots. vvormed. Cell 614446·4131 a flor 4 PM.

Radio
Equipment

6 montk old female German
Shepherd . Call 614-367-0448.

25' ' cotorconsoleteleYisions for
sale. S100 S. uo. Call614-4462713.

6 week old AU!Itralian Shepherd
puppies, ASCA double ~is­
tered. Blue merta end black
tri-colored. Cell 814-742-2385
anytime.

Antiques

AKC Bassett !-founds. 5 ve ar
breedar. No\N'have 21ittersbred
lor brood stock . Males, S125 ..
fem&amp;les s 150. 614·667·8967.

Buy or Sell. Riverine Antiques,
1124 E. Main Street. Pomeroy.
Hours; ~ . T.W 10a.m. to &amp;p.m .,
Sunday 1 to 8p.m . 614c992·

2528.

57

Wheelchairs-new or used. 3
wheeled electric scooters. Call
Rogers Mobllty collect) 1 ·614·

Musical
Instruments

Bundy clairnst. musi c stand,
beginners books. Casio MT 100
keyboard. biltlery operated. Call
614-367-0684.

870-9661 .

We are the Hefrcfll't Professionals! Try us end vou'tl see why I

6 piec• drun'l set·digtt..l delay

FIESTA HAIR FASHIONS, 322

aampl&amp;r, 3 distution pedrllt, 5
guitara. Fre"fless bass guitar,
amps, PA system, powar heeds.
light sytem. Must Selt- Movlnq.
Ct'teaJ)t Call 614-448-3126.

Second Ave .. across from the
perk, 614-446·9162.
.,lackfout radio controlled 4
wheel truck. $150. cau 614446-3638 before 5 PM.

Individual gf.Jitar lessons, b ..
ginners. serious gukarist , 8ruicardis ~sic. 614--446-0&amp;87.
Jeff Wamsl- lnttructor. 114~ ...

1 BronwingautomatieSweet 1 6
A 1 Browning Ught 1 2 guaga.
Cell 614·448-3649.

- - - - - -·

1980 Pon~oc Q..,d Prl• V·6,
.,to. PI· pb, air. white with ted
intarior. 12,495. 304· 875-

292&amp;.

460 dieeellnternetional tl'lctOf',
wide ffont. PS, 3 pt., with hay
conditioner baler. plows. com
planter S. buah hog. S3160.
Owner will finance. Cell 814288-8522..

1979 Grand Prix. runs good.

MFSOTractor. 18ft. h'VMgon.
!5 ft. MF $fustl Hog. lnternetiorwl HI'/ Baler No . 46. 3 point
12 inch plows. •2so;o. 614887-8535 after 6 :00pm .

1I•:==========14~4~6-~80~77~.~L~im~it~ot~Op~o;n:in~g~•·;;.;
SNAFUtt by Bruce Beattie

8illv Goat. 120. Weather goat.
8 15 c.- •30 for bath. Call

614-266-9384.

Pige for Ale. $26.00 each.
304-876-6490.

65 ,Seed &amp;

Fertilizer

Dekah1b -Seedcorn. Tekingelfty
orderstoellureasupplyofyour
f81tori1t hybrids. Seed supply
could be ahon oo lock In an .....,
supply . Henry ErnetJ Kay, 304875-16061fttr 8 pm.

46

Auto's For Sale

PS, PB. Coli 814-4tB·1615.
aft"' 6 PM 446-1244.,
·
RED HOT blrgeln•l Drug defll.
•s' c•s. boetl. J)llf'l• !tpo'd,
Surplus. Your 1r... 8uven

Guidi. (1) 806-187-1000......
&amp;-4112.

.&lt;lddloon Rd. Coli 814-448·
4286 aft• 4 PM.

*

1988 Bulclc Skyllrk. 4 door.
ctvlnder, AC. r cru.... tilt. PS,

OfRc. Spac• From 1 to S
room~. Up to 1700 1q. ft. of
nlctltf decxdted office sp1ce.
Wl•m., Aeal E1tete, eskfarlll:e
Wiseman, office 814- 4483844. re•idence t14-44e·

Good

cond. 14400. can 814-

441-0sn.

1981 -da RX 7, 12800.
1983 Clde.

Arena Wegon.

37118.

• 2000. ...... _ _ 1200.
Call 814-216-1270.

COUNTIW MOBIL! Ho010 Pwk.
Rou• 33, No111t of """'"'"Y·

1971 Ford F2IO •••. ,. ton,

537·9528.

~8.:.34_4_.- - - - - - -

1982 Dataun King Cab, 61,000
"'let. atuo, PS, PB. re•window
defogg«. nice truck. 304-676-

6758.

76 Ford ~~· ton . • 2200. Call after
e ,oop.m. 304-882·3471 .

W.O.

Honde 310Tmotoroyde. $380.

1913 Kew...kl 210 LTD. On~
1900 mll11, original o"""•· WUI

1111 to• esoo.
3978,

c.tt S14-8t2·

- _ _ , _ -_ _

.

I

Runo llfiod. 12900. n111. 1874
Cerntra. Aunt Qf'I.C . Cell I14-

44S-892G.

8:30 ()) Blltlllda Women's World
. Open 9-BaU Championship
from Las Voges: Semlflnal (T)
(I) MtjOI Llegul S.Hbatt
(I) elll Heed ol the Ctou
Charlie gets his class Into
the school's_£reduction ol
Greaee. (R) Iii
9:00 ()) 700 Club
8 (2) 1111 MOVIE:
·'Convtcted: A Mother'•
11:{ NBC Mowle of the

Ai~lt-.lG

~ ei

{3:00)

.

Cor. Fourth and Pine
Galllpolil. Ohio
Phona 614-448-3888 or 814446-4477

BARNEY
llME

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

FER

51CH A
THOUGHTY

YORI:

FRESH AIR
8REAK. MAW

CRITTER

Residential or commercial wiring. New service or repilrs.
licenled e1eetrlci., , Estimete .
free. AI dcllnour Electrical. 304- .•
875-1786.
~

Ill -

1111 e 1121 Wloeguy Vinnie
risks hl8 life lor an old friend
to free his conscience. (R)

101 e-11111 New•

General Hauling ~

fiJI NIWI

• CIIIOk and Cheal

THE GRIZZWELLS4t

Dillard WM:er Service: Pools,
Oster ns. Weill. Delivery Any· v
time . Cell 814-446-7404-No
Sunday calla.

10:30 ()) A - n Snspohota

(l) Rock and Rott: The Earty
DQI Artists such 88 the
Everly Brothers, Fats ·
Domino, Buddy Holly and
Elvia Presley brought the
world to Its feet and they're
aP here In this special. (NR)
(1 :00)
• (I]) Cllmltlnl

•
'
'

• VidiOCouniiY

11:00 (Jl Remlugton II1MII A
SIH18 at any Price

'

Peul Rupe , Jr: Wlter Servtee. 1..
PoDia, cistarns. wells. Call 814- li,,
448-3171 .
.
.•

• ()) Cll • &lt;ll 1111 eo
Gil ......

- - - -- - - •·,
deiMrv . 1000 gallons . ::•

•

Water
Re•oneble prieee. 1m mediate •"
delivery. Call 814-912-11275.
'

Watterson's Water Heu ling. ·•
rueonebte r11te1, Immediate 1
2.000 gallon d.&amp;lvery. clt•rns.
pQOis, \IWIIII, etc. cell 304-57.. ....,
2919.
-

•
Dump truck deltvery anti bush : ~
•

hoq mowing. phone 304-6753190

Upholstery

Countly

10:00 (Jl Stroigl1t Totk

- - - - -- .,

87

BelCh Ptrty Armed at the

washington Monument on
July 4, 1985, 700,000 rans
turned out to celebrate with
The Beach Boys. James ·
Watt's a~Y _reads off the
shoW. (NR) {1:00)
(J) Sgt. Pepjler: tt W11
Twenty Yeero Ago TOday
With The Beatles' Sgt.
Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club
Band giving the locus,
reminiscences by Beetles' ·
members and othars help
evoke the flavor of 1967.

AND HEATING

84

Chins Beach

Several young woman
beCOina unsung heroes In ,
VIetnam. (R) D
(l) (f) Mlrll lfuuell Comedy
Special Satirist Mark Russell
pedorms before a Uve
audience, to tum the day's
worrisome news Into luellor
laughter.
101 Larry King Llvet
11J The Fll'tlt Olympic•:
Alhlnl, 1891 • Per12 (NR)

CARTER'S PLUMBING

'
~

•

SCIIAM-I.ETS ANSWERS
VIcuna - Admit :.._ Srlna - Cactus - ACCIDENT

1thought I looked great In my blue ane8kere, pink slacks

and yellow shirt. My daughter, h~. exclaimed, "You look
like

PEANUTS

'

Hltcllhlker

•YouConBeehtr

11:11&lt;1l MDVII!: Devll'a Conyon

TillS 15 Crt.AZ•(.

SIR ..

J.lOW

CAN AN ATTORNE'r' LEAD
I.IS OUT OF TJ.IE WOODS ?

~UIET, MAACIE .. NEVEIC

BRIDGE

DISTURB AN ATTORNEV

WilEN llE'S Tll1NKIN6

11:30·~:~Show
(J)
{L)
~ •• lltodlll

PIZZA WOULDTASTE 600D ..

lt...,.•Q

l j:iPda·A--~

''

1tP ttondl v-•s Megna tor ~wrey's Upholntring •vlng ~
..... 304-176-3131.
trl oountv•ee23'fll••· Thebest ·,.;i
in fun'Mtu• uahalltlrlrlg. C.ll ~
V.etl Mq• 19SS folded. golll 304 · 878 · 411• for fru ,!
cond. 304-895-3011.
Htlmetes.
:

l'eii1'CIILats

•\

Going,

-'

,,
•

NORTH
.10815

!

John, M.D.
, Gonzo

1-U-A

•s•

James Jacoby

tU4
.AI84

Converting
a takeout double

•u
EAST

WEST

.KJH

.KJJOII
tQ6U

.7 .

tAJ87

By James Jaooby

•n

.KJJ05

How do you respond to your partner's takeout double when you have a
fair hand, but your best suit is the one
that the opponents opened? You can of
course bid some number of no-trump,
based upon your general high~rd
strength, but what about.,-lng part·
ner's double and trying to exact a pen·
ally? Yes, it is OK to .,- for penal·
ties, as long as you uadentand that by
so doing you are telling your partner
!hat they have bid your suit and you
think the best defense is to start pulling their trumps.
Today's deal is a good example. Because East held the 10-9·8 of hearts
for his intermMiate spots, he had a
reasonable expectation that bis side
would be able to draw the smaller
spot-cards in South's trump suit. With
South vulnerable, that would make the
penalty well worthwbUe. And that's
the way it went. Witb the trump lead,
South scrambled around and finally
took four tricks, but that was still 800
to the defenders. What if the heart
spots bad been different, with South
belding A·Q-10-9-8? Then East would

CROSSWORD

SOUTH

•Qu

.AQ6S2
t K 10
.QS2

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South

Dbl .

Norllr

Eut

Pass

Paoo

Opening lead: • 7

have been bettor advised to bid one notrump over the takeout double. 0.
member, the penalty .,- is a command for partner to lead trumps,
James Jacoby's boob 'Jacoby m
Brldge" lllld "Jacoby 1111 C.rd Games•
(writtt!D with bJs latber, tile J.te Oswald Jacoby) are IIOW available at
bookstores. IlDtb are publb/Hid by
Pharos Boots.

C)-.----

=r.,;.

by THOMAS JOSEPH
DOWN
1 Church

ACROSS
i Aide

(abbr.)
part
li Genuine
2 Roman
9 Cougar
dictator
10Famed
3Mom
chipmunk
and
12 Strip
pop store,
for example
of wOOd
4 Work on
13 Vacillate
15 Building
edging
Yesterday's Alwwer
5 CI8;8Sifi· 19 Founda- 29 Famed
extension
CatiOn
.
16 Peruke
6
Sad
verse
lion
U.S.N.
17 Couple
• 7 "Hail!"
22 Israeli
vessel
18 N.Y. city
to 2 Down dance
30 Consumed
20Swale
8 Custer's .24 Numerous 34 Hawaiian
21 Thrill
last site 25 Abstruse
chant
(sl.)
u
Stairway 26 Buffa
36 Steal
22 Clutched
post
or
(sl.)
23 Function 14 Highway
comique 37 Extinct
Z4Crowd
16
Subside
27
Fe;;.lt_,.,....,.---r
211 Medicine
.. serving

27Bombay
belle's
dress

28,Spire
ornament
29 Hou.sehold
(Fr.)

31 Bard's
adverb

32"Wednesday"
33Thespian
311 Summary
37Speck
381n

unison
39 Russian
city
40Hastened

41 Meara
of comedy

DAILY CRYPTOQUOO ES- Here's bow to work It:
AXYDLBA.AXR
II LONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In this sample A is tilled

for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formatio~ of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
.
CllYPTOQUOTE

8·24
AEMXRA

.s

p

K R M I

(1:32)

Rl~ ABOUT NOW 15 WllE!ol A

j

•

=:-

an ACCIDENT!"

ii]II.OM Con-'ion

8o IIIOfloack Pc 111n11

1
1

"'You mentioned your husband's Ctiml&gt;ing
the Himalayas? He says there's been an
accident. "

1 VJAf,JTEC 10

9:30 ()) PIA Bowling
(l) The hlch Boy•' D.C.

A A R Water Servic~ . Paola, 1
cisterns , &gt;Nell• . lmrnediat• -'
1.000or 2 .000getlonsde1Mtrv.
Call 304-8711-8370.
.I':

814-986-4418.

1:05 ()) S.nlord and Son

"

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

1976 atuer 4x4. Nstc:nd in .. de
end out, 304-882-31151.

Ceii304-S76-1433.

OPdn..New•

1H1 MOVIE: Cabobttnco (AI
(1 :271
· Ill Tille of the Oold

~e:L.SE: ...

245-9285.

78 Suz~ GS 5150 E. Ex.
condldon! .11~od tlton &amp; bet•ryr
undef 8.000 mila $700 neg.

France and U.S. battle rn
pole vauiting; scenes of
closing ceremonl88. Q
IIJl e 1121 Allee In
Wonde11ond, Per1 2(NR)

"

1 981 Jeep C.ll , 4 cyl. 4 speed.

Motorcyclas

lt's~. (R)Q

CD Cff18 Oay• ol Cllory

304-875-7121 .

J &amp; J Water Service. Swirnming
pools, cis11rns. wells. Ph . 614-

e 14-941-2&amp;31 .

war,

OR. COULD NOT,
RETURN TO THE
SHIP, J&gt;, CAli:HER
WOULI&gt; 8E !PENT
AFTER. MEl

Alura Tree Trimming and Stump
Remo,.l. Free estimates. Call •

85

Vans &amp; 4

.. .IF I 1&gt;10

, hou• cell •rvlclng GE. Hot :
Point. wuhers, dryers and ,
stoves. 304-578·2398.
,

1981 Fo&lt;d F1 ao with ftbe•&amp;'"''
tapper, 304-882-3159.

73

Ooldtn Link: OIHI
Oly111111eno Ralph Boston and
Bob Beaman
,
Cll e (J) On&gt;Wing Paint
Mike's asked to run for
student body president, but
(J)

.

Electrician, State Certified. trae
estimates, .c all Ed Sha'llblin
304-876-8459.

' 72 ~eric. 72 Ford truck with
camper. 304- n l-9122.

Wonderllnd

• ()) 1111 Oeorgt Schlatter'•
Funny People

ROlli'S APPLIANCE SERVICE. ·,:

Pick up beds, Ford Chi!Nrolet,
long or shan. no ru•. 304-8715-

6288.

VldiCCoun11y
7:31(1) Andy Orllfta1
8:00 ()) Cruy Uke 1 Fox Fox In

TWINfC of THEM AS
l.AR~. MOE AND Cu~l.'(.

WHATCHA MEAN,TH'

RON'S Television Service.
Hou• cells on RCA. Ouerar,
G E. Speelallng In Zenh:h. Cell _

Trucks for Sale

1981 8 cvt ...., dent Chi!Ny
truck. Also 1981 Oldl 4 doCM'
c • . 614·985-3839.

•

.

Painting: lntMior &amp; EJCterior. · tt
Free Mtirnetea. C.ll 614-448· "

82

72

IOIC-'lre
IHI...,_

I

MonkeY
Ill Nllthvttte N.ow

1979 Plymouth window van.

• 1500. Coli 304-875-6429.

IF '(ou

.......u

•

1974 Ford Torino, runa good.
body need work, 304-875·

1522.

i'O UNDE~~TANt&gt;

e&lt;llJudfle
.,,~=nlytQ

Concre• Septic Tanks - 1ooo J;
gal ., 1600gll. andJetAeration M.
aystem. Factory tnined reptir .t..
ahop. RON EVANS ENftR- '·•
PAISES, Jackson, Ohio. 1-800- ,1·

Rooting. framing, battwoomand '
kitchen lnatelletions, electrical, ,
concrete, brlclt and block levlng,
estimates, 304-876-2440.

74

1977Camaro. V- 8,eu~o. lnlns ..

Large trailer lot, IUIIYHie·

304-676-4480.

Call 814-256-6251.

71

814-446-3432.

1987 Pontiac Grand Am,

.:t FlND THAT T't'le
------- IP, TfiE ~o, ANP TliE
.$UPE~EGO A~e MU:::tf EA51ER

~4~46-~·~022!9~4~-------------·~

Rotary or cable tool drilling., ··'
r.toat'NIIIiacornpletedAmeday .. '
Pump 11111 end tervice. 30~ . '
896-3802
•'

1983 Ouwy Malibu atetion
wagon, 30.4-875-4480.

Amertce
(J) an.telnment Tonight

c...k Rd. can 614· ,..

1 980 Ford Mustang t1 ,200.00.
304-875·4480.

1983 111'1611 Plymouth pickup
with trr.ll camper top. Only
40.000 miles. Very good condition. t2100 or wll trldeforcar.

SALE-Spedal Feeder Calf Sal•
Seturdr~t. August27et 1 PM. Ali
breeds including Holsteins. Cat·
tie will be acceptad ••rtlng at 4
Pl\oi, Friday. Hll.lling evallable.
Athen1 Llvettock Sal•1 rnlle
east of Albany on SR. 50. Cell
Stock Yard 814-592-2322 or
698-3531 ltVenings.

Geo'901

Fettv Tree Trlt'n~Nng. ltllnP
remowl. Cell 304-676-1331 .

4480.

())-of ~·tic Bporll

SWEEPER end sewing rnechin• ' ::
repeir. PlrtL 1nd sul)f)fi•. Pick •.
up end deliwlry, o.v;s Veoown •.
Cleaner. on~t half mile uP ~·

'74 Cougar, PSD. PB, auto, air,
304-87!=,50 18 after 4:00pm .

1986 Ford Tempo, 84,900.00.

Livestock

A o g e r 1 B • s e m e n t. ·
Waterprooflnq.
', ·

304-578-2398 ... 614·448· '
2464.
'

1987 Plvmouth Horizon ,
t4,700.0D. Phone 304-676-

e

ALLEYOOP

Call collect

1-814-237-0488. d.,. o• night-.

304-675-6331 .

USED NEW HOllAND
Forage Equipment
One AC 782 ci'IOPPtf 2 row
head; two N H 6 -717 choppers 1
row head: two NH 718 chopper
1 row head; one whh electric
controls. One NH 3 point 707
chopper 1 row head; one NH
model 26 bloYoftr; one Kat•n
forage bo~~: : one Cobey for19e
bo~e . Keefers S•vlce Center. St.
Rt . 87. Leon, W.Va. Phone
304-896-3874.

Hotol-81 4-446-9580.

Att.-ct 1ue offl ce suite. Vwy
prfwte. locn.d In downtown
Golllpolla. 0360 P• mOntll. Coli

1 987 Mercury LynM OS. 4
speed, PS. PB, air, rear defogger, AM·FM. pOV&gt;Ierrnlrrows,

$9.750.00. 304-676-4480.

T ranspurt at1on

Space for Rent

304-882-351e.

2559.

63

Fr" Oltlmatlni.

1

e14-28&amp;8522.

.

Uncondtttonal lif.rme gulfiA· '

good cond. 304-e75·321 3.

304·676-5332 •• 614-992·
5535.

FREUDIAN
PSVCHOLOGY

•

IIIIa. loclll ref.enC* furni&amp;hed.

6768.

' 87 Cavlller.Z24. euto tranmitlion. air , cond. crulse, tHt. sun
roof, ltM·FM cauett, Cl Inte rior. white. 26,000 miles. must
sell make en offer, 304-875-

Rabbits. 304-882-2489.

Misc. Merchandise

198810dCem..o. 2.811en, VB,

'79 Trent Am. black. good tires,
neweMhaust. run1good. AM· FM
cas ..me. t1 .700.00. 304-675!53&amp;3..

TONIGHT

~----~-------- 1
Home
!
.Improvements
,

BASEMENT
WATERPROOF1111G

..

LECTURE

!

81

9 30 Case di•el tl'llctor, nice.
SOOhourt. •3950 . 1ntern~~tlonel
2400 round btler, t3250.long
3 pt . b eckhoe attachment,
S 1600. Ownar wll finance. Call

1256 Oliver dl81181 tractor. 4
drive. late mochd. Sharp,
.f4850. Post drMr with cylinder
&amp; hOIIJS, 8595. I&gt;Nnlr Wilt
Unanco. Cell 614·286-6522.

!'

7214"' 814-912-3224.

1979 Corvette. l01dtd. blue.

wh~

.

•.,

Looclad. *1200. Coli 814-992·

7:05 ()) Anclr Orllfta1
7:30 C2l Hotly wood Square•

FRANK AND ERNEST

1178Chrylller Le-on. 4 door,
new ,.Int. tire~. b• .....,.. brek•.

John Oeere 1010 tractor, One
owner. Cream Puff with ptows,
disc, mo"-"ng tnaehine &amp; b1ler,
$2695. Owner will finance. Call
814-288-8622.

Rat terrier puppies, call 614-• D2 Cat Pony engine with Cat
24 5·66 14 aft er 5:30weekdays. wench. Good Cond. t3,000.
enylimBSaturday&amp; Sunday.
After S:OOo'cloclc caii304-67S.

52 CS.TV,

1971 Winnebago motor home,
t10.500.00. 304-876-4480.

6944ar 814-992-2898.

&amp; complete line of new &amp; used

Ill CIIIOk end Ch111

noo.

'83 Grind Prix, $2.950.00,

56

antenna . Cell 814-448·8208'
weekct.y s only .

&amp;ct. s 9a06.

Mea.., Faguaon, New Holland,
Bush Hog Sel•&amp; Service. Over

• Chan net Rustic:
and Beveled Lep Siding
• Ded Materials
GuAranteed Quality
CETIDE, INC ., Athens-814594-3678

II) Alrwolf (NR)

eodfned. tleeps 6. elr. TV

Government Selz•d Vehicl•
from •~oo . Ford•. I'Mrcedes,
Corvettes, Chevys. Surplus.
Bu¥trs guide. 1-805-&amp;87-8000

614-286-6461.

CEDAR

aJ Moneytne

!Hi a.ney Miller

I'

I I I I I I I Ir·NI I ·I·

e

1984 'Tour MMter 18ft., fully

Coli 814-286-6522.

1978 Old&amp; 98. 4 doo•.
Cell614-742-2421.

Ne-=:00)
··tour~
Ill
Gl Gl Wheel of
I'OIIIMD
eall Tall

19ft. 1 9n Nomad cern!Mf'. Self
COn111ned, dull IMI•. Excel.
cond. Clll 814-448-1838.

1987 Ouwy Cavalier. black
exwrior. gray interior. 1 B. 000
mH•. t4950. 1988 Pontiac
Convertible Bonnwlh, Sh.-p.
"-'n• good. look• good. • 27150.

1970 Ohk 98. $130.00. 304875-1131 .

I"'ESTER N RED

Vallll';' Furnitun1
NIIW •nd used furniture and
applicences . Call 614-446·
7572. Hours 9-5.

8240.

Concrete blocks- all sizes- yard· 61 Farm Equipment
or delivery. Mason•nd. Gallipolis Block Co., 1 23'h Pine St .•
llo SONS
Gallipolis, Ohio. Cell 614· 446- · U.S . 35CROSS
WH1. Jeckson. Ohio.
2783.

0322.

w -·i ~ .- ...... · --..-..--~-· - ---- .....,__..-•• -

ft PRINT NUMBERED
~ lETTfRS

elll

1988 Camper wfth elr' condl·
tioner end more. Cell 814-4489418.

lull lnlac:tlon. T · - 11,000
miles. t8500. c.ll 304-n'J.

245-5121.

Rooms for .ant- waek or month.
StM'tlng et •120 a mo. 0.111•

Rentlf tl'lilers. Call 114-112-

I

I I

~

I
-,l,;.'-:;lr.e=..,I,;9,....:;.1..::..TI-l 0

()) lpoflsCenler (L)
(I) CUINIII Atflllr
(l) (!) MocNeit/ Llhrer

County Appliance. Inc. Good
used liP pllancn end TV sets.
Open BAM to &amp;PM. Mon 1hru

54

~

I' 1

"This cereal has no pre·
servatlve8, caffeine , salt or
.
.
.
.
sugar," exclaimed the wife. "My
husband will be glad because 11
T RE T I B
has absolutely in -1"
~-.
Comple&gt;e rho chuckle quoted
-..I.L..J..
_J.-..1..
-J.-..1
by
filling fn rhe mi:ssiog words
L
yev develop from step No. 3 betow.

e ()) PM Mltg~~zlntt

Bunk beds with bedding- •199.
Full Jlze mertrea &amp; foundation
starting- •99. Recliners
starting· $99.
USED- Btdl:. dr••n. bedroom
auitas, e1 99-t299 . Desk!,
wrlnQBr wether, 1 complete line
of Ultd furniture .
NEW· WMtern boob- S30.
Workboob t18 &amp; up. (Steel &amp;
soft toe) . Cetl614-446·3159.

53

---.~~..:U;,,.:S:..;;N:..._:,Y---ll ..;

!HI JeflerloM
.
Ill You C.n Be a Star
8:31 ()) C.rollurnett
7:00()) Romlngtan ._Corn
Fad Steele

,.

Furnished room-919 Second
Ave ., GalllpoUs. &amp;12!S • mo.
Utlllti81 paid. Si,.gtemale. Sh . .
b•tt. Cell446-4418efter7PM.

7478.

8ide ol 8poftl (R)
Q

I TRIGS I
~l::::1I="1=1~ i

• (I]) ltopn'l - ·
fOIInllde Politico '18

AUCTION llo FURNITURE 6 2
Olive St .. Golllpolls.

Garage apt. fu rRthed. 29'/z Neil.
Gallipolis. $226. Utiltti• ~id.
Call Ul-4418 after 7 PM.

~~~quked. Cell814-44~

Now accepting applcetions for
2 bedroom apartments. fulty

2 &amp; 3 SR. All utilities peidexcept
electricity. ConYinlent location.
Call 814-448-8668 or 446·

=
allody E=IWI

{jj

Household Goods

90 Oays same as cash with
approved credit. 3 MiiBS out
Buleville Rd . Open 9am to 5pm
Mon. thru Sat. Ph. 814-446-

Furnished apartment. t225 •
mo. 1 BR . Utilitl81 peicl 920
Forufl Ave.. Oellipolia. Call
448-4418 after 7 PM.

304-882-2568.

Mobile Homes
for Rent

tllll • 1121

e e1121 cas ....,.

51

3 room apartment. f1 00 e mo.

Furnished apt New . Ne•HMC.
1 BR. S296. Utilities psi d. Cell
448-4418efter 7 PM.

dopotlt. Coli 81 4-24S.6220.

Homes for Rent

(J)

8:05(J)Allce

Sofas and chairs priced frorn
t396 to •995. Table~ S60 end
up to t 125. Hld•l·bedt t390
to $595. Redlners · t2215 to
*375. lamps t28 to 8125.
Dinettn 1109 and up 101495.
Wood table w-8 chairs 8286 to
$796. O.sk 1100 up to 8375.
Hutch• 1400 and up. Bunk
beds complete w-mattreues
U96enduptoe396. Bat7(beds
$1 10. MettresHS orbo11 .-ings
full 01" twin t8B, firm •78. and
t88. Queen sett 6250 &amp; up,
King •360. 4 drawer chllt $69.
Gu.n eebinets 6 gun. Beb,'
mattresses 835 &amp; US. Bed
framas •20, $30 &amp; King frame
SSO. Goods.. eCtion of bedroom
su;.M, m etel cabinets, headboards no and up to $65.

1 upstairs &amp; 1 ground floor
fu rnlahed apt in town. Call

•

I

PM.

1 BA . apt. in Rio Grande. All
uOUti• paid t250 w / t160

1980 Fairmont 14x70. C.ll
814-268-1378efter 5 :30PM.
Must Sell! 10x65, 2 BR . Mobile
Home. c.ll 814-388-992~hft•
6 PM.

1 986 Black IW'd white 1 3 inch
T.V. hcefl.,t . Call 814 -992-

(J) Nlghlly .,.,_,, Report

Furnished efficiency - 920
Fourth. Gallipolis. t180. Utilftl• paid. C.ll448-4418after 7

4345.

New complet•lv furni•h•d
ep.enmtnt • mobile honw In
city. Adutts anty. P•Wng. Call

r:8760.

luMurlout Tare Townhou•
apartments. Eleg1nt 2 floors. 2
BR .. fun b•h uPitlln. powder
room downstairs. CA .. dis·
hwllsher, disposal, prfvlte entrance. l)r'Wite encl011d patio.
pool, playground. UtllltiH not
included. Starting at 8299 per
mo. Call 814-387-7850.

Deposit

304-882·3394.

1980 Bay!liew 1 4a70, 7x21
l!tllplndo, 3 BAs .. 2 ful blllh•.
fireplace with 19x20. 2
ege, setting on 1 0 1crM of
d. • ::5,000. Cell 1114-44a.

'*

Fur•hed apt. •110. Utllltl•
peid. Share bath. Single I'Mie.
919 Second Avt .. GtHipofis.
Cell 44&amp;-4418 aftttf 7 PM.

blo.

2 BR . aptt. 8 clo ... a, krtch,..
appl . furri1hed, w........ Dryer
hook-up. ww c•P". newty
peln'tlld, deck.
From t17!i.
Regency.
ApfL Cell 3046~11104. or 875-5388 or
,875-7738.

.7000. Coli 614-445-2981.,

1619.

1 BA . 81)1 .. new c•pet:. •nge·
l froll free refrigerator fur nished. Water·Uarbege paid.

Thi«&lt; A,.. Coli 614-446-3748

e~~~ndo ,

Furnished- 3 rooms a. bath.
CleM. No pets. Ref.· a depa-H:
required. Utllltlee hunlthed.
Aduhs only. Call 814· 448·

26 acres Broad Run Road. New
Haven, Owner flnenclng avail•

or 268-1903.

1971

kfitch.n furnilhed. w/ w c•••No pets. Off stntet parking.
t325emo. plutl.llilh:iell. Dep. a

lots. 304-675-6908.

28Ft, adults onlv . ....., pets. 322

Mobile Homes
for Sale

Uptalrt unfurnished apt. Car·
p.-d. utlltUIII ..1d. No children.
No pMs. C.ll814-446·1637.

Apartments end hou•s. Cell
304-676-6104.

1602.

1988 Redmon Sectional28~~:56.
3 BA ., CA. To be moved. Call
&amp;14-448-8594after 8 PM,

'•

.

3BR .. 1 bath. 1 car garage. Nice
yard. Gallipolis area. $300a mo.
Call 614·446-0475 before 5

1985 Marlette Mott.llar Horne.
60~e28 . All electric. Ca. 3 BR .. 2
balhs, great room, dining room .
To manv e.w;tras to list. Must see
to apprecillle. S45.000, owner
financing. Call 614-446-1408
after 5 PM.

32

Farms for Sale

40 acres Raccoon Rd.- Mobile
home. t38.000. c.tl 304-522-

I ~OTICE I
niE OHIO VAlLEY PUBLISH·

882-3397.

Merchandise

Apartment
for Rent

!Of. Coli 814-446-'B26.

'Mil baby sit in my horne part or

Business
Opportunity

814-985-3.913.

1:30. ()) 1111 NBC Nightly - ·

1 1 Cou11 St ·2 BR ., 2 baths.

1970 ChampM:m mobile horne
1 b80. goodcond. newc•petA
lnefoum . 304-875-1578.

21

·ae YZ490. exc shape, ·•
t1 ,800.00 or best off«. 304- :

I't,l"

I~~T,:::i:;7:::1ii:::::===T~;::::;;:::::;::::::;::::::::1

I will babysit in my home. 2 smell
Children. Ollys. Cln have ref.
Call 304-876-1 146.

F10anc1al

•

7758.

614-446-4039.

Need a Job Done? lnt./Ext.
painting. light hauling. yard
maintenance. .car care. "Odd
Jobs". Call 814-448-2570 . .

304-882-3440.

Want 10 rent 3 bedroom horne
wtth option to buy. 304-675-

alternations. Call 614·388·
87U

bob\' '"''ng in mv home.

.:..:::.:..:~-=----- .

&lt;IDJWW&amp;?~

Exc«dse bike f25 . Walker.
jogg•. tre.adnll!l. tiS. 8149815·4418.

Wanted. Hou• c.- trailer In
c.ountry. land comrtet or ,.nt.
Able to and will do NPiira.
614-992-3878.

~

1977Hirte¥' Devldson ~PG~t•r. •
new -.gin.. exc . cond. t1800. •

5111 .

roofing &amp; e•pentry

work bv. the hour or job. Call
814-379-2416.

l\1otoreycles .

1 983 Honcle XL lOOft exc.Uem
condh:ian. Mutt Mil. 3()4.17518152 after 4 J~. m .

~-~ -

1979 Hydr-c S1ream, new 11 &amp;
Mercurv out bo•d. very sh•p
andvtJYfast. Suzuki 250Quad
Racer. Both priced to tell .

47 Wanted to Rent

avenings. Th•k You.

w111 do

flatbed dump, t 1100. C.ltl14367-7619 .

74

KIT •N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wrlabt

bone loadtr, t4500. 1988

Spac• for .-nt. 1rtll ar tPic•.
Wlter • sewer funUhed. low.t
Ad. At 1, 304-875-1071.

rienoed. honest. re11onable.

a.

A..,.. In MlddiiPOf'tt bY.Sneu

304-875-3073.

Carpentry, ramodeting. Eape.

P'linting

John Deere tog tkfdder, gqod
cond. t8SCJO. Ram.,. knuckl•

Sp.:ious mobil• horM lot• for
rent. ~mlty Prklt Mobile Home
P•k. GllliDOII1 Ferry, W. Va.

Wanted to Do

"timate~ .

bu.,._, a.-c•
for .ent, loceted • North Second
d...... Coli 814-992-6645 ...
814-949-2211.

US C'll tl IITS

line Aug. 19. C.ll .t41-4:JI7.
Reg. No. 88-11 ·10658 .

Fr"

54 Misc. Merchandise

Office or .mall

RE-TRAIN NOW\
SOUTHEASTERN BUSINESS

18

Space for Rent

Wedneeday, August 24. 1988

PAEYASRD
QJPSRXPP

AK

GXXV

V K S R A

I KJ

UX

NKYGSRD

E

SR
D K A
AOEA

AEMXRA.-SYUSRD
QXYMSR
' YeeterU,'e er,pteq_. I DO BELIEVE 11fERE IS

MANY A TEAR IN 111E HEART THAT NEVER REACHES
.THE EYES.- NORMAN MAC EWAN
l

0 · - - , ...... s,ndtcllo,
Inc.
.

�:.Page 16-The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday. August 24, 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Reds top

Ohio Lottery

Pittsburgh;

Daily Number

LA loses
THURS. &amp;FRI. -LUCKY 8 DAYS

TUESDAY -SR. CITIZUS' DAY

RECEIVE DOUBLE THE COUPON VALUE
ON UP TO 8 MANUFACTURERS' COUPONS

RECEIVE 5% DISCOUNT ON
MOST PURCHAS!S.

SH Store For Detllll•

933 .
Pick 4
6175
Super Lolto
11-15-26-29-39-41

Page3

1M Store For Detllll

•

e

MIDDLEPORT, OH.•GEN. HARTINGER PKWY.&amp;· PEARL ST.•992·3471
Vo1.38, No. n
Copyrighted 1988

•

at

Clear loniJhl, low near 88.
Friday, sqnny, hlch In lower

808.

•

enttne

.. ...
.
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday. August 26. 1988

Z Sectlooo, lt Pages

26 Conto

. A Mulllmedla Inc. Newopaper

Expect decision soon on use -of ODD funds

......

Valuable Coupon

......
BUY ONE GET ONE i
Valuablc Coupon

I

ONE GET ONE

project. b!ttoe said a total cost · Nov. l. However, If the county
By NANCY YOACHAM
between $125,00 and $130,000 may submits the elevator applic.atlon
Sentinel Staff Writer
The Meigs County Commls· be anticipated, and agreed to prior to deadline, then an earlier
stoners expect to find out within a prepare the detailed breakdown. project approval from the State
The county wlll have to make might be expected.
week If this year's entire allotup
the difference between the
As soon as a grant agreement
ment of $106,900 In Community
CDBG
funding and the total Is Issued by the Stati, then
Development Block Grant fund·
lng from the Ohio Department of project cost. Commissioner RI- monies can be,pbllgated, Shields
Development can be used to chard Jones said that In the said. An earlier obligation of
lnS\81! an elevator In the court· county's anticipated budget for funds would be advantageous to
house for use by the handicapped 1989, money was Included for the county because bids could
and elderly. Kim Shjelds, the · capital lmprove111ents. That mo- then be taken In order to prevent
county's director of develop- ney should cover the difference project cost Increases, even
ment, said at Wednesday's meet- In the elevator project cost, though· the actual release of the
State funding would not come
Ing of the com"missloners that he Jones said.
Once official approval Is re- until sometime In 1989.
anticipates no barriers to using
No bids for the Syracuse CDBG
the CDBG funding for the ceived from the State to proceed
with the application for the project at the London pool came
elevator.
Blfl Dlttoe, of Burgess and elevator project only, Shields .Is In to the commissioners on
Nlple Ltd., Parkersburg, W.Va., to prepare the appllcatton for Wednesday. An Informal bidding
was asked by the commissioners submission to the State as soon as process was followed In this
to prepare a detailed breakdown possible. The deadline for sub- project, since the project was
of the costs for the elevator mitting CDBG applications Is less than $10,000 and formal

I

I

Auto Drip or Electric Perk ·
nth ounce

can

bidding was not reqUired. Shields :Management Plan has been
lndlcated local contractors who established. The Citizens Advl·
might be Interested In the project sory Board Is an Important part
would probably be contacted for of the management plan and
price quotations.
members of the board will serve
It was reported by the commls· three year terms. The advisory
sioners that final covering at the board Is to be compriSed of
now closed Meigs County Land· members from each county In
flll should be finished this week. which sludge has been or could In
Reseeding of the site will be the future be applled. The first
scheduled In September.
meeting of this board Is scheCommissioner David Koblentz duled for tonight In Jackson.
was appolllted by the board to a
The commissioners took steps
position on a Clt!ze'ns Advisory to establish a Delinquent Real
Board to advise Mead Paper on Estate Tax and Assessment
the future appllcatlon of sludge Collection Fl!nd, as required by a
material In reclamation and new State Jaw. Five percent of
reseeding projects, primarily of delinquent taxes collected by
old strip mines. Although past counties must now be put In this
application of sludge has been a special fund to be dlvlded by the
controversial Issue because of county treasurer's and prosecuthe existence of low-level dioxin tor's offices, and used onlv for
In the sludge, a Mead Sludge
•

·

expenses derived from thecol!e~­
tion of additional dellnquent
taxes.
The resignation of Jane
Snouffer, dated Aug. 15, as an
employee of the Meigs County
Department of H\lman Services,
was accepted by the commission·
ers. Snouffer resigned from DHS
to take other employment.
The commissioners will be
attending a ~pt. 6 meeting In
Athens on House Blll592 regard·
lng solld waste disposal. The
meeting Is being sponsored by
the Athens County Commission.
They will also be attending the
15th Annual Recognition Dinner
of the county's Retired Senior
Volunteer Program. The dinner
will be held Sept. 28 at the senior
cltlzens center In Pomeroy.

GNP report is
being watched for
inflation signals

, .,
f
* t·.. ,.

4-H WINNERS- Winners oflhe Outstandlng4-H awards lor Ibis
year are Greta Riffle of Racine and Jared Sheets of Pomeroy. The
two were presented with their trophies at last week's Meigs County
Fair by officials from Southern O.hlo Coal Company;• Dlvlslqn,

ALL VARIEDES .
-

t :;

·Decisions subject to appeal, court says

COKE ':

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) Decisions of the State Employment Relations Board are sub·
ject to judiCial review, the Ohio
Supreme Court has held.
Wednesday's t-3 ruling came
In a case Involving South Community Inc., a non-profit corpo·
ration providing mental health
services In Day ton.
The State Employment Relations Board administers Ohio's
collective bargaining law for
public employees.
SouOI Community appealed a
ruling by SERB that . the Ohio

~·

2 LIT~R ..:;
'

.

(

~

'{~

·,

'")

•' fJ.

Association of Publ!c School
Employees . was the exclusive
bargaining unit for South Community employees.
South Community contended
that SERB had Improperly ruled
that only employees hired before
July 3, 1985, were eligible to vote
In a re·run election held In
December 1985. SERB had
voided an earUer election at the
objection of South Community.
Franklin County Common
Pleas Court held that state law
gives SERB the power to decide
barga ln!ng l!nlts, and that no

'

Assorted Varieties•Pius peppslt
. '

Local news briefs·--

'

.

.

. No one hurt in Meigs wreck
'

8

16 oz.

btla.

·The Gall!a·Melgs post of the State Highway Patrol
Investigated an accident at 7: lOa .m. Wednesday on SR.l24, 0.2
· mUes west of mlle post 35, In Lebanon Township.
Troopers said Steven R. Boso, 29, Rt . l , Portland, was headed
wes I when a rear dual tire fell off the vehicle, cau~lng the driver
to lose control. The 1980 International Eagle went off the road
and overturned. Damage was heavy. No one was Injured. There
was no citation.

Two injured in Rutland mishap .
•

I

\'

which sponsored the awards. For left lo rlcht are .Jared Sheets;
Jim Tompkins, vice president and general manager for the coal
company; Chloris Gaul, secretary to the general manacer and fair
·
coordinator; and Greta Riffle.

....
•

Two area youths were lnjured .ln a one-car accident on New
Lima Road In Rutland Vlllage Wednesday at 10:45 p.m. One of
the vouths was thrown from the vehiCle. . .
Lifefilght was called In and landed on the former Rutland
High School football field fqr one of the youths, Scott Gilkey of
Langsville. Gilkey wa• tak~ by Llfefiight to Grant Hospital In
Columbl!s. Also Injured was Billy McQuaid, SR 124, who was
taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital by the Rutland unit ofthe
Melp County Emercency Medical Services. G!lkey was listed
In satisfactory condition Thursday morning, and McQuaid was
treated and released Wednesday night.
The Meigs County Sheriffs Department reports the juveniles
were In a 1982 Ford traveling on New Lima Road when the
driver lost control of the vehicle and struck a tree. The sheriff's
departme~~t also reports that a third jiiVenlie was In the vehicle,
bll t refused to release the 1111me. EMS reports that a third youth
Contlauid on page 10
I

•

appeal Is provided.
But the Fran kiln County Court
of Appeals reverSed, holding that
the manner In which the election
was held Is appealable.
Writing for the majority, Jus·
tlce Robert Holmes agreed with
the appellate court !hat SERB 's
determination or the bargaining
unit may not be appealed,, but
that the matter of who mav vote
In a re-run election Is subject to
appeal.
In a dlssentingoplnlon, Justice
Andrew Douglas said there
should be no right of appeal on
the part of South Community
because SERB's election procedures are fundamentally adml·
nistratlve and concern on'!y

South Community's employees.
''Clearlv the General Assembly did not Intend that public
employers could appeal a SERB
order certifying an organization
as the exc!usl&gt;&lt;e representative
of a publlc employee bargaining
unit, " wrote Douglas.
Douglas said the ruling would
permit management to use dlla·
tory tactics In frustrating collective bargaining. ' 'If collective
bargaining Is permitted to be
repeatedly disrupted by scattershot appeals such as the one
allowed today, the entire process
w!IJ. disintegrate and tile noble
pu'ftloses of the 1collective. bargaining) act wlll be frustrated,"
he said .

WASHINGTON (UP!) -The
nation's economy, strong enough
to shrug off the summer drought,
also may defy efforts to control
Its lnfiatlonary potential, warned
analysts awaiting today's report
on second-quarter economic
growth.
The revised report on the gross
national prodtiet; the total ·U.s, .
output of gOods and services, was
prepared by the Commerce De·
partment a month after Its early
estimate of the second-quarter
GNP showed a balanced annual
growth rate of 3.1 percent. There
was a 3.4 percent rate In the first
three months of the year.
The department noted that the
drought In farm states sliced 0.5
percent from overall GNP
growth In the second quarter,
representing a $5.5 bllllon loss.
Most experts predicted today's
revision would show the economy
grew a lltt!e faster than the
advance estimate, between 3.2
percent and 3. 7 percent, baSed on
higher consumer spending and
bulging Inventories.
Michael Penzer, a senior econ·
omlst for the Bank of America In
San Francisco, said he even
would "go out an a limb" by
predicting a 4 percent growth
rate.
"I think there's a good chance
that we should see that things
were revised up substantially,"
Penzer said Wednesday.
While showing solid growth,
however, the GNP figures also
. contain a danger signal. Two
measures the department's Bu·
reau of Economic Analysis uses
to adjust for price changes went
through the roof In the second
quarter.
The fixed weights Index, which
corresponds most closely to the
actual Inflation rate, hit a six·
year high of 4.7 percent from
Apr!! to June.
The d~fiator. which takes Into

account the composition of GNP
as well as price changes, rase
from 1. 7 percent In the first
quarter tO 4.2 percent In . the
second, the highest rate since the
first three months of 1984.
In light of the administration's
3 percent growth rate goal for
this year, continued higher expansion could overheat the economy and prompt further mea·
sures to cool! tin order to dampen
lnfiatlonary trends, analysts
warned.
The Federal Reserve Board
raiSed Its benchmark discount
Interest rate Aug. 9 from 6
percent to 6.5 percent as a signal
It means to curb Inflation even at
the risk of Increasing unemploy.
ment. Major commercial banks
followed by hiking their prime
lending rate from 9.5 percent to
10 percent.

Study shaws
•
recovery zs
possible

'

•
•

WASHINGTON IUPI)
Sclentls ts who used a roof to
shelter a wooded area from acid
rain say they found the environ·
ment can stage a remarkable
recovery once pollution ceases,
at !east In some places.
In an effort to gauge the ablllty
of the envlronllj.ent to rebound,
researchers put a clear. plastic
roof over about 1,000 square
yards of a sparsely wooded
region of southern Norway sub- •
ject to high levels of acid rain
from pollution.
During the four-year course of
their Ingenious experiment, the
roofed area was "watered" .bv
rain and snow from which acidic
chemicals were removed.

Propose new requirements for tow_n dumps
WASHINGTON IUPI) - New
federal environmental rules proposed for garbage dumps nationwide would require Improve·
ments at virtually every one of
the 6,000 municipal landfllls,
offlclals say, costing the average
homeowner $11 a year.
The wide-ranging •proposal by
the Environmental Protection
Agency calls for states to set up
regulatory enforcement for what
would be the llrst minimum
federal requirements for design,
operation and closure of dump
sites.
The EPA proposed the rules
Wedne~day, Including ground·
water monitoring and siting
. restrletlons, to supercede gen·
eral landtill pldellnes ·Issued In
1971 that have proved
l!nenforceable.
Followlq a period of publiC
comment, tbe new rules would be
expected to take,.effect In i year,
at wblch time alatE!I would have
another 18 months to enact

leglsla t n setting up landflll
permlttl
programs, offlclals
said.
The EPA s tlma te Its e
would require
vements a
virtl!ally all of the 6,000 mun!cl·
psi dumps nationwide, with
average costs running about
$50,000 each. Altogether, the
changes would cost the country
an extra $880 mllllon a year and
would Increase the average ho·
meowner's garbage bill by $11
annually. ,
· EPA offlclals acknowledged
states would face substantial
personnel and training costs In
set tlng up programs, yet they
termed It "unlikely" the federal
goverrunent would provide flnanclal ald.
Winston Porter, asslstantEl&gt;A
administrator for solid waste,
conceded state offlclals are un·
happy about that news and many
local leaders. especially from
small towns, are !rate about the

requirements.
•'We have had a lot of comment
that they do not want to spend
more on their dumps than on
education," Porter sal d.
With that In mind, the proposal
could aggravate the nation's
garbage disposal crisis by creal·
lng an Incentive for some dump
operators to shut down before the
new rules - particularly longterm Closure requirements take effect.
Porrer acknowledged the rules
could result In some "short-term
dislocation" In disposal operations In some areas, bl!t he
argued many local governments
do not have alrernatlves and thus
could not shut down to avoid the
extra costs.
States would be allowed some
leeway In determlnlni how toqh
their programs should be, he
explained, but the new rules
would require at a minimum:
-Groundwater monitoring for
a limited number of contaml-

nants at least twice a year; !I
slgnlflcant contamination Is
found, cleanup action must be
undertaken and monitoring must
become more frequent.
-Dally operating safeguards
such as screening procedures to • ·
ensure no toxic wastes are·
accepred, dump covers that ,·
could be put In place at the end of .
each day, limits on open bu·r·nlng
and controls on runoff and .
explosive gases.
-Siting restrictions that would
require special controls for land·
flUs near airports to prevent bird
lnrerterence with planes, as well
'
as fiood plains, wetlands and
unstable or earthqi!Bke zones.
-Closure plans and monitor·
lng for landfills for at least 30
years after they are shut down;
operators also would have to
demonstrate they have the money and technical expertise to
provide proper post-closure
monitoring.

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