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LMNG

ALONG THE RivER
~ big second family'

fiouse of the Weelt

Foster parents provide stability, support, Cl

Create a new tradition,. 01

..
I

HometownNews for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties

.. lliams' competency
·called ·. into question

SPORTS
:-.Tournament baseball
::action. See Page 81.

BY. BRIAN J. REED
eREEDoMYDAlLYSENTINEL.coM

· PoMEROY - Counsel
for C-harles S. ~tlliams said
this week a sychological
evaluation is ecessary to
determine if illiams is
com~tent to stand trial.
· W11liams is charged with
the robbery and murder of
Deris Jacksmi of Tuppers
Plains in February. The
indictment against h1m con-

tains two ·counts of ag~vated J11Urder and erght
other charges: three counts
of kidnapping, aggmvated
robbery, aggravated ·burglary, tampering with evidence, and grand theft of a
motor vehicle. .
-·
His trial has been set for
July 1.
. . . ··
According to defense
attorneys Charles Knight
and William Eachus,
. Williams was imprisoned in

1991 for threatening the life
of President George H.W.
Bush; and has been treated
in the psychiatric wards of
at least six facilities since
then.
.
.· In a memorandum . supporting a motion for a psychological · examination
filed May 13. Knight said .
. Williams has made suicide .
attempts.since his arrest on
murder and other charges.
''The defendant's mental

condition has limited his
ability to take part in his
defense," Knight wrote.
"Clearly, (Williams') extensive history of psychiatric
treatment warrants a psychological evaluation to
determine his •competency
to stand trial 0r his ability to
understand the contents of
any plea agreement."
·
According to Knight's
memorandum, William.s has
Please •

Williams, A2

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Friday, May 15, 2009

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GALLIPOLIS - · Chris
Haynes of Hamilton has
been announced as the '
speaker and parade marshal
for the .annual Memorial ·
Day
observ,ation . in
Gallipolis on Monday, May

25. '

I ••

Congratulatio-n s _

0

ClasS

a

Organized by the Gallia
County Veterans. Service .
Office, the parade will be at
10:30 a.m. The parade will
march through downtown to
· the .Veterans Memorial in
ti1~' City:Patk, with the ceremony beginning at II a.m. ·
Haynes is currently the .
state
inspector for the
•• Local Briefs.
Veterans of Foreign Wars .
SeePageM
Department of Ohio. He
·• SOuthern honors
served in the U.S. NavY. .
from July 1988 unttl
2009's best, btightest.
September 1996.
;SeePageA3
Haynes became eligible
.
..
. .
C_
hartene Hoelllchlphqto
•• Occupants escape
for
the VFW for his service
From leff; John ~nUey, Bob Graham and Rick Riling, sell coins to Meigs !Ourih graderS making-their purchases with pl!ly
Operation · Desert
during
.fire In apartment. · · ·· mgn.ey.·TM ~:&lt;?'""~air marked the finale for p~rams this school year-bY t~e OhKan. · Ch,tb· members.
·
Shield. Haynes has just .
:See Page AS , .
completed a year as the
: • Special m~ng to
grand commander of the ·
Military Order . of the
.discusS sctiooltevy.
Cooties.
·See Page A6.
More information on the
'
.
;• Kyger Creek alumni
event is available at the
VSO by calling 446-2005 .
.reunion set for May 23.
Prior to the parade and
SeePageA6
ceremony, Sons of Union
:.'• Bean dinner, parade
School all nine years. He is usually Family Homes and Farmers Bank, he Veterans of the Civil W,ar
BY .CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICHCIMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
· assisted·by.another coin collector, John bought quantities of coins to share Cadot-Blessing Camp · 126
:'slated at Centerville. ·
of Gallipolis will conduct a
.
Bentley of Syracuse.
with the students at the fair.
:;See Page A6
' POMEROY - Getting kids interThe history of coins and coin colEach one in the class was· provided Memorial Day commemoested in coin colle~;ting is the goal of leering, the different designs, and the · $5 in "play" money to spend. They ration at Pine Street
::•lfs openi~g weekend
.
B9b Graham of Pomeroy; wbo for the inost and least valuable as a collectible crowded around a long table filled . Cemetery, starting at 9 a.m. ·
Cedar Point
past nine years has been gointt; into because of date and condition are · with coins purchased by the coin club
The program, with the
1?-See Page A6
Bend area schools tP .show ~nd sh.are among the infonnation he shares with to "spend" their money. .
.
· Rev, Michael Lynn of the
bis long~time hobby.
· · ·
. the students.
Gallipolis Christian Church
·"I
JUst
want
these
kids
to
be
exposed
:•·
A member of the OhKan Coin Club,
To wrap up the school year, Graham to something new and ·this fair where as speaker, will honot veter.•'
Graham has been doing coin programs decided to do a .coin fair. With Cl)- . they use play money to buy coins · ans of all wars and includes
with the fourth gqule students of Karen sponsors, the OhKan Coin &lt;;Iub and gives them the concept of going to real
.WEATHER
Walker at the Meigs Intennediate some individual members, Pullins _show," said Graham.
.......... Spu••• A2

2009

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::tor

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_Commissioners closely
monitor autopsy, jail fees

To All Our Local Graduates ...
Here's to :all the young men and women
· who have worked so hard towards
co~me!Jcement day. ·.Seize the day and
may .a.~ I your dreams ·come true!

tbe

Bv :BRIAN J. Rem . "'

2009, includin~ those of
three murder v1ctims, and ·
Meigs ·
County
. POMEROY · - M;urder Conunissionersmay need to
cases · are expensive for make .additional funding
.county · government~; · and availabJe · to meet autopsy
with three such cases pend- cosis for the remainder of
ing,
Meigs
County the year.
Commissioner:; could face
Health . Commissioner
financial. re~trilints as the Larry Marshall, _who has
year progresses. , .
been serving as an assistant
"
Coroner Douglas Hunter to Coroner Douglas Hunter,
4 SECitONS - 24 PAGES
has ordered 10 autopsies in
J\routld Town
A3- the first five months of
Pl•nsHFees,A2
BREEDCIMYOAILYSENTINEl.COM

..

NATIONAL BANK

STAFF

RACINE 81 SYRACUSE

We've Got It!

.

(:e}ebrations

-

'

,.§lassifieds

C4
DSection

..
Editorials

insert

Obituaries

A!)

~mics

Sports
Weather

A4
B Section
A6

&lt;tJ 1009 Ohio Volley Pub~ Co.

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Retail suryey n~eds input
·
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STAFF REPORT

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MOTNEWSOMYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

GALLIPOLIS
~
Residents of Gallipolis and
people .who live elsewhere;
but work here, are being
asked to help in a study
examining the current state
of retail shopping in
Gallipolis and the future of
the c1ty's business districts .
Community residents· and
workers can express their

•

opinions in a survey being
condil£t¢ about shopping
· habiis''and preferences, the
curre~tt~ condition o( the
city's '&lt;retail areas, and the
· types of business establishments they think are needed
Kevin Kettyfphoto
in Gallipolis.
Galli
a
County
law
enforcement
gathered
in front of the
The survey is part of a
retail market study being Gallipolis City Building for Friday's observation of Police
done for the city by the Memorial Day, when the efforts of police officers past and
Voinov ich
School
of present to protect and serve are memorialized. The observation and concluding prayer were led by local chaplain
PluM see Survey. A2
Bob Hood. .
•
I

.Caldwell
appointed.
advertising
manager -·
REPORT

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MDTNEWSCIMYOAILYTRIBUNE.(X)M

Jm&gt;EX

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Making coin

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INSIDE

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MOTNEWSCMVOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

:PageAS
.
:• Qr..Philip L Edmiston
•• Dallas Janey
.:&gt;Dakota.Lee Marshall
;• Larry L. Mitchell
. • Tommy J-. Queen
~ • Tina Mana Barsotti
·• Steven Kock

t"l,.

Memorial
Day guest
speaker
is named
Bv: KEVIN KELLY

0BmJARIES

'I

Chris Haynes

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GAI.;LiPOLIS ...., ·Pam
Caldwell, a 21-year employ,
ee of Ohio Valley Publishing
Co., has been named advertising manager for the Ohio Valley Group of Helirtland
Publications newspapers. •
. The Ohio Valley Group;
includes the Gallipolis Daily:
Tribune_ (Galli~ County),'
The Dmly Sentmel (Meigs
County) and the Point
·_Pleasant Register (Mason
County, W.Va.), in addition
to the Sunday Times· Sentinel, which includes the
Tribl!ne and Sentmel : .
.
Pam has been With . the
local newspapers smce
March 1981! as an adve~s·
mg representative, first wllh
PleiiH ... Cll&amp;hnll. A1

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·REGIONAL

Speaker from PtlgeAt

Local Briefs
Neighborhood
Watch meeting

ARoUND ToWN

Sunday, May 17, 2009

Monday at 9:30 a.m. at the board
office in the courthouse.

B-Preunion
isMay 23

GALLIPOLIS
Gallipolis
Neighborhood Watch will meet Monday
at 6 p.m. at the Gallia {:ounty Senior
Resou rce Center. featuring speakers on
BIDWELL - The annual Bidwell·
.stalking and domestic violence.
Porter alumni reunion is Saturday,
Vict ims advocate Regina Brown of May 23 at River Valley Middle School
the Rape Crisis Center in 'Gallia and (the
former
Bidwell -Porter
Mason counties. and Melissa Kimmel, · Elementary School) at 8779 Ohio l(i().
director of Serenity House, will be the
The reunion is from 3 to 6 p.m. and
speakers.
the cost is $5 per person.. Re.servations
Community and Neighborhood are due May 20 .
.Watch programs are urged to attend this
For more infomlatioll, contact Don11a
.informative and educational event.
Broyles , 85 Locus/ St., Gallipolis, Ohio

an honor guard firing a salute and a history of Memorial
Day. The SUVCW will also march in the parade.
Camp Commander Jim Oiler said Memorial Day had its
beginnings with veterans of the Civil War, a tradition maintained by members of the SUVCW as both Union and
tonfederate soldiers are buried at Pine Street and several
other cemeteries around Gallia County.
~eeting
On Sunday, May 24 at 2 p.in.,American Legion Post 161
of
Vinton has scheduled its annual Memorial Day :rrvice at
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia ' County
Vinton
Memorial Park.
·
1
.
Children Services Board will meet in ·
.
.
.
special sess.ion Tuesday at 5 p.m. in
the Children Services office.

· ~blic meetings

Association, 7:30 p.m ..
Syracuse fire station . Final
meeting before summer
1
Monday, May 18
break.
I POMEROY - Veterans
Thursday, May 21
Service Commission meets .
POMEROY
- Meig~
at 8 a.m., 117 Memorial Dr..
County
American
Cancer
Pomeroy.
RACINE
- Southern Society Advisory ·Board ,
Locru Board of Education. regular meeting , noon,
regular meeting, 8 p.m., . basement room of Pomeroy
Southern High School, Library , . lunch provided .
RSVP with Courtney Sim at
media room.
992-6626,
ext. 24.
LETART FALLS
MASON,
W.Va. ·- Meigs
Letart ·Township Trustees,
County
Retired
Teachers,
regular meeting, 5 p.m .
luncheon
,
noon,
Riverside
Wednesday, May 20
SH j\DE
Bedford Golf Course Clubhouse,
Township Twstees, special local history speaker, gospel
meeting , di scuss concerns trio, members invited to
relating_ to tire coverage for bring guests.
mwnsh1p, 7 p.m., town hall .

.

Special

Fees from Page AI

met with commissioners Friday to discuss· the cos~ of
autopsies
and other costs associated with them; inclu1ding
POMEROY - A judgment . was
·
iss ued in Meigs County Common his own expenses in assisting Hunter.
4563 I ,
dbroyles63@liotmail.com, Pleas Court to Farmers Bank. and
of
a
man
and
an
infant
child
killed
He said the autopsies
phone 446-207 I. or Virginia Stout, 669 Savings Co., against Juan Tabler, in last week in a traffic acddent are the latest of 10 complet·
Porter Roa.d, Bidwell, Ohio 45614, the amount of $15.513. The judgment ed this year. (The child's mother also died in the accident,
phone 388-8462.
was ,incorrectly reported as ·a foreclo- but Marshall said an autopsy was determined to be unnces·
.sary due to the nature of her injuries). ~
.
sure granted.
Marshall said Hunter has been "judicious" on a case-by·
GALLIPOLIS - . Gallipolis City
case basis, but said the circustances surrounding all I0
Commission will meet in special session
deaths warranted autopsies. Those' autopsies are generally
at 7 p.m. Tuesday in the City Building,
performed at the Montgomery County C.oroner's Office,
· City Manager Joe Woodall announced.
POMEROY - Rocksprings United" .and the county pays $1 ,200 for each orie and $600 to $800
VINTON - Huntington/Morgan Methodist Church is one of the Meigs
. Crime Watch will meet Thursday. May Cooperative Parish-member churches to transport remains to and from Dayton.
. Commissioners have transfered the line item for autopsies
21 at 6 p.m. in Vinton Village Hall .
contributing to the Cooperative Parish from Hunter's budget to their own general fund budget this
scholarship fund. The church was year, Commissioner MickDavenjlOrt said. He said Marshall
omitted from a recent story and The can be paid from a $1,000 appropriation for coroner employ. RIO GRANDE - The annual
Daily Sentinel ~egrets the error. _ees, and the supplies line item, which Marshall said will like·
se nior certificate ceremony of the
ly require add1t10nal money, can be supplemented if neces,.
Gallia-Jackson- Vinton / ·
Joint
'
.
sary.
Vocational School Distric will be held
GALLIPOLIS - Peoples Bank of
The
cost
•
of
housing
prisoners.
outside
of
the
county
jail
on Thursday, May 21 at '6 :30p.m. in Gallipolis , 349 Third . Ave ., will be
7 including four in custody for their alleged roles in murLyne Center on ·the campus of the having a hotdog cookout luncheon on
der
cases - is also on the increase. .
.
,. University of Rio Grande/Rio Grande Friday,May 22.
·.
POMEROYTraining
sessions.for
Accused
murderer
Charles
WilliamS
is
in
.the
Southeastern
Community College:
. All proceeds go to Relay for Life.
District 18 Ohlo Public Works Regional Jail in Nelsonville, due to medical conditions,
Students from Buckeye Hills will For information, call 446-0902, All Commission
State
Capital ·
Improvement Program will be . held · me 1!!ding a brok~n leg. Paula Riz~~ and. Trinity Wh!tcraft
receive a Career-Technical Certificate support.will be greatly appreciated.
from 10a.m.tonoonor6to8p.m.on . are m the Washmgton County Jatl_, ~s 1s Whitcrafts coof Completion and a Career Passport.
The Career Passport is a credentialing
June 3 ai the Holiday Inn. Manetta.
defendant, Nichol Lafleur, whose bail IS $250,000 cash on a
Topics will include application pre a- charge of _aggtav.at~d robbery. Only ~ames Le~ Garnes,
tool that documents the specific occuration and illformation on loans ~ charged With ~Celvmg stolen property m the Dons Jackson
pational skills, academic skills and
.
assistance. l'he sessions are offered for mur~er c~ , ts m the Me1gs County Jatl.
employability skills of students who
GALLIPOLIS - Mid-Ohio Valley all persons · interested in applying for
So far th1syear, Sheriff_ Robert Beegle has spent $12,300
.complete a secondary career-technical
Amateur Radio Club . is offering a SCIP and LTIP pro
s. Local gov- to ho~se pnsoners m ,Jails out of the county, .mostly at
education program in Ohio.
Scholarships and other special beginner class for adults and youth emn1ent entities an~ter ·and sewer Washmg~on County Jatl, where Beegle has.a contract rate
awards will also be given to students wanting tl1eam their ham radio license . districts ate eligible to participate.
for housmg both men and women . An addi_t10nal $11,605
The
class
begins
ai
6:30
p.m.
·
'
.
·
has .been enumbered for pendmg housmg b11ls, Da~enport
during the ceremony ..Parents , family
members. friends and community Thursday. June 4, and inchides evening
.
said.
· .
, . .
. ·
.
.
.
·
Davenport satd the comrrnss•oners are closely momtormembers are invited to attend this spe- . sessions on Mo~. June 8, friday,
June 12 and all day Saturday, June 13.
POMEROY . _ · The MeiJlS Local . ing .costs associated with housing, defense counsel fees,
cial program.
All sessions will be held at the Gallia Board&lt;if Educ;~tion wili meet special de_fense expert fees and o!her e,xpenses that are expected to
County 911 Communications Center, session 7 p.m. Mo~tday for the ·piJ\"pOSe anse from the I~ pending murder cases. .
·
.
Ohio 160, Gallipolis.
·, .
.
of further discussion on a permanent . Davenport smd Fnday no funds have been appropnated
GALLIPOUS - Gallia County
Cost of the class is $25.for book and improvement levjl; and other businesS into established line i.tems for those expenses, b_ut said the
Board of Elections will meet on . supplies; plus $15 for the FC~ license which may come before the board.
costs will be a concern to commissioners as the cases
-------:----------~------'--'------------------- progress through the local court system.

Commission
to meet

Crime Watch
~eeting set

Certificate
ceremony set

Clubs and
organizations

Omitted

.Fundraiser
planned

Training
sessiOns

.
..reported

m

'

being treated at
:Lakin State Hospital in
·Maso n County, W.Va.,
:Atkins · Mental Health
:center; North Central
:Regional Jail in Doddridge
:County, W.Va. , Western
Psychological
Hospital,
Oakwood Forensic Center,
·Mount Olive Correctional
:Center in West Virginia,
."and others, the names of
:which he cannot recall."
.. "ln. 1991. (Williams) was

w

sentenced to a term of oile
year
in
the
Federal
Correctional Institution ·at,
Butner,. N.C., for tl!reatening the life of the U.S. president.
Furthermore,
(Williams)
has
made
attempts to lake his own life
as recently as April 8 and
27."
"Clearly,
defendant'~
extensive history of psychiatric treatment warrants a
psychological evaluation to ,

•·

·caldwell
rromPageAt
..

•

5th J\nnual3unwr
·JfisS ~iuer ~reation Pageant
. Contest will be held ·
Thursday, July 2, 2009 at 6:30pm

Survey rrom Page AI
I

Dcclllioafor: _ GalliaAcadanyllS Ubnl)·
I\JIIOUDI: - - -

_ Ri1-er Vl!ley H.S. Liny
_..:,___ (-mail: _ _ __..,;;_

Pltast n»i;e cbcd;Ymotley 01\kn IQ: Gallipolil Robry Club

AlTN: TfQliUU
P.O.&amp;1214 .
GaiiiPOlrs. 01145631

Aalcwlt:

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Sooth~ II.S. Ubhr)·

Amounl _ _~

Anyone with a question
about the survey should
contact the City Manager's
office at (740) 446-1789 or
citymanager@gallianet.net.

1lreton L vttorgan, ~r.D..
·

Dr. Breton L. Morgan is proud
to announce
. his return
to the practice of
.
Adult &amp; Adolescent Medicine
.

HASKELL BLOO'lJ'I.VI.'-

2907 Jackson Avenue, Point Pleasant, WV

who

304-675-6492-· Hours: 8:00 am - 4:30

thru

For lilli'lllllllleadlnalolhe arrest and
person or persons rasa•slllllelor lhalhen or a
zuua ru1cu1~ "pun~mcm auO

4WD Four-Wheeler
Green in Color
Contact:

lallla Countv Sheriffs Belt. Tllllne at:

11401 446•6555
•

Other eyents

~

determine his competency sions required of hi in_;, .
To date , Judge . Fred W. . the Tri-County Marketplace, then with the Register, where
to stand trial or his ability to
Crow
Ill has apfroved pay- . ~h~ was qariledgeneral manager and advertising manager
understand the contents of
ment · of $ ,000 . for mJuly 2006.
.
·
any plea agreement."
Williams'
psychological
Based
at
!he
Tribune
office
in
Gallipolis,
Pam
will be
"Based on the historical
evaluation.
At
·
Williams'
available
to
assist
whh
any
advertising
needs
and
can be
factors specific to this
arraignment,
Knight
reachep
by
calling
(740)
446-2342,
extension
17,
or
e-maildefendant and counsel's
interactions with him, conn· reserved the ri~ht to with- ~ ing pcaldwell@heartlandpublications.com.
'
sel must ensure that the ·draw Williams not guilty
pleas
to
two
counts
of
mur
·
defendant is able to understand the nature of the pro· der in exchange for pleas of ·
ceedings and that he has the not guilty by reason of
psychological ability to insanity, once psychiatric
make the impor!ant deci- testing has been completed .

"Our goal is to keep the
:Leadership and Public · operators .are being asked to
·:Affairs at Ohio University. keep a tally of customers who Gallipolis business cQmrnuni·
:Copies will be distributed to visit stores or receive services ty healthy and ensure that
in the city to leani where their downtown Gallipolis is attracresidents .
customers
come from.
tive to residents and visitors as
· Residents are asked to
The
retail
market
study
is
well as to the businesses that
:complete the survey - it will
aimed
·
at
generating
ideas
serve
them," he said.
-take oilIy a few minutes Three retail business
:and return it within one week from community residents for
:using the return envelope, or revitalizing the city's retail areas are included in the
:lfrop it off at the Water Office shopping areas, and attracting study: the downtown retail
jn the Municipal Building. appropriate businesses or ser- district around the park,
the area from Pine Street to
518 Second Ave.
.
· v1ces to vacant retail space.
An 18-member. Planning Mill Creek, and the · area
:: Copies of the survey are
also being distributed to Committee is overSeeing the east of Mill Creek along
Avenue
that
large groups of employees project. II . includes City Eastern
Commission·
President
James
includes
both
residential
:s uch as those at Hol·z er
Medical Center, Gallipolis Cozza and City Manager Joe and commercial properties.
Survey responses will be
Developme ntal
Center, Woodall , who urged all resiGallipolis
Municipal .dents who receive the survey analyzed by the Voinovich
School. The analysis 'will
Building , Gallia County to complete it.
of
retail
bus'ihelp
the
Planning
This
study
Courttrouse, Gallia County
Chamber of Commerce ness in Gallipolis is ·a pro- Committee learn where
:Gallia County Conventio~ ject that belongs to the com- Gallipolis-area residents
:and
Visitors
Bureau , munity. For it to be sue- . · shop, what products they
'Bossard Memorial Library. cessful we .need as much buy. if. they shop .out of
community input as we can town, and where gaps exist
and other large employers.
in .the City 's retail areas.
· In addition, retail business generate," said Woodall .

Saturday, May 16
MIDDLEPORT
Screening of motion · picFriday, May 15
ture, " Fireproof," 6 p.m .,
HARRISONVILLE
Hope Baptist Church . for
Harrisonville O .E.S annmil adults only who are married
inspection, 7:30 p.m. at the or planning to be married .
hall . Refreshments.
~ree to the public . Call 992·
Saturday, May 16
.;J197 for mformat1on.
RACINE - Brooks Grant
Sunday, May 17
Camp of the Sons of the
ROCK SPRINGS . Union Veterans of the Civil Rock
Springs
United
War and Major Daniel Methodist Church, spiritual
McCook Circle ofthe Ladies · renewal service, 6:30 p.m.,
· .
.
.
· · ·
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·
.
·
.
·
Beth SergenVphoto of the Grand Army of the today-Tuesday, singing and
·P1ctured are students frorn Southern High School's Class of 2009 that ~ecelved either an academic or scholarship award Republic , · annual Memorial revival -style message by
.at Fnday's assembly. Pictured, front row (from left) Tosha Jones, Jaime Warner, Samantha Patterson, Rashell Boso, Day service at Star Mill Park Rev. fred Adkins.
.
Ernma Hunter, Chelsea 'Pape, Merri Collins; second row (from left). Jordan Pickens, Rusty Carnahan, CHris Holter,. Drew in Rac ine. II a.m. Guest
Hoover, Kyle Goode; third row {from left), Ryan Lee Beegle, Ryan Lain Beegle, Brody Flint, Alex Hawley, Bryan Harris; speaker, also announcement
of winners in the third annu"fourth row (from left), Jerry Justis, Weston Roberts, Zach Ash.
.
.
.
.
.
al Memorial Day essay conSaturday, May 23
test with .essays to be read .
MIDDLEPORT
Picnic lunch to follow .
Feeney-Bennett Post 128,
SALEM CENTER
American Legion baseball
Star Grange #778 and Star
Junior Grange #878 Fun team tryouts, 3 p.m . Saturday
Scholarship, Night and potluck supper. and Sunday, Meigs High
Pape; Larry R . Morrison LLC Scholarship, $1 ,000 , Memori al
.Bv BETH SeRGENT
.BSERGENt@ MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM .Female Athlete of the Year,
.
Weston Roberts; Downtown $400 each. Rashell Boso, Dmner at 6:30 p.m., Fun School. Rain or shine.
Collins ;
Orris Night
~ Emma Hunter; Larry R . Athletic "club Scholarship , Merri
follow. Open to
RACINE - Seniors ut Morrison Male Athlete of $500 each, Kyle Goode, Gordan Fisher Scholarship, members and the public.
Southern High School were the Yeat,Bryan Harris; Quiz Bryan Harris; American $250 each, -Kyle Goode:
Monday, May 18
honored with academic and Bowl, Dre)oY Hoover, varsity Red Cross Scholarship, Gateway Scholarship at
Tuesday, May 19
RACINE - Chapter I 86
·scholarship awards on MVP; work study key, Paul $250 each, Chelsea Pape, OU, $500. Brody Flint; of Eastern· Star, 6:30 p.m .,
POMEROY . - Meigs
.Friday during its annual Powell .
:
Brody Hint; Harold Roush • Frederick · W.
Bush refreshments.
County Board of Elections
· Jim Adams . Memorial Bill McKelvey Ohio River Memorial Scholarship at
Senior .Awards Assembly.
will conduct official count
. Wednesday, May lo
· The following seniors ScholarshiJ?s •. $500 each, Producers FFA Scholarship, OU, $580. Emma · Hunter;
SYRACUSE - Meigs of May 5 special election
Reunion ~
Alumni County
' were honored with the fol- Bryan Hams, Chelsea Pape; $500, Chiis Holter, $400, . Era
Firefighters ballots ; 10:30 a.m.
lowing
academic
and Edison Brace .Memorial Rusty Carnahan, $250 , Scholarship at OU, $420,
extracurricular awards: FFA Scholarship, $500 each, Ryan Lain Beegld Stewart- Emma Hunter; The Creed
.
leadership key and service · Weston · Roberts, Chelsea Johnson VFW Post 9926 Janes Schelarship at OU ,
awards. Eric Perry, Dustyn Pape,
Emma
Hunter; Scholarship; $500, Jordan $2 ,000, Chelsea Pape;
Johnson , Chris Holter, Dax · Clarence &amp; Ruth Bradford Pickens; Lost Brothers Maude Sellers Scholarship.
Holman , Rusty Carnahan, Memorial
Scholarship, Scholarship, $1,000 each , $200, Emma Hunter; OU
~Ryan Lee B~egle, Ryan
$500, Brody Flint; Clarence Jerry Justis,. Rashell Boso, Bobcat Award, $1,800
Lain Beegle; FFA scholar· frank
Memorial Chelsea
Pape; each , Chelsea Pape. Z.ach
·ship key, Rusty Carnahan; Scholarship, $500, Jordan Reconnecting .
Youth Ash, Brody Fhnt; OU
•recognized for four years in · Pickens; Geraldine Cleland Scholarship, $200, Jordan Academic Competitiveness
FFA. Ryan Lain Beegle, · Memorial
Scholarship. Pickens;
Rio
Grande Grant, $750, Chelsea Pape;
Ryan Lee Beegle, John $500, Rashell· Boso; Paul Community
College Marietta College Grant and
$30,400,
Brauer, Brad ·Brown, Rusty Marr
· Memorial Scholarship, $6,000, Kyle Awards,
;Carnahan, Luke Dillard, · Scholarship, $500, Weston Goode; Home National Samantha Patterson; Dodge
Rio \ Grande Truck FFA Scholarship,
:Dax Holman, Chris Holter, Roberts; Frank Cleland Bank
· ;Brian
· Hunt, : Dustyn Memorial
Scholarsl)ip, Community
. College $1,000, Chris Holter;
Sign up at the following locations:
•Johnson. Eric Perry, Chad $500, : Rusty ·· Carnahan; Scholarship, $200, Zach Meigs .Cooperative Parish
·· Area High Schools and Elememary Schools,
:wolfe, Ronnie · Wil son ~ David B. Sayre Memorial Ash; Dr. James H . &amp; Nellie Scholarships , $500 each,
;Justin Porter,- Paul Powell; Scholarship, $100, Bryan Jeweii-Manasseh
Cutler Ryan Lain Beegle, Alex
River Valley HighScbooi,South Gallia High School,
;Travis Adams Achievement Harris;
Racine
Area . Scholarship, full, tuition to Hawley, Bryan Harris;
•Award , Chris Holter; social Community Orgjlnization, Ohio University for four Ohio State Land · Grant
Gallia Academy High School, Ohio Valley Christian High Sch~XJI,
$13 ,042 ,
:studies key. Brody Flint; $500 each, Rashell Boso, years, 'valued over $80,000, Scholarship, ·
and lhe Galli aCounty 'Chamber of Coinmeree
;home economics key, Jaime
Wame·r, · Rusty Jaime Warner.
· Chris Holter; Bob Hall
;Rashell Boso, home eco- Carnahan, Chris Holter,
Helen Coast Hayes Diesel Scholarship from
lltadliae to apply il FRIDAY, May 12 .
onomics most outstanding, ·samantha Patterson, Drew Memorial Scholarships, University of Northwestern
$3 ,000,
Ru sty
:April Richards ; physical Hoover, Bryan Harris , $400 each , . Samantha Ohio ,
Official Rules &amp;Regulations do apply &amp;can be picked up a1 tbe
Carnahan;
Agricultural
;science key, Drew Hoover. Emma Hunter, Chelsea Patterson, Chelsea Pape,
Chamber of Commerce, 16 Stale Sireet, Gallipclis,OH
Scholarship .
•biological scien·c e key , Pape·, Weston Roberts, Chris Holter, Brody Flmt, Equipment
University
of
Jaime Warner ; Holzer Merri Collins, Brody Flint. Alex · Hawley;
Wayne from
FntryFee: $25.00
Oliio ,
,Clinic Science Award, Drew
Hill's.Classic CarsfHome Roush
Memorial Northwestern
;Hoover; mathematics key , National
Bank/Gatling., Scholarship, $400, Emma $6,000, Rusty Carnahan; ·
For more information call Tonya Wise: 446·2673
Waterways
•Emma
Hunter,
Drew Ohio LLC Cruisin' Car Hunter; George M. Sayre Inland
Looking for gnat adnrtisiDg opportunily S)lO~LWr this EVENT!
:Hoover; English key, Drew Show Scholarship, $800 Memorial
Scholarship, Academy, $600, Daniel
Crawford-GrayWeston Miller;
iHoover,
Samantha each, Rusty Camahan, $400 .. .each,
;Patterson; technology ke}i. Brody Flint, Rashell Boso, Roberts, Jordan Pickens , Lewis Scholarship, Zach
·
;Alex Hawley; · foreign ian· Jerry 'Justis; Gatling , Ohio Bryan Harris; Edith Jividen Ash .
,_gua~e , Drew Hoover; John
fhihp Sousa Award, Jordan
~Pickens: band keys , Jordaq ·
•Pickens, Rusty Carnahan,
In Loving Memory of
:,Steven Loane, Kyle Goode ,
t£)rew Hoover: citizenship
;award, Emma
Hunter,
.Jordan Pickens; activities
Passed Away Twenty-One Years Ago
:award , . Jordan Pick'ens;
Mayl6,1988
~ncentive plan award, April
;Richards.
;· WSAZ Best of the Class,
Life is a highway
iEmma Hunter: National
On which the years go by,
'Honor Society, Brody Flint. ·
Sometimes the road is level,
Chehca Pape . Samantha .
sometimes the hills are high.
Patterson, Jaime Warner,
But as we travel onward
Emma . Hunter,
Bryan
Harris , Chris Holter; honors
to a future that's unknown,
diploma and honorees ,
We can make each mile we travel
Rashell Boso. Brody Flint,
a heavenly stepping stone.
Kyle Goode, Bryan Harris,
No
farther
away than a picture,
Chris Holter, Drew Hoover,
A smile or remembered phrase;
Emma Hunter, Tosha Jones,
·chelsea Pape. Samantha·
Our loved one lives in memory
Patterson, Jaime Warner:
so clos~ in so many ways.
Awards of Merit, Jaime .
How often has a flower, ·
Warner, Rashell Boso.
Or a crysllll autumn sky
Brody Flint , Kyle Goode,
Brought golden recollection$
Alex Hawley, Chris Holter,
:Emma Hunter, Chelsea
of happy days gone by.
Pape. Sarnantha Pattersou;
· Memories have a magic way
salutatorian , Jaime Warner:
of keeping loved one&amp; near,
valedictorian,
Emma
Ever close in mind and heart
Hunter; US Marine Corps
. Award, Jordan Pickens,
Is the one we hold so dear.
musicians. 'Chelsea Pape ,
distinguished
athlete ;
OHSAA scholar at hlete ,
. Sadly missed by wife,
Emma
Hunter,
Drew
Virginia and children
Hoover: OHSAA Archie·
Griffin
Sportsmanship ·
Award. Zach Ash, Chelsea
.

to

Special session

Williams rrom Page AI

Church events

Youth events

Ham radio
.class forming

Board to meet

Sunday, May 17, 2009

Meigs CountY calendar

exam.fee. Reservations are due May 27
and send check or money order to MidOhio Valley Amateur Radio Club, in
care of James (Moe) Siders, 1759
Kriner Road , Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 .

Correction

I

PageA3

j

'

Life...financed daily

�••

I

'

I

.PageA2

·REGIONAL

Speaker from PtlgeAt

Local Briefs
Neighborhood
Watch meeting

ARoUND ToWN

Sunday, May 17, 2009

Monday at 9:30 a.m. at the board
office in the courthouse.

B-Preunion
isMay 23

GALLIPOLIS
Gallipolis
Neighborhood Watch will meet Monday
at 6 p.m. at the Gallia {:ounty Senior
Resou rce Center. featuring speakers on
BIDWELL - The annual Bidwell·
.stalking and domestic violence.
Porter alumni reunion is Saturday,
Vict ims advocate Regina Brown of May 23 at River Valley Middle School
the Rape Crisis Center in 'Gallia and (the
former
Bidwell -Porter
Mason counties. and Melissa Kimmel, · Elementary School) at 8779 Ohio l(i().
director of Serenity House, will be the
The reunion is from 3 to 6 p.m. and
speakers.
the cost is $5 per person.. Re.servations
Community and Neighborhood are due May 20 .
.Watch programs are urged to attend this
For more infomlatioll, contact Don11a
.informative and educational event.
Broyles , 85 Locus/ St., Gallipolis, Ohio

an honor guard firing a salute and a history of Memorial
Day. The SUVCW will also march in the parade.
Camp Commander Jim Oiler said Memorial Day had its
beginnings with veterans of the Civil War, a tradition maintained by members of the SUVCW as both Union and
tonfederate soldiers are buried at Pine Street and several
other cemeteries around Gallia County.
~eeting
On Sunday, May 24 at 2 p.in.,American Legion Post 161
of
Vinton has scheduled its annual Memorial Day :rrvice at
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia ' County
Vinton
Memorial Park.
·
1
.
Children Services Board will meet in ·
.
.
.
special sess.ion Tuesday at 5 p.m. in
the Children Services office.

· ~blic meetings

Association, 7:30 p.m ..
Syracuse fire station . Final
meeting before summer
1
Monday, May 18
break.
I POMEROY - Veterans
Thursday, May 21
Service Commission meets .
POMEROY
- Meig~
at 8 a.m., 117 Memorial Dr..
County
American
Cancer
Pomeroy.
RACINE
- Southern Society Advisory ·Board ,
Locru Board of Education. regular meeting , noon,
regular meeting, 8 p.m., . basement room of Pomeroy
Southern High School, Library , . lunch provided .
RSVP with Courtney Sim at
media room.
992-6626,
ext. 24.
LETART FALLS
MASON,
W.Va. ·- Meigs
Letart ·Township Trustees,
County
Retired
Teachers,
regular meeting, 5 p.m .
luncheon
,
noon,
Riverside
Wednesday, May 20
SH j\DE
Bedford Golf Course Clubhouse,
Township Twstees, special local history speaker, gospel
meeting , di scuss concerns trio, members invited to
relating_ to tire coverage for bring guests.
mwnsh1p, 7 p.m., town hall .

.

Special

Fees from Page AI

met with commissioners Friday to discuss· the cos~ of
autopsies
and other costs associated with them; inclu1ding
POMEROY - A judgment . was
·
iss ued in Meigs County Common his own expenses in assisting Hunter.
4563 I ,
dbroyles63@liotmail.com, Pleas Court to Farmers Bank. and
of
a
man
and
an
infant
child
killed
He said the autopsies
phone 446-207 I. or Virginia Stout, 669 Savings Co., against Juan Tabler, in last week in a traffic acddent are the latest of 10 complet·
Porter Roa.d, Bidwell, Ohio 45614, the amount of $15.513. The judgment ed this year. (The child's mother also died in the accident,
phone 388-8462.
was ,incorrectly reported as ·a foreclo- but Marshall said an autopsy was determined to be unnces·
.sary due to the nature of her injuries). ~
.
sure granted.
Marshall said Hunter has been "judicious" on a case-by·
GALLIPOLIS - . Gallipolis City
case basis, but said the circustances surrounding all I0
Commission will meet in special session
deaths warranted autopsies. Those' autopsies are generally
at 7 p.m. Tuesday in the City Building,
performed at the Montgomery County C.oroner's Office,
· City Manager Joe Woodall announced.
POMEROY - Rocksprings United" .and the county pays $1 ,200 for each orie and $600 to $800
VINTON - Huntington/Morgan Methodist Church is one of the Meigs
. Crime Watch will meet Thursday. May Cooperative Parish-member churches to transport remains to and from Dayton.
. Commissioners have transfered the line item for autopsies
21 at 6 p.m. in Vinton Village Hall .
contributing to the Cooperative Parish from Hunter's budget to their own general fund budget this
scholarship fund. The church was year, Commissioner MickDavenjlOrt said. He said Marshall
omitted from a recent story and The can be paid from a $1,000 appropriation for coroner employ. RIO GRANDE - The annual
Daily Sentinel ~egrets the error. _ees, and the supplies line item, which Marshall said will like·
se nior certificate ceremony of the
ly require add1t10nal money, can be supplemented if neces,.
Gallia-Jackson- Vinton / ·
Joint
'
.
sary.
Vocational School Distric will be held
GALLIPOLIS - Peoples Bank of
The
cost
•
of
housing
prisoners.
outside
of
the
county
jail
on Thursday, May 21 at '6 :30p.m. in Gallipolis , 349 Third . Ave ., will be
7 including four in custody for their alleged roles in murLyne Center on ·the campus of the having a hotdog cookout luncheon on
der
cases - is also on the increase. .
.
,. University of Rio Grande/Rio Grande Friday,May 22.
·.
POMEROYTraining
sessions.for
Accused
murderer
Charles
WilliamS
is
in
.the
Southeastern
Community College:
. All proceeds go to Relay for Life.
District 18 Ohlo Public Works Regional Jail in Nelsonville, due to medical conditions,
Students from Buckeye Hills will For information, call 446-0902, All Commission
State
Capital ·
Improvement Program will be . held · me 1!!ding a brok~n leg. Paula Riz~~ and. Trinity Wh!tcraft
receive a Career-Technical Certificate support.will be greatly appreciated.
from 10a.m.tonoonor6to8p.m.on . are m the Washmgton County Jatl_, ~s 1s Whitcrafts coof Completion and a Career Passport.
The Career Passport is a credentialing
June 3 ai the Holiday Inn. Manetta.
defendant, Nichol Lafleur, whose bail IS $250,000 cash on a
Topics will include application pre a- charge of _aggtav.at~d robbery. Only ~ames Le~ Garnes,
tool that documents the specific occuration and illformation on loans ~ charged With ~Celvmg stolen property m the Dons Jackson
pational skills, academic skills and
.
assistance. l'he sessions are offered for mur~er c~ , ts m the Me1gs County Jatl.
employability skills of students who
GALLIPOLIS - Mid-Ohio Valley all persons · interested in applying for
So far th1syear, Sheriff_ Robert Beegle has spent $12,300
.complete a secondary career-technical
Amateur Radio Club . is offering a SCIP and LTIP pro
s. Local gov- to ho~se pnsoners m ,Jails out of the county, .mostly at
education program in Ohio.
Scholarships and other special beginner class for adults and youth emn1ent entities an~ter ·and sewer Washmg~on County Jatl, where Beegle has.a contract rate
awards will also be given to students wanting tl1eam their ham radio license . districts ate eligible to participate.
for housmg both men and women . An addi_t10nal $11,605
The
class
begins
ai
6:30
p.m.
·
'
.
·
has .been enumbered for pendmg housmg b11ls, Da~enport
during the ceremony ..Parents , family
members. friends and community Thursday. June 4, and inchides evening
.
said.
· .
, . .
. ·
.
.
.
·
Davenport satd the comrrnss•oners are closely momtormembers are invited to attend this spe- . sessions on Mo~. June 8, friday,
June 12 and all day Saturday, June 13.
POMEROY . _ · The MeiJlS Local . ing .costs associated with housing, defense counsel fees,
cial program.
All sessions will be held at the Gallia Board&lt;if Educ;~tion wili meet special de_fense expert fees and o!her e,xpenses that are expected to
County 911 Communications Center, session 7 p.m. Mo~tday for the ·piJ\"pOSe anse from the I~ pending murder cases. .
·
.
Ohio 160, Gallipolis.
·, .
.
of further discussion on a permanent . Davenport smd Fnday no funds have been appropnated
GALLIPOUS - Gallia County
Cost of the class is $25.for book and improvement levjl; and other businesS into established line i.tems for those expenses, b_ut said the
Board of Elections will meet on . supplies; plus $15 for the FC~ license which may come before the board.
costs will be a concern to commissioners as the cases
-------:----------~------'--'------------------- progress through the local court system.

Commission
to meet

Crime Watch
~eeting set

Certificate
ceremony set

Clubs and
organizations

Omitted

.Fundraiser
planned

Training
sessiOns

.
..reported

m

'

being treated at
:Lakin State Hospital in
·Maso n County, W.Va.,
:Atkins · Mental Health
:center; North Central
:Regional Jail in Doddridge
:County, W.Va. , Western
Psychological
Hospital,
Oakwood Forensic Center,
·Mount Olive Correctional
:Center in West Virginia,
."and others, the names of
:which he cannot recall."
.. "ln. 1991. (Williams) was

w

sentenced to a term of oile
year
in
the
Federal
Correctional Institution ·at,
Butner,. N.C., for tl!reatening the life of the U.S. president.
Furthermore,
(Williams)
has
made
attempts to lake his own life
as recently as April 8 and
27."
"Clearly,
defendant'~
extensive history of psychiatric treatment warrants a
psychological evaluation to ,

•·

·caldwell
rromPageAt
..

•

5th J\nnual3unwr
·JfisS ~iuer ~reation Pageant
. Contest will be held ·
Thursday, July 2, 2009 at 6:30pm

Survey rrom Page AI
I

Dcclllioafor: _ GalliaAcadanyllS Ubnl)·
I\JIIOUDI: - - -

_ Ri1-er Vl!ley H.S. Liny
_..:,___ (-mail: _ _ __..,;;_

Pltast n»i;e cbcd;Ymotley 01\kn IQ: Gallipolil Robry Club

AlTN: TfQliUU
P.O.&amp;1214 .
GaiiiPOlrs. 01145631

Aalcwlt:

---

Sooth~ II.S. Ubhr)·

Amounl _ _~

Anyone with a question
about the survey should
contact the City Manager's
office at (740) 446-1789 or
citymanager@gallianet.net.

1lreton L vttorgan, ~r.D..
·

Dr. Breton L. Morgan is proud
to announce
. his return
to the practice of
.
Adult &amp; Adolescent Medicine
.

HASKELL BLOO'lJ'I.VI.'-

2907 Jackson Avenue, Point Pleasant, WV

who

304-675-6492-· Hours: 8:00 am - 4:30

thru

For lilli'lllllllleadlnalolhe arrest and
person or persons rasa•slllllelor lhalhen or a
zuua ru1cu1~ "pun~mcm auO

4WD Four-Wheeler
Green in Color
Contact:

lallla Countv Sheriffs Belt. Tllllne at:

11401 446•6555
•

Other eyents

~

determine his competency sions required of hi in_;, .
To date , Judge . Fred W. . the Tri-County Marketplace, then with the Register, where
to stand trial or his ability to
Crow
Ill has apfroved pay- . ~h~ was qariledgeneral manager and advertising manager
understand the contents of
ment · of $ ,000 . for mJuly 2006.
.
·
any plea agreement."
Williams'
psychological
Based
at
!he
Tribune
office
in
Gallipolis,
Pam
will be
"Based on the historical
evaluation.
At
·
Williams'
available
to
assist
whh
any
advertising
needs
and
can be
factors specific to this
arraignment,
Knight
reachep
by
calling
(740)
446-2342,
extension
17,
or
e-maildefendant and counsel's
interactions with him, conn· reserved the ri~ht to with- ~ ing pcaldwell@heartlandpublications.com.
'
sel must ensure that the ·draw Williams not guilty
pleas
to
two
counts
of
mur
·
defendant is able to understand the nature of the pro· der in exchange for pleas of ·
ceedings and that he has the not guilty by reason of
psychological ability to insanity, once psychiatric
make the impor!ant deci- testing has been completed .

"Our goal is to keep the
:Leadership and Public · operators .are being asked to
·:Affairs at Ohio University. keep a tally of customers who Gallipolis business cQmrnuni·
:Copies will be distributed to visit stores or receive services ty healthy and ensure that
in the city to leani where their downtown Gallipolis is attracresidents .
customers
come from.
tive to residents and visitors as
· Residents are asked to
The
retail
market
study
is
well as to the businesses that
:complete the survey - it will
aimed
·
at
generating
ideas
serve
them," he said.
-take oilIy a few minutes Three retail business
:and return it within one week from community residents for
:using the return envelope, or revitalizing the city's retail areas are included in the
:lfrop it off at the Water Office shopping areas, and attracting study: the downtown retail
jn the Municipal Building. appropriate businesses or ser- district around the park,
the area from Pine Street to
518 Second Ave.
.
· v1ces to vacant retail space.
An 18-member. Planning Mill Creek, and the · area
:: Copies of the survey are
also being distributed to Committee is overSeeing the east of Mill Creek along
Avenue
that
large groups of employees project. II . includes City Eastern
Commission·
President
James
includes
both
residential
:s uch as those at Hol·z er
Medical Center, Gallipolis Cozza and City Manager Joe and commercial properties.
Survey responses will be
Developme ntal
Center, Woodall , who urged all resiGallipolis
Municipal .dents who receive the survey analyzed by the Voinovich
School. The analysis 'will
Building , Gallia County to complete it.
of
retail
bus'ihelp
the
Planning
This
study
Courttrouse, Gallia County
Chamber of Commerce ness in Gallipolis is ·a pro- Committee learn where
:Gallia County Conventio~ ject that belongs to the com- Gallipolis-area residents
:and
Visitors
Bureau , munity. For it to be sue- . · shop, what products they
'Bossard Memorial Library. cessful we .need as much buy. if. they shop .out of
community input as we can town, and where gaps exist
and other large employers.
in .the City 's retail areas.
· In addition, retail business generate," said Woodall .

Saturday, May 16
MIDDLEPORT
Screening of motion · picFriday, May 15
ture, " Fireproof," 6 p.m .,
HARRISONVILLE
Hope Baptist Church . for
Harrisonville O .E.S annmil adults only who are married
inspection, 7:30 p.m. at the or planning to be married .
hall . Refreshments.
~ree to the public . Call 992·
Saturday, May 16
.;J197 for mformat1on.
RACINE - Brooks Grant
Sunday, May 17
Camp of the Sons of the
ROCK SPRINGS . Union Veterans of the Civil Rock
Springs
United
War and Major Daniel Methodist Church, spiritual
McCook Circle ofthe Ladies · renewal service, 6:30 p.m.,
· .
.
.
· · ·
.
·
.
·
.
·
Beth SergenVphoto of the Grand Army of the today-Tuesday, singing and
·P1ctured are students frorn Southern High School's Class of 2009 that ~ecelved either an academic or scholarship award Republic , · annual Memorial revival -style message by
.at Fnday's assembly. Pictured, front row (from left) Tosha Jones, Jaime Warner, Samantha Patterson, Rashell Boso, Day service at Star Mill Park Rev. fred Adkins.
.
Ernma Hunter, Chelsea 'Pape, Merri Collins; second row (from left). Jordan Pickens, Rusty Carnahan, CHris Holter,. Drew in Rac ine. II a.m. Guest
Hoover, Kyle Goode; third row {from left), Ryan Lee Beegle, Ryan Lain Beegle, Brody Flint, Alex Hawley, Bryan Harris; speaker, also announcement
of winners in the third annu"fourth row (from left), Jerry Justis, Weston Roberts, Zach Ash.
.
.
.
.
.
al Memorial Day essay conSaturday, May 23
test with .essays to be read .
MIDDLEPORT
Picnic lunch to follow .
Feeney-Bennett Post 128,
SALEM CENTER
American Legion baseball
Star Grange #778 and Star
Junior Grange #878 Fun team tryouts, 3 p.m . Saturday
Scholarship, Night and potluck supper. and Sunday, Meigs High
Pape; Larry R . Morrison LLC Scholarship, $1 ,000 , Memori al
.Bv BETH SeRGENT
.BSERGENt@ MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM .Female Athlete of the Year,
.
Weston Roberts; Downtown $400 each. Rashell Boso, Dmner at 6:30 p.m., Fun School. Rain or shine.
Collins ;
Orris Night
~ Emma Hunter; Larry R . Athletic "club Scholarship , Merri
follow. Open to
RACINE - Seniors ut Morrison Male Athlete of $500 each, Kyle Goode, Gordan Fisher Scholarship, members and the public.
Southern High School were the Yeat,Bryan Harris; Quiz Bryan Harris; American $250 each, -Kyle Goode:
Monday, May 18
honored with academic and Bowl, Dre)oY Hoover, varsity Red Cross Scholarship, Gateway Scholarship at
Tuesday, May 19
RACINE - Chapter I 86
·scholarship awards on MVP; work study key, Paul $250 each, Chelsea Pape, OU, $500. Brody Flint; of Eastern· Star, 6:30 p.m .,
POMEROY . - Meigs
.Friday during its annual Powell .
:
Brody Hint; Harold Roush • Frederick · W.
Bush refreshments.
County Board of Elections
· Jim Adams . Memorial Bill McKelvey Ohio River Memorial Scholarship at
Senior .Awards Assembly.
will conduct official count
. Wednesday, May lo
· The following seniors ScholarshiJ?s •. $500 each, Producers FFA Scholarship, OU, $580. Emma · Hunter;
SYRACUSE - Meigs of May 5 special election
Reunion ~
Alumni County
' were honored with the fol- Bryan Hams, Chelsea Pape; $500, Chiis Holter, $400, . Era
Firefighters ballots ; 10:30 a.m.
lowing
academic
and Edison Brace .Memorial Rusty Carnahan, $250 , Scholarship at OU, $420,
extracurricular awards: FFA Scholarship, $500 each, Ryan Lain Beegld Stewart- Emma Hunter; The Creed
.
leadership key and service · Weston · Roberts, Chelsea Johnson VFW Post 9926 Janes Schelarship at OU ,
awards. Eric Perry, Dustyn Pape,
Emma
Hunter; Scholarship; $500, Jordan $2 ,000, Chelsea Pape;
Johnson , Chris Holter, Dax · Clarence &amp; Ruth Bradford Pickens; Lost Brothers Maude Sellers Scholarship.
Holman , Rusty Carnahan, Memorial
Scholarship, Scholarship, $1,000 each , $200, Emma Hunter; OU
~Ryan Lee B~egle, Ryan
$500, Brody Flint; Clarence Jerry Justis,. Rashell Boso, Bobcat Award, $1,800
Lain Beegle; FFA scholar· frank
Memorial Chelsea
Pape; each , Chelsea Pape. Z.ach
·ship key, Rusty Carnahan; Scholarship, $500, Jordan Reconnecting .
Youth Ash, Brody Fhnt; OU
•recognized for four years in · Pickens; Geraldine Cleland Scholarship, $200, Jordan Academic Competitiveness
FFA. Ryan Lain Beegle, · Memorial
Scholarship. Pickens;
Rio
Grande Grant, $750, Chelsea Pape;
Ryan Lee Beegle, John $500, Rashell· Boso; Paul Community
College Marietta College Grant and
$30,400,
Brauer, Brad ·Brown, Rusty Marr
· Memorial Scholarship, $6,000, Kyle Awards,
;Carnahan, Luke Dillard, · Scholarship, $500, Weston Goode; Home National Samantha Patterson; Dodge
Rio \ Grande Truck FFA Scholarship,
:Dax Holman, Chris Holter, Roberts; Frank Cleland Bank
· ;Brian
· Hunt, : Dustyn Memorial
Scholarsl)ip, Community
. College $1,000, Chris Holter;
Sign up at the following locations:
•Johnson. Eric Perry, Chad $500, : Rusty ·· Carnahan; Scholarship, $200, Zach Meigs .Cooperative Parish
·· Area High Schools and Elememary Schools,
:wolfe, Ronnie · Wil son ~ David B. Sayre Memorial Ash; Dr. James H . &amp; Nellie Scholarships , $500 each,
;Justin Porter,- Paul Powell; Scholarship, $100, Bryan Jeweii-Manasseh
Cutler Ryan Lain Beegle, Alex
River Valley HighScbooi,South Gallia High School,
;Travis Adams Achievement Harris;
Racine
Area . Scholarship, full, tuition to Hawley, Bryan Harris;
•Award , Chris Holter; social Community Orgjlnization, Ohio University for four Ohio State Land · Grant
Gallia Academy High School, Ohio Valley Christian High Sch~XJI,
$13 ,042 ,
:studies key. Brody Flint; $500 each, Rashell Boso, years, 'valued over $80,000, Scholarship, ·
and lhe Galli aCounty 'Chamber of Coinmeree
;home economics key, Jaime
Wame·r, · Rusty Jaime Warner.
· Chris Holter; Bob Hall
;Rashell Boso, home eco- Carnahan, Chris Holter,
Helen Coast Hayes Diesel Scholarship from
lltadliae to apply il FRIDAY, May 12 .
onomics most outstanding, ·samantha Patterson, Drew Memorial Scholarships, University of Northwestern
$3 ,000,
Ru sty
:April Richards ; physical Hoover, Bryan Harris , $400 each , . Samantha Ohio ,
Official Rules &amp;Regulations do apply &amp;can be picked up a1 tbe
Carnahan;
Agricultural
;science key, Drew Hoover. Emma Hunter, Chelsea Patterson, Chelsea Pape,
Chamber of Commerce, 16 Stale Sireet, Gallipclis,OH
Scholarship .
•biological scien·c e key , Pape·, Weston Roberts, Chris Holter, Brody Flmt, Equipment
University
of
Jaime Warner ; Holzer Merri Collins, Brody Flint. Alex · Hawley;
Wayne from
FntryFee: $25.00
Oliio ,
,Clinic Science Award, Drew
Hill's.Classic CarsfHome Roush
Memorial Northwestern
;Hoover; mathematics key , National
Bank/Gatling., Scholarship, $400, Emma $6,000, Rusty Carnahan; ·
For more information call Tonya Wise: 446·2673
Waterways
•Emma
Hunter,
Drew Ohio LLC Cruisin' Car Hunter; George M. Sayre Inland
Looking for gnat adnrtisiDg opportunily S)lO~LWr this EVENT!
:Hoover; English key, Drew Show Scholarship, $800 Memorial
Scholarship, Academy, $600, Daniel
Crawford-GrayWeston Miller;
iHoover,
Samantha each, Rusty Camahan, $400 .. .each,
;Patterson; technology ke}i. Brody Flint, Rashell Boso, Roberts, Jordan Pickens , Lewis Scholarship, Zach
·
;Alex Hawley; · foreign ian· Jerry 'Justis; Gatling , Ohio Bryan Harris; Edith Jividen Ash .
,_gua~e , Drew Hoover; John
fhihp Sousa Award, Jordan
~Pickens: band keys , Jordaq ·
•Pickens, Rusty Carnahan,
In Loving Memory of
:,Steven Loane, Kyle Goode ,
t£)rew Hoover: citizenship
;award, Emma
Hunter,
.Jordan Pickens; activities
Passed Away Twenty-One Years Ago
:award , . Jordan Pick'ens;
Mayl6,1988
~ncentive plan award, April
;Richards.
;· WSAZ Best of the Class,
Life is a highway
iEmma Hunter: National
On which the years go by,
'Honor Society, Brody Flint. ·
Sometimes the road is level,
Chehca Pape . Samantha .
sometimes the hills are high.
Patterson, Jaime Warner,
But as we travel onward
Emma . Hunter,
Bryan
Harris , Chris Holter; honors
to a future that's unknown,
diploma and honorees ,
We can make each mile we travel
Rashell Boso. Brody Flint,
a heavenly stepping stone.
Kyle Goode, Bryan Harris,
No
farther
away than a picture,
Chris Holter, Drew Hoover,
A smile or remembered phrase;
Emma Hunter, Tosha Jones,
·chelsea Pape. Samantha·
Our loved one lives in memory
Patterson, Jaime Warner:
so clos~ in so many ways.
Awards of Merit, Jaime .
How often has a flower, ·
Warner, Rashell Boso.
Or a crysllll autumn sky
Brody Flint , Kyle Goode,
Brought golden recollection$
Alex Hawley, Chris Holter,
:Emma Hunter, Chelsea
of happy days gone by.
Pape. Sarnantha Pattersou;
· Memories have a magic way
salutatorian , Jaime Warner:
of keeping loved one&amp; near,
valedictorian,
Emma
Ever close in mind and heart
Hunter; US Marine Corps
. Award, Jordan Pickens,
Is the one we hold so dear.
musicians. 'Chelsea Pape ,
distinguished
athlete ;
OHSAA scholar at hlete ,
. Sadly missed by wife,
Emma
Hunter,
Drew
Virginia and children
Hoover: OHSAA Archie·
Griffin
Sportsmanship ·
Award. Zach Ash, Chelsea
.

to

Special session

Williams rrom Page AI

Church events

Youth events

Ham radio
.class forming

Board to meet

Sunday, May 17, 2009

Meigs CountY calendar

exam.fee. Reservations are due May 27
and send check or money order to MidOhio Valley Amateur Radio Club, in
care of James (Moe) Siders, 1759
Kriner Road , Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 .

Correction

I

PageA3

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Life...financed daily

�I

·6unba~ ltmtl ·itnttnd

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OPINION

Pagei\4.

· Sunday, May 17,

Sunday, May 17,2009

·Obituaries

Obama must min~ the gaps
825 Third Avenue • Gallipolis, Ohio

(740) 446·2342 ·FAX (740) 446-3008
www.mydallytrlbune.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher
Diane Hill
Controller

Kevin Kelly
Managing Editor

Letrers ro .rhe editor are welcome. They should be less
rhan 300 words. Alllellers are ·subject to editing and musl
be signed and incl11de address and telephone number. No
unsigned lerter&gt;· •·ill be published. Letrers should be in
good taste , ad~ressing issues, not personalities.
'

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Sunday, May 17, the !37th day of 2009. There
are 228 days left in the year.
.
Today's Highlight in History: On May 17, 1954. the U.S.
Supreme Court unani~ously struck down racially ·segregated pub he schools m 1ts Brown v. Board of Education of
Topeka decision.
. . On _this date: In I 792,the New York Stock Exchange had
1ts ongms as a group of brokers met under a tree on Wall
Street.
In 1814, Norway's constitution was signed,providing for
·
.
a l•m•ted monarchy.
In ~~49, fire erupted in St. Louis, resulting in the loss of
three hves, more; than &lt;WO buildings and some two dozen
.
steamsh1ps. · ·
In 1875, the first Kentucky Derby was run· the winner
was Aristides. ·
·
'
·
I~ 1938, Congress pass~ the Second Vinson Act, prov•dmg for a strengthened U.S. Navy. The radio quiz show
"lnfonnation, Please!" made its debut on the NBC Blue
Network.
·
In 1939, Britain'S King George VI and Queen Elizabeth
arr_1~ed m Qu~bec on the first visit to Canada by reigning
Bnt1sh sovere1gns.
In 1946, President Harry S. Truman seized control of the
nation's railroads, delaying - but not preventing - a
threatened strike by engineers and trainmen.
In 1973, the Senate began 'its televised hearings into the
Watergate scandal.
.. · . .
.In 1980: rioting thatclain:ed.181!ves erupted in Miami's
l,.1berty C!ty after :m all-wh1te JUry m Tampa acquitted four
former Muu~u pohce officers of fatally beating black insurance executtve Arthur McDuffie.
In . 1987, 37 American sailors were killed when .an Iraqi
waqllane - attacked the U.S. Navy frigate Stark in the
Perswn Gulf (Iraq and the U.S. called the attack a mistake.)
Ten years ago: The Supreme Court banned states from
~ayin.g lowe~ welfare benefits to newcomers as opposed to
longt1me restdents, Labor Party leader Ehud Barak unseat·
ed _Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Israeli elections.
Makah Indians in Washington state harpooned a gray whale
for the first time in 70 years.
.·
. . Five years ago: Massachusetts became·.the first state to ·
4llow legal same-sex marriages. Abdel-Zahraa Othman,
~lso known as lzzadine Saleem, head of the Iraqi
Governing Council, was killed in a suicide car bornbing in
~aghdad. More than I00 people were killed in a prison fire
m northern Honduras, Transsexuals were cleared to compete in the Olympics for the first time. Actor Tony Randall
died in New York at age 84.
. One year ago: Sen. EdWard Kennedy, D-Mass., was
flown to a Boston hospital after suffering a seizure at his
Cape Cod home. (l:le was later diagnosed with a cancerous
l!rai~ tumor.) Nearing the. end of his five-day Mideast trip,
President George W. Bush held a rapid·fire series of diplotnatlc meetmgs at the Red Sea resort of Sharm EI-Sheik in
:{lgypt. Kentt1cky Derby winner Big Brown ran away with
the Preakness. (However, the horse's Triple Crown quest
ended three weeks later when he finished last in the
Belmont Stakes.)
: Thought for Today: "I always have a quotation for everythin!\ - it saves original thinking." - Dorothy L. Sayers,
Enghsh author (1893-1957).

In
the
London
Underground, a recorded
voice warns travelers to
"mind the gap" between an
incoming train and the station platfonn. The phrase
became so popular that it
has. spawned a book, a TV
qmz show and countless Tshr;President Obama tries
to overhaul the healthcare
system, he actually has to
mind two gaps: a treasury
gap and a trust gap. Either
one could derail his ambitious plans to cover the 47
million Americans who
lack health insurance.
Without a doubt, there
are some positive si~s. At
a White House meetmg last
week, maj'?r players in the
healthcare mdustyy - docc
tors, drug makers, insurers,
hospitals - pledged to
reduce the rapid rise in
healthcare costs by 1.5 percent a year for 10 years.
Since healthcare accounts
for about 17. percent of the
entire American economy,
those savings could, in theory, amount to $2 trillion.
Obama has clearly made
headway with his argument
that everyone suffers from
spiraling health costs:
Workers lose wages, businesses lose customers and
young families can't afford
.premiums or find jobs that
provide benefits. In the Iatest . Kaiser
Family
Foundation survey, 59 percent said healthcare reform
is more important than
ever, while only 37 percent
called it too costly in the
current economy.

•

Philip L. Edmiston, 84, of Vinton, passed away
Priday, May 15, 2009, in Holzer Medical Center at
6aliipolis.
' Dr. Edmiston practiced veterinaty medicine in Gallia
County and the surrounding area for 47 years prior to his
retirement in 2003.
.
.:"J?oc," as he was rondly called, was born Aug. 9, 1924,
mVmton , son of the late Clayte and Grace Casto Edmiston.
·' H~ was a Vinton High School graduate, Class of 1942;
rece1ved a B.S. pegree, Ohio State University. 1951; and his
D.octorofVetennayy Medicine, Ohio State University 1955.
·•tn addition, be was a World War II staff sergeant ~eteran
vlho served in Japan and the Far East, member of the
Vint'?n American Legion Post No. 161, and also the Vinton
Bapt1st Church.
'
.! Dr. Edmiston mmted Ruby Ernestine Russell Edmiston
6p March 30, 1950, in Gallipolis, and she preceded him in
death on Dee. 2, 1995.
·
' Surviving are two daughters and a son, Phyllis Ann
(Richard) Brown of Vinton , and children, Wendy (Todd)
}'j:tne, Brock and Avery, all of Marion, Ohio, and Joshua
Brown at home, Debbie (Dale) Grant of Vinton, and children, M1sty (Ben) Blackburn, Kendra and Kelly, all of
VintOn, and Tisha and Trevor at home, and Mark Pat
(Che~l) Edmiston of Dayton; a brother, Harold (Coleen)
E'dmlSion of Land O'Lakes, Fla.; a sister, Mary Lanier of
V'mton; and and several nieces and nephews.
~ Servi~es will be _II a.m. Tuesday, May 19, 2009, in the
Harvest1me Worsh1p Center (the fonner Vinton Baptist
Church), Main Street, Vinton , with the Rev. Chester Hess
o'lficiating. Burial will follow in the Vinton Memorial Park.
Military graveside rites will be conducted by the Vinton
·
American Legion Post No. 16 I.
Friends may call at the McCoy-Moore Funeral Home at
Y,intiln, on Monday, May 18,2009, from 4 to 8 p.tn.
. Jn lieu of flowers, memorial Ggifts may be sent to the
Meigs County Humane Society, P.O. Box 682, Pomeroy
· ·
'
Ohio 45769.

Rif

a

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11na Maria ·aarsotti

i
Tiria Maria Barsotti, 97, Winter Haven, Fla., formerly of
Ga!Hpolis, died Friday, May 15, 2009, in Winter Haven.
Mass of Christian Burial will be 10 a.m. Thursday, May
21, 2009, at St. Louis Catholic Church. Burial will be in
Ohio Valley Memory Gardens. Friends may call at the
Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral Home from 6 to 8 p.m.
Wednesday.
·
· A complete obituary will appear in a later edition of the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune.

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••••••••••••

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stains our nation's moral
fabric. But, if the opposition believed that the gruesome procedures produced
some actionable intelligence that k.ept the country
Donna · from being harmed, do tell
Brazile
and explain it to us.
Perhaps lawmakers or the
commission's
members
could ask Cheney and oth'less some . in their · own e~s \Vhy,when in our e~tire
party or the opposition· ·h•story from the Arnencan
party, the optio·n of a mean- . · Revoluhon thr?ugh the first
ingful national debate on . Iraq War we d1d not see the
torture, it is vitally impor' · need to torture, what so
tant that the Obama admin- chlll)ged as to also change
istration gives Congress or our national character?
an independent commis'Yhen the_ f~te of our
sian the opportunity to air natJ.on was Ill Its g~eatest
our collect•ve dirty laundry. · pent, Abraham Lmcoln
Sunshine, as was once neuher authonzed nor confamously stated is the best doned
torture
of
disinfectant.
'
Confederate prisoners to
I know the president has obtain intelligence.
·
much on his plate, but with . The Umted States and
the release 'o f the memos on democracy has had no
t~e · interrogation•. tech- ~ore
despicable
or
mques and the upcoming tm"'!oral an enemy than the
release of the internal Naz1s. Yet we d1d not torreport by the Justice ture Oennan POWs, either
·Department, this issue will as an unwritten or authonot go away. Nor, so it rized activity. President
seems, will ChenexDwight D . Eisenhower,
lt's timeweactlik:eadults Gen. George C. Marshall,
and allow the infonnation, President Harry S. Truman,
including the detainee pho- President Franklin D.
tos that the administration Roosevelt
and
Gen .
.had once agreed to release, Douglas MacArthur never
to
come
forward. argued for the torture ofour
Somehow, I believe the enemies.
In ·fact, .the National
Court will hot reverse
course and allow · them to Archives records of the ·
come to the forefront. So let OSS (Office of Strategic
the country debate the mer- Services) has a document
its. This is not just about the · showing that' MacArthur
safety of our brave men and personally
nixed
a
women in uniform fighting · Hollywood producer's proabroad; it is about the rule posal to make a propaganda
of law·and the reputation of film out of interviewing
o~: country and all of its Japanese prisoners of war.
Citizens.
In further fact, it was men
For the record, I opposed of this caliber who estabthe use of torture. It is ille- lished at Nuremberg the ·
gal. Worse, tiJ.e use of it legal dictum that the person
.'

StevenKock

Steven Kock, 62, Vinton, died Friday, May 15, :2009,
at the home of his daughter; Stephanie Isaac of Vinton.
·
Arrangements will be annoQnced' by . the Rader-Lynch
and Dobbs Funeral Home, London,.Ohio.,Local arrangements are by McCoy-Moore Funeral Home, Vinton.

"

Occupants escape
.fire in apm,ntent ·
Bv 'KEVIN KELLY .
MCTNEWSOMVOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

.,.

who "followed the rules" ir'
committing war crimes i1
as culpable as those whc
gave the order.
,
The clerk who processee:
the · paperwork
fo.1.'
Auschwitz and the soldie1
who kept guard over the
Holocaust victims wert·
held to be morally liable fot.;
their actions.'
,.,
· ·It is Cheney who be a~·
.the burden of making lti!
case. Cheney was instru1,,
mental in introducing itl
and, 1f he wants to . gc.
before a Commission anC'
discuss what he authorize ·
let it be.
:.
Torture is so .fundamental,
a change in our nation·,·
moral compass that it mus1.
be debated. It shows ho\\
far we have alread)
cha)lged that we ever
debate what Was previous!)
a settled matter: torture i1
immoral. Period.
If torture is accepted as t 1
federal domestic tool t~ 1
elicit information froll"
domestic enemies, woulc
not it also flow into prac,.
tices of local police?
..
It is Orwellian doubles•
peak to argue that torture i;·
mereLy an "extreme dures!• ·
method that produce!•
fruit." lt is forbidden fruit·
poisonous in the extreme. ·
Bring it on, Mr. Cheney '
Let there be a national,
debate. You have much tC'
answer for. Meanwhile, Mr
President, it's time we ere·
ate an independent com·
mission to investigate these
matters.

(Donna Brazile i~ a polit·
ica/ commemaror on CNN
ABC and NPR ; crmrrihtlt·
ing columnist 10 Roll Call
the newspaper of Capilo,
Hill; and former campaigr,
manager.for AI Gore).
-1

,.
!. •

GALLIPOLIS -Occupants of a.seclond floor apartment .
at 848 Second Ave. escaped unharmed frOm a fire Saturday
. morning, the Gallipolis Volunteer Fire Department reported.
'
.
.
· Firefighters were called to·the scene at 9:50a.m. when a
fire of as-yet undetennined cause broke out in the apartment. Several occupants fled the two-story structure with
the help of passersby, including Mike Whitt, who joined the
Staff of Ohio Valley Publishing C9.last week in circulation.
~ Three trucks and about 20 firefighters responded to 'the
call, and officials estimated damage to t)le ·apartment as
moderate. The buildin~ is owned by Joseph Cremeens of
&lt;!Jallipolis. Officials sa1d minor smoke damage may have
been done to the first floor apartment.
.
.
· The GVFD was on the scene for an hour.
· Earlier'Satt1rday, Gallia County 9-l-1 was notified of a ·
ohe-vehicle accident on County Road 61 (Homewood
Prive) near Bidwell in which the vehicle left the road and
ioHed over, with the driver ejected. ·
·
·• HealthNet airlifted the driver to St. Mary's Medical
Center, Huntington, W.Va., for treatment. The accident,
which .occurred around 8:20a.m., is under iinvestigation by
the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway ·PatroL
Additional details were unavailable before pressume.
'
.

~ . Ohio to note Wright
.j brothers' first passenger
WEST MILTON (AP) - Ohio is recognizing a man who
was a trailblazer for all ·those people flying first class, business and coach.
·, Charley Furnas was the first passenger of Wil~ur and
Orville Wright, on · one of their early airplanes. On
s·aturday, a state historical marker noting the 1908 flight is
bein~ dedicated in West Milton , the southwest Ohio com·
mumty where Furnas was bom in 1880 .
• Historical accounts refer to Furnas as a mechanic who
had done odd jobs for .the Wrights in Dayton and pestered
them to teach him to fly. He showed up at their camp in
Kitty Hawk, N.C., in May 1908 and wound up as a passenger of first Wilbur and then Orville in their a1rplane . ·

Community.
.events ·

graduation , 2 p.m., First
Baptist Church.
Sunday, May 24
GALLIPOLIS - Fred
Monday, May 18
and Mary Lewis Harrison
GALLIPOLIS
·
family reunion, II a.m. to 3
Victims advocate Regina p.m., ' Raccoon Creek
Brown and Serenity House County Park. For informa·
Director Melissa Kimmel tion, call 379-.2581. . · .
will
s.peak
to
the · VINTON - Memorial
Gallipolis Nei~hborho~d Day ceremony by American
Watch, 6 p.m ., Galha . Legion Post 161 , ·2 p.m .,
.County Semor Resource Vinton Memorial Park.
Center.
·•
·
MQntlay,May 2S
Thesday, May 19
GALLIPOLIS ·
Memorial Day commemo· ·
GALLIPOLIS
Ch~istian : ration by Cadot-Biessing
Gallipolis
Women's
. Connection Camp .126, Sons of Union .
meeting, noon, at !)ave's Veterans of the Civil War,
American Grill . at 323 9 · a.m.; · Pipe · Street
· .
Upper River Road behind Cemetery.
the Super 8 Motel. Please
GAL.LIPOLIS ~ Annual
call Linda at 446-4319 or Memorial . Day. parade
Judy at 245-5181 to make organized by the Galli a
a reserVation ; A plant and County Veterans Service
book sale will be the spe- · Office, 10:.30 a.m. ; fol·
cial . feature; bring indoor lowed by an 11 a.m. cere·
or outdoor. plants to share mony at , the Veterans
with others. Books will be Memorial, Gallipolis City
welcomed ·_ too, · Mary · Park. ' ·
· ·'
· . Thesday, May 26
Eckler will be th.e guest
speaker. Bring a friend and . EWING TON · ·
join us for fun and fellow- American Legion Post 161
ship.
will meet at 7:30 p.m. at
Ewington Academy. On ·
Thursday, May 21
RIO
GRANDE ·
the agenda will be a dis·
Certficate ceremony for cussion of the events
Buckeye· Hills Career involved iQ the Aug. I
Center graduates; 6:30p.m., Vinton 'Bean Dinner. Ail
Lyne Center, University of members are encouraged to
Rio · Grande/Rio Grande attend . A Happy Hour
Community College.
starts at 6:30p.m .
Friday, May 29
VINTON
Huntington/Morgan Crime
CHESHIRE River
Watch will·meet at 6 p.m. in Valley High School gradua·
the Vinton Village Hall.
tion, 7 p.m. , RVI:IS football
Friday, May 22
field (in ·case of rain: Lyne
RIO GRANDE - Gallia Center).
.
Academy · High Schoof
. Saturday, May 30
graduation , 7 p.m., Lyne
·MERCERVILLE
Center, University of Rio South Gallia High School
Grande/Rio
Grande graduation, 2 p.m., SGHS.
Community College.
TheS&lt;!ay, June 2
Saturday, May 23
GALLIPOLIS - Holzer
MERCERVILLE
, _ Clipic Retirees will meet for
Annual Brush College -ooq. lunch at noon at the
room school reunion fOr Courtside Bar and Grill , 308
family, friends and alumni, Second AYe. Pat Connors
potluck at 12:30 p.m. at ~ill be the speaker.
.Providence
Missionary
Card
Baptist Church located on .
Teens Run Road . For infor·
GALLIPOLIS - Edna
mation, call (614) 657Barry
will celebrate her
8032.
GALLIPOLIS ~ Ohio 97th birthday on May 21 .
Valley Christian School Cards can be sent to her at

shower

Custom des~ned &amp;/enered
J611t loved ones. 'MDny somp~s on D~p/4y

~co_y~~ore

446-6352
After hours and ror appl
Call L~yd Danner 446-4999
or Dav~ Tawney 446-1615

Punera( 1fomes
Herb, lea11, 1awl, lVIe/isJ« ?H Toe Moore - DiMors
420
A~~nue, Gallipnli• , Oll • (740) 446-0832
208 Muin Slrvot, Vinton, Oll •(740) 388-8321
•

iot

.

lrimrli -erntinel • Page As

Lany L Mitchell
Larry L. Mitchell. 60. of Ga llipoli&gt;, passed away ,
Thur,day, May 14,2009. at Stenic Hil l&gt; Nursing Center.
H ~ was born Jan . 28. l'i4'J. in Gallia County, to the lat~
W1lham and M1ldred Dexter Mitchell.
· In addition to his parent;. he wa, preceded by one broth·
er, Denni&gt; MitchelL
·
Larry was a United States Army veteran and worked for
many years m the cons~ruction industry a&amp; a bricklayer.
He IS sum ved by fou r ch ildren, Ki'mberly Mitchell ,
Mildred M1tchell , an·d Larry Mitc~cll Jr:. ali of Lake ·
Charles. La .. and Tes; Manuel of North Carolina: I I
grandchildren; three ~i;ter&gt;. Kathy Garnes and Romona
Mitchell. both of Bidwell. and Marjor_ie (Howard)
Moore of Rome, Ga .: and two broth.e rs. William
(Sandra) Mitchell of Bidwell. and Sammy Mitchell of
Gallipo lis.
·
Services will be I p.m. Wednesday, May 20, 2009. at the
Waugh -Halley-Wood Funeral Home, with the Rev. Gene
Armstrong offic iating. Burial will follow in the Pine Street
~e metery. Friends may call at the funeral home on
fucsday. M_ay 19.2009 , from 6 to 8 p.m.
.
M1htary funeralhonors will be presented at .the cemetery
by the Gaiha County Veterans Funeral Detail.
Pallbearers will tie Dennis Mitchell Jr., Dwight Mitchell.
Kyle Mitchell , Nikolas Mitchell , Demetrius Games and
Keith Sheets.
.
. An online gue~t registry is available at wa~gh-haliey·
wood.com
·
··

Tommy L Queen
Tommy L. Queen: 70. pa&gt;scd away Monday, April 27;
2009, m Tarpon Springs , Fla.
Born Aug. 19. 1938. in Gallia County. he graduated from
Gallia Academy High School.
·
·
.
·
·
He was a long-time Col_umbus, Ohio. barber, and retired
from Rican Automotive.
· ·
· :
He was preceded in death by his father, Earl. and wives;' .
Ann and Marlene.
·
He is survived by his mother !,.aura, brother Ric,childreri
John, Cindy, Christa and Carolee, and grandchildrell.
·
. Arrangements were by Dobies Funeral Home at Tarpon
Spnngs.
.
.
·

Gallia County calendar

Deaths

I.

.

Dakota Lee Marshall

Dallas Janey

.'

No time· to hide

He was born Aug. 12, 1930, in Red House, W.Va .. to the
late Jacob and Bertha Janey.
Mr. Jant:y worked as a plumber and a union
pipefitter. Mr. Janey also was a member of the Chun:h of
Christ.
He is survived by his wife of 53 years, Dorothy Janey;
son, Paul and Angela Janey; daughters, Mary and Tom
Crisp, Debra Blevins, Joyce and Kimberly and Adam
Barrett; grandchildren, Heather, Bethany, Jessica. Sam,
Rachel, Brooke, Nathan, Moq~an,Amara, Elana , Jenna and
Kati; great-grandchildren, Nicolette, Christopher, Lillian
and Tristan; and a twin sister, Alice Kyle.
He is preceded in death by his son, Ray Janey; grandson,
Stephen Crisp; and eight brothers and sisters.
.
Services will be I p.m. Tuesday, May 19, 2009, at the
Anderson Mcl)aniel Funeral Home in Pomeroy. Burial will
follow at Salem Center Cemetery. Vi siting boUJ's will be on
Monday, May 18, 2009 from 5 to 7 p.m . at the funeral
' home.
A registyy is available on-line at www.andersonmcdaniel.com .

Dakota .Lee Marshall. 12, of Middleport , is resting in the
arms of Jesus after leaving us Friday, May 15 2009 at
Nationwide Children's Hospital in Columbus. '
'
He was born Dec. 13, 1996, to Lorna Marshall and Mike
Vance ·of Middleport. The family attended the Rutland
Church of God at Rutland.
Besides his parents, he is survived by sisters, Carrie
(Adam) Barton of Middleport, and Brandy Vance, and a
niece, Sierra Barton, of Middleport; an aunt, June Marshall ,
and cousin, Kendra Marshall, of Syracuse; grandfather,
Bob Vance of Middleport; and several other aunts, uncles
and cousins . .
He was preceded by grandparents, Harold and Rena
Marshall .
Services will be I p.m. Monday, May 18, 2009, at the
Birchfjeld Funeral Home in Rutland. with Pastor Don
Combs officiating. Burial wjll follow in Sandhill Cemetery
at Long Bottom.
·
·.
The family will receive friends on Monday for one hour
prior to the ~etvices.
· ·
.
.
The family asks that in lieu of flowers, donations be
Dallas Janey, 78, of Langsville, passed away Friday, May
rs, 40()9, at his residence.
.
.
made to. the funeral home to help with Dakota's expenses.

fACE TRANSPLANT!

t!Ctme!5 -~enttnel

0

~r.

I NEED A

Former Vice President
Dick Cheney invites public
debate on the use of torture,
or "extreme duress" as he
euphemistically calls it, to
secure intelligence from
suspected or actual foes.
Even his daughter, Liz
Cheney, got into the act,
ripping a page from Alaska
LETTERS TO THE
Gov. Sarah Palin's stump
EDITOR
to
accuse
speeches
President
Barack
Obama
of
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be
"being' soft on terrorists ."
less than 300 words. All letters are subject to editing,
Like many political
lnust be signed, and include address and telephone · observers, I had hoped to
humber: No .unsigned letters will be published. Letters
enjoy the end of Cheney's
~hou14 _be in: good taste, addressing issues, not perefforts to shape pubic polisonalltzes. Letters of thanks to organizations and indicy. especially in the area of
national security.
Yiduals will not be accepted for publication.
However, Cheney has
willingly agreed to not only
serve
as
national
spokesperson for the previReader Services
ous administration, but it
appears he's also signed on
Correction Polley
Third Avenue , Gallipolis. OH
as spokesman of the supOur main conc:em In all siOries islo bo 4563t . Periodical postage paid
·accurate. Uyou know ot an error In a at Gallipolis.
posedly · rebranded and
'story. please call one ot our newsrooms. · Member: The Associated Press.
retooled Republican Party.
the
West
Virginia
Press
And who IS the "model
Association. and the Ohio
Cktr malo numbn am:
Republican"
of the new
Newspaper As.ociatlon.
tfribunr • Gallipols, OH
GOP,
"Face
the Nation"
POalmlatar: Send address ·cor·
(740) 446-2342
rections to the Gallipolis Daily
asked Cheney last week?
Sentfnel • Pomeroy, OH
Tribune, 825 _Third Avenue,
Radio talk-show entertainer
(740) 992·2155.
Gallipolis, OH 45631.
Rush Limbaugh? Former
l\rgilltr • Pl. Pleasant, WV
Sl!cretary
of State Colin
(304) 675-1333
Subscription Rates
Powell? Cheney choose
By carrier or motor route
4 weeki .
'11.30
our Wlbt!ta n:
Limbaugh.
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tJnfortunately for the forSunday ...............'1.50
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mer
vice president - and
S...lor.Citizen rat..
.· .Sentinel• Pomeroy, OH
for the country
fortunately
211-k• .... ~ ... " ,. , .'59.61
.WW.mydlllyltiiiiMI.com
- · the Obama administra52 - k • .. : ... .• ..•.'118.ll0
l\rpllrt • ·Pt. Pteqtan~ WV
~ should remit , In advaooe
tion
is now in tbC: driver's
www.mydlltyreg~st~r.com
diNc:O 10 1he Gal~ Doily Tri:June. f'lo
seat, and all of this public
...W.I!Ab• by mall pomilllid In .....
bullying and nonsensical
homocarrler_ll_
spewing by Cheney is notha:rikAr • Gallipolis, 0H
Mall
Subscription
ing more than a d1straction
mdtowwaemydltllrtJibune.eom
lntlde
COUnty
to
further divide people at a
Sentinel • Pomeroy, OH
12 Weeks . ............'3!;.26
•
time
when we should itll be
rndiiiiiWSemydlll)llllllntl.cam 26 Weeks .. .', .........'70.70
working
together to make
1\rgi•tu • Pt. P1easanl, WV
52 )'leeks ...... ... . ..'1 40.11
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our nation sounder and
safer.
Outalde County
(USPS 431 840)
t2 Weeks ......•....• .'56.55
Since the Bush adminisOhio Valley ·P ublllhlng Co. 26 Weeks ........ , .•.'113.60
tration
· did not give the
; Published every Sunday, 825 52 Weeks ... :. , •..... '227.2t
American people, much

~unbap

Dr. Philip L Edmistan

mist at the Brookings Obama has insisted repeat·
Institution, captured our edly that a government-cur.
feelings in the New York system is off the table. Hi!1
Cokle
Ttn!es: "I had a
Van critics refuse to believf
lind
Winkle moment, as i I had him.
,
Steven
fallen asleep in 1977 and
Take the Wall Stree~
.woke up again this mom- Journal. editorial ~age
Roberts
ing."
'
hi b 11 d h 0 a~r;
wcaegetat
As Aaron's comment indi- . wants to create a "new enll·
cates, confidence might be tlement" that "woul&lt;.
~ shorter sllpply than cash. quickly crowd out private,
Still, skepticism is the The healthcare ISSUe resem- insurance as people gravionly sensible mindset when bles the Middle East, a land- tated to heavily subsidize(
it comes to · healtbcare scape Ii~red with brn~en policies, eventually leadint
refonn. Obama went way piomises, failed hOpes and to a single-payer system." .
· ·
If be •s going to succeed
overboard in using words dee· p. susp•c•ousne~
on a11
like "historic" and "water- · sides. And that lack of trust Obama has to isolate t~
shed" to describe his White · centeJ:s on one key element ideologues on both side!!(
House meeting. He forgot· .of the debate - whether to . the far left that really wantt~
to mind the gaps.
·
create a public insurance a government-run system
Start with the treasury plan that competes with pri- and the far right that rean):
gap. Just as Obama was vate companies.
wants no change at an:
lavishing praise on healthSupporters of the idea are Fortunately, Sen. Charlet'
· care executives, his own absolutely convinced - or Schumer has offered a use-;
budget office reported that so they say - that without ful set ofconciliatory ideall
this year's deficit would a public ·plan int]Qencing Any public plan, he sug,:.
surpass previous estimates the marketplace, private gests, should not enjoy tbi
and reach $1.84 trillion. A · in~urers will never provide unfair advantages feared bj
day later,' trustees warned adequate coverage for the Journal: no subsidizec·
that Medicare was facing a higll-risk or low-wage fam- premiurns, no lower pay;
"significantly less favor- ilies. In the words of New outs to providers, nc'
able" financial outlook. York Times columnist Paul requirements that doctoU:
And yet the president still · Krugman, insurance com- and hospitals must partie~
insists he can find the $1.5 panies are "major villains", pate.
·trillion needed to finance that will always put maxi·
Ol]luna has to explainJ
his reform proposals. His mizing profit ahead ofsetv- honestly, how he's gomg t(
· "watershed" is looking a bit ing people. Adds Ohio Sen. ·finance his reforms. And II(;
more like a cold shower.
Sherrod . Brown: "Private has. to embrace, honestly, f
It's certainly encouraging · insurance plans are often public plan that preserv~·
that healthcare executives just· one step ahead of tbe the free market and pre'
feel compelled to promise a sheriff."
eludes a national takeover
cost-reduction effort, but · The trust gap is equally' Otherwise, the gaps CO!Jk
frankly, we' ve heard all this . wide on the other ·side . . swallow him up;
•
before. Many times. When Critics of a public plan are
(Cokie Robens'/atest booli
we
started
covering absolutely convinced - or is "Ladies of Liberty: Th&lt;
Congress in the late 1970s, so they say - that federal Women Who Shaped, Ou~
~·hospital cost containment"
intervention in the market Nation" (William Morrow
became a major buzzword, can lead to only one out- 2008). Steve and Cokii
but it never happened. come: nationalization of Robens carr be readred ar
Henry J. Aaron, an econo- health care. No matter that stevecokie@gmail.com).

~unbav

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

2009

Hrs: M·F

352 THIRD AVENUE •GALLIPOLIS, OH

Arbors of Gallipolis, Room
221 , I 70 Pinecrest Drive,
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.
GALLIPOLIS - . Ruth
Thivener will celebrate
her 90th birthday on May
25. Cards can be sent ·to
her at 5118 Cypres·s Creek
Drive , Orlando , Fla .
32.811.
COLUMBUS - Virginia
(Boots Persinger) Wright
will celebrate her 85th
birthday on May 29 . Cards
may be sent to her at 292
· ~khards . Road, Columbus,
Ohio 43214 .

GALLIPOLIS - Lillian
Hurt is celebrating her 93rd:
birthday oil May 30. Cards
can be sent to her at 727.
Fourth Ave,, Apartmen·t
209, · Gallipoli s. Ohio
4563 I .
.
. .

E-mail community calen~
dar
items
to
mdtrr e ws @myda i lytri;
bune.com. Fax announce·'
merrts to 446-3008. Mait
items IC~ 825 ·Third Ave.,
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 ~

Arrrrouncemenls may also
be dropped off at the:
Tribune office.
·

740-667-303
Join us for ... '

. Spring

Revival
MAY 17 • 20,2009

with
Rev. David &amp; Debbie Brown
Da1 id gradumcd fmm Galli a A&lt;-ademy, and
altcndc-J I he First Ch ur~h of · the Nutarene ,
during his .teen )car,, He grad uated frum
Mount Vernon Nu7arcne l lnivcrsity whcit' he
met his wife [khbie who abonttemiC&lt;J Mount
Vernon, m~unring in cduc"Uti':tn.
Sunday serYices l 0:40 AM and 6:00 PM
Mnnday through Wednesday 7:00 PM

o/1'; ~ fo--J ~ 6eei"? ~/'

c;Jfo#tCfl~(~
.

·

· ofThc. ·

�I

·6unba~ ltmtl ·itnttnd

'

OPINION

Pagei\4.

· Sunday, May 17,

Sunday, May 17,2009

·Obituaries

Obama must min~ the gaps
825 Third Avenue • Gallipolis, Ohio

(740) 446·2342 ·FAX (740) 446-3008
www.mydallytrlbune.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher
Diane Hill
Controller

Kevin Kelly
Managing Editor

Letrers ro .rhe editor are welcome. They should be less
rhan 300 words. Alllellers are ·subject to editing and musl
be signed and incl11de address and telephone number. No
unsigned lerter&gt;· •·ill be published. Letrers should be in
good taste , ad~ressing issues, not personalities.
'

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Sunday, May 17, the !37th day of 2009. There
are 228 days left in the year.
.
Today's Highlight in History: On May 17, 1954. the U.S.
Supreme Court unani~ously struck down racially ·segregated pub he schools m 1ts Brown v. Board of Education of
Topeka decision.
. . On _this date: In I 792,the New York Stock Exchange had
1ts ongms as a group of brokers met under a tree on Wall
Street.
In 1814, Norway's constitution was signed,providing for
·
.
a l•m•ted monarchy.
In ~~49, fire erupted in St. Louis, resulting in the loss of
three hves, more; than &lt;WO buildings and some two dozen
.
steamsh1ps. · ·
In 1875, the first Kentucky Derby was run· the winner
was Aristides. ·
·
'
·
I~ 1938, Congress pass~ the Second Vinson Act, prov•dmg for a strengthened U.S. Navy. The radio quiz show
"lnfonnation, Please!" made its debut on the NBC Blue
Network.
·
In 1939, Britain'S King George VI and Queen Elizabeth
arr_1~ed m Qu~bec on the first visit to Canada by reigning
Bnt1sh sovere1gns.
In 1946, President Harry S. Truman seized control of the
nation's railroads, delaying - but not preventing - a
threatened strike by engineers and trainmen.
In 1973, the Senate began 'its televised hearings into the
Watergate scandal.
.. · . .
.In 1980: rioting thatclain:ed.181!ves erupted in Miami's
l,.1berty C!ty after :m all-wh1te JUry m Tampa acquitted four
former Muu~u pohce officers of fatally beating black insurance executtve Arthur McDuffie.
In . 1987, 37 American sailors were killed when .an Iraqi
waqllane - attacked the U.S. Navy frigate Stark in the
Perswn Gulf (Iraq and the U.S. called the attack a mistake.)
Ten years ago: The Supreme Court banned states from
~ayin.g lowe~ welfare benefits to newcomers as opposed to
longt1me restdents, Labor Party leader Ehud Barak unseat·
ed _Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Israeli elections.
Makah Indians in Washington state harpooned a gray whale
for the first time in 70 years.
.·
. . Five years ago: Massachusetts became·.the first state to ·
4llow legal same-sex marriages. Abdel-Zahraa Othman,
~lso known as lzzadine Saleem, head of the Iraqi
Governing Council, was killed in a suicide car bornbing in
~aghdad. More than I00 people were killed in a prison fire
m northern Honduras, Transsexuals were cleared to compete in the Olympics for the first time. Actor Tony Randall
died in New York at age 84.
. One year ago: Sen. EdWard Kennedy, D-Mass., was
flown to a Boston hospital after suffering a seizure at his
Cape Cod home. (l:le was later diagnosed with a cancerous
l!rai~ tumor.) Nearing the. end of his five-day Mideast trip,
President George W. Bush held a rapid·fire series of diplotnatlc meetmgs at the Red Sea resort of Sharm EI-Sheik in
:{lgypt. Kentt1cky Derby winner Big Brown ran away with
the Preakness. (However, the horse's Triple Crown quest
ended three weeks later when he finished last in the
Belmont Stakes.)
: Thought for Today: "I always have a quotation for everythin!\ - it saves original thinking." - Dorothy L. Sayers,
Enghsh author (1893-1957).

In
the
London
Underground, a recorded
voice warns travelers to
"mind the gap" between an
incoming train and the station platfonn. The phrase
became so popular that it
has. spawned a book, a TV
qmz show and countless Tshr;President Obama tries
to overhaul the healthcare
system, he actually has to
mind two gaps: a treasury
gap and a trust gap. Either
one could derail his ambitious plans to cover the 47
million Americans who
lack health insurance.
Without a doubt, there
are some positive si~s. At
a White House meetmg last
week, maj'?r players in the
healthcare mdustyy - docc
tors, drug makers, insurers,
hospitals - pledged to
reduce the rapid rise in
healthcare costs by 1.5 percent a year for 10 years.
Since healthcare accounts
for about 17. percent of the
entire American economy,
those savings could, in theory, amount to $2 trillion.
Obama has clearly made
headway with his argument
that everyone suffers from
spiraling health costs:
Workers lose wages, businesses lose customers and
young families can't afford
.premiums or find jobs that
provide benefits. In the Iatest . Kaiser
Family
Foundation survey, 59 percent said healthcare reform
is more important than
ever, while only 37 percent
called it too costly in the
current economy.

•

Philip L. Edmiston, 84, of Vinton, passed away
Priday, May 15, 2009, in Holzer Medical Center at
6aliipolis.
' Dr. Edmiston practiced veterinaty medicine in Gallia
County and the surrounding area for 47 years prior to his
retirement in 2003.
.
.:"J?oc," as he was rondly called, was born Aug. 9, 1924,
mVmton , son of the late Clayte and Grace Casto Edmiston.
·' H~ was a Vinton High School graduate, Class of 1942;
rece1ved a B.S. pegree, Ohio State University. 1951; and his
D.octorofVetennayy Medicine, Ohio State University 1955.
·•tn addition, be was a World War II staff sergeant ~eteran
vlho served in Japan and the Far East, member of the
Vint'?n American Legion Post No. 161, and also the Vinton
Bapt1st Church.
'
.! Dr. Edmiston mmted Ruby Ernestine Russell Edmiston
6p March 30, 1950, in Gallipolis, and she preceded him in
death on Dee. 2, 1995.
·
' Surviving are two daughters and a son, Phyllis Ann
(Richard) Brown of Vinton , and children, Wendy (Todd)
}'j:tne, Brock and Avery, all of Marion, Ohio, and Joshua
Brown at home, Debbie (Dale) Grant of Vinton, and children, M1sty (Ben) Blackburn, Kendra and Kelly, all of
VintOn, and Tisha and Trevor at home, and Mark Pat
(Che~l) Edmiston of Dayton; a brother, Harold (Coleen)
E'dmlSion of Land O'Lakes, Fla.; a sister, Mary Lanier of
V'mton; and and several nieces and nephews.
~ Servi~es will be _II a.m. Tuesday, May 19, 2009, in the
Harvest1me Worsh1p Center (the fonner Vinton Baptist
Church), Main Street, Vinton , with the Rev. Chester Hess
o'lficiating. Burial will follow in the Vinton Memorial Park.
Military graveside rites will be conducted by the Vinton
·
American Legion Post No. 16 I.
Friends may call at the McCoy-Moore Funeral Home at
Y,intiln, on Monday, May 18,2009, from 4 to 8 p.tn.
. Jn lieu of flowers, memorial Ggifts may be sent to the
Meigs County Humane Society, P.O. Box 682, Pomeroy
· ·
'
Ohio 45769.

Rif

a

'

f

·'

11na Maria ·aarsotti

i
Tiria Maria Barsotti, 97, Winter Haven, Fla., formerly of
Ga!Hpolis, died Friday, May 15, 2009, in Winter Haven.
Mass of Christian Burial will be 10 a.m. Thursday, May
21, 2009, at St. Louis Catholic Church. Burial will be in
Ohio Valley Memory Gardens. Friends may call at the
Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral Home from 6 to 8 p.m.
Wednesday.
·
· A complete obituary will appear in a later edition of the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune.

'

: i

,.

,,
·.

••••••••••••

•

.

stains our nation's moral
fabric. But, if the opposition believed that the gruesome procedures produced
some actionable intelligence that k.ept the country
Donna · from being harmed, do tell
Brazile
and explain it to us.
Perhaps lawmakers or the
commission's
members
could ask Cheney and oth'less some . in their · own e~s \Vhy,when in our e~tire
party or the opposition· ·h•story from the Arnencan
party, the optio·n of a mean- . · Revoluhon thr?ugh the first
ingful national debate on . Iraq War we d1d not see the
torture, it is vitally impor' · need to torture, what so
tant that the Obama admin- chlll)ged as to also change
istration gives Congress or our national character?
an independent commis'Yhen the_ f~te of our
sian the opportunity to air natJ.on was Ill Its g~eatest
our collect•ve dirty laundry. · pent, Abraham Lmcoln
Sunshine, as was once neuher authonzed nor confamously stated is the best doned
torture
of
disinfectant.
'
Confederate prisoners to
I know the president has obtain intelligence.
·
much on his plate, but with . The Umted States and
the release 'o f the memos on democracy has had no
t~e · interrogation•. tech- ~ore
despicable
or
mques and the upcoming tm"'!oral an enemy than the
release of the internal Naz1s. Yet we d1d not torreport by the Justice ture Oennan POWs, either
·Department, this issue will as an unwritten or authonot go away. Nor, so it rized activity. President
seems, will ChenexDwight D . Eisenhower,
lt's timeweactlik:eadults Gen. George C. Marshall,
and allow the infonnation, President Harry S. Truman,
including the detainee pho- President Franklin D.
tos that the administration Roosevelt
and
Gen .
.had once agreed to release, Douglas MacArthur never
to
come
forward. argued for the torture ofour
Somehow, I believe the enemies.
In ·fact, .the National
Court will hot reverse
course and allow · them to Archives records of the ·
come to the forefront. So let OSS (Office of Strategic
the country debate the mer- Services) has a document
its. This is not just about the · showing that' MacArthur
safety of our brave men and personally
nixed
a
women in uniform fighting · Hollywood producer's proabroad; it is about the rule posal to make a propaganda
of law·and the reputation of film out of interviewing
o~: country and all of its Japanese prisoners of war.
Citizens.
In further fact, it was men
For the record, I opposed of this caliber who estabthe use of torture. It is ille- lished at Nuremberg the ·
gal. Worse, tiJ.e use of it legal dictum that the person
.'

StevenKock

Steven Kock, 62, Vinton, died Friday, May 15, :2009,
at the home of his daughter; Stephanie Isaac of Vinton.
·
Arrangements will be annoQnced' by . the Rader-Lynch
and Dobbs Funeral Home, London,.Ohio.,Local arrangements are by McCoy-Moore Funeral Home, Vinton.

"

Occupants escape
.fire in apm,ntent ·
Bv 'KEVIN KELLY .
MCTNEWSOMVOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

.,.

who "followed the rules" ir'
committing war crimes i1
as culpable as those whc
gave the order.
,
The clerk who processee:
the · paperwork
fo.1.'
Auschwitz and the soldie1
who kept guard over the
Holocaust victims wert·
held to be morally liable fot.;
their actions.'
,.,
· ·It is Cheney who be a~·
.the burden of making lti!
case. Cheney was instru1,,
mental in introducing itl
and, 1f he wants to . gc.
before a Commission anC'
discuss what he authorize ·
let it be.
:.
Torture is so .fundamental,
a change in our nation·,·
moral compass that it mus1.
be debated. It shows ho\\
far we have alread)
cha)lged that we ever
debate what Was previous!)
a settled matter: torture i1
immoral. Period.
If torture is accepted as t 1
federal domestic tool t~ 1
elicit information froll"
domestic enemies, woulc
not it also flow into prac,.
tices of local police?
..
It is Orwellian doubles•
peak to argue that torture i;·
mereLy an "extreme dures!• ·
method that produce!•
fruit." lt is forbidden fruit·
poisonous in the extreme. ·
Bring it on, Mr. Cheney '
Let there be a national,
debate. You have much tC'
answer for. Meanwhile, Mr
President, it's time we ere·
ate an independent com·
mission to investigate these
matters.

(Donna Brazile i~ a polit·
ica/ commemaror on CNN
ABC and NPR ; crmrrihtlt·
ing columnist 10 Roll Call
the newspaper of Capilo,
Hill; and former campaigr,
manager.for AI Gore).
-1

,.
!. •

GALLIPOLIS -Occupants of a.seclond floor apartment .
at 848 Second Ave. escaped unharmed frOm a fire Saturday
. morning, the Gallipolis Volunteer Fire Department reported.
'
.
.
· Firefighters were called to·the scene at 9:50a.m. when a
fire of as-yet undetennined cause broke out in the apartment. Several occupants fled the two-story structure with
the help of passersby, including Mike Whitt, who joined the
Staff of Ohio Valley Publishing C9.last week in circulation.
~ Three trucks and about 20 firefighters responded to 'the
call, and officials estimated damage to t)le ·apartment as
moderate. The buildin~ is owned by Joseph Cremeens of
&lt;!Jallipolis. Officials sa1d minor smoke damage may have
been done to the first floor apartment.
.
.
· The GVFD was on the scene for an hour.
· Earlier'Satt1rday, Gallia County 9-l-1 was notified of a ·
ohe-vehicle accident on County Road 61 (Homewood
Prive) near Bidwell in which the vehicle left the road and
ioHed over, with the driver ejected. ·
·
·• HealthNet airlifted the driver to St. Mary's Medical
Center, Huntington, W.Va., for treatment. The accident,
which .occurred around 8:20a.m., is under iinvestigation by
the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway ·PatroL
Additional details were unavailable before pressume.
'
.

~ . Ohio to note Wright
.j brothers' first passenger
WEST MILTON (AP) - Ohio is recognizing a man who
was a trailblazer for all ·those people flying first class, business and coach.
·, Charley Furnas was the first passenger of Wil~ur and
Orville Wright, on · one of their early airplanes. On
s·aturday, a state historical marker noting the 1908 flight is
bein~ dedicated in West Milton , the southwest Ohio com·
mumty where Furnas was bom in 1880 .
• Historical accounts refer to Furnas as a mechanic who
had done odd jobs for .the Wrights in Dayton and pestered
them to teach him to fly. He showed up at their camp in
Kitty Hawk, N.C., in May 1908 and wound up as a passenger of first Wilbur and then Orville in their a1rplane . ·

Community.
.events ·

graduation , 2 p.m., First
Baptist Church.
Sunday, May 24
GALLIPOLIS - Fred
Monday, May 18
and Mary Lewis Harrison
GALLIPOLIS
·
family reunion, II a.m. to 3
Victims advocate Regina p.m., ' Raccoon Creek
Brown and Serenity House County Park. For informa·
Director Melissa Kimmel tion, call 379-.2581. . · .
will
s.peak
to
the · VINTON - Memorial
Gallipolis Nei~hborho~d Day ceremony by American
Watch, 6 p.m ., Galha . Legion Post 161 , ·2 p.m .,
.County Semor Resource Vinton Memorial Park.
Center.
·•
·
MQntlay,May 2S
Thesday, May 19
GALLIPOLIS ·
Memorial Day commemo· ·
GALLIPOLIS
Ch~istian : ration by Cadot-Biessing
Gallipolis
Women's
. Connection Camp .126, Sons of Union .
meeting, noon, at !)ave's Veterans of the Civil War,
American Grill . at 323 9 · a.m.; · Pipe · Street
· .
Upper River Road behind Cemetery.
the Super 8 Motel. Please
GAL.LIPOLIS ~ Annual
call Linda at 446-4319 or Memorial . Day. parade
Judy at 245-5181 to make organized by the Galli a
a reserVation ; A plant and County Veterans Service
book sale will be the spe- · Office, 10:.30 a.m. ; fol·
cial . feature; bring indoor lowed by an 11 a.m. cere·
or outdoor. plants to share mony at , the Veterans
with others. Books will be Memorial, Gallipolis City
welcomed ·_ too, · Mary · Park. ' ·
· ·'
· . Thesday, May 26
Eckler will be th.e guest
speaker. Bring a friend and . EWING TON · ·
join us for fun and fellow- American Legion Post 161
ship.
will meet at 7:30 p.m. at
Ewington Academy. On ·
Thursday, May 21
RIO
GRANDE ·
the agenda will be a dis·
Certficate ceremony for cussion of the events
Buckeye· Hills Career involved iQ the Aug. I
Center graduates; 6:30p.m., Vinton 'Bean Dinner. Ail
Lyne Center, University of members are encouraged to
Rio · Grande/Rio Grande attend . A Happy Hour
Community College.
starts at 6:30p.m .
Friday, May 29
VINTON
Huntington/Morgan Crime
CHESHIRE River
Watch will·meet at 6 p.m. in Valley High School gradua·
the Vinton Village Hall.
tion, 7 p.m. , RVI:IS football
Friday, May 22
field (in ·case of rain: Lyne
RIO GRANDE - Gallia Center).
.
Academy · High Schoof
. Saturday, May 30
graduation , 7 p.m., Lyne
·MERCERVILLE
Center, University of Rio South Gallia High School
Grande/Rio
Grande graduation, 2 p.m., SGHS.
Community College.
TheS&lt;!ay, June 2
Saturday, May 23
GALLIPOLIS - Holzer
MERCERVILLE
, _ Clipic Retirees will meet for
Annual Brush College -ooq. lunch at noon at the
room school reunion fOr Courtside Bar and Grill , 308
family, friends and alumni, Second AYe. Pat Connors
potluck at 12:30 p.m. at ~ill be the speaker.
.Providence
Missionary
Card
Baptist Church located on .
Teens Run Road . For infor·
GALLIPOLIS - Edna
mation, call (614) 657Barry
will celebrate her
8032.
GALLIPOLIS ~ Ohio 97th birthday on May 21 .
Valley Christian School Cards can be sent to her at

shower

Custom des~ned &amp;/enered
J611t loved ones. 'MDny somp~s on D~p/4y

~co_y~~ore

446-6352
After hours and ror appl
Call L~yd Danner 446-4999
or Dav~ Tawney 446-1615

Punera( 1fomes
Herb, lea11, 1awl, lVIe/isJ« ?H Toe Moore - DiMors
420
A~~nue, Gallipnli• , Oll • (740) 446-0832
208 Muin Slrvot, Vinton, Oll •(740) 388-8321
•

iot

.

lrimrli -erntinel • Page As

Lany L Mitchell
Larry L. Mitchell. 60. of Ga llipoli&gt;, passed away ,
Thur,day, May 14,2009. at Stenic Hil l&gt; Nursing Center.
H ~ was born Jan . 28. l'i4'J. in Gallia County, to the lat~
W1lham and M1ldred Dexter Mitchell.
· In addition to his parent;. he wa, preceded by one broth·
er, Denni&gt; MitchelL
·
Larry was a United States Army veteran and worked for
many years m the cons~ruction industry a&amp; a bricklayer.
He IS sum ved by fou r ch ildren, Ki'mberly Mitchell ,
Mildred M1tchell , an·d Larry Mitc~cll Jr:. ali of Lake ·
Charles. La .. and Tes; Manuel of North Carolina: I I
grandchildren; three ~i;ter&gt;. Kathy Garnes and Romona
Mitchell. both of Bidwell. and Marjor_ie (Howard)
Moore of Rome, Ga .: and two broth.e rs. William
(Sandra) Mitchell of Bidwell. and Sammy Mitchell of
Gallipo lis.
·
Services will be I p.m. Wednesday, May 20, 2009. at the
Waugh -Halley-Wood Funeral Home, with the Rev. Gene
Armstrong offic iating. Burial will follow in the Pine Street
~e metery. Friends may call at the funeral home on
fucsday. M_ay 19.2009 , from 6 to 8 p.m.
.
M1htary funeralhonors will be presented at .the cemetery
by the Gaiha County Veterans Funeral Detail.
Pallbearers will tie Dennis Mitchell Jr., Dwight Mitchell.
Kyle Mitchell , Nikolas Mitchell , Demetrius Games and
Keith Sheets.
.
. An online gue~t registry is available at wa~gh-haliey·
wood.com
·
··

Tommy L Queen
Tommy L. Queen: 70. pa&gt;scd away Monday, April 27;
2009, m Tarpon Springs , Fla.
Born Aug. 19. 1938. in Gallia County. he graduated from
Gallia Academy High School.
·
·
.
·
·
He was a long-time Col_umbus, Ohio. barber, and retired
from Rican Automotive.
· ·
· :
He was preceded in death by his father, Earl. and wives;' .
Ann and Marlene.
·
He is survived by his mother !,.aura, brother Ric,childreri
John, Cindy, Christa and Carolee, and grandchildrell.
·
. Arrangements were by Dobies Funeral Home at Tarpon
Spnngs.
.
.
·

Gallia County calendar

Deaths

I.

.

Dakota Lee Marshall

Dallas Janey

.'

No time· to hide

He was born Aug. 12, 1930, in Red House, W.Va .. to the
late Jacob and Bertha Janey.
Mr. Jant:y worked as a plumber and a union
pipefitter. Mr. Janey also was a member of the Chun:h of
Christ.
He is survived by his wife of 53 years, Dorothy Janey;
son, Paul and Angela Janey; daughters, Mary and Tom
Crisp, Debra Blevins, Joyce and Kimberly and Adam
Barrett; grandchildren, Heather, Bethany, Jessica. Sam,
Rachel, Brooke, Nathan, Moq~an,Amara, Elana , Jenna and
Kati; great-grandchildren, Nicolette, Christopher, Lillian
and Tristan; and a twin sister, Alice Kyle.
He is preceded in death by his son, Ray Janey; grandson,
Stephen Crisp; and eight brothers and sisters.
.
Services will be I p.m. Tuesday, May 19, 2009, at the
Anderson Mcl)aniel Funeral Home in Pomeroy. Burial will
follow at Salem Center Cemetery. Vi siting boUJ's will be on
Monday, May 18, 2009 from 5 to 7 p.m . at the funeral
' home.
A registyy is available on-line at www.andersonmcdaniel.com .

Dakota .Lee Marshall. 12, of Middleport , is resting in the
arms of Jesus after leaving us Friday, May 15 2009 at
Nationwide Children's Hospital in Columbus. '
'
He was born Dec. 13, 1996, to Lorna Marshall and Mike
Vance ·of Middleport. The family attended the Rutland
Church of God at Rutland.
Besides his parents, he is survived by sisters, Carrie
(Adam) Barton of Middleport, and Brandy Vance, and a
niece, Sierra Barton, of Middleport; an aunt, June Marshall ,
and cousin, Kendra Marshall, of Syracuse; grandfather,
Bob Vance of Middleport; and several other aunts, uncles
and cousins . .
He was preceded by grandparents, Harold and Rena
Marshall .
Services will be I p.m. Monday, May 18, 2009, at the
Birchfjeld Funeral Home in Rutland. with Pastor Don
Combs officiating. Burial wjll follow in Sandhill Cemetery
at Long Bottom.
·
·.
The family will receive friends on Monday for one hour
prior to the ~etvices.
· ·
.
.
The family asks that in lieu of flowers, donations be
Dallas Janey, 78, of Langsville, passed away Friday, May
rs, 40()9, at his residence.
.
.
made to. the funeral home to help with Dakota's expenses.

fACE TRANSPLANT!

t!Ctme!5 -~enttnel

0

~r.

I NEED A

Former Vice President
Dick Cheney invites public
debate on the use of torture,
or "extreme duress" as he
euphemistically calls it, to
secure intelligence from
suspected or actual foes.
Even his daughter, Liz
Cheney, got into the act,
ripping a page from Alaska
LETTERS TO THE
Gov. Sarah Palin's stump
EDITOR
to
accuse
speeches
President
Barack
Obama
of
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be
"being' soft on terrorists ."
less than 300 words. All letters are subject to editing,
Like many political
lnust be signed, and include address and telephone · observers, I had hoped to
humber: No .unsigned letters will be published. Letters
enjoy the end of Cheney's
~hou14 _be in: good taste, addressing issues, not perefforts to shape pubic polisonalltzes. Letters of thanks to organizations and indicy. especially in the area of
national security.
Yiduals will not be accepted for publication.
However, Cheney has
willingly agreed to not only
serve
as
national
spokesperson for the previReader Services
ous administration, but it
appears he's also signed on
Correction Polley
Third Avenue , Gallipolis. OH
as spokesman of the supOur main conc:em In all siOries islo bo 4563t . Periodical postage paid
·accurate. Uyou know ot an error In a at Gallipolis.
posedly · rebranded and
'story. please call one ot our newsrooms. · Member: The Associated Press.
retooled Republican Party.
the
West
Virginia
Press
And who IS the "model
Association. and the Ohio
Cktr malo numbn am:
Republican"
of the new
Newspaper As.ociatlon.
tfribunr • Gallipols, OH
GOP,
"Face
the Nation"
POalmlatar: Send address ·cor·
(740) 446-2342
rections to the Gallipolis Daily
asked Cheney last week?
Sentfnel • Pomeroy, OH
Tribune, 825 _Third Avenue,
Radio talk-show entertainer
(740) 992·2155.
Gallipolis, OH 45631.
Rush Limbaugh? Former
l\rgilltr • Pl. Pleasant, WV
Sl!cretary
of State Colin
(304) 675-1333
Subscription Rates
Powell? Cheney choose
By carrier or motor route
4 weeki .
'11.30
our Wlbt!ta n:
Limbaugh.
52 .......... ....... .'128.8$
rtnhnr • GalliPolis, OH
tJnfortunately for the forSunday ...............'1.50
.www.mydlllylrlbu~t.com
mer
vice president - and
S...lor.Citizen rat..
.· .Sentinel• Pomeroy, OH
for the country
fortunately
211-k• .... ~ ... " ,. , .'59.61
.WW.mydlllyltiiiiMI.com
- · the Obama administra52 - k • .. : ... .• ..•.'118.ll0
l\rpllrt • ·Pt. Pteqtan~ WV
~ should remit , In advaooe
tion
is now in tbC: driver's
www.mydlltyreg~st~r.com
diNc:O 10 1he Gal~ Doily Tri:June. f'lo
seat, and all of this public
...W.I!Ab• by mall pomilllid In .....
bullying and nonsensical
homocarrler_ll_
spewing by Cheney is notha:rikAr • Gallipolis, 0H
Mall
Subscription
ing more than a d1straction
mdtowwaemydltllrtJibune.eom
lntlde
COUnty
to
further divide people at a
Sentinel • Pomeroy, OH
12 Weeks . ............'3!;.26
•
time
when we should itll be
rndiiiiiWSemydlll)llllllntl.cam 26 Weeks .. .', .........'70.70
working
together to make
1\rgi•tu • Pt. P1easanl, WV
52 )'leeks ...... ... . ..'1 40.11
~s@mydatlyrlglattr.com
our nation sounder and
safer.
Outalde County
(USPS 431 840)
t2 Weeks ......•....• .'56.55
Since the Bush adminisOhio Valley ·P ublllhlng Co. 26 Weeks ........ , .•.'113.60
tration
· did not give the
; Published every Sunday, 825 52 Weeks ... :. , •..... '227.2t
American people, much

~unbap

Dr. Philip L Edmistan

mist at the Brookings Obama has insisted repeat·
Institution, captured our edly that a government-cur.
feelings in the New York system is off the table. Hi!1
Cokle
Ttn!es: "I had a
Van critics refuse to believf
lind
Winkle moment, as i I had him.
,
Steven
fallen asleep in 1977 and
Take the Wall Stree~
.woke up again this mom- Journal. editorial ~age
Roberts
ing."
'
hi b 11 d h 0 a~r;
wcaegetat
As Aaron's comment indi- . wants to create a "new enll·
cates, confidence might be tlement" that "woul&lt;.
~ shorter sllpply than cash. quickly crowd out private,
Still, skepticism is the The healthcare ISSUe resem- insurance as people gravionly sensible mindset when bles the Middle East, a land- tated to heavily subsidize(
it comes to · healtbcare scape Ii~red with brn~en policies, eventually leadint
refonn. Obama went way piomises, failed hOpes and to a single-payer system." .
· ·
If be •s going to succeed
overboard in using words dee· p. susp•c•ousne~
on a11
like "historic" and "water- · sides. And that lack of trust Obama has to isolate t~
shed" to describe his White · centeJ:s on one key element ideologues on both side!!(
House meeting. He forgot· .of the debate - whether to . the far left that really wantt~
to mind the gaps.
·
create a public insurance a government-run system
Start with the treasury plan that competes with pri- and the far right that rean):
gap. Just as Obama was vate companies.
wants no change at an:
lavishing praise on healthSupporters of the idea are Fortunately, Sen. Charlet'
· care executives, his own absolutely convinced - or Schumer has offered a use-;
budget office reported that so they say - that without ful set ofconciliatory ideall
this year's deficit would a public ·plan int]Qencing Any public plan, he sug,:.
surpass previous estimates the marketplace, private gests, should not enjoy tbi
and reach $1.84 trillion. A · in~urers will never provide unfair advantages feared bj
day later,' trustees warned adequate coverage for the Journal: no subsidizec·
that Medicare was facing a higll-risk or low-wage fam- premiurns, no lower pay;
"significantly less favor- ilies. In the words of New outs to providers, nc'
able" financial outlook. York Times columnist Paul requirements that doctoU:
And yet the president still · Krugman, insurance com- and hospitals must partie~
insists he can find the $1.5 panies are "major villains", pate.
·trillion needed to finance that will always put maxi·
Ol]luna has to explainJ
his reform proposals. His mizing profit ahead ofsetv- honestly, how he's gomg t(
· "watershed" is looking a bit ing people. Adds Ohio Sen. ·finance his reforms. And II(;
more like a cold shower.
Sherrod . Brown: "Private has. to embrace, honestly, f
It's certainly encouraging · insurance plans are often public plan that preserv~·
that healthcare executives just· one step ahead of tbe the free market and pre'
feel compelled to promise a sheriff."
eludes a national takeover
cost-reduction effort, but · The trust gap is equally' Otherwise, the gaps CO!Jk
frankly, we' ve heard all this . wide on the other ·side . . swallow him up;
•
before. Many times. When Critics of a public plan are
(Cokie Robens'/atest booli
we
started
covering absolutely convinced - or is "Ladies of Liberty: Th&lt;
Congress in the late 1970s, so they say - that federal Women Who Shaped, Ou~
~·hospital cost containment"
intervention in the market Nation" (William Morrow
became a major buzzword, can lead to only one out- 2008). Steve and Cokii
but it never happened. come: nationalization of Robens carr be readred ar
Henry J. Aaron, an econo- health care. No matter that stevecokie@gmail.com).

~unbav

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

2009

Hrs: M·F

352 THIRD AVENUE •GALLIPOLIS, OH

Arbors of Gallipolis, Room
221 , I 70 Pinecrest Drive,
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.
GALLIPOLIS - . Ruth
Thivener will celebrate
her 90th birthday on May
25. Cards can be sent ·to
her at 5118 Cypres·s Creek
Drive , Orlando , Fla .
32.811.
COLUMBUS - Virginia
(Boots Persinger) Wright
will celebrate her 85th
birthday on May 29 . Cards
may be sent to her at 292
· ~khards . Road, Columbus,
Ohio 43214 .

GALLIPOLIS - Lillian
Hurt is celebrating her 93rd:
birthday oil May 30. Cards
can be sent to her at 727.
Fourth Ave,, Apartmen·t
209, · Gallipoli s. Ohio
4563 I .
.
. .

E-mail community calen~
dar
items
to
mdtrr e ws @myda i lytri;
bune.com. Fax announce·'
merrts to 446-3008. Mait
items IC~ 825 ·Third Ave.,
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 ~

Arrrrouncemenls may also
be dropped off at the:
Tribune office.
·

740-667-303
Join us for ... '

. Spring

Revival
MAY 17 • 20,2009

with
Rev. David &amp; Debbie Brown
Da1 id gradumcd fmm Galli a A&lt;-ademy, and
altcndc-J I he First Ch ur~h of · the Nutarene ,
during his .teen )car,, He grad uated frum
Mount Vernon Nu7arcne l lnivcrsity whcit' he
met his wife [khbie who abonttemiC&lt;J Mount
Vernon, m~unring in cduc"Uti':tn.
Sunday serYices l 0:40 AM and 6:00 PM
Mnnday through Wednesday 7:00 PM

o/1'; ~ fo--J ~ 6eei"? ~/'

c;Jfo#tCfl~(~
.

·

· ofThc. ·

�&gt;

OHIO

:iunba; limts ·itnttntl

Special meeting to
-~iscuss schQOIIevy

bt the Open, Page B2

•

Weekly Ohio fishing report, Page B3
Rio Grande roondup, Page B4

reunion set for May23

HOEFLICHOMYDAILVSENTINELCOM

CHESHIRE Kyger oils years are also welcome with their classmates.
Creek alumni's fourth annu- to attend .
Special dasses to be
al reunion is Saturday, May
The comroittee of Steve acknowledged this year are
23, starting 8 p.m. at the Henderson,Avalee (Johnson) · 1959, 1969, 1979 and 1989,
Moose Lodge in Point · Swisher, Lois (Rodgers) or the 501h, 40th, 30th and
Pleasant, W.Va. All gradual- "'5nyder, Sherry McCumber 20th.
ing classes of Kyger Creek Roberts, Haroldine (Thomas)
Dancing to the oldies and
High School and their guests Oiler, Barton Stump and Bob music will be ~rovided by
are welcome to attend.
Polcyn invites every local OJ Rick Roach. Door P.rizes
·
aluinni
to come and reunite and .special gifts Will be
Other guests
from
previ.
.

Sunday;May 17,2009

awarded during the evening.
The first 50 alumni to attend
will receive .a special sur·
prise when registering.
·
Those planning .to a~nd
are asked to RSVP to one of
the commiltee members,
Lois Snyder at (740) 446~
3488, or Avalee Swisher at
(304) 675-4831.

Point burns Red Devils, ·
wins sectional crown
Bv ANNA JESSMER
IIIIDRSPORT$GUY£WLYREGISTER.COW

POINT PLEASANT Point Pleasant may go by
many different names, · but
Friday night they went by
only one- Class AA sectional champs. The Black
Knight squad overcame a
three-game battle to)emerge
victorious after their final
10-3 . .contest
against
.Ravenswood, While game
two may . have been short
and sweet, Frid.t) 's match
·was a ·seven'inning contest
with a big start·and a big finish.
·
Tbe battle of the Red and
Black squads started off
. 'l"ith an inning of runs. The
visiting Black Knight~ took
Bryan Walllralltlt photo to the plate in a frenzy of an
the mempers of the \stack Knight squad pose for a preseason pholo at Point Pleasant High Sc~&lt;)OI. The Black Knlg~ offens1ve . movement.
won th'[l Class M sectional Iitle Friday night in game thre.e against Ravenswood, 10-3.
. ·
· .· ..
·· Sending a strong mess~ge to
'
.
.
'

Bean dinner, parade slated at Centerville';
.

CENTERVILLE
Centerville will obse..Ve its
26th annual parade and
· bean dinner on Saturday,
May 23 at the Centerville
Volunteer Fire Department.
Sponsored by the fire

department, the event features traditional bean · soup
made in cauldrons, in addition to cornbread, hot dogs,
hamburgers, pies, cak~s and
other desserts.
The parade kicks off at II

.

~

.
\
a.m . . Pre-registratio11 is leave a· message.
. . :.
requested, but anyone wish~ . The dinner will be at thcl.
ing to participate can also VFD. Entertainment will be' ·
show up by 10:30 a.m. the provided by local singer; ,
day of the parade and join songwriter Bill Hawks and ·
the lineup. To pre-register, · the South Gallia Higli
call · (740) 245-5635 and School Show Choir.
'

'

'

of

~;.;

TVC. Track and. Field Championships

Tuesday and Tuesday
nlght ...Mostly clear. Highs
in the mid 70s. Lows in the
lower 50s.
'
Wednesday
through
Thursday .. .Partly cloudy.
Highs ill the · upper 70s.
Lows in the mid 50s.
·
· Thursday night and
Friday...Partly
cloudy.
Lows in the lower 60s .
Highs in the lower 80s .

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Roy~~l Dutch

.,.,'

d Within liO II¥ Y1JU _ , CGiijllotely ~ ""' ... tot
+•II&lt;O•IIIpolio l 145 E01tt&lt;n Avo, 11401416-2407

IIIII Lola (NY

~.:

liicbon ~emU
+ The Zon~ 73 EH1Jton St, (7 ~OJ 286-9698
Milklltp«t Ingels £1ectlnn ~e~ !06 N 2nd Ave.
[141l) 99l-l81S

out.,_ Canirol:t.
.Open Sunday

+High Speed Internet Sold Here

. •'

1111t mC!IIplionnllilt wilt in tilt m011 - •

ol!liglliall..d

'AliT irfoloo: •RIJulllllll't COOt At&lt;lovtty ~ o! up to SUS II iitlp dthy COSllil&lt;untd i1 CGirfll!inl wilt
diorgtllnfOHd bj Sllllli!d Ftileil
ltloccm "'UUollolli;.Slltt li!d Foltnl U!lthll Stl11&lt;t cholgto; tild Udllli9fllot gtMiilntilt -""""""' A'/IT.IIttit,.., lit not 111111 .. p•Nl!lnl-nquiltd

.......

.

.

.

'·

Shalt - 48.43

s.a,. Holding (NASDAQ) -

49.17

. ''

Wa~Mort (NVSE)

- 48.15
Wtndy'l (NVSE) - 4.24
Woo!l.onco (NYBE) - 18.81
Worthington (NYBE) - 13.12
Dilly llock rtp0111 11'1 the 4
p.m. ET doalng q u - of tronaacttone for May 1S. 2008, ptOYidld by Edward Joriulln.o...,..
ecMIIora 1 - Mttta In Gllltlpolle

at (740) 441·8441 lncl lAIIey
Marrero In Point Pllaunt at
(304) 67~174. u.mblr StPC.
·;

•

~

·.

0
0
0
0

Bv BRYAN WALTERS

• NELSONVILLE
Meigs County - repreSented by Mei$S• ~stem and
Southern h1gh schools
fared very well Friday night
at the 2009 Tri-Valley
Conference Track and Field
f;:hampionships, as . the ·
· Smith
· Wolfe
Eastern boys brought !lOme
pnother TVC Hocking . - - - - - - . r---:-=::'::::"l
.:rown while MHS combined to win nine individual
events, se't four stadium
records and '!?reduce the top
T\'C Ohio guls scorer over
the course of the evening.
: The Eagles - who placed
fifth overall out of 12 teams
:_ · were ihe top TVC
._ocking finisher with 59
Metts
Bolin
points, allowing the boys at
EHS to win their second ·
.
consecutive divis-ion tille.
Smith . posted winning
Athens won the Ohio record times of 5 I .08 secPivision and overall team onds in the 400m dash aM
. event with 142 points, fol- 23.1 seconds in the 200m
lowed by runner-up Meigs dash, and also won .the
With 97 points. Belpre and lOOm dash with a time of
the host Buckeyes both tied 11.3 seconds. Metts won
for third with 66 points. · both the shot put and discus
Southern was last with 12 events with respective dis~ints.
tances of 53 feet, 10.25
. Two athletes - junior inches and 142 feet, eight
Jeremy Smith and senior inches.
Those were the only event
Mason Metts - captured
the five individual champi- winners from Meigs .County
onships for the_ Marau~ers, . on the boys· side, while the
with Smith setnng a pa1r of girls bf\lught home another
siadium records in both the
,._.. - Tnlc:ll; 13
200m and 400m events.

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

-·

.

Butterfly Releas~ &amp; Celebration

iWALTERSOM'VOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

Local Weather

f'IIZo (NASDAQ) - 43.80

.

Hocking; Meigs wins
nine individual titles

http:l/www.c;edarpolnt.com/

Ohio Vattey Bane Corp. (NA5-

AnnualPVH Hospice Tribute.·
.

Easte:r,~ boys win TVC

•

DAQ)- 22.08
BBT (NYSE) .,- 21.63
.,_,plea(NASDAQ) ..;. 15.58
"-!*co (NYSE) - 50.32
P.....,ter (NASDAQ) - 5.45
Roclcwatt (NYBE) - 31.20 ·
Rocky Boola (NASDAQ) - 4

Bv GARY CLARK
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

game Wahama played errorJess baseball which proved
to be a huge factor in the
·: MASON
- Jerry · sectional card. A WHS
~erkley, scattered five · hits error in game one of the
whil!i: striking out seven in a series led to a nine inping, 2domplete gam.e performance 0 Buffalo triumph but durto lead the Wahama White ing the final two outings it
Falcons past visiting Quffalo was the pitching depth of the
Friday evening an(l give the White Falcons ·· !lnd 'the
Bend.Area -team a 4~2 dia- . Buffalo defense that opened
1110nd win and the . Region . the door to the F,alcons fjrsf
· IV Section One blisel)all sectional title in four years.
championship.
· Wahama last claimed a s.ec: The victory was the sec- tiona! . championship in the
ond in a row for Coach Tom 2005 season .after defeating
Cullen's White Falcons in Buffalo lly 6-5 and 7-6
the best of three series with scores .
the Bison and earned the ' As in . the erevious two ·
· Bend Are~ team a berth in post-season affairs imi&gt;ther
. the Region IV semifinals on huge · crowd ."'i(nessed the .
Mondayl.May 25 against the final game that provided a
Se&lt;;tion two wil)ners.
· third conse.cutive entertain.By virtue of .the. sectional ing . contest. There were ·
title the Wabamf·:·bine will stellar defensive plays on
host the Regional .'semifinal the pait of both teams and
contest at Bither Point timely base hits fr.om each
Pleasanl High ,Scrool or the squad that made the three
Falcons home lurf. Van and game set' as dramatic as any
Charleston Cuoolic com- diamond series ever played
prise the secti~ ~'W;oP.ortion at ·. the ., high s;::hool level •.
of' Region IV lihd w1Jl pro- Wahania entered the postvide . the locals opposition seaso11. ranked ihjrd amo!'g
. . . ·. . .
.. · · .
..
· .· .
·
·
.
Brymr Wiltter8/photO
~uring .semifi~Mtcompeti- Class , A . scho?,ls while ·
Members ~till Wahama baseball team celebrate In a pile on the.pitcher's mound alter winning the Glass Asectlon~l title
. non.
·
, :... \ · ·
·
·
·•· ·
against Buffalo. ln Mason.
·.
..
·
. .
· .
.
For the second straight Plein SH Wehilme. 8~ . Fiiday night
.
•.

On the Net:

AEP (NYSE) -' 24.84

Pleen IH Point. 811

.falcons
up
sectional

SANDUSKY (AP) - Cedar Point amusement park is
openin~ its new season with a bil,t hday celebration· for its
p10neenng Magnum roller coaster. ·
·
: The Ma$num XL-200 was the first coaster ov.e r 200 feet .
tall when 11 debuted in 1989. A new entrance sign will be
unveiled for the ride and free birthday cake and ice cream
!.viii.be served during Saturday's opening day festivities at
the nonhero Ohio park.
· Cedar Point has 17 roller coasters among its 75 rides.
· The park in Sandusky will launch its I 40th season with
lin openin!l ceremony at the main entrance featuring a skylliver delivering the American flag and the National
Anthem performed by a local choir and the Ohio State
University Spring Athletic Band .
· Cedar Point's sister park in southwes~ Ohio, Kings
~land, opened Iast month.

Local Stocks

the Red Devils, the boys of
Point Pleasant sent in five of
their athletes in the bottom
of the first , setting the precedent for the rest of sectional
play.
.
The Red Devils responded
with three runs of their own
in the bottom, putting up the
only three on th.e board for
the duration of the contest.
Innings two through fQUr
were a standstill between the
squads, each starting a scar- ·
ing campaign without .a successful·finish. However, this
trend was put to a stop by ,
the Black Knights in the ·
sixth inning.
·
Crossing home four times
in the top of the sillth', t)le
Black Knights ·rallied
together to pad their l!:Ad
against the Red Devil$ tliilt

'

:It's opening weekend
· for Cedar Point

. · Sunday .••Sunny. Much
cooler with highs in the
lower 60s. North winds I 0
"'- )o 15.mph.
: Sundar
night ...Clear.
Colder w1th lows in the upper
30s. North winds 5 to 10 mph.
Monday...Sunny . . Highs
in the upper 60s. Northeast
winds around 5 mph.
: Monday night ...Clear.
Lows in the upper 30s.

Bl

inside

sunday,Mayt7,20o9

Kyger Creek al

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

POMEROY - A special meeting of the Meigs Local
Board of Education has been set for 7 p.m. Monday at the
board office to further discuss .the permanent improvement
levy requested by· the Meigs Local Enrichment
.
·
Foundation. ·
At the meeting, Superintendent William Buckley will
have figures from Meigs County Auditor Mary Byer-Hill
showing whether the 1.95 mill levy requested by the
foundation will generate more or less money than the
estimated $1 ,059,000 needed to complete the
stadium/track project.
Action to move forward on the levy was given unanimous approval by the board at last week's meeting . .
. In other business from last week's board meeting, a resolution to notify. the Meigs Local Teachers Association and
the Ohio Association of Public School Employees, Me1gs
Chapter, of its intent to implement a reduction in force
(RIF) due to a lack of funding for the 2009-10 school year
was approved.
.
The board also approved a contract with Ohio University
to ,provide an athleuc trainer to Meigs High School for the
next year at a cost of $10,100 . An agreement was also
approved between Holzer Clinic Inc. and Meigs high
~chool, to provide oversight for the trainer and to accept
the corresponding $10,000 stipend to offset that program.
- Buckley . reported that the fruit and vegetable grant at
.Meigs Elementary School has been extended for another
year. The 'program is geared to get school children to eat
more nutritiously.
.
· As for personnel, the board hired volleyball coaches for
)he season: Dale Harrison, high school junior varsity coach,
,Maria Drenner, head Middle School coach, and Amber
Baker, assistant Middle School coach. Carl Wolfe· was
hired as Meigs High School athletic director/athletic treasurer for the 2009-10 year and Amy Perrin was awarded·a
supplemental contract as drama coach at MHS .
Approved by the board was the creation of two grantfunded positions as reading/literacy coach and math
coach. The grants are for $120,000 per year for the next
Jwo years. It was reported that the grant positions will be
·
posted.
Some discussion was held on vocational offerings at
Meigs High. with no decision being reached · on any
changes. Approval of a request to the Ohio Department of
Education for a waiver for operating an alternative schedule for early childhood education was approved by the
·
board..
Meeting with the board was Mike Hattrnan,.project based
grant coach for the Meigs-Morgan-Washington County
Tech Prep Consortium, who spoke about the Meigs High
School project-based learning program and awards
received by the teaching staff.
•.
.
: He described ,project-based learning as a participation
program which mvolves both minds and hands, and listed Meigs among the leaders in the state in implementing the program . He said three units are being evaluat. ed at Meigs now and spoke· of the work 'of "SUzanne
Bentz, Scott Brinker, Lauren Hargrove, Kathy Sargent
and Donna Wolfe and the · College Tech Prep ·IT:
Jnteractive Media program, for which they have&gt;,l!leen ·
recognized.
· Attending the meeting were Superintendent Buckley,
Roger Abbott, Ron Logan, Barbara Musser, Larry tucker
and Scott Walton, board members.
.
.

•

PageA6

•

'

.

Wednesday, May 27, 2009
PVH Main Entrance
Noon·

Public is cordially invited .

For more information about this special event
to.learn mon? about Hospice or the "Wings"
GriefSuppqrt Group: please call, (304) 675-1400,

or

' .

..

1

'

lfm~·',
1/r~t'/
'
.
,.If"!
'"f
., ~~

~,.:

_

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• .. 1r

fI

!.

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I•'
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11

�&gt;

OHIO

:iunba; limts ·itnttntl

Special meeting to
-~iscuss schQOIIevy

bt the Open, Page B2

•

Weekly Ohio fishing report, Page B3
Rio Grande roondup, Page B4

reunion set for May23

HOEFLICHOMYDAILVSENTINELCOM

CHESHIRE Kyger oils years are also welcome with their classmates.
Creek alumni's fourth annu- to attend .
Special dasses to be
al reunion is Saturday, May
The comroittee of Steve acknowledged this year are
23, starting 8 p.m. at the Henderson,Avalee (Johnson) · 1959, 1969, 1979 and 1989,
Moose Lodge in Point · Swisher, Lois (Rodgers) or the 501h, 40th, 30th and
Pleasant, W.Va. All gradual- "'5nyder, Sherry McCumber 20th.
ing classes of Kyger Creek Roberts, Haroldine (Thomas)
Dancing to the oldies and
High School and their guests Oiler, Barton Stump and Bob music will be ~rovided by
are welcome to attend.
Polcyn invites every local OJ Rick Roach. Door P.rizes
·
aluinni
to come and reunite and .special gifts Will be
Other guests
from
previ.
.

Sunday;May 17,2009

awarded during the evening.
The first 50 alumni to attend
will receive .a special sur·
prise when registering.
·
Those planning .to a~nd
are asked to RSVP to one of
the commiltee members,
Lois Snyder at (740) 446~
3488, or Avalee Swisher at
(304) 675-4831.

Point burns Red Devils, ·
wins sectional crown
Bv ANNA JESSMER
IIIIDRSPORT$GUY£WLYREGISTER.COW

POINT PLEASANT Point Pleasant may go by
many different names, · but
Friday night they went by
only one- Class AA sectional champs. The Black
Knight squad overcame a
three-game battle to)emerge
victorious after their final
10-3 . .contest
against
.Ravenswood, While game
two may . have been short
and sweet, Frid.t) 's match
·was a ·seven'inning contest
with a big start·and a big finish.
·
Tbe battle of the Red and
Black squads started off
. 'l"ith an inning of runs. The
visiting Black Knight~ took
Bryan Walllralltlt photo to the plate in a frenzy of an
the mempers of the \stack Knight squad pose for a preseason pholo at Point Pleasant High Sc~&lt;)OI. The Black Knlg~ offens1ve . movement.
won th'[l Class M sectional Iitle Friday night in game thre.e against Ravenswood, 10-3.
. ·
· .· ..
·· Sending a strong mess~ge to
'
.
.
'

Bean dinner, parade slated at Centerville';
.

CENTERVILLE
Centerville will obse..Ve its
26th annual parade and
· bean dinner on Saturday,
May 23 at the Centerville
Volunteer Fire Department.
Sponsored by the fire

department, the event features traditional bean · soup
made in cauldrons, in addition to cornbread, hot dogs,
hamburgers, pies, cak~s and
other desserts.
The parade kicks off at II

.

~

.
\
a.m . . Pre-registratio11 is leave a· message.
. . :.
requested, but anyone wish~ . The dinner will be at thcl.
ing to participate can also VFD. Entertainment will be' ·
show up by 10:30 a.m. the provided by local singer; ,
day of the parade and join songwriter Bill Hawks and ·
the lineup. To pre-register, · the South Gallia Higli
call · (740) 245-5635 and School Show Choir.
'

'

'

of

~;.;

TVC. Track and. Field Championships

Tuesday and Tuesday
nlght ...Mostly clear. Highs
in the mid 70s. Lows in the
lower 50s.
'
Wednesday
through
Thursday .. .Partly cloudy.
Highs ill the · upper 70s.
Lows in the mid 50s.
·
· Thursday night and
Friday...Partly
cloudy.
Lows in the lower 60s .
Highs in the lower 80s .

FREE StHPPING

~ lnc.5YSE) - 24.18
- 24.28
8cib e.. na(NA DAQ)'- 24.29
llorgWIII:I* (NYSE) - 27.65
c.ntiiiY Aluminum (NASDAQ)

:.... 1.150

CfllmPion (NASDAQ) -

1.52
j:hamllll9 Shopa (NASDAQ) -

U7

.

(:ltY Holding (NASDAQ) - 31 .03

Colltna (NYSE) . Dullont (NYSE) -

31.22
28.113
US~ (NY.SE) - 17.87
Qanilelt (NYSE) - 4.38
- . 1 Et.ctrlc (NYSE) - 12.88
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JP Molpn (NYSE) - 34.91
l(nlgar (NY$E) - 21.10

Umllad lll'!lncla (NVSE).- 11.01 .
NoffOIII $outham (NYSE) -

lla.DI
•

'

;.

TEST US FOR 30 DAYS. SATISFACTION IS GUARAN1lED.

'

J •.

.
•

+~d.bn CanmunicariO,.lsCoonectioo
Ill EMain St, !h. 6, 11401l88-1806

Roy~~l Dutch

.,.,'

d Within liO II¥ Y1JU _ , CGiijllotely ~ ""' ... tot
+•II&lt;O•IIIpolio l 145 E01tt&lt;n Avo, 11401416-2407

IIIII Lola (NY

~.:

liicbon ~emU
+ The Zon~ 73 EH1Jton St, (7 ~OJ 286-9698
Milklltp«t Ingels £1ectlnn ~e~ !06 N 2nd Ave.
[141l) 99l-l81S

out.,_ Canirol:t.
.Open Sunday

+High Speed Internet Sold Here

. •'

1111t mC!IIplionnllilt wilt in tilt m011 - •

ol!liglliall..d

'AliT irfoloo: •RIJulllllll't COOt At&lt;lovtty ~ o! up to SUS II iitlp dthy COSllil&lt;untd i1 CGirfll!inl wilt
diorgtllnfOHd bj Sllllli!d Ftileil
ltloccm "'UUollolli;.Slltt li!d Foltnl U!lthll Stl11&lt;t cholgto; tild Udllli9fllot gtMiilntilt -""""""' A'/IT.IIttit,.., lit not 111111 .. p•Nl!lnl-nquiltd

.......

.

.

.

'·

Shalt - 48.43

s.a,. Holding (NASDAQ) -

49.17

. ''

Wa~Mort (NVSE)

- 48.15
Wtndy'l (NVSE) - 4.24
Woo!l.onco (NYBE) - 18.81
Worthington (NYBE) - 13.12
Dilly llock rtp0111 11'1 the 4
p.m. ET doalng q u - of tronaacttone for May 1S. 2008, ptOYidld by Edward Joriulln.o...,..
ecMIIora 1 - Mttta In Gllltlpolle

at (740) 441·8441 lncl lAIIey
Marrero In Point Pllaunt at
(304) 67~174. u.mblr StPC.
·;

•

~

·.

0
0
0
0

Bv BRYAN WALTERS

• NELSONVILLE
Meigs County - repreSented by Mei$S• ~stem and
Southern h1gh schools
fared very well Friday night
at the 2009 Tri-Valley
Conference Track and Field
f;:hampionships, as . the ·
· Smith
· Wolfe
Eastern boys brought !lOme
pnother TVC Hocking . - - - - - - . r---:-=::'::::"l
.:rown while MHS combined to win nine individual
events, se't four stadium
records and '!?reduce the top
T\'C Ohio guls scorer over
the course of the evening.
: The Eagles - who placed
fifth overall out of 12 teams
:_ · were ihe top TVC
._ocking finisher with 59
Metts
Bolin
points, allowing the boys at
EHS to win their second ·
.
consecutive divis-ion tille.
Smith . posted winning
Athens won the Ohio record times of 5 I .08 secPivision and overall team onds in the 400m dash aM
. event with 142 points, fol- 23.1 seconds in the 200m
lowed by runner-up Meigs dash, and also won .the
With 97 points. Belpre and lOOm dash with a time of
the host Buckeyes both tied 11.3 seconds. Metts won
for third with 66 points. · both the shot put and discus
Southern was last with 12 events with respective dis~ints.
tances of 53 feet, 10.25
. Two athletes - junior inches and 142 feet, eight
Jeremy Smith and senior inches.
Those were the only event
Mason Metts - captured
the five individual champi- winners from Meigs .County
onships for the_ Marau~ers, . on the boys· side, while the
with Smith setnng a pa1r of girls bf\lught home another
siadium records in both the
,._.. - Tnlc:ll; 13
200m and 400m events.

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

-·

.

Butterfly Releas~ &amp; Celebration

iWALTERSOM'VOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

Local Weather

f'IIZo (NASDAQ) - 43.80

.

Hocking; Meigs wins
nine individual titles

http:l/www.c;edarpolnt.com/

Ohio Vattey Bane Corp. (NA5-

AnnualPVH Hospice Tribute.·
.

Easte:r,~ boys win TVC

•

DAQ)- 22.08
BBT (NYSE) .,- 21.63
.,_,plea(NASDAQ) ..;. 15.58
"-!*co (NYSE) - 50.32
P.....,ter (NASDAQ) - 5.45
Roclcwatt (NYBE) - 31.20 ·
Rocky Boola (NASDAQ) - 4

Bv GARY CLARK
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

game Wahama played errorJess baseball which proved
to be a huge factor in the
·: MASON
- Jerry · sectional card. A WHS
~erkley, scattered five · hits error in game one of the
whil!i: striking out seven in a series led to a nine inping, 2domplete gam.e performance 0 Buffalo triumph but durto lead the Wahama White ing the final two outings it
Falcons past visiting Quffalo was the pitching depth of the
Friday evening an(l give the White Falcons ·· !lnd 'the
Bend.Area -team a 4~2 dia- . Buffalo defense that opened
1110nd win and the . Region . the door to the F,alcons fjrsf
· IV Section One blisel)all sectional title in four years.
championship.
· Wahama last claimed a s.ec: The victory was the sec- tiona! . championship in the
ond in a row for Coach Tom 2005 season .after defeating
Cullen's White Falcons in Buffalo lly 6-5 and 7-6
the best of three series with scores .
the Bison and earned the ' As in . the erevious two ·
· Bend Are~ team a berth in post-season affairs imi&gt;ther
. the Region IV semifinals on huge · crowd ."'i(nessed the .
Mondayl.May 25 against the final game that provided a
Se&lt;;tion two wil)ners.
· third conse.cutive entertain.By virtue of .the. sectional ing . contest. There were ·
title the Wabamf·:·bine will stellar defensive plays on
host the Regional .'semifinal the pait of both teams and
contest at Bither Point timely base hits fr.om each
Pleasanl High ,Scrool or the squad that made the three
Falcons home lurf. Van and game set' as dramatic as any
Charleston Cuoolic com- diamond series ever played
prise the secti~ ~'W;oP.ortion at ·. the ., high s;::hool level •.
of' Region IV lihd w1Jl pro- Wahania entered the postvide . the locals opposition seaso11. ranked ihjrd amo!'g
. . . ·. . .
.. · · .
..
· .· .
·
·
.
Brymr Wiltter8/photO
~uring .semifi~Mtcompeti- Class , A . scho?,ls while ·
Members ~till Wahama baseball team celebrate In a pile on the.pitcher's mound alter winning the Glass Asectlon~l title
. non.
·
, :... \ · ·
·
·
·•· ·
against Buffalo. ln Mason.
·.
..
·
. .
· .
.
For the second straight Plein SH Wehilme. 8~ . Fiiday night
.
•.

On the Net:

AEP (NYSE) -' 24.84

Pleen IH Point. 811

.falcons
up
sectional

SANDUSKY (AP) - Cedar Point amusement park is
openin~ its new season with a bil,t hday celebration· for its
p10neenng Magnum roller coaster. ·
·
: The Ma$num XL-200 was the first coaster ov.e r 200 feet .
tall when 11 debuted in 1989. A new entrance sign will be
unveiled for the ride and free birthday cake and ice cream
!.viii.be served during Saturday's opening day festivities at
the nonhero Ohio park.
· Cedar Point has 17 roller coasters among its 75 rides.
· The park in Sandusky will launch its I 40th season with
lin openin!l ceremony at the main entrance featuring a skylliver delivering the American flag and the National
Anthem performed by a local choir and the Ohio State
University Spring Athletic Band .
· Cedar Point's sister park in southwes~ Ohio, Kings
~land, opened Iast month.

Local Stocks

the Red Devils, the boys of
Point Pleasant sent in five of
their athletes in the bottom
of the first , setting the precedent for the rest of sectional
play.
.
The Red Devils responded
with three runs of their own
in the bottom, putting up the
only three on th.e board for
the duration of the contest.
Innings two through fQUr
were a standstill between the
squads, each starting a scar- ·
ing campaign without .a successful·finish. However, this
trend was put to a stop by ,
the Black Knights in the ·
sixth inning.
·
Crossing home four times
in the top of the sillth', t)le
Black Knights ·rallied
together to pad their l!:Ad
against the Red Devil$ tliilt

'

:It's opening weekend
· for Cedar Point

. · Sunday .••Sunny. Much
cooler with highs in the
lower 60s. North winds I 0
"'- )o 15.mph.
: Sundar
night ...Clear.
Colder w1th lows in the upper
30s. North winds 5 to 10 mph.
Monday...Sunny . . Highs
in the upper 60s. Northeast
winds around 5 mph.
: Monday night ...Clear.
Lows in the upper 30s.

Bl

inside

sunday,Mayt7,20o9

Kyger Creek al

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

POMEROY - A special meeting of the Meigs Local
Board of Education has been set for 7 p.m. Monday at the
board office to further discuss .the permanent improvement
levy requested by· the Meigs Local Enrichment
.
·
Foundation. ·
At the meeting, Superintendent William Buckley will
have figures from Meigs County Auditor Mary Byer-Hill
showing whether the 1.95 mill levy requested by the
foundation will generate more or less money than the
estimated $1 ,059,000 needed to complete the
stadium/track project.
Action to move forward on the levy was given unanimous approval by the board at last week's meeting . .
. In other business from last week's board meeting, a resolution to notify. the Meigs Local Teachers Association and
the Ohio Association of Public School Employees, Me1gs
Chapter, of its intent to implement a reduction in force
(RIF) due to a lack of funding for the 2009-10 school year
was approved.
.
The board also approved a contract with Ohio University
to ,provide an athleuc trainer to Meigs High School for the
next year at a cost of $10,100 . An agreement was also
approved between Holzer Clinic Inc. and Meigs high
~chool, to provide oversight for the trainer and to accept
the corresponding $10,000 stipend to offset that program.
- Buckley . reported that the fruit and vegetable grant at
.Meigs Elementary School has been extended for another
year. The 'program is geared to get school children to eat
more nutritiously.
.
· As for personnel, the board hired volleyball coaches for
)he season: Dale Harrison, high school junior varsity coach,
,Maria Drenner, head Middle School coach, and Amber
Baker, assistant Middle School coach. Carl Wolfe· was
hired as Meigs High School athletic director/athletic treasurer for the 2009-10 year and Amy Perrin was awarded·a
supplemental contract as drama coach at MHS .
Approved by the board was the creation of two grantfunded positions as reading/literacy coach and math
coach. The grants are for $120,000 per year for the next
Jwo years. It was reported that the grant positions will be
·
posted.
Some discussion was held on vocational offerings at
Meigs High. with no decision being reached · on any
changes. Approval of a request to the Ohio Department of
Education for a waiver for operating an alternative schedule for early childhood education was approved by the
·
board..
Meeting with the board was Mike Hattrnan,.project based
grant coach for the Meigs-Morgan-Washington County
Tech Prep Consortium, who spoke about the Meigs High
School project-based learning program and awards
received by the teaching staff.
•.
.
: He described ,project-based learning as a participation
program which mvolves both minds and hands, and listed Meigs among the leaders in the state in implementing the program . He said three units are being evaluat. ed at Meigs now and spoke· of the work 'of "SUzanne
Bentz, Scott Brinker, Lauren Hargrove, Kathy Sargent
and Donna Wolfe and the · College Tech Prep ·IT:
Jnteractive Media program, for which they have&gt;,l!leen ·
recognized.
· Attending the meeting were Superintendent Buckley,
Roger Abbott, Ron Logan, Barbara Musser, Larry tucker
and Scott Walton, board members.
.
.

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PageA6

•

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Wednesday, May 27, 2009
PVH Main Entrance
Noon·

Public is cordially invited .

For more information about this special event
to.learn mon? about Hospice or the "Wings"
GriefSuppqrt Group: please call, (304) 675-1400,

or

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11

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Page 82 • ~unbap tn:imes -&amp;mtmrl

Sunday, May 17. .2009

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Waverly ends Blue Devils' season

I

In the

Open

Jim Freeman

Wahama

Lady Knights to host championsi,.ip

••

Pomt
fromPageBl
:were unable to surpass the
·Point Pleasant defense.
; The Black Knights added
:a single run to their lead in
:the· seventh inning, sealing
their total at 10. Point followed this UP. by securing
. the Red Dev11's three runs
;though a strong defensive
·
·effort to end the game.
: Contributors to the Point
:Pleasant victory were many.
:D.W. Herdman went 2 for 4
with an RBI; Philip Allen .
went 3 for 4 ; Titus Russell
. went 3 for 4 with a double
:and four runs; Clay Krebs
·went 2 for 4 with two RBls;
:and Justin Weaver and
:Tyson Jones both finished
the game with hits.
With two consecutive
suite tournament appear·
:ances, and the posibon of
·Class AA state runner-up
; for 2008, the Black Knights
:have a lot to look forward ·to
·in the continlJation of the
2009 post-season.
·
Coach
Higginbotham
.commented on the goal for
:the sqllad in the pJ;e· season
:noting, "As always our goal
•is to win every game, bu~
:especially .the sectional
·championship ."
-

-

.

N:~o-it-yourself ~lasslfled ads
Save time and money. Go to www.mydailytribune.com
· and click on Classifieds and follow the user-fr!endly steps
to place your ad.' '
~

Anna JeNI!Ier/photo

Point's F&gt;hillip Allen charges toward third altar stealing sec·
ond base· in Friday's game against Ravenswood. The Black
Knights went on to a 10·3 victory· over the Red Devils.
With one goal already Higginbotham it should be a
accomplished, the Black good show.
Knights are gearing up to
fight their way to the state
POINT PLEASANT 10,
championships, and hope·
RAVENSWOOD 3
fully claim the title. .
Point
soc 004 1 - 1c 12 1
But first the Red and
R - 300 ooo o - 3 H
Black must face Roane
POINT: B - McClung; 8 .J. Lloyd
RAVENSWOOD· Jam11 vannott,
Count)'. May 26. starting at
Sponco Oroko (1) . Luke Coney($); O.W.
6:30. The squad has the tal· Ma~1n
.
ent and the drive, and with
the direction of Coach WP- McClung: LP- Vllnnolll.

- - - - - - - - - - - - - --

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6ttnbav t!times .&amp;wtintl • Page B3

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Weelllv Ohio Rsblnl Rapon Close-knit Cavaliers not just the LeBron show

Return of the osprey a
wildlife success story

Rya n Robenson was
MDTSPORTS . MYDAlt_'(lAIBU'iE C~
ma,terful in the winning
decision . allowing only
WAVERLY
Gallia
three hits and a walk over
Academy baseball needed a
seven innings while strik·
li ttle magic to . get past
ing out eight.
Osprey are genera II y
One of Ohio's more recent
Athens on Monday to reach
John Troester took the wildlife success stories is
monogamous, and may or
ihe Di vision II &gt;ectional
loss for GAHS ; allowing the reintroduction of the
not be migratory. Once
final against host ,Waverly.
six runs , four hits and a Ospr~y:
paired. the birds will build a
Unfortunately for the
walk over 2.1 innings of
large
nest as much as five
Ospreys were once comBlue Devils, the magic/did·
work .
·
feet wide and . several feet
JIIOn throughout the cont!·n't follow on Friday during
Kruize Wand lin~ finished nent, but the use of pestideep. An ideal nest location
a 7· I setback to the top·
for the guests m relief, cides, habitat destruction
would consist of a high,
seeded Tigers in Pike
working 3.2 innings on the and persecution led to a ·
open platfonn near a good
County.
mound.
supply of fish.
drastic decline in the osprey
The Devils ( 13- 10) mu sIt was the final game in population. Here lately,
The female usual!y . lays
tered onl y three hits in the
the Blue and White for hot.ever, I have received a
three
or . four whitecand·
·contest. half of the number
seniors Whaley, Dressel, couple of ~ports from peo·
brown splotchy eggs about
·of safeties that the host s
Brett Bowman, Austin
ple who have observed Lanllley Air Force Base in the size. of a hen's egg, and
produced in the triumph .
Roush and Clint Saunders. osprey
along the Ohio River. Virgmia, which has numer- both parents help incubate
But thing s were going
Al first glimpse, it is easy ous osprey nests, provided them uillil they hatch.
well early on , as both teams
WAVERLY 7, GALUA ACADEMY 1
to dismiss an osprey as a many of the birds in an Generally only two chicks
battled through two innings
Galllpotis 000 . 001 o - 1.3 2
v~ltur'e or some other large effon to help reduce the risk per nest survive to fledging.
- only to remain scoreless.
Waverty
006 100 x - 7 6 2
Feeding osprey can be
· Then in the bottom of the
b1rd.
A rM:...collisjons between jets observed
hovering high
'third , everything rell apart
Ospreys are large J~arro~spreys. The prOJeCt
WP - Robertson; LP - li'oester.
above
lakes,
rivers or ponds,
Wmged
hawks
With was funded by donatiOnS
search
for
fish
cruising neru:
wingspans up to five}::et. tax check-offs and the pur:
They tend to fly flat- chase of wildlife conserva- the surface. Spotting one,
they quickly fold their wings
winged" with a distinct ~nk tion plates.
·
and
dive, grabbing the fish,
m the elbow. Tbey are bnght
The sites chosen for the
hitting
the water talons fust.
white underneath, with dark releases were Deer Creek
Once
airborne
again, the
brown patches at the carpal Wildlife Area in centr.U
joints and a mottled dark Ohio
Lake La Su An bird manipulates the fish to
brown necklace. Other iden- Wildlife Area in northwest catry it head·first, making it
tify.ing markings include a Ohio Pona~e Lakes in more streamlined in flight.
The bottoms o( an
dark stripe through each eye, north~ast Oh1o Salt Fork
and. a dark brown back. ·
Wildlife Area 'in southeast osprey's feet are also spe·
Ospr~ys were. the subject Ohio,
Spring Valley cially adapted for· grippmg
of a remtroducllon program Wildlife Area in southwest and carrying fish, as they are
staned itT the late 1990s.
Ohio and The Wilds also in covered with shon, sharp
According to the Ohio southeast Oh.io. The sites spines. Supposedly the
Depanment of Natural were carefully selected to talons are better suited for
Resources' Division of allow long-term monitoring grabbing fish than . they are '
Wildlife, the prow:am was of the birds, arid to avoid fur releasing them; if an ·
. staned in 1996 with a goal conflicts with bal!l eagles, a osprey grabs too large of a
fish, it faces a swim back to
of 20 nesting pairs of competing bird species.
ospreys by 20 10. Tha! goal
Due to the success of the shore or even the possibility
was achieved in 2003, seven reintroduction
program, of drowning.
of
schedule.
·
ospreys
are
no
longer
years
ahead
•
Bryan Wattert/photo
Jim Freemar1 is wildlife
The young ospreys .that released, but Division per·
Members of the Wahama baseqall team pose for a picture after receiving its Class A secwere released were donated sonnet still monitor the specialist for the Meigs Soil
tional title trophy Friday night. afater defeating. Buffalo by a 4·2 margin in Masen.
by New York, Virginia and number of nests and chicks. and Water Conservation
runs in the third inning to in the seventh, retired the Maryland, states that already A brief search of tl)e internet District. He can be contact·
iake an early lead when B isons leadoff batter on have established osprey revealed no osprey-related ed weekdays at 740-992· ·
Kitchen and Roach opened strikes before getting the populations.
or
. at
Wildlife damage or nuisance com- 4282
the
fame with a single each. second out of the inning on Services
fromPageBl
jim freeman@ oh .nacdnet .net
personnel
at plaints.
Underwo.od then lined a two .a come-backer to the
run double to drive in the mound. Wahama recorded
Buffalo was rated faunh in games. first two runs before the final out of the evening
the
latest
Charleston Warth made it a three run on Warth's stellar defensive
:Gazette state ranl&gt;ings.
,.
falcon advantage with a grab· of a foul pop-up just
: The sectional victory two-base hit to left.
past first base to set off a
· hits during the seven-inning by Jennifer Wickline.
BY
ANNA JESSMER
; moved the Falcons season
MORSPORTSOMYD,a.lLVREGJSTER.COM
contest and struck out lJ to
Buffalo came back to JUbilant celebration among
Lady Knight hitters dur·
·record to 19-3 on the year close the gap to a single the Falcons players, coachsecure the Red and Black · in11 · the game
were:
:while Buffalo saw its ~009 tally in the fifth as Call led es and fans.
W1ckline (3-3) with an RBI;
ELLENBORO :._ · The win.
·campaign come to a condu- off the inning with a line
The match was scoreless Cottrill (1-3) with an RBI;
Berkley emerged with the Lady Knights shut out the
~ion at 21-11.
. drive . double - to left. ·pitching win, his tenth of Lady Rebels of Ritchie until the bottom of the third . A. Sommer (1-3); and
. WHS collected eight hits Following a ground out the season without a defeat, County Thursday night in inning when Anna Sommer Regan Cottrill (1-3).
·
:on the day which included Jared Tucker walked before while Jared Tucker took the · game one of regional play. and Jennifer Wickline each The Lady Knights are set
:three extra base knocks. Chris Belcher broughrin the hard-luck mound setback The 22-9 Point Pleas.a nt knocked out singles tcr get to host the regional champi·
;Zac Warth drove in a run . first Bison run with an RBf for .Buffalo. After pitching · squad upped the . ante on base . Devm Cottnll fol- onsh1p Thursday agamst the
;with a. single and a double single. After a fielder's ·. six scoreless innings .on against the contending team lowed up with a single that winner of the Magnolia·
·to lead the Bend Area team choice loaded the bases Tuesday, Berkley gave . up with a solid defensive effort sent Sommer in for Point's Weir g~me.
:offensively. with Garrett Berkley got Burdette on a two runs on five hits while and just enough of ail offen. first run.
Underwood chasing home s hort fl y to ng
POINT PLEASANT 2,
The final run of the con· ht b e fore fanning seven and walking· sive
drive to · secure a 2·0
·
. imother Falcon tally with a W1nterstem
RiTCHIE COUNTY 0
· bl oope d a t wo- three. Tucker also nitched victory o. ver Ritchie County. test occurred in the fifth
.
· iwo-base hit.
· 1e to ceo t er to rna ke . an impressive gamer in a
Senior pitcher Tessa inning when Emily Sommer RC
000 000 0 _ o 2 1
ou t smg
· Ethan McGrew : also it a 3-2 contest. Berkley route going performance for Wyant allowed onl~ two was sent home by a single PP
001 010 x - 2 a o
·stroked a double for then retired the side by get- Buffalo with the Bison
' Wahama with William ting the next hitter on a right-harider giving up four
Zuspan, Brice Clark, Tyler grounder to second.
· runs, three earned, on eight
Kitchen and Jacob Roach
Walks to Anthony Bond, hits with six strikeouts and
adding a single apiece. Ethan McGrew and Jacob three walkS.
Zuspan, Wanh and Kitchen' Roach sandwiched around ·a
The sectional champion
also had outstanding defen- couple . of strikeouts in the . Whjre Falcons will now
·sive plays to compliment bottom half of the sixth
·the five hit pitching of loaded the sacks with White await the Region IV semifinal contest at 6:00 pm on
.Berkley.
Falcons and led to the locals May 25th in th~ Bend Area
Buffalo received ~o hits final run of the night. teams quest to return to the
off the bat of Garrett Garrett
Underwood 's state tournament forthe first .
Burdette with Zack Call grounder to short was mis· time since the 1998 season,
smacking a double; Chris played for an error to give
Belcher . · ·and
·Nathan Wahama an unearned insurWAHAMA 4, BUFFALO 2
Winterstein added· a single ance run and a 4-2 lead
Clasalfleda
Buffalo ooo 020 o - 251
.
each for the visiting B.isons g oing into the final frame
.
wahama 003 001 x
48 o
Berkley, facing the top of
in the 4-2. loss.
~ Plaoo a newspaper ad
Wahama slruck for three the batting order for. B'uffalo WP - Berl&lt;ley: LP - Tucker.
. [}Place a~ online. ad
for
the
fo urth -seeded
gue sts.
WHS plated six run s in
that pivotal frame , which
helped the hosts e'tabli'h a
lead it would never relin·
quish.
Waverly added another
run in the fourth. which
increased its advantage to
seven runs after four com·
plete.
·
The lone GAHS offen·
sive breakthrough came in
the sixth as the guests
ended Waverly's .no-hit bid
with singles by Beau
Whaley and lan Dressel ,
which allowed Whaley to
score and make it a 7- I
deficit.
·
Chuck Calven also had a
pinch-hit single in the seV·
enth , but the Devils were
not able to do any more
damage in the setback .

STAFF REPORT

Sunday, May 17,2009

COLUMBUS (AP) - The weekly fiShing repon provided
by the Division · of Wildlife of the Ohio Department of
Natural Resources.

OHIO RIVER
Western and Cincinnati area - Current river conditions
.are high and muddy. Water levels should steadily drop
.through Thursday, May!4.

SOUTHEAST OHIO
·. Dillon Lake (Muskingum County) - Crappie fishing has
he lei its own the past few weeks with anglers fiShing jigs and·
minnows near the dam and dock areas and catching seven to
12 inch fish. Largemouth bass fishing has also been good,
· ·anglers are casting cr.mk baits and other artificials along the
shoreline and reeling in eight to 15-inch largemouths.
Seneca Lake (Guernsey and Noble counties) - One of the
hottest spots is the cove nearest to the beach. Anglers report
· ~ood catches of walleye in the 16-inch range , channel catfish
:m the 12 to 19-inch rdllge, as well as white and black crappie being caught in this cove. A. nine-inch minimum length
'limit for cr.1ppie is active.
.
Burr Oak Lake (Athens and Morgan counties) - White
'crappie are hitting on jigs tipped with a minnow fished over
structure throughout the lake. Bluegill are being ·caught by
'fishing a worm four-feet below a bobber cast out over struc'ture. Heavy structure by the dam wall is producing great
·results.

SOUTHWEST OHIO .

·I

Grand Lake St. Marys (Auglaize and Mercer County) I The lake is one foot above pool with a 61 degree water tern·
·perature. Bass are being caught in good numbers. They are
being caught along the shoreline in less than three feet of
·water using soft plastics, (pumpkinseed, watermelon) and
'white spinner baits. The bass are starting to spawn so con·centrate your efforts in'the back of channels, and bays where
there is brush, and rock . For pan fish - good numbers are
'being caught with cork, and live bait. Fish about one to two
·feet deep along any rocky or brushy channel. Catfish · good
·numbers are being taken on the mam lake using cut bait, and
·raw shrimp, and night crawlers. Fishing tight-line is best.
. ' East Fork Lake (Clermont County) - Now in summer
·pool and the water is clear. Anglers are reporting success on
crappie using minnows and jigs with tubes. Try chanreuse .
'and white color patterns . They are generally bemg taken m
'18 to 24-inches of water. Fish around structure, fallen trees
·and in the coves .

CENTRAL OHIO
- Hoover Reservoir (Ddawaie and Franklin counties) White bass are the hot fish at Hoover Reservoir right now.
Try using small spinners and jigs in Big Walnut Creek north
of the reservoir. Crappie are also active right now. They can
'be caught in two to four feet of water on jigs tipped with min'nows ortwister tails. Most fish range from seven to 10 inch·
-es. Hoover is alst&gt; an excellent lake to catch nice largemouth
bass due to lower ·fishing pressure than other large lakes.
'May is the time. to fish &amp;horeline cover. with lures like tube
'baits; jig &amp; pig a.ndjerkbaits. Look for· ~pawning bluegill oil
beds in the backsof coves .. There is a 10 horsepower motor
limit at this reservoir:
. · O'Shaughnessy Reservoir (Delaware County) - Crappie
are very active in .the north end of the lake. Target submerged
cover using minnows suspended under a bobber. Fish·shore·
line cc ··r throughout the lake with small worms and laival
'baits su,pcnded beneath a bobber when seeking bluegill.
Areas along the west shoreline that have fallen trees and
:brush piles are good places to.·fish for largemouth bass. Try
,a variety of creature baits,lizards, and tubesfor best resu.lts.
'Channel catfish can .be taken in the upper section of the
· •reservoir. Use cut baits, shrimp, or. night crawlers fished on
'the bottmh.
· ·
· '

NORTHEAST OHIO .
· West Branch Lake (Portage County) :"- This lake is well
known for its excellent muskellunge fishing. Last year,
'anglers reported catching 221 muskies with 31 fish exceed·
ing 42 inches. All fiSh reported were released after capture.
A total of 2,269 advanced· fingerling muskellunge were
stocked in 2008. Gizzard shad makes of most of the diet-for
muskies, so using shad-imitating crank baits should provide
great results. Fish management staff from the Ohio Division
of Wildlife introdu~ed over.265 slructures into the lake last
month as a result of a recycling partnership with the
Mahoning County Green Team. These structures will be a
.
great .asset to anglers who fish '\Vest Branch. ·
Mogadore Reservoir (P&lt;;~rtage County) ~ For y~ars , this
lake has served as one of the most popular panfishmg lakes
in northeast Ohio b.ut sadly, it seems as though this panfish·
. ery is no longer a top producer. On a positive note for bass
anglers, however, sampling efforts in 2008 produced a large
number of the bass · measuring at least IS-inches lon~.
Electric n1otors only; wheelchair accessible shoreline facih,
ties available. Anglers visiting Mogadore should note that
docks at Congress Lake Road, the State Route 43 boathouse,
and Lansinger Road. have been recently renovated thanks to
a local Eagle Scout pr~ect.
·.

. ·

.

NOiiiTHWEST OHIO

.·

· . Maumee River (Lucas and Wood counties) - The water
temperature is 60 degr~es and the water levels are nonnal.
Wh1ie bass anc! white perch fishing remain good. Fishing
e best. The occasional
shiners ·under a bobiJer is workin
walleye is still being caugh .
. . Fish are being caught
from Fort Meills through Orlean
k. Bluegrass Island is
accessible at th1s time.
·
. Sandusky River (Sandusky Cou t ) - The water temperature is 64 degrees and the water le.vel is low. Excellent
catches of white bass is being reponed .. One-sixth to l/8
ounce jigs with light colors are working well as is fishing
minnows under a bobber. The shoreline from the Ballville
Dam to the sand Docks is the best place to fish. It is predicted that this week will be the peak of the run.

·

the floor. And if my · man
helps. I can knock down the
3. I try to affect the game m
a lot of different ways."
General manager Danny
Ferry attempted to bring in
an established veteran like
Mike Bibby or Jason Kidd
.via trade . but couldn't get a
deal done. Then in August,
while James was 1in China
winning a gold nledal with
the U.S. Olympic Redeem
Team,
Ferry
lande\1
Williams , a confident 26year-old who used to light
up the Cavaliers every time
he plar.ed against them with
the M1lwaukee Bucks .
Not knowing he would
one day be Williams' teammate and close friend ,
James had scouted him . He
knew what Williams could
bring tq the internationally
flavored Cavs. who have
players from Lithuania,
Brazil and Serbia.
"I saw t)ie things tie did
against us last yelrr in
Milwaukee," James said.
"Because I'm a fan of the
game, I watched him and ~
thought he could be a really
good fit for us, and I tbouglit
he could definitely help me
out on the perimeter. He has
taken a lot of pressure off
me as far as ballhandling
and things like that. He has
done that and more. He's an
unbelievable point guard~
He controls the team ana
runs the team ." .
Williams didn't know
James well before he .
arrived , but they bonded
immediately.
"Our friendship from the
jump gave us trust in each ·
other on the · court.''
Williams said . "Especially
him trusting me." .

.1rack
from Pagt: Bl
four championship efforts .
A pair of Meigs seniors
- Catie Wolfe and Adrian
Bolin . - each brought
home two gold medals and
a stadium record at the end
of the night .
Wolfe won both the
lOOm (12.96 seconds) and
400m (1:01.92) dashes,
with the stadium record
coming in.the lOOm victory. Bolin was victorious in
both the I OOm hm;dles
(16.77 seconds) ·and 300m
hurdles (48.71 seconds),
· Bryan Walteralllte photo
setting her stadium record Members of the Eastern boys track and field team pose for a praseason picture during this
in the 300m event.
March file pt10to at Tuppers F&gt;iains.
·
·
Wolfe, with 26 accumulated points, was the top did not compte in the girls mark of 3:53.03 in the up with a time of 16.25
4x400m event. Aeiker also seconds and· also placed
girls scorer in the TVC competition.
In the boys competition, finished third in the third in the pole v11ult with
Ohio, while Ryan Yates of
Belpre did the same on the the Eagles produced five 3200m run wiih a time of a height of 10-feet even.
· Wolfe also placed third
finishes
~
10:59.23 .
boys side with 35 points. ·top -three
Meigs also fared well in in the 200m dash (27 .8
Chandra Cuckler (26) and although none of them
l.,amaur Buck (19 .75)., were individual titles . relays, placing second in seconds) on the girls side ,
both of Federal Hocking, Junior Mike Johnson led both the 4x lOOm ~nd while senior Morgan Burt
won top-point honors on the TVC Hocking champi· 4x200m events. Sm1th, was the lone Eastern gi~l
the Hocking Division ·side . ons finishing second in . Jeff Roush, Zach Story and to finish in the top-three
the
BOOm run Crockett &lt;;row posted a with a height of 4-8 in the
TheAthens girls won the both
. .
h'
·
runner-up t1me of I :36.22 , high jump.
TVC Ohio and overall (2.05.51)
and •gh JUmp. while Roush , Story, Crow
Complete_results of the
team 'event with a score of (6-2). Joh!J.son ~as also and Darby Gilmore ran the
2009
Tri· Valley
109.5 points, while Belpre partof~paJrofthlrd-place . 4xl00m relay in .47.49
Conference Track and
was second with 89 points. efforts 111 the 4x800m and seconds.
· Fie.ld Championships are
The · Lady Marauders 4x400m relays.
Jacob Well ·was the available . on rhe web at
placed . third with 85
Johnson ,. Josh Hur.p, I !Om high hurdles runner- · www .baumspage .com
points, · followed by TVC B.J. Moore and Ke1th
Hocking champ Federal Aeiker mad~ up the
Hocking · (81)
and 4x800m squad that posted
Alexander (71) to round a time of 8:53 .68, while
out the top five. Eastern Johnson, Moore, Kelly ·
(28) placed IOlh in the I I- Wi11ebrenner and Klint
for all
team field, while Southern Connery finished with a

.'1helorld's Bast Roaf'
. Flat or Low Sloped Roofs

LAKE ERIE

'- The walleye bag limit is 6 fish per day. The minimum
size limit for walleye is 15 inches. ·
· - The daily bag limit for Lake Erie yellowperch i.s 25 fish
per angler in waters west of the Huron pier. The limit will
remain at 30 fish per angler in Ohio waters from Huron eastward. Any boats landing west of Huron,Ohio will be subject
to the 25 fish daily bag limit, while boats landing at Huron
or points east will be subject to a 30 fish daily bag limit.
Shore-based anglers west of the Huron pier will be subject to
a 25 fish daily bag limit, while those on the pier and eastward
will remain at 30 fish daily. .
- Through May 15, the steelhead trout daily bag limit is
2 t1sh_ The minimum size limit for steelhead is 12 inches.
- Black bass is closed to possession (catch and release
only) through June 26, with the limit returning to 5 fish on
June 27 .
Western Basin - Walleye fishing was good in the western
basin durino the week of May 4. The best fishing was around
the island ~omplex including north of North Bass Island,
south of Starve Island to Kelleys fsland , north of K~lleys
Island , and north of Kelleys lslaild Shoal. F1sh can sull be
caught on jigs in Maumee Bay and on the Camp Perry reef
complex. but jig fishing is slowinl! down as the spawmng
season ends. Trollers were catchmg fish on crank balls,
worm harnesses fis)led with .inli~e wei~hts or botto~ bouncers. and on spoons fished w11h d1psy d1vers or JCI d1vers.
Yellow perc.h tishing has been best off of Ballast .Island
and around Kelleys Island . Perch spreaders or crappie ngs
with shiners fished near the bottom produce the most fish.
The best small mouth ba~s fishing reports hav\l coTe from
the north bay of Kelleys Island .
.
~ .

.
'
guys who know how to play
CLEVELAND (AP) Absent from any box score
significant minutes, guys
and unseen on TV highwho know how to play 5as·
lights, the moment passed
ketball. We haven't had that
without fanfare . Earlier this
in the past "
year, LeBron James did
Or anyone like Williams.
something that may best
define his breakthrough sea· . ·
" Right
over
there ,"
10 the ~gular season and are Williams said. pointing to a
son with the Cavaliers .
It wasn ' t a thunderous · rampag~ng through the play- sideline
area
inside
dunk or no-look pass . In the. offs, ~~th senes sweeps of . Cleveland's training facility.
aftermath of a win, James Detroit and Atlanta already "That's where LeBron and I
was dissecting the game u~~er th~lr belts.
I first talked about winning a
when he called Cavs po,int
They ve got w~apons all championship - together.
guard !lito Williams a name over · th~ floor. Hawks Since day one, that has been
never uttered in Cleveland coach M1ke Wood~n srud _ the goaL"
be(ore,
" As g~ as he IS, and
Williams was the missing
" He's
my sidekick," LeBron IS one &lt;lf the best ·
J
· fi
fi
I've seen in 27 years in this piece. 1n · ames Irs1 IVe
James said :
seasons. tb·e Cavs didn 't
· After a recent practice , league , he doesn ' t do it have a poi~ guard capable
.
W
I.
· i11ams
reca II e d · J ames ' alone."
o f consist
ntly d irecting
stamp of approval..
In winning their first eight their offense. They needed
"That was cool ," Williams playoff games - all by dou-- someone to create shots for
said. "Robin's cool. Batman ble digits - the Cavaliers James, someone to take the
are an eye-popping 74-l6, ball out of his hands, somecan't.have it all."
In fiction and reality, tying them with the 1986 one to settle things down.
there 's a long been a place Boston Celtics for the Too often , James was a solo
for the faithful sidekick, the fourth-best
stan
ever artist ..
dependable panner that the through 90 games. Only the
Ricky
Davis .
Larry
hero can count on . Johnny 1996 Chicago Bulls (79- ll), Hughes . Jeff Mcinnis . Eric
Carson had Ed McMahon: the 1997 Bulls (76·14) and Snow. They all tried, but
The Lone Ranger had Tonto. the 1967 Philadelphia 76ers none of those guards devel'
Captain Kirk had Mr. and 1972 Los Angeles oped into what Cleveland
Spack.
Lakers (75- 15) have · hit the needed most: A complemen·
But until this season, it 90-game mark ahead of tary component fo~ James.
was King James without a these Cavs, who have been The Scottie Pippel) to his
royal coun.
·
unequaled in recent months. Michael Jordan.
To be fair, this year's
Since the All-Star break,
There is no jealousy.
MVP had a few teammates the Cavs, who will face Williams has not only
he could trust on the floor, either Boston or Orlando in accepted his costarring role,
but not enough. The the conference final , are 35- but he relishes being pan of
Cavaliers were talented. bui 5 with one of the losses James' on-coun entourage . .
not as skilled as the Bo~ton coming in the regular-seaWilliams can take over
Celtics ; Los Angeles Lakers son
finale
against when he needs to, and like
or others .
Philadelphia when coach James, he 's able to set up
But
now,
besides Mike Brown rested James teammates to score. Also
Williams,
an
All-Star and
other
starters. like No. 23,-when a big shot
acquired in a trade last sum- Cleveland's ·reserves took · is needed, Williams wants
mer, James is surrounded by the Sixers to ovenime the ball.
a solid supporting cast. A before losing.
"I pick my spots," he said.
team as tight-knit as a col"We got 10 or I L guys "This is a well-balan·ced
lege fraternity, the Cavaliers who have started on other team. At times I don't have
had the league's best record teams," James said.''We .got to be aggressive.) can spac¢

•

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Sarah E•a•s·Moore &amp; Joe Moore
"Tile Home Team"
Gallipolis, Oblo 140-44.1·1111
Tha.n.l{ you for rating Auto- OWue t•s
In su ra nce wil h the i .D. l'l&gt;owi:t'
"'- ndA.'i.•m ciatcs ;.z.oo8 "Highest In
Cus tomer Sati.s facLion with t.he
Auto Jn ~urnnce Claims Exp c rh-J n c:c."

'"Award wt.rnlng MoSter Roofers ·
.. Years in

aRow'"

Pomeroy, Ohio

.7 40-992-7953 • 740-591-4641

I

�I

Page 82 • ~unbap tn:imes -&amp;mtmrl

Sunday, May 17. .2009

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Waverly ends Blue Devils' season

I

In the

Open

Jim Freeman

Wahama

Lady Knights to host championsi,.ip

••

Pomt
fromPageBl
:were unable to surpass the
·Point Pleasant defense.
; The Black Knights added
:a single run to their lead in
:the· seventh inning, sealing
their total at 10. Point followed this UP. by securing
. the Red Dev11's three runs
;though a strong defensive
·
·effort to end the game.
: Contributors to the Point
:Pleasant victory were many.
:D.W. Herdman went 2 for 4
with an RBI; Philip Allen .
went 3 for 4 ; Titus Russell
. went 3 for 4 with a double
:and four runs; Clay Krebs
·went 2 for 4 with two RBls;
:and Justin Weaver and
:Tyson Jones both finished
the game with hits.
With two consecutive
suite tournament appear·
:ances, and the posibon of
·Class AA state runner-up
; for 2008, the Black Knights
:have a lot to look forward ·to
·in the continlJation of the
2009 post-season.
·
Coach
Higginbotham
.commented on the goal for
:the sqllad in the pJ;e· season
:noting, "As always our goal
•is to win every game, bu~
:especially .the sectional
·championship ."
-

-

.

N:~o-it-yourself ~lasslfled ads
Save time and money. Go to www.mydailytribune.com
· and click on Classifieds and follow the user-fr!endly steps
to place your ad.' '
~

Anna JeNI!Ier/photo

Point's F&gt;hillip Allen charges toward third altar stealing sec·
ond base· in Friday's game against Ravenswood. The Black
Knights went on to a 10·3 victory· over the Red Devils.
With one goal already Higginbotham it should be a
accomplished, the Black good show.
Knights are gearing up to
fight their way to the state
POINT PLEASANT 10,
championships, and hope·
RAVENSWOOD 3
fully claim the title. .
Point
soc 004 1 - 1c 12 1
But first the Red and
R - 300 ooo o - 3 H
Black must face Roane
POINT: B - McClung; 8 .J. Lloyd
RAVENSWOOD· Jam11 vannott,
Count)'. May 26. starting at
Sponco Oroko (1) . Luke Coney($); O.W.
6:30. The squad has the tal· Ma~1n
.
ent and the drive, and with
the direction of Coach WP- McClung: LP- Vllnnolll.

- - - - - - - - - - - - - --

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Qtimes -ientinel

6ttnbav t!times .&amp;wtintl • Page B3

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Weelllv Ohio Rsblnl Rapon Close-knit Cavaliers not just the LeBron show

Return of the osprey a
wildlife success story

Rya n Robenson was
MDTSPORTS . MYDAlt_'(lAIBU'iE C~
ma,terful in the winning
decision . allowing only
WAVERLY
Gallia
three hits and a walk over
Academy baseball needed a
seven innings while strik·
li ttle magic to . get past
ing out eight.
Osprey are genera II y
One of Ohio's more recent
Athens on Monday to reach
John Troester took the wildlife success stories is
monogamous, and may or
ihe Di vision II &gt;ectional
loss for GAHS ; allowing the reintroduction of the
not be migratory. Once
final against host ,Waverly.
six runs , four hits and a Ospr~y:
paired. the birds will build a
Unfortunately for the
walk over 2.1 innings of
large
nest as much as five
Ospreys were once comBlue Devils, the magic/did·
work .
·
feet wide and . several feet
JIIOn throughout the cont!·n't follow on Friday during
Kruize Wand lin~ finished nent, but the use of pestideep. An ideal nest location
a 7· I setback to the top·
for the guests m relief, cides, habitat destruction
would consist of a high,
seeded Tigers in Pike
working 3.2 innings on the and persecution led to a ·
open platfonn near a good
County.
mound.
supply of fish.
drastic decline in the osprey
The Devils ( 13- 10) mu sIt was the final game in population. Here lately,
The female usual!y . lays
tered onl y three hits in the
the Blue and White for hot.ever, I have received a
three
or . four whitecand·
·contest. half of the number
seniors Whaley, Dressel, couple of ~ports from peo·
brown splotchy eggs about
·of safeties that the host s
Brett Bowman, Austin
ple who have observed Lanllley Air Force Base in the size. of a hen's egg, and
produced in the triumph .
Roush and Clint Saunders. osprey
along the Ohio River. Virgmia, which has numer- both parents help incubate
But thing s were going
Al first glimpse, it is easy ous osprey nests, provided them uillil they hatch.
well early on , as both teams
WAVERLY 7, GALUA ACADEMY 1
to dismiss an osprey as a many of the birds in an Generally only two chicks
battled through two innings
Galllpotis 000 . 001 o - 1.3 2
v~ltur'e or some other large effon to help reduce the risk per nest survive to fledging.
- only to remain scoreless.
Waverty
006 100 x - 7 6 2
Feeding osprey can be
· Then in the bottom of the
b1rd.
A rM:...collisjons between jets observed
hovering high
'third , everything rell apart
Ospreys are large J~arro~spreys. The prOJeCt
WP - Robertson; LP - li'oester.
above
lakes,
rivers or ponds,
Wmged
hawks
With was funded by donatiOnS
search
for
fish
cruising neru:
wingspans up to five}::et. tax check-offs and the pur:
They tend to fly flat- chase of wildlife conserva- the surface. Spotting one,
they quickly fold their wings
winged" with a distinct ~nk tion plates.
·
and
dive, grabbing the fish,
m the elbow. Tbey are bnght
The sites chosen for the
hitting
the water talons fust.
white underneath, with dark releases were Deer Creek
Once
airborne
again, the
brown patches at the carpal Wildlife Area in centr.U
joints and a mottled dark Ohio
Lake La Su An bird manipulates the fish to
brown necklace. Other iden- Wildlife Area in northwest catry it head·first, making it
tify.ing markings include a Ohio Pona~e Lakes in more streamlined in flight.
The bottoms o( an
dark stripe through each eye, north~ast Oh1o Salt Fork
and. a dark brown back. ·
Wildlife Area 'in southeast osprey's feet are also spe·
Ospr~ys were. the subject Ohio,
Spring Valley cially adapted for· grippmg
of a remtroducllon program Wildlife Area in southwest and carrying fish, as they are
staned itT the late 1990s.
Ohio and The Wilds also in covered with shon, sharp
According to the Ohio southeast Oh.io. The sites spines. Supposedly the
Depanment of Natural were carefully selected to talons are better suited for
Resources' Division of allow long-term monitoring grabbing fish than . they are '
Wildlife, the prow:am was of the birds, arid to avoid fur releasing them; if an ·
. staned in 1996 with a goal conflicts with bal!l eagles, a osprey grabs too large of a
fish, it faces a swim back to
of 20 nesting pairs of competing bird species.
ospreys by 20 10. Tha! goal
Due to the success of the shore or even the possibility
was achieved in 2003, seven reintroduction
program, of drowning.
of
schedule.
·
ospreys
are
no
longer
years
ahead
•
Bryan Wattert/photo
Jim Freemar1 is wildlife
The young ospreys .that released, but Division per·
Members of the Wahama baseqall team pose for a picture after receiving its Class A secwere released were donated sonnet still monitor the specialist for the Meigs Soil
tional title trophy Friday night. afater defeating. Buffalo by a 4·2 margin in Masen.
by New York, Virginia and number of nests and chicks. and Water Conservation
runs in the third inning to in the seventh, retired the Maryland, states that already A brief search of tl)e internet District. He can be contact·
iake an early lead when B isons leadoff batter on have established osprey revealed no osprey-related ed weekdays at 740-992· ·
Kitchen and Roach opened strikes before getting the populations.
or
. at
Wildlife damage or nuisance com- 4282
the
fame with a single each. second out of the inning on Services
fromPageBl
jim freeman@ oh .nacdnet .net
personnel
at plaints.
Underwo.od then lined a two .a come-backer to the
run double to drive in the mound. Wahama recorded
Buffalo was rated faunh in games. first two runs before the final out of the evening
the
latest
Charleston Warth made it a three run on Warth's stellar defensive
:Gazette state ranl&gt;ings.
,.
falcon advantage with a grab· of a foul pop-up just
: The sectional victory two-base hit to left.
past first base to set off a
· hits during the seven-inning by Jennifer Wickline.
BY
ANNA JESSMER
; moved the Falcons season
MORSPORTSOMYD,a.lLVREGJSTER.COM
contest and struck out lJ to
Buffalo came back to JUbilant celebration among
Lady Knight hitters dur·
·record to 19-3 on the year close the gap to a single the Falcons players, coachsecure the Red and Black · in11 · the game
were:
:while Buffalo saw its ~009 tally in the fifth as Call led es and fans.
W1ckline (3-3) with an RBI;
ELLENBORO :._ · The win.
·campaign come to a condu- off the inning with a line
The match was scoreless Cottrill (1-3) with an RBI;
Berkley emerged with the Lady Knights shut out the
~ion at 21-11.
. drive . double - to left. ·pitching win, his tenth of Lady Rebels of Ritchie until the bottom of the third . A. Sommer (1-3); and
. WHS collected eight hits Following a ground out the season without a defeat, County Thursday night in inning when Anna Sommer Regan Cottrill (1-3).
·
:on the day which included Jared Tucker walked before while Jared Tucker took the · game one of regional play. and Jennifer Wickline each The Lady Knights are set
:three extra base knocks. Chris Belcher broughrin the hard-luck mound setback The 22-9 Point Pleas.a nt knocked out singles tcr get to host the regional champi·
;Zac Warth drove in a run . first Bison run with an RBf for .Buffalo. After pitching · squad upped the . ante on base . Devm Cottnll fol- onsh1p Thursday agamst the
;with a. single and a double single. After a fielder's ·. six scoreless innings .on against the contending team lowed up with a single that winner of the Magnolia·
·to lead the Bend Area team choice loaded the bases Tuesday, Berkley gave . up with a solid defensive effort sent Sommer in for Point's Weir g~me.
:offensively. with Garrett Berkley got Burdette on a two runs on five hits while and just enough of ail offen. first run.
Underwood chasing home s hort fl y to ng
POINT PLEASANT 2,
The final run of the con· ht b e fore fanning seven and walking· sive
drive to · secure a 2·0
·
. imother Falcon tally with a W1nterstem
RiTCHIE COUNTY 0
· bl oope d a t wo- three. Tucker also nitched victory o. ver Ritchie County. test occurred in the fifth
.
· iwo-base hit.
· 1e to ceo t er to rna ke . an impressive gamer in a
Senior pitcher Tessa inning when Emily Sommer RC
000 000 0 _ o 2 1
ou t smg
· Ethan McGrew : also it a 3-2 contest. Berkley route going performance for Wyant allowed onl~ two was sent home by a single PP
001 010 x - 2 a o
·stroked a double for then retired the side by get- Buffalo with the Bison
' Wahama with William ting the next hitter on a right-harider giving up four
Zuspan, Brice Clark, Tyler grounder to second.
· runs, three earned, on eight
Kitchen and Jacob Roach
Walks to Anthony Bond, hits with six strikeouts and
adding a single apiece. Ethan McGrew and Jacob three walkS.
Zuspan, Wanh and Kitchen' Roach sandwiched around ·a
The sectional champion
also had outstanding defen- couple . of strikeouts in the . Whjre Falcons will now
·sive plays to compliment bottom half of the sixth
·the five hit pitching of loaded the sacks with White await the Region IV semifinal contest at 6:00 pm on
.Berkley.
Falcons and led to the locals May 25th in th~ Bend Area
Buffalo received ~o hits final run of the night. teams quest to return to the
off the bat of Garrett Garrett
Underwood 's state tournament forthe first .
Burdette with Zack Call grounder to short was mis· time since the 1998 season,
smacking a double; Chris played for an error to give
Belcher . · ·and
·Nathan Wahama an unearned insurWAHAMA 4, BUFFALO 2
Winterstein added· a single ance run and a 4-2 lead
Clasalfleda
Buffalo ooo 020 o - 251
.
each for the visiting B.isons g oing into the final frame
.
wahama 003 001 x
48 o
Berkley, facing the top of
in the 4-2. loss.
~ Plaoo a newspaper ad
Wahama slruck for three the batting order for. B'uffalo WP - Berl&lt;ley: LP - Tucker.
. [}Place a~ online. ad
for
the
fo urth -seeded
gue sts.
WHS plated six run s in
that pivotal frame , which
helped the hosts e'tabli'h a
lead it would never relin·
quish.
Waverly added another
run in the fourth. which
increased its advantage to
seven runs after four com·
plete.
·
The lone GAHS offen·
sive breakthrough came in
the sixth as the guests
ended Waverly's .no-hit bid
with singles by Beau
Whaley and lan Dressel ,
which allowed Whaley to
score and make it a 7- I
deficit.
·
Chuck Calven also had a
pinch-hit single in the seV·
enth , but the Devils were
not able to do any more
damage in the setback .

STAFF REPORT

Sunday, May 17,2009

COLUMBUS (AP) - The weekly fiShing repon provided
by the Division · of Wildlife of the Ohio Department of
Natural Resources.

OHIO RIVER
Western and Cincinnati area - Current river conditions
.are high and muddy. Water levels should steadily drop
.through Thursday, May!4.

SOUTHEAST OHIO
·. Dillon Lake (Muskingum County) - Crappie fishing has
he lei its own the past few weeks with anglers fiShing jigs and·
minnows near the dam and dock areas and catching seven to
12 inch fish. Largemouth bass fishing has also been good,
· ·anglers are casting cr.mk baits and other artificials along the
shoreline and reeling in eight to 15-inch largemouths.
Seneca Lake (Guernsey and Noble counties) - One of the
hottest spots is the cove nearest to the beach. Anglers report
· ~ood catches of walleye in the 16-inch range , channel catfish
:m the 12 to 19-inch rdllge, as well as white and black crappie being caught in this cove. A. nine-inch minimum length
'limit for cr.1ppie is active.
.
Burr Oak Lake (Athens and Morgan counties) - White
'crappie are hitting on jigs tipped with a minnow fished over
structure throughout the lake. Bluegill are being ·caught by
'fishing a worm four-feet below a bobber cast out over struc'ture. Heavy structure by the dam wall is producing great
·results.

SOUTHWEST OHIO .

·I

Grand Lake St. Marys (Auglaize and Mercer County) I The lake is one foot above pool with a 61 degree water tern·
·perature. Bass are being caught in good numbers. They are
being caught along the shoreline in less than three feet of
·water using soft plastics, (pumpkinseed, watermelon) and
'white spinner baits. The bass are starting to spawn so con·centrate your efforts in'the back of channels, and bays where
there is brush, and rock . For pan fish - good numbers are
'being caught with cork, and live bait. Fish about one to two
·feet deep along any rocky or brushy channel. Catfish · good
·numbers are being taken on the mam lake using cut bait, and
·raw shrimp, and night crawlers. Fishing tight-line is best.
. ' East Fork Lake (Clermont County) - Now in summer
·pool and the water is clear. Anglers are reporting success on
crappie using minnows and jigs with tubes. Try chanreuse .
'and white color patterns . They are generally bemg taken m
'18 to 24-inches of water. Fish around structure, fallen trees
·and in the coves .

CENTRAL OHIO
- Hoover Reservoir (Ddawaie and Franklin counties) White bass are the hot fish at Hoover Reservoir right now.
Try using small spinners and jigs in Big Walnut Creek north
of the reservoir. Crappie are also active right now. They can
'be caught in two to four feet of water on jigs tipped with min'nows ortwister tails. Most fish range from seven to 10 inch·
-es. Hoover is alst&gt; an excellent lake to catch nice largemouth
bass due to lower ·fishing pressure than other large lakes.
'May is the time. to fish &amp;horeline cover. with lures like tube
'baits; jig &amp; pig a.ndjerkbaits. Look for· ~pawning bluegill oil
beds in the backsof coves .. There is a 10 horsepower motor
limit at this reservoir:
. · O'Shaughnessy Reservoir (Delaware County) - Crappie
are very active in .the north end of the lake. Target submerged
cover using minnows suspended under a bobber. Fish·shore·
line cc ··r throughout the lake with small worms and laival
'baits su,pcnded beneath a bobber when seeking bluegill.
Areas along the west shoreline that have fallen trees and
:brush piles are good places to.·fish for largemouth bass. Try
,a variety of creature baits,lizards, and tubesfor best resu.lts.
'Channel catfish can .be taken in the upper section of the
· •reservoir. Use cut baits, shrimp, or. night crawlers fished on
'the bottmh.
· ·
· '

NORTHEAST OHIO .
· West Branch Lake (Portage County) :"- This lake is well
known for its excellent muskellunge fishing. Last year,
'anglers reported catching 221 muskies with 31 fish exceed·
ing 42 inches. All fiSh reported were released after capture.
A total of 2,269 advanced· fingerling muskellunge were
stocked in 2008. Gizzard shad makes of most of the diet-for
muskies, so using shad-imitating crank baits should provide
great results. Fish management staff from the Ohio Division
of Wildlife introdu~ed over.265 slructures into the lake last
month as a result of a recycling partnership with the
Mahoning County Green Team. These structures will be a
.
great .asset to anglers who fish '\Vest Branch. ·
Mogadore Reservoir (P&lt;;~rtage County) ~ For y~ars , this
lake has served as one of the most popular panfishmg lakes
in northeast Ohio b.ut sadly, it seems as though this panfish·
. ery is no longer a top producer. On a positive note for bass
anglers, however, sampling efforts in 2008 produced a large
number of the bass · measuring at least IS-inches lon~.
Electric n1otors only; wheelchair accessible shoreline facih,
ties available. Anglers visiting Mogadore should note that
docks at Congress Lake Road, the State Route 43 boathouse,
and Lansinger Road. have been recently renovated thanks to
a local Eagle Scout pr~ect.
·.

. ·

.

NOiiiTHWEST OHIO

.·

· . Maumee River (Lucas and Wood counties) - The water
temperature is 60 degr~es and the water levels are nonnal.
Wh1ie bass anc! white perch fishing remain good. Fishing
e best. The occasional
shiners ·under a bobiJer is workin
walleye is still being caugh .
. . Fish are being caught
from Fort Meills through Orlean
k. Bluegrass Island is
accessible at th1s time.
·
. Sandusky River (Sandusky Cou t ) - The water temperature is 64 degrees and the water le.vel is low. Excellent
catches of white bass is being reponed .. One-sixth to l/8
ounce jigs with light colors are working well as is fishing
minnows under a bobber. The shoreline from the Ballville
Dam to the sand Docks is the best place to fish. It is predicted that this week will be the peak of the run.

·

the floor. And if my · man
helps. I can knock down the
3. I try to affect the game m
a lot of different ways."
General manager Danny
Ferry attempted to bring in
an established veteran like
Mike Bibby or Jason Kidd
.via trade . but couldn't get a
deal done. Then in August,
while James was 1in China
winning a gold nledal with
the U.S. Olympic Redeem
Team,
Ferry
lande\1
Williams , a confident 26year-old who used to light
up the Cavaliers every time
he plar.ed against them with
the M1lwaukee Bucks .
Not knowing he would
one day be Williams' teammate and close friend ,
James had scouted him . He
knew what Williams could
bring tq the internationally
flavored Cavs. who have
players from Lithuania,
Brazil and Serbia.
"I saw t)ie things tie did
against us last yelrr in
Milwaukee," James said.
"Because I'm a fan of the
game, I watched him and ~
thought he could be a really
good fit for us, and I tbouglit
he could definitely help me
out on the perimeter. He has
taken a lot of pressure off
me as far as ballhandling
and things like that. He has
done that and more. He's an
unbelievable point guard~
He controls the team ana
runs the team ." .
Williams didn't know
James well before he .
arrived , but they bonded
immediately.
"Our friendship from the
jump gave us trust in each ·
other on the · court.''
Williams said . "Especially
him trusting me." .

.1rack
from Pagt: Bl
four championship efforts .
A pair of Meigs seniors
- Catie Wolfe and Adrian
Bolin . - each brought
home two gold medals and
a stadium record at the end
of the night .
Wolfe won both the
lOOm (12.96 seconds) and
400m (1:01.92) dashes,
with the stadium record
coming in.the lOOm victory. Bolin was victorious in
both the I OOm hm;dles
(16.77 seconds) ·and 300m
hurdles (48.71 seconds),
· Bryan Walteralllte photo
setting her stadium record Members of the Eastern boys track and field team pose for a praseason picture during this
in the 300m event.
March file pt10to at Tuppers F&gt;iains.
·
·
Wolfe, with 26 accumulated points, was the top did not compte in the girls mark of 3:53.03 in the up with a time of 16.25
4x400m event. Aeiker also seconds and· also placed
girls scorer in the TVC competition.
In the boys competition, finished third in the third in the pole v11ult with
Ohio, while Ryan Yates of
Belpre did the same on the the Eagles produced five 3200m run wiih a time of a height of 10-feet even.
· Wolfe also placed third
finishes
~
10:59.23 .
boys side with 35 points. ·top -three
Meigs also fared well in in the 200m dash (27 .8
Chandra Cuckler (26) and although none of them
l.,amaur Buck (19 .75)., were individual titles . relays, placing second in seconds) on the girls side ,
both of Federal Hocking, Junior Mike Johnson led both the 4x lOOm ~nd while senior Morgan Burt
won top-point honors on the TVC Hocking champi· 4x200m events. Sm1th, was the lone Eastern gi~l
the Hocking Division ·side . ons finishing second in . Jeff Roush, Zach Story and to finish in the top-three
the
BOOm run Crockett &lt;;row posted a with a height of 4-8 in the
TheAthens girls won the both
. .
h'
·
runner-up t1me of I :36.22 , high jump.
TVC Ohio and overall (2.05.51)
and •gh JUmp. while Roush , Story, Crow
Complete_results of the
team 'event with a score of (6-2). Joh!J.son ~as also and Darby Gilmore ran the
2009
Tri· Valley
109.5 points, while Belpre partof~paJrofthlrd-place . 4xl00m relay in .47.49
Conference Track and
was second with 89 points. efforts 111 the 4x800m and seconds.
· Fie.ld Championships are
The · Lady Marauders 4x400m relays.
Jacob Well ·was the available . on rhe web at
placed . third with 85
Johnson ,. Josh Hur.p, I !Om high hurdles runner- · www .baumspage .com
points, · followed by TVC B.J. Moore and Ke1th
Hocking champ Federal Aeiker mad~ up the
Hocking · (81)
and 4x800m squad that posted
Alexander (71) to round a time of 8:53 .68, while
out the top five. Eastern Johnson, Moore, Kelly ·
(28) placed IOlh in the I I- Wi11ebrenner and Klint
for all
team field, while Southern Connery finished with a

.'1helorld's Bast Roaf'
. Flat or Low Sloped Roofs

LAKE ERIE

'- The walleye bag limit is 6 fish per day. The minimum
size limit for walleye is 15 inches. ·
· - The daily bag limit for Lake Erie yellowperch i.s 25 fish
per angler in waters west of the Huron pier. The limit will
remain at 30 fish per angler in Ohio waters from Huron eastward. Any boats landing west of Huron,Ohio will be subject
to the 25 fish daily bag limit, while boats landing at Huron
or points east will be subject to a 30 fish daily bag limit.
Shore-based anglers west of the Huron pier will be subject to
a 25 fish daily bag limit, while those on the pier and eastward
will remain at 30 fish daily. .
- Through May 15, the steelhead trout daily bag limit is
2 t1sh_ The minimum size limit for steelhead is 12 inches.
- Black bass is closed to possession (catch and release
only) through June 26, with the limit returning to 5 fish on
June 27 .
Western Basin - Walleye fishing was good in the western
basin durino the week of May 4. The best fishing was around
the island ~omplex including north of North Bass Island,
south of Starve Island to Kelleys fsland , north of K~lleys
Island , and north of Kelleys lslaild Shoal. F1sh can sull be
caught on jigs in Maumee Bay and on the Camp Perry reef
complex. but jig fishing is slowinl! down as the spawmng
season ends. Trollers were catchmg fish on crank balls,
worm harnesses fis)led with .inli~e wei~hts or botto~ bouncers. and on spoons fished w11h d1psy d1vers or JCI d1vers.
Yellow perc.h tishing has been best off of Ballast .Island
and around Kelleys Island . Perch spreaders or crappie ngs
with shiners fished near the bottom produce the most fish.
The best small mouth ba~s fishing reports hav\l coTe from
the north bay of Kelleys Island .
.
~ .

.
'
guys who know how to play
CLEVELAND (AP) Absent from any box score
significant minutes, guys
and unseen on TV highwho know how to play 5as·
lights, the moment passed
ketball. We haven't had that
without fanfare . Earlier this
in the past "
year, LeBron James did
Or anyone like Williams.
something that may best
define his breakthrough sea· . ·
" Right
over
there ,"
10 the ~gular season and are Williams said. pointing to a
son with the Cavaliers .
It wasn ' t a thunderous · rampag~ng through the play- sideline
area
inside
dunk or no-look pass . In the. offs, ~~th senes sweeps of . Cleveland's training facility.
aftermath of a win, James Detroit and Atlanta already "That's where LeBron and I
was dissecting the game u~~er th~lr belts.
I first talked about winning a
when he called Cavs po,int
They ve got w~apons all championship - together.
guard !lito Williams a name over · th~ floor. Hawks Since day one, that has been
never uttered in Cleveland coach M1ke Wood~n srud _ the goaL"
be(ore,
" As g~ as he IS, and
Williams was the missing
" He's
my sidekick," LeBron IS one &lt;lf the best ·
J
· fi
fi
I've seen in 27 years in this piece. 1n · ames Irs1 IVe
James said :
seasons. tb·e Cavs didn 't
· After a recent practice , league , he doesn ' t do it have a poi~ guard capable
.
W
I.
· i11ams
reca II e d · J ames ' alone."
o f consist
ntly d irecting
stamp of approval..
In winning their first eight their offense. They needed
"That was cool ," Williams playoff games - all by dou-- someone to create shots for
said. "Robin's cool. Batman ble digits - the Cavaliers James, someone to take the
are an eye-popping 74-l6, ball out of his hands, somecan't.have it all."
In fiction and reality, tying them with the 1986 one to settle things down.
there 's a long been a place Boston Celtics for the Too often , James was a solo
for the faithful sidekick, the fourth-best
stan
ever artist ..
dependable panner that the through 90 games. Only the
Ricky
Davis .
Larry
hero can count on . Johnny 1996 Chicago Bulls (79- ll), Hughes . Jeff Mcinnis . Eric
Carson had Ed McMahon: the 1997 Bulls (76·14) and Snow. They all tried, but
The Lone Ranger had Tonto. the 1967 Philadelphia 76ers none of those guards devel'
Captain Kirk had Mr. and 1972 Los Angeles oped into what Cleveland
Spack.
Lakers (75- 15) have · hit the needed most: A complemen·
But until this season, it 90-game mark ahead of tary component fo~ James.
was King James without a these Cavs, who have been The Scottie Pippel) to his
royal coun.
·
unequaled in recent months. Michael Jordan.
To be fair, this year's
Since the All-Star break,
There is no jealousy.
MVP had a few teammates the Cavs, who will face Williams has not only
he could trust on the floor, either Boston or Orlando in accepted his costarring role,
but not enough. The the conference final , are 35- but he relishes being pan of
Cavaliers were talented. bui 5 with one of the losses James' on-coun entourage . .
not as skilled as the Bo~ton coming in the regular-seaWilliams can take over
Celtics ; Los Angeles Lakers son
finale
against when he needs to, and like
or others .
Philadelphia when coach James, he 's able to set up
But
now,
besides Mike Brown rested James teammates to score. Also
Williams,
an
All-Star and
other
starters. like No. 23,-when a big shot
acquired in a trade last sum- Cleveland's ·reserves took · is needed, Williams wants
mer, James is surrounded by the Sixers to ovenime the ball.
a solid supporting cast. A before losing.
"I pick my spots," he said.
team as tight-knit as a col"We got 10 or I L guys "This is a well-balan·ced
lege fraternity, the Cavaliers who have started on other team. At times I don't have
had the league's best record teams," James said.''We .got to be aggressive.) can spac¢

•

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Sarah E•a•s·Moore &amp; Joe Moore
"Tile Home Team"
Gallipolis, Oblo 140-44.1·1111
Tha.n.l{ you for rating Auto- OWue t•s
In su ra nce wil h the i .D. l'l&gt;owi:t'
"'- ndA.'i.•m ciatcs ;.z.oo8 "Highest In
Cus tomer Sati.s facLion with t.he
Auto Jn ~urnnce Claims Exp c rh-J n c:c."

'"Award wt.rnlng MoSter Roofers ·
.. Years in

aRow'"

Pomeroy, Ohio

.7 40-992-7953 • 740-591-4641

I

�Page 84 • &amp;unbap «:i~ :&amp;entind

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

·. Stone continues to lead
Rio men's bas~etballlands JC standout Jones Riverside Senior League_
.~io Grande Roundup

Bv

men's 3.000-meter race solid defensively as well, Natal)e Sargent of Watkins
STAFF REPORT
walt at the NAIA Indoor recording a .982 fielding 'Memorial
and
Ohio
MOSSPORTSOMVCWLYSENTINB..COM
National Track &amp; Field percentage.
Universi.ty transfer Jaymie
2009 Senior League
RIO
GRANDE
Championships at the Mini
"I think the biggest thing Rector as the current memSl4nding 4S Mzy. 12
Universiry of Rio Grande Dome in Johnson City, TN is, offensively we worked at bers of 2009-2010 recruiting . MASON - Carl Stone of
Ripley is holding onto the
Clll62.$
RedStorrn men's basketball in early March .
it," said Rio Grande head class.
lead
in the Riverside Sen'ior
IWIIII.....
.,
team is going about the task
Hi~ely posted a time of , coach Brad Wamimont.
Men's Golf League through
of replacing a stellar senior 14:23.27 m that event after " We put in more lime swinglllil:k - - - · - .f8.l;
-45;5 ,. '
RIO SOFTBAll. INKS
five weeks of play. Stone
C111!1.
.
......
.'
-45 .
. !•
class. They feel that _they qualifying with a time of ing the bat and the offensive ·
NEWTON'S STEWART
has a total of 52.5 points to ' fd~ . . ~5
have taken a big step with 14:33.01.
dividends took hold. We led
. Ead~ $.1'··:' 112'
the signing of junior college
Hively is the only Rio the conference in hitting and
RIO GRANDE _ The lead second place Ralph
at!kiHlillfSJU .f1 · ·.
Sayre of New Haven by 4.5 · .... ~ • · 39.1!
':
standout Meau Jones to a . Grande participant at the a lot of the offensive carenational letter of intent.
three-day event .
gories and the kid's saw the University of Rio Grande pomts . ln third place is Mick
~.5 . . . . .
Jones
leaves Truettbenefits of that, they worked ~~~~~~ 7:tb~~rtff~~ Winebrenner of Syracuse, ' · ~,..Hoillol.... . 311
... i'
Ohio, with 46.5 points to
McConnell Collefe after Rto WELL REPRESENTED ON extremely hard ."
~
·h 1
. ,llfl ~
" •' 34.5
.,.,
fu
'
'""e
should
be
up
there,"
•Utore
ranks
Wit
Ia
enl
durlead
fourth
place
Richard
Doo~
-.;:, 3C
l.i
..
,-o very success seasons ALL-AMC BASEBALL TEAM
"'
·
h'
..
· ·
in which TMC won 38
he added. '"We put 38 wins tng 1 IS recruiting season Made of Point Pleasant by a
Jlntrnr
. IIMMill •. ,33.6
KMI .~
' .·· ~.5 .
. '
ames and played in the CEDARVILLE _ The uL and finished third in re~- and the latest to sign on the f single point.
~~ 32
'
·
J ·
co11ege University of Rio Grande .0 ar season and second In dotted
line for head coach
A total of 70 players were
• ....,. .
~1.1; , .
eorg•a
umor
D 'd Pyl · N
H' h
DeW
Wikle.
·
.....
31 .; .
'\ ...
on
lulnd
for
Senior
League
Athletic Association semi- RedStom'l baseball team is the tournament and I'm very
avl
es IS ewton 1g
·~" '· -~.5 . . • . '
finals both seasons. Meau
proud of how
. they did."
School standout Katie on Tuesday making up 16 . ~QIInoi
81,WJiilb1.... . ·. ·281 "'r ~;- ~~~ ..
Stewart
well represented on the Allteams of four players and
had six double-doubles this American
Mideast
Wamimont's
program
·
~;'&amp;:;,
~~
Stewart, a 5-7 pitcher/out- two three man teams. The
season, · scoring in double Conference team . Senior should have a bright future
·Jfl#
~ . ·,:· ..1111. ' •I 1:
figures 17 times. He man- third baseman Edwin Orta as all the honorees with the fielder, comes to Rio Grande' low score for the day was a ,~;-~~ ' .- -~ } _7;._1$ - _;f;~~;i;, .
aged that fea.t 21 times over
d · ·
h
T
.exception of Orta will be With a great pedigree . The ·
_. · . ·:: . ,. ·:!?.s ·. ; h'l,,
JUntor catc er y 1er back next year. ''That's def- sou thpaw was All •Oh'IO 1as t three way tie at 63 (-7 under Bll~
~~ -~-- ··;, .. 21.s .~- ':~iR .a two year period. He also an
1
par)
between
the
teams
of:
_. IJkil~,:-~::;.· ,,i"::; _,2 7~ I
~-;&lt;:, ,
P umpton garnered Ist team
· ·
d
had eight games with double honors.
initely a positive, Eddie's season as a JUmor an was Charley Hargraves · (New :-lltcfi..-...i'*' .-~._,i""-~ -'1;~·-r:1:
lll&lt;k tlo.oGiol
. 2ij "' . : .• •2 ' .
"gores in rebounds.
the only one w_e 're losing. all-conference in each of the.
25 ''"" /~ ~~- .
''· Jones·
Orta, a native of C.aracas, but 1 don't want them to get 1ast t wo seasons and WI'II Haven), Jerry Arnold (New ,.:~-&lt;. . ..f'averaged
8.6
Haven), and Haske! Jones , ~
·
fliql. '·"·
24.~ ·., '
YEN; batted 372 (77-forlik I dd h'rd
t b
.
24.5
..
rebounds last season. He 207) for the season and fat and happy we're going to
e Y a a t I year o er (Charleston); Ed Debalski : l!ab·
.
BCA
Allcontinue
to
work
and
that's
belt
when
the
2009
season
Was named GA
(Ravenswood), Dick Dugan ·- ~~
established a new school
d
·am,
Honorable
what
I
told
them."
·
comes
to
an
en
'
Academl·c .,..e
(Racine, Ohio), Don Corbin L....;,_'~........ . . _~ .~·. ; _ _ . . .&gt;. _ . .,
"
record for runs batted in
·
Mention to the GABCAAII- with 59. He clubbed six
"We're goin~ into a new
Stewart also displayed (Gallipolis, Ohio), and ners were Carl Stone on theS.tate NAIA/JUCO Team, home runs (tied for second conference (Mid-South) and excellence in the classroom Sayre; and Gary Clark (New ninth
hole
and
Jim.'
· and a member of the 00 the team) and 16 doubles the c~allenges ahead of us being a part of the' all-con- Haven), Jerry Dean (Leon), Lawrence on the 14th hole. ,
Georgia/Florida
All -Star (third on the team) while are ~oing to be just as ference academic team in Chet Thomas (Patriot,
A total of 88 different.
·
41
('
rth
steen,"
he
added.
"We
2007
and
2008
and
won
a
Game.
Ohio).
and
Willis
Dudding
players haverlayed at least,
runs .ou
on
~1
1
sconng
Jones feels blessed to have the team).
wont be a surprise, I imag- scho ar ath ete award last (New Haven). .
.
one. week o league play._
the opportunity to continue · Plumpton, a native of ine we'll be picked in the year.
There was a three way tie thus far this season. The'~
his career at R1o Grande.
Peterborough, ONT, accept- middle of that conference, I
Stewart also made all- at 64 ( -6 under par) for league will continue .to meeti
"l'm just ready to get on ed the move to lead-off bat- don't think we'll be picked , league in basketball in 2007 fourth through sixth place.
on Tuesdays through the
that court and I feel blessed ter and took to it very well at the bottom. with what we and 2008 as well as the acaThe closest to the pin win- month of September.
thatl have the opportunity to leading the RedStorrn in hit- have returning."
demic team in 2008 . She
continue to play at Rio."
ting w1th a .403 (87-for-216)
Rio Grande set a new was team Most Valuable
Rio Grande is .coming of a batting average.
school record with 38 wins Player both years and closed
20 win season and is staring
Plumpton set a new high this season.
out her career on the hardat the huge task of going into water mark for Rio Grande
wood as the school's No. 2
the Mid-South Conference. with 87 safeties this season. REDSTORM SOFTI!ALL ADDS all-time leader in points
"I am excited for Meau He also topped the stat sheet
RUCKER
scored.
and his future. I think Meau with seven home runs and
"I am very excited about
is a great student, Christian, drove in 47 runs. Plumpton
RIO GRANDp - The signing with Rio," Stewart
and young man who hap- led . the team with 19 dou- University of Rio Grande said. "I think it seems like a
pens to work extremely hard bles. Defensively, he han- softball program is pleai;ed good school and I cannot
at being a good basketball died the pitching staff to announce the signing of waitto·be a part of the softplayec I ihink Meau will remarkably . and crafted a Mackenzie
Rucker
of ball program."
have a successful run at Rio .987 'fielding percentage Fairland High School to a
Stewart commented on
Grande in all phases," said while throwing out 21 6f 35 national letter of intent to what she liked about Rio
TMC . head coach Cory . would be base ·stealers. He play for the RedStorrn Grande. "Rio· Grande is a
aaldwin.
·
was also seleded to the All- beginning in the. 2009-10 small communit)i 'much like
· Jones is the second TMC AMC RawliiJgs Gold Glove academic year.
.
my owil hometown," she
Bear to sign this season, and Team.
Rucker, a catcher, is a added . "The softball coach,
the 13th in the . past three
Plumpton was a 2nd team · four-year letterwinner for David Pyles, seems like a
seasons.
selection a season ago. '
the Lady Dragons. She has good coach as well as a good
Rio Grande head coach
Junior centerfielder Ryan millie I st All-Ohio Valley person. · Also, the atmosKen French is excited about Yakura (Pickering, ONT) Conference and lst team fhere of Rio Grande is what
!ones joinin?, the RedStorm made 2nd team. Yikura was All-Southeast District . in loved."
·
pro~ram.
'We are very an honorable mention choice · each of her first three seaCoach Pyles says there·is a
exc1ted .to add Meau Jones to at shortstop last season. For sons and will likely add a lot to like about Stewart.
our basketball family ht:re at the year, Yakura finished fourth.year at the end of the "Even though she's leftthe University of Rio with a .398 (45;for-ll3) bat- .current season . Rucker handed lthink this kid could
Grande,"
French . said. ting average with one ·home served as team captain each play any position based on
·~Meau is a pe!'lion .of high run and 2Z RBI's.
.
Qf the last two seasons for. everybody that I've talked
character and happens to be
Hncored a team-high 57 head coach Glenn Dillon.
to," he said. "She's a very
'I talented basketball player. runs while collecting nine
Ruck~r was also · very athletic kid, three-sport star
He will help our ·program doubles and 22 stolen bases accomplished on the basket- and is a good quality kid."
tremendously as we make (third on the team). Yakura ball court for the Lady
"She·~ the type that' you
our move . into the Mid- was solid on defense, com- Dragons garnering all-con- want to bring into the proAPphoiO
mitting only four errors in ference honors twice and all- gram and has thatleft-handSouth Conference ."
San
Diego
Padres
Jody
Gerut,
left,
score~
around
the tall:
"We were very impressed 95 chances (.958).
district once.
.
ed arm, so it's something
with Meau's play hut even
Rio had three pitchers
"I'm really excited (about that we haven't had," Pyles of Cincinnati Reds catcher Ramon Hernandez, during the.·
sixth inning of a baseball game against the Cincinnati RedS:
more impressed with his make 2nd team in sopho- .the signing), it's something added.
.,
~rsonality," French added. more Angel Santiago (Santa I've always wanted to do
Stewart infends to major Friday in San Diego.
'Having graduated five Isabel, PR), junior Tyler (play college softball)," in nursing . .
seniors we needed to 'fill a Schunk (Cincinnati, OH) Rucker said. "They really
Stewart also talked about
leadership role within our aQd
freshman
Ryan focus on education and 1t her strongest assets as a
..
seems like a good fit." ·
player and also areas where
program and with . si*ning Chapman (Racine. OH),
SAN DlEGO (AP) - Giles' base hir. David:
Meau we've done that.'
Santiago posted a 7-4
Rio Grande head . coach she needs to improve as she
Jones joins J.D. Hale of record with a 5.05 earned David Pyles is pleased to be makes the jump ~0 the colie- Adrian Gonzalez: homered Eckstein followed With a·.
in his fifth straight ~arne, tying single into right field ... ,
Oak Hill and D.D. Joiner run average. He pitched 73 signing
Rucker. g1ate level.
Scott
Hairston drove m the
Arthur Rhodes replaced 1
"I feel that my best assets .
from Groveport Madison as innings and had five com- . "Mackenzie is a very athletgo-ahead
run
in
a
three:run
Harang
and
walked
the current recruiting class plete games, striking out 68 ic kid, also a good baskelbl\ll as a player are that 1 all) a
for the 2009-10 season .
batters and walking 30. He player on top of beiqg a team player, 1 can handle seventh and the San Diego Gonzalez on four pitches IQ,
was honorable mention as a good softball player. She pressure and as a player 1 am Padres beat the Cincinnati load the bases. Hairston then:
freshman last season.
will come in and probably competitive," she said. "I Reds 5-3 on Friday night to hit a tiebreaking RBI single&lt;
HIVELY TO COMPETE AT
Schunk
led
the
staff
with
compete
for at least a· back- h · k 1
k
snap a six-game losing off ltavid Weathers and;
NAIA OUTDOOR
an 8-4 mark with three ·saves up catcher role and possibly 1 10 · can wor on being streak.
Jody Gerut added a sacrifice: .
more outspoken as a person
CHAMPIONSHIPS
and a 4.44 ERA. 1-le J?itched an every other *arne starting and a player."
Gonzalez hit a solo shot in fly.
.
RIO
GRANDE .
75 innings while strikmg out role," he said. 'She's quickPyles gives an assist 10 an .the first iiming off Aaron · Harang, a San Diego ·
.
.
f R' G d 50 and walking 27. He er than you normally think
. f R' G d ,
Harang (3-4), his major native, allowed five runs
U
. mverslty 0 . 10 . , ran e topped the staff with 21 of, when you think of catch- a1umnus 0 10 ran e .or league·l~ading 15th homer. and eight hits.
' ·
JUntor Kyle HJvely Will rep- appearances.
ers, she can bat from either informing
him
about He has sill homers in · his . Giles lost Alex Gonzalez'C0
. resent the RedStorrn at ~e
Chapman had a breakout side of the plate a 'little bit; Stewart. "Alumni
from
fifth-inning line drive in the:
~8th Annual NAIA Men s . rookie campaign, posting a has a good arm, she's also a here, Charles Tackett, for- five-game streak.
The
Padres
overcame
·
a
lights,
allowing Cincinna~·
0utdoor
.
Nat10nal 5-1 record with a 4 _13 ERA. good student and a good per- merly helped with the softfielding miscue . by right to take a 2-1 lead. The pia
amhpK10nsh1pSs to_be held at Chapman was second on the . son."
. .
ball bprogrham yedarsha~o htold
Brian Oils that led was ruled a double as Gile;.
· 1Jl orte tad•um m St. staff with 20 appearances "It's a nice signing for us," · us a out er an t at s ow fielder
to
two
runs
arid won for just went to the gross as the bah•
L&lt;?uls, MO May 21-23. He encompassing
we got on to her," he said.
213 Pyles added.
69
the
fifth
time
in 24 games.
was sinking. He stuck hiS:
Will compete m the 5,000- innings with 48 strikeouts
Rucker hasn.' t {'inpointed "Charles now coaches the
Gonzillez, one of the few glove up as he turned hiS:
met~r race walk,
. .
and 26 walks.
a major yet but said that she Ohio/West Virginia All-Star
bright
spots for the 14-22 head and· nearly caught IC
H•vely,_a nattve of Vm!J&gt;n.
Sophomore shonstop Brad is looking at the medical game (which is held on lhe
Padres,
moved within one before it hit the $round.
:
QH , quahfied for the natton- Konrad (Maumee, OH) and field.
· .
Rio Grande campus~, sows·
of
tying
the
club
Ji:ley
Votto
Jut
his
fift3
game
al m~et ~t · the AMC sophomore first baseman
Rucker assessed her a neat story," '
~hamp10nsh1ps when he fin- Francisco .
Ramirez strengths and also her area
Stewart will be J?laying for record for consecutive homer .in the sixth to put th
games with home runs set Reds up 3-1 · but Kevi
tshed fourth m ~e 5,000- (Columbus, OH) were of concern when it comes to Tackett on the Ohto squad.
meter race walk with a lime tabbed honorable mention.
improvement as she prePrior to coming to .Rio by Graig Nettles in 1984. · Kouzmanoff got San Dieg
of 24:20.~3. ~e 1s ranked
Konrad returned to the pares to take step up a level Grande Stewart knew the Gonzalez, who had five within one again with a~
131/1. headmg mto the com- RedStorm . after a red-shirt m ·coll)petition. "f love to community surrouilcling the homers and eight RBis on RBI double in the botton(
•.
petl~lon.
year in 2008 and delivered a run the bases and win," she university was small, but the team's just completed 0- half.
6
road
trip,
finished
I
for
3
Notes:
Adrian
GonzaleZ,:
· R1o !Jrande_ head c~ach stel,l ar season. He batted said. "I need to work on ·knew very little else. "Prior
whose shot Friday nighh
Bob W1lley sa1d that H1v~ly .335 (72-for-215) for the being stronger behind the to coming to Rio Grande I with a walk.
(1-2)
came
in San Diego's 36th•~
Kevin
Correia
will compete desp1te havmg season with one home run plate." ·
. only knew that it was a small
allowed
three
runs
and
five
game,
did ·not hit his 15th
She . is also aware and is community and knew nothto deal with some nagging and 53 RBi's from the numhits
over
seven
irinings
to
home
run
last season· unti(l
injuries during the outdoor her two slot in the batting comfortable with th.e smaller in~ of the program," she
earn
his
first
win
with
the
the
Padres'
52nd game ....:
season.
order. Konrad racked up 12 class sizes and individual sa1d .
·
·
"He's been injured, but doubles and led the team atrention she will receive at
Stewart's goals as a player Padres. The right-hander Cincinnati's Willy Tavera~·
he's going to give it a shot," with four triples . He scored Rio Grande from an educa- while at Rio Grande? "My signed with the team in the went 0 for 4 to end his 14.,:
game hitting streak .... Alex:
Willey said. "(Assistant 54 runs (second on the team) tion standpoint. "I know it's ultimate goal as a player is offseason .
Correia's win was the first Gonzalez started at short.;
coach) . Matt (Boyles) has and swiped 26 bases (second a smaller school and. has to help improve the Rio soft·
done a ~reat job working on the team).
more one-on-one focus," .ball program ani! do my best by a Padres starter in 26 stop for the first time sine~
with 1J1m and J(yle's
Ramirez faid claim to the Rucker said.
to uphold RedStorrn pride," games since Jake Peavy won May 4. Gonzalez missedi
on April 16. San Diego nine games with u strained.i
responded," Willey said. first base pilsiti&lt;in early il1
Rucker plans· to dedicate she said.
"Kyle has really done a great. the season and did not relin- . herself to the game while . · Katie is the daughter of starters were 0-12 during .left oblique muscle .... Red~
job this season, going all the quish it. He batted .377 (75· playing for Rio Grande. "I Robert Stewart of Pleasant that span.
RHP Micah Owings, whosC.l;
way back to the indoor sea- for-199) with five home runs want to just work hard on Hill , OH .
. Heath Bell retired four next start was pushed back:
Son."
.
and 38 RBI's. He displayed the field and off," she said.
She joins Katie Fuller of batters to pick up his ninth until Wednesday because O'}
: "We're very happy and an ability to hit to all fields
Mackenzie is the daughter Hamilton High School, save in nine chances.
· off d_ays, was av~ilable fo'Ji
excited for Kyle , just really and had tremendous disci· of Jeff and Debbie Rucker of Natalie Sargent of Watkins
The Padres scored three rehel work on hiday undi
proud of his accomplish- pline at the plate as he tied Proctorville.
Memorial
and
Ohio timesinthe seventhtotakea will be available oO:
ments this year," Willey Yakura for the team lead
She joins Newton Hi!lh University transfer Jaymie 5-3 lead. _Chris Burke Saturday. Cincinnati RHP: .
added.
with 30 walks. Ramirez School standout • Kalie Rector as the current mem- reached on a leadoff single, Nick Masse! (strained side):
Hively produced a sirong clubbed 18 doubles and Stewart, Katie Fuller of hers of2009-2010 recruiting advanced to second on a is unavailable throug~
lOth place finish in the scored 26 runs while playing Hamilton High School , class ..
groundout and took third on Saturday.
'

'THOMPSON'S

"It's something complete·
•
ly different from football,
and it taps inio a creative
. pops a compact d1sc mto the
The Titans became his side !think I always knew I
dlayer; The Tenn~ssee fifth team in 2006, but he had but never had an outlet
Jttans qUarterback hstens found himself backing up for," be said.
ijltently to the count'?' demo VInce Young until taking
In a town ftlled with foot!)'om someone_ who IS hop- over the offense late in the ball fans who happen to be
1pg Colltns WI.II be a con-· 2008 -season opener. He led songwriters, finding coqecuo~ to _mus1c stardQm. . Tennessee to an NFL-best writers isn't hard. A charity
I That s ~1ght, the face _of 13-3 record, anti the Titans event last year led him to Ed
!)lash ville s N~L franchise rewarded him with a tWO· H1U , whose ltst of hits .
JS also becomlng a player year $15 million deal on includes ·co-writing Tracy
qff the field in Music City the .first day of free agency. Lawrenc~·s "Find O'!.t W~o
+someone . would-be
·~J get to finish my career Your Fnends · Are . HJII
!lingers and 'Yrtte~s hope out as a Titan, said Collins couldn't believe Collins
dan get them an mdustry who will t~m · 3 7 days called him back, and they
~ookup.
.
before this year's regular- co-wrote a song la~t
, The hopefuls all· seem to season fmale. "I have a October day~ before a b•g
llave heard: The q~arte~- chance to be on a good foot- wm over Ind1anapohs. .
)jack turned son&amp;wnter 1s ball team at this stage in my
Th~ only reason Collms
4mous about mus1c .
career so it just couldn't had t1me to wnte dunng the
:"It's somethin¢ I djd~'t work out any better."
s~ason? It was. a Monday
Jbresee happemng," sa1d
.
.
·. .
. mght game, giVIng h1m an
(!:ollins, who has found CDs
C~llms IS enJoymg the extra day in his schedule
!O;ashed in his mailbox and co~ •de~ce that com~s f~om that week.
.
~ad people pass them to him ~hmg gtvenhthe sttartmthg JOedb. Hill was impressed when
""ter games
e move as s reng en
h
C II' . '
teb . k
his relationship With the e S~W O_lOS . no 00
, I came to· Nashvtlle, I teammates who watched With Its pages cu~led from
qe~t:r even thought about him achieve an 80 _2 passer use and full of 1dea.s the
&gt;fnllng . songs and never
'
.
· quarterback had JOtted
6ven thought that that rhaung - thH.e third tbest 0 f down on the road or in lockwould he something I'd IS career. e "':as 10 ercep1• er rooms. ·
"He's got a real passion
aver have the opportunity to ~d onl_Y seven times, sac~ed
do," he said. "I started JUSt eight an~ moved mto for it.'': }:till said. "He does1
meeting people anti had the . 4th all-time m yards pass- n't have a lot of experience
·.
APphoto
·
·
dpportunity to write with .•n,g.
.
.
.
&lt;!Ping. it. Most peorle don't In this photograph taken on Aptill 16, Timilessee. Titar.s quarterback Kerry Collins.
some great people, and it . Happ1ly mamed With_ a tftat play footbal for all adjusts the volume .on a CD player as he rides a· bus to .a stop in Shelbyville, Terin . ·
just kind of took off from young daughter, Collms their life. He definitely has Collins Is taking part in the team's 12th annual spring caravan, in Which players visit,
there."
likes to hunt back home in ability for i.t. He Jeans on communities in Tennessee, northern Alabama artd southern Kentucky. Collins was:
· Though Collins inajored Nonb Carolina .and has tar- me and Billy sometimes given the CO by someone hoping Collins, who likes to write songs himself, can help him
· get. Into the .music b.uslness . .·. ,
in labor and industrial edu. geted. · turkey
· . and. · deer .be_cause we d o 1··r every d ay
cation at Penn State he' has around Tennessee.
for 25 years."
said.
.
.
. The song didn't make the
"I think I'm one of those
~mething crucial .for any
He has also. been_jottj~g
Thafs !lilly Lawson,
Collins is also learning to ' final CUI in what Collins' people that's going to be
"piring songwriter: life down thopghts and adeas m whose songs ·include Trace play the guitar, . though a fellow writers call an ·exam- better in the late 30s and.
eKperience.
a notebook for years and. Adkins' "! · Left Somethinr, · recent karaoke fundraiser ple of how tough Mu&gt;ic 40s than in my early 20s.
tHe has seen the highs and needed another outlet out- Turned on at Home.' provided a reminder that his City can be .
the experience and knowing;
lfWS football stardom side of football.
Lawson has co-written five skills are with a football or
For the quarterback, myself better," Collins said.
Qffers. A top high school
Collins got his first crack or six songs with Collins pen, not a microphone.
songwriting has become the "And I've got a great fami,_
tf;cruit, an All-American in at songwriting during the and calls the quarterback a
He hasn't had a song perfect intersection of his ly,great situation in my pro~llege and
new NFL 2007 offseason with a cou- good thinker.
recorded
yet,
though professional and personal fessional life. I've found
1tanchise's first ever draft pie friends in the musiC
"He knows what he wants George. Strait did put a hold lives, and something that . something outside of that 1.
dick, he's also been released business. His contribution · to say. When you throw on that song Collins wrote would not likely ·have hap- really enjoy too.
It' that team , struggled with · comes through words', not something out, he can tell with Hill last October titled pened in any other NFL "Tha.t's put me in a really:
lflcoholism, gone from notes:
you if he likes it," Lawson "Ain't Hard to be. Happy." town .
good place.''
•

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.Ex-Saints RB Deuce McAllister confident about a comeback - We offer the
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:MANDEViLLE,' La, (AP) after iast se;tSon, McAllister

McAllister said doctors rent Saints players: partici- can really say. I think all that .

f. Deuce McAllister is done has spent part of the offsea- have advised him to work on pated in the . event, which will come out."
ttYing to be a superstar, done son . visiting with doctors at strength and flexibility in his raised abo'ut $180,000.
McAllister also is iri litigaI

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thRa
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STA- Super Bo;,.l starter to back-

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Padres power past Redsi.

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Page Bs

TIO~.Tenn.(AP)- Kerry upandbackagaintoastartColhns leans fo~wa_rd and ing role.

MARK WILUAMS

.

~mtb.w lrimn -.&amp;ennncl•

Pomeroy •.Middleport • Gallipolis

Happy QB's personal outlet? Writing countcyr songs=

SPECIAL TO THE TIMES-SENTINEL

~

.

. Sunday, May 17, 2009

Sunday, May 17. 2009

'\

tfYing to carry a team on his
k as he did with the New
eans Saints earlier· this
e ade.
: The 30-year-old power
dtnner doesn't want to be the
tinbittered player .living in
4enial about the. effects ··of
111:e and injuries on .his game.
~e does, however, $till want
!11 win a Super Bowl - as a
(llayer.
•"Keep living," McAllister
~id. "Ei.ther injuri~s are
going to take you out or age
will catch you, and you have
to kind of redefine your role
if you want to con.tinue to
play.
'"I'm content," McAllister
a,dded. "I've been the guy
IJefore, so I'm be~ond that.
The ultimate goal1s to win a
championship and to be able
to help a team out."
:. Drafted by the Saints out
df Ole Miss in ' 20D.I,
McAllister is the franchise's
career rushing leader with
l!,096 yards. His 55 total
t()uchdowns and 49 rushing
TDs also are Saints records.
• Released by New Orleans

t

Duke University· and the rest hips, ankles and core, some"The fans appreciate what tion to save his closed Nissan
. inGulfBreeze,Fia.,wotking thmg he didn't' focus on as he 's brought to New dealership in Jackson , Miss.
out about five·hollrs a day ·ar · much before.
· ·
O'rleans ," Saints ri~ht tackle He :s trying to pull it out of
a . spons medicine institute
"It's really just working on .Jon Stinchcomb sa~ d. "They bankruptcy. His other dealerrun .by orthopedic surgoon everything around the knee understand tlie business side ship, which sells higher-end
Dr. James Andrews.
to take soma of the pressure to the NFL, but I think they makes like Lunq Rover and
·Just. about every morning, , off of the knee," McAllister . have . a genuipe' love for Jaguar, remains open . .
he's pulling sleds or doing said. .
Deuce McAllister."
McAIHster, who grew ·up
other traditional resistance
He hopes within a few If McAllister eventually in the Jackson area, said he is
training. With a military base "':e~ks to .be r~ady to start s~g_ns w1th a team, the·poss1- still working on the redevelnearby, he sometimes works v.'slt,•qg teams mterested m b.thty of a four-gam~ suspen- .opment of historic downout alongside special .forces s1gnmg h1m. He ~lso WO\lld- · s1_on could be hangmg over town buildings there . He said
soldiers,admiring their tech- · n't rule out ret~rnmg to Ne:-v h1m. He was among severn! the recession has complicat.niques and stamina.
Orleans, wh1ch he sa1d players last )iear whose use.
.
"Those guys are pretty would be "a dream come of
over-tl~e-counter . ed the ~roJect · b4t that new
neat," McAllister said, true .... But if it's ,on a visit- dietary supplement yielded · tax _credits have helped keep
cracking a smile. "They can ing team, then so be it. All positive tests for the banned 11 Vlab\
. .
.
probably run 30 minutes at that will play itse.lf out."
diuretic bumetanide. The · Sllll.. e sa•? h•s pn~ary
time, but their lateral moveCertainly,
McAllister . players have appealed their focus 1s latchmg on_ ~1th a
ment is not the best.''
remains popular with Saints suspensions and the case is t~am that would be ~tlhng to
McAllister's goal was to fans.
pending in federal cou 1t.
g1ve h1m another cltanc_e figure out · why his knees
On Friday, he traveled · McAllister . said.
he and at least 10-15 carnes a
have taken such a beating in back to the New Orleans area remamed conf1dent 1n the game.
recent . seasons. He's torn to continue hisiong-standing players' cuse.
'Tm still going to play,''
anterior cruciate ligaments in chanty work m the regton .
"I feel very good about it," McAllister assened. "I want
both legs, first his right one ~!s Cat&lt;:b 22 Foundation he began . "There's-not a lot I to play a couple more years."
in 2005 and then the left in JOmed · With local · company
2007. He's needed minor Allfax Specialties Inc., hostcleanup operations since and ing a golf tournament to raise
played hurl throuj:hout last money
for
Children's
season, having flUid drainetl Hospital of New Orle&lt;ms .
from his left knee on a rouMore th.an 200 golfers; ·
tine basis.
· including a number of cur-

an

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�Page 84 • &amp;unbap «:i~ :&amp;entind

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

·. Stone continues to lead
Rio men's bas~etballlands JC standout Jones Riverside Senior League_
.~io Grande Roundup

Bv

men's 3.000-meter race solid defensively as well, Natal)e Sargent of Watkins
STAFF REPORT
walt at the NAIA Indoor recording a .982 fielding 'Memorial
and
Ohio
MOSSPORTSOMVCWLYSENTINB..COM
National Track &amp; Field percentage.
Universi.ty transfer Jaymie
2009 Senior League
RIO
GRANDE
Championships at the Mini
"I think the biggest thing Rector as the current memSl4nding 4S Mzy. 12
Universiry of Rio Grande Dome in Johnson City, TN is, offensively we worked at bers of 2009-2010 recruiting . MASON - Carl Stone of
Ripley is holding onto the
Clll62.$
RedStorrn men's basketball in early March .
it," said Rio Grande head class.
lead
in the Riverside Sen'ior
IWIIII.....
.,
team is going about the task
Hi~ely posted a time of , coach Brad Wamimont.
Men's Golf League through
of replacing a stellar senior 14:23.27 m that event after " We put in more lime swinglllil:k - - - · - .f8.l;
-45;5 ,. '
RIO SOFTBAll. INKS
five weeks of play. Stone
C111!1.
.
......
.'
-45 .
. !•
class. They feel that _they qualifying with a time of ing the bat and the offensive ·
NEWTON'S STEWART
has a total of 52.5 points to ' fd~ . . ~5
have taken a big step with 14:33.01.
dividends took hold. We led
. Ead~ $.1'··:' 112'
the signing of junior college
Hively is the only Rio the conference in hitting and
RIO GRANDE _ The lead second place Ralph
at!kiHlillfSJU .f1 · ·.
Sayre of New Haven by 4.5 · .... ~ • · 39.1!
':
standout Meau Jones to a . Grande participant at the a lot of the offensive carenational letter of intent.
three-day event .
gories and the kid's saw the University of Rio Grande pomts . ln third place is Mick
~.5 . . . . .
Jones
leaves Truettbenefits of that, they worked ~~~~~~ 7:tb~~rtff~~ Winebrenner of Syracuse, ' · ~,..Hoillol.... . 311
... i'
Ohio, with 46.5 points to
McConnell Collefe after Rto WELL REPRESENTED ON extremely hard ."
~
·h 1
. ,llfl ~
" •' 34.5
.,.,
fu
'
'""e
should
be
up
there,"
•Utore
ranks
Wit
Ia
enl
durlead
fourth
place
Richard
Doo~
-.;:, 3C
l.i
..
,-o very success seasons ALL-AMC BASEBALL TEAM
"'
·
h'
..
· ·
in which TMC won 38
he added. '"We put 38 wins tng 1 IS recruiting season Made of Point Pleasant by a
Jlntrnr
. IIMMill •. ,33.6
KMI .~
' .·· ~.5 .
. '
ames and played in the CEDARVILLE _ The uL and finished third in re~- and the latest to sign on the f single point.
~~ 32
'
·
J ·
co11ege University of Rio Grande .0 ar season and second In dotted
line for head coach
A total of 70 players were
• ....,. .
~1.1; , .
eorg•a
umor
D 'd Pyl · N
H' h
DeW
Wikle.
·
.....
31 .; .
'\ ...
on
lulnd
for
Senior
League
Athletic Association semi- RedStom'l baseball team is the tournament and I'm very
avl
es IS ewton 1g
·~" '· -~.5 . . • . '
finals both seasons. Meau
proud of how
. they did."
School standout Katie on Tuesday making up 16 . ~QIInoi
81,WJiilb1.... . ·. ·281 "'r ~;- ~~~ ..
Stewart
well represented on the Allteams of four players and
had six double-doubles this American
Mideast
Wamimont's
program
·
~;'&amp;:;,
~~
Stewart, a 5-7 pitcher/out- two three man teams. The
season, · scoring in double Conference team . Senior should have a bright future
·Jfl#
~ . ·,:· ..1111. ' •I 1:
figures 17 times. He man- third baseman Edwin Orta as all the honorees with the fielder, comes to Rio Grande' low score for the day was a ,~;-~~ ' .- -~ } _7;._1$ - _;f;~~;i;, .
aged that fea.t 21 times over
d · ·
h
T
.exception of Orta will be With a great pedigree . The ·
_. · . ·:: . ,. ·:!?.s ·. ; h'l,,
JUntor catc er y 1er back next year. ''That's def- sou thpaw was All •Oh'IO 1as t three way tie at 63 (-7 under Bll~
~~ -~-- ··;, .. 21.s .~- ':~iR .a two year period. He also an
1
par)
between
the
teams
of:
_. IJkil~,:-~::;.· ,,i"::; _,2 7~ I
~-;&lt;:, ,
P umpton garnered Ist team
· ·
d
had eight games with double honors.
initely a positive, Eddie's season as a JUmor an was Charley Hargraves · (New :-lltcfi..-...i'*' .-~._,i""-~ -'1;~·-r:1:
lll&lt;k tlo.oGiol
. 2ij "' . : .• •2 ' .
"gores in rebounds.
the only one w_e 're losing. all-conference in each of the.
25 ''"" /~ ~~- .
''· Jones·
Orta, a native of C.aracas, but 1 don't want them to get 1ast t wo seasons and WI'II Haven), Jerry Arnold (New ,.:~-&lt;. . ..f'averaged
8.6
Haven), and Haske! Jones , ~
·
fliql. '·"·
24.~ ·., '
YEN; batted 372 (77-forlik I dd h'rd
t b
.
24.5
..
rebounds last season. He 207) for the season and fat and happy we're going to
e Y a a t I year o er (Charleston); Ed Debalski : l!ab·
.
BCA
Allcontinue
to
work
and
that's
belt
when
the
2009
season
Was named GA
(Ravenswood), Dick Dugan ·- ~~
established a new school
d
·am,
Honorable
what
I
told
them."
·
comes
to
an
en
'
Academl·c .,..e
(Racine, Ohio), Don Corbin L....;,_'~........ . . _~ .~·. ; _ _ . . .&gt;. _ . .,
"
record for runs batted in
·
Mention to the GABCAAII- with 59. He clubbed six
"We're goin~ into a new
Stewart also displayed (Gallipolis, Ohio), and ners were Carl Stone on theS.tate NAIA/JUCO Team, home runs (tied for second conference (Mid-South) and excellence in the classroom Sayre; and Gary Clark (New ninth
hole
and
Jim.'
· and a member of the 00 the team) and 16 doubles the c~allenges ahead of us being a part of the' all-con- Haven), Jerry Dean (Leon), Lawrence on the 14th hole. ,
Georgia/Florida
All -Star (third on the team) while are ~oing to be just as ference academic team in Chet Thomas (Patriot,
A total of 88 different.
·
41
('
rth
steen,"
he
added.
"We
2007
and
2008
and
won
a
Game.
Ohio).
and
Willis
Dudding
players haverlayed at least,
runs .ou
on
~1
1
sconng
Jones feels blessed to have the team).
wont be a surprise, I imag- scho ar ath ete award last (New Haven). .
.
one. week o league play._
the opportunity to continue · Plumpton, a native of ine we'll be picked in the year.
There was a three way tie thus far this season. The'~
his career at R1o Grande.
Peterborough, ONT, accept- middle of that conference, I
Stewart also made all- at 64 ( -6 under par) for league will continue .to meeti
"l'm just ready to get on ed the move to lead-off bat- don't think we'll be picked , league in basketball in 2007 fourth through sixth place.
on Tuesdays through the
that court and I feel blessed ter and took to it very well at the bottom. with what we and 2008 as well as the acaThe closest to the pin win- month of September.
thatl have the opportunity to leading the RedStorrn in hit- have returning."
demic team in 2008 . She
continue to play at Rio."
ting w1th a .403 (87-for-216)
Rio Grande set a new was team Most Valuable
Rio Grande is .coming of a batting average.
school record with 38 wins Player both years and closed
20 win season and is staring
Plumpton set a new high this season.
out her career on the hardat the huge task of going into water mark for Rio Grande
wood as the school's No. 2
the Mid-South Conference. with 87 safeties this season. REDSTORM SOFTI!ALL ADDS all-time leader in points
"I am excited for Meau He also topped the stat sheet
RUCKER
scored.
and his future. I think Meau with seven home runs and
"I am very excited about
is a great student, Christian, drove in 47 runs. Plumpton
RIO GRANDp - The signing with Rio," Stewart
and young man who hap- led . the team with 19 dou- University of Rio Grande said. "I think it seems like a
pens to work extremely hard bles. Defensively, he han- softball program is pleai;ed good school and I cannot
at being a good basketball died the pitching staff to announce the signing of waitto·be a part of the softplayec I ihink Meau will remarkably . and crafted a Mackenzie
Rucker
of ball program."
have a successful run at Rio .987 'fielding percentage Fairland High School to a
Stewart commented on
Grande in all phases," said while throwing out 21 6f 35 national letter of intent to what she liked about Rio
TMC . head coach Cory . would be base ·stealers. He play for the RedStorrn Grande. "Rio· Grande is a
aaldwin.
·
was also seleded to the All- beginning in the. 2009-10 small communit)i 'much like
· Jones is the second TMC AMC RawliiJgs Gold Glove academic year.
.
my owil hometown," she
Bear to sign this season, and Team.
Rucker, a catcher, is a added . "The softball coach,
the 13th in the . past three
Plumpton was a 2nd team · four-year letterwinner for David Pyles, seems like a
seasons.
selection a season ago. '
the Lady Dragons. She has good coach as well as a good
Rio Grande head coach
Junior centerfielder Ryan millie I st All-Ohio Valley person. · Also, the atmosKen French is excited about Yakura (Pickering, ONT) Conference and lst team fhere of Rio Grande is what
!ones joinin?, the RedStorm made 2nd team. Yikura was All-Southeast District . in loved."
·
pro~ram.
'We are very an honorable mention choice · each of her first three seaCoach Pyles says there·is a
exc1ted .to add Meau Jones to at shortstop last season. For sons and will likely add a lot to like about Stewart.
our basketball family ht:re at the year, Yakura finished fourth.year at the end of the "Even though she's leftthe University of Rio with a .398 (45;for-ll3) bat- .current season . Rucker handed lthink this kid could
Grande,"
French . said. ting average with one ·home served as team captain each play any position based on
·~Meau is a pe!'lion .of high run and 2Z RBI's.
.
Qf the last two seasons for. everybody that I've talked
character and happens to be
Hncored a team-high 57 head coach Glenn Dillon.
to," he said. "She's a very
'I talented basketball player. runs while collecting nine
Ruck~r was also · very athletic kid, three-sport star
He will help our ·program doubles and 22 stolen bases accomplished on the basket- and is a good quality kid."
tremendously as we make (third on the team). Yakura ball court for the Lady
"She·~ the type that' you
our move . into the Mid- was solid on defense, com- Dragons garnering all-con- want to bring into the proAPphoiO
mitting only four errors in ference honors twice and all- gram and has thatleft-handSouth Conference ."
San
Diego
Padres
Jody
Gerut,
left,
score~
around
the tall:
"We were very impressed 95 chances (.958).
district once.
.
ed arm, so it's something
with Meau's play hut even
Rio had three pitchers
"I'm really excited (about that we haven't had," Pyles of Cincinnati Reds catcher Ramon Hernandez, during the.·
sixth inning of a baseball game against the Cincinnati RedS:
more impressed with his make 2nd team in sopho- .the signing), it's something added.
.,
~rsonality," French added. more Angel Santiago (Santa I've always wanted to do
Stewart infends to major Friday in San Diego.
'Having graduated five Isabel, PR), junior Tyler (play college softball)," in nursing . .
seniors we needed to 'fill a Schunk (Cincinnati, OH) Rucker said. "They really
Stewart also talked about
leadership role within our aQd
freshman
Ryan focus on education and 1t her strongest assets as a
..
seems like a good fit." ·
player and also areas where
program and with . si*ning Chapman (Racine. OH),
SAN DlEGO (AP) - Giles' base hir. David:
Meau we've done that.'
Santiago posted a 7-4
Rio Grande head . coach she needs to improve as she
Jones joins J.D. Hale of record with a 5.05 earned David Pyles is pleased to be makes the jump ~0 the colie- Adrian Gonzalez: homered Eckstein followed With a·.
in his fifth straight ~arne, tying single into right field ... ,
Oak Hill and D.D. Joiner run average. He pitched 73 signing
Rucker. g1ate level.
Scott
Hairston drove m the
Arthur Rhodes replaced 1
"I feel that my best assets .
from Groveport Madison as innings and had five com- . "Mackenzie is a very athletgo-ahead
run
in
a
three:run
Harang
and
walked
the current recruiting class plete games, striking out 68 ic kid, also a good baskelbl\ll as a player are that 1 all) a
for the 2009-10 season .
batters and walking 30. He player on top of beiqg a team player, 1 can handle seventh and the San Diego Gonzalez on four pitches IQ,
was honorable mention as a good softball player. She pressure and as a player 1 am Padres beat the Cincinnati load the bases. Hairston then:
freshman last season.
will come in and probably competitive," she said. "I Reds 5-3 on Friday night to hit a tiebreaking RBI single&lt;
HIVELY TO COMPETE AT
Schunk
led
the
staff
with
compete
for at least a· back- h · k 1
k
snap a six-game losing off ltavid Weathers and;
NAIA OUTDOOR
an 8-4 mark with three ·saves up catcher role and possibly 1 10 · can wor on being streak.
Jody Gerut added a sacrifice: .
more outspoken as a person
CHAMPIONSHIPS
and a 4.44 ERA. 1-le J?itched an every other *arne starting and a player."
Gonzalez hit a solo shot in fly.
.
RIO
GRANDE .
75 innings while strikmg out role," he said. 'She's quickPyles gives an assist 10 an .the first iiming off Aaron · Harang, a San Diego ·
.
.
f R' G d 50 and walking 27. He er than you normally think
. f R' G d ,
Harang (3-4), his major native, allowed five runs
U
. mverslty 0 . 10 . , ran e topped the staff with 21 of, when you think of catch- a1umnus 0 10 ran e .or league·l~ading 15th homer. and eight hits.
' ·
JUntor Kyle HJvely Will rep- appearances.
ers, she can bat from either informing
him
about He has sill homers in · his . Giles lost Alex Gonzalez'C0
. resent the RedStorrn at ~e
Chapman had a breakout side of the plate a 'little bit; Stewart. "Alumni
from
fifth-inning line drive in the:
~8th Annual NAIA Men s . rookie campaign, posting a has a good arm, she's also a here, Charles Tackett, for- five-game streak.
The
Padres
overcame
·
a
lights,
allowing Cincinna~·
0utdoor
.
Nat10nal 5-1 record with a 4 _13 ERA. good student and a good per- merly helped with the softfielding miscue . by right to take a 2-1 lead. The pia
amhpK10nsh1pSs to_be held at Chapman was second on the . son."
. .
ball bprogrham yedarsha~o htold
Brian Oils that led was ruled a double as Gile;.
· 1Jl orte tad•um m St. staff with 20 appearances "It's a nice signing for us," · us a out er an t at s ow fielder
to
two
runs
arid won for just went to the gross as the bah•
L&lt;?uls, MO May 21-23. He encompassing
we got on to her," he said.
213 Pyles added.
69
the
fifth
time
in 24 games.
was sinking. He stuck hiS:
Will compete m the 5,000- innings with 48 strikeouts
Rucker hasn.' t {'inpointed "Charles now coaches the
Gonzillez, one of the few glove up as he turned hiS:
met~r race walk,
. .
and 26 walks.
a major yet but said that she Ohio/West Virginia All-Star
bright
spots for the 14-22 head and· nearly caught IC
H•vely,_a nattve of Vm!J&gt;n.
Sophomore shonstop Brad is looking at the medical game (which is held on lhe
Padres,
moved within one before it hit the $round.
:
QH , quahfied for the natton- Konrad (Maumee, OH) and field.
· .
Rio Grande campus~, sows·
of
tying
the
club
Ji:ley
Votto
Jut
his
fift3
game
al m~et ~t · the AMC sophomore first baseman
Rucker assessed her a neat story," '
~hamp10nsh1ps when he fin- Francisco .
Ramirez strengths and also her area
Stewart will be J?laying for record for consecutive homer .in the sixth to put th
games with home runs set Reds up 3-1 · but Kevi
tshed fourth m ~e 5,000- (Columbus, OH) were of concern when it comes to Tackett on the Ohto squad.
meter race walk with a lime tabbed honorable mention.
improvement as she prePrior to coming to .Rio by Graig Nettles in 1984. · Kouzmanoff got San Dieg
of 24:20.~3. ~e 1s ranked
Konrad returned to the pares to take step up a level Grande Stewart knew the Gonzalez, who had five within one again with a~
131/1. headmg mto the com- RedStorm . after a red-shirt m ·coll)petition. "f love to community surrouilcling the homers and eight RBis on RBI double in the botton(
•.
petl~lon.
year in 2008 and delivered a run the bases and win," she university was small, but the team's just completed 0- half.
6
road
trip,
finished
I
for
3
Notes:
Adrian
GonzaleZ,:
· R1o !Jrande_ head c~ach stel,l ar season. He batted said. "I need to work on ·knew very little else. "Prior
whose shot Friday nighh
Bob W1lley sa1d that H1v~ly .335 (72-for-215) for the being stronger behind the to coming to Rio Grande I with a walk.
(1-2)
came
in San Diego's 36th•~
Kevin
Correia
will compete desp1te havmg season with one home run plate." ·
. only knew that it was a small
allowed
three
runs
and
five
game,
did ·not hit his 15th
She . is also aware and is community and knew nothto deal with some nagging and 53 RBi's from the numhits
over
seven
irinings
to
home
run
last season· unti(l
injuries during the outdoor her two slot in the batting comfortable with th.e smaller in~ of the program," she
earn
his
first
win
with
the
the
Padres'
52nd game ....:
season.
order. Konrad racked up 12 class sizes and individual sa1d .
·
·
"He's been injured, but doubles and led the team atrention she will receive at
Stewart's goals as a player Padres. The right-hander Cincinnati's Willy Tavera~·
he's going to give it a shot," with four triples . He scored Rio Grande from an educa- while at Rio Grande? "My signed with the team in the went 0 for 4 to end his 14.,:
game hitting streak .... Alex:
Willey said. "(Assistant 54 runs (second on the team) tion standpoint. "I know it's ultimate goal as a player is offseason .
Correia's win was the first Gonzalez started at short.;
coach) . Matt (Boyles) has and swiped 26 bases (second a smaller school and. has to help improve the Rio soft·
done a ~reat job working on the team).
more one-on-one focus," .ball program ani! do my best by a Padres starter in 26 stop for the first time sine~
with 1J1m and J(yle's
Ramirez faid claim to the Rucker said.
to uphold RedStorrn pride," games since Jake Peavy won May 4. Gonzalez missedi
on April 16. San Diego nine games with u strained.i
responded," Willey said. first base pilsiti&lt;in early il1
Rucker plans· to dedicate she said.
"Kyle has really done a great. the season and did not relin- . herself to the game while . · Katie is the daughter of starters were 0-12 during .left oblique muscle .... Red~
job this season, going all the quish it. He batted .377 (75· playing for Rio Grande. "I Robert Stewart of Pleasant that span.
RHP Micah Owings, whosC.l;
way back to the indoor sea- for-199) with five home runs want to just work hard on Hill , OH .
. Heath Bell retired four next start was pushed back:
Son."
.
and 38 RBI's. He displayed the field and off," she said.
She joins Katie Fuller of batters to pick up his ninth until Wednesday because O'}
: "We're very happy and an ability to hit to all fields
Mackenzie is the daughter Hamilton High School, save in nine chances.
· off d_ays, was av~ilable fo'Ji
excited for Kyle , just really and had tremendous disci· of Jeff and Debbie Rucker of Natalie Sargent of Watkins
The Padres scored three rehel work on hiday undi
proud of his accomplish- pline at the plate as he tied Proctorville.
Memorial
and
Ohio timesinthe seventhtotakea will be available oO:
ments this year," Willey Yakura for the team lead
She joins Newton Hi!lh University transfer Jaymie 5-3 lead. _Chris Burke Saturday. Cincinnati RHP: .
added.
with 30 walks. Ramirez School standout • Kalie Rector as the current mem- reached on a leadoff single, Nick Masse! (strained side):
Hively produced a sirong clubbed 18 doubles and Stewart, Katie Fuller of hers of2009-2010 recruiting advanced to second on a is unavailable throug~
lOth place finish in the scored 26 runs while playing Hamilton High School , class ..
groundout and took third on Saturday.
'

'THOMPSON'S

"It's something complete·
•
ly different from football,
and it taps inio a creative
. pops a compact d1sc mto the
The Titans became his side !think I always knew I
dlayer; The Tenn~ssee fifth team in 2006, but he had but never had an outlet
Jttans qUarterback hstens found himself backing up for," be said.
ijltently to the count'?' demo VInce Young until taking
In a town ftlled with foot!)'om someone_ who IS hop- over the offense late in the ball fans who happen to be
1pg Colltns WI.II be a con-· 2008 -season opener. He led songwriters, finding coqecuo~ to _mus1c stardQm. . Tennessee to an NFL-best writers isn't hard. A charity
I That s ~1ght, the face _of 13-3 record, anti the Titans event last year led him to Ed
!)lash ville s N~L franchise rewarded him with a tWO· H1U , whose ltst of hits .
JS also becomlng a player year $15 million deal on includes ·co-writing Tracy
qff the field in Music City the .first day of free agency. Lawrenc~·s "Find O'!.t W~o
+someone . would-be
·~J get to finish my career Your Fnends · Are . HJII
!lingers and 'Yrtte~s hope out as a Titan, said Collins couldn't believe Collins
dan get them an mdustry who will t~m · 3 7 days called him back, and they
~ookup.
.
before this year's regular- co-wrote a song la~t
, The hopefuls all· seem to season fmale. "I have a October day~ before a b•g
llave heard: The q~arte~- chance to be on a good foot- wm over Ind1anapohs. .
)jack turned son&amp;wnter 1s ball team at this stage in my
Th~ only reason Collms
4mous about mus1c .
career so it just couldn't had t1me to wnte dunng the
:"It's somethin¢ I djd~'t work out any better."
s~ason? It was. a Monday
Jbresee happemng," sa1d
.
.
·. .
. mght game, giVIng h1m an
(!:ollins, who has found CDs
C~llms IS enJoymg the extra day in his schedule
!O;ashed in his mailbox and co~ •de~ce that com~s f~om that week.
.
~ad people pass them to him ~hmg gtvenhthe sttartmthg JOedb. Hill was impressed when
""ter games
e move as s reng en
h
C II' . '
teb . k
his relationship With the e S~W O_lOS . no 00
, I came to· Nashvtlle, I teammates who watched With Its pages cu~led from
qe~t:r even thought about him achieve an 80 _2 passer use and full of 1dea.s the
&gt;fnllng . songs and never
'
.
· quarterback had JOtted
6ven thought that that rhaung - thH.e third tbest 0 f down on the road or in lockwould he something I'd IS career. e "':as 10 ercep1• er rooms. ·
"He's got a real passion
aver have the opportunity to ~d onl_Y seven times, sac~ed
do," he said. "I started JUSt eight an~ moved mto for it.'': }:till said. "He does1
meeting people anti had the . 4th all-time m yards pass- n't have a lot of experience
·.
APphoto
·
·
dpportunity to write with .•n,g.
.
.
.
&lt;!Ping. it. Most peorle don't In this photograph taken on Aptill 16, Timilessee. Titar.s quarterback Kerry Collins.
some great people, and it . Happ1ly mamed With_ a tftat play footbal for all adjusts the volume .on a CD player as he rides a· bus to .a stop in Shelbyville, Terin . ·
just kind of took off from young daughter, Collms their life. He definitely has Collins Is taking part in the team's 12th annual spring caravan, in Which players visit,
there."
likes to hunt back home in ability for i.t. He Jeans on communities in Tennessee, northern Alabama artd southern Kentucky. Collins was:
· Though Collins inajored Nonb Carolina .and has tar- me and Billy sometimes given the CO by someone hoping Collins, who likes to write songs himself, can help him
· get. Into the .music b.uslness . .·. ,
in labor and industrial edu. geted. · turkey
· . and. · deer .be_cause we d o 1··r every d ay
cation at Penn State he' has around Tennessee.
for 25 years."
said.
.
.
. The song didn't make the
"I think I'm one of those
~mething crucial .for any
He has also. been_jottj~g
Thafs !lilly Lawson,
Collins is also learning to ' final CUI in what Collins' people that's going to be
"piring songwriter: life down thopghts and adeas m whose songs ·include Trace play the guitar, . though a fellow writers call an ·exam- better in the late 30s and.
eKperience.
a notebook for years and. Adkins' "! · Left Somethinr, · recent karaoke fundraiser ple of how tough Mu&gt;ic 40s than in my early 20s.
tHe has seen the highs and needed another outlet out- Turned on at Home.' provided a reminder that his City can be .
the experience and knowing;
lfWS football stardom side of football.
Lawson has co-written five skills are with a football or
For the quarterback, myself better," Collins said.
Qffers. A top high school
Collins got his first crack or six songs with Collins pen, not a microphone.
songwriting has become the "And I've got a great fami,_
tf;cruit, an All-American in at songwriting during the and calls the quarterback a
He hasn't had a song perfect intersection of his ly,great situation in my pro~llege and
new NFL 2007 offseason with a cou- good thinker.
recorded
yet,
though professional and personal fessional life. I've found
1tanchise's first ever draft pie friends in the musiC
"He knows what he wants George. Strait did put a hold lives, and something that . something outside of that 1.
dick, he's also been released business. His contribution · to say. When you throw on that song Collins wrote would not likely ·have hap- really enjoy too.
It' that team , struggled with · comes through words', not something out, he can tell with Hill last October titled pened in any other NFL "Tha.t's put me in a really:
lflcoholism, gone from notes:
you if he likes it," Lawson "Ain't Hard to be. Happy." town .
good place.''
•

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. .. . 24·&gt;··· "r¢r· .
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.Ex-Saints RB Deuce McAllister confident about a comeback - We offer the
..
best prices
•

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'

:MANDEViLLE,' La, (AP) after iast se;tSon, McAllister

McAllister said doctors rent Saints players: partici- can really say. I think all that .

f. Deuce McAllister is done has spent part of the offsea- have advised him to work on pated in the . event, which will come out."
ttYing to be a superstar, done son . visiting with doctors at strength and flexibility in his raised abo'ut $180,000.
McAllister also is iri litigaI

t

'·

thRa
-

.

STA- Super Bo;,.l starter to back-

!

Padres power past Redsi.

.

Page Bs

TIO~.Tenn.(AP)- Kerry upandbackagaintoastartColhns leans fo~wa_rd and ing role.

MARK WILUAMS

.

~mtb.w lrimn -.&amp;ennncl•

Pomeroy •.Middleport • Gallipolis

Happy QB's personal outlet? Writing countcyr songs=

SPECIAL TO THE TIMES-SENTINEL

~

.

. Sunday, May 17, 2009

Sunday, May 17. 2009

'\

tfYing to carry a team on his
k as he did with the New
eans Saints earlier· this
e ade.
: The 30-year-old power
dtnner doesn't want to be the
tinbittered player .living in
4enial about the. effects ··of
111:e and injuries on .his game.
~e does, however, $till want
!11 win a Super Bowl - as a
(llayer.
•"Keep living," McAllister
~id. "Ei.ther injuri~s are
going to take you out or age
will catch you, and you have
to kind of redefine your role
if you want to con.tinue to
play.
'"I'm content," McAllister
a,dded. "I've been the guy
IJefore, so I'm be~ond that.
The ultimate goal1s to win a
championship and to be able
to help a team out."
:. Drafted by the Saints out
df Ole Miss in ' 20D.I,
McAllister is the franchise's
career rushing leader with
l!,096 yards. His 55 total
t()uchdowns and 49 rushing
TDs also are Saints records.
• Released by New Orleans

t

Duke University· and the rest hips, ankles and core, some"The fans appreciate what tion to save his closed Nissan
. inGulfBreeze,Fia.,wotking thmg he didn't' focus on as he 's brought to New dealership in Jackson , Miss.
out about five·hollrs a day ·ar · much before.
· ·
O'rleans ," Saints ri~ht tackle He :s trying to pull it out of
a . spons medicine institute
"It's really just working on .Jon Stinchcomb sa~ d. "They bankruptcy. His other dealerrun .by orthopedic surgoon everything around the knee understand tlie business side ship, which sells higher-end
Dr. James Andrews.
to take soma of the pressure to the NFL, but I think they makes like Lunq Rover and
·Just. about every morning, , off of the knee," McAllister . have . a genuipe' love for Jaguar, remains open . .
he's pulling sleds or doing said. .
Deuce McAllister."
McAIHster, who grew ·up
other traditional resistance
He hopes within a few If McAllister eventually in the Jackson area, said he is
training. With a military base "':e~ks to .be r~ady to start s~g_ns w1th a team, the·poss1- still working on the redevelnearby, he sometimes works v.'slt,•qg teams mterested m b.thty of a four-gam~ suspen- .opment of historic downout alongside special .forces s1gnmg h1m. He ~lso WO\lld- · s1_on could be hangmg over town buildings there . He said
soldiers,admiring their tech- · n't rule out ret~rnmg to Ne:-v h1m. He was among severn! the recession has complicat.niques and stamina.
Orleans, wh1ch he sa1d players last )iear whose use.
.
"Those guys are pretty would be "a dream come of
over-tl~e-counter . ed the ~roJect · b4t that new
neat," McAllister said, true .... But if it's ,on a visit- dietary supplement yielded · tax _credits have helped keep
cracking a smile. "They can ing team, then so be it. All positive tests for the banned 11 Vlab\
. .
.
probably run 30 minutes at that will play itse.lf out."
diuretic bumetanide. The · Sllll.. e sa•? h•s pn~ary
time, but their lateral moveCertainly,
McAllister . players have appealed their focus 1s latchmg on_ ~1th a
ment is not the best.''
remains popular with Saints suspensions and the case is t~am that would be ~tlhng to
McAllister's goal was to fans.
pending in federal cou 1t.
g1ve h1m another cltanc_e figure out · why his knees
On Friday, he traveled · McAllister . said.
he and at least 10-15 carnes a
have taken such a beating in back to the New Orleans area remamed conf1dent 1n the game.
recent . seasons. He's torn to continue hisiong-standing players' cuse.
'Tm still going to play,''
anterior cruciate ligaments in chanty work m the regton .
"I feel very good about it," McAllister assened. "I want
both legs, first his right one ~!s Cat&lt;:b 22 Foundation he began . "There's-not a lot I to play a couple more years."
in 2005 and then the left in JOmed · With local · company
2007. He's needed minor Allfax Specialties Inc., hostcleanup operations since and ing a golf tournament to raise
played hurl throuj:hout last money
for
Children's
season, having flUid drainetl Hospital of New Orle&lt;ms .
from his left knee on a rouMore th.an 200 golfers; ·
tine basis.
· including a number of cur-

an

· In June
tltbe ~alltpolts Jaatl!' fltrtbune
Pomeroy Daily Sentinel
~otnt f)leasant 1\egtster
will be-publishing its'

;&lt;l~~~ SeettiJ~tt
GALLIA • MASON
. \.&amp; MEIGS COUNTIES
I~ 4: all c ,

i11

, _,v i II 1-, (_"

ts

tiJ(_"

ll4:lflt.."l·s

v 2 Is t
Deadline for entries is 4 p.m. on June 3, 2009.
c , 11

~1 4: t

Please allow 5 to 7 days if malUng your entries

and protection

.f&lt;&gt;r

·

s:un indepi:ndenr_
;tgency. we can r;~.ilor·
•
rhe b~r in.~ur.lrKe prorwion a.t
oompetitiv~p[i~~. W:c rc:p·r~ot

only the fin"' I*'--"\
in~!-uanq:

cpmpanie;

induding
Auto-Owners
[ns'urancc
COmpany,

which h"' truly t.rntd rh&lt;
reputation ..ts The '' 1'\o Problem"
.

'

J&gt;eopk·• Nik \l~ ahom rhc
many olhcr &lt;~dY•.mtages of doing

busine.'il wi{h an mdcpendem
iruut2ncc agtncy .

Let Me Show You How To
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.

. .

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doesn't fit all
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• 0%APR for 12 months or
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• 3.9%APR fo~ 36 months or

• 5.9%APR for 48 months

.. • No :paymentS 'tii·November,· ·
- No Interest "til October•

'

I· .

�;· Page B6 • The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunj!ay, ~ay 17, 2009

Middleport • PomerQy • Gallipolis, OH •J;&gt;t. Pleasant, WV

Cl

.6unba!'. atime&amp;-6enttntl
. .

.

.

•

,,

.

Sunday, May 17, 2009

.

.foster parents provide
· stability; sup

'
•

BY HOPE ROUSH
hiAOUSHOMYOAILYREGISTER.COM

I

GALLIPOLIS - Every child ·needs a
family.
That's the sentiment echoed by . the
Transitions for Youth agency, which is a treatment foster care network based in Gallipolis.
· Transitions for Youth has been licensed in
Ohio since 2002 and IV~E reimbursable
and a non-pr9fit organization. The agency
describes itself as being , very ·active and
purposely kept small so it can maximize the
s~rvices provided to children and families.
· Through the agency · children are given
individual attention during support groups
tWice a month, regular·visits with their case
manager and frequent agency-wide activities. According to Brooke Pauley, who does
public relations for Transitions for Youth,
the a_gency takes refe!Tills from all counties
in Ohio and curr¢ntly . is ·trying to get

Norris Northup Dodge is pleased to inform our customers .that, as
of May 14th, Chrysler ·has designated our Sales and Service
··
Agreement to be assumed and assigned as.a Chrysler, Dodge and ·
Jeep dealer. Norris Northup Dodge"wUI·remain a dealer as Chrysler
moves forward.
.

is

.

.

As yo.u know, Chrysler is in the process of restructuring, and wiD
emerge as a significantly stronger and ·more·powerful global
.
competitor. We want
·you to play an increasingly important role in
.
our company's rebirth to prosperity.
.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

We want to assure you that Chrysler and Norris Northup Dodge will
be here to meet your future automotive needs,·whether you are in
the market to purchase a new Dodge,
Chrysler, Jeep, one .of our
.
.quality used vehicles, or for service of your presently owned
vehicle. We have an excellent sales ·staff, ASE certified service .
technicians, a knowledgeable parts staff to meet all of your Mopar
needs, and a top quality body shop. We are all here to serve you.
Please feel free to contact us should you have any questions.

- l~TW!~~~v~ib~fpit·t&gt;fhoines; includ~ .

in~ family fos1~,homesfor children that do
not e,)(hibit dellnqueni behavior. The al!ency
also has treatment foster homes for chtldren
that have behavior and emotionaUssues and
· medically fragile homes, which are for chil. dren that require medical attention such as
nursing and frequent doctor visits.
,
Foster care provides skilled and caring
substitute families for children and
teenagers to live with until their own serious family problems are resolved.
, "A lot of our kids are teenagers, but we take
anyone from newborn to (age) 18 - usually
·Qewboms are easy to place;~ Pauley said.
·
She added that foster parents offer guidance, discipline and safety while working
With the biological parents and the agency tO
address any special needs. Children in foster
care ultimately return to their biological faniily unit, move to a pennanent adop~ve home
or live independently upon emancipation.
While Transitions for Youth does not han91e adoption cases, Pauley said more foster.
l'arents are startinp to adopt.

"We like to see (the childt'en)get adopted
because that's a forever family. The more
stability you can get a kid. the better off
they will be,',' she added.
. .
·.
· Foster parents must be at least 21 years of
age, have a sufficient income to maintain ~
household, be in good physical, emotional
and mental health and have no criminal
records for violent crimes, sexual crimes or

Plellse see fllllllly, C2

Hope Rouohlphoto

Brooke Pauley of Transitions for Youth, a treatment foster care network based in Gallipolis,
displays information pamphlets that detail how to become a foster parent and what the
agency does.

·,

•

'

'

.

Thank you,
J. Michael Northup, President·
.

.

.

800-446-0842
252 Upper River Rd., Gallipolis, OH 45631
.

------·-·----

School of Business
honors·top students
RIO GRANDE - The
University of Rio Grande's
Emerson E. Evans School
of Business honored some
of its top students during a
ceremony on April 23.
.
· At the ceremony, held
annually at the end of the
spring
semester,
Rio
Grande faculty members
presented awards to the top
students . in -the Evans
School of Business ·and
.,njoyed a luncheon with
srudents, thelr family memhers and friends.·Faculty member Darlene
Ringhand said after the ceremony that the students
who received the honors
worked very hard in their
classes and achieved a great
· deal this year.
. "This ts an exceptional
group of students, and the
faculty members at Rio
Grande are proud that they
chose us for ·their educa~ions.~ Rinj!hand said.
Also dunng the luncheon,
Rio Grande faculty member
Dr. Krishna Kool , was rec·
ognized for his many years
of dedication a'nd service to
Rio Grande and the Evans
School of Business.
, Awards were handed out
for students in a wide range
of areas at the ceremony
after
faculty
member

Wesley .Thoene welcomed
the crowd to the luncheon
and ·faculty member Roger•
Watson gave the Invocation.
The
Outstanding
Accounting Stullent Award
was presented to Tony
Southworth for excellent
work in the accounting pro- ·
-gram. Faculty · member
-Richard Campbell presented the.award .
So\ithworth also received
Business Field Test Award. ·
Darlene Ringhan4 presented.this award and explained
that Rio Grande students
received some of their
highest scores ever on the
Business Field Test this
year. She added th~t
Southworth also did weU in
his classes .
The
Outstanding
Information Technology.
StudentAward was present·. ··
.
.
. Subm~ photoa
ed to Chris Brown by faculThese
photas·
are
of
award
recipients
honored
during
the
annual
awards
luncheon
sponsored
by
the
Emerson
E. Evans
~ member Chuck Winters. ·
·SChool
of
Business
Management
at
the
University
of
Rio
Grande/Rio
Grande
Community
College.
.
.
·
The.Outstanding Business
Management
Student
Simmbns Stout by faculty member were presented to Pau I in the game, which allows
Award was presented to
Elizabeth
Rupe. Lyndsey Meyers and Rio Grande students to
Seth Riley by faculty mem- received the W. Lowell A. Chuck Winters.
Tony
Southworth. All three work on all aspects of runher John Hill for his work in · "Buz" Call Mark of
Elizabeth Dawkins was
his classes at Rio Grande.
Excellence Award, which is presented
with
the of the students did very well ning a business while comThe
Outstanding a high honor for Rio Grande Outstanding
Associate in the simulation game, and paring themselves against
Marketing Student Award students in the Evans Degree Award by faculty R!!pe had one of the highes.t the other competitors.
Meyers also received the
went to Chelsea Young. School of Business.
member John Hill for her scores in the world during
his
time
in
the
game
.
Wall Street Jounial Award
Thoene presented the award
Another top honor, the wor'k this YeR!·
.
to Young for her work and En1iepreneunal . Award,
The Busmess Polley Thousands of students during the. ceremony for ber
achievements at Rio Grande. ·was presented to Jason . Simulation Game l'\wards around the world take part outstanding work as a student.

r

t'

••

�;· Page B6 • The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunj!ay, ~ay 17, 2009

Middleport • PomerQy • Gallipolis, OH •J;&gt;t. Pleasant, WV

Cl

.6unba!'. atime&amp;-6enttntl
. .

.

.

•

,,

.

Sunday, May 17, 2009

.

.foster parents provide
· stability; sup

'
•

BY HOPE ROUSH
hiAOUSHOMYOAILYREGISTER.COM

I

GALLIPOLIS - Every child ·needs a
family.
That's the sentiment echoed by . the
Transitions for Youth agency, which is a treatment foster care network based in Gallipolis.
· Transitions for Youth has been licensed in
Ohio since 2002 and IV~E reimbursable
and a non-pr9fit organization. The agency
describes itself as being , very ·active and
purposely kept small so it can maximize the
s~rvices provided to children and families.
· Through the agency · children are given
individual attention during support groups
tWice a month, regular·visits with their case
manager and frequent agency-wide activities. According to Brooke Pauley, who does
public relations for Transitions for Youth,
the a_gency takes refe!Tills from all counties
in Ohio and curr¢ntly . is ·trying to get

Norris Northup Dodge is pleased to inform our customers .that, as
of May 14th, Chrysler ·has designated our Sales and Service
··
Agreement to be assumed and assigned as.a Chrysler, Dodge and ·
Jeep dealer. Norris Northup Dodge"wUI·remain a dealer as Chrysler
moves forward.
.

is

.

.

As yo.u know, Chrysler is in the process of restructuring, and wiD
emerge as a significantly stronger and ·more·powerful global
.
competitor. We want
·you to play an increasingly important role in
.
our company's rebirth to prosperity.
.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

We want to assure you that Chrysler and Norris Northup Dodge will
be here to meet your future automotive needs,·whether you are in
the market to purchase a new Dodge,
Chrysler, Jeep, one .of our
.
.quality used vehicles, or for service of your presently owned
vehicle. We have an excellent sales ·staff, ASE certified service .
technicians, a knowledgeable parts staff to meet all of your Mopar
needs, and a top quality body shop. We are all here to serve you.
Please feel free to contact us should you have any questions.

- l~TW!~~~v~ib~fpit·t&gt;fhoines; includ~ .

in~ family fos1~,homesfor children that do
not e,)(hibit dellnqueni behavior. The al!ency
also has treatment foster homes for chtldren
that have behavior and emotionaUssues and
· medically fragile homes, which are for chil. dren that require medical attention such as
nursing and frequent doctor visits.
,
Foster care provides skilled and caring
substitute families for children and
teenagers to live with until their own serious family problems are resolved.
, "A lot of our kids are teenagers, but we take
anyone from newborn to (age) 18 - usually
·Qewboms are easy to place;~ Pauley said.
·
She added that foster parents offer guidance, discipline and safety while working
With the biological parents and the agency tO
address any special needs. Children in foster
care ultimately return to their biological faniily unit, move to a pennanent adop~ve home
or live independently upon emancipation.
While Transitions for Youth does not han91e adoption cases, Pauley said more foster.
l'arents are startinp to adopt.

"We like to see (the childt'en)get adopted
because that's a forever family. The more
stability you can get a kid. the better off
they will be,',' she added.
. .
·.
· Foster parents must be at least 21 years of
age, have a sufficient income to maintain ~
household, be in good physical, emotional
and mental health and have no criminal
records for violent crimes, sexual crimes or

Plellse see fllllllly, C2

Hope Rouohlphoto

Brooke Pauley of Transitions for Youth, a treatment foster care network based in Gallipolis,
displays information pamphlets that detail how to become a foster parent and what the
agency does.

·,

•

'

'

.

Thank you,
J. Michael Northup, President·
.

.

.

800-446-0842
252 Upper River Rd., Gallipolis, OH 45631
.

------·-·----

School of Business
honors·top students
RIO GRANDE - The
University of Rio Grande's
Emerson E. Evans School
of Business honored some
of its top students during a
ceremony on April 23.
.
· At the ceremony, held
annually at the end of the
spring
semester,
Rio
Grande faculty members
presented awards to the top
students . in -the Evans
School of Business ·and
.,njoyed a luncheon with
srudents, thelr family memhers and friends.·Faculty member Darlene
Ringhand said after the ceremony that the students
who received the honors
worked very hard in their
classes and achieved a great
· deal this year.
. "This ts an exceptional
group of students, and the
faculty members at Rio
Grande are proud that they
chose us for ·their educa~ions.~ Rinj!hand said.
Also dunng the luncheon,
Rio Grande faculty member
Dr. Krishna Kool , was rec·
ognized for his many years
of dedication a'nd service to
Rio Grande and the Evans
School of Business.
, Awards were handed out
for students in a wide range
of areas at the ceremony
after
faculty
member

Wesley .Thoene welcomed
the crowd to the luncheon
and ·faculty member Roger•
Watson gave the Invocation.
The
Outstanding
Accounting Stullent Award
was presented to Tony
Southworth for excellent
work in the accounting pro- ·
-gram. Faculty · member
-Richard Campbell presented the.award .
So\ithworth also received
Business Field Test Award. ·
Darlene Ringhan4 presented.this award and explained
that Rio Grande students
received some of their
highest scores ever on the
Business Field Test this
year. She added th~t
Southworth also did weU in
his classes .
The
Outstanding
Information Technology.
StudentAward was present·. ··
.
.
. Subm~ photoa
ed to Chris Brown by faculThese
photas·
are
of
award
recipients
honored
during
the
annual
awards
luncheon
sponsored
by
the
Emerson
E. Evans
~ member Chuck Winters. ·
·SChool
of
Business
Management
at
the
University
of
Rio
Grande/Rio
Grande
Community
College.
.
.
·
The.Outstanding Business
Management
Student
Simmbns Stout by faculty member were presented to Pau I in the game, which allows
Award was presented to
Elizabeth
Rupe. Lyndsey Meyers and Rio Grande students to
Seth Riley by faculty mem- received the W. Lowell A. Chuck Winters.
Tony
Southworth. All three work on all aspects of runher John Hill for his work in · "Buz" Call Mark of
Elizabeth Dawkins was
his classes at Rio Grande.
Excellence Award, which is presented
with
the of the students did very well ning a business while comThe
Outstanding a high honor for Rio Grande Outstanding
Associate in the simulation game, and paring themselves against
Marketing Student Award students in the Evans Degree Award by faculty R!!pe had one of the highes.t the other competitors.
Meyers also received the
went to Chelsea Young. School of Business.
member John Hill for her scores in the world during
his
time
in
the
game
.
Wall Street Jounial Award
Thoene presented the award
Another top honor, the wor'k this YeR!·
.
to Young for her work and En1iepreneunal . Award,
The Busmess Polley Thousands of students during the. ceremony for ber
achievements at Rio Grande. ·was presented to Jason . Simulation Game l'\wards around the world take part outstanding work as a student.

r

t'

••

�PageC2

YOUR HOMETOWN
Sunday,
17, 2009
When otherforms of -COMMUNITY CORNER.. medicine were common Support, hard work speaks to dreams
iunbap ~Umt~ -itnttntl

l

were manufactured in Newton entered the medical
Gallipoii&gt; in the 19th centu- college in Louisville. Ky.
In 1841. Newton opened
. The watershed year for ry. contained cayenne pepAmerican medicine was per. Eclectic medicine was up his medical practice in
probably 1910 when the originally a break-off from Gallipolis as an allopathic
Aexner report. financed by the botanical medicine or doctor. But his reading of
the Camegre and Rockefeller Thomson ian
medicine . botany led him to believe
foundations
and
the Eclectic doctors also stud- that nature held many of the
1\merican Medical Society, ied the various fields of secret&gt; of healing too. In
was released . The report medicine, including anato- 1845. he became an Eclectic
~;learly favored so.called allomy, chemistry. obstetrics, doctor, the first such physipathic medicine and signaled surgery, etc., but they main- cian of that ~chool in
•
the death-knell to other forms tained a heavy emphasis as Gallipolis history.
In 1849, Newton moved to
of healing, such as homeopa- well on botanical cures.
thy and eclectic medicine.
In 1915, there were eight Memphis, where he became
For well over 100 years, a accredited EClectic schools of the chairman of surgery for
great debate 'bas gone on in medicine, as well as nine the medical school there. In
American medicine about Homeopathic schools in the · later years, he taught at -the
how the body reacts to vari- U.S . In addition, there were Eclectic Medical Institute in
oils treatments. Standard seven African American Cincinnati and at the Eclectic
Practice
Medicine,
or schools and three women- Medical College in New
Allopathy, tended to intro- only medic,al colleges. By York. It was Newton who
duce outside forces into the 1940, all of the above schools . helped establish the Eclcclic
healing process , whereas • were gone and what was left State Society in New York.
l10meopathy ·and eclectic was .a medical establishment He also edited the Ecle..'lic
medicine emphasized ways. controlled by the American Medical Journal. Over time,
that the body could heal itself. Medical Association. The Newton wrote and helped
Allopaths in the early 19th course to the control of medi· publish numerous books on
century used such opposite cine by allopaths had been eclectic medkine.
Dr. Newton's brother. Dr.
things as arsenic and mercury, completed.
as well as blood-letting to
One of the leading Eclectic O.E. Newton , was also an
shock the system, while doctors of the 19th century eclectic doctor in Gallipolis
)lomeopaths claimed that · was from Gallipolis. Robert · and other places as well.
"like cures like." It was their Safford Newton was born . Eclectic medicine sort of
opinion that 90 percent of all here in 1818. His father WJI$ a peaked in the 1890s as pharillnesses, if left alone, would fanner and in his early days, maceutical ·companies were
,ure themselves. Homeopaths Robert received onty a lliOd- springing ·up across the
also loved to use watered- est education. About 1832, he country. They had enough
ilown quinine to contribute to was sent · off . to· school at clout to convince people that
this process. .
Lewisburg, Va., but by 1834 botanical medicine was no
But 150 years ago in Gallia he was back on the farm.
longer useful. The last
County. there were also doc- ·
One day in 1837 while school of eclectic medicine
tors who practiced botanic plowing corn, Newton closed in Cincinnati in 1939.
medicine. phreno-magnetism, stopped in the middle of the
Some principals of eclecmesmerism as well as eclectic row and vowed never to tic medicine are being redismedicine; homeopathy and plow another row of corn in covered as more testing gets
allopathy. Botanical doctors, his life ..With 50 cents in his done on the possible positive
sometimes called "puke" doc- pocket, he moved in with effects of herbs and plants on
tors, believed that most ill- Dr. Naret, who lived on the healing process. Eclectic
nesses had thefr root cause in State Street in Gallipolis. He books on the curative pow·
poor digestion. Lobelia ' wits did odd jobs for the doctor ers of various plants , written
.used to induce vomiting in While also reading medicine. I00 years ago, are being rea&lt;;!
order to clean out the diges- He was taught Greek and once again.. ·
· tive system. Then to return the Latin by the Methodist min(lame~· Sands is a special
'.'cooled off' system back to ister in town and he took pri- correspondent for the
warmth, cayenne pepper and vate lessons from the princi- Sunday Times-Sentinel. He
Steam baths were ordered.
pal of Gallia Academy in can be contacte.d by writing
: It is amazing how many history, m!lthematics and to Box 92, Norwich, Ohio
:medicines, several of which philosophy.
In
1839, 43767).

Family from Page Cl

'.

!

For more information
~rimes against children. In with a picnic ·for area foster
addition, foster parents must families; At the picnic the about fo~·ter care or
attend 36 hours of pre-ser· foster families and children Tra11sitions for Youth, visit
:vice training and meet the get a chance to interact, play http://Www.transitionsfory:continuing
. education games and win door prizes. outh.nel, e-mail tranJitions·
requirements of 60 hours
"(Foster parents) .are like foryou t/12002@ yahoo .com
a big second family," or call 740-446-7239 or
~very two years.
· According to Pauley, .Pauley said, addin~ that 740-794-0248.
For · more information
Transitions for Youth pro- families also take a trtp with
vides the majority of train· the agency each summer about National Foster Care
and have a Christmas party Month, visit http://wwwfosin~; which is often accomplished in the meetings that each December. .
tercaremonth .org.
the agency has with foster
parents every two weeks.
":rhere is support (for fos·
ter parents). We are there to
support . them," she said,
addmg that they also see the
children once a week and
are on-call 24 hours a day,
seven days a week.
In addition, the agency
offers respite care if foster
Friday, June 5 &amp; 6
parents want to take a weekend· for themselves. Being a
Friday 6 pm until
RELAY
foster parent offers other
FOR
LaFE• Saturday Noon
benefits as well, includi'ng
•
financial assistance With
1\ri'I'!K ,111
reimbursement for services,
, , l , lfH o•r
Gallipolis City Park
1 ' ')( 1' IJ ,
gas cards and phone cars.
All clothing1 school fees,
activities, oirthday and
Christmas . presents are
Lyminan
9 PM
included in a per diem rate.
For general Relay for Life and Luminary iltformation,
"Seeing :a kid succeed is
please .contact:
the main reward (of bein~ a
foster parent)," Pauley satd .
She also encouraged othFor general Relay for Life information, please contact: .
ers to become foster parents
Bonnie McFarland at(740) 446-5679
because there i~ a significanrneed for·foster parents.
"All children need a famJoin us at dusk, Friday evening, June 5, 2009
ily. Even .some people say
for the lighting of ourltunillaries.
'why take a child at 18,' but
you still ~ant someone to
Luminary Purchased For ($10 each):
call a family and on the holidays to have someone to go
Please circle one:
In Memnry
In HonOr
to or someone to call ,"
Pauley said. "There are so
many kids that need homes,
\....and rt's amazing ."
2.------~------------------In Memory
In Honor
Ple\e ci~le one:
For those who Watlt to be
foster parents. Pauley said
they must start out with
3.~~~----~~------~~--~
structure and' be able to give
Plea st." circle ont&gt;:
In Memory
In Honor
rules up front as well as
offer love and support. The
amount of time families
4 . Pieuse
~~~----~~----~--~---circle one:
In Memory
In Honor
have foster children depend
on the county's plan.
From----------------------------In addition to foster par·
enting, Transitions for
Youth has an independent
Amount Enclosed
$ ---------living program for children
16 and older, which helps
l'll'&lt;t'l' mail to :
youth be prepared for when
Bonnil· \khtrland
they go out on their own.
As the month of May
\lin: Rd;n For l.ill·
serv~s as National Foster
lllll.larJ..,on l'iJ..l· • ( ;;Illipoli,, ()If ~~tr.ll
Care Month . Pauley said the
agency plans to celebrate

GALLIA COUNTY

Relay for Life

....

"

Ceremony -

,.

•

for Junior Fair activities,
Sometimes we forget to
advises· that applications for
point with pride to our
king and queen and prince
Meigs County kids who go
and princesses are now availoff to college or out into the
able at all t!Jree high schools
world and do· good. There
.
! as well as the Mei~ County
are so many from here who
.Ch.artene !Extension 'office. Or those
do just that. .
Hoeflich wanting can apply can do so
More than a . few have
by accessing the Meigs
excelled professionally or othCounty fair site. The dead·
eiWise. Some have remained
line is June IO,sodon'tdelay.
aw~ for a time, some have
retufned to share their talents
•••
''Don't shake hands. Bow
in the place where tliey grew broadened her performing
up, and many have con- . borizon. This summer, she for health:·
Now th;u's a great idea
tributed in other ways.
will be working at Farmers
The success of the Meigs · Bank to earn money for a that columnist· George H.
Local ··
Enrichment return to New York to follow Russell came up with. He
Foundation in raising money herdre;am. We wish her well. recommended iI at this time
because Of the swine flu
for the development of a
•••
cross-country/nature trail and
Meigs Countians are a scare, but I think it's a great
a stadium at the high school. compassionate people. It idea for all the time. Cold,
speaks well to the support of waS proven again last week flu a.nd other germs are
MHS alumni not only here, when letter carriers of the everywhere and facilities
but around ihe country.
' Pomeroy Post Office carried for hand washing are not
. They may have left town, out their annual food drive. always relatively ·available.
So Russell suggests when
Customers ~ontributed
but the.ir heart is still here. It
someone
approac'hes with
speaks to following dreams, 1,732 pounds of foOd, which
something every young per- was contributed to the Meigs ·an outstretched hand, just
son should do, even perhaps Cooperative Parish for dis- take a step back and bow
those of another generation tribution to families in need. with your hands behind your
who had to give up their pasIn this economy, what with back. It's good idea for bot))
sion for practical reasons. . all the unemployment and . the person who wants to stay
I think today of Katie salary reductions being expe- healthy and the carrier of
. Reed and her passion in the rienced by workers, there 1s a germs ·who is considerate
field of dramatic arts. Last great need, and fewer able to enough not to spread them.
week. she performed in shirre. However, here those
So if I have a bad cold and
"The Tempest" by William who could give apparently don't want · to spread it
Shakespeare on the stage of were very generous since around, you may see me not
the Elizabeth Evans Baker contributions excelled last . stretching out my hand to ·
Theater in Kantner Hall . . year's figure of I ,621 pounds. greet you, but taking a ster.
•••
Next month, she will graduback and bowing. After al ,
The Meigs County Fair ''An ounce.of prevention is
ate from Ohio University.
Last summer, she attended may be three months away, worth a pound of cure."
the New York University but plans are well under way
(Charlene Hoeflich is
Conservatory for Dramatic for a bigger and better event. general mana,er of The
Alyssa Holter, who is chair Daily Sentinel m Pomeroy).
Arts, a school where she

SUNDAY.PUZZLER
.

ACROSS

I Dragged
.6 Money
tO Play a uke
15 Hem and.,8 Incensed
19 Fseii"9S ol pity
21 The ones ltlera
22 City InIndia
24 Back tooll)
25 Make angry
28 Competitor

27

28
29
· 31
33

Buc~ol

Loan ch«rga (abbr.)
~epaJred

AlvtrtolhaNorthSea
Suitcase
35 Sleopalltlle

37 -the rooet
3ll SldNtep
39 Oldmovlea

40 Alvtr In France
42 Award
43 Kooky rellglooa
44 Mt~eeome ·
· 46 As long as
.
· 47 Weather phenomenon ·
48 Aldta wave
52 Sunglaeaoa .
53 Doer
54 Placard
56 Bywayot
57 Privileged"""
. 58 Substantive
59 Without a cent ·
60 Emissary
62 Surrounded by
63 Brass instfUmanl
66 Diving bird
66 Haran!!"•
67 Balpooht .
68 Kind ol test or show
69 Retained
71 AorBorC,a.g.
73 Brirj(
75 Alenar
76 Nama
77 Point a weapon
78 Sweet potatoes
82 De&lt;;aralive jars
~~ ~i~; whale
66 Wager
·
87 Malle downhearted
90-Vegos
91 Mercllilnl
93 Hindu p!incess

.

94L~·· lol
95 Confidence
97 Prince In an opera
98 Gold, e.g. .
99 Race an engine
100 Mastermind
102 City In Utah
104 Cut in two
1os woa·acqualnte&lt;j with
107 Numoroua .
1 Scornful look
109 Ootarmlnt
IIOLoltn
112 Ravl Shanklr'e

oe

lnatrument

II3 Otadtntld
114 Strong laeUng

117 Splldtr'a uridclng
118 CIII!Chld hand
119 Formany, ot old
t 23 Gladdened
124 Jookl)i
125 Sir- ~~a!Jh
121 From--2
t 28 Aeperalon
t 29 Antalope
.
I 31 Spike ol kozan wa\Or
I 33 Fraquently
135 Carry
136 Meaning .,·
137 E)ected
1361rr~te

139- Aviv

140 Seized .
'141 God of thunder
142 Broughttoa~ose

.

•

DOWN

1 Flinltl8arted
2 City in Maine
3 Adance
4 Greek letter
.5 Skin (P&lt;efi&lt;)
B Taper
7 ~-- Growsln
Brooklyn"
8 Food !Ish
9 Farm animal
10 Taka tong etapa
11 Old prono111
12 Wander
13 Service brarch (abb
. r.)
14 'Moby Dlcl&lt;' author

I! Unlucky
1! 0rtct more
17 Wato!llooatlon

·

19 Poverty .

20 like a toady

23 Pub Qrdere
30 SaUa and Eatrada
32 Fog
.
34 Elavalon \abbr.)
36 Got away rom .
36 Dlacotd peraonlfle&lt;j
39 Ratlnue
41 Dollar ~lie
42 C~l.
. • 43 Sarrel
44 arought dishonor en
. 45 Sidewalk matenal
46 Injury
47 -,line and ainkor
49 Eye pan
50 Peel
.
51 Destiny
52 Cootour
53 Sol, wet ground
54 Bluenose
55 Pollee actloo ·
58 Loop In alasso
59 Scog
61 Ean-tea
63 Summit ·
64 aoslre tor dnnk
00 Circus pertormer
70 Common abbr;
71 liquid mseaure
72 Stair pan
74 Perpetually
76 Browned breed
79 Died down
e~ Threaten
81 Wading ~rd
83 Madaa hole·in-one

85 Avkl ·
87 Kind of chocolate
88 Paredlse
89 Supreme Roman god
90 '!love-'"
92 Ssaducl&lt;
93 Dwell
95 lnstru~
96 Hou~ng expenaa
98 Smal rodenta
. tOt lloaatlul
·
102 AGroat Lake ·
t 03 Wheol with Ieath
104 Mldlor 01 O~a
106 Squandering""'
108 Facet

1~~ ~~~UIIWOrk

112 Make blut
tt3 Gmder ot grain
114 Nulaance

1t 5 Apporlon
118 Cook a certainway
I I 7 Wlllh cycle

118 ~eo~
.
1.20 praised

121 arlin or Meddan
122 Softenedl'"lh
"down")
124.Tiar125 Desire·
126 Lariat
130 Grassy field
132 Slash
134 Watland

•

COMM

iunbaJ' lime~ ·itnttnel

Ma~

J3Y JAMES SANDS

I

I

I

•

PageC3
Sunday; May 17, 2009

CINCINNATI -A team
from the University of Rio
Grande/Rio
Grande
Community College is
advancing to the national
competition, but this one is
in an academic contest .
The team is the Students
In Free Enterprise (SIFE)
team, wbich has turned into
a dynasty of sorts in recent
years at tile regional com·
.petition:
The team won the regional competition in Cincinnati
in March.• and now will
advance to the nation11l con. Submlttld photo
test in Philadelphia, Pa. in
.;
•
The
University
of
Rio
Grande/Rio
Grande
Community
mid-May.
College
Students
In
Free
Enterprise
(SIFE)
team is
"We.. are once again the
.
..
. .
.
iubm- phOto
regional champion," Rio advancing to the national competHion in Philadelphia, .Pa.
The Ohio Valley Symphony Board of Directors met recently to plan the July 4 patriOtic pops Grande SIFE Advisor Carol thts month after winning the.JI9ional competition in March ;
concert in the Gallipolis City Park. From left in front rrm are OVS Executive DirOOtOr Lora Smith said. It is a great ·
Lynn Snow, OVS usher Elizabeth Davidson and board member Chris Petro of otiio Valley achievement . for the Rio material extremely well. ally active SIFE' teams .iii
·
-Bank; back row, board members Or. Mike Owens of Holzer Clinic, Tracy Call of Farmers Bank Grande team to finish high- "We started preparing our the nation .
presentation
·
in
January."
The team hopes to do welf
and Savings Co. and OVS
Board President. Paul Simon, a Point Pleasant businessman.
er than ·other SIFE teams
.
Jlresentation
shows
off
The
at
the national competition
frQm the different. colleges
the
students'
public
speakin
Philadelphia
Mzy 10-12,
and universities in the
ing
sllills,
and
'it
also
feabut
just·
advancing
to the
region. At the same time,
tures
Power
Point
materials
.
competition is .already a
GALI,.IPOLIS - There guest soloist. Stripling will be Elizabeth CoDcert ... because· though, the recognition is
will be fireworks .on stage as performing the music of she asked." Mrs. Dater has almost something that has The presentation must also sign of the group's success.
well a• in the sky on July 4 Louis Armstronll and will often professed that she become commonplace for have many facts and fig- In addition to giving their
when, the Ohio Valley bring to Gallipolis his musi- believes the world would be a the Rio Grande students.
ures, and. show results ·of presentation at the national
In the last 13 years, there how. effective the group was event, the Rio Grande stuSymphony presents its first cal and theatncal experience better place if more people
outdoor concert on Saturday, in portraying Armstrong in listened to symphonic music . ·have been only two times .. m tis work dunng .the dents wi II also be able to see
the work that other SIFE
July 4 in the Gallipolis City · the Broadway prOduction of Now she is making it possi· that the Rio Grande team school year.
students
are doing around
P11rk as part of the annual ·"Satchmo."
has
not
advanced
the
The
SIFE
team
starts
.
ble for everyone to hear Tthe
10
the
country,
.talk with top
River Recreation Festival.
rehearsmg: ~~ February,
The July 4 concert is part of Ohio Valley Symphony free national competition.
international
business lead·
The SIFE team members often startmg tis work at 7
The Summe·r Elizabeth a year-long celebration of in the park on July 4.
Concert will be Sa~urday · The Ohio Valley Symphony's
In case of inclement weath- who took parJ in the region- ~-~· so.the students can ~ut ers and hear several out~
·
evening at 8 p.m: with patri- "Twenty Years of Musical er, the back-up location is the · a! competition this year m.~~e before clas~es begm. standing speakers. ·
The
students
are
excited
otic pops, marches, jazz and Excellence."Theconcert was . Ariel-Ann Carson Dater included President Valerie
. I m really ''!lpres.sed
other American music cul- the brainchild :of Elizabeth Performing Arts Centre in Cangemi, Vice President ~tth, the. students dedtca- about attending the national
competition, but Smith i~ .
minating ·in the fireworks Davidson, who ushers for downtown Gallipolis .
Megan Clark, Gary Horsley, tiOn , Smtth satd. .
over the river.
In the last year, the SIFE even more excited about all
OVS concerts. The July 4
For more information, visit Joe Rossler, Angela Patton,
The free OYS concert ~ill concert · is funded by . Mrs. the Ohio .Valley Symphony~ Kendra Ely, Taka Endo and team completed _17 proJects of the excellent work the
feature nationally known jazz Ann Carson Dater and will be website at: www.ohioval- Katie Peters.
·
on c~mpu~ and m .the com- students have already completed this year. · ·
trumpeter, Byron Stripling, as known as "The Summer leysymphony,org.
The SIFE team is dedi- mumty.
"I'm very pleased with
cate(l to promoting the
The SJFE .team h~ also
ideas of economics and free . been recogmzed thts year them and very prqud of
enterprise in the region. · for . !ts · . Progra~ them," she said. ·
For more in{ormatioll oli
The students sponsor spe- Sustamabthty. The ofgamthe
Rio Grande S/FE ream,
:BY PATTY TOLER RN
with high levels of constant can exacerbate symptoms of cial activities on campus, zat10n has been achve .on
Stnith at 1-800-282'
WOMEN'S HEALTH SERVICES
stress, which results in adren- depression. In additton, peri- hold special classes and . ~ampus smce 1978, makmg call
72.01.
.
)'ROGRAM DIRECTOR
events
m
local
schools
and
It
one
of
the
oldest,
contmual fatigue. They are responsi- menopllusal women are more
GALUA COUNTY HEALTH
work
ble for producing DHEA, a prone to problems with even
.
. . with local entrebEPARTMENT
preneurs.
hormone. that helps regulate adrenal and thyroid function ,
At the end of each school
: Many woman will experi- . healthy energy levels and sex ·as well as insulin resistance.
year,
the students put
First
and
foremost,
underence depression at some drive. This imbalance results
.
together
a . presentation on
.
stand
that
the
solution
to
your
point in their life. ·In rnany in depression. fatigue.loss of
their
activities
throughout
:cases, these feelings are not libido, sleep disturbances depression depends upon the
t,he
year,
and
then
make the ·
'severity of your symptoms.
11 true mood disorders,' but and Weight gain. . ·
Instead are signs of an under• Hypothyroidism: Many For · women with inajor presentation at the regional
lying hormonal imbalance.
women suffer from a thy- depressive disorder, bipolar coinpetition, and then , the
;., Often a pre!;Cription for roid gland that does not pro- disorder, or women who may national competition if they
llntidepressants is prescribed duce ~nough thyroxine. The be harmful to them them- advance.
The judges at the i:ompe-•
based solely on the symptom most common symptoms of selves o~ others, an at home
·
titions
include . business
:Of depression. The most pop- . sub normal thyroid function approach is not . enough.
;ular antidepressants · are are fatil!ue, del;'ression, Every woman with depres- leaders · and corporate
sion should discuss her.feel- CEOs, and the students jlive
.SSR!s, which work by artifi- weight gam an,d hatt loss.
Cially increasing the serotonin
• Insulin reststance: Years ings with her health care professional presentations
:in your brain. If your sero- of poor diet and eating too . provider or a mental health· and then answer questions.
"I think they hand.led all
;«&gt;nin is in fact imbalanced, many refined- carbohydrates professional to make sure
of
the quesrions very, very
they
get
the
appropriate
care.
;rour mood is . positively and sugars can cause the
.
well,"
Smith said, addin)!
.affected. However, if the body to stop responding to For women with honnonal
that
the
students knew thetr
jmba1ance is from one of your insulin. As a result, your cells depression women should
;bodies many other hormones? cannot absorb the glucose seek a health care provider
. Depression is a common they need for energ~ and send and have a simple blood test.
The basic idea to solve
:Symptom associated with signals to your bnun to crave
)lormomil imbalance from carbohydrates an_d sugar. some imbalances is to
'adrenal fatigue,. menopause, Satlsfymg thatcravtngcauses encourage your body to pro·
· or thyroid dysfunction. There . ·a short burst of serotonin, but duce serotonin naturally.
:are blood tests your doctor when .that burst wears off This support comes in !he
;can order to show where the .· serotonin levels plunge. This form of dietary changes,
&lt;imbalance is coming from.
eXplains why many women exercise, and vitamin D.
: Once you understand the become addicted to sugar or Moderate daily sun expo:physical causes of your crabs, whtle exi'Cnencmg su're can also help. At the
depression, you can often worsening depresston . ·
same time try to reduce the
:~ive your body the support · . • Perimenopause and demands on your body and
:1t needs to overcome your menopause: The hormonal eliminate sources of chronic
;feelings of sadness. The shifts that occur during peri- stress. When this happens,
most common imbalances menopause and menopause your body will feel better.
Cla..lflede
:related t.o defression are: ··. often affect mood in the form
For more information on
; • Adrena fatigue: We of mood swings, irritability, · hormonal depre£$ion con;often see depression in anxiety or depression. Lack tact your doctor or C&lt;lll
.Place a. n~YWSpaJ&gt;Qr ad
Ptac".an ·onli ne ad
;women who are burdened of estrogen and progesterone (740) 441-2950.

.

...

JUIV 4cancerl

lallev

. When is depression hormonal?

{J'

'4

. Kipling, S~oe Co.

}Jb~

GALLIPOLIS LOCATION'S•••

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· ,

all

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Save time and money. Go to Www.mydallytrlbune.com
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KIPLING SHOE CO.
300 2nd Ave.

Gallipolis

740-441·9010

~be i&gt;unbap Qeime~ -i&gt;entinel
•

•

�PageC2

YOUR HOMETOWN
Sunday,
17, 2009
When otherforms of -COMMUNITY CORNER.. medicine were common Support, hard work speaks to dreams
iunbap ~Umt~ -itnttntl

l

were manufactured in Newton entered the medical
Gallipoii&gt; in the 19th centu- college in Louisville. Ky.
In 1841. Newton opened
. The watershed year for ry. contained cayenne pepAmerican medicine was per. Eclectic medicine was up his medical practice in
probably 1910 when the originally a break-off from Gallipolis as an allopathic
Aexner report. financed by the botanical medicine or doctor. But his reading of
the Camegre and Rockefeller Thomson ian
medicine . botany led him to believe
foundations
and
the Eclectic doctors also stud- that nature held many of the
1\merican Medical Society, ied the various fields of secret&gt; of healing too. In
was released . The report medicine, including anato- 1845. he became an Eclectic
~;learly favored so.called allomy, chemistry. obstetrics, doctor, the first such physipathic medicine and signaled surgery, etc., but they main- cian of that ~chool in
•
the death-knell to other forms tained a heavy emphasis as Gallipolis history.
In 1849, Newton moved to
of healing, such as homeopa- well on botanical cures.
thy and eclectic medicine.
In 1915, there were eight Memphis, where he became
For well over 100 years, a accredited EClectic schools of the chairman of surgery for
great debate 'bas gone on in medicine, as well as nine the medical school there. In
American medicine about Homeopathic schools in the · later years, he taught at -the
how the body reacts to vari- U.S . In addition, there were Eclectic Medical Institute in
oils treatments. Standard seven African American Cincinnati and at the Eclectic
Practice
Medicine,
or schools and three women- Medical College in New
Allopathy, tended to intro- only medic,al colleges. By York. It was Newton who
duce outside forces into the 1940, all of the above schools . helped establish the Eclcclic
healing process , whereas • were gone and what was left State Society in New York.
l10meopathy ·and eclectic was .a medical establishment He also edited the Ecle..'lic
medicine emphasized ways. controlled by the American Medical Journal. Over time,
that the body could heal itself. Medical Association. The Newton wrote and helped
Allopaths in the early 19th course to the control of medi· publish numerous books on
century used such opposite cine by allopaths had been eclectic medkine.
Dr. Newton's brother. Dr.
things as arsenic and mercury, completed.
as well as blood-letting to
One of the leading Eclectic O.E. Newton , was also an
shock the system, while doctors of the 19th century eclectic doctor in Gallipolis
)lomeopaths claimed that · was from Gallipolis. Robert · and other places as well.
"like cures like." It was their Safford Newton was born . Eclectic medicine sort of
opinion that 90 percent of all here in 1818. His father WJI$ a peaked in the 1890s as pharillnesses, if left alone, would fanner and in his early days, maceutical ·companies were
,ure themselves. Homeopaths Robert received onty a lliOd- springing ·up across the
also loved to use watered- est education. About 1832, he country. They had enough
ilown quinine to contribute to was sent · off . to· school at clout to convince people that
this process. .
Lewisburg, Va., but by 1834 botanical medicine was no
But 150 years ago in Gallia he was back on the farm.
longer useful. The last
County. there were also doc- ·
One day in 1837 while school of eclectic medicine
tors who practiced botanic plowing corn, Newton closed in Cincinnati in 1939.
medicine. phreno-magnetism, stopped in the middle of the
Some principals of eclecmesmerism as well as eclectic row and vowed never to tic medicine are being redismedicine; homeopathy and plow another row of corn in covered as more testing gets
allopathy. Botanical doctors, his life ..With 50 cents in his done on the possible positive
sometimes called "puke" doc- pocket, he moved in with effects of herbs and plants on
tors, believed that most ill- Dr. Naret, who lived on the healing process. Eclectic
nesses had thefr root cause in State Street in Gallipolis. He books on the curative pow·
poor digestion. Lobelia ' wits did odd jobs for the doctor ers of various plants , written
.used to induce vomiting in While also reading medicine. I00 years ago, are being rea&lt;;!
order to clean out the diges- He was taught Greek and once again.. ·
· tive system. Then to return the Latin by the Methodist min(lame~· Sands is a special
'.'cooled off' system back to ister in town and he took pri- correspondent for the
warmth, cayenne pepper and vate lessons from the princi- Sunday Times-Sentinel. He
Steam baths were ordered.
pal of Gallia Academy in can be contacte.d by writing
: It is amazing how many history, m!lthematics and to Box 92, Norwich, Ohio
:medicines, several of which philosophy.
In
1839, 43767).

Family from Page Cl

'.

!

For more information
~rimes against children. In with a picnic ·for area foster
addition, foster parents must families; At the picnic the about fo~·ter care or
attend 36 hours of pre-ser· foster families and children Tra11sitions for Youth, visit
:vice training and meet the get a chance to interact, play http://Www.transitionsfory:continuing
. education games and win door prizes. outh.nel, e-mail tranJitions·
requirements of 60 hours
"(Foster parents) .are like foryou t/12002@ yahoo .com
a big second family," or call 740-446-7239 or
~very two years.
· According to Pauley, .Pauley said, addin~ that 740-794-0248.
For · more information
Transitions for Youth pro- families also take a trtp with
vides the majority of train· the agency each summer about National Foster Care
and have a Christmas party Month, visit http://wwwfosin~; which is often accomplished in the meetings that each December. .
tercaremonth .org.
the agency has with foster
parents every two weeks.
":rhere is support (for fos·
ter parents). We are there to
support . them," she said,
addmg that they also see the
children once a week and
are on-call 24 hours a day,
seven days a week.
In addition, the agency
offers respite care if foster
Friday, June 5 &amp; 6
parents want to take a weekend· for themselves. Being a
Friday 6 pm until
RELAY
foster parent offers other
FOR
LaFE• Saturday Noon
benefits as well, includi'ng
•
financial assistance With
1\ri'I'!K ,111
reimbursement for services,
, , l , lfH o•r
Gallipolis City Park
1 ' ')( 1' IJ ,
gas cards and phone cars.
All clothing1 school fees,
activities, oirthday and
Christmas . presents are
Lyminan
9 PM
included in a per diem rate.
For general Relay for Life and Luminary iltformation,
"Seeing :a kid succeed is
please .contact:
the main reward (of bein~ a
foster parent)," Pauley satd .
She also encouraged othFor general Relay for Life information, please contact: .
ers to become foster parents
Bonnie McFarland at(740) 446-5679
because there i~ a significanrneed for·foster parents.
"All children need a famJoin us at dusk, Friday evening, June 5, 2009
ily. Even .some people say
for the lighting of ourltunillaries.
'why take a child at 18,' but
you still ~ant someone to
Luminary Purchased For ($10 each):
call a family and on the holidays to have someone to go
Please circle one:
In Memnry
In HonOr
to or someone to call ,"
Pauley said. "There are so
many kids that need homes,
\....and rt's amazing ."
2.------~------------------In Memory
In Honor
Ple\e ci~le one:
For those who Watlt to be
foster parents. Pauley said
they must start out with
3.~~~----~~------~~--~
structure and' be able to give
Plea st." circle ont&gt;:
In Memory
In Honor
rules up front as well as
offer love and support. The
amount of time families
4 . Pieuse
~~~----~~----~--~---circle one:
In Memory
In Honor
have foster children depend
on the county's plan.
From----------------------------In addition to foster par·
enting, Transitions for
Youth has an independent
Amount Enclosed
$ ---------living program for children
16 and older, which helps
l'll'&lt;t'l' mail to :
youth be prepared for when
Bonnil· \khtrland
they go out on their own.
As the month of May
\lin: Rd;n For l.ill·
serv~s as National Foster
lllll.larJ..,on l'iJ..l· • ( ;;Illipoli,, ()If ~~tr.ll
Care Month . Pauley said the
agency plans to celebrate

GALLIA COUNTY

Relay for Life

....

"

Ceremony -

,.

•

for Junior Fair activities,
Sometimes we forget to
advises· that applications for
point with pride to our
king and queen and prince
Meigs County kids who go
and princesses are now availoff to college or out into the
able at all t!Jree high schools
world and do· good. There
.
! as well as the Mei~ County
are so many from here who
.Ch.artene !Extension 'office. Or those
do just that. .
Hoeflich wanting can apply can do so
More than a . few have
by accessing the Meigs
excelled professionally or othCounty fair site. The dead·
eiWise. Some have remained
line is June IO,sodon'tdelay.
aw~ for a time, some have
retufned to share their talents
•••
''Don't shake hands. Bow
in the place where tliey grew broadened her performing
up, and many have con- . borizon. This summer, she for health:·
Now th;u's a great idea
tributed in other ways.
will be working at Farmers
The success of the Meigs · Bank to earn money for a that columnist· George H.
Local ··
Enrichment return to New York to follow Russell came up with. He
Foundation in raising money herdre;am. We wish her well. recommended iI at this time
because Of the swine flu
for the development of a
•••
cross-country/nature trail and
Meigs Countians are a scare, but I think it's a great
a stadium at the high school. compassionate people. It idea for all the time. Cold,
speaks well to the support of waS proven again last week flu a.nd other germs are
MHS alumni not only here, when letter carriers of the everywhere and facilities
but around ihe country.
' Pomeroy Post Office carried for hand washing are not
. They may have left town, out their annual food drive. always relatively ·available.
So Russell suggests when
Customers ~ontributed
but the.ir heart is still here. It
someone
approac'hes with
speaks to following dreams, 1,732 pounds of foOd, which
something every young per- was contributed to the Meigs ·an outstretched hand, just
son should do, even perhaps Cooperative Parish for dis- take a step back and bow
those of another generation tribution to families in need. with your hands behind your
who had to give up their pasIn this economy, what with back. It's good idea for bot))
sion for practical reasons. . all the unemployment and . the person who wants to stay
I think today of Katie salary reductions being expe- healthy and the carrier of
. Reed and her passion in the rienced by workers, there 1s a germs ·who is considerate
field of dramatic arts. Last great need, and fewer able to enough not to spread them.
week. she performed in shirre. However, here those
So if I have a bad cold and
"The Tempest" by William who could give apparently don't want · to spread it
Shakespeare on the stage of were very generous since around, you may see me not
the Elizabeth Evans Baker contributions excelled last . stretching out my hand to ·
Theater in Kantner Hall . . year's figure of I ,621 pounds. greet you, but taking a ster.
•••
Next month, she will graduback and bowing. After al ,
The Meigs County Fair ''An ounce.of prevention is
ate from Ohio University.
Last summer, she attended may be three months away, worth a pound of cure."
the New York University but plans are well under way
(Charlene Hoeflich is
Conservatory for Dramatic for a bigger and better event. general mana,er of The
Alyssa Holter, who is chair Daily Sentinel m Pomeroy).
Arts, a school where she

SUNDAY.PUZZLER
.

ACROSS

I Dragged
.6 Money
tO Play a uke
15 Hem and.,8 Incensed
19 Fseii"9S ol pity
21 The ones ltlera
22 City InIndia
24 Back tooll)
25 Make angry
28 Competitor

27

28
29
· 31
33

Buc~ol

Loan ch«rga (abbr.)
~epaJred

AlvtrtolhaNorthSea
Suitcase
35 Sleopalltlle

37 -the rooet
3ll SldNtep
39 Oldmovlea

40 Alvtr In France
42 Award
43 Kooky rellglooa
44 Mt~eeome ·
· 46 As long as
.
· 47 Weather phenomenon ·
48 Aldta wave
52 Sunglaeaoa .
53 Doer
54 Placard
56 Bywayot
57 Privileged"""
. 58 Substantive
59 Without a cent ·
60 Emissary
62 Surrounded by
63 Brass instfUmanl
66 Diving bird
66 Haran!!"•
67 Balpooht .
68 Kind ol test or show
69 Retained
71 AorBorC,a.g.
73 Brirj(
75 Alenar
76 Nama
77 Point a weapon
78 Sweet potatoes
82 De&lt;;aralive jars
~~ ~i~; whale
66 Wager
·
87 Malle downhearted
90-Vegos
91 Mercllilnl
93 Hindu p!incess

.

94L~·· lol
95 Confidence
97 Prince In an opera
98 Gold, e.g. .
99 Race an engine
100 Mastermind
102 City In Utah
104 Cut in two
1os woa·acqualnte&lt;j with
107 Numoroua .
1 Scornful look
109 Ootarmlnt
IIOLoltn
112 Ravl Shanklr'e

oe

lnatrument

II3 Otadtntld
114 Strong laeUng

117 Splldtr'a uridclng
118 CIII!Chld hand
119 Formany, ot old
t 23 Gladdened
124 Jookl)i
125 Sir- ~~a!Jh
121 From--2
t 28 Aeperalon
t 29 Antalope
.
I 31 Spike ol kozan wa\Or
I 33 Fraquently
135 Carry
136 Meaning .,·
137 E)ected
1361rr~te

139- Aviv

140 Seized .
'141 God of thunder
142 Broughttoa~ose

.

•

DOWN

1 Flinltl8arted
2 City in Maine
3 Adance
4 Greek letter
.5 Skin (P&lt;efi&lt;)
B Taper
7 ~-- Growsln
Brooklyn"
8 Food !Ish
9 Farm animal
10 Taka tong etapa
11 Old prono111
12 Wander
13 Service brarch (abb
. r.)
14 'Moby Dlcl&lt;' author

I! Unlucky
1! 0rtct more
17 Wato!llooatlon

·

19 Poverty .

20 like a toady

23 Pub Qrdere
30 SaUa and Eatrada
32 Fog
.
34 Elavalon \abbr.)
36 Got away rom .
36 Dlacotd peraonlfle&lt;j
39 Ratlnue
41 Dollar ~lie
42 C~l.
. • 43 Sarrel
44 arought dishonor en
. 45 Sidewalk matenal
46 Injury
47 -,line and ainkor
49 Eye pan
50 Peel
.
51 Destiny
52 Cootour
53 Sol, wet ground
54 Bluenose
55 Pollee actloo ·
58 Loop In alasso
59 Scog
61 Ean-tea
63 Summit ·
64 aoslre tor dnnk
00 Circus pertormer
70 Common abbr;
71 liquid mseaure
72 Stair pan
74 Perpetually
76 Browned breed
79 Died down
e~ Threaten
81 Wading ~rd
83 Madaa hole·in-one

85 Avkl ·
87 Kind of chocolate
88 Paredlse
89 Supreme Roman god
90 '!love-'"
92 Ssaducl&lt;
93 Dwell
95 lnstru~
96 Hou~ng expenaa
98 Smal rodenta
. tOt lloaatlul
·
102 AGroat Lake ·
t 03 Wheol with Ieath
104 Mldlor 01 O~a
106 Squandering""'
108 Facet

1~~ ~~~UIIWOrk

112 Make blut
tt3 Gmder ot grain
114 Nulaance

1t 5 Apporlon
118 Cook a certainway
I I 7 Wlllh cycle

118 ~eo~
.
1.20 praised

121 arlin or Meddan
122 Softenedl'"lh
"down")
124.Tiar125 Desire·
126 Lariat
130 Grassy field
132 Slash
134 Watland

•

COMM

iunbaJ' lime~ ·itnttnel

Ma~

J3Y JAMES SANDS

I

I

I

•

PageC3
Sunday; May 17, 2009

CINCINNATI -A team
from the University of Rio
Grande/Rio
Grande
Community College is
advancing to the national
competition, but this one is
in an academic contest .
The team is the Students
In Free Enterprise (SIFE)
team, wbich has turned into
a dynasty of sorts in recent
years at tile regional com·
.petition:
The team won the regional competition in Cincinnati
in March.• and now will
advance to the nation11l con. Submlttld photo
test in Philadelphia, Pa. in
.;
•
The
University
of
Rio
Grande/Rio
Grande
Community
mid-May.
College
Students
In
Free
Enterprise
(SIFE)
team is
"We.. are once again the
.
..
. .
.
iubm- phOto
regional champion," Rio advancing to the national competHion in Philadelphia, .Pa.
The Ohio Valley Symphony Board of Directors met recently to plan the July 4 patriOtic pops Grande SIFE Advisor Carol thts month after winning the.JI9ional competition in March ;
concert in the Gallipolis City Park. From left in front rrm are OVS Executive DirOOtOr Lora Smith said. It is a great ·
Lynn Snow, OVS usher Elizabeth Davidson and board member Chris Petro of otiio Valley achievement . for the Rio material extremely well. ally active SIFE' teams .iii
·
-Bank; back row, board members Or. Mike Owens of Holzer Clinic, Tracy Call of Farmers Bank Grande team to finish high- "We started preparing our the nation .
presentation
·
in
January."
The team hopes to do welf
and Savings Co. and OVS
Board President. Paul Simon, a Point Pleasant businessman.
er than ·other SIFE teams
.
Jlresentation
shows
off
The
at
the national competition
frQm the different. colleges
the
students'
public
speakin
Philadelphia
Mzy 10-12,
and universities in the
ing
sllills,
and
'it
also
feabut
just·
advancing
to the
region. At the same time,
tures
Power
Point
materials
.
competition is .already a
GALI,.IPOLIS - There guest soloist. Stripling will be Elizabeth CoDcert ... because· though, the recognition is
will be fireworks .on stage as performing the music of she asked." Mrs. Dater has almost something that has The presentation must also sign of the group's success.
well a• in the sky on July 4 Louis Armstronll and will often professed that she become commonplace for have many facts and fig- In addition to giving their
when, the Ohio Valley bring to Gallipolis his musi- believes the world would be a the Rio Grande students.
ures, and. show results ·of presentation at the national
In the last 13 years, there how. effective the group was event, the Rio Grande stuSymphony presents its first cal and theatncal experience better place if more people
outdoor concert on Saturday, in portraying Armstrong in listened to symphonic music . ·have been only two times .. m tis work dunng .the dents wi II also be able to see
the work that other SIFE
July 4 in the Gallipolis City · the Broadway prOduction of Now she is making it possi· that the Rio Grande team school year.
students
are doing around
P11rk as part of the annual ·"Satchmo."
has
not
advanced
the
The
SIFE
team
starts
.
ble for everyone to hear Tthe
10
the
country,
.talk with top
River Recreation Festival.
rehearsmg: ~~ February,
The July 4 concert is part of Ohio Valley Symphony free national competition.
international
business lead·
The SIFE team members often startmg tis work at 7
The Summe·r Elizabeth a year-long celebration of in the park on July 4.
Concert will be Sa~urday · The Ohio Valley Symphony's
In case of inclement weath- who took parJ in the region- ~-~· so.the students can ~ut ers and hear several out~
·
evening at 8 p.m: with patri- "Twenty Years of Musical er, the back-up location is the · a! competition this year m.~~e before clas~es begm. standing speakers. ·
The
students
are
excited
otic pops, marches, jazz and Excellence."Theconcert was . Ariel-Ann Carson Dater included President Valerie
. I m really ''!lpres.sed
other American music cul- the brainchild :of Elizabeth Performing Arts Centre in Cangemi, Vice President ~tth, the. students dedtca- about attending the national
competition, but Smith i~ .
minating ·in the fireworks Davidson, who ushers for downtown Gallipolis .
Megan Clark, Gary Horsley, tiOn , Smtth satd. .
over the river.
In the last year, the SIFE even more excited about all
OVS concerts. The July 4
For more information, visit Joe Rossler, Angela Patton,
The free OYS concert ~ill concert · is funded by . Mrs. the Ohio .Valley Symphony~ Kendra Ely, Taka Endo and team completed _17 proJects of the excellent work the
feature nationally known jazz Ann Carson Dater and will be website at: www.ohioval- Katie Peters.
·
on c~mpu~ and m .the com- students have already completed this year. · ·
trumpeter, Byron Stripling, as known as "The Summer leysymphony,org.
The SIFE team is dedi- mumty.
"I'm very pleased with
cate(l to promoting the
The SJFE .team h~ also
ideas of economics and free . been recogmzed thts year them and very prqud of
enterprise in the region. · for . !ts · . Progra~ them," she said. ·
For more in{ormatioll oli
The students sponsor spe- Sustamabthty. The ofgamthe
Rio Grande S/FE ream,
:BY PATTY TOLER RN
with high levels of constant can exacerbate symptoms of cial activities on campus, zat10n has been achve .on
Stnith at 1-800-282'
WOMEN'S HEALTH SERVICES
stress, which results in adren- depression. In additton, peri- hold special classes and . ~ampus smce 1978, makmg call
72.01.
.
)'ROGRAM DIRECTOR
events
m
local
schools
and
It
one
of
the
oldest,
contmual fatigue. They are responsi- menopllusal women are more
GALUA COUNTY HEALTH
work
ble for producing DHEA, a prone to problems with even
.
. . with local entrebEPARTMENT
preneurs.
hormone. that helps regulate adrenal and thyroid function ,
At the end of each school
: Many woman will experi- . healthy energy levels and sex ·as well as insulin resistance.
year,
the students put
First
and
foremost,
underence depression at some drive. This imbalance results
.
together
a . presentation on
.
stand
that
the
solution
to
your
point in their life. ·In rnany in depression. fatigue.loss of
their
activities
throughout
:cases, these feelings are not libido, sleep disturbances depression depends upon the
t,he
year,
and
then
make the ·
'severity of your symptoms.
11 true mood disorders,' but and Weight gain. . ·
Instead are signs of an under• Hypothyroidism: Many For · women with inajor presentation at the regional
lying hormonal imbalance.
women suffer from a thy- depressive disorder, bipolar coinpetition, and then , the
;., Often a pre!;Cription for roid gland that does not pro- disorder, or women who may national competition if they
llntidepressants is prescribed duce ~nough thyroxine. The be harmful to them them- advance.
The judges at the i:ompe-•
based solely on the symptom most common symptoms of selves o~ others, an at home
·
titions
include . business
:Of depression. The most pop- . sub normal thyroid function approach is not . enough.
;ular antidepressants · are are fatil!ue, del;'ression, Every woman with depres- leaders · and corporate
sion should discuss her.feel- CEOs, and the students jlive
.SSR!s, which work by artifi- weight gam an,d hatt loss.
Cially increasing the serotonin
• Insulin reststance: Years ings with her health care professional presentations
:in your brain. If your sero- of poor diet and eating too . provider or a mental health· and then answer questions.
"I think they hand.led all
;«&gt;nin is in fact imbalanced, many refined- carbohydrates professional to make sure
of
the quesrions very, very
they
get
the
appropriate
care.
;rour mood is . positively and sugars can cause the
.
well,"
Smith said, addin)!
.affected. However, if the body to stop responding to For women with honnonal
that
the
students knew thetr
jmba1ance is from one of your insulin. As a result, your cells depression women should
;bodies many other hormones? cannot absorb the glucose seek a health care provider
. Depression is a common they need for energ~ and send and have a simple blood test.
The basic idea to solve
:Symptom associated with signals to your bnun to crave
)lormomil imbalance from carbohydrates an_d sugar. some imbalances is to
'adrenal fatigue,. menopause, Satlsfymg thatcravtngcauses encourage your body to pro·
· or thyroid dysfunction. There . ·a short burst of serotonin, but duce serotonin naturally.
:are blood tests your doctor when .that burst wears off This support comes in !he
;can order to show where the .· serotonin levels plunge. This form of dietary changes,
&lt;imbalance is coming from.
eXplains why many women exercise, and vitamin D.
: Once you understand the become addicted to sugar or Moderate daily sun expo:physical causes of your crabs, whtle exi'Cnencmg su're can also help. At the
depression, you can often worsening depresston . ·
same time try to reduce the
:~ive your body the support · . • Perimenopause and demands on your body and
:1t needs to overcome your menopause: The hormonal eliminate sources of chronic
;feelings of sadness. The shifts that occur during peri- stress. When this happens,
most common imbalances menopause and menopause your body will feel better.
Cla..lflede
:related t.o defression are: ··. often affect mood in the form
For more information on
; • Adrena fatigue: We of mood swings, irritability, · hormonal depre£$ion con;often see depression in anxiety or depression. Lack tact your doctor or C&lt;lll
.Place a. n~YWSpaJ&gt;Qr ad
Ptac".an ·onli ne ad
;women who are burdened of estrogen and progesterone (740) 441-2950.

.

...

JUIV 4cancerl

lallev

. When is depression hormonal?

{J'

'4

. Kipling, S~oe Co.

}Jb~

GALLIPOLIS LOCATION'S•••

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KIPLING SHOE CO.
300 2nd Ave.

Gallipolis

740-441·9010

~be i&gt;unbap Qeime~ -i&gt;entinel
•

•

�•

•

.

Page C4

CELEBRATIONS

iunba, limes ·itntinel

(
.

ON THE BOOKSHELF

iunbap limes ·itnttntl

Sunday, May 17, 2009 /

.

I
'

PageCs
Sunday, May 17, 2009

Changing the world, one school at a·time:
Three C11ps of Tea i&gt; the

hecn there and ;ee' the need
fascinating true 'tory of
and believe; thi; is what
Greg Mortenson's mission
Alnerican' should be doing.,
to fight terrorism in
Tht /I emler. re&lt;:en tly·
Paki stan and Afghanistan
made inhl a film for ~~ohich:
by building school&gt;.
Kate WiJhlet wOii her best:
Mortenson. after a fai led
Beverly
actrc" Oscar this year, is an ·
attempt m climb K I. an
Gettles
umMlal book. It is difficult
even deadlier peak than
to see how the movie could
Mount Everest , wandered
be made from it - so-much.
into an isolated Pakistani
contemphiii()n and so l.ittle:
village, sick and disheartaction. It Iells the story of a•
ened. He was nursed back to
·young boy's affajr with an :
health by the villagers. He ing girls. What will happen older woman and their:
· se,·era 1years 1ater. :
observed children ha vi ng to Mortenson 's school• if meet111g
classes· outdoors, writing the Taliban again takes con·
The book begins. ''When [
their lessons In the dirt with trol of the country'
was fifteen . 1 got hepatitis.':
Mortenson is now the M.IC hae 1 Berg 1·1ves 1n:
·
sticks. He 'pledged to come
director
of
the
Central
Asia
B
)'
D
·
h.
'II
back and build them a
er m. unng IS 1 ness;;
In stitute and has built more h
11
d·
d
school.
than 50 schools in Pakiston
e co apses an IS rescue :
Returning· to his home in
by Hall.!!\!. the woman with•
California, he wrote letters and Afghanistan in some of whom he begins an affair,:
•
to .58.0 celebrities asking for their most' isolated and As lime
goes on. he 1oses:•
ovei1y-stricken
areas.
One
k
t'
h
P
help with hi s pro•iect. He
rrac n er ·an d meets hec
J
wonders
how
his
wife
.
feels
·· when he att~:n dsa Ina
·1
received one letter back with
· . ·
.
agam
a $100 check from Tom about this work, but there ~re for war criniinals.
Brokaw. He did not give up. photographs of.herstandmg . Berg is shocked and dis,
beside him With their.son m maycd whe n he hears that
)
Eventua Iy, he IOund a the_ K~yber Pass. posmg for the woman he loved as a
••·•
wealthy patron who agreed the 1r ChriStmas card.
·
.
·
Submllllld photo
to finance the school.
The title comes from a young mun was an overseer
4reative writing students at River Valley High School .ara mounting a service learning proThere . were all sorts of homily which ·says that with ar one of the Nazi death
ifct concerning the history of the Gania County Local School District. Taping of interviews bureaucratic and tribal hur- the fi rst cup of tea , you are a camp,. Thi&lt; i' not a happy
and memorabilia associated with the schools will take place at the Gallia County Senior dies to overcme before the stranger; . with the second story. We are still haunted
Resource 'Center on May 27from 9:30a.m. to 1:30 p.m .
·
school could begin . First, cup, you are a guest, and by the atroc iti ~s and unbelievable cruel ty visited upon
the people· needed a bridge with the third, you are fami - the
Jew,. If yo u have ne ver·
. in their mountainous regiod ly. Mortenson 's· story shows seen·
it, may J suggest you·
which is nearly inaccessible how one persol) can make a visi( the Holocati'St Museum ·
by roads. It is easy to see · huge difference . What a in Washington D.C. nex t
why we have not found Bin ~hame there are not more time you go there : It is arj'
Laden when you read about like him, accepting of oth·. unforgettable experience. '
.the terr(!in in this area.
· · ers' culture and· beliefs ;
Mortenson was not a pop- seeking common bond&amp; and
··· CHESHIRE River . ''We know that the earliest member could ·come and
Valley Hi!!h School's ere- one room log school was share knowledge and expe- ular person with some of the purposes for a better life in
ative . wnting class is . located in the southern end rience. .
mullahs, and surviv.ed being the future. The · story . also
.
involved in a service learn- of the county and d·ates back
Mike ·Kimble, technical kidnapped and held for. sev- shows that. not all Muslims
ing project concerning the to 1802 ," a spokesperson advisor and support engi · era! days under threat of arf radical terrorists, bent
h-istory of the Gallia County · sai~. "As Jhe district has neer of this project, will be death . He attempted to fight on killing us. Mostly, they
local School District.
. evolved , some of the under- taping interviews and ftlm- the poverty and ignorance want a better life for their
As both River Valley and standing of how that evolu- ing any memorabilia from which fuel terrorism in these children, just as we do.
South Gallia prepare to enter tion occurred has been lost. the schools. Memorabilia regions . His schools are for
My friend Sandy's grandnew buildings, the time is
"This project will provide includes · items, pictures, · boys and girls alike . . One son, who recently served in
JWpropriate to trace and docu- a· base ·of mformation · that and documents. By film- fears the recurring strength the military in Afghanistan,
·FREe 2..-r r""''" 's''"'"
lj)ent the long history of edu- · can be. utilized as a starting ing, tlle class can avoid .los. of the Taliban and their donated his · Christmas
"'"""'' ·'"'' ""'""''' ""
· H 'h
•• ''"""
I~O-I'I'I;lil Dddt~wlthWobrnaW
'11!tional facilities that have place for ,ul)derstanding the ing precious . pieces that strong belief. against-educat- · · money tot h'IS cause.
e as . .c,.,.,;...,,,,..,........'""'"""
· ·· .
wntributed' to this district. development of .the district people value. ·.
~s history will t:e co~piled and its polities,"· she added.
The center will accommoLEATHER
mto a DVD which w1ll 'be · The Gallia County Senior date this activity on
Jidl '3 1-'IOIW : . _ ;
pre~nted to the community.
Resource Center will be a Wednesday, May 27, from
. ACCESSORIES
Sigt1 Up On llntl www.LOCIINttcom
• Butfotds ; Pursey •
; This project is intergener· central location where stu- 9:30 a.m . until1 :30 _p.m.
Portfolios
• Totes • Day
. ;'#ional and promises to be dents hope that ·anybody
F()r . m()re inf()rmation,
Planners
•
Key Hotde.;s .
~ rich in the experience as who was a student. a contact Cindy Graham at
•
Backpacks
~is in the history traced 3J1d teacher, a parent, a staff, Rivf!r Valley at (740) 367. . .
.
'corded.
·
.
board , or 'administrative 7377.

Derek Johnson end Dentetle Champagne

CHAMPAGNEJOHNSON
ENGAGEMENT
MIDDLEPORT - Danielle Ann Marie Champagne ttnd
. Derek Franklin Johnson announce their engagement and
approaching marriage.
. . ·
The bride-elect is the daughter of Gretchen Rogers Dupre
and Daniel Champagne from Houma , La. She IS a 2003
graduate of Terrebonne High School , Houma, La:, and a
2008 graduate of North Western State. Uni~ersity of
Louisiana , Natchitoches , La., with a degree tn history and
military studies .
·
.
· A 2nd lieutenant in the United ~tales Army, she IS stationed in Fort Stewart, Ga., and will be deployed ·to
Afghanistan later this summer.
Her fiance is the son of Kathy and Wayne Thomas, and
the grandson !Jf Bill ~nd Naomi King , all of Bradbury
Road, Middleport. He 1s a 200 I graduate of Meigs H1gh
School and a 2008 graduate·of Ohio University with a master's degree in recreation and sport sciences, and a bachelor de11ree in sport sciences.
He IS also a 2nd lieutenant in the United States Army stationed in Fort Polk. La., following his return from Iraq earlier this year. .
.
·. · ·
'The wedding will take place at 2 p.m. on Saturday, May
30, 2009, at the St. Loui.s Chu.rch m Houma, La., with a
reception immediately following at the Knights
Columbus Hall. also in Houma. ·

Kelsey Huffman and Timothy Stover

HUFFMANSTOVER
ENGAGEMENT
GALLIPOLIS - Kelsey Ann HutTman and .Timothy
Richard Stover are announcing their engagement and
approaching marrial!e . .
.
.
The bride-elect 1s the daughter of Gene and ' Kathy
Huffman of Gallipolis . She is the granddaughter of James
and Leahanna Allen of Gallipolis, and Alice and Vernon
Sheets of Zanesville.
. .
She is a 2005 graduate of Gallia Academy High School,
and graduated from the University of Rio Grande/Rio
Grande Community College on May 9, 2009, after majoring in AYA integrated mathematics.
The prospective bridegroom is the son of Roberta Stover
and Victor Stover of Bellefontaine. He is the grandson of
Charles and Ghnelda McDougall of Findlay, and the late
· ·
.
Delbert and Ruby Stover of Lowell.
He is a 2006 graduate of Benjamin Logan High School at
Bellefontaine and will graduate from the University of Rio
Grande/Rio Grande Community College in May 2010. He
is majoring in AYA integrated mathematics. · He is
employed at AutoZone in Gallipolis.
·
The wedding will be Sa!IIrday, June 13, 2009, at Faith
Baptist Church.
··

Camp Invention registration
deadline scheduled May 27 .·
RIO GRANDE - The Camp .Invention program, set for
June 22-26, focuses on brain-powered activities and powerful projects that enhance creativity, teamwork, and inven'tive-thinking skills. .
.
· ·
Children in Gallia, Jackson, and Meigs counties entering ·
grades one through six in the fall have fun as they participate daily in five activity-oriented modules promoting science , math , history, a'nd the arts through creative problemsolving and critical thinking skills. ·
Participants create superheroes ,learn how t6 fly, search for
lost treasure, and create the next great land vehicle. Directed
and taught by local educators; Camp Invention is available
June 22-26, Monday through friday, 9 a.m. to 3:30p.m. at the
University of Rio Grande/Rio Grande·Community College . .
· Register for camp by May 27 one of four ways: Online,
www.campinvention.org; call, (800) 968-4332; fax form,
(330) 849-8528; or mail form (forms were sent to all area
schools or ·go to·www.gallialocal.org website, click downloads. go to Talented .&amp; Gifted Programs, and click on
Registration form for Camp Invention) and send to: Camp
lnvention, 565 White Pond Drive, Akron, Ohio 44320 . · · ·
Base cost for camp is $205. bring a friend and come for
$185. For more information, contact camp director Sandra
Plantz at the Galli a County Lo&lt;;'al Schools 446-7917 or
email, gl_splantz@seovec.org·.

Mr. and Mrs. James Pedersen
"

BLAKE-PEDERSEN
WEDDING
,..
.

.Students stal'l research
for school disbict history
'

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Rought of Pomeroy ·
announce the marriage of their daughter, Stephannie Elten·
Blake, to James Chris Pedersen, son of Lorraine Pederse.n,
and the late Janies Frank Pedersen of Racine, Wis .
r
The couple exchanged wedding vows on April 18, 2009,.
at Monte go Bay, Jamaica , followed by a week's honey·,.
moon there .
•
•
..
They reside in New Richmond, Wis, where a celebmtion:
party for family and close friends will be held on June 27, 2009.;,

Local pharmacist installed as trustee;
RUTLAND :.... Robbin
Sizemore, R.Ph., Pharrit.D.,
of Rutland, was installed as
trustee of the Ohio
Pharmacists
Association
(Oi&gt;A), representing District
8, at its Blst annual conference held April 17- 19 in
Columbus.
Sizemore is the clinical
coordinator for pharmacist
care services and pharmacy ·
manager of Holzer Long
Term Care in Gallipolis ,
where she has · been
employed for the past five
years.
Robbin Sizemore
· · .
:;
Sizemore completed her
undergraduate studies at Northern Kentucky University,•.
graduate courses at the University of Kentucky doctor of;
pharmacy program, and completed community pharmacy,·
residency with Fry's Food and Drug, which is affiliated.·
with the University of Arizona to receive her Pharrn.D. ,,,
"I am .deeply honored to represent the pharmacists of.•
southeastern Ohio as well ·as the patients we serve,'!,
Sizemore said. "I will ensure our community hus u voice in.·
the healthcare issues affecting our state."
The. OPA , established in 1879, represents more thun
4,000 pharmacists , pharmacy educators and pharmacy stth
dents throughout the state.
·
·•

·I

...

•

'

t.&lt;/

'

I
I
~

;

.~

•
Sylvia and Arthur (Bill) Brown

BROWN
·
.
ANNIVERSARY
'

: PATRIOT - Arthur (Bill) and Sylvia Brown will celebrate their 50th.wedding anniversary on May 18, 2009.
They will celebrate with their two sons, Art (Regina)
Brown and Mark Brown. They also have three grandchildren, Kyle, Storrni and Grant.

· u.wsrDIOF

AWARD -·IG SPAS

'I

~·""·:..

'

I
.

,.
,.

..

.

.

...

'

I

•·

'l Rio hosts board's spring meeting .

.''PEOPLE ,•
I, - '

•

( r;,; :p--:6xlii$1e,/'-··

••
...

'

'

.t

~entirtel

RIO GRANDE - . T)le public instruction fqr .the Ohio for a conference, just
University
of
Rio Ohio
Department
of as it benefit's the region
when Rio Grande brings .in
Grande/Rio ·
Grande Education.
Community Colle~e hosted
Outstanding . · faculty people from . around the
the Ohio Ass'octation of awards will also be present· state and region throughout
l'wo· Year
Colleges ed to college professors· tlie year f~r the many differ(OATYC)
Bot~rd
of from around the state during ent academic, athletic and
Directors spring meeting in · the conference. Brasel won community events that are
·
April, and will now host the the OATYC Teacher of the held on campus.
For more il!{ormarion on
organization's fall confer· .Year Award in 2006, and
ence in October.
.
Rio Grande faculty member the recent OATYC board
. The OATYC is made up Jake Bapst has also previ- meeting m; on the fall cam- ·
of faculty members from ously . beeri recognized by pus, call Brasel. ar (800)
282-7201.
two-ye'ar colleges around tlie organization. ·
Also . at the conference,
Ohio, and Rio Grande facul•
ty member Ellen Brasel is the OATYC members will
currently serving as the also award teaching grants
president-elect of the orga- and discuss a wide range of
nization.
· topics .
On April 24, the OATYC
Brasel is happy to have
held its annual spring board the conference held at Rio
meeting in Bob Evans Grande for several reasons.
Farms Hall on the Rio One ·reason is to bring so
. Grande campus, Brasel was many outstanding faculty
pleased to have rhe board meinbers to ·campus for the
members at Rio Grande , day. These. outstanding
and said . they were teachers will be able to
tlnpressed ~1th the campus share teaching information,
and the facthties.
and the Rio Grande faculty
. One mam focus of the members will ·benefit from
May
at 7 PMI
~ard meetmg was to plan · hearing from and meeting
rKI:CONCI.':RT!
tOr the 42~d annual con- different teachers.
Reaene &amp;eats TodiiYI
!ere~ce. wh1c.h will be held
In addition, it will benefit
Gil :!ltd Aw. Got~polls. OH
at
RIO
Grande
on
Fnday,
th
·
t
b
·
f It
740-446-ARTS
Oct. 16.
_
e regiOn . o nng acu y
: The theme for this year's members m from around
be
conference
will
"Teaching in a . Global
Society," and Brasel said it
will benefii Rio Grande and
the region in several ways
by having the conference on
campus.
·
During the fall conferences, the OATYC members discuss numerous
issues related to teac.hing at
access
two-year colleges in Ohio, .
a pap test
such. as professional development, . collaboration ,
dtversity. technology and
new program development
Members of the organization make proposals about
presentations they want to
give at the fall conference.
and then tht! board members
decide on the different presentations.
During· the fall confer. ence. Bmsel will welcome
.members from around the
Serving women ia: Adams, Brown, Gallia,
state to the campus: and will
Highland, Jackson, Lawrence, Pike, Ross,
also introduce the keynote
Scioto and Vinton counties
speakers.
·The keynote speakers for
.... eo-,
~uthem Ohio Wmm:n's C11111.-.:r Project
this year's event will be
~~~
475 Wes1em A•e., ·suite A
Jennifer L. Sheets. president
Chillirot , Ohio 4560 I
of the Ohio State Board of
740 775·7331
Education. and Deborah S.
DISTRICT
Delisle, superintendent of
1

\

This economy has created many opportunities for
FANTASTIC DEALS! Come &amp; See! ,
.If you are looking for silk flowers for Memorial Day,
·
YOU WON'T WANT TO MISS THIS SALE I ,
Our silk flowers are both beautiful &amp; cheap.
Small Silk Flower Bushes perfect for cemetai'Y. vases.
Sales each $1.00 to $1.99 OUR TENT SALE 69~ EACH

He&lt;ilth

j •

•

�•

•

.

Page C4

CELEBRATIONS

iunba, limes ·itntinel

(
.

ON THE BOOKSHELF

iunbap limes ·itnttntl

Sunday, May 17, 2009 /

.

I
'

PageCs
Sunday, May 17, 2009

Changing the world, one school at a·time:
Three C11ps of Tea i&gt; the

hecn there and ;ee' the need
fascinating true 'tory of
and believe; thi; is what
Greg Mortenson's mission
Alnerican' should be doing.,
to fight terrorism in
Tht /I emler. re&lt;:en tly·
Paki stan and Afghanistan
made inhl a film for ~~ohich:
by building school&gt;.
Kate WiJhlet wOii her best:
Mortenson. after a fai led
Beverly
actrc" Oscar this year, is an ·
attempt m climb K I. an
Gettles
umMlal book. It is difficult
even deadlier peak than
to see how the movie could
Mount Everest , wandered
be made from it - so-much.
into an isolated Pakistani
contemphiii()n and so l.ittle:
village, sick and disheartaction. It Iells the story of a•
ened. He was nursed back to
·young boy's affajr with an :
health by the villagers. He ing girls. What will happen older woman and their:
· se,·era 1years 1ater. :
observed children ha vi ng to Mortenson 's school• if meet111g
classes· outdoors, writing the Taliban again takes con·
The book begins. ''When [
their lessons In the dirt with trol of the country'
was fifteen . 1 got hepatitis.':
Mortenson is now the M.IC hae 1 Berg 1·1ves 1n:
·
sticks. He 'pledged to come
director
of
the
Central
Asia
B
)'
D
·
h.
'II
back and build them a
er m. unng IS 1 ness;;
In stitute and has built more h
11
d·
d
school.
than 50 schools in Pakiston
e co apses an IS rescue :
Returning· to his home in
by Hall.!!\!. the woman with•
California, he wrote letters and Afghanistan in some of whom he begins an affair,:
•
to .58.0 celebrities asking for their most' isolated and As lime
goes on. he 1oses:•
ovei1y-stricken
areas.
One
k
t'
h
P
help with hi s pro•iect. He
rrac n er ·an d meets hec
J
wonders
how
his
wife
.
feels
·· when he att~:n dsa Ina
·1
received one letter back with
· . ·
.
agam
a $100 check from Tom about this work, but there ~re for war criniinals.
Brokaw. He did not give up. photographs of.herstandmg . Berg is shocked and dis,
beside him With their.son m maycd whe n he hears that
)
Eventua Iy, he IOund a the_ K~yber Pass. posmg for the woman he loved as a
••·•
wealthy patron who agreed the 1r ChriStmas card.
·
.
·
Submllllld photo
to finance the school.
The title comes from a young mun was an overseer
4reative writing students at River Valley High School .ara mounting a service learning proThere . were all sorts of homily which ·says that with ar one of the Nazi death
ifct concerning the history of the Gania County Local School District. Taping of interviews bureaucratic and tribal hur- the fi rst cup of tea , you are a camp,. Thi&lt; i' not a happy
and memorabilia associated with the schools will take place at the Gallia County Senior dies to overcme before the stranger; . with the second story. We are still haunted
Resource 'Center on May 27from 9:30a.m. to 1:30 p.m .
·
school could begin . First, cup, you are a guest, and by the atroc iti ~s and unbelievable cruel ty visited upon
the people· needed a bridge with the third, you are fami - the
Jew,. If yo u have ne ver·
. in their mountainous regiod ly. Mortenson 's· story shows seen·
it, may J suggest you·
which is nearly inaccessible how one persol) can make a visi( the Holocati'St Museum ·
by roads. It is easy to see · huge difference . What a in Washington D.C. nex t
why we have not found Bin ~hame there are not more time you go there : It is arj'
Laden when you read about like him, accepting of oth·. unforgettable experience. '
.the terr(!in in this area.
· · ers' culture and· beliefs ;
Mortenson was not a pop- seeking common bond&amp; and
··· CHESHIRE River . ''We know that the earliest member could ·come and
Valley Hi!!h School's ere- one room log school was share knowledge and expe- ular person with some of the purposes for a better life in
ative . wnting class is . located in the southern end rience. .
mullahs, and surviv.ed being the future. The · story . also
.
involved in a service learn- of the county and d·ates back
Mike ·Kimble, technical kidnapped and held for. sev- shows that. not all Muslims
ing project concerning the to 1802 ," a spokesperson advisor and support engi · era! days under threat of arf radical terrorists, bent
h-istory of the Gallia County · sai~. "As Jhe district has neer of this project, will be death . He attempted to fight on killing us. Mostly, they
local School District.
. evolved , some of the under- taping interviews and ftlm- the poverty and ignorance want a better life for their
As both River Valley and standing of how that evolu- ing any memorabilia from which fuel terrorism in these children, just as we do.
South Gallia prepare to enter tion occurred has been lost. the schools. Memorabilia regions . His schools are for
My friend Sandy's grandnew buildings, the time is
"This project will provide includes · items, pictures, · boys and girls alike . . One son, who recently served in
JWpropriate to trace and docu- a· base ·of mformation · that and documents. By film- fears the recurring strength the military in Afghanistan,
·FREe 2..-r r""''" 's''"'"
lj)ent the long history of edu- · can be. utilized as a starting ing, tlle class can avoid .los. of the Taliban and their donated his · Christmas
"'"""'' ·'"'' ""'""''' ""
· H 'h
•• ''"""
I~O-I'I'I;lil Dddt~wlthWobrnaW
'11!tional facilities that have place for ,ul)derstanding the ing precious . pieces that strong belief. against-educat- · · money tot h'IS cause.
e as . .c,.,.,;...,,,,..,........'""'"""
· ·· .
wntributed' to this district. development of .the district people value. ·.
~s history will t:e co~piled and its polities,"· she added.
The center will accommoLEATHER
mto a DVD which w1ll 'be · The Gallia County Senior date this activity on
Jidl '3 1-'IOIW : . _ ;
pre~nted to the community.
Resource Center will be a Wednesday, May 27, from
. ACCESSORIES
Sigt1 Up On llntl www.LOCIINttcom
• Butfotds ; Pursey •
; This project is intergener· central location where stu- 9:30 a.m . until1 :30 _p.m.
Portfolios
• Totes • Day
. ;'#ional and promises to be dents hope that ·anybody
F()r . m()re inf()rmation,
Planners
•
Key Hotde.;s .
~ rich in the experience as who was a student. a contact Cindy Graham at
•
Backpacks
~is in the history traced 3J1d teacher, a parent, a staff, Rivf!r Valley at (740) 367. . .
.
'corded.
·
.
board , or 'administrative 7377.

Derek Johnson end Dentetle Champagne

CHAMPAGNEJOHNSON
ENGAGEMENT
MIDDLEPORT - Danielle Ann Marie Champagne ttnd
. Derek Franklin Johnson announce their engagement and
approaching marriage.
. . ·
The bride-elect is the daughter of Gretchen Rogers Dupre
and Daniel Champagne from Houma , La. She IS a 2003
graduate of Terrebonne High School , Houma, La:, and a
2008 graduate of North Western State. Uni~ersity of
Louisiana , Natchitoches , La., with a degree tn history and
military studies .
·
.
· A 2nd lieutenant in the United ~tales Army, she IS stationed in Fort Stewart, Ga., and will be deployed ·to
Afghanistan later this summer.
Her fiance is the son of Kathy and Wayne Thomas, and
the grandson !Jf Bill ~nd Naomi King , all of Bradbury
Road, Middleport. He 1s a 200 I graduate of Meigs H1gh
School and a 2008 graduate·of Ohio University with a master's degree in recreation and sport sciences, and a bachelor de11ree in sport sciences.
He IS also a 2nd lieutenant in the United States Army stationed in Fort Polk. La., following his return from Iraq earlier this year. .
.
·. · ·
'The wedding will take place at 2 p.m. on Saturday, May
30, 2009, at the St. Loui.s Chu.rch m Houma, La., with a
reception immediately following at the Knights
Columbus Hall. also in Houma. ·

Kelsey Huffman and Timothy Stover

HUFFMANSTOVER
ENGAGEMENT
GALLIPOLIS - Kelsey Ann HutTman and .Timothy
Richard Stover are announcing their engagement and
approaching marrial!e . .
.
.
The bride-elect 1s the daughter of Gene and ' Kathy
Huffman of Gallipolis . She is the granddaughter of James
and Leahanna Allen of Gallipolis, and Alice and Vernon
Sheets of Zanesville.
. .
She is a 2005 graduate of Gallia Academy High School,
and graduated from the University of Rio Grande/Rio
Grande Community College on May 9, 2009, after majoring in AYA integrated mathematics.
The prospective bridegroom is the son of Roberta Stover
and Victor Stover of Bellefontaine. He is the grandson of
Charles and Ghnelda McDougall of Findlay, and the late
· ·
.
Delbert and Ruby Stover of Lowell.
He is a 2006 graduate of Benjamin Logan High School at
Bellefontaine and will graduate from the University of Rio
Grande/Rio Grande Community College in May 2010. He
is majoring in AYA integrated mathematics. · He is
employed at AutoZone in Gallipolis.
·
The wedding will be Sa!IIrday, June 13, 2009, at Faith
Baptist Church.
··

Camp Invention registration
deadline scheduled May 27 .·
RIO GRANDE - The Camp .Invention program, set for
June 22-26, focuses on brain-powered activities and powerful projects that enhance creativity, teamwork, and inven'tive-thinking skills. .
.
· ·
Children in Gallia, Jackson, and Meigs counties entering ·
grades one through six in the fall have fun as they participate daily in five activity-oriented modules promoting science , math , history, a'nd the arts through creative problemsolving and critical thinking skills. ·
Participants create superheroes ,learn how t6 fly, search for
lost treasure, and create the next great land vehicle. Directed
and taught by local educators; Camp Invention is available
June 22-26, Monday through friday, 9 a.m. to 3:30p.m. at the
University of Rio Grande/Rio Grande·Community College . .
· Register for camp by May 27 one of four ways: Online,
www.campinvention.org; call, (800) 968-4332; fax form,
(330) 849-8528; or mail form (forms were sent to all area
schools or ·go to·www.gallialocal.org website, click downloads. go to Talented .&amp; Gifted Programs, and click on
Registration form for Camp Invention) and send to: Camp
lnvention, 565 White Pond Drive, Akron, Ohio 44320 . · · ·
Base cost for camp is $205. bring a friend and come for
$185. For more information, contact camp director Sandra
Plantz at the Galli a County Lo&lt;;'al Schools 446-7917 or
email, gl_splantz@seovec.org·.

Mr. and Mrs. James Pedersen
"

BLAKE-PEDERSEN
WEDDING
,..
.

.Students stal'l research
for school disbict history
'

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Rought of Pomeroy ·
announce the marriage of their daughter, Stephannie Elten·
Blake, to James Chris Pedersen, son of Lorraine Pederse.n,
and the late Janies Frank Pedersen of Racine, Wis .
r
The couple exchanged wedding vows on April 18, 2009,.
at Monte go Bay, Jamaica , followed by a week's honey·,.
moon there .
•
•
..
They reside in New Richmond, Wis, where a celebmtion:
party for family and close friends will be held on June 27, 2009.;,

Local pharmacist installed as trustee;
RUTLAND :.... Robbin
Sizemore, R.Ph., Pharrit.D.,
of Rutland, was installed as
trustee of the Ohio
Pharmacists
Association
(Oi&gt;A), representing District
8, at its Blst annual conference held April 17- 19 in
Columbus.
Sizemore is the clinical
coordinator for pharmacist
care services and pharmacy ·
manager of Holzer Long
Term Care in Gallipolis ,
where she has · been
employed for the past five
years.
Robbin Sizemore
· · .
:;
Sizemore completed her
undergraduate studies at Northern Kentucky University,•.
graduate courses at the University of Kentucky doctor of;
pharmacy program, and completed community pharmacy,·
residency with Fry's Food and Drug, which is affiliated.·
with the University of Arizona to receive her Pharrn.D. ,,,
"I am .deeply honored to represent the pharmacists of.•
southeastern Ohio as well ·as the patients we serve,'!,
Sizemore said. "I will ensure our community hus u voice in.·
the healthcare issues affecting our state."
The. OPA , established in 1879, represents more thun
4,000 pharmacists , pharmacy educators and pharmacy stth
dents throughout the state.
·
·•

·I

...

•

'

t.&lt;/

'

I
I
~

;

.~

•
Sylvia and Arthur (Bill) Brown

BROWN
·
.
ANNIVERSARY
'

: PATRIOT - Arthur (Bill) and Sylvia Brown will celebrate their 50th.wedding anniversary on May 18, 2009.
They will celebrate with their two sons, Art (Regina)
Brown and Mark Brown. They also have three grandchildren, Kyle, Storrni and Grant.

· u.wsrDIOF

AWARD -·IG SPAS

'I

~·""·:..

'

I
.

,.
,.

..

.

.

...

'

I

•·

'l Rio hosts board's spring meeting .

.''PEOPLE ,•
I, - '

•

( r;,; :p--:6xlii$1e,/'-··

••
...

'

'

.t

~entirtel

RIO GRANDE - . T)le public instruction fqr .the Ohio for a conference, just
University
of
Rio Ohio
Department
of as it benefit's the region
when Rio Grande brings .in
Grande/Rio ·
Grande Education.
Community Colle~e hosted
Outstanding . · faculty people from . around the
the Ohio Ass'octation of awards will also be present· state and region throughout
l'wo· Year
Colleges ed to college professors· tlie year f~r the many differ(OATYC)
Bot~rd
of from around the state during ent academic, athletic and
Directors spring meeting in · the conference. Brasel won community events that are
·
April, and will now host the the OATYC Teacher of the held on campus.
For more il!{ormarion on
organization's fall confer· .Year Award in 2006, and
ence in October.
.
Rio Grande faculty member the recent OATYC board
. The OATYC is made up Jake Bapst has also previ- meeting m; on the fall cam- ·
of faculty members from ously . beeri recognized by pus, call Brasel. ar (800)
282-7201.
two-ye'ar colleges around tlie organization. ·
Also . at the conference,
Ohio, and Rio Grande facul•
ty member Ellen Brasel is the OATYC members will
currently serving as the also award teaching grants
president-elect of the orga- and discuss a wide range of
nization.
· topics .
On April 24, the OATYC
Brasel is happy to have
held its annual spring board the conference held at Rio
meeting in Bob Evans Grande for several reasons.
Farms Hall on the Rio One ·reason is to bring so
. Grande campus, Brasel was many outstanding faculty
pleased to have rhe board meinbers to ·campus for the
members at Rio Grande , day. These. outstanding
and said . they were teachers will be able to
tlnpressed ~1th the campus share teaching information,
and the facthties.
and the Rio Grande faculty
. One mam focus of the members will ·benefit from
May
at 7 PMI
~ard meetmg was to plan · hearing from and meeting
rKI:CONCI.':RT!
tOr the 42~d annual con- different teachers.
Reaene &amp;eats TodiiYI
!ere~ce. wh1c.h will be held
In addition, it will benefit
Gil :!ltd Aw. Got~polls. OH
at
RIO
Grande
on
Fnday,
th
·
t
b
·
f It
740-446-ARTS
Oct. 16.
_
e regiOn . o nng acu y
: The theme for this year's members m from around
be
conference
will
"Teaching in a . Global
Society," and Brasel said it
will benefii Rio Grande and
the region in several ways
by having the conference on
campus.
·
During the fall conferences, the OATYC members discuss numerous
issues related to teac.hing at
access
two-year colleges in Ohio, .
a pap test
such. as professional development, . collaboration ,
dtversity. technology and
new program development
Members of the organization make proposals about
presentations they want to
give at the fall conference.
and then tht! board members
decide on the different presentations.
During· the fall confer. ence. Bmsel will welcome
.members from around the
Serving women ia: Adams, Brown, Gallia,
state to the campus: and will
Highland, Jackson, Lawrence, Pike, Ross,
also introduce the keynote
Scioto and Vinton counties
speakers.
·The keynote speakers for
.... eo-,
~uthem Ohio Wmm:n's C11111.-.:r Project
this year's event will be
~~~
475 Wes1em A•e., ·suite A
Jennifer L. Sheets. president
Chillirot , Ohio 4560 I
of the Ohio State Board of
740 775·7331
Education. and Deborah S.
DISTRICT
Delisle, superintendent of
1

\

This economy has created many opportunities for
FANTASTIC DEALS! Come &amp; See! ,
.If you are looking for silk flowers for Memorial Day,
·
YOU WON'T WANT TO MISS THIS SALE I ,
Our silk flowers are both beautiful &amp; cheap.
Small Silk Flower Bushes perfect for cemetai'Y. vases.
Sales each $1.00 to $1.99 OUR TENT SALE 69~ EACH

He&lt;ilth

j •

•

�PageC~

ENTERTAINMENT

iunba, limts -ienttnel

'

'

Sunday,May17, 2009

Review: 'Angels &amp; Demons'

,

INSIDE

Dl

6unbap Qtimtl-6entinel

Down on the Farm,' Page D2 ·

AcnJSS the Nation, Page D3
Gardening, Page D6

•

.more summery than solemn
vial of anti-matter was
stolen for the planned
attack, Her arrival also
LOS ANGELES
· allows for such standard
Blessedlr, "Angel!. &amp; action-picture dialogue as,
Demons' is more entertain- "Can you deactivate the
ing and les.s ·self-serious device?"
·
than its predecessor, the
Never mind that Vittoria
~ense and dreary yet enor- is sexy .and mysterious, not
mously successful ''The Da · middle-aged and frumpy.
Vinci Code."
(And we gotta say. Hanks is
: In adapting another of looking pretty good here,
aulbor Dan Brown's reli- · too. The first time we see
gious-mystery page turners, him. he's tanned and trim,
director Ron Howard wisely swimming laps in a Speedo
gave in to its beat-the-clock in the Harvard pool.) Never
thriller elements, which mind that the time frame is
~akes for a more enjoyable impossible - that they
'Iimmer movie experience. must dash l(Cross the city at
The brouhaha has long night , with · its narrow
sjnce
abated
among streets and · tourist traps
Catholics. albinos. · "Da packed .with visitors, in
.Yinci Code" purists. what time to stop each killing.
~ave you, and all that's left And never mind that one
ts air-conditioned escapism . .
· But its twists, turns and
revelations are just as
ridiculous as those in the
tlrst film - perhaps even
more so - and it breezes
through arcane details with
just as much dizzying
·
speed.
Besides Howard, the key
players are back from that
2006 international hit,
including Tom Hanks as
liarvard professor and symllologist Robert. Langdon
a.rid Akiva Goldsman as
screenwriter (with David
Koepp 'collaborating on the
script). Joining them · are
Ewan McGregor, Stellan
Skarsgaard and Armin
)1.1ueller-Stahl among the
estimable supporting cast,
all of whom have enjoyed
the benefits of stronger
material but manage to supply gravitas nonetheless ,
. Although "Angels &amp;
Demons" preceded "The Da
Vinci Code" in book form ,
. the film is positioned as a
sequel to take advantage of
the strained . relationship
between Langdon and the
:Vatican - only this time,
it's his expertise the folks
!here reluctantly. need.
: With ·the pope dead and
the College of Cardinals
about to meet in conclave to
choose a replacement, a
secret society known as the
tlluminati has kidnapped
!he four likeliest candidates. ·
lioward and cinematographer Salvatore Totino, who
· also shot "The Da Vinci
&lt;;:ode ," cloak all these pro~=eedings in dark, ominous
shadows,
and
Hans
Zimmer's score ralher obviously adds to lhe feeling of
foreboding.
.
' Langdon is brought in to
decipher clues at various
churches and historical sites
throughout Rome to prevent
the killing of the cardinals,
one every hour, leading to a
bomb explosion · at the
Vatican. He gets help along
.the way from Vittona Vetra
(Ayelet Zurer), an Italian
scientist who worked at !he
jab where the combustible
py,CHRISTY LEMIRE
AP MOVIE CRITIC

•

person appears to be
responsible for orchestrating these elaborate and very
public deaths.
·
But wait, we haven 't even
gotten to the most laughable
part of the story yet! We
won't give it away entirely
for those who haven 't. read
the book . We'll just say it
involves an exploding helicopter and a crucial character parachuting out of it just
in time. Because it is summer, after all, despite the
aura of religious solemnity.
"Angels &amp; Demons," a
Columbia
Pictures
release, is rated PG-13 for
sequences of violence, dis·
turbhtg images and the·
.
.
AP photd:
malic material. Running In this film publicity image released by_Columbia Pictures/Sony Entertainment, from 111ft; ·
time: 138 minutes. Two Tom Hanks, Ayelet Zurer, Thure Undhart and Ewan McGregor are shown in a scene from,
stars out of four.
"Angels &amp; Demons.·
·
·
· ,.
"·

,.

Sunday, May 17, 2009

01

reate a ·new tra ition
(AP)
Keystones.
:ir.ched windows and a hip
roof give this home, Plan
E-1719 by Home Plans
LLC, its traditional chara:cter: .
'
: The functional floor plan
covers 2,068 square feet of
living space.
·
The living areas occupy
the front of the home. A ·
fireplace and access to a
·'
screen porch and ·a deck
ooyond enhance !he appeal·
of the living room.
- The kitchen's peninsula
.maximizes counter space,
:ind !he adjacent eating area
i.s perfect for everyday
meals. Garage access nearby makes unloading gro:
ceries convenient.
The bedrOoms lie ,along ,
the . design's perimeter for
privacy, Two of the bed- ·
(OOms; each wilb' a private
vanity and a walk-in closet, ·
share a barb.
· The master suite boasts
. a space-adding tray ceiling, and features a private
bath and a large walk-in
closet. A clever door
;irrangement in the closet's linen stora~e allows
access to the uulity room
for easy 'loading on laundry day. .
Above the · garage; a
. and :Publications Designer Network
.
.
bonus room makes an ideal This artist rendition released by Homestyle Plans
shows traditional
design elements,
studio, office or playroom.
shuttered
windows
and
a
columned
front
porch,
lend
a
stately
character
to
this
spacious
home.
'
'.
.
.
.

.

''

jV
I

I .

Ii

I

I

X

~:Tonight' guest

·&lt;
I.

~onan O'Brien

;. LOS ANGEJ:.ES (AP) Jay Leno's last J!Uest on
:Tonight Show" Will be ihe
fDaD who's taking ·Over for
him - Conan O'Brien.
_; Leno wraps up his 17·
}ll!al:·run as host of NBC's
lilte-nigbt show on May 29.
l'be network says that
O'Brien will be Leno 's final
Jtlest. Then O'Brien steps
m as "Tonight" host June I.
; ~ big names making the
gut.fot Leno's fmal week of
shows inc.lude Mel Gibson.
Prince and BiU~ Crystal who was Leno s fli'St guest
!lifhen he took "Tonight" over
fton!Johnny Carson in 1992.
. Clttson 's final guest~ were
Bette Midler and Robin
Williams, who appeared on
€arson's next-to-last show.
Jl~ hosted his finai"Tonight"
flroadcast wilhout guests.
~; This fall, Leno will begin
a; , daily prime-time j}ow
ftn" NBC.
'--' .

'

.•

.

.

.

T

o learn.that King's Daughters Medical Center (KDMQ offers
·
minimally· invasive heart bypass surgery - providing a quicker
recovery and less trauma to the chest area-; was a bit of good
news for Ironton, Ohio, resident Terry lowe.
. lowe has been a drummer for more than 40 years, traveling all
'over the country and on cruise shrps 111 the Bahamas with vanous
'
· musicians to make his living. ~Kcept for a bout with add refluK and a
hiatal hernia in 1992, he has been heahhy.
But this past winter, whil~ ~lking on a trt:admill, t~ 58-year-old lowe
feh pressure in his throat that ~pi coming back. After endoscopic tests
showed no additional problems in the digestrve trlict, lowt underwent
a series of tests that lead to a cardiac catheterization 1\ith cardiologist
Richard Paulu~ M.D. lowe' soon learned he had suffered a heart attack
and his heart was oorking only at 25 percent capacity ~ to improve
h~ srtuatioli, he oould need open heart SUilJery.
' I had not experienced chest pain or leh arm pain," said lowe. "A
heart attack v.~s the last thing on my mind. It is scary to think this
was wor1dng on me and I didn't know it."

·Dr. Paulu~ referted lowe to cardiothoiaCr~ sutgeon Marcos M0res,
M.D., who discussed the minimally invasive procedure. Minimally ·
invasive open heart surgery is not ideal for every patient, Dt Mores
. said, but for lowe less trauma to his chest was music to his ea1&gt;.
Dr. Nores penormed the mintmally invasive procedure through a
three-inch incision bet~ the ribs on the side of the che5t. Thrs
small incision is in contrast to the traditional full sternotomy v.~th a

12 X ll """"'~~

1~

l

22x22

·,

.

,16 clg

·.dining

porch 16 x 6

br3

This artist rendition released by Homestyle Plans and
Publications Designer Network shows the functional floor plan, .
which covers 2,068 square feet of living space.

Gallia Auto Sales takes
pride in rePeat business

.

"A heart atta~;k was the last thing on my
mind. It is scary to think this was working
on me and I didn't know it:'

GALLIPOLIS - In more of the business can be
than 50 years of operation, attributed to those buyers
Gallia Auto Saleshas prided who bought one vehicle
itself on serving numerous from the business and are so
repeat customers and draw- ·satisfied they come back for
ing in car buyers from the !heir next. Vehii:Ies are
checked out in the service ·
surrounding area.
Locat~d at 2747 Jackson garage, .which Don Mink
Pike, Galli a Auto Sales has opened in I960.
expanded over the years
"We have a lot of faithful
from its beginnings as a . customers in Gallia County
small lot with four or five and from Meigs, Jackson
pre-owned cars to a wide and Vinton counties and
variety of low mileage, fac- Mason County in West ·
Gallla Auto Sales today
tory warranty cars and Virginia. They have been
trucks for customers to good 'to us," David said.
· A. Don has been noted for Brent Davies. who has been
choose from.
David can attribute his his restoration work on with Gallia Auto Sales for
Gallia Auto Sales was interest in cars to his father, Model A's.
five years, helps John in the
started by Don Mink and is who always enjoyed workWilh GalliaA11tO Sales for shop. Karen Maddox is the
now operated by his son ing on cars and whose first 30 years· is John · McGuire, office secretary and title
David ,who said the success vehicle was a 1931 Model who is the service manager. clerk. She has been a pan of

scar of about 10 inches up and down the breast bone. The minimally
invasivf' procedure is more challenging for the surgeon as he is
grven a lirflited view, but the patient benefits from aquicker recovery
and less pain, less chance of infection, and less operatwe trauma.
Generally, these patients ca1t return to normal attwity- work and.
driving -within thre~ weeks. ·
A5 p1edicted, three weeks after surgery, lowe was back behind
the drums and feeling good. "A5 a drumtner, my upper body is my
livelihood. I feelv~ lucky to have been in the right place at the 1ight

time,:' he said.
To share your story. ..
Do you have a success story about King's Daughters Medical Center ·
that you would like to share with others? If so, please IH us know by ·
calling us at 1.888J77.KDMC ore-mailing us at info@kdmc.net, or
visit lcdmc.com/storles.

Galli&amp; Auto Sales when 11 opened
the team for 15 years."
"We appreciate all your
business and invite you to
come out for another great
deal ; bring your trade,'" said
David.

Gallia Auto Sales is open
from 9 a.m. until 5:30 p.m.
Monday through Friday.
and 9 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. on
Saturday. Tile phone num·
ber is (740) 446-0724.

NEW THING.S HAPPENING AT ELITE LOOK SALON

KINGS

GALLIPOLIS - Elite
Look Salon and Spa is now
under new manage,ment.
Wilh this new management
comes all new salon renovat(ons,
new stylists and
.
services.
Elite Look has many
new services to offer,
including include hair
extensions, eyelash extensions, eyebrow tinting,
formal updos. and "fun

DAUGHTERS

HEART AND
VASCULAR CENTER
. Taking Medicine Further"

•

living
16x 20

garage

j

•.

'

!iet21ss .
I

12 X 12

12 X 12

II' I tile todiW
r1t

br2

10 clg

•.

•

such as an elegant~-·
hip roof,
'
.

~0

12 X 12

Drummer keeps on pace with minimally invasive
heart surgery at King's Daughters Medical Center

i' ·

Baths: 2•112
Main floor: 1,704 sq. fl.
Bonus room: :364 sq. ft.
T•lllvlng area: 2,068
sq. fl. · ·
·
Screen po!'llh: 128 sq. ft.
Garage: 484 sq. ft.
Storage: 216 sq. ft.
Exterior Wall Framing: ·
2x4
Foundation Options: ·
CraWlspace or Slab

. deck

'

The Beat Goes On

Leno's last

Bedrooms: 3+

II II

bJnus~m .
2f.

E-1719 DETAILS

'

.

colored" hair (pink, blue, ?p.m.; and Saturday. 10
·purple) . These come in a.m. to 2 p.m .
permanent. extensions, or
Elite Look would like to
clip-ins.
invite each of you to our
Along with its new se(· new and improved salon.
vices, Elite Look still has On your first visit receive a
oldies,. but goodies . This ticket to be put in a drawing
includes all hair and spa ser- for a.free pedicure.
vices.
For mo.re information,
Elite Look's hours of visit us al 1479 Ohio 160,
operati~n are Sunday and . call ar (740)446-2891, or on
Monday. closed; Tuesday the
web
at
through Friday. 9 a.m. to wwwmyspace.comlefitelook.

�PageC~

ENTERTAINMENT

iunba, limts -ienttnel

'

'

Sunday,May17, 2009

Review: 'Angels &amp; Demons'

,

INSIDE

Dl

6unbap Qtimtl-6entinel

Down on the Farm,' Page D2 ·

AcnJSS the Nation, Page D3
Gardening, Page D6

•

.more summery than solemn
vial of anti-matter was
stolen for the planned
attack, Her arrival also
LOS ANGELES
· allows for such standard
Blessedlr, "Angel!. &amp; action-picture dialogue as,
Demons' is more entertain- "Can you deactivate the
ing and les.s ·self-serious device?"
·
than its predecessor, the
Never mind that Vittoria
~ense and dreary yet enor- is sexy .and mysterious, not
mously successful ''The Da · middle-aged and frumpy.
Vinci Code."
(And we gotta say. Hanks is
: In adapting another of looking pretty good here,
aulbor Dan Brown's reli- · too. The first time we see
gious-mystery page turners, him. he's tanned and trim,
director Ron Howard wisely swimming laps in a Speedo
gave in to its beat-the-clock in the Harvard pool.) Never
thriller elements, which mind that the time frame is
~akes for a more enjoyable impossible - that they
'Iimmer movie experience. must dash l(Cross the city at
The brouhaha has long night , with · its narrow
sjnce
abated
among streets and · tourist traps
Catholics. albinos. · "Da packed .with visitors, in
.Yinci Code" purists. what time to stop each killing.
~ave you, and all that's left And never mind that one
ts air-conditioned escapism . .
· But its twists, turns and
revelations are just as
ridiculous as those in the
tlrst film - perhaps even
more so - and it breezes
through arcane details with
just as much dizzying
·
speed.
Besides Howard, the key
players are back from that
2006 international hit,
including Tom Hanks as
liarvard professor and symllologist Robert. Langdon
a.rid Akiva Goldsman as
screenwriter (with David
Koepp 'collaborating on the
script). Joining them · are
Ewan McGregor, Stellan
Skarsgaard and Armin
)1.1ueller-Stahl among the
estimable supporting cast,
all of whom have enjoyed
the benefits of stronger
material but manage to supply gravitas nonetheless ,
. Although "Angels &amp;
Demons" preceded "The Da
Vinci Code" in book form ,
. the film is positioned as a
sequel to take advantage of
the strained . relationship
between Langdon and the
:Vatican - only this time,
it's his expertise the folks
!here reluctantly. need.
: With ·the pope dead and
the College of Cardinals
about to meet in conclave to
choose a replacement, a
secret society known as the
tlluminati has kidnapped
!he four likeliest candidates. ·
lioward and cinematographer Salvatore Totino, who
· also shot "The Da Vinci
&lt;;:ode ," cloak all these pro~=eedings in dark, ominous
shadows,
and
Hans
Zimmer's score ralher obviously adds to lhe feeling of
foreboding.
.
' Langdon is brought in to
decipher clues at various
churches and historical sites
throughout Rome to prevent
the killing of the cardinals,
one every hour, leading to a
bomb explosion · at the
Vatican. He gets help along
.the way from Vittona Vetra
(Ayelet Zurer), an Italian
scientist who worked at !he
jab where the combustible
py,CHRISTY LEMIRE
AP MOVIE CRITIC

•

person appears to be
responsible for orchestrating these elaborate and very
public deaths.
·
But wait, we haven 't even
gotten to the most laughable
part of the story yet! We
won't give it away entirely
for those who haven 't. read
the book . We'll just say it
involves an exploding helicopter and a crucial character parachuting out of it just
in time. Because it is summer, after all, despite the
aura of religious solemnity.
"Angels &amp; Demons," a
Columbia
Pictures
release, is rated PG-13 for
sequences of violence, dis·
turbhtg images and the·
.
.
AP photd:
malic material. Running In this film publicity image released by_Columbia Pictures/Sony Entertainment, from 111ft; ·
time: 138 minutes. Two Tom Hanks, Ayelet Zurer, Thure Undhart and Ewan McGregor are shown in a scene from,
stars out of four.
"Angels &amp; Demons.·
·
·
· ,.
"·

,.

Sunday, May 17, 2009

01

reate a ·new tra ition
(AP)
Keystones.
:ir.ched windows and a hip
roof give this home, Plan
E-1719 by Home Plans
LLC, its traditional chara:cter: .
'
: The functional floor plan
covers 2,068 square feet of
living space.
·
The living areas occupy
the front of the home. A ·
fireplace and access to a
·'
screen porch and ·a deck
ooyond enhance !he appeal·
of the living room.
- The kitchen's peninsula
.maximizes counter space,
:ind !he adjacent eating area
i.s perfect for everyday
meals. Garage access nearby makes unloading gro:
ceries convenient.
The bedrOoms lie ,along ,
the . design's perimeter for
privacy, Two of the bed- ·
(OOms; each wilb' a private
vanity and a walk-in closet, ·
share a barb.
· The master suite boasts
. a space-adding tray ceiling, and features a private
bath and a large walk-in
closet. A clever door
;irrangement in the closet's linen stora~e allows
access to the uulity room
for easy 'loading on laundry day. .
Above the · garage; a
. and :Publications Designer Network
.
.
bonus room makes an ideal This artist rendition released by Homestyle Plans
shows traditional
design elements,
studio, office or playroom.
shuttered
windows
and
a
columned
front
porch,
lend
a
stately
character
to
this
spacious
home.
'
'.
.
.
.

.

''

jV
I

I .

Ii

I

I

X

~:Tonight' guest

·&lt;
I.

~onan O'Brien

;. LOS ANGEJ:.ES (AP) Jay Leno's last J!Uest on
:Tonight Show" Will be ihe
fDaD who's taking ·Over for
him - Conan O'Brien.
_; Leno wraps up his 17·
}ll!al:·run as host of NBC's
lilte-nigbt show on May 29.
l'be network says that
O'Brien will be Leno 's final
Jtlest. Then O'Brien steps
m as "Tonight" host June I.
; ~ big names making the
gut.fot Leno's fmal week of
shows inc.lude Mel Gibson.
Prince and BiU~ Crystal who was Leno s fli'St guest
!lifhen he took "Tonight" over
fton!Johnny Carson in 1992.
. Clttson 's final guest~ were
Bette Midler and Robin
Williams, who appeared on
€arson's next-to-last show.
Jl~ hosted his finai"Tonight"
flroadcast wilhout guests.
~; This fall, Leno will begin
a; , daily prime-time j}ow
ftn" NBC.
'--' .

'

.•

.

.

.

T

o learn.that King's Daughters Medical Center (KDMQ offers
·
minimally· invasive heart bypass surgery - providing a quicker
recovery and less trauma to the chest area-; was a bit of good
news for Ironton, Ohio, resident Terry lowe.
. lowe has been a drummer for more than 40 years, traveling all
'over the country and on cruise shrps 111 the Bahamas with vanous
'
· musicians to make his living. ~Kcept for a bout with add refluK and a
hiatal hernia in 1992, he has been heahhy.
But this past winter, whil~ ~lking on a trt:admill, t~ 58-year-old lowe
feh pressure in his throat that ~pi coming back. After endoscopic tests
showed no additional problems in the digestrve trlict, lowt underwent
a series of tests that lead to a cardiac catheterization 1\ith cardiologist
Richard Paulu~ M.D. lowe' soon learned he had suffered a heart attack
and his heart was oorking only at 25 percent capacity ~ to improve
h~ srtuatioli, he oould need open heart SUilJery.
' I had not experienced chest pain or leh arm pain," said lowe. "A
heart attack v.~s the last thing on my mind. It is scary to think this
was wor1dng on me and I didn't know it."

·Dr. Paulu~ referted lowe to cardiothoiaCr~ sutgeon Marcos M0res,
M.D., who discussed the minimally invasive procedure. Minimally ·
invasive open heart surgery is not ideal for every patient, Dt Mores
. said, but for lowe less trauma to his chest was music to his ea1&gt;.
Dr. Nores penormed the mintmally invasive procedure through a
three-inch incision bet~ the ribs on the side of the che5t. Thrs
small incision is in contrast to the traditional full sternotomy v.~th a

12 X ll """"'~~

1~

l

22x22

·,

.

,16 clg

·.dining

porch 16 x 6

br3

This artist rendition released by Homestyle Plans and
Publications Designer Network shows the functional floor plan, .
which covers 2,068 square feet of living space.

Gallia Auto Sales takes
pride in rePeat business

.

"A heart atta~;k was the last thing on my
mind. It is scary to think this was working
on me and I didn't know it:'

GALLIPOLIS - In more of the business can be
than 50 years of operation, attributed to those buyers
Gallia Auto Saleshas prided who bought one vehicle
itself on serving numerous from the business and are so
repeat customers and draw- ·satisfied they come back for
ing in car buyers from the !heir next. Vehii:Ies are
checked out in the service ·
surrounding area.
Locat~d at 2747 Jackson garage, .which Don Mink
Pike, Galli a Auto Sales has opened in I960.
expanded over the years
"We have a lot of faithful
from its beginnings as a . customers in Gallia County
small lot with four or five and from Meigs, Jackson
pre-owned cars to a wide and Vinton counties and
variety of low mileage, fac- Mason County in West ·
Gallla Auto Sales today
tory warranty cars and Virginia. They have been
trucks for customers to good 'to us," David said.
· A. Don has been noted for Brent Davies. who has been
choose from.
David can attribute his his restoration work on with Gallia Auto Sales for
Gallia Auto Sales was interest in cars to his father, Model A's.
five years, helps John in the
started by Don Mink and is who always enjoyed workWilh GalliaA11tO Sales for shop. Karen Maddox is the
now operated by his son ing on cars and whose first 30 years· is John · McGuire, office secretary and title
David ,who said the success vehicle was a 1931 Model who is the service manager. clerk. She has been a pan of

scar of about 10 inches up and down the breast bone. The minimally
invasivf' procedure is more challenging for the surgeon as he is
grven a lirflited view, but the patient benefits from aquicker recovery
and less pain, less chance of infection, and less operatwe trauma.
Generally, these patients ca1t return to normal attwity- work and.
driving -within thre~ weeks. ·
A5 p1edicted, three weeks after surgery, lowe was back behind
the drums and feeling good. "A5 a drumtner, my upper body is my
livelihood. I feelv~ lucky to have been in the right place at the 1ight

time,:' he said.
To share your story. ..
Do you have a success story about King's Daughters Medical Center ·
that you would like to share with others? If so, please IH us know by ·
calling us at 1.888J77.KDMC ore-mailing us at info@kdmc.net, or
visit lcdmc.com/storles.

Galli&amp; Auto Sales when 11 opened
the team for 15 years."
"We appreciate all your
business and invite you to
come out for another great
deal ; bring your trade,'" said
David.

Gallia Auto Sales is open
from 9 a.m. until 5:30 p.m.
Monday through Friday.
and 9 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. on
Saturday. Tile phone num·
ber is (740) 446-0724.

NEW THING.S HAPPENING AT ELITE LOOK SALON

KINGS

GALLIPOLIS - Elite
Look Salon and Spa is now
under new manage,ment.
Wilh this new management
comes all new salon renovat(ons,
new stylists and
.
services.
Elite Look has many
new services to offer,
including include hair
extensions, eyelash extensions, eyebrow tinting,
formal updos. and "fun

DAUGHTERS

HEART AND
VASCULAR CENTER
. Taking Medicine Further"

•

living
16x 20

garage

j

•.

'

!iet21ss .
I

12 X 12

12 X 12

II' I tile todiW
r1t

br2

10 clg

•.

•

such as an elegant~-·
hip roof,
'
.

~0

12 X 12

Drummer keeps on pace with minimally invasive
heart surgery at King's Daughters Medical Center

i' ·

Baths: 2•112
Main floor: 1,704 sq. fl.
Bonus room: :364 sq. ft.
T•lllvlng area: 2,068
sq. fl. · ·
·
Screen po!'llh: 128 sq. ft.
Garage: 484 sq. ft.
Storage: 216 sq. ft.
Exterior Wall Framing: ·
2x4
Foundation Options: ·
CraWlspace or Slab

. deck

'

The Beat Goes On

Leno's last

Bedrooms: 3+

II II

bJnus~m .
2f.

E-1719 DETAILS

'

.

colored" hair (pink, blue, ?p.m.; and Saturday. 10
·purple) . These come in a.m. to 2 p.m .
permanent. extensions, or
Elite Look would like to
clip-ins.
invite each of you to our
Along with its new se(· new and improved salon.
vices, Elite Look still has On your first visit receive a
oldies,. but goodies . This ticket to be put in a drawing
includes all hair and spa ser- for a.free pedicure.
vices.
For mo.re information,
Elite Look's hours of visit us al 1479 Ohio 160,
operati~n are Sunday and . call ar (740)446-2891, or on
Monday. closed; Tuesday the
web
at
through Friday. 9 a.m. to wwwmyspace.comlefitelook.

�I

-·

iunba~~ttmes-ientintl -DOWN ON THE

FARM

(

PageD2

.ACROSS THE
HOT IN RECESSION

.Sunday, May 17, 2009

-

Extension Corner:· Coping with slugs· livESTOCK REPORT
.

~y

'

www.ohioline .osu.ed/
or
stopping by the Extension
otlice.

Are you finding holes in
•••
your hosta plant leaves? Are
there holes in vour ripe
Farmers.
the
June
·
Ag~icilltural Survey will be
&gt;lrawberries?
Take a look under the - conducted beginning in
plant leave&gt;, rocks · and . June . The surveys will be
other hiding places for &gt;en! out in late May by
~lugs. These slimy creaUSDA's
National
lures (mollusks) have vora- Agricultural
Stahstics '
cious appetites for lush Service (NASS). NASS colplant growth. The wet lects data from 73.000
spring and cool weather has farms, which are selected at
been ideal for the · young random from the 2.2 m.illion
slugs to continue their farms in the United States.
growth into adulthood . It compiles the potential
Most commonly found producllon and supply of
slugs are the gray garden major commodities.
slug (less than one inch in
The information allows
length), leopard slug (four bener business decision makto five inches, black spots ing by the farmer, the supplion grayish body) and dusky ers , grain elevator operaslug (one to three inches, tions, bankers, and the
gray to orange in color).
futures market. All reports
Control methods include: are available thfough NASS
changing .the habitat around web site www.nass.usda.gov.
our plants, trapping and or by phone, (800) 727-9540.
Gommercial slug. baits.
•••
Are you interested in
Changing the habitat may
include anything that kteps becoming an effective
the soil dryer around the leader ancl advocate for agriplant. This is difficult in a culture? Ohio Farm Bureau
wet spring . Clean out debris Federation has developed a
around plants. Apply mulch year long program, "The
at a later time in the spring. AgriPower Institute" to
Utilize sand mulCh around assist farmers and agribusimore desirable plants. Cut ness persons learn about
lower tree ·and shrub public policy issues conbraqches to allow sunlight fronting agriculture and th~
to dry out garden beds food industry. The prof!ram
consists of seven mult1-day
,quicker.
Second strategy is to trap classes held within a onethe slugs. Build yourself a year time span. .
Interested applicants need
slug trap using a pie tin. old
saucer or a cup. Use old to fill out an application and
beer or any fermenting food apply by May 29 to OFBF.
(yeast. sugar and water) as ·Applicants accepted will be
an attractant. Place the lip of not1fied by June 25 as the
tlje tin or cup at soil level first class begins on July 31.
then fill the · slug trap with 2009, in Columbus. You
the liquid attractant. ·
must be able to attend all
You will be surprised the seven classes. Call your
next morning by how many local farm bureau office for
slugs have been drowned in niore details.
the liquid. Discard the dead
•••
slugs each morning and
Statewide, Ohio State
retill the next night.
University Extension is celThere are commercial slug ebrating its second annual
stations sold in the garden Master Gardener Week,
centers. Thirdly, use a slug May 17-23. Over 3,000
bait product sold in area Master Gardeners are active
stores as baits or pellets. Keep throu!hout the state.
Locally, over 30 local citthem dry for most effective
use. These poisons contain a izens have taken the Master
moluscicide which can harm Gardener class since 1995.
other animals. Place the poi- They have donated back
son in pots turned over on their time and energy to ·
their sides or commercial bait share research based infYr·stations. For·further informa- mation to our community.
tion, seek out our Home, Yard
Thanks to their efforts,
and Garden Factsheet No. our collnty has enjoyed
2010, "Slugs and Their annual plant exchanges,
Management'' on the web at exhibits at the county fair,

educational classes for the
community and assistance
in answering homeowner
gardening questions . Thank
you to all the Meigs County
Master Gardeners for their
tilne and effort!.. Join us in
downtown .Pomeroy at the
courtyard park &lt;~cross from
the Daily Sentinel office on

Monday. May 18 from
II :45 a.m. to 12:45 p.m.,
during the lunch hour as we
share gardening information
to Meigs County citizens.
(Hal Kneen is the Meigs
County Agriculture and
Natural
Resources
Educator, Ohio · State
University Extension).

GALUPOLIS - United Producers Inc. market
report from Gallipolis for sales conducted on
Wednesday, May 13, 2009.

:Bv

275-415 lbs .• Steers, $75-$117, Heifers, $75-$115;
425-525 Ibs .• Steers, $75-$112; Heifers. $70-$105; 550625 lbs., Steers, $75-$108, Heifers, $70-$90; 650-725
lbs., Steers, $75-$97, Heifers, $70-$88; 750-850 lbs.,
Steers, $75-$92, Heifers, $70-$82.

Fed Cattle

· ·Cows-Steady
Well-Muscled/Fleshed. $45-$47. Medium/Lean, $40. $49. Thin/Light, $35-$42. Bulls, $55-$70.

Back To The Farm:
Cow/Calf Pairs, $400-$1,DIO,; Bred Cows , $385·
$685; Baby Calves, $40-$210; Goats, . $28-$82 .50;
Hogs, $30-$40 .

Upcoming specials: ·.
Ohio appoved feeder sale, Wednesday, May 20. 10
a.m.
For more information,. call De Wayne at (740) 3390241 or Stacy at (304) 634-0224. Vrsir rhe website ar
. ·www.uproducers.com. ·

UND YTELEVI I N UIDE

10

I

1,1

DEB

are

RtECHMANN

1l

BULLETIN BOARD

O'Dell True Value Lumber
4"x10' Sewer &amp; Drain Pipe $4.99
4'x10' Sch 40 Sewer Pipe $11.99
24ft. Trusses $29.95,
Shingles $59,97 Sq.

DEADLINE 2:00 P.M. FRI.

61 Vine St.. M-F 7-5:30. Sat. 6-5, Sun. 10-4

Mercervilie/Hannan Trace·
Alumni

Mollohan Carpet
"Quality at low prices"

1925- 1992

Laminate Sale
$28.99/ Box
25 year warranty
740·446· 7444

Saturday, May 23rd
Hannan Trace Elementary
Doors Open 4:30 pm - Dinner 6:30pm

. Jered Sheffer

Kody Roberts

M ND YTELEVI I N UIDE

·"

'r

RSVP 740·256-6051
.
.
or 740-446-1379

High Country Band
1 to5 pm
Home for sale on
State Route 160 {Hanersville)
within one mile of Holzer.
Details at
www.docshouse4sale.com

"Those were the days"
Southwestern Alumni Banquet
Sat, May 23rd, 2009
6:00
Contact 740-682-6051
I

'I .

TUMBLING.
Back Handspring Clinic
Mon. 6:00 - 8:00 @ $10 hr.
Advanced Tumbling · , .
(requires handspring)
Mon. 6:30- 8:00 @$15 class
, Beginning tumbling
6:00- 7:00 @ $10 hr.

Will Power Tumbling
(Behind Bob's Market)
740-441-1570

J

~----,;,__--------,------~-------

--

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

•

KCHS 4th Annual A'lumnl Reunion
Sat, May 23, at
Moose Lodge Pt. Pleasant
RSVP or more info 446·3488 or
675-4831.7-12 pm
All KCHS Alumni invited
O'Dell True Val,u e Lumber ·
PAINT SALE!
Interior Latex ·$9.99 gallon ·
Exterior Latex $9.99 gallon
Primer $9.99 gallon
61 Vine St. M-F 7-5:30, Sat. 8·5, SW'. 10-4

Mason Co. Youth Football

"BINGO"

American
Legion Post 27 .
.
Senior Sunday Lunch
Sunday, May 17th
Noon to 3 p.m. ·

State FFA Degree goes
to GAHS members
GALLIPOLIS - ' Two Gallia County Junior Fair.
members of the Gallipolis
Jered plans to attend colFFA Chapter have been lege and major in finance.
.named recipients of the
Kody Roberts is the son of
highest degree awarded by Eugene Valentine and Laum
the State FFA organization. Baker, and is currently a
the State FFA Degree.
junior at GAHS, He has been
Jered Shaffer and Kody enrolled in agricultural classRoberts are both members es for the past three years.
of the Gallipolis FFA.
Kody's activities in the
Jered Shaffer is the son of FFA include vice ,preside.nt,
Paul and Lisa Shaffer. and is sentinel, MFE, state and
currently a junior at GAHS . national convention , parliaHe . has been enrol.led in mentary procedure team,
agricultural classes for the · Greenhapd Camp, dairy
past three years.
judging and rural soil judgJered's activities in the ing, His supervised agriculFFA inClude: president. sec- tural experience program
retary, MFE, state and includes market hogs and
national conventions, parlia- tobacco production.
mentary procedure team,
Kody also participates in
Greenhand and summer symphonic choir. speech
camps , gen~ral livestock . and broadcasting, G.allia
judgmg. urban soil judging,. County Youth Board. Junior
Colt Conference,
and Fair. Board, USBC bowling,
District. 10 officer training. . Gallia County Cattlemen's
He has mail\tained a super- Association,
Charolais
vised agricultural experience Association, and Gallia
program in beef production. County Dairy 4-H Club . ·
Kody plans to attend colJered also participates in
Gallia County Jumor Fair lege and major i_n American
.Board, Elizabeth Chapel history or anaesthesiology.
Youth Group, National
Agricultural education is
Honor SQCiety, Thivener offered at' Gallia Academy
Pioneers 4-H Club, tennis, High School through . the
homecoming and prom com- G a IIi a-Jackson- Vinton
mittees , choir, Madrigals, JVSD. Harold Benson and
musicals, Key Club and Jerrod Ferguson are the
takes swine and cattle to the Gallipolis FFA advisors.

Prices

.on the tummy as they are on the wal- dealers
awash in customers as
WASHINGTON (AP) - More evidence emerged Friday that
let.
Chicago-based
market investors big and small see the safe- the recession is easin~, with output by the nation's factories,
.
mines and utilities fallmg at the slowest pace in six months.
researcher lnformation Resources ty of gold.
Sunsbine Minting Inc. in Coeur
At least one area of the economy is flat, but that's welcome news.
: WASHINGTON - It's not all Inc. repor!S that sales of laxative liq;doom and gloom in the U.S. econo- uids and powders rose 11.5 percent d'Alene, Idaho • .Y.ihicb su!Wlies gold Consumer prices were lc;vel in April after a slight dip the prior month .
:my. Some products are bucking the for the 52 weeks ending April 19. blanks to the U.S/. Mint, ifoubleiJ its
Intlation usually doesn't pick up until well after a recovery
.recession and flying off store Sales of stomach remedy tablets, work force in 2008.
·
. begins, noted Mark Vitner. senior' economist at Wa£hovia. If the
:shelves.
·
,
including Pepto-Bismol and Phillips
"It just came on like gangbusters,:' economy rebounds late this year, as many analysts expect, p.\ces
: Sales . of chocolate and running brands, climbed 8 percent.
.
said president Tom Power. who likely will be stable until 20 II . he said.
'
.
-shoes are up. Wine drinkers haven't
As eltpected during any economic struggled to hire, train and get new
Some economists have been concerned about the possibility of
:StopjJed sipping; they just seem to slump, recession shoppers looking equipment to handle demand that deflation, a sustained period of declining prices that can deepen a
:be choosing .cheaper vintages.
for deals have boosted sales at dis- doubled, then tripled. ''You can't recession. But most say that possibility appear!! remote because the .
: Gold coins are selli(lg like hot count chains such as Wai-Mart just flip a switch and jump up pro- Federal Reserve has responded with force to combat the downturn.
· i:akes. So are gardening seeds. Stores Inc. Dollar Tree Inc. sneaked duction overnight."
The Fed said output at factories, mines and utilities fell 0.5 perc
:running products are piling up in into this year's Fortune 500 for the
Guns are selling well, too. Total cent last month, after revised declines of I .7 percent in March
:Shopping carts; maybe more people first time, at No. 499.
firearms sales rose 27.5 percent at and I percent in February. Analysts had eltpected a drop of 0.6 .,
;are finding color m a bottle than
'IJ1ere's a general tendency to Smith &amp; Wesson for the three percent last month.
· ·
.from sun-worshipping on a faraway trade &lt;)own, according to Leo J. months ending Jan. 31. It's not a
Still, the report showed U.S. industry remains weak. Industrial
beach.
.
Shapiro &amp; Associates, a consulting sudden interest in hunting behind produc.tion ·has fallen in 15 ofthe 17 months since.the recession
: Strong sales of Spam. Dinty firm in Chicago. That means eating the increase; huntin!l firearm sales at beg31) m December 2007 and 1s down 16 percent smce then.
;Moore stew an~ chili helped Harmel dinner at the kitchen table instead of the· company dechned during the
"Overall, yet another report that .fits Within the picture of an
Foods Corp. post a 6 percent restaurants, buying used cars and quarter by 46 percent.
. economy contracting more slowly but still far from an actual
jncrease in first quarter sales in its shopping at do-it-yourself auto parts
Gun sales are being driven by con- recovery." Paul Ashworth, senior U.S. economist at Capital
:grocery products unit.
stores. It ,meal)~ spending less on cern that the Obama administration Economics, wrote in a note Friday.
. .
: Consumers have trimmed. house- . clothes. Sales at luxury retailer Saks will tighten gun laws. But people
A 1.4 percent increase in auto production. which came after huge
-hold budgets and postponed cars, Inc. fell 32 percent last month. Sales also are feeling a level of fear and redm:tions earlier this year, boosted the overall results. But that won't
major appliances and other big-tick- at GoOdwill Industries International heightened interest in self-reliance last as Chrysler LLC and General Motors Corp. are shuning plants io
;e t items. Yet they stili' are willing to stores in the U.S. and Canada as they weather the recession. . ·
May and June, whichwuld send industrial production lower, econO&gt;'Shell out for small indulgences and . jumped by 7 percent in March.
"They are looking down the road . mists said. Meanwhile, the Labor Department said its Consumer
:goods that make life more comfort"If you're used to eating out, going 'What could happen here?'" Price lndex was flat last month, meeting economists' expectations.
:able at home, where they are spend- maybe you're now buying a high- Underhill said. "! think a lot .of The tame inflation performance reflected a second monthly drop in
_;ing more time .
end steak at the supermarket," said Americans are truly scared. One of · ene~gy costs and a third ·straight decline in food prices.
· Recession shoppers. also are .Bill Patterson, a senior analyst in the things that tickles is our pioneer
Over the past year, consumer prices have fallen 0.7 percent, the
4rawn to items tha.t make them feel Chicago With Mintel International, · ethos, which is, 'I feel better with a largest 12-month decline since a similar drop for the year ending
:Safe. both personally and financial- which supplies consumer, product year's supply of toilet paper' and in June 1955..
'·
·
·
and media intelligence. "If you eat 'Maybe I should start, canning and ·
Falling prices can be good for shoppers. But over the. long ·
;ly.
"The focus on the·family hearth is. at home mostly, maybe you are pickling."'
. ,
term, they can erode wages and cause consumers to postpone
.something that has happened in going down from the branded prodMany people already are.
purchases, leading to steep drops in production. A destabihzing
:nearly every recession. It's, 'How uct to .a private labeL"
The number o( home vegetable period of falling pric.es hasn't been seen in the U.S . since the
;can I have more fun at home?"' said
People are not drinking as .much gardens is predicted to jump more , Great Depression of the 1930s, though Japan suffer~d througli
·Paco Underhill, whose company,. beer or wine at bars and restaurants, than 40 percent this year, compared deflation in the 1990s.
Erivirosell, monitors tlie behavior of but they haven't stopped drinking. 'with two years ago, according to the
But broad price declines aren't affecting· goods outside food
shoppers and sellers across the U.S. · The Wine Institute says that despite National Gardening Association. and energy. economists said. Core inflation, which excludes food
and in other countries.
the recession, U.S. sales of Sales of vegetable seeds such· as and energy, rose 0.3 percent last month. It was the biggest jump
· "People are much more focused" California wines totaled about 467 green beans, tomatoes, cucumbers, since July, but about 40 percent of the gain came from a huge rise
on their homes and their immediate million gallons last year· - 2 per- squash and lettuce climbed 30 per- in tobacco prices, reflecting higher federal taxes.
' happiness and they're buying things coot more than the year before: But cent as of March at W. Allee Burpee,
Energy prices dropped 2.4 percent. in April and are down 25.2
that they can use themselves ~ people are looking more closely at a large seed company in Warminster, percent over the past 12 months. Those J?rices have retreated
seeds, fishing equipment. Lipstick cheafer selections: The . overall Pa. It organized a basic training sharply from record-highs set last spring and summer.
and chocolate are small rewards that retai value of California wine stiles course called "root camp" for hun·
Food costs fell 0.2 percent in April·as the price of dairy prodmake you feel liener."
fell slightly from 2007, the institute dreds of would-be gardeners this ucts dropped.
·
·
Profits in the first three months of said.
·month outside Philadelphia.
Still, concerns abOut deflation remain muted in the U.S. because of
2009 at Hershey Co., the nation's
Those on the go are .not shying . Still, when the· e~onomy ~nds to the~ssiveactionstakenbytheFed- actionsthatwouldthreaten
second-largest candy maker, surged away from footing the bill for sturdy a halt·, people clench thelf teeth. ··.to igmte inflation if the economy weren't so. weak. The central bank
20 percent and beat Wall Street's running shoes. Sales increased 2 That could mean spending money at has pushed a key intere~;t rate to a record low near zero and has taken
expectations . . Kraft Foods Inc.. percent in 2008, said Tom Doyle at the dentist.
other steps to flood the banking system with cash to ease credit. ·
reported double-digit growth in the National · Sporting · Goods
There's no statistical evidence, but
There are more worries about deflation in other parts of the
macaroni and cheese dinners - the Association in Mount Prospect, IlL
dentists such as ·Dr. Matthew world. Prices have been falling again in Japan, China and India as
consummate comfort food.
"Runners . aren't going to hurt Messina in Cleveland, Ohio., are the global economy deals with what the International Monetary
Recessimis, it seems, are good for tbemselves to save a few bucks," he seeing more people with tooth- Fund has said will be the worst global downturn since the 1930s.
love, too. Over the final three said. Likewise. sales of bjcycle he!- grinding injuries.
.
A year ago, the Fed was worrying about the threat of runaway
months of 2008, condom sales rose mets are up as parents continue ·to
"The \)ody res)?,?,nds the same way inflation as prices for crude-oil and other energy products h11
5 percent and Match.com reported spend money to protect youngsters. to a real threat, There's a burglar in record-highs. But- since last fall when the financial crisis h it, the
its strongest perfmmance in seven he said.
·
the house,' as it does to a perceived Fed switched its focus to boosting economic growth.
"The recent pressures have been to the deflationary side,
years.
The financial meltdown produced stress like 'I'm worried I'm $oing to
But economic woes are as rough more interest in borne safes. Coin lose the house,"' Messina sa1d.
· though we seem to have beaten that back," Fisher said.

(Second Wednesday of each month)
Choice - Steers, $80-$85; Heifers , $7&amp;-$82.
Select - Steers, $75-$79; Heifers,.$72-$78 .

1

Sunday, May 17, 2009

·ASSOCIATEO PRESS WRITER

Feeder Cattle-Steady

.

'

~ Chocolate,- running shoes, SpalJt

'

HAl KNEEN .

NATION

Page,D3

Tri-State Pressure ·
. Washing ·
I ·

· Free Estimates
Specializing in Ext
Stain, painting

740-794-0662
Nice mobile home lot
, for rent $125 a month
call
1-740·367-7995
37 yr old stay at home Mom
will provide child care.
Summer full of planned
activities. Call740-367-0536
for an intervie~.

LeGrande Blvd.
3 BR brick, hardwood
floors, FR. 2 full baths,
central air,
10 x 14 metal building,
5 min. from town,

$109,000
740-709-1858

•

WV Jobs Foundation ·
Bingo Hall at
124 Highland Ave.
Point Pleasant, WV
Tuesday Night
$6,000 4-Leaf Clover
If hit in only 40 numbers or
less, doors open at 4 pm
ZUMBADANCE
AEROBICS
Pleasant Valley Wellness
/ Center
Beginning Tuesday, May 19
Tuesday evenings ( 7 p.m.)
Thursday evenings { 5 p.m.)
$6/class ·
Instructor: Ashley Hackney
For more Information,
{304) 675-7222

OHIO WINERIES TOUR
Friday, July 17, 2009
Chanerect Coach Tranaponatlon
to Four Ohio Wineries,
ALL TASTIN~S INCLUDED,
Lunch &amp; Dinner
· Only $130/pereon
Cash, check and credit carda
accepted
LIMITED SEATS AV~ILABLE
Payment due at time of
re~trvatlon

Coach leaves PVHtower level
. parking lot at 8 a.m.
Coach returns at approximately
10:30 p.m.
Please call
PVH Community Relatione
to reserve a seat,
304 675-4340 Ext. 1326
American Legion .
Post 27
will be having
nominations
and elections for
2009·201 0 post officers
on Monday, May 18th
at 7:30p.m.
Dinn!)r at 6:30p.m.

�I

-·

iunba~~ttmes-ientintl -DOWN ON THE

FARM

(

PageD2

.ACROSS THE
HOT IN RECESSION

.Sunday, May 17, 2009

-

Extension Corner:· Coping with slugs· livESTOCK REPORT
.

~y

'

www.ohioline .osu.ed/
or
stopping by the Extension
otlice.

Are you finding holes in
•••
your hosta plant leaves? Are
there holes in vour ripe
Farmers.
the
June
·
Ag~icilltural Survey will be
&gt;lrawberries?
Take a look under the - conducted beginning in
plant leave&gt;, rocks · and . June . The surveys will be
other hiding places for &gt;en! out in late May by
~lugs. These slimy creaUSDA's
National
lures (mollusks) have vora- Agricultural
Stahstics '
cious appetites for lush Service (NASS). NASS colplant growth. The wet lects data from 73.000
spring and cool weather has farms, which are selected at
been ideal for the · young random from the 2.2 m.illion
slugs to continue their farms in the United States.
growth into adulthood . It compiles the potential
Most commonly found producllon and supply of
slugs are the gray garden major commodities.
slug (less than one inch in
The information allows
length), leopard slug (four bener business decision makto five inches, black spots ing by the farmer, the supplion grayish body) and dusky ers , grain elevator operaslug (one to three inches, tions, bankers, and the
gray to orange in color).
futures market. All reports
Control methods include: are available thfough NASS
changing .the habitat around web site www.nass.usda.gov.
our plants, trapping and or by phone, (800) 727-9540.
Gommercial slug. baits.
•••
Are you interested in
Changing the habitat may
include anything that kteps becoming an effective
the soil dryer around the leader ancl advocate for agriplant. This is difficult in a culture? Ohio Farm Bureau
wet spring . Clean out debris Federation has developed a
around plants. Apply mulch year long program, "The
at a later time in the spring. AgriPower Institute" to
Utilize sand mulCh around assist farmers and agribusimore desirable plants. Cut ness persons learn about
lower tree ·and shrub public policy issues conbraqches to allow sunlight fronting agriculture and th~
to dry out garden beds food industry. The prof!ram
consists of seven mult1-day
,quicker.
Second strategy is to trap classes held within a onethe slugs. Build yourself a year time span. .
Interested applicants need
slug trap using a pie tin. old
saucer or a cup. Use old to fill out an application and
beer or any fermenting food apply by May 29 to OFBF.
(yeast. sugar and water) as ·Applicants accepted will be
an attractant. Place the lip of not1fied by June 25 as the
tlje tin or cup at soil level first class begins on July 31.
then fill the · slug trap with 2009, in Columbus. You
the liquid attractant. ·
must be able to attend all
You will be surprised the seven classes. Call your
next morning by how many local farm bureau office for
slugs have been drowned in niore details.
the liquid. Discard the dead
•••
slugs each morning and
Statewide, Ohio State
retill the next night.
University Extension is celThere are commercial slug ebrating its second annual
stations sold in the garden Master Gardener Week,
centers. Thirdly, use a slug May 17-23. Over 3,000
bait product sold in area Master Gardeners are active
stores as baits or pellets. Keep throu!hout the state.
Locally, over 30 local citthem dry for most effective
use. These poisons contain a izens have taken the Master
moluscicide which can harm Gardener class since 1995.
other animals. Place the poi- They have donated back
son in pots turned over on their time and energy to ·
their sides or commercial bait share research based infYr·stations. For·further informa- mation to our community.
tion, seek out our Home, Yard
Thanks to their efforts,
and Garden Factsheet No. our collnty has enjoyed
2010, "Slugs and Their annual plant exchanges,
Management'' on the web at exhibits at the county fair,

educational classes for the
community and assistance
in answering homeowner
gardening questions . Thank
you to all the Meigs County
Master Gardeners for their
tilne and effort!.. Join us in
downtown .Pomeroy at the
courtyard park &lt;~cross from
the Daily Sentinel office on

Monday. May 18 from
II :45 a.m. to 12:45 p.m.,
during the lunch hour as we
share gardening information
to Meigs County citizens.
(Hal Kneen is the Meigs
County Agriculture and
Natural
Resources
Educator, Ohio · State
University Extension).

GALUPOLIS - United Producers Inc. market
report from Gallipolis for sales conducted on
Wednesday, May 13, 2009.

:Bv

275-415 lbs .• Steers, $75-$117, Heifers, $75-$115;
425-525 Ibs .• Steers, $75-$112; Heifers. $70-$105; 550625 lbs., Steers, $75-$108, Heifers, $70-$90; 650-725
lbs., Steers, $75-$97, Heifers, $70-$88; 750-850 lbs.,
Steers, $75-$92, Heifers, $70-$82.

Fed Cattle

· ·Cows-Steady
Well-Muscled/Fleshed. $45-$47. Medium/Lean, $40. $49. Thin/Light, $35-$42. Bulls, $55-$70.

Back To The Farm:
Cow/Calf Pairs, $400-$1,DIO,; Bred Cows , $385·
$685; Baby Calves, $40-$210; Goats, . $28-$82 .50;
Hogs, $30-$40 .

Upcoming specials: ·.
Ohio appoved feeder sale, Wednesday, May 20. 10
a.m.
For more information,. call De Wayne at (740) 3390241 or Stacy at (304) 634-0224. Vrsir rhe website ar
. ·www.uproducers.com. ·

UND YTELEVI I N UIDE

10

I

1,1

DEB

are

RtECHMANN

1l

BULLETIN BOARD

O'Dell True Value Lumber
4"x10' Sewer &amp; Drain Pipe $4.99
4'x10' Sch 40 Sewer Pipe $11.99
24ft. Trusses $29.95,
Shingles $59,97 Sq.

DEADLINE 2:00 P.M. FRI.

61 Vine St.. M-F 7-5:30. Sat. 6-5, Sun. 10-4

Mercervilie/Hannan Trace·
Alumni

Mollohan Carpet
"Quality at low prices"

1925- 1992

Laminate Sale
$28.99/ Box
25 year warranty
740·446· 7444

Saturday, May 23rd
Hannan Trace Elementary
Doors Open 4:30 pm - Dinner 6:30pm

. Jered Sheffer

Kody Roberts

M ND YTELEVI I N UIDE

·"

'r

RSVP 740·256-6051
.
.
or 740-446-1379

High Country Band
1 to5 pm
Home for sale on
State Route 160 {Hanersville)
within one mile of Holzer.
Details at
www.docshouse4sale.com

"Those were the days"
Southwestern Alumni Banquet
Sat, May 23rd, 2009
6:00
Contact 740-682-6051
I

'I .

TUMBLING.
Back Handspring Clinic
Mon. 6:00 - 8:00 @ $10 hr.
Advanced Tumbling · , .
(requires handspring)
Mon. 6:30- 8:00 @$15 class
, Beginning tumbling
6:00- 7:00 @ $10 hr.

Will Power Tumbling
(Behind Bob's Market)
740-441-1570

J

~----,;,__--------,------~-------

--

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

•

KCHS 4th Annual A'lumnl Reunion
Sat, May 23, at
Moose Lodge Pt. Pleasant
RSVP or more info 446·3488 or
675-4831.7-12 pm
All KCHS Alumni invited
O'Dell True Val,u e Lumber ·
PAINT SALE!
Interior Latex ·$9.99 gallon ·
Exterior Latex $9.99 gallon
Primer $9.99 gallon
61 Vine St. M-F 7-5:30, Sat. 8·5, SW'. 10-4

Mason Co. Youth Football

"BINGO"

American
Legion Post 27 .
.
Senior Sunday Lunch
Sunday, May 17th
Noon to 3 p.m. ·

State FFA Degree goes
to GAHS members
GALLIPOLIS - ' Two Gallia County Junior Fair.
members of the Gallipolis
Jered plans to attend colFFA Chapter have been lege and major in finance.
.named recipients of the
Kody Roberts is the son of
highest degree awarded by Eugene Valentine and Laum
the State FFA organization. Baker, and is currently a
the State FFA Degree.
junior at GAHS, He has been
Jered Shaffer and Kody enrolled in agricultural classRoberts are both members es for the past three years.
of the Gallipolis FFA.
Kody's activities in the
Jered Shaffer is the son of FFA include vice ,preside.nt,
Paul and Lisa Shaffer. and is sentinel, MFE, state and
currently a junior at GAHS . national convention , parliaHe . has been enrol.led in mentary procedure team,
agricultural classes for the · Greenhapd Camp, dairy
past three years.
judging and rural soil judgJered's activities in the ing, His supervised agriculFFA inClude: president. sec- tural experience program
retary, MFE, state and includes market hogs and
national conventions, parlia- tobacco production.
mentary procedure team,
Kody also participates in
Greenhand and summer symphonic choir. speech
camps , gen~ral livestock . and broadcasting, G.allia
judgmg. urban soil judging,. County Youth Board. Junior
Colt Conference,
and Fair. Board, USBC bowling,
District. 10 officer training. . Gallia County Cattlemen's
He has mail\tained a super- Association,
Charolais
vised agricultural experience Association, and Gallia
program in beef production. County Dairy 4-H Club . ·
Kody plans to attend colJered also participates in
Gallia County Jumor Fair lege and major i_n American
.Board, Elizabeth Chapel history or anaesthesiology.
Youth Group, National
Agricultural education is
Honor SQCiety, Thivener offered at' Gallia Academy
Pioneers 4-H Club, tennis, High School through . the
homecoming and prom com- G a IIi a-Jackson- Vinton
mittees , choir, Madrigals, JVSD. Harold Benson and
musicals, Key Club and Jerrod Ferguson are the
takes swine and cattle to the Gallipolis FFA advisors.

Prices

.on the tummy as they are on the wal- dealers
awash in customers as
WASHINGTON (AP) - More evidence emerged Friday that
let.
Chicago-based
market investors big and small see the safe- the recession is easin~, with output by the nation's factories,
.
mines and utilities fallmg at the slowest pace in six months.
researcher lnformation Resources ty of gold.
Sunsbine Minting Inc. in Coeur
At least one area of the economy is flat, but that's welcome news.
: WASHINGTON - It's not all Inc. repor!S that sales of laxative liq;doom and gloom in the U.S. econo- uids and powders rose 11.5 percent d'Alene, Idaho • .Y.ihicb su!Wlies gold Consumer prices were lc;vel in April after a slight dip the prior month .
:my. Some products are bucking the for the 52 weeks ending April 19. blanks to the U.S/. Mint, ifoubleiJ its
Intlation usually doesn't pick up until well after a recovery
.recession and flying off store Sales of stomach remedy tablets, work force in 2008.
·
. begins, noted Mark Vitner. senior' economist at Wa£hovia. If the
:shelves.
·
,
including Pepto-Bismol and Phillips
"It just came on like gangbusters,:' economy rebounds late this year, as many analysts expect, p.\ces
: Sales . of chocolate and running brands, climbed 8 percent.
.
said president Tom Power. who likely will be stable until 20 II . he said.
'
.
-shoes are up. Wine drinkers haven't
As eltpected during any economic struggled to hire, train and get new
Some economists have been concerned about the possibility of
:StopjJed sipping; they just seem to slump, recession shoppers looking equipment to handle demand that deflation, a sustained period of declining prices that can deepen a
:be choosing .cheaper vintages.
for deals have boosted sales at dis- doubled, then tripled. ''You can't recession. But most say that possibility appear!! remote because the .
: Gold coins are selli(lg like hot count chains such as Wai-Mart just flip a switch and jump up pro- Federal Reserve has responded with force to combat the downturn.
· i:akes. So are gardening seeds. Stores Inc. Dollar Tree Inc. sneaked duction overnight."
The Fed said output at factories, mines and utilities fell 0.5 perc
:running products are piling up in into this year's Fortune 500 for the
Guns are selling well, too. Total cent last month, after revised declines of I .7 percent in March
:Shopping carts; maybe more people first time, at No. 499.
firearms sales rose 27.5 percent at and I percent in February. Analysts had eltpected a drop of 0.6 .,
;are finding color m a bottle than
'IJ1ere's a general tendency to Smith &amp; Wesson for the three percent last month.
· ·
.from sun-worshipping on a faraway trade &lt;)own, according to Leo J. months ending Jan. 31. It's not a
Still, the report showed U.S. industry remains weak. Industrial
beach.
.
Shapiro &amp; Associates, a consulting sudden interest in hunting behind produc.tion ·has fallen in 15 ofthe 17 months since.the recession
: Strong sales of Spam. Dinty firm in Chicago. That means eating the increase; huntin!l firearm sales at beg31) m December 2007 and 1s down 16 percent smce then.
;Moore stew an~ chili helped Harmel dinner at the kitchen table instead of the· company dechned during the
"Overall, yet another report that .fits Within the picture of an
Foods Corp. post a 6 percent restaurants, buying used cars and quarter by 46 percent.
. economy contracting more slowly but still far from an actual
jncrease in first quarter sales in its shopping at do-it-yourself auto parts
Gun sales are being driven by con- recovery." Paul Ashworth, senior U.S. economist at Capital
:grocery products unit.
stores. It ,meal)~ spending less on cern that the Obama administration Economics, wrote in a note Friday.
. .
: Consumers have trimmed. house- . clothes. Sales at luxury retailer Saks will tighten gun laws. But people
A 1.4 percent increase in auto production. which came after huge
-hold budgets and postponed cars, Inc. fell 32 percent last month. Sales also are feeling a level of fear and redm:tions earlier this year, boosted the overall results. But that won't
major appliances and other big-tick- at GoOdwill Industries International heightened interest in self-reliance last as Chrysler LLC and General Motors Corp. are shuning plants io
;e t items. Yet they stili' are willing to stores in the U.S. and Canada as they weather the recession. . ·
May and June, whichwuld send industrial production lower, econO&gt;'Shell out for small indulgences and . jumped by 7 percent in March.
"They are looking down the road . mists said. Meanwhile, the Labor Department said its Consumer
:goods that make life more comfort"If you're used to eating out, going 'What could happen here?'" Price lndex was flat last month, meeting economists' expectations.
:able at home, where they are spend- maybe you're now buying a high- Underhill said. "! think a lot .of The tame inflation performance reflected a second monthly drop in
_;ing more time .
end steak at the supermarket," said Americans are truly scared. One of · ene~gy costs and a third ·straight decline in food prices.
· Recession shoppers. also are .Bill Patterson, a senior analyst in the things that tickles is our pioneer
Over the past year, consumer prices have fallen 0.7 percent, the
4rawn to items tha.t make them feel Chicago With Mintel International, · ethos, which is, 'I feel better with a largest 12-month decline since a similar drop for the year ending
:Safe. both personally and financial- which supplies consumer, product year's supply of toilet paper' and in June 1955..
'·
·
·
and media intelligence. "If you eat 'Maybe I should start, canning and ·
Falling prices can be good for shoppers. But over the. long ·
;ly.
"The focus on the·family hearth is. at home mostly, maybe you are pickling."'
. ,
term, they can erode wages and cause consumers to postpone
.something that has happened in going down from the branded prodMany people already are.
purchases, leading to steep drops in production. A destabihzing
:nearly every recession. It's, 'How uct to .a private labeL"
The number o( home vegetable period of falling pric.es hasn't been seen in the U.S . since the
;can I have more fun at home?"' said
People are not drinking as .much gardens is predicted to jump more , Great Depression of the 1930s, though Japan suffer~d througli
·Paco Underhill, whose company,. beer or wine at bars and restaurants, than 40 percent this year, compared deflation in the 1990s.
Erivirosell, monitors tlie behavior of but they haven't stopped drinking. 'with two years ago, according to the
But broad price declines aren't affecting· goods outside food
shoppers and sellers across the U.S. · The Wine Institute says that despite National Gardening Association. and energy. economists said. Core inflation, which excludes food
and in other countries.
the recession, U.S. sales of Sales of vegetable seeds such· as and energy, rose 0.3 percent last month. It was the biggest jump
· "People are much more focused" California wines totaled about 467 green beans, tomatoes, cucumbers, since July, but about 40 percent of the gain came from a huge rise
on their homes and their immediate million gallons last year· - 2 per- squash and lettuce climbed 30 per- in tobacco prices, reflecting higher federal taxes.
' happiness and they're buying things coot more than the year before: But cent as of March at W. Allee Burpee,
Energy prices dropped 2.4 percent. in April and are down 25.2
that they can use themselves ~ people are looking more closely at a large seed company in Warminster, percent over the past 12 months. Those J?rices have retreated
seeds, fishing equipment. Lipstick cheafer selections: The . overall Pa. It organized a basic training sharply from record-highs set last spring and summer.
and chocolate are small rewards that retai value of California wine stiles course called "root camp" for hun·
Food costs fell 0.2 percent in April·as the price of dairy prodmake you feel liener."
fell slightly from 2007, the institute dreds of would-be gardeners this ucts dropped.
·
·
Profits in the first three months of said.
·month outside Philadelphia.
Still, concerns abOut deflation remain muted in the U.S. because of
2009 at Hershey Co., the nation's
Those on the go are .not shying . Still, when the· e~onomy ~nds to the~ssiveactionstakenbytheFed- actionsthatwouldthreaten
second-largest candy maker, surged away from footing the bill for sturdy a halt·, people clench thelf teeth. ··.to igmte inflation if the economy weren't so. weak. The central bank
20 percent and beat Wall Street's running shoes. Sales increased 2 That could mean spending money at has pushed a key intere~;t rate to a record low near zero and has taken
expectations . . Kraft Foods Inc.. percent in 2008, said Tom Doyle at the dentist.
other steps to flood the banking system with cash to ease credit. ·
reported double-digit growth in the National · Sporting · Goods
There's no statistical evidence, but
There are more worries about deflation in other parts of the
macaroni and cheese dinners - the Association in Mount Prospect, IlL
dentists such as ·Dr. Matthew world. Prices have been falling again in Japan, China and India as
consummate comfort food.
"Runners . aren't going to hurt Messina in Cleveland, Ohio., are the global economy deals with what the International Monetary
Recessimis, it seems, are good for tbemselves to save a few bucks," he seeing more people with tooth- Fund has said will be the worst global downturn since the 1930s.
love, too. Over the final three said. Likewise. sales of bjcycle he!- grinding injuries.
.
A year ago, the Fed was worrying about the threat of runaway
months of 2008, condom sales rose mets are up as parents continue ·to
"The \)ody res)?,?,nds the same way inflation as prices for crude-oil and other energy products h11
5 percent and Match.com reported spend money to protect youngsters. to a real threat, There's a burglar in record-highs. But- since last fall when the financial crisis h it, the
its strongest perfmmance in seven he said.
·
the house,' as it does to a perceived Fed switched its focus to boosting economic growth.
"The recent pressures have been to the deflationary side,
years.
The financial meltdown produced stress like 'I'm worried I'm $oing to
But economic woes are as rough more interest in borne safes. Coin lose the house,"' Messina sa1d.
· though we seem to have beaten that back," Fisher said.

(Second Wednesday of each month)
Choice - Steers, $80-$85; Heifers , $7&amp;-$82.
Select - Steers, $75-$79; Heifers,.$72-$78 .

1

Sunday, May 17, 2009

·ASSOCIATEO PRESS WRITER

Feeder Cattle-Steady

.

'

~ Chocolate,- running shoes, SpalJt

'

HAl KNEEN .

NATION

Page,D3

Tri-State Pressure ·
. Washing ·
I ·

· Free Estimates
Specializing in Ext
Stain, painting

740-794-0662
Nice mobile home lot
, for rent $125 a month
call
1-740·367-7995
37 yr old stay at home Mom
will provide child care.
Summer full of planned
activities. Call740-367-0536
for an intervie~.

LeGrande Blvd.
3 BR brick, hardwood
floors, FR. 2 full baths,
central air,
10 x 14 metal building,
5 min. from town,

$109,000
740-709-1858

•

WV Jobs Foundation ·
Bingo Hall at
124 Highland Ave.
Point Pleasant, WV
Tuesday Night
$6,000 4-Leaf Clover
If hit in only 40 numbers or
less, doors open at 4 pm
ZUMBADANCE
AEROBICS
Pleasant Valley Wellness
/ Center
Beginning Tuesday, May 19
Tuesday evenings ( 7 p.m.)
Thursday evenings { 5 p.m.)
$6/class ·
Instructor: Ashley Hackney
For more Information,
{304) 675-7222

OHIO WINERIES TOUR
Friday, July 17, 2009
Chanerect Coach Tranaponatlon
to Four Ohio Wineries,
ALL TASTIN~S INCLUDED,
Lunch &amp; Dinner
· Only $130/pereon
Cash, check and credit carda
accepted
LIMITED SEATS AV~ILABLE
Payment due at time of
re~trvatlon

Coach leaves PVHtower level
. parking lot at 8 a.m.
Coach returns at approximately
10:30 p.m.
Please call
PVH Community Relatione
to reserve a seat,
304 675-4340 Ext. 1326
American Legion .
Post 27
will be having
nominations
and elections for
2009·201 0 post officers
on Monday, May 18th
at 7:30p.m.
Dinn!)r at 6:30p.m.

�Page D4 • 6unblp 1J4mtt ·6tnttlld

I

Sunday, May 17, 2009

Pomeroy
OH • Pt. Pleasant, WV
. • Middleport • Gallipolis,
.

Help Wanted

~ribune-

Sentinel-l\t
CLASSIFIED

.Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Pt. Pleasant, WV

Help Wanted

......

'· )

· ..

~

Jllloj:ttlt..-~

"""""i

A-

•S1NA's

-~ ...,•. _,.ti~wlna~:
·1'111-,.m&amp;,..hll~·4011
~/n-:-HIIJ

~ !~.nytrit.m~com

111 Bucllllrlgt Rt.l4 -

Wellsl!ea:

0114!614

www.vrablehealthcare:com
i =====:;;:;;:..;:;;;;;:::;;;:;:;::=;
NUR$1Nq ADMINISTRATION
ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT

··~·alii.
.1 - l o l l
••~O

:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m
HOlY IO WRITE Afl1 AD
ful Ads
Should Include Th- lteme
To Help Get R•ponM ...
Succ LI

m

a.m. 8UM1ay

Paper

Thu,.....-y

Graphics SOC tor small
Sl.OOforlarve

• "" ee11 mu.t be prepeld'

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

• bchtH PIIIIMN..._. AMAIN,_. Wile .......

Otl!ors.m-

Pelt

H~MIForSolo

HouMt For Rent

.Ohio Volley

j

Sl99/mo!

Publlohlng NlfrvtO
thO ~gilt to edit,
reject or canctl1ny

'
movtln by ..Jun•1•~·

•datanytl..,..

~~=~

I

• 11-.t YIU Alb WtlllA ICeYMN'd •IAdliMit COM .....
O.CIIfl!..• • JactMe A Prln • Av.ld •Urf\tllllltl

Required qualifications include: High School
graduate or equinlent required. Computer
skills including Excel, PowerPoinl, and Word.
Excellent wordsmith skills, timely turnaround
o(assignments. Must be able to multi-task: ,
maintain confidentiality and exhibit excellent
phone etiquette. E•pericnce with minutes.
email and internet. Able to develop flyers.
structure policies and other dOcuments.

Rural Development
Property Currently rent·
Jng 1 &amp; 2 BFt units Spa·
cious fJoor plans, ranch
&amp; lowl)home style living, playground &amp; b~ts·
kelball cour1, on-site.
laundry facility, 24 hr
. emergency malnte:
nance, quiet country to. catiOn close to major
medical
facUlties:
pharmacies. grocery
store .. .just minutes
away from other major
shopping in the are$.
Honeyouckle Hlh
,Apartment•
266 Colonial Drive ~113
Bidwell, Ohio 45614 ·

MUll

pu~!~~

bo:d , 2

b:nh.~

If imerested, please con1ac1:

lilmk Rcpo! (5Cft tlown. J s ~
yean•. K% t\I'Rj !'nr li~l i n.gs •
1
~00-()21}·~946 ex R021'

. HUMAN RESOURCES
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
100 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis, OH 45631
Phone: ·(740) 446-5105

2br. hol'tle 1 car garage ~
w/ river rrontage located 1
In New Havon
WV:

or

304·934·7462

304-573-6334.

'DA E 1
EOE/,"'
mp oyer

~2-~be·d~ro·o~ill-"!$3~50~/rr-lo':
$350/ctep water &amp; trash~
paid. l'ets with writing
permission.
Phone :
.740·245-5571-

~~:;;~;:;;;~~;:;;;;::;;;~~;,;;;::;~

r

ISHOP CLASSIFIEDSI
.

5 room house at 44 Otlve :
Has stovefr~fridg.e.
$426/rent plus deposit,

·

_Auction

St.

:N:!o::em:::·:44::6::·3::9::4s==~~· ,

.woo

740.446·3344
Ofl~e Hours M, W, F
9AM · SPM

.

·

ERNEST TUCKER ESTATE

Roniolo

SATURDAY, MAY 23; 2009
JO.:OOAM. '

are

We

gmail.com
or mall to - CLA 101, PO
Box 469, Gal~s, OH

Interested
pelliOns
submit an Ohio
Civil. service Appllcation.
VoU: must submit on line
s~ould

at

car'eer.ohlo.gov.

by

mall, falC or you can pick
one. up in the Admin~tra:
tlon Office at GOC.
ODMR&amp;OD
Gallipolis
Developmental .Center
Attention:
Human Re·
source Depanmont
2500 onio Avenue, Galli·
polis Ohio 45631 ,
Phone: (740) 446-1642
fmt: (740) 446-1341
The . Oai\Jpo!ie DevelOp·
mental Center is an
Equal Opportunity Emplayer

I
l'

FT

Flexible ' Schedulin-g
Competitive Wages
HealthiOental Benefits
401 k, paid Holidays

Health
April.Blair, AN
5982 US Route 60 E.
SarbOursvhr&amp;,
WV

25004
304-733-1626

1-SQ0-462-9365 . to apply
or
go
10
www.r~Jucking.com.

:;.E.!!O!!.E!!.!!!!!!!!!!1!!!1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
;;;;::

;;;;;:~~E~du~c:atl~['!on~~VACAN9Y: H.S. SC.Ia

ENCE INSTRUCTOR
Valid Ohio ScienCe cettl·
flcatioo required. CONTACT:

RN •. LPN, &amp;. .HHA 392. Sil·
ver
BridQe
Plaza.
7-40-446•3808

e~:;;=~"':"'~--.:

tomer service depart· poliaas . a valid Ohio
mant, Company training Managing Cosmetoloiglst
provide, muet be a HS L~nse. Salary 18 based
graduate. FT potl!lona on
commission. inter$16 per hr. For Interview · ested candidates should

&lt;ali BB6·339•n97

1111

Independent
contract~rs
need to make Pharma·
ceutlcal deliverlet In Gal·
llpolls and Marietta · reglon. Independent con·
tractor&amp; will drive there
own vehicle. Must be
able to pass drug SCI"een,
baCkground check &amp; motor' vehicle t;:h&amp;Ck. Must
be flexible to make deliv·
erles In the evenings &amp;
weekends. This Is a
great · oppor1unitv for

333 Page Street, Middle·
por1,
Ohio, Overbrook
Center . participates in the
drug free Worllptace Pro·
gram.
•
Part-time Class-1 operB·
tor for sewer" district 20
noura per wee!( &amp; on call
for emergencies. Send
resume to: PO Box 175,
Tuppers
Plains,
Ohio
45783

out an applicollon at

~::::::-:-:~~~~:"::'
Gallia·Jeckson·Vfnton
AVON I All Areas! To Buy
JVSD (740) 245·5334, someone . 10 make extra or Sen Shirte~ ·spears
Ext. 201 · EEO

income. Please contact 304-675-1429

Help.Wanted • General

C~su
S13-794-3t54

Delivery/Warehouse per·
son needed, lull time, lm·
mediate opening, must
have good driving re-

crlstleCprioritydl&amp;patch.c
om
J
FliP! Maintenance Persana! Meded fof 48 unit

cord. Apply·Lifestyie Fur·

complex.

apartme~

lnfoCisfon
Come work for a top

employer, commttt«:t
to

Sales rep needed tQ sell
Cable TV-&amp; related serv·
Regional
Dump
and
Ices · in the Pt. Pleasant,
Pneumatic -raMir Dr1v·
Gallipolis areas. Sales
tra.
exp.
preferred.
Paid
R&amp;J Trucking Company
trai.ning. Great Eaming
in · .Marietta
OH. . Is
Potential. J04.476·21S9.
searching tor q~,~atlfled .
Overbrook RehabilitatiOn
aPplicants mua1 be it --~~~~-- Center Je currently seek·
least , ~3)'ra., have miniATTENTtON
lnp a beautician to work
mum ot 1 yr. ot tate Local company w/ FT &amp; rn. the facility's beauty sa·
commercia! d~ng expe- PT position• In our cut· ton. Candida(es should

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

uelll, Inc.
I&amp; currently seek1ng an
inSide reta11 safes perso/,
lor our Pt Pleasant WV
loCation. Expenence pre·
lened. Job benefits 1n·
elude 40,k, healltl 1nsur'
ance J!:nd paid 'o'acations
are
also
aYa•lable.
Please apply m pei'SOfl.
located at 426 V1and ~t.
in downtown Pt. l'leasant

offering employ-

ment opportuntttes In
our areal

EOE

We pay up ro S~225Jhr
after Sl)( months
Talk with other Amari·

cans tO promote conservatNB values. Also raise
funds for co~rvative
causes, influentlill polilf·
cal leaders and interest
groups.

nhure 866 Third Ave, Please tax: resume or letGallipOlis, 9:30·5:00 No 1
t
•
1o
~r · o1 · 1n1eres
Phone Calls
304-674·0079 · or
call
304·674-0023

H8 1 W d
P ante

Call Todayl
Interview Tomorrow!
Start work May 26th\

Hl88·tPIIC·PAYU
Exl. 2321
Apply·onllne:
hHp:lljobt.l,fOCIIIOn.com

on
SAVINGS

Help Wanted

i••

In memory of
Lisa A. Tawney
6123/65 · I0122108

our anniversary 5117109- /9 yrs ago
I married my best friend. I miss her with all
my heart and wiJ/ love her umil
1can see her again. She gave me 2 wond•rf•r'
sons ~nd th• best /8 //2 yrs of my life. We
miss her more than words can say.

Love forever,
Your husbal'lt!, Tim

Card of Thankl

FOR RENT

Announcements

LAUR§.!Cow&amp;lNs

@))

14 Laurel Commons Ravenswood, WV
Spacious Newly Renovaled 3 BR Townhouses

IW EsTAT£ GA.WU, L"!(.

($475-$485)'
Brand new appliances, carpeting, fresh painl.
Special $50 MOVE IN • 1st montb rent
· free, $SO Set:urlty and $400 Wiii·Mart gift
certllkate!
Easy commute lo Charleoton arid Parkersburg
Call today 304-273-3344 Visil our webpage al
hnp:l/laurelcommons.prospectportal.coml

Attention itl\lc.'ilors!
Check (mlthb J BR
conage \vith large

60 Madison
, fenced lot.

CIA. Gas Heat

Call Wyall Boles
Rt&gt;altor

Ill _MLS
74~35l·6l04 til
•

Card of Thank•

The. family of

John Paul

Holley .

...................... :..............................75

would like to thank
all those who have .
given us their support
and prayers during
these 4ifficult times.

CIII7.0.99UI80 or
IM 212 not. ext. 74lS or

Auctton

'Wi(S"' v•
.l'fl

-~" 11tH,~Ht,

P.O. Box 1.1527 ,
Athtend, KV

41105-1527
£qutJ Opportunity
•
EmpJo~r
Mtml»r'FDIC

Medical
A
Celebration
Of
Lile .. •···· ·
Overbrook Canter, Located At 333 Page
Street. Middleport, Ohio
Is Pleased To Announce
We Are Accepting Appti·
catiOns For A Full nme
FIN 7P·7A To Join Our
·Ftlendty And Dedicated
Starr. Applicant's Must

Be

Dependable,

Tean·

[ig iBailp fEribune
(740) 446-2342

·The Daily Sentinel
. (740) 992-2155
~leasant

Help Wanted

l\eglgter

(304) 675-1333

Oaiilpolls

loco·

Help Wanted

UNIVERSITY OF RIO GRANDE
Position Announcement

Are you

Pos11ng Daie: Mny 4, 2009

m~de

·.
' for ALDI?

..

.

DIRECTOR
CENTER FOR SMALL BUSINESS
ENTREPRENEURSHIP

"C:hirul~~hiftManager

$10.00/Hr

The University of RiO "Grande annOunces the opening for a full time
pnsi1ion· for the D\rec10r of rhe Cen(er for Small Business .

+$4.00/hr additional when performing
Shift Men agar Outi"

Entrepreneurship. ·

Responsibilities. include bm .ure not limited to !&gt;Ianning, developing,

it tllkeJ-4 uoiqml P•lloo. SMl~Ciflll whfli daliitlllfltl Who n· ·
ethll a !lapp.ort•d. t•~m·ofierj•4enwiranlllelll. And ts ready
to. do what it takes to &amp;11111 thfl fllWIJ'$ • hk11 higluu wagot,
f1HV!fQUI UC.Itiort nm11, 1111d WI IIIII b111H1flta -· lhul tlOIT•Irom H

succeuful careor at 111.01. WtthmoJetlun30yearJ mthe 1ft·
dllltry. we art ttta leitduJU selfd·anortm~~:m grocer 111d OO'il of
tbe l1ngest food fliltllltritn the wortd, With owr 4,(DIIoca0011!.

and administering-the center's prngi'ams: to pmvidt' oppo11unities which
promote entrepreneurial develoPment. In addition, coordinute · the
School of Busl1,1es!" undergraduate intem~hips. a:-.!&lt;;ist with admini~tering
the MBA pr:ogram. c.ollubmalc with the OSU Snu1il Bu.sine~s

Developme.nt Counselor to

uver~ee

the

~A' ~tullcnts'

E)lperientia! '

.Learning projec1~. and con~ult wilh t;tudenL~ in the ~I FE pfo£nun.

A bachelor's degree in bu~111ess ·required. Master of Busines~
Administration hig~ly preferred as we_ll as previou~ ~..·xperience with
small husine!.ses.
·
Applications will be recdvctl until the position is· filled . Qualified
applicants should send a Jette( de.lailing (heir interest and quaJilicatlom.
a transcript. iJS well us a resume im.:ludi!'lg the nllmes llfld addres~es of
at least three reference~ to:
Ms. Phyllis Mason. SPIIR
VIce Presidenl of Human Resoun:.,
University of Rio Grunde
P.O.Box500
Rio Grande, OH 45674
l"ax 740-245-7972
e-mail pmason@rio.edu
EEOIA A Employer
Wnmen ami Minorities are ~nLourugctl to apply

Help Wanted

·Real Estate

Reel Estate

Real Estate

Real

Estate

PO!lllng Date May 4, 2009

CHORAL MUSIC
FACULTY POSITION
are

estate

resident of Meigs County. retired school teacher.
10 parking
space we are moving the contents of the house to the Amvels Building
in Kanagua. OH. This is· a house full of very nice antique furoirure and
collectables.
. .
FlJRNITlJRR.. . VictOrian Marble Top Dresser w~Mirror. Desk
w/Bookcase on top. S ft. 8 panel Bookcase .• Marble Top Wa.•hstand,
Hall Seat w/Mirror. Comer Chair. ViciQrian Sumds. Was~ Slarnl Claw
Feet, Rocker w/Swan Anns. Round Clas.' China Cubinet. Old Wooden
Recliner. Buffet, Tnblf &amp; 6 Chairs. Settca. Large Piano, Rocker's,
Couch &amp; chair, Large Round Table Stands, End Tables, Blanket chest.
Hump Back Trunk. Flul Top Trunks. Weighled Clock, Desk Chair, 5 pc
Bedroom Sel, 2 Linger• Chest. Latge Chair. Wicker Chair &amp; stand.
Rose Back Rocker, Desk w/Pigeon Holes. Large Wardrobe beds. ·
SWlJ Dl! 3 Swonls, 2 may be Civil War · ·
·
·.
a:A: ~iW~~E~ Rook wood Vase (Repaired). Nippon Vase. Nippon
u:
ilowl. Lead Crystal, Havil and China Se1s, Salt .&amp;
Pepper Sets. Cups Saucers. Lard Glass Eggs, Hand Painted Glass. Blue
&amp; White Delfts Plale. Teapots, Large Water Pitcher, Stem Glasses,
Cllamber Pot.
·
·
PAINTJNG· Oil on Canvas, Old Picture's, Pomeroy Picture
CQIJ,)«;JABI R'j: Old Flddle, Old Ukulele, Large Wpoden Basket,
Old S1ove Fireplace Fronts, Spice Rack, Reconi,Piayers. Large
Amount of Books. Paper Stone Crocks, Glass Washboanl. Wooden
Boxes. Linen's, Lunch Bucket. Cigarette Lighter. Old Artist Stets,
Canes.
This is a small listing. COme and see what we have! More pictures can
be seen on www.auctionzlp.com .
Air Conditioned Building, No Smoking
Sale Conducted By:
·

John W. Leadl· Auctlon..r Ll&lt;. I 2006000143 Lk &amp; Bondtd In I0\'0&lt; al
Stale ol Ohio. 1tnns ol Sale: Cash or good cbedts wllh posiU•eiD.
. ·

Attn.: HR (New H..tn 8M)

Position Announcement

(740)367-0123

,

offers a great team
enviroomenl
Send Rnumn to:
City NaiiDnBI Bank

University of Rio Grande

BROKEN SPOKE AUCTION SERVICES

Application'
June1,2oo9

f~mmuni ty banks and

AAJEOE

1- ~·6 75·.\1 ~I

in Memory

City National Bank offers
competitive satary and.
comprehensiVe beneftts.
including a 401K plan.
CJ'Y Is one ol tne larQest

salesperson
Needed:
Experience In building
materials required. Apply
In person. Thomas Do It . ··

Virginia license. Previous medical office
experience or hospital related ·expreience
preferred.
4
Send
resumes to:
I
Oscar E. i.!lick 1 ~ ·
Pleasant Valier Hospital
WV Lic./1754 &amp; Bondtd in WV
eta Human Resources
· 2520 Valier Drive
304-895-3640
Apprentic• Auctioneer:
Point Pleasa!lt WV 15550
Clarence Edwin Rice Ill WV Lie. #1926A
Or fax: 304-675·6975, or apply on-tina
Photo gAIIuy 011 tu4ctiolfzip.com ID 1413!
at www.pvaUer.aq
Auction

prelened . tP r~Nflk.ls Brar'ICh
MenaSi!r expanence 11'1 heu.of
deg•ee ma~ be con~Oer ed J­

'-=========
-~=,.Sa=l';;'""!;;;;;....
!'
-

·
Field Parking
Concessions by Busy 4's 4H Clilb
Auctjon£1:

Auction

teiadership and denveriftg .
pOsitive. results.
A Bachelors Degree 15

~:~.ter,

Certified Nursing Assistant$
Pleasant Valley Nursing and Rehabilita~on
Center currently has openings for Certi11ed
Nursing Assistants. Must be state certiried
in West Virginia. Must be willing to work
12 hour shifts.
.
•
For more information, please contact
Angie Cleland, Director of Nursing at (304)

~

in a sales

Help Wan\e~

wagons. disk, 2 spike harrows. 5' side ·
winder bushhog, New Idea ground drive
manure spreader, 3 pi 7' sickle mower, 3 pt.
LlaNSED PllACTIOU. NURSE
2 bottom plows, IH horse drawn manure
AND/DR
MEDICAL ASSISTANT
spreader willi brakes, horse plows , metal
Pleasant
Valley.
Hospital is q~rrently
com crib, gates, big air compressor,' ·e1i!c.
accepting applications foi a full-time
Welder, acetylene Iorch , side .shaft motors,
vices, cases of oil. e.ngine hoist. · 314
Licensed Practical Nurse anc!/or · Medical
Craftsman drill· press, tools and. many' more
Asst. LPN's must have cwent West

I&lt;

e~nence

env1ronment ean(Mates
should have a proven
track record of providing

Players With Positive At·
titudes To Join Us In ·
Providing
Outstanding,
Quality Care To Our
Residents. Stop BY And
Fill Out An Appllcatlon
M·F 9AM·5PM. .COOiact
Lucy Goff, Staff Develop.
men!
~rdlnator
A1(740)992·647t;, EOE &amp; ·
Panlclpant
Of
The
Drug-Free
Workplace
Program

®

Located SJII!liles South of Point Pleasant,
WV 011 State Rt. 62. Watch for signs.
675· 5236. .
19SS Int. 112:ton RIOO pickup, 1987 Dodge
Aries station wagon, MF #10 riding mower; , l::::====~~"~"·"~'"'~=====
Fnm\nll .C wide front end &amp; .7' sickle bar _
mower, Fannall H with front fork, DR
Help Wanted
H~p Wanted
trimmer mower 5 hp. IH power unit . 3
Ora~ely tractors wilhanachmenrs, 2 16' hay

~~

should be highly
mot1vated, self star1ers
WJ!h 4-6 years of bank1ng

Bonuses
• Onsite Doctor
• Complete Benefits
Package
• Free.NRA memberShip

farm items.

For snlc 14:1.7! 1997 !br.. ~
!ni.J11ubil&lt;:
home

Ha11en. W office.
Successful candidates

FT

;. =He=l:p:W:a:n:ted==;...:=:H:el:p:W:a:n:t:ed=:;

Terms; Cusll.orcheck with ID.Items sold AS IS

Branch Manager

-:ancMates for our New

• Weekly Pay &amp;

email

l~~~~~~cJ

BRANCH MANAGER
New H~en. WY
Crty NatiOnal Bank 1s
lbolung tor energetic

• Hiring Evening Shift
Positooe ·
• Starting Wage $8.80!hr

Rabei'IS.

or

..

'

E~tpandlng,

Hiling Adclitional
Physical Therapist.

~ Home

Auction

FARM AUCTION

Manu factured .
fious ng

se,ooo
Slgn-On-Bonua

izatlonal skills and the
ability to work lndependently with strong .. atten·
tion to detail. . Please
sond resume and references to

Holzer Medical Cemer, Oallipolis,10hio seeks
a full time Administrative A'sistant for rlence in a truck, Humat
Nursing Admi.nistralion . Respon~ibilities for .certltQtlon, . clean MVR
this position include but are not limited to: and good jQI) siablilty.
perfonns sccrelarial and related duties for the . WB offer. comPetitive
Divisi_on of Nursing. Coordinates office / benefits plua 401K and
operations, -informati~Jfl .flow, record keeping vocation pay. ·
Contact
Dennis
at
and communication.

Now you can have borders aDd qraphlcs
~
oddedtoyourclasslfledads
{ .•,~;~
BorderS$3.00/perad
E!

$Choot

Full Time

Personal leave lime

--:---~--- - Driven &amp; o.u..y.

Help Wanted

Is cuuentty SB!fking In·
terim Ucensed 1PraC1ica!
, Nwses and · l)lerapoulic
Progra, Workers. LPN'S
must have an Ohio LPN
and valid driver's license;
TPWs must have at
least 6 months paid ex·
perience in direct care; a

degrBB high

45631

NEEDED IMMEDIATELY

Monday thru .Friday ·.

Accounting

-=~!!!!!1!!!1':":"!'1!!!1""

Help Wanted

t-s•-••1

Help Wanl.d. G.......l Help Waond. General Help Wanlod · Gtonwal
n.e· ODMA&amp;DD GallipoAppahochlen 11111 Prod-. =~~Su~po~rw~isory~~~PT

and experience required. diploma/GED and a valid
Must have good organ~ driver's license.

galllpollsaecountanllt

() fmo/lii4Gll@w•M-"'~- OrOI/Ino '"

wWw.mydallytribune.com
www.mydallysentinel.com
www.mydallyregltter.com

Accountant.: .
Full-lima
positbn with busy· accounting office in GaHipolis for Immediate empk&gt;y·
men!.

. All Sliifts, FII' l!r pfi

udlcla.. ..

Pr~•,riPr.p•r'-1

lis Developmental Cen1er

We aro CUITently accepting applirolions
jrH" tlw following positiws:

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
~LUS YDUB AD ·NOW ONLINE

')000

All Sales att final. Food will be,Availablt. Not responsible for loss or IK'C'tdcnts.
AnnQU~emenl:s dey of sale tak~
O\'~ any
I material Vi'il
ror
and
10 am ·

,

The UniversitY of Rio Grande invites
applications for a one-year. full-time choral
music faculty position for the 2009-2010
academic year.
Responst~ilities include conduct~ng 1h.e
Masterworks Chon1le, a non-auditioned chorus
of students. faculty. staff. and community
si~gers. and the Grande Chorale·. an
auditioned. vocal jazzfchamber ensemhle with
instrumental accompaniment . Teaching
responsibilities include Choral Condul1ing and
Adolescent to Yo'ung Adlllt &lt;Zhornl Music
Methods. Other teaching duties may include
studio voice, aural training. jazz or Tttul:iic
portf~lio.

A master·s degree in choral music or music
education is Jl:qUired: a doctorate in musk is
preferred. Three years of leaching in a public
school setting is a requirement for this
position. Participation in depanmental and ·
University commiuees and recruitment is
expecoed.
Applications will be receive~ until the
position~ arc filled . Qualified appliconiS should
send a letter d~tailing: their intc:re.st and
qualifications . transcripts . as well is a resume
including the names and addresses of at least
three·references to:
Ms. Phyllis MilSOn, SPHR
Vice Presldent of Human Resources
University of Rio Grande
P.O. Box ~00, Rio Grande, OH 4Sii74
Fax 740-:145-7971
emoll: pmason@rlo.edu

EEOI AA Employer
Women and Minorities are encouraged to
apply.

&amp;u"t on ~oUR tot

~~omes in Ohio
, Buildinl qua ittr 50 years!
and !'A lor ewe SOO company!
' N'(SE, forWIne t enel'ff-ellitlent

or ours. r
• Ooz-"50

vea
1

nome deti&amp;f\ \-oduCIS t~~rou&amp;~&gt;out!
, ~d name P ~slor
' Low. IO'H rate t
qualified~:.·tncentlvM ~ ~rm~ time only\

.

N'«
.
&amp;ran~ro!, Designs lnuoduttOI"f
)and~
t:he
•
!'need from80'S
.
LOW$ $lOO's0n'fourLot!
to t:he upper

·

@) .
· ·~
~

fifty Yean of

BuildingQuaht)

lint• ...0 , . . .,. t\ltlftCt to dlarwl· ~ ....,. b,- loadOI'I

G)

I ' I •
_...

- - - - - - - - - - - - ------

0

�Page D4 • 6unblp 1J4mtt ·6tnttlld

I

Sunday, May 17, 2009

Pomeroy
OH • Pt. Pleasant, WV
. • Middleport • Gallipolis,
.

Help Wanted

~ribune-

Sentinel-l\t
CLASSIFIED

.Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Pt. Pleasant, WV

Help Wanted

......

'· )

· ..

~

Jllloj:ttlt..-~

"""""i

A-

•S1NA's

-~ ...,•. _,.ti~wlna~:
·1'111-,.m&amp;,..hll~·4011
~/n-:-HIIJ

~ !~.nytrit.m~com

111 Bucllllrlgt Rt.l4 -

Wellsl!ea:

0114!614

www.vrablehealthcare:com
i =====:;;:;;:..;:;;;;;:::;;;:;:;::=;
NUR$1Nq ADMINISTRATION
ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT

··~·alii.
.1 - l o l l
••~O

:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m
HOlY IO WRITE Afl1 AD
ful Ads
Should Include Th- lteme
To Help Get R•ponM ...
Succ LI

m

a.m. 8UM1ay

Paper

Thu,.....-y

Graphics SOC tor small
Sl.OOforlarve

• "" ee11 mu.t be prepeld'

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

• bchtH PIIIIMN..._. AMAIN,_. Wile .......

Otl!ors.m-

Pelt

H~MIForSolo

HouMt For Rent

.Ohio Volley

j

Sl99/mo!

Publlohlng NlfrvtO
thO ~gilt to edit,
reject or canctl1ny

'
movtln by ..Jun•1•~·

•datanytl..,..

~~=~

I

• 11-.t YIU Alb WtlllA ICeYMN'd •IAdliMit COM .....
O.CIIfl!..• • JactMe A Prln • Av.ld •Urf\tllllltl

Required qualifications include: High School
graduate or equinlent required. Computer
skills including Excel, PowerPoinl, and Word.
Excellent wordsmith skills, timely turnaround
o(assignments. Must be able to multi-task: ,
maintain confidentiality and exhibit excellent
phone etiquette. E•pericnce with minutes.
email and internet. Able to develop flyers.
structure policies and other dOcuments.

Rural Development
Property Currently rent·
Jng 1 &amp; 2 BFt units Spa·
cious fJoor plans, ranch
&amp; lowl)home style living, playground &amp; b~ts·
kelball cour1, on-site.
laundry facility, 24 hr
. emergency malnte:
nance, quiet country to. catiOn close to major
medical
facUlties:
pharmacies. grocery
store .. .just minutes
away from other major
shopping in the are$.
Honeyouckle Hlh
,Apartment•
266 Colonial Drive ~113
Bidwell, Ohio 45614 ·

MUll

pu~!~~

bo:d , 2

b:nh.~

If imerested, please con1ac1:

lilmk Rcpo! (5Cft tlown. J s ~
yean•. K% t\I'Rj !'nr li~l i n.gs •
1
~00-()21}·~946 ex R021'

. HUMAN RESOURCES
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
100 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis, OH 45631
Phone: ·(740) 446-5105

2br. hol'tle 1 car garage ~
w/ river rrontage located 1
In New Havon
WV:

or

304·934·7462

304-573-6334.

'DA E 1
EOE/,"'
mp oyer

~2-~be·d~ro·o~ill-"!$3~50~/rr-lo':
$350/ctep water &amp; trash~
paid. l'ets with writing
permission.
Phone :
.740·245-5571-

~~:;;~;:;;;~~;:;;;;::;;;~~;,;;;::;~

r

ISHOP CLASSIFIEDSI
.

5 room house at 44 Otlve :
Has stovefr~fridg.e.
$426/rent plus deposit,

·

_Auction

St.

:N:!o::em:::·:44::6::·3::9::4s==~~· ,

.woo

740.446·3344
Ofl~e Hours M, W, F
9AM · SPM

.

·

ERNEST TUCKER ESTATE

Roniolo

SATURDAY, MAY 23; 2009
JO.:OOAM. '

are

We

gmail.com
or mall to - CLA 101, PO
Box 469, Gal~s, OH

Interested
pelliOns
submit an Ohio
Civil. service Appllcation.
VoU: must submit on line
s~ould

at

car'eer.ohlo.gov.

by

mall, falC or you can pick
one. up in the Admin~tra:
tlon Office at GOC.
ODMR&amp;OD
Gallipolis
Developmental .Center
Attention:
Human Re·
source Depanmont
2500 onio Avenue, Galli·
polis Ohio 45631 ,
Phone: (740) 446-1642
fmt: (740) 446-1341
The . Oai\Jpo!ie DevelOp·
mental Center is an
Equal Opportunity Emplayer

I
l'

FT

Flexible ' Schedulin-g
Competitive Wages
HealthiOental Benefits
401 k, paid Holidays

Health
April.Blair, AN
5982 US Route 60 E.
SarbOursvhr&amp;,
WV

25004
304-733-1626

1-SQ0-462-9365 . to apply
or
go
10
www.r~Jucking.com.

:;.E.!!O!!.E!!.!!!!!!!!!!1!!!1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
;;;;::

;;;;;:~~E~du~c:atl~['!on~~VACAN9Y: H.S. SC.Ia

ENCE INSTRUCTOR
Valid Ohio ScienCe cettl·
flcatioo required. CONTACT:

RN •. LPN, &amp;. .HHA 392. Sil·
ver
BridQe
Plaza.
7-40-446•3808

e~:;;=~"':"'~--.:

tomer service depart· poliaas . a valid Ohio
mant, Company training Managing Cosmetoloiglst
provide, muet be a HS L~nse. Salary 18 based
graduate. FT potl!lona on
commission. inter$16 per hr. For Interview · ested candidates should

&lt;ali BB6·339•n97

1111

Independent
contract~rs
need to make Pharma·
ceutlcal deliverlet In Gal·
llpolls and Marietta · reglon. Independent con·
tractor&amp; will drive there
own vehicle. Must be
able to pass drug SCI"een,
baCkground check &amp; motor' vehicle t;:h&amp;Ck. Must
be flexible to make deliv·
erles In the evenings &amp;
weekends. This Is a
great · oppor1unitv for

333 Page Street, Middle·
por1,
Ohio, Overbrook
Center . participates in the
drug free Worllptace Pro·
gram.
•
Part-time Class-1 operB·
tor for sewer" district 20
noura per wee!( &amp; on call
for emergencies. Send
resume to: PO Box 175,
Tuppers
Plains,
Ohio
45783

out an applicollon at

~::::::-:-:~~~~:"::'
Gallia·Jeckson·Vfnton
AVON I All Areas! To Buy
JVSD (740) 245·5334, someone . 10 make extra or Sen Shirte~ ·spears
Ext. 201 · EEO

income. Please contact 304-675-1429

Help.Wanted • General

C~su
S13-794-3t54

Delivery/Warehouse per·
son needed, lull time, lm·
mediate opening, must
have good driving re-

crlstleCprioritydl&amp;patch.c
om
J
FliP! Maintenance Persana! Meded fof 48 unit

cord. Apply·Lifestyie Fur·

complex.

apartme~

lnfoCisfon
Come work for a top

employer, commttt«:t
to

Sales rep needed tQ sell
Cable TV-&amp; related serv·
Regional
Dump
and
Ices · in the Pt. Pleasant,
Pneumatic -raMir Dr1v·
Gallipolis areas. Sales
tra.
exp.
preferred.
Paid
R&amp;J Trucking Company
trai.ning. Great Eaming
in · .Marietta
OH. . Is
Potential. J04.476·21S9.
searching tor q~,~atlfled .
Overbrook RehabilitatiOn
aPplicants mua1 be it --~~~~-- Center Je currently seek·
least , ~3)'ra., have miniATTENTtON
lnp a beautician to work
mum ot 1 yr. ot tate Local company w/ FT &amp; rn. the facility's beauty sa·
commercia! d~ng expe- PT position• In our cut· ton. Candida(es should

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

uelll, Inc.
I&amp; currently seek1ng an
inSide reta11 safes perso/,
lor our Pt Pleasant WV
loCation. Expenence pre·
lened. Job benefits 1n·
elude 40,k, healltl 1nsur'
ance J!:nd paid 'o'acations
are
also
aYa•lable.
Please apply m pei'SOfl.
located at 426 V1and ~t.
in downtown Pt. l'leasant

offering employ-

ment opportuntttes In
our areal

EOE

We pay up ro S~225Jhr
after Sl)( months
Talk with other Amari·

cans tO promote conservatNB values. Also raise
funds for co~rvative
causes, influentlill polilf·
cal leaders and interest
groups.

nhure 866 Third Ave, Please tax: resume or letGallipOlis, 9:30·5:00 No 1
t
•
1o
~r · o1 · 1n1eres
Phone Calls
304-674·0079 · or
call
304·674-0023

H8 1 W d
P ante

Call Todayl
Interview Tomorrow!
Start work May 26th\

Hl88·tPIIC·PAYU
Exl. 2321
Apply·onllne:
hHp:lljobt.l,fOCIIIOn.com

on
SAVINGS

Help Wanted

i••

In memory of
Lisa A. Tawney
6123/65 · I0122108

our anniversary 5117109- /9 yrs ago
I married my best friend. I miss her with all
my heart and wiJ/ love her umil
1can see her again. She gave me 2 wond•rf•r'
sons ~nd th• best /8 //2 yrs of my life. We
miss her more than words can say.

Love forever,
Your husbal'lt!, Tim

Card of Thankl

FOR RENT

Announcements

LAUR§.!Cow&amp;lNs

@))

14 Laurel Commons Ravenswood, WV
Spacious Newly Renovaled 3 BR Townhouses

IW EsTAT£ GA.WU, L"!(.

($475-$485)'
Brand new appliances, carpeting, fresh painl.
Special $50 MOVE IN • 1st montb rent
· free, $SO Set:urlty and $400 Wiii·Mart gift
certllkate!
Easy commute lo Charleoton arid Parkersburg
Call today 304-273-3344 Visil our webpage al
hnp:l/laurelcommons.prospectportal.coml

Attention itl\lc.'ilors!
Check (mlthb J BR
conage \vith large

60 Madison
, fenced lot.

CIA. Gas Heat

Call Wyall Boles
Rt&gt;altor

Ill _MLS
74~35l·6l04 til
•

Card of Thank•

The. family of

John Paul

Holley .

...................... :..............................75

would like to thank
all those who have .
given us their support
and prayers during
these 4ifficult times.

CIII7.0.99UI80 or
IM 212 not. ext. 74lS or

Auctton

'Wi(S"' v•
.l'fl

-~" 11tH,~Ht,

P.O. Box 1.1527 ,
Athtend, KV

41105-1527
£qutJ Opportunity
•
EmpJo~r
Mtml»r'FDIC

Medical
A
Celebration
Of
Lile .. •···· ·
Overbrook Canter, Located At 333 Page
Street. Middleport, Ohio
Is Pleased To Announce
We Are Accepting Appti·
catiOns For A Full nme
FIN 7P·7A To Join Our
·Ftlendty And Dedicated
Starr. Applicant's Must

Be

Dependable,

Tean·

[ig iBailp fEribune
(740) 446-2342

·The Daily Sentinel
. (740) 992-2155
~leasant

Help Wanted

l\eglgter

(304) 675-1333

Oaiilpolls

loco·

Help Wanted

UNIVERSITY OF RIO GRANDE
Position Announcement

Are you

Pos11ng Daie: Mny 4, 2009

m~de

·.
' for ALDI?

..

.

DIRECTOR
CENTER FOR SMALL BUSINESS
ENTREPRENEURSHIP

"C:hirul~~hiftManager

$10.00/Hr

The University of RiO "Grande annOunces the opening for a full time
pnsi1ion· for the D\rec10r of rhe Cen(er for Small Business .

+$4.00/hr additional when performing
Shift Men agar Outi"

Entrepreneurship. ·

Responsibilities. include bm .ure not limited to !&gt;Ianning, developing,

it tllkeJ-4 uoiqml P•lloo. SMl~Ciflll whfli daliitlllfltl Who n· ·
ethll a !lapp.ort•d. t•~m·ofierj•4enwiranlllelll. And ts ready
to. do what it takes to &amp;11111 thfl fllWIJ'$ • hk11 higluu wagot,
f1HV!fQUI UC.Itiort nm11, 1111d WI IIIII b111H1flta -· lhul tlOIT•Irom H

succeuful careor at 111.01. WtthmoJetlun30yearJ mthe 1ft·
dllltry. we art ttta leitduJU selfd·anortm~~:m grocer 111d OO'il of
tbe l1ngest food fliltllltritn the wortd, With owr 4,(DIIoca0011!.

and administering-the center's prngi'ams: to pmvidt' oppo11unities which
promote entrepreneurial develoPment. In addition, coordinute · the
School of Busl1,1es!" undergraduate intem~hips. a:-.!&lt;;ist with admini~tering
the MBA pr:ogram. c.ollubmalc with the OSU Snu1il Bu.sine~s

Developme.nt Counselor to

uver~ee

the

~A' ~tullcnts'

E)lperientia! '

.Learning projec1~. and con~ult wilh t;tudenL~ in the ~I FE pfo£nun.

A bachelor's degree in bu~111ess ·required. Master of Busines~
Administration hig~ly preferred as we_ll as previou~ ~..·xperience with
small husine!.ses.
·
Applications will be recdvctl until the position is· filled . Qualified
applicants should send a Jette( de.lailing (heir interest and quaJilicatlom.
a transcript. iJS well us a resume im.:ludi!'lg the nllmes llfld addres~es of
at least three reference~ to:
Ms. Phyllis Mason. SPIIR
VIce Presidenl of Human Resoun:.,
University of Rio Grunde
P.O.Box500
Rio Grande, OH 45674
l"ax 740-245-7972
e-mail pmason@rio.edu
EEOIA A Employer
Wnmen ami Minorities are ~nLourugctl to apply

Help Wanted

·Real Estate

Reel Estate

Real Estate

Real

Estate

PO!lllng Date May 4, 2009

CHORAL MUSIC
FACULTY POSITION
are

estate

resident of Meigs County. retired school teacher.
10 parking
space we are moving the contents of the house to the Amvels Building
in Kanagua. OH. This is· a house full of very nice antique furoirure and
collectables.
. .
FlJRNITlJRR.. . VictOrian Marble Top Dresser w~Mirror. Desk
w/Bookcase on top. S ft. 8 panel Bookcase .• Marble Top Wa.•hstand,
Hall Seat w/Mirror. Comer Chair. ViciQrian Sumds. Was~ Slarnl Claw
Feet, Rocker w/Swan Anns. Round Clas.' China Cubinet. Old Wooden
Recliner. Buffet, Tnblf &amp; 6 Chairs. Settca. Large Piano, Rocker's,
Couch &amp; chair, Large Round Table Stands, End Tables, Blanket chest.
Hump Back Trunk. Flul Top Trunks. Weighled Clock, Desk Chair, 5 pc
Bedroom Sel, 2 Linger• Chest. Latge Chair. Wicker Chair &amp; stand.
Rose Back Rocker, Desk w/Pigeon Holes. Large Wardrobe beds. ·
SWlJ Dl! 3 Swonls, 2 may be Civil War · ·
·
·.
a:A: ~iW~~E~ Rook wood Vase (Repaired). Nippon Vase. Nippon
u:
ilowl. Lead Crystal, Havil and China Se1s, Salt .&amp;
Pepper Sets. Cups Saucers. Lard Glass Eggs, Hand Painted Glass. Blue
&amp; White Delfts Plale. Teapots, Large Water Pitcher, Stem Glasses,
Cllamber Pot.
·
·
PAINTJNG· Oil on Canvas, Old Picture's, Pomeroy Picture
CQIJ,)«;JABI R'j: Old Flddle, Old Ukulele, Large Wpoden Basket,
Old S1ove Fireplace Fronts, Spice Rack, Reconi,Piayers. Large
Amount of Books. Paper Stone Crocks, Glass Washboanl. Wooden
Boxes. Linen's, Lunch Bucket. Cigarette Lighter. Old Artist Stets,
Canes.
This is a small listing. COme and see what we have! More pictures can
be seen on www.auctionzlp.com .
Air Conditioned Building, No Smoking
Sale Conducted By:
·

John W. Leadl· Auctlon..r Ll&lt;. I 2006000143 Lk &amp; Bondtd In I0\'0&lt; al
Stale ol Ohio. 1tnns ol Sale: Cash or good cbedts wllh posiU•eiD.
. ·

Attn.: HR (New H..tn 8M)

Position Announcement

(740)367-0123

,

offers a great team
enviroomenl
Send Rnumn to:
City NaiiDnBI Bank

University of Rio Grande

BROKEN SPOKE AUCTION SERVICES

Application'
June1,2oo9

f~mmuni ty banks and

AAJEOE

1- ~·6 75·.\1 ~I

in Memory

City National Bank offers
competitive satary and.
comprehensiVe beneftts.
including a 401K plan.
CJ'Y Is one ol tne larQest

salesperson
Needed:
Experience In building
materials required. Apply
In person. Thomas Do It . ··

Virginia license. Previous medical office
experience or hospital related ·expreience
preferred.
4
Send
resumes to:
I
Oscar E. i.!lick 1 ~ ·
Pleasant Valier Hospital
WV Lic./1754 &amp; Bondtd in WV
eta Human Resources
· 2520 Valier Drive
304-895-3640
Apprentic• Auctioneer:
Point Pleasa!lt WV 15550
Clarence Edwin Rice Ill WV Lie. #1926A
Or fax: 304-675·6975, or apply on-tina
Photo gAIIuy 011 tu4ctiolfzip.com ID 1413!
at www.pvaUer.aq
Auction

prelened . tP r~Nflk.ls Brar'ICh
MenaSi!r expanence 11'1 heu.of
deg•ee ma~ be con~Oer ed J­

'-=========
-~=,.Sa=l';;'""!;;;;;....
!'
-

·
Field Parking
Concessions by Busy 4's 4H Clilb
Auctjon£1:

Auction

teiadership and denveriftg .
pOsitive. results.
A Bachelors Degree 15

~:~.ter,

Certified Nursing Assistant$
Pleasant Valley Nursing and Rehabilita~on
Center currently has openings for Certi11ed
Nursing Assistants. Must be state certiried
in West Virginia. Must be willing to work
12 hour shifts.
.
•
For more information, please contact
Angie Cleland, Director of Nursing at (304)

~

in a sales

Help Wan\e~

wagons. disk, 2 spike harrows. 5' side ·
winder bushhog, New Idea ground drive
manure spreader, 3 pi 7' sickle mower, 3 pt.
LlaNSED PllACTIOU. NURSE
2 bottom plows, IH horse drawn manure
AND/DR
MEDICAL ASSISTANT
spreader willi brakes, horse plows , metal
Pleasant
Valley.
Hospital is q~rrently
com crib, gates, big air compressor,' ·e1i!c.
accepting applications foi a full-time
Welder, acetylene Iorch , side .shaft motors,
vices, cases of oil. e.ngine hoist. · 314
Licensed Practical Nurse anc!/or · Medical
Craftsman drill· press, tools and. many' more
Asst. LPN's must have cwent West

I&lt;

e~nence

env1ronment ean(Mates
should have a proven
track record of providing

Players With Positive At·
titudes To Join Us In ·
Providing
Outstanding,
Quality Care To Our
Residents. Stop BY And
Fill Out An Appllcatlon
M·F 9AM·5PM. .COOiact
Lucy Goff, Staff Develop.
men!
~rdlnator
A1(740)992·647t;, EOE &amp; ·
Panlclpant
Of
The
Drug-Free
Workplace
Program

®

Located SJII!liles South of Point Pleasant,
WV 011 State Rt. 62. Watch for signs.
675· 5236. .
19SS Int. 112:ton RIOO pickup, 1987 Dodge
Aries station wagon, MF #10 riding mower; , l::::====~~"~"·"~'"'~=====
Fnm\nll .C wide front end &amp; .7' sickle bar _
mower, Fannall H with front fork, DR
Help Wanted
H~p Wanted
trimmer mower 5 hp. IH power unit . 3
Ora~ely tractors wilhanachmenrs, 2 16' hay

~~

should be highly
mot1vated, self star1ers
WJ!h 4-6 years of bank1ng

Bonuses
• Onsite Doctor
• Complete Benefits
Package
• Free.NRA memberShip

farm items.

For snlc 14:1.7! 1997 !br.. ~
!ni.J11ubil&lt;:
home

Ha11en. W office.
Successful candidates

FT

;. =He=l:p:W:a:n:ted==;...:=:H:el:p:W:a:n:t:ed=:;

Terms; Cusll.orcheck with ID.Items sold AS IS

Branch Manager

-:ancMates for our New

• Weekly Pay &amp;

email

l~~~~~~cJ

BRANCH MANAGER
New H~en. WY
Crty NatiOnal Bank 1s
lbolung tor energetic

• Hiring Evening Shift
Positooe ·
• Starting Wage $8.80!hr

Rabei'IS.

or

..

'

E~tpandlng,

Hiling Adclitional
Physical Therapist.

~ Home

Auction

FARM AUCTION

Manu factured .
fious ng

se,ooo
Slgn-On-Bonua

izatlonal skills and the
ability to work lndependently with strong .. atten·
tion to detail. . Please
sond resume and references to

Holzer Medical Cemer, Oallipolis,10hio seeks
a full time Administrative A'sistant for rlence in a truck, Humat
Nursing Admi.nistralion . Respon~ibilities for .certltQtlon, . clean MVR
this position include but are not limited to: and good jQI) siablilty.
perfonns sccrelarial and related duties for the . WB offer. comPetitive
Divisi_on of Nursing. Coordinates office / benefits plua 401K and
operations, -informati~Jfl .flow, record keeping vocation pay. ·
Contact
Dennis
at
and communication.

Now you can have borders aDd qraphlcs
~
oddedtoyourclasslfledads
{ .•,~;~
BorderS$3.00/perad
E!

$Choot

Full Time

Personal leave lime

--:---~--- - Driven &amp; o.u..y.

Help Wanted

Is cuuentty SB!fking In·
terim Ucensed 1PraC1ica!
, Nwses and · l)lerapoulic
Progra, Workers. LPN'S
must have an Ohio LPN
and valid driver's license;
TPWs must have at
least 6 months paid ex·
perience in direct care; a

degrBB high

45631

NEEDED IMMEDIATELY

Monday thru .Friday ·.

Accounting

-=~!!!!!1!!!1':":"!'1!!!1""

Help Wanted

t-s•-••1

Help Wanl.d. G.......l Help Waond. General Help Wanlod · Gtonwal
n.e· ODMA&amp;DD GallipoAppahochlen 11111 Prod-. =~~Su~po~rw~isory~~~PT

and experience required. diploma/GED and a valid
Must have good organ~ driver's license.

galllpollsaecountanllt

() fmo/lii4Gll@w•M-"'~- OrOI/Ino '"

wWw.mydallytribune.com
www.mydallysentinel.com
www.mydallyregltter.com

Accountant.: .
Full-lima
positbn with busy· accounting office in GaHipolis for Immediate empk&gt;y·
men!.

. All Sliifts, FII' l!r pfi

udlcla.. ..

Pr~•,riPr.p•r'-1

lis Developmental Cen1er

We aro CUITently accepting applirolions
jrH" tlw following positiws:

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
~LUS YDUB AD ·NOW ONLINE

')000

All Sales att final. Food will be,Availablt. Not responsible for loss or IK'C'tdcnts.
AnnQU~emenl:s dey of sale tak~
O\'~ any
I material Vi'il
ror
and
10 am ·

,

The UniversitY of Rio Grande invites
applications for a one-year. full-time choral
music faculty position for the 2009-2010
academic year.
Responst~ilities include conduct~ng 1h.e
Masterworks Chon1le, a non-auditioned chorus
of students. faculty. staff. and community
si~gers. and the Grande Chorale·. an
auditioned. vocal jazzfchamber ensemhle with
instrumental accompaniment . Teaching
responsibilities include Choral Condul1ing and
Adolescent to Yo'ung Adlllt &lt;Zhornl Music
Methods. Other teaching duties may include
studio voice, aural training. jazz or Tttul:iic
portf~lio.

A master·s degree in choral music or music
education is Jl:qUired: a doctorate in musk is
preferred. Three years of leaching in a public
school setting is a requirement for this
position. Participation in depanmental and ·
University commiuees and recruitment is
expecoed.
Applications will be receive~ until the
position~ arc filled . Qualified appliconiS should
send a letter d~tailing: their intc:re.st and
qualifications . transcripts . as well is a resume
including the names and addresses of at least
three·references to:
Ms. Phyllis MilSOn, SPHR
Vice Presldent of Human Resources
University of Rio Grande
P.O. Box ~00, Rio Grande, OH 4Sii74
Fax 740-:145-7971
emoll: pmason@rlo.edu

EEOI AA Employer
Women and Minorities are encouraged to
apply.

&amp;u"t on ~oUR tot

~~omes in Ohio
, Buildinl qua ittr 50 years!
and !'A lor ewe SOO company!
' N'(SE, forWIne t enel'ff-ellitlent

or ours. r
• Ooz-"50

vea
1

nome deti&amp;f\ \-oduCIS t~~rou&amp;~&gt;out!
, ~d name P ~slor
' Low. IO'H rate t
qualified~:.·tncentlvM ~ ~rm~ time only\

.

N'«
.
&amp;ran~ro!, Designs lnuoduttOI"f
)and~
t:he
•
!'need from80'S
.
LOW$ $lOO's0n'fourLot!
to t:he upper

·

@) .
· ·~
~

fifty Yean of

BuildingQuaht)

lint• ...0 , . . .,. t\ltlftCt to dlarwl· ~ ....,. b,- loadOI'I

G)

I ' I •
_...

- - - - - - - - - - - - ------

0

�..

PageD6

GARDENING

_iunba, lime• -i~ntinel

Sunday,May17, 2009 -

_Recycled gear makes gardening even greener
Bv

DEAN FOSDICK

FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

- Manufacturers are hitting
pay dirt with recycled prod{icts designed for the garden.
• Discarded plastic is being
made into work gloves, rainbarrels and buckets. WornOut tires are being converted
into weed-smothering mulch
and durable walkways.
: Beverly Schor is founder
t&gt;f West County Garden!'~, a
aan Francisco-based company that creates garden and
work gloves from recycled
plastic bottles. ·
.
- "We do a lot of testing on
fibers and found these gloves
i!Je just as durable, just as soft,
~ any made . from natural
materials," Schor said. "We
tftink their wearability is better
than leather. Among other
tl'llngs, you can simp! y throw
them into a washer and dryer."
; Turning recycled pl;~stic
into fiber began in the 1980s
3uring a time of gasoline
Shortages, she said. As prices
sOared for petrochemicall:!ased plastic , mills discov. ered practical ways to convert
lJ!e less expensive recycled
~ubstance into carpeting.

"But carpets are coarse," said
Schor, a gardener and former
sports a~l designer. "I started looking around for another
raw material and found a
Korean company that could
make something finer (from
plastic bottles) for textiles."
The sturdy but soft, padded
gloves retail at around $19.95
a pair. Every recycled glove
produced means one fewer 8ounce· plastic bottle tossed
into a landfill, Schor said.
"In 2010, we will be
retooling and taking that to
two bottles. Everything' but
the palm (on the gloves) will
be roo percent recycled, and
we're even working on that."
Americans generated 254
million tons of trash, and recycled and composted aboui 85
·tons of that in 2007, the U.S.
Environmental
Protection
Agency said. That works out to
a recycling rate of 33 .4 percent.
Those figures ~present municipal solid waste - things commonly used and then thrown
away, such as food scraps,
grass clippings, old tires, furniture and appliances. It does not
include industrial, hazardous or
construction waste.
Making greater use of organ-

Scores of eco-ingenious
products are finding •
their way back into the
garden. These breath·
able, soft but durable
work gloves were made
from a plastic that was
recycled from beverage
.bottles. Every recycled ·
glove means one less
eight-ounce plastic bottle being tossed into a •;
landfill, the manufacturE~~' claims.

ic materials reduces the amount
of solid waste in landtills.
Scores of companies are
shredding. bald vehicle tires
into crumb rubber, which has
~arden applications includIng mulch, tree rings, soaker
hoses and steppingstones.
"Sales are really up for the
mulch," said Madeline Wenz
of Garden Oaks Specialties in
Bound Brook, NJ., which
retails the recycled product by
the bag or in bulk. "It's cleaner
(than wood mulch), &lt;;,omes in

AP photo

'
~

sea~~~~~ s~~~~ 1(~~~~

.~

"~

i:'J'

;t'.

'

..

,.

.

.~: ~ It'S. ~u~h8~=::;!:~4fUtshrlnk

Burlington. Vt., sells many
,
,
.,
• ~·
,
_
.
products made from recycled
.
- · ·
·
content. The company recent~ recv~. mat6i'ia.f~ that
be~ used'tO ~ke new garder:t 'productS: ' ..
ly surveyed customers about ; • ,._tlca: Drink bottl.(!s are}H,~tng convert~ Into ~1119 from fta,ce puJiovef$ to
what they were looking for -~en. gloVeS
. t9llf:lh~ht tub$, Plasti~ pots,.ce!I-J]aGka; 9Jl'd8q trQ.ys, hanging..,_.
from garden suppliers.
'ke\il and "!'Jicfil bagsJt.rF bfng remade •.~to .1Umber:f9r decking- and ~r fumffute..
"We had 22,000 responding, ~·fitc:&lt;YCifd piastre al~ IS.!fltt:stuff of rail" bfi!reli anct c;o~rs~ · t,i. · .· , ' .
with 10 percent saymg they · ~.~~~;W~rn.tin¥·can b•h.~r~ad .~ tume&lt;fi~~ ~ttl!ftl~'t PlayQtou~ sur·
cared about things involving ~taC+ardritzler ~~es~~vtalkWay edging. Crumb 'rupbet '.~!So. ~n .Be l)lac:t,.over int()
the environment , particularly
IpJ1g,,ap.
' 1-&lt;.llll!.n(l.rnii'Ah
. ~ ., ,.,
.
. ..
·~ '
. '
. ••. '
. .
., '
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ar•·

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f~;~~bf~~~~~~;~e~~'; ~ •(i-.: Dl~~ Qll,$$ ·is b~iog' grQuri(l into j)o!N~er) and res~apedJnft) ~bble&amp;:~o
~p r-tain water 10 plant ~talhe,.,, saylng lOts ~f potti!}lf$011tn the. ptOees$. '• •,

quality," said spokeswoman
Maree Gaetani . "We're still
going through all of it, but it's
obvious people are reaching
out for ~rreen kinds of products. We'~'re seeing it in dollars
and cents."

•,0~ ~~~~~In-husks~ recta.!rn~ paper a11(1~qom~t$d CffN 111anQr&amp;:afe
; feP.tijclngp,ta,tic fdr,U$8.$8ldurabre an.d ~mpo-tt po~. \l$e ,!h~m 'fpr splt&gt;Utlf'$1.
~ eds, th8n drop"tbe WtioJe bui':M;IIe i~o the' groi.iod. ·ellmlnatlrig transpJB!itiJ'!g.' · ..
·. • ~,·$ojar ~~~~ ~ impi'6\ilnQ ~. afonQ-will:f!ainp sty{es and run~ik.
•ti. Solar ~.·ti"'~~~ waJkWaYS, d~Y$ ot (QWetteds, Therl!l~ a~'":
~to~·;~~ or dusk an(lllO ~ht ~· Sln;IP~~ ftte,~n.~o ..,i~

2009 Buick

cadf:cTs

Enclave CXL
. 119267. FWD, Lelthtr Loaded.

19156, Pertonnlilce Colltttlon,
Pert,.mance lWIII)' Pacbgt.

.
......Ol.•••t$3
7·
MJaP

M .....

OneAtThlll'ltctf

SalePrlce

1

ct'!~
HHR"

Aveo ·

119069. Auto. Summer
Yellow, AnU lOck Brakes.

....

119016. Chrome Pltg., Auto.,
Remote Start.

-· $14

.......

MSIP
,..
.... 0&amp;.:••••

...... OIKo•t

OneAl ;r~::el

Oiie.lll11hl'ltcel

We Price

$1 7

2009

Cheyy
Ma1lb"U

2009Chevy
Tahoe LTZ or
GMC Yukon
Denali
3 In Stock!

2009
GMC Sierra
1500

2009
Pontiac
G8

119096. V6, Auto. looded.

2009
GMC

ACADIA

#9206. I'WO, loaded.

•2009
GMf.sfl&amp;r~a
119270. ~.~. long Bed ·

2009
Pontiac

·2009
Pontiac
G5

Vlbe

19021.

....
-·...... •....S14
191156. S Spd., Air, CO.

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.

co,.O.:stor

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Ttlf!1'1111111t1Cip!lf11o&lt;f.:JI~

Dealer•hlp not re•pon•lble for ~nl•prlnt•.
Photo• for lllu•trauon purpo•e only.

,.,.,__ CHEVROLET • CADILLAC • PONTIAC • BUICK • CMC
Main • -740 ...992
or 1 .
-1094 • Pomeroy, OH
12... •

Senice a-1 • Closed Sunday

ID.C:

MI.

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