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.

l' www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B8 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, April4, 2008

dv

ALONG THE .RivER ·
Off to the races _
When Meigs met the need for speed, Cl

~

Ohio
Valley
&amp;n,,•
Bank II-._,

I , _ . _ , ..,.. ...

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

H / - "-" ,......,.._ PIYJSIIIU

c.......

-·-

... If roil llavu quntion _url coal 11d, write: NASCAR This Week, qo The GaSton Gazette, 'P.O. Box 1538, Gastonia, NC 28053

NatloiM!de

Sprint Clp
• R..: Samsung 500

•

1~

• Wlae: Teoas Motor SpeedWWJ, Justin (1.5 miles). 334
laps/ 501 miles.
•Wilen: Sunday, AprilS
• Laot rut'l .W.: Jeff Burton, Chewolet.
•Qullllfl'lnllrecood: Brian Vick·
ers, Chewolet, 196.235 mph,
No\1. 3, 20oo.
• R.. oecord: ca~ Edwaflls,
Fofll.151.055 mph, Nov. 6,
2005
• Laot -"=Theres nothing
qu~e like riding off Into the
mist while the pursuers are
held at bay. Denny Hamlin deserved to 'Mn the Goody's Coot
Orange 500 at Martinsville
Speed'NWJ, but a newcomer
made the victOI)' a bit easier.
The tact that both Hamlin and

Michael McDowell, who was
making his first Sprint Cup
start. were driving Toyotas
probably hoo nothing to do
with~. but McDowell couldn't
have mooe more-enemies hoo .
he been -a brand-new rooster
in the Sprint Cup henhouse.
Hot pursu~ of the winner
cooled considerably !hanks to
the presence in the waning .
laps of the 231ear-old McDowells No. 00 between Hamlin's ·
No. 18 and, well, everyone
else. By the.time Jeff Gordon,
Jeff Burton and Jimmie John_ son managed to get past Me-Dowell, Hamlin's car was difli-cu~ to pick out in the gloaming, though Gofllon managed
to close to within .398 of a
second at the finish.

J

cl

'J r

I

• R..: O'Reilly 300

•bee: O'Reilly Allto Parts
• Willie: Texas Motor
250
.
s~. Fort Worth (1.5
. - . . , Kansas speedway.
mileS), 200 laps/300 miles Kansas City, Kan . (1.5 mi.),
•Wilen: Saturday, April 5. _ 1671apsf250.5 mileS.
• Laot ,...• ....., Matt ......., Saturday, April 26.
Kenseth, ford_
•LMt ,...., wiiWr: Erik
• Q..,.C.record: Jeff
Darnell, ford_
Greell, Chevrolet 193.493 •Qe WJIIC - . 1: BUI
mph, April 5, 2002.
Lester, Toyota, 173.833
• R.. .-.1: ~n Har·
mP,h, July 1. 2005.
vick, Chevrolet.145.710
•"*- NCG!d: Ricky Henmph, Nov. 4, 2006.
drick, Chevrolet. 125.094
• Laot ,_, Scott Wimmer mph, July 7, 2001.
_
drove a Chevrolet to victory, • LMt ,..., Dennis Setzer,
the sixth of his career, In · in a Dodge, won for the thifll
the Pepsi 300 at Nashville ·time at Martinsville SpeedSuperspeedway.
WWJ In his-career, capturing
the Kroger 250.

J ;;: .: s j:. r

-y I J r:s t ] -/

•

·SPORTs
• • Final Four previews.
• SeehgeBl

Senators, Wilson take
interest in health need
.
'

BY BRIM J. REm
BREEDtiMYDAIL\'SEN11N£LCOM

POMEROY
.
Rqiresentati ves of U.S. Sens.
Sherrod Brown and .George
Voinovich, and U.S. Rep.
Charlie Wilson, D-Bridgeport,
met with Meigs County officials Friday to discuss the
fOunty's effons to improve
health care services.
The meeting came in .the
midst of nationwide reports
ldlout the death last August of a

J

No. 11 FEDEx TOYOTA -

DENNY HAMLIN

SPRINT CUP SERIES

Hometown News for Gallia &amp;: Meigs oountie5

Crlftulaa TniCk

Middleport woman due ro com' plications of a pregnancy. U.S.
Sen. Hillary Clinton, D-N.Y.,
has used a srory rold about
Trina Bachtel ro illuminate·the
need for health care reforms.
Bachtel's family, however,
deny that the 35-year-old
Bachtel was ever refused med- .
ical _care because she was
unable ro pay for it
_
· A family llleDlber said Friday
that Bachtel was insured through
ber mstaurant job, and had been
. hospitaliwt at Ohio State

Universiiy Hospital for a week at
thetimeofberdeath,
no time,
the family Says, wasAtshe
ever
sent borne without necessary
treatment If she had beea, they
would have paid for her care.
Bachtel's death was discussed
during Clinron 's meeting with
the Holman and Nash families
in Pomeroy in February, and she
has reoounted what now
appears to be a false 3CC9Wit in
appearances across the country.
The_ Washington Post, The
Associated · Press and other
national media . sources have
IqlO!ted the srory.
Regardless of the deuils surrounding Bachtel's death, the

~~~~,;~~~&amp;~;;~~~~·
I&gt;;
c1
·

.

-

Pin• Ml Dn'as. AZ

·-

·Coordinating
officer gets
nod by boards

Burton

' •the hWleiliin-ftiOkie bolh .

....,. lwws.

It MlrliOswlle ilnd fcir 11\e.a&amp;on

OBrruARIES

.IIIIIIM~DIAA
Burton's bid to 'Mn two in a'row .
foundered because the presence of •
· McDowell, making his Sprint Cup
but, between Burton and leader Denny Hamlin. "That ·oo· (McDowell's
number) is going to leam some mall-'
ners, or I'm going to teach him · :
si&gt;me; said Burton.

IDilll!l- Aellill1 Smitll, .00
111M 0 ct1Dfiniltl14th. it&gt;~ ID lhe post.race-re' port, 20 dilllreritidriVers were in-

de-:

.wl'llld to crasll!Js;and six_, In
more tllan one. "ft!t 41 of the 43

cefbere-atill rimi1g- a:tually,
· twO -!lit Of gas- at the end.

.. IW!e 'BusCh's Toyota suffered.
- ,_ flilure early, finis~ing 38th .
-and costi~11\e 22-year-old the

·points leid, wtiich fell to Burton,
.00 finiShed first and thir!l in the
\wO 8h011-llacl&lt; _raoes to date.
., Three Hendrick drivers - -Dale
.Earrihaflll Jt, (fourth 1, Gor!lon
(ninth) and Jimmie Johnson
(10th) .:.. are now in the top .10.
The same is true Of Joe Gibbs
~i~. :Mtlch .has Kyle Busch,
• 'TDf!Y Stewaf.t and Hamlin in fifth,
Sllth . and elehth. respectively. -

Denny Hamlin (abate and beloW) said his win Ill_Marlins'lille was the biCieSt of his ca.,.

.. ialtMiy,JI Will Wl!!lh ~for ·

. 'sure~ ' he lfid.

i"'i,

,_ -

I

• NASCAR .wan~&amp; ,parity -

it's
1he Wliale klea bel\ind the cur- •
rent w dleSign - and so far,
~'S gpt 11. The manufacturer
win&amp; so far are: Ford 2, Toyota
2;rehlwy 1, ilodlle 1. The manu'lacttnr points? Chevy 37, ToyOil! 35, foro 35 and Dodge 25.
.. Not onlj' did.Tony Stewart finl!lh fifth, bul 0111!1' the past week
he's had his hair cut- finally
-and tliS back waxed ... for
~ ~. 'To ral!le•Jt25,000. at.-

getting in the leaders' WWf when
.
you're not on the lead lap and 1hey'l8
trying to settle the outcome. He's · ;
not the first to h8YE! trouble adjust- ·
and he won1 be the laSt to
.:
learn:

'I

I

I

_. ...

-

MARTIN.SVILLE, Va. -Natives ,of
this co!)1Jllonwealth tmnntedlor their
loyalty and pFide, dating -back to the
country's birth. It thus came as no
sutprise when native Virginian Denny . Hamlin dubbed his victory iJI tHe
Goody's.Cool Orange 500 as the most
important of his career.
"This trac)l: has always been my Super Bow~" he said. "Now I guess you
could say it's probably Richmond."
Richmond, of course, is the other
Sprint Cup track located in Virginia.
"(Martinsville) is a track where I
have a lot of laps," Hamlin added.
"You just get around this place. You
learn niches and little things about it
that help."
·
Hamlin became the second Toyota
driver from the Joe Gibbs stable to
· win during the season's ftrSt six races.
All three - Hamlin, Kyle Busch alid
Thny'Stewart - are in the top eight of
the Cup standings.
The 27-year-old native of Chesterfield, Va., also held off Jeff Gordon,
which is significant since Gordon has
won seven times at the .526-mile

The 1atest victory was the fourth of
Hamlin's career. He has won in each
·''of his three seasons in Cup and was
the 2006 Raybestos Rookie. of ·the_
. :)!ea__r. ------'- -

:- _ - • .:_ _::-_- : ·.__:_

~It's _
ba!'d to be patient," said

track, NASCAR's smallest. The Hen- .
drick Motorsports drivers who dominated the 2007 season, Gordon and
Jimmie Johnson, both finished in the
top four, but the Hendrick super team
of Gordon, Johnson, Dale Earnhardt
Jr. and' Casey Mears still baan't won
this year.
·

_.....,

I FA N - j j p $
Most ,., nl1r IIIIo•

Native son Hamlin wins in his home state for the first time
'

By Monte Dut\011
NASCAR This Week

. Page AS
• Ewetta Bed\tle, 91

w.

• L.any McGtalh, 62
. • Carl T. Murdock, 87
• Roger 'T'hon¥Jaon, 58
• Kalal Jc¥» Ytager, ~

IIA5CAR Tllllw.k's Mollie
Duttan .,_ lllltlllll: "McDowell
was trying his best. but he's got to .
learn the aocepted standards of not - _

Photos ll'l CIA Stoct&lt; Photos

Hamlin. "When you get so close to winning.
so many races and-something bad happens or things just don't work out ...
it's toligh to maintain confidence.
Your self:esteem starts going down. It
takes its toll on you.''
A late problem - his No. 18 didn't
come up to speed - cost Hamlin a
possible victory at Bristol a week ear·
lier.
"(It) was just, like, how many times
do we have to go through this?" Hamlin said he asked himself.
For one more week, as it turned out.
AD inopportune pit stop dropped
Hamlin as fai back as 20th late in the
race. As a result, he was protecting
his lead on well-worn tires at the end.
"Frankly, I didn't want to have to
answer any more questions at the end
of the race," said Hamlin, "so I just
· went out and woo it."

-·i

-:

Want to vote for Chex Most I'Qp-,
ular Driver irt the Sprint Cup Series? It's easy, and you can do tt once a day. Go to www.mostpOpu- -·
lafllriver.com and follow the instruc·
lions. Last year Dale Earnhardt Jr.
;won the awafll for the fifth consecut!Ve~ar. receiving 1.4 miHioo gf \_h' 3 ;Blii~lion vot~§Cil§t----: , ..

-'

'

c.,..

.. - ....... .,art
a 'M jW IICII r d ' IJ
Almost weekly we hear that

NASCAR Is as great as ~ is because :
Of the fans. If so, I&gt;1T; doesn't
NASCAR respect us by fixing the
iousy practice and race COYefalle by : _
ABC and ESPN?
ESPN misses practices coml)let&amp;;
ly, and ABC misses restarts at races ·
con ~l stently. 'l'hese are vitally lmpor- ;
. tant ___
_.. Fox and NBC never hOO this
problem , and their commentators
are superior In experience and 1Jef·

INSIDE

" ' --wEAThER .
/ ·-\
.

•

e~ans1on
•

Dllllllllll II:C

Gunter, Iexas

Just out of curiosity: Jn wnar other
sport dpes TV prrNicJe cXwetage of
practice on a regula' basJs?

.

i'

;

Let's Go Racin!!

..

4 SECilONS - 114 P.,¥J1!8

'

:Around Town

A3

'Celebrations

C4

Classifieds

Editorials

..,. ...ling:
• Ford l llutQru •It ...,..
' • Engll-. Tran..., C•n• &amp; l'lanMIIalonl.
.
• A,..._tlill Rlpl..:•nent 8Nellllet8l&amp; Components
• For All" ,,.. of Vehlc:lll

·.-

~

c3

Obituaries

As
8 Section
A6

Weather

HOLZER 'CLINIC

A4

Movies

Sports

{740) 992-2155

03_5
insert

Comics

"S. ..;"' J ,_·1(./t·

r, t

~ · '~

-

·c -

~ v.-.,. ... 111 11• eo.

Jl(

II •

Sign
of
the
times·
.----_.;.,-----

begin

N~lYTRtBUHE. COM

........

._.. .
'

.·

-

·HolzerER
•

, .'

INDEX

111 Court St.
Pomeroy, OH

, RIO GRANDE - A
officer who
wilt work With the adminis- .
tration and boards of
trustees for the University
of Rio Grande and Rio
. Grande Community College
will have her ftrst meeting
on campus later this week.
Dr. "Barbara GellmanDanley was ·nominated by
Ohio Board- of Regents
Chancellor Eric Ftngerhut
last month to
serve as the
coordinating
officer,
a
po s it i on
Fin g erhut
proposed in
an
agreement
that
Dr. IIMbMa · ended a dispure between
the Rio Grande boards oyer
governance and affordability issues.
_ lfer.l!PR!iinJmJ;nt' has_~
'ii"".lrtt-1 J!I'I'J'Oved b-y-!l-re-uniyersity
Board alid receives approval
from the_community college
board in a special meeting
on April 2.
coordinatin~

_,

Read irwre from Monte Dutton at
www. ga.~tongazette.com

KKEL.lYOMYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

6!r

sonal~-

(

BY KEviN KDJ.y

GALLIPOLIS John Clayton
Jeffers showed oo emotion after being
sentenced ro life in prison by Judge D.
Dean Evans in Gallia County CoiiiDIQn
Pleas Court on Friday,
Jeffers, 34, of Southside, W.Va., was
convicted on one count of murder and
one count of theft of a motor vebicle in
cormection to the death of Larry R. Coil
aa the Island V.ew MCIW in Gallipolis
011 July 19, 2007.
At the time of his death, Cox bad been
living in Kissimmee,
. and was in
~lis
wort at

Cox
been ~ and
in the
Ironton/Ashland, Ky., area and had .
lived in this vicinity for much of his life.
A number of his family members were
present for Jeffers' trial and sentencing.
They remembered Cox as a bard-wort.
ing man that never knew a strangec. He
liked ro fish and bunt and attend Sunday
dinners wi~ his family. He was a son, a
brother, a father and a grandfather. He
was mere months from retirement when
be was killed and had bought a piece
land to live .out what he and his wife
• "'.......to,....,.,.
_ . ..........,
_
called their "golden yeatS."
"''I""~ VI~
husband Wali a___g__ood man, a
-:-- k:Jvt-loostl:al11er Skybus-··~t~~=~ saiiJ COx's Wife; -51Won.. Allllfm to shUt doWn. · I
people, he had a strong
work ethic; a handshake was as good as
See Page A6
your word. If you kriew my husband, for
• Study shows hi!ll
something like this to happc;n ro him is
levels of toxic chemical
just.uobelievable. I feel like I'm' living a
in residen1s' blood.
ni htlnare."
§I have ft ve brothers and two sisters,"
See Paige A2
said Cox's oldest sister, Phyllis Woods,
• Roller promoted
"and none ro give away to murder.
· US "' .:-UnfortunatelY, John Jeffers decided ro
n 1 • ...,./,......
m : · ,...r run.....
take one of my brothers. He has no
See Paige A3
remorse now, but one day he'll see ,my John Clayton Jeffers is led out of Gallia County Common Pleas Court following
his sentencing hearing Friday morning. Jeffers was ~nte(lced to life in prison
,.,............... A2
tor murder and 18 months for theft of a motor vehicle.

").

The Daily Sentinel

BY E'uZABEIII Rlaa
ERI~lYlliiBUNE.COM

GALLIPOUS - - James
R. Phillippe, president of
Holw Medical Center,
ant)CfUnced Friday the
e~sion and renovation of
lhCJi'l'lmeraency Department
(ED)atHMC.
.
.
• The expansion will add·
three additional treatment
rooms, and the renovation
will create additional space
for patie~t tr!age ~d ~­
\late reg~strallon, tn addition to converting some
existing treatment bays inro
private rooms.
. Lori Saunders, RN, MSN,
FNP, unit manager of the
Emergency Department
HMC conui:lentS;adding exua treatmtent
rooms, we are creating an
environment in which
patients will be able to get
mto
the
Emergency
Department at a much
quicker-rate.
PI I
I 'p liS: A2

I...

-

. IIRin KoiJ/.....

While the Raccoon Creek had not left ·its banks ·at VInton as of Saturday morning, officials were looking ahead and posting high water signs, such as this one on Ohio .325
'North .,Heavy rain late In ltle week prompted Gallla County Local Sthools to dismiss early
on Friday and people living in areas that historically flood were advised to watch creek
and stream levels.
'

.

111••-.,_,

Please see OHkier. A2

Rutland in
need of
fiscal officer
av am. Samoo ,

ae!'JlG_Q!Til&gt;-"ffilAilYSENJlNCL.COM

RUTLAND - The vil lage of Rutland, which has
seen its share of fi nancial
woes, is now in need of a
new fiscal officer and
water/sewer -clerk to at
least maintain the small
progress its made ·in digging out of debt.
.
Joyce Frye, who until
Saturday was both the vil lage's water/sewer clerk and
fiscal officer. resigned the
positions.
On March 22, Frye
resigned only her position
as water/sewer clerk after
accepting the part-time
position of mayor's court
clerk for Middleport. At that
time, Frye said this parttime position would allow
her to continue her duties as
fiscal officer in Rutland up
to 16 hours a week.
Frye was hired as fiscal
officer for around- I 0 hours
a week. She also said any
extensive - training she
received for mayor's court
clerk could be applied to the
mayor's cler( -position ' in
Rutland if the vi llage
wished to utilize it.
In a letter to Frye, Mayor
Lowen Vance said ~ e
PI ••-litllaRd,Al

�•

REGIONAL .

Rutland
Study shows high
levels of toxic chemical
.in residents' blood
CHARLESlON, W.Va. (AP) -

·"

PageA2

Thousands of West
Vuginia and Ohio residents have elevated levelS of a cbemical used to make ~ nonstick ooatiqg Teflon, according to
preliminary data from a study.
·
In 2005, DuPont agreed to fund health ~Dings for up
to 70,000 residents who cl•imed releases of the chemical
C8 from the .Washington Worts plant near Parkersburg bad
contaminated public arid private wells. .
Some studies estimate that ·90 peaoeot of U.S. residents
· have an average 5 parts per billion of C8 in their blood.
Data released last week involving about 24,000 residents in
CODUilunities around the plant show an average of 28 parts
per billion.
·
'"These folks are not like what you·find around America,"
said Alan Ducatman, a West Vuginia University researcher
and principal investigator for the C8 Health Project.
' An earlier study reviewed blood samples from 378 residents of tlle Little Hocking Water Association in
Washington County, Ohio.
.
·
DuPont has used C8 for more than SO yean in milking
nonstick and stain- and water-resistant coatings for cookware, c3rpets and other products. The U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency considers C8 a likely carcinogen.
DuPont plans to phase out use of C8 - ammonium perfluoroootanoate- by 2015.

Jeffers
fromPageAl

vehicle. Bodl sentences are
robe served consecutively.
''We inlaid to file an appeal
with the Founh Dislrict COurt
of ~s on 5DIIIe ~
Ull lSSUCS ibat we did not
feel were llddressed," said

week's council - - ·
Vance said , the ~·
handbook bad 110 •• iipfrom Pllge A1
lion of any 'Vii~ positiDa,
including fiscal officer. ·
Frye then resigned ber tiscouldn't accept the resignacal
officer's positioa in n:ply
tion as written because he
to
Vance's
coocems.ln a ld.felt she could not WM.for
the village as fiscal officlor ter to Vance and council
if she wasn' t available 'dur- IriCIIIbCrs. Frye said sbe has
~ standard houls of opec- boco ·wuting on W"drends
anon. Frye was in the office and evenings as fiscal officer.
as water/sewer clerk for 30 During Wednesday's council
hours a week. He alsO stat- 1111lC1ing, she also pointed out
ed the letter of resignation · fonner Fiscal Ollicu Susan
gave a two week notice but Baker ' wodred part-time in
PQC 43 of 1ihe employee the evenings. After dishandbook 'Said those in cussing t!le si~ ar
administrative positions Thunday's council meeting,
were required to give four Vance gave Frye an CJWIXIUnity to amend or
Ia
weeks notice.
However, at one of l~t resignation if sbe.would lie

mod

Sunday, April6, 2oo8
workiJig as fiscal
~.but frye drrli.....t
Bakec· who was · at
'llmsday:s IMJ"fing, said ~
OO!ld fill m as fjscal offica" m
die intnim, but sbe didn't
ha\e time to be any SDrt of
long-lam ck:d · Ill Rndsmd,
which was why sbe resignc.t
in die first place. Bam is also
used by die Slllle anrtin's
office 10 train new fisal offia:rs oo ,die accounting systern, wbich she also offered 10
do but Rutland will be footi~
10 ronrinue

dlebillfurdlat~Baker

or aJMIII!vw • of die ancfitnr's
"Wiiiilgii'Yn•:•••s"i_sused.
Frye was doing die jobs of
fiscal offia:r and watedsewl!l'
c1e1t fur $7_per hour. Council
didn't Sl31e what C)(lll'lensa-

Expansion
fromPageAl
"This will also allow
patients to have much more
priv.:y with the physician
and staff," she added "'ur
wait times are a direct result
of patient volume. When
patient roi&gt;ms are full,
patients are forced to wait
until a free room is available: By adding extra rooms,
wait times will decrease. as
long as our current volume
stays the same."
But what does all of this
ooostruclion really mean for

the patients of die Emergency
Depanment at HMC?
"'ur main priority is our
Eatients," PhillipJ?C said.
'Emergency situaUoos are
never easy on the patient or
their families, and by
din th d partme t
expan ~ e e
n
· eBDd makmg the nccesSl!l}'
changes to the bays, we
believe we will increase our
patient satisfaction and ultimately, allow patient care to
reach a higher level."
With the expansion of the
Emergency
Department
comes new software technology, as well.
·
HEC
(Horizon
Emergency Care) documentation is a new electronic

the natient's p~ysician, .
With writteii permission &lt;&gt;f
the patient Any p1qcnt
admitted ro a patient ' bed
within Holzer, can llave
dJeir chart ·'Viewed fur oecCss.y infonnatioo .ltr lbeir
physicians and nurses,. to
expedite patient CR,
Construction on the
Emergency R,oom. project
will begin next week, with a
completion date set for the
tint week of dctober.
For mon? infomllllion lHI
till! locations and the ser.vices provided by Holur
Health Systmis, pleast; .visit
its
website
al

um--

served 1M murder. He also
sentenced him to the maxi. mum sentence of 18 mooths
in prison for theft of a motor

Dem•es
from Page Al

im~o=toir~~~~b~u¥!t~.~wr~ :"'Z:::t~~~~ =~~~~te~j:~ ~ut
r:'~
Hughes was ~ ro' :r~:=~~~;":!~J-·":r:~ ~ =mew!~J ~ session prod~
two yean of oommunity con~
tro1 fur ber involvelnent in
the afclementioned crimes.

i,nto a new ·campus building
at Yellow Springs "akin ·m a
mini-village in one facility,"

nities, and continuing
efforts to expand services
here to include a 24-hour

90 percent ·o f patients who

emergency room.

The COIIIIty has received a
issue of rural health care has $6,000 grant to study modattracted the attention of the cis that combine emergency
news media. and that is pos- rooms with Federallr.Qualified Health Care facilitive · for. Meigs, County ities like the Family Health
Conumssaon~r
.M1c~ Care clinic in PomefC)y.
Davenport .swd. He S8!d tile · Davenport discussed tlie
aepresentauves of the coun- Community Improvement
tfs congressio~ dele!!a- Corpotation's purchase of
bOD met here Fnday to dis-. 13 acres just outside of
cuss how the federal gov- Pomeroy for . possible
emment can further ·assist development as a medical
efforts to provide emer- campus.
gency room care.
"We went out on a limb in
In a •oldio interview on the buying the property, but it
Seattle-based "Dave Ross ne:.Mct to be done, and it is
Show" Friday, Davenport a · perfect
location,"
addressed the unique health · Davenport said.
care rliieds of rum1 commu- · Aooordiqg to Davenport..

Hospital
from Page At .

patient," said Rick

Cuarop, chief

e~teaative

officer of lbe O'Bierless
Health Sisfem. "1bere is 110
indicatioo that she was ever
denied .medical care at any
time, for my Ieason. We
clelrly rejeCt any peaceptipn
·~~ever ~ed ~r care
·kl ·uus young woman.
· "Any implication that
O'BJeaess
MeU¥&gt;rial
H9JiP4tal or River JlOBe
Obllleuics and GyoecOIOS)'
involved in den~
Clre is definitely not true,

The story related that she
went back home and later
returned to the hospital,
where she lost her baby. She
was transferred to a
Columbus hospital wbere
she l;~ter died.
The . Washington Post
reported the identity of the
woman
described
by
Clinton. The woman idenUfied was a patient of ~ ~· ~policy
O' Bleness
Memorial IS to provade medically neeHospital and River Rose es~ ~ t:e'ardless of our
Obstretrics and Gynecology, pauents ability to pay for
affiliates of the O ' Bleness \.~ices. We .implo~ the
Health System in Athens.
Clinton campaign to unme"We reviewed the medical · diately ' desist from repeatand patient account records ing this stocy."

"We .are looking forward
worting· with her and we
hope .she will guide us

expected to add another
vistted the emergency physician to its staff and
room
at
Veterans outgrow its current locaMemorial Hospital before tion before the end of the
it closed in 200 I were non- year. It operates in space in
emergenc~
. ses.
·
the Medical Arts Building
· '"'bis p
a strain on it shares with physicians
the emergency room and the from O ' Bleness Health
hospital
operations," Services.
Davenport told Ross, "but
"We're only halfway
in interviews with local · · there," Davenport said. "We
people to find what aiaedicai don't have an emergency
services are needed most room in the county, and that,
here, they idenUfied an combined with the FQHC
CIJiel!ency room."
.
The county frrst applied
for FQHC funding in
2003, and was denied four
times before ·receiving
funding last fall. The clinic opened in December,
and Davenport said it is

,
of this

.......S.•••
==·
-

IIAnnc:Y

0rar A
My husband
and I have been manried fur
two years and are anxiously
awaiting the bidb of our
first child - a boy.
My side:; of the fanlily is
~ _c~ost:. My husband's
s1de 1s a different story. My
mother-in-law and I have
1101 spoken since the wedding. except for a heated
phone conversation a year
ago. Sbe ended thar phone
call by saying, ~I hope God
never blesses you with tbe
gift of a child. n
My husband has pleaded
with his mother to call aod
see bow I am. doing; but
there is no desire on lw
part. Based on her rude and
demeaning comments about
me, I assume she'd prefer
we divorce. Needless ro say,
1 do 1101 feel obli~ to Jet
her bav.e anything to do
with our son. If she cannot
accept me, how can she
acoept .something that is
growing inside me?
My husband claims he
supports me I00 percent,
but I fear that the first time
his mother throws one of
her fake pity-party crying
fits about seeing the baby,
1

•

.
·

~

~

brother's face eternally;
be'U have remorse then. I
only thank God I'm a Jeffers' ' ~):. James
HeQry of GallipoJis, followwww.holur.org.
Christian."
. die~.
Sharon Cox was given the
opportunity to speak in ~'The state IS plelsrd with
as
Gellman-Da,pley . ·through this vety difficult
Reoognizillg the financial
coun before Jeffers was the jury's ~ we think
'
lhlt
it
was
.tbe
right
VCl'dict
described
l:he
structure.
.
period,..
said
Dr.
Herman
concerns
faced by Rio
sentencec;!.
.She has been at Antioch Koby, tbe oommUnity col- Grande, Gellman-Danley
"What you did robbed us bued .on dlt evidence presented.
Mr.
Cox
was
brUtal-.
fnm
Page
AI
McGregor
for the last nine lege president
said she can relate to it in
of our future) what
ly
IIIUI'dered,
though
he
had
yean,
and
previously
"She
has
requested
a
great
her
experience at Antioch.
brought pain to our.
· y,"
worked as a faculty member deal of information and we
"While we are all sad- .
she said. "I hope every night . extended a friendly blod to
Mr.
Jeffers,"
said
Adkins.
In
an
inlroductory
letter
to
and
administrator
at
comhave
provided
it
to
her,
but
dened
by the difficulties facwben you go to sleep and
"We
are
pleased
with
the
~
officials,
Gellman-·
m11nity
colleges
in
it
wiif
require
her
to
personing
Antioch
College, their
every morning when. you
sentence
o1
the
oourt,
which
Danley
said
conflict
resoluOklahoma
and
N\lW
York.
ally
experience
die
situasitualion
is
not
unique," she
wake up, you see Larry's
Her tole at Rio Grande tioo," he added.
said. "Uberal arts instituface. You rewarded his act is dle·mnimum sentence for ~ina~ha!:!~ ~ has
will be to ·work "with bOth
Gellman-Danley
will tion~ are slruggling across
. of kindness towards you by IIIUI'der as well as for 1hel.t"
"I would like to thank of'1~~&gt;eSon,sed~~ institutions to improve the chair a · COOidinating com- the country and those dtat
· taking his life and taki~-'
Assistant
Prosecutor Eric
..........,.,.....
LlUUI\WUJ"
wo~king .
refationship mittee made up of represen- will succeed must be innovhim away from his family.'
Mulford,
Gallia
County's
tion,.
a
ndyes-handlingdisbetween
the
two
institutions tatives from lhe boards of ative and find a unique
One of Cox's brothen,
John, was also given an pro&amp;ecution staff, Delrdi.ve ~.....andanddi~~~ smd for wOitin~ for the coo- both institutions. The com- approaCh in serving learners.
. 8Boyer, Sgt. Matt '~!!UUUty .
·~~ ~ viabibty of both mittee's fint session will be
"This can be done with a
~ty to speak-i n COUI't. Sgt. ~~
Champlin
from
the
~
di~
tnsttw~lOtions."
She
will
also
Aprilll,
and
she
plans
to
be
very
collaborative, creative
What you did wasn't
Gallipolis
J&gt;olicie
uons.
she
said.
"We
always
,
~
ways
to
increase
on
campus
and
conduct
group
of faculty, staff and
right," he said. "If you had
· administrations. stretching
fought my brother like a Depiatmeni, Coroner Dan found die comnJOQ ground 1!f · ~s ' and decrease . meetings oo Fridays.
·
Wbitcley,
Deputy
Corooer
loq
ai
we
kept
our
foaism
·
ec1dtoes
for
both
instituUnder
the
agreement
their vision to a new dream,
man, 'he'd probably be the
Russell
Uptegrove,
Special
dlele.:nm."
'
·
lions.
to
eliminate
the
uniworked
out
by
Fmft:,C:~t
while respecting existing
one standing trial heR:
1
J\al:8t
Hanshaw
from
1be
Gellman-J?anley
~
~Vc:nity's
financial
debt
and
tbe
boards,
Ge
values,
shared 1ovemanoe
today. 1 bOpe you .Sutfet'in
. prison because you, aren't Oliio ·Bureau of Criminal dent of An~ Umversatt . &gt;1b·1hat end, and for her . Danley will be the coordi- and individuals, Gellmanand M~gor .m
~ello';' · otlle{"
· responsibilities, Dating officer for a year. The Danley added.
getting near · what you · lnv~~on
ldeldificltion,
Adam
Garber
.Spnngs,
~
siJte1'
Gdlman-Qanley
has agreement extended the curdeserve. Maybe the good
aDd
ICriilen
Slaper
from
the
ty
·
l
O
·
~ttnch
~U.:gel
a
·
~
numerous
d\)CIIrelit instructional services
Lord will give it-to you."
Gailia
County A~ General's office, famed liberal arts ~ IJ¥:IltS "'Dd tepOJtS to famil- contract between the uniProsecuting Attorney Jeff aod all of die other witness servillg ·traditional Wider• Wir.e herself with Rio versity and die community
college until I line 30, 2009.
· ·Adkins then asked dle court 'that testified · in this .case," graduate ~nu!ents ani1 now Grande'.s 'Situation.
facing closure.
· .
"We bave sent her self'lbal contract was to have
to impose the mujmum Adkins said.
Anlh_'ea. M. Hughes, 18, ~~ochsystem,:how· lltudi;es, ~· ~talogues expired this J~e ~· .and
sentence for eacb cllarle.
Judge D. Deans evans SOuthside, W.Va., was also ever, elUSts on seveml can1- .and milCh' .other informa- when both msutuuons
noted Jeffen' criminal histo- sentenced on Friday. ·She pusm; in New ~. itioft, 110 We believe sbe will ; reached an impasse in negory and lack of remorse had previously pled guilty to · . Ore~ and CalifODI!Ii and lie "Very delibenlte and thor- tiations over governance
before sen):encing him to life complicity to the theft of a Anttoch McGregor llm'CS ~ :about Rio Grande," and affordahility concerns,
in prison without the jlossi_
summoned
. .. bilit¥-of P.arole until a mini-

.:;_ iiWVl vr -f.s:~m-tiil •wen:

An ·opportunity to mend fences

documentation system, built automatiCally faxed din:ctly
specifically for use in an
emergency room setting.
ED physicians and nunes
will be entering patient data
at the patient bedside. Some
of the data. such as allergies
and medication history, will .
be s~ as historic data for
each patient, with only the
need to ~eview and confirm
on each return visit
Some other unique featores of this new HEC electionic system are the f3fl
that all prescriptions are
writteo
electronically
directly from the same system. A patient needing a
referral for follow•up care
can have his or her chart

'•

ANNIE'S 'MAILBOX

:

l,':;:,fd

.I

ARoUND TOWN

.6nblp li...·6tntiud

tioo Ia' ~ would
Mreive or if dley could find
one pelliOIIID do both jobs. At
1bis lime die village is looking foc applicants wid! experience on UAN, fund
accounting, Mlcrosolt Excel
or previous township or vii"
!age clerk CXIO ian:
The deadline for appliants to tum in resumes is
April' 14. Resnmes can be
turned in at the waterlsewer
office in Rutland.
·
· .Unnt a replacement can
be found. Vance will be in
lbe wak:dsewer office during regulilr bUsiness hours
to accept payments. No
members of council can
accept money from the public in that capacity.

Officer .

,I

,

·
- ' - ' - _ .

Roller promoted
in U.S. Air Force
. BELPRE- Richard (Brad) RoUer was recently promoted to lieutenant colonel in the U.S. Air Force.
· He is a 1988 graduate of Belpre High School and a 1992
graduate of the United States Air Foo:e Academy. He
'received his pilot wings at Columbus . Air Force Base,
.
Columbus, MISS.
Roller's service has inCluded flying the AWAC (E-3)
. Aircraft out of Saudi Arabia, Turkey, Germany, Nevada,
Vrrginia and South America.
While flying the C-21A Lea!jet, he flew out of Saudi
Arabia to Kuwait, Qatar, Bahrain and Oman. He is currently
.serving as assistant director of operntions of the 94th Aying
:Traini11g Squadron, at the United States Air Force Academy,
Colorado Springs, Colo. He and his wife, Nina, and daugh·
'ters, Sidney and Alexa, reside in Castle Rock, Colo.
· He is the son of Richard and Loretta Roller of Belpre and
the grandson of Charldene Hanning of Middlepoit.

-M t¥ County mlendar .

1

.
:
:

lnC will 0!\'e. Am I

making
lbe wrong decision? -

Eq•''iwc_.Sb
I
De. IO:.J I f 1· One of
the nice things aboul a nc:w

baby is it gi~ paoU!IS ~
grandpuaJts an cppodWuty
· to nneQd fences Your mother-iiHalf.' ;nmds lie a tough

~but~ .fOI:l..._.,Uidl her
With cuociliation m11e&lt;M cjf
~

'Sbe may respond m
kind. Don't bring up the
past W1ncn the baby is bom,
call and f,Y you'd like 10 let
bygooes be bygones and
invite ber to meet ber grand-

i*dlls diwn:al wbm I was
~ youo.g, and my 'f llbcl's
side of the family dido't
bave llllldl intaelt in~
ing lime with my l!iotln or
lile:
My Wber, now
doocased, bad a dangha
from his sooond ~ .
and 1 would love ro invire
her to my n:D:plion. Am I
abligatcd to invite the .m of
my fatber's family. whom· I
hardy bow? I don't w.mt to
~a feud.- Cwfa 1 II ill
li' ly Mlilkrs
.
Dmr c !aa:d; Are you
in touch with your falbcl-'s
l'amily'? If oot, you do not
have to include them.
However, if there is some
ainJact, it would be nice to
at least include gr.mdpareats, if there are any.
.
Dar;\= 'z· You reoendy
printed a ldtcr from ~B~
in Pboenix.,n a young rollege student who was barely
!iCillping by financially. You
offered a m1miw's of good
suggestioos. May I offer
some 1110re'!
1'be writer metlioned car
payments as one of ha
. major budget items. She
should consider 5elling ber
car and buying a m aper
one., 01" taking public tnmspol'talion. She also can mt

SOIL We're hoping me will
be civil enough to~ fresh.
If oot, you are perfucdy jusbfiod in staying away, but
please doo't keep Hubby
from bringing your son to
see Grandma. He obviously
still cares about Mom. and
· sbe will probably adore the
baby, although be must
promise that if she denigrates you to the dliJd, the
visits will end.
Dtar Annir· I'm a 27b~~ld female and have
with a wondelful guy
for five years. We are
engaged to be married in a
sni3lf ceremony (immediate
fanlily only) wid! a ·larger
reception after.
My problem is this: My. bact ber hours

next

ttt Thll ~ bod! redboe
lw tuilioo - m up -.x
limc.,'-.;tlidunigbl cuable bet
to put in extra ltouni • worK. ..
Sbe might .also ~ to
lw •1ma11Q!O\oyed boyfriend
that he get a papet" route. II
woo' t make bim rich, bul
even a few dolbrs liiiOUid d&lt;l
lbe .pair of' lbem 11 lot of
good. There's oo ~ be
couldn't get up early, nm a
papet" route :and ;;rill have :aiD
day to job-bunt -A.. .ill
8'
dl., N.D.
Dar Aaa: ~ :are
plenty of part-time, offhours, minimum-.,. jobs
av.ailable fur .&gt;IOIDeOIIe Wb&lt;!1
is serious about earning
extR cash while looking fur
~ employmem. 'l1wlk:s
fur the suggeslioos.
AluiW"s Jl•'llorar is writ,_ ., KdrJ' Milt I
Jf&amp;:q ~ . . . - fUn' of
A.. lc ' s
, . _ . 1'14 rw e r",_,.
Jllftfio•s Ill - • " ri'~ 11r wrire
w: Alulir"s .11-r"Dmz, r..o.
Box lllliJtl. f'tiorr, IL
titl611. To jiM _, ·""-1 "-i.e's Mm,....r,
. . , -.4/ 'rztfi .,. tlfltu
0 r""' Sy: 5 «e wriR!rs
.., ~ flirit •
Crallln SJ'"Err'e Web

-« _.

*

semes

.,_.a r u -

f1111t:e •

Gallia County calendar
Community
.

even~

GAlLIPOLIS - Gallia
County
Rural
Water
Association Inc. regular
meeting,
7:30
p.m.
Resheduled fromApril8 due
1D a S&lt;"hednting,cooflict. ror
infonnalion, call 446-9221.
Apriln

ner meeti~ at the ~y
Inn at6:30 p.m. Future plans
will be disaassc:d COIIIXI1Iiiig
some of the needs within the

left hip :and

'llmday, April8
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia
County Dis(rict Library
Card
at the Rutland Fire Station. Board of Trustees regular
monthly
meeting,
5
p.m.,
POMEROY - Salisbury
POst 161 GAUJPOUS-Mr.and
Township Trustees, 6:30 Bossard Memorial Library.
ThUrsday, April tO
will meet at 7:30 p.m. in Mrs. Okey Martin will oelep.m. at the town haiL
GAlLIPOLIS - Gallia Ewiogton Academy. New brate their 60th wedding
Tuesday, April8
Suaday, April6
County
Cattleman
POMEROY - B!.ldford Association and OSU officers will be installed and anniversary on April 9.
RACINE - Racine OES
'practice for inspection, 2 Township Trustees, 7 p.~. Extensioo will be hosting a plans developed for future Canis an be sent to tbem at
events. All members are 1149
Bulaville
Pike,
'p.m. Officen and pages to at the townhouse.
Pasture
Restoration
semiurged
to
att£nd
and
enjoy
Gallipolis,
Obio
45631.
CHESTER - Chester
·attend.
GAUJPOUS -The Rev.
Township Trustees regular nar, 6:30 p.m., at the C.H. the fellowship afterwards.
. Monday, April 7
McKenzi~
A~cultural
,
Mr-Iay,
April
211
Bob
Addis, wbO was reoov. POMEROY
-Meigs monthly meeting, 7 p.m.,
c;enter.
Dinner
will
be
pro·
GAILIPOIJS
Knigbts
·
cring
from a broken right b_i{l,
'County Cancer Initiative, town hall.
of Columbus will have -din-· reoendy fell and broke his
SYRACU~E Sutton v1ded.
regular meeting, noon, conGALLIPOLIS - Gallia
·
ference
room,
'Senior Township Trustees, 7 p.m. County Retired Teaclnen ·
::oiiliO;~iiii:;:i:iili;OJiiiE::iiiiiiOilliE:ii,.....iE:IiiliOii!""""..,..::iliili""""'"""""""'
Syracuse Village hall.
Citizens Center.
Association's Aprillunc:beOO,
POMEROY Meigs 11000, Courtside Grill, 308
RACINE - Racine OES
County
Board
of
Elections,
inspection ·of officen, 7:30
Second Ave. Kristy Woodall
8:30 a.m. ar the office
p.m. Refreshments.
will speak: on 8Sp"'dS of the
. POMEROY - · Meigs
• Qildren's lea
RSVP Program. Make n:sel'High School Band Boosten,
even~
vations by calling Louis
• Sbowers
• S •IJOO!II Eveuts
6 p.m. in the bandroom. ·
Greenlee at 245-5029.
All sem., at:CftSories fi"Jritlerllritlf• 11tk rtNI
Thesday, April.IS
~ne~C1
Monday, April7
~\
Ta llarite5s: Law ' • 'g s
~
SALEM CENTER -TB
GALUPOLIS - Giillia
Aftn-5:tl
·,
Clinic at Star Grange Hall, County Veterans Service
Monday, April 7
5-6 . p.m., for skin testing. Commission will meet at 4
.
7~3714
....:Jl~TL.o\_ND -. Rut~~f:l! -5-6 W~ne~a}'-:f~ -12:-111. aHhe-V~ru-am ScrviceQl'fi~· fH!2J~Ei,{nJ Pike, ·
Township nuscees. 4 p.m. - th~liliu; ~~lli,

,., tsy,

Clubs and
organb.ations

~dei:

IJ'Irib~UU.coa

shower

A=~on

JOIJB. Jlllil iteas Ill 1125
lJrinl Are., G-"ijrlis, otio

45611.

A•IIOIUKalirlllS

.ay , _ 6e o6• 1; rll olf Ill
•~oJJice-

-----

a' ' . - yru tu:llf9o Iiiii
• 10.-mlil.---........
•'OMDm_'SWif!lgl -,.......... ~!

• .......

Other

Pubuc m

the agreement, approved
after .the univenity board
made revisions.

Some
of ultimate
Ross's goal."
urban
clinic
is our
Seattle-area listeners were ·
curious that people here
would choose to live in an
area wbere emergency
health care is 30 miles
froin home.
"I say tbat's crazy,"
Davenport · said. "You
should be able to choose to
live anywhere in this coonb)' and be assured of ER
services in every county."

li~~~~~§~~~~~

Breast ·Health Services
"I'm y01'ng and lu.lve no family history of breast caneer."
A week after Pamela .Burns of Logan stopped breastfeeding the youngest
of her three children, she discovered a marble-sired lump in her breast.
The ,worried 30-year-old immediately consulted her doctor, Michael
Clark, DO, at River Ro5e Obstetrics and Gynecology.

After J"!er surgeries, Pamela began an individualized regimen of
radiation therapy with Aaron Williams; MD, at the Athens Cancer
Center in the Castrop Cenrer. She also had chemotherapv and
continues taking a medication used for aggressive forms of cancer.

An ultrasound indicated the lump was a cyst. A mammogram performed

"Everyone took S1Kh good care of me. When I went to the
Qmcer Center, it was like goin,g to visit a friend. When I had
my mammograms, ·t~ woman who did them always f'emembered
me, ewn if l hadn't been in for" a while.

at O'Bleness Memorial Hospital's mammography suite in the Castrop
Center also showed characteristics of a cyst. Dr. Clark sent Pamela to
surgeon.Nei\1 Nesbitt, MD. After attempts were made to dr~in the cyst,
' Dr. Nesbitt decided to perform a lumpecmmy. The
lump tested positive for cancer and Dr. Nesbitt
performed · · o additional surgeries at the
Athens
rgery Center in the Castrop
Cente and O'Bleness Memorial Hospital's
Ou atiem Surgery Center.

"Many people thought-I
s~ go to Columbus for
my care. HI tell thon~y go aU the way to
\
Colamabu5 when there is
good care nearby!"
)

Ask,_..,. ••anerllh
......

.

.

,..,

O'BLENESS
'~
HEALTH SYSTEM

Pile

.

ss Hosptall Ol'iYe. "rtwn" Ohio 4S701 .

www.OblenessHealthSystem.org
'

'

Ftu

--""Ill~

iJ'ea Witli ry-ou

"l mscooen~d l was ~aling with
s e Ill cancer. Although it was
· htming, I found the people at
'Bleftess to be ...ery knowledgeable."

'

Glnis

can be sent to him at 008 Foil
Duquesne Drive, Sun City
Onrcr, Fla. 33573-5156..
E-.il ,...••.., mlaloommunity. All members m:
.,._,,.~urged to~

-

I

�•

REGIONAL .

Rutland
Study shows high
levels of toxic chemical
.in residents' blood
CHARLESlON, W.Va. (AP) -

·"

PageA2

Thousands of West
Vuginia and Ohio residents have elevated levelS of a cbemical used to make ~ nonstick ooatiqg Teflon, according to
preliminary data from a study.
·
In 2005, DuPont agreed to fund health ~Dings for up
to 70,000 residents who cl•imed releases of the chemical
C8 from the .Washington Worts plant near Parkersburg bad
contaminated public arid private wells. .
Some studies estimate that ·90 peaoeot of U.S. residents
· have an average 5 parts per billion of C8 in their blood.
Data released last week involving about 24,000 residents in
CODUilunities around the plant show an average of 28 parts
per billion.
·
'"These folks are not like what you·find around America,"
said Alan Ducatman, a West Vuginia University researcher
and principal investigator for the C8 Health Project.
' An earlier study reviewed blood samples from 378 residents of tlle Little Hocking Water Association in
Washington County, Ohio.
.
·
DuPont has used C8 for more than SO yean in milking
nonstick and stain- and water-resistant coatings for cookware, c3rpets and other products. The U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency considers C8 a likely carcinogen.
DuPont plans to phase out use of C8 - ammonium perfluoroootanoate- by 2015.

Jeffers
fromPageAl

vehicle. Bodl sentences are
robe served consecutively.
''We inlaid to file an appeal
with the Founh Dislrict COurt
of ~s on 5DIIIe ~
Ull lSSUCS ibat we did not
feel were llddressed," said

week's council - - ·
Vance said , the ~·
handbook bad 110 •• iipfrom Pllge A1
lion of any 'Vii~ positiDa,
including fiscal officer. ·
Frye then resigned ber tiscouldn't accept the resignacal
officer's positioa in n:ply
tion as written because he
to
Vance's
coocems.ln a ld.felt she could not WM.for
the village as fiscal officlor ter to Vance and council
if she wasn' t available 'dur- IriCIIIbCrs. Frye said sbe has
~ standard houls of opec- boco ·wuting on W"drends
anon. Frye was in the office and evenings as fiscal officer.
as water/sewer clerk for 30 During Wednesday's council
hours a week. He alsO stat- 1111lC1ing, she also pointed out
ed the letter of resignation · fonner Fiscal Ollicu Susan
gave a two week notice but Baker ' wodred part-time in
PQC 43 of 1ihe employee the evenings. After dishandbook 'Said those in cussing t!le si~ ar
administrative positions Thunday's council meeting,
were required to give four Vance gave Frye an CJWIXIUnity to amend or
Ia
weeks notice.
However, at one of l~t resignation if sbe.would lie

mod

Sunday, April6, 2oo8
workiJig as fiscal
~.but frye drrli.....t
Bakec· who was · at
'llmsday:s IMJ"fing, said ~
OO!ld fill m as fjscal offica" m
die intnim, but sbe didn't
ha\e time to be any SDrt of
long-lam ck:d · Ill Rndsmd,
which was why sbe resignc.t
in die first place. Bam is also
used by die Slllle anrtin's
office 10 train new fisal offia:rs oo ,die accounting systern, wbich she also offered 10
do but Rutland will be footi~
10 ronrinue

dlebillfurdlat~Baker

or aJMIII!vw • of die ancfitnr's
"Wiiiilgii'Yn•:•••s"i_sused.
Frye was doing die jobs of
fiscal offia:r and watedsewl!l'
c1e1t fur $7_per hour. Council
didn't Sl31e what C)(lll'lensa-

Expansion
fromPageAl
"This will also allow
patients to have much more
priv.:y with the physician
and staff," she added "'ur
wait times are a direct result
of patient volume. When
patient roi&gt;ms are full,
patients are forced to wait
until a free room is available: By adding extra rooms,
wait times will decrease. as
long as our current volume
stays the same."
But what does all of this
ooostruclion really mean for

the patients of die Emergency
Depanment at HMC?
"'ur main priority is our
Eatients," PhillipJ?C said.
'Emergency situaUoos are
never easy on the patient or
their families, and by
din th d partme t
expan ~ e e
n
· eBDd makmg the nccesSl!l}'
changes to the bays, we
believe we will increase our
patient satisfaction and ultimately, allow patient care to
reach a higher level."
With the expansion of the
Emergency
Department
comes new software technology, as well.
·
HEC
(Horizon
Emergency Care) documentation is a new electronic

the natient's p~ysician, .
With writteii permission &lt;&gt;f
the patient Any p1qcnt
admitted ro a patient ' bed
within Holzer, can llave
dJeir chart ·'Viewed fur oecCss.y infonnatioo .ltr lbeir
physicians and nurses,. to
expedite patient CR,
Construction on the
Emergency R,oom. project
will begin next week, with a
completion date set for the
tint week of dctober.
For mon? infomllllion lHI
till! locations and the ser.vices provided by Holur
Health Systmis, pleast; .visit
its
website
al

um--

served 1M murder. He also
sentenced him to the maxi. mum sentence of 18 mooths
in prison for theft of a motor

Dem•es
from Page Al

im~o=toir~~~~b~u¥!t~.~wr~ :"'Z:::t~~~~ =~~~~te~j:~ ~ut
r:'~
Hughes was ~ ro' :r~:=~~~;":!~J-·":r:~ ~ =mew!~J ~ session prod~
two yean of oommunity con~
tro1 fur ber involvelnent in
the afclementioned crimes.

i,nto a new ·campus building
at Yellow Springs "akin ·m a
mini-village in one facility,"

nities, and continuing
efforts to expand services
here to include a 24-hour

90 percent ·o f patients who

emergency room.

The COIIIIty has received a
issue of rural health care has $6,000 grant to study modattracted the attention of the cis that combine emergency
news media. and that is pos- rooms with Federallr.Qualified Health Care facilitive · for. Meigs, County ities like the Family Health
Conumssaon~r
.M1c~ Care clinic in PomefC)y.
Davenport .swd. He S8!d tile · Davenport discussed tlie
aepresentauves of the coun- Community Improvement
tfs congressio~ dele!!a- Corpotation's purchase of
bOD met here Fnday to dis-. 13 acres just outside of
cuss how the federal gov- Pomeroy for . possible
emment can further ·assist development as a medical
efforts to provide emer- campus.
gency room care.
"We went out on a limb in
In a •oldio interview on the buying the property, but it
Seattle-based "Dave Ross ne:.Mct to be done, and it is
Show" Friday, Davenport a · perfect
location,"
addressed the unique health · Davenport said.
care rliieds of rum1 commu- · Aooordiqg to Davenport..

Hospital
from Page At .

patient," said Rick

Cuarop, chief

e~teaative

officer of lbe O'Bierless
Health Sisfem. "1bere is 110
indicatioo that she was ever
denied .medical care at any
time, for my Ieason. We
clelrly rejeCt any peaceptipn
·~~ever ~ed ~r care
·kl ·uus young woman.
· "Any implication that
O'BJeaess
MeU¥&gt;rial
H9JiP4tal or River JlOBe
Obllleuics and GyoecOIOS)'
involved in den~
Clre is definitely not true,

The story related that she
went back home and later
returned to the hospital,
where she lost her baby. She
was transferred to a
Columbus hospital wbere
she l;~ter died.
The . Washington Post
reported the identity of the
woman
described
by
Clinton. The woman idenUfied was a patient of ~ ~· ~policy
O' Bleness
Memorial IS to provade medically neeHospital and River Rose es~ ~ t:e'ardless of our
Obstretrics and Gynecology, pauents ability to pay for
affiliates of the O ' Bleness \.~ices. We .implo~ the
Health System in Athens.
Clinton campaign to unme"We reviewed the medical · diately ' desist from repeatand patient account records ing this stocy."

"We .are looking forward
worting· with her and we
hope .she will guide us

expected to add another
vistted the emergency physician to its staff and
room
at
Veterans outgrow its current locaMemorial Hospital before tion before the end of the
it closed in 200 I were non- year. It operates in space in
emergenc~
. ses.
·
the Medical Arts Building
· '"'bis p
a strain on it shares with physicians
the emergency room and the from O ' Bleness Health
hospital
operations," Services.
Davenport told Ross, "but
"We're only halfway
in interviews with local · · there," Davenport said. "We
people to find what aiaedicai don't have an emergency
services are needed most room in the county, and that,
here, they idenUfied an combined with the FQHC
CIJiel!ency room."
.
The county frrst applied
for FQHC funding in
2003, and was denied four
times before ·receiving
funding last fall. The clinic opened in December,
and Davenport said it is

,
of this

.......S.•••
==·
-

IIAnnc:Y

0rar A
My husband
and I have been manried fur
two years and are anxiously
awaiting the bidb of our
first child - a boy.
My side:; of the fanlily is
~ _c~ost:. My husband's
s1de 1s a different story. My
mother-in-law and I have
1101 spoken since the wedding. except for a heated
phone conversation a year
ago. Sbe ended thar phone
call by saying, ~I hope God
never blesses you with tbe
gift of a child. n
My husband has pleaded
with his mother to call aod
see bow I am. doing; but
there is no desire on lw
part. Based on her rude and
demeaning comments about
me, I assume she'd prefer
we divorce. Needless ro say,
1 do 1101 feel obli~ to Jet
her bav.e anything to do
with our son. If she cannot
accept me, how can she
acoept .something that is
growing inside me?
My husband claims he
supports me I00 percent,
but I fear that the first time
his mother throws one of
her fake pity-party crying
fits about seeing the baby,
1

•

.
·

~

~

brother's face eternally;
be'U have remorse then. I
only thank God I'm a Jeffers' ' ~):. James
HeQry of GallipoJis, followwww.holur.org.
Christian."
. die~.
Sharon Cox was given the
opportunity to speak in ~'The state IS plelsrd with
as
Gellman-Da,pley . ·through this vety difficult
Reoognizillg the financial
coun before Jeffers was the jury's ~ we think
'
lhlt
it
was
.tbe
right
VCl'dict
described
l:he
structure.
.
period,..
said
Dr.
Herman
concerns
faced by Rio
sentencec;!.
.She has been at Antioch Koby, tbe oommUnity col- Grande, Gellman-Danley
"What you did robbed us bued .on dlt evidence presented.
Mr.
Cox
was
brUtal-.
fnm
Page
AI
McGregor
for the last nine lege president
said she can relate to it in
of our future) what
ly
IIIUI'dered,
though
he
had
yean,
and
previously
"She
has
requested
a
great
her
experience at Antioch.
brought pain to our.
· y,"
worked as a faculty member deal of information and we
"While we are all sad- .
she said. "I hope every night . extended a friendly blod to
Mr.
Jeffers,"
said
Adkins.
In
an
inlroductory
letter
to
and
administrator
at
comhave
provided
it
to
her,
but
dened
by the difficulties facwben you go to sleep and
"We
are
pleased
with
the
~
officials,
Gellman-·
m11nity
colleges
in
it
wiif
require
her
to
personing
Antioch
College, their
every morning when. you
sentence
o1
the
oourt,
which
Danley
said
conflict
resoluOklahoma
and
N\lW
York.
ally
experience
die
situasitualion
is
not
unique," she
wake up, you see Larry's
Her tole at Rio Grande tioo," he added.
said. "Uberal arts instituface. You rewarded his act is dle·mnimum sentence for ~ina~ha!:!~ ~ has
will be to ·work "with bOth
Gellman-Danley
will tion~ are slruggling across
. of kindness towards you by IIIUI'der as well as for 1hel.t"
"I would like to thank of'1~~&gt;eSon,sed~~ institutions to improve the chair a · COOidinating com- the country and those dtat
· taking his life and taki~-'
Assistant
Prosecutor Eric
..........,.,.....
LlUUI\WUJ"
wo~king .
refationship mittee made up of represen- will succeed must be innovhim away from his family.'
Mulford,
Gallia
County's
tion,.
a
ndyes-handlingdisbetween
the
two
institutions tatives from lhe boards of ative and find a unique
One of Cox's brothen,
John, was also given an pro&amp;ecution staff, Delrdi.ve ~.....andanddi~~~ smd for wOitin~ for the coo- both institutions. The com- approaCh in serving learners.
. 8Boyer, Sgt. Matt '~!!UUUty .
·~~ ~ viabibty of both mittee's fint session will be
"This can be done with a
~ty to speak-i n COUI't. Sgt. ~~
Champlin
from
the
~
di~
tnsttw~lOtions."
She
will
also
Aprilll,
and
she
plans
to
be
very
collaborative, creative
What you did wasn't
Gallipolis
J&gt;olicie
uons.
she
said.
"We
always
,
~
ways
to
increase
on
campus
and
conduct
group
of faculty, staff and
right," he said. "If you had
· administrations. stretching
fought my brother like a Depiatmeni, Coroner Dan found die comnJOQ ground 1!f · ~s ' and decrease . meetings oo Fridays.
·
Wbitcley,
Deputy
Corooer
loq
ai
we
kept
our
foaism
·
ec1dtoes
for
both
instituUnder
the
agreement
their vision to a new dream,
man, 'he'd probably be the
Russell
Uptegrove,
Special
dlele.:nm."
'
·
lions.
to
eliminate
the
uniworked
out
by
Fmft:,C:~t
while respecting existing
one standing trial heR:
1
J\al:8t
Hanshaw
from
1be
Gellman-J?anley
~
~Vc:nity's
financial
debt
and
tbe
boards,
Ge
values,
shared 1ovemanoe
today. 1 bOpe you .Sutfet'in
. prison because you, aren't Oliio ·Bureau of Criminal dent of An~ Umversatt . &gt;1b·1hat end, and for her . Danley will be the coordi- and individuals, Gellmanand M~gor .m
~ello';' · otlle{"
· responsibilities, Dating officer for a year. The Danley added.
getting near · what you · lnv~~on
ldeldificltion,
Adam
Garber
.Spnngs,
~
siJte1'
Gdlman-Qanley
has agreement extended the curdeserve. Maybe the good
aDd
ICriilen
Slaper
from
the
ty
·
l
O
·
~ttnch
~U.:gel
a
·
~
numerous
d\)CIIrelit instructional services
Lord will give it-to you."
Gailia
County A~ General's office, famed liberal arts ~ IJ¥:IltS "'Dd tepOJtS to famil- contract between the uniProsecuting Attorney Jeff aod all of die other witness servillg ·traditional Wider• Wir.e herself with Rio versity and die community
college until I line 30, 2009.
· ·Adkins then asked dle court 'that testified · in this .case," graduate ~nu!ents ani1 now Grande'.s 'Situation.
facing closure.
· .
"We bave sent her self'lbal contract was to have
to impose the mujmum Adkins said.
Anlh_'ea. M. Hughes, 18, ~~ochsystem,:how· lltudi;es, ~· ~talogues expired this J~e ~· .and
sentence for eacb cllarle.
Judge D. Deans evans SOuthside, W.Va., was also ever, elUSts on seveml can1- .and milCh' .other informa- when both msutuuons
noted Jeffen' criminal histo- sentenced on Friday. ·She pusm; in New ~. itioft, 110 We believe sbe will ; reached an impasse in negory and lack of remorse had previously pled guilty to · . Ore~ and CalifODI!Ii and lie "Very delibenlte and thor- tiations over governance
before sen):encing him to life complicity to the theft of a Anttoch McGregor llm'CS ~ :about Rio Grande," and affordahility concerns,
in prison without the jlossi_
summoned
. .. bilit¥-of P.arole until a mini-

.:;_ iiWVl vr -f.s:~m-tiil •wen:

An ·opportunity to mend fences

documentation system, built automatiCally faxed din:ctly
specifically for use in an
emergency room setting.
ED physicians and nunes
will be entering patient data
at the patient bedside. Some
of the data. such as allergies
and medication history, will .
be s~ as historic data for
each patient, with only the
need to ~eview and confirm
on each return visit
Some other unique featores of this new HEC electionic system are the f3fl
that all prescriptions are
writteo
electronically
directly from the same system. A patient needing a
referral for follow•up care
can have his or her chart

'•

ANNIE'S 'MAILBOX

:

l,':;:,fd

.I

ARoUND TOWN

.6nblp li...·6tntiud

tioo Ia' ~ would
Mreive or if dley could find
one pelliOIIID do both jobs. At
1bis lime die village is looking foc applicants wid! experience on UAN, fund
accounting, Mlcrosolt Excel
or previous township or vii"
!age clerk CXIO ian:
The deadline for appliants to tum in resumes is
April' 14. Resnmes can be
turned in at the waterlsewer
office in Rutland.
·
· .Unnt a replacement can
be found. Vance will be in
lbe wak:dsewer office during regulilr bUsiness hours
to accept payments. No
members of council can
accept money from the public in that capacity.

Officer .

,I

,

·
- ' - ' - _ .

Roller promoted
in U.S. Air Force
. BELPRE- Richard (Brad) RoUer was recently promoted to lieutenant colonel in the U.S. Air Force.
· He is a 1988 graduate of Belpre High School and a 1992
graduate of the United States Air Foo:e Academy. He
'received his pilot wings at Columbus . Air Force Base,
.
Columbus, MISS.
Roller's service has inCluded flying the AWAC (E-3)
. Aircraft out of Saudi Arabia, Turkey, Germany, Nevada,
Vrrginia and South America.
While flying the C-21A Lea!jet, he flew out of Saudi
Arabia to Kuwait, Qatar, Bahrain and Oman. He is currently
.serving as assistant director of operntions of the 94th Aying
:Traini11g Squadron, at the United States Air Force Academy,
Colorado Springs, Colo. He and his wife, Nina, and daugh·
'ters, Sidney and Alexa, reside in Castle Rock, Colo.
· He is the son of Richard and Loretta Roller of Belpre and
the grandson of Charldene Hanning of Middlepoit.

-M t¥ County mlendar .

1

.
:
:

lnC will 0!\'e. Am I

making
lbe wrong decision? -

Eq•''iwc_.Sb
I
De. IO:.J I f 1· One of
the nice things aboul a nc:w

baby is it gi~ paoU!IS ~
grandpuaJts an cppodWuty
· to nneQd fences Your mother-iiHalf.' ;nmds lie a tough

~but~ .fOI:l..._.,Uidl her
With cuociliation m11e&lt;M cjf
~

'Sbe may respond m
kind. Don't bring up the
past W1ncn the baby is bom,
call and f,Y you'd like 10 let
bygooes be bygones and
invite ber to meet ber grand-

i*dlls diwn:al wbm I was
~ youo.g, and my 'f llbcl's
side of the family dido't
bave llllldl intaelt in~
ing lime with my l!iotln or
lile:
My Wber, now
doocased, bad a dangha
from his sooond ~ .
and 1 would love ro invire
her to my n:D:plion. Am I
abligatcd to invite the .m of
my fatber's family. whom· I
hardy bow? I don't w.mt to
~a feud.- Cwfa 1 II ill
li' ly Mlilkrs
.
Dmr c !aa:d; Are you
in touch with your falbcl-'s
l'amily'? If oot, you do not
have to include them.
However, if there is some
ainJact, it would be nice to
at least include gr.mdpareats, if there are any.
.
Dar;\= 'z· You reoendy
printed a ldtcr from ~B~
in Pboenix.,n a young rollege student who was barely
!iCillping by financially. You
offered a m1miw's of good
suggestioos. May I offer
some 1110re'!
1'be writer metlioned car
payments as one of ha
. major budget items. She
should consider 5elling ber
car and buying a m aper
one., 01" taking public tnmspol'talion. She also can mt

SOIL We're hoping me will
be civil enough to~ fresh.
If oot, you are perfucdy jusbfiod in staying away, but
please doo't keep Hubby
from bringing your son to
see Grandma. He obviously
still cares about Mom. and
· sbe will probably adore the
baby, although be must
promise that if she denigrates you to the dliJd, the
visits will end.
Dtar Annir· I'm a 27b~~ld female and have
with a wondelful guy
for five years. We are
engaged to be married in a
sni3lf ceremony (immediate
fanlily only) wid! a ·larger
reception after.
My problem is this: My. bact ber hours

next

ttt Thll ~ bod! redboe
lw tuilioo - m up -.x
limc.,'-.;tlidunigbl cuable bet
to put in extra ltouni • worK. ..
Sbe might .also ~ to
lw •1ma11Q!O\oyed boyfriend
that he get a papet" route. II
woo' t make bim rich, bul
even a few dolbrs liiiOUid d&lt;l
lbe .pair of' lbem 11 lot of
good. There's oo ~ be
couldn't get up early, nm a
papet" route :and ;;rill have :aiD
day to job-bunt -A.. .ill
8'
dl., N.D.
Dar Aaa: ~ :are
plenty of part-time, offhours, minimum-.,. jobs
av.ailable fur .&gt;IOIDeOIIe Wb&lt;!1
is serious about earning
extR cash while looking fur
~ employmem. 'l1wlk:s
fur the suggeslioos.
AluiW"s Jl•'llorar is writ,_ ., KdrJ' Milt I
Jf&amp;:q ~ . . . - fUn' of
A.. lc ' s
, . _ . 1'14 rw e r",_,.
Jllftfio•s Ill - • " ri'~ 11r wrire
w: Alulir"s .11-r"Dmz, r..o.
Box lllliJtl. f'tiorr, IL
titl611. To jiM _, ·""-1 "-i.e's Mm,....r,
. . , -.4/ 'rztfi .,. tlfltu
0 r""' Sy: 5 «e wriR!rs
.., ~ flirit •
Crallln SJ'"Err'e Web

-« _.

*

semes

.,_.a r u -

f1111t:e •

Gallia County calendar
Community
.

even~

GAlLIPOLIS - Gallia
County
Rural
Water
Association Inc. regular
meeting,
7:30
p.m.
Resheduled fromApril8 due
1D a S&lt;"hednting,cooflict. ror
infonnalion, call 446-9221.
Apriln

ner meeti~ at the ~y
Inn at6:30 p.m. Future plans
will be disaassc:d COIIIXI1Iiiig
some of the needs within the

left hip :and

'llmday, April8
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia
County Dis(rict Library
Card
at the Rutland Fire Station. Board of Trustees regular
monthly
meeting,
5
p.m.,
POMEROY - Salisbury
POst 161 GAUJPOUS-Mr.and
Township Trustees, 6:30 Bossard Memorial Library.
ThUrsday, April tO
will meet at 7:30 p.m. in Mrs. Okey Martin will oelep.m. at the town haiL
GAlLIPOLIS - Gallia Ewiogton Academy. New brate their 60th wedding
Tuesday, April8
Suaday, April6
County
Cattleman
POMEROY - B!.ldford Association and OSU officers will be installed and anniversary on April 9.
RACINE - Racine OES
'practice for inspection, 2 Township Trustees, 7 p.~. Extensioo will be hosting a plans developed for future Canis an be sent to tbem at
events. All members are 1149
Bulaville
Pike,
'p.m. Officen and pages to at the townhouse.
Pasture
Restoration
semiurged
to
att£nd
and
enjoy
Gallipolis,
Obio
45631.
CHESTER - Chester
·attend.
GAUJPOUS -The Rev.
Township Trustees regular nar, 6:30 p.m., at the C.H. the fellowship afterwards.
. Monday, April 7
McKenzi~
A~cultural
,
Mr-Iay,
April
211
Bob
Addis, wbO was reoov. POMEROY
-Meigs monthly meeting, 7 p.m.,
c;enter.
Dinner
will
be
pro·
GAILIPOIJS
Knigbts
·
cring
from a broken right b_i{l,
'County Cancer Initiative, town hall.
of Columbus will have -din-· reoendy fell and broke his
SYRACU~E Sutton v1ded.
regular meeting, noon, conGALLIPOLIS - Gallia
·
ference
room,
'Senior Township Trustees, 7 p.m. County Retired Teaclnen ·
::oiiliO;~iiii:;:i:iili;OJiiiE::iiiiiiOilliE:ii,.....iE:IiiliOii!""""..,..::iliili""""'"""""""'
Syracuse Village hall.
Citizens Center.
Association's Aprillunc:beOO,
POMEROY Meigs 11000, Courtside Grill, 308
RACINE - Racine OES
County
Board
of
Elections,
inspection ·of officen, 7:30
Second Ave. Kristy Woodall
8:30 a.m. ar the office
p.m. Refreshments.
will speak: on 8Sp"'dS of the
. POMEROY - · Meigs
• Qildren's lea
RSVP Program. Make n:sel'High School Band Boosten,
even~
vations by calling Louis
• Sbowers
• S •IJOO!II Eveuts
6 p.m. in the bandroom. ·
Greenlee at 245-5029.
All sem., at:CftSories fi"Jritlerllritlf• 11tk rtNI
Thesday, April.IS
~ne~C1
Monday, April7
~\
Ta llarite5s: Law ' • 'g s
~
SALEM CENTER -TB
GALUPOLIS - Giillia
Aftn-5:tl
·,
Clinic at Star Grange Hall, County Veterans Service
Monday, April 7
5-6 . p.m., for skin testing. Commission will meet at 4
.
7~3714
....:Jl~TL.o\_ND -. Rut~~f:l! -5-6 W~ne~a}'-:f~ -12:-111. aHhe-V~ru-am ScrviceQl'fi~· fH!2J~Ei,{nJ Pike, ·
Township nuscees. 4 p.m. - th~liliu; ~~lli,

,., tsy,

Clubs and
organb.ations

~dei:

IJ'Irib~UU.coa

shower

A=~on

JOIJB. Jlllil iteas Ill 1125
lJrinl Are., G-"ijrlis, otio

45611.

A•IIOIUKalirlllS

.ay , _ 6e o6• 1; rll olf Ill
•~oJJice-

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a' ' . - yru tu:llf9o Iiiii
• 10.-mlil.---........
•'OMDm_'SWif!lgl -,.......... ~!

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Other

Pubuc m

the agreement, approved
after .the univenity board
made revisions.

Some
of ultimate
Ross's goal."
urban
clinic
is our
Seattle-area listeners were ·
curious that people here
would choose to live in an
area wbere emergency
health care is 30 miles
froin home.
"I say tbat's crazy,"
Davenport · said. "You
should be able to choose to
live anywhere in this coonb)' and be assured of ER
services in every county."

li~~~~~§~~~~~

Breast ·Health Services
"I'm y01'ng and lu.lve no family history of breast caneer."
A week after Pamela .Burns of Logan stopped breastfeeding the youngest
of her three children, she discovered a marble-sired lump in her breast.
The ,worried 30-year-old immediately consulted her doctor, Michael
Clark, DO, at River Ro5e Obstetrics and Gynecology.

After J"!er surgeries, Pamela began an individualized regimen of
radiation therapy with Aaron Williams; MD, at the Athens Cancer
Center in the Castrop Cenrer. She also had chemotherapv and
continues taking a medication used for aggressive forms of cancer.

An ultrasound indicated the lump was a cyst. A mammogram performed

"Everyone took S1Kh good care of me. When I went to the
Qmcer Center, it was like goin,g to visit a friend. When I had
my mammograms, ·t~ woman who did them always f'emembered
me, ewn if l hadn't been in for" a while.

at O'Bleness Memorial Hospital's mammography suite in the Castrop
Center also showed characteristics of a cyst. Dr. Clark sent Pamela to
surgeon.Nei\1 Nesbitt, MD. After attempts were made to dr~in the cyst,
' Dr. Nesbitt decided to perform a lumpecmmy. The
lump tested positive for cancer and Dr. Nesbitt
performed · · o additional surgeries at the
Athens
rgery Center in the Castrop
Cente and O'Bleness Memorial Hospital's
Ou atiem Surgery Center.

"Many people thought-I
s~ go to Columbus for
my care. HI tell thon~y go aU the way to
\
Colamabu5 when there is
good care nearby!"
)

Ask,_..,. ••anerllh
......

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,..,

O'BLENESS
'~
HEALTH SYSTEM

Pile

.

ss Hosptall Ol'iYe. "rtwn" Ohio 4S701 .

www.OblenessHealthSystem.org
'

'

Ftu

--""Ill~

iJ'ea Witli ry-ou

"l mscooen~d l was ~aling with
s e Ill cancer. Although it was
· htming, I found the people at
'Bleftess to be ...ery knowledgeable."

'

Glnis

can be sent to him at 008 Foil
Duquesne Drive, Sun City
Onrcr, Fla. 33573-5156..
E-.il ,...••.., mlaloommunity. All members m:
.,._,,.~urged to~

-

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�. , ..• ,.lild

(7e) ••• 2342. FAX
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US

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Ollio

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(7G} 4• . .
...,_,.,.

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:t::;'qll!eti,
:and

Ohio Valley ~Malting Co. ·

-

1&gt;

con¥Ontions. flr:ime .eumple:
lfue
Mis!iissmJ&gt;i
fu.ecdom !Demooratic IPJU:ty
.in n964. Ol:gani ...ed 110
(lountcr lthe ~dficili'l!Jlm:ly 'lilatC&lt;df&amp;lf'c!;aleti
wbo lhad 1\(0Wcii!IIOlltO wppoFt !Pr.esideut J.obnson
hecause &lt;df !liis '!!U.P.JXll1 &lt;df
lthe ClM1 ~gilts Act. ·lfhe

'Sleuua
IIUIIC Is

ll'~escnta-

lriv.es. df DcmlooRttic P.mty
1()011!1tiituoncies '1l(}r(l) lflris

0.. Gaoliliidi

y.em' ;an: ~ lt0

rmake
:add
~ ~ales iint0 lthe
100lumn Of cne &lt;CIIllilitlB11" ((111'.
rthe &lt;other lt0 [pUt llrlm ((111' ihor
&lt;0¥« llhe ltl!f&gt;. But ~tim ~s
cuotly lthe IWRIIl!\ year lf.or
lihem lt0 [filay lthat m1e lf.or

PlmtiSher

rthe &lt;diiff.emnce -

Keuiila Kaly

Dillie . .
Conliioller

~hts JICtivists ifmm &lt;earlier

. 'Diey'n! ~ Ito
Wildt ;as .a mlfily &lt;Cbco'k at Jl
l[&gt;l!!l!ijuafi011 prooess lt'hat
Qll
!Y lbe &lt;desmiibed .as
lbiumle. 11h.ey .ar.e ltbe
ilbe elected

.

•G

s-...t.,y~

:s ,

April6, . . . ,

~6ditor

"-'s rto ltbe ~or .,,., ...eloome. rJhey whouliJ !be .'let;o

dwm JDQ ""'-'rihi. .tlfl llenero "'"' SJibjeC!I to ~iliting &lt;LJnil mum

/be 'l&gt;igndlilltd ~ 11Jil4re1Ni .anil1e'lephlme 'wmiber. No
IIIIUiigne4 llenero wU /be 1plibli~'beii. ~r. whouliJ !be tin
~ood lklsi£.11Jil4re11Sirtg mws, .. ar f!H!'SO'iiiilitieli.

&lt;l'llte

Ito

liD1J!li!lllla1 ""'-- II'HCe.

Demroratic. &lt;reforms ,elf tihe fu.ecdom •
!Democrats
I~JI(!)s !had &gt;C01Pt:ied \I'Jut tihe ~ lb!lf~ lfue .ore-

~1illcll momr !by giv- . ,denfuils&lt;OOIIlllllttce 110 ~
..
. •
-'L ..
the &lt;ease tthat lthe "ire~•1..r
rJJUl ...__
&lt;UJC mommat:Jon ...,umce
. .c~
110 e'lecte(j &amp;l~"&lt;&gt;a:tes, a.eat- ~~ cllc.1e";gatum w.as
..

q

&lt;OOIIJP1icB1edIPf.ooedw:es

ifOO'&lt;dhooSi~~ese&lt;dc'J~ates

Nm '0Iily iis lilt entm1y .and "'JlpottJ&lt;'IIIil!E 1them on
'Wii:ihin i1'he mules lf4'JT lfue · lihe !basis \I'Jf
&lt;BI~d -seJC
-sqper.de'legates il(1) vme ltheir
IPJl11ty sta'lw.llltts, ~n~
lfllthcr 'Minc.ed lthat lfue !l'efmliDS
tthan siql]y &lt;edhe tthe v.mcrs ll'.esu'l.Uld ~n tfh.e nomination
&lt;Of lthoir states, lthat'~; ltheir .and sUbsequent Qand!ilide
mason lfor lbCing - lthese &lt;defeat
&lt;Of
G.eor;ge
IJlmfessional 1J10lliicians .ar.e MLGe:v.ern rin ~'!:1"72, .and the
SUI"'''SED te .eli.el'cise mabi1if&gt;.: lfor tfh.e .oonv.ention
ltheir ~nl!gmont, lb&lt;ilth [p(l)liti- 11o llliri!fy lb.e'hlnd Jimmy
a].anQ personal 11hey &lt;def- Callter .after ihi~; .o'luillel!ge
mite1y CAN .Cha@se lfue from l'.eildy Kennedy lin
n(lllllinee; :the .questi011 ~s, U'98(i), ·decided Ito reclaim
'SHOUlD l!hey? -W.e &lt;t'hin'k same.cl0ut:as runoommitted
ID@t. Nm rtliis y.ear. If lthe ~legatcs. · A'I1d in U"J84,
i(lliiily -.elites elect Hillary ~When Walte!l' Mondale lhad
Rar.ac'k nat .oempldtely ~ 'liP
Oliimon \I'JV.er
O.bama, illiany .\lfiniCjjll- lthe 111ominatien after lfue
Amenicans 'WiiTI !be oon- 1ast [pllimmy lba'llots w.ere
v.inood lthat rthe rules w..er.e ..cast, .rthe polilica'l JPres
~ il(1) ~.adk tthcm \I'Jut.
. lfllay.ed a 111sef,Jil a:e1e in
l'fhaf-s lll!lo lhwd IDe:cau!ie lbringin,g lihe ~ to.gether
:the ii&amp;a &lt;Of enSU!iing a lillY lbefor.e ~he .conv.entiion,
lfllf :the [p01iticiam -lfl00Ple lthoqgh their choice ll'.esult\Wlw hav.e .a stake lin rthe .ei:l&lt;in.anothe:r1anlilslideloss.
8ut lit's i1l1]!)011l1Ilttelkeep
futUJt &lt;l!lf the patty, liWl Jiust
mmind wby :the IIJ)emoorats
.an iindi&gt;lidua1 .candidate rmakes .a ~at OOif sense. 11he .epteO ifer ll'.ef=~ in the
IMilCept \I'Jf 1Pew.er ill!) :the first phc.e. 'ilihey w.ere instilfl01IDcians~ .emer:ged .as
toted ito ~ .a wroQg wme:thing \I'Jf .a coonter- i!he ·.exclusian •af .antikf.@l1lllllliian, .after lthe Vtetnam w.ar .and pro-.oivil-

=

oorooe.

TODAY IN HISTORY

m ·IVIdbdion d' [p81ily ~es
.and lfederal bw.
.. .
. Co~sman .and ;mVil!IIJ,ghts 110011 Jlobn Lewis !has
wri~ lfuat lfue [jlllltty'-s
&lt;decJSI011 il0 &amp;iJ_y ilCH!s Ito
the flr.ecdom DemOCII'.ats
-sent ~..mov'o.nent mt~ lthe
streets: ;we .had pley!!d .ib.Y
1the rules, .ilene .e:veJYflri!lg
we IW.ell'e SUJ?PO&amp;ed Ito do .....
.and f.ound :the do0r
s'lammed lin &lt;OUf lface.~'1Ilhat
can it rhappen . .llgllm. A
.gr.oup of ]l01itJCI8DS, aJml!st
half .of wllom .ar.e white
men, c.anit lbe perceivcil .~
&lt;eJCcluding rthe .b'llw1: .oandi.date, .e:vtm.~ Iiiiey .are Bct:ing
totally IWithtn lthe mules.
IIJ)oes that mean lfuat lthe
nominati:qg [pf.ooe:ss should
stop 'llight new .and .every\I'Jne get lbe'hmd . aradk
Obama IDe:cause ihe !happens
to lbe munning slighlly
.ahead at the mement? &lt;Of
.oollii'Se '!lOt. This has ibeen .a
year •elf so many 1\Wist~; .and
turns rthat lifs more limperttant than e:v.er to [play .out
lthe wbole .game.IEv.ecy fP!iinuu:y :and. omcus, .ev.my
stare .con..ention, .ev.ery

challenge, if :it 001IICS to
that, must &gt;go ifOI\l!'.m:d. And
' some fair w.ay must ltie
found ·Ito .scat cdele.gatcs
from the !key 'States of
Mic'higan .and fllorida.
kny .atteJlWt ItO lforQC
Billmy i(Jiinton .out &lt;of this
a;ace lis net.only .a diMer.viae
!to lihe IVI'IIeTS Who luiv:i:Ii't
y.et lhad ltheir '!!BY lb ut IJ!Oses
.a lthr.eahto lihe IDernocratit
· IPJ~J~~y lfrom .another !key ·
&lt;Constituency -women Who&lt;donlt wJI!lt ItO see otie
,of ltheir own JPIISheil out. ilf
iibe "old lbo.Yii' nerwoi'k"
-seems 10 be beatillg lllp •On
Ulinton- .and aJmost two~thirds &lt;of lthe superdelegates
.are men -lthat.couldbadkfu.e \I'Jn any .attempts Ito
tbriqg lfue sqpportcrs •Of &lt;the
'liWO candidates lto.gether.
We wish :the nominating
pr.oces·s were saner. W.e
wish !the rrul.es ·w.ere JJJiilfrom state rto state.
And we .hav.e no objection
· to ..electeo 1J10liticians .havling .a substantial ·say lin
·-sclecting rthe rparty's stan.dardJbear.er. But \When so
many rpeople from
·:yeung b1ac1: men to older
White women - are :excit,!!dfby ihe:ir.ohoices and 1inJog &lt;Up rto \Vote, this year
· &lt;Canit.endrin,disillusion :with
":the sytote:m:" 1I'his is not
:the y.ear lfor superdelegates
Ito &lt;decide.
.
('Steve !Robert-s' latest
book i-s "My IFathers'
!House,.;: Memoir of

lfomn

a

!Family" (William Morrow,
2005 ). Steve and Cokie
!Rdberts can !be aonrocted •
by
e-mdil
'at
-steuecokie@gmail.com.) ·

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Pomeroy• Middl~ ·~s

0. April6, :zoo8

W.Va. truckers cr1nverge on state
Capitol to protest diesel costs

Not this year

6u111p ~.,.
-6eidiad
.
-1liJniJ

PageA4

OPINION

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: ·Euvena Bechtle, 91 ,. of Middleport, passed away
8Y lM' i d M SMIA
111bmsday, April 3, 2008, at Pleasant Vlilley Hospital in
•
ASSOCIAT£0 PRESS WRilrR
Point !Pleasant, W.Va.
: . 'She was born Sept. 26, 1916, in Beec'h Hill, W.Va., to the
CHARLESTON, W.Va.
'late William and Sarah (King) Barnett. •
·
Horns blaring, dozens of
. Mrs. !Bechtle was the owner and operator ·of her own
'DeStaUrllnt m Middleport. 'She was a 55·y&lt;ear Evangeline West Vrr~inia truckers fed
\Chapter'OESChapter '172 and a retired member of the aux- up with high fuel costs converged on the state Capitol
:'i]imy rfor ·the Middleport Fire Department.
in
a Friday morning prote~ .
· He is survived by two sons, John and Ann Ruby 1Becht1e
They
drove off three hours
ofiGolumbus, imll DliiTiiU IL. .and Mary Ann Bechtle of West
Cdlunihia, W.l\la.; a daughter, ·Sarah and IRuss Clontz of later, frus~rated but with
!Lancaster; two gran9sons, Jobn D. Bechtle. and Peter assurances of support. from
Manchin.
Clontt; ~ ~andda:ughters, Mary Ann Frohnauer, !Debra Gov.
More
than
60 rigs rumbled
(lor.dle and ll'inca Sowers; great-grandchildren, Lacey Bias,
·,.;}exandra 'Sowers, Collin 'Sowers and Bryce Oontz; great- off Interstate 64n7 lf'riday
great-grandchildren, Taylor Bias and Mason Bias; and sev- morning and pulled up to the
seat of state government,
'.eflll :nieces and nephews.
·
,
'She· was preceded in death.by her parents; husband. John where · truckers demanded
W. ~J110k" Bechtle; stepmother, Annie Barnett; and one sis- relief. TraiJerc]ess tractors, .
coal trucl&lt;:s, lumber haulers
1er, rfive brothers .and a daughter-in-law.
and
tow trucks were among
· 'Services will be 1:30p.m. Monday, A.pril7, 2008, at the
the
vehicles that roUe4 in
iFis'her-Ainderson-McDaniel Funeral Home in Middleport,
single,file
from a gathering
with lfue Rev. 'Tom Runyon officiating. !Burial will follow
lin lthe IRiv.ervie:w Cemetery at Middleport. Visitlition will 1JOint about 70 miles- north.
The ' convoy of . mostly
be beld from 6 ·to 8 p.m. on Sunday, April 6, 2008, at the
· operators
independent
funeral home.
included
Donald
Cottrill of ·
mile family would like to thaitk the Qverbrook Nursing
Dad's
'JTuck:ing.
Cotttill
.has
.and Rehabilitation Center and Staff. They would also like
to :iharik Dr. 'Shah and the Nurses and Staff .at lhe Pleasant seen his weekly fuel bill
climb to $2,500 from $500
\llilley IEiospitlll on 'Soutb 2.
· lin lieu of flower donations may be made in Mrs. nine years ago. He linked Trucks file down Greenbrier Street as truckers rally against high fuel prices at ~ vyest
the costs to the rising prices Virginia state Capitol in Charleston, W.Va. Friday. More tllan 60 rigs rumbled off Interstate
Bechtle's name to a .charity of your choice.
ODline registry is av:ailiihle at www.andel'SO~l.com. of lumber and other goods. 64!77 on Friday and pulled up to the seat of State government to demand relief.
he luuils on •his flatbed to
'
businesses .across the stare.
up its rig, she said.
regular unleaded gas prices session, none of the 2,134
'1If~; just time for us to
"For owner-operators, the in the state at $3.38, up 64 bills introduced appear to
mak.e .a stand;" said Cottrill, fuel costs are just too cents from a year ago . have targeted taxes.on vehi: ILany Wayne Mo'Gratli, 62 •. of Guysville, passed away 37. "This ain't just for us. much," she said.
Friday's in-state prices for cle fuels . William Doak
11bmsilay, April 3, 2008, as the result of.an automobile acci- W.e're trying to do this for
Amid talk of returning both gas and diesel remain noted thal the session's sucdent.
everybody."
next week in larger num- within two cents of their cessful bills iQcluded a
lEie was born Nov. 6, 1945, in Pomeroy, son of the 1ate
Manchin was away from bers, some protes~rs called recorded highs, reached last $5,000 salary hike for lawEarl .lmd Minnie Bretton McGrath.
the Capitol. His legislative for a starewtde hauling shut- month, AAA said.
makers.
· lEie is ·survived Qy his wife, Barbara Ward McGrath; a director, Jim Pitrolo, told a down. Others spoke of ralState taxes account for
"We pay their wages, and
smi, Gary McGrath; a daughter and son-in-law, CheryJ crowd of truckers and their lying West Virginians to 32.2 cents in those prices . they vote themselves a raise,"
'McGmt:l:i and. Dwayne Ollom; .two grandchildren, supporters in the . Rotunda spearhead a national push to The year began with a said Doak, 54. "Everybody
Chnistoph.er IR¥an McGrath and Mildnzi Ollom; &lt;t brother, that Manchin is urging fed- tackle the problem.
dozen states sporting higher seems to warrant raises and
·Otis McGrath; and a great-grandson.
eral action.
Several faulted the· gover- gas taxes than West stuff. but we don't seem to be
lHe ·w.as ,preceded in death by his parents and a brother,
"The state has no control nor for his absence. More Virginia, while 10 had high- getting anything."
i'lhmb MiGmih
. .' ~
\11{ pnriiDg
'fuel,'' !Ritrolo than a few vowed to take ttie er taxes on diesel, according
Truckers have tal!:en to the
$aniiccs 1\Wllbe Ill JI.'IIl. ~J• :A1xil 8, 2008'; .at lthe .salil. ~) i:islruinnoitr. issue with them into the vot- to January figures from the roads throughout the counY.w~ IFJUJeJ?il ~orne r.m ~1v.ille, •wilii '!Bill !ted'lO-wOtt:iilg .~-lfOtJ. ing booth, during the state's · American
Petroleum try for similar protests all
Miu;Pb.Y Officiatin_g. ll!l'-aliWilllfdllow llll&lt;Gnl\uml'to Qulpe1 . ,cml!· cgoWmmenf' ~ lthe · May l3 primary and in InstitUte. Federal taxes add week. Among other places.
CiCJD!!ICIY .lit 'Shade.IF.nends ~ &lt;Ca'll.arliho funenil &gt;home ,
to ~l1hbm' &amp;
November. A Democrat, another 18.4 cents per-gallftom51to:t!JilliD. Monday,~ 7,:2008. ·
· · , .. · \811illowerrfuCI~ :" .Manchin is up for re-ele&lt;;tion lon to the price of gas ;pld they clogged streets arouliQ
· Pennsylvania's Capitol on
Ytiu iCIIIl -sip lthe \Oriline gnestborik · at ww.w.w,hite- . · ~will~ ~did llittle 1o this year along with nearly 24.4 cents for diesel.
Monday, forced slowdowns
~me.com.
. ' ·tOaibi:':&gt;Wbe:n state Attorney all other statewide officers
But West Vrrginia's fuel on the New Jersey Turnpike
In Jlir»i rdf lflow.ers, oonttibutions .can lbe !liUitle Ito Sa_ving Gencnil ~ :McGraw and most of the Legislature. taxes also provide 61 peron Tuesday and shut down a
Ollie$ ~. :associated \With lllo:me AM]th Caie &lt;df ..am..Wd tbC:proiesfa:!i;and
But before the crowd cent of the state's revenues · state port authority terminal
~Ohio, ~1 Dntdl!Riilge !ltoad, Oli:ysVi.lle. Oliio : ~ ifiri!¥ 'gltelltionli, tiCY- departed, Manchin spoke to for its main road fund ,
67.35.
.
.
· ·
. .
. l-Cilil. . ~a.. fihc;y fa~ beir!ll .its leaders by phone 4uring which relies on federal dol- in Georgia on Thursday.
.
.
. ,. . lf&lt;mzd tto
&lt;or &lt;&amp;"en' t.ell a lengthy private confer- lars as well. The state
. . . . - - - - . . . ..
· [fbeit rigs. "-'sbow ·Ofrfumas ence. That'appeared to cool expects these taxes to bring
.....
•.........-.
suggested most lack health some of the anger.
in $405 ;8 million by the
time
the budget year ends
"I
will
ask
President
Bush
Roger William Thompson,58, .of Lancaster, and former- covera~e, with a number
of
the
June
30. Collections were
to
release
some
1y of Gallia County, passed .a:w.ay in Moum iCatmel East indicahng they shed tbat
strategic petroleuni reserve $547,000 below projections
Hospital at Columbus, rfollowing a brief battle with cancer. benefit to cut costs.
He was born in •F ebruary 1950, son of the late Roger and . Diesel prices averaged to help stabilize the current as of last month.
"It's sort of a Catch-22.
.
.
. $4.14 per .gallon in West cost of fuel. But we also
Winifred Taylor Thompson,
need
Money
that comes off the
to
understand
that
this
•In addition to his parents he was preceded in death ·by one Virginia on Friday, up $1.21
·
S'-"- o
from a year ago, accerding would be a short-term ban- gas tax, comes out of the
SISter, lliLLOn nope.
AAA' D ·1 F 1 G
He is sur:vived iby :three children, Maria Thompson, Roger to
s at Y ue auge dage," the governor said road fund," said Pitrolo,
an i ndq&gt;endt:ru
ThoiJ!PSOII Jr., and Chris Thompson, all of central Ohio.
Report. Donna Doak has aftllrward in a statement: noting chronic complaints
, ~ncy. Wt' can tailor
IJn ,adiJirionltOihe.chililren and grandChildren, he is survived seen that jump; having "The key i~ that we've got of inadequate funding in the
lnsura.ncr prott:et~on u
by huflthers and sisters, ®III\IIy Thompson of Gallipolis, Mike joined her husband on the to get. the "federal govern- state's road budget.
Though the Legislature
Taylor of Groveport, Katie Pierce of Point Pleasant, W.Va., road in 2007. Their D &amp; B ment to understand· t~e
comperiri~ prlco. We n:prescnt
pasSed several tax cuts and
:P~ lLountbeny of Michigan, and Susan Hockenhimer and Trucking, out of West urgency of this issue."
AAA's report averaged phase-outs during its recent
only the finest JIL-.--.
Sh.eila Kleinebrow of central Ohio; an uncle, Forrest Union, spends $1,000 to fill
-~---------------------------insurance
Thompson of Rio Grande; and several cousins.
Graveside ·services will be 2 p.m. Sunday, April 6~ 2008,
.c;...,.. · ·
~"

Joe

,........,

..m

Tn

tli::ilent,

a

We offer the
best prices

and protection
for you.

. -.·Ct:?f.lgressio._nal
.·.,.
..
. .. ,..---.-a....,

•

foeling subpri~ itifertuJ ,

. ~ · f t . Ml!I1111Um~

)

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
letters ro lihe editor ~ welcome. They should be
las dian 300 w.oiris. .Ml htters are subject lfJ &amp;iilin.g,
.Ust.be signed, !ll1Jd in&amp;ude address mui ulep'lione
IJMJftber: Nrumsigllellletters will be published. Letters
:sltoi4J be in good taste, addi:essing iss~s. il'/.01 perSOftdlilies. l.mers of,thanks to organizations and i.ndi-

\li4Mals wiU not be aceepted for publication.

s;uttba~ . tEimt~ -~etttintl
Reader Services
C I f
PDiicr
Third Avenue, Gallij)olis, 0H
•DII'mrin COIIIBnln alllltDitel 1110:be . 45631 . Periodicaipostage paid
......, Wrou l&lt;now mrn """In&amp;..# Galtipollr.

. ~.~ Clll·one of ourn""'"'""''l"·

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..........

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iJM)GS-tJII

.,.,...., lihe Associated Ptllas. ,

the
West Virginia 'Press '
Assooia\ion , and lhe Ohio
Newspaper Aaoloclation .

Posbcwa•. Send address cor·
reclions to 1lle Gallipolis O.lly
Tribune, 825 l'hird Avenue,
G.llipolia. OH ~5631 .

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I
Olllo v.lley Pu?llltlling &lt;Co.
PUblitMd every Sunday, 825

Jann modificatiom for •o .
wi!lil1iir.e blailiing «hhiou~h
bot:Fower''s ,p rimary resithe ~nlry, liru:inerafuig
dence.
·
b0use
·.aliter
lbause.
Two proposals in :the
/
1
Firefi.ghte!l's Me .exbausted.
House and Senate would
Reporters areollt in&lt;drc:v.es,
have done just that. U'
.ca!ILing rthe p1ay-'by-play.
~~le
passed, these .would, like
P-oliticians don il!heir blue
ur.-.r
CRL
indicates,
help
ueans and lament the' crisis
-600,000 f.am:ilies stuck in
rfor llhe .cameras. 1FT~
subprime loans ·to continue
making mortgage paymsur.ers sw.ear 10p .and
·down t.e Omgress that they for IR.espensible Lending ments and .avoid foreclo.aJ1e S@lv.ent. MeanVlbile, (CRL) and signed by a sure. Both 'b orrowers and
hGmeowners watc'h \help- coalition of 15 civil rights, lenders would benefit, "ll
aessly .as rtan'ks .ef w.ater and •h ousing ' and .consumer again, while costing tax- .
hefty bases . r.est on the prganizations; in the debate . payers absolutely nothing.
gwund, waiting if.l)r @Uf pver wnaJ JlSSiru!~ 10
The Senate, unfortunate· ~eaders :to decilile whether .offer. "lawmakers decided ly, recently voted (58 to 36rto help, and, if so, how to exclude a provision that to table their amendment,
moob. Imagine lif this had would .allow courts to mod- S. 2636. llhe House pro. been 1h.e ~nse to 1he ify unaffordable mortgages, posal, HR 3609, bas yet to
Southem ClilifMnia fires.
a provision that without any be voted on.
·
This lcind l!f sl~w cost to taxpayer~ would
l~'s a shame to have to
respoose to a 11$10nal rlis- help stabilize communities legt.slate such a reasonable
· aster w~uld be unf~v- . and prevent up to 600,000 · solution when lenders
~le. Yetili,at'·slthe.sJhtahon additional families facing could, and should, make
·wdhitoday s subprim.e.fore- foreclosure."
these modifications volun:
cl~t&amp;mes, currently mreatTalk about a missed titrily, :without federalinter- .
ening .abou.t .20;000 bouse- oppertunity.
v.ention. !But they ·won't.
me
!fe&lt;deral When Shawn Howell, ·1\9
.holds evecy :w.eek.. Yes, · Wb:ille
·e very · week thousands of Reserve Board scrambles ilraq war ·lleteran from
, struggling families are los- to cut interest rates and bail .· Kentucky, found himself
ing il!heir homes .as lthey out W.all Street investment . with an unma,nageable
wait for their government fiirms, lflelp for ordinary increase on his adjustableto wate ~ and~ them. · people is being D,eglected. rate mortgage, he asked his
S~ngly
enough, Unfoliunately, blaming the lender,
Countrywide
~sident Bu~b left. the rictim has been an ,~too- Financial, to help him find
COIIIltl)' flilf tiD intcmltiolW common response
to a way to avoid foreclosure.
j;IUJlDU! just 'liS ~s national · disa~r these · He rud his part - finding a
lleblrDCld _to WasbingtnD. .deys. Kemember"hmricane second job
but
DC~ to lllldt:ess the crisis. Katrina and ilhe ·victims Countrywide refused to
Mia' ICfiJsiq to deal with Who !Wefe left stranded on modify the loan. Forced
die crilis ibd'Oc'e rthe Easta- their rooftaps l()T inside into foreclosure, the scr~1., the Democraic their attics? Should have viceman and his family
Dlljority 110011 bned 1bal . .purcbase4 tilood insurance, now live in a trailer.
RepUbliellls llllfRteldy y'~.
I don't see failed
1
for compromise. Sadly,
Th.ere's .no doubt that Countrywide's execs living
IUII1ess die new bipartisan dousing the foreclosure fire in trailers, do you?
fervor helps struggling would help vulnerable fam- · If Congress doesn 't act
·homeowners renegotiate ilies and communities pre- on this simple bankruptcy
the terms of their loans, serve what little they have. reform, not only will capaCongress' .attempts to ftx Yet poweiful Washington ble, working families loSe:
this crisis will continue to interests are resisting at their hQmes, but 40 million
miss the mark.
•
least one easy, ine~nsi,ve families li ving near them
According to ·a press solution: Lift the prohibi,' · stand to lose more than
release issued by 'lh.eCenter tion on court-supervised $356 billion · as their prop-

.... Wlecrtpllon
lneiCieCalo""

13 Week5 .. ......... ."32.26
26 Weeks ........... '1&amp;1.20
52
'127.11

w-. .. __ .......

Oi•rtdl County
13 Weeks ........ .... '53.55
26 Weeks ..... ... ...'107. tO
52 Weeks ...........'21421

•

'

.

.

erty valucli plummet That
is a significant erosion of
family wealth, not to men,
tion the tax base that delivers vital community ser~
wices to keep neighborhoods healthy and vibrant
services like hiw.
entor.opm~nt, street repair
.and, yes, fire protection.
This isn 't a bail-@ut for
people who were irrespon•
sible; it is the simplest,
cheapest way to prevent a
downward spiral all .too .
similar to the one that ·
caused . 'the
Great
Depression. This is insurance for .all of us.
W.e now know that even
sophisticated blmkers - .
weU"versed in all the
nuances of fmancing and
backed by teams of lawyers
and accountants- failed to
understand the danger of
subprime loans. What's ,
more, many borrowers '!J.Crt;
deliberately offered prod,
nets that were doomed tci
fctil•.even though they qual.;
ified for better loans theY. ·
would have been able to
afford. There's a reason it's
called "predatory·· lending. ;
So let's stop blaming ~
victims. lt's time to act
quickly, tum off the micrO.:
phones and pick up those
hoses. We have to put out
this fire before it burns us
all. Bankruptcy reform is
an inex.pensive, commonsense solution for honest,
hard-working . subprime
·borrowers. Let's not miss
this cbance, Congr~. to
do right by American
homeowners.
~~
(Donna Brazile is a political comment~tor Of! CNN,
ABC and NPR, contributing columnist to Roll Call,
the newspaper of Capiro!

Hill, and former campaign
manager for AI Gore.)

~~n"f~~':C:e~:~~ oy: Moor:
Yinton.

·

H.
r. · • •
· kill
F:mer~t Home in ~.~.fl.OUse UIC neat ' yy!-$C-()nSln .~~!; :~- : 5 .

3 ·students; neighbors heard smoke alarms

·

, Carl T.Mnrilook, 87, fmctotville, died Friday, April4, 2008,
in Runtington IHealth and Rehabilitation, Huntington, W.Va.
lEie .is survived by bis wife, Lillian Murdock. ·
·
. Services will .be II a.m . .Monday in 'the Hl!li Funeral
Borne, lf&gt;rootorville: Burial will be . in the Centenary
Cemetery, Chesapeake. !friends may call at the funeral
.Jmme from '6 to 8 p.m. Sunday.
.

'·

'

· Karen·Ioyce V.eager, 67, •Glillipo1is, died Thursday, April
3, 2008, at Holzer Medical Center.
·
'Services will be private:
.
Waugh-'Halley-Wood FunerallEiome is assisting the family.
· An online .g uest registry is .available at waugh-halleyw00&lt;4;om.

..

Visit us online

at

. www~mydallpentlnel.com

. and
www.m~dallytllbune.com

Your online source for news .'

Layaway l\l ou ·
For Spring'

· ihe v1ct1ms as April C. . authorities said.
BY AMY FORUTI
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
Englund, 21, of West St.
All .three vic1ims were
Paul, Minn.; Amanda Jean · found in separate bedrooms .
MENOMONIE. Wis.
Rief, 20, of Chaska, Minn. ;
Unrversity
counselors
A smoky house fire near a and Scott A . Hams, 23, of were on hand to help stuUniversity of Wisconsin Hayward. All three appeared dents, and the school
campus killed three students 10 have died of smoke encouraged students to call
early Saturday, even though inhalation, said authorities, their families.
neighbors said they heard who do not suspect foul play.
Hams had pictures online
alarms going off.
"It's a tragedy that no of him water skiing, doing
Rescuers found
two campus prepares for." stunts with a motocross din
women and a man i.n sec- Chancellor
· Charles bike and flying a small air- .
ond-floor bedrooms near Sorensen
said.
"We'll plane. He said . he liked
the
Unive~ity
of grieve in ~his toge ther.~· .
snowboarding, wakeboardFirefighters arrived five ing and skateboarding. "I
W,isconsin-Stout, and they
wen~ pronounced dead at a" minutes after a call made can't believe it's real," said
hospital; authorities sai'd. ·: ·-,.abou!Jl:30 a.m. to fmd smoke his fatper, Allen Hams. "l
The .smoke detectors were commg fium the basement. know there's a · reason.
working, and neighbors first floor and second floor of God's got a plan. He 's such
called police when they the
duplex,
university . a good kid; he'd do anyheard the alarms, · said spokesman Doug Mell said.
thing for anybody."
Menomonie Police Chief . Eng lurid was the only resThe elder Hams said he
Dennis Beety. Police don't ident of the front unit of the had talked to his son on
know why the three victims white house in a row of Friday night.
didn't wake up and leave.
well-kept properties blocks
"There w.as a bottle of away from campus. The
alcohol and the top was on other two victims - Riefl
of it," Beety said . "But ,and Hams- were sleeping
that 's no indication they over because Englund's
weredrinking at the time ."
roommates
left
town,
The university jdentified Englund's
father
and

indwling ·
AunH)wnm

lnwrancr
~mpany,

which bas nuly camftJ tht'
repuurion a.\ ThC' '"t\o Problem"'

l'&lt;ople•. ,o,,k w .OOur the
many o&lt;her advmcages of doing

husinas with an mdependent

intiurmce-agcncy.

111111111!111

The
Joint Implant Center

To the residents of GalUa County
On behalf of all my family, I would like to
express our gratitude for your thoughts, prayers
and cards during our time of loss. The last 6
months llave JJeen a very dijjicult time for ou,r:
family. the loss ofparents is always a dijjicult
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of lo~s and need like this.

....____
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Barboursville. WV

~

.~Sincerely,

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and Family

Next clinic date is Friday, Aprll18.
Call (614) 461,.174 or 1-800-371-47to
for an appointment.

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-

1&gt;

con¥Ontions. flr:ime .eumple:
lfue
Mis!iissmJ&gt;i
fu.ecdom !Demooratic IPJU:ty
.in n964. Ol:gani ...ed 110
(lountcr lthe ~dficili'l!Jlm:ly 'lilatC&lt;df&amp;lf'c!;aleti
wbo lhad 1\(0Wcii!IIOlltO wppoFt !Pr.esideut J.obnson
hecause &lt;df !liis '!!U.P.JXll1 &lt;df
lthe ClM1 ~gilts Act. ·lfhe

'Sleuua
IIUIIC Is

ll'~escnta-

lriv.es. df DcmlooRttic P.mty
1()011!1tiituoncies '1l(}r(l) lflris

0.. Gaoliliidi

y.em' ;an: ~ lt0

rmake
:add
~ ~ales iint0 lthe
100lumn Of cne &lt;CIIllilitlB11" ((111'.
rthe &lt;other lt0 [pUt llrlm ((111' ihor
&lt;0¥« llhe ltl!f&gt;. But ~tim ~s
cuotly lthe IWRIIl!\ year lf.or
lihem lt0 [filay lthat m1e lf.or

PlmtiSher

rthe &lt;diiff.emnce -

Keuiila Kaly

Dillie . .
Conliioller

~hts JICtivists ifmm &lt;earlier

. 'Diey'n! ~ Ito
Wildt ;as .a mlfily &lt;Cbco'k at Jl
l[&gt;l!!l!ijuafi011 prooess lt'hat
Qll
!Y lbe &lt;desmiibed .as
lbiumle. 11h.ey .ar.e ltbe
ilbe elected

.

•G

s-...t.,y~

:s ,

April6, . . . ,

~6ditor

"-'s rto ltbe ~or .,,., ...eloome. rJhey whouliJ !be .'let;o

dwm JDQ ""'-'rihi. .tlfl llenero "'"' SJibjeC!I to ~iliting &lt;LJnil mum

/be 'l&gt;igndlilltd ~ 11Jil4re1Ni .anil1e'lephlme 'wmiber. No
IIIIUiigne4 llenero wU /be 1plibli~'beii. ~r. whouliJ !be tin
~ood lklsi£.11Jil4re11Sirtg mws, .. ar f!H!'SO'iiiilitieli.

&lt;l'llte

Ito

liD1J!li!lllla1 ""'-- II'HCe.

Demroratic. &lt;reforms ,elf tihe fu.ecdom •
!Democrats
I~JI(!)s !had &gt;C01Pt:ied \I'Jut tihe ~ lb!lf~ lfue .ore-

~1illcll momr !by giv- . ,denfuils&lt;OOIIlllllttce 110 ~
..
. •
-'L ..
the &lt;ease tthat lthe "ire~•1..r
rJJUl ...__
&lt;UJC mommat:Jon ...,umce
. .c~
110 e'lecte(j &amp;l~"&lt;&gt;a:tes, a.eat- ~~ cllc.1e";gatum w.as
..

q

&lt;OOIIJP1icB1edIPf.ooedw:es

ifOO'&lt;dhooSi~~ese&lt;dc'J~ates

Nm '0Iily iis lilt entm1y .and "'JlpottJ&lt;'IIIil!E 1them on
'Wii:ihin i1'he mules lf4'JT lfue · lihe !basis \I'Jf
&lt;BI~d -seJC
-sqper.de'legates il(1) vme ltheir
IPJl11ty sta'lw.llltts, ~n~
lfllthcr 'Minc.ed lthat lfue !l'efmliDS
tthan siql]y &lt;edhe tthe v.mcrs ll'.esu'l.Uld ~n tfh.e nomination
&lt;Of lthoir states, lthat'~; ltheir .and sUbsequent Qand!ilide
mason lfor lbCing - lthese &lt;defeat
&lt;Of
G.eor;ge
IJlmfessional 1J10lliicians .ar.e MLGe:v.ern rin ~'!:1"72, .and the
SUI"'''SED te .eli.el'cise mabi1if&gt;.: lfor tfh.e .oonv.ention
ltheir ~nl!gmont, lb&lt;ilth [p(l)liti- 11o llliri!fy lb.e'hlnd Jimmy
a].anQ personal 11hey &lt;def- Callter .after ihi~; .o'luillel!ge
mite1y CAN .Cha@se lfue from l'.eildy Kennedy lin
n(lllllinee; :the .questi011 ~s, U'98(i), ·decided Ito reclaim
'SHOUlD l!hey? -W.e &lt;t'hin'k same.cl0ut:as runoommitted
ID@t. Nm rtliis y.ear. If lthe ~legatcs. · A'I1d in U"J84,
i(lliiily -.elites elect Hillary ~When Walte!l' Mondale lhad
Rar.ac'k nat .oempldtely ~ 'liP
Oliimon \I'JV.er
O.bama, illiany .\lfiniCjjll- lthe 111ominatien after lfue
Amenicans 'WiiTI !be oon- 1ast [pllimmy lba'llots w.ere
v.inood lthat rthe rules w..er.e ..cast, .rthe polilica'l JPres
~ il(1) ~.adk tthcm \I'Jut.
. lfllay.ed a 111sef,Jil a:e1e in
l'fhaf-s lll!lo lhwd IDe:cau!ie lbringin,g lihe ~ to.gether
:the ii&amp;a &lt;Of enSU!iing a lillY lbefor.e ~he .conv.entiion,
lfllf :the [p01iticiam -lfl00Ple lthoqgh their choice ll'.esult\Wlw hav.e .a stake lin rthe .ei:l&lt;in.anothe:r1anlilslideloss.
8ut lit's i1l1]!)011l1Ilttelkeep
futUJt &lt;l!lf the patty, liWl Jiust
mmind wby :the IIJ)emoorats
.an iindi&gt;lidua1 .candidate rmakes .a ~at OOif sense. 11he .epteO ifer ll'.ef=~ in the
IMilCept \I'Jf 1Pew.er ill!) :the first phc.e. 'ilihey w.ere instilfl01IDcians~ .emer:ged .as
toted ito ~ .a wroQg wme:thing \I'Jf .a coonter- i!he ·.exclusian •af .antikf.@l1lllllliian, .after lthe Vtetnam w.ar .and pro-.oivil-

=

oorooe.

TODAY IN HISTORY

m ·IVIdbdion d' [p81ily ~es
.and lfederal bw.
.. .
. Co~sman .and ;mVil!IIJ,ghts 110011 Jlobn Lewis !has
wri~ lfuat lfue [jlllltty'-s
&lt;decJSI011 il0 &amp;iJ_y ilCH!s Ito
the flr.ecdom DemOCII'.ats
-sent ~..mov'o.nent mt~ lthe
streets: ;we .had pley!!d .ib.Y
1the rules, .ilene .e:veJYflri!lg
we IW.ell'e SUJ?PO&amp;ed Ito do .....
.and f.ound :the do0r
s'lammed lin &lt;OUf lface.~'1Ilhat
can it rhappen . .llgllm. A
.gr.oup of ]l01itJCI8DS, aJml!st
half .of wllom .ar.e white
men, c.anit lbe perceivcil .~
&lt;eJCcluding rthe .b'llw1: .oandi.date, .e:vtm.~ Iiiiey .are Bct:ing
totally IWithtn lthe mules.
IIJ)oes that mean lfuat lthe
nominati:qg [pf.ooe:ss should
stop 'llight new .and .every\I'Jne get lbe'hmd . aradk
Obama IDe:cause ihe !happens
to lbe munning slighlly
.ahead at the mement? &lt;Of
.oollii'Se '!lOt. This has ibeen .a
year •elf so many 1\Wist~; .and
turns rthat lifs more limperttant than e:v.er to [play .out
lthe wbole .game.IEv.ecy fP!iinuu:y :and. omcus, .ev.my
stare .con..ention, .ev.ery

challenge, if :it 001IICS to
that, must &gt;go ifOI\l!'.m:d. And
' some fair w.ay must ltie
found ·Ito .scat cdele.gatcs
from the !key 'States of
Mic'higan .and fllorida.
kny .atteJlWt ItO lforQC
Billmy i(Jiinton .out &lt;of this
a;ace lis net.only .a diMer.viae
!to lihe IVI'IIeTS Who luiv:i:Ii't
y.et lhad ltheir '!!BY lb ut IJ!Oses
.a lthr.eahto lihe IDernocratit
· IPJ~J~~y lfrom .another !key ·
&lt;Constituency -women Who&lt;donlt wJI!lt ItO see otie
,of ltheir own JPIISheil out. ilf
iibe "old lbo.Yii' nerwoi'k"
-seems 10 be beatillg lllp •On
Ulinton- .and aJmost two~thirds &lt;of lthe superdelegates
.are men -lthat.couldbadkfu.e \I'Jn any .attempts Ito
tbriqg lfue sqpportcrs •Of &lt;the
'liWO candidates lto.gether.
We wish :the nominating
pr.oces·s were saner. W.e
wish !the rrul.es ·w.ere JJJiilfrom state rto state.
And we .hav.e no objection
· to ..electeo 1J10liticians .havling .a substantial ·say lin
·-sclecting rthe rparty's stan.dardJbear.er. But \When so
many rpeople from
·:yeung b1ac1: men to older
White women - are :excit,!!dfby ihe:ir.ohoices and 1inJog &lt;Up rto \Vote, this year
· &lt;Canit.endrin,disillusion :with
":the sytote:m:" 1I'his is not
:the y.ear lfor superdelegates
Ito &lt;decide.
.
('Steve !Robert-s' latest
book i-s "My IFathers'
!House,.;: Memoir of

lfomn

a

!Family" (William Morrow,
2005 ). Steve and Cokie
!Rdberts can !be aonrocted •
by
e-mdil
'at
-steuecokie@gmail.com.) ·

.

)

..

•

Pomeroy• Middl~ ·~s

0. April6, :zoo8

W.Va. truckers cr1nverge on state
Capitol to protest diesel costs

Not this year

6u111p ~.,.
-6eidiad
.
-1liJniJ

PageA4

OPINION

•.

.

•

;

: ·Euvena Bechtle, 91 ,. of Middleport, passed away
8Y lM' i d M SMIA
111bmsday, April 3, 2008, at Pleasant Vlilley Hospital in
•
ASSOCIAT£0 PRESS WRilrR
Point !Pleasant, W.Va.
: . 'She was born Sept. 26, 1916, in Beec'h Hill, W.Va., to the
CHARLESTON, W.Va.
'late William and Sarah (King) Barnett. •
·
Horns blaring, dozens of
. Mrs. !Bechtle was the owner and operator ·of her own
'DeStaUrllnt m Middleport. 'She was a 55·y&lt;ear Evangeline West Vrr~inia truckers fed
\Chapter'OESChapter '172 and a retired member of the aux- up with high fuel costs converged on the state Capitol
:'i]imy rfor ·the Middleport Fire Department.
in
a Friday morning prote~ .
· He is survived by two sons, John and Ann Ruby 1Becht1e
They
drove off three hours
ofiGolumbus, imll DliiTiiU IL. .and Mary Ann Bechtle of West
Cdlunihia, W.l\la.; a daughter, ·Sarah and IRuss Clontz of later, frus~rated but with
!Lancaster; two gran9sons, Jobn D. Bechtle. and Peter assurances of support. from
Manchin.
Clontt; ~ ~andda:ughters, Mary Ann Frohnauer, !Debra Gov.
More
than
60 rigs rumbled
(lor.dle and ll'inca Sowers; great-grandchildren, Lacey Bias,
·,.;}exandra 'Sowers, Collin 'Sowers and Bryce Oontz; great- off Interstate 64n7 lf'riday
great-grandchildren, Taylor Bias and Mason Bias; and sev- morning and pulled up to the
seat of state government,
'.eflll :nieces and nephews.
·
,
'She· was preceded in death.by her parents; husband. John where · truckers demanded
W. ~J110k" Bechtle; stepmother, Annie Barnett; and one sis- relief. TraiJerc]ess tractors, .
coal trucl&lt;:s, lumber haulers
1er, rfive brothers .and a daughter-in-law.
and
tow trucks were among
· 'Services will be 1:30p.m. Monday, A.pril7, 2008, at the
the
vehicles that roUe4 in
iFis'her-Ainderson-McDaniel Funeral Home in Middleport,
single,file
from a gathering
with lfue Rev. 'Tom Runyon officiating. !Burial will follow
lin lthe IRiv.ervie:w Cemetery at Middleport. Visitlition will 1JOint about 70 miles- north.
The ' convoy of . mostly
be beld from 6 ·to 8 p.m. on Sunday, April 6, 2008, at the
· operators
independent
funeral home.
included
Donald
Cottrill of ·
mile family would like to thaitk the Qverbrook Nursing
Dad's
'JTuck:ing.
Cotttill
.has
.and Rehabilitation Center and Staff. They would also like
to :iharik Dr. 'Shah and the Nurses and Staff .at lhe Pleasant seen his weekly fuel bill
climb to $2,500 from $500
\llilley IEiospitlll on 'Soutb 2.
· lin lieu of flower donations may be made in Mrs. nine years ago. He linked Trucks file down Greenbrier Street as truckers rally against high fuel prices at ~ vyest
the costs to the rising prices Virginia state Capitol in Charleston, W.Va. Friday. More tllan 60 rigs rumbled off Interstate
Bechtle's name to a .charity of your choice.
ODline registry is av:ailiihle at www.andel'SO~l.com. of lumber and other goods. 64!77 on Friday and pulled up to the seat of State government to demand relief.
he luuils on •his flatbed to
'
businesses .across the stare.
up its rig, she said.
regular unleaded gas prices session, none of the 2,134
'1If~; just time for us to
"For owner-operators, the in the state at $3.38, up 64 bills introduced appear to
mak.e .a stand;" said Cottrill, fuel costs are just too cents from a year ago . have targeted taxes.on vehi: ILany Wayne Mo'Gratli, 62 •. of Guysville, passed away 37. "This ain't just for us. much," she said.
Friday's in-state prices for cle fuels . William Doak
11bmsilay, April 3, 2008, as the result of.an automobile acci- W.e're trying to do this for
Amid talk of returning both gas and diesel remain noted thal the session's sucdent.
everybody."
next week in larger num- within two cents of their cessful bills iQcluded a
lEie was born Nov. 6, 1945, in Pomeroy, son of the 1ate
Manchin was away from bers, some protes~rs called recorded highs, reached last $5,000 salary hike for lawEarl .lmd Minnie Bretton McGrath.
the Capitol. His legislative for a starewtde hauling shut- month, AAA said.
makers.
· lEie is ·survived Qy his wife, Barbara Ward McGrath; a director, Jim Pitrolo, told a down. Others spoke of ralState taxes account for
"We pay their wages, and
smi, Gary McGrath; a daughter and son-in-law, CheryJ crowd of truckers and their lying West Virginians to 32.2 cents in those prices . they vote themselves a raise,"
'McGmt:l:i and. Dwayne Ollom; .two grandchildren, supporters in the . Rotunda spearhead a national push to The year began with a said Doak, 54. "Everybody
Chnistoph.er IR¥an McGrath and Mildnzi Ollom; &lt;t brother, that Manchin is urging fed- tackle the problem.
dozen states sporting higher seems to warrant raises and
·Otis McGrath; and a great-grandson.
eral action.
Several faulted the· gover- gas taxes than West stuff. but we don't seem to be
lHe ·w.as ,preceded in death by his parents and a brother,
"The state has no control nor for his absence. More Virginia, while 10 had high- getting anything."
i'lhmb MiGmih
. .' ~
\11{ pnriiDg
'fuel,'' !Ritrolo than a few vowed to take ttie er taxes on diesel, according
Truckers have tal!:en to the
$aniiccs 1\Wllbe Ill JI.'IIl. ~J• :A1xil 8, 2008'; .at lthe .salil. ~) i:islruinnoitr. issue with them into the vot- to January figures from the roads throughout the counY.w~ IFJUJeJ?il ~orne r.m ~1v.ille, •wilii '!Bill !ted'lO-wOtt:iilg .~-lfOtJ. ing booth, during the state's · American
Petroleum try for similar protests all
Miu;Pb.Y Officiatin_g. ll!l'-aliWilllfdllow llll&lt;Gnl\uml'to Qulpe1 . ,cml!· cgoWmmenf' ~ lthe · May l3 primary and in InstitUte. Federal taxes add week. Among other places.
CiCJD!!ICIY .lit 'Shade.IF.nends ~ &lt;Ca'll.arliho funenil &gt;home ,
to ~l1hbm' &amp;
November. A Democrat, another 18.4 cents per-gallftom51to:t!JilliD. Monday,~ 7,:2008. ·
· · , .. · \811illowerrfuCI~ :" .Manchin is up for re-ele&lt;;tion lon to the price of gas ;pld they clogged streets arouliQ
· Pennsylvania's Capitol on
Ytiu iCIIIl -sip lthe \Oriline gnestborik · at ww.w.w,hite- . · ~will~ ~did llittle 1o this year along with nearly 24.4 cents for diesel.
Monday, forced slowdowns
~me.com.
. ' ·tOaibi:':&gt;Wbe:n state Attorney all other statewide officers
But West Vrrginia's fuel on the New Jersey Turnpike
In Jlir»i rdf lflow.ers, oonttibutions .can lbe !liUitle Ito Sa_ving Gencnil ~ :McGraw and most of the Legislature. taxes also provide 61 peron Tuesday and shut down a
Ollie$ ~. :associated \With lllo:me AM]th Caie &lt;df ..am..Wd tbC:proiesfa:!i;and
But before the crowd cent of the state's revenues · state port authority terminal
~Ohio, ~1 Dntdl!Riilge !ltoad, Oli:ysVi.lle. Oliio : ~ ifiri!¥ 'gltelltionli, tiCY- departed, Manchin spoke to for its main road fund ,
67.35.
.
.
· ·
. .
. l-Cilil. . ~a.. fihc;y fa~ beir!ll .its leaders by phone 4uring which relies on federal dol- in Georgia on Thursday.
.
.
. ,. . lf&lt;mzd tto
&lt;or &lt;&amp;"en' t.ell a lengthy private confer- lars as well. The state
. . . . - - - - . . . ..
· [fbeit rigs. "-'sbow ·Ofrfumas ence. That'appeared to cool expects these taxes to bring
.....
•.........-.
suggested most lack health some of the anger.
in $405 ;8 million by the
time
the budget year ends
"I
will
ask
President
Bush
Roger William Thompson,58, .of Lancaster, and former- covera~e, with a number
of
the
June
30. Collections were
to
release
some
1y of Gallia County, passed .a:w.ay in Moum iCatmel East indicahng they shed tbat
strategic petroleuni reserve $547,000 below projections
Hospital at Columbus, rfollowing a brief battle with cancer. benefit to cut costs.
He was born in •F ebruary 1950, son of the late Roger and . Diesel prices averaged to help stabilize the current as of last month.
"It's sort of a Catch-22.
.
.
. $4.14 per .gallon in West cost of fuel. But we also
Winifred Taylor Thompson,
need
Money
that comes off the
to
understand
that
this
•In addition to his parents he was preceded in death ·by one Virginia on Friday, up $1.21
·
S'-"- o
from a year ago, accerding would be a short-term ban- gas tax, comes out of the
SISter, lliLLOn nope.
AAA' D ·1 F 1 G
He is sur:vived iby :three children, Maria Thompson, Roger to
s at Y ue auge dage," the governor said road fund," said Pitrolo,
an i ndq&gt;endt:ru
ThoiJ!PSOII Jr., and Chris Thompson, all of central Ohio.
Report. Donna Doak has aftllrward in a statement: noting chronic complaints
, ~ncy. Wt' can tailor
IJn ,adiJirionltOihe.chililren and grandChildren, he is survived seen that jump; having "The key i~ that we've got of inadequate funding in the
lnsura.ncr prott:et~on u
by huflthers and sisters, ®III\IIy Thompson of Gallipolis, Mike joined her husband on the to get. the "federal govern- state's road budget.
Though the Legislature
Taylor of Groveport, Katie Pierce of Point Pleasant, W.Va., road in 2007. Their D &amp; B ment to understand· t~e
comperiri~ prlco. We n:prescnt
pasSed several tax cuts and
:P~ lLountbeny of Michigan, and Susan Hockenhimer and Trucking, out of West urgency of this issue."
AAA's report averaged phase-outs during its recent
only the finest JIL-.--.
Sh.eila Kleinebrow of central Ohio; an uncle, Forrest Union, spends $1,000 to fill
-~---------------------------insurance
Thompson of Rio Grande; and several cousins.
Graveside ·services will be 2 p.m. Sunday, April 6~ 2008,
.c;...,.. · ·
~"

Joe

,........,

..m

Tn

tli::ilent,

a

We offer the
best prices

and protection
for you.

. -.·Ct:?f.lgressio._nal
.·.,.
..
. .. ,..---.-a....,

•

foeling subpri~ itifertuJ ,

. ~ · f t . Ml!I1111Um~

)

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
letters ro lihe editor ~ welcome. They should be
las dian 300 w.oiris. .Ml htters are subject lfJ &amp;iilin.g,
.Ust.be signed, !ll1Jd in&amp;ude address mui ulep'lione
IJMJftber: Nrumsigllellletters will be published. Letters
:sltoi4J be in good taste, addi:essing iss~s. il'/.01 perSOftdlilies. l.mers of,thanks to organizations and i.ndi-

\li4Mals wiU not be aceepted for publication.

s;uttba~ . tEimt~ -~etttintl
Reader Services
C I f
PDiicr
Third Avenue, Gallij)olis, 0H
•DII'mrin COIIIBnln alllltDitel 1110:be . 45631 . Periodicaipostage paid
......, Wrou l&lt;now mrn """In&amp;..# Galtipollr.

. ~.~ Clll·one of ourn""'"'""''l"·

Or--.
..........

7

1111:

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{1411.W.S
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Pl. f'llllllrlt, WV

iJM)GS-tJII

.,.,...., lihe Associated Ptllas. ,

the
West Virginia 'Press '
Assooia\ion , and lhe Ohio
Newspaper Aaoloclation .

Posbcwa•. Send address cor·
reclions to 1lle Gallipolis O.lly
Tribune, 825 l'hird Avenue,
G.llipolia. OH ~5631 .

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...._..,., bV n1111pa;; II I i n wtWft!lihomeCIIrief...O·ia'• 7 'M.

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(USPS 4. 1401

I
Olllo v.lley Pu?llltlling &lt;Co.
PUblitMd every Sunday, 825

Jann modificatiom for •o .
wi!lil1iir.e blailiing «hhiou~h
bot:Fower''s ,p rimary resithe ~nlry, liru:inerafuig
dence.
·
b0use
·.aliter
lbause.
Two proposals in :the
/
1
Firefi.ghte!l's Me .exbausted.
House and Senate would
Reporters areollt in&lt;drc:v.es,
have done just that. U'
.ca!ILing rthe p1ay-'by-play.
~~le
passed, these .would, like
P-oliticians don il!heir blue
ur.-.r
CRL
indicates,
help
ueans and lament the' crisis
-600,000 f.am:ilies stuck in
rfor llhe .cameras. 1FT~
subprime loans ·to continue
making mortgage paymsur.ers sw.ear 10p .and
·down t.e Omgress that they for IR.espensible Lending ments and .avoid foreclo.aJ1e S@lv.ent. MeanVlbile, (CRL) and signed by a sure. Both 'b orrowers and
hGmeowners watc'h \help- coalition of 15 civil rights, lenders would benefit, "ll
aessly .as rtan'ks .ef w.ater and •h ousing ' and .consumer again, while costing tax- .
hefty bases . r.est on the prganizations; in the debate . payers absolutely nothing.
gwund, waiting if.l)r @Uf pver wnaJ JlSSiru!~ 10
The Senate, unfortunate· ~eaders :to decilile whether .offer. "lawmakers decided ly, recently voted (58 to 36rto help, and, if so, how to exclude a provision that to table their amendment,
moob. Imagine lif this had would .allow courts to mod- S. 2636. llhe House pro. been 1h.e ~nse to 1he ify unaffordable mortgages, posal, HR 3609, bas yet to
Southem ClilifMnia fires.
a provision that without any be voted on.
·
This lcind l!f sl~w cost to taxpayer~ would
l~'s a shame to have to
respoose to a 11$10nal rlis- help stabilize communities legt.slate such a reasonable
· aster w~uld be unf~v- . and prevent up to 600,000 · solution when lenders
~le. Yetili,at'·slthe.sJhtahon additional families facing could, and should, make
·wdhitoday s subprim.e.fore- foreclosure."
these modifications volun:
cl~t&amp;mes, currently mreatTalk about a missed titrily, :without federalinter- .
ening .abou.t .20;000 bouse- oppertunity.
v.ention. !But they ·won't.
me
!fe&lt;deral When Shawn Howell, ·1\9
.holds evecy :w.eek.. Yes, · Wb:ille
·e very · week thousands of Reserve Board scrambles ilraq war ·lleteran from
, struggling families are los- to cut interest rates and bail .· Kentucky, found himself
ing il!heir homes .as lthey out W.all Street investment . with an unma,nageable
wait for their government fiirms, lflelp for ordinary increase on his adjustableto wate ~ and~ them. · people is being D,eglected. rate mortgage, he asked his
S~ngly
enough, Unfoliunately, blaming the lender,
Countrywide
~sident Bu~b left. the rictim has been an ,~too- Financial, to help him find
COIIIltl)' flilf tiD intcmltiolW common response
to a way to avoid foreclosure.
j;IUJlDU! just 'liS ~s national · disa~r these · He rud his part - finding a
lleblrDCld _to WasbingtnD. .deys. Kemember"hmricane second job
but
DC~ to lllldt:ess the crisis. Katrina and ilhe ·victims Countrywide refused to
Mia' ICfiJsiq to deal with Who !Wefe left stranded on modify the loan. Forced
die crilis ibd'Oc'e rthe Easta- their rooftaps l()T inside into foreclosure, the scr~1., the Democraic their attics? Should have viceman and his family
Dlljority 110011 bned 1bal . .purcbase4 tilood insurance, now live in a trailer.
RepUbliellls llllfRteldy y'~.
I don't see failed
1
for compromise. Sadly,
Th.ere's .no doubt that Countrywide's execs living
IUII1ess die new bipartisan dousing the foreclosure fire in trailers, do you?
fervor helps struggling would help vulnerable fam- · If Congress doesn 't act
·homeowners renegotiate ilies and communities pre- on this simple bankruptcy
the terms of their loans, serve what little they have. reform, not only will capaCongress' .attempts to ftx Yet poweiful Washington ble, working families loSe:
this crisis will continue to interests are resisting at their hQmes, but 40 million
miss the mark.
•
least one easy, ine~nsi,ve families li ving near them
According to ·a press solution: Lift the prohibi,' · stand to lose more than
release issued by 'lh.eCenter tion on court-supervised $356 billion · as their prop-

.... Wlecrtpllon
lneiCieCalo""

13 Week5 .. ......... ."32.26
26 Weeks ........... '1&amp;1.20
52
'127.11

w-. .. __ .......

Oi•rtdl County
13 Weeks ........ .... '53.55
26 Weeks ..... ... ...'107. tO
52 Weeks ...........'21421

•

'

.

.

erty valucli plummet That
is a significant erosion of
family wealth, not to men,
tion the tax base that delivers vital community ser~
wices to keep neighborhoods healthy and vibrant
services like hiw.
entor.opm~nt, street repair
.and, yes, fire protection.
This isn 't a bail-@ut for
people who were irrespon•
sible; it is the simplest,
cheapest way to prevent a
downward spiral all .too .
similar to the one that ·
caused . 'the
Great
Depression. This is insurance for .all of us.
W.e now know that even
sophisticated blmkers - .
weU"versed in all the
nuances of fmancing and
backed by teams of lawyers
and accountants- failed to
understand the danger of
subprime loans. What's ,
more, many borrowers '!J.Crt;
deliberately offered prod,
nets that were doomed tci
fctil•.even though they qual.;
ified for better loans theY. ·
would have been able to
afford. There's a reason it's
called "predatory·· lending. ;
So let's stop blaming ~
victims. lt's time to act
quickly, tum off the micrO.:
phones and pick up those
hoses. We have to put out
this fire before it burns us
all. Bankruptcy reform is
an inex.pensive, commonsense solution for honest,
hard-working . subprime
·borrowers. Let's not miss
this cbance, Congr~. to
do right by American
homeowners.
~~
(Donna Brazile is a political comment~tor Of! CNN,
ABC and NPR, contributing columnist to Roll Call,
the newspaper of Capiro!

Hill, and former campaign
manager for AI Gore.)

~~n"f~~':C:e~:~~ oy: Moor:
Yinton.

·

H.
r. · • •
· kill
F:mer~t Home in ~.~.fl.OUse UIC neat ' yy!-$C-()nSln .~~!; :~- : 5 .

3 ·students; neighbors heard smoke alarms

·

, Carl T.Mnrilook, 87, fmctotville, died Friday, April4, 2008,
in Runtington IHealth and Rehabilitation, Huntington, W.Va.
lEie .is survived by bis wife, Lillian Murdock. ·
·
. Services will .be II a.m . .Monday in 'the Hl!li Funeral
Borne, lf&gt;rootorville: Burial will be . in the Centenary
Cemetery, Chesapeake. !friends may call at the funeral
.Jmme from '6 to 8 p.m. Sunday.
.

'·

'

· Karen·Ioyce V.eager, 67, •Glillipo1is, died Thursday, April
3, 2008, at Holzer Medical Center.
·
'Services will be private:
.
Waugh-'Halley-Wood FunerallEiome is assisting the family.
· An online .g uest registry is .available at waugh-halleyw00&lt;4;om.

..

Visit us online

at

. www~mydallpentlnel.com

. and
www.m~dallytllbune.com

Your online source for news .'

Layaway l\l ou ·
For Spring'

· ihe v1ct1ms as April C. . authorities said.
BY AMY FORUTI
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
Englund, 21, of West St.
All .three vic1ims were
Paul, Minn.; Amanda Jean · found in separate bedrooms .
MENOMONIE. Wis.
Rief, 20, of Chaska, Minn. ;
Unrversity
counselors
A smoky house fire near a and Scott A . Hams, 23, of were on hand to help stuUniversity of Wisconsin Hayward. All three appeared dents, and the school
campus killed three students 10 have died of smoke encouraged students to call
early Saturday, even though inhalation, said authorities, their families.
neighbors said they heard who do not suspect foul play.
Hams had pictures online
alarms going off.
"It's a tragedy that no of him water skiing, doing
Rescuers found
two campus prepares for." stunts with a motocross din
women and a man i.n sec- Chancellor
· Charles bike and flying a small air- .
ond-floor bedrooms near Sorensen
said.
"We'll plane. He said . he liked
the
Unive~ity
of grieve in ~his toge ther.~· .
snowboarding, wakeboardFirefighters arrived five ing and skateboarding. "I
W,isconsin-Stout, and they
wen~ pronounced dead at a" minutes after a call made can't believe it's real," said
hospital; authorities sai'd. ·: ·-,.abou!Jl:30 a.m. to fmd smoke his fatper, Allen Hams. "l
The .smoke detectors were commg fium the basement. know there's a · reason.
working, and neighbors first floor and second floor of God's got a plan. He 's such
called police when they the
duplex,
university . a good kid; he'd do anyheard the alarms, · said spokesman Doug Mell said.
thing for anybody."
Menomonie Police Chief . Eng lurid was the only resThe elder Hams said he
Dennis Beety. Police don't ident of the front unit of the had talked to his son on
know why the three victims white house in a row of Friday night.
didn't wake up and leave.
well-kept properties blocks
"There w.as a bottle of away from campus. The
alcohol and the top was on other two victims - Riefl
of it," Beety said . "But ,and Hams- were sleeping
that 's no indication they over because Englund's
weredrinking at the time ."
roommates
left
town,
The university jdentified Englund's
father
and

indwling ·
AunH)wnm

lnwrancr
~mpany,

which bas nuly camftJ tht'
repuurion a.\ ThC' '"t\o Problem"'

l'&lt;ople•. ,o,,k w .OOur the
many o&lt;her advmcages of doing

husinas with an mdependent

intiurmce-agcncy.

111111111!111

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COLUMBUS - Lowoost
carrier
Stybus .
Airlines is shutting down
Sai:Urday and plans tD file'

11-1

. s-r•w:
~~

for bankruptcy protection
next week. becoming- the
latest of the nation's airlines tD fall because of rising fuel costs and a slowing economy.
.
The Friday aJIIIOUIICelllt
came less than a year after
Skybus bad its stattup at
Purt

CDllllllbus

1~Apr16,ll

I

Some in

Kansas
cannot
forgive

...

International AirPort. o11a"ing seVCl'll $10 tligbts. The

S

airline's financial siluation
worsened in recent weeks,

said Stybus spokesllWI
Bob Thneabaum.
"We deeply regret !his
decision. and lbe imp.ct this
will have on our employees
and lbeir famil~ our costome!'$, our vendors and.
otbcr panncrs. and the communities in which we bave
been operating," Michael
Hodge, chief executive of
Columbus-based Skybus,
said in a stateuv:nt
"Stybus .struggled to
overcome the ·combioation
of rising jet fuel costs and
a slowing economic environment;" be said. "These
two issues proved to be
insurmountable for a new ·
carrier."
The airline made 74 daily
flights to 15 U.S. cities.
Tenenbaum said. It has
about 350 employees in

... .....
Cnlvm'-Js and 100 at a liCIC~ pany has Ojpts scheduled
and hub ll Piedmont-liiad tiJnJuP Sept. 2. They ~
International aitpoat in eligi~ for a full rdUnd.
The mine Sllid an ntpts
GR:ensboro.
N.C.
Eimployees lrwnrd of the wm: tD be oomplded
sbllldown Friday oipt
Friday and tbat it plans 10
. Teaatbaum aid lbe final file Mooday for O..prr II
Stybus 8ipt Willi from Ft. blnlauplcy prolrdion.
Slcybus is pdling lbe plug
Laudecdale to CollUIIbus,
aod it landed arouDd I a.m. less dian two weeks aftrr
~y. ~ to air~ CEO Bill Dillendrrlfer
port fligbt infOODIIIKin. .
~ tD pnue a bqok1bnenbaum did DOt blow wrilm&amp; c:aRerO He was sucbow llWIY passengers ceccled by ~. 1be comwould be affected by the plllly's chief fiuncial offishutdown but said lbe com- a:r fu' 1he past year.

I.ocalBriels

.,
.,

/

ina is Friday, May 9 • 9
Board to meet . a.m.
in lbe Gallia Co!aay
Service
ee.r. a1.mr.
RIO GRANDE ....;.. Rio
Grinde Board of Public
Afflini' monthly meeting is
Monday, Apri114 at 6 p.m.
in
the Rio Grande
Municipal Building.
The pablic is inVited to
,attend

Diftdors'
nwfing.
wELLsTON - GalliaJ ackson-Me.i gs-Vinton
Solid Waste Management
District Boan1 of Directors
will meet Thursday, April
10 at 3:30 p.m. in the district office at 1056 S. New
Hampsbire Ave.
~~--.~·-;-~~

.

~·

-

- "SpCIPI1Ili!BIIIg
1

GALLIPOLIS
Gallipolis City Board of
Education will meet on
Monday, April 14 at l p.m.
in the Clay Alternative
School, I 1802 Ohio 7'
· South, to participate in the
Ohio · School
Board
Association development
in-service.

Meeting canceled .
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia
County · Family
and
Chil&lt;Rn First Council hiS
CJ!'"'1ed the
II P!ml·
ninglprogramming meeung.
'l1le 'cOuncil's next meet-

Atn'il

Closed Geauga
I...akc amusement
park to auction
1925-vintage
roller coaster.
, AURORA (AP) -· The
Lake
closed
Geauga
81J1!1sement park in north~~ Ohio plans to auction
Its
1925-vintage
Big
Dipper and other roller
coasters.
•
' Geauga Lake southeast of
Cleveland will bold an auction Jwie 17 and 18 to sell
the wooden Big Dipper and
other rides including the
Double Loop, Raging Wolf
Bobs and Villain.
The owner announced tast
year that the 119-year-old
amusement park was closing.
The
neighboring
""" Wlldwater Kingdom water
park remain~ open.
The owner bas previously sought buyers for the
coasters.

Pike.

G·B .......
damop

. 17

a:

_..Jigt

.,

.,..'
., .

....
'

.

· SGIIS.tradrsk:rs
.
··-·..... at
Vift)l•
ad ·.

........... iD rock falls 81111
die ·tlwiae of
tVU~e 10

die

die~::.~

tonipt,..

'

::t:.;

said

ui ·

ODO

Dislril:t-10 Deputy DiaW

LanJ:.

-~

~

•

~ W~d.

~willodu

-..aCo"

ID

GALLIPOUS - ·Krep . bebroupiDIOOioitoW,and
Gallia Beautiful's annual excavation will begin ·ill
spring cleanup bas been set shott ordrL"
for Saturday, Aprill9.
ODOT Director James
Details will be announced G. Beasley 11igned · the
later.
emugency contract Friday
afternoon. OOOT anticipates the closure being
lifted ·within 30 days,
acoording to Stephanie M.
GALLIPOUS - VFW Filson, public infOl'lllation
Post 4464 wiU bold the office -of District l 0,
annual election of offia:rs at ODOT.
.
the 7:30 p.m. ·meeting on

Thesday, Amil JS. ,
.
T1le loritioo Will.fiC: innc . . . ' . ...1...;.;.., .
post af lli 1iDnt Ave. You
uam.up ··
must present a cw•~ paid

..' .· CaoCtery

-·

~·-.

up membership card in
order to vote.

Contract
awarded

.

RACINE - The village
of Racine is in ·the process
of cleaning up Greenwood

••
low (lQI5t priCIIig.

Cemeray.

· .Anyone wishing to keep
anything should have It
. removed by April 15 . .
MARIETTA ' Ohio . Queslions. call949-2296.
Department ·
of
·
Transponation District 10
Jmnnmiatioa
announces that a oontract
bas been awarded for the
clinic.
Ohio 7 slip repair project
located between - Newport ,
POMEROY
-The
and New Matamoras.
Meigs Cou_nt): Health
The low bidder is Beaver O!l(!l!ltmmt wtU hold .a
Excavating hic.,Of Ciilton, childhO(ld immunization
who bid $174,385 for the clinic from 9-11 a.m. aod 1job. The March 20 slip · 3 p.m. tomorrow.

-'•

011'

~staff. convtnient

hours and wait time. and $39 office visits,
)'01.1 can't affud not 10 visit Ohio QuicltC:are

for your medical needs.

ulck~re
t

KINSHIP PERMANENCY INCENTIVE
The Kinship Permanency Incentive program provides timelimited incentive payments to families caring for their kin.
Eligible families will ~ive an iiutial ,payment of $1,000 per
cbild 10 defray the cost of initial placement .md may mceive five
hundred dollars per ehild at each of six-month intervals (up to a
maximum of $3,500) to support the stability of the ehild's
placement iD the home. Participation in ibis program does not
preclude these families l'Jom receiving Child only
benefits; timHimited incentive payments an: in addition to
TANF bendiu.
.

Eligibility requirements for Ohio's Kinship
lncealive Program include:

Oja M 10 &amp;.M. to 10 p.m.

7 ••••••,

- ·rc
........
Cawo

c

5u

45631

ww&amp;OhiaQIIid:.C:ar-.CDIIII

1'1#'-'·-·· ...

Pe~ency

Pwt'AcrUs

• The court must have aw8rded legal custody or guardianship o
the child on or a&amp;r- July l, 11)()5 to the kinship caregiver. ·
• The public children semces IIFDC}' must have completed the
Relative or Non-Relative Substitute Placement Approvll
Process, inclusive of a criminal background cb!:ck. as well as
completion of an application form.
• The gross income of the caregiver's family, including the
child, may not exceed 300 peroerit of the federal poverty

:

1-7~2342 .81lt.

.,...- H-«l .419008

33

,

. _ - -"'OmjdalytrtbuneJJORl
8 ,...,

.,..w
(7«1) ..,

r

.,spaltl ......

2312, eld 33

-..o~.com

&amp;tc,.. ....... lp¥18 .......

guidciines.

(7.,) 448 21M2. 0111. :t3

awekllpl••"''ddltJWilihll.oam ·

For more infornuition about the program, please contact the
Meigs County Department of Job and Family Services at 9922117 Ext. 116.
1

...,.en., . . . . . . .
(r.o) 418 2112., - "'
tan.wne,., ~•\: a Jallm

0

(

\

..

..

'

'-'

.

.......

North C81011na's TY!!!f Han!brougl1, light, dunks over Juan Palacios duri~ the second half of
the NCM East RegiOi1al flnal basketball game in .Charlotte, N.C. , in this March 29 file phOto.
Hansbrough was selected The Associated Press collele baslletball player of the year friday.

•.

�'

,PageA6

OHIO ·

..

Bl

In He

ll&gt;••..:lll,·,.-.11J

0\'tS Wi•lilllr!S!ii:...

Local Wealleer

~lld-ltNDIS .. ?&gt;;, . . . ID

~·ow-..-.ac

..

•

·J,ocAL,ScnmvtE

-·-----·
-------..........

GNJ!IaliS~----

COLUMBUS - Lowoost
carrier
Stybus .
Airlines is shutting down
Sai:Urday and plans tD file'

11-1

. s-r•w:
~~

for bankruptcy protection
next week. becoming- the
latest of the nation's airlines tD fall because of rising fuel costs and a slowing economy.
.
The Friday aJIIIOUIICelllt
came less than a year after
Skybus bad its stattup at
Purt

CDllllllbus

1~Apr16,ll

I

Some in

Kansas
cannot
forgive

...

International AirPort. o11a"ing seVCl'll $10 tligbts. The

S

airline's financial siluation
worsened in recent weeks,

said Stybus spokesllWI
Bob Thneabaum.
"We deeply regret !his
decision. and lbe imp.ct this
will have on our employees
and lbeir famil~ our costome!'$, our vendors and.
otbcr panncrs. and the communities in which we bave
been operating," Michael
Hodge, chief executive of
Columbus-based Skybus,
said in a stateuv:nt
"Stybus .struggled to
overcome the ·combioation
of rising jet fuel costs and
a slowing economic environment;" be said. "These
two issues proved to be
insurmountable for a new ·
carrier."
The airline made 74 daily
flights to 15 U.S. cities.
Tenenbaum said. It has
about 350 employees in

... .....
Cnlvm'-Js and 100 at a liCIC~ pany has Ojpts scheduled
and hub ll Piedmont-liiad tiJnJuP Sept. 2. They ~
International aitpoat in eligi~ for a full rdUnd.
The mine Sllid an ntpts
GR:ensboro.
N.C.
Eimployees lrwnrd of the wm: tD be oomplded
sbllldown Friday oipt
Friday and tbat it plans 10
. Teaatbaum aid lbe final file Mooday for O..prr II
Stybus 8ipt Willi from Ft. blnlauplcy prolrdion.
Slcybus is pdling lbe plug
Laudecdale to CollUIIbus,
aod it landed arouDd I a.m. less dian two weeks aftrr
~y. ~ to air~ CEO Bill Dillendrrlfer
port fligbt infOODIIIKin. .
~ tD pnue a bqok1bnenbaum did DOt blow wrilm&amp; c:aRerO He was sucbow llWIY passengers ceccled by ~. 1be comwould be affected by the plllly's chief fiuncial offishutdown but said lbe com- a:r fu' 1he past year.

I.ocalBriels

.,
.,

/

ina is Friday, May 9 • 9
Board to meet . a.m.
in lbe Gallia Co!aay
Service
ee.r. a1.mr.
RIO GRANDE ....;.. Rio
Grinde Board of Public
Afflini' monthly meeting is
Monday, Apri114 at 6 p.m.
in
the Rio Grande
Municipal Building.
The pablic is inVited to
,attend

Diftdors'
nwfing.
wELLsTON - GalliaJ ackson-Me.i gs-Vinton
Solid Waste Management
District Boan1 of Directors
will meet Thursday, April
10 at 3:30 p.m. in the district office at 1056 S. New
Hampsbire Ave.
~~--.~·-;-~~

.

~·

-

- "SpCIPI1Ili!BIIIg
1

GALLIPOLIS
Gallipolis City Board of
Education will meet on
Monday, April 14 at l p.m.
in the Clay Alternative
School, I 1802 Ohio 7'
· South, to participate in the
Ohio · School
Board
Association development
in-service.

Meeting canceled .
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia
County · Family
and
Chil&lt;Rn First Council hiS
CJ!'"'1ed the
II P!ml·
ninglprogramming meeung.
'l1le 'cOuncil's next meet-

Atn'il

Closed Geauga
I...akc amusement
park to auction
1925-vintage
roller coaster.
, AURORA (AP) -· The
Lake
closed
Geauga
81J1!1sement park in north~~ Ohio plans to auction
Its
1925-vintage
Big
Dipper and other roller
coasters.
•
' Geauga Lake southeast of
Cleveland will bold an auction Jwie 17 and 18 to sell
the wooden Big Dipper and
other rides including the
Double Loop, Raging Wolf
Bobs and Villain.
The owner announced tast
year that the 119-year-old
amusement park was closing.
The
neighboring
""" Wlldwater Kingdom water
park remain~ open.
The owner bas previously sought buyers for the
coasters.

Pike.

G·B .......
damop

. 17

a:

_..Jigt

.,

.,..'
., .

....
'

.

· SGIIS.tradrsk:rs
.
··-·..... at
Vift)l•
ad ·.

........... iD rock falls 81111
die ·tlwiae of
tVU~e 10

die

die~::.~

tonipt,..

'

::t:.;

said

ui ·

ODO

Dislril:t-10 Deputy DiaW

LanJ:.

-~

~

•

~ W~d.

~willodu

-..aCo"

ID

GALLIPOUS - ·Krep . bebroupiDIOOioitoW,and
Gallia Beautiful's annual excavation will begin ·ill
spring cleanup bas been set shott ordrL"
for Saturday, Aprill9.
ODOT Director James
Details will be announced G. Beasley 11igned · the
later.
emugency contract Friday
afternoon. OOOT anticipates the closure being
lifted ·within 30 days,
acoording to Stephanie M.
GALLIPOUS - VFW Filson, public infOl'lllation
Post 4464 wiU bold the office -of District l 0,
annual election of offia:rs at ODOT.
.
the 7:30 p.m. ·meeting on

Thesday, Amil JS. ,
.
T1le loritioo Will.fiC: innc . . . ' . ...1...;.;.., .
post af lli 1iDnt Ave. You
uam.up ··
must present a cw•~ paid

..' .· CaoCtery

-·

~·-.

up membership card in
order to vote.

Contract
awarded

.

RACINE - The village
of Racine is in ·the process
of cleaning up Greenwood

••
low (lQI5t priCIIig.

Cemeray.

· .Anyone wishing to keep
anything should have It
. removed by April 15 . .
MARIETTA ' Ohio . Queslions. call949-2296.
Department ·
of
·
Transponation District 10
Jmnnmiatioa
announces that a oontract
bas been awarded for the
clinic.
Ohio 7 slip repair project
located between - Newport ,
POMEROY
-The
and New Matamoras.
Meigs Cou_nt): Health
The low bidder is Beaver O!l(!l!ltmmt wtU hold .a
Excavating hic.,Of Ciilton, childhO(ld immunization
who bid $174,385 for the clinic from 9-11 a.m. aod 1job. The March 20 slip · 3 p.m. tomorrow.

-'•

011'

~staff. convtnient

hours and wait time. and $39 office visits,
)'01.1 can't affud not 10 visit Ohio QuicltC:are

for your medical needs.

ulck~re
t

KINSHIP PERMANENCY INCENTIVE
The Kinship Permanency Incentive program provides timelimited incentive payments to families caring for their kin.
Eligible families will ~ive an iiutial ,payment of $1,000 per
cbild 10 defray the cost of initial placement .md may mceive five
hundred dollars per ehild at each of six-month intervals (up to a
maximum of $3,500) to support the stability of the ehild's
placement iD the home. Participation in ibis program does not
preclude these families l'Jom receiving Child only
benefits; timHimited incentive payments an: in addition to
TANF bendiu.
.

Eligibility requirements for Ohio's Kinship
lncealive Program include:

Oja M 10 &amp;.M. to 10 p.m.

7 ••••••,

- ·rc
........
Cawo

c

5u

45631

ww&amp;OhiaQIIid:.C:ar-.CDIIII

1'1#'-'·-·· ...

Pe~ency

Pwt'AcrUs

• The court must have aw8rded legal custody or guardianship o
the child on or a&amp;r- July l, 11)()5 to the kinship caregiver. ·
• The public children semces IIFDC}' must have completed the
Relative or Non-Relative Substitute Placement Approvll
Process, inclusive of a criminal background cb!:ck. as well as
completion of an application form.
• The gross income of the caregiver's family, including the
child, may not exceed 300 peroerit of the federal poverty

:

1-7~2342 .81lt.

.,...- H-«l .419008

33

,

. _ - -"'OmjdalytrtbuneJJORl
8 ,...,

.,..w
(7«1) ..,

r

.,spaltl ......

2312, eld 33

-..o~.com

&amp;tc,.. ....... lp¥18 .......

guidciines.

(7.,) 448 21M2. 0111. :t3

awekllpl••"''ddltJWilihll.oam ·

For more infornuition about the program, please contact the
Meigs County Department of Job and Family Services at 9922117 Ext. 116.
1

...,.en., . . . . . . .
(r.o) 418 2112., - "'
tan.wne,., ~•\: a Jallm

0

(

\

..

..

'

'-'

.

.......

North C81011na's TY!!!f Han!brougl1, light, dunks over Juan Palacios duri~ the second half of
the NCM East RegiOi1al flnal basketball game in .Charlotte, N.C. , in this March 29 file phOto.
Hansbrough was selected The Associated Press collele baslletball player of the year friday.

•.

�•

•--··Jii'" '

.. a aa. • e s t••sr~···~•~e•r••

as

Roy
ft

•

·ss••·"'s. Afril' moa

1

s

J!A~ilil ...
a.:
.. - - .

I

I

i t .... l

r' lePg B3

9VCS ·honors ·a~ at W"mter Sports Banquet .

....

.

'

ss•!!•aF IJIIIII'•:ac;•z

~­

~¥11UBIJNEXOM

lf'ic:tlmld,
ifrom left.

'lll.e'bo!IS
Ms\cietbell

..,.rowm.
melSfrom
the(()\ICS
Winter.

aw

n

Sports
Banquet.
iFiley i81'll
0tmiel
llr.win, 2actl
ICarr•.iienry

1RJ ' .

••lllll'lt-.llt.. . .
_,
~

~ick,

'71 ,...
.
I
.
aa.'JNI:

~le:Scdtt

.--.-n
"....

0

ami Jared

IBart!ey.

WEST

SIT

0

Lady Knigl•ts double up Wahama

NELSONVrui..E - · lfhe
Meigli ~ SChool rtrack
Jllld field :Je!!11K prtiawatcd
in the Rooky l'llllils TTack

I

llnvitatioruil.at Nelsonville- I
Y&lt;Oilt

~b

'School

on

Friday w.ith Stwcn other
catCa 'SdbOOls, 1J1bc £ompeti,
~ for both
idie gil"Js ltCalll fm- ,.-......,,-......,
isbcd tin fifth iJllace with 75
'JIOiuts, and tthe !boys ·leaD!
finimen tin scv.enih IWiib 55 .
1Iaklir!g first &lt;Over.Jill for
ilhc :gilfls w&amp; Athens with
a05 !POints. Ne1sonvil1eYcn\: W$lf.ight 'belrind ·them
w.iih a 02, followed .by
11edera1 Hoo1cing with
'98.50.andWalerfordwith
'I3
1!1 :50. Vinton &lt;Count~,
JJ!Cbon, Jlllil IBcrnc IUnion
ltook. si'Jl'th, seventh, and !Emil)' !fields, Whitney
.eighth, TCSpeetiv&lt;Cly.
!Johnson, .and Wolfe with
. lfor tthc 'boys, Jlnd unlike senior Patti Vining comttheir girlli, iBeme Union bined for .a time of 1:00.23.
finiShed ·well . .ahead of Other Tunner-up finisbes
.every~ else. They ~ for the .girls tea1n ineluded
il'mt. with 1:55 pomK the 4xlOOm r.rilay, run by
Aihcns ihad ihc ~st ..all- f'.ic1ds, ·Vining, Wolfe, and
~ound .d.ay,. ~mnm,g .the junior Adrian Bolin. Their
,girls COII1JlClltlon .and 'tak- time was :56 45
~ng iiCC~d;in ~ boys with Bolin
~ond place
~ .5@ pomts. Third tthrongh individually in the I OOm
mtcth 'P~ w.cre bokson ·hurdles with a time of
~Sil pomts), Nelsonville- 17.70. Runner-up finishes
YaH: (1!0.50), Waterford w,cre wonh eight team
~66.50), :and Vimon _County points.
(66). ~.edcral Hocking W$
Gruescr had a third-place
last~ 5[.50.
.
:finim ·in the discus throw to
ilndi¥Idwilly. , the grrls go with her frrst in ·the shot
team
. . lh.ad three .a~letcs put.:Shc had .a thtow of 89wnh first plawe fimshcs. 04
.
Junior rcatie Wolfe too'k . :· ,good for SIX team
first tin '1he J OOm ,dJISh with pmms. .
.
.
.a lliimc l,{)f 13.44 . .!Junior
On .the ~ys Side, semor
Dcv.an 'SoulSby ·won the Cassad.y 'WJllford ihrew the
800m run w.ith .a time of ·shot put 4;3-03.7:5, also
1:44.:SD. ' Senior Melissa wonhy of third place.
· Gru.eser ltltrew lihc. fai:tbest Taki11g founh place in the
mlihc ·shot JPII1 with .aiiiUII'k. boys 806m Tun was
rdf :27416.00. iEaCh first !Br.andon Hanning. The
place ffiini.tih W$ 'Wm:th ~0 junior finish ~itb a _time of
ileam!P"ints.
2:18.00, earmng h1s team
· 'IJbe lbo,ys team lhad one five points.
~ tta'kc first iJll.acc
~urum: IK.imbcrly Swisher,
lB1l
~v.cm.
'Senior wnh a ume of 6:22.01, finBnmilon liisber lbcsted .all ·ished in fifth place in the
il\iliQ!:jri lin tbc lOOm dash girls !600m run, which
w.ifh ;a time l(jf lll AS. The earned four team points.
\boyfl lilso !had .a fu&amp;t p1.acc
The Marauder track and
1inisb m :the 4x200m :r.e!ay, field teams ate. bad: in
oounc.s y of sophomore action on Tuesday when
Jeremy Smith, !fisher, they travel to Jackson for a
9unior &lt;Gabe Hill, and meet scheduled to stan 111
'1ieliiorCome1ins !EJ1tlish.
4:30p.m .
The .girls 4x200m relay
Full results are available
.~
finiShed
fiooond on
the
web
at
hebind Mhen!i. lluniors www.baumspage.com

lticm 'Was
~$

•

s

:took

Memphis.

.....

hanored

1

&lt;Cheer- .
llelltters,
ifr.l!lm

left
Melissa
Stl!nlp,
IAieKis
ii!lem):,
Elicil

II'IMn,
~

Erin

Bart~y

.lind
lllmll)cla
Jllll'lils ilt

AP

ttle
2(!)(!18

Winter
Sports
Sanquet.

I

...............
/··

.I

.

'

Two Wheel
.

aI

0

Aligment

sa..

1 .

. 1,...
~--~---------.
llalb Fs1l Su1r Pac•••• 1

I

1

Oll ·cl:langeanddlillller•'Rotlde.and~nspect

•.
I Four
.andCebor'FIIler·
I ,J,..._a• 'I •l'tlliitAIIIIMJ•ChackiBebs I
. 1mdlh.
To
I . . 5qds. '01 GM or GWI Vet:'lcle
I
I
$t4.95 .. · I

I

Tns•~Air

I
1.

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

. 'GM Premium Blend
I Oil and Riter Change
.

GM Vehide up to 5 qts..

...............
.............

I

$2t.85

I

Tire Rotation

And Brake Inspection
.

$18.85

...............
).
. ............,
I

I Four Wheel AUgnment I

a lime of 2:05.7,
.tuldma 'Ibnn:!• e 'PcM. Willie 'J1nneo 11111 juaiar
WOII lillll place ill 61: . . . Nc=b AdkiDS ta1li&amp;id •
put
widJ a 1brow of 21 f c, IDtal d. 6ree
" 8 illcbes,
while 'f1M = clfuill betm ·
.·
100t 1DD .hoooni in die 100- 'DM••II!! w• lhird in 1bc
.mspeetively in die ·lhot put lD1Ifa: 6m.Des event widl a 100m••'n wilh a timed
1:01-:5, 1dci1e ,ldljns plllllld ·
aad clilcus. Jmnsoo :duew 1ime af 18.2 • ••'"'•·
AtbetiS WOD 1bc Jids , tlinl ja badl lhc loog .
36-.feet, 6 ird!es in 1bc sbot
aad fellow IICllior c'alll!!* COilijlttition 'with a teazn (12 feet.} ioc:h)
Bnc:r vmn for m -feet. s tally of 91.5 _p+•11•, wbi1e I dllh (14.31 ~•).

·Rebels -

,........

lhtfjr.Jd .

ICDd

fn&gt;• =

. , wilh

:= w!C:J:too!h:

iDches in lhc di!!OJS.
The Laty Rcbcls, 011 1be
odlcr band, !iCored 24 points runner-up spot witb a tDtll dies wid! a time of 22 lieCODds f1ll. Htcficld was also
as a team - including a of 62 pomts. .
1bc
Rebels were fourth in tbe discus wifli a
pail of event champions in
IIOJibomore
Sav11111111 runner-up m tbe 4l200m throw of 63-feet, 4 ioches.

Ladr

,,;

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Jusr Don'T LET
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Us .AT
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OR 800-837-1094 ··
•

To MAKE AN APPT.

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.. a aa. • e s t••sr~···~•~e•r••

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9VCS ·honors ·a~ at W"mter Sports Banquet .

....

.

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ss•!!•aF IJIIIII'•:ac;•z

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~¥11UBIJNEXOM

lf'ic:tlmld,
ifrom left.

'lll.e'bo!IS
Ms\cietbell

..,.rowm.
melSfrom
the(()\ICS
Winter.

aw

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Sports
Banquet.
iFiley i81'll
0tmiel
llr.win, 2actl
ICarr•.iienry

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••lllll'lt-.llt.. . .
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IBart!ey.

WEST

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Lady Knigl•ts double up Wahama

NELSONVrui..E - · lfhe
Meigli ~ SChool rtrack
Jllld field :Je!!11K prtiawatcd
in the Rooky l'llllils TTack

I

llnvitatioruil.at Nelsonville- I
Y&lt;Oilt

~b

'School

on

Friday w.ith Stwcn other
catCa 'SdbOOls, 1J1bc £ompeti,
~ for both
idie gil"Js ltCalll fm- ,.-......,,-......,
isbcd tin fifth iJllace with 75
'JIOiuts, and tthe !boys ·leaD!
finimen tin scv.enih IWiib 55 .
1Iaklir!g first &lt;Over.Jill for
ilhc :gilfls w&amp; Athens with
a05 !POints. Ne1sonvil1eYcn\: W$lf.ight 'belrind ·them
w.iih a 02, followed .by
11edera1 Hoo1cing with
'98.50.andWalerfordwith
'I3
1!1 :50. Vinton &lt;Count~,
JJ!Cbon, Jlllil IBcrnc IUnion
ltook. si'Jl'th, seventh, and !Emil)' !fields, Whitney
.eighth, TCSpeetiv&lt;Cly.
!Johnson, .and Wolfe with
. lfor tthc 'boys, Jlnd unlike senior Patti Vining comttheir girlli, iBeme Union bined for .a time of 1:00.23.
finiShed ·well . .ahead of Other Tunner-up finisbes
.every~ else. They ~ for the .girls tea1n ineluded
il'mt. with 1:55 pomK the 4xlOOm r.rilay, run by
Aihcns ihad ihc ~st ..all- f'.ic1ds, ·Vining, Wolfe, and
~ound .d.ay,. ~mnm,g .the junior Adrian Bolin. Their
,girls COII1JlClltlon .and 'tak- time was :56 45
~ng iiCC~d;in ~ boys with Bolin
~ond place
~ .5@ pomts. Third tthrongh individually in the I OOm
mtcth 'P~ w.cre bokson ·hurdles with a time of
~Sil pomts), Nelsonville- 17.70. Runner-up finishes
YaH: (1!0.50), Waterford w,cre wonh eight team
~66.50), :and Vimon _County points.
(66). ~.edcral Hocking W$
Gruescr had a third-place
last~ 5[.50.
.
:finim ·in the discus throw to
ilndi¥Idwilly. , the grrls go with her frrst in ·the shot
team
. . lh.ad three .a~letcs put.:Shc had .a thtow of 89wnh first plawe fimshcs. 04
.
Junior rcatie Wolfe too'k . :· ,good for SIX team
first tin '1he J OOm ,dJISh with pmms. .
.
.
.a lliimc l,{)f 13.44 . .!Junior
On .the ~ys Side, semor
Dcv.an 'SoulSby ·won the Cassad.y 'WJllford ihrew the
800m run w.ith .a time of ·shot put 4;3-03.7:5, also
1:44.:SD. ' Senior Melissa wonhy of third place.
· Gru.eser ltltrew lihc. fai:tbest Taki11g founh place in the
mlihc ·shot JPII1 with .aiiiUII'k. boys 806m Tun was
rdf :27416.00. iEaCh first !Br.andon Hanning. The
place ffiini.tih W$ 'Wm:th ~0 junior finish ~itb a _time of
ileam!P"ints.
2:18.00, earmng h1s team
· 'IJbe lbo,ys team lhad one five points.
~ tta'kc first iJll.acc
~urum: IK.imbcrly Swisher,
lB1l
~v.cm.
'Senior wnh a ume of 6:22.01, finBnmilon liisber lbcsted .all ·ished in fifth place in the
il\iliQ!:jri lin tbc lOOm dash girls !600m run, which
w.ifh ;a time l(jf lll AS. The earned four team points.
\boyfl lilso !had .a fu&amp;t p1.acc
The Marauder track and
1inisb m :the 4x200m :r.e!ay, field teams ate. bad: in
oounc.s y of sophomore action on Tuesday when
Jeremy Smith, !fisher, they travel to Jackson for a
9unior &lt;Gabe Hill, and meet scheduled to stan 111
'1ieliiorCome1ins !EJ1tlish.
4:30p.m .
The .girls 4x200m relay
Full results are available
.~
finiShed
fiooond on
the
web
at
hebind Mhen!i. lluniors www.baumspage.com

lticm 'Was
~$

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s

:took

Memphis.

.....

hanored

1

&lt;Cheer- .
llelltters,
ifr.l!lm

left
Melissa
Stl!nlp,
IAieKis
ii!lem):,
Elicil

II'IMn,
~

Erin

Bart~y

.lind
lllmll)cla
Jllll'lils ilt

AP

ttle
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Winter
Sports
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llalb Fs1l Su1r Pac•••• 1

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Oll ·cl:langeanddlillller•'Rotlde.and~nspect

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I Four
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To
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a lime of 2:05.7,
.tuldma 'Ibnn:!• e 'PcM. Willie 'J1nneo 11111 juaiar
WOII lillll place ill 61: . . . Nc=b AdkiDS ta1li&amp;id •
put
widJ a 1brow of 21 f c, IDtal d. 6ree
" 8 illcbes,
while 'f1M = clfuill betm ·
.·
100t 1DD .hoooni in die 100- 'DM••II!! w• lhird in 1bc
.mspeetively in die ·lhot put lD1Ifa: 6m.Des event widl a 100m••'n wilh a timed
1:01-:5, 1dci1e ,ldljns plllllld ·
aad clilcus. Jmnsoo :duew 1ime af 18.2 • ••'"'•·
AtbetiS WOD 1bc Jids , tlinl ja badl lhc loog .
36-.feet, 6 ird!es in 1bc sbot
aad fellow IICllior c'alll!!* COilijlttition 'with a teazn (12 feet.} ioc:h)
Bnc:r vmn for m -feet. s tally of 91.5 _p+•11•, wbi1e I dllh (14.31 ~•).

·Rebels -

,........

lhtfjr.Jd .

ICDd

fn&gt;• =

. , wilh

:= w!C:J:too!h:

iDches in lhc di!!OJS.
The Laty Rcbcls, 011 1be
odlcr band, !iCored 24 points runner-up spot witb a tDtll dies wid! a time of 22 lieCODds f1ll. Htcficld was also
as a team - including a of 62 pomts. .
1bc
Rebels were fourth in tbe discus wifli a
pail of event champions in
IIOJibomore
Sav11111111 runner-up m tbe 4l200m throw of 63-feet, 4 ioches.

Ladr

,,;

.

1

$59.95

•TapOII~tFILildsUp

Jusr Don'T LET
ANYONE WORK
ON
CAR.
HAve OtE OF OUR .

Gil TRAIN8J 11
Do TIE Joe RIGHI
THE fiRSTT
Us .AT
740-992-6614
CALL

OR 800-837-1094 ··
•

To MAKE AN APPT.

....--------·"""'-----------...--

:t:

•

andToe

Check &amp; Adjust Camber

tbird-LW:

~U:~'(?7!}~

I1

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•

m

.............
,
..
,
Ifill'•••••••
I
I
Get1KOFF
I.
au
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.._______ _ __,I
,.••••••••
..
1ft. OFF
'i

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I
I

On

GM Delco Battery's
and GM 'Wiper BIBdes

I
..._.,lanice~
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z-.~:--tiiiallil'1111

• a ... :iia....

_~eF6oss

s

·IPIIII••cc01t' • X'" 1\t • C.:(Jiiii•E
..

·LB has no .doubts he made right JGR teaming with T~yota to
· to reh•• n to Ohio State .tackle rash of
· •; issues
COLUMBUS (AP) Ohio 'State'1! Austin Spjiler
temen1bcn; the first &lt;lhoqght
jle bad 'IPOO lbearinJ!llhal: the
: ~in imnl of bim .at line- ·
:
' ' James Lawiruri.t:i;;,
•W. OBmin_g back for his

'""'*'

'ill

Gavin Shadle of .Gallipolis recentty participated 1n Hot 'Rod's Arenacross Winter Series ~
Hem:lelson ti015e-Aren'il in JaCkson. Shadle 1001\ lst place in the oil ir)jec1ed class ·a nd 2nd
·
'
•
place m both the 50cc 46 and -50cc tJpen "-13 classes.

will
Dt5pite ~of Butler and auotet;
Buckeyts see bright _t hi• aheM

..._. ·"" SI&lt;Oimi-llER

Ohio

State coach Thad Matta
lle\l.cr millie ·tbe case that
winning 1IJe Nl1f WliS .a liiJb.

stiture for J!lOUm deep m1be
NCAA 'lnnmament But it
1lUIJ: 1lcm 'boWing out w.iib .a
loss.
"AbsOlute~," ·Matta said
by lJiborare &lt;Wbilelibe 1CaJDllus·

ibrollldl

.negmatNJ .

.Manhattan lnlffu: Jlftm' ilie
Buckeyes
beat·
Mes•wibn!!C!Its 92-85 in the
.· ~bampionSbip
'llbursday
~- "'The biggest :tbinR is
;that this team got 'tiCttti in
1he last 1lu= wc:Cks in tbe
NIT. And No. 2, players got
better. I qoUii!n' t be llllppier
with .thlt .as we loot to Jhc
.future:"
.

~T WORIH, Texas Joe Gibbs Racing came into
Texas Motor Speedway
with rwo wins i n the past of mechanical failures and
: !JCIIior season.
;tbree :r.aces. iBy 1eam &lt;:alcu- took his concerns to team
: ' "'h aap.n Spitler said.
latiims., that's aoout three .(I)WDCT Joe &lt;Gibbs.
· : : Spitler later looked at
viotmes·Shmt of-where the~
"It's pretty frustrating, but
• Laurinaitis' ·l'elnrn as .a posiSbou1d be.
anytime you ao have a prob:tive. .another Chance to !learn
Meclumica'l
~ssues
have
lem, .at least it hasn 't hap:Smnethill)1; fmm the finest
plagued all three Gibbs cars ;pened twice," !Busch said.
;oollegiate li.i:obaclcer in 1:be
this
'Sellson at v.arious times, "We've been worlcing on
, ~. He tried not to think
i creating a frustration level things to.ltl)' and 0nly make
: ~~year spent .On the
, . •often :unseen iri teams run- it happen once. ~ o talking to
: liideline. watching No. 33
ning -so well. Kyle Busch aoe, it's 'kind of a ' Shame on
:roam the field making tack.Jes. .
· - - enters Sunday's Tace fifth in us' to have .it bappen once,
: · Ailmost evetyone fi,gured ·Ohio State linebacker James l..aurinaitis yells to his team- the Sprint Cup standings, iBm it's .a .prdblem When it's
·
:1 Jmrinaitis, who was tabbed mates during ;a college football game •inst Wisconsin, i~ Tony Stewan is sixth .and twice.
·:as
a
topI~ or even mp-5 ... · "
...
fi
Denny
Hauilin,
itbe
·winner
'
'.Fommately,
we haven' t
:(lid. lin this sprin_g' s &lt;draft, •niS ••OV. 3 • .z.007
· ., · lie !Photo. in Cl!llumbus. OhiG 'State 'linelast
w«ik
;at
Mmtiru;ville
bad
the
·same
problem
twice
: ..,ould tae the mO!Ie}' mid tlacker James laurinaitis could nave :taken tile mone~ and
yet."
"""
·. iun. But 1he junior said the run. Some of the~ closest to tlim said ne ·should read· Speedway, is e§bth.
''h'i&gt;
llurr.d.
A!lllthey
llrnow
But
the
!broken
steenng
:if)ecision ro 1!tay if~ lhis rfurttre NR. ayearear1y, without running the l'isk of a deblli·
:founh -season .as a Buckeye teting 'injury While winding up tris. ool~ ooareer. But is they 1breke ;a pan and it oox plagued bl:nh Hamlin
:w$!1"t .all dmt troubling.
Laurinaltis said !be Jiust lhiHI to come 'back tl!t 1he !Buckeyes. ikept them from winning a and Busch, ibaffiing the
· : "'1 just pmyed hard on it seriiGT this fall, is one 'Of the Laurinaitis is . remmik:ably ll'ace.," Jimmy Makar, senior entire Gibbs oFgani.zation.
:\Uid o(JIICC yau pray &lt;011 solne- IIOOSt ·deoor.ated ilinehaclrers saft-spoken .and .almast vice !Jlresldent of racing Makar said ·the :team bas yet
:tbing,~ou'get.asignandyou in college foothlill bistmy. blends in with lihe lbaok- r@Jl'T"DGDS :at JGR. said .to pi:npaint what happened
to Hamlin';;, but said
;ron -w1th it and you oon"t HewontheNagurslciAwan:l gmund. He .doesn' t feel a Friday. ·
1
iUDderstand
their
frusBuscb
's fail we a week later
bave t0 wony iOOut it any- two years . ago and the need to call attention to him.DIOII;" he said Friday. "' Butkus Award l1:ast ~n self. Unlike a lot of elit.e col- itration. All we .can .do is :get was .a n assembly issue. ..
'1n all my years rof racing.
took .adv.ice !from 1bc people and ·has been 'll first.,team · lege stars, he doesn't feel he t o ,.wmik.. TheFe'1! rtmthi.ng
do but 'fi11 the prob- rve never. ever, seen that
Closest to me and !bey :were Associated
Plre!&gt;s AllJ.- bas rm ;COnstantly prove or yoo
all kind of telling me, ' Hey, Ammcan.hl!dl 11CW"'S. He promote himself. ·
liOIIl and show them that it's problem once let alone
. ~back..' hook that .as a also was die Big 'Thn'-s
"James is .a guy &lt;that 110 fixed -be proactive about twice," Makar -said. "The
SJgiL
defensive p~er &lt;1f the year matter how good !be ;gets -or the ·i ssues we' ve been hav- comfmting •thing !is that we
It isn't often these days last season .and is an .odds-on bo
h
··
be &lt;i11g."
lmow tliis isn"t because we
:iluit a young Jllblete walk!; favorite ·t o
add
the · w muc cerogm:tr:on . ·
1be problems lhave ·been •have · !bad meChanics. We
away from . a promise of Lombardi, Len .and/or _gets, every day in llfactice
.and usually knew om :people are good.
·widespread.
Lambo!]¥hinis., diamonds Bednarik trophies Chis year. be's the guy running past
come
when
a
Gibbs car is !But sometimes you run into
.and million-&amp;lllar homes to
But it w.asn't .\H iihe .accO- everybody,n fellow ilineproblems with &lt;autside vephang around with his ·lbnd- lades and .awards dllt 4rew bacb:r · Mar~us Freeman .running near the front.
:Hamlin's
;power
steering
d0rs,
and we ltbink that's
. dies for another year. A play- . him bacik fO£AJM*r SCI'SOO said. ..He's me guy who
•
k ·
d fall
finds that ener_gy and rna'kes
· ediinAtlanta,;.andJbe 'had been the cause of many of
·&lt;C:r s stoc nses an
s
"&amp;lncaiion'.s Unp0rtant, sure he~ getting bdier
We.'! .picbp issue while OLD' issues S0 far :this year."
;~to the ficldeness being wilh your 'm ends, this and better."
.
leadi11g
on .a restart in the
lbat's comfaning to
: rof_~ experts bef~ ~ ~ .is the~ tunc of yoor life, n
LiDebaolcers.ooach and ~
• ~IIIJCS can oost millions m be said when .asked to list
~ Glosi!lg llljlS at Bristol-the Hamlin, who has .a histoty
: ;fnnlre earnings.
the reasons for returning.
defensive. CO&lt;_J£dinator ~ same JlTOblem Stewart had of being outspoken when
: ·. But Laurinaitis took. what
His mother and falll!l[ _
Ft~ Sllld his pnze pupilts mements lbef&lt;m: · when his car. has prob'lems. His
:·8l0111lted to .a winning lot- Joe Laurinaitis, the WWE a~- ·
.
.
Hauilin
lhim for 'the fuistration over mechanical
:'teJ:Ylicket ... and tore it~. wrestlerlnown.as""Animal" . Hes ;8ot. the m~1bles lead.
failwes bad ' been building
· · f'¢llow linebacker Curtis from1hel.iegiooof0oom- and ~at s•• the. m?st tmpor.Susdllbas tiad •the worst toward a osli!IW boil when lbe
:TellY said he was shocked ~ell 'bim to get 'liis degree tantlhmg.. ~f!ckell .. , luck, losin&amp;his pow.er steer- finally broke imough with
: ~ _~
'beard
that and enjoy his last year
His bunulny and matunty ing in Bristol - while lead- the win 1ast w.e ek in
;Laurinains w.as coming beforetumingpro. 'So1bafs . t be.~ tlluslnlled by ing -· then ~ng . a rear Martinsville.
-~
just what he decided to do.
Law:inaitls ~swcr when be
last · week
in
..Between myself and
. : , "1 was very 'S1llpli!led, but · He admits there are times was .asked If any of his gear
Mattinsville.
A
'
b
roken
gas(Busch)
with the steering
:&amp;a just spem for James wben be digs deep into his friends ihoogbt he w.as crazy
·.lind what type of character pockets and wishes he could to tum down .ail that money ket lilso todk him aut of boll issues, they were
:file has," he said "He wanted pull out a wad of cash. !But and risk so much to come contention at bil! home &lt;track asliCmbly issues at itbe factoin Las Vegas.
ry,~ Hamlin said. "That is
~ :tiniSb what be otarted 1 at the same time, he doesn' t back to campus.
B16d!.,
Who
scored · some1bing we really can"t
~ him .' for ihat, have .any OOubts that be did
~A few Ujends, but those
·
T
_oyota'
s
first
Cqp
victocy
chaqge at our or.ganization.
"b('C•se ~-W!!t •.a. !Oy,gb ;lbc, t'jJbt ~ for him olllld are _guys who just ~JDQiiey
!~Sian .
~
' lbis&amp;mily.
· · first,~ be said. ~And that's with ·ibis w.in !last month in · It·s really just ·.a freak 'thing
;. Law:inaitis, .a ·M oot-3,
"There' s 11Q ~ts,~ be the wrong way Ito look at Atlanta, frgures be's i)JTOba- why it's ·happening to all
· 2-40-pounder w.bo will be a -said.
·
.
life."
bly llost three races because three r;:ars se Tegularly.

=

Passed

,

()(i)IJJ]MBUS -

ltrJIIIIIIlAtiB
liOP-NJTO 'RACING !MUTER

by

.

..-- fiY.cp!IIG8ja11Je

• • f " " .....

.

gives you

through
. .. -:: ·

' -- .

. . ll W$ I yeill' ·of lllinSitiOll
.after last y.car'!s .35-4 run to

1be natiimal ~ionsbip
. Cmeendcd lwjth three
n leaving early for
•..llbeNBA draft, .and with two Ohio State's Jamal Bi.rtler, Tight, cuts down part of the net
llliitCrS .grarhiating.
after Ohio State beat Massactrusetts 92'85 in the final of
Senior point ~ Jamar college basi celball's NIT at Yadison Square Garden in New
ut1cr .bad a big year, but it Vorl&lt; on Thursday.
took a long time for the rest · But before · anyone can er of the year in MiohiJPI",
&lt;Of . tbe Buckey1:s - wbo begin to contemplate What will' have to learn a ).ot m .a
''ltartt:d two :ticsbmen and a 1he Buckeyes will loOk: like s!Jort time to earn play.ing
'IOphomore -. to come in 20()8..9, the future of 7- tune .
.uund .and ;c1incb a measure foot-1 fieshmau Kosta
Another prized rec;ruit,
of::.'!P!_m::·
Koufos must be .ironed out. JU. Mullens, will likely fill
-~~~ s ,...., ·.
you ~or- Koufos, wbo p~yed out pf the post spot. If Koufos
•Jet at~. with ~v~ pOsition on the block with comes back, .the Bu&lt;ikc
. :Yes
· .we llost. Mana said. ·~l .tbiak his back to the basket all would have llbeir Ullest .and
Jamar WJ!S ·~ fiftb-~ng lie!!l!!!Il. must dl:cide if be'll most talented .. J-.2 ;punch
IICOIW :co~ batk ~m join last year's freshmen ev.er in1he frontcourt.
1ast~.1tjust100k us ume (Greg ·Oden., Mike Conley
SlaitcrS Evan Thmer and
10 get m ibe flo~ and get a Jr., and Daequan Cook) in David Lighty are bad.,
:p:at unc!enrtandmg ~f what vaulting to the NBA after along with shooting guard ·
- ~ to do. l tbil_lk 1he .one sc:ason at Ohio State. Or Jon Diebler, 1 amlerdale,
~~s did a ¥C1)' good job of be coUld take an offer worlb Eric Wall.ape and Kyle
it. ·
. . millions to play in Greece, Madsen.
But now Butler - OtJ!o .his 11arents' &amp;omeiand.
This year's AP Mr.
~~ leader m
~fright now 1'11_1 just Basketball in OIJ!o. '#(tlliam ·
asSISls, 3-pomters. made ·1111&lt;1 taking 11 a day at a tune," Buford, &amp;lso w11l Vl.e for ·
frce..~w percenrag.~ - IS Koufos .said after cutting playing time. So will Walter
.J111duating, .along w1th for· down the nets at Madison Offutt, a preJ? star •out of
~ard Othello Hunte! _and Square Garden .. "'I dot:t't indianapolis. hometown of
iOOb-man Matt. Terwilliger. lmow what I' In going to do. Oden .and Conley.
Another pronnsmg class of ... I haven't even talked to
No matter who is back and
~ts is ~ in. Sure, myself about it"
wb.at t)Je lineup is, ne~
1beJ:e s the excitement . ~f A year ~o. Matta bad no year•s team will be 1Jlore
Jlllvmg wo!l the
but ;'1 s problem wtth lill three play- versatile and flexible than
blended wtih.the di~mt- C!" jumping to the pros._ This. this one. The Buckeyes were
mcut of bavmg Ullsscd tbe ume arouod. be believes ltidebound to play zone
. ~AA ~nL ~that Kou~~t gain by stick.- defense all year. Even
·will ~e as an mcentive:
iJ!g
campus for at Jboogb it was ·effective, it
":We ~ gomg ~ ~mg . .~st an~ther year:
!imit:ed what they could do
.ll&amp;mg that as mOUvabon all
I think be could really .m utber areas m prevented
~. for sure until1he next help us and .help himlelf by them from adapting during
:NCAA tournament, the next coming back'," Matta said.
games.
Selection Sunday," ·Said
Butler will be 'hard to
Matta, nO)N a glittering
backup
center
Vallas replaoe. particularly since JOS-35 in his four seasons at
Lauderdale,
who
saw there's no one in the pipeline Ohio State; is excited libout ·
iaaeaacd ai:tion while coo, who aeems to be r=ldy to fill the pos ibilities. So are odJ'1l'ibutiDB more as the NIT his .roles as playmat.er and en.
·
p~e&amp;aed.
"Whenever scorer. PJ . Hill played well
"CoaCh Matta is one of the
we .m in tbe weight room in in spot&amp; .while spellinJ best recmiting coacbc.§... out
rille of!i ea1011, 1"m going to Butler, but be"s not 111 ulfea- ~.w Koufos said. ''He's
say, •-we Wille t!lis cloae last .sive threat.
goin_g to lead us to the
.aime. Ibis .lifting ~ei.@.lts. Incoming
. freshman promised land."
l6is Jnisbt ~ tbe djffer- Anthony
Crater,
an
Or, at the very least, to the
- ·"'
Aisocialed ~ lit* play- NIT.·

-

c-

.

SCJ'Days.until your first payment!' (TIIat's JuneJ ..

f5lrilillili.rii

.I ICIIW .

As Law as 5.24"

select lender's appoval. (lbat's low lnlef18stJ
Plus ·- .00 cash .baCt llilb purd.ase of . ·.
(111ats $500)

No lloney
Your
is .worth n101e. March Spec:ial 3 mOnth

"!'s

NJ!.

boxes. ~

ll'tle ~acine. Southern fifth'.gTilde boys bash.elball1eam "reCently won first place at the Meils
CountY leag!oe 1D!Irnament. Pictured above, ifrom left tO ;rjght, are team mer rlliers Brallt!Y
~;,JW~y fisher, ~an lll)'els, mach Johh HobaCk, Jristen Wolfe, ·Kevin ~rry, Jerentv
Dut!Dn, and Jacob iioibalik. '
.
•
.
• .
.

ObioSildie~.a24-13

•ICIISOII

"They'JTe good about fixing pr.0blems ithat we have .
Rare1y do we rhave the same
problem twice.~
Toyota, W,iiicb paiFed with
the Gibbs organiution &lt;this
season, is alsa .doing its part
to help the team figure out .
its meChanical issues.
The .day after Busch'~
steering failed 111 Bristol,
Toy0ta e~teCutives Lee
White mid Andy Graves
. '\'l~.lllGibbs' shqp'befare 8
.a.m. to offer their assistance
in solving the problem.
"'We told :them, 'Guys..
you are .doing great in making it go fast. lfthere's .anything · we .can de .as an engineerin;g ;pr-ovider to ibe'l;p
~th the 'heavy lifti11g with
this lcind of stuff, all yoo
have :to do is askTlhrulke.a
phone .call to Califrn;ni.a .and
we •II have li crew of engi1lCerS here the same day. ilf
we can help with same of
this type ef the ll¢v.ity, .it
.helps you w.od: 'liln going
fast.~ White said.
That's ilhe 'teamwork
Gibbs 'IIIIas hoping for when
the team left . General
Motor1! a~r 1'6 seasons:
Although leaii! management
bad faith the pantnership
with Toyota w.ould be ;prO:
ductive, the drivers dido' t
know ·whatto-elgli:Cl.
But knoWing Toyota
Racing Development is so
involved in this rash of broken parts has put Hamlin' s
mind at ease.
· "We're getting a 'lot of
support from -l'RD. Any
issue that we have, they are
coming to us;" he said. "Of
course, they want answers
as much as we do. They';re
giving us pretty much full
resources of everything they
have to try to fix ®T issues
do mere testing and
spend more money to try
and develop things like better fuel cells and steering

.

.

·

,

·

llllid JlholiD

"" I

The Galli a Trotters youth basketball team won the Neilson Invitational Tournament by goi~
a perfect 6-0 in that tournament. Members of the Trotters are: Kneeling in front, from le'll,
are Zach Johnson, Kirkland Morrow Mathew Bally. Standing In middle are Anthony SiPJilli,
Wes larrel, Jake Strieter and Dayton Hardwax. Standing in back are coaches Don Strietir
and John Sipple.
.""'-·
·
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Toa
Ji"nee CG'.IItt
May 18. ft - 'lilt,•• ' ....
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l.a..1L Y011 Sloae, 0:* Bil .... ...,_...,.
ro pilticiplte
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·IPIIII••cc01t' • X'" 1\t • C.:(Jiiii•E
..

·LB has no .doubts he made right JGR teaming with T~yota to
· to reh•• n to Ohio State .tackle rash of
· •; issues
COLUMBUS (AP) Ohio 'State'1! Austin Spjiler
temen1bcn; the first &lt;lhoqght
jle bad 'IPOO lbearinJ!llhal: the
: ~in imnl of bim .at line- ·
:
' ' James Lawiruri.t:i;;,
•W. OBmin_g back for his

'""'*'

'ill

Gavin Shadle of .Gallipolis recentty participated 1n Hot 'Rod's Arenacross Winter Series ~
Hem:lelson ti015e-Aren'il in JaCkson. Shadle 1001\ lst place in the oil ir)jec1ed class ·a nd 2nd
·
'
•
place m both the 50cc 46 and -50cc tJpen "-13 classes.

will
Dt5pite ~of Butler and auotet;
Buckeyts see bright _t hi• aheM

..._. ·"" SI&lt;Oimi-llER

Ohio

State coach Thad Matta
lle\l.cr millie ·tbe case that
winning 1IJe Nl1f WliS .a liiJb.

stiture for J!lOUm deep m1be
NCAA 'lnnmament But it
1lUIJ: 1lcm 'boWing out w.iib .a
loss.
"AbsOlute~," ·Matta said
by lJiborare &lt;Wbilelibe 1CaJDllus·

ibrollldl

.negmatNJ .

.Manhattan lnlffu: Jlftm' ilie
Buckeyes
beat·
Mes•wibn!!C!Its 92-85 in the
.· ~bampionSbip
'llbursday
~- "'The biggest :tbinR is
;that this team got 'tiCttti in
1he last 1lu= wc:Cks in tbe
NIT. And No. 2, players got
better. I qoUii!n' t be llllppier
with .thlt .as we loot to Jhc
.future:"
.

~T WORIH, Texas Joe Gibbs Racing came into
Texas Motor Speedway
with rwo wins i n the past of mechanical failures and
: !JCIIior season.
;tbree :r.aces. iBy 1eam &lt;:alcu- took his concerns to team
: ' "'h aap.n Spitler said.
latiims., that's aoout three .(I)WDCT Joe &lt;Gibbs.
· : : Spitler later looked at
viotmes·Shmt of-where the~
"It's pretty frustrating, but
• Laurinaitis' ·l'elnrn as .a posiSbou1d be.
anytime you ao have a prob:tive. .another Chance to !learn
Meclumica'l
~ssues
have
lem, .at least it hasn 't hap:Smnethill)1; fmm the finest
plagued all three Gibbs cars ;pened twice," !Busch said.
;oollegiate li.i:obaclcer in 1:be
this
'Sellson at v.arious times, "We've been worlcing on
, ~. He tried not to think
i creating a frustration level things to.ltl)' and 0nly make
: ~~year spent .On the
, . •often :unseen iri teams run- it happen once. ~ o talking to
: liideline. watching No. 33
ning -so well. Kyle Busch aoe, it's 'kind of a ' Shame on
:roam the field making tack.Jes. .
· - - enters Sunday's Tace fifth in us' to have .it bappen once,
: · Ailmost evetyone fi,gured ·Ohio State linebacker James l..aurinaitis yells to his team- the Sprint Cup standings, iBm it's .a .prdblem When it's
·
:1 Jmrinaitis, who was tabbed mates during ;a college football game •inst Wisconsin, i~ Tony Stewan is sixth .and twice.
·:as
a
topI~ or even mp-5 ... · "
...
fi
Denny
Hauilin,
itbe
·winner
'
'.Fommately,
we haven' t
:(lid. lin this sprin_g' s &lt;draft, •niS ••OV. 3 • .z.007
· ., · lie !Photo. in Cl!llumbus. OhiG 'State 'linelast
w«ik
;at
Mmtiru;ville
bad
the
·same
problem
twice
: ..,ould tae the mO!Ie}' mid tlacker James laurinaitis could nave :taken tile mone~ and
yet."
"""
·. iun. But 1he junior said the run. Some of the~ closest to tlim said ne ·should read· Speedway, is e§bth.
''h'i&gt;
llurr.d.
A!lllthey
llrnow
But
the
!broken
steenng
:if)ecision ro 1!tay if~ lhis rfurttre NR. ayearear1y, without running the l'isk of a deblli·
:founh -season .as a Buckeye teting 'injury While winding up tris. ool~ ooareer. But is they 1breke ;a pan and it oox plagued bl:nh Hamlin
:w$!1"t .all dmt troubling.
Laurinaltis said !be Jiust lhiHI to come 'back tl!t 1he !Buckeyes. ikept them from winning a and Busch, ibaffiing the
· : "'1 just pmyed hard on it seriiGT this fall, is one 'Of the Laurinaitis is . remmik:ably ll'ace.," Jimmy Makar, senior entire Gibbs oFgani.zation.
:\Uid o(JIICC yau pray &lt;011 solne- IIOOSt ·deoor.ated ilinehaclrers saft-spoken .and .almast vice !Jlresldent of racing Makar said ·the :team bas yet
:tbing,~ou'get.asignandyou in college foothlill bistmy. blends in with lihe lbaok- r@Jl'T"DGDS :at JGR. said .to pi:npaint what happened
to Hamlin';;, but said
;ron -w1th it and you oon"t HewontheNagurslciAwan:l gmund. He .doesn' t feel a Friday. ·
1
iUDderstand
their
frusBuscb
's fail we a week later
bave t0 wony iOOut it any- two years . ago and the need to call attention to him.DIOII;" he said Friday. "' Butkus Award l1:ast ~n self. Unlike a lot of elit.e col- itration. All we .can .do is :get was .a n assembly issue. ..
'1n all my years rof racing.
took .adv.ice !from 1bc people and ·has been 'll first.,team · lege stars, he doesn't feel he t o ,.wmik.. TheFe'1! rtmthi.ng
do but 'fi11 the prob- rve never. ever, seen that
Closest to me and !bey :were Associated
Plre!&gt;s AllJ.- bas rm ;COnstantly prove or yoo
all kind of telling me, ' Hey, Ammcan.hl!dl 11CW"'S. He promote himself. ·
liOIIl and show them that it's problem once let alone
. ~back..' hook that .as a also was die Big 'Thn'-s
"James is .a guy &lt;that 110 fixed -be proactive about twice," Makar -said. "The
SJgiL
defensive p~er &lt;1f the year matter how good !be ;gets -or the ·i ssues we' ve been hav- comfmting •thing !is that we
It isn't often these days last season .and is an .odds-on bo
h
··
be &lt;i11g."
lmow tliis isn"t because we
:iluit a young Jllblete walk!; favorite ·t o
add
the · w muc cerogm:tr:on . ·
1be problems lhave ·been •have · !bad meChanics. We
away from . a promise of Lombardi, Len .and/or _gets, every day in llfactice
.and usually knew om :people are good.
·widespread.
Lambo!]¥hinis., diamonds Bednarik trophies Chis year. be's the guy running past
come
when
a
Gibbs car is !But sometimes you run into
.and million-&amp;lllar homes to
But it w.asn't .\H iihe .accO- everybody,n fellow ilineproblems with &lt;autside vephang around with his ·lbnd- lades and .awards dllt 4rew bacb:r · Mar~us Freeman .running near the front.
:Hamlin's
;power
steering
d0rs,
and we ltbink that's
. dies for another year. A play- . him bacik fO£AJM*r SCI'SOO said. ..He's me guy who
•
k ·
d fall
finds that ener_gy and rna'kes
· ediinAtlanta,;.andJbe 'had been the cause of many of
·&lt;C:r s stoc nses an
s
"&amp;lncaiion'.s Unp0rtant, sure he~ getting bdier
We.'! .picbp issue while OLD' issues S0 far :this year."
;~to the ficldeness being wilh your 'm ends, this and better."
.
leadi11g
on .a restart in the
lbat's comfaning to
: rof_~ experts bef~ ~ ~ .is the~ tunc of yoor life, n
LiDebaolcers.ooach and ~
• ~IIIJCS can oost millions m be said when .asked to list
~ Glosi!lg llljlS at Bristol-the Hamlin, who has .a histoty
: ;fnnlre earnings.
the reasons for returning.
defensive. CO&lt;_J£dinator ~ same JlTOblem Stewart had of being outspoken when
: ·. But Laurinaitis took. what
His mother and falll!l[ _
Ft~ Sllld his pnze pupilts mements lbef&lt;m: · when his car. has prob'lems. His
:·8l0111lted to .a winning lot- Joe Laurinaitis, the WWE a~- ·
.
.
Hauilin
lhim for 'the fuistration over mechanical
:'teJ:Ylicket ... and tore it~. wrestlerlnown.as""Animal" . Hes ;8ot. the m~1bles lead.
failwes bad ' been building
· · f'¢llow linebacker Curtis from1hel.iegiooof0oom- and ~at s•• the. m?st tmpor.Susdllbas tiad •the worst toward a osli!IW boil when lbe
:TellY said he was shocked ~ell 'bim to get 'liis degree tantlhmg.. ~f!ckell .. , luck, losin&amp;his pow.er steer- finally broke imough with
: ~ _~
'beard
that and enjoy his last year
His bunulny and matunty ing in Bristol - while lead- the win 1ast w.e ek in
;Laurinains w.as coming beforetumingpro. 'So1bafs . t be.~ tlluslnlled by ing -· then ~ng . a rear Martinsville.
-~
just what he decided to do.
Law:inaitls ~swcr when be
last · week
in
..Between myself and
. : , "1 was very 'S1llpli!led, but · He admits there are times was .asked If any of his gear
Mattinsville.
A
'
b
roken
gas(Busch)
with the steering
:&amp;a just spem for James wben be digs deep into his friends ihoogbt he w.as crazy
·.lind what type of character pockets and wishes he could to tum down .ail that money ket lilso todk him aut of boll issues, they were
:file has," he said "He wanted pull out a wad of cash. !But and risk so much to come contention at bil! home &lt;track asliCmbly issues at itbe factoin Las Vegas.
ry,~ Hamlin said. "That is
~ :tiniSb what be otarted 1 at the same time, he doesn' t back to campus.
B16d!.,
Who
scored · some1bing we really can"t
~ him .' for ihat, have .any OOubts that be did
~A few Ujends, but those
·
T
_oyota'
s
first
Cqp
victocy
chaqge at our or.ganization.
"b('C•se ~-W!!t •.a. !Oy,gb ;lbc, t'jJbt ~ for him olllld are _guys who just ~JDQiiey
!~Sian .
~
' lbis&amp;mily.
· · first,~ be said. ~And that's with ·ibis w.in !last month in · It·s really just ·.a freak 'thing
;. Law:inaitis, .a ·M oot-3,
"There' s 11Q ~ts,~ be the wrong way Ito look at Atlanta, frgures be's i)JTOba- why it's ·happening to all
· 2-40-pounder w.bo will be a -said.
·
.
life."
bly llost three races because three r;:ars se Tegularly.

=

Passed

,

()(i)IJJ]MBUS -

ltrJIIIIIIlAtiB
liOP-NJTO 'RACING !MUTER

by

.

..-- fiY.cp!IIG8ja11Je

• • f " " .....

.

gives you

through
. .. -:: ·

' -- .

. . ll W$ I yeill' ·of lllinSitiOll
.after last y.car'!s .35-4 run to

1be natiimal ~ionsbip
. Cmeendcd lwjth three
n leaving early for
•..llbeNBA draft, .and with two Ohio State's Jamal Bi.rtler, Tight, cuts down part of the net
llliitCrS .grarhiating.
after Ohio State beat Massactrusetts 92'85 in the final of
Senior point ~ Jamar college basi celball's NIT at Yadison Square Garden in New
ut1cr .bad a big year, but it Vorl&lt; on Thursday.
took a long time for the rest · But before · anyone can er of the year in MiohiJPI",
&lt;Of . tbe Buckey1:s - wbo begin to contemplate What will' have to learn a ).ot m .a
''ltartt:d two :ticsbmen and a 1he Buckeyes will loOk: like s!Jort time to earn play.ing
'IOphomore -. to come in 20()8..9, the future of 7- tune .
.uund .and ;c1incb a measure foot-1 fieshmau Kosta
Another prized rec;ruit,
of::.'!P!_m::·
Koufos must be .ironed out. JU. Mullens, will likely fill
-~~~ s ,...., ·.
you ~or- Koufos, wbo p~yed out pf the post spot. If Koufos
•Jet at~. with ~v~ pOsition on the block with comes back, .the Bu&lt;ikc
. :Yes
· .we llost. Mana said. ·~l .tbiak his back to the basket all would have llbeir Ullest .and
Jamar WJ!S ·~ fiftb-~ng lie!!l!!!Il. must dl:cide if be'll most talented .. J-.2 ;punch
IICOIW :co~ batk ~m join last year's freshmen ev.er in1he frontcourt.
1ast~.1tjust100k us ume (Greg ·Oden., Mike Conley
SlaitcrS Evan Thmer and
10 get m ibe flo~ and get a Jr., and Daequan Cook) in David Lighty are bad.,
:p:at unc!enrtandmg ~f what vaulting to the NBA after along with shooting guard ·
- ~ to do. l tbil_lk 1he .one sc:ason at Ohio State. Or Jon Diebler, 1 amlerdale,
~~s did a ¥C1)' good job of be coUld take an offer worlb Eric Wall.ape and Kyle
it. ·
. . millions to play in Greece, Madsen.
But now Butler - OtJ!o .his 11arents' &amp;omeiand.
This year's AP Mr.
~~ leader m
~fright now 1'11_1 just Basketball in OIJ!o. '#(tlliam ·
asSISls, 3-pomters. made ·1111&lt;1 taking 11 a day at a tune," Buford, &amp;lso w11l Vl.e for ·
frce..~w percenrag.~ - IS Koufos .said after cutting playing time. So will Walter
.J111duating, .along w1th for· down the nets at Madison Offutt, a preJ? star •out of
~ard Othello Hunte! _and Square Garden .. "'I dot:t't indianapolis. hometown of
iOOb-man Matt. Terwilliger. lmow what I' In going to do. Oden .and Conley.
Another pronnsmg class of ... I haven't even talked to
No matter who is back and
~ts is ~ in. Sure, myself about it"
wb.at t)Je lineup is, ne~
1beJ:e s the excitement . ~f A year ~o. Matta bad no year•s team will be 1Jlore
Jlllvmg wo!l the
but ;'1 s problem wtth lill three play- versatile and flexible than
blended wtih.the di~mt- C!" jumping to the pros._ This. this one. The Buckeyes were
mcut of bavmg Ullsscd tbe ume arouod. be believes ltidebound to play zone
. ~AA ~nL ~that Kou~~t gain by stick.- defense all year. Even
·will ~e as an mcentive:
iJ!g
campus for at Jboogb it was ·effective, it
":We ~ gomg ~ ~mg . .~st an~ther year:
!imit:ed what they could do
.ll&amp;mg that as mOUvabon all
I think be could really .m utber areas m prevented
~. for sure until1he next help us and .help himlelf by them from adapting during
:NCAA tournament, the next coming back'," Matta said.
games.
Selection Sunday," ·Said
Butler will be 'hard to
Matta, nO)N a glittering
backup
center
Vallas replaoe. particularly since JOS-35 in his four seasons at
Lauderdale,
who
saw there's no one in the pipeline Ohio State; is excited libout ·
iaaeaacd ai:tion while coo, who aeems to be r=ldy to fill the pos ibilities. So are odJ'1l'ibutiDB more as the NIT his .roles as playmat.er and en.
·
p~e&amp;aed.
"Whenever scorer. PJ . Hill played well
"CoaCh Matta is one of the
we .m in tbe weight room in in spot&amp; .while spellinJ best recmiting coacbc.§... out
rille of!i ea1011, 1"m going to Butler, but be"s not 111 ulfea- ~.w Koufos said. ''He's
say, •-we Wille t!lis cloae last .sive threat.
goin_g to lead us to the
.aime. Ibis .lifting ~ei.@.lts. Incoming
. freshman promised land."
l6is Jnisbt ~ tbe djffer- Anthony
Crater,
an
Or, at the very least, to the
- ·"'
Aisocialed ~ lit* play- NIT.·

-

c-

.

SCJ'Days.until your first payment!' (TIIat's JuneJ ..

f5lrilillili.rii

.I ICIIW .

As Law as 5.24"

select lender's appoval. (lbat's low lnlef18stJ
Plus ·- .00 cash .baCt llilb purd.ase of . ·.
(111ats $500)

No lloney
Your
is .worth n101e. March Spec:ial 3 mOnth

"!'s

NJ!.

boxes. ~

ll'tle ~acine. Southern fifth'.gTilde boys bash.elball1eam "reCently won first place at the Meils
CountY leag!oe 1D!Irnament. Pictured above, ifrom left tO ;rjght, are team mer rlliers Brallt!Y
~;,JW~y fisher, ~an lll)'els, mach Johh HobaCk, Jristen Wolfe, ·Kevin ~rry, Jerentv
Dut!Dn, and Jacob iioibalik. '
.
•
.
• .
.

ObioSildie~.a24-13

•ICIISOII

"They'JTe good about fixing pr.0blems ithat we have .
Rare1y do we rhave the same
problem twice.~
Toyota, W,iiicb paiFed with
the Gibbs organiution &lt;this
season, is alsa .doing its part
to help the team figure out .
its meChanical issues.
The .day after Busch'~
steering failed 111 Bristol,
Toy0ta e~teCutives Lee
White mid Andy Graves
. '\'l~.lllGibbs' shqp'befare 8
.a.m. to offer their assistance
in solving the problem.
"'We told :them, 'Guys..
you are .doing great in making it go fast. lfthere's .anything · we .can de .as an engineerin;g ;pr-ovider to ibe'l;p
~th the 'heavy lifti11g with
this lcind of stuff, all yoo
have :to do is askTlhrulke.a
phone .call to Califrn;ni.a .and
we •II have li crew of engi1lCerS here the same day. ilf
we can help with same of
this type ef the ll¢v.ity, .it
.helps you w.od: 'liln going
fast.~ White said.
That's ilhe 'teamwork
Gibbs 'IIIIas hoping for when
the team left . General
Motor1! a~r 1'6 seasons:
Although leaii! management
bad faith the pantnership
with Toyota w.ould be ;prO:
ductive, the drivers dido' t
know ·whatto-elgli:Cl.
But knoWing Toyota
Racing Development is so
involved in this rash of broken parts has put Hamlin' s
mind at ease.
· "We're getting a 'lot of
support from -l'RD. Any
issue that we have, they are
coming to us;" he said. "Of
course, they want answers
as much as we do. They';re
giving us pretty much full
resources of everything they
have to try to fix ®T issues
do mere testing and
spend more money to try
and develop things like better fuel cells and steering

.

.

·

,

·

llllid JlholiD

"" I

The Galli a Trotters youth basketball team won the Neilson Invitational Tournament by goi~
a perfect 6-0 in that tournament. Members of the Trotters are: Kneeling in front, from le'll,
are Zach Johnson, Kirkland Morrow Mathew Bally. Standing In middle are Anthony SiPJilli,
Wes larrel, Jake Strieter and Dayton Hardwax. Standing in back are coaches Don Strietir
and John Sipple.
.""'-·
·
;

. .~
.at .
.
'

HiD

'

'R f ...:... '11trrLi Oik 8
1'lliR 1riHl • t:e a:·-c4lralllila
. .. ' 1 edla1J . ..... Will tile~- .
ill•r*'
•1 JOifW:t 57
Toa
Ji"nee CG'.IItt
May 18. ft - 'lilt,•• ' ....
.
• d ·~ .... (MIJta-11SS Ql'
&gt;te 1riD.
l.a..1L Y011 Sloae, 0:* Bil .... ...,_...,.
ro pilticiplte
L~

rear .

··,011*---Sd .. ..
:a .t•tnr:
.._,..,
. .. ;_ • ., ...

fleain •

. . . . . . . . -..., j l - • ..: •
.lli*lllllie'.l frJei; lat. .fool IIIII • 1J r
1

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.

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•l

Sunday, April6, 2001

Mjddlqnt• Pomaoy•G-IIipolis,OH•Pt.JI'Ieasant, WV

.

.6alibap ~Did
.. -6tlttiad

Cl
&amp;uwlay, April 6, 2008

.......... . e. ··$14,011
..........
....... $26,110

When·Meigs met the ·n

model.fl GD37.4BEW

~

.

~·

.....

.

2009 Nissan ' 2009 DODGE JOURNEY
·Murano
1HE·. NEWEST IN
2 .o\viiillble At 1l'hi5 Pie.

~

model f:Yf182BEW

$259

2008 Nissan Versa
Hatchback 1.8S

TRUCKS

•a.ooo
0"

lt\wilable At This Price.

-

11 . $1~760 :

NEW2007·

NISSAN FRONTIER··
CREWCAB4X4
. l Avllllble At This 1'rill!.

-7·

...... •
s......
•19
.
, 360 ·

Full stallds, aDd ears parted
so close dJat it "somrn~
took: boars" to leave the
track, according to local
news stories. J\ series of
events led to die demise of
IICIUa1. car racing in ~

for speed

~
.

'

RogueS . OiRYSlER TOWN &amp; COUNTRY
5I .....
~ ~lllble At lhisiflricE.

eventll were very popular.

.

(1800-l901fs style, that is). County.Asracingacrosstlte
Accordil1g
to
local nation began to revive, bigaccounts. tbc late Ward JCr purses in !110ft: populous
Sayre of Syntcusc used to llmiS drew some of .tfJc drijob about bis daledcvil vers who bad raced at
amics 8Dd ~t for speed. Oaybanb. Fans w~
Sayre OWDCd ODe of .tbree caught up in lbe l1lcing fad.
ady Model T's :in Meigs Olbers blamed die iJia:us..
OMmty. all of lbe same year. ingly poPular p«'sc:ncc of
Tbc sCconil was owned by tclevisioa on lbe local taeL.!-.
__.. . . _ .._,_. of
. •s ...,ID!se.
...... .
...,. ·uo-."""
..., u.wu
mg
tbc i(lei!J ;,..,.1 S1J e~ was
When the fields of cars
. tbc popa:ty of a mali from drdjned so did !be fan base.
lbc olber end nf 1bc COUDiy- 1J:ds in IICIIby 'ICxdt imd
~-~ .tby
' -'- ~lhll ~both Lubeck. W.Va., had lights
..... ...., ·brotu.a
for ~ht racing which
eJIIioyed nclng. They would afJ'*dcd oomfurt from lbe
pass on die ~ one J!Oiag bot !3Jmmc:r sun of Sunday
one dirccdon lllldoODC m ·ibe ~ ~- Nightncotbi!J directilm. Ibm they ~.I~ mduced lbe dust.
WoUld switch ·lanes and
t::laybanks Speedway was
Cross-over. "p1aying chick- ecently featUred on the

.

$22,111

Meigs

Countians have always had
a need for speed Wbctber
dull: need was met oo die
nee t1"adl: « on die high-'
way, loc8ls &lt;CODtiDuc a lcgacy 1hm dilk:s hack to JICIII"
tbc "nan of die cmnny~

POMEROY -

ALL DODGE 1500 SERIES

"-1!1452218

.

*23,595

$1.9,210

lbc :IJi&amp;h-~ "'!"""'~WII'S ll'ilft Dtlai 1arifying to.

C11Ln

. World W"Idc Web-bascld

Ghost Thds. l ocatrd at
dlc intcrscction of state
~pili
.
iwtes 7 and 124 toWIIl1
· Then Ollie da~ did Rntland, tbc outline of thD
the J11a11!1i111ver ]u;'~ he triCk. some g1Wdnil feol:e
W doDe many times wben posts. llld ~ of die flag
·Jie IIIW liD qproaching . 1iDDd caD still be lll:a1 in tbc
Model T just like his ~ lllldsibrusiL
'" ll I PD- road IPd
o\ltbua.gh .racitlj •.wi11!ia111e :two liit head . 011. · die ·comtty died, MeiJs
hiiiUiaat tbc jdriver COUIIly ACa"S ·De\'111" 1qwL
of the oihcr car was '11 man ~ King, Friu Noms.
from die Qtbcr ~ of the Bobby Joe Adams liJid odl'county, not his brother. ers oontinued their race driAlthou.f!!,: cars were ~ legacies at Torch and
badly ·
ed, everyone Ohio Wley Speedway in
emeig-'11 ullllljun::d, or · so Lubeck. Coupes IJ:allsthe stmy goes.
fonilcd into supcr-mqdiR¥i11g moved from road- fieds. which later evolved.
w.,ys ~ nee !niCks and in .into opcu wheel sprint cars.

lbc

IIDIIIIpCCtiq

and

:n··•

ibc 1950s, Me"
County Jack md Bill Harris lw:amc
bad two. The ~ County one of only a few Meigs
Faiqrounds
at
Rock Countians to ever field a
_ ~_gs just ~t~ !!f full-blo~~ car.
_ ·
· Pinaoy ran-a-·lls pewt · · The fatbGr-son team
·. _:. sife'ilotildle new Cla)'banlei . 'Owued Ollf Of the best loolr• ~
Speedway, a quarter-mile ing Slq)C('s in the area,. the
dirt oval on the back roads old «:-95. Then came a Adams became one of local
outside of town opened CAE sprint car chassis often racing's greatest drivers,
.from 1954throughtbc 1957 driven by veteran midget winning 30-plus races in
~- Reportedly, both specialist Pete M"illcr, "The one season in a career that
tracks ran Sunday after- Flying Milkman" from hovered around 1he 300-win
DOOIIS since there w~ no POint Pleasant. Gallipolis lllliik. Bob Adams Jr., Bob
tips al cilbcr facility.
.native Roy Johnson later Adams Sr~ Benny Hickel
Powedul midget racing purcbascd and campai~ (Pomaoy), and Hilton "Big
cars, predecessors of die lbe Harris Special Johnson. Foozc" Wolfe Jr. (Racine)
sprint CII'S or "big cars" that still occasionally races a dirt are an iDdnctees of lbe Ohio
DID .at Indianllpolis, were modified at local triCks.
Valley Stock Car Racing
one of the auractions at !be
1D die 1960s, dng racing Hall of Fame located in
faqrounds that ran semi- rose to a high level of Parkersburg, W.Va. .
ftlgularly from , the post- pron;Unence.
Although
Olber local drivers have
World War
era to the Meigs County never had
competed on the local rae• opset of 1t!e new CUlybanks official q
strip, many i.JII ~ode~ wilh much ~uc- .
!)val. While tlie mi4gcts Satmday ~ghts drew a few cess, .and Meigs County still
were gcncrally more of a ·s pectatoR and· bot cars at has a ~ oontingent of
1raVdinlt show, coupes .llld isolared areas nf die coon- fimi • local speedways. ·
....t..u; lined tbc local nc- ty's state highways system.
Dog racing saw a ~1!1"­
iDg latJclscBpc liJid be&gt; •ne Thal was lbe ~ in lhe geace in the mid-1990's
=~wid! tbc fans. days when V-8 mgJDCS ll!d with !be building of
·
· to m:ws(IIIPCI stock muscle cars migJwl Kanawha Valley Dragw.ay
:w;v ••.
faiJ:grounds lllprClilC.
Speedometers· Park outside of Poiin
tn£t .and Qaybanb both wtre set at 120 to 140 mph . Pleasant. W.Va.~ 3gain,
Uicd 10 race on tbc same as part uf de 'StoCk muscle Meigs COunty has a laundry
day, splitting the .crowd car ,package, and the local liS( of winners from the varuntil the fairltounds guy,- could get biB fix for · ious divisions at KVDP. late model ~ such as this one Clriven by Ryan Mlfttlam 010e at area speedways,. With
dropped re,gulu ~ing !ip"'CCI Of course, tllis &amp;Jtion Several local champs ·
local tracks, Meigs County racers travel to other areas includi!C Fairplain, W.Va., at ~77
evenlfl. For a short tme, -not oondooal, and was advanced to nationally Speedway where Pomeroy's Todd Smith was champion last year.
tbc flirpounds then DID frowned upon by local law sanctioned meets to tout
.
. ,
~ · With local racers Wull:ement
lbcir talents wbcre they
and Claybanks , ran the
The legal dragways exist- have ..Iways ~scnted the
coupes. 'lbcsc traeb weae ed at Plocmrville, Ohio, ~ weU.
only about I0 minutes and W"mfidd, W.V.a., when:
Not all quests for speed
from each other, md die Dave Shain's Pootiacs often tesulted in on-lniCk r;-acing.
poupes poved 10 be most brought home the wumiq Man&gt;in Hill broke inth claspopullll" tlccau~ they trophies.
Pomeroy's sic car ~ .and
J:e8CIIlbled
fans often Noonm Price was always n=stonlliOB of classic cars. .
drove to die ttldb.
IIOtcid as having one of the He is nlacr of Hills Classic
Cars' from HlllllingtOO. most immaculate . cars. Cars mel Hill's 1bunderbird
Charleston,
and
the Also,
other
Mci$s Cc:mer just · outside of
Patkcrsburr;-Matiett.a llU Countian&amp; ~ suit m RICiDC. Gene Whaley of
joined die I.Oclll staB, such time-period Clrq r.aciJig Whllley's Auto P.ans and
as felfW"dloo, Kenny King. until round-tl"adl: stock Cll" Whaley's Oyiic C.S .also
Fritz Norris, Bobby Joe I1ICing once again aw an delves ialo restoration, but
Adams, · Rich Wdson, explosion at lbe local level mostly reoonsiJUcts muscle
Kenny Grover, Guy Hysell in Jhe mid-1970s.
. cars liJid old classics.
.lad the W"dlougbby brothBobby Joe Adams came
Meigs Countians have
ers from across die Obio out of ·mitemcnt and ran l.oo@ been fascinated with
llivu.
team cars · with son Bob c.aR and the speed they
Old pbotolllld mm••ics Adams Jr., .a.k.L "11e show wleG nciJw II'OUDd a Scott Wolfe's !ale modal stDck Cll" is a 2004 Rocket a-Is Gr.-.d ·Prill Witt1 ~30
&amp;om dlote wbo at Black
Bandit"
or lnd:, Tbat fascination Aluminam CheYrolet racifW qine, Llle models siiOh as 1tle!le n10e at 51\ytine Stl eedway .
at Stewart Where ~ nWtt ~ begins on April 11.
Oaybaab show tbat .the "Buckshot." 1be YIIIIIIF" &amp;bows iiO .liP uf Wllliq.

n

an

oo

'*"

•

'

•

I.

•

•

..•

·•

•

•

�J

•l

Sunday, April6, 2001

Mjddlqnt• Pomaoy•G-IIipolis,OH•Pt.JI'Ieasant, WV

.

.6alibap ~Did
.. -6tlttiad

Cl
&amp;uwlay, April 6, 2008

.......... . e. ··$14,011
..........
....... $26,110

When·Meigs met the ·n

model.fl GD37.4BEW

~

.

~·

.....

.

2009 Nissan ' 2009 DODGE JOURNEY
·Murano
1HE·. NEWEST IN
2 .o\viiillble At 1l'hi5 Pie.

~

model f:Yf182BEW

$259

2008 Nissan Versa
Hatchback 1.8S

TRUCKS

•a.ooo
0"

lt\wilable At This Price.

-

11 . $1~760 :

NEW2007·

NISSAN FRONTIER··
CREWCAB4X4
. l Avllllble At This 1'rill!.

-7·

...... •
s......
•19
.
, 360 ·

Full stallds, aDd ears parted
so close dJat it "somrn~
took: boars" to leave the
track, according to local
news stories. J\ series of
events led to die demise of
IICIUa1. car racing in ~

for speed

~
.

'

RogueS . OiRYSlER TOWN &amp; COUNTRY
5I .....
~ ~lllble At lhisiflricE.

eventll were very popular.

.

(1800-l901fs style, that is). County.Asracingacrosstlte
Accordil1g
to
local nation began to revive, bigaccounts. tbc late Ward JCr purses in !110ft: populous
Sayre of Syntcusc used to llmiS drew some of .tfJc drijob about bis daledcvil vers who bad raced at
amics 8Dd ~t for speed. Oaybanb. Fans w~
Sayre OWDCd ODe of .tbree caught up in lbe l1lcing fad.
ady Model T's :in Meigs Olbers blamed die iJia:us..
OMmty. all of lbe same year. ingly poPular p«'sc:ncc of
Tbc sCconil was owned by tclevisioa on lbe local taeL.!-.
__.. . . _ .._,_. of
. •s ...,ID!se.
...... .
...,. ·uo-."""
..., u.wu
mg
tbc i(lei!J ;,..,.1 S1J e~ was
When the fields of cars
. tbc popa:ty of a mali from drdjned so did !be fan base.
lbc olber end nf 1bc COUDiy- 1J:ds in IICIIby 'ICxdt imd
~-~ .tby
' -'- ~lhll ~both Lubeck. W.Va., had lights
..... ...., ·brotu.a
for ~ht racing which
eJIIioyed nclng. They would afJ'*dcd oomfurt from lbe
pass on die ~ one J!Oiag bot !3Jmmc:r sun of Sunday
one dirccdon lllldoODC m ·ibe ~ ~- Nightncotbi!J directilm. Ibm they ~.I~ mduced lbe dust.
WoUld switch ·lanes and
t::laybanks Speedway was
Cross-over. "p1aying chick- ecently featUred on the

.

$22,111

Meigs

Countians have always had
a need for speed Wbctber
dull: need was met oo die
nee t1"adl: « on die high-'
way, loc8ls &lt;CODtiDuc a lcgacy 1hm dilk:s hack to JICIII"
tbc "nan of die cmnny~

POMEROY -

ALL DODGE 1500 SERIES

"-1!1452218

.

*23,595

$1.9,210

lbc :IJi&amp;h-~ "'!"""'~WII'S ll'ilft Dtlai 1arifying to.

C11Ln

. World W"Idc Web-bascld

Ghost Thds. l ocatrd at
dlc intcrscction of state
~pili
.
iwtes 7 and 124 toWIIl1
· Then Ollie da~ did Rntland, tbc outline of thD
the J11a11!1i111ver ]u;'~ he triCk. some g1Wdnil feol:e
W doDe many times wben posts. llld ~ of die flag
·Jie IIIW liD qproaching . 1iDDd caD still be lll:a1 in tbc
Model T just like his ~ lllldsibrusiL
'" ll I PD- road IPd
o\ltbua.gh .racitlj •.wi11!ia111e :two liit head . 011. · die ·comtty died, MeiJs
hiiiUiaat tbc jdriver COUIIly ACa"S ·De\'111" 1qwL
of the oihcr car was '11 man ~ King, Friu Noms.
from die Qtbcr ~ of the Bobby Joe Adams liJid odl'county, not his brother. ers oontinued their race driAlthou.f!!,: cars were ~ legacies at Torch and
badly ·
ed, everyone Ohio Wley Speedway in
emeig-'11 ullllljun::d, or · so Lubeck. Coupes IJ:allsthe stmy goes.
fonilcd into supcr-mqdiR¥i11g moved from road- fieds. which later evolved.
w.,ys ~ nee !niCks and in .into opcu wheel sprint cars.

lbc

IIDIIIIpCCtiq

and

:n··•

ibc 1950s, Me"
County Jack md Bill Harris lw:amc
bad two. The ~ County one of only a few Meigs
Faiqrounds
at
Rock Countians to ever field a
_ ~_gs just ~t~ !!f full-blo~~ car.
_ ·
· Pinaoy ran-a-·lls pewt · · The fatbGr-son team
·. _:. sife'ilotildle new Cla)'banlei . 'Owued Ollf Of the best loolr• ~
Speedway, a quarter-mile ing Slq)C('s in the area,. the
dirt oval on the back roads old «:-95. Then came a Adams became one of local
outside of town opened CAE sprint car chassis often racing's greatest drivers,
.from 1954throughtbc 1957 driven by veteran midget winning 30-plus races in
~- Reportedly, both specialist Pete M"illcr, "The one season in a career that
tracks ran Sunday after- Flying Milkman" from hovered around 1he 300-win
DOOIIS since there w~ no POint Pleasant. Gallipolis lllliik. Bob Adams Jr., Bob
tips al cilbcr facility.
.native Roy Johnson later Adams Sr~ Benny Hickel
Powedul midget racing purcbascd and campai~ (Pomaoy), and Hilton "Big
cars, predecessors of die lbe Harris Special Johnson. Foozc" Wolfe Jr. (Racine)
sprint CII'S or "big cars" that still occasionally races a dirt are an iDdnctees of lbe Ohio
DID .at Indianllpolis, were modified at local triCks.
Valley Stock Car Racing
one of the auractions at !be
1D die 1960s, dng racing Hall of Fame located in
faqrounds that ran semi- rose to a high level of Parkersburg, W.Va. .
ftlgularly from , the post- pron;Unence.
Although
Olber local drivers have
World War
era to the Meigs County never had
competed on the local rae• opset of 1t!e new CUlybanks official q
strip, many i.JII ~ode~ wilh much ~uc- .
!)val. While tlie mi4gcts Satmday ~ghts drew a few cess, .and Meigs County still
were gcncrally more of a ·s pectatoR and· bot cars at has a ~ oontingent of
1raVdinlt show, coupes .llld isolared areas nf die coon- fimi • local speedways. ·
....t..u; lined tbc local nc- ty's state highways system.
Dog racing saw a ~1!1"­
iDg latJclscBpc liJid be&gt; •ne Thal was lbe ~ in lhe geace in the mid-1990's
=~wid! tbc fans. days when V-8 mgJDCS ll!d with !be building of
·
· to m:ws(IIIPCI stock muscle cars migJwl Kanawha Valley Dragw.ay
:w;v ••.
faiJ:grounds lllprClilC.
Speedometers· Park outside of Poiin
tn£t .and Qaybanb both wtre set at 120 to 140 mph . Pleasant. W.Va.~ 3gain,
Uicd 10 race on tbc same as part uf de 'StoCk muscle Meigs COunty has a laundry
day, splitting the .crowd car ,package, and the local liS( of winners from the varuntil the fairltounds guy,- could get biB fix for · ious divisions at KVDP. late model ~ such as this one Clriven by Ryan Mlfttlam 010e at area speedways,. With
dropped re,gulu ~ing !ip"'CCI Of course, tllis &amp;Jtion Several local champs ·
local tracks, Meigs County racers travel to other areas includi!C Fairplain, W.Va., at ~77
evenlfl. For a short tme, -not oondooal, and was advanced to nationally Speedway where Pomeroy's Todd Smith was champion last year.
tbc flirpounds then DID frowned upon by local law sanctioned meets to tout
.
. ,
~ · With local racers Wull:ement
lbcir talents wbcre they
and Claybanks , ran the
The legal dragways exist- have ..Iways ~scnted the
coupes. 'lbcsc traeb weae ed at Plocmrville, Ohio, ~ weU.
only about I0 minutes and W"mfidd, W.V.a., when:
Not all quests for speed
from each other, md die Dave Shain's Pootiacs often tesulted in on-lniCk r;-acing.
poupes poved 10 be most brought home the wumiq Man&gt;in Hill broke inth claspopullll" tlccau~ they trophies.
Pomeroy's sic car ~ .and
J:e8CIIlbled
fans often Noonm Price was always n=stonlliOB of classic cars. .
drove to die ttldb.
IIOtcid as having one of the He is nlacr of Hills Classic
Cars' from HlllllingtOO. most immaculate . cars. Cars mel Hill's 1bunderbird
Charleston,
and
the Also,
other
Mci$s Cc:mer just · outside of
Patkcrsburr;-Matiett.a llU Countian&amp; ~ suit m RICiDC. Gene Whaley of
joined die I.Oclll staB, such time-period Clrq r.aciJig Whllley's Auto P.ans and
as felfW"dloo, Kenny King. until round-tl"adl: stock Cll" Whaley's Oyiic C.S .also
Fritz Norris, Bobby Joe I1ICing once again aw an delves ialo restoration, but
Adams, · Rich Wdson, explosion at lbe local level mostly reoonsiJUcts muscle
Kenny Grover, Guy Hysell in Jhe mid-1970s.
. cars liJid old classics.
.lad the W"dlougbby brothBobby Joe Adams came
Meigs Countians have
ers from across die Obio out of ·mitemcnt and ran l.oo@ been fascinated with
llivu.
team cars · with son Bob c.aR and the speed they
Old pbotolllld mm••ics Adams Jr., .a.k.L "11e show wleG nciJw II'OUDd a Scott Wolfe's !ale modal stDck Cll" is a 2004 Rocket a-Is Gr.-.d ·Prill Witt1 ~30
&amp;om dlote wbo at Black
Bandit"
or lnd:, Tbat fascination Aluminam CheYrolet racifW qine, Llle models siiOh as 1tle!le n10e at 51\ytine Stl eedway .
at Stewart Where ~ nWtt ~ begins on April 11.
Oaybaab show tbat .the "Buckshot." 1be YIIIIIIF" &amp;bows iiO .liP uf Wllliq.

n

an

oo

'*"

•

'

•

I.

•

•

..•

·•

•

•

�,

PageC2.

YoUR-HOMETOWN
.
.

CoMM

:6aoap'lime•·ientiad

PageC3
SUnday, April6, 2008
.

•

Did ·GaJiia .native inspire .Popeye?

Marshall hosting
concert of
traditional
Japariese music
HUNI'INGTON, W.Va. Masayo Isbigure, a visiting
musician wbo plays tbe k.Qto.
will give a concert of ttadi·
tiona! Japanese music at 8
.· p.m. Wednesday, April 9 in
· ROOm 133 of Smilh Music
Hall on MarsbaJJ University's
Huntington campus.
·Jolning l~higure oil the
program will be' Dr.
Wendell Dobbs. professor
of flute at Marshall.
The keto is a variety of
East Asian zither with 13
'strings stretched over · 13
moveable bridges. It is found
in a number of traditional
Japanese households, but ..
now is oot as popular as the
piano in contemporary society. Therefore, this concert is
a very SJX'dal occasion,
according to Dr. Natsuki
Fukunaga Anderson, assis- ·
tant prof~ssor and cooolinator of the Japanese program
at Marshall.
lshigure is (rom Gifu,
Japan, and currently restdes
in New York. She has performed at · a number of
events all over the world,
especially since arriving in
the U .S. in 1992. She
.recorded music · for the
vision clinic several times a soundtrack of the movie
year to screen children for "Memoirs of a Geisha" by
vision problems; if necessary John Williams in 2005
the child will receive .a pre- . along with ltzhak Perlman.
scription for eyeglasses.
Yo Yo Ma, and others. .
The Women, Infants, and
Dobbs
joined . .the
Children (WlC) program is Marshl!ll University faculty
a nutrition education pro- in 1985. He performs regu·
gram funded by the U.S. latly' in solo and chamber
Department of Agriculture. music' settings, ranging
The program offers nutri- from
the
Huntington
tious foods to promote good Symphony Orchestra and
health in pregnant women, the Ohio Valley Symphony
women who have just had a (principal flute in both) to
baby, breastfeeding moth· Blackbirds and Thrushes, a
ers, and infan~ and children Celtic band.
.
up to the age of5. ·
·
Doors 0pen at 7:30 for the
.For more infoonation, call concert, which is free and
the GalliaCountyWIC office. open to the public. The event
The GaUia County .l;lealth is sponsored by the Toyota
Department is a public Foundation of West Virginia.
agency :whose purpose; is to as well as the Center for
promote the health of the International Programs and
people and to prevent or con- the Japan Club at Marshall.
trol disease through its and was organized by the
numerous services. The Japanese
program
in
above are just a few of the Marshall's Department of
Services offered by the Gallia Modern Languages and the
County Health Department.
Japan Club.
We will be observing
For further. information.
National Public Health · contact Anderson by e·mail
Week April 7-13, 2008, stop ar ande.rsonn@marsbalLedu.
us!
in and
or by plzone at (304) 696·
For more information, 3543.
'
please contact the healtlz
department at (740). 441 ·
U RA .. D
.
2018 or via website at

'

~Celebrating Doctor's ·Day
Sl , _ ., . _

·On MaF~h 31, Holzer Medical Denter held .a breakfast in ~ooor of OoCtor's Day in the Fren.ch
.500 RooJlll .at t!)e hospital. tiospital employees were .enoour~d to bring in tneir favorit~
breakfast food to share with both HMC .ana I'IGizer Clinic physicians. HMO would like to
:show ttleir appreciation fGr all ~hysicians, and tlilank them for the countless hours spent to
~better the lives of uur communities. In the photo at right, Dr. Glenn Rsher reac~s for some
,fTesh l'ruit to start Gff his wo11&lt; day. Above. the team that graciously donates their time in
order to prepare a wGnderful breakfast include, from left, Sam Holstein, securjty; Sarah
·Mayes, patient registratiGn; Lisa Mitchell, RN; Pam Dye, director of Holzer Weight Loss
Solutioos; ana Mi~ .Hemphill, physical therapist
·
I

I

·Celebrate National Puolic Health Week

'
are hospitable to ·disea~e gmundslRV- patts, residen·
PUBLIC HEALTH NURSE
causing ·organisms, people . tial C3JIIPS, marinas, public
GALLIA COUNTY HEALTH DEPARTMENT
who consume the food may swimming pools/spas, tattoo
· be subject to illness. Some and ibOO¥ ptercing facilities.
· What do you think of When diseases such as hepatitis A
Vital Statistics houses &lt;1ur
you bear Public Health?
.arid Salmonella bacteria are local registrar who records all
Public Health plays a role t6nsmitted through .improp-- births and deaths 1hat occur in
:in everyone's life in many ~.handling offood.
the county, The infomnatien
'ways. Many of us ane famil·
Sewage systems are also is then sent tG the Ohio
iar with vaccinations from an important pallt of public Depat1111mt10fHeallh Bureau
the local health department, health. Cer.tain disease- of Vrtal Statistics. The local
but may not be familiar with causin~ organisms are vital stlllistics c:1epattmont \has
all that your local health transnutted ilhrough oonta- records of births and deaths
minated drinkin~ water and · · in oor oowny dating back to
department does.
Public Health dlites back the .most ellfecllve way •t o 1908.
to biblical times when the limit these water borne dis·
Another branch of public
si~k were quarantined _to eases is to ensure,.our drink· ,heaith is epidemielo.gy,
prevent the · spread of dis· ing water is safe ·ana oot which studies the incidence
ease. Ancient !Romans also · contaminated by sewage. of diseases in ·the j:&gt;opllla·
adopted public health ideas We may not think that these lion. Epidemiologists and
when they built aqueducts .diseases are common, but other public health official~
to supply pure water and .a the United Nations esti- work to break the chain of
public sewer system to mates that between 5 and 10 disease transmission by
cany away waste.
million people die each year notifying people who may
1be gGals Gf public health from water borne diseases be at risk for contraoting :an
ate to prevent human dis· such as cholera.
infectious disease.
There are numerous other
Threats to public health
ease, injury, .and disability;
protect people kom envi· programs such as school and rohcems change over time
ronmental. health hazards; institution environmental and epidemio'logists ·study
promote behaviors that lead health and safety programs trends to best meet the pubto good physical and •mental which
conduct
yearly lie's
health .
needs.
health; educate the public inspections ·o f the schools in Immunizations are olie of the
about health; and assure the county looking for con- most effective weapons to
availability of high-quality ditions that are dangerous to combat the ·spread of infechealth se.rvices. Many dis· health and safety. Did you tious disease. The immunizaeases . can be prevented know it is Ohio law that lion programs of public
through healthy li\ting and anyone that is bitten by an health have been very suepan of public health is to animal or a medical provider cessful; several · infectious
educate the general publk that treats someone ·bitten by diseases have ·~ vittually
' . about how to prevent nonin· an animal must report the C!l!dicated by imruunization
·
animal bite to the local programs. Polio hils been vir·
• ·- · ,fectious diseases. .
···
Your local health. depart· - bealib department? The ani··: l!JaJ.!L~illlin••M fmm_most
meiit meets these goals wftll · mB.I wiU be quararlrlneil If aevelo.pe!l nations In· the
a variety of di·fferent pFOr able or its remains will be world, and the incidence of
grams to ensure the public's sent to the Ohio Department whooping cough, tetanus,
health.
of Health lab for testing of and diphtheria has been.dras·
The environmental .health possible rabies virus.
tical.ly reduced worldwide.
section of public health
Rabies is a disease that if
The United Nations esti·
wears many hats like the left untreated is almost mates that up to 4 million
food protection program always fatal so proper test- lives ~ould be saved annual·
and the sewage system pro- ing and prophylacllc treat- ly if existing, but under-used
gram. Food protection pro- meot is important. There are vaccinations were fully
·grams establish and cnforoe other .!ypes of·licensing pro- implemented. Otildren need
'laws for safe food storage grams \lperated by your most of their inununizations
and preparation. Food dtat local health department. . by the age of 2; .at birth they
is not , washed or cooked Some ·o f those include the should start their hepatitis B
thoroughly. or if food is licensing and inspecting of series. Booster doses are
stoi!Cd at temperatures that mobile home park.~ camp- also needed at four to six

8Y GwEN McGR•IV, RN

'

'

I

.

'

SUNDAY PUZZLER

'

.'

I

II

~#Vfaule
REALTY

I

II
l

l
••

~It

18..1Jt

____..

I

,...._ .too.-...-

·JOnlnlftt_10
a .. lllllelda11er.._.r2
BR, 1.11111t . .·~-­
__

., .

MdiPOifotloe. Ha.....-1u~....,...._.,._...,..

..... fiiOIIIINI·,_ dill dtst. l..t ran~Ptl....n loAtiCI

Call or.uit our ....boia:
to. . . upiO.&lt;&gt;Ur

Ne~~~/isli•&amp;S

. · E-ldkr

Madog COOter to bold reremony at Evans 'Ceritetery

years of age and around the
lime of adolescents.
Adults need immunizations
too! Adults can get immunized for influl:nza, pneumonia. tetanus, diphtheria, per.
tussis and hepatitis A&amp;B. lf
you .are the adventurous type
and will be t:r:dveling you may
need immunizations to pro·tect -you against typhoid and
yellow fever. Some countries
won' t let you enter unle!&lt;S .
you have a valid yellow fever
certificate!
The Gallia County Health
Department offers childhood
immunizations free of charge
to Obit! residents under the
age of 1·9; we also have many
adult immunizations for a fee .
lmmunizations are available
·· at the Gallia County Health
Department Monday .through
Friday, 8 am. to 4 p.m., no
appointment necessary.
The Gallia County Health .
Oepartment
offers
a
Women's Health Clinic
which offers prenatal services, SID testing, paf smears, and birth contro .
Pregnancy tests are offt;red
through our Child and Family
Health Services grant.
Lead testing is also
·offered and is a requirement .
wwW-~galliacohealtlz. org.
for children on Medicaid.
There are other progt'dJDS to
Sources: Encarta Online
ensure public health, such .as Encyclopedia.. Ohio. Public
the Bureau fot: Children with :Health-Association.· .. . .•

see

'

~

'

:

'"&lt; ' ' ;•

• b' -·
l-

"&lt;

.

Medi.Cl!l-flmidii:itps (BCMHy,

The OCMH nurses work with
families as case lllllllligers to
coordinate diagnosis and
ti-eatrnent of the child's condition. The Gallia County .
Health Department offers a '

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7

RIO GRANDE - The University of Rio . ·has 'been done in recent years •to improve the . ~-IIIIIIMI!IIiiii•-J
Grande's Madog Center for Welsh Studies look Gfthe cemetery. Previously, it was dif·
will hold a ceremony at the E~ans ficult just to get to the cemetery, and the
Cemetery on April 20. De~ndauts of the gmuruls needed to
sJllillced up. ~ late
peaple buried tllere are mvtted to take pan ~ayne Evans was mstruiiiCDtal ll_lllnprov·
m the occasion.
mg the gmunds With the belp of Rio Grande
The cemetery is where many of lhe Oligi- soccer players. Evans will be mnemberel:l at
:na1 Welsh settlers of the region are buried, the cemetery ·on April 20 in honor ·of the
;and several imerovements have beeri made wOO&lt;: be did for the ptopttty.
ro the grounds recently.
.
Many of the original Welsh settlers are
: "We are looking for any of the relatives of buried in the Ev,a ns Cemetery, and Jindra
llie people who are buri~ in ~ Evans said the cemf?1ery looks · very nice today.
Cemetery," · said Jeanne JmQr:a, director of The cemetery 1s named after the Evans farothe Madog Center.
·
. ily, which was one of the original families
: In 1818, John Jones (TU'bach) and his that traveled to America from Wales with
'wife Eleanor came to America from Wales fGhn Jones (Tltbach~,
~itb' six famllies and 5ettl.ed in SOUlbcm
The Evans Cern C!fery is located in the
Ohio. The story of the settlement, ·o()ften Cooper Hollow area oo Moriah Road, which
leferred to as "the accidental ~nt," is is off of U.S. 35 North. The Madog Center for
being told in the new play, "New World_s," Welsh ~llldies 31 Rio Grande is working with
-.;.,hich will be perlormed at the Berry Fme the ~ Welsh Qub to put on the event.
SPRING
and Petfonning Arts ~nter on the Rio
Jindra IS hoping that m~y ~f the descen·
SPfCW.S JUST
:Grande campus on Apnl 19,
dants of the people buned m the Evans
· Rio Grande has an eKchange program Cemetery will attend the event, but she has
IN TIMEFOI?
~ith Trinity College in Cannarthen, Wales, no way to eet in touch with of them.
'(OUR INCfM.
and the Welsh students studying on campus Anyone who IS a descendant or who knoWS
TAl RETIIRNS!
(luring the spring wrote the play and are a descendant is invited to contact Jindra. All
putting it on.
.
~e~ndants and area !'lsidents are also
· Jobn Jones (Tirllach) was the patriarch of mv1ted to attend the April20 ceremony.
the family 'or settlers wbo came to .soutbem The activities at the Evans Cemetery will
Ohio, and be and his wife are buried in the begin ~t 2 p.m. on.~pril 20. After the~·
)::emetery. Their graves have no .headstones, mony " over, addiuonal pre~ntauons will
however, so a bench is being placed in tJ:.e be held ~ the Welsh Amencan Heritage
Ct:metery to hooor the couple.~ bench will Museum m 0~ Hill. .
.
be fonnal.ly dedicated at the Apri120 event.
Fo~ rnf.o,mtmuHr, call Jmdra at
The event will also celebrate the wen that (740) U5· 7I 86 or (80Qj 282-7201 .

Auditions
"INTO THE WOODS"
April 9th
5:3IHI:OO pm ·

"OKLAHOMA"

..

April11 &amp; 12
.
. 7:30

lox Dtfice: 428 2nd Ave.
Glllpalill, OH (740)446-.\RTS

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:ttoakor

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Katie Pack. koltvr

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74Clrm.7006

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SAME AS
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YoUR-HOMETOWN
.
.

CoMM

:6aoap'lime•·ientiad

PageC3
SUnday, April6, 2008
.

•

Did ·GaJiia .native inspire .Popeye?

Marshall hosting
concert of
traditional
Japariese music
HUNI'INGTON, W.Va. Masayo Isbigure, a visiting
musician wbo plays tbe k.Qto.
will give a concert of ttadi·
tiona! Japanese music at 8
.· p.m. Wednesday, April 9 in
· ROOm 133 of Smilh Music
Hall on MarsbaJJ University's
Huntington campus.
·Jolning l~higure oil the
program will be' Dr.
Wendell Dobbs. professor
of flute at Marshall.
The keto is a variety of
East Asian zither with 13
'strings stretched over · 13
moveable bridges. It is found
in a number of traditional
Japanese households, but ..
now is oot as popular as the
piano in contemporary society. Therefore, this concert is
a very SJX'dal occasion,
according to Dr. Natsuki
Fukunaga Anderson, assis- ·
tant prof~ssor and cooolinator of the Japanese program
at Marshall.
lshigure is (rom Gifu,
Japan, and currently restdes
in New York. She has performed at · a number of
events all over the world,
especially since arriving in
the U .S. in 1992. She
.recorded music · for the
vision clinic several times a soundtrack of the movie
year to screen children for "Memoirs of a Geisha" by
vision problems; if necessary John Williams in 2005
the child will receive .a pre- . along with ltzhak Perlman.
scription for eyeglasses.
Yo Yo Ma, and others. .
The Women, Infants, and
Dobbs
joined . .the
Children (WlC) program is Marshl!ll University faculty
a nutrition education pro- in 1985. He performs regu·
gram funded by the U.S. latly' in solo and chamber
Department of Agriculture. music' settings, ranging
The program offers nutri- from
the
Huntington
tious foods to promote good Symphony Orchestra and
health in pregnant women, the Ohio Valley Symphony
women who have just had a (principal flute in both) to
baby, breastfeeding moth· Blackbirds and Thrushes, a
ers, and infan~ and children Celtic band.
.
up to the age of5. ·
·
Doors 0pen at 7:30 for the
.For more infoonation, call concert, which is free and
the GalliaCountyWIC office. open to the public. The event
The GaUia County .l;lealth is sponsored by the Toyota
Department is a public Foundation of West Virginia.
agency :whose purpose; is to as well as the Center for
promote the health of the International Programs and
people and to prevent or con- the Japan Club at Marshall.
trol disease through its and was organized by the
numerous services. The Japanese
program
in
above are just a few of the Marshall's Department of
Services offered by the Gallia Modern Languages and the
County Health Department.
Japan Club.
We will be observing
For further. information.
National Public Health · contact Anderson by e·mail
Week April 7-13, 2008, stop ar ande.rsonn@marsbalLedu.
us!
in and
or by plzone at (304) 696·
For more information, 3543.
'
please contact the healtlz
department at (740). 441 ·
U RA .. D
.
2018 or via website at

'

~Celebrating Doctor's ·Day
Sl , _ ., . _

·On MaF~h 31, Holzer Medical Denter held .a breakfast in ~ooor of OoCtor's Day in the Fren.ch
.500 RooJlll .at t!)e hospital. tiospital employees were .enoour~d to bring in tneir favorit~
breakfast food to share with both HMC .ana I'IGizer Clinic physicians. HMO would like to
:show ttleir appreciation fGr all ~hysicians, and tlilank them for the countless hours spent to
~better the lives of uur communities. In the photo at right, Dr. Glenn Rsher reac~s for some
,fTesh l'ruit to start Gff his wo11&lt; day. Above. the team that graciously donates their time in
order to prepare a wGnderful breakfast include, from left, Sam Holstein, securjty; Sarah
·Mayes, patient registratiGn; Lisa Mitchell, RN; Pam Dye, director of Holzer Weight Loss
Solutioos; ana Mi~ .Hemphill, physical therapist
·
I

I

·Celebrate National Puolic Health Week

'
are hospitable to ·disea~e gmundslRV- patts, residen·
PUBLIC HEALTH NURSE
causing ·organisms, people . tial C3JIIPS, marinas, public
GALLIA COUNTY HEALTH DEPARTMENT
who consume the food may swimming pools/spas, tattoo
· be subject to illness. Some and ibOO¥ ptercing facilities.
· What do you think of When diseases such as hepatitis A
Vital Statistics houses &lt;1ur
you bear Public Health?
.arid Salmonella bacteria are local registrar who records all
Public Health plays a role t6nsmitted through .improp-- births and deaths 1hat occur in
:in everyone's life in many ~.handling offood.
the county, The infomnatien
'ways. Many of us ane famil·
Sewage systems are also is then sent tG the Ohio
iar with vaccinations from an important pallt of public Depat1111mt10fHeallh Bureau
the local health department, health. Cer.tain disease- of Vrtal Statistics. The local
but may not be familiar with causin~ organisms are vital stlllistics c:1epattmont \has
all that your local health transnutted ilhrough oonta- records of births and deaths
minated drinkin~ water and · · in oor oowny dating back to
department does.
Public Health dlites back the .most ellfecllve way •t o 1908.
to biblical times when the limit these water borne dis·
Another branch of public
si~k were quarantined _to eases is to ensure,.our drink· ,heaith is epidemielo.gy,
prevent the · spread of dis· ing water is safe ·ana oot which studies the incidence
ease. Ancient !Romans also · contaminated by sewage. of diseases in ·the j:&gt;opllla·
adopted public health ideas We may not think that these lion. Epidemiologists and
when they built aqueducts .diseases are common, but other public health official~
to supply pure water and .a the United Nations esti- work to break the chain of
public sewer system to mates that between 5 and 10 disease transmission by
cany away waste.
million people die each year notifying people who may
1be gGals Gf public health from water borne diseases be at risk for contraoting :an
ate to prevent human dis· such as cholera.
infectious disease.
There are numerous other
Threats to public health
ease, injury, .and disability;
protect people kom envi· programs such as school and rohcems change over time
ronmental. health hazards; institution environmental and epidemio'logists ·study
promote behaviors that lead health and safety programs trends to best meet the pubto good physical and •mental which
conduct
yearly lie's
health .
needs.
health; educate the public inspections ·o f the schools in Immunizations are olie of the
about health; and assure the county looking for con- most effective weapons to
availability of high-quality ditions that are dangerous to combat the ·spread of infechealth se.rvices. Many dis· health and safety. Did you tious disease. The immunizaeases . can be prevented know it is Ohio law that lion programs of public
through healthy li\ting and anyone that is bitten by an health have been very suepan of public health is to animal or a medical provider cessful; several · infectious
educate the general publk that treats someone ·bitten by diseases have ·~ vittually
' . about how to prevent nonin· an animal must report the C!l!dicated by imruunization
·
animal bite to the local programs. Polio hils been vir·
• ·- · ,fectious diseases. .
···
Your local health. depart· - bealib department? The ani··: l!JaJ.!L~illlin••M fmm_most
meiit meets these goals wftll · mB.I wiU be quararlrlneil If aevelo.pe!l nations In· the
a variety of di·fferent pFOr able or its remains will be world, and the incidence of
grams to ensure the public's sent to the Ohio Department whooping cough, tetanus,
health.
of Health lab for testing of and diphtheria has been.dras·
The environmental .health possible rabies virus.
tical.ly reduced worldwide.
section of public health
Rabies is a disease that if
The United Nations esti·
wears many hats like the left untreated is almost mates that up to 4 million
food protection program always fatal so proper test- lives ~ould be saved annual·
and the sewage system pro- ing and prophylacllc treat- ly if existing, but under-used
gram. Food protection pro- meot is important. There are vaccinations were fully
·grams establish and cnforoe other .!ypes of·licensing pro- implemented. Otildren need
'laws for safe food storage grams \lperated by your most of their inununizations
and preparation. Food dtat local health department. . by the age of 2; .at birth they
is not , washed or cooked Some ·o f those include the should start their hepatitis B
thoroughly. or if food is licensing and inspecting of series. Booster doses are
stoi!Cd at temperatures that mobile home park.~ camp- also needed at four to six

8Y GwEN McGR•IV, RN

'

'

I

.

'

SUNDAY PUZZLER

'

.'

I

II

~#Vfaule
REALTY

I

II
l

l
••

~It

18..1Jt

____..

I

,...._ .too.-...-

·JOnlnlftt_10
a .. lllllelda11er.._.r2
BR, 1.11111t . .·~-­
__

., .

MdiPOifotloe. Ha.....-1u~....,...._.,._...,..

..... fiiOIIIINI·,_ dill dtst. l..t ran~Ptl....n loAtiCI

Call or.uit our ....boia:
to. . . upiO.&lt;&gt;Ur

Ne~~~/isli•&amp;S

. · E-ldkr

Madog COOter to bold reremony at Evans 'Ceritetery

years of age and around the
lime of adolescents.
Adults need immunizations
too! Adults can get immunized for influl:nza, pneumonia. tetanus, diphtheria, per.
tussis and hepatitis A&amp;B. lf
you .are the adventurous type
and will be t:r:dveling you may
need immunizations to pro·tect -you against typhoid and
yellow fever. Some countries
won' t let you enter unle!&lt;S .
you have a valid yellow fever
certificate!
The Gallia County Health
Department offers childhood
immunizations free of charge
to Obit! residents under the
age of 1·9; we also have many
adult immunizations for a fee .
lmmunizations are available
·· at the Gallia County Health
Department Monday .through
Friday, 8 am. to 4 p.m., no
appointment necessary.
The Gallia County Health .
Oepartment
offers
a
Women's Health Clinic
which offers prenatal services, SID testing, paf smears, and birth contro .
Pregnancy tests are offt;red
through our Child and Family
Health Services grant.
Lead testing is also
·offered and is a requirement .
wwW-~galliacohealtlz. org.
for children on Medicaid.
There are other progt'dJDS to
Sources: Encarta Online
ensure public health, such .as Encyclopedia.. Ohio. Public
the Bureau fot: Children with :Health-Association.· .. . .•

see

'

~

'

:

'"&lt; ' ' ;•

• b' -·
l-

"&lt;

.

Medi.Cl!l-flmidii:itps (BCMHy,

The OCMH nurses work with
families as case lllllllligers to
coordinate diagnosis and
ti-eatrnent of the child's condition. The Gallia County .
Health Department offers a '

.1-'l'N C1.r

_,
"A~
.. --

~

. ·.

..:'!"
&lt;..

~

~

&lt;!-

•

'

,'

I

··

'

'

'

_ .... ~

1
0
&gt;

~

..;

'

l'flttllHMIM:; ,\RP.i f'F.hl"Rt

.

.

7

RIO GRANDE - The University of Rio . ·has 'been done in recent years •to improve the . ~-IIIIIIMI!IIiiii•-J
Grande's Madog Center for Welsh Studies look Gfthe cemetery. Previously, it was dif·
will hold a ceremony at the E~ans ficult just to get to the cemetery, and the
Cemetery on April 20. De~ndauts of the gmuruls needed to
sJllillced up. ~ late
peaple buried tllere are mvtted to take pan ~ayne Evans was mstruiiiCDtal ll_lllnprov·
m the occasion.
mg the gmunds With the belp of Rio Grande
The cemetery is where many of lhe Oligi- soccer players. Evans will be mnemberel:l at
:na1 Welsh settlers of the region are buried, the cemetery ·on April 20 in honor ·of the
;and several imerovements have beeri made wOO&lt;: be did for the ptopttty.
ro the grounds recently.
.
Many of the original Welsh settlers are
: "We are looking for any of the relatives of buried in the Ev,a ns Cemetery, and Jindra
llie people who are buri~ in ~ Evans said the cemf?1ery looks · very nice today.
Cemetery," · said Jeanne JmQr:a, director of The cemetery 1s named after the Evans farothe Madog Center.
·
. ily, which was one of the original families
: In 1818, John Jones (TU'bach) and his that traveled to America from Wales with
'wife Eleanor came to America from Wales fGhn Jones (Tltbach~,
~itb' six famllies and 5ettl.ed in SOUlbcm
The Evans Cern C!fery is located in the
Ohio. The story of the settlement, ·o()ften Cooper Hollow area oo Moriah Road, which
leferred to as "the accidental ~nt," is is off of U.S. 35 North. The Madog Center for
being told in the new play, "New World_s," Welsh ~llldies 31 Rio Grande is working with
-.;.,hich will be perlormed at the Berry Fme the ~ Welsh Qub to put on the event.
SPRING
and Petfonning Arts ~nter on the Rio
Jindra IS hoping that m~y ~f the descen·
SPfCW.S JUST
:Grande campus on Apnl 19,
dants of the people buned m the Evans
· Rio Grande has an eKchange program Cemetery will attend the event, but she has
IN TIMEFOI?
~ith Trinity College in Cannarthen, Wales, no way to eet in touch with of them.
'(OUR INCfM.
and the Welsh students studying on campus Anyone who IS a descendant or who knoWS
TAl RETIIRNS!
(luring the spring wrote the play and are a descendant is invited to contact Jindra. All
putting it on.
.
~e~ndants and area !'lsidents are also
· Jobn Jones (Tirllach) was the patriarch of mv1ted to attend the April20 ceremony.
the family 'or settlers wbo came to .soutbem The activities at the Evans Cemetery will
Ohio, and be and his wife are buried in the begin ~t 2 p.m. on.~pril 20. After the~·
)::emetery. Their graves have no .headstones, mony " over, addiuonal pre~ntauons will
however, so a bench is being placed in tJ:.e be held ~ the Welsh Amencan Heritage
Ct:metery to hooor the couple.~ bench will Museum m 0~ Hill. .
.
be fonnal.ly dedicated at the Apri120 event.
Fo~ rnf.o,mtmuHr, call Jmdra at
The event will also celebrate the wen that (740) U5· 7I 86 or (80Qj 282-7201 .

Auditions
"INTO THE WOODS"
April 9th
5:3IHI:OO pm ·

"OKLAHOMA"

..

April11 &amp; 12
.
. 7:30

lox Dtfice: 428 2nd Ave.
Glllpalill, OH (740)446-.\RTS

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CEI.EBRATIONS

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PageC4

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ation

.

•

Geraldine Brooks :writes
' eiilellent historical oovels.
She won a Pulitz.er foc
Mturch., about the absent
father of Little 1\Wmen, set
during tbe Qvil W.u-. She
also authored Y~r · of
GetUu
Wt:mders, abmlt an En]!li.sb
town which · quaranuned
itself during the Pl.a,gue,
allowing DO one in or out of
the village. Her most recent
work, Peopte of tl-.e Book,· intolerant of ideas are also
ClOiicerns a beautifully illu- intolerant of the people who
minated Hebrew manuscript have lhe ideas. The author's
· rescued from Sarajevo dur- conclusion is that "To ,be .a
1
ing die recent conflict human being matters ~
• , ...,. ........ between dx: Bosnians and than to be a Jew, a Muslim.
•
- • · · - - dx: Sert!S.
Catholic or Orthodox." This
.. Gallia Coamty Gel\lealogical Society, OGS Chap1er board neubets for 2008 ~ from left, seated, Aim Bmwn, lreaslllrer,
The story opens in i 996. novel, tike the others BFOOks
. ~ Evans, president, and Pat Compton, member; baclk row; 8atbata Ridlatds, vice presidemt, l.!inda CriAeT, recording Hanna
Heath
is
an has wrinen so well, is based
~e Cletaty,
Ma
,
rum
SChoonover,
member,
aAd
Cemlyn
OQgar,
~secretary.
.
.
Au~"-L-•_..
' aotual h'Jstnty..
,
.
,....,ww l"llre ......,. """ec- . on

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·Geneal
. ·. ogiail SOciety reprints Gallia history sketch ::~
~cal~n:s
r!;~~ ::.ha~J~~=
rare
valuable volume. Cloudsplitter, about ilhe
~·

FOR lliE IISSOCIATED PRESS

,.....,

--"'1 of art.

WINECOIIK
COASTERS
These are fast to make and
last forevCL An eKCellent
conversation piere, they really will prot:Cct your tabletops.
Vou.. aeed:
• Wme cor1o; of llflPlllDmately the same sir.e, about.
lO or ll per finished item
• Heavy felt
• Glue (such as Elmer's or
Aleene's Tacky Glue)
Whllttodo:
• Cut a square of felt that's
approximately 4-lf2 inches
long by 4-112 inches wide. ·
• Lay the wine COib on
their sule on the square in
any pattet'IYof 'Straight lines
that yoo'd like, trying to
cover the felt
• Test your coaster by
placing an empty glass oo
top of it: 'Is it steady11f not,
substitute any offending
Wits for otiJcni, ·
• Glue the aJib 1.0 the
felt. The gtlie may ', seep to
POMEROY - The families of Joshua Harris and ·the back of the felt, so dry
Jacqueline Nye announce the couple's engagement to be this -item upside down.
married.
'
• When dry, flipover ·and
Josh is the son of Angie and Jiin MQ:lure of Pomeroy, use, cork side up. Cheers!
and Bany Harris of New Haven, W.Va. He is a l998 .gradWite of Meigs High School and a 2003 graduate of the
MINT TIN
·Pennsylvania Culinary Institute.
'I'REASUilEJIO:XO
Jaoquelille is the daughter of Mary Kay and Frank
FlllllllY, Item's a use tOr
Jovemtti of Johnsonburg, Pa., and Terry Nyc of Ridgway, · your staggering collection of
Pa. She is a 2{)()3 grnduate of Ridgway High School .mel
2004 graduate of the IUP Academy of Culinary Arts.
. lbey are both cwrently eltlployed at the Grand Hyatt in
Washington D.C . .
1be couple are planning a May 2009 wedding 10 be held
in Ridgway, Pa.
.

.
empty mint tins . .Instead of

• Trace the tin's base onto
the backside of another
scrap of paper.
• Glue the three pieoes of
paper onto their respllCI:ive
places: Outer and inner lid,
and inside base. You may
need to trim the paper to
make it fit. . ·
• Decorate the outside lid
as desired, with buttons,
beads, jewels, and . other
found objects.
• Decorate the inside lid
and base, ensuring that notbing bulky is used that would
hinder closing the tin.
• Note: Older kids may
like tlie challenge .of uying
.l!l.. ~ve~ IM. sides with
paper. "ulilllg. the IWilll ttao-_
ing and ~uing technique.
This will take extra precision.

paper, you can visit your
local wallpaper store and ask
if they have any discarded
sample bool;s 10 give away.
You receive free "paper"
while rescuing the sample
books from the landfill.
You'D aeed:
·
• Mint,tins, such as Altoids,
empty and wiped dean
• Patterned paper scraps,
such as &amp;om scrapbooking,
or wallpaper scraps
·
• Glue (such as Elmer's or
Aleene's Tacky Glue)
• Found objects, such as
buuons, beads, fake jc;wels
and faux flowers, or anything
!Pat's sllli!!J .and r;;olorful _ :..__
• Optional: stickers and
nwkers
What to do:
• Trace the tin's lid onto
the backside of a piece
paper. Do this twice; the
paper does not have to
mal£b.

CRAZY HAIR PEOPLE
This craft can be fnlly
oompostable if you use

cbase fuJm a suppli~ such as
Eco-Produots,
www.eooproducts.com. If you can fiDd
wheatgrass seed, you can cut
ywr friend's "ltait" for juic~- aootber kick for kids.

VOII'Uneed:
• Paper cups, preferably
oompostable
• Markers or cray&lt;ins
·~gsoil

• Grass seed, such a,s
wheatgrass, or any lawn ·
variety, such as tall fescue
• Spoon, ~uring spoon,
small scoop or lmwel
•Water
· ~ A small plate or saucer
• Optional: Plastic wrap
and rubber band
Wbattoclo:
·~wa~oo~~
of the cup with tnarlrers or
crayons.
• Punch a small bole in
the. bottom of the cup (for
drainage).
:
• Fill cup 213 full with
soil.
• Add about I tablespoon
of grass seed.
• Mix ·grass seed into soil
with finger or spoon.
Moisten soil with water. 1\tt
in sink for drainage or on
saucer.
• To encourage growth.
cover cup with plastic wrap
and secure with rubber band
• ·Place cup in sunny window. Water as needcid.
. • ,Remove plastic MIIP.· if _:c,
.us_mg, when sprouung
seedlings grow near.
• When your "crazy hair"
is lililg enough, you can cut
it and watch it grow again,
· • When ready to discard,
compost or throw out; it
will biodegrade.

~ur,

bloom at
BSNevent
RIO &lt;JRANDE - BSN
nursing students at me

U~!:?n~o
Grande
. College

will be bokli"t!: - . ual
beabh fair Ql .
ry. April
15 from lOa.m.to
. 2
tbe Davis Uqivmity
(Jontm:uoe Room C.
Thcl'e will he· multiple

t:.:

veadcrs 8l this bealth. fair
perlonning various bealtb
saeeoing~ and pro~ a
host of educational matma!.
There
be multiple
drawings . throughout the
.day for door prizes.
Venden attending include,
but not limited to Gallia
County Health Depar1lnent,
'Paramount
Beauty
Academy, Galli! County
Sheriff's
Department,
University of Rio Grande
Health Services, Holzer
Bariatric Center-Surgical
Weight Loss Information,
and Ohio University ROTC.
'{'lle£e will be many educatiooal
opportunities
throughou! the day as well
as many gtveaways.

I'OMEROY - Clarence and Vtrginia Lewis Hayman of
Pomeroy will celebrate thei~ 49th wedding anniversary on

Friday, Aprill8, 2008.
.
· 1bey were manied by the late Rev. Clarence Proffit at
Portlan!l on April 18, 1959. They are the parents ·o f six
dmgbten and two sons, with one daughter and one son

now deceased.
No celebration is plano¢ due to Mr. Hayman's illneSs,
'but cards may be sent to the couple at 33547 Naylor's Run
Road, Po~y, Ohio 45769.
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- · ---it ~ - - - - ·- ·

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IA'hkh.

Marshall Librnries ·to celebrate·career of science fiction author
. HUNTINGTON ,

'fV.Yif. - "'~e~ 111. .(\!! !IDJ!!~qnqa- 'M~ for liw .ildevision,

~ The MaiShallUruversity

zine11.

These ini::ludild
Libraries will host a week- orimi, mystecy and sports
long retrospective on the pieces as well and fantasy
life and .c areer of legendary and science fiction."
science fiction :writer and ' Vintage TV sbows ·based
Marshall University alum- on Bond's. work to be
nus Nelson S. Bond begin- · shown in Drinko Library
ning Monday April 14, Room 402 are:
·
according to Barl&gt;ara A.
• Monday, April 14- "AI
Winters, dean of the Haddon's Lamp.~ first pubMarsltall Libraries.
lisbed as a short story in
: Among the highlights of Unknown Worlds, June
i!he retrospective · titled !942. Adapted :as a live
:"Neloon S. Bond: From WV radiQ play for CBS'
to TV and Beyond" are vin- "Escape.~ i 949. Adapted
i.age video presentations on forlivetelevisiononNBC's
tbe Marshall campus from "Gruen Guild Playhouse,"
Jelevision shows produced 1952_Stars Buddy ~bsen. .
from Bond's scripts, and the
• Tuesday, A;ril 15 . dedicatiuu of lhe Nelson ' "Bacular Glock, first pub.
Bond Room ori the third lished as a short stol)' in
ilooroftheMorrowLibrary Blue Book, 1942. Adapted
~ed fot 3 p.m. Friday, for live radio on NBC's
Aprill9.
"The World's Greatest
~Nelson Slade Bond may
Stories~ and "Stories of
be the only graduate of the Nelson Olmstead,~ 1942.
Page Pitt School of Adapted for live television,
Joumalism to have bad a Revue Productions, 1949.
r-amer in each of the seven .Stars Buddy Ebsen.
~pecialties taught in the
• Wednesday, April 16 6cbool," WmterS said. "He "Mask of Medusa,n first
Btodied under Page Pin him- published as a ·short story in
)ie]f. &lt;Uid his writing 'C8l'Cef Biue Book, December
1\P'illned seven decades. In · 1945. Adapted for live radio
just 23 years, fiom 1935 to on NBC's "Peter Lorre's
l958,1te published 258 sto- Mystery on lhe Air,~ 1.947.

-aid l'iM
NBC'i

&lt;broadriiil on ·

"Radio "' · City

Playhouse,~ 1949_ Bcmd''S
ver&amp;ion televised on ABC's
'1'alesofTOIDOm):wt 1'953.
Stars Raymond Bwr.
• Thursday, April 17 "The
Night
America
Tremj)lecl,~ five television
play on CBS's "Siiudio
One," 1957. Stars Edward
R Mlirrow, Ed Asner,
James Co~um. Warren
Beatty, Warren Oates and
Vmcent Gardenia. A dramatizationoftheeventsofOct.
30, 1938. when Orson
. WeUes scared .fhe . United
States w1tless WJth hts adap' .tatioo of ·"The War Of The
Worlds.~ Bond's script for
"The
Night
Ameri~
Trembled" brought "Studio
One" the highest ratings in
its history.
Each video presentation
will be introduced by Lisle ·
·amwn, curator in Marshall
University Libraries Special
Collections, who will provide attendees with littieknown ~s and historical
perspective about Bond and
the programs produced
from his writings. All
videos are 36-minutes long,

-ex.Oept

fot

" The Ni~hi ,

.~ ttGJiofile.d.."

Nelson Bond lbeg;m transfetring ffis literary apers to
the University Libraries
Special
· Coll.ecbons
Department at Marshall in
2003 and continued .t he
process up .to his death on
Nov. 4, 2006, just 19 days
short of his 98th birthday.
The
collection
also
includes correspondence
(including fan mail), contracts, agent .c prrespondeuce and finanoial records
-as well as a full run of
the Nelson Bond Society's .
Ne~sle~ and copies of his
anltquanan book catalogs.
Far fttctbec information;
contact Winters at ( 304)
696-2318.

Month!! ..

lnvent«y C'hanPn~ weekly with new weekly savings ...

will

HAYMAN
ANNIVERSA·RY
•

Gallia lhatuseincreasedninetotm traDscribedtheobiiUaly.
~ily ~.:., Sources
. the Inside its pages She fmds a
abolitionist John Bmwn,
County
~ogical limes that of a DOI1Dlll day.
.•
MiiUry ·
..... die ~............., 10
white !hair, an insect wing, a and The Sweet HenJD.fter,
Society, OGS ~·
Evans said, "'ne of our
·•"" rim
drins- include "old notes drop of salt and a wine stain. about a tragic school bus
.moutll:liS a new pllblicaMn.
members, Joanne Galvia Of
This ~lleclioa.of obituar- from visits.to lbe ·( ftJ! "'"ries. The clasps which formerly accident and its effect oo ;a
a tqXint of tbe Gallia County Michigan, ak2tod .NEHGS ies of Qvil W• veterans lUid :also liom death itiOOids, bound the book are missing. small town. The ResenJe is
liCOlon of Howes Kutorioal to the website and many was ttan!JC'I'ibrd liom -vari- funeral b1!me reooi'd&amp;, obitn-. ·
As Hanna .seeks the set at the beginning of the
·CoUectiorJs in 1888.
lbanks go to her as wdl as ous C".allia Coo"'Y aewspa- aries, and contributions from ·answers to the mysteries Second World War in die
It is a brief genetal histmy Neil and die manY., many pcrs. They have been 01g11- inany indivi&lt;Jmd,s who oon- cmrtaiurd in ilhe manuscript, Adirondacks in u,pstate New
fullyindexcdbyODeoflheir people who oontnbure to nizedalpltabeticallyby!m- tribnted new :and OOJ:Rdcd .the reader travels with her York among the weal11hy
members. The earty French make it a success by coo- name. In addition to die inf01n•..U.O ~
.
. back in time ro Seville in . who maintain homes there.
!ddement and the Scioto tributing articles, pbolns, 'obituary text, each •enllcy
The database is a11mabeii- l4S6, to l!he Venice gheno
The story is part rmnanoe,
imd Ohio companies with &gt;Obituaries and a'ftl!l by ~ins the name of the cal by SU!lJI!DI" Oi.ck on during the Inquisition under pat! mystery, part social comthe familiar ftgures Joel data. . ~ appreci,afc ewry- . newspaper, volume and date "Alphabetical Index~ in 1he 1be rule &lt;Of flerdinand and mentary. The rich and !\[X)iled
BarloW
.and
William one's effliltS 1D add eo dtis ipli•wwion and dte name · index 011 the left side of the JsabeUa, and .to a harem · . ad0(lted daughter of a bJ;ain
Playfair are presented. fablllous genealogical base of lbe ild~ Who ()QJ)- page ro begin yoor seaidL A where a black aiiliist resides. surgooo, Vanessa Cole, bas
Sketcbesofthelogcabinsin and we invite you CD lib: a ln"bulald:eobil!!ary.
key for the abbreviations
~areaooupleofsub- been twi,ce divorced at 29.
the pait lhe Pub!Ji.c Square lex* 8l ~.org.~
.· · ) = ' 'lf • - •
found in the database is plots in the novel Hanna Flying his biplane onto a ·
as weU as stories about Mad
1be arucle-is as follows:
The MililaJy Ra::uds sec- . it1duded on ·tbe CemeltJry ~gins a romance with a neamy lake on the Fowth of
Ann Bailey and . Dr.
Greetings from lhe New . tion oonsisriofthei'OSta.'SOf . R.ecords main ~e. The, Muslim librarian, Ozram July oomesalocalanist,marSaugrain. "the little French England .
Historic twelve Obio Volunteer dlllt .lield!i inoludC .Wmame, Kat:aman from Sarajevo, ried with dli1dren,ooe Jordan
'doctor,~ are includOd.
Genealogical Society! This Cavaby and lnfantry ·C01Dp8- given name, • et•ne.y name, who rescued 1!be book from Groves. His tq!Uiation as a
· 1be society also recently newsletter bas been sent ro nies. Each database OQIIIlUDS township :abbrevUiioo, date his burning library. His own · womapi7Plf and ¢venturer
received recognition by people who asked to abriefbistotyandan~- ofbidh,dateofdeath,•at wirewaskilledinlhecross- have preceded him. Of
beil\g spo~ted in die New receive it
.beti~ list of the soldiers in lka1h. and inscription. rt you fire bcitween factions, and .course, Vanessa is intrigued
England (Boston) Historic
GalliaCoonty is located in dlCb ·company. ;lbe data ~ are und~ · about wheFe his li¢e SOI\;iJieS in a bospi- and~ooksonJordanasacluil­
Genealogical
Society's sootbeaslem Obio ~ fields include IllUDe, rank im, indivilllial townships are till, .liCverely wounded.
lenge. Her past contains a
oewsleliter wbicb featured on the Ohio River. Gallia I3Dk out, andrompany.
located within the county,
Hamia's modler is a datil; secret. flllet you guess
the society's website. ·The County is ooe of the oldest
C
ta ies ,:...,
go ·to the Maps section ito prominent surgeon who what ffi1Ppeos next.
society bas had a w.ebsite . rountiesin the state, dating
AcmsusoftheoemeteRes aooesstberesounESdlere.
boreHannaoutofwcdlock · Thongbleiljoyedthisbook
Addjt- "
and never told her who her and finished it ina men time,
since September, 2006, and ~ :t o 1803. The Gallia &lt;Of Gallia GooDlY :w~ taken
it bas grown enensivety OJunty&lt;JmealogicalSociety between i976 aitd 1983. As
•~s was ·
fatherw.as. Shebaskeptthis it wasn't Bariks' best book.
tillcedauime. Bdowisdle bas upiOided a number .of it happens there are IJII!Ire · Odler resources on die secret, which is a souroeof Thedesoiiptioooftbewdud'li1ide ia ils u&amp;:cty aDil il · RSOUR:ei m its website.
than :500 ceuieteries in website include the index •to coDftiot between the tw0.
ed beauty of theAdiroodacb
...,..,.,.dle-.y~
Ollbarim
Gallia County_ On the Hardesty'sHisroryOJGa1/is
The story tells :the 1oog IIUikes tbe ik!caDon a major
Ael• *Ute
..
c:an. be
This. ·seotiooof!bewebsite. Cemr:teries main page yoo County, the delinquent tax histBty &lt;Of anti-Semitism i.n player in the SIDI)T.Aiio. the
r rt«&gt;dbyvtSltllig;pll•av-- oootamucollootionofobit- will find dJe hst of Gallia list for 1860, and a number Europe an4 women's Slnlg- social and eoooomic dilfel'nea,logy.u:g.
uaries drawn U:um various cemeteries by township with of photo .albums. Hardesty's gle fur equality. It brings ences between the llocals and
· Aaxlrding to Pl!esitlent Gallia Glimty newspapers. speeific infoonation about Histozy was published in together Jews, Christians the vacationers make clear
Hean) Evans, tbe website is Tbey are ·organized ~ba- Where each one is located.
1'882, and, acooJ'!iing to the and Muslims and their com- the wide gap between rioo
il success due to webmaster, bebcally by slli1UUDC. Each
1be &lt;eemetery database, website, is the only !mown moo heritage. One character and poor during the
Neil Elvick of California, eniiy includes the Obituaty, which contains more than eady history_ of the county. . says that "Book burnings are Depression. As Johnny Ecker
who keeps it up to-date and name of the newspapel', date 34,&gt;000 reoords, includeS' · The_ townsbip-by-10wnshiD .always the forerunners of the used to say, "We live by the
moving along. Elvick· noti- of the obituary, page · on burials .from every known delinquent ·t ax :list for t866 stake, the ·ovens, the mass Golden Rule. Them that has
fied Evans that one day soon whldi it ·~ and the cemelely in Ga1lia County, was published in .tht graves." Those who are . the gold make the rules."
after the feature by NEI.JGS niune .of the individual who including those in ~mall Gallipolis Joumal.

GAWPOUS -

a~n tom trash to tmBJre with Earth Day crafts .
FOOT-CONNOLLY Kids
biodegradable paper cups.
BY Ja• a: -=--at
&lt;lleck
your local coffee shop
ENGAGEMENT .
or bealtb-food store, or pur-

into uSeable pieoes

Sunday, April6, 2098

the Adirondacks:
A novel approach

On March 29, 2008, the .Past Exalted Rulers Association of Gallipolis ·installed the 2008 lodge officers fur Gallipolis
Elks 1.07. New lodge .officers are, from left, first row. Tiler, Scott Allison; lecturing Knight, Mitch Williams;-Treasurer,
Nelson Dray; Exaltec;l Ruler, Tom Johnson; Chaplain, David Allison; Trustee, Tom Meadows; and Leading Knight, 'John ·
Cremeans. In the second row are Inner Guard, John Story; Loyal Knight, Steve Marxen; Trustee Chairman, Mile Fulks;
ancl secretary, Fred Bryant.

finished
£&lt;Hth Day
crafts are
seen in
Arvada,
,.,.._, Colo. Maroh
29. Earth
Day craft ,
projects can
tum tJ:ash

PageCs

From Sa•-ajevo to

"•

52

To honor Earth Day in
RACINE - Bruce Fout of Creola and Judy Foul of
kids~ crnfting, one really
McArthur announce the engagement and 11f.Proacbing
marriage of their daughter, Amber "Nikki ' Fout, to needs to think uasb.
That is, "What can I resZachary Everette Connolly, son of Brian and Angela
cue
from the gatbage bin
Connolly of Racine.
1be bride,.elect is a 2003 graduate of Vmton County High andreuseT'
This is DO time for going
School and a 2006 graduate of Hoclcing College with an
heavy
on the non•recyclable
associate's degree in nursing. She is employed with Obi()
such as pipe cleandoodads,
Valley Home Health in Gallipolis.
Her qance is a 2005 graduate of Southern High School ers and poDI1lOIIIS. in our
and is enrolled at Hocking Colle¥e, working on a degree in art projects. For Earth Qay,
environmental restoration. He ts employed with Field's which is April 22, oonsider
these crafts that make the
Excava~: Kitts Hill.
most
of objects you .probaThe w
· g is planned for Saturday, Aug. 23, 2008, at
bly already have:
Racine United Methodist Clturch.

0~ mE BOOKSHEI.•F

.'

S.Oiollwy, April6, 2008

..

the.......,.

Onlam .... wkh d.e best . . . in
on the tl Actui 1 J'DIIW ala., I -:dedi
~~

"' aot stM1&gt;&lt;l "" tho worl: ,ou looo. ...,.... with, the best deal ever ~ 10ur fawrilo
Ha.y Fe.pon• trac;to, Choose from ouc ~ triC!Or&lt;llCDID,GCI!atO..-tw!wd-.153Slt540-.
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on our Porda and in our Clearance Area!!

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CEI.EBRATIONS

6adap limn-6entind

'

PageC4

•

•

ation

.

•

Geraldine Brooks :writes
' eiilellent historical oovels.
She won a Pulitz.er foc
Mturch., about the absent
father of Little 1\Wmen, set
during tbe Qvil W.u-. She
also authored Y~r · of
GetUu
Wt:mders, abmlt an En]!li.sb
town which · quaranuned
itself during the Pl.a,gue,
allowing DO one in or out of
the village. Her most recent
work, Peopte of tl-.e Book,· intolerant of ideas are also
ClOiicerns a beautifully illu- intolerant of the people who
minated Hebrew manuscript have lhe ideas. The author's
· rescued from Sarajevo dur- conclusion is that "To ,be .a
1
ing die recent conflict human being matters ~
• , ...,. ........ between dx: Bosnians and than to be a Jew, a Muslim.
•
- • · · - - dx: Sert!S.
Catholic or Orthodox." This
.. Gallia Coamty Gel\lealogical Society, OGS Chap1er board neubets for 2008 ~ from left, seated, Aim Bmwn, lreaslllrer,
The story opens in i 996. novel, tike the others BFOOks
. ~ Evans, president, and Pat Compton, member; baclk row; 8atbata Ridlatds, vice presidemt, l.!inda CriAeT, recording Hanna
Heath
is
an has wrinen so well, is based
~e Cletaty,
Ma
,
rum
SChoonover,
member,
aAd
Cemlyn
OQgar,
~secretary.
.
.
Au~"-L-•_..
' aotual h'Jstnty..
,
.
,....,ww l"llre ......,. """ec- . on

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·Geneal
. ·. ogiail SOciety reprints Gallia history sketch ::~
~cal~n:s
r!;~~ ::.ha~J~~=
rare
valuable volume. Cloudsplitter, about ilhe
~·

FOR lliE IISSOCIATED PRESS

,.....,

--"'1 of art.

WINECOIIK
COASTERS
These are fast to make and
last forevCL An eKCellent
conversation piere, they really will prot:Cct your tabletops.
Vou.. aeed:
• Wme cor1o; of llflPlllDmately the same sir.e, about.
lO or ll per finished item
• Heavy felt
• Glue (such as Elmer's or
Aleene's Tacky Glue)
Whllttodo:
• Cut a square of felt that's
approximately 4-lf2 inches
long by 4-112 inches wide. ·
• Lay the wine COib on
their sule on the square in
any pattet'IYof 'Straight lines
that yoo'd like, trying to
cover the felt
• Test your coaster by
placing an empty glass oo
top of it: 'Is it steady11f not,
substitute any offending
Wits for otiJcni, ·
• Glue the aJib 1.0 the
felt. The gtlie may ', seep to
POMEROY - The families of Joshua Harris and ·the back of the felt, so dry
Jacqueline Nye announce the couple's engagement to be this -item upside down.
married.
'
• When dry, flipover ·and
Josh is the son of Angie and Jiin MQ:lure of Pomeroy, use, cork side up. Cheers!
and Bany Harris of New Haven, W.Va. He is a l998 .gradWite of Meigs High School and a 2003 graduate of the
MINT TIN
·Pennsylvania Culinary Institute.
'I'REASUilEJIO:XO
Jaoquelille is the daughter of Mary Kay and Frank
FlllllllY, Item's a use tOr
Jovemtti of Johnsonburg, Pa., and Terry Nyc of Ridgway, · your staggering collection of
Pa. She is a 2{)()3 grnduate of Ridgway High School .mel
2004 graduate of the IUP Academy of Culinary Arts.
. lbey are both cwrently eltlployed at the Grand Hyatt in
Washington D.C . .
1be couple are planning a May 2009 wedding 10 be held
in Ridgway, Pa.
.

.
empty mint tins . .Instead of

• Trace the tin's base onto
the backside of another
scrap of paper.
• Glue the three pieoes of
paper onto their respllCI:ive
places: Outer and inner lid,
and inside base. You may
need to trim the paper to
make it fit. . ·
• Decorate the outside lid
as desired, with buttons,
beads, jewels, and . other
found objects.
• Decorate the inside lid
and base, ensuring that notbing bulky is used that would
hinder closing the tin.
• Note: Older kids may
like tlie challenge .of uying
.l!l.. ~ve~ IM. sides with
paper. "ulilllg. the IWilll ttao-_
ing and ~uing technique.
This will take extra precision.

paper, you can visit your
local wallpaper store and ask
if they have any discarded
sample bool;s 10 give away.
You receive free "paper"
while rescuing the sample
books from the landfill.
You'D aeed:
·
• Mint,tins, such as Altoids,
empty and wiped dean
• Patterned paper scraps,
such as &amp;om scrapbooking,
or wallpaper scraps
·
• Glue (such as Elmer's or
Aleene's Tacky Glue)
• Found objects, such as
buuons, beads, fake jc;wels
and faux flowers, or anything
!Pat's sllli!!J .and r;;olorful _ :..__
• Optional: stickers and
nwkers
What to do:
• Trace the tin's lid onto
the backside of a piece
paper. Do this twice; the
paper does not have to
mal£b.

CRAZY HAIR PEOPLE
This craft can be fnlly
oompostable if you use

cbase fuJm a suppli~ such as
Eco-Produots,
www.eooproducts.com. If you can fiDd
wheatgrass seed, you can cut
ywr friend's "ltait" for juic~- aootber kick for kids.

VOII'Uneed:
• Paper cups, preferably
oompostable
• Markers or cray&lt;ins
·~gsoil

• Grass seed, such a,s
wheatgrass, or any lawn ·
variety, such as tall fescue
• Spoon, ~uring spoon,
small scoop or lmwel
•Water
· ~ A small plate or saucer
• Optional: Plastic wrap
and rubber band
Wbattoclo:
·~wa~oo~~
of the cup with tnarlrers or
crayons.
• Punch a small bole in
the. bottom of the cup (for
drainage).
:
• Fill cup 213 full with
soil.
• Add about I tablespoon
of grass seed.
• Mix ·grass seed into soil
with finger or spoon.
Moisten soil with water. 1\tt
in sink for drainage or on
saucer.
• To encourage growth.
cover cup with plastic wrap
and secure with rubber band
• ·Place cup in sunny window. Water as needcid.
. • ,Remove plastic MIIP.· if _:c,
.us_mg, when sprouung
seedlings grow near.
• When your "crazy hair"
is lililg enough, you can cut
it and watch it grow again,
· • When ready to discard,
compost or throw out; it
will biodegrade.

~ur,

bloom at
BSNevent
RIO &lt;JRANDE - BSN
nursing students at me

U~!:?n~o
Grande
. College

will be bokli"t!: - . ual
beabh fair Ql .
ry. April
15 from lOa.m.to
. 2
tbe Davis Uqivmity
(Jontm:uoe Room C.
Thcl'e will he· multiple

t:.:

veadcrs 8l this bealth. fair
perlonning various bealtb
saeeoing~ and pro~ a
host of educational matma!.
There
be multiple
drawings . throughout the
.day for door prizes.
Venden attending include,
but not limited to Gallia
County Health Depar1lnent,
'Paramount
Beauty
Academy, Galli! County
Sheriff's
Department,
University of Rio Grande
Health Services, Holzer
Bariatric Center-Surgical
Weight Loss Information,
and Ohio University ROTC.
'{'lle£e will be many educatiooal
opportunities
throughou! the day as well
as many gtveaways.

I'OMEROY - Clarence and Vtrginia Lewis Hayman of
Pomeroy will celebrate thei~ 49th wedding anniversary on

Friday, Aprill8, 2008.
.
· 1bey were manied by the late Rev. Clarence Proffit at
Portlan!l on April 18, 1959. They are the parents ·o f six
dmgbten and two sons, with one daughter and one son

now deceased.
No celebration is plano¢ due to Mr. Hayman's illneSs,
'but cards may be sent to the couple at 33547 Naylor's Run
Road, Po~y, Ohio 45769.
- -- - -

- · ---it ~ - - - - ·- ·

-

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- - - - - -- · -

-

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IA'hkh.

Marshall Librnries ·to celebrate·career of science fiction author
. HUNTINGTON ,

'fV.Yif. - "'~e~ 111. .(\!! !IDJ!!~qnqa- 'M~ for liw .ildevision,

~ The MaiShallUruversity

zine11.

These ini::ludild
Libraries will host a week- orimi, mystecy and sports
long retrospective on the pieces as well and fantasy
life and .c areer of legendary and science fiction."
science fiction :writer and ' Vintage TV sbows ·based
Marshall University alum- on Bond's. work to be
nus Nelson S. Bond begin- · shown in Drinko Library
ning Monday April 14, Room 402 are:
·
according to Barl&gt;ara A.
• Monday, April 14- "AI
Winters, dean of the Haddon's Lamp.~ first pubMarsltall Libraries.
lisbed as a short story in
: Among the highlights of Unknown Worlds, June
i!he retrospective · titled !942. Adapted :as a live
:"Neloon S. Bond: From WV radiQ play for CBS'
to TV and Beyond" are vin- "Escape.~ i 949. Adapted
i.age video presentations on forlivetelevisiononNBC's
tbe Marshall campus from "Gruen Guild Playhouse,"
Jelevision shows produced 1952_Stars Buddy ~bsen. .
from Bond's scripts, and the
• Tuesday, A;ril 15 . dedicatiuu of lhe Nelson ' "Bacular Glock, first pub.
Bond Room ori the third lished as a short stol)' in
ilooroftheMorrowLibrary Blue Book, 1942. Adapted
~ed fot 3 p.m. Friday, for live radio on NBC's
Aprill9.
"The World's Greatest
~Nelson Slade Bond may
Stories~ and "Stories of
be the only graduate of the Nelson Olmstead,~ 1942.
Page Pitt School of Adapted for live television,
Joumalism to have bad a Revue Productions, 1949.
r-amer in each of the seven .Stars Buddy Ebsen.
~pecialties taught in the
• Wednesday, April 16 6cbool," WmterS said. "He "Mask of Medusa,n first
Btodied under Page Pin him- published as a ·short story in
)ie]f. &lt;Uid his writing 'C8l'Cef Biue Book, December
1\P'illned seven decades. In · 1945. Adapted for live radio
just 23 years, fiom 1935 to on NBC's "Peter Lorre's
l958,1te published 258 sto- Mystery on lhe Air,~ 1.947.

-aid l'iM
NBC'i

&lt;broadriiil on ·

"Radio "' · City

Playhouse,~ 1949_ Bcmd''S
ver&amp;ion televised on ABC's
'1'alesofTOIDOm):wt 1'953.
Stars Raymond Bwr.
• Thursday, April 17 "The
Night
America
Tremj)lecl,~ five television
play on CBS's "Siiudio
One," 1957. Stars Edward
R Mlirrow, Ed Asner,
James Co~um. Warren
Beatty, Warren Oates and
Vmcent Gardenia. A dramatizationoftheeventsofOct.
30, 1938. when Orson
. WeUes scared .fhe . United
States w1tless WJth hts adap' .tatioo of ·"The War Of The
Worlds.~ Bond's script for
"The
Night
Ameri~
Trembled" brought "Studio
One" the highest ratings in
its history.
Each video presentation
will be introduced by Lisle ·
·amwn, curator in Marshall
University Libraries Special
Collections, who will provide attendees with littieknown ~s and historical
perspective about Bond and
the programs produced
from his writings. All
videos are 36-minutes long,

-ex.Oept

fot

" The Ni~hi ,

.~ ttGJiofile.d.."

Nelson Bond lbeg;m transfetring ffis literary apers to
the University Libraries
Special
· Coll.ecbons
Department at Marshall in
2003 and continued .t he
process up .to his death on
Nov. 4, 2006, just 19 days
short of his 98th birthday.
The
collection
also
includes correspondence
(including fan mail), contracts, agent .c prrespondeuce and finanoial records
-as well as a full run of
the Nelson Bond Society's .
Ne~sle~ and copies of his
anltquanan book catalogs.
Far fttctbec information;
contact Winters at ( 304)
696-2318.

Month!! ..

lnvent«y C'hanPn~ weekly with new weekly savings ...

will

HAYMAN
ANNIVERSA·RY
•

Gallia lhatuseincreasedninetotm traDscribedtheobiiUaly.
~ily ~.:., Sources
. the Inside its pages She fmds a
abolitionist John Bmwn,
County
~ogical limes that of a DOI1Dlll day.
.•
MiiUry ·
..... die ~............., 10
white !hair, an insect wing, a and The Sweet HenJD.fter,
Society, OGS ~·
Evans said, "'ne of our
·•"" rim
drins- include "old notes drop of salt and a wine stain. about a tragic school bus
.moutll:liS a new pllblicaMn.
members, Joanne Galvia Of
This ~lleclioa.of obituar- from visits.to lbe ·( ftJ! "'"ries. The clasps which formerly accident and its effect oo ;a
a tqXint of tbe Gallia County Michigan, ak2tod .NEHGS ies of Qvil W• veterans lUid :also liom death itiOOids, bound the book are missing. small town. The ResenJe is
liCOlon of Howes Kutorioal to the website and many was ttan!JC'I'ibrd liom -vari- funeral b1!me reooi'd&amp;, obitn-. ·
As Hanna .seeks the set at the beginning of the
·CoUectiorJs in 1888.
lbanks go to her as wdl as ous C".allia Coo"'Y aewspa- aries, and contributions from ·answers to the mysteries Second World War in die
It is a brief genetal histmy Neil and die manY., many pcrs. They have been 01g11- inany indivi&lt;Jmd,s who oon- cmrtaiurd in ilhe manuscript, Adirondacks in u,pstate New
fullyindexcdbyODeoflheir people who oontnbure to nizedalpltabeticallyby!m- tribnted new :and OOJ:Rdcd .the reader travels with her York among the weal11hy
members. The earty French make it a success by coo- name. In addition to die inf01n•..U.O ~
.
. back in time ro Seville in . who maintain homes there.
!ddement and the Scioto tributing articles, pbolns, 'obituary text, each •enllcy
The database is a11mabeii- l4S6, to l!he Venice gheno
The story is part rmnanoe,
imd Ohio companies with &gt;Obituaries and a'ftl!l by ~ins the name of the cal by SU!lJI!DI" Oi.ck on during the Inquisition under pat! mystery, part social comthe familiar ftgures Joel data. . ~ appreci,afc ewry- . newspaper, volume and date "Alphabetical Index~ in 1he 1be rule &lt;Of flerdinand and mentary. The rich and !\[X)iled
BarloW
.and
William one's effliltS 1D add eo dtis ipli•wwion and dte name · index 011 the left side of the JsabeUa, and .to a harem · . ad0(lted daughter of a bJ;ain
Playfair are presented. fablllous genealogical base of lbe ild~ Who ()QJ)- page ro begin yoor seaidL A where a black aiiliist resides. surgooo, Vanessa Cole, bas
Sketcbesofthelogcabinsin and we invite you CD lib: a ln"bulald:eobil!!ary.
key for the abbreviations
~areaooupleofsub- been twi,ce divorced at 29.
the pait lhe Pub!Ji.c Square lex* 8l ~.org.~
.· · ) = ' 'lf • - •
found in the database is plots in the novel Hanna Flying his biplane onto a ·
as weU as stories about Mad
1be arucle-is as follows:
The MililaJy Ra::uds sec- . it1duded on ·tbe CemeltJry ~gins a romance with a neamy lake on the Fowth of
Ann Bailey and . Dr.
Greetings from lhe New . tion oonsisriofthei'OSta.'SOf . R.ecords main ~e. The, Muslim librarian, Ozram July oomesalocalanist,marSaugrain. "the little French England .
Historic twelve Obio Volunteer dlllt .lield!i inoludC .Wmame, Kat:aman from Sarajevo, ried with dli1dren,ooe Jordan
'doctor,~ are includOd.
Genealogical Society! This Cavaby and lnfantry ·C01Dp8- given name, • et•ne.y name, who rescued 1!be book from Groves. His tq!Uiation as a
· 1be society also recently newsletter bas been sent ro nies. Each database OQIIIlUDS township :abbrevUiioo, date his burning library. His own · womapi7Plf and ¢venturer
received recognition by people who asked to abriefbistotyandan~- ofbidh,dateofdeath,•at wirewaskilledinlhecross- have preceded him. Of
beil\g spo~ted in die New receive it
.beti~ list of the soldiers in lka1h. and inscription. rt you fire bcitween factions, and .course, Vanessa is intrigued
England (Boston) Historic
GalliaCoonty is located in dlCb ·company. ;lbe data ~ are und~ · about wheFe his li¢e SOI\;iJieS in a bospi- and~ooksonJordanasacluil­
Genealogical
Society's sootbeaslem Obio ~ fields include IllUDe, rank im, indivilllial townships are till, .liCverely wounded.
lenge. Her past contains a
oewsleliter wbicb featured on the Ohio River. Gallia I3Dk out, andrompany.
located within the county,
Hamia's modler is a datil; secret. flllet you guess
the society's website. ·The County is ooe of the oldest
C
ta ies ,:...,
go ·to the Maps section ito prominent surgeon who what ffi1Ppeos next.
society bas had a w.ebsite . rountiesin the state, dating
AcmsusoftheoemeteRes aooesstberesounESdlere.
boreHannaoutofwcdlock · Thongbleiljoyedthisbook
Addjt- "
and never told her who her and finished it ina men time,
since September, 2006, and ~ :t o 1803. The Gallia &lt;Of Gallia GooDlY :w~ taken
it bas grown enensivety OJunty&lt;JmealogicalSociety between i976 aitd 1983. As
•~s was ·
fatherw.as. Shebaskeptthis it wasn't Bariks' best book.
tillcedauime. Bdowisdle bas upiOided a number .of it happens there are IJII!Ire · Odler resources on die secret, which is a souroeof Thedesoiiptioooftbewdud'li1ide ia ils u&amp;:cty aDil il · RSOUR:ei m its website.
than :500 ceuieteries in website include the index •to coDftiot between the tw0.
ed beauty of theAdiroodacb
...,..,.,.dle-.y~
Ollbarim
Gallia County_ On the Hardesty'sHisroryOJGa1/is
The story tells :the 1oog IIUikes tbe ik!caDon a major
Ael• *Ute
..
c:an. be
This. ·seotiooof!bewebsite. Cemr:teries main page yoo County, the delinquent tax histBty &lt;Of anti-Semitism i.n player in the SIDI)T.Aiio. the
r rt«&gt;dbyvtSltllig;pll•av-- oootamucollootionofobit- will find dJe hst of Gallia list for 1860, and a number Europe an4 women's Slnlg- social and eoooomic dilfel'nea,logy.u:g.
uaries drawn U:um various cemeteries by township with of photo .albums. Hardesty's gle fur equality. It brings ences between the llocals and
· Aaxlrding to Pl!esitlent Gallia Glimty newspapers. speeific infoonation about Histozy was published in together Jews, Christians the vacationers make clear
Hean) Evans, tbe website is Tbey are ·organized ~ba- Where each one is located.
1'882, and, acooJ'!iing to the and Muslims and their com- the wide gap between rioo
il success due to webmaster, bebcally by slli1UUDC. Each
1be &lt;eemetery database, website, is the only !mown moo heritage. One character and poor during the
Neil Elvick of California, eniiy includes the Obituaty, which contains more than eady history_ of the county. . says that "Book burnings are Depression. As Johnny Ecker
who keeps it up to-date and name of the newspapel', date 34,&gt;000 reoords, includeS' · The_ townsbip-by-10wnshiD .always the forerunners of the used to say, "We live by the
moving along. Elvick· noti- of the obituary, page · on burials .from every known delinquent ·t ax :list for t866 stake, the ·ovens, the mass Golden Rule. Them that has
fied Evans that one day soon whldi it ·~ and the cemelely in Ga1lia County, was published in .tht graves." Those who are . the gold make the rules."
after the feature by NEI.JGS niune .of the individual who including those in ~mall Gallipolis Joumal.

GAWPOUS -

a~n tom trash to tmBJre with Earth Day crafts .
FOOT-CONNOLLY Kids
biodegradable paper cups.
BY Ja• a: -=--at
&lt;lleck
your local coffee shop
ENGAGEMENT .
or bealtb-food store, or pur-

into uSeable pieoes

Sunday, April6, 2098

the Adirondacks:
A novel approach

On March 29, 2008, the .Past Exalted Rulers Association of Gallipolis ·installed the 2008 lodge officers fur Gallipolis
Elks 1.07. New lodge .officers are, from left, first row. Tiler, Scott Allison; lecturing Knight, Mitch Williams;-Treasurer,
Nelson Dray; Exaltec;l Ruler, Tom Johnson; Chaplain, David Allison; Trustee, Tom Meadows; and Leading Knight, 'John ·
Cremeans. In the second row are Inner Guard, John Story; Loyal Knight, Steve Marxen; Trustee Chairman, Mile Fulks;
ancl secretary, Fred Bryant.

finished
£&lt;Hth Day
crafts are
seen in
Arvada,
,.,.._, Colo. Maroh
29. Earth
Day craft ,
projects can
tum tJ:ash

PageCs

From Sa•-ajevo to

"•

52

To honor Earth Day in
RACINE - Bruce Fout of Creola and Judy Foul of
kids~ crnfting, one really
McArthur announce the engagement and 11f.Proacbing
marriage of their daughter, Amber "Nikki ' Fout, to needs to think uasb.
That is, "What can I resZachary Everette Connolly, son of Brian and Angela
cue
from the gatbage bin
Connolly of Racine.
1be bride,.elect is a 2003 graduate of Vmton County High andreuseT'
This is DO time for going
School and a 2006 graduate of Hoclcing College with an
heavy
on the non•recyclable
associate's degree in nursing. She is employed with Obi()
such as pipe cleandoodads,
Valley Home Health in Gallipolis.
Her qance is a 2005 graduate of Southern High School ers and poDI1lOIIIS. in our
and is enrolled at Hocking Colle¥e, working on a degree in art projects. For Earth Qay,
environmental restoration. He ts employed with Field's which is April 22, oonsider
these crafts that make the
Excava~: Kitts Hill.
most
of objects you .probaThe w
· g is planned for Saturday, Aug. 23, 2008, at
bly already have:
Racine United Methodist Clturch.

0~ mE BOOKSHEI.•F

.'

S.Oiollwy, April6, 2008

..

the.......,.

Onlam .... wkh d.e best . . . in
on the tl Actui 1 J'DIIW ala., I -:dedi
~~

"' aot stM1&gt;&lt;l "" tho worl: ,ou looo. ...,.... with, the best deal ever ~ 10ur fawrilo
Ha.y Fe.pon• trac;to, Choose from ouc ~ triC!Or&lt;llCDID,GCI!atO..-tw!wd-.153Slt540-.
1he

pO.iect

time of -

IIVI'It are

)OU

wlibni fori

larJe. c.-, I&gt;&amp;· And

lNe

orvdil ~""" .
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(Sf/) M6-55(16
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e I'
Miit die Dlilkll'a
llrptllomee8'pol'idll\ ilpllll
u6:~aii·Wil ,.q,atdttl&amp;
lbnecac inGIIIia o.ty.
fftMde ~ s:Dxlulcd&lt;J'
~ seMa:s in )W'Iuned
aib•r

""" a ton. See )'OUt' Masley Fe&lt;)o100 _,. tDdoy

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- - m..c:e ~Olin . . . . . "' ,....,_ INii! ""P'i ~ ~ ... ]Q 2*. ~,_.,......... .... for----~ q:JIIIDnL .... ~

...,.... e *"O.,.,.JI.Iird

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Jim ·s Farm Equipment. In c.

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C)~~~~

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740 ) 446-9777

L.;

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( 740 1 446 ·2484

~veupto 75%
on our Porda and in our Clearance Area!!

O.w*'*ltdpdlallliiaty

....

ar.-ldiiMiiiiX

•7 rrJ'
• Rei• lOY ftneLIIZ. .I..
•lllmc:lllia or
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,

KIPLING
SHOE
llff
...2

(JO.t) 675-7810

· -

rwww.,...,_
' .,forr••(Hf.co.i
I •

I

•

.

-

- · - ...

--

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.,

IIIDild PI ......,do WV

Slole Houts: Mon-fri 8-6, Sot. 9-6; Sun 12 Noon-5

..
..

�••
•

•
o

.

I
I

Saw'ky,Api16, ~ J

• . . . . C6 • SUnday Tma as SaIIi,..

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.............. 02

Dl

· 6unbap Cliaef
-6amad·
.
.

.

•

!Simdwy, April6, 2008

1.
'This undited image provided by Homestyle Plans and Publications
Designer Netwol1l shows an e)'IH:atchi~ oombination of stone and
~ COIII'Itry home.

stucco gives a

- to
-this
charming cottage·
look

chann,.cottage look
PATIO

~t::::~·

... ,.

BEDROOM

3

.....
....

LMNG

___...___
...

,.

.....
.,
....

DtNING

... ,..

BEDROOM 2

In this undated image provided by Homestyle Plans
and Publications Designer •
Network, this 3 bedroom,
. 2.5 bathroom floor plan
colters 1, 790 square feet
of livini space., ·

·gn;up: Before you tear down and rebuild, consider the environmenial ·costs
. 8rb;; U . •

torecyclucwsplimllldboi- issue for some 30 years. In
tles and a]uminum cans 1980, after a round of oil
while we're dlrowiug away pricc shocks, the poup
· aaiiCEI EY, Calif.
entire buildings or even prinled a poster depicting an
A11¥1iica?s. love ~ ClltR IIC'igbbodloods," uys old bniklmg in the shape of
dowD uuamz We W our Ridwd Moe, president of a gas can,
"! .,...... up~·llllds., IIICl1p · the Natioaal 1iust for
Which brings Moe to his
diem down .t o 1lacir fOUDda- Historic Pmervation.
orescnt-day
argument.
'!iODs, and ~ rimed ·~ 1bc
Moe has berome a lead- :.Buildings," he says, "are
' ! I OilED PREli?IWIII1ER

ultimate
demolitlons:
»••'·ti~ skysaapcn. "·It's
all
_au 1pilt ~ a adturlll need to
Illite ·way for ·tbc new and .

·

""""- ·
Lt
·fiae oonstruotion and
tiJW'!'ion buildings liCIIds
,of

ing ·ev~lizcr of this
niche-market green gospel.
He spoke on a recent
evening from the pulpit at
the First Church of Christ.
St:icmist, a national hiSIOric
landnuwt 011 tbe ~ of
the University of Cllifumia,
, IBertcley campus. The
Gothic-influenced church,
with its interior .•COIIIllete
supporti(\g eolwnns and
muSCUlar timber .roof s"'"'
ports, is COIIIiden:d dJe masferVo'oO: o( ~ Bay
Area . arcbitect Bemard

liP 'tWice as much greenilolule gas emis&amp;ioos as ibc
entire U.S. aanliJIDI1ation
.eaor. ~g
ibc
Jll!ljnMJ Trust for Historic
~ (Analysts witb
tbe
fecJinl · Energy
lnfonnatioD Mcpinill1lalioo
say it is
cl01er to
ewo. an ·
coosi.dr:rcd. &gt; Mavbeok.
In "1hi1, ~llCrV~onists
Moe'li .
. . mess~se :
bave fOUDd.aeew calhng for "Preservab.on 1s sustamlbcir old ~- 11lcy E
ability,"
pn-achq apinsl tbc evils And wbiJc tbc veking
~ ,..,....,... - i11Dt *» '18\!e 1011r H .new, bclillzsm point
~~e-. 'bat lbc fulua
out lbal: tbc fllfjmll U1llt
"'t makes no for is has been talkiag about tbc

to

C:::l

.

,.

"

vast respositoric:s of energy."
"It takes energy to manu- ·
fact~e to exlract building
materials, more energy to
transport tbem to a construe!ion site, still more energy to
assemble them into a building," be says. "All of that
energy is embodied in the
fini.shed structure - and if
lbe ~ is demolished
and landfillcd, the mergy
lockt&lt;f up in it is totally
wasllld."

A typical 50,000-~
foot commercial building
"embodies" the equivalent
of 640,000 galloos of gaso- .
line, according to the
Council
on
Advisory
Historic Preservation, .which
advises lhe White House and
Congress cJn historic Jnservatioo 'policy.

Tbc

very process of
dcmolislling uses more cncrgy·and cmatcs tons of waste.
And of course, the construetion of a new . building
.expends still more~· in
)Janling materials, lighting
the structure . and rimning
tools. Building a . new
50,000-square-foot office
structure releases the same
amount of carllon into the
atmos~ as driving a car
.2.8 million miles, Moe says.
Moe goes out of his way
to counter the.argument that
energy-efficient new buildings quickly offset the energy used to tear down and
replace ,an older building.
Even if 40 percent of materials in a new building ~
recycled, it takes about 65
years for a "green, eneTP.efficient new office building to recover the energy
lost : in demolishing an
existing building," he says,
citing research by the
lllinois
Historic
Preservation Agency.
It won't woO: everywhere,
Moe acknowledges.

Seattle, for instance, is ethic, it's pllrt of American
eDCOUI"agiJlg higher p(lpula- culture. bur it is changint~•
tioo density in its wban cen- thank goodness," he says m
ter. Replacing smal1, old an interview a! the church.
structures with tall, new ones ''Them's sud! a mi,ndset in
will require tcardowns, says this country that a building
Paul Mackie. an~ manag- bas a life cycle and if you
er with the Weste'm Red live out that life cycle, tear it
'Cedar Lumber Association.
down instead of trying to
. Not surprisingly. the lum- retrofit it for increased ener·
ber group, too. has gotten in gy purposes."
"We 're dealing with attion the climate change act.
Timber products, Mackie tudes that have been set for
are
"cleaning many, many years, for gensays,
machines'' that suck carbon erations," he said. "That •s
out of. the air aixl ~ renew- been the bi~est impediment
able; processing them emits to preservation in America
a fraction of tbe CBibon as for a long time, is that people
steel manufacturing. he says. tend to think new is bener
"'ur position is that we than old, tear out the old,
need both renovation and build the new. But we' re
new construction," Mackie changing that."
says. "Using sustainable
On the Net:
building materials like wood
- especially western red
• Nati•••f Dwu for
cedar - that have the best Historic Prnemttiott:
htrp:llwww.preservat-ion.environmental values are
great choices."
na{ion..org
Moe recOgnizes he is ask~""'*"'formi-Pti~
ing Americans to resist a If« 'ailbo tiN tWboua of G
deeply emiJe&lt;lded impulse.
proj«:t's slrNcflns """sitle:
'fearing down and rebuild- , http ://bujldcarbonneu.
ing are "part of lhe American tral.org

,.

�••
•

•
o

.

I
I

Saw'ky,Api16, ~ J

• . . . . C6 • SUnday Tma as SaIIi,..

........

INsiDE

-,

p

.

.............. 02

Dl

· 6unbap Cliaef
-6amad·
.
.

.

•

!Simdwy, April6, 2008

1.
'This undited image provided by Homestyle Plans and Publications
Designer Netwol1l shows an e)'IH:atchi~ oombination of stone and
~ COIII'Itry home.

stucco gives a

- to
-this
charming cottage·
look

chann,.cottage look
PATIO

~t::::~·

... ,.

BEDROOM

3

.....
....

LMNG

___...___
...

,.

.....
.,
....

DtNING

... ,..

BEDROOM 2

In this undated image provided by Homestyle Plans
and Publications Designer •
Network, this 3 bedroom,
. 2.5 bathroom floor plan
colters 1, 790 square feet
of livini space., ·

·gn;up: Before you tear down and rebuild, consider the environmenial ·costs
. 8rb;; U . •

torecyclucwsplimllldboi- issue for some 30 years. In
tles and a]uminum cans 1980, after a round of oil
while we're dlrowiug away pricc shocks, the poup
· aaiiCEI EY, Calif.
entire buildings or even prinled a poster depicting an
A11¥1iica?s. love ~ ClltR IIC'igbbodloods," uys old bniklmg in the shape of
dowD uuamz We W our Ridwd Moe, president of a gas can,
"! .,...... up~·llllds., IIICl1p · the Natioaal 1iust for
Which brings Moe to his
diem down .t o 1lacir fOUDda- Historic Pmervation.
orescnt-day
argument.
'!iODs, and ~ rimed ·~ 1bc
Moe has berome a lead- :.Buildings," he says, "are
' ! I OilED PREli?IWIII1ER

ultimate
demolitlons:
»••'·ti~ skysaapcn. "·It's
all
_au 1pilt ~ a adturlll need to
Illite ·way for ·tbc new and .

·

""""- ·
Lt
·fiae oonstruotion and
tiJW'!'ion buildings liCIIds
,of

ing ·ev~lizcr of this
niche-market green gospel.
He spoke on a recent
evening from the pulpit at
the First Church of Christ.
St:icmist, a national hiSIOric
landnuwt 011 tbe ~ of
the University of Cllifumia,
, IBertcley campus. The
Gothic-influenced church,
with its interior .•COIIIllete
supporti(\g eolwnns and
muSCUlar timber .roof s"'"'
ports, is COIIIiden:d dJe masferVo'oO: o( ~ Bay
Area . arcbitect Bemard

liP 'tWice as much greenilolule gas emis&amp;ioos as ibc
entire U.S. aanliJIDI1ation
.eaor. ~g
ibc
Jll!ljnMJ Trust for Historic
~ (Analysts witb
tbe
fecJinl · Energy
lnfonnatioD Mcpinill1lalioo
say it is
cl01er to
ewo. an ·
coosi.dr:rcd. &gt; Mavbeok.
In "1hi1, ~llCrV~onists
Moe'li .
. . mess~se :
bave fOUDd.aeew calhng for "Preservab.on 1s sustamlbcir old ~- 11lcy E
ability,"
pn-achq apinsl tbc evils And wbiJc tbc veking
~ ,..,....,... - i11Dt *» '18\!e 1011r H .new, bclillzsm point
~~e-. 'bat lbc fulua
out lbal: tbc fllfjmll U1llt
"'t makes no for is has been talkiag about tbc

to

C:::l

.

,.

"

vast respositoric:s of energy."
"It takes energy to manu- ·
fact~e to exlract building
materials, more energy to
transport tbem to a construe!ion site, still more energy to
assemble them into a building," be says. "All of that
energy is embodied in the
fini.shed structure - and if
lbe ~ is demolished
and landfillcd, the mergy
lockt&lt;f up in it is totally
wasllld."

A typical 50,000-~
foot commercial building
"embodies" the equivalent
of 640,000 galloos of gaso- .
line, according to the
Council
on
Advisory
Historic Preservation, .which
advises lhe White House and
Congress cJn historic Jnservatioo 'policy.

Tbc

very process of
dcmolislling uses more cncrgy·and cmatcs tons of waste.
And of course, the construetion of a new . building
.expends still more~· in
)Janling materials, lighting
the structure . and rimning
tools. Building a . new
50,000-square-foot office
structure releases the same
amount of carllon into the
atmos~ as driving a car
.2.8 million miles, Moe says.
Moe goes out of his way
to counter the.argument that
energy-efficient new buildings quickly offset the energy used to tear down and
replace ,an older building.
Even if 40 percent of materials in a new building ~
recycled, it takes about 65
years for a "green, eneTP.efficient new office building to recover the energy
lost : in demolishing an
existing building," he says,
citing research by the
lllinois
Historic
Preservation Agency.
It won't woO: everywhere,
Moe acknowledges.

Seattle, for instance, is ethic, it's pllrt of American
eDCOUI"agiJlg higher p(lpula- culture. bur it is changint~•
tioo density in its wban cen- thank goodness," he says m
ter. Replacing smal1, old an interview a! the church.
structures with tall, new ones ''Them's sud! a mi,ndset in
will require tcardowns, says this country that a building
Paul Mackie. an~ manag- bas a life cycle and if you
er with the Weste'm Red live out that life cycle, tear it
'Cedar Lumber Association.
down instead of trying to
. Not surprisingly. the lum- retrofit it for increased ener·
ber group, too. has gotten in gy purposes."
"We 're dealing with attion the climate change act.
Timber products, Mackie tudes that have been set for
are
"cleaning many, many years, for gensays,
machines'' that suck carbon erations," he said. "That •s
out of. the air aixl ~ renew- been the bi~est impediment
able; processing them emits to preservation in America
a fraction of tbe CBibon as for a long time, is that people
steel manufacturing. he says. tend to think new is bener
"'ur position is that we than old, tear out the old,
need both renovation and build the new. But we' re
new construction," Mackie changing that."
says. "Using sustainable
On the Net:
building materials like wood
- especially western red
• Nati•••f Dwu for
cedar - that have the best Historic Prnemttiott:
htrp:llwww.preservat-ion.environmental values are
great choices."
na{ion..org
Moe recOgnizes he is ask~""'*"'formi-Pti~
ing Americans to resist a If« 'ailbo tiN tWboua of G
deeply emiJe&lt;lded impulse.
proj«:t's slrNcflns """sitle:
'fearing down and rebuild- , http ://bujldcarbonneu.
ing are "part of lhe American tral.org

,.

�•

PageD2

·DoWN -ON THB FARM

• EWM JM •

.S

OH • Pt. Pleasant,

tn:ribune - Sentinel - Re
CLASSIFIED .

Wet&gt;sttes:
In One Week-With Us
www.mydailytribune.com
E-m!!!
E ACH OVER
PROSPECTS www.myclailysentinel.com
&lt;Classified 0 mvaailytribune.oom R·
www.n.ydailyregister.com
ON
'1'0 Place
Q:rtbune
Regi!)ter
Sentinel
..
'lburAII.
eca-11 Todtiw••• (740) 446-2342 (740} 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
1

Or Fax To

I .

9112-2157

67!K;234

tJilfee.ll~cf"

i

:

YOUR Cl.ASSIRm UNE.AD N0100Eil

....................

Monday thru -::riday
7:30 a.11"1. tO 5:30 P•oi'Tll.

.!

Nowyau can have boo dels and C)niPhks
~
addeclto~dassllledads
&lt;:,~
' Hn
llonlets$3.00/perad
~
Graphics SOCI'orsmalt

1:qo ... ....
l:u- ,
•
:I.:DD p.wn.

·AI.- must be pr

r

$1.00fot'lan)e

ld"'

-lth Aide&amp; tor Middlelurr E5tates is llallipt- ~ cllice looldng tor
Ablny """'· Athens&amp; Meigs ing
IIP!llications
1or medical lliOIIptlonisJ. Also
Co. Competitive- &amp; Temporary LPN~. • you addi1g two new pooltioos:
lr'8Yel time. Call 1-7C0-373- WOUld Wtetotalce actvantage full time clinical assistant
w.&amp; and househotd flems. FIM-ti'ne emplapnent offers Cl.4le instructions pmmptty. 3800 ask foe Wanda or of 1his cq1011unity, you may and part·time billing peTSOn .
Directions: Rt 160 North an 81Ct91'11i¥8 benefH pad(- ExperienCe required wtth apply on line www.inter- appty at 8204 Carla Drive, JobS
require
typing
·past Holzer HospttaJ, 2.3 age, mctuding State civil profiCiency in Graphic imh8allhcare.corn
Galipolis, Ohlo 45631 or by skitls/medical experienCe
Garage Sale- Friday &amp; Coolllied Nursing ~ Publisher :
Saturday, April 4th I 5111. lor lUI time and tomporaoy Applicants mu&amp;1 be ·
8am,-?,776KoorRd,.- l . (90-days)""'"'lna114.bed have strong conoeptual
OH. Lots . &amp; Lots of glass- ~ ·mnn care State tadllfV. akiHs and 1he abilty to axe-

[·
·I

milel10 Kerr Ad, 112 mila 8INVioe retlremen1, eam up
out Kerr Ad twatch for to15day6vacationperyear.
aigiro).
l
18 days aiel&lt; laaw and 12
-!"""~---·-. plus
paid
holidays:
AronoN AN&gt;
hoafthlllle Insurance is avallFlFAM.utslrr
able. Salary is commensu·
rate with ...,..nonce. MuS1
em. Creek Auction ElulfH) hiiYe awv CNA certification
Auction Sat rd
6p
ID - I n West Virginia, and
Utile C8e&amp;aos 'bov"~'Food ;; mU&amp;t either a GED
,......_,_ or high rsctuHJt diploma.
the
Purina Dog
r:aoe,
~~ ~
be piclred
22111 bags. Kibllles N Bits
at~ ~ Lalcln
17.6ib bags, Name Brand Wllup M........,· ~-..: """..;
Cereals Pepperorf Bacon
, "' ......., u''"""""' ' """"f•
~I
Date ~rti .,; 8am-4pm. Lakin Hospital is
eell high muallty kn'
an EEO/AA ompi"''''. Laltin
Caseq .8
Hospital conducts pre~Building~ full. Visa ~ employment drug/alcohol
M-r Can! &amp; DaM (:104) tasting. ·Employsas may be
55o- 1616 Stephen Reedy exposed to streamline or
1639
smoke..

I

I

r

'

Food ·

'!a,

'* :-Moss
8

t

~~-

-ntl
·C

Allool... Top DoMao - ~1,
ver/gold
coins,
any

ustmnei'

10K/14KI1BK gold jewaioy,
dental gold, pre 1935 us
currency, -proof/mint sets. ·
diamond&amp; MTS Coin ~.
151 2nd AVB!lU!I, Gaiipolis.

Service

.....

406-2&amp;02

--·____

16K72 , _ "-1 moblia
home.Call740-742,.224. "

4-H ca•nping c;»ppotztunities abound
m,

IIYTucrW.;

camping games, 1111111e
education programs, biki~,

Don't wooy, we have a
wmftld camp for childien
in gGI!des6-8 tool
Thi~&gt; .,eeJrend · camp is
eaUcd Teen Genes :and the
2008 lbeme is "Decisioos,
Deci5ions,
Decisions."
.Childmt attendino this

l9llt 8 p.m, The ClOSt of dis
-.; EDUCAltlll
pwW!eboati~andliuedancwcrt.r:nd amp iii oaly $45
Ulll. The event be81ns. oo
and includei all iDealti,
GALLIPOLIS - "Get ,Friday, May 2, with died; in
actimies aacl crafts.
.
1be Buzz on 4-H Camp" is ar 6:3Q p.m. and will llllll
Like Spiiug AiD&amp;. y.a'
the dleme of this year's umil Sabmlay, May 3, With a
dJild ·does oot have 10 be
Sptiing Fling.
4 p.m. dw
__lwut time_ •
mrolkd in 4-H anneM ·
What is Spring Fling? It's
The dilldren will have a campwillbavethe~If your dJild
like
ID overnight camping ape· pizza party on~~night nity fO participltC "i'B"1bcir to padiciplle in C:ida of
rience foi-yooth in grades 3· and be served
and own P!m party, ~ fill: these camps,
5. The -overnight camp is lunch on SaiUrday, 'flle oost activtties, team buildilig fOIDis am be foul'ld oa tiDe
held at the Elizabeth L. of the 'OVernight is only $35 acti~. teadmihip dwi- . 11 pDil 0111CCIU ~Ill' pii(td
,E\'W,-Outdoor,
~~~=~ICJii~·:,sinl;ludeti all IIJMlJ, -- o.-.~ -41¥ins, biki!!f. ·-up ---,~-_~ ti.~
, C.entef7C,gttf.'s'
!e
Jllli grafts.
·
pddlr tJoais, IIi!~ :aaiv1- ··iJDioc. Ill Jackson Pie,
Campoutside-oflaek&amp;oo.
~vent is Open ro lill tiesaadmom. .
.
s~ 1572.
Cbildren will bave the children in grades 3-5
The event begins with
F.or- i:fi!i»ltiJI8un or
cpportunity to try out 4-H reganlless_of 4-H member- dleck-in on Friday, A,prill8 qwstiolu, Clllltlie Frutlion
c:ampiJ1g activities 1m c8mp ship. Not in grades 3-5? at 6:30p.m., and ends with Officut .(7«J} 446-7007.
• GIWJA COUNTY OOENSION Dll!ECTOR.

-w

..,,*'ion

1'1 • as lac. - * «
Iii/or M1er w·-•rl ""'

IJ~

zg t;-..,!:1'"
Feeder

1 Bonnie Williams. am
responsible for no debts
other thanasmyof own.
thi~ is
· eftectiw
september

215-415 lbs., S.US, S75-$U8, Heifus, $75"$UO~
425-525 ibs., :Sieea, $7SCSUO, Heifers, :$75-'$~100; 550·.ru IlK.; Strrt;$75-'$100, Heifers, $75-$93~ 65G-7l5
~. Steen.. SU·~~. ~i $?0.SII5T 75():;850 ~ .· ·
Stem, $75.$90, Heifers, $70-':.&gt;SO.

.

14, 2oo7

REYNOLDSBURG
Gw. Thd StricXJand, along

I

·

·eo- Sle ady

Well-Musc:Jed1Fle&amp;bed, '548-'$56.

1biniU&amp;bt. $1!~$38.
Bulls, $50-'$63.

i

Bac.tc: to lhe Fa m:

Educator's workshops scheduled

scie~ standanls.

0!,1 Tuesday, April 8, particjpants will be instructed
on the "Project Learning
Tree" program from 9 im.
to 3:30 p.m. "Project
Leaming Tree" focuses on

'

People" both focua 011
~ S 110 t2.
tioo Jll'OILIIIl that focUiel
"$ciee .,. and Civice" U I
oa foteet eooloey -~other part of die Project WilJ)
topics. .The leaiOD&amp; teach PRIIfllllllldibowutuclrms
lhJdmt• bow to think, not . boW ~ help 1111¢1in wildljfr:
. what to think, about . the ~uJh
COIIIIIUIDi1y
environmetlt.
involven....,
Qn Wednesday, April 9,
''Healdly Wiler, HnJtby
"Science and Civics" Will be People" is a Wlta' .qullity
covered in the mon:f from education proJ1111i1 iipOII·
9 to B :30 a.m;
tlrn liOfed in pat b,Y Project
"Healthy Water, Healthy Water
Educatioa
for
People" will be eovered TeacheR. To Jqistel' for
from 1100n to 3;30 p.m.
either Ed&amp;'CI'Or's WOlbbop,
"Science and Ci~ and call the Jdeias, SWCD at

•

bring resume: NO PHONE

Apt.A.

Mommy and

Dadcty are Trudy and Bobby

• Mitch&amp;lt. If you

==-="---An Excellent way to earn

sife retum. We love and
Mill her very. much so it you
can please bring her hlij1&gt;a n
would be greatly appreciatad . Thank .......

a

w•

No Expa iewce Neasary
Tntln
Po

E-.

INIIIol!us...........,
E!l!llil R,......, ,

JANICE~ASJITNL'OM

or Fu Resume
lii6-886-890I

-======;Help Wtln1ed

GWJrOUS

DonationS (yard -

+401(k)
+Profil Sharing
NQWHIR!NG

j
• sl&lt;ills ond
general olfice lkr1iol
aquipJ Send tatter. .......,

YARD SAiJ;.

j

' Monagement

commu nication/computer ·

• Customer Sales
• Collections .
·• Delivery

lmOwladge of

oncl

AFT wlbenetiti.
cowr

rtnd 111ree - . o1 nil. 1o:

011 lh!ily 10Grw!

SCIIC. HR. 540 Rf11l Avo ..
noms) Hur&lt;in~. Wll 25701 by

Apply online
www.r2o.com

for yard .... on April -11, 2006. eoe

5/28, 29, 30. All money Growing DME company

madll from sale goes to ...... dallvary/moln18narlCe
: ChlllthOOd Oance{. Fof Info irtdr. Call 7&lt;10-4&lt;1 1-11145 tor
•coi17~
l!'oOn ink&gt;.

'"'"'"''""'opera

aa

Gallipolis, OH. Manaoe
building and music, danoo
and theater programs. See

tor
daU!is or call740-4&lt;46-2787.
www.arteltheatre.org

Deadline ~5108

Now Hiring:
Full Time Day Shift
Full Time Evening Shift

.

pointplaasant.oom
------POST OFFICE NOW
HIRING
1\vg. Pay S2Mu or
$57K/yr. includes .
Federal Benefits, DT.
Otlered by E•am Services,
. not ottered w/ USPS wtlO
hires.

FEDERAL
·POSl'AL JOBS

1-866-403-2582

·Uptoll.5lltlltour

S17.89-$28.27.11Y., now hiring. For apptmoo and governement )Qb 'infQ, can
Mnffican AssoC. of Labor 1-

• On-Bite Or. Office
coming in April

Hlllp Wanted

• ~ Tr&amp;:lning
1~YU

Fiscal OHioer ~ wate.r~r ctem, mcpenenoe · m
Microsolt, Eorcol and Uan,
fund accounting pre1erfed
but • """"""'
until Apr1t 14, """" 1D PO
llaK, 297, ~ o1 Ruland,

Lite Ambulant in Gallipolis is
looldng for driwrs, dispatchaos. paranreQr:s &amp; EMrs.

ouwly at lliy

JENT-2-()WN

~;;

Ph;

SPAtNGimooNEW

eorMake a diflerunce in the
lives af children and

446-7930

.

-::-Mi&lt;-::-lldl-::-,..-,-.,-=e-::-..,-\AA--::--aa:spt---

16

f~· Q119i4~ " - 'ing' !II'Piicat'fOng tOr . !lifOC!
Full time triJCII: driV8f' neected Care Staff. If you would like
wi1h.valid driverS Roenae and to take advantage of this .

Monday

Send re~s to CLA BoDe ef11Jiayer FIMJON.

1o1 . c/o Gollipolis Daily
mbune, P.O. Sox 469, Wan11!d. Care Giver ·tor
Gallipois,OH45631
Eldeoly Man, Female or
- - - - - - - Male 2417 304-675-6963 or
Help wanted at Daost Home 304-638-5700 lasve mesGroup Home. 740-992·5023 &amp;all"

If .........

Various tours of duty are

available. Applicants rnust
possess actiw, unreitrtcted
license in any US state. We
offer comprehensive
benefits paolraga including:
Malpractice coverage ,
Fadeoal Emplorees
Retirement Sys1em, Health
&amp; Lite Insurance, Thrift
Savings Plan (4011&lt;).
generous le&amp;\'e and
holidays. educational &amp;
maea.rch opportunities and
more.Thole 991acted will
,.., be oligit:Oa to toe
·
par1ic4&gt;otk&gt; '· please
contact VA Mec:llcal Center

adultsbytllldng
INBOUND &amp; OUTBOUND
calls 1ot Non-Profit &amp;
Christian organizations

Now Ortah•

En$ik;ws:
0 On-Site

rmd-Physician _

PIMible for &amp;UpiL!J-

Weeldy.Pay &amp; Bonuses
0

....

,.rt.._wouif6inour
Prill.-,' CINe J - f l
Duties entail no sal : ld,
holiday or niflhl co••uaga

....... FT

0

7
I

......

P' MiOf

PI

Outstandir'l-

0 30-day onoi1o paid

training
0 Fun &amp; Professional
wOrking environment

1540 Spring Val~ Drive.
Huntington. W\125704:
304-429-6759 ext 2571 or
tax 304-429-0290 Ann:
Jeffery B. BreM•, M.D..
FACP Chiol, Medical
· Service or·Jeyenne
Buqjess, Medical
Management SpeQalist.

n - .11'-lltrl
Joben1t11

SHOP THE CLASSIREDS!

Competitive wages . 740-

45631 ,

77

1-llllll-ftiC.PAYU

Ext.2347

services s1011s and be al*l ta Ohio

VA-Can!Bf,
Huntington. W\1 is -..i!lng
f&lt;lriiCIBETc •• AIKIIOI.

Start~Ninw;

913-599-8226, 24/lus. amp.
sarv.

-nld

CNA &amp; STNA personnel. "
you would like 1o take
advantage d this opportunity, you moy apply Monday
th!0041 Friday Sa~ at
8204 Carta Drive. Gallipolis,
Ohio. 'lllu may also fax a
resume to:
rtla.JrisonOreucare.com. An
Equal Opportunity Employer
FIM/ON.

Help Wanll!d

• MedicaiiDantai/401K

NURSEPRACTnnONEROR
PHYSICIAN ASSISTANT

u-1_ . . . . . . . .

,_., !&amp;I

Local medical cen~ is recruiting fuiJtime nurse practitioners or physician
a"islrult• for a growing bospitalist

Limited on-call schedule.
salary, benefits and work

schedule. Must have a West Virginia
license. excellent customer service skills ,
and ' work well in a -learn environment.
Send·resume to:

IUIOMOIIYE
PEOPLE

s•• 5
1

Previous experience o plus bul not
required. Generous benefit package. If
you want o Career in Soles and Have:
Good Work Habits and High Drive Plus

Desire, WE MAY BE INTEREslt:D IN YOU!
Our

NPIPA Search

Corporate

Trniner

will conduct sales

training !his month. This is your opportun~
ty lo reach your lull pdtential.
·._

,._. 'fl="
.,,.__, . . . . M .
'UliMA,..._,_.,
·
740-JtUMr
-~

~

·IJiuj~ ~

by OJ/'tl 108.

.81 0 East,Stele Street;·Athens
or

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

' Valley Hospital rur,rPntlv
Pleasant
openings for full-time
Baccalaureate degree in Medica
Techn.oiO!W or •elated field plus elig:ibillityl
ASCP and/or associates degree
applied science or related field
eligibility for certifiation by ASCi&gt;. Must
.Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently
able to wolll all shifts.
accepting applications lor a Surgical
Send resunies to:
Technologist. Graduate . of . accredited
Plen·nt v.lley Hospital
surgical technology program or equivalent
clo~~taS
experience required. CST or CST eligible.
2521 v.lley Drilre
To apply, contact:
l'uint ..........
25550
Pleasant VIII ley Hospiloll .· •
Orftx:
.

0

1

OPERATING ROOM
TECHNIOAN

Call Totafa/GM Safe~ Man Ill''
Dan J'onwn:e - 740-~J6
900 East Stele Street, Athens
Also on the web al www.donwood .com·.
E.O.E.

DONWOOD
AUTOMOTIVE
Help Wanted

Help Wanted

wv

~.

OI'.....,Oft-line l1l

AA/EOE

Help Wanted

Gllllia COilllty Health Department
"Notice of Position V.ac:ancy~
POSmON: Public Health Nurse
TYPE OF I'OSI110N: Part time
MINIMUM REQUIREMENTS: Bachelor's
Degree in nursing frot11 an accredited school of
nursing (preferred not required) or an
Associa.te's/Diploma Registered NllThe with

two years nursing experience (preferred not
required) and currently licensed in the stat&lt;; of
Ohio. Must hold a v8Iid Ohio driver's license .

· DATE AVAILABLE: April28 , 2008
RATE ' OF PAY AND BENEFITS: As per
Gallia Counly Health Deportment salary
structure. See ~ursing DirectOr for stanjng
rates and explanation of benefits .
QATE OF POSTI~G: April3 , 2008
DEADLINES FOR ACCEPTANCE OF
AJ'PLICAnON W1111 RESUME: April II ,
2008. close of business.
Submit .to:

MellosaConkle
BSN, RN, Director of Nuning
Galla County Heall.b Depou1ment
499 Jacksoii Pike, Suite D
GaiUpolis, OH 45631
T11e Gallia County Health Departmeiu is an
oppPrtunity employer and setvil.'e provider.

· cto Human ReSciun:es
2520 Valley Drive

'

wv

•• fVIIIIeyO!J

Man...,-

Slartnoc

ment.

on

hou

lncll.lling:

Now lfiriD&amp;!!!

SBM-512.1111...

/ r":=;=;::::::
r

·ca~-·~

FuUTime~t

675-1429.
' - - - - - -- - ,SCAC seeka Program
IENT-2-0WN
Director for Mason Cty.
Homeless Shelter in ?t.
'..
Pl.....m. BA/IlS in Social
Pay
Worlu'Counseiing or raia1ed
- - - - - - - iield. Prefeo 7 years axperiLost: Blaok&amp;Whlte Male. ence In field and 5 years
+Health Insurance

YARD SALE

'

-c~•sH
:II

: 7•0-416·57;l1 .There is a AVON! All Areasl To Buy or

ShiriOy Spears, 304-

t

5I\

Call Marilyn 304-882-l!645

· $50 dollar reward 1or my Sell.

e-otve- tor hi6-

f"PRESS

Border CoUie in the camp supervision
ewp
CONey orao. Smoi&lt;aY' 1as1 Admlrol1raliW &lt;IUtiOSinCiude
eeen near Airport Road on fiscal management and .
March 27'rh. PLEASE call development of progn~m;
304-G75-5299"
lundraising and grant development experience pluS

(740) 992-4282.

workplace

Help Wtln1ed
-::::;;=:~:;::::;:;;

1ind me money. The New ~·

• plaooe Call 740-992-5492 or

100Compa-

Now Hiring Ser\lers and - - - - - - Apply within or Rescare Home Care is
online at www.bennigan9- accepting applicatfons for

Cook&amp;.

«

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

A5769

Take inbound customer
servioe calls for Fortune

EOE

•

work a flexible schedule,
Including some wEI&amp;ke~ds
~nd oo:'rnlght. Thls. posit!~
IS cons1dered full ~with
~ be~s, paid vaca1ton and Slci. time. A 4 year encourages
degree lrom a collage Of uni- mvorslty.

Appiir:ationslor·the pool1ion
---,.---:--::-:-- can b e - by stopping
LOSTI Watch Coilbri QUOrtz by !he facility Morolaypendant on 8 neok chain. Friday,
8am-4pm.
Round blaok face. ....._ Completed
applications
ltllfl 740-949-2497!1!11
should also include a
resume. Applicants must
- - - - -- - havv • valid Ohio driver'&amp;
Lost.,
My "}arne is Belle license. a clean driving
Belle and I'M a 4 Yr. okl all record, pass a drug rest and
white Peldnese.l live at 240 undergo 8 criminal baokUnooln St. Midtlepo&lt;1. Ohio ground check.

Main St. Pt. Pleasant. VN
25550
--------

Nci Ptlone Colle PIIN!oo

-

36?59 Rocksprings Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Extendicare
Health
5ervices, Inc. i&amp; an equal
opportunity employer that

r

Send resume to CLA 7 C/o
Point-~. 200

2866 Fin;t Avenue
Hnntington, W¥ -~~·

,-

varsity js required. Previous
Lady s Se1ko Watch (senti- experience and knowledge
mental) lost downtown Pl of mental retardation and/0&lt;
Ae818nt Reward 304-675- developmental disabilities is
· 2453
d&lt;llrablt, lliJ1 not ltl&lt;lillni~.

Inbound Wort~

"""""

c/o Golllpollt T 1125 Third Avo, ~
Gllllipallit OH !_IQl

I

Lorr

collar. 740-245-5645

,

.n jiodei, from K t.o 12. It
u 111 environmental ""•ra-

"Healthy Water, 'Healthy

a

'part-ti""' •n1p1oyee, pleua

·------'
Found: {f) pup on Brushy
Point Rd. Black w/ a bit of
wh~ 011 ·chest. red and gray

new

cate of completion with
coatact houn will be pro.
vided. Many f'ftJe mardiali
will be given away. All programs are correlated ro. 1tate

I

tllking applications tor

rweumeto:
-HIM

ID good homo only. catl740. --~---256-9323
Activity
CoordinatorEchoing
· Me&amp;dows
Residential Center, an Dietary Aide: Enjoy a new
-Pu-ppy-.-,mal-l-lovi-_n_g_fe_m_a_le ICF!MR faclt~ locatecl ~~~ career in long-term care!
Aoeicsprings Rehab Center
10 good home, Boston 319 We~ ~n1o_n Street 1n is currently seeking Dietary
TerrierfMt. Feast 30+ea2• Athens. Oh1o IS currently Aides ' to assist in serying·
accepting applications tor
3980
nutritional meals and snadols
iliii;;..~----, the position of Activity
to our residents!
AND
Coordinator. This position
Apply in pel50fl at:
FOOND
• will require an individual to

suwli-

1be
Educator's
WOI'bbops will be beJd in
Pomeroy at lhe .OSU
&amp;tellllioa Office. A certifi-

Far Ol!lflll¥ttOnl

Ar;quislti&lt;ins Fine Jawalry-is
-~WAV

well -

toad and unload trucks. Mus1 through Friday. Bam-4pm. · Jl1'!}gram .
ba able to wor1&lt; weai&lt;Mds. An
equal opportunity Attractive

w•qw•r·

- ~.eend

' .
01\LLS Pl.CAOG, Apply in
-· 7 mornn n1a· (rl fiOidln, peMDn ai 1St 2nd Ave .
Ret.lt..ab mix. GOod wf kids, Gatlipotis

duoers,andprocessors."
port Ohio's farmers :and liitetomalrieitasicdocpmThe re-launch of the pro- agribusinesses. However, Dl:l'S to join die pojlah IIIII
with Oliio Dep81'1:01ent of gram, which was ~y fesultfi also showed dial toaeatea'bcaa'w.ayfllroooCownlf Pair~ '$525-'SI.,HMt; Bred Cows, $265Agriculture Director Robert created in 1993, came after consumers did not ~late rhe liWIIIfi to find&lt;llio pmctnm
$775; Baby Calves, $20-$200; Goats, '$135-dn.; Hogs,
Boggs, revealed an easier . research c:ondm:ted by Ohio fO!'IIIer Ohio Proud logo 10 (www.........."'!O!Z).
$31-$40.
.
.
'
way for .consumers to fil'ld State University a:vealed &lt;tgrieulture and fresh, l.ocal• A mluoed fee stmcture
Ohio-made and grown agri- the importance of 1be pro- ly-grown products.
to make it marc ~CCCSsibJe
cultural products during the gram ro oonslliiiCI1i, and that
..The Slllle's Ohio Proud to smaller bllunenes, cspe. state's new Ohio Proud logo the original nwteting pro- ptoj;uun has been a . gmat cially farm Olal:tets and
and V{~b site . !!DYC'il~ Jlt ~ WI!Jl I!Ql :011 UJ:get with tooLm ct!nr"'"' COOSUliii!I'S ;· fBmll!tli• miiY«t.
the statehouse on April2.. · dtanging oonslllllm trends.
about the-importance of buy• An ovcnll11101e iacJu. "'hio is .a &lt;Vverse
Of those polled, 90 per- ing local," said Boggs. sivc . JXV,grllll . through ·
er of lllOfi: than 200 agn.cul- cent said they were 'll'illing "After uu:b ~search, plan· e~panclmg membenhip, to
tural crops and is a .producer to spend up ro $0.50 more · ~ and collaboration, the ~ wbGiesalers, and
of many more specialty for ID Ohio pmduot over a new ptogram has been associati.oos.
food products; gi~ OW' n,atiooaJ brand, and 98 per- . restrulliURd and improved to
When OODSI'mer&amp; buy
state 1iie potential to pro\'ide cent -o f those surveyed said fit cummt times and trends." · Ohio food and qriadturl1
fresh,
locally-produced they would Illlla pun:lwe
The -new Ohio Proud pro- products 1ltey a 'IIIPJICil1iDg
foQd," said Suickland. "The Ohio products over .aoother gram feanues:
the !lt*'s ·f aildi IDd fooil
improved Ohio Proud pro- .brand.
• A new lqgo design and procenors. Food aod aari·
Jl'IIDl fills right in line with
The ,study also revealed r.agline "Made in . Ohio, a~l~ is die state's top
our goal to provide safe, that ~le wiDt fresh, Grown in QUo" to beua indulltly, oc1111riht•ina 111111e
loc:ll foods to OOUIIIIIIICI'S, healthie£ products aud to OCliii!C'Al(t!Jepogrambac:kto thlll&lt;$93-billioilliOdlellllie•t
ud to create
oppo.ttu- know that their purchases Ohio agricul~.
coo~y and .employilll
nitie&amp; for local growcn, pro- help provide jobl 11111 11up• ·A new, imaacli~ Web •ODe ·m IICWII OhM •w

ncjtecl 10 )CIIIIIIbouucm.

r

' .

...-

-Including
hlo1111 oncllilll

dltyo.

IIEr..JI WANIED
~------'
....,.

me_
nt sk.Uis, attention to
delail, and be able to com-

.....,-...--Plio.-

· 40111. pold
ond
--1

riO

-=:lqjliJCiliaa.

. e-mail lo: angte@sudden- helpfuL Applications availlin«mail.com . A' Equal able a1 John A. wade, MD
~ Fo\1/DN.
Inc.. SuHa 112, Poim
Pleasam Valley Hospital ,
Now acoapti1 og applications Point Pleasant
fof email engine repair poii......._
tion at Bidwoll Hardware.

Insurance. Must be depend- opportunity. you mroy apply
able. have good cuotomer at 8204 Carta Dr.. Ganipolis.

--·-ond

answer; leave a message_
can Call Colect

Medium1lean, $42-$47..

State unveils new 'Ohio Proud' logo

Junk Cars,

oftMIIall

GULil'OUS -

D

.... "'*"
uolng IIMi
pltone.

call 740-388-oB84, if no

REPOKJ'-

m· •DiaCJDSibmlay,Ap:il

1¥

1U atnour

_._
'·
· lullflp1c

n\1, -~~ :

Wanted to buy

"'" I ""

fuH.4IIM 0

..r..l$

Wttnt ID buy 31o 5 Aorallior

Designakills.MustbewiNing
to worit · under changing
· m u - havv
excellent project manage-

Home

equal

Point Pleasant,
25550
(304) 675-4340, lu resu- to
30«i75-6915 or apply on-line at
-pv•lley.OIJ
AA/EOE
Help Wanted

Help Wllllted

loolgTermC../._C..
DMoian
Do you want to make a differei)Ce? If you are
compa.o;,;sionate and committed to providing
quality. care come and be a pan of our Long
Tem1 Care/Home Care team .
We have the following positions available:
Hqlzu Exlr1 Cm;
Persona l Care Aides- Per Diem

ACCOUNTING MANAGER
Holzer Clinic. a multi -specialty !p-oup
pra~tice with 100+ physiL:iant-.. is seeking a

c andidate t o manage o u r Accounting
Department. Successful applicants will
possess a BS in Finance. Accounting or

equivalent degree . Proficient with calculator
and PC . Knowledgeable of EDP and PC
systems . Ability to interact w!th others :
Qua lity cllm!lluni q nion ski ll s. (oral and ·
wr~tten ).
Demonstrated leadership sli ll s.
Professional bearirig and appearance.
Competitive bene fit packa ge including :

Health. Denial. Life. Disability. 40 1(k) &amp;
Profit Sharing
Applicanls may apply to:
Holzer Cliliic:
HumiiD Keooura Departmoat
90 Jackson Pike
Ga!Hpolis, Ohio 45CiJI
Or fax to 740-441·359l
wwwJwlvqljgk.gun
Equal Opportunity Employer.

Un'wUmrjq;
Personal Care Assistant

!Jnlzer Home fen:;
Therapist-~er Diem :
, • Speech

•OT
•LPTA
.6FTE PT
.6F]E PTA
tfw,. Smlor Cerr Catq;

Sl'NA·Ff or PT
LPN- 1-FT &amp; 1-PT
Health Care Coordinator 3- 11
Applicant~ for Nursing Assistant Classes
Qo'w
Uyip¥· Ge!Mrlts;

hwif'r1'

Resident A ssistant~· PT
Dishwasher/Dietary Aide-- PT

For details pleoM: give Barb Peterson.
Director of Human Resources for our Long

Tenn Care/Home Care division a call at 740441 -3401 or email ""' at pe1erson@holur.org
or visit us on the web a1 www.holzer.org .

Equal Opportunity Employer.

'

'

'

�•

PageD2

·DoWN -ON THB FARM

• EWM JM •

.S

OH • Pt. Pleasant,

tn:ribune - Sentinel - Re
CLASSIFIED .

Wet&gt;sttes:
In One Week-With Us
www.mydailytribune.com
E-m!!!
E ACH OVER
PROSPECTS www.myclailysentinel.com
&lt;Classified 0 mvaailytribune.oom R·
www.n.ydailyregister.com
ON
'1'0 Place
Q:rtbune
Regi!)ter
Sentinel
..
'lburAII.
eca-11 Todtiw••• (740) 446-2342 (740} 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
1

Or Fax To

I .

9112-2157

67!K;234

tJilfee.ll~cf"

i

:

YOUR Cl.ASSIRm UNE.AD N0100Eil

....................

Monday thru -::riday
7:30 a.11"1. tO 5:30 P•oi'Tll.

.!

Nowyau can have boo dels and C)niPhks
~
addeclto~dassllledads
&lt;:,~
' Hn
llonlets$3.00/perad
~
Graphics SOCI'orsmalt

1:qo ... ....
l:u- ,
•
:I.:DD p.wn.

·AI.- must be pr

r

$1.00fot'lan)e

ld"'

-lth Aide&amp; tor Middlelurr E5tates is llallipt- ~ cllice looldng tor
Ablny """'· Athens&amp; Meigs ing
IIP!llications
1or medical lliOIIptlonisJ. Also
Co. Competitive- &amp; Temporary LPN~. • you addi1g two new pooltioos:
lr'8Yel time. Call 1-7C0-373- WOUld Wtetotalce actvantage full time clinical assistant
w.&amp; and househotd flems. FIM-ti'ne emplapnent offers Cl.4le instructions pmmptty. 3800 ask foe Wanda or of 1his cq1011unity, you may and part·time billing peTSOn .
Directions: Rt 160 North an 81Ct91'11i¥8 benefH pad(- ExperienCe required wtth apply on line www.inter- appty at 8204 Carla Drive, JobS
require
typing
·past Holzer HospttaJ, 2.3 age, mctuding State civil profiCiency in Graphic imh8allhcare.corn
Galipolis, Ohlo 45631 or by skitls/medical experienCe
Garage Sale- Friday &amp; Coolllied Nursing ~ Publisher :
Saturday, April 4th I 5111. lor lUI time and tomporaoy Applicants mu&amp;1 be ·
8am,-?,776KoorRd,.- l . (90-days)""'"'lna114.bed have strong conoeptual
OH. Lots . &amp; Lots of glass- ~ ·mnn care State tadllfV. akiHs and 1he abilty to axe-

[·
·I

milel10 Kerr Ad, 112 mila 8INVioe retlremen1, eam up
out Kerr Ad twatch for to15day6vacationperyear.
aigiro).
l
18 days aiel&lt; laaw and 12
-!"""~---·-. plus
paid
holidays:
AronoN AN&gt;
hoafthlllle Insurance is avallFlFAM.utslrr
able. Salary is commensu·
rate with ...,..nonce. MuS1
em. Creek Auction ElulfH) hiiYe awv CNA certification
Auction Sat rd
6p
ID - I n West Virginia, and
Utile C8e&amp;aos 'bov"~'Food ;; mU&amp;t either a GED
,......_,_ or high rsctuHJt diploma.
the
Purina Dog
r:aoe,
~~ ~
be piclred
22111 bags. Kibllles N Bits
at~ ~ Lalcln
17.6ib bags, Name Brand Wllup M........,· ~-..: """..;
Cereals Pepperorf Bacon
, "' ......., u''"""""' ' """"f•
~I
Date ~rti .,; 8am-4pm. Lakin Hospital is
eell high muallty kn'
an EEO/AA ompi"''''. Laltin
Caseq .8
Hospital conducts pre~Building~ full. Visa ~ employment drug/alcohol
M-r Can! &amp; DaM (:104) tasting. ·Employsas may be
55o- 1616 Stephen Reedy exposed to streamline or
1639
smoke..

I

I

r

'

Food ·

'!a,

'* :-Moss
8

t

~~-

-ntl
·C

Allool... Top DoMao - ~1,
ver/gold
coins,
any

ustmnei'

10K/14KI1BK gold jewaioy,
dental gold, pre 1935 us
currency, -proof/mint sets. ·
diamond&amp; MTS Coin ~.
151 2nd AVB!lU!I, Gaiipolis.

Service

.....

406-2&amp;02

--·____

16K72 , _ "-1 moblia
home.Call740-742,.224. "

4-H ca•nping c;»ppotztunities abound
m,

IIYTucrW.;

camping games, 1111111e
education programs, biki~,

Don't wooy, we have a
wmftld camp for childien
in gGI!des6-8 tool
Thi~&gt; .,eeJrend · camp is
eaUcd Teen Genes :and the
2008 lbeme is "Decisioos,
Deci5ions,
Decisions."
.Childmt attendino this

l9llt 8 p.m, The ClOSt of dis
-.; EDUCAltlll
pwW!eboati~andliuedancwcrt.r:nd amp iii oaly $45
Ulll. The event be81ns. oo
and includei all iDealti,
GALLIPOLIS - "Get ,Friday, May 2, with died; in
actimies aacl crafts.
.
1be Buzz on 4-H Camp" is ar 6:3Q p.m. and will llllll
Like Spiiug AiD&amp;. y.a'
the dleme of this year's umil Sabmlay, May 3, With a
dJild ·does oot have 10 be
Sptiing Fling.
4 p.m. dw
__lwut time_ •
mrolkd in 4-H anneM ·
What is Spring Fling? It's
The dilldren will have a campwillbavethe~If your dJild
like
ID overnight camping ape· pizza party on~~night nity fO participltC "i'B"1bcir to padiciplle in C:ida of
rience foi-yooth in grades 3· and be served
and own P!m party, ~ fill: these camps,
5. The -overnight camp is lunch on SaiUrday, 'flle oost activtties, team buildilig fOIDis am be foul'ld oa tiDe
held at the Elizabeth L. of the 'OVernight is only $35 acti~. teadmihip dwi- . 11 pDil 0111CCIU ~Ill' pii(td
,E\'W,-Outdoor,
~~~=~ICJii~·:,sinl;ludeti all IIJMlJ, -- o.-.~ -41¥ins, biki!!f. ·-up ---,~-_~ ti.~
, C.entef7C,gttf.'s'
!e
Jllli grafts.
·
pddlr tJoais, IIi!~ :aaiv1- ··iJDioc. Ill Jackson Pie,
Campoutside-oflaek&amp;oo.
~vent is Open ro lill tiesaadmom. .
.
s~ 1572.
Cbildren will bave the children in grades 3-5
The event begins with
F.or- i:fi!i»ltiJI8un or
cpportunity to try out 4-H reganlless_of 4-H member- dleck-in on Friday, A,prill8 qwstiolu, Clllltlie Frutlion
c:ampiJ1g activities 1m c8mp ship. Not in grades 3-5? at 6:30p.m., and ends with Officut .(7«J} 446-7007.
• GIWJA COUNTY OOENSION Dll!ECTOR.

-w

..,,*'ion

1'1 • as lac. - * «
Iii/or M1er w·-•rl ""'

IJ~

zg t;-..,!:1'"
Feeder

1 Bonnie Williams. am
responsible for no debts
other thanasmyof own.
thi~ is
· eftectiw
september

215-415 lbs., S.US, S75-$U8, Heifus, $75"$UO~
425-525 ibs., :Sieea, $7SCSUO, Heifers, :$75-'$~100; 550·.ru IlK.; Strrt;$75-'$100, Heifers, $75-$93~ 65G-7l5
~. Steen.. SU·~~. ~i $?0.SII5T 75():;850 ~ .· ·
Stem, $75.$90, Heifers, $70-':.&gt;SO.

.

14, 2oo7

REYNOLDSBURG
Gw. Thd StricXJand, along

I

·

·eo- Sle ady

Well-Musc:Jed1Fle&amp;bed, '548-'$56.

1biniU&amp;bt. $1!~$38.
Bulls, $50-'$63.

i

Bac.tc: to lhe Fa m:

Educator's workshops scheduled

scie~ standanls.

0!,1 Tuesday, April 8, particjpants will be instructed
on the "Project Learning
Tree" program from 9 im.
to 3:30 p.m. "Project
Leaming Tree" focuses on

'

People" both focua 011
~ S 110 t2.
tioo Jll'OILIIIl that focUiel
"$ciee .,. and Civice" U I
oa foteet eooloey -~other part of die Project WilJ)
topics. .The leaiOD&amp; teach PRIIfllllllldibowutuclrms
lhJdmt• bow to think, not . boW ~ help 1111¢1in wildljfr:
. what to think, about . the ~uJh
COIIIIIUIDi1y
environmetlt.
involven....,
Qn Wednesday, April 9,
''Healdly Wiler, HnJtby
"Science and Civics" Will be People" is a Wlta' .qullity
covered in the mon:f from education proJ1111i1 iipOII·
9 to B :30 a.m;
tlrn liOfed in pat b,Y Project
"Healthy Water, Healthy Water
Educatioa
for
People" will be eovered TeacheR. To Jqistel' for
from 1100n to 3;30 p.m.
either Ed&amp;'CI'Or's WOlbbop,
"Science and Ci~ and call the Jdeias, SWCD at

•

bring resume: NO PHONE

Apt.A.

Mommy and

Dadcty are Trudy and Bobby

• Mitch&amp;lt. If you

==-="---An Excellent way to earn

sife retum. We love and
Mill her very. much so it you
can please bring her hlij1&gt;a n
would be greatly appreciatad . Thank .......

a

w•

No Expa iewce Neasary
Tntln
Po

E-.

INIIIol!us...........,
E!l!llil R,......, ,

JANICE~ASJITNL'OM

or Fu Resume
lii6-886-890I

-======;Help Wtln1ed

GWJrOUS

DonationS (yard -

+401(k)
+Profil Sharing
NQWHIR!NG

j
• sl&lt;ills ond
general olfice lkr1iol
aquipJ Send tatter. .......,

YARD SAiJ;.

j

' Monagement

commu nication/computer ·

• Customer Sales
• Collections .
·• Delivery

lmOwladge of

oncl

AFT wlbenetiti.
cowr

rtnd 111ree - . o1 nil. 1o:

011 lh!ily 10Grw!

SCIIC. HR. 540 Rf11l Avo ..
noms) Hur&lt;in~. Wll 25701 by

Apply online
www.r2o.com

for yard .... on April -11, 2006. eoe

5/28, 29, 30. All money Growing DME company

madll from sale goes to ...... dallvary/moln18narlCe
: ChlllthOOd Oance{. Fof Info irtdr. Call 7&lt;10-4&lt;1 1-11145 tor
•coi17~
l!'oOn ink&gt;.

'"'"'"''""'opera

aa

Gallipolis, OH. Manaoe
building and music, danoo
and theater programs. See

tor
daU!is or call740-4&lt;46-2787.
www.arteltheatre.org

Deadline ~5108

Now Hiring:
Full Time Day Shift
Full Time Evening Shift

.

pointplaasant.oom
------POST OFFICE NOW
HIRING
1\vg. Pay S2Mu or
$57K/yr. includes .
Federal Benefits, DT.
Otlered by E•am Services,
. not ottered w/ USPS wtlO
hires.

FEDERAL
·POSl'AL JOBS

1-866-403-2582

·Uptoll.5lltlltour

S17.89-$28.27.11Y., now hiring. For apptmoo and governement )Qb 'infQ, can
Mnffican AssoC. of Labor 1-

• On-Bite Or. Office
coming in April

Hlllp Wanted

• ~ Tr&amp;:lning
1~YU

Fiscal OHioer ~ wate.r~r ctem, mcpenenoe · m
Microsolt, Eorcol and Uan,
fund accounting pre1erfed
but • """"""'
until Apr1t 14, """" 1D PO
llaK, 297, ~ o1 Ruland,

Lite Ambulant in Gallipolis is
looldng for driwrs, dispatchaos. paranreQr:s &amp; EMrs.

ouwly at lliy

JENT-2-()WN

~;;

Ph;

SPAtNGimooNEW

eorMake a diflerunce in the
lives af children and

446-7930

.

-::-Mi&lt;-::-lldl-::-,..-,-.,-=e-::-..,-\AA--::--aa:spt---

16

f~· Q119i4~ " - 'ing' !II'Piicat'fOng tOr . !lifOC!
Full time triJCII: driV8f' neected Care Staff. If you would like
wi1h.valid driverS Roenae and to take advantage of this .

Monday

Send re~s to CLA BoDe ef11Jiayer FIMJON.

1o1 . c/o Gollipolis Daily
mbune, P.O. Sox 469, Wan11!d. Care Giver ·tor
Gallipois,OH45631
Eldeoly Man, Female or
- - - - - - - Male 2417 304-675-6963 or
Help wanted at Daost Home 304-638-5700 lasve mesGroup Home. 740-992·5023 &amp;all"

If .........

Various tours of duty are

available. Applicants rnust
possess actiw, unreitrtcted
license in any US state. We
offer comprehensive
benefits paolraga including:
Malpractice coverage ,
Fadeoal Emplorees
Retirement Sys1em, Health
&amp; Lite Insurance, Thrift
Savings Plan (4011&lt;).
generous le&amp;\'e and
holidays. educational &amp;
maea.rch opportunities and
more.Thole 991acted will
,.., be oligit:Oa to toe
·
par1ic4&gt;otk&gt; '· please
contact VA Mec:llcal Center

adultsbytllldng
INBOUND &amp; OUTBOUND
calls 1ot Non-Profit &amp;
Christian organizations

Now Ortah•

En$ik;ws:
0 On-Site

rmd-Physician _

PIMible for &amp;UpiL!J-

Weeldy.Pay &amp; Bonuses
0

....

,.rt.._wouif6inour
Prill.-,' CINe J - f l
Duties entail no sal : ld,
holiday or niflhl co••uaga

....... FT

0

7
I

......

P' MiOf

PI

Outstandir'l-

0 30-day onoi1o paid

training
0 Fun &amp; Professional
wOrking environment

1540 Spring Val~ Drive.
Huntington. W\125704:
304-429-6759 ext 2571 or
tax 304-429-0290 Ann:
Jeffery B. BreM•, M.D..
FACP Chiol, Medical
· Service or·Jeyenne
Buqjess, Medical
Management SpeQalist.

n - .11'-lltrl
Joben1t11

SHOP THE CLASSIREDS!

Competitive wages . 740-

45631 ,

77

1-llllll-ftiC.PAYU

Ext.2347

services s1011s and be al*l ta Ohio

VA-Can!Bf,
Huntington. W\1 is -..i!lng
f&lt;lriiCIBETc •• AIKIIOI.

Start~Ninw;

913-599-8226, 24/lus. amp.
sarv.

-nld

CNA &amp; STNA personnel. "
you would like 1o take
advantage d this opportunity, you moy apply Monday
th!0041 Friday Sa~ at
8204 Carta Drive. Gallipolis,
Ohio. 'lllu may also fax a
resume to:
rtla.JrisonOreucare.com. An
Equal Opportunity Employer
FIM/ON.

Help Wanll!d

• MedicaiiDantai/401K

NURSEPRACTnnONEROR
PHYSICIAN ASSISTANT

u-1_ . . . . . . . .

,_., !&amp;I

Local medical cen~ is recruiting fuiJtime nurse practitioners or physician
a"islrult• for a growing bospitalist

Limited on-call schedule.
salary, benefits and work

schedule. Must have a West Virginia
license. excellent customer service skills ,
and ' work well in a -learn environment.
Send·resume to:

IUIOMOIIYE
PEOPLE

s•• 5
1

Previous experience o plus bul not
required. Generous benefit package. If
you want o Career in Soles and Have:
Good Work Habits and High Drive Plus

Desire, WE MAY BE INTEREslt:D IN YOU!
Our

NPIPA Search

Corporate

Trniner

will conduct sales

training !his month. This is your opportun~
ty lo reach your lull pdtential.
·._

,._. 'fl="
.,,.__, . . . . M .
'UliMA,..._,_.,
·
740-JtUMr
-~

~

·IJiuj~ ~

by OJ/'tl 108.

.81 0 East,Stele Street;·Athens
or

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

' Valley Hospital rur,rPntlv
Pleasant
openings for full-time
Baccalaureate degree in Medica
Techn.oiO!W or •elated field plus elig:ibillityl
ASCP and/or associates degree
applied science or related field
eligibility for certifiation by ASCi&gt;. Must
.Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently
able to wolll all shifts.
accepting applications lor a Surgical
Send resunies to:
Technologist. Graduate . of . accredited
Plen·nt v.lley Hospital
surgical technology program or equivalent
clo~~taS
experience required. CST or CST eligible.
2521 v.lley Drilre
To apply, contact:
l'uint ..........
25550
Pleasant VIII ley Hospiloll .· •
Orftx:
.

0

1

OPERATING ROOM
TECHNIOAN

Call Totafa/GM Safe~ Man Ill''
Dan J'onwn:e - 740-~J6
900 East Stele Street, Athens
Also on the web al www.donwood .com·.
E.O.E.

DONWOOD
AUTOMOTIVE
Help Wanted

Help Wanted

wv

~.

OI'.....,Oft-line l1l

AA/EOE

Help Wanted

Gllllia COilllty Health Department
"Notice of Position V.ac:ancy~
POSmON: Public Health Nurse
TYPE OF I'OSI110N: Part time
MINIMUM REQUIREMENTS: Bachelor's
Degree in nursing frot11 an accredited school of
nursing (preferred not required) or an
Associa.te's/Diploma Registered NllThe with

two years nursing experience (preferred not
required) and currently licensed in the stat&lt;; of
Ohio. Must hold a v8Iid Ohio driver's license .

· DATE AVAILABLE: April28 , 2008
RATE ' OF PAY AND BENEFITS: As per
Gallia Counly Health Deportment salary
structure. See ~ursing DirectOr for stanjng
rates and explanation of benefits .
QATE OF POSTI~G: April3 , 2008
DEADLINES FOR ACCEPTANCE OF
AJ'PLICAnON W1111 RESUME: April II ,
2008. close of business.
Submit .to:

MellosaConkle
BSN, RN, Director of Nuning
Galla County Heall.b Depou1ment
499 Jacksoii Pike, Suite D
GaiUpolis, OH 45631
T11e Gallia County Health Departmeiu is an
oppPrtunity employer and setvil.'e provider.

· cto Human ReSciun:es
2520 Valley Drive

'

wv

•• fVIIIIeyO!J

Man...,-

Slartnoc

ment.

on

hou

lncll.lling:

Now lfiriD&amp;!!!

SBM-512.1111...

/ r":=;=;::::::
r

·ca~-·~

FuUTime~t

675-1429.
' - - - - - -- - ,SCAC seeka Program
IENT-2-0WN
Director for Mason Cty.
Homeless Shelter in ?t.
'..
Pl.....m. BA/IlS in Social
Pay
Worlu'Counseiing or raia1ed
- - - - - - - iield. Prefeo 7 years axperiLost: Blaok&amp;Whlte Male. ence In field and 5 years
+Health Insurance

YARD SALE

'

-c~•sH
:II

: 7•0-416·57;l1 .There is a AVON! All Areasl To Buy or

ShiriOy Spears, 304-

t

5I\

Call Marilyn 304-882-l!645

· $50 dollar reward 1or my Sell.

e-otve- tor hi6-

f"PRESS

Border CoUie in the camp supervision
ewp
CONey orao. Smoi&lt;aY' 1as1 Admlrol1raliW &lt;IUtiOSinCiude
eeen near Airport Road on fiscal management and .
March 27'rh. PLEASE call development of progn~m;
304-G75-5299"
lundraising and grant development experience pluS

(740) 992-4282.

workplace

Help Wtln1ed
-::::;;=:~:;::::;:;;

1ind me money. The New ~·

• plaooe Call 740-992-5492 or

100Compa-

Now Hiring Ser\lers and - - - - - - Apply within or Rescare Home Care is
online at www.bennigan9- accepting applicatfons for

Cook&amp;.

«

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

A5769

Take inbound customer
servioe calls for Fortune

EOE

•

work a flexible schedule,
Including some wEI&amp;ke~ds
~nd oo:'rnlght. Thls. posit!~
IS cons1dered full ~with
~ be~s, paid vaca1ton and Slci. time. A 4 year encourages
degree lrom a collage Of uni- mvorslty.

Appiir:ationslor·the pool1ion
---,.---:--::-:-- can b e - by stopping
LOSTI Watch Coilbri QUOrtz by !he facility Morolaypendant on 8 neok chain. Friday,
8am-4pm.
Round blaok face. ....._ Completed
applications
ltllfl 740-949-2497!1!11
should also include a
resume. Applicants must
- - - - -- - havv • valid Ohio driver'&amp;
Lost.,
My "}arne is Belle license. a clean driving
Belle and I'M a 4 Yr. okl all record, pass a drug rest and
white Peldnese.l live at 240 undergo 8 criminal baokUnooln St. Midtlepo&lt;1. Ohio ground check.

Main St. Pt. Pleasant. VN
25550
--------

Nci Ptlone Colle PIIN!oo

-

36?59 Rocksprings Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Extendicare
Health
5ervices, Inc. i&amp; an equal
opportunity employer that

r

Send resume to CLA 7 C/o
Point-~. 200

2866 Fin;t Avenue
Hnntington, W¥ -~~·

,-

varsity js required. Previous
Lady s Se1ko Watch (senti- experience and knowledge
mental) lost downtown Pl of mental retardation and/0&lt;
Ae818nt Reward 304-675- developmental disabilities is
· 2453
d&lt;llrablt, lliJ1 not ltl&lt;lillni~.

Inbound Wort~

"""""

c/o Golllpollt T 1125 Third Avo, ~
Gllllipallit OH !_IQl

I

Lorr

collar. 740-245-5645

,

.n jiodei, from K t.o 12. It
u 111 environmental ""•ra-

"Healthy Water, 'Healthy

a

'part-ti""' •n1p1oyee, pleua

·------'
Found: {f) pup on Brushy
Point Rd. Black w/ a bit of
wh~ 011 ·chest. red and gray

new

cate of completion with
coatact houn will be pro.
vided. Many f'ftJe mardiali
will be given away. All programs are correlated ro. 1tate

I

tllking applications tor

rweumeto:
-HIM

ID good homo only. catl740. --~---256-9323
Activity
CoordinatorEchoing
· Me&amp;dows
Residential Center, an Dietary Aide: Enjoy a new
-Pu-ppy-.-,mal-l-lovi-_n_g_fe_m_a_le ICF!MR faclt~ locatecl ~~~ career in long-term care!
Aoeicsprings Rehab Center
10 good home, Boston 319 We~ ~n1o_n Street 1n is currently seeking Dietary
TerrierfMt. Feast 30+ea2• Athens. Oh1o IS currently Aides ' to assist in serying·
accepting applications tor
3980
nutritional meals and snadols
iliii;;..~----, the position of Activity
to our residents!
AND
Coordinator. This position
Apply in pel50fl at:
FOOND
• will require an individual to

suwli-

1be
Educator's
WOI'bbops will be beJd in
Pomeroy at lhe .OSU
&amp;tellllioa Office. A certifi-

Far Ol!lflll¥ttOnl

Ar;quislti&lt;ins Fine Jawalry-is
-~WAV

well -

toad and unload trucks. Mus1 through Friday. Bam-4pm. · Jl1'!}gram .
ba able to wor1&lt; weai&lt;Mds. An
equal opportunity Attractive

w•qw•r·

- ~.eend

' .
01\LLS Pl.CAOG, Apply in
-· 7 mornn n1a· (rl fiOidln, peMDn ai 1St 2nd Ave .
Ret.lt..ab mix. GOod wf kids, Gatlipotis

duoers,andprocessors."
port Ohio's farmers :and liitetomalrieitasicdocpmThe re-launch of the pro- agribusinesses. However, Dl:l'S to join die pojlah IIIII
with Oliio Dep81'1:01ent of gram, which was ~y fesultfi also showed dial toaeatea'bcaa'w.ayfllroooCownlf Pair~ '$525-'SI.,HMt; Bred Cows, $265Agriculture Director Robert created in 1993, came after consumers did not ~late rhe liWIIIfi to find&lt;llio pmctnm
$775; Baby Calves, $20-$200; Goats, '$135-dn.; Hogs,
Boggs, revealed an easier . research c:ondm:ted by Ohio fO!'IIIer Ohio Proud logo 10 (www.........."'!O!Z).
$31-$40.
.
.
'
way for .consumers to fil'ld State University a:vealed &lt;tgrieulture and fresh, l.ocal• A mluoed fee stmcture
Ohio-made and grown agri- the importance of 1be pro- ly-grown products.
to make it marc ~CCCSsibJe
cultural products during the gram ro oonslliiiCI1i, and that
..The Slllle's Ohio Proud to smaller bllunenes, cspe. state's new Ohio Proud logo the original nwteting pro- ptoj;uun has been a . gmat cially farm Olal:tets and
and V{~b site . !!DYC'il~ Jlt ~ WI!Jl I!Ql :011 UJ:get with tooLm ct!nr"'"' COOSUliii!I'S ;· fBmll!tli• miiY«t.
the statehouse on April2.. · dtanging oonslllllm trends.
about the-importance of buy• An ovcnll11101e iacJu. "'hio is .a &lt;Vverse
Of those polled, 90 per- ing local," said Boggs. sivc . JXV,grllll . through ·
er of lllOfi: than 200 agn.cul- cent said they were 'll'illing "After uu:b ~search, plan· e~panclmg membenhip, to
tural crops and is a .producer to spend up ro $0.50 more · ~ and collaboration, the ~ wbGiesalers, and
of many more specialty for ID Ohio pmduot over a new ptogram has been associati.oos.
food products; gi~ OW' n,atiooaJ brand, and 98 per- . restrulliURd and improved to
When OODSI'mer&amp; buy
state 1iie potential to pro\'ide cent -o f those surveyed said fit cummt times and trends." · Ohio food and qriadturl1
fresh,
locally-produced they would Illlla pun:lwe
The -new Ohio Proud pro- products 1ltey a 'IIIPJICil1iDg
foQd," said Suickland. "The Ohio products over .aoother gram feanues:
the !lt*'s ·f aildi IDd fooil
improved Ohio Proud pro- .brand.
• A new lqgo design and procenors. Food aod aari·
Jl'IIDl fills right in line with
The ,study also revealed r.agline "Made in . Ohio, a~l~ is die state's top
our goal to provide safe, that ~le wiDt fresh, Grown in QUo" to beua indulltly, oc1111riht•ina 111111e
loc:ll foods to OOUIIIIIIICI'S, healthie£ products aud to OCliii!C'Al(t!Jepogrambac:kto thlll&lt;$93-billioilliOdlellllie•t
ud to create
oppo.ttu- know that their purchases Ohio agricul~.
coo~y and .employilll
nitie&amp; for local growcn, pro- help provide jobl 11111 11up• ·A new, imaacli~ Web •ODe ·m IICWII OhM •w

ncjtecl 10 )CIIIIIIbouucm.

r

' .

...-

-Including
hlo1111 oncllilll

dltyo.

IIEr..JI WANIED
~------'
....,.

me_
nt sk.Uis, attention to
delail, and be able to com-

.....,-...--Plio.-

· 40111. pold
ond
--1

riO

-=:lqjliJCiliaa.

. e-mail lo: angte@sudden- helpfuL Applications availlin«mail.com . A' Equal able a1 John A. wade, MD
~ Fo\1/DN.
Inc.. SuHa 112, Poim
Pleasam Valley Hospital ,
Now acoapti1 og applications Point Pleasant
fof email engine repair poii......._
tion at Bidwoll Hardware.

Insurance. Must be depend- opportunity. you mroy apply
able. have good cuotomer at 8204 Carta Dr.. Ganipolis.

--·-ond

answer; leave a message_
can Call Colect

Medium1lean, $42-$47..

State unveils new 'Ohio Proud' logo

Junk Cars,

oftMIIall

GULil'OUS -

D

.... "'*"
uolng IIMi
pltone.

call 740-388-oB84, if no

REPOKJ'-

m· •DiaCJDSibmlay,Ap:il

1¥

1U atnour

_._
'·
· lullflp1c

n\1, -~~ :

Wanted to buy

"'" I ""

fuH.4IIM 0

..r..l$

Wttnt ID buy 31o 5 Aorallior

Designakills.MustbewiNing
to worit · under changing
· m u - havv
excellent project manage-

Home

equal

Point Pleasant,
25550
(304) 675-4340, lu resu- to
30«i75-6915 or apply on-line at
-pv•lley.OIJ
AA/EOE
Help Wanted

Help Wllllted

loolgTermC../._C..
DMoian
Do you want to make a differei)Ce? If you are
compa.o;,;sionate and committed to providing
quality. care come and be a pan of our Long
Tem1 Care/Home Care team .
We have the following positions available:
Hqlzu Exlr1 Cm;
Persona l Care Aides- Per Diem

ACCOUNTING MANAGER
Holzer Clinic. a multi -specialty !p-oup
pra~tice with 100+ physiL:iant-.. is seeking a

c andidate t o manage o u r Accounting
Department. Successful applicants will
possess a BS in Finance. Accounting or

equivalent degree . Proficient with calculator
and PC . Knowledgeable of EDP and PC
systems . Ability to interact w!th others :
Qua lity cllm!lluni q nion ski ll s. (oral and ·
wr~tten ).
Demonstrated leadership sli ll s.
Professional bearirig and appearance.
Competitive bene fit packa ge including :

Health. Denial. Life. Disability. 40 1(k) &amp;
Profit Sharing
Applicanls may apply to:
Holzer Cliliic:
HumiiD Keooura Departmoat
90 Jackson Pike
Ga!Hpolis, Ohio 45CiJI
Or fax to 740-441·359l
wwwJwlvqljgk.gun
Equal Opportunity Employer.

Un'wUmrjq;
Personal Care Assistant

!Jnlzer Home fen:;
Therapist-~er Diem :
, • Speech

•OT
•LPTA
.6FTE PT
.6F]E PTA
tfw,. Smlor Cerr Catq;

Sl'NA·Ff or PT
LPN- 1-FT &amp; 1-PT
Health Care Coordinator 3- 11
Applicant~ for Nursing Assistant Classes
Qo'w
Uyip¥· Ge!Mrlts;

hwif'r1'

Resident A ssistant~· PT
Dishwasher/Dietary Aide-- PT

For details pleoM: give Barb Peterson.
Director of Human Resources for our Long

Tenn Care/Home Care division a call at 740441 -3401 or email ""' at pe1erson@holur.org
or visit us on the web a1 www.holzer.org .

Equal Opportunity Employer.

'

'

'

�part • ('

..

"'In'·, 0H • Pt. Pill II 11o WY .

an
SAVII ISS

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Keystone Tires S Service

;;Beatrice
~.
small

yam

m

Moroan
Ward

Potnt

ond Gollipalis
area.
c.ll 304-256-Q292 ar

30U7s.3712 -

1936-1958

....

lt'r.._•,..,._-.1

- - ...... got
boolc 10

w rlilllllin,...

""" ....... .

I"'Udo-

c..l&lt;/,_
n.. ,._, &lt;J/IAis &amp;II wislots ro """"'T
their ~incere lhanb to,.,~,. for their
the loss oftheir belovtd tt'ife.,
lfiOtlter QIJd grundrrwtlwr.
~ wish to especially dtcutA: rht IWcint
Ullbed MerhodiSI Clt•rch Family affli R.v.
Knry Wood for t~ir dt~lufoltttss and
sypor1. fbe.ldndness aJtJl hn~ rharwas
e.diklll iJt tM .~pedal dinni:r after tlu!
liltivioe mmnt so much . ,
H~r Hospia will b. long ,.,...,U,.m/
for their cmrrptlSSio!WUt' aNd proftssioMI
· Sllf1PO'I in

FREE
.... ,_....,.
FREE
.
...._,_.

to .nd

nlugt, 1l1e molhow lmovstlgo1ed

llll"e :oryof
PdyRtilftrtu

ollorlng.
Oono~Put•to

l750D.!no !'T1FT.
-

lnformollonl
.fomlybizt23 .....

'"For•A••ddiee~•

coR" cd' Loia· dw'ing her illnen. Tht

.AUTOMOT/Vf'NC. --

so

ill Cluist, Gilt,_,. be
· 'W"k ....e." I Cor.IS:22

mrptJIIi}' of Hol:;.er llospla gaw
c:ompo.ssi011 and dig~· loa
l~fY dif/icuJT time.
.
l"'laob a/1&gt;0 ro f..,;ly afflifrierW /r1' '""
""'J'...,.;,,g off/a...rs. food affli donatiOIIS.
,_.,w si:J"VWs .ltdd by Rev. Kerry Mbod
affli ll&lt;'.lmry Fi..,_,. -glir special
""""""' ..... fomily . Tilt spocial ....i&lt;
p~s-.1 by Deboroh llbod and lkverly
aNI Zoe CIUIIIinRham ~~ '~' touching
. 1M r.sp«.ffoo hnndli•g of tlu!
arrongem,ertts by Ja_v c~ and
associolts MillS ~ly appmja~M.

We Miss Yo•,
Yow Lo•~ HIU"-4,
{"C~IIi'ldl~• «&lt;ld GIWIIIIfcfeN~•

AooDnld•
~,.....,.,,,

._.II)UR. .i

Alltilple c I .1
S*
Friday,AprillltU:ee.OidGioryA.aleoo.....e

$11,5tt
$19,,..
$11,:121
$17,. . .

U8 1191S. I Owr!tf,L.or,o; Mlla. .

u·•&amp;B127 JM o..eew-.~.ow,,n;Jct. .

$dooo .. - IS611 8...
_.,..,... f f'
9 Y6 .. 1G61511DR . s.,..,,od,fO&amp;W""fl' , CD
0

21113 . . . . ' d

Auc:lion

.......

.......
.......

IG61620D. loaded.

s.n... GI.S .. rG615130R . Sunroclli, Alum. wt.la.

'JIIMSpol't ..... ~

'
# F61426J
2~ Miiei , IO&lt;lded .

$16,- ·

$u,m

21004 ..... Ceoltuoy • """16230
21107 hril ru-SE· t1F616 1QJI .

$16,~ '

$15,...

II

·•

_ ---'Str,.tSUf'• pari,OIUANtW!Sl- . .
Wi ~ovic1 !i&lt;onoiliiiiilio;fuii0illu iitoll llio
~d\';~~~l~

l

lllllCTilllll COI'JOUCTEO 1Y

RICK PEARSON
AUCnON CO. 166
llJ-5447 O!lllJ-5715
P.QA Dlvklt'llomn for Aclclll Miller
WWIIUIUCT!ONZIP .coM
1-.o""'l• Cosh Or Check With ID. Must have a
letter of credit unless sli.now to Auction

-

....

------........-~

oori&lt;1 Up 10 $1500 lo

-

OIICI

complete listing and pictuJ&lt;s 8" tti the
fi
WVIocator.oom _This is only a paniallil;ting, more iro,. coming
&amp; IIOUSE WAlliS: Yellow wm Crook bowls,, -:~;~I
Glass Carnival, Drink Set. Hall Westinghouse C
Hall W. "'"'" bal:er. Fireking tulip bowls (2 ) Pink .:-.;;~~I
Gloss chums (I qt &amp; 4 qt). Watt {Edmond Canister set. ,.,
Outc~ oven. cOokie jlr. double apple baker) Jadeite clock,
asso&lt;tment I
of Jadeite (Full set of mixing bowls. football platter, gre.ue ·
platter. Restaommt wan. plattor. 8 Jane Ray Dinner plates, 8 Jm• RttV
plates. skillet. Ash lilly. loaf &amp; blos!iOIIl 5et). 2 iVOI)' mi.U.s
JIIIIC Ray Dcmitas"' cup IJr. Saua:n;, 1110011SIOI"', Jeannette Jldeite
H. Atlas Florentine Groen J&gt;in:her Ill Thmbleno. Gay Fad, Bowl ,
p&lt;elors. bean slioer, Griswold com pan (,..,). sunldst ckictric
(Jadeiu:). "New Way" salesman lW!lplc: apple peeler wl\}riginal """'·
granitewate, 112 &lt;rock (Hairlille). mewar&lt; jugs, cloches dryiog ract, old
tapes11y piano nmnen, ook'mantle (Origilllll &lt;lalt patina!), Aladdin Lamp
(metal). Maple City l'olt&lt;ry a.&lt;shft. Ohio croci&lt; (smoll) • .Gallipolis. Ohio
Crock (Rock Dale "-Yl. Painted oleml"hoeler omit). Kraut Boord wnx.x.
speedo super juicer, ..-1 chWll (u found). Te.usware bowl, "8!l scoles,
TOYS: German toy train whistle, Marx power grater, Campbell's Pori&lt; -NBeans, Wuisville slugp:r bat. CokO cost iron tnlck: Nylint e1octro oemcmt
truck, allSIIIle doubk trailer..,.,;~ old Toub 1m trui:k, liooel tank car
wlbox, ·
Gondola cor wlbmt . Lumar Milirary trucks. 1930·s Wyandou
;;~:r:.t"';~ .E ul I'.,... Truolt, Buiok "Ounnpalgn tin--&lt;:ar, lO&lt;iWc- toy
scenic emioer bus. auburn rubber tractor, Marx Bllicl oonvertible
top. steel cor Cenvettibte (Japan) Buddy L. Wreow. Nylint Roadster,
Baldwin roD bd: trudc. plus Olher-Wyandotts - Tonbs- Nylim - ·Ltmws Marx, Tru Vtew w/slides. MJmmy doll, Cap guns (V.IIious Asoorttnent) , I
Eloctric YJcw Master, Manual view.master, 1)1 Beaniet;. American
Station House, Doisy 8 -B gun•. child's metal coy fridp: . Empi,.
warmer l1lll8" toy. olum, Dod!&lt; bUCL toy. Cub Cadet tractor toy, 2 EJ&lt;I&lt;t&lt;&gt;r I
sets, "Big Boy" Resllllrlnt toy&gt;. cast iroa aitpiane, Cast iroa Citru• Wagoo
wl1ion . Cas1 iron race ca-. cast iron Nodder in wagoo, Rad Spot Automatic:
Ch . P. Ca. 1916 Gun TOOLS: Sbeltoo plane. Stanley London
·
Campus, Dodo plone, canww. DriU Index, saw sets,
"Motben Own" mol set, leather WOlters tool s&lt;l, Clay Adams
assorted drill bit index, wooden mallets, hand forged saw set, Ouinbridoc: I
Barber supply -igbt ~ wloriginal case, Rwge blower, bellows.
knives, com planters. reel mower. fodder knives-Sod irons, Guoline ·
vorious weed plones, gWl checkering tooloet, "Handy Oiler" jor, push
w/cultivlllors. general sickle grinder. boae auger, and other augm. Stevens I
lc:vel {Newton Foil, Ohio). 8" anvil. Fro saws (l Ill 2 man cross cut), Harness
pieces, ltugc assof1mejjt of tools.leatber vil:e.
MISC: Cooper boiler, """"""· l...uckJI Strite 6" fishing plug. Ooean Penn
Reel, Lucky Floater minnow bucker. fishing reels.. C&amp;O railmod wlll.ef Cllll ,
C&amp;N W. Railroad can, Barr lanton (Drill), Raya lamp filler tube. glo&amp;S
negatives, Davis paper roller, assor11nen1 ol wooden aates, dove tailed
boxes Sugar oil can (I qt), tatro floor model radio. RCA Vtctor radio,
Admiral A.M. radio, RCA victor, table top phollOgTiljlh. Millen G&amp;:S dairy
Clll, world globes, tobacco liDs, union leader tobacco ma1Ch tin,
Longabcrger. pure battery cab.,.diiplay. Winchester likiCl ice sbtes, Star
S""'l skates wllcadier pouch. N.Y Cen1n1 Lock. A.O. Spencer microsoope.
Jaeger fue bripdc pino, Muoni&lt; Jr. 00. A.M. Pin ribbon (Kyger. Ohio), 2
stOI)' display , Red Glove RR. I.aniCm , l'ot;t Canis , hl Editioo lithograplts.
Duels unlimited (W~, Mtutin Stoves, ~e. foor&lt;:t, from Ironton,
Ohio., B . Ham StoVe .t: Rams&lt; Cpi CO-mini). Sin~ nocl yoke. Give .t.
show projector w/slid&lt; canis, .........,..,. CA~Rh. Rim Beer items (Cr.IIC,
elcc. clock, sil!"•· poster), 1921 Gallia Aqodcmy High School Yearl&gt;oolt.
1927 Moltio Ohio State U. Yearboot, 1923 Ill 1924 Estollian (WestminiSICr

aooa sao. aD • 6'5612201. Sc•lli•lodio

_...,OI)r.

$15,9JO

- - G6 V6 - OG61,.,..

_co··ot
· .·!::~~~r:~~-~·"~'~'"'7cJ:":~~-:-;--_..,-,~,.-·~

.
' 2 br. -2ba ' • • St., Mi&lt;ldleJ&gt;Oi,
1.700 oq ft $49.989
tumished apt., no pets. For

.1 .....
~~-~-- l16,-

,,

-""~'

• t 2722.111C.

2007 Salum loll • fG6 U55Jl .
2111J7ChewyCollaJt 0 • *f6 1650MI.
20061Go Opl"
#H60876f BI\JII
2005 ... ' Suft&amp;re • iG61 ~BJ CD, K.~ &amp;.w-r, Del.- wt...l c-.
.o2 Tt ' lit a . . . . _ t" a 1 • •2122s i c sa.,.•.
JOOSGwp.twPI'Cn(t · R.d. t110I OJru .
~ $111um·UOO " 177JJC12t. s-.tl'!roof. fo;,. larnpt, Tini.d Glau
~ Pe&amp;ll'-: Gtancl PriJt Gf .. fl'f6 137.4 1M . \Ieryftioe.
•

=.

2002 ...... 6» • tF61S3M. lecllhtt, lood.d.
-.nltwHnf " S . . . h · t H61l0'1J.SII2001 Chewy Cas 5 ~ IH609A1C. hd.
~
Accent • I H606512 Red .
f4$0 ~ • t 77.AB2lf . CO, A./C. L.allwr, Nloy ~. Tow P\g..

low,.,,.,

$11,. . .
$11 ....

......
..."5

*239
'219
'214
*198

zm_ep

'

:3 Bedroom homos !rom
· S21.C.36permonth,lnctudes
. _.,. upgrades. deliwcy &amp;
. · (740)385-2~34 .

....

liED
!'iPII S1&amp;iL
-

c~L

CONVEtEtm..'f L.D,CAT· Driwe~ &amp; WB!kwavs-lll
Ell &amp; llf'FOIIDA8t£1
Scrap- Open Monday,
Townhouse
apartmen1s, Tuesday, Wednesday' I
ardlor small hoooes FOR Friday, Bom-4:s0pm. Clooed
RENT. Call (740)"1 -1111 Thursday, Soturday &amp;
for application &amp;inlurma1ion. Sunday. (740)446-7300

'178
'159
*159

•m••.

'158
'153
'134
'125

BULLETIN BOARD

.....

21004-- - IIG6 14500
~ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • fG6 1 SnO. OnStor, C~L.crhtf, ~

111.-

..-.... .. , G0,6 11JD.

lii001: Jeap Lloeitr 4114 - ,,_ ......

2004 .... Lloeitr Spilt - ' "'' ''"'
JDOS ..... 4l • :laJ 4x4 • JSI0322f iow ""' .foo """"'·loadod'

·= ..

• m """'

1104 a.., ,,
tHO 1.58!iJ.
1005 .... hoope • 5'- t 271 831C
. . . M I Okt ,

'

... ..,. .. I H6092JC

*2Jeapliloeoty0D··ri7019.:ZO .co loalho&gt;. Jow "o., HoM"*

a.oJONpGraiMIC&amp;aauuaSXI· IG6J53&amp;J.Lood.d.

aM Kills

I

..

Law Mild.

JDOS Gat . . . . . . . &amp;Cis elif • IG6 1S3QI .

*2""""' Sioo-. LE • &lt;IG6t&lt;l2l l . co.""'"',_,'- ••·.
JDOS...., MI'VIJI· 1712&gt;011 . co cr..- . -.., • 0.-.n fH699.43C.

DEADLINE 2:00P.M. FRI.

$19,. . .

$17,. . .
$17,. . .
$17,. . .
$IS,. . .
$14.$14,. . .
$14.$;4.$14,. . .
$12,-

liOOS Chewy Tl ••I •

For IleNe lnlo: malic;N1
Fled Hoppes
740-505-3581
740-335-7394

s:u....

V6 • liG616 11 011

fenl .... • ff-61175,_., 19tC: Milt..
Jeap Lloeitr UD. """. 0211A&gt;IC . .....
.... Jeap Lloeitr $pelt - 0()6l57&lt;J

·

Two Years.

AAQI•• .....

su....

-..-.Grc~~M~au

Over 50 Winners The Past

~ ..J'VV'\ 'rwin Rivers TCJIMtf is aooept- S1EIL
51 ,900 down. Save ....,..I
SAVETHOIISJUIJS
Midwest 741).828.2750
ing applicatioos for welting
,~~-list lor Hud-subsized. 1· br, on three caooeled orders:
rnvmn.nnn.u """'""'com
- - - - - - - - apartment,foJ
the 20ic26 and 30x40 'Made in
: WHV PIIY RENT?. 3 bed 2 elderly/disabled can 67S. USA. In~_,, last.
• bdl. $199 a month. 7-40- 6679
Equal
Housing cahlOW tor h~ uvings!
: 446-:1384
lJt&gt;portunlty

21004 ....... J'iton Sl • ' 71108•2£. 5 Pen....
foglat!lp~o. ,
1005 Dooltle .... 1500 • t27221CT~.
$15.1002 OliliC C1500 • IS7051&gt;t. O.S... co. '""""'· _,_
~ Clllll!; L •• ..4 ~ • w.ome en. c.-, ~•.AI!ar v.t..iL_ StUll
1. . . . . . . . . . 2500-. ,_ 1271831(
$10,. . .

"'r- lllfltloo •

........,
Sf.:; , Selling 180 He@d of Barracas
lltol;;., . &amp; Gel!s &amp; P-ure Oteda.

QO!l.l - crof; . . M!lllilw!l._ enoniiOI.flot Bllr
·(7!IDHH:Jtli
__. Orali;,11""· '1'01~·

UII!DttiiiES 3BR from

••5•
......
"·'"
......
.....
s:n.'"
.......

··-

--~

--'~-·--···"""--

$14,.,.

$13,$12,900
$13,$11.-

&gt; '

--

Public Welcome
Gallia County Conservation

meeting Wed., April 9ltl
Dinner6:30

..

Military S1,1pport Grp.
Meeting Tues. AprilS
6:30p.m. Gallipolis VFW
Post 4464 Third Ave.
(upstairs)

.......

$10,. . .
$11,$17,...
$16,$U,tft.

~to the Public

..............

All a111U in and around the
Suprasta Gallipolis Feny
plant including clubhoule .
and farmland are postacl

$1S.-

as:

$6....

. '

No Trespassing
to the public;
This posting tor the safety
of our community.

strinJ
s...
I E=~~E~Asoortod

llilroodBlc:ssin&amp;
bootlds.Fiddle:
2 Justride
Iampo
guitar.
(ca,e catbide
.t 3 bows).
(M...er).
drum. Fti Bu&amp;le (1917- Oticogo). E Flat
rotary valve coronet (PulltDIIl Co) Assortment of Oold lewelcy. Aft
anDOUncements day of ule takes precedence over all printed lTWcriaJ . This
will be ' a long ule. Food availoble from our kitohen. Oi~oos an: oo
website . Jim Taylor A-10014 Ucenood II Bonded in favor of Stole
of Ohio .t WV. lenns.- Cub or good check . All oot of SI.IIC checlu over

Globol

CEMETERY·CI.EANUP
The Hanison Township Trustees ,

are making preparations for Spring
Cleanup and Mowing of ·
Cemeteries. They nlqU8SI

gravesile dacorations,be !811l0Ved
by April 15, for (Dicltey Cemetery, •
Houck Cemalery, and Macedonia
Cemelery)

Ohio 'Ialiey Home .Health, Inc.
hiring a FT LPN for
Puepo~rtvate CIN Otllce.

Comp.utlva Wlgll. bertlltll
including hMllh illiUranctl and

mn 1ge
lor

Pllone7~1·1383

men hlfutn 1111011 06 apply at
1480 JKbon Pile.,
Gall~. Ohio '

Cour18ide Bar &amp; Grill
Beer Pong

Wednesday
$3.50 Domestic
Pitcher

'

PVH Community
Education

PENNINGTON
SHOW PIG SALE

Topic: Organ Donation
.Guest Speakers:
Local Families of Organ
Donors &amp; Recipients

Saturday, April 12, 2008
7:00pm

·Tuesday,
April8,2008
61 p.tn~ to 8 p.m.

Pike County

Monday,
April14, 2008
River Valley
Middle School

Fairground,

St. Rt. 160, Bidwell, OH

Piketon, Ohio

Doors open at 5:00 p:m.
Games begin at 6:00 p.m.

120 HD selected barrows &amp; gilts
Haf1'4)S, Yorks &amp; Exotic Crosses

McNeill Conferanoe Room
To i'elerve a Hat piiUI Clll,

(304) 675-4340,
Ext. 2004 or 1151

GAMES

E1W8IIent 1181 of show pigs
Ror mora lnfo~~~~&amp;tloD Wlkl site:
penningtonthowplgs.com ·

740-222·2737 or
740·357-6619

Refreshmants Available

$20 = 20 games
Special Basket for Pre-sold tlok8tl
T~Ck$8

call (740) 367-7530
or (740) 446-3488
Gallla Co. Oemocflll8

· Serenity House
aerves victims ot domestic
violence cal 446-6752 or
1-800-942•9577

I000.00 mllit be pre-approved by IIWI&amp;gement.

--~.

••

I

.........

•

''•

I

�part • ('

..

"'In'·, 0H • Pt. Pill II 11o WY .

an
SAVII ISS

-- _
::·:·:-=.:-..::
:--·----....-.........
..
-...- ............. ,

_.....,.
..... ..
.....--~
pk-

4

-

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

c ,. . .

..

••

Keystone Tires S Service

;;Beatrice
~.
small

yam

m

Moroan
Ward

Potnt

ond Gollipalis
area.
c.ll 304-256-Q292 ar

30U7s.3712 -

1936-1958

....

lt'r.._•,..,._-.1

- - ...... got
boolc 10

w rlilllllin,...

""" ....... .

I"'Udo-

c..l&lt;/,_
n.. ,._, &lt;J/IAis &amp;II wislots ro """"'T
their ~incere lhanb to,.,~,. for their
the loss oftheir belovtd tt'ife.,
lfiOtlter QIJd grundrrwtlwr.
~ wish to especially dtcutA: rht IWcint
Ullbed MerhodiSI Clt•rch Family affli R.v.
Knry Wood for t~ir dt~lufoltttss and
sypor1. fbe.ldndness aJtJl hn~ rharwas
e.diklll iJt tM .~pedal dinni:r after tlu!
liltivioe mmnt so much . ,
H~r Hospia will b. long ,.,...,U,.m/
for their cmrrptlSSio!WUt' aNd proftssioMI
· Sllf1PO'I in

FREE
.... ,_....,.
FREE
.
...._,_.

to .nd

nlugt, 1l1e molhow lmovstlgo1ed

llll"e :oryof
PdyRtilftrtu

ollorlng.
Oono~Put•to

l750D.!no !'T1FT.
-

lnformollonl
.fomlybizt23 .....

'"For•A••ddiee~•

coR" cd' Loia· dw'ing her illnen. Tht

.AUTOMOT/Vf'NC. --

so

ill Cluist, Gilt,_,. be
· 'W"k ....e." I Cor.IS:22

mrptJIIi}' of Hol:;.er llospla gaw
c:ompo.ssi011 and dig~· loa
l~fY dif/icuJT time.
.
l"'laob a/1&gt;0 ro f..,;ly afflifrierW /r1' '""
""'J'...,.;,,g off/a...rs. food affli donatiOIIS.
,_.,w si:J"VWs .ltdd by Rev. Kerry Mbod
affli ll&lt;'.lmry Fi..,_,. -glir special
""""""' ..... fomily . Tilt spocial ....i&lt;
p~s-.1 by Deboroh llbod and lkverly
aNI Zoe CIUIIIinRham ~~ '~' touching
. 1M r.sp«.ffoo hnndli•g of tlu!
arrongem,ertts by Ja_v c~ and
associolts MillS ~ly appmja~M.

We Miss Yo•,
Yow Lo•~ HIU"-4,
{"C~IIi'ldl~• «&lt;ld GIWIIIIfcfeN~•

AooDnld•
~,.....,.,,,

._.II)UR. .i

Alltilple c I .1
S*
Friday,AprillltU:ee.OidGioryA.aleoo.....e

$11,5tt
$19,,..
$11,:121
$17,. . .

U8 1191S. I Owr!tf,L.or,o; Mlla. .

u·•&amp;B127 JM o..eew-.~.ow,,n;Jct. .

$dooo .. - IS611 8...
_.,..,... f f'
9 Y6 .. 1G61511DR . s.,..,,od,fO&amp;W""fl' , CD
0

21113 . . . . ' d

Auc:lion

.......

.......
.......

IG61620D. loaded.

s.n... GI.S .. rG615130R . Sunroclli, Alum. wt.la.

'JIIMSpol't ..... ~

'
# F61426J
2~ Miiei , IO&lt;lded .

$16,- ·

$u,m

21004 ..... Ceoltuoy • """16230
21107 hril ru-SE· t1F616 1QJI .

$16,~ '

$15,...

II

·•

_ ---'Str,.tSUf'• pari,OIUANtW!Sl- . .
Wi ~ovic1 !i&lt;onoiliiiiilio;fuii0illu iitoll llio
~d\';~~~l~

l

lllllCTilllll COI'JOUCTEO 1Y

RICK PEARSON
AUCnON CO. 166
llJ-5447 O!lllJ-5715
P.QA Dlvklt'llomn for Aclclll Miller
WWIIUIUCT!ONZIP .coM
1-.o""'l• Cosh Or Check With ID. Must have a
letter of credit unless sli.now to Auction

-

....

------........-~

oori&lt;1 Up 10 $1500 lo

-

OIICI

complete listing and pictuJ&lt;s 8" tti the
fi
WVIocator.oom _This is only a paniallil;ting, more iro,. coming
&amp; IIOUSE WAlliS: Yellow wm Crook bowls,, -:~;~I
Glass Carnival, Drink Set. Hall Westinghouse C
Hall W. "'"'" bal:er. Fireking tulip bowls (2 ) Pink .:-.;;~~I
Gloss chums (I qt &amp; 4 qt). Watt {Edmond Canister set. ,.,
Outc~ oven. cOokie jlr. double apple baker) Jadeite clock,
asso&lt;tment I
of Jadeite (Full set of mixing bowls. football platter, gre.ue ·
platter. Restaommt wan. plattor. 8 Jane Ray Dinner plates, 8 Jm• RttV
plates. skillet. Ash lilly. loaf &amp; blos!iOIIl 5et). 2 iVOI)' mi.U.s
JIIIIC Ray Dcmitas"' cup IJr. Saua:n;, 1110011SIOI"', Jeannette Jldeite
H. Atlas Florentine Groen J&gt;in:her Ill Thmbleno. Gay Fad, Bowl ,
p&lt;elors. bean slioer, Griswold com pan (,..,). sunldst ckictric
(Jadeiu:). "New Way" salesman lW!lplc: apple peeler wl\}riginal """'·
granitewate, 112 &lt;rock (Hairlille). mewar&lt; jugs, cloches dryiog ract, old
tapes11y piano nmnen, ook'mantle (Origilllll &lt;lalt patina!), Aladdin Lamp
(metal). Maple City l'olt&lt;ry a.&lt;shft. Ohio croci&lt; (smoll) • .Gallipolis. Ohio
Crock (Rock Dale "-Yl. Painted oleml"hoeler omit). Kraut Boord wnx.x.
speedo super juicer, ..-1 chWll (u found). Te.usware bowl, "8!l scoles,
TOYS: German toy train whistle, Marx power grater, Campbell's Pori&lt; -NBeans, Wuisville slugp:r bat. CokO cost iron tnlck: Nylint e1octro oemcmt
truck, allSIIIle doubk trailer..,.,;~ old Toub 1m trui:k, liooel tank car
wlbox, ·
Gondola cor wlbmt . Lumar Milirary trucks. 1930·s Wyandou
;;~:r:.t"';~ .E ul I'.,... Truolt, Buiok "Ounnpalgn tin--&lt;:ar, lO&lt;iWc- toy
scenic emioer bus. auburn rubber tractor, Marx Bllicl oonvertible
top. steel cor Cenvettibte (Japan) Buddy L. Wreow. Nylint Roadster,
Baldwin roD bd: trudc. plus Olher-Wyandotts - Tonbs- Nylim - ·Ltmws Marx, Tru Vtew w/slides. MJmmy doll, Cap guns (V.IIious Asoorttnent) , I
Eloctric YJcw Master, Manual view.master, 1)1 Beaniet;. American
Station House, Doisy 8 -B gun•. child's metal coy fridp: . Empi,.
warmer l1lll8" toy. olum, Dod!&lt; bUCL toy. Cub Cadet tractor toy, 2 EJ&lt;I&lt;t&lt;&gt;r I
sets, "Big Boy" Resllllrlnt toy&gt;. cast iroa aitpiane, Cast iroa Citru• Wagoo
wl1ion . Cas1 iron race ca-. cast iron Nodder in wagoo, Rad Spot Automatic:
Ch . P. Ca. 1916 Gun TOOLS: Sbeltoo plane. Stanley London
·
Campus, Dodo plone, canww. DriU Index, saw sets,
"Motben Own" mol set, leather WOlters tool s&lt;l, Clay Adams
assorted drill bit index, wooden mallets, hand forged saw set, Ouinbridoc: I
Barber supply -igbt ~ wloriginal case, Rwge blower, bellows.
knives, com planters. reel mower. fodder knives-Sod irons, Guoline ·
vorious weed plones, gWl checkering tooloet, "Handy Oiler" jor, push
w/cultivlllors. general sickle grinder. boae auger, and other augm. Stevens I
lc:vel {Newton Foil, Ohio). 8" anvil. Fro saws (l Ill 2 man cross cut), Harness
pieces, ltugc assof1mejjt of tools.leatber vil:e.
MISC: Cooper boiler, """"""· l...uckJI Strite 6" fishing plug. Ooean Penn
Reel, Lucky Floater minnow bucker. fishing reels.. C&amp;O railmod wlll.ef Cllll ,
C&amp;N W. Railroad can, Barr lanton (Drill), Raya lamp filler tube. glo&amp;S
negatives, Davis paper roller, assor11nen1 ol wooden aates, dove tailed
boxes Sugar oil can (I qt), tatro floor model radio. RCA Vtctor radio,
Admiral A.M. radio, RCA victor, table top phollOgTiljlh. Millen G&amp;:S dairy
Clll, world globes, tobacco liDs, union leader tobacco ma1Ch tin,
Longabcrger. pure battery cab.,.diiplay. Winchester likiCl ice sbtes, Star
S""'l skates wllcadier pouch. N.Y Cen1n1 Lock. A.O. Spencer microsoope.
Jaeger fue bripdc pino, Muoni&lt; Jr. 00. A.M. Pin ribbon (Kyger. Ohio), 2
stOI)' display , Red Glove RR. I.aniCm , l'ot;t Canis , hl Editioo lithograplts.
Duels unlimited (W~, Mtutin Stoves, ~e. foor&lt;:t, from Ironton,
Ohio., B . Ham StoVe .t: Rams&lt; Cpi CO-mini). Sin~ nocl yoke. Give .t.
show projector w/slid&lt; canis, .........,..,. CA~Rh. Rim Beer items (Cr.IIC,
elcc. clock, sil!"•· poster), 1921 Gallia Aqodcmy High School Yearl&gt;oolt.
1927 Moltio Ohio State U. Yearboot, 1923 Ill 1924 Estollian (WestminiSICr

aooa sao. aD • 6'5612201. Sc•lli•lodio

_...,OI)r.

$15,9JO

- - G6 V6 - OG61,.,..

_co··ot
· .·!::~~~r:~~-~·"~'~'"'7cJ:":~~-:-;--_..,-,~,.-·~

.
' 2 br. -2ba ' • • St., Mi&lt;ldleJ&gt;Oi,
1.700 oq ft $49.989
tumished apt., no pets. For

.1 .....
~~-~-- l16,-

,,

-""~'

• t 2722.111C.

2007 Salum loll • fG6 U55Jl .
2111J7ChewyCollaJt 0 • *f6 1650MI.
20061Go Opl"
#H60876f BI\JII
2005 ... ' Suft&amp;re • iG61 ~BJ CD, K.~ &amp;.w-r, Del.- wt...l c-.
.o2 Tt ' lit a . . . . _ t" a 1 • •2122s i c sa.,.•.
JOOSGwp.twPI'Cn(t · R.d. t110I OJru .
~ $111um·UOO " 177JJC12t. s-.tl'!roof. fo;,. larnpt, Tini.d Glau
~ Pe&amp;ll'-: Gtancl PriJt Gf .. fl'f6 137.4 1M . \Ieryftioe.
•

=.

2002 ...... 6» • tF61S3M. lecllhtt, lood.d.
-.nltwHnf " S . . . h · t H61l0'1J.SII2001 Chewy Cas 5 ~ IH609A1C. hd.
~
Accent • I H606512 Red .
f4$0 ~ • t 77.AB2lf . CO, A./C. L.allwr, Nloy ~. Tow P\g..

low,.,,.,

$11,. . .
$11 ....

......
..."5

*239
'219
'214
*198

zm_ep

'

:3 Bedroom homos !rom
· S21.C.36permonth,lnctudes
. _.,. upgrades. deliwcy &amp;
. · (740)385-2~34 .

....

liED
!'iPII S1&amp;iL
-

c~L

CONVEtEtm..'f L.D,CAT· Driwe~ &amp; WB!kwavs-lll
Ell &amp; llf'FOIIDA8t£1
Scrap- Open Monday,
Townhouse
apartmen1s, Tuesday, Wednesday' I
ardlor small hoooes FOR Friday, Bom-4:s0pm. Clooed
RENT. Call (740)"1 -1111 Thursday, Soturday &amp;
for application &amp;inlurma1ion. Sunday. (740)446-7300

'178
'159
*159

•m••.

'158
'153
'134
'125

BULLETIN BOARD

.....

21004-- - IIG6 14500
~ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • fG6 1 SnO. OnStor, C~L.crhtf, ~

111.-

..-.... .. , G0,6 11JD.

lii001: Jeap Lloeitr 4114 - ,,_ ......

2004 .... Lloeitr Spilt - ' "'' ''"'
JDOS ..... 4l • :laJ 4x4 • JSI0322f iow ""' .foo """"'·loadod'

·= ..

• m """'

1104 a.., ,,
tHO 1.58!iJ.
1005 .... hoope • 5'- t 271 831C
. . . M I Okt ,

'

... ..,. .. I H6092JC

*2Jeapliloeoty0D··ri7019.:ZO .co loalho&gt;. Jow "o., HoM"*

a.oJONpGraiMIC&amp;aauuaSXI· IG6J53&amp;J.Lood.d.

aM Kills

I

..

Law Mild.

JDOS Gat . . . . . . . &amp;Cis elif • IG6 1S3QI .

*2""""' Sioo-. LE • &lt;IG6t&lt;l2l l . co.""'"',_,'- ••·.
JDOS...., MI'VIJI· 1712&gt;011 . co cr..- . -.., • 0.-.n fH699.43C.

DEADLINE 2:00P.M. FRI.

$19,. . .

$17,. . .
$17,. . .
$17,. . .
$IS,. . .
$14.$14,. . .
$14.$;4.$14,. . .
$12,-

liOOS Chewy Tl ••I •

For IleNe lnlo: malic;N1
Fled Hoppes
740-505-3581
740-335-7394

s:u....

V6 • liG616 11 011

fenl .... • ff-61175,_., 19tC: Milt..
Jeap Lloeitr UD. """. 0211A&gt;IC . .....
.... Jeap Lloeitr $pelt - 0()6l57&lt;J

·

Two Years.

AAQI•• .....

su....

-..-.Grc~~M~au

Over 50 Winners The Past

~ ..J'VV'\ 'rwin Rivers TCJIMtf is aooept- S1EIL
51 ,900 down. Save ....,..I
SAVETHOIISJUIJS
Midwest 741).828.2750
ing applicatioos for welting
,~~-list lor Hud-subsized. 1· br, on three caooeled orders:
rnvmn.nnn.u """'""'com
- - - - - - - - apartment,foJ
the 20ic26 and 30x40 'Made in
: WHV PIIY RENT?. 3 bed 2 elderly/disabled can 67S. USA. In~_,, last.
• bdl. $199 a month. 7-40- 6679
Equal
Housing cahlOW tor h~ uvings!
: 446-:1384
lJt&gt;portunlty

21004 ....... J'iton Sl • ' 71108•2£. 5 Pen....
foglat!lp~o. ,
1005 Dooltle .... 1500 • t27221CT~.
$15.1002 OliliC C1500 • IS7051&gt;t. O.S... co. '""""'· _,_
~ Clllll!; L •• ..4 ~ • w.ome en. c.-, ~•.AI!ar v.t..iL_ StUll
1. . . . . . . . . . 2500-. ,_ 1271831(
$10,. . .

"'r- lllfltloo •

........,
Sf.:; , Selling 180 He@d of Barracas
lltol;;., . &amp; Gel!s &amp; P-ure Oteda.

QO!l.l - crof; . . M!lllilw!l._ enoniiOI.flot Bllr
·(7!IDHH:Jtli
__. Orali;,11""· '1'01~·

UII!DttiiiES 3BR from

••5•
......
"·'"
......
.....
s:n.'"
.......

··-

--~

--'~-·--···"""--

$14,.,.

$13,$12,900
$13,$11.-

&gt; '

--

Public Welcome
Gallia County Conservation

meeting Wed., April 9ltl
Dinner6:30

..

Military S1,1pport Grp.
Meeting Tues. AprilS
6:30p.m. Gallipolis VFW
Post 4464 Third Ave.
(upstairs)

.......

$10,. . .
$11,$17,...
$16,$U,tft.

~to the Public

..............

All a111U in and around the
Suprasta Gallipolis Feny
plant including clubhoule .
and farmland are postacl

$1S.-

as:

$6....

. '

No Trespassing
to the public;
This posting tor the safety
of our community.

strinJ
s...
I E=~~E~Asoortod

llilroodBlc:ssin&amp;
bootlds.Fiddle:
2 Justride
Iampo
guitar.
(ca,e catbide
.t 3 bows).
(M...er).
drum. Fti Bu&amp;le (1917- Oticogo). E Flat
rotary valve coronet (PulltDIIl Co) Assortment of Oold lewelcy. Aft
anDOUncements day of ule takes precedence over all printed lTWcriaJ . This
will be ' a long ule. Food availoble from our kitohen. Oi~oos an: oo
website . Jim Taylor A-10014 Ucenood II Bonded in favor of Stole
of Ohio .t WV. lenns.- Cub or good check . All oot of SI.IIC checlu over

Globol

CEMETERY·CI.EANUP
The Hanison Township Trustees ,

are making preparations for Spring
Cleanup and Mowing of ·
Cemeteries. They nlqU8SI

gravesile dacorations,be !811l0Ved
by April 15, for (Dicltey Cemetery, •
Houck Cemalery, and Macedonia
Cemelery)

Ohio 'Ialiey Home .Health, Inc.
hiring a FT LPN for
Puepo~rtvate CIN Otllce.

Comp.utlva Wlgll. bertlltll
including hMllh illiUranctl and

mn 1ge
lor

Pllone7~1·1383

men hlfutn 1111011 06 apply at
1480 JKbon Pile.,
Gall~. Ohio '

Cour18ide Bar &amp; Grill
Beer Pong

Wednesday
$3.50 Domestic
Pitcher

'

PVH Community
Education

PENNINGTON
SHOW PIG SALE

Topic: Organ Donation
.Guest Speakers:
Local Families of Organ
Donors &amp; Recipients

Saturday, April 12, 2008
7:00pm

·Tuesday,
April8,2008
61 p.tn~ to 8 p.m.

Pike County

Monday,
April14, 2008
River Valley
Middle School

Fairground,

St. Rt. 160, Bidwell, OH

Piketon, Ohio

Doors open at 5:00 p:m.
Games begin at 6:00 p.m.

120 HD selected barrows &amp; gilts
Haf1'4)S, Yorks &amp; Exotic Crosses

McNeill Conferanoe Room
To i'elerve a Hat piiUI Clll,

(304) 675-4340,
Ext. 2004 or 1151

GAMES

E1W8IIent 1181 of show pigs
Ror mora lnfo~~~~&amp;tloD Wlkl site:
penningtonthowplgs.com ·

740-222·2737 or
740·357-6619

Refreshmants Available

$20 = 20 games
Special Basket for Pre-sold tlok8tl
T~Ck$8

call (740) 367-7530
or (740) 446-3488
Gallla Co. Oemocflll8

· Serenity House
aerves victims ot domestic
violence cal 446-6752 or
1-800-942•9577

I000.00 mllit be pre-approved by IIWI&amp;gement.

--~.

••

I

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•

''•

I

�GAitii'KNING
s ,,, .
.
Don't Wild :~
-~tin's sliD alive and weD·in the ga•den as in abe woods if '
you're dwse ac; .
the
universal
language
ofbotanical
naanes
........._1:11_
part of a plant
I

.~.....,

&amp;

.

L

~

'

r

'

Smuts eam the Arrow
of Light award, A3 "

a

gO

Club makes

donation, A3

........, .
__

reswe~

RIR'H-=IPIIESS

AaJCW~ idodat
liDe about I.-in beiD,g ·a

cbd I @'! ! bam"l . .
...:lllillleaOIIlllla Wbai
,pole a

.

'

-.·. ..,...

scheduled on AMP

I' ... " hicp it :ali~ _,
a Latin-based

dassi..,._
cblillld
..t .a balf
P"ti~~~; is

sysmn

two

&lt;lCIII- •

waify plat '
7"'5 . . . ia _ , cases,
slaodal
lbi:m.
Cat
1 •a-s
·a ·s.edish
......iSl · ' ..t ' physician,
mrieS . •

fO

bill,..,..,.,

baed
Wld;oa
ubw:awllblt; ..t + eel pbys- ·
at dlaacAtiiaUcs.
The ~ mme, or
biJICWrial amsi!oU of die
"f'......;s,~ a • ,.W!&gt;diMd lli!ua This uttJ
rJ piiOID sire ~ a· pelalpiiium in a )8d iin New N ' W:. -. S.;aln . : 1, ·JGU c::e"t ideidt a L aer ~a
~a 8iwn plmt pr. .an. TBihe 1he case dftlli$_ ... lleil......,.• - O f the mast COOiiiiUij•IH plaiiS in /tll)ltlilcawilll- 20J)..:;.
Of
pwp.' The ...,.
podioD eties. It's ..,lilly a~ and Cll1liiW it by ft5 lAIIin liBI1e ~ a horbuln)Wlll ..._ -*1 ..,
mis'
n
:e:a
lidetlflltr.
is the ~ ific • &amp;'"w:t"" or a
lower cue arljcc •ive isobl-

.......

•**"

~ amemha: (f{fdlll group.
Ow!dw ....... , !hey O.h•iry a
pldicullr · p~B., ..m! or

millcAl
A &amp;mik e• ••4* aQbt ,
be lv:u rubnun, or die' :Scia!ljfic: IIIIDC fu£a nd nuple
1Rie. fitiDt it a *ft furlbrr'
10 Ale« l1lllnlm "''ctober
Brilli;anre~ -w pnMde
die tJ:wilmwlr name fur a
p.tticulady brilliiDJ led.
Duple 00 ............ it is
COIIIDIOIIly ¢ailed (Soft,
Scadet or Swamp maple)
. within its GUJ8e from
O!Urio fO Flurida.
: "'Couimon plant aames •
- a rid! crove of imQay.
ud I would JDeW:I' suggest
tfl;at we .stop toll::il!g about
p;gweed. pussytoes., or
love-ia,;a-putf.~
writes
Jand!iCapC
desipa
lb!bm:a Danuoscb in liD
imroduction
to
"'Gadeata's Latin~ by BiD
Neal "'Bill QMDIIWW llaJIIeS

'1

County proclamations

Oaape••Q

...
idt611aa

. Latin 101: A qUick primer in~
·horticultmal I .atin for the garden

~

,.

!

...

~

I
I

•

lh' a r• .LIIEID

.IIYDEMII1F-•

. . . A5 .

• o..w.dcuniljs, 8t
• LblllH ; IJ!l. 83

' . Finltdii¥JbalrJ

bool•• at

tsdia:ll:

•sl See . . AJ
··OBis ness DGiar
,od"'iai'bel!es •adla..a::•aallili:.....,
drss See . . ..u
• 4-1 Pars dler

All aue: Meigs County
Col Iii I • 5, Jnlils Jim Sheets and
Uick Davenport signed a pmdamation Thursday declaring May 1

as1MJ ~ional Du uf ~.in
Ufll Couri!y, .tlsQ. $1U!11Cl . .

-

1frill I iliei's Of f i ·kicliHIIiitiOOal '

Day m,Prayer eomm.ittee=
•Bn;mda Bamhart, Gladys
Cumings, f&gt;asiDr Galy Ellis and
Aaslor Peter Nanindale.

s.r.AS
I

•

fi811181il OOimidel

Uft: Meigs County
.
Commissionels proclaimed April
Alcohol Awareness Month, in
. conjunction with the .National
Council on Alcoholism and Drug ·
Dependence, Meigs County
Mobilizing for Change on Alcobol,
and Meigs County Studen1s
Against Destructive Decisions.
Cara BullingiDn, Brenda Culfman
and Michelle Evans of the agencies are pictured with
Commissioners Jim Sheets ·and

.,

W~tBBR

•, ..

Mick Davenport.

.
. ..

I-

5

......1. 7

I

C
'
l
. . . . . . . . .

''!PI I

"

'

receives boost.

Rutland in search
·of water leak·
· BY BEnt Sew

BSERGENTOMI'DAll~

'

Classifi~
•

Cmnics
F.ditorials
•
Movies
•
•
Obituaries
'
~rts

·

•

..

on hBating &amp; altl(rJg

www.qualitywindowsystems.com
*With appi"'YBd aei:tit
--,-- v- -

' **,..,.,Glass

costs with
-The rixiz!r lhlt Pill mr t2rr·
FREE in-home ~1

Weather

8 Section
A6

RUTLAND Sinoe
January, the Village of
RutlaJ;ld has lost more than
one million gallons of water.
This ongoing problem is
putting a major strain on
the village' s water fund
which is consistently in the
red. The missing water was
·discussed
at
Rutland
Council 's most recent
meeting.
Rutland purchases its
water from I eNiing Creek
Conservancy District and in
March it pun:hased 408,700
gallons more than it sold. In
the last couple of months
village officials have been
.
fi d the
auemptm g 10
m
alleged leak.
.
Street . S'!pennloendent
Dave Davts lilltd a ~ple .or
months ago an olficial wtth
the Ohio Rural 'WIIter

Association tested, at no
charge, 800-1,000 feet of
water line on Depot Street
but found no leaks. Davis
and other Rutland workers
should begin this week in
searching for a possible leak
on Martin Avenue in another attempt to find and solve
the problem.
Last week when visitors
fro~ the office of the Ohio
· Auditor of State visited the
village, they reooiilll'lended
fi~ng the leak as well as
finding other measures to
cut ~osts such as. posSibly
turnmg the stree.t lights off.
May~ Lowell Vance and
Councilwoman Tom Hudsan
met wtth the offictals who
also ~scus~ what It would
mean ;f the vtllage went mto
fiscal emergency where the
state would manage all vii1a financeS. Vance said the •
otfcials indicated to him
·
PI

••-...._AI

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