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                  <text>Friday, April18,2008

Holzer
.Clinic e-..,

ALONG THE RivER
Bio Amustics·
Meigs woman piouee15 eu egiug scienc:~. Cl

......,,.,

;:a

• is.ck'asfiqoase
ill rlu! VlliiNI

WilE ·NASCAA This Wee11. C/O The Gaston GRelle, P.O. Bol1538, GIStoola, NC 28053

s, we.,

Cllc.••-....

11
•.n.u. ... ......
200
•

......, .\Iron's 499

. - . , TaiJadela (AIL} Sir
perspeedMry {2.66miles),

188 laps/500.08 miles
· -: Sundlry, ~127
•LIIIC ,_..--.: Jeff Gor,. doo, Chevrulel
•Q 5)11 • ....,., Bill Bliatt.
- · 212.809 ..... ~130,
1987
Mlf1( Martin,
.fud, 188.3M ..... '-'10,
1997
•LIIIC....ac SuueHmes 1he
.1Dnolse belts lite haes. l1le
winner of lite s..DMty fftsh Fit
500, ~- - ...untllely .
,. ·mrtaise. Jfrrlnie Jut; so; 1won
1lte past two Cup cl\arrtpi""'""ips. IJist "'"'he """ 10

...... --=

IIIOI!S. 1be latest. at ""-""

tiib:H(IItitiwl Ra ~he WIJr1
wlltt COOl SIJ 4li&lt; IICUIIIell,
not 181etrlless speed. John.·
· son's cll!wer rnw cltiel', Cllltd

Knells,- his~ open
as al the other aaab:inders ·
....... t.lrlrtiol, Dille £amhartlt
Jr., Denrw- 11111 can Ell-as -pitied. Then, wllh
Johnson left ..... out front.
Knaus inslrudlod his drilo!r to
Slow_, and ... _ ... fuel.
It -1he first~ ., 1lte
- f u r bUtl1 Jotlo 11011 and
his ...... Hoirtdr'ij('.MIIIur·
sports. Secuud&lt;plaoe Clint
11ow111r.,. no 1111e to CUIIIp~e~e the . _ wttltuut
1 pit Slllllin lite flnllllaps.

lltllk-

. . . . Al.ftbdiOIIWJI HeflllllllS RarlrP. 200
llps,l201.~

mites

·
-s..no-. April20
aLIIIC,....-.r.
Juan
NIIU\btiDJII, ~
•Q Y)C....,Soolt
Pruell, Dudge, 103.614
mph, tllln:h 2, 2007.
. . . . . . . . . Martin 1iuel
Jr.. CltrMolel, 67.591 mph,

. Mlll:ll ti, 2005
•LIIIC ....ac ¥e Busttt
claimad his socond victory
In as ll'ldi\'IWleS, ~ills
Tu,olll to victory. "'-'it
lnlemllionltl Rae ! 1!1f.

......, O'Rt!ii!Y AUIII Pats
250
'
Kansas
l(ansas CIIV. !(an. (1.5 mi.l,
16711psf250.5 miles

•-=

s.-s s

SPOR'IS

· -: Srrb.ld1!ll. Apnl26
•LIIIC ,....--.:&amp;it&lt;
Dlmell, Ford

1Q Y)._..,Bill
Leslor, ili&gt;jala, 113.833
mph, July 1, 2005

•GAHSIBtis
li list&amp; perfect week.
SeeP ge81

..... -fliclflter&gt;
dricll, ctoMolet. 125:994

_,Dennis

COLUMBUS - This
month lbe Ohio Power
Siting BoaJd is set to decide
ror or ag.ainst .a requested
"reheati.ug" in rellltion to
American
Municipal
Powa:-Oruo's cenificate of
environmental compatibility :and public need.
1be request was made on
April 2 by environmental

.c JiDD &amp;ft1Ai ~vm~ •

J

Eworr SADlER ·

No. 19 STANLEY TOOLS DoDGE

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

·~ In IWlCAR's billest race.AJ.

. . . . . . . lite
IIUie at Phuet tix.lte

~

finish"-

""""~! up
lleadlatnerwll"a

-"

dillk~-·

.,.SlluidaHIM!I'

~~~~~n.---

; ·1'PtlR'JIIIW,..... __

•., Ill-·"'···

: ..... JJ.--.!Mii:lwl
ln1he
;~ .illllldfarll!ls,_. '
~&amp;en 'In lllllldua!llllft, win-

•

:IIIIlS. llllllf 111011111· One lllllll

-·--·the&amp;mjsh.

and

~· is,111e1'iadllllil;
the car·
; .. . . .,.,.,.. COIISider some
~ i 1!'11unohltlivll,y in May.
·

'

•

OBrruARIFS

n-.alol"

·••m. dtitillld II!'fuel mileage.

... "

'

: ~JII·!Miilll, flu&amp;1mir~fand

Stotmsewer
work begins

~ '•&lt;n.,-.a~nuwand
'' 111111,'1'1·- C'ID spec:ulatll,

.. ........,_.Whonas

c li$1i£trJIPEZZ::Wr..!*

:=·~--=
1D'!Mewtlo
it InIIOeSnl.
the
I I adlllie·and

......&amp;I,...

1•

. ll&gt;lliUnrWIINIIiunwide Series
' lllfll(w'lillliidoo!lllr 11 this
· . "
. ~ ,..,'!"*"·!lilies !hiS 1he ~ '
_ . I 1'.1111 1111111112 Ill d!e l'f!ff,
~

HIK:ftD._ . . .

l!!!!t!MI!I!MI!!1!:1!17.1!1!!!§1

s!li'

u _ ·-.-....,..~~~~~~tt•Uazlc•MIII"'f

John()loii&lt;,IThe -

-~-

nJ _

1950 to ;_. off the new system of
flillh•1!1fS 11\at stnltched across the
country from north to south. World
champiQns l'hillilll and Juan
\llrwel Fafllio took pat In 1he TliCO ,

c:Wllild 111111ejust·as much sense

,, illlflll'ln "iiD&gt;1La:1;1irCMS"

...

w.n IWiCM vialllillrillol,

:MialiAieald1&amp;iiiutd.
' .il!'s 1181in\Oiu.Jo~C)1181S since
- illrllliar•••lr.w.~.a mce.
· .,.. . .. _.Nsflnl, ~·s

.........

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,
&lt;.......,., ltlll,-

......... --

;~ ttil aallort,111111Di1t~ Sin-

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;;

.

.-.._.'liirt
-~

Back~-the-pack Phoenix finish

., •• '* Nt•

...

NASCAR This Week

•

won' help Sadler's ailing back

I just stayed off my bact and feet to
&amp;I!IUII my tDiij, and I'm definitely

Jl lOt bdter-.·

W"rtll the excnJCiating paiD apparElliott Sadler, only recently recovered from knw!r-bact problems, got a. entlybebilld him,~. who turns 33
much-needed lift when he qualified mAprilJO,:US1njllt1Dwm-kimprovsecond for the Subway fresh Fit 500 ing on his Wilplace nnking in the
Sprint Cup ~tJndinp He Jaun't Will
at Phoenix
The night didn't eod up being much . at the Cup levellliDce captwiu&amp; Win of
of a Cindefella story - Sadler WOUDd · his three career victories in 20114
up 4111 - but it sipaled 1 step up in while competing for Robert Yates
performance for the struggliDg Sadler Racing. .
Once 1 baskethlll rect:uit of ldty
and ltiJ Gillett~ llotuisports
l'rim" at James Mldin Ulliret sity,
team.
Though .he didn't miss any rices, Sadler followed his older bt\6tr HmoSadler competed. ill intense paitl ~at - mieiltto NASCAll ~~.Bet -,
CDce l'ICIIII!alJocliel• at ·slmt ll'ICb
Martinsville and 'lttas.
"I played five different sports in !IIIII' the~ Empmia, Va., Woe.
The eo~ Gilldt Evrnlllm orpoihigh schoolllld hid injuries, but notltmg like I faced (at Yartinsville)," be ' zatiGa had an off }'ell' in 2007. Sadler
.said. "I went to a lot of therapy this ·said he hu the lll!lle oatlnnk he takes
week, stayed in bed a lot, rested 1 lot. into every &amp;ea8011.

•

l&lt;I&lt;ELLY...,VOAIL.vTRlBUNt,COM

. ·GALUPQUS := · Maji.W

ca-.

,..·· - - - ; BDi1\e ~
"lUUIkaoe
· ~·flr---onl)'.lt
~

111' KEv. ·l(au

SIMrii!WCAR drM!rs~·

•

, ----hft

n

fill in Mooiou dur"-the 1950!. The
,La
~cana WIS $Wt·
-~'11\e....,..ic:lm e-nliiili1til .' '

"1fy to do the best we cu, try to
make the Chase and 111 from there,"
he said "We have aiatoC work to do at
Gillett E~enlwn Mottr&amp;ports. We
. have a aew owner {(leorge Gillett)
whO hu COllie in, and ft're dtanging
the way ft do things here and there.
· We were pwbably DOe of the ·busiest
teamB ill the ofr-soa IS far a&amp;
sttuc:turing, redcing thiugs.
"We lla.ve to play cato~Ht~."
Sadler's performance so far has
been erratic. The highUght was a
sixth-place fiDish in the Daytona 500.
Three raees into the season, Sadler
. .... !2.
JVM.lll...,.toP
.
' ..
"1 thiok we Cl!l get it dooe," he Slid.
"We still think we Cl!l !Dike the

re:

Cbue."

Which tan throiCh 1954. liersltel
'Mr:Gri!l, 1he stuok&lt;ar racer from
Bridal \lell, Ore., woo 111e first SUCh
T8CO in ., Oldsmcblle 88. Bill
France, Curtis Turner and Malllhall
Teltgue all cumpeled durirC the ·
llllle's ~run.

• May 3X)8 prodained
Older Amet icans Month.
SeePageA2
'.Devon McDcnald
. sp !:iag i1 r~
·on behalf« FCA.
"SeePageA2
/ • Harassn lel'lt
recpes legal action.

SeeP..-.u .
·•Re • h plaswl8d for

-~

7 5?

...........

" .... t

I

I'"" been WII!Qh-. 111C"- fur over

50 )'elliS, and lite one QUestion or

..,_ ,('"" -

~ or """" is: •

When are the ~ tan~I!OiiW to r.oe at Daylnnll? Daytona cars 111M!
· dor1e Indy but niM!Ithe CJiher W1Y
IIOUitC!....
. . F. . . .
·' ~~JeA.f\!.¥. ..

•lhis week. See Page AS

·• Trans1omler to
:be moved Sunday.
. See Pllge A6

• Raising a ruckus.
SeePage A&amp;

WEATIIEil

n,.

•-s aAJ

atttte _,...,

"**""'
r:onsldeiiJtl to be UI1SIA! lor
lnll)l

•

I

I

•

BY Euz· '" RIIEL

ERIGEleMYDAILVTRIBUNE.COM

'

'

4 SticnoNS- Z4 PAGilS

~undTown

Celebrations
Classifieds

·srlr
... , -'!l.rr
.,.....-

Comics
Editorials •
'
Movies
· Obituaries

.... I '1.:
• Ford a 'I 1 wiaaft ,_.
• Eil ..:a, Tla I C I 6 Tlw WIIIIIDra
*Aftlissa•A 11 c•-•S~w~CIIIMI•-cassp

*FarM" I

Sports

Bo•,zea Cmuc

A3
C4
D3-5

insert

A4
C2

As
B Section

A6

Weather

GAlLIPOLIS - This year's Ohio
Chautauqua schedule for Gallia County
was announced in the Gallipolis City
Park on Friday morning, along with
some comments by . guest speaker
Thomas Alva Edison.
The 2008 Ohio Chautauqua in Gallia
County, presented by the Ohio
Humanities Council, is scheduled for
Thesday, July 15 through Saturday, July
19 and will be held in the city park the
same as it was in 2006.
Gallipolis IIIliR:s the last stop for this
year's Ohio Chautauqua, Which is currently celebrating its I Oth season. It is
hopld that Gallipolis will become a rcgu·
lar stop on the tour in years to come.
In the days before television and the
Internet. Chautauqua consisted of a
sequence of educational lectures held
under tents that traveled from town to
town, featuring speakers on various subjects to serve as entertainment.

"·-ou,,u

'

•

I

woups

Fequit:e lihe evJI!ual'ion .of the
impacts of the AMP Coal
Plant's C02 emissions and
im;p1'&amp;r:ly concluded llhat
such
2 ilJil'aotS need not
ibe factm&gt;ed into lbe evalualimt of alternatives for minimizing me impacts of

AMP's pmposai.~

• The board "i~pcrly
dismissed •e nergy efficiency and renewab1.e .energy
alliernatives to tbe AMP
ooalplanC

"

• The board "impropetly
upheld AMP's rejection of
llllliUral gas combined cycle
f~Dd integrated gasification
combined cycle alternatives
to the AMP coal ,plant."
• The board "improperly
upheld evidentiary rulings
that were conn:ary to the
board' s regulations and the
Ohio Rules of !Evidence."
Last · week., AMP-Ohio

. . . . . . . . . JD

VIllage
delays
attempt
at funds
BY BIMtti J. REED
BREEDOMYDAILYSENTINELCOM

MIDDLEPORT - l t will
lilcely be three years; before
M.iddlepon applies again
for downtown revitalization
funding . That. Mayor
Michael Gerlach said, is
when matching funds will
likely . be av.aila:ble to suppol't it.
Last monlb, Gerlach said
.llhe
·
Middlepon
Development Group was
advised that chances of getting funding ·t hrough the
program were ll!llikely until
a llarge match is available,
making the application
more competiti11.e.
·Gerlueh said th~ (levelQp· ·
~Je\r.rish oeiebratitln of
ll)eJit ,group firSt pll\!IDed to
Passo~r commemorates
bold off on a third .applica.
the Exodus from Egypt and
tion, but later con~idered
the liberation mthe
submitting again, anyway,
'Israelites from slavery. lhe ' in t)rder "to keep a foot in
th 1d oor._.
' "
meal also plays an :impor· . '!fee
•
tant part in Christian tliSt~ ·· .·;Ultimately,,; ba~p on the
ry (The ·Last SU!Jper"\is \.r advice ' oH •t!vckeye
Hitls/Hbcking
Valley
believed to have ~n a
Passover meal). Students
Regional
.Development
at Mid-Valley Christian
District grani writers. the
Sch(lol in Middleport celegroup · has decided any
more attempts to secure
brated the Seder meal
state funding would be ill
Friday as an educational
advistrd until a l.arge sewer
eKercise and a celebration
· f
·
of their own faith. David
upgrade IS unded. Melissa
Zoeller of BH/HVRDD .
McCurdy of Lakin, W.Va., a
who wrote. the village's
· studellt of the Jewish her·
most recent application for
itage and customs,
funding , met with the
presided over the meal ,
group Thursday to discuss
weariRg a prayer shawl. He
the next steps in a downis a member of the
town revitalization funding
and to discourage a third
Rejoicing Life Church. Jews
look forward to the
application .
Passover holidays with the
Gerlach, who serves as
same eagerness as
downtown
revitalization
Christians do Christmas.
coordinator as well as
Egg, bitter herbs, horserad· ·
said there are other
i511 , .wlN!~ arul.)tro!W:i-are __.f-P.u.bllil:.__;?~~in j; oppnn un i·
among the foods served
available
the mean·
during the meal. rich in his·
time, to complete elements
tory and symbolism.
of th!= streetscape and infra·
J. _
structure improvements.
.....,...
1
The. largest expense
included in the proposed
streetscape plan was for
new sidewalks and curbing.
That work, Gerlach said last
month, is an example of ·a
project that could he com·
pleted using other grant
sources.
The village plans a $2 .5
million sewer upgrade .·
designed to carry sewage
and storm drainage from
the village "s combined san·
itary and storm sewers to
the outfalls in the Ohio
River.
Gerlach said that projec1
is e11pected to begin in 20 I0
or 2011, and can serve as a
major local match to lever·
age state revitalization
funding . Most applicants
seeking revitalization funding successfully offer mil, lions of dollars in local
matching dollar' through
infrastructure . improvements. At least one town
awarded funding in the
Thomas Edison, portrayed by Hank Fincken. entertains a crowd Friday in the 2007 round used sewer
Gallipolis City Parle Officials and community members gathered under the tent improvement funding as a
local match.
in the park for the announcement of this year's' Ohio Chautauqua schedule.

'
'

'

Gallipolis prepares for Chautauqua's return

·- - .......

(740) 992-2155

until August. a spokesiiillll
for Ameresro Energy said.
Work on the line, which
will divert stonn water from
streets off F.as!em in the
vicinity of West Virginia
Electric Supply and Smith
GM Superstore, has been
under way but the llugcr
phase of 1he job - digging
lbe lines in lhe residential
.section - begins this week,
said Paul. LaPrise, project
manager for Amercsco.
1be storm sewer is the
final phase of an energy savqs initiative the city entered
.into with Ameresco in 2005.
A line will . come up to
Eastern from the Ohio
River and lines will be
installed on side .streets,
including
Chatham

"

Cfi

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St.
Pomeroy, OH

work ·oo~-storm sewer project in lhe ·upper end of
Gallipolis off Eastern
Avenue is expected to sta11
Thesday and will oootinue

Street
i:""""~c..,,_:_~j~~~~~C~he¥~&amp;tnut
llllle storm
runoff inw the river,
LaPrise e~lained. The

lbere'S been some IBN&lt; aboul
""""",...,., but If ft,...,.. ., _ . , :
tile 1801! wfllllfOblb!y be run on 11te
road cwrselhlltpartialiy snMI!s
tltlrJI4III ttte D1!lllona lnfleltl. llle 11/ftt

·~ana~ 5/le

pamittillg ~s (moo~
AMP amtends many still
eXist! because dte OPSB
must ;approve any plans fM
ilhe oomstructiGn rof new
.e nergy facilities in Ohio. .
'lbe
•environmental
wbo \vel'e g;ranted
tntervonor group status during the Fe gular beano g,
claim dtere are several il'ellsons for the reheariog
which include;
• 1be OPSB "failed to

Passover celebration

Wd Friday lhe dcpadment
is investigating .a dmwoing
between ll:30 :and 9:30 p.m.
on Thursday i.n lhe Ohio
River at South Front Stmet.
Swift said lbe identity of
die victim, incbv!iq name
:and IF. will not be reka&amp;ed
until family members have
been ptopetly nolified.

ARXM'IItiiWolli'tl .....

-tie . ~500stiU
.
I

Natural
~--·
Defense
Council,
Ohio
Eovimnmental Council and
Sian Oub, all of wblch
were intervenors during me
original hearing which rook
place in December of l.ast
year aDd cootinuod periodically until the OPSB's
. March 3 decisioD to
approve die cett.ificate.
· Receiving d!e •oertit'icatc
was a major hlllllle in the

~::~Bruce Swift

............. tlllll: •.._lite
viCtor)' at Dlyloolt ..... Newman and
!tis-.. a fal9e 9111191! of security.
He 181Mins in the 'IIIP l2 - bnty
- so thele's still time 1D . . . . lite
- - "fine flnist1 at ToiJadelll...,...,

~ ~-.

~
~

·

in the ...... "',...
ntll1'5 Mo. l2. 1be
sare failure pl•wl Nlloman at
Bristol. "Ourqlne COitiJIIIIt needs
to get their stuff ll:Ct!Her; he said.

• •.,...,..illlllllllllf

abe

· MIDDLEPORT -The
name and age of a drowning
viotim bas DOt been re1cucd
by the Middleport Police

ftleliiC !line

the track and sent •
-cars S!linnlrC

r:.-

NoiDyet
on victim
of drowning

The Dl!fiDnB 500 winner and

l'lr&amp;e~- has had ttls - ·
1D 90Uih since IIUII"- oil quhe the

:....

R

s

BSeRGENT-ILVSElmNEL!COM

..... July 7. 2001
•LIIIC
Scm!&lt;,
In. DI:XIJie,""" for lite Ullrc!
tin'e. U.lltsUIIe~
..... In his-.~
1he flrllllr 250.

•
SPRINT CuP SERIES

111' lima

•

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•

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. . . . . ./

.....

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.

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. 6mlp~-intiad

•

Former

Hannan Trace

Elementary at .

NFL and University of
Notre
Dame
standout
Devon McDonald will
1ipC8k at 11 area schools
· April21-24 as part of~ tnur
oonduoted by the Galiia
County Fellowship of
Ouiistian Athletes.
McDenald was an AllAmeni~ linebacker who
belPOd Notre Dame to the
1'9!f2oal!ional d:ampionShip
befcm: ,eJribaAcing (en a professional career that saw
him
play
for
the
lodianapolis Colts and
- Arirona Cardinals.
"For the first 26 years of
my life, I wondered why I
was created," McDonald
said. ·'Even though I had
·graduated from Notre Dame
·ami was playing in my
faurtb year in ·t he NFL, my
life felt worthless.
"Te deal with those feelings, I got, drunk, smeked,
lied, cheated and more," he
added. "But these things
only dragged me further
into 'lmpelessness."
McDonald, said he consid'ered suicide.
"Then one night 1] realized
J oeeded to make~ .change,"
ihc said. •That change was
't o invite ~esus into· my life
and have a growing relation.Ship with .Him. With Christ.
I know bow to deal with trials and temptations and be
victmiaus Oller them.~
McDonald shares Iris
,amar.ing life story with
youth ilhroughout !l'he U.S.,
ibelping them to understand
and deal with pear pressures
dtey face today.
His
straightforward discussion
· ihelps youth make positive
llife decisions.
"Today, ~no longer worry
.about the 1pU11p0se for my
life," McDonald said. "I am
mamed· with .a family and
my desire is to give to others what has been given to
me. bojJe."
MoDonal.d will speak at

.

Connie Montgomery

Jackson High

o.-t

School, II :40

am. andGall:4.5
11a
.
·. p.m. at
, ·Aca&amp;my High School. and at
,fi:JO p.m. ;at ;the University of
Rio Grande/Rio Grande
Community College.
~Rio Grande assembly
i.s ·~ •t o the public, is free
of dwge and will feature
URG student -athletes, as ·
well.
"We :encourage everyone
to come see Devon at Rio
Grande," said Tim Stephens,
area director af FCA.
"Uni!leubt.edly, anyane who
comes will 'be blessed. It's a.
8Y EuZA11E111 R:aa.
Americans Month.
·great opportunity for people
ERIGEl@MYDAILVTRIBUNE.COM
Older Americans Month
to hear a professional athlete
is
observed nationally .each
proclaim his faith in ilesus
GALLlPOUS
May
to celebrate the accOm•Christ, just as he does in
Representatives
from
the
plishments of older citizens
public schools on a regular
Area
Agency
on
Aging
and to express gratitude for
basis. Many people don't
District
7
and
theGaJlia
the
contributions they have
realize just how much freeCounty
Senior
Resource
made,
and continue to
dom we have to talk about
Center
attended
Thursday's
make. to our communities.
God in schools . Devon
Gallia
·County
Gallia County is home to
McDonald is a great examCommissioners
meeting
to
over
4.500 older adults.
ple of how we can reach stuwitness
commissioners
proin Gallia County.
Seniors
dents fer Christ."
claim
May
2008
as
Older
and
around
Ohio can live
On A:jnil 23, McDonald
will speak at 8:30 .a.m. at
South Gallia !High :School,
follow.e d 'by an 11
appearance
at
Point
JACKSON (AP)
Vance of Jackson is facing
PJeasa,pt High SchOOl, and .a
1:30 p.m. appearance at Authorities say they've three counts of conspiracy
three
people to commit qggra11ated mur'Southwestern and IRio indicted
accused of conspiracy for der and one count of. conGrandi: relemcntaries.
On~24, ,at~:l5 a.m., their roles in the murderspiracy to conunit aggravatMCDorulld IW.ill be at Riv.er for-hire of a 72-ye·a r-old ed burglary.
Forty-nine-year-old
Valley ffigb 'School. At nl retired school administrator.
.a m. he will ,be at IRiver
Carol £vans' body was Randy !Faught of Jackson
Valley Middle School and found in her ransacked and 28~jear.old · Heather
will conclude his :tour at .[ home near Jackson last Speakman &lt;O{ !Richmo~e
p.m. ·at Green E:lementaey.
.month.
were indicJ;ed 1iln od'e count
For .more information,
The Jackson Coiml)' , of conspiracy to commit
.ca]] Stephens at (304) 633- indictments detail a ·schCme aggravated murder.
8353 or PCA Gallia County · in which Evans' strangulaJackson
County
President Joe Moore or tion followed the theft ·o f Prosecutor
Jonathan
Sarah Evans-Moore at (740) $20,000 in cash.
Blanton says more arrests
441-1111.
•
Fony-year-old
· Terry are expected.

-M~tctSI-

11c 1llill!/.,._

full and satisfying lives and
Older Ohioans are intecontribute to making the gral to a strong COOIKJJDy
state and ·the county a better and can be valuable assets
place through care giving, to employers through .revolunteer work., employ- careeiing, re-entering the
ment. and family and com- market, :getting job ~
munity leadership. Just as and more.
older Ohioans are the founThe governor of Ohio, the
dations of families, they can state's aging netwol'k, .and
also be the cornerstones of members . af ·Gallia County
communities, serving as tluink senior citizens for
leaders, ~ntors, and role being positive role model~
for all generations.
models.
' '

making a moot point since

onlyth&lt;6ncsr
insurartct

cornparUc.,
including

is on the agenda for next

'

'

'

{

Ill

lnsura~

I r

Company,

that, even if it coruiidered the and according to Shana
evidence that was excluded Eisel stein, spokesperSPn
by the administrative law from the Public Utilities
j11dges, it would .noL.haY,e '(;oD!_mission of Ohio, .a
altered its findings." ·.
det:isioli Will . be made at
The iegutist fii)" rebeaffiig · tha!' meeting:

ElltJitC Pl.amrlng.
Medicaid Planning.
Willsfl"ru.ts., Power of
Attorney. Guardianship,

. loif" IO"''fl!DCC• Lo.,g
. T enn HeAllb 01U11,
Medicare Supple.Mnts.,

which hu t&lt;uly earned the
!&lt;pUWiM 21 The

People~.

•No l'mllkm•.

Alit"' .oou.,:tf&gt;.

nwiy "otlict aavantOgc. of doi"'
husineos wirh an inclt:pendmt

Tax Mioinri.ZIIIion

in&amp;UDll« ~-

on Eastern,

Junes R. Hcury

.

Call 740-446-2033
To Schedule An
Appoin~ent

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the Tribune office.

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Member

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Gem

IN CONCERT!

r

.Jeff &amp; Sheri Easter
Suaday, AprillQ • 6 p.m.
Gallipoliw First Cbull'cla oftbe N.-reae
lUG First Aveuue • Gallipolis., Ohio
Free admisllion • !l.uve otT\.Ti n~ will be lllkc..'Tl

~

•

I

of her three children, she discovered a marble-sized lump in her breast.
The worri~ 30-year~old immediately consulted l;:.er doctor, Michael
Clark, DO, at River Rose Obstetrics and Gynecology.

radiation therapy with Aaron Williams, M D, at the Athens Cancer
Center in the Castrop Center. She also h ad chemotherapy anJ
continues taking a medication used for aggrt-ssive forms_ of cancel'.

An ultrasound indicated the lump was a cyst. A mammogram performed
at O'B~ness Memorial Hospital's mammography suite In the Casnop
Center also showed characteristics of a cyst. Dr. Clark sent Pamela to
surgeon Neal Nesbitt. MD. After attempts were made to drain the cyst,
.Dr. Nesbitt decided w perform a lumpectomy. The •
lump tested positive for cancer and Dr. Nesbitt .
performed two additional surgeries at the
Athens Surgery Center in the Castrop
Center and O'Bleness Memorial Hospital's
Outpatient Surgery Center.

"Everyone took such good care uf me. When 1 u •ent to the
Cancer Center, it was like going to visit a friend. When I had
my mammograms, the woman who did them always remembered
me, even if 1 hadn't been in.for a while.
.

"l discooered l UICl5 dealing with
stcq"e Ill cancer. A1tliowgh it UICl5
frightening' l fmmd the peopk at
O'Bimess to be .~~-"

"Many people thought I
should go to ColumbU-s for
my care. I'd teU t~rrr­
wh.y go all the way to

Columbus when there is
good care nearby!"

·

~
O'BLENESS {~
HEALTH SYSTEM
www .Ob len.,ss H

FREE in-home demonstration

... . ..

GALLIPOLIS - Mary
Maxine (Kemper) Fonner
will soon be celebrating her
84th birthday. Cards may be
sent to: 138 Buhl Morton
Road, .Apt. 201, Gallipolis.
Ohio4563L
GMLIPOUS - Mabel
Phillips will be celebrating
her 86th birthday on April 22.
Cards may be sent to her at
14840 State Route 7 South,
Gallipolis, Ohio 4563 1.
Ada
WELLSTON Chambers will celebrate her
94th birthday on April 22.
Cards can be sent to her at
Room
5142, , Jenkins
Memorial Road, Wellston,

Breast Health Services

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Card shower

Ohio 45692.
BIDWELL -· Charlotte
French will celebrate her
60th birthday on April 28.
Cards can be sent to her at
Holzer Senior. Care Center,
Room 114. 380 Colonial
Drive, Bidwell, Ohio4561 4.
BIDWELL Pauline
Shaver will celebrate her ·
93rd birthday on April 29. ·
Cards can be sent to her ai
Holzer Senior Care Center,
Room 111 ; 80 Colonial
Drive. Bidwell. Ohio45614.
GALLIPOLIS - DIJC ti&gt;
failing health. the family of
Annabel Houdashelt is
requesting a card shower.
Thinking of you cards can
be sent to her at 6657 State
Route 440. Hickory, K y.
42051.
E-mail community calendar items to .kkeUy@mydaiFax
lytribune.com.
announcements to . 4463008. Mail items to j2 5
Third Ave., Gallipolis, Olti(J
45631.
Announcements
may also be dropped off at

~l~iA;:;·;-;;iGaftfte~r~~,J;"EBi;;urns
~
· ·.of Logan stopped br~astf;ed~~-rhe ioung~sr ----;;:~r h~r ~~rgeri~s. Pamela beg~ -an in!livid~al~ed-regi~~n of

www.ovbc.com
-..:. 615-1311

ing eight Ohio counties, J 0
a.m .. Gallia County Senior
Resource Center. 1167 State
Route 160, Speakers are
Mike Muffell, health care
benefit organizer, and Jack
Wymer, PERl president.
Noon meal will be served ar
cost of $7. Pay in .advan ce
by 1\priJ •30 by sending the
money to Jane Colley. president, 981 Centerpoint
Road, Oak ·Hill. Ohio
45656.. For information
contact her at (740) 41 g.
6800.

"I'm ymtng and ha11e rw family history of fJreast cancer."

1-860-468-6682

-5600

because fol}cs .sometimes think r m a drag queen. .
.
Annie, 11 s awful. r ve experienced hamssment at woric
Although I reported it, my frnmer boss fired me out of fear
of being sued. When it happened at my next job, J didn't say
anything, but I can't stand it any longer. One of my co-work~ told everyone I had a ~secret gay life." Human Resounces
1s aware of the ~s!Mnt. ~everyone bad to sit through
clas~ on d.iSCI1IIIIJiatJOn. Still,,one of my managers tried to
override the passw()l:d ·on my voice mail after the .latest round
of :tumors in order to fiM out what I was hiding. fve even
shown oo-worters my birth certificate and pictures of me
~wing up. ·but it htlsn 'tmade any difference.
·
• 11111! a Christian woman and a virgin. This is incredibly
offens1ve to me. I nuely go out anymore. l' m tired ,o f the
stares, the offensive remarks and the .unfortunate things peole think about those J!ving as transvestites - even though
am not. My parents can't believe people could be so cruel
and assume it's all in my bead. Believe me, I wish it were.
rve gone to"counseling to get a handle on the stress. How
do other masculine-looking women cope with the stares,
the smirks, the giggles and the offens:ve comments? Newr (Ever) a Gay
.
.
· · De.r Never a Gay: 1be harassment you are getting at
w&lt;HK may be actionable under the law, so -please discuss it
with an attnmey. No one should be pemutted to bully or
treat you so shabbily {or fire you!) because of a perceived
impression af your·sexual orientation. As for the .rest. try to
be less defensive. You cannot control what others think, but
Thesday,~y 13
you can learn acceptance and develop confidence in your
GALLIPOLIS .- PERI
District meeting representown body - whatever it looks like. Since you are seeing a
counselor, ask to work on this.
.
. DearA• • :I have a 14-year-old grandson who is a hugger.
,-.eddy" will say .heDo and goodbye with a hug, which is great.
But my concern is how much he wants to hug in between.
h '10 oot unusual for Thddy to walk up two or tluee times during a visit and want a hug. And they aren't brief hugs. I am conPOMEROY Meigs
(:ellled about a boy this age wanting to be hugged so much, so
Conty Retired Teachers,
often. He gets plenty of affection from his parents. What should
noon 1uncheon, Trinity
Monday, April 2l
.be said to him and by whom?
CaKes ned Grandma
Church.
Second Street
LETART
Letart
Dear Grandma: Some kids, ·boys as well as girls, are
entrance.
Beth Shaver,
hug~ers. They love the physical .contact. and by itself, it's Township Trustees, 5 p.m.
executive
director
of Meigs
nothmg to worry about. Is this a recent phenomenon? Does
Council on Aging, to speak.
Teddy hug women more than men? (Some young buys use
Entertainment ~ some
buggmg as an acceprable way to tnuch women.) Is TC",ddy's
Meigs students of "Grease"
intellectnal and physical development normal? If so, he's
organin~tions
musical.Take papier prodlikely to tone down the hugging as he gets older, and 'we'd
ucts ·ad personal care items·
:let his parents handle it. Say nothing. .
Monday, April 21
for
women's shelter.
De.r Annie: ·You've printed a few letters from women
TUPPERS PLAINS who object to be~ called ''you guys" in restaurants and Special meeting of Eastern
other places. I feel JUst the opposite.
High School Music Boosters,
· I am one of four female eleictricians among 200 males. I 6:30 p.m., music room.
absolutely hate it when someone comes in and says, "You
RACINE - .Racine Area
Sunday, ~pril 241
guys and lady" because they are emphasizing my gender more Community Organization
MIDDLEPORT - Kelly
.than my presence already does. There aren't that many women 6:30 p.m. at Star Mill Park. Perry will sing at the I a.m.
in this field so we dOn't need to be pointed out every time the Potluck meal. New mem- service of the obson
.boss wants In address us. In this field. it's more respectful of bers welcome.
Christian
Fellowship
my P\')Sition to be one of the "guys.'' - Saplaw, Mkb.
Tuesday, April 22 ·
.Church, __
Mi~dleport.
-'-.· .UIIIIr- Slgluw: In ~nt year£, "yo.u._guys" has bewme _ ATHE_NS -_- So~therh _ He~~eL'\Yhlti.ds. tlu::,pastor.
·gimder-neutral, .and . we' re sure many women feel such Consoruum for Ch1ldren
S8turday, Aprill6
monikers mean the men consider them equals and valued Board meeting, 10 a.m. at
CARPENTER - First
for what they contribute In the job.
festival · at
the offices. 20 East Circle cornbread
Happy Passover to all our Jewish readers.
Drive, Building 20, Third Catpenter Baptist Chunch,
Alutie's ~_is writfa by Kildly Milcld flllll M~y Floor, Athens.
Ohio 143. Crafts, food,
Sl!,tlr, . . _ dil•softlteAIIIIlandmcoburul. Pkase
Thursday, April 24
mountain bike race, live
POMEROY
- Meigs . gospel music, free train
~--- JfiiiT ~ to llllllies~Mt, or
~ 111: Alutie's Mr"*u, P.O. Box Ufl190, ~. IL
Soil and Water Conservation rides, free vendor space.
MJIU. To jill4 0111 fffllfY llbowt AluW 's Mailbox, tllld twM1 Board of Supervisors meet· Cornbread
cook-off.
}ieitblrn 6yodler0w'rs Sj·n£c¢e writerslllld cmtooflists, ing, 11:30 a.m. , district Contact Pastor Whitt Akers,
·tisit tile Crnfn SJ'IIIfit"llte mil~~ www.COIUitNs.rom. office, Hiland Road.
591-1236 for rules .
. &gt; ,,

114Court
Pomeroy

3.50% A.P.Y.

L-------.. . ------------1

'

Sunday, April 20
GAl,LIPOLIS - Knife
Club organizational meet.
ing, 4:30 p .m., Gallia
County Junior FaiJNOunds.
Please attend if interesteii.
Monday, Aprilll
GALLIPOLIS - ·Gallia
County Ohio .Township
Association meeting. 7
p .m., Gallia County Senior
Res&amp;rce Center, 1167 State
Route 160.
GAlLIPOLIS - GalliaMeigs Friends of Scouting
annual banquet, 6:30 p.m.;
First Church of Goli, State
Route 141, sponsored by
Gallipolis Lions Club and
Bob Evans Farms. Guest
speaker is Donnie Jones,
men's baskietbal1 coach at
Marshall .University.
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia
County Garden Club to
meet at the C.H. McKenzie
Agricultural Center, 7:30
p.m.
Tuesday, April 22
EWING TON
American Legion Post 161
will meet at 7:30 p.m. in
Ewington Academy. New
offig~rs will be installed and
plans developed for future
events. All members are
urged to attend and enjoy
the fellowship afterwards.

RIO
GRANDE
Southeast Ohio Safety
Council will meet at noon in
ConferenCe Room C of
Davis University Center on
the ' campus
of
Lhe
0 niversity
of
Rio
Grande!Rio
. Grande
Community College The
speaker will be Aaron
Quinn, safety dinector for
the · University of Rio
Grande, on tbe topic of
"Safety
on
College
Campus." Representatives
from the Bureau of Workers
C:ompensation will also be
on h'and to distribute safety
awards . for the year.
ReSCIVations must be made
by Friday, April 18 by calling Phyllis Mason at 2457228 or Paula McCloud at
245-7170.
Monday, Aprill8
GALLIPOLIS - Knights
of Columbus will have a
dinner meeting at the
Holiday lnn at 6:30 p.m.
Future plans will be discussed concerning some of
the needs within the community. · All members are
urged to attend.
Tuesday, April 29
GALLIPOLIS - GaJlia
County Veterans Service
Commission will meet at 4
p.m. at the Veterans Service
Office, 1102 Jackson Pike.

992 -6677

This year's Chautauqua ·
schedule is as follows:

di4

Community
events

Chu.n:h events

Auto-Owners

'

Gallia County calendar

Clubs and

competicivt price.. We !&lt;p.-u

There will be no traffic

iutem~ption

'

iheb&lt;ot insur1.nce protection at

j,

Sunday, April2o, 2008

Me~ County calendar

you.

II,

progressively worse. Although I do my best to ·b e

f

We
best.
aitcl protedion

,

11ll61·~

g~~

fenumne (barr, makeup, nails, dresses, ·etc.), it doesn't help

zens.

n

Maple Shade," LaPrise said.
Since Ameresoo &lt;eiitm:d
When completed, the pro- ipto an agnlenlent with 'the
LaPrise said.
ject· will cost about $1 mil- city, Gallipolis bas seen
fmm.-..~
iJ'he stonn sewer will take lion, he added.
new
water
mre-.rs,
runoff from the main sewer
Ameresco recently cmn- improved exterior Ii'gbting ·
reduce
capacity
at
lines
and
pleted
repairs and sealing to in the City Park, heating,
work will mean ·those
the
city's
wastewater
treatmore
than
100 manholes in ventilation .and air condistreets will be closed for
the city. Six were treated tioning at the tllllinrenanoe
construction work at cer- ment plant.
."lt will cut down on the with a substance known as .garage in addition to a new
tain times, although use of
alleys by traffic will be c;apacity at the plant, so Spectra · Seal to eliminate backup ,generator~ and
allowed.
we're running mostly in inflow problems.
new u;affic signals. . . . ·
'
American inventor and
Ohio
native Thomas
Edison.
from Page AI
Fincken · gave a preview
of his presentation on
Vootk Wru'kshqJ!s 10:30 a.m.
Edison to the Galli a County .
Present! y, Chautauqua is ·
Chamber
of Commerce at
·
Tuesday
Dorothy
Prince
sponsored by the Ohio
its
annual
meeting
Wednesday -Hank Fincken
Humanities Council and
Thursday
.
.
Thursday - Michael Hughes
features historical scholars
During
Chauatauqua,
Friday- Paxton Williams
who dress and act in
youth
workshops
will be
Saturday
·
George
Dauler
accordance to the individ·
I
0
:30
a.m.
and
held
at
uals they have researched
AduH Wodgihops 2:30p.m.
~
adult
at 2:30
to enligllJen audiences on
Tuct~day
Hru1k-Fincken
-::
----tl--~jlilll.,.free
thllt' :person's · lift: and
Wednesday - Michael Hughes
workshops do not consist
expenence. ·
Thursday - Paxton Williams
, of the scholars in character,
This year 's theme is
Friday - George Dauler
J but as themsel"&lt;es talking
"Inventors and Innovators,"
Saturday -Dorothy Prince
, ~ut the individuals they
and will feature five such
portray. Evening perforexperts to bring the lives of
Under the Tent 6:45 p.m.
mances will be held under
important historical figures
to evening progrants in a
Thesday - Alexander Graham Bell
the red and white striped
tent in the plll'k, as well as to
Wednesday - George Washington Carver
tent in the city park begin_youth and adub workshops
ning at 6:45 p.m.
Thursday -Andrew Carnegie
at
Bossard
Memorial •
Friday - Mary McLeod Bethune
For more information,
Library during the daytime.
Saturday - Thomas .Edison
,
contact ·the Gallia County
They
are
Michael
Convention and Visitors '
Hughes as telecommunicaBureau by phone at 446tions inventor Alexander as African American agri· Washington Carver, and of 6882 or online at www. visit· Graham Bell, Dorothy cultural inv.cntor George course, Hank Fincken as gallia.com.
Prince as African American
educator Mary McLeod
Bethune, George Dauler as
inustriaJist
Andrew
Carnegie, Paxton Williams

S fryTIIln-Si

•

De.r ~: I am a 40-year-old single wo~ who happens .to have broad shonJders. In my 30s, people occasion. ally JOked that ~ iooked like :! guy, and over the years, it's

was proclaimed Older
Americans Month by
the commissioners in
honor of older citi-

arguments thoroughly exam- "the board noted in .its order · Monday's . regular meeting

Chautauqua

Coimzy Commissioner
Joe Foster, Ana Maria
Pirs-Mendieta, board
member of the AAA 7,

Commissioners
President Justin
Fallon. May 2008

.a.m.

ined and rejected in the wellreasoned opinion, order and
CCI'tificate issued by the
1
filed ·a: !_!l~nse ta th!= .. .bo!mi.'' ,Jn .regards tn·tbl, evi. ceq:relit Wliliih stated "activigt r dentiary rulings, .AMP ·said 1
·groups offernot"bil\g new 'al\d . the. · ·~tivist · greupS"---are

.

BY Klmn' Ml:um•

May 2008 proclaimed Older Americaits Month .·

have simply restated earlier

Sewer

of the AAA7, Gallia

Shirley Doss of the ,
Gallia County Senior
Resource Center, and
Gallia&lt;County
·

'kOuuld

MAILBOX

Harassment requires
legal action

on Aging District 7.

1:45
p.m .
Monday. On
l'uesday, be
w,i)l speak at
9 a.m. .at

I'

AMP

ANNIE~S

CommissionefS Vice
President Dr. David
Smith, Kathy Lathey
of the Area ~ncy

IIIII

PageA3

AROUND TOWN

Sunday, April zo, zoos
from left are Gallia
County

'

GAlLIPOUS -

PageA2

REGIONAL

•

·- . .. - · . .
~

•

. ..

•

.,.1 th System .org

.

�(
.

.

. 6mlp~-intiad

•

Former

Hannan Trace

Elementary at .

NFL and University of
Notre
Dame
standout
Devon McDonald will
1ipC8k at 11 area schools
· April21-24 as part of~ tnur
oonduoted by the Galiia
County Fellowship of
Ouiistian Athletes.
McDenald was an AllAmeni~ linebacker who
belPOd Notre Dame to the
1'9!f2oal!ional d:ampionShip
befcm: ,eJribaAcing (en a professional career that saw
him
play
for
the
lodianapolis Colts and
- Arirona Cardinals.
"For the first 26 years of
my life, I wondered why I
was created," McDonald
said. ·'Even though I had
·graduated from Notre Dame
·ami was playing in my
faurtb year in ·t he NFL, my
life felt worthless.
"Te deal with those feelings, I got, drunk, smeked,
lied, cheated and more," he
added. "But these things
only dragged me further
into 'lmpelessness."
McDonald, said he consid'ered suicide.
"Then one night 1] realized
J oeeded to make~ .change,"
ihc said. •That change was
't o invite ~esus into· my life
and have a growing relation.Ship with .Him. With Christ.
I know bow to deal with trials and temptations and be
victmiaus Oller them.~
McDonald shares Iris
,amar.ing life story with
youth ilhroughout !l'he U.S.,
ibelping them to understand
and deal with pear pressures
dtey face today.
His
straightforward discussion
· ihelps youth make positive
llife decisions.
"Today, ~no longer worry
.about the 1pU11p0se for my
life," McDonald said. "I am
mamed· with .a family and
my desire is to give to others what has been given to
me. bojJe."
MoDonal.d will speak at

.

Connie Montgomery

Jackson High

o.-t

School, II :40

am. andGall:4.5
11a
.
·. p.m. at
, ·Aca&amp;my High School. and at
,fi:JO p.m. ;at ;the University of
Rio Grande/Rio Grande
Community College.
~Rio Grande assembly
i.s ·~ •t o the public, is free
of dwge and will feature
URG student -athletes, as ·
well.
"We :encourage everyone
to come see Devon at Rio
Grande," said Tim Stephens,
area director af FCA.
"Uni!leubt.edly, anyane who
comes will 'be blessed. It's a.
8Y EuZA11E111 R:aa.
Americans Month.
·great opportunity for people
ERIGEl@MYDAILVTRIBUNE.COM
Older Americans Month
to hear a professional athlete
is
observed nationally .each
proclaim his faith in ilesus
GALLlPOUS
May
to celebrate the accOm•Christ, just as he does in
Representatives
from
the
plishments of older citizens
public schools on a regular
Area
Agency
on
Aging
and to express gratitude for
basis. Many people don't
District
7
and
theGaJlia
the
contributions they have
realize just how much freeCounty
Senior
Resource
made,
and continue to
dom we have to talk about
Center
attended
Thursday's
make. to our communities.
God in schools . Devon
Gallia
·County
Gallia County is home to
McDonald is a great examCommissioners
meeting
to
over
4.500 older adults.
ple of how we can reach stuwitness
commissioners
proin Gallia County.
Seniors
dents fer Christ."
claim
May
2008
as
Older
and
around
Ohio can live
On A:jnil 23, McDonald
will speak at 8:30 .a.m. at
South Gallia !High :School,
follow.e d 'by an 11
appearance
at
Point
JACKSON (AP)
Vance of Jackson is facing
PJeasa,pt High SchOOl, and .a
1:30 p.m. appearance at Authorities say they've three counts of conspiracy
three
people to commit qggra11ated mur'Southwestern and IRio indicted
accused of conspiracy for der and one count of. conGrandi: relemcntaries.
On~24, ,at~:l5 a.m., their roles in the murderspiracy to conunit aggravatMCDorulld IW.ill be at Riv.er for-hire of a 72-ye·a r-old ed burglary.
Forty-nine-year-old
Valley ffigb 'School. At nl retired school administrator.
.a m. he will ,be at IRiver
Carol £vans' body was Randy !Faught of Jackson
Valley Middle School and found in her ransacked and 28~jear.old · Heather
will conclude his :tour at .[ home near Jackson last Speakman &lt;O{ !Richmo~e
p.m. ·at Green E:lementaey.
.month.
were indicJ;ed 1iln od'e count
For .more information,
The Jackson Coiml)' , of conspiracy to commit
.ca]] Stephens at (304) 633- indictments detail a ·schCme aggravated murder.
8353 or PCA Gallia County · in which Evans' strangulaJackson
County
President Joe Moore or tion followed the theft ·o f Prosecutor
Jonathan
Sarah Evans-Moore at (740) $20,000 in cash.
Blanton says more arrests
441-1111.
•
Fony-year-old
· Terry are expected.

-M~tctSI-

11c 1llill!/.,._

full and satisfying lives and
Older Ohioans are intecontribute to making the gral to a strong COOIKJJDy
state and ·the county a better and can be valuable assets
place through care giving, to employers through .revolunteer work., employ- careeiing, re-entering the
ment. and family and com- market, :getting job ~
munity leadership. Just as and more.
older Ohioans are the founThe governor of Ohio, the
dations of families, they can state's aging netwol'k, .and
also be the cornerstones of members . af ·Gallia County
communities, serving as tluink senior citizens for
leaders, ~ntors, and role being positive role model~
for all generations.
models.
' '

making a moot point since

onlyth&lt;6ncsr
insurartct

cornparUc.,
including

is on the agenda for next

'

'

'

{

Ill

lnsura~

I r

Company,

that, even if it coruiidered the and according to Shana
evidence that was excluded Eisel stein, spokesperSPn
by the administrative law from the Public Utilities
j11dges, it would .noL.haY,e '(;oD!_mission of Ohio, .a
altered its findings." ·.
det:isioli Will . be made at
The iegutist fii)" rebeaffiig · tha!' meeting:

ElltJitC Pl.amrlng.
Medicaid Planning.
Willsfl"ru.ts., Power of
Attorney. Guardianship,

. loif" IO"''fl!DCC• Lo.,g
. T enn HeAllb 01U11,
Medicare Supple.Mnts.,

which hu t&lt;uly earned the
!&lt;pUWiM 21 The

People~.

•No l'mllkm•.

Alit"' .oou.,:tf&gt;.

nwiy "otlict aavantOgc. of doi"'
husineos wirh an inclt:pendmt

Tax Mioinri.ZIIIion

in&amp;UDll« ~-

on Eastern,

Junes R. Hcury

.

Call 740-446-2033
To Schedule An
Appoin~ent

INSURANCE
PLUS
AGENCIES ,
INC .

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Open a Market-Watch now and get a 3.44%
Interest Rate (3.50% A.P.Y.) for the first 180 days
,(6 months). After 180 days, current rates apply.

Omo VALLEY BANK.

.-

·~

t

..

the Tribune office.

• AEE'W7T~I .......
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Public meetings ·

lllgnUpOnllnol _.....-....,.,

Member

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Gem

IN CONCERT!

r

.Jeff &amp; Sheri Easter
Suaday, AprillQ • 6 p.m.
Gallipoliw First Cbull'cla oftbe N.-reae
lUG First Aveuue • Gallipolis., Ohio
Free admisllion • !l.uve otT\.Ti n~ will be lllkc..'Tl

~

•

I

of her three children, she discovered a marble-sized lump in her breast.
The worri~ 30-year~old immediately consulted l;:.er doctor, Michael
Clark, DO, at River Rose Obstetrics and Gynecology.

radiation therapy with Aaron Williams, M D, at the Athens Cancer
Center in the Castrop Center. She also h ad chemotherapy anJ
continues taking a medication used for aggrt-ssive forms_ of cancel'.

An ultrasound indicated the lump was a cyst. A mammogram performed
at O'B~ness Memorial Hospital's mammography suite In the Casnop
Center also showed characteristics of a cyst. Dr. Clark sent Pamela to
surgeon Neal Nesbitt. MD. After attempts were made to drain the cyst,
.Dr. Nesbitt decided w perform a lumpectomy. The •
lump tested positive for cancer and Dr. Nesbitt .
performed two additional surgeries at the
Athens Surgery Center in the Castrop
Center and O'Bleness Memorial Hospital's
Outpatient Surgery Center.

"Everyone took such good care uf me. When 1 u •ent to the
Cancer Center, it was like going to visit a friend. When I had
my mammograms, the woman who did them always remembered
me, even if 1 hadn't been in.for a while.
.

"l discooered l UICl5 dealing with
stcq"e Ill cancer. A1tliowgh it UICl5
frightening' l fmmd the peopk at
O'Bimess to be .~~-"

"Many people thought I
should go to ColumbU-s for
my care. I'd teU t~rrr­
wh.y go all the way to

Columbus when there is
good care nearby!"

·

~
O'BLENESS {~
HEALTH SYSTEM
www .Ob len.,ss H

FREE in-home demonstration

... . ..

GALLIPOLIS - Mary
Maxine (Kemper) Fonner
will soon be celebrating her
84th birthday. Cards may be
sent to: 138 Buhl Morton
Road, .Apt. 201, Gallipolis.
Ohio4563L
GMLIPOUS - Mabel
Phillips will be celebrating
her 86th birthday on April 22.
Cards may be sent to her at
14840 State Route 7 South,
Gallipolis, Ohio 4563 1.
Ada
WELLSTON Chambers will celebrate her
94th birthday on April 22.
Cards can be sent to her at
Room
5142, , Jenkins
Memorial Road, Wellston,

Breast Health Services

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Card shower

Ohio 45692.
BIDWELL -· Charlotte
French will celebrate her
60th birthday on April 28.
Cards can be sent to her at
Holzer Senior. Care Center,
Room 114. 380 Colonial
Drive, Bidwell, Ohio4561 4.
BIDWELL Pauline
Shaver will celebrate her ·
93rd birthday on April 29. ·
Cards can be sent to her ai
Holzer Senior Care Center,
Room 111 ; 80 Colonial
Drive. Bidwell. Ohio45614.
GALLIPOLIS - DIJC ti&gt;
failing health. the family of
Annabel Houdashelt is
requesting a card shower.
Thinking of you cards can
be sent to her at 6657 State
Route 440. Hickory, K y.
42051.
E-mail community calendar items to .kkeUy@mydaiFax
lytribune.com.
announcements to . 4463008. Mail items to j2 5
Third Ave., Gallipolis, Olti(J
45631.
Announcements
may also be dropped off at

~l~iA;:;·;-;;iGaftfte~r~~,J;"EBi;;urns
~
· ·.of Logan stopped br~astf;ed~~-rhe ioung~sr ----;;:~r h~r ~~rgeri~s. Pamela beg~ -an in!livid~al~ed-regi~~n of

www.ovbc.com
-..:. 615-1311

ing eight Ohio counties, J 0
a.m .. Gallia County Senior
Resource Center. 1167 State
Route 160, Speakers are
Mike Muffell, health care
benefit organizer, and Jack
Wymer, PERl president.
Noon meal will be served ar
cost of $7. Pay in .advan ce
by 1\priJ •30 by sending the
money to Jane Colley. president, 981 Centerpoint
Road, Oak ·Hill. Ohio
45656.. For information
contact her at (740) 41 g.
6800.

"I'm ymtng and ha11e rw family history of fJreast cancer."

1-860-468-6682

-5600

because fol}cs .sometimes think r m a drag queen. .
.
Annie, 11 s awful. r ve experienced hamssment at woric
Although I reported it, my frnmer boss fired me out of fear
of being sued. When it happened at my next job, J didn't say
anything, but I can't stand it any longer. One of my co-work~ told everyone I had a ~secret gay life." Human Resounces
1s aware of the ~s!Mnt. ~everyone bad to sit through
clas~ on d.iSCI1IIIIJiatJOn. Still,,one of my managers tried to
override the passw()l:d ·on my voice mail after the .latest round
of :tumors in order to fiM out what I was hiding. fve even
shown oo-worters my birth certificate and pictures of me
~wing up. ·but it htlsn 'tmade any difference.
·
• 11111! a Christian woman and a virgin. This is incredibly
offens1ve to me. I nuely go out anymore. l' m tired ,o f the
stares, the offensive remarks and the .unfortunate things peole think about those J!ving as transvestites - even though
am not. My parents can't believe people could be so cruel
and assume it's all in my bead. Believe me, I wish it were.
rve gone to"counseling to get a handle on the stress. How
do other masculine-looking women cope with the stares,
the smirks, the giggles and the offens:ve comments? Newr (Ever) a Gay
.
.
· · De.r Never a Gay: 1be harassment you are getting at
w&lt;HK may be actionable under the law, so -please discuss it
with an attnmey. No one should be pemutted to bully or
treat you so shabbily {or fire you!) because of a perceived
impression af your·sexual orientation. As for the .rest. try to
be less defensive. You cannot control what others think, but
Thesday,~y 13
you can learn acceptance and develop confidence in your
GALLIPOLIS .- PERI
District meeting representown body - whatever it looks like. Since you are seeing a
counselor, ask to work on this.
.
. DearA• • :I have a 14-year-old grandson who is a hugger.
,-.eddy" will say .heDo and goodbye with a hug, which is great.
But my concern is how much he wants to hug in between.
h '10 oot unusual for Thddy to walk up two or tluee times during a visit and want a hug. And they aren't brief hugs. I am conPOMEROY Meigs
(:ellled about a boy this age wanting to be hugged so much, so
Conty Retired Teachers,
often. He gets plenty of affection from his parents. What should
noon 1uncheon, Trinity
Monday, April 2l
.be said to him and by whom?
CaKes ned Grandma
Church.
Second Street
LETART
Letart
Dear Grandma: Some kids, ·boys as well as girls, are
entrance.
Beth Shaver,
hug~ers. They love the physical .contact. and by itself, it's Township Trustees, 5 p.m.
executive
director
of Meigs
nothmg to worry about. Is this a recent phenomenon? Does
Council on Aging, to speak.
Teddy hug women more than men? (Some young buys use
Entertainment ~ some
buggmg as an acceprable way to tnuch women.) Is TC",ddy's
Meigs students of "Grease"
intellectnal and physical development normal? If so, he's
organin~tions
musical.Take papier prodlikely to tone down the hugging as he gets older, and 'we'd
ucts ·ad personal care items·
:let his parents handle it. Say nothing. .
Monday, April 21
for
women's shelter.
De.r Annie: ·You've printed a few letters from women
TUPPERS PLAINS who object to be~ called ''you guys" in restaurants and Special meeting of Eastern
other places. I feel JUst the opposite.
High School Music Boosters,
· I am one of four female eleictricians among 200 males. I 6:30 p.m., music room.
absolutely hate it when someone comes in and says, "You
RACINE - .Racine Area
Sunday, ~pril 241
guys and lady" because they are emphasizing my gender more Community Organization
MIDDLEPORT - Kelly
.than my presence already does. There aren't that many women 6:30 p.m. at Star Mill Park. Perry will sing at the I a.m.
in this field so we dOn't need to be pointed out every time the Potluck meal. New mem- service of the obson
.boss wants In address us. In this field. it's more respectful of bers welcome.
Christian
Fellowship
my P\')Sition to be one of the "guys.'' - Saplaw, Mkb.
Tuesday, April 22 ·
.Church, __
Mi~dleport.
-'-.· .UIIIIr- Slgluw: In ~nt year£, "yo.u._guys" has bewme _ ATHE_NS -_- So~therh _ He~~eL'\Yhlti.ds. tlu::,pastor.
·gimder-neutral, .and . we' re sure many women feel such Consoruum for Ch1ldren
S8turday, Aprill6
monikers mean the men consider them equals and valued Board meeting, 10 a.m. at
CARPENTER - First
for what they contribute In the job.
festival · at
the offices. 20 East Circle cornbread
Happy Passover to all our Jewish readers.
Drive, Building 20, Third Catpenter Baptist Chunch,
Alutie's ~_is writfa by Kildly Milcld flllll M~y Floor, Athens.
Ohio 143. Crafts, food,
Sl!,tlr, . . _ dil•softlteAIIIIlandmcoburul. Pkase
Thursday, April 24
mountain bike race, live
POMEROY
- Meigs . gospel music, free train
~--- JfiiiT ~ to llllllies~Mt, or
~ 111: Alutie's Mr"*u, P.O. Box Ufl190, ~. IL
Soil and Water Conservation rides, free vendor space.
MJIU. To jill4 0111 fffllfY llbowt AluW 's Mailbox, tllld twM1 Board of Supervisors meet· Cornbread
cook-off.
}ieitblrn 6yodler0w'rs Sj·n£c¢e writerslllld cmtooflists, ing, 11:30 a.m. , district Contact Pastor Whitt Akers,
·tisit tile Crnfn SJ'IIIfit"llte mil~~ www.COIUitNs.rom. office, Hiland Road.
591-1236 for rules .
. &gt; ,,

114Court
Pomeroy

3.50% A.P.Y.

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'

Sunday, April 20
GAl,LIPOLIS - Knife
Club organizational meet.
ing, 4:30 p .m., Gallia
County Junior FaiJNOunds.
Please attend if interesteii.
Monday, Aprilll
GALLIPOLIS - ·Gallia
County Ohio .Township
Association meeting. 7
p .m., Gallia County Senior
Res&amp;rce Center, 1167 State
Route 160.
GAlLIPOLIS - GalliaMeigs Friends of Scouting
annual banquet, 6:30 p.m.;
First Church of Goli, State
Route 141, sponsored by
Gallipolis Lions Club and
Bob Evans Farms. Guest
speaker is Donnie Jones,
men's baskietbal1 coach at
Marshall .University.
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia
County Garden Club to
meet at the C.H. McKenzie
Agricultural Center, 7:30
p.m.
Tuesday, April 22
EWING TON
American Legion Post 161
will meet at 7:30 p.m. in
Ewington Academy. New
offig~rs will be installed and
plans developed for future
events. All members are
urged to attend and enjoy
the fellowship afterwards.

RIO
GRANDE
Southeast Ohio Safety
Council will meet at noon in
ConferenCe Room C of
Davis University Center on
the ' campus
of
Lhe
0 niversity
of
Rio
Grande!Rio
. Grande
Community College The
speaker will be Aaron
Quinn, safety dinector for
the · University of Rio
Grande, on tbe topic of
"Safety
on
College
Campus." Representatives
from the Bureau of Workers
C:ompensation will also be
on h'and to distribute safety
awards . for the year.
ReSCIVations must be made
by Friday, April 18 by calling Phyllis Mason at 2457228 or Paula McCloud at
245-7170.
Monday, Aprill8
GALLIPOLIS - Knights
of Columbus will have a
dinner meeting at the
Holiday lnn at 6:30 p.m.
Future plans will be discussed concerning some of
the needs within the community. · All members are
urged to attend.
Tuesday, April 29
GALLIPOLIS - GaJlia
County Veterans Service
Commission will meet at 4
p.m. at the Veterans Service
Office, 1102 Jackson Pike.

992 -6677

This year's Chautauqua ·
schedule is as follows:

di4

Community
events

Chu.n:h events

Auto-Owners

'

Gallia County calendar

Clubs and

competicivt price.. We !&lt;p.-u

There will be no traffic

iutem~ption

'

iheb&lt;ot insur1.nce protection at

j,

Sunday, April2o, 2008

Me~ County calendar

you.

II,

progressively worse. Although I do my best to ·b e

f

We
best.
aitcl protedion

,

11ll61·~

g~~

fenumne (barr, makeup, nails, dresses, ·etc.), it doesn't help

zens.

n

Maple Shade," LaPrise said.
Since Ameresoo &lt;eiitm:d
When completed, the pro- ipto an agnlenlent with 'the
LaPrise said.
ject· will cost about $1 mil- city, Gallipolis bas seen
fmm.-..~
iJ'he stonn sewer will take lion, he added.
new
water
mre-.rs,
runoff from the main sewer
Ameresco recently cmn- improved exterior Ii'gbting ·
reduce
capacity
at
lines
and
pleted
repairs and sealing to in the City Park, heating,
work will mean ·those
the
city's
wastewater
treatmore
than
100 manholes in ventilation .and air condistreets will be closed for
the city. Six were treated tioning at the tllllinrenanoe
construction work at cer- ment plant.
."lt will cut down on the with a substance known as .garage in addition to a new
tain times, although use of
alleys by traffic will be c;apacity at the plant, so Spectra · Seal to eliminate backup ,generator~ and
allowed.
we're running mostly in inflow problems.
new u;affic signals. . . . ·
'
American inventor and
Ohio
native Thomas
Edison.
from Page AI
Fincken · gave a preview
of his presentation on
Vootk Wru'kshqJ!s 10:30 a.m.
Edison to the Galli a County .
Present! y, Chautauqua is ·
Chamber
of Commerce at
·
Tuesday
Dorothy
Prince
sponsored by the Ohio
its
annual
meeting
Wednesday -Hank Fincken
Humanities Council and
Thursday
.
.
Thursday - Michael Hughes
features historical scholars
During
Chauatauqua,
Friday- Paxton Williams
who dress and act in
youth
workshops
will be
Saturday
·
George
Dauler
accordance to the individ·
I
0
:30
a.m.
and
held
at
uals they have researched
AduH Wodgihops 2:30p.m.
~
adult
at 2:30
to enligllJen audiences on
Tuct~day
Hru1k-Fincken
-::
----tl--~jlilll.,.free
thllt' :person's · lift: and
Wednesday - Michael Hughes
workshops do not consist
expenence. ·
Thursday - Paxton Williams
, of the scholars in character,
This year 's theme is
Friday - George Dauler
J but as themsel"&lt;es talking
"Inventors and Innovators,"
Saturday -Dorothy Prince
, ~ut the individuals they
and will feature five such
portray. Evening perforexperts to bring the lives of
Under the Tent 6:45 p.m.
mances will be held under
important historical figures
to evening progrants in a
Thesday - Alexander Graham Bell
the red and white striped
tent in the plll'k, as well as to
Wednesday - George Washington Carver
tent in the city park begin_youth and adub workshops
ning at 6:45 p.m.
Thursday -Andrew Carnegie
at
Bossard
Memorial •
Friday - Mary McLeod Bethune
For more information,
Library during the daytime.
Saturday - Thomas .Edison
,
contact ·the Gallia County
They
are
Michael
Convention and Visitors '
Hughes as telecommunicaBureau by phone at 446tions inventor Alexander as African American agri· Washington Carver, and of 6882 or online at www. visit· Graham Bell, Dorothy cultural inv.cntor George course, Hank Fincken as gallia.com.
Prince as African American
educator Mary McLeod
Bethune, George Dauler as
inustriaJist
Andrew
Carnegie, Paxton Williams

S fryTIIln-Si

•

De.r ~: I am a 40-year-old single wo~ who happens .to have broad shonJders. In my 30s, people occasion. ally JOked that ~ iooked like :! guy, and over the years, it's

was proclaimed Older
Americans Month by
the commissioners in
honor of older citi-

arguments thoroughly exam- "the board noted in .its order · Monday's . regular meeting

Chautauqua

Coimzy Commissioner
Joe Foster, Ana Maria
Pirs-Mendieta, board
member of the AAA 7,

Commissioners
President Justin
Fallon. May 2008

.a.m.

ined and rejected in the wellreasoned opinion, order and
CCI'tificate issued by the
1
filed ·a: !_!l~nse ta th!= .. .bo!mi.'' ,Jn .regards tn·tbl, evi. ceq:relit Wliliih stated "activigt r dentiary rulings, .AMP ·said 1
·groups offernot"bil\g new 'al\d . the. · ·~tivist · greupS"---are

.

BY Klmn' Ml:um•

May 2008 proclaimed Older Americaits Month .·

have simply restated earlier

Sewer

of the AAA7, Gallia

Shirley Doss of the ,
Gallia County Senior
Resource Center, and
Gallia&lt;County
·

'kOuuld

MAILBOX

Harassment requires
legal action

on Aging District 7.

1:45
p.m .
Monday. On
l'uesday, be
w,i)l speak at
9 a.m. .at

I'

AMP

ANNIE~S

CommissionefS Vice
President Dr. David
Smith, Kathy Lathey
of the Area ~ncy

IIIII

PageA3

AROUND TOWN

Sunday, April zo, zoos
from left are Gallia
County

'

GAlLIPOUS -

PageA2

REGIONAL

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.,.1 th System .org

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�PageA4

OPINION
"The ~ I lite is thal
he speaks with maral clari-

125lblld A - • C Flpclla, Ohio

(740) 446-2342 • FAX (740) 446 3008

-~
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
.
'

DanGooddch
Publisher

Kevin Kelly
MaJilaging Editor

Diane Hill
Oontf:oller

Leners to the editor are welcome. They should be less
than 300 won'ls. A-ll letter&amp; are ~ubject to editing and must
be signed and include address and telephone IUUPiber. No
uMigned krters .will be published. uners shoM/d be irr
good taste, ,addressing issues, not personalities.

:READER ~s

VIEW

snext
Fire tUn bill prompts questimis
O..Mtw.:
A few years -ago, our volunteer firemen circulated infor.mation about placing a ~evy on the -city ballot to allow for

me &lt;OpCl'llliion 41Dd upkeep of the fire department The residents ;appro¥ed our velunteers' request and passed the levy
• to 111PCJ'3te tbe fue department.
· Now we see Where 'the village commission wants "more
11110ney" from homeowners (who have insurance) .t a ".oper:ate" the fu:e !department.
My first guestion to our village .o1fu:ia.l~ is, what ~
pened or _is 'llliPJlening to the levy money that -was voted m
fm this pllliJlOSC?
:
.
Secood, should an audit of that fund be requested to see
where the money is or has gone?
·
EBI?h townShip that the Gallipolis Fire Department covers
:(Addison. Clay, Galliwlis and Green) pay the ~e of
Gal.lipGlis a substantial yearly fee that shouid be used to
oo:ver lhe cost of fue protecl:lon to their respective township. However, that money isn't given to .•the fire department, ~t lis placed lin the village general fund.
.
If.a ~e resident gets a bill fium tbe village auditor for
the servtce of ·~ protection (that thc;y are ~y pa)injl
for t:Jn:ongh ttheir Jocal 1tax Je...y) and they .knoWIDgly subDUt
,that bill to their insurance carrier, is that considered insurance fi:aud1
· Is it kBal to ibill a township resident for a seMce when
.their po11tica'l mpresentatives (trustees) alreildy contracted ·
. and~ payjqg for •tha:t service?
· Where will this kind of madness st(i)p? H d1ere 'is a
prowler .amuod· my bouse 4lnd I call the p0lice, are they
,going to send 1116 a lbill for ·lhat ne~t?
Again, I ask, Where is the fire 1evy 111011ey glililg? What
with it since it w&amp; voted in place?
'have

w1&amp;:!ased .

IJ.
I'
' G ..I Pdf

ty," said President Bush
about Pope Benedict XVI
on the way to :Andmws Air
Force Base. Explaining
why for the first time lin bis
pl'esidency be chose to
moet 1111 ani'liog head of
state I31her than wait to
receive bim .at the White
House, he (l()Otinued, "'t's a
sign of respect. He's a
major figure in 1he world.
M01'e poeple listen .t o bim
th4lD anycme in the wood."
If it was unusual, for
George Bush; it was even
more unusual for Coltie,
who received an mvitation
·•t o jOin him, Laura Bush
and their daughter Jenna lin
tlte limeusine from the
White House to Andrews.
The president deamy want.e d to tell a reporter personally why the pope·~ visit
mattered so much te rum.
"He is a worldwide spiritual leader, miUiens of
our citizens are excited
about having him in
America," said the world's
most powerful leader, who
was pretty excited himself.
"Some hardened sows in
the White House are
dee,p ly teuched about
meeting him." ·
That's not to say that the
president and the pontiff
see eye to eye on every
.issue - far from it. Bush
knows
that
Benedict
strongly opposed the U.S.
invasion of Iraq, though be
sayli the pope has come to
believe that a "precipitous
· .drawdown of troops" .could

So Republicans are using
American immigrants, was the immigration issue to
on the pope's mind as well protect themselves from
as he' traveled to the United challenges on the right.
States, where almost 40 . lbat's 001 something the
peroent of the Catholic president thought he'd
population is Hispanic. want to get into with the
Benedict told tepooc:rs that pope, but - his irritation
he would talk with Bush evident - he did expect to
about the ct:aekdown on explain his disappointment
inunigrants in this oountry, with the failure of immiurging him to tight vio- gration ·reform.
But mostly, President
lence "so that immigrants
Bush,
like the "hardened
may lead dignified lives."
souls~
he
joked about, just
On that subject, the presw41Dted
to
be in the pope's
ident welcomes the .pontiff's suppolt. 'Ottholicism presence, as millions of
Americans
do.
is the religion of the newly other
Though
polls
show
majori.lllrived. When you lllrive 4lS
a stranger in a strange land, ties of Catholics disagree
it's· important to have lov, with Benedict XVI on one
ing sisters and brothers issue or another, they are
welcoming you. There's no lining up for ticlrets to his
better place to find a safe Masses, jostling each other
haven and love than out of the way for a space
by .the window as his
church."
motorcade
passes by.
Asked if he thought
¥on don't have to agree
immigrants were discriminated against because they with the pope to be touched
·are Catholic, the ~sident by him. That's what the
responded, "No. That has president understands as he
happened in the past, but says simply, "Every time
now it's that the people r ve been around a Holy
who are immigrants hap- Father, I come away a betpen to be Catholic." And ter person." That's why the
theugh Bush understands President of the United
the ''frustration" · over States was so eager to welimmign1tion, be. personally come Benedict XVI to
· believes that "the newly America. He was ready to
arrived invigorate our spir- drink in a dose of that
it and our soul."
· "moral clarity."
(Steve Roberts' latest
So his frustration is not
book
is "My Farhers'
with 'immigrants but with
members pf Congress who HoMses: Memoir of a
"draw themselves such safe Family " (William Morrow,
districts" that the only 2005 ). Steve and Cokie
thing they wOI'I)' about is Roberts can be contacted
. e-mail
at
someone running .ag~st by
them in their own parties: stevecokie@ gmail.com.)
ulady the plight of Latin

endanger the ·Chris)ian
minooity there and in the
rest of 'the region.
A:nd .e ven .a s an elaborate
White House ceremony
celebratling the pope's
birthday was under way,
with more than 13;000 exubc.mlt well-wishers crowding onto the grounds, the
·Supreme Court handed
down a .decision .uphOlding
the use of lethal injections
· lin eliecutions. The death
penalty is another area of
sharp . · disagreement
between the two men.
The Catholic Church
viev.:s the death penalty as
a violation of its pro-life;
principles and ·though the
president disagrees on that
Issue, it is the pro-life message that Bush finds most
about
appealing
Catholicism. "I will bring
up how very important it is
for the Chul:ch to maintain
a strong position on life
and our shared vision for
helpintl with hunger and
education and health care.
And •I will make clear that
my concern is not just
Afro-centric, that we. need
programs for the poor here
m our own hemisphere."
This hemisphere, partie-

James Matthew Kiskis; 76, of Gallipolis, died Thursd;ty,
Apnl 17, 2008, at Ross Heart Hospital in Columbus.
He was born ~arch 25, 1932, in Springfield, son of the
late Georg.e Charl~s and Dorothy Jane Kiskis.
In adihtton to his parents, he was preceded in death by
a brother. George Jr., and by three sisters, Agnes, Patricia
and Mary.
J~ graduated. from CathOlic Central High School in
.
SP!"ngfield. He was employed by International Harvester and
. retired from Robbins and Myers after 42 years of SC"JVioe. He
was an Amateur Radio Operator (W8PA) with "extra" classification. James enjoyed computers and his two cats.
. He_will be sadly missed by his wife of 28 years, Norma
,8. Kisk1s! chtldren, Brenda (Ross) Elliott, James Joseph
(~el'l)') Ktsk1s, Thomas (Nancy) Kiskis, Kennet;h (Karen)
Ktskts, Karen (David) McCarty, Damel (Cecelia) Kiskis,
_a nd Elame (Greg) Fo!lbes; 10 grandchildren, four great- ·
gr~ndch1ldren and ·several stepgrandchildren; and a
.brother. John.
· ,
·
. Al~ surviving are his . fomtel' wife, Zoie Taylor, and a
Sister-m-law, Esther (Bill) Fanning. He also had an extended family of nieces, nephews and cousins.
Services will be 11 a.m. Monday, April 21, 2008, at the
'wauJlh-Halley-Wood Fuueral Home, with Monsignor .
Wilham Myers offi~iating. Burial will follow in Gravel Hill
Cemetery at Cheshire. Friends may call at the funetal borne
on Monday fro,m I 0 acm. until the time of the·service.
Grandsons and sons-in-law. will serve .as pallbearers.
ln lieu of flowers, connihutions can be made to either the
St. f:..oui_s · ca~olic , Church Building Fund, 85 State St.,
Gallipolis. Ohto 45631, or the Perennial Cat Shelter, P.O.
Box 48, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 .
An online guest registry is available at waugh-halleywood.com.
--..

Sylvia Rape
. S~lvia Rupe, 82, of Middleport, passed away Saturday,
April 19, 2008, at Overbrook Nursing and Rehabilitation
Center in MiQdlepon.
·
. She was born April 28, 1925, in Gallia County, daughter
of the late Earl and Ruth (Shoemaker) Miller.
She worked in a sewing factory for most of her life.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded by her busband, Stanley . Rupe; stepfather, Harlow "Bug" Tate; and
.siste'rs, Clara Jane Rinehart, Beulah Dean Stewart and
Dorothy Trel!heit.
She ts survtved by daughters, Carolyn and Larry Little of
Mason, W.Va., Roger and Terry Rupe of Wellington, Ohio,
Ruth and Ronnie Sopata of Seven Hills, Ohio, and Trudy
and John Marshall of -'Las -vegas, Nev.; .grandchtldten,
Cheryl, Vicki, Scott Kristi, Melissa, John. Craig, Tony,
Roger H, Brian and Liz; 12 jp'eat-grandchildren; sister,
Mary J?ru~ond; and several meces and .nephews.
.Serv1ces w1ll be 1.:30 P·~· Tuesday, Apnl22, 2008, at the
Fisher-AndersQn~McDamel
Funeral
Home
in
M_•ddleport. &lt;?ffictaung w11l be ~e Rev. John Sallaz. Burial
w~ follow to the Gravel Hdl Cemetery at Cheshire.
Fnends may ca1l at the funeral home from 2 to 4 and 6 to 8
p.m.~onday, Apnl21 , 2008.
Online condolences may be sent to www.andersonmcdaniel.com. ·

Are Americans bitter? Ukll, duh

Democratic contest is trying crying out for help that all
to convince Democratic vot- too often never came. Like
ers thal she is better suited to ·the Katrina victims still
run against McCain because struggling to rebuild their
Republicans have already lives, the incompetent Bush
rifled through the Clinton's admimsttation
·
Donna
struggles
-u'le,
luggage. What nonsense! each day to rebuild its tat- -•Besides, the Democratic tered reputation.
race is not about choosing a
For Democrats to win in
CBDdidate the ·Republicans the f~l, they must give the
cannot ruin with lies, distor- American people a reason
Food prices are skyrocket- tions and divisions. It's to hope, to overcome divimg. Jobs- art drying up. about selecting the best can- sion, and to come togQther
And their COIDltry is in a didate to lead America at .a to solve our country' s probwar
with no exit strategy vety tough time.
Iems. No marter who wins,
: Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be
that
is
costing
them
$5,000
I.t's
obvious
~t
~e
let
us all hope that he or she
'less than 300words. All letters are subject .to editing,
every second of evety da:v Clinto.n
camp31gn
ls did so because of their
,IIII.IS.t be signed, and .include .addrt!ss ·and 1elqihone
in taxpayer money. 1heif assunnug th_at Obama will stands on the issues and not
'number. No ':'nsigned letters will be published. Letters
political system has failed he the _nonunee. And ~y their mastery of "gutter
/J£__in__gnod taste, addr11~sing issues, n{lt perthemr.........,..,.
, -:--------:-- ~ JOmg _overl!QMI . wtlh politics." _ . . ,
·sonalmes. Letters ofthanks to oig/JIIiUJtli11U imJJ liU1i-. ·
Are they bitter? Dub.
relentless negative attacks,
Voters in Pennsylvania,
. ~ viduols will not be acceplfd for publication.
I am not sure why Obama hOping that something will Indiana, North Carolina, ·
should apologize for trying , sti~. ~ut ~ truth. is that Oregon,
Montana,
to etf~:.::: ·the emotional thetr di~ons will hurt Kentuc~, Puerto Rico and
and
ial hardship of Democrats _m ~ovember. .
others now have a choice.
our fellow Americans.
In anb.clpabon of hts They can accept Obama's
Reader Services
Perhaps Clinton 81ld John presidential . bid, Robert e~tplanation that he poorly
Cw: •• _,..,.
McCain, who is still strug- Kennedy wrote ''To Seek a used words and phrases
Third Avenue, .Gallipolis, OH
45631
.
Periodical
postage
paid
Our main •axmm i1 all is 1D be
~!ooi~tes ~~ gling to find his voice on Newer World," a book that . that genuinely do not
acarralll. n,... 1&lt;row of an errur in a at Gallipolis.
the economy and all things declared it is ·time to face reflect their spirit or they
alory, please call one af our netu$0Uiiii: ••mba : The Anoc:iated Pren,
~g
for
.the
·nomination.
local,
think: that if they can !he truth about the critical can return to the old-style
the
West
Virginia Preas
After
a
seven-week
time
create
the impression that 1ssues of the. day. Like tbe politics of division, distracQw l. . MiihpiB:
Asaocialion, and the Ohio
out, ·Sens. Hillary Clinton Obama is an out-of-touch pope's acknowledgement lion and distortions. All
NaWIIpaper Aaoociation.
1iri...r • Gallipolis, OH
.
, , _ , Send address cor·
and Barack Obama took elitist, they can nortray .of the . pain and suffering · three candidates have
{'1'411) •• 2342
rections
to
the
Gallipolis
Dally
the
stage at the
ABC
News
·
by
'"
Sentin&lt;:l• Pomeroy, OH
Hall
debate
in themse1ves as be..mg m
caused
pe dophile weakne sses. None of them
Constitution
Tribune, 825 Third Avenue , .
touch with the fears, the Catholic priests, the three is perfect As our next pres{'1'411) IIIN155
Gallipolis, OH 45631.
......... Pl. Pleasanl, wv
Philadelphia to talk about uncertainty and, die daily remaining candidates must ident, they will all sac;
· "binergate."
('Iioo
had grind of ordinary wodting use the home stretch of the things that will not Eit we
(JIM) 675-1338
•tt bl'an..._
Clinton ·has a short
1nl"'nlV'V
---·• people.
primary season before the with us. But, now is the
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to
appeal
to
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fortlte
coungeneral election starts to time they show ·humility
span;
in
trying
'
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t Our
:-• I
Galipolis, OH
luncb-bucketlblue-collar try and for the Democratic tell us the truth. Enoogh is and gratitude for the great......., ........... ,;'1.10
-•JMJtllbune.com
Democratic voters in .1992, Party, people are channel- enough. The voters are not ness of America that has
Sentinel • Puii&amp;CJV, OH
,.....em her husbmd made exactly ( iJ!1 their bitterness into only looking for a "fighter" given us all so many opporO n e - ........ ,'111.27
US WJIIg Jstlj MllliiMI.coM
'1the
same m;g~t as ~ political pllticipa- ,who has been through the · ~unities. No matter what
...... Pl. Pleaant, wv
Obama.). Nevflltheless, uon by · donating their fears of smears and jeers. happens, the pope's visit
·;';:I, ~
tbtt lo . . ~ DollfT...... No
.
Obama.
for all his elo- 1D7lDC}' and voting in RIOOI'd They desperately want reminds us of the power of
....,• •"by n'llll.pwne..:~m­
q~ and abilities, fouod mnnl-ets.
someone who will fight for hope and renewal - some.
wtwehaml~---·· 719 .
Owl 7 77
himlidf
once
apin
on
1be
What
is
goiiiB
is
''kitcbcn
them
- not just each other. thing the candidates should
~· 0 ro•• OH
.
.
II
IIIII
I
:J lpiiiQIII
defensive .a nd had to back- sink lmd DlOII1I2Jtum." The
George W. Bush's presi- start echoing on the came1;rds · lllalllaCoufttJ
Seulilel• PIAtltil~. OH
trld:
.
and
his Cliaton . campaign
is dency officially ended the paign trail.
1 3 - ... .. .......'3226
wa¥ through
st the lltem{Jtin&amp; to set up a SUJI}'- morning Hurricane Katrina
(Donna Brazile is a polit2
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........ Pl. Pleaclt, wv
enb.re
debate.
What
a
line
for
a
.
win
10
made
shore
on
the
Gulf
ical
conunentator on CNN,
5 2 - ........ .. "127.11
• .,••,. •a' ~
shame. .
Pennsylvania, where sbe is Coast. Americans watched ABC and NPR, contriblllOo 7 I 7 Coo 1f11r
.
Qf
course
people
are
bitheavily favored, thal spins in horror as the floodwaters ing colwnnist to Roil Ca/J,
(USPS . . .. ,
1 3 - ......... .. .'53.55
ter
are
losing
their
the
IUII1'IIli ve that Obama rose, dead bodies floated r~ newspaper of, Cdpitt?l
Ollio flllleJ Plillllllllng Co. 26 w.et&lt;&amp; ' ....... ' ..'107.10
bomes.
Y ~ paying canoot heat Md:ain. The · ,down the streets and people Hz,ll, and former campaiw.z
Publiahed every Sunday, 825 52 Weaks .. ' ' .......'21421
almost 54 I gallon for gas. furmer fruot-nmner of the ·sat slrai¥led oo their 7:o&lt;Jfs manager for AI Gore.)

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

'slw.llk!

&amp;unbap Ql;imt~ -&amp;entinrl

Political pundits work
hard, often at a moment's
call. I lrnow thi~ becanse
I'm
one
of
them.
Throughout this unconv.entiona! political season, we
· ~ve heel! cerythingalled_
upofronto
mterpret ev ·
m
·the candidates' religious
views to denouncing the
sermons · of a CBDdidate's
f\)7'IIDCI' pastor. The arrival
of His Holiness Pope
Benedict XVI bumped
many of us off cable television. 'l'hank God (no pun
intended). I dislike wearing
my faith on my sleeve. ·
·The major themes of
~oJ)C Betlien?ldUict:~hts'steric
..sU "to ·
fii.LCU tales;
which contains the thirdhugest nlllllber of Catholics
on the planet, was hOpe, a
desire for unity (especially
in the church) and the need
tQ overcome divisioos. The
pope could have aimed that .

___ _
--·--il.,

o.w,_. ... , .......

backJ::::

7

the.fite

' ..

___
____ ---- _______ _______________________..___
..

Jmmunbations scheduled

OoU show slated

Community dinner

Luncheon in the park

.,_,

•

SIDcm

·

AS60CIATEDPRESSWRIT£RS

RIO GRANDE - Two
upcoming recitals itt the
University
of
Rip
Grande/Rio
Grande
Community . College will
feature the musical talents
of several students.
On Tuesday, April 22, the
Departmental Recital will
be held in the Berry Fine
and Performing Arts Center
. beginning at 8 p.m., and
.will showcase the musical
talents of Rio Grande students performing on a variety of instruments.
And on Saturday, April
26, Rio Grande studen?
Andrea
McCabe
of
Gallipolis will · hold her
senior recital beginning al 3
p .m. in the Berry Fine and
Performing Arts Center.
Both performances are free
and open to the public.
· Professor
Assistant
David Lawrence explained
.that the Departmental
Recital would featur.e students of all class leve ls ut
. Rio Grande who are studying music. Some students
will play instruments,
while others will si ng. All
of the students are very talented and will perform · the
music they learned during
the academic year.
This is the end of the year
.recital for the students, and
area residents will be treat-ed to a wide range of musical styles in the show.
McCabe's senior recital
will feature her performing
on the French hom. She is
·studying music education at
Rio Grande and is an excellent student.
· "She's going to be one of
our
bes1
teachers,"
Lawrence said.

. . Sbe · .is an . experl~!!c~d ~. WEST CHESlER. Pi. mstrumental mus1cian who Barack Obama cast his
has also sung with the Democratic presideD~ rival
Grande Chorale vocal Saturday as a game-player
music group on campus, who uses "slash and burn"
Lawrence said.
tactics and can't be trusted to
"She just has a passion to say what she believes, a
do this," Lawrence said.
sharp jab at her character in
McCabe loves music and the closing chapter of the
loves teaching, and is very pivotal Pennsylvania primaorganized, Lawrence said. ry campaign.
.
He added that she will do an
Hillary Rodham Clinton
excellent job working with implored voters to look
her students and helping beyond "whoop ·dee. do"
them learn.
.
speeohmaking and take a
McCabe also is an out- hard look at who's got the
standing musician, and know-how to deal with the
Lawrence said her senior nation's 'burdens.
recital should be v~ry enter·'J want everyone thinktaining.
.
ing," she declared, as ,if to
Senior music studen?s at suggest those backing
Rio Grande are required to Obama are not. Her implihold their own recitals, and cation was clear: She's subthe concerts serve as a final stance, he 's flash.
exam of sorts for them. The
Altogether. the campaign
students are judged on how for Tuesday's contest was
well they perform, .and they closing with the sort of acriwork vet:y hard preparing mony that party leaders
fnr the redtafs. ·
·
_wish would end in a, hurry,
· MCCabe is '1lll honur ·sru- before it l1numges-rnc nomic·
dent who bas played a big nee in the fall. Obama 's critpart in the fme arts depart- icisms were direct, while
ment during her time at Rio Clinton's were oblique. At
Grande. Lawrence invites various times in the pro~
all area residents to her tracted contest, it's been the
senior recital so they · can other way around.
enjoy listing to her perform.
The primary Tuesday folThe Fine Arts Department · lows a monthlong hiatus in
at Rio Grande has been voting, a gap the candidates
holding several concerts in filled in large measure by
the · • Berry -Fine
and sullying each other.
Performing Arts· Center in
Party officials known as
Apri I. The Jazz Ensemble, superdelegates continued
Rock Band, Symphonic' drifting toward Obama in that
Band ·and Masterworks interim, increasing his edge
Chorale performances have
already been held, but the
Grande Chorale will hold its
spring concert OIJ Friday,
April25 beginning ·at 8 p.m.
This concert is also free and
open to the public.

an.,.. ...... .....

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

Local Briefs

Ate LIZ

1.~ ·

Teday ii.s Sunday, Aptill.20, the 11 l•th day ,of 2008. There
are 255 days left m the year.
· Toclay's ~1ign lin History: On Apr.il 20, 1•999, the ·
Columbine ' gh SChool massacre took place in Littleton.
&lt;Colo., as twe students, Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold, shot
and killed 12 classmates and one teacher before :taking their
own lives.
.
· On this .date: In 1808, Napoleon m, Emperor of the
•French, was bam lin P.aris.
·
· In l 836, Congress voted to esta~ish the Wisconsin ·
'Territory.
• 11n ·1'889, Adolf Hitler was lbom m Braunau am [no,
·Austria.
: Thought for Today: "'lbe law that will wolik: is merely the
'summing up in legislative form •o f the moral judgment that
1be community has already reached." -Woodrow Wtlson
AmeriCllll president (1836-1'924). .
'

.Charles 0 . Land.ers, 78, of Welchtown Hill, Pomeroy,
Hazel Thelma (Rollins) Mattox, 79, of leon, W.Va. died
d1ed Thursday. Apnl 17 ,' 2008, at Holzer Medical Center in Thursday, April 17, 2008, at her residence.
G:illipolis, following an extended illness.
Services will be I p.m. Monday in the Crow-Hussell
He wa~ born Jan. 3, 1930, in Pomeroy, soo of the late Funeral Home, Point Pleasant, W.Va., with the Rev. David
Charles and Aliza (Gregory) Landers.
Morgan officiating. Burial will be in the Jack Yauger
He was a retired employee of the Exoelsior Salt Worb.
Cemetery, Leon. Friends may call at the funeral home on
His wife, Clarbelle Landers, s'lfvives. Also surviving are Monday from II a.m. until 1 p.m.
his daughters and sons-in-law, Linda Beaver of Columbus,
An online guest registry is available at www.crowhusBamara and James Hudson of Middleport, 81ld Trina selllb.com.
.
Mayes of Gallipolis; sons 4lnd daughters-in-law, Michael
Hudson of Pomeroy, Suzanna Stewart of Texas, and Anetta
Nitt of Racine; brothers, Charles 0 . Landers II of
Gallipolis, and Raymond L. Landers' of Racine; brother-inlaw, Anthony D. Hudson of Pomeroy; and 22 gr;onddJildren
and several great- grandchildren.
.
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by a stepson, Alonzo D. Hudson.
Services wi II be at I0 a.m. Tuesday, Apil 22, 200&amp;, at the
9ALIJ:ffiUS -. The 9~a County Health Depanment
Ewing Funeral Home in Pomeroy, with the Rev. James Will provule free; IIDDluntzatmns on Tuesday, April 21 4lnd
Acree officiating. Burial will he in Roctsprings Cemetery. Monday, April 28 at the health depanment. 499 Jackson
Friends may call at the funeral home liom 7 to 9 p.m. Pike, from 4 to 7 p.m.
.
Monday. April 21, 2008.
·
Children in need of immunizations must be accompanied
by a .parent or le~al guardian ~ bring a current ?JIIlllUmzat:Ion record wtth them. Evenmg WIC appointments are
available by request. .
·
·
Additional
services
such
as:
blood
pressure
checks,
and
·
Cathy Diane Smith, 51, of V'mtoo, passed away une~t­
pectedly on Friday, April 18, 2008, at Pleasant Valley pregnancy tests will be offered doring the evening hours at
the bealth department..
lloiipital in Point Pleasant, W. Va
·
She wa~ born July 19, 1956, in Point Pleasant, daughter
of Elmer Sr. and Charlene Donnett Spaulding of Bidwell.
. She; was a homemaker and a 1'974 graduate of Kyger
MIDDLEPORT- The Rivetbend Arts Council will bost
Creek High School.
·
In addition to ~r parents, she is survived by ber husband, an afternoon tea and doll show from 2 to-4 p.m. Saturday,
Ronald Lee Srruth of Vinton, two brothers and one sister, April 26 at their Middleport locatiori on North Third Street.
Numerous dolls from local private collections will be on
Roger (Cheri) Spaulding of Bidwell, Elmer Jc. (Lee Ann)
Spaulding Bidwell, and Cindy (fommy) Thompson of disp~ay. Shirley Huston of Syracuse, whO will display a
Bidwell; father-in-law, Raymond Smith of Vmton; brodler- portion of her extens1ve display of antique dolls, will speak
in-law, Olen (Carol) Smith of Port St Lucie, Aa.; nieces, about doll collecting at 2 p.m.
.
In conjunction with the show a tea will be held with sandWe~dy Halfuil~. Miranda (J . W.) .~nnett, Jayden Spaulding,
Melmda (David) Guse and Melissa (Vmce) McKinney; . wiches, cookies and tea being served by arts council memnephews, Ryan Spaulding, ~.J. (Heather) Thompson and bers. While there is no admission charge, doaations will be
Drew Spaulding; four great-meces and five great-nephews; accepted from those attending.
and many close family, friends and loved ones.
Cathy was preceded in death by a beloved grandmother,
Elizabeth Sarah Donnett; mother-in-law, Mildred Smith;
sand ister-in-law, Dianna Smith.
MIDDLEPORT- A community dinner, open and free to
·She was a very loving and caring person who enjoyed
~yone ~bo wants to attend, will be held Friday, April 25,
helping others, and she will be greatly missed by all those wtth servmg from 4:30 to 6 p.m. at the Middleport Church
· who knew her.
·
of Christ Family Life ·Center.
.
"God gnmt me the serenity to accept the things I cannot
A
twirey dinner will be served.
· change; courage to change the things I can and the wisdom
to know the difference."
·
Services will be II a.m. Thesday, April 22, 2008, at the
Deercreek Freewill Baptist Church on Sailor Road near
POMEROY- An Arbor Day luncheon will be beld in the
Vinton, with Pastor M1ckey Maynard officiating. ,Burial
Court
Street mini-park Friday as a fund-raiser for me sumwill follow in Poplar Ridge Cemetery near Addison.
Fri"ends may call at the McCoy-Moore Funeral Home in mer music series of the Pomeroy Blues and Jazz Society.
Serving of red beans 81ld rice with . com bread muffins
Vinton on Monday evening from 5 to 8 p.m.
In lieu of flowers, memorial gifts may be sent to The and beverages will be done at tables in the mini-pait, or on
Cathy Smith Memorial Fund, P.O. Bolt 148, Vmton, request be delivered to places of employment The cost is
$5. There is no charge for delivery. To place orders, call
Ohio 45686.
.
CoDOOieneoes may be sent to www.timefOI1I?CIIMI)'.com/nnn. (740) 992-6524.

Recitals
planned
c~~,~?amain~n:!s~hi~~~~~~ ~~fo!ep~~?~Y=
£_or thise
k ,
a
. . . wee :

.

.TODaY :. IN .HISTORY

·=

Deaths·

.

The president and.the pontiff

6utlbap 1tiltd -6tlltind
.

&amp;unlla~ ~imtf -&amp;rntind • Pqe As

Pomeroy • Middleport • GaiHpolis

2008

Sunday, April20; 2oo8

.

'

Sunday, April 20,

of gaffes, and dlat trend is
· lxmndto~Ierateif~eerfonm .. ~gly Tul&amp;aay.
Clinton is hoping a decisive
win will put a stop to that.
Polls ~ve ~ she has
a conSistent i(ShrinJcing lead.
1J:te New York senator
spoke under a baking sun
outside West Chester's 175year~ld fire house, striking
a somber note about problems at hOme and abroad as
she. described the stakes for
voters Thesday. She asked
them to think about the
looming
challenge
of
China, the restive Middle
East, the trade imbalance
and the debt burden.
"I don't want to just show
up and give one of those
whoop-dee-do speeches and
get everybody whipped up,"
she said. "I want everyone
thinking."
As she looked to exploit
questions about his gravitas,
he played on poll findings
indicating unease with her ,
veracity, and did so head on.
i!LW.YDllewOO&lt;j, sever.tJ

thou11and~supporters lined
the tracks for the first stop on
his daylong whistle-stop tour
aboard a royal blue train car
that
pulled
out
of
Philadelphia in late morning.
"I may not be perfect but I
will always tell you what I
think, and I will always tell
. you where I stand," he told
the crowd. Then he spoke of
his rival.
"Sbe's tak.en different
positions at different times
on issues as fundamental as
trade, or even the war, to .

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miserable place."
·So ·touch for Obama:s
reeent aboYe~Jray · aftl.
tude. Not since Clinton was
the front-runner last year has
her ch3racter been SQ bluntly cnbcized. Then-candidate
JOhn Edwards portrayed her
l!~ a defender of a conupt
Washington system/
Casual without Ia tie or
jacket, his shirt sleeves
rolled up, the Illinois senator
shoolc hands with conductors and rail-workers on the
platform in Philadelphia and
set off, pulling the train
whistle. Flags and bunting
draped the back. The train ·
had four stops en route to his
evening rally in Harrisburg.

MEIGS COUNTY
'

Relay for Life

""• •

May 9th &amp; lOth
Frillll~ 4 pni"".
FORUFE

RELAY .
.

.

Saturday 10 AM
Meigs County Fair
Grounds

L11miruu:y Ceremony - May 9th
For irifomuJrion regarding luminaries, please conlact:

Mary Wolfe at 992-2136
For general Relay for Life information, please contact:

JoAnn Crisp at 992-2136 .
ACS Panaer- BUiie Ha?l'la, 1-888-227-6446 Ext. 32l5
Join us at dusk. Friday tvening, Mav 9th
for rhe lighting of our /umi11aries.

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moment And when she gets
cauaht at it, the notion Is,
we[, you lcnow what, that's
just politics. That's how it
works in Washington. You
can say one ~g here and
say another thing there."
. He amplified the point at
a later stop, in Paoli.
"Senator Clinton's essentia1 argument in this campaign is yo11 can't change
hOw the game is played in
Washington. Her basic
argument is that the slashand-bum, say-anything, doanything s~cial interestdriven PQhtics is how it
works.... Senator Clinton
has. internalized a lot of the
strategies, the tactics,, that

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�PageA4

OPINION
"The ~ I lite is thal
he speaks with maral clari-

125lblld A - • C Flpclla, Ohio

(740) 446-2342 • FAX (740) 446 3008

-~
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
.
'

DanGooddch
Publisher

Kevin Kelly
MaJilaging Editor

Diane Hill
Oontf:oller

Leners to the editor are welcome. They should be less
than 300 won'ls. A-ll letter&amp; are ~ubject to editing and must
be signed and include address and telephone IUUPiber. No
uMigned krters .will be published. uners shoM/d be irr
good taste, ,addressing issues, not personalities.

:READER ~s

VIEW

snext
Fire tUn bill prompts questimis
O..Mtw.:
A few years -ago, our volunteer firemen circulated infor.mation about placing a ~evy on the -city ballot to allow for

me &lt;OpCl'llliion 41Dd upkeep of the fire department The residents ;appro¥ed our velunteers' request and passed the levy
• to 111PCJ'3te tbe fue department.
· Now we see Where 'the village commission wants "more
11110ney" from homeowners (who have insurance) .t a ".oper:ate" the fu:e !department.
My first guestion to our village .o1fu:ia.l~ is, what ~
pened or _is 'llliPJlening to the levy money that -was voted m
fm this pllliJlOSC?
:
.
Secood, should an audit of that fund be requested to see
where the money is or has gone?
·
EBI?h townShip that the Gallipolis Fire Department covers
:(Addison. Clay, Galliwlis and Green) pay the ~e of
Gal.lipGlis a substantial yearly fee that shouid be used to
oo:ver lhe cost of fue protecl:lon to their respective township. However, that money isn't given to .•the fire department, ~t lis placed lin the village general fund.
.
If.a ~e resident gets a bill fium tbe village auditor for
the servtce of ·~ protection (that thc;y are ~y pa)injl
for t:Jn:ongh ttheir Jocal 1tax Je...y) and they .knoWIDgly subDUt
,that bill to their insurance carrier, is that considered insurance fi:aud1
· Is it kBal to ibill a township resident for a seMce when
.their po11tica'l mpresentatives (trustees) alreildy contracted ·
. and~ payjqg for •tha:t service?
· Where will this kind of madness st(i)p? H d1ere 'is a
prowler .amuod· my bouse 4lnd I call the p0lice, are they
,going to send 1116 a lbill for ·lhat ne~t?
Again, I ask, Where is the fire 1evy 111011ey glililg? What
with it since it w&amp; voted in place?
'have

w1&amp;:!ased .

IJ.
I'
' G ..I Pdf

ty," said President Bush
about Pope Benedict XVI
on the way to :Andmws Air
Force Base. Explaining
why for the first time lin bis
pl'esidency be chose to
moet 1111 ani'liog head of
state I31her than wait to
receive bim .at the White
House, he (l()Otinued, "'t's a
sign of respect. He's a
major figure in 1he world.
M01'e poeple listen .t o bim
th4lD anycme in the wood."
If it was unusual, for
George Bush; it was even
more unusual for Coltie,
who received an mvitation
·•t o jOin him, Laura Bush
and their daughter Jenna lin
tlte limeusine from the
White House to Andrews.
The president deamy want.e d to tell a reporter personally why the pope·~ visit
mattered so much te rum.
"He is a worldwide spiritual leader, miUiens of
our citizens are excited
about having him in
America," said the world's
most powerful leader, who
was pretty excited himself.
"Some hardened sows in
the White House are
dee,p ly teuched about
meeting him." ·
That's not to say that the
president and the pontiff
see eye to eye on every
.issue - far from it. Bush
knows
that
Benedict
strongly opposed the U.S.
invasion of Iraq, though be
sayli the pope has come to
believe that a "precipitous
· .drawdown of troops" .could

So Republicans are using
American immigrants, was the immigration issue to
on the pope's mind as well protect themselves from
as he' traveled to the United challenges on the right.
States, where almost 40 . lbat's 001 something the
peroent of the Catholic president thought he'd
population is Hispanic. want to get into with the
Benedict told tepooc:rs that pope, but - his irritation
he would talk with Bush evident - he did expect to
about the ct:aekdown on explain his disappointment
inunigrants in this oountry, with the failure of immiurging him to tight vio- gration ·reform.
But mostly, President
lence "so that immigrants
Bush,
like the "hardened
may lead dignified lives."
souls~
he
joked about, just
On that subject, the presw41Dted
to
be in the pope's
ident welcomes the .pontiff's suppolt. 'Ottholicism presence, as millions of
Americans
do.
is the religion of the newly other
Though
polls
show
majori.lllrived. When you lllrive 4lS
a stranger in a strange land, ties of Catholics disagree
it's· important to have lov, with Benedict XVI on one
ing sisters and brothers issue or another, they are
welcoming you. There's no lining up for ticlrets to his
better place to find a safe Masses, jostling each other
haven and love than out of the way for a space
by .the window as his
church."
motorcade
passes by.
Asked if he thought
¥on don't have to agree
immigrants were discriminated against because they with the pope to be touched
·are Catholic, the ~sident by him. That's what the
responded, "No. That has president understands as he
happened in the past, but says simply, "Every time
now it's that the people r ve been around a Holy
who are immigrants hap- Father, I come away a betpen to be Catholic." And ter person." That's why the
theugh Bush understands President of the United
the ''frustration" · over States was so eager to welimmign1tion, be. personally come Benedict XVI to
· believes that "the newly America. He was ready to
arrived invigorate our spir- drink in a dose of that
it and our soul."
· "moral clarity."
(Steve Roberts' latest
So his frustration is not
book
is "My Farhers'
with 'immigrants but with
members pf Congress who HoMses: Memoir of a
"draw themselves such safe Family " (William Morrow,
districts" that the only 2005 ). Steve and Cokie
thing they wOI'I)' about is Roberts can be contacted
. e-mail
at
someone running .ag~st by
them in their own parties: stevecokie@ gmail.com.)
ulady the plight of Latin

endanger the ·Chris)ian
minooity there and in the
rest of 'the region.
A:nd .e ven .a s an elaborate
White House ceremony
celebratling the pope's
birthday was under way,
with more than 13;000 exubc.mlt well-wishers crowding onto the grounds, the
·Supreme Court handed
down a .decision .uphOlding
the use of lethal injections
· lin eliecutions. The death
penalty is another area of
sharp . · disagreement
between the two men.
The Catholic Church
viev.:s the death penalty as
a violation of its pro-life;
principles and ·though the
president disagrees on that
Issue, it is the pro-life message that Bush finds most
about
appealing
Catholicism. "I will bring
up how very important it is
for the Chul:ch to maintain
a strong position on life
and our shared vision for
helpintl with hunger and
education and health care.
And •I will make clear that
my concern is not just
Afro-centric, that we. need
programs for the poor here
m our own hemisphere."
This hemisphere, partie-

James Matthew Kiskis; 76, of Gallipolis, died Thursd;ty,
Apnl 17, 2008, at Ross Heart Hospital in Columbus.
He was born ~arch 25, 1932, in Springfield, son of the
late Georg.e Charl~s and Dorothy Jane Kiskis.
In adihtton to his parents, he was preceded in death by
a brother. George Jr., and by three sisters, Agnes, Patricia
and Mary.
J~ graduated. from CathOlic Central High School in
.
SP!"ngfield. He was employed by International Harvester and
. retired from Robbins and Myers after 42 years of SC"JVioe. He
was an Amateur Radio Operator (W8PA) with "extra" classification. James enjoyed computers and his two cats.
. He_will be sadly missed by his wife of 28 years, Norma
,8. Kisk1s! chtldren, Brenda (Ross) Elliott, James Joseph
(~el'l)') Ktsk1s, Thomas (Nancy) Kiskis, Kennet;h (Karen)
Ktskts, Karen (David) McCarty, Damel (Cecelia) Kiskis,
_a nd Elame (Greg) Fo!lbes; 10 grandchildren, four great- ·
gr~ndch1ldren and ·several stepgrandchildren; and a
.brother. John.
· ,
·
. Al~ surviving are his . fomtel' wife, Zoie Taylor, and a
Sister-m-law, Esther (Bill) Fanning. He also had an extended family of nieces, nephews and cousins.
Services will be 11 a.m. Monday, April 21, 2008, at the
'wauJlh-Halley-Wood Fuueral Home, with Monsignor .
Wilham Myers offi~iating. Burial will follow in Gravel Hill
Cemetery at Cheshire. Friends may call at the funetal borne
on Monday fro,m I 0 acm. until the time of the·service.
Grandsons and sons-in-law. will serve .as pallbearers.
ln lieu of flowers, connihutions can be made to either the
St. f:..oui_s · ca~olic , Church Building Fund, 85 State St.,
Gallipolis. Ohto 45631, or the Perennial Cat Shelter, P.O.
Box 48, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 .
An online guest registry is available at waugh-halleywood.com.
--..

Sylvia Rape
. S~lvia Rupe, 82, of Middleport, passed away Saturday,
April 19, 2008, at Overbrook Nursing and Rehabilitation
Center in MiQdlepon.
·
. She was born April 28, 1925, in Gallia County, daughter
of the late Earl and Ruth (Shoemaker) Miller.
She worked in a sewing factory for most of her life.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded by her busband, Stanley . Rupe; stepfather, Harlow "Bug" Tate; and
.siste'rs, Clara Jane Rinehart, Beulah Dean Stewart and
Dorothy Trel!heit.
She ts survtved by daughters, Carolyn and Larry Little of
Mason, W.Va., Roger and Terry Rupe of Wellington, Ohio,
Ruth and Ronnie Sopata of Seven Hills, Ohio, and Trudy
and John Marshall of -'Las -vegas, Nev.; .grandchtldten,
Cheryl, Vicki, Scott Kristi, Melissa, John. Craig, Tony,
Roger H, Brian and Liz; 12 jp'eat-grandchildren; sister,
Mary J?ru~ond; and several meces and .nephews.
.Serv1ces w1ll be 1.:30 P·~· Tuesday, Apnl22, 2008, at the
Fisher-AndersQn~McDamel
Funeral
Home
in
M_•ddleport. &lt;?ffictaung w11l be ~e Rev. John Sallaz. Burial
w~ follow to the Gravel Hdl Cemetery at Cheshire.
Fnends may ca1l at the funeral home from 2 to 4 and 6 to 8
p.m.~onday, Apnl21 , 2008.
Online condolences may be sent to www.andersonmcdaniel.com. ·

Are Americans bitter? Ukll, duh

Democratic contest is trying crying out for help that all
to convince Democratic vot- too often never came. Like
ers thal she is better suited to ·the Katrina victims still
run against McCain because struggling to rebuild their
Republicans have already lives, the incompetent Bush
rifled through the Clinton's admimsttation
·
Donna
struggles
-u'le,
luggage. What nonsense! each day to rebuild its tat- -•Besides, the Democratic tered reputation.
race is not about choosing a
For Democrats to win in
CBDdidate the ·Republicans the f~l, they must give the
cannot ruin with lies, distor- American people a reason
Food prices are skyrocket- tions and divisions. It's to hope, to overcome divimg. Jobs- art drying up. about selecting the best can- sion, and to come togQther
And their COIDltry is in a didate to lead America at .a to solve our country' s probwar
with no exit strategy vety tough time.
Iems. No marter who wins,
: Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be
that
is
costing
them
$5,000
I.t's
obvious
~t
~e
let
us all hope that he or she
'less than 300words. All letters are subject .to editing,
every second of evety da:v Clinto.n
camp31gn
ls did so because of their
,IIII.IS.t be signed, and .include .addrt!ss ·and 1elqihone
in taxpayer money. 1heif assunnug th_at Obama will stands on the issues and not
'number. No ':'nsigned letters will be published. Letters
political system has failed he the _nonunee. And ~y their mastery of "gutter
/J£__in__gnod taste, addr11~sing issues, n{lt perthemr.........,..,.
, -:--------:-- ~ JOmg _overl!QMI . wtlh politics." _ . . ,
·sonalmes. Letters ofthanks to oig/JIIiUJtli11U imJJ liU1i-. ·
Are they bitter? Dub.
relentless negative attacks,
Voters in Pennsylvania,
. ~ viduols will not be acceplfd for publication.
I am not sure why Obama hOping that something will Indiana, North Carolina, ·
should apologize for trying , sti~. ~ut ~ truth. is that Oregon,
Montana,
to etf~:.::: ·the emotional thetr di~ons will hurt Kentuc~, Puerto Rico and
and
ial hardship of Democrats _m ~ovember. .
others now have a choice.
our fellow Americans.
In anb.clpabon of hts They can accept Obama's
Reader Services
Perhaps Clinton 81ld John presidential . bid, Robert e~tplanation that he poorly
Cw: •• _,..,.
McCain, who is still strug- Kennedy wrote ''To Seek a used words and phrases
Third Avenue, .Gallipolis, OH
45631
.
Periodical
postage
paid
Our main •axmm i1 all is 1D be
~!ooi~tes ~~ gling to find his voice on Newer World," a book that . that genuinely do not
acarralll. n,... 1&lt;row of an errur in a at Gallipolis.
the economy and all things declared it is ·time to face reflect their spirit or they
alory, please call one af our netu$0Uiiii: ••mba : The Anoc:iated Pren,
~g
for
.the
·nomination.
local,
think: that if they can !he truth about the critical can return to the old-style
the
West
Virginia Preas
After
a
seven-week
time
create
the impression that 1ssues of the. day. Like tbe politics of division, distracQw l. . MiihpiB:
Asaocialion, and the Ohio
out, ·Sens. Hillary Clinton Obama is an out-of-touch pope's acknowledgement lion and distortions. All
NaWIIpaper Aaoociation.
1iri...r • Gallipolis, OH
.
, , _ , Send address cor·
and Barack Obama took elitist, they can nortray .of the . pain and suffering · three candidates have
{'1'411) •• 2342
rections
to
the
Gallipolis
Dally
the
stage at the
ABC
News
·
by
'"
Sentin&lt;:l• Pomeroy, OH
Hall
debate
in themse1ves as be..mg m
caused
pe dophile weakne sses. None of them
Constitution
Tribune, 825 Third Avenue , .
touch with the fears, the Catholic priests, the three is perfect As our next pres{'1'411) IIIN155
Gallipolis, OH 45631.
......... Pl. Pleasanl, wv
Philadelphia to talk about uncertainty and, die daily remaining candidates must ident, they will all sac;
· "binergate."
('Iioo
had grind of ordinary wodting use the home stretch of the things that will not Eit we
(JIM) 675-1338
•tt bl'an..._
Clinton ·has a short
1nl"'nlV'V
---·• people.
primary season before the with us. But, now is the
O n e - ..........'111.27
to
appeal
to
Fortunately;
fortlte
coungeneral election starts to time they show ·humility
span;
in
trying
'
"'D.M
t Our
:-• I
Galipolis, OH
luncb-bucketlblue-collar try and for the Democratic tell us the truth. Enoogh is and gratitude for the great......., ........... ,;'1.10
-•JMJtllbune.com
Democratic voters in .1992, Party, people are channel- enough. The voters are not ness of America that has
Sentinel • Puii&amp;CJV, OH
,.....em her husbmd made exactly ( iJ!1 their bitterness into only looking for a "fighter" given us all so many opporO n e - ........ ,'111.27
US WJIIg Jstlj MllliiMI.coM
'1the
same m;g~t as ~ political pllticipa- ,who has been through the · ~unities. No matter what
...... Pl. Pleaant, wv
Obama.). Nevflltheless, uon by · donating their fears of smears and jeers. happens, the pope's visit
·;';:I, ~
tbtt lo . . ~ DollfT...... No
.
Obama.
for all his elo- 1D7lDC}' and voting in RIOOI'd They desperately want reminds us of the power of
....,• •"by n'llll.pwne..:~m­
q~ and abilities, fouod mnnl-ets.
someone who will fight for hope and renewal - some.
wtwehaml~---·· 719 .
Owl 7 77
himlidf
once
apin
on
1be
What
is
goiiiB
is
''kitcbcn
them
- not just each other. thing the candidates should
~· 0 ro•• OH
.
.
II
IIIII
I
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defensive .a nd had to back- sink lmd DlOII1I2Jtum." The
George W. Bush's presi- start echoing on the came1;rds · lllalllaCoufttJ
Seulilel• PIAtltil~. OH
trld:
.
and
his Cliaton . campaign
is dency officially ended the paign trail.
1 3 - ... .. .......'3226
wa¥ through
st the lltem{Jtin&amp; to set up a SUJI}'- morning Hurricane Katrina
(Donna Brazile is a polit2
6 - ......... ...'64.20
........ Pl. Pleaclt, wv
enb.re
debate.
What
a
line
for
a
.
win
10
made
shore
on
the
Gulf
ical
conunentator on CNN,
5 2 - ........ .. "127.11
• .,••,. •a' ~
shame. .
Pennsylvania, where sbe is Coast. Americans watched ABC and NPR, contriblllOo 7 I 7 Coo 1f11r
.
Qf
course
people
are
bitheavily favored, thal spins in horror as the floodwaters ing colwnnist to Roil Ca/J,
(USPS . . .. ,
1 3 - ......... .. .'53.55
ter
are
losing
their
the
IUII1'IIli ve that Obama rose, dead bodies floated r~ newspaper of, Cdpitt?l
Ollio flllleJ Plillllllllng Co. 26 w.et&lt;&amp; ' ....... ' ..'107.10
bomes.
Y ~ paying canoot heat Md:ain. The · ,down the streets and people Hz,ll, and former campaiw.z
Publiahed every Sunday, 825 52 Weaks .. ' ' .......'21421
almost 54 I gallon for gas. furmer fruot-nmner of the ·sat slrai¥led oo their 7:o&lt;Jfs manager for AI Gore.)

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

'slw.llk!

&amp;unbap Ql;imt~ -&amp;entinrl

Political pundits work
hard, often at a moment's
call. I lrnow thi~ becanse
I'm
one
of
them.
Throughout this unconv.entiona! political season, we
· ~ve heel! cerythingalled_
upofronto
mterpret ev ·
m
·the candidates' religious
views to denouncing the
sermons · of a CBDdidate's
f\)7'IIDCI' pastor. The arrival
of His Holiness Pope
Benedict XVI bumped
many of us off cable television. 'l'hank God (no pun
intended). I dislike wearing
my faith on my sleeve. ·
·The major themes of
~oJ)C Betlien?ldUict:~hts'steric
..sU "to ·
fii.LCU tales;
which contains the thirdhugest nlllllber of Catholics
on the planet, was hOpe, a
desire for unity (especially
in the church) and the need
tQ overcome divisioos. The
pope could have aimed that .

___ _
--·--il.,

o.w,_. ... , .......

backJ::::

7

the.fite

' ..

___
____ ---- _______ _______________________..___
..

Jmmunbations scheduled

OoU show slated

Community dinner

Luncheon in the park

.,_,

•

SIDcm

·

AS60CIATEDPRESSWRIT£RS

RIO GRANDE - Two
upcoming recitals itt the
University
of
Rip
Grande/Rio
Grande
Community . College will
feature the musical talents
of several students.
On Tuesday, April 22, the
Departmental Recital will
be held in the Berry Fine
and Performing Arts Center
. beginning at 8 p.m., and
.will showcase the musical
talents of Rio Grande students performing on a variety of instruments.
And on Saturday, April
26, Rio Grande studen?
Andrea
McCabe
of
Gallipolis will · hold her
senior recital beginning al 3
p .m. in the Berry Fine and
Performing Arts Center.
Both performances are free
and open to the public.
· Professor
Assistant
David Lawrence explained
.that the Departmental
Recital would featur.e students of all class leve ls ut
. Rio Grande who are studying music. Some students
will play instruments,
while others will si ng. All
of the students are very talented and will perform · the
music they learned during
the academic year.
This is the end of the year
.recital for the students, and
area residents will be treat-ed to a wide range of musical styles in the show.
McCabe's senior recital
will feature her performing
on the French hom. She is
·studying music education at
Rio Grande and is an excellent student.
· "She's going to be one of
our
bes1
teachers,"
Lawrence said.

. . Sbe · .is an . experl~!!c~d ~. WEST CHESlER. Pi. mstrumental mus1cian who Barack Obama cast his
has also sung with the Democratic presideD~ rival
Grande Chorale vocal Saturday as a game-player
music group on campus, who uses "slash and burn"
Lawrence said.
tactics and can't be trusted to
"She just has a passion to say what she believes, a
do this," Lawrence said.
sharp jab at her character in
McCabe loves music and the closing chapter of the
loves teaching, and is very pivotal Pennsylvania primaorganized, Lawrence said. ry campaign.
.
He added that she will do an
Hillary Rodham Clinton
excellent job working with implored voters to look
her students and helping beyond "whoop ·dee. do"
them learn.
.
speeohmaking and take a
McCabe also is an out- hard look at who's got the
standing musician, and know-how to deal with the
Lawrence said her senior nation's 'burdens.
recital should be v~ry enter·'J want everyone thinktaining.
.
ing," she declared, as ,if to
Senior music studen?s at suggest those backing
Rio Grande are required to Obama are not. Her implihold their own recitals, and cation was clear: She's subthe concerts serve as a final stance, he 's flash.
exam of sorts for them. The
Altogether. the campaign
students are judged on how for Tuesday's contest was
well they perform, .and they closing with the sort of acriwork vet:y hard preparing mony that party leaders
fnr the redtafs. ·
·
_wish would end in a, hurry,
· MCCabe is '1lll honur ·sru- before it l1numges-rnc nomic·
dent who bas played a big nee in the fall. Obama 's critpart in the fme arts depart- icisms were direct, while
ment during her time at Rio Clinton's were oblique. At
Grande. Lawrence invites various times in the pro~
all area residents to her tracted contest, it's been the
senior recital so they · can other way around.
enjoy listing to her perform.
The primary Tuesday folThe Fine Arts Department · lows a monthlong hiatus in
at Rio Grande has been voting, a gap the candidates
holding several concerts in filled in large measure by
the · • Berry -Fine
and sullying each other.
Performing Arts· Center in
Party officials known as
Apri I. The Jazz Ensemble, superdelegates continued
Rock Band, Symphonic' drifting toward Obama in that
Band ·and Masterworks interim, increasing his edge
Chorale performances have
already been held, but the
Grande Chorale will hold its
spring concert OIJ Friday,
April25 beginning ·at 8 p.m.
This concert is also free and
open to the public.

an.,.. ...... .....

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

Local Briefs

Ate LIZ

1.~ ·

Teday ii.s Sunday, Aptill.20, the 11 l•th day ,of 2008. There
are 255 days left m the year.
· Toclay's ~1ign lin History: On Apr.il 20, 1•999, the ·
Columbine ' gh SChool massacre took place in Littleton.
&lt;Colo., as twe students, Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold, shot
and killed 12 classmates and one teacher before :taking their
own lives.
.
· On this .date: In 1808, Napoleon m, Emperor of the
•French, was bam lin P.aris.
·
· In l 836, Congress voted to esta~ish the Wisconsin ·
'Territory.
• 11n ·1'889, Adolf Hitler was lbom m Braunau am [no,
·Austria.
: Thought for Today: "'lbe law that will wolik: is merely the
'summing up in legislative form •o f the moral judgment that
1be community has already reached." -Woodrow Wtlson
AmeriCllll president (1836-1'924). .
'

.Charles 0 . Land.ers, 78, of Welchtown Hill, Pomeroy,
Hazel Thelma (Rollins) Mattox, 79, of leon, W.Va. died
d1ed Thursday. Apnl 17 ,' 2008, at Holzer Medical Center in Thursday, April 17, 2008, at her residence.
G:illipolis, following an extended illness.
Services will be I p.m. Monday in the Crow-Hussell
He wa~ born Jan. 3, 1930, in Pomeroy, soo of the late Funeral Home, Point Pleasant, W.Va., with the Rev. David
Charles and Aliza (Gregory) Landers.
Morgan officiating. Burial will be in the Jack Yauger
He was a retired employee of the Exoelsior Salt Worb.
Cemetery, Leon. Friends may call at the funeral home on
His wife, Clarbelle Landers, s'lfvives. Also surviving are Monday from II a.m. until 1 p.m.
his daughters and sons-in-law, Linda Beaver of Columbus,
An online guest registry is available at www.crowhusBamara and James Hudson of Middleport, 81ld Trina selllb.com.
.
Mayes of Gallipolis; sons 4lnd daughters-in-law, Michael
Hudson of Pomeroy, Suzanna Stewart of Texas, and Anetta
Nitt of Racine; brothers, Charles 0 . Landers II of
Gallipolis, and Raymond L. Landers' of Racine; brother-inlaw, Anthony D. Hudson of Pomeroy; and 22 gr;onddJildren
and several great- grandchildren.
.
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by a stepson, Alonzo D. Hudson.
Services wi II be at I0 a.m. Tuesday, Apil 22, 200&amp;, at the
9ALIJ:ffiUS -. The 9~a County Health Depanment
Ewing Funeral Home in Pomeroy, with the Rev. James Will provule free; IIDDluntzatmns on Tuesday, April 21 4lnd
Acree officiating. Burial will he in Roctsprings Cemetery. Monday, April 28 at the health depanment. 499 Jackson
Friends may call at the funeral home liom 7 to 9 p.m. Pike, from 4 to 7 p.m.
.
Monday. April 21, 2008.
·
Children in need of immunizations must be accompanied
by a .parent or le~al guardian ~ bring a current ?JIIlllUmzat:Ion record wtth them. Evenmg WIC appointments are
available by request. .
·
·
Additional
services
such
as:
blood
pressure
checks,
and
·
Cathy Diane Smith, 51, of V'mtoo, passed away une~t­
pectedly on Friday, April 18, 2008, at Pleasant Valley pregnancy tests will be offered doring the evening hours at
the bealth department..
lloiipital in Point Pleasant, W. Va
·
She wa~ born July 19, 1956, in Point Pleasant, daughter
of Elmer Sr. and Charlene Donnett Spaulding of Bidwell.
. She; was a homemaker and a 1'974 graduate of Kyger
MIDDLEPORT- The Rivetbend Arts Council will bost
Creek High School.
·
In addition to ~r parents, she is survived by ber husband, an afternoon tea and doll show from 2 to-4 p.m. Saturday,
Ronald Lee Srruth of Vinton, two brothers and one sister, April 26 at their Middleport locatiori on North Third Street.
Numerous dolls from local private collections will be on
Roger (Cheri) Spaulding of Bidwell, Elmer Jc. (Lee Ann)
Spaulding Bidwell, and Cindy (fommy) Thompson of disp~ay. Shirley Huston of Syracuse, whO will display a
Bidwell; father-in-law, Raymond Smith of Vmton; brodler- portion of her extens1ve display of antique dolls, will speak
in-law, Olen (Carol) Smith of Port St Lucie, Aa.; nieces, about doll collecting at 2 p.m.
.
In conjunction with the show a tea will be held with sandWe~dy Halfuil~. Miranda (J . W.) .~nnett, Jayden Spaulding,
Melmda (David) Guse and Melissa (Vmce) McKinney; . wiches, cookies and tea being served by arts council memnephews, Ryan Spaulding, ~.J. (Heather) Thompson and bers. While there is no admission charge, doaations will be
Drew Spaulding; four great-meces and five great-nephews; accepted from those attending.
and many close family, friends and loved ones.
Cathy was preceded in death by a beloved grandmother,
Elizabeth Sarah Donnett; mother-in-law, Mildred Smith;
sand ister-in-law, Dianna Smith.
MIDDLEPORT- A community dinner, open and free to
·She was a very loving and caring person who enjoyed
~yone ~bo wants to attend, will be held Friday, April 25,
helping others, and she will be greatly missed by all those wtth servmg from 4:30 to 6 p.m. at the Middleport Church
· who knew her.
·
of Christ Family Life ·Center.
.
"God gnmt me the serenity to accept the things I cannot
A
twirey dinner will be served.
· change; courage to change the things I can and the wisdom
to know the difference."
·
Services will be II a.m. Thesday, April 22, 2008, at the
Deercreek Freewill Baptist Church on Sailor Road near
POMEROY- An Arbor Day luncheon will be beld in the
Vinton, with Pastor M1ckey Maynard officiating. ,Burial
Court
Street mini-park Friday as a fund-raiser for me sumwill follow in Poplar Ridge Cemetery near Addison.
Fri"ends may call at the McCoy-Moore Funeral Home in mer music series of the Pomeroy Blues and Jazz Society.
Serving of red beans 81ld rice with . com bread muffins
Vinton on Monday evening from 5 to 8 p.m.
In lieu of flowers, memorial gifts may be sent to The and beverages will be done at tables in the mini-pait, or on
Cathy Smith Memorial Fund, P.O. Bolt 148, Vmton, request be delivered to places of employment The cost is
$5. There is no charge for delivery. To place orders, call
Ohio 45686.
.
CoDOOieneoes may be sent to www.timefOI1I?CIIMI)'.com/nnn. (740) 992-6524.

Recitals
planned
c~~,~?amain~n:!s~hi~~~~~~ ~~fo!ep~~?~Y=
£_or thise
k ,
a
. . . wee :

.

.TODaY :. IN .HISTORY

·=

Deaths·

.

The president and.the pontiff

6utlbap 1tiltd -6tlltind
.

&amp;unlla~ ~imtf -&amp;rntind • Pqe As

Pomeroy • Middleport • GaiHpolis

2008

Sunday, April20; 2oo8

.

'

Sunday, April 20,

of gaffes, and dlat trend is
· lxmndto~Ierateif~eerfonm .. ~gly Tul&amp;aay.
Clinton is hoping a decisive
win will put a stop to that.
Polls ~ve ~ she has
a conSistent i(ShrinJcing lead.
1J:te New York senator
spoke under a baking sun
outside West Chester's 175year~ld fire house, striking
a somber note about problems at hOme and abroad as
she. described the stakes for
voters Thesday. She asked
them to think about the
looming
challenge
of
China, the restive Middle
East, the trade imbalance
and the debt burden.
"I don't want to just show
up and give one of those
whoop-dee-do speeches and
get everybody whipped up,"
she said. "I want everyone
thinking."
As she looked to exploit
questions about his gravitas,
he played on poll findings
indicating unease with her ,
veracity, and did so head on.
i!LW.YDllewOO&lt;j, sever.tJ

thou11and~supporters lined
the tracks for the first stop on
his daylong whistle-stop tour
aboard a royal blue train car
that
pulled
out
of
Philadelphia in late morning.
"I may not be perfect but I
will always tell you what I
think, and I will always tell
. you where I stand," he told
the crowd. Then he spoke of
his rival.
"Sbe's tak.en different
positions at different times
on issues as fundamental as
trade, or even the war, to .

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miserable place."
·So ·touch for Obama:s
reeent aboYe~Jray · aftl.
tude. Not since Clinton was
the front-runner last year has
her ch3racter been SQ bluntly cnbcized. Then-candidate
JOhn Edwards portrayed her
l!~ a defender of a conupt
Washington system/
Casual without Ia tie or
jacket, his shirt sleeves
rolled up, the Illinois senator
shoolc hands with conductors and rail-workers on the
platform in Philadelphia and
set off, pulling the train
whistle. Flags and bunting
draped the back. The train ·
had four stops en route to his
evening rally in Harrisburg.

MEIGS COUNTY
'

Relay for Life

""• •

May 9th &amp; lOth
Frillll~ 4 pni"".
FORUFE

RELAY .
.

.

Saturday 10 AM
Meigs County Fair
Grounds

L11miruu:y Ceremony - May 9th
For irifomuJrion regarding luminaries, please conlact:

Mary Wolfe at 992-2136
For general Relay for Life information, please contact:

JoAnn Crisp at 992-2136 .
ACS Panaer- BUiie Ha?l'la, 1-888-227-6446 Ext. 32l5
Join us at dusk. Friday tvening, Mav 9th
for rhe lighting of our /umi11aries.

Need a great Auto
iosunmce rate?

Jessica DiUoa

.__
as
as

moment And when she gets
cauaht at it, the notion Is,
we[, you lcnow what, that's
just politics. That's how it
works in Washington. You
can say one ~g here and
say another thing there."
. He amplified the point at
a later stop, in Paoli.
"Senator Clinton's essentia1 argument in this campaign is yo11 can't change
hOw the game is played in
Washington. Her basic
argument is that the slashand-bum, say-anything, doanything s~cial interestdriven PQhtics is how it
works.... Senator Clinton
has. internalized a lot of the
strategies, the tactics,, that

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'

�OHIO
be moved Sunday
8r Du• Poll' I FF

HENDERSON, W.Va. Motorists who usuaUy trav~ U.S. 35 on Sundays are
~ing asked
to have palience Ibis weekend as a
tnosfonner moves through
1be area.
Au elemic transfonnel" is .
being moved fium Gallipolis
Feny to · the American
Elcaric Powet-- Jolm Amos
J'laat in SL Alhans on
Sunday. It is the same type
of transfOilllel" that was
lnosporttd through Mason
County two yCBlli ~o.
• Al;cording to Ross Roush,
assistant administrator for
lbe West Vuginia Division
pf
Highways,
Mason .
aar.ge, the reason the
Uiulsport oomp:my does .not
take liiiOtber route, such as
lnrerstde 64, is becanse the
lllldeJpasses along the highway I!R: too low.
.
. During lhe last b'aDSpOit,
lhe transfcxmec .was delivm:d
to
tbe
·csx
Transportation depot . in
HliDtington, wbcre it was
loaded on a Oatbed semi and

Sunday, April zo, :aoo8

The

mooity lileliilers
came out to enjoy

uP

a fun evening of
live music~ .
ttle annual
·Rt tc:kus in the

CmtpbeU's T~
where it waikd until that

Sunday to go down U.S. 35
to 1o1m Amos.
. This time, a CSX train
transported the transfOfiiJel"
lbrougb Mason County to a
spot in Gallipolis Ferry
across from Letalt Sand and
Gravel on W.Va. 2.
Roush said traffic on U.S.
35 Sunday will be slowmoving because tbe vehicle

·~'c15·

OOI,..e' l Gil

lhUISday ·a t the
'
UnNelsily of Rio
Grande/Rio Glaide
Community
College. lhe event,
organiled by lhe

a five-year oontract exten-

sioo despite faculty concerns
that arose last year.
· Trustees voted I1DliJii,
!JlOUSlY Friday to negotiate .
the new contract, which

.Would run~ 20l3.
. In a statement, ttustees
J&amp;Y tbey'n: llllisficcl with
McDavis' tJU¥CDS in academic quality, financial
improvements, diversity

L' , . . 12

1 ds W"lllll!lllw~~t,, . . . 14

Sunday, April20, 2008

Sb!dent Senale,

probably

.will . travel
10 mph and
wiU have a polire ~

Mason

Coonty Sberilf's DtfalbiM!Dt
will provide the escm and
will rondud baffic OOnb:ol
froin tbe site to tbe Putnam
County line on U.S. 35.
On . Thursday, the DOH
plaoed eleroooic signs near
u.s, 35 warning motorists
of the. slow-moving traffic
and advised lbem to find
altemative routes of trllvei.

~-..-.--- ,
7

~LYSENTlNEl .COM

7 4Wd21

..... I 7
l'lullwi-lllGolla-.,. $p.m.
licil* Htllll - . ,, 5 p.m.

C"m:

'

POMEROY Meri ,
VanMeter was 3-for-3 in
game one, and · Lian
Hoffman hit a home run in
game two as the Meigs
High School softball team
defeated the River Valley
Lady Raiders in a pair of
games Friday evening.
VanMeter's three hits and
two runs belped the Lady
Maraudenl win 7-4 in the
first game, and Hoffinan's
solo shot in the third inning
of the seoond game turned
into the game winner as
Meigs edged River Valley

aSG&amp;tf~GIIii.Sp .m.

-..,.
---Cool
----

.., .

bdat~.5;p.An .

.,......-...sq~.m.

, · 4 llSI::Utan, sp.m.

~II'

,P. oc••IAih•Gella• 7 ny,51P..m.
!loOk HI
51J.m.
SOdhG.IIaaitFWts , S#J.m.
Wo1811uololle-., 5".m.
t,lliigs ... .._,.._ 5 I'.Ill.

at---,.

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chaliLOe

BY &amp;lc Rlv11101P11

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caqlbiL5 a

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

between 5 and

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-

to unwind ewery
s,pringjust befuie
final eJGtmS.

ttanspoding the ll'allsformec

___ __

IDeAL 8cHEDui:.E.

gi'o'es ewr)'OBl! on

·- .s. ...- . 511.111.

.

'

• ;3D p.m.

. IPID

1Mnwn m Qllllia.L

.,.,, 5 p.m.

---~.5p,m,

G.....,, 5p.m.

, . _ mllolgl, 5 p,m,

I

.,.,...,_G.-.&amp;!
..
.

hJ, 5 p.m.

-~~~-~.Sp.m.

$oulh·-

3-2.
leona Ward was 2-for-2

at CooiGmw, 5 p:m.
bllflllloll 1'o1nt 1''
Pl. •:so p.m,

.

with a triple in game one for

~-·- .... 11)'.4:11Dp.m.

the Lady Raiders, and teammare Kirsten Carter also had

.

-·-~quad. 4:30p.m.

hits in both ber appearances
at the
In game two,
Tan ·
had the only

C

-lfounly.Goblia.-.
Molgo.
4;30 p.m,
.

8Potm BIUEI'S

15th Annual

Meigs Football
(!olf tourney

and alcobol initiatives.

. : MASON, W.Va. - The
15th Annual Meigs Football

year ago, 17 pero::nt of
University
are · giving faculty wbo took: pat in a
l'miident Roderick Mcl&gt;avis .survey gave a~

.,

...........

'

Cabell County. The nexJ day, .
the transfOilJiel" was lllka1
fiom !bat spot,
W.Va. 2 ·
intoMasooCountyandonto

A

trustees . at Ohio

I

, ..

g:s
new
. contract m OU
AllfENS (AP) -

I

·'*

• McDavis
boanl uf

-A

tnnsported through the east .
side of dJe city to Lesage in

Deputies with the

Bl

Imide

. . . . . . . . . . 11)

a ruckus

Transfot-.rtter to
DPOTTIJAAWMYDULYREGISTERCOM

.Page·A6

..,., LL?

7

extra base hit for River
Valley with a double .
The teams played five
innings in both games.
With the wins, Meigs
improves to 5-3 em the season, while the Lady Raiders
move to 2"7. ·
The Lady Marauders got
doubles from four players in
a six-run third inning to win
game one.
VanMeter led off the first

7'

n•-•=

•r~oD

~tlltl

Gallia Academy's Tim Huffman, left. ~pares fur a return as his No. 2 doubles partner
Mollie Blake, rwrt, delivers a serve d11fir1111iday evenlr~fs SEOAI South Division tennis
match against Jackson at .Memorial Field.

GABS tennis_finishes perfect week
BY 8

uuc WMRIII

BYALTERs.M'IONLYTRIBUNE.COM

Golf Tournament will be
{leld SatuFday, May 31, at
die Riverside Golf Course
if8:30 a.m.
: 'The format is a $60 per
person, bring your own
~ four-man ·scramble.
Teams must have a com6ined handicap of 40 ·.or
ibove with only one team
Otember under 10. Price
ltioludes golf, cart, lunch,
lad beverages. Prizes will
~ awarded for the top three

to McDavis amid budget
problems, the elimillllion of
sporu teams, a plagiarism
scandal and computer-security breaches.
About 48 pera:nl of abe
faculty in Athens and at
n:gional c:ampu~
in die survey
by
lhe Ohio University chat ktt
of the American Associllion
of University Profeuon.

reams.

.For more information,
Meigs footbal1
ooach Mike .Chancey at
74().!992-2158 or 740-992-

Another step taken toward
~urn enrichment plant in Ohio

cOOw:t

0064.

PIKETON (AP) - The . ~ for the plant, ollic;iafs
O&lt;li_DPIIDY buildin&amp; a $3.5 S31d they ~it to,be,gin
billioo Uranium enriclunenl operafu!,g in We · 2Im -«
said Thutliday it has early
10 and io . bavli
naliml lhe iniiial design 11.500 a:nllifu2e machines,
for the machines that will be each about 40 feet .tall, runused at a facility under con- ning by late 2012. ·
The use of centrif11gal
struction in southern Ohio.
USEC Inc., based in force to enrich uranium is
Bethesda, Md., said its Lead considered much more effiCascade testing program is dent than the 1950s-develdemonstrating reliable and oped gaseous diffusion
consistent operations. 1be method. Enriched uranium
program is an intmnodiate from
the
American
·stage between demonst:ra- Centrifuge Plant wollid be
lion and commercial pro- used in generating electriciduction.
ty at nuclear power·plants.
Piketon is about 65 miles
Although the company
has not yet lined up financ- south of Columbus .

Eric A8ndolph/pholo

Meigs third baseman Talisha Beha, left, tags out River

Valley baserunner Jenna ward (10) during Friday's non-co'"
·ferenoe softball doubleheader at Rocksprings.

-:ro

Glafit

.r .,

Locai'Weather
· Sunday•••Cloudy.
A
chance of showers in the
morning ... Then scattered
showers with isolated
dlunderstorms i n the afternoon. Highs in the upper
60s . Northwest w~nds
amup.o
d 5 mph. Chance of .

MolldJiy•••Partly · sunny.
Highs in the lower 70s.
Northeast winds around 5
mph:..:. ......,., ..a... ... ~ ·
M-.,. . _ ~-­
Tuesday
. aipt...Partly
cloudy. Lows in .t he Sower
50s. Highs in the lower 70s.

· SuDday aigbt••• Mostly
cloudy with scattered
showers. Lows in the mid
40s. North winds around 5
mph. Chance of rain 40

Friday-Mostly
cloudy
with a · duuv-e of showers ·
and thundelstorms. Highs in
the mid 70s. Lows in the
mid 50s. Chance of rain 40

percent. ,

percent.

n1ir ~ i'ercenL ·

·

Wl!ilu•uy

· tliiWiujh

FREE S MIPPtNG

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�OHIO
be moved Sunday
8r Du• Poll' I FF

HENDERSON, W.Va. Motorists who usuaUy trav~ U.S. 35 on Sundays are
~ing asked
to have palience Ibis weekend as a
tnosfonner moves through
1be area.
Au elemic transfonnel" is .
being moved fium Gallipolis
Feny to · the American
Elcaric Powet-- Jolm Amos
J'laat in SL Alhans on
Sunday. It is the same type
of transfOilllel" that was
lnosporttd through Mason
County two yCBlli ~o.
• Al;cording to Ross Roush,
assistant administrator for
lbe West Vuginia Division
pf
Highways,
Mason .
aar.ge, the reason the
Uiulsport oomp:my does .not
take liiiOtber route, such as
lnrerstde 64, is becanse the
lllldeJpasses along the highway I!R: too low.
.
. During lhe last b'aDSpOit,
lhe transfcxmec .was delivm:d
to
tbe
·csx
Transportation depot . in
HliDtington, wbcre it was
loaded on a Oatbed semi and

Sunday, April zo, :aoo8

The

mooity lileliilers
came out to enjoy

uP

a fun evening of
live music~ .
ttle annual
·Rt tc:kus in the

CmtpbeU's T~
where it waikd until that

Sunday to go down U.S. 35
to 1o1m Amos.
. This time, a CSX train
transported the transfOfiiJel"
lbrougb Mason County to a
spot in Gallipolis Ferry
across from Letalt Sand and
Gravel on W.Va. 2.
Roush said traffic on U.S.
35 Sunday will be slowmoving because tbe vehicle

·~'c15·

OOI,..e' l Gil

lhUISday ·a t the
'
UnNelsily of Rio
Grande/Rio Glaide
Community
College. lhe event,
organiled by lhe

a five-year oontract exten-

sioo despite faculty concerns
that arose last year.
· Trustees voted I1DliJii,
!JlOUSlY Friday to negotiate .
the new contract, which

.Would run~ 20l3.
. In a statement, ttustees
J&amp;Y tbey'n: llllisficcl with
McDavis' tJU¥CDS in academic quality, financial
improvements, diversity

L' , . . 12

1 ds W"lllll!lllw~~t,, . . . 14

Sunday, April20, 2008

Sb!dent Senale,

probably

.will . travel
10 mph and
wiU have a polire ~

Mason

Coonty Sberilf's DtfalbiM!Dt
will provide the escm and
will rondud baffic OOnb:ol
froin tbe site to tbe Putnam
County line on U.S. 35.
On . Thursday, the DOH
plaoed eleroooic signs near
u.s, 35 warning motorists
of the. slow-moving traffic
and advised lbem to find
altemative routes of trllvei.

~-..-.--- ,
7

~LYSENTlNEl .COM

7 4Wd21

..... I 7
l'lullwi-lllGolla-.,. $p.m.
licil* Htllll - . ,, 5 p.m.

C"m:

'

POMEROY Meri ,
VanMeter was 3-for-3 in
game one, and · Lian
Hoffman hit a home run in
game two as the Meigs
High School softball team
defeated the River Valley
Lady Raiders in a pair of
games Friday evening.
VanMeter's three hits and
two runs belped the Lady
Maraudenl win 7-4 in the
first game, and Hoffinan's
solo shot in the third inning
of the seoond game turned
into the game winner as
Meigs edged River Valley

aSG&amp;tf~GIIii.Sp .m.

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t,lliigs ... .._,.._ 5 I'.Ill.

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chaliLOe

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to unwind ewery
s,pringjust befuie
final eJGtmS.

ttanspoding the ll'allsformec

___ __

IDeAL 8cHEDui:.E.

gi'o'es ewr)'OBl! on

·- .s. ...- . 511.111.

.

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G.....,, 5p.m.

, . _ mllolgl, 5 p,m,

I

.,.,...,_G.-.&amp;!
..
.

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-~~~-~.Sp.m.

$oulh·-

3-2.
leona Ward was 2-for-2

at CooiGmw, 5 p:m.
bllflllloll 1'o1nt 1''
Pl. •:so p.m,

.

with a triple in game one for

~-·- .... 11)'.4:11Dp.m.

the Lady Raiders, and teammare Kirsten Carter also had

.

-·-~quad. 4:30p.m.

hits in both ber appearances
at the
In game two,
Tan ·
had the only

C

-lfounly.Goblia.-.
Molgo.
4;30 p.m,
.

8Potm BIUEI'S

15th Annual

Meigs Football
(!olf tourney

and alcobol initiatives.

. : MASON, W.Va. - The
15th Annual Meigs Football

year ago, 17 pero::nt of
University
are · giving faculty wbo took: pat in a
l'miident Roderick Mcl&gt;avis .survey gave a~

.,

...........

'

Cabell County. The nexJ day, .
the transfOilJiel" was lllka1
fiom !bat spot,
W.Va. 2 ·
intoMasooCountyandonto

A

trustees . at Ohio

I

, ..

g:s
new
. contract m OU
AllfENS (AP) -

I

·'*

• McDavis
boanl uf

-A

tnnsported through the east .
side of dJe city to Lesage in

Deputies with the

Bl

Imide

. . . . . . . . . . 11)

a ruckus

Transfot-.rtter to
DPOTTIJAAWMYDULYREGISTERCOM

.Page·A6

..,., LL?

7

extra base hit for River
Valley with a double .
The teams played five
innings in both games.
With the wins, Meigs
improves to 5-3 em the season, while the Lady Raiders
move to 2"7. ·
The Lady Marauders got
doubles from four players in
a six-run third inning to win
game one.
VanMeter led off the first

7'

n•-•=

•r~oD

~tlltl

Gallia Academy's Tim Huffman, left. ~pares fur a return as his No. 2 doubles partner
Mollie Blake, rwrt, delivers a serve d11fir1111iday evenlr~fs SEOAI South Division tennis
match against Jackson at .Memorial Field.

GABS tennis_finishes perfect week
BY 8

uuc WMRIII

BYALTERs.M'IONLYTRIBUNE.COM

Golf Tournament will be
{leld SatuFday, May 31, at
die Riverside Golf Course
if8:30 a.m.
: 'The format is a $60 per
person, bring your own
~ four-man ·scramble.
Teams must have a com6ined handicap of 40 ·.or
ibove with only one team
Otember under 10. Price
ltioludes golf, cart, lunch,
lad beverages. Prizes will
~ awarded for the top three

to McDavis amid budget
problems, the elimillllion of
sporu teams, a plagiarism
scandal and computer-security breaches.
About 48 pera:nl of abe
faculty in Athens and at
n:gional c:ampu~
in die survey
by
lhe Ohio University chat ktt
of the American Associllion
of University Profeuon.

reams.

.For more information,
Meigs footbal1
ooach Mike .Chancey at
74().!992-2158 or 740-992-

Another step taken toward
~urn enrichment plant in Ohio

cOOw:t

0064.

PIKETON (AP) - The . ~ for the plant, ollic;iafs
O&lt;li_DPIIDY buildin&amp; a $3.5 S31d they ~it to,be,gin
billioo Uranium enriclunenl operafu!,g in We · 2Im -«
said Thutliday it has early
10 and io . bavli
naliml lhe iniiial design 11.500 a:nllifu2e machines,
for the machines that will be each about 40 feet .tall, runused at a facility under con- ning by late 2012. ·
The use of centrif11gal
struction in southern Ohio.
USEC Inc., based in force to enrich uranium is
Bethesda, Md., said its Lead considered much more effiCascade testing program is dent than the 1950s-develdemonstrating reliable and oped gaseous diffusion
consistent operations. 1be method. Enriched uranium
program is an intmnodiate from
the
American
·stage between demonst:ra- Centrifuge Plant wollid be
lion and commercial pro- used in generating electriciduction.
ty at nuclear power·plants.
Piketon is about 65 miles
Although the company
has not yet lined up financ- south of Columbus .

Eric A8ndolph/pholo

Meigs third baseman Talisha Beha, left, tags out River

Valley baserunner Jenna ward (10) during Friday's non-co'"
·ferenoe softball doubleheader at Rocksprings.

-:ro

Glafit

.r .,

Locai'Weather
· Sunday•••Cloudy.
A
chance of showers in the
morning ... Then scattered
showers with isolated
dlunderstorms i n the afternoon. Highs in the upper
60s . Northwest w~nds
amup.o
d 5 mph. Chance of .

MolldJiy•••Partly · sunny.
Highs in the lower 70s.
Northeast winds around 5
mph:..:. ......,., ..a... ... ~ ·
M-.,. . _ ~-­
Tuesday
. aipt...Partly
cloudy. Lows in .t he Sower
50s. Highs in the lower 70s.

· SuDday aigbt••• Mostly
cloudy with scattered
showers. Lows in the mid
40s. North winds around 5
mph. Chance of rain 40

Friday-Mostly
cloudy
with a · duuv-e of showers ·
and thundelstorms. Highs in
the mid 70s. Lows in the
mid 50s. Chance of rain 40

percent. ,

percent.

n1ir ~ i'ercenL ·

·

Wl!ilu•uy

· tliiWiujh

FREE S MIPPtNG

Local Stocks
MP (liME) -

44.17
(IIAIMQ) -10
• Jill ... lllc. (liME) - 53.14

. . . . . . (NYSE)

-23.21

--~(NAIO*Q)­

aol
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CI tlwr IUa I EL (IIIASO*Q)

-.-71.117
~- ;I (N 1 10*QI- 4.84
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911£ Ill Ell blc: (liME) -

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llate1; De¥111I:m (IIIYSE)37.2W

.P Ml ILL (NYIE)- 4'5.76
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•
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11!11'US . . . JODAYS. SA11Sf.U:IION IS...........
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. . . ,..,., -34.53
PI ;I (fWIDAQ) -34.74
f'I$ I I (tn'IE) - 70.10
f'IIA 't t (IVIO*QJ - 11.15

'• r 2145 - . . Aoo.. o .eo1~l-401
AlliHCtf!u'W ilflA.l~

........ ll&lt;d Sl-,.. Wftlos, 711 EMain St., sie. 6

~nSundoy

{7-10)1J8.11011
.,_., Z...,, 73 E tiunin !1. (1-IOJ

•High Speed- Sold-

It&amp;--

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............ rtllt
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�Sunday, April20, 2oo8

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis
'

· · Sunday, Aprilzo, 2oo8

Angels slay Lady Dragons in five
BYa.-WAUDS
BWAl'IBis.M\'OAil\11118UNE.COM

PROCTORVILLE
Gallia Academy softball
claimed its fifth Slraigbt victory of the season Friday
evening with a five-inning,
10.0 mercy-rule triumph
over bosl Fairland during a
.DiliH:ooferenoe matdlup.
The Blue Angels (9-2) 8.. s
'
1iCXnd in only two of their
fi,ve &amp;ames at the plate, but a {our over the minimum.
-seven-run thUd pt:Ovided
MackeiiZie Rucker· s~
plenty of breathing mom for FHS and wotked 2.1
and a three-run fifth closed · innings. allowing five runs
1be door on the Lady (zero earned), two hits and
Dragons ,.._ who feU to 3-5 three walks in taking the
CM::Ril this ~aigo.
loss. Amber Bias entered in
&lt;JAilS knocked out eight relief during the third and
ilits in the decision and also fini~ed things out, going
benefitted from
seven 2.2 innings and allowin six
·Fairland errors, as well
hits, five nms (one earned)
.four walks. 1be guests also and a walk while fanning
·committed four errors in the three. Rucker also struck out
·win, but allowed only one two.
·hit and two walks. Both
Sooreless througb two, the
-teams stranded six runners . Blue and White sent a dozen
.on base.
batterS ro the plate in the top
· Sophomore Kimber Davis of the third - which result·picked up the winning deci- ed in the pivotal seven-run
sion, pitching a !01tutout and explosion. The hosts oomfanning four over fiv.e mitted six of their errors durinnings of work. Davis faced . ing that eruption, while
· just 19 battei'S in the game, GAHS also bad two bits and
m

-

as

:.

. - CHESHIRE River
.!Valley baseball is still iit
- ~ for its elusive first
. win of the season following
·Riday evening's 13-2, six~g setback 10 visiting
=""'Vinton

Courtney Shriver paced
tbe.olfensivellllal:'k with two
bits and ' tWo RBis, while
Davis, lindsey Wlday, Amy
Noe, Alii S~ Morgan
Lesliie and .Kari Campbell
eaoh provided one safely.
Campbell, Britlyn Saunders
and Bri~y Miller alsp had
an RBI· ap~eoe.
.
Rucker bad the lone Green
and White hit wi!h a double :
during the first inning.
Gallia Acade!ny returns to '
action Monday wben its
llosts
Portsmouth
:at
Memorial Field for ~
Soutbeastfm Ohio Athldic
League South I&gt;ivisiOn ()()11...,...wu
test. Game tinie is scheduled So~h Gallia head baseball ooatli Greg Sullivan, stamdt~. gives a pregame talk oduring
fur 5 p.m.
Thursday's home i(ijlellel •(11St Sjmmes ~.r ~ ,Me1t:e~"ille .

County~­

i.ng a non-

conference

matobup_
T h e

Raiders (012l
feU
behind 4-1
tbrougbtwo
innings of
[$ AI
play
and
.
managod to
•~ things that way until
ihc top of the .f ifth, when tbe
Vikings (5-7) ·exploded for
three run~ to .take a 7-I
advantage. VCHS also
s.y.o Wallanlphoto
tucked on six more scores in River Valley catcher Austin Justice, left, tags out Vinton County's. Austin Ankrom during the
the sixth for a 13-1 edge.
sixth inning of Friday's noiHXlnference baseball game _in Cheshire.
Misner
and over five innings while strik- 10-0, five-inning loss to
' RVHS Jl111Ulaged to score contest.
a JllUl in its half of the sixth · Caldwell also had an RBI ing out two and walking six.. Fairland.
to pull within 11, but that each.
.
Ryan Eggleton worked relief
River Valley returns to
was -as close as the hosts
The Vtk.in~s - who had in the sixth, allowing seven action Monday when it hosts
:came before the mercy-rule I 8 hits in tbe triumph -. hits and two . walks while Rock Hill in an Ohio Valley
took: ef!fect~
were led by Corey Cosgray fanning one.
Conference contest. Game
· ·The Raiders tallied seven with four bits, followed by
Cosgray was the winning time is scheduled for 5 p.m.
bits in die setback, with Eric the quartet of Andy Grillo, pitcher, going six full
Vinton County 13, Rl2
Caldwell leading the way Levi
Lawhead,
Derek innings and allowing one
61nnlngo
wilih two bits and a run McManus and Adam Ward walk while striking out five.
-scored. Jacob Brown, Aaron with thfee hits apiece. Grillo
Vinton
County . also
Vinton Co 220 036 - 13 1.8 0
Mulholland, Devin Gibbs, also bad a game-high three claimed a season sweep,-· R Valley 010 001 - 2 7 0
Ohris Misner and Clayton runs scored in the triumph.
winning tbe first matchup VCHS (5·7): Go"'y Gosgray and Tommy
Curnutte each provided .a
Brown was ·the losing between these teams by a Hale.
RVHS (0·12): Jacob Brown, Ryan
safety as well., with Gibbs pitcher of record for the 14-10 count. RVHS was also Eggkrton
(6) and Austin .Justice.
liCO!ing the other run in the Raiders, all()wing seven runs one-hit Thursday during a WP - Coscray: LP - Brown .

'**

Gallipolis

5--

007 oa -

10ta 4

~-

ooo oo -

•o n

'GAHS (9-2): Kimber Davis a1d Lindsay
Wanl.
FHS (11-5): -..zie Ruci&lt;ar, l'.mber
Bias ~) and'Sarah Sirnrrs.
WP- OaYis; LP ~ Rucker.

Eastern track competes at Ft. Frye
SWW:Rawu

·~LYSENTJie..t:OM -

Rebels
lose
home opener to Vtkes
I
.
,
!SliU'F R&amp;wr

SPOimilffiiYDAILYTRIBUNEIJOM

MERCERVILLE
. Soutli Gama basdWl after two-and-a-luM weekli
on die road-· finidly made
its home debut Thursday
ev.e nwg against Symmes
Vall~y. Unt:qrtunaliely for
the hosts, it wasn't mucb of
a coming horne piuty.
Tile Vikings plated four
runs in the top of tlhe Mt
and never looked back,
scoring in every frame during a five; ioning, 13-2. victory over the Rebels.
SVHS (5-2) pounded out
14 hits in :t he triumph,
while ~he Rebels (24U
managed only four hits
over the · same five-iiming
span. Both teams 'commit.ted two -err()rs in the ODD.test.
The Vikings led 4-1 after
one inning of play, ·t hen
added a run .e ach i.n lihe second and third to take a 6- 1
advantage after twG-and-ahalf frames . SGHS added
its final run in the thiid to
cut the deficit to four, but

alqowi.ng 10 runs, II hits
and four walks whille fanning two. B.J. Stanley
entered in relief during the
.
follflh and gave up three
runs and three hits over an
inning-plus Qf work.
Micah Cardwell [ed the
hosts witb two ihits, followed by Wells and Corey
Small with a ·safety apiece.
SVHS had six different
· players with multi-bit
oever came closer the Test ef!forts, led oy Cody Bland
of the way.
with three hits. Powell ,
Symmes Valley scored Tyler Easthom., E~
seven runs over tbe ll.ast two Wilson, Brice Se"ton md
fi:ames- including five in Luke Taylor a1so had two
llhe top of the fift!h - to hits each.
secure the final 11-run -outSoutb Gallia will return
come.
to action Monday when it
J.J . Huff was lihe winning hosts Chesapeake i.n .a nonpitcher of recor.d, going conference matchup. The
dn:ee inlrin~s .and .allowing f1rst pitch is scheduled for 5
lour bits, t wo runs and p.m.
three walks while striking
out six. R0bbie Powell 1lymmeo'Valley 13, Soulll
Sinn....
worked ( WO inni.ngs of
relief, . ailowwg .21ero hits S Valley
~11 25 13142
101
Oil
242
S
Gama
and ~ro runs for tbe victors.
SVHS (5-2): J.J. Hutl. Rol&gt;ble Powell (4)
SGHS staner John Wells and Cody Bland.
took the Joss working . SGHS (2-8): Jot.. Wells, B.J. Siani&amp;y
.
. '.
.d (4) and Gorey Small.
th ree-p Ius mmngs an
WP-Huff; LP-Weils.

Vol..,

Bartrum-Brown Camp coming to Huntington
· SPECIAL TO THE TIMEs-SENTINEL

HUN1INGTON, W.Va. The 2008 Bartrum and
Brown Foothall Camp, and
Celebrity Golf Tournament
will be held on May 17th and
]'8th .in Huntipgton. The football camp will be held on
Saturday, May 17 at Marshall
Uni~ersny·s Joan C. EdwBI'\is
Stadium, while the golf ·tt&gt;urnament will be held on
'Sunday, May 18at1'winSilos
Golf Course.
1be weekend will be hosted by focmer Marshall and
,NIL stars Mike Bartrum and
Tmy Brown
·
1be football camp will be
divided intt&gt; two sessions. for

-.z

Eastern.holds off visiting Spartans
StaWREPGRr
SPORTS@MVDAILYSENTINEl.GPM .

-

TUPPERS I?LAINS ··
Kyle Gordon and Derek
Griffin each bad two hits
and two RBis for E:astem,
helping the _Eagles baseball .
team defeat the Alexander
Spru:tans 6-4 Friday night.
Gordon fmished :2-for-3
Q I s
with AI walk, while Griffm
went 2-for-4 with a double.
Tyler Hendrix also went 2- two in bolih the bottom of
for~3 and had a douhle.
die !ieCOnd and 1ihe 'bottom
The wi n gi~es Eastern a of ·me ilhird while keeping
record · Qf 5-7 on lihe !lea- Alexander off me board.
son.
They held a S-1 lead
Gordon earned the win, through four innings.· ·
pitching a complete game . The 'Spaitails made it
interesting .the ilO.p of. the
and striking-out six.
Eastern sco~ed once in "fifdl,' getting two runners
the first inning. but their on through fielding efl'ors
first lead didn 'I last .as the who went oo to score and
Spartans tied it in die sec- -aOOJber who walked and
ond.
later scored.
The Eagles then scored
But the · Eaglell stopped

...

m

:Meigs second baseman Meri vanMeter, right. looks toward the umpire for a call after tag·ging Riller Valley's Allison Porter during a steal attempt Friday m a non-oonference softball
:pme at Rocksprings_
.'
Meigs also got hits from she could make it home and

Sweeps

Chandn Stanley and StJellie tie the game.
Bailey, finishing- with I 0
It was the closest they'd
total
.
.River
Valley
bad
eight
oome
to salvaging a split as
.fhJm Page 81
hits, and both teams bad one· River Valley closed the
game out with two three up,
:with a bit and scored. two error.
In
two,
the
Lady
three down innings.
:batters later when Amy Barr
Raiders' comeback: fell just
Hoffman went 2-for-3,
· and Meigs also got singles
tum soored in the short.
Meigs, the away team for from VanMeter, Barnes, and
:Jleeond, and !he Lady
:Raiders took: the lead in the the second game, scored Stanley. They fmished with
:top of the third. · Kirsten twice in the top of the first seven total hits.
Birchf~eld ~so had a hit
:Cirter singled, Jenna Ward thanks to a lriple from Barr
that
drove
in
VanMeter
and
in ~ame two for the .Lady
·lbve her in with a triple.
. and lbcn Brittany Hardway a double from Shanalle Raiders. w.ho JOt five total.
Smi!h that drove in Bm.
Both te'ama play qain
:.ut Ward borne,
Still
up
two
in
the
third,
Monday. Meial i1 on ·tbe
In the bottom of the third,
:Mel&amp;• ~ hits from aeven Hoffman 11111Cked the ball road ·qalnat Belpre, While
playi!rl, includlna doubles onto the football field River Valley play• at home
.l'roin Mickl
Barne1, beyond left for a 3.0 Lady .,aialt Oak HIU. Stan time
· Sbanalle Smith, Kelaey Marauder lead.
for eacb Is 5 p .m.
· · Pife, and Tiicia Smith.
Gllllll
: River Vall~ ldded one the
ND in the fOurth on hila wilh three cotlleCutiW bill
:from Holly Taylor, Carter, by Wlfd, Hardway, and ~~~ . . ,, - U l
Mllgl
101 01( - 110 I
llld WII'Cl, and they ICOI'ed Grimth. Hardway and ~
- Amr llrr. L'- t&lt;.rt Mlll'ann. .
:IIIOtber run in the fiftb after Griffith both went 011 to

·Stephanie Griffith and IICOtCi and JCil River VIJ1ey
:Porter were hit by pitches within one. Then Porter
:and Kari McFann and doubl,ed to left with two
Iateiyn Birchfield both sin- ouu and ldvm:ed to third,
bitt the inning ended before
Jiod.

WP- Gordon; LP - Lawson.

'

•_
r.

-

433 ·
6 10 2 '

'

,j"

·r

.

0%APR b' 18 m61•
•1.9%APRforl4mqn
•3.flAM for :46 • •
• 5.9%APR for 48 manibJ
til~

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-·-....

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201 DO -

371
I
- l&lt;arl

~~~
002 DO - 2 5
WP - ~ Ebeiilblatl; LP

Mclflnn,

·- t - -

- - . -- - -

Westbrook of .the Eagles and
Rodney Harri son of the
Patriots. Otber players are
John Wade of the Raiders,
Max Lane formerly of the
Patriots, Andre O ' Neil ()f the
VIkings, Matt Blundin for~
merly of the Chiefs and
Lions, Allen DeGraffenreid
formerly of the Packers and
Chiefs. Jason Rader ·of the
Pa!Qots, Will Shields of the
Chiefs, Carl Lee of the
VIkings, Chris Massey of the
Rams, Billy Lyon of the
Packers and Chiefs. Lee
VIckers of tbe Ravens imd
Ahmad Bradshaw of the
World Champion New York
. Giants. Also expected to
attend are former -coaches
from the. "Young Herd" that
.

was featured in tbe "We are
Marshall"
movie
Jack
Lengyel and Red Dawson,
alon~ with the q~roack of
the 'Young Herd" Reggie
Oliver.
The golf tourilament wi II
begin at 9 a.m. on Sunday,
with several sponsorships
available. From multiple
teem entrees to a single
golfer, but the spots are
expected to fill up fast.
Anyone interested in the
camp, or golf tournament can
register at www.bartrumandbrown.com. For more information in the camp you can
contact Mary Gannon at 304697-5640 or Mike Chancey
at 740-992-2158, or Gannon
for the Golf tournament.

..

Ohio's spring turkey season begins tomorrow at
6: II a.m., putting an end to .
weeks or even month s of
preparation by die-hard
gobbler hunters.
Meigs and Gallia coun ~
ties are ·great for wild
turkey hunting;, and hunters
in tbese two oounties consistently bag large numbers
. of gobblers.
Hunters ·are allowed to
kill tv;o bearded turkeys
during ! the season, whi ch
ends May 18, but can ' t
shoot them both on the
same day. Hunting hours
are one-half hour before
sunrise to noon. Only shotguns (including muzzleloading shotguns) using
shot, crossbows and lon g~
bows are permitted.
Due to the nature of
turkey
hunting,
i.e.
attempting to attract a legal
bird (gobbler) while pre~
te(lding to be an illegal bird
(a hen) through calling and
decoys, the sport carrie s
with it some specific hazards . .
In order to help you have
a safe and enjoyable. hunt. ing experience, I am offering the following turkey
hunting safety tips:
Don' t stalk: Don't try to
sneak up on a wild turkey
or turkey sounds. Chances
are pretty good you aren ' t
stealthy enough to actually
sneak up on a turkey, plus
there is a chance that what
you think is a turkey is
actually another hunter
waiting for a real turkey to
come to him .
Red, white and blue?:
Those ~e great colors for
lndepenclence Day, not so
much for turkey huntiqg .
Black neither. As a general
rule, don't dress in colors
that are associated with
your quarry. My suggestion? Full camouflage
when sitting still, hunter
orange when walking or

·In the

Open
JunFreeman
carrying out your trophy.
Keep still : Never move.
wave or ' make turkey
sounds to alert other
hunters to your presence .
Try yelling or speaking
loudly instead. Don 't use a
gobble call in the woods.
Location. location, location : Select a calling location th at leaves your back
again st a large tree and
leaves the area in front of
you open. Be careful when
using a decoy ; don' t put it
belwee n yourself an d
where a person might sneak
up on you. Don ' t sit too
close to your decoy.
See the beard: Make sure
what you are about' to· shom
is a legal bird . To do that.
you have to see the bird; no
exceptions'
A man 's got to know his
limitations: Don' t shoot at
a turkey outside your shot ~
gun ' s effective range and
always shoot at the head
and neck of the bird .
Pal tern your gun before the
hunt using number 4. 5 or 6
shot . The closer the better.
Follow these safety tips
and you should have a safe
and successful turkey season . Take along a youngste r
to pass along the tradition .

Jim Freeman is ..-ildlife
sp ecia lisr for ril e Meigs
Soil
and
WQfer
Conservariorr Di.Hri ct. H e
can b e co11ta cred weekdays at 740 - 992 ~4 2 82 or
at jim .fre eman @oil.nacdnet.net

MORE LOCAL NEWS. .

MORE lOCAL fOLKS.
· ;.;. s'ub(ctibe today. . ·
446~Z341 .or 992-2155
'

-

#1 USED CAR STORE gives vou more!

90 Days until your first payment! (That~s June)

lleld Over ltr Popul• De11aand 4.74% with selec:t lender's approval. (That's low interest)
•••A No Money Down! Plus $500.00 ·cash back with pu~hase o,lUctiJLcle (That's $500)

.Your bade is worth more. 3 month

.tunM •- •~G':.W...te••~n-

....,.-....

Me(ll

.....

AieKande( 010 030 0 Eas1om
122 001 X -

'

:site~

=

~-•• '1

grades 1-4 the time will be
&amp;:30 .a.m. until noon, while
the afternoon session will be
f01' grades 5-8 and it will be
heldfrom I :30 p.m. until4:30
p.m.
·
'
The oost of the camp is $30
for the early registrabon and
$40 tbe · day of !he camp.
Eacb additional child is $20.
Early registration must be in
by May 3rd.
. Over 20 former and present
NFL players, and former
MarshallplayersandCI,l'lches
will take part in the camp.
Among those NFL players
expected to attend are AII ·Pro
players .Jevon Kearse of the
Titans, Chad Pennington of
the .Jets, Mike Vr.tbel of the
Patriots,
and
Brain

ATHENS

.,,.;.
~
. .

game

The~ 't'::

the bleediag with the lead
smaller but slliU intJ&amp;Ct at 54. and ~t1ten they add~
another run in the sixtb far
good measure. It was the
second win in as maiiy
days ifor Eastem.
·
Nick Brannon bad :a dop:- ·
bie .f or !the Eagles, who
also got hits from Zach ·
Hendrix, Ben iBucldey, and
Andrew Benedu!IL
:
Eastern finished with l(l
hits .and two erntrs, whilj:
Alexander had thr.e e hits
and d!Fee errors.
·
Ea'si.em ret:ums ,to actioo
Monday when it hos$
Waterford i.n a Tri-Valley
Conference
H0ck:.io.,g
Division contest. Game
time is scheduled for 5
p.m.

r- One
doesn't
·
.

Edl:~Rai ..i .lp tltpt. ale

.

BY 8tmull WMJI!IIS

' ;;IIWAL'IBISAti'DAil\1111BIJNE.COM

walk.

' :y 10, rtliu11wid o

~!' bl:itne!i i!ltntind • Page 83

tRaiders fall to Vmton County in six innings Enjoy turkey season stifely

received dime walks in that
frame.
The guests man&lt;~god tbcir .
otha' three runs in the fifth .
.on d!ree hits, an error and a

Glilllll•

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

mileii~i[·~~i~i!j

�Sunday, April20, 2oo8

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis
'

· · Sunday, Aprilzo, 2oo8

Angels slay Lady Dragons in five
BYa.-WAUDS
BWAl'IBis.M\'OAil\11118UNE.COM

PROCTORVILLE
Gallia Academy softball
claimed its fifth Slraigbt victory of the season Friday
evening with a five-inning,
10.0 mercy-rule triumph
over bosl Fairland during a
.DiliH:ooferenoe matdlup.
The Blue Angels (9-2) 8.. s
'
1iCXnd in only two of their
fi,ve &amp;ames at the plate, but a {our over the minimum.
-seven-run thUd pt:Ovided
MackeiiZie Rucker· s~
plenty of breathing mom for FHS and wotked 2.1
and a three-run fifth closed · innings. allowing five runs
1be door on the Lady (zero earned), two hits and
Dragons ,.._ who feU to 3-5 three walks in taking the
CM::Ril this ~aigo.
loss. Amber Bias entered in
&lt;JAilS knocked out eight relief during the third and
ilits in the decision and also fini~ed things out, going
benefitted from
seven 2.2 innings and allowin six
·Fairland errors, as well
hits, five nms (one earned)
.four walks. 1be guests also and a walk while fanning
·committed four errors in the three. Rucker also struck out
·win, but allowed only one two.
·hit and two walks. Both
Sooreless througb two, the
-teams stranded six runners . Blue and White sent a dozen
.on base.
batterS ro the plate in the top
· Sophomore Kimber Davis of the third - which result·picked up the winning deci- ed in the pivotal seven-run
sion, pitching a !01tutout and explosion. The hosts oomfanning four over fiv.e mitted six of their errors durinnings of work. Davis faced . ing that eruption, while
· just 19 battei'S in the game, GAHS also bad two bits and
m

-

as

:.

. - CHESHIRE River
.!Valley baseball is still iit
- ~ for its elusive first
. win of the season following
·Riday evening's 13-2, six~g setback 10 visiting
=""'Vinton

Courtney Shriver paced
tbe.olfensivellllal:'k with two
bits and ' tWo RBis, while
Davis, lindsey Wlday, Amy
Noe, Alii S~ Morgan
Lesliie and .Kari Campbell
eaoh provided one safely.
Campbell, Britlyn Saunders
and Bri~y Miller alsp had
an RBI· ap~eoe.
.
Rucker bad the lone Green
and White hit wi!h a double :
during the first inning.
Gallia Acade!ny returns to '
action Monday wben its
llosts
Portsmouth
:at
Memorial Field for ~
Soutbeastfm Ohio Athldic
League South I&gt;ivisiOn ()()11...,...wu
test. Game tinie is scheduled So~h Gallia head baseball ooatli Greg Sullivan, stamdt~. gives a pregame talk oduring
fur 5 p.m.
Thursday's home i(ijlellel •(11St Sjmmes ~.r ~ ,Me1t:e~"ille .

County~­

i.ng a non-

conference

matobup_
T h e

Raiders (012l
feU
behind 4-1
tbrougbtwo
innings of
[$ AI
play
and
.
managod to
•~ things that way until
ihc top of the .f ifth, when tbe
Vikings (5-7) ·exploded for
three run~ to .take a 7-I
advantage. VCHS also
s.y.o Wallanlphoto
tucked on six more scores in River Valley catcher Austin Justice, left, tags out Vinton County's. Austin Ankrom during the
the sixth for a 13-1 edge.
sixth inning of Friday's noiHXlnference baseball game _in Cheshire.
Misner
and over five innings while strik- 10-0, five-inning loss to
' RVHS Jl111Ulaged to score contest.
a JllUl in its half of the sixth · Caldwell also had an RBI ing out two and walking six.. Fairland.
to pull within 11, but that each.
.
Ryan Eggleton worked relief
River Valley returns to
was -as close as the hosts
The Vtk.in~s - who had in the sixth, allowing seven action Monday when it hosts
:came before the mercy-rule I 8 hits in tbe triumph -. hits and two . walks while Rock Hill in an Ohio Valley
took: ef!fect~
were led by Corey Cosgray fanning one.
Conference contest. Game
· ·The Raiders tallied seven with four bits, followed by
Cosgray was the winning time is scheduled for 5 p.m.
bits in die setback, with Eric the quartet of Andy Grillo, pitcher, going six full
Vinton County 13, Rl2
Caldwell leading the way Levi
Lawhead,
Derek innings and allowing one
61nnlngo
wilih two bits and a run McManus and Adam Ward walk while striking out five.
-scored. Jacob Brown, Aaron with thfee hits apiece. Grillo
Vinton
County . also
Vinton Co 220 036 - 13 1.8 0
Mulholland, Devin Gibbs, also bad a game-high three claimed a season sweep,-· R Valley 010 001 - 2 7 0
Ohris Misner and Clayton runs scored in the triumph.
winning tbe first matchup VCHS (5·7): Go"'y Gosgray and Tommy
Curnutte each provided .a
Brown was ·the losing between these teams by a Hale.
RVHS (0·12): Jacob Brown, Ryan
safety as well., with Gibbs pitcher of record for the 14-10 count. RVHS was also Eggkrton
(6) and Austin .Justice.
liCO!ing the other run in the Raiders, all()wing seven runs one-hit Thursday during a WP - Coscray: LP - Brown .

'**

Gallipolis

5--

007 oa -

10ta 4

~-

ooo oo -

•o n

'GAHS (9-2): Kimber Davis a1d Lindsay
Wanl.
FHS (11-5): -..zie Ruci&lt;ar, l'.mber
Bias ~) and'Sarah Sirnrrs.
WP- OaYis; LP ~ Rucker.

Eastern track competes at Ft. Frye
SWW:Rawu

·~LYSENTJie..t:OM -

Rebels
lose
home opener to Vtkes
I
.
,
!SliU'F R&amp;wr

SPOimilffiiYDAILYTRIBUNEIJOM

MERCERVILLE
. Soutli Gama basdWl after two-and-a-luM weekli
on die road-· finidly made
its home debut Thursday
ev.e nwg against Symmes
Vall~y. Unt:qrtunaliely for
the hosts, it wasn't mucb of
a coming horne piuty.
Tile Vikings plated four
runs in the top of tlhe Mt
and never looked back,
scoring in every frame during a five; ioning, 13-2. victory over the Rebels.
SVHS (5-2) pounded out
14 hits in :t he triumph,
while ~he Rebels (24U
managed only four hits
over the · same five-iiming
span. Both teams 'commit.ted two -err()rs in the ODD.test.
The Vikings led 4-1 after
one inning of play, ·t hen
added a run .e ach i.n lihe second and third to take a 6- 1
advantage after twG-and-ahalf frames . SGHS added
its final run in the thiid to
cut the deficit to four, but

alqowi.ng 10 runs, II hits
and four walks whille fanning two. B.J. Stanley
entered in relief during the
.
follflh and gave up three
runs and three hits over an
inning-plus Qf work.
Micah Cardwell [ed the
hosts witb two ihits, followed by Wells and Corey
Small with a ·safety apiece.
SVHS had six different
· players with multi-bit
oever came closer the Test ef!forts, led oy Cody Bland
of the way.
with three hits. Powell ,
Symmes Valley scored Tyler Easthom., E~
seven runs over tbe ll.ast two Wilson, Brice Se"ton md
fi:ames- including five in Luke Taylor a1so had two
llhe top of the fift!h - to hits each.
secure the final 11-run -outSoutb Gallia will return
come.
to action Monday when it
J.J . Huff was lihe winning hosts Chesapeake i.n .a nonpitcher of recor.d, going conference matchup. The
dn:ee inlrin~s .and .allowing f1rst pitch is scheduled for 5
lour bits, t wo runs and p.m.
three walks while striking
out six. R0bbie Powell 1lymmeo'Valley 13, Soulll
Sinn....
worked ( WO inni.ngs of
relief, . ailowwg .21ero hits S Valley
~11 25 13142
101
Oil
242
S
Gama
and ~ro runs for tbe victors.
SVHS (5-2): J.J. Hutl. Rol&gt;ble Powell (4)
SGHS staner John Wells and Cody Bland.
took the Joss working . SGHS (2-8): Jot.. Wells, B.J. Siani&amp;y
.
. '.
.d (4) and Gorey Small.
th ree-p Ius mmngs an
WP-Huff; LP-Weils.

Vol..,

Bartrum-Brown Camp coming to Huntington
· SPECIAL TO THE TIMEs-SENTINEL

HUN1INGTON, W.Va. The 2008 Bartrum and
Brown Foothall Camp, and
Celebrity Golf Tournament
will be held on May 17th and
]'8th .in Huntipgton. The football camp will be held on
Saturday, May 17 at Marshall
Uni~ersny·s Joan C. EdwBI'\is
Stadium, while the golf ·tt&gt;urnament will be held on
'Sunday, May 18at1'winSilos
Golf Course.
1be weekend will be hosted by focmer Marshall and
,NIL stars Mike Bartrum and
Tmy Brown
·
1be football camp will be
divided intt&gt; two sessions. for

-.z

Eastern.holds off visiting Spartans
StaWREPGRr
SPORTS@MVDAILYSENTINEl.GPM .

-

TUPPERS I?LAINS ··
Kyle Gordon and Derek
Griffin each bad two hits
and two RBis for E:astem,
helping the _Eagles baseball .
team defeat the Alexander
Spru:tans 6-4 Friday night.
Gordon fmished :2-for-3
Q I s
with AI walk, while Griffm
went 2-for-4 with a double.
Tyler Hendrix also went 2- two in bolih the bottom of
for~3 and had a douhle.
die !ieCOnd and 1ihe 'bottom
The wi n gi~es Eastern a of ·me ilhird while keeping
record · Qf 5-7 on lihe !lea- Alexander off me board.
son.
They held a S-1 lead
Gordon earned the win, through four innings.· ·
pitching a complete game . The 'Spaitails made it
interesting .the ilO.p of. the
and striking-out six.
Eastern sco~ed once in "fifdl,' getting two runners
the first inning. but their on through fielding efl'ors
first lead didn 'I last .as the who went oo to score and
Spartans tied it in die sec- -aOOJber who walked and
ond.
later scored.
The Eagles then scored
But the · Eaglell stopped

...

m

:Meigs second baseman Meri vanMeter, right. looks toward the umpire for a call after tag·ging Riller Valley's Allison Porter during a steal attempt Friday m a non-oonference softball
:pme at Rocksprings_
.'
Meigs also got hits from she could make it home and

Sweeps

Chandn Stanley and StJellie tie the game.
Bailey, finishing- with I 0
It was the closest they'd
total
.
.River
Valley
bad
eight
oome
to salvaging a split as
.fhJm Page 81
hits, and both teams bad one· River Valley closed the
game out with two three up,
:with a bit and scored. two error.
In
two,
the
Lady
three down innings.
:batters later when Amy Barr
Raiders' comeback: fell just
Hoffman went 2-for-3,
· and Meigs also got singles
tum soored in the short.
Meigs, the away team for from VanMeter, Barnes, and
:Jleeond, and !he Lady
:Raiders took: the lead in the the second game, scored Stanley. They fmished with
:top of the third. · Kirsten twice in the top of the first seven total hits.
Birchf~eld ~so had a hit
:Cirter singled, Jenna Ward thanks to a lriple from Barr
that
drove
in
VanMeter
and
in ~ame two for the .Lady
·lbve her in with a triple.
. and lbcn Brittany Hardway a double from Shanalle Raiders. w.ho JOt five total.
Smi!h that drove in Bm.
Both te'ama play qain
:.ut Ward borne,
Still
up
two
in
the
third,
Monday. Meial i1 on ·tbe
In the bottom of the third,
:Mel&amp;• ~ hits from aeven Hoffman 11111Cked the ball road ·qalnat Belpre, While
playi!rl, includlna doubles onto the football field River Valley play• at home
.l'roin Mickl
Barne1, beyond left for a 3.0 Lady .,aialt Oak HIU. Stan time
· Sbanalle Smith, Kelaey Marauder lead.
for eacb Is 5 p .m.
· · Pife, and Tiicia Smith.
Gllllll
: River Vall~ ldded one the
ND in the fOurth on hila wilh three cotlleCutiW bill
:from Holly Taylor, Carter, by Wlfd, Hardway, and ~~~ . . ,, - U l
Mllgl
101 01( - 110 I
llld WII'Cl, and they ICOI'ed Grimth. Hardway and ~
- Amr llrr. L'- t&lt;.rt Mlll'ann. .
:IIIOtber run in the fiftb after Griffith both went 011 to

·Stephanie Griffith and IICOtCi and JCil River VIJ1ey
:Porter were hit by pitches within one. Then Porter
:and Kari McFann and doubl,ed to left with two
Iateiyn Birchfield both sin- ouu and ldvm:ed to third,
bitt the inning ended before
Jiod.

WP- Gordon; LP - Lawson.

'

•_
r.

-

433 ·
6 10 2 '

'

,j"

·r

.

0%APR b' 18 m61•
•1.9%APRforl4mqn
•3.flAM for :46 • •
• 5.9%APR for 48 manibJ
til~

~· Ot.:tolll!r-

-·-....

.......

&lt;

201 DO -

371
I
- l&lt;arl

~~~
002 DO - 2 5
WP - ~ Ebeiilblatl; LP

Mclflnn,

·- t - -

- - . -- - -

Westbrook of .the Eagles and
Rodney Harri son of the
Patriots. Otber players are
John Wade of the Raiders,
Max Lane formerly of the
Patriots, Andre O ' Neil ()f the
VIkings, Matt Blundin for~
merly of the Chiefs and
Lions, Allen DeGraffenreid
formerly of the Packers and
Chiefs. Jason Rader ·of the
Pa!Qots, Will Shields of the
Chiefs, Carl Lee of the
VIkings, Chris Massey of the
Rams, Billy Lyon of the
Packers and Chiefs. Lee
VIckers of tbe Ravens imd
Ahmad Bradshaw of the
World Champion New York
. Giants. Also expected to
attend are former -coaches
from the. "Young Herd" that
.

was featured in tbe "We are
Marshall"
movie
Jack
Lengyel and Red Dawson,
alon~ with the q~roack of
the 'Young Herd" Reggie
Oliver.
The golf tourilament wi II
begin at 9 a.m. on Sunday,
with several sponsorships
available. From multiple
teem entrees to a single
golfer, but the spots are
expected to fill up fast.
Anyone interested in the
camp, or golf tournament can
register at www.bartrumandbrown.com. For more information in the camp you can
contact Mary Gannon at 304697-5640 or Mike Chancey
at 740-992-2158, or Gannon
for the Golf tournament.

..

Ohio's spring turkey season begins tomorrow at
6: II a.m., putting an end to .
weeks or even month s of
preparation by die-hard
gobbler hunters.
Meigs and Gallia coun ~
ties are ·great for wild
turkey hunting;, and hunters
in tbese two oounties consistently bag large numbers
. of gobblers.
Hunters ·are allowed to
kill tv;o bearded turkeys
during ! the season, whi ch
ends May 18, but can ' t
shoot them both on the
same day. Hunting hours
are one-half hour before
sunrise to noon. Only shotguns (including muzzleloading shotguns) using
shot, crossbows and lon g~
bows are permitted.
Due to the nature of
turkey
hunting,
i.e.
attempting to attract a legal
bird (gobbler) while pre~
te(lding to be an illegal bird
(a hen) through calling and
decoys, the sport carrie s
with it some specific hazards . .
In order to help you have
a safe and enjoyable. hunt. ing experience, I am offering the following turkey
hunting safety tips:
Don' t stalk: Don't try to
sneak up on a wild turkey
or turkey sounds. Chances
are pretty good you aren ' t
stealthy enough to actually
sneak up on a turkey, plus
there is a chance that what
you think is a turkey is
actually another hunter
waiting for a real turkey to
come to him .
Red, white and blue?:
Those ~e great colors for
lndepenclence Day, not so
much for turkey huntiqg .
Black neither. As a general
rule, don't dress in colors
that are associated with
your quarry. My suggestion? Full camouflage
when sitting still, hunter
orange when walking or

·In the

Open
JunFreeman
carrying out your trophy.
Keep still : Never move.
wave or ' make turkey
sounds to alert other
hunters to your presence .
Try yelling or speaking
loudly instead. Don 't use a
gobble call in the woods.
Location. location, location : Select a calling location th at leaves your back
again st a large tree and
leaves the area in front of
you open. Be careful when
using a decoy ; don' t put it
belwee n yourself an d
where a person might sneak
up on you. Don ' t sit too
close to your decoy.
See the beard: Make sure
what you are about' to· shom
is a legal bird . To do that.
you have to see the bird; no
exceptions'
A man 's got to know his
limitations: Don' t shoot at
a turkey outside your shot ~
gun ' s effective range and
always shoot at the head
and neck of the bird .
Pal tern your gun before the
hunt using number 4. 5 or 6
shot . The closer the better.
Follow these safety tips
and you should have a safe
and successful turkey season . Take along a youngste r
to pass along the tradition .

Jim Freeman is ..-ildlife
sp ecia lisr for ril e Meigs
Soil
and
WQfer
Conservariorr Di.Hri ct. H e
can b e co11ta cred weekdays at 740 - 992 ~4 2 82 or
at jim .fre eman @oil.nacdnet.net

MORE LOCAL NEWS. .

MORE lOCAL fOLKS.
· ;.;. s'ub(ctibe today. . ·
446~Z341 .or 992-2155
'

-

#1 USED CAR STORE gives vou more!

90 Days until your first payment! (That~s June)

lleld Over ltr Popul• De11aand 4.74% with selec:t lender's approval. (That's low interest)
•••A No Money Down! Plus $500.00 ·cash back with pu~hase o,lUctiJLcle (That's $500)

.Your bade is worth more. 3 month

.tunM •- •~G':.W...te••~n-

....,.-....

Me(ll

.....

AieKande( 010 030 0 Eas1om
122 001 X -

'

:site~

=

~-•• '1

grades 1-4 the time will be
&amp;:30 .a.m. until noon, while
the afternoon session will be
f01' grades 5-8 and it will be
heldfrom I :30 p.m. until4:30
p.m.
·
'
The oost of the camp is $30
for the early registrabon and
$40 tbe · day of !he camp.
Eacb additional child is $20.
Early registration must be in
by May 3rd.
. Over 20 former and present
NFL players, and former
MarshallplayersandCI,l'lches
will take part in the camp.
Among those NFL players
expected to attend are AII ·Pro
players .Jevon Kearse of the
Titans, Chad Pennington of
the .Jets, Mike Vr.tbel of the
Patriots,
and
Brain

ATHENS

.,,.;.
~
. .

game

The~ 't'::

the bleediag with the lead
smaller but slliU intJ&amp;Ct at 54. and ~t1ten they add~
another run in the sixtb far
good measure. It was the
second win in as maiiy
days ifor Eastem.
·
Nick Brannon bad :a dop:- ·
bie .f or !the Eagles, who
also got hits from Zach ·
Hendrix, Ben iBucldey, and
Andrew Benedu!IL
:
Eastern finished with l(l
hits .and two erntrs, whilj:
Alexander had thr.e e hits
and d!Fee errors.
·
Ea'si.em ret:ums ,to actioo
Monday when it hos$
Waterford i.n a Tri-Valley
Conference
H0ck:.io.,g
Division contest. Game
time is scheduled for 5
p.m.

r- One
doesn't
·
.

Edl:~Rai ..i .lp tltpt. ale

.

BY 8tmull WMJI!IIS

' ;;IIWAL'IBISAti'DAil\1111BIJNE.COM

walk.

' :y 10, rtliu11wid o

~!' bl:itne!i i!ltntind • Page 83

tRaiders fall to Vmton County in six innings Enjoy turkey season stifely

received dime walks in that
frame.
The guests man&lt;~god tbcir .
otha' three runs in the fifth .
.on d!ree hits, an error and a

Glilllll•

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

mileii~i[·~~i~i!j

�PIJit B4 • i;u11l~• ~ i;a::tiud

PomeloJ • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday, April

Point Pleasant outlas1s White Falcons
MASON, W.Va. - Clay Krebs
drilled a 1hral run homer in the rop half
of !be tenth inning aod Cwt Grimm
wcut !be distance oo the DlOWid to give
·visiting Point Pleasant a thrilling OOIIllj·
from-behind % diamond victory OVC!f
Wahama Friday evening in a ~
between two MllliOil Couilty rivals. .
· Krebs• three run blast hil!;hlighted a
.lart: Big Black rally as PJ'HS scored
lbree seventh inning runs to knot the
soore aod send the contest into extta
. innings. The come-from-behind triumph gave Point Pleasant its second
.· win of the spring over its neighboring
rivals as the Big Blacks improved to S7 on the year. Wahama, playing its sec.ond straight e~tta inning ron~ in as
many days,' failed to erose things out
. ·against Point Pleasant with Brock
-McClung delivering a clutch, two-run
sinl!;lc in the seventh to even the score
ancfsend the game into the extra frames.
. Cun Grimm fanned 16 White Faloon
.batters in the outing while ~iving up six
·runs, four earned, on six hits and seven
·free passes during his gutsy. 10 inning
route going performance. Wil!iam
·Zuspan, the !OOCOnd of two WHS pitch:ers.. ~as tagged with the loss after
.relieving Fafoon staiter, Jeny !Jl'rl:ley,
.in the seventh. Bl'rl:ley went su and a
'thinJ innings giving up five runs, three
earned, on five hits with seven strike'Qllts and five walks. Zuspan went three
·and two-thirds innings allowing four
runs, tJrree earned, on two hits while
fanning seven and walking six.
· P-oint Pleasant totaled seven base
·.knOcks on the evening with Krebs and
.McClung coming up with the big hits
.for the Big Blacks. D.W. Herdman
smacked a pair of singles in the outin~
.with McClung adding another base hit
to go along with his ganre tying, tworun safety. Ashton Jones and Justin
:Veith also collected a base hit 31?iece for
CoachJamieHigginbotham'scharges.
· Wahama tallied six sing_les with
Anthony Bond coming up With a two
run single with Veazey and Justili
Arnold also drivinLJin a run each with a
single. Zuspan ad
a hit for the White
Faloons as did Jerry Berldey and Jacob
Roach.

CONFERENCE

l.-.y~

.
_unyCrrmU '1 .
Point Pleasant's T'ltus Ru.ssell makes a throw to first dunng a high school baseball game against Wahama Friday evening in Mason.
.
'th
. ..._fifth._..,
In the
' ~_.... ro· .., ____, ---'li
mg up WI. .two runs m WE:
~ore
. ~w ~ rliCoiDillll W...,..;u 1Wahama gained a ~2 ~vantage m ~ de. t1m1; m mountmg 3llOIIII2' threat as
bonnm half of the mmng. The Wbite ~ Ve~~ aod Asbtoo Jones led off !be
Faloo~s and Veazey took rts time l1!fl mmng with baet-10-back bases on balls.
lead mto the seveqth wben the Btg KrebSthenausbedatwoandtwo~­
Blacks began its. 001•11'hadr rally af!ei' ~ ~ Znym fur a three run dinger
Veazey bad retired the first pomt to g~ve Pomt Pleasant a 9-6 leild.
Pleasant bitta of the inning.
~ lben ~ short work of tbe
Jones w~ before Kn:bs ground ~ Fal~ m the bottom half of~
ball was llllSplayed for an error. mrung by retu:ing the first two WHS hitHenbnan oha5!"" home~ Big Black tel'S oo strikes l;lefore getting Caleb
~ runner With an RBI sinj!Je before Roach to ln'OUDII.~ to Jones at short to
Higgbotbam _called on McC~ who conclude ibe 10 mmng marathon.
•.
proDIJJtly delivered a two run single to
WabaJIII! . now ~ do the ~ IS
knot ibe soore at 5-5.
.
.
slakd to VIS!I ~lhamstown fur a pall' Of
~ teams ~ a run m the ninth game.s begmmng at II a.m. .before
withHerdman~awalkandmov- opemng up next weeks acuoo _at
ing ~ thinJ on McClung's second hit of OtadeSioo Catbolic on Tuesday. Pomt
~ mgbt Tttus RusseU's ~ was Pleasant opens a four
home ~
IDI~lar:!!or ~ mur With Hmlman on M~y when.Ho:
Hoover vtsits
racmg n
to g1ve PI'HS a 6-5 advan- for a 5.30 p.m. conleh1 follo_wed by
tage. Wahama bloued the soore in the Buffalq on ~sday, Me~gs on
botJom half of !be inni~in much tbe W~sday aud Chapmanville on
same fashion as Point -HSI!nt's cally. Friday.
Jacob Roach sinlded to get things startPI
cl . . . . . . . e
ed for the White Falooos. Roach swiped pp 000 .PDIRt
020 301 3
second and later SOIII'ed on a Big Bfitck w 100 040 001 0 -- 870
665
fielding miscue to again eve~~ the count - y . ~n (7) and Urodetwoud. Grinim and

C

Hardman. WP -Grimm. LP --: Zuspon.

..

ment that she needs to wori Ill'S on the haldwood.
on beooming a bette:r hitter.
Other activities include
"I feel that my strength is participating · in .her prior
my ability to play various government class mock
positions. I have played sec- election where she ran for
ond base, fmt base and one of lhe Logan · County
shQftSlOp daring my high Commissi.oner tats and was
"fJboo! mM," .she Wei. "' cholieD for . !he po&amp;itiOil.
~ ~ ~ve 0!!. my hit- . ~~~!1m' the ~Ul"
ling .and qurinelos."' ·nity to job madow the COWlShe plans to major in ty kaders for a day.
Nursing, which was also
She was RlCCD1ly chosen
another reason she selected ·as a member of the Niiiiona:l
Rio Gtande.
Honor Society with a grade
"I know they have a good point average of 3.4945 aod
nursing prognm~. a strong 1s nmW 15th in ~class.
softball team, Bob Evan's ' Pyles has had liiSICni playFarm is there aod my sister ing for him before and
goes there," she said
believes that Lindsey and
SteveM is well I'OIIoded as Amanda will be good for
she comes to college, having each ~ next season. "I
played volleyblill, basket- tbinkifsexcitingforbothof
ball, softball aud also was a them to get to play with eacli
cheerleader for Riverside. odler tor :a year,'" Pyles said.
She is a member of Interact, "Amanda is a model kid for
FCCLA, FCA, aud the us, so hopefully Lindsey
Riverside Yearbook Staff. comes down and follows in
She also wOlted as apart of her sister's footsteps."
the ..
~ for the
Lindsey's . goal's . while
-_..
senior class play.
playing at Rio Grande?
She earned first team all- . ''To wort hard and belp
oonference llooo!i in volley- . tbe team with the AMC
ball as a senior and was (American
Mideast
··bbed
·
. ._
...le ............
.
·
Co-o&lt;-,-.-.-)"
title,
win
...
""""""" ....._.....
.,..,..,....,..
District 9. She was tbe Most regionals and make it to
'Valuable Player for tbe bas- nationals."
kctball team .and glll1JCied Lindsey is the~ ::~r~~~~
1llill0illtl!ll'llal1-l'".....-oeli0i!· 0i1K11r .t"ll'!fl Sl
·-

_.,.,.a_

m·

--..-

I

:Redwomen soccer inks Circleville's Scudder

I.

.,

I
' I

JiOil.

She is a 5-foot, 5-inch
·sweeper/defender,
who
brings plenty of accolades
with to the colle;ge, game.
,;Having played for Rio alum
Jason Herbert, she was first
learn All-District and first
:team All-Mid-State League
·ifl.2007 while being voted
·lhe team's best defender for
.a team that finished 13-3-3.
.She earned honorable men-tion Ali-MSL as a junior and
second team as a sopho11¥&gt;1'e· She was also selected

..

as honor.able , menlion all-distri.ct as a
sophomore,
while earning the most
improved
p ·I a y e r
award.
"I
am
very ellcited
to go to Rio.
I think there will be many
opportunities there for me in
soccer and communications
(which is her intended
major)," 'Scudder said. "It
is a p-eat campus and I was
looking for a small friendly
~~~~ to and that is

thought the dorms were very
nice, unlike some other
small schools."
As a defender for
Circleville, Scudder helped
provide 22 career shutouts
m three years. During that
time Circleville won two
district championships and
one league title.
Oliver is very pleased to
be bringing in a player of
Scudder's skill seJ. "I .am
extremely excited to be
adding Ltz to our 2008 roster. She is a great addition
to our program and 1 look
for her to .add many new
d~ensi~ns to our play,"
Oij.ver said. "I see Liz mat. ~ ';J;::.iate impact on

Scudder had some familiarity with the school from
some alumni that she knew
and from attending summer
soccer camps. ·"I knew a
couple of people who went
to Rio and they lov~ it,"
she said. "Also, l have been
to soccer camp there and I

Scudder discu'sed her
best assets aud what she
feels like she needs to
improve on as a player. "I
would bave to say !hat my
best assets are bei.ilg a
leader and beina coachable," she said. 1~'While at
Rio, I would like to wod: 011

---··--

llliwi ........

playoffs, which .a:ait this
woehnd:
E.\SI'EitN

BY MARK W•••ws

Jail.
Scudder is the third recruit
:to sign for head coach
.Amber Oliver this offsea-

.

A look at the eight firstround .series in lfle. NBA

SPECIAL TO THE TIMESSENTINEL

RIO GRANDE - The
.:unive!lity · of Rio Grande
...,omen 's&lt;_ soccer program
.has ·signed Circleville High
School's Liz Scudder to a
· national letter of intent.
:scudder will begin her
.career at Rio Grande in the

Previews of the eight 2008
first-round NBA playoff series
IJy

Stevens signs with Rio Grande softball

BYMAMWw-

Pomeroy • .K'iddleport • Gallipolis

. AEP donates tarps, fiist~id
-kits
to local athletic
•

Coach Tom Cullen's Bend Area team
·soored one run in the first before adding
a four run frame in the fifth and another
single tally in the ninth. Point Pleasant
eraSed the Falcons I .Q edge after oom- nt 6-6.

SPECIAL TO THE TIMES.SENTINEL

20, 2008

..

my fitness ro '"&gt;lay at the best
of my ability. "
. Oliver likes her strong,
p~ysi911 play.on the «Jt;f~­
stve end of the field. 'Uz
will be a great additioo to
our defensive unit," she
said · ·she is a strong, physical player that knows the
game. Her aggressive style
of play · and composure
under pn:ssure will add tn ·
our team defensively."
Scudder talked about her
goals as a player- while · at
Rio Grande. "To be an
accountable player for Rio
and serve as a role model for
other players . even as a
freshman," she said.
Scudder joins Urbana
High School's Maggie
and
Brittany
Harris
Brannock of Bethel-Tate
High School as the cunent
members of the 2008 Rio
~recruiting class.,
. Li.t is the daughter of Jeff
and Miriam Scudder . of
Cin:leville .

1

wahama's Alex Wood pitdles durifll the second inning of a
high school softball game against Ravenswood Friday ih
Hao lfunl. The lady Falcons won 4-2.

I

Lady Falcons hold otT

late Ravenswood charge
BYLI'

c..

three hits aud one run over
the fiDal six innings, but the
damage had already been
HARTFORD, W.Va. · - done.
Aftec Thursday's disapOn the other side of the
pointing loss to Bulfalo, a diamond Alex Wood played
narrow win over a tough a solid game for the home
opponent ~s just what tbe squad in picking up the win.
doctor ordered for Wahama Sbe gave up five bits and
as the Lady 'Falcons edged finished with six sCrikeoqts
out a 4-2 wm over Class AA and two walks in six innings
foe Ravenswood Friday of wmt.. ·
evening.
Wahama 's other
Thursday's loss to Buffalo Kylie Riggs, provi
the
SIIW the Red and White out- biggest impact at the plate
play their opponent in all going 2-for-4 highlighted by
aspects of the game, but a an RBI double. Taylor
small handful of errors Hysell also posted an RBI
allowed the Lady Bison to double and added a single.
ed~e out a 5-3 win. On
Mary Kebler and Ashley
Fnday the Wy Falcons Wolfe had an RBI single
(10-7) corrected tbose mis- apiece for Wahama and
·takes, cutting out the errors Kayana Sayre went 2-for-3
while keeping up the offense to round out the WHS
in posting tbe narrow win. offense.
,
Wahama went up 3.Q after
Ravens:wood managed
one inning and extended that just five poles led by
lead to 4.Q with a run in the 8elcber who bad a twO-run
fowth before Ravenswood triple.
Hiltnn
and
(9-9) found some offe~~se in Carmichael added a pair of
the sixth. The Devilettes . hits each. ·
scored two runs in the visiWabama will complete a
tor half of the inning to cut very busy week that saw it
their deficit in half, but play nine games in six days
wuldn 't set any closer from ·on Saluniay with a doublethere.
lleailet. Y!lllllll Man starting
. Mllmly played a major at· 2 p.m.
·.
role in the big lii'St inmng
... Wiiii4,Raus:e :d2
for Wabam~ giving u.P five
bitS ll!ld three nms m the R ·0 00 002 0·. - 251
•so
pitcbers cin:le before quick- w 300 100 x
ly being replaced in the fo!- RHS (9-9): Murray, J. Peery (2) and A.
lowing inning .by Peery. Peery.
did a much better job WHS (10.7): Aiel&lt; Wood and An'dlor
-·----'
•
Tully.
.or Ve!lSwuuu,
givmg
Up WP- M"""Y'. LP--: WDOO.
I

~LYREGISTEROQM

.f!ttcber,

I.AJCal Greg Fowler
compe"~
:u;;,

·m·

all-star race

8Y la n1 C..

Hot Rod divisioo at the event,
one of seven lHRA divisions.
Eigbldriversfromeachoflhe
POINT PlEASANT, W.Va. divisions will be battling for
- To be one of the fastest lhe
cltaiilpionsbip
in
A...n
•
•
•
Salurday's all-star llllle. Ober
one&gt;Aaf'&gt;
m a g~vm aa
IURA divisions include liop'
LCRU~L\'REGISTEltOQM

lhr;s

IS

&lt;;1...-0

~ ~

To be me of the fastest dri- ~~man.
ster,
\US in 1be w«id - that is Si:of.::k, Super lock,
.
Rod and S
Rod.
"'""liing o.••qktcly 4ifferuper """"DCI""'r:dod .hi_!n
em,
His finiBb ~gar
And local product . Greg the No.7 seed m •the Hot RQd
Fowler knOws exact~~ 11 Division for. ~)"s ~
:15' " ' - • - a.... ~
"'"' lllliJielll, pamng hiiD W,!tb
"'""' "' ""' '
_..,_ ·~ Utidi!I'W!iOO lit"'llmpA
label diem"! Jli'I:S
Jic:st in Fl. 'IWo is !be third~ OdirJr
the q lliClDg OOII1IDIIIIIty as ·oompetilooi at ~~
be ~ to tta~ .to the event Lioclude top
JHRAN11ro Jam National All- Damieo Hazdtoo Of Ottowa,
Star race Speedway
Satwday in
at Ohio· and No. 2 seed John "'·Rockinghant
•~uu.
Rockingham, NC. .
~C.
.
The national e~t, ":hicb in the~=r:g~:J
features tho; top eight drivers Hanis of NOJWood, NC,
!lithe final '2f.1J7. worl=- Glenn
Ferguson
of
~ ~~~ Greensboro, NC, TIDIOthy
sty "'- IHRA
and . Shuck. of West Lafayette,
·~ ...,
.seasoo
·Ohio and Scott Morgan of
billed ~ tJ:le IHRA's all-~ Oakboro, Nol1h Carollila.
event, Similar ~ the Spl!llt
To earn a spot in the all-star
OJp Olallenge ID NASCA#{. evenl, driven; from across the
"J.am e.xtmnely happy to be country were ~uired to comable tO _compete at di!s level pete in eight diVIsional events
·and .against ihe top driv~ m aod six national eve~~ts. From
the wOdd. Four Of the e1gbt those points Divisional
OO!I)Jld!tors ha\!e been World . Olampioils were detennined
Otampmns and my opponent by the~ ~g the most
is one of them." Fowler said. .n nint• m divisiOnal races.
"Not ooly am l n:presentmg ,.-FOWler won the Division I
West V~ but .the e~~tlre Cbao_Ipionship, representirnl
Nol1heaslmi U~. I i1II1 ~- the NOrtheast; and the poirits
ful to !Jave this oppolWIIIty gained from that title were
and plan to do my best to added to the points he gained
bring home the cbamp1- in national races held all
onship."
·
across the United State and
Fowler fmisbed seventh in Canada
.
the World standings in 2fJJ7
"Drag racing is a ~ery comhaving raced all across the petitive spon and it is ellciting
United States. and ~ to be able to OOmpele at me
racking up WlDS and pomts level J have the past couple of
alonR ibe way TOWard the final years. I am also very thlink:ful
woda standings.
for .the suppon I have rereived
He will be representing the from this area," Fowler said.

or.g:ooro.

IS

I.

•

. No.I BOSTON
· CFLTICS (66-16) w..
No.IA'I'LANTA
HAWKS (37-45)
S • -iios: Ce1tics 3-0.
They won all dee by double
digits.aod didn't even need
. 10 play their Biglbn:te in !be
fowth quart~::£ of tbe last
IDCJCfing In do it Atlanta
never readied 90 points in
any of the lbree games.
~vin Garnett aver..ged 23.7
points and 13.7 rebounds
while shooting 62.5 percmt
from tbe t1ooc.
·

.

..

.

varsity

.

..__iilh_

·DIMePc6wftllpl 111

Dave Fli'e, ~ ""' Sdlool
softball eoaoh, recently received a 100foot-by-100.
oa:•nn .and a safety kit from Rose fife, Mooty
.foot taJP for the school's ballfield as well as ~
Gilley and Gary Jol'lnSorl of AfP Riwer ()pe!ations iB Lakin, W.Va.

Slaijs

7

After rolling In

the NBA's best recool in the
largest one-season improveIDCIIt in NBA bist.ocy, the
, Celtics are back in the playoff's against the Hawks, who
ended the ~·,. loogest
· ~ drou~ with
their first
•m.Je liince
19911 . •
.

;ar•

ward, using
I..ewis H an
undersized
4, and now
they have to
falz one of
the best in
· tbe
East
Bosh averaged
33
Po i n t s
against
Odando and
shou1d put
UJl big numben in~~~- But Lewis
·~ his own matchup
~s with his ~
· shooting~~ 20. per
game agamst the llapt6rs.
Key matctwp D: How~d
vs. ~sho Nesterov1c.
Neste:roYlC beads 10 lbe postseason after one of die best
~ of bis ~A career,
avetagmg l6.3 pomts on 60
perllelll shooting in April.
Any offense · he proVIdes
~ is a hcn15:, because his
pnmary role .nil be bl slo:w
Howllld, !be NBA bder m
double-dou?les who sbot 71

No.7 DALLAS MAVERICKS (51-31)
S MJ wries: Tied 2-2.
The Mavericks eilmed the
split tD set up this srries by
beating tbe Homds lll-98
on tbe last night of the season. 1be teams also split two
meetings
since Dallas
acquired Jason Kidd, with
tbe Hornets wirming 104-93
iniGdd's Mavericks debut in
the first game after the AilStar break..
Staryliae: A year after losing in the first round as the
No. I seed, the Mavericks
are oow the dangerolis
underdogs against a New
Odeans team with little post- .
seaSOII experience.
Key matdlup I: Chris
Paul vs. Ki.dd. PaW bad easily been getting !be better of.
this matchup this season,
both when Kidd was playing
for New Jersey and Dallas,
but ·the veteran collected bis
tOOth Career triple-double in
the Mavs' victory in the season finale. Kidd struggles
pemen~_ 'W'mst T~.
against Paul's speed, but
Pn4i 4
Magic m 6.
always finds other ways to
Ne.4a.J!:VFL.\ND
getby.
.
CAV. IJJr.M:&lt;oiS-,'I'n
Ill'~.
D: Da 'd
:A
~ ""'' w.
-" n
I
·
V1
Ne.S WASHINGTON . West vs. DiJt Nowitzki.
WIZARDS (0-~)
West was one of the NBA's
S •Mil -its. Tied 2-2:· most underrated pow.er fork's toogh 1o gatber mucb wards before maki?g bis first
from the regillar season, An-Star game this season.
because the teams were Can step away from the
never at full. Sli'CDgtlh at the ~lock to bit from the outside,
same time. Gilbett Arenas though not with nearly the
missed all four games, while range of Nowitzki, who was
AD-Stars LeBron James .and superb 00wn the stretch after
Caron Buder each sat out a ~ from his ankle and
loss because of injuries. leg injuru:s.
.
lliiJieS averaged 27 ~Ptwli-eha: Hornets in 7.
10 rebounds and 7.7 assists
Nos3SANANTONIO
in !be dime be played.
SPUitS (~lii) w; No.6
Sl.ryliae: Thinl .stiaipn PHOENIX SUNS (55-%7}
)'ear lbese teams ;m: ...,.....ng
s. w Jllftiios: Suns 3-1.
m die fu:st mi11111: Cleveland f'boenix won both games
won .tbe pl\lY_tOUS two, after mJquiring Shaqu.ille
s~ a WaShington team O'Nal.. Tm1 Duncan was .a
IDISUg Arenas aod Buder combined 15-for-40 in those
last )'Qt. ~
two games, while O'Neal
1CeJ ntwp 1: fames vs. averaged 15 points and 12.5
B~ .Butler ~verag~ 23 rebounds. The S~s won
~ m Wasbin~n s two twice in San Antonio.
~s. but was hm1ted to ~0
SteQiille: Second sttaight
m ~one loss he played m. )'elll' these teams meet in the
Anxious for a g~ p:tfl'*- postseason. Spurs won last
man~ after ~ssms last year•s
tense
Western
~ s senes with an 1IIJIIIY· Confaenoe semifinal · ·
chever of lbese p1ayers """""'s aided by suspe~i:S
survives will be a nigblmatc ..-- '
· •
for
Boston
in the second to . the. Suns . Amare
round.
·
Stoudemire and Bons Diaw

JCej M P
I: Garnett
vs. Josh SmidL Garnett, a
favorite for Defmsive Player
of the Year, llgllinst a player
who should get some v&lt;Jfes.
Smith was in the league's top
. to in blocb aod ·Siieals, !)ut
lacks Garnett's offensive
.skills and can get di!.11acted
yelling at merces, . ~
or teammatefi. Nothing
makes Girnetl lose bis
focus.
Key M• • p 0: Rajoo
Rondo vs, Mite Bibby.
H~n's one advantage for
Atlanta. Bibby appeared .in
51 postseason
playing for ·
· ,
wJple Rondo is mating his
debut in only his second
NBA season. But his lipCel1
.advantage wiU he tougll foc
Bibby to handle.
Prwlidi-: Celtics in 4.
Nos 2 DETROIT PISTONS (~23) w.
Nos 7 PIIIL\DFLI'IIIA
76ERS (.,_.2)
S ITtl wries: Tied 2-2
after the 76ers won the last
.
. two meetings. Philalklphia
AEP River .....__ions in Lakill. W.va., recentlu donated 16 first-aid kits to the Green averaged 80 points in the
....,..,....
.Baseball Association
for the up6omi~ season.' Association President Matt Henry is pic- !irs!~ ~s before~tu!W with s~ reflresentative Gary JOhnsqn, stores supervisorMorty Gilley, payroll coor- l!lS 101 m a. VIctory~~ · K.ey •at+• D: Arenas ill Gam~ :5. . ' ...
Glnatar R!lse l'lfe ~iid .st_ores ~n~!lnt Dwayne £vans.
. '
' ~~ Ri=~
of vs.. ~~ ~lison. &lt;"ribsoo
·L ,; mafdlup t DUIIGan
lkttoit's ·starters played 30 had.hisown mJury problems, vs. 0 N~ and Stoudemire.
minntes.
missirlg more than a month Sroudennre was ~uently
SLi; '
Picked to fillish after the AD-Star break with m foul trouble trymg ~o
near
boitom in the East, an ankle injury. Fitber _can defe!ld Duncan, but ":~.IS
the 76ers instead turned into change the momentwn m a ·~ o~ tllilt responsibility
one of the league's biggest game by co~g off the With 0 Neal .there to do ~t.
surprises and made the play- bench and gettmg bot from Duncan, one of the league s
offs for the first time in lilRle outside in a hurry, as Gt'bson top low-post defenders,
years. The key was an 11-4 ~dafew~slastyeardur- probab~y has to take turns
March thai included a one- mg the Cavs run to the NBA defending both.
point win at Defmit
finals. Arenas bas gradually
Key matcbup H: Manu
Key
nMchup
I· been get1lil1g his confidence Ginobili
vs.
Leandro
Chawioey Billups vs. ~ back after a lengthy absence ~arbosa. ~ is the best
Miller: Miller av~ a followmg knee surgery.
SIXth man ID the league, and
area--high 11.1 points as
PI 115ft: Wtzards in 7. B~sa. who. -:von last
year s award, 1sn t too far
the veteran leiuier on a
young team. The 76ers will
· WESIERN
bdlind. Buf the Suns can
need him to be just as good
CONFERENCE
afford an off night from
against Billups a cfutch
Nos I LOS ANGELES Barbosa, the ·Spurshave no
postseason perf~rmer who
LAKERS (57-15) VL
chance if Ginobili doesn't
was in double figures in
No. .I DENVER
play w~ll..
.
every ~- .~.s season
NUGGETS (50-32)
·Piwlirficw: Spurs m 7.
against~
S
• -ies: Lakers 3..0.
No.4 UTAH JAZZ (54Key
makhup
U: AH three meetings were in 28) VL Ne.. 5 HOUStoN
Hamihon
vs.
Andrre the first half of the ·season
ROCKETS (55-27)
lguodala. lguodala couldn't before the Lakers added Pau
Season series: Jazz 2-1.
· reach a contract ·extension Gaso1. Los Angeles shredded They woo the season series
witb the Sixers in the fall, Denver for 118 points per with a 105-96 victory on
hut he will earn a ni.ce !leal game, only needing 22 per Mond@;y, ~~~ket5 l!._a.ng- ~
Jazz one of ibeir fow;
· Jack Cullen with Point Pleasant High School received a
canwas tarp and from tllennnllie.offseason game from . Kobe -sryam. ed
afterleadingthe_
i
ninsooring.
Allen
Iverson
had
51
for
horne
losses
with a 106-95
'first-aid kit for the baseball and softball teams: Cullen is picture~ with Troy Krebs and Morty He can help bis case .e~eo Denver in one loss and aver- victory on Nov.
1.
Gilley of AEP River Operations. Cullen said the canvas will 1&gt;e used under the batting cage more.
by
~~ntammg aged 32 points, but Carmelo
Storyline: Rematch o( a
.in the gym when teams have batting practic.e during bad weather.
J:lanulton, Detro1~ s ~e- Anthony managed only 20.7. first-round series from a year
ume A!J-Star ~ ,leading
Storyliae: A strong finish ago, .with similar circumscorer.
.
gave Bryant and the Lakers stances. The Jazz are the No.
Predidicw: Pis ns in 5. the No. l seed, but they get,a 4 seed as a division champiNOs 3 OllLANDO MAGIC dangerons first-round ~- on, but ·the Rockets have
NEW YORK (AP) - lsiah · The Knicks fmished 23-59, coach -. was originitlly (5Z-J0) w. Nos 6 TOilON~ ne~t that was only seven voc- home-court
advantage
.......
h f
hin
h
fr
h.
. t L t
tuall
I
ro RAPTOitS (41-41) '· tones worse. Bryant (28 ·3&gt;· because of !heir better
~oN::a~~.,.,~~~ ~n :UrJios~~. in~~~~ :J:~swi'lli. even Y wen
S 11Ueriell:~,2-1. Iverson (26.4) and Anthony record. That didn't belp in
Friday after a season of list- enth straight losing season.
· Thomas' tenure with tbe Orlando ,found . things to be &lt; 25 ·7~ ~ ~- 3-4 on the 2007- Utah won Game 7 at
'
'
all Kni cks has been marked bY a . on
pretty
easy ~~Bainst Toronto NBA
list.I: Bryant thel lToyota
Center· . Carlos
JeSs and dreadful basketball,
' I can t tell you re y
the offensive e~~d, shootKey·s
up
' - Ma·..._~
.a tawdry lawsuit and unend- where we failed,". Walsh number of embWTIISsments.
ing 49 perce_nt from the ~eld vs. Iv~n. May n_ot spend Boo-:~r vs. L~s 1ia. Scola
ing chants from fans said. "Tbe bottom line is we
This season alone, Thomas and averagutg 10S.7 pomts. much ttme defending each h ~ ed ' .
~.;ft
demanding Thomas' dis- haven't won. and the team was found to have sexually Ouis Bosh SCored 40 ints other, but who cares"? 'JWo as P a&gt;: 10 numerous v . .
missal.
didn't look like it was moti- harassed a former team in the Raptors'lone v~. great scorers from the deep games, 10 E~.. _anhed ~
· Thomas, the coach for two vated to try to win." '
employee, feuded with point but wu out with an
1996 draft respect each other 0 1ymp\cs, w.~., ,., .._
1eas0ns, will remain with the
Walsh wants a new coach guard Stephon Martlun' and when the Maaic cline
the and botb shOuld P.ut on 1 Araen~na wm . the gold
OIJanization reporting direct- in place by the draft in June, benched center Eddy CUI'!)' seuon aerie• with 1 102-87 show. Uken don t alway&amp; . medalm 2004. His first tutc
ly to new president Donnie when the Knicks will finally the playen Thomas rout 00 March 4.
need BJYint to acore. but the of postiCUOn P!iY in the
Walsh, a rapid fall . for have their lottery pick aallin acquired in the two biJ~e~st of
Slon-lllle: Despite their 52 Nugetl need points from NBA has him
to con·
'Thomas who II so was team after handing over their last a number of moves that never wins. the Maaic are the over, Iverson.
taln Boozer, wno eel Utlh
lookOd team ln the Bast, not
Key metm'IP U: Oa10l with 21.1 points and 10.4
president a little more tii·IU! two to Chicago in the Curry panned oull
two week&amp; ago.
trade. Walsh laid Sunday he . Still, Walsh said he considered much of a ~~ vs. Marcu1 Camby. ~drew re~ndiM~n·. Ronnie ·
· · Walsh took over thai role had not yet talked to any can- believed Thomas oollld 0011• to Boston or Detroit, and this B)'l!um never made it blck.
-~
~ ·
April2, and his fin;t big deci- didatcs for either a coach or tribute to making the Kriic:ks is their first clwu:e to prove 10 Oa10l i&amp; forced to remain Brewer va. TraCy Mce;Jrac~Y. ·
. lion was to change coaches general manager job.
a better franchise.
otherwise. Serle• matchei u the center. That could help McGradr ~ 47 points fn
·u he begins.the process of Thomas is 187-223 as an
"I feel like some of the big- two of the NBA's best 3- th~ Lake!" here •. beci)JIC Houston s wtn and a !~tal ~f
.turning around a team that NBA coach. leading the ger events that happened on ~int 'shooting teams but the wtth all hili offensl'l(e skills. 43 on 38 peroent shooting m
never won a playoff game m Indiana Pacers to the playoffs the way with lsiah overshad- Kapton will have ~ find a Camby .won't be able to help their losses. If B~wer and
·'Thomas' tenure.
in three straight years from owed some of the good way to slow All,Star center off him much to go for his hel' hold McGrady down
, "I just believe a new voice, 2000.Q3. Lan:y Bird ftred things" that he accomplished, Dwight Howani
,
blocked ihot&amp; and re~nds. here:· -Mac's stteak of never
a new coach, is necessary to him after beeoming team Walsh s~d.
Key ••Ill ,., 1: Raihlnl
PledldiDD: Lakm: m 6.
gettmg past the first round
dlange the direction of the president, a move Walsh • "I will .be in touch with Lewis vs. Bosh. The Magic
No.2 NEW ORLEANS contmues.
team," Walsh said.
who had hired Thomas as Isiah a lot," he said.
are without a true power lor,
HORNETS (!6-26) VII.
Predk:tion: Jazz in 6.
1

c=

!:;'

tt!:

me

·Isiah Th
' 01D3S fired
. as C03Ch Of Knicks

:=

1

1

.!Jury

tryi,

•

�PIJit B4 • i;u11l~• ~ i;a::tiud

PomeloJ • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday, April

Point Pleasant outlas1s White Falcons
MASON, W.Va. - Clay Krebs
drilled a 1hral run homer in the rop half
of !be tenth inning aod Cwt Grimm
wcut !be distance oo the DlOWid to give
·visiting Point Pleasant a thrilling OOIIllj·
from-behind % diamond victory OVC!f
Wahama Friday evening in a ~
between two MllliOil Couilty rivals. .
· Krebs• three run blast hil!;hlighted a
.lart: Big Black rally as PJ'HS scored
lbree seventh inning runs to knot the
soore aod send the contest into extta
. innings. The come-from-behind triumph gave Point Pleasant its second
.· win of the spring over its neighboring
rivals as the Big Blacks improved to S7 on the year. Wahama, playing its sec.ond straight e~tta inning ron~ in as
many days,' failed to erose things out
. ·against Point Pleasant with Brock
-McClung delivering a clutch, two-run
sinl!;lc in the seventh to even the score
ancfsend the game into the extra frames.
. Cun Grimm fanned 16 White Faloon
.batters in the outing while ~iving up six
·runs, four earned, on six hits and seven
·free passes during his gutsy. 10 inning
route going performance. Wil!iam
·Zuspan, the !OOCOnd of two WHS pitch:ers.. ~as tagged with the loss after
.relieving Fafoon staiter, Jeny !Jl'rl:ley,
.in the seventh. Bl'rl:ley went su and a
'thinJ innings giving up five runs, three
earned, on five hits with seven strike'Qllts and five walks. Zuspan went three
·and two-thirds innings allowing four
runs, tJrree earned, on two hits while
fanning seven and walking six.
· P-oint Pleasant totaled seven base
·.knOcks on the evening with Krebs and
.McClung coming up with the big hits
.for the Big Blacks. D.W. Herdman
smacked a pair of singles in the outin~
.with McClung adding another base hit
to go along with his ganre tying, tworun safety. Ashton Jones and Justin
:Veith also collected a base hit 31?iece for
CoachJamieHigginbotham'scharges.
· Wahama tallied six sing_les with
Anthony Bond coming up With a two
run single with Veazey and Justili
Arnold also drivinLJin a run each with a
single. Zuspan ad
a hit for the White
Faloons as did Jerry Berldey and Jacob
Roach.

CONFERENCE

l.-.y~

.
_unyCrrmU '1 .
Point Pleasant's T'ltus Ru.ssell makes a throw to first dunng a high school baseball game against Wahama Friday evening in Mason.
.
'th
. ..._fifth._..,
In the
' ~_.... ro· .., ____, ---'li
mg up WI. .two runs m WE:
~ore
. ~w ~ rliCoiDillll W...,..;u 1Wahama gained a ~2 ~vantage m ~ de. t1m1; m mountmg 3llOIIII2' threat as
bonnm half of the mmng. The Wbite ~ Ve~~ aod Asbtoo Jones led off !be
Faloo~s and Veazey took rts time l1!fl mmng with baet-10-back bases on balls.
lead mto the seveqth wben the Btg KrebSthenausbedatwoandtwo~­
Blacks began its. 001•11'hadr rally af!ei' ~ ~ Znym fur a three run dinger
Veazey bad retired the first pomt to g~ve Pomt Pleasant a 9-6 leild.
Pleasant bitta of the inning.
~ lben ~ short work of tbe
Jones w~ before Kn:bs ground ~ Fal~ m the bottom half of~
ball was llllSplayed for an error. mrung by retu:ing the first two WHS hitHenbnan oha5!"" home~ Big Black tel'S oo strikes l;lefore getting Caleb
~ runner With an RBI sinj!Je before Roach to ln'OUDII.~ to Jones at short to
Higgbotbam _called on McC~ who conclude ibe 10 mmng marathon.
•.
proDIJJtly delivered a two run single to
WabaJIII! . now ~ do the ~ IS
knot ibe soore at 5-5.
.
.
slakd to VIS!I ~lhamstown fur a pall' Of
~ teams ~ a run m the ninth game.s begmmng at II a.m. .before
withHerdman~awalkandmov- opemng up next weeks acuoo _at
ing ~ thinJ on McClung's second hit of OtadeSioo Catbolic on Tuesday. Pomt
~ mgbt Tttus RusseU's ~ was Pleasant opens a four
home ~
IDI~lar:!!or ~ mur With Hmlman on M~y when.Ho:
Hoover vtsits
racmg n
to g1ve PI'HS a 6-5 advan- for a 5.30 p.m. conleh1 follo_wed by
tage. Wahama bloued the soore in the Buffalq on ~sday, Me~gs on
botJom half of !be inni~in much tbe W~sday aud Chapmanville on
same fashion as Point -HSI!nt's cally. Friday.
Jacob Roach sinlded to get things startPI
cl . . . . . . . e
ed for the White Falooos. Roach swiped pp 000 .PDIRt
020 301 3
second and later SOIII'ed on a Big Bfitck w 100 040 001 0 -- 870
665
fielding miscue to again eve~~ the count - y . ~n (7) and Urodetwoud. Grinim and

C

Hardman. WP -Grimm. LP --: Zuspon.

..

ment that she needs to wori Ill'S on the haldwood.
on beooming a bette:r hitter.
Other activities include
"I feel that my strength is participating · in .her prior
my ability to play various government class mock
positions. I have played sec- election where she ran for
ond base, fmt base and one of lhe Logan · County
shQftSlOp daring my high Commissi.oner tats and was
"fJboo! mM," .she Wei. "' cholieD for . !he po&amp;itiOil.
~ ~ ~ve 0!!. my hit- . ~~~!1m' the ~Ul"
ling .and qurinelos."' ·nity to job madow the COWlShe plans to major in ty kaders for a day.
Nursing, which was also
She was RlCCD1ly chosen
another reason she selected ·as a member of the Niiiiona:l
Rio Gtande.
Honor Society with a grade
"I know they have a good point average of 3.4945 aod
nursing prognm~. a strong 1s nmW 15th in ~class.
softball team, Bob Evan's ' Pyles has had liiSICni playFarm is there aod my sister ing for him before and
goes there," she said
believes that Lindsey and
SteveM is well I'OIIoded as Amanda will be good for
she comes to college, having each ~ next season. "I
played volleyblill, basket- tbinkifsexcitingforbothof
ball, softball aud also was a them to get to play with eacli
cheerleader for Riverside. odler tor :a year,'" Pyles said.
She is a member of Interact, "Amanda is a model kid for
FCCLA, FCA, aud the us, so hopefully Lindsey
Riverside Yearbook Staff. comes down and follows in
She also wOlted as apart of her sister's footsteps."
the ..
~ for the
Lindsey's . goal's . while
-_..
senior class play.
playing at Rio Grande?
She earned first team all- . ''To wort hard and belp
oonference llooo!i in volley- . tbe team with the AMC
ball as a senior and was (American
Mideast
··bbed
·
. ._
...le ............
.
·
Co-o&lt;-,-.-.-)"
title,
win
...
""""""" ....._.....
.,..,..,....,..
District 9. She was tbe Most regionals and make it to
'Valuable Player for tbe bas- nationals."
kctball team .and glll1JCied Lindsey is the~ ::~r~~~~
1llill0illtl!ll'llal1-l'".....-oeli0i!· 0i1K11r .t"ll'!fl Sl
·-

_.,.,.a_

m·

--..-

I

:Redwomen soccer inks Circleville's Scudder

I.

.,

I
' I

JiOil.

She is a 5-foot, 5-inch
·sweeper/defender,
who
brings plenty of accolades
with to the colle;ge, game.
,;Having played for Rio alum
Jason Herbert, she was first
learn All-District and first
:team All-Mid-State League
·ifl.2007 while being voted
·lhe team's best defender for
.a team that finished 13-3-3.
.She earned honorable men-tion Ali-MSL as a junior and
second team as a sopho11¥&gt;1'e· She was also selected

..

as honor.able , menlion all-distri.ct as a
sophomore,
while earning the most
improved
p ·I a y e r
award.
"I
am
very ellcited
to go to Rio.
I think there will be many
opportunities there for me in
soccer and communications
(which is her intended
major)," 'Scudder said. "It
is a p-eat campus and I was
looking for a small friendly
~~~~ to and that is

thought the dorms were very
nice, unlike some other
small schools."
As a defender for
Circleville, Scudder helped
provide 22 career shutouts
m three years. During that
time Circleville won two
district championships and
one league title.
Oliver is very pleased to
be bringing in a player of
Scudder's skill seJ. "I .am
extremely excited to be
adding Ltz to our 2008 roster. She is a great addition
to our program and 1 look
for her to .add many new
d~ensi~ns to our play,"
Oij.ver said. "I see Liz mat. ~ ';J;::.iate impact on

Scudder had some familiarity with the school from
some alumni that she knew
and from attending summer
soccer camps. ·"I knew a
couple of people who went
to Rio and they lov~ it,"
she said. "Also, l have been
to soccer camp there and I

Scudder discu'sed her
best assets aud what she
feels like she needs to
improve on as a player. "I
would bave to say !hat my
best assets are bei.ilg a
leader and beina coachable," she said. 1~'While at
Rio, I would like to wod: 011

---··--

llliwi ........

playoffs, which .a:ait this
woehnd:
E.\SI'EitN

BY MARK W•••ws

Jail.
Scudder is the third recruit
:to sign for head coach
.Amber Oliver this offsea-

.

A look at the eight firstround .series in lfle. NBA

SPECIAL TO THE TIMESSENTINEL

RIO GRANDE - The
.:unive!lity · of Rio Grande
...,omen 's&lt;_ soccer program
.has ·signed Circleville High
School's Liz Scudder to a
· national letter of intent.
:scudder will begin her
.career at Rio Grande in the

Previews of the eight 2008
first-round NBA playoff series
IJy

Stevens signs with Rio Grande softball

BYMAMWw-

Pomeroy • .K'iddleport • Gallipolis

. AEP donates tarps, fiist~id
-kits
to local athletic
•

Coach Tom Cullen's Bend Area team
·soored one run in the first before adding
a four run frame in the fifth and another
single tally in the ninth. Point Pleasant
eraSed the Falcons I .Q edge after oom- nt 6-6.

SPECIAL TO THE TIMES.SENTINEL

20, 2008

..

my fitness ro '"&gt;lay at the best
of my ability. "
. Oliver likes her strong,
p~ysi911 play.on the «Jt;f~­
stve end of the field. 'Uz
will be a great additioo to
our defensive unit," she
said · ·she is a strong, physical player that knows the
game. Her aggressive style
of play · and composure
under pn:ssure will add tn ·
our team defensively."
Scudder talked about her
goals as a player- while · at
Rio Grande. "To be an
accountable player for Rio
and serve as a role model for
other players . even as a
freshman," she said.
Scudder joins Urbana
High School's Maggie
and
Brittany
Harris
Brannock of Bethel-Tate
High School as the cunent
members of the 2008 Rio
~recruiting class.,
. Li.t is the daughter of Jeff
and Miriam Scudder . of
Cin:leville .

1

wahama's Alex Wood pitdles durifll the second inning of a
high school softball game against Ravenswood Friday ih
Hao lfunl. The lady Falcons won 4-2.

I

Lady Falcons hold otT

late Ravenswood charge
BYLI'

c..

three hits aud one run over
the fiDal six innings, but the
damage had already been
HARTFORD, W.Va. · - done.
Aftec Thursday's disapOn the other side of the
pointing loss to Bulfalo, a diamond Alex Wood played
narrow win over a tough a solid game for the home
opponent ~s just what tbe squad in picking up the win.
doctor ordered for Wahama Sbe gave up five bits and
as the Lady 'Falcons edged finished with six sCrikeoqts
out a 4-2 wm over Class AA and two walks in six innings
foe Ravenswood Friday of wmt.. ·
evening.
Wahama 's other
Thursday's loss to Buffalo Kylie Riggs, provi
the
SIIW the Red and White out- biggest impact at the plate
play their opponent in all going 2-for-4 highlighted by
aspects of the game, but a an RBI double. Taylor
small handful of errors Hysell also posted an RBI
allowed the Lady Bison to double and added a single.
ed~e out a 5-3 win. On
Mary Kebler and Ashley
Fnday the Wy Falcons Wolfe had an RBI single
(10-7) corrected tbose mis- apiece for Wahama and
·takes, cutting out the errors Kayana Sayre went 2-for-3
while keeping up the offense to round out the WHS
in posting tbe narrow win. offense.
,
Wahama went up 3.Q after
Ravens:wood managed
one inning and extended that just five poles led by
lead to 4.Q with a run in the 8elcber who bad a twO-run
fowth before Ravenswood triple.
Hiltnn
and
(9-9) found some offe~~se in Carmichael added a pair of
the sixth. The Devilettes . hits each. ·
scored two runs in the visiWabama will complete a
tor half of the inning to cut very busy week that saw it
their deficit in half, but play nine games in six days
wuldn 't set any closer from ·on Saluniay with a doublethere.
lleailet. Y!lllllll Man starting
. Mllmly played a major at· 2 p.m.
·.
role in the big lii'St inmng
... Wiiii4,Raus:e :d2
for Wabam~ giving u.P five
bitS ll!ld three nms m the R ·0 00 002 0·. - 251
•so
pitcbers cin:le before quick- w 300 100 x
ly being replaced in the fo!- RHS (9-9): Murray, J. Peery (2) and A.
lowing inning .by Peery. Peery.
did a much better job WHS (10.7): Aiel&lt; Wood and An'dlor
-·----'
•
Tully.
.or Ve!lSwuuu,
givmg
Up WP- M"""Y'. LP--: WDOO.
I

~LYREGISTEROQM

.f!ttcber,

I.AJCal Greg Fowler
compe"~
:u;;,

·m·

all-star race

8Y la n1 C..

Hot Rod divisioo at the event,
one of seven lHRA divisions.
Eigbldriversfromeachoflhe
POINT PlEASANT, W.Va. divisions will be battling for
- To be one of the fastest lhe
cltaiilpionsbip
in
A...n
•
•
•
Salurday's all-star llllle. Ober
one&gt;Aaf'&gt;
m a g~vm aa
IURA divisions include liop'
LCRU~L\'REGISTEltOQM

lhr;s

IS

&lt;;1...-0

~ ~

To be me of the fastest dri- ~~man.
ster,
\US in 1be w«id - that is Si:of.::k, Super lock,
.
Rod and S
Rod.
"'""liing o.••qktcly 4ifferuper """"DCI""'r:dod .hi_!n
em,
His finiBb ~gar
And local product . Greg the No.7 seed m •the Hot RQd
Fowler knOws exact~~ 11 Division for. ~)"s ~
:15' " ' - • - a.... ~
"'"' lllliJielll, pamng hiiD W,!tb
"'""' "' ""' '
_..,_ ·~ Utidi!I'W!iOO lit"'llmpA
label diem"! Jli'I:S
Jic:st in Fl. 'IWo is !be third~ OdirJr
the q lliClDg OOII1IDIIIIIty as ·oompetilooi at ~~
be ~ to tta~ .to the event Lioclude top
JHRAN11ro Jam National All- Damieo Hazdtoo Of Ottowa,
Star race Speedway
Satwday in
at Ohio· and No. 2 seed John "'·Rockinghant
•~uu.
Rockingham, NC. .
~C.
.
The national e~t, ":hicb in the~=r:g~:J
features tho; top eight drivers Hanis of NOJWood, NC,
!lithe final '2f.1J7. worl=- Glenn
Ferguson
of
~ ~~~ Greensboro, NC, TIDIOthy
sty "'- IHRA
and . Shuck. of West Lafayette,
·~ ...,
.seasoo
·Ohio and Scott Morgan of
billed ~ tJ:le IHRA's all-~ Oakboro, Nol1h Carollila.
event, Similar ~ the Spl!llt
To earn a spot in the all-star
OJp Olallenge ID NASCA#{. evenl, driven; from across the
"J.am e.xtmnely happy to be country were ~uired to comable tO _compete at di!s level pete in eight diVIsional events
·and .against ihe top driv~ m aod six national eve~~ts. From
the wOdd. Four Of the e1gbt those points Divisional
OO!I)Jld!tors ha\!e been World . Olampioils were detennined
Otampmns and my opponent by the~ ~g the most
is one of them." Fowler said. .n nint• m divisiOnal races.
"Not ooly am l n:presentmg ,.-FOWler won the Division I
West V~ but .the e~~tlre Cbao_Ipionship, representirnl
Nol1heaslmi U~. I i1II1 ~- the NOrtheast; and the poirits
ful to !Jave this oppolWIIIty gained from that title were
and plan to do my best to added to the points he gained
bring home the cbamp1- in national races held all
onship."
·
across the United State and
Fowler fmisbed seventh in Canada
.
the World standings in 2fJJ7
"Drag racing is a ~ery comhaving raced all across the petitive spon and it is ellciting
United States. and ~ to be able to OOmpele at me
racking up WlDS and pomts level J have the past couple of
alonR ibe way TOWard the final years. I am also very thlink:ful
woda standings.
for .the suppon I have rereived
He will be representing the from this area," Fowler said.

or.g:ooro.

IS

I.

•

. No.I BOSTON
· CFLTICS (66-16) w..
No.IA'I'LANTA
HAWKS (37-45)
S • -iios: Ce1tics 3-0.
They won all dee by double
digits.aod didn't even need
. 10 play their Biglbn:te in !be
fowth quart~::£ of tbe last
IDCJCfing In do it Atlanta
never readied 90 points in
any of the lbree games.
~vin Garnett aver..ged 23.7
points and 13.7 rebounds
while shooting 62.5 percmt
from tbe t1ooc.
·

.

..

.

varsity

.

..__iilh_

·DIMePc6wftllpl 111

Dave Fli'e, ~ ""' Sdlool
softball eoaoh, recently received a 100foot-by-100.
oa:•nn .and a safety kit from Rose fife, Mooty
.foot taJP for the school's ballfield as well as ~
Gilley and Gary Jol'lnSorl of AfP Riwer ()pe!ations iB Lakin, W.Va.

Slaijs

7

After rolling In

the NBA's best recool in the
largest one-season improveIDCIIt in NBA bist.ocy, the
, Celtics are back in the playoff's against the Hawks, who
ended the ~·,. loogest
· ~ drou~ with
their first
•m.Je liince
19911 . •
.

;ar•

ward, using
I..ewis H an
undersized
4, and now
they have to
falz one of
the best in
· tbe
East
Bosh averaged
33
Po i n t s
against
Odando and
shou1d put
UJl big numben in~~~- But Lewis
·~ his own matchup
~s with his ~
· shooting~~ 20. per
game agamst the llapt6rs.
Key matctwp D: How~d
vs. ~sho Nesterov1c.
Neste:roYlC beads 10 lbe postseason after one of die best
~ of bis ~A career,
avetagmg l6.3 pomts on 60
perllelll shooting in April.
Any offense · he proVIdes
~ is a hcn15:, because his
pnmary role .nil be bl slo:w
Howllld, !be NBA bder m
double-dou?les who sbot 71

No.7 DALLAS MAVERICKS (51-31)
S MJ wries: Tied 2-2.
The Mavericks eilmed the
split tD set up this srries by
beating tbe Homds lll-98
on tbe last night of the season. 1be teams also split two
meetings
since Dallas
acquired Jason Kidd, with
tbe Hornets wirming 104-93
iniGdd's Mavericks debut in
the first game after the AilStar break..
Staryliae: A year after losing in the first round as the
No. I seed, the Mavericks
are oow the dangerolis
underdogs against a New
Odeans team with little post- .
seaSOII experience.
Key matdlup I: Chris
Paul vs. Ki.dd. PaW bad easily been getting !be better of.
this matchup this season,
both when Kidd was playing
for New Jersey and Dallas,
but ·the veteran collected bis
tOOth Career triple-double in
the Mavs' victory in the season finale. Kidd struggles
pemen~_ 'W'mst T~.
against Paul's speed, but
Pn4i 4
Magic m 6.
always finds other ways to
Ne.4a.J!:VFL.\ND
getby.
.
CAV. IJJr.M:&lt;oiS-,'I'n
Ill'~.
D: Da 'd
:A
~ ""'' w.
-" n
I
·
V1
Ne.S WASHINGTON . West vs. DiJt Nowitzki.
WIZARDS (0-~)
West was one of the NBA's
S •Mil -its. Tied 2-2:· most underrated pow.er fork's toogh 1o gatber mucb wards before maki?g bis first
from the regillar season, An-Star game this season.
because the teams were Can step away from the
never at full. Sli'CDgtlh at the ~lock to bit from the outside,
same time. Gilbett Arenas though not with nearly the
missed all four games, while range of Nowitzki, who was
AD-Stars LeBron James .and superb 00wn the stretch after
Caron Buder each sat out a ~ from his ankle and
loss because of injuries. leg injuru:s.
.
lliiJieS averaged 27 ~Ptwli-eha: Hornets in 7.
10 rebounds and 7.7 assists
Nos3SANANTONIO
in !be dime be played.
SPUitS (~lii) w; No.6
Sl.ryliae: Thinl .stiaipn PHOENIX SUNS (55-%7}
)'ear lbese teams ;m: ...,.....ng
s. w Jllftiios: Suns 3-1.
m die fu:st mi11111: Cleveland f'boenix won both games
won .tbe pl\lY_tOUS two, after mJquiring Shaqu.ille
s~ a WaShington team O'Nal.. Tm1 Duncan was .a
IDISUg Arenas aod Buder combined 15-for-40 in those
last )'Qt. ~
two games, while O'Neal
1CeJ ntwp 1: fames vs. averaged 15 points and 12.5
B~ .Butler ~verag~ 23 rebounds. The S~s won
~ m Wasbin~n s two twice in San Antonio.
~s. but was hm1ted to ~0
SteQiille: Second sttaight
m ~one loss he played m. )'elll' these teams meet in the
Anxious for a g~ p:tfl'*- postseason. Spurs won last
man~ after ~ssms last year•s
tense
Western
~ s senes with an 1IIJIIIY· Confaenoe semifinal · ·
chever of lbese p1ayers """""'s aided by suspe~i:S
survives will be a nigblmatc ..-- '
· •
for
Boston
in the second to . the. Suns . Amare
round.
·
Stoudemire and Bons Diaw

JCej M P
I: Garnett
vs. Josh SmidL Garnett, a
favorite for Defmsive Player
of the Year, llgllinst a player
who should get some v&lt;Jfes.
Smith was in the league's top
. to in blocb aod ·Siieals, !)ut
lacks Garnett's offensive
.skills and can get di!.11acted
yelling at merces, . ~
or teammatefi. Nothing
makes Girnetl lose bis
focus.
Key M• • p 0: Rajoo
Rondo vs, Mite Bibby.
H~n's one advantage for
Atlanta. Bibby appeared .in
51 postseason
playing for ·
· ,
wJple Rondo is mating his
debut in only his second
NBA season. But his lipCel1
.advantage wiU he tougll foc
Bibby to handle.
Prwlidi-: Celtics in 4.
Nos 2 DETROIT PISTONS (~23) w.
Nos 7 PIIIL\DFLI'IIIA
76ERS (.,_.2)
S ITtl wries: Tied 2-2
after the 76ers won the last
.
. two meetings. Philalklphia
AEP River .....__ions in Lakill. W.va., recentlu donated 16 first-aid kits to the Green averaged 80 points in the
....,..,....
.Baseball Association
for the up6omi~ season.' Association President Matt Henry is pic- !irs!~ ~s before~tu!W with s~ reflresentative Gary JOhnsqn, stores supervisorMorty Gilley, payroll coor- l!lS 101 m a. VIctory~~ · K.ey •at+• D: Arenas ill Gam~ :5. . ' ...
Glnatar R!lse l'lfe ~iid .st_ores ~n~!lnt Dwayne £vans.
. '
' ~~ Ri=~
of vs.. ~~ ~lison. &lt;"ribsoo
·L ,; mafdlup t DUIIGan
lkttoit's ·starters played 30 had.hisown mJury problems, vs. 0 N~ and Stoudemire.
minntes.
missirlg more than a month Sroudennre was ~uently
SLi; '
Picked to fillish after the AD-Star break with m foul trouble trymg ~o
near
boitom in the East, an ankle injury. Fitber _can defe!ld Duncan, but ":~.IS
the 76ers instead turned into change the momentwn m a ·~ o~ tllilt responsibility
one of the league's biggest game by co~g off the With 0 Neal .there to do ~t.
surprises and made the play- bench and gettmg bot from Duncan, one of the league s
offs for the first time in lilRle outside in a hurry, as Gt'bson top low-post defenders,
years. The key was an 11-4 ~dafew~slastyeardur- probab~y has to take turns
March thai included a one- mg the Cavs run to the NBA defending both.
point win at Defmit
finals. Arenas bas gradually
Key matcbup H: Manu
Key
nMchup
I· been get1lil1g his confidence Ginobili
vs.
Leandro
Chawioey Billups vs. ~ back after a lengthy absence ~arbosa. ~ is the best
Miller: Miller av~ a followmg knee surgery.
SIXth man ID the league, and
area--high 11.1 points as
PI 115ft: Wtzards in 7. B~sa. who. -:von last
year s award, 1sn t too far
the veteran leiuier on a
young team. The 76ers will
· WESIERN
bdlind. Buf the Suns can
need him to be just as good
CONFERENCE
afford an off night from
against Billups a cfutch
Nos I LOS ANGELES Barbosa, the ·Spurshave no
postseason perf~rmer who
LAKERS (57-15) VL
chance if Ginobili doesn't
was in double figures in
No. .I DENVER
play w~ll..
.
every ~- .~.s season
NUGGETS (50-32)
·Piwlirficw: Spurs m 7.
against~
S
• -ies: Lakers 3..0.
No.4 UTAH JAZZ (54Key
makhup
U: AH three meetings were in 28) VL Ne.. 5 HOUStoN
Hamihon
vs.
Andrre the first half of the ·season
ROCKETS (55-27)
lguodala. lguodala couldn't before the Lakers added Pau
Season series: Jazz 2-1.
· reach a contract ·extension Gaso1. Los Angeles shredded They woo the season series
witb the Sixers in the fall, Denver for 118 points per with a 105-96 victory on
hut he will earn a ni.ce !leal game, only needing 22 per Mond@;y, ~~~ket5 l!._a.ng- ~
Jazz one of ibeir fow;
· Jack Cullen with Point Pleasant High School received a
canwas tarp and from tllennnllie.offseason game from . Kobe -sryam. ed
afterleadingthe_
i
ninsooring.
Allen
Iverson
had
51
for
horne
losses
with a 106-95
'first-aid kit for the baseball and softball teams: Cullen is picture~ with Troy Krebs and Morty He can help bis case .e~eo Denver in one loss and aver- victory on Nov.
1.
Gilley of AEP River Operations. Cullen said the canvas will 1&gt;e used under the batting cage more.
by
~~ntammg aged 32 points, but Carmelo
Storyline: Rematch o( a
.in the gym when teams have batting practic.e during bad weather.
J:lanulton, Detro1~ s ~e- Anthony managed only 20.7. first-round series from a year
ume A!J-Star ~ ,leading
Storyliae: A strong finish ago, .with similar circumscorer.
.
gave Bryant and the Lakers stances. The Jazz are the No.
Predidicw: Pis ns in 5. the No. l seed, but they get,a 4 seed as a division champiNOs 3 OllLANDO MAGIC dangerons first-round ~- on, but ·the Rockets have
NEW YORK (AP) - lsiah · The Knicks fmished 23-59, coach -. was originitlly (5Z-J0) w. Nos 6 TOilON~ ne~t that was only seven voc- home-court
advantage
.......
h f
hin
h
fr
h.
. t L t
tuall
I
ro RAPTOitS (41-41) '· tones worse. Bryant (28 ·3&gt;· because of !heir better
~oN::a~~.,.,~~~ ~n :UrJios~~. in~~~~ :J:~swi'lli. even Y wen
S 11Ueriell:~,2-1. Iverson (26.4) and Anthony record. That didn't belp in
Friday after a season of list- enth straight losing season.
· Thomas' tenure with tbe Orlando ,found . things to be &lt; 25 ·7~ ~ ~- 3-4 on the 2007- Utah won Game 7 at
'
'
all Kni cks has been marked bY a . on
pretty
easy ~~Bainst Toronto NBA
list.I: Bryant thel lToyota
Center· . Carlos
JeSs and dreadful basketball,
' I can t tell you re y
the offensive e~~d, shootKey·s
up
' - Ma·..._~
.a tawdry lawsuit and unend- where we failed,". Walsh number of embWTIISsments.
ing 49 perce_nt from the ~eld vs. Iv~n. May n_ot spend Boo-:~r vs. L~s 1ia. Scola
ing chants from fans said. "Tbe bottom line is we
This season alone, Thomas and averagutg 10S.7 pomts. much ttme defending each h ~ ed ' .
~.;ft
demanding Thomas' dis- haven't won. and the team was found to have sexually Ouis Bosh SCored 40 ints other, but who cares"? 'JWo as P a&gt;: 10 numerous v . .
missal.
didn't look like it was moti- harassed a former team in the Raptors'lone v~. great scorers from the deep games, 10 E~.. _anhed ~
· Thomas, the coach for two vated to try to win." '
employee, feuded with point but wu out with an
1996 draft respect each other 0 1ymp\cs, w.~., ,., .._
1eas0ns, will remain with the
Walsh wants a new coach guard Stephon Martlun' and when the Maaic cline
the and botb shOuld P.ut on 1 Araen~na wm . the gold
OIJanization reporting direct- in place by the draft in June, benched center Eddy CUI'!)' seuon aerie• with 1 102-87 show. Uken don t alway&amp; . medalm 2004. His first tutc
ly to new president Donnie when the Knicks will finally the playen Thomas rout 00 March 4.
need BJYint to acore. but the of postiCUOn P!iY in the
Walsh, a rapid fall . for have their lottery pick aallin acquired in the two biJ~e~st of
Slon-lllle: Despite their 52 Nugetl need points from NBA has him
to con·
'Thomas who II so was team after handing over their last a number of moves that never wins. the Maaic are the over, Iverson.
taln Boozer, wno eel Utlh
lookOd team ln the Bast, not
Key metm'IP U: Oa10l with 21.1 points and 10.4
president a little more tii·IU! two to Chicago in the Curry panned oull
two week&amp; ago.
trade. Walsh laid Sunday he . Still, Walsh said he considered much of a ~~ vs. Marcu1 Camby. ~drew re~ndiM~n·. Ronnie ·
· · Walsh took over thai role had not yet talked to any can- believed Thomas oollld 0011• to Boston or Detroit, and this B)'l!um never made it blck.
-~
~ ·
April2, and his fin;t big deci- didatcs for either a coach or tribute to making the Kriic:ks is their first clwu:e to prove 10 Oa10l i&amp; forced to remain Brewer va. TraCy Mce;Jrac~Y. ·
. lion was to change coaches general manager job.
a better franchise.
otherwise. Serle• matchei u the center. That could help McGradr ~ 47 points fn
·u he begins.the process of Thomas is 187-223 as an
"I feel like some of the big- two of the NBA's best 3- th~ Lake!" here •. beci)JIC Houston s wtn and a !~tal ~f
.turning around a team that NBA coach. leading the ger events that happened on ~int 'shooting teams but the wtth all hili offensl'l(e skills. 43 on 38 peroent shooting m
never won a playoff game m Indiana Pacers to the playoffs the way with lsiah overshad- Kapton will have ~ find a Camby .won't be able to help their losses. If B~wer and
·'Thomas' tenure.
in three straight years from owed some of the good way to slow All,Star center off him much to go for his hel' hold McGrady down
, "I just believe a new voice, 2000.Q3. Lan:y Bird ftred things" that he accomplished, Dwight Howani
,
blocked ihot&amp; and re~nds. here:· -Mac's stteak of never
a new coach, is necessary to him after beeoming team Walsh s~d.
Key ••Ill ,., 1: Raihlnl
PledldiDD: Lakm: m 6.
gettmg past the first round
dlange the direction of the president, a move Walsh • "I will .be in touch with Lewis vs. Bosh. The Magic
No.2 NEW ORLEANS contmues.
team," Walsh said.
who had hired Thomas as Isiah a lot," he said.
are without a true power lor,
HORNETS (!6-26) VII.
Predk:tion: Jazz in 6.
1

c=

!:;'

tt!:

me

·Isiah Th
' 01D3S fired
. as C03Ch Of Knicks

:=

1

1

.!Jury

tryi,

•

�Page 86- The Sunday rmes Sentinel

Sunday. April 20, 2008

Pomeroy, Middlepart. Gallipolis, OH • Point Ple••an~. WV

Cl

,,

•

.....
••
.....
.....
......
.....
...
.
·•••••.... n ........................... .

•

Sunday, April20, 2008

Stock INIIIS5

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1111 ..........,. ... tall

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ALBANY
Three
decades ago as a young
woman growing up in Meigs
County, Sharry Edwanls was
desaiiJed as being "intuitive.~.
That description and later
her own reoognitioo that she
did indeed have an "unusUal
lal.ent" took Edwards into a
new scienti&amp; field - one
geared to the advancement
of energy medicine through

StociiN6ut

I

sound.
. . After ieali . her master's degree~ Ohio
University in 1982, she
moved on to resuuth through
which she pioneered the
emerging scieooe of human
bio-acoustics. She was
inspired 10 embrace resuuth
by the ~ults of her graduation thesis on tinniws which
showed that specific soonds .
. would cause a dramatic drop

lilt r 1 'u lnd IIIIa 111 r

- ---·l•l.llllzft
....,lllf,flf

Stock IN7129

Abowe: Dr. Russ Rudy, diagnosed with

ma person' s blj)Dd ~­

·u lll:"n Iii l:•eaiRII

- .....,.Ill..,

.. . , '

~ lnf

I, ,.,IIIAII

*****Pre·Owned Specials***·**
'this Weak

•

nrru.••.,aU.Jita- -

;""'

-~ -

-··-- ...r...

BlliCK.

CIEIIILET '

_PONTIAC'

Thank You Ohw 6 We!:.&gt;t Virginia F'or Supporting

,.., ,_

U~;

1900 Eastem Ave. • Gallipolis, OH

Sincf! 1954'

sive neurological disorder in 2001. had to use a motorized
scooter to practioe medicine until he blmed to altematiw
medicine offered by Sharry Edwards at Sound Health.
Here, Dr. Rudy shares his story with pmctitioners from
around the worid attendirig the week-&lt;lq oooference.

Wit: Sharry Edwards oounsels Alex Majewski, a current
student training tu become ll bicHicoustic' .practitioner.
.

, , 7'+4 ......

L:'

••

---··· .... ____.........

; For many yeats now as a
practitioner she has been
«!Edicated to boiling her Ia!.. ent and skills in advanced
seientific research in sound,
;dong with treating patients
I!Dd educating others in the
field of bio-acoustics. She
ciperates the Sound Health·
and Bio-Acoustic Biology
Baker, nmng that just rec:ent- drtailrrl in several OO..S
Institute located in Albany.
"When I started this J.y Pfi:ny Plwmaceuticals bas
"The instibJte is known
~on ueady 30
followed in Edwards foot- throUgboot the wodd," said
ago, I only knew that I
a steps ·as they begin to use Edwards, "'but was only
~ unusual talent that was vocal profiling in their evalu- recently recognized by the
very useful:" Thallal.ent has ation of new medications.
stare of Ohio as an innovative
oow been explained sci~nPresently SouDd Health is Biotech oompany ql,l3)~ !0
. t!fically !!!Jd in tum we have · preparine to WOlt. in ! U.S, Rlfcr the OhiQ. TcclUloi&lt;JE'&gt;'
dev~OO¢ contpllteJ' tech,
Army .pmjccllhat win invcti- Tax credit k! Ohio investnrs! '
She explained that sud!
ooiogies that can do what I ~ the degrees of percusdid that others considered to stve injury for soldiers recognition gives Ohio
he intuitive," said Edwards. rewming from Iraq who have inve!tors in Spund Health a 30
· "WI! · are now capable of been exposed to bomb blasts pen=! tax credit fOI' llllllley
taking a sample of some- causing injury aDd post trau- invested in the business.
one's voice and using that . malic stress. The preliminary Baker added that very few
sample to show patterns of steps for the project were businesses in the state have
health and wellness, disease completed in February when received such rerognition, and
and stress. There is nothing two army researchers' trav- said Sound Health is the only
like it anywhere in the world e1ed to Albany to take part in oompany in southeastern Ohio
that we dido't originate. Our the courses · taught by to be so honored.
Edwards uses her extensive
only · competition is from Edwanls and ber staff.
thOse we traine4 bere.
In conjunction with the knowledgl! in bio-aooustics to
."'And to think it all started open hoqse a week-loog alter- evaluate and treat medical
bere in Meigs County, Ohio. . native healthcare conference rooditions like muscle disor'ft'ho would have ever iota$- was held with practitioners ders and · trauma. immune
ined that something tilts coming from several coun- syndromes, stroke impairavant-garde could have tries including Israel, England rnent, fibromyalgia. hack pain
originated in Appalachia; and Australia. A variety of and weight management
She was the recipient of
and without any help from Cldr.l1ainment was presented
an
. y big companie_s or the by · artists, One being a song the 2001 Scientist of the
government?"
called "Sharry's Song" about Year Award from the
· Due to the growing busi- thewod:ofSoundHealthand Association of New Science
and the 2002 O'SpuqJeon
ness and interest in bio- Edwards'.dedication.
acoustics, the business
Edwards does a weeldy English Award in Medtcine
recently moved from its ear- show on public radio "Sound from Temple University.
Her extensive work in
lier location into the old Health and Vocal Profiling
Albany school building ~-"She has been the sub- sound medicine and bio!yhich has been completely- ,F of several doc_~tanes ltcoustics is recognized
~ teiiOVliled~· xn ope~ liOuse ~uding a ~o-~ sen~ !Jy lii'OUfld t11e wOrld. ·
The daughter of Meigs
-..as held recently giving the Ohio
Um':erstty Utled
J.!Ublic an opportunity 10 see :'Sound Healing" plus ~o Coonty residents Victor and
the new location while pro- independent documentanes Dessie Perry was right
viding Sound Health a time ~ "~ Medi~" ~ when she quipped - "Who
to demonstrate the role bio- ·Some Apothecary which would have ever imagined
acoustics play in the health focused on frequency based that something this avantfield.
biology. In addition the work tlarde could have originated
..
"Not many people had . of So!md Health bas been m Appalachia!"
.
.
beard of Sound Health or
the unusual research they
are conducting until 'Dow,"
said Heather ·Baker, media
qoordinator for Sound
Health. "We arc the laq;est
~ternad ve research facility
in Ohio, the largest employer in Albany, ~d the su~
of many books," she ad .
At the open house free
personalized vocal proftles
were offered. It is a procedure involving a three-second speaking sample of
voice taken via a microphone connected to a com\1111 our $111e-d-1he-an 1:111 centers and learn about
J.!Uter. Tile frequencies are
than analyzed by a computall of our an•••• our E~ Wiliness Fair.
designed by Edwards,
We wiH be conducting on-the-spot lnietviews.
1jrho is a pioneer in the techSO
llllp by, meetlhe stall, tour the laCIVIieS and
qique, according to Baker.
find
out why lnfoCision is the place for you!
· "The architecture, ampli·
thde imd hannonics of the
· voice are evaluated and can
be related to SlaleS o( 'emotional and psychological
health and well being," said

havi~ a progres-

.er

~

.

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

•

.~

•" CiemaltttWIIIk~Jteun~

·,

~· :·

•il*cw.ltllt'ea ..
·
. '•.Atfoa 1 M tow CGSt.p.tdug.
' our highly-trfil'ed staff,
,\Y.iltl
convenient hours and wait time,
and $39 office visits, you can't
afford .not to visit Ohio QuickCare
for 'four medical.needs..

. •.

.
. . JOSt,;u.._._.
,

C Still aND 456Jt

re

We see JWlf:ient5 .gt 12 mouths .nd older. NO NAILWIK MIN MfDICAT10N
WILliE PRESCIIIIEO OR KEPT ON SITE.. 'le - -~c:om for a
fullist Ill h • s we tre1t lnd ., fiaes we PlowidL

I

"

Frianlly and NlbnS.Ie IPrrl'Na&amp;

•

•

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�Page 86- The Sunday rmes Sentinel

Sunday. April 20, 2008

Pomeroy, Middlepart. Gallipolis, OH • Point Ple••an~. WV

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ALBANY
Three
decades ago as a young
woman growing up in Meigs
County, Sharry Edwanls was
desaiiJed as being "intuitive.~.
That description and later
her own reoognitioo that she
did indeed have an "unusUal
lal.ent" took Edwards into a
new scienti&amp; field - one
geared to the advancement
of energy medicine through

StociiN6ut

I

sound.
. . After ieali . her master's degree~ Ohio
University in 1982, she
moved on to resuuth through
which she pioneered the
emerging scieooe of human
bio-acoustics. She was
inspired 10 embrace resuuth
by the ~ults of her graduation thesis on tinniws which
showed that specific soonds .
. would cause a dramatic drop

lilt r 1 'u lnd IIIIa 111 r

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Abowe: Dr. Russ Rudy, diagnosed with

ma person' s blj)Dd ~­

·u lll:"n Iii l:•eaiRII

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*****Pre·Owned Specials***·**
'this Weak

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BlliCK.

CIEIIILET '

_PONTIAC'

Thank You Ohw 6 We!:.&gt;t Virginia F'or Supporting

,.., ,_

U~;

1900 Eastem Ave. • Gallipolis, OH

Sincf! 1954'

sive neurological disorder in 2001. had to use a motorized
scooter to practioe medicine until he blmed to altematiw
medicine offered by Sharry Edwards at Sound Health.
Here, Dr. Rudy shares his story with pmctitioners from
around the worid attendirig the week-&lt;lq oooference.

Wit: Sharry Edwards oounsels Alex Majewski, a current
student training tu become ll bicHicoustic' .practitioner.
.

, , 7'+4 ......

L:'

••

---··· .... ____.........

; For many yeats now as a
practitioner she has been
«!Edicated to boiling her Ia!.. ent and skills in advanced
seientific research in sound,
;dong with treating patients
I!Dd educating others in the
field of bio-acoustics. She
ciperates the Sound Health·
and Bio-Acoustic Biology
Baker, nmng that just rec:ent- drtailrrl in several OO..S
Institute located in Albany.
"When I started this J.y Pfi:ny Plwmaceuticals bas
"The instibJte is known
~on ueady 30
followed in Edwards foot- throUgboot the wodd," said
ago, I only knew that I
a steps ·as they begin to use Edwards, "'but was only
~ unusual talent that was vocal profiling in their evalu- recently recognized by the
very useful:" Thallal.ent has ation of new medications.
stare of Ohio as an innovative
oow been explained sci~nPresently SouDd Health is Biotech oompany ql,l3)~ !0
. t!fically !!!Jd in tum we have · preparine to WOlt. in ! U.S, Rlfcr the OhiQ. TcclUloi&lt;JE'&gt;'
dev~OO¢ contpllteJ' tech,
Army .pmjccllhat win invcti- Tax credit k! Ohio investnrs! '
She explained that sud!
ooiogies that can do what I ~ the degrees of percusdid that others considered to stve injury for soldiers recognition gives Ohio
he intuitive," said Edwards. rewming from Iraq who have inve!tors in Spund Health a 30
· "WI! · are now capable of been exposed to bomb blasts pen=! tax credit fOI' llllllley
taking a sample of some- causing injury aDd post trau- invested in the business.
one's voice and using that . malic stress. The preliminary Baker added that very few
sample to show patterns of steps for the project were businesses in the state have
health and wellness, disease completed in February when received such rerognition, and
and stress. There is nothing two army researchers' trav- said Sound Health is the only
like it anywhere in the world e1ed to Albany to take part in oompany in southeastern Ohio
that we dido't originate. Our the courses · taught by to be so honored.
Edwards uses her extensive
only · competition is from Edwanls and ber staff.
thOse we traine4 bere.
In conjunction with the knowledgl! in bio-aooustics to
."'And to think it all started open hoqse a week-loog alter- evaluate and treat medical
bere in Meigs County, Ohio. . native healthcare conference rooditions like muscle disor'ft'ho would have ever iota$- was held with practitioners ders and · trauma. immune
ined that something tilts coming from several coun- syndromes, stroke impairavant-garde could have tries including Israel, England rnent, fibromyalgia. hack pain
originated in Appalachia; and Australia. A variety of and weight management
She was the recipient of
and without any help from Cldr.l1ainment was presented
an
. y big companie_s or the by · artists, One being a song the 2001 Scientist of the
government?"
called "Sharry's Song" about Year Award from the
· Due to the growing busi- thewod:ofSoundHealthand Association of New Science
and the 2002 O'SpuqJeon
ness and interest in bio- Edwards'.dedication.
acoustics, the business
Edwards does a weeldy English Award in Medtcine
recently moved from its ear- show on public radio "Sound from Temple University.
Her extensive work in
lier location into the old Health and Vocal Profiling
Albany school building ~-"She has been the sub- sound medicine and bio!yhich has been completely- ,F of several doc_~tanes ltcoustics is recognized
~ teiiOVliled~· xn ope~ liOuse ~uding a ~o-~ sen~ !Jy lii'OUfld t11e wOrld. ·
The daughter of Meigs
-..as held recently giving the Ohio
Um':erstty Utled
J.!Ublic an opportunity 10 see :'Sound Healing" plus ~o Coonty residents Victor and
the new location while pro- independent documentanes Dessie Perry was right
viding Sound Health a time ~ "~ Medi~" ~ when she quipped - "Who
to demonstrate the role bio- ·Some Apothecary which would have ever imagined
acoustics play in the health focused on frequency based that something this avantfield.
biology. In addition the work tlarde could have originated
..
"Not many people had . of So!md Health bas been m Appalachia!"
.
.
beard of Sound Health or
the unusual research they
are conducting until 'Dow,"
said Heather ·Baker, media
qoordinator for Sound
Health. "We arc the laq;est
~ternad ve research facility
in Ohio, the largest employer in Albany, ~d the su~
of many books," she ad .
At the open house free
personalized vocal proftles
were offered. It is a procedure involving a three-second speaking sample of
voice taken via a microphone connected to a com\1111 our $111e-d-1he-an 1:111 centers and learn about
J.!Uter. Tile frequencies are
than analyzed by a computall of our an•••• our E~ Wiliness Fair.
designed by Edwards,
We wiH be conducting on-the-spot lnietviews.
1jrho is a pioneer in the techSO
llllp by, meetlhe stall, tour the laCIVIieS and
qique, according to Baker.
find
out why lnfoCision is the place for you!
· "The architecture, ampli·
thde imd hannonics of the
· voice are evaluated and can
be related to SlaleS o( 'emotional and psychological
health and well being," said

havi~ a progres-

.er

~

.

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

•

.~

•" CiemaltttWIIIk~Jteun~

·,

~· :·

•il*cw.ltllt'ea ..
·
. '•.Atfoa 1 M tow CGSt.p.tdug.
' our highly-trfil'ed staff,
,\Y.iltl
convenient hours and wait time,
and $39 office visits, you can't
afford .not to visit Ohio QuickCare
for 'four medical.needs..

. •.

.
. . JOSt,;u.._._.
,

C Still aND 456Jt

re

We see JWlf:ient5 .gt 12 mouths .nd older. NO NAILWIK MIN MfDICAT10N
WILliE PRESCIIIIEO OR KEPT ON SITE.. 'le - -~c:om for a
fullist Ill h • s we tre1t lnd ., fiaes we PlowidL

I

"

Frianlly and NlbnS.Ie IPrrl'Na&amp;

•

•

..

�i

'
•

/

•••, limd ·6t11tintl .

YOUR HOMETOWN

.

Gallia played hand in grape production
BvJAMESSaPP!S

as ..damp, shabby and
struggling " he reco~zed
them as the same kind of
grapes (Red Fox.) that be
bad seen growing wild all
across the frontier.
In the book, A History of
Wrne in America it says:
«The settlers, whalever tbcir
ideas about the origins of
tbeir vines, were under oo
delusions as .to the quality
of me wine llhey made, calliDg it, Volney tells us, 'merchant Surenc.' The wines of
Sw:esnes, near Paris, ' w~ a
byword for sourness; a mer·
chant Suresnes woUld thus
be a superlatively thjn and
sour wine." About H96, ads
appeared in the l'triladelphia
papers about wine made at
Gallipolis call Scioto wine.
. In time, vinevards started
lium "ladtings.r ioadc from
~U.S. ~~gao to
show up m Gallipolis; hence
tbe stn:et nameS Grnpe and
Vme. 1bc:re was a latge vineYllld in Gallipolis that ran

GalliaCountyasacommercial enterprise was pretty
much .finished, at least in
the 19th century. The strong
temperance movement may
also have helped the demise
as well as the development
of lbe beer industry in
southern Ohio.
Vines here that did survive the 19th century were
probably those planted by
Satgue, the famous
Gallia hermit.
' German immigrants to ,
O&lt;Xdlem Ohio .revived Ohio
wine making in la!cr years
and today Ohio ranks IOih
among all sillieS in the produruon of gt:¥es.lt is a distant lOntb from the leader
California, which produres
90 percent of all the grapes
grown in the U.S. Grape
growing in southern Ohio
began to revive in the ~960s
when hatdy disease-reststant .
French-American grapes
were planted here. Those
. grapes produoed a wine less
sweet ·t bantheolderwinesof ·
oordlemOhio.
By the way, the leading
grape ·oountry in 1he world is
· litaly, followed by France,
U.S., Spain and Turkey.
Consumption of grnpes in
the U.S- has gone from 2.1
~ per ~~ . Year
111 1970 tD 8
·. tOday.
A\\1 aibitoflrivia, lhe .b ride's
father in ancient Babylon
would supply ·a month's
wol'lh of mead (booey:wine)
tD his new !iOn-in-law. The
time of dlc fu:!e mead wu
r.a!!rvl ~ney IDOII!h~ which
we now call "'honeymoon.~
(1_, Sub if • rpetilll

At the staJ1 of the Civil
War, Ohio was the leading
producer of grapes in tbe
. United States. Gallip&lt;llis
:had a hand in that history as·
·the vineyard developed by
·tbe French 500 at Gallipolis·
in 1792 was one of the first
ones on the west side of the ·
Allegheny Mountains and
the first in Ohio.
.
The .first wine made at
Gallipolis was made from
the native grapes that grew
wild on Gallipolis Island.
The French had some fascinating stores to tell about
how grapes .happened to
·have landed there.
One story had it that t!he
grapes on the island were '
the offspring of grape vines
plantedbythefrenchatFmt
Duquesne in 1754. That fmt
was bumed to the ground
aDd with it went t!he grape
viBes dill! stood inside the
fott. It was imagined by tbe
Frenct! lba.t bears bad wan- 00m Gmpe SullCl to Vmc
~into die JUins oftlle Slmetandlrom'lbiniAvenue
fott anll some gr.tpe seeds to Foudh Avenue dial was
had clung to lbeir fur. A~ the ·Siill around in the 1840&amp;.
bears wound their way
That vineyaRI :aDd 1Jlbers
south, over lime libe seeds close by covered 6 .acres
took roots ill various ,places. and J!!R&gt;d'!Nld 1,000 gallons
Amther e'xplanation lias, of wine per yeat. The
it t!hat the French soldi~ at .Frencl! ca1l the ,grape, the
Fort Duquesne, m OJ!der to Cape of Good H'?.= §'llpe.
deprive t!he Bnglish of lbe but it was most tike1y the
luxury of the french-plant- Sohu:ytill Museatel &lt;thai
·ed grapes. r{lt)ted t!bem up came fivui ~
when the British defeated
The~ was located oo
libe French and threw the · ThinJ Avenue. AlSo growing
vines into the river. In time, ~ were peadl trees. In
the vines li!lded on fact, durit\g lhe Civil War,
Gallipolis Island,
many of die Allies held to
Of morse grapes bad " recruit soldiers f0r ·!he Union
grown wild in Ohio for lli1IIY were bcld . in •that ~~~~
many y.ears. When FFencl!

historian

Constantine

lean

Annual Student Art ~b~t at Rio be~ Tu~~Y
RIO_G~J?-Anew

22:

- - : Gl:tllll .....
I 0H(l411)-.un5 '

SUND/i.Y Puz
· ZLER
.

.....

GO!',....,. (ilmr.,

37 EWIQI&amp;Ehi:

39 Poivale (lllbr.l
41 Eject
43-U!ria
44 So8son
45 Ci1y in Venezuela
48Melalf50 Sword
52 Be neiii1D
55 lineal """'"""'
ST Food and drink
59 SometiN;t
evoking
63 GOa1oe

64 Magical drint .

66 AUIDITobile part

, POMEROY ·
The young people," said scholFoundation for Appalachian arship · committee ·c hair
j
Ohio's scholarship commit- Marianne Campbell. "By
j
tee met in Pomeroy on helping make ,celk:gc arealThursday, April 10 to review ity for high school students
scholarship applications and in this region, we are work·!1
select the students who will ing toward reduclng povetty
;t
. receive this year's awards.
rates and impmving the
FAO administers several economic future for citizens
1
scholarship funds with the of Appalachian Obi(&gt;.~ . ,
t~ .. goal Qf helpm!f'itudcilti 111
· • Among the idiOianbipi
j
Appalachian Ohio have bet- FAO administers are the
:1
· ter access to secondary edu- Bachtel awardS; which go to
4
.cation. This regioo currently ·four seniors at Meigs County
;
:bas a 30 percent mllege High School each year,
1
· attendance ra~. compared These scholarships am made
f.
.to the 62 percent national possible hy an endowed fund
•
average.
. created by the late ·I&gt;r. Hally
"Access to education is , ·Kcig in bonor of one of his
the key to success for our high school teacbers. Keig's

,I
I

1,
i
;
.t

"

·I

j,

· $500,000 bequest makes
passible four $2,500 scbolarships each year, two in
mcognition of academic
achievement and two for
ath1dic achievement
' 1lbe &amp;~;holarship commit!lee will present its decisions
'before the FAO board of
directors for_ ~val anq
all t!Cboljlrsbip ~ will
be annonnced .later this
spring.
For more information
about fAO or to find ow
how you can creare or help
grow scholarship resources,
visit
www.appalachi·
anohio.org or call (740)
753-JJJ/ . .

.. ...
7

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96

!

fi:'.IUIOIMING Amqmt

•

Put.....,....,
a,._
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FAO Scholarship Committee meets in P(}meroy

· ~ r~,_;~ ~

Cll-.urtSfllr
Ill
R

82

.,~

68Fitof~

69lDyal
70Holidaydrink
72 Farm of a kind

73 Rying saucer
74 Ligt1t brown
75 Prnjudice

76 Intimidated
78 Cove
79B&lt;itishgun

eo s.a inlet
S2Taproom
83 Quavering SOIRI

. . .

.

· .

.

~IIIAIIIIRI-

90 l'l8liminary !lloeldl

101AidarYelow
. 101! Aloilile
1DU)-1Md .

(

:y-JSUal Art studen1s showcase works at Rio

92 &lt;launi!De

93 Helat
94Zilch
95 Ulle with olt18rs
96 ·M iilad.., An:l**&gt;gill ~• tm
!l8Wart&lt;IIMI

'US 66illllbi ,

:ma-.g

'*"*

106 fuMy
107 Mike "'Y dly
109~

110 City illllln
111 Happr

: ~ RIOGRANDE-Anew · Ibis piece. she took.· a boo·)It exhibit at the Univenity quct of flowas aod dipped
Rio Grande's Greer it in p11111er clay. Sbe -then

:fl!

99 - illiliiJISii&amp;i

101 Fill!inaCI!l
103 Spaid*' dly
104.for one's oge,

, 112 Han; d'OIIMIIS, e.g.
(2 wdo.) ' •
1151'«M••
117 Mlrlini fruil

11~

.

If...in...,

l'lrluiM

~~~Et·120
prolollld

19 Clroolo
' 21l·Sowmsd

31 Merit
33-

11!!-nle
124 Spilllhe beans
126 Poar grade
128Diaws, in a way

35 Higt'ly 8Bti Ml8d
38-pods
40 "llMne &lt;Jomadf pool

42F-

1&lt;12V8190 ·~

44 Son o!Ad!n and Eve

4BA , I !00
47 - R Ctlamel
43-lal

144 Noi;llbcM of Chile

'

1&lt;18 Cen!al grillS
1&lt;18 Lmxic

51 L.l&lt;e child's play

52 Oiedolon

151 Coiiii6C6
153 Org. aJUiin
155 Fn!l\ch ..... - lola

53Fn!ndlpainler
5&gt;4Piaan~
56~

157EII:IIim&amp;
158 Eniovs

58 Held -!Sibte

OOT...e-

1581'1dotl
111D Duk:ll-&lt;11118

61-larsale

. 62~

161 Deleolo
162 Pul iniD ollice

64 Say IJBC8
85The....,t

163 ~loci&lt;

.

..)hmdmg young .usts.

.

1m! Daei; ...... job
110 01 B!eOP 111tlcM
lj
114 Judgl! ·-

1:!9-saeat
192 Short alelp
134 Encoul1er '
136 Color
ol .. lilioid!Od linan
137141 Similrlcoealu!e
1&lt;16 Fleming
andr•1

·· \ :aoo ~signs from ~ out-

107 ....... part

118~ .,
'I·
119 Roquinl
1
121 ~ ii lliVIniil

11!! Qllli rntifilll
123 firlt (lllbr,)
125 Girm
127 In a1Jnlle

: ttuseum is showcasing a

, :iwide range of lll1islic styles

1:!9 Cll!*n
130 Mu&amp;ical dnlna
131 Be-yo!

· · :: 1be e~ featllres the
: ~ of Rill Gi'iiide 'lll!lii&lt;in; •
- ~ .MidleiJe Thoma&amp;, ' who is
:Jiom Ash,villc;. Bdsy Poff,
:'11/bo is from Cin:levi!Je; and
~ Brianna Allison, whois also
'from Cin:leville.
·
:: 1be exhibit opened on
. :~10.

133Darp

135 Chal.... illit
138Cilyinldlllo

139Lqt140 Honoit
1&lt;12 Alllgt IU1Ibef
143~telow

145 081tn:lldicll

.::ronym

147 Clan .
150 P&amp;wive

152 W'll1lef ..,,
' 154 L8tters on 8 WIIIPB

1560amoge

87Smlllbollle
69 MakO

164T.. -

11 Urm:'!t
75 W''91d cruatures

85~

76Willrway
77 Hlng in ldds

86 Abbr. on a map
87 Roll
88 Higtu:ald
89 FISh paddle
90 Wine sediment
93 Car type

79- qua non
81 Rress
82 IJIIIDI1Dp81""'19d8d.84 v.&gt;;cold

96 Of vaoous sor1s

89 tJnyiekling

the clay flower
and placed them
against phOtos of flowers,
after she bad changed the
~s,

~of lbc tJQwers. The been~toputrogedtend ~.-is ·'ll!i inletestlng ··· c!iTOr' campus and OOIIIIDIJoiand &amp;triking woili of art.
ty groups mch as the Atdton

campus .

This exiDbit will be fullowedbyajuricdemibitfcaIUI'ing the wed: of !le\ICGII
Rio Grande art students. This
exhibit will open on Thesday,
April12 with a special recrp.
.tioq, and cash prizes will be
aw~Rkd fur the IQp ~
The Greet Mu.scUm is
open from I to 5 p.m.
Tuesdays through Sundays
at Rio Grande. The museum
i~ free and open to the publie and brings in a wide
range of types of artwod; by
regional artists and artists
from the area.
For nwtr information em
both of these ahibits a1 the
Greer Museum, call Jim
AtknaJ(800}281-720l..
·

87G~Iigtt

•·
PLEASANT,::,..day_will eentel-liU\IP!I bow
.,
- G;illeiy at 409, an · to wrlte and publish sue: iut/educational gallery, is cessful~ botb ttaditiooal
· pleased to announce a sneak and ebooks, · a quick and
: preview of the gallery space profitable way to publish. .
: with a book signing and
Admission will be 525
: publishing seminar on and includes all events for
: ~aturday, April 26 from 10 the day. ~ for SIS
:a.m. until 4:30 p.m.
off the admission price are
: ~ The
Get
Published . available by e-mailing
·Seminar will have several gallery409@gmail.com or
: local well-known authors . call (740) 339-0530 for
: available for ' signing lbeir .lliQre infm'matioo. .
· : books and asking questions.
At 3:30 .P·!IL· the doors ·
' !J1e theme throughout the will open to the public at no

.

dwgc_{QfJhose who w.ould
like tD • meet tbe authors,.
purchase books or ~ve
booksauro~

Gallery at 409 is located
at 409 Main St., as part of
the historic Lowe Hotel in
Point Pleasant. The gallery
is planning an official grand
preview at a .future date. It
will feature works of art by
local artists, educational
materials, classes in a variety of subjects and educational seminars.

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Call us today at:
(fm) 646-5566
for this FREE program. ot• b'
more information, ph II cllll

O.ewkwltdpMb• variety
d..moa.IID:
•Afp
•n· lility
.• RcuM:Iy li&lt;miloii:aa. q,.y m-~
•llsDI:Ria&lt;r UiCULI)' ir¥ioi1Cil

man11g! unt,
IDol, IPS e(ti lr'8

I

1Dr. John Peny

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·~t PUblished sen1inar set April 26

851'11)1ing CBfd

95 Secn!l agent

used

she has designed. YtSitors tD
the IDII""IIJI are able t!J gd
ontoarnmptn«!hat isinthe
exlo'bit and easily move fiuin
one website to HDiodrt. 1be
websites include ~
sites, aloJig with sites she has

Poll, who will receive her Alumni AssociatiOn.
bachelor's of scieace degree
One of ber favorite pieces
with a wmprebeosive major in the exhibit is ~alt of
in visual arts in May, placed Aberration." a ,ooto that at
several of her sculpture and first looks like it is just
oenunic works into lbe someone standing in bare
:: Thomas, who is double ex.hibit.
feet. Visitors to the Greer
.inajoring in llllllteting and
One of her favorite pieces Museum will especially '
910 lndividu8lly
:fine arts, with a focus on is "Self PoltJait" With this want tD look at this image a
W14JIIi8dCoils
: paphic design, collecled mixed media piece. she took linle closer, though, and find
: IICVeral pieces fur the exbib- her baby blanket that ber out what it reaJiy sbows.
:it, including her wod in . grandmother made fo.- her,
Thomas, PoffandAllison
·Jfigital pbotograpby, ttadi- and placed a watercolor are all proud of having
, : tioual · photography and painting of her against it. their works displayed in the r-~---:=~-----.....;,....-------:--;-------:---.
: ~dentity packages.
Sbe lilres the piece so much Greer Museum and are
: : . The identity packages because it shows ber child- hoping area residents will
· Include design work such as hood, while at the same time stop by the museum to. see
: Jroohures and logos fot local it sbows how she is an adult. the artworks !bey have ere. Allison placed several of ated. The students are fm·
:business, campus groups aod
:Charitable organizations.
her digilal pbotogtapbs, tradi- ishing up ~eir academic
· : One of her favorite pieces tiooal pbolographs liQd prints · careers at Rio Grande, and
: jn the ewbit is titled, ..As in the exlobit. Sbe is also said they enjbyed their time
, Delicate As A Aower." With ex.bibiting six of the websites and learned a lot while on

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'

O'Bleness holds Pillar
Soci·ety recepb"on

,..

91 Whaellpllllls

Perry named April's PhysiCian of Month at HMC
dALLIPOLIS - Dr. John Perry of
Surgery was selected as the April Phystcian
of the Month at Holzcr Medical Center by
the hospital's Physician Satisfaction Team.
Perry earned his medical degree from the
State University of New York in Buffalo.
Before joining Holzer, Dr. Perry worked
, with in Canton at his private practice for
·eight years.
·
Perry is a mentber of the Society of
' Thoracic Surgeons. He was born in
Jamaica. West Indies, and oow resides in
. Gallipolis with his wife Ursula and three
children, Alexandria, 16, Amanda. 14, and
Blake. 12.
In his spare time, be enjoys art, writing
and soccer.
The Physician Satisfaction team presentc
: ed Perry with the Physician of .the Month
:award based oh comments ·by staff and
· peers. For his special honor. Perry received
a framed certificate and designated .parking
spot for the month of April.

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Help your child grow up healthy

~

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26Kilctlenilem
29 Enemy
00 Gentine

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24Show25 Nepal neigllbcM'
26 Fold in a garment
21 Relative
of !he weasel

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Olganimtiuns. The Pediatric Fund, in elistence for 7 e&amp;!'¥ 30 ,ears. has supplied I
led toys, equipned: and enleltaM~
,•
iner1t tD the thousands d pedilltric jiiO:IIIS Who have 1ec:eiWld care on Holler U Ji: al Cenlef's .Pedialric Unit. V'tfa.eh.1
HalleyWood funeral Hocre, n;p
IIBI in the phbrlo aiJcNe at left tJr Gene Wood; and RiM floot Honda, rep~esenled by
.
•
•
.
.
,
Bob.CoK inlhe pt10ID atfWJt, are this 111011tli's sponsors. Also pidtnd is linda Lester reptesesltillglhe Holler~
~-.0 Blcoess Memotial HO!lj)Jtalilelda~n
'lhe errtiJe staff of Holzer Me llical Cenler joins in eajllessirlg lheir (pliblde, alorlg with the )'OUIIg dlii!Rn and lheir filmi- , ~ Api13 tD ~ ~ ""bo ve made ~-s mm~nbu­
Jies~ for lhese 1 eous .wubil~ to Ure Eat Neff Pediatric fund. Anyone who~ like 11101e iofumlation or is inter- ~ 110 11IJII!"'l. ~ llCIVIoeS 0 81eness plmo&lt;I!IOS to S001!:tcast
ested in making a donation maywutact the Holmr r-tdation at (740) 446-5217.
Obioby ~~as m~Dbor!i of die P.illarSooieJy..
1be ,1911 Pilbr Socielty was established ro il'OOOg;DJH iDdJriduals.wbo give $100or roore for ~c projoots l!ha! betJ,
etit O'Blcoess. Curtl:ody7 O'Bleoess ilas r.aised $355,000
rowan~ a goal of '$JIOO,OOO ro fund .a diglita'l breast liml!ging
campai:gn. The new digital mamJlilog;aj)hy ledmology wiil
replaoe ronl.'ellliona!l film for breast iJru®img and will sm&lt;e
BY Runt l.amMr, LPN
• Go outside! Cbildren · lines..Rl£ e-anq!le· a liunily 30 pcroe.m more paliem:s. Test resulrs cam be easilv sent ro
GIIUJA OOUNtY ~ llEIWmiENI'
who play outside are more size ~ 2, 1r••tlhly inmme spociali!is far seoond OjMIDons or ~rg,jcal planning~
AND atiU1R9I
• Drink less soda and active. Fmd a safe area fur ~ aooed $2,139; fami.. 'lbe Pillar Society refioots.lhe rommul'lity l!raditioo o f gmng
otbec sweetened drinks. your child to play.
ly size of 4-$3.269 family support bO' Bicoess. The hospita'l was established in 192116
: Nodling is stronger than a Onlcr milk 01' Willa' if you
• Fmd Olbe£ childrea 1o ~ 5 - $3,814; family size Sbdtering Arms - a i~-m hospital for matemily cases.
· habit. Your young child · is eat away frod:l hnmc Do not play wi!h. It is fun tD play 6 - $4,379. l'kue note: A
At the~ dooors rereived a "'J'lCCially-oommisSiomOO
, learning beallby habits. keep soda in your refrigaa- with odtc:rs. V'tSit a local pregnant woman 0011nrs as 6-indt by 6-indl li3e with a picture of the SbeJtering Alms
; which will last his lifdiJIM"
park or play area. Join a play more !han ooe famiJ.y mem- ooUage tim hangs m the Castmp Center in lhe O'Biemess
torathome
' Hen: are some ideas tD . • Drink more water! grouporprescboolpoyam bet: A pmon who cunmdy Medical Pad. The Iitle was produced by Passioo Wo!ks. a
: ~lp your child ·develop Water is a healthy cboioe
with odJer dilldren.
receives
Medicaid, l9cal ~ t1a is involved in colJlab&lt;mltive at~~-malcing
:.hc:althy eating and physical
You
are
your
child's
best
CareSouroe,
Unison
or between attills witb and -.vilbout. developJ11ent di~bilities.
·• Eat more whole grain
activily habits:
breads. pasta and ClCI'eals. role model Remembc£ to Molina health oovenge. Each tile has 1111 Jlllea of four "'modaalions" which can be added
btaurt
They are great b fib!:£ and eat sman and be ac1i.ve with food Sl3lllpS, or Ohio Worlcs . during the followillg four years for additional gifts.
· . •. Drink skim o.- I (dcent lllllrition.
your child. Your cbild is · Fn (OWF) automalically
Followi"" lbe mrentiion &lt;md distribution of mfitS; the Five
.
Bedw:
.; ~l Otildren over the age
learning from you!
·
IDedS the iornme eli,gibility Tweoly··~ E~le of Alexand(lr Hi""'"School per,
uf 2 years can drink skim oc
WHO CAN APPLY criteria fur W1C.
• Watch less television.
fonnod. Guest speakers were Mike Sostaii~ O'Blenes'
, 1 (dcetJt milk-they are low Tly tD watch two hours or FoR WIC! Women wbo
Please call the Gallia Devduproent Council chair :and Russell Norris. annual sup' In fat aod calories. It iS a . less each day.
are pregnant, breaslfeeding, County WIC Offioe at 441- pon oommittec chair.
, Sleallby choice for your
• Do more family activi- or jusa had a baby; infants 'N17 fur fin1hel" infurmalioo . The event was coordinated by members of the
''.famil
ties. Go fur a walk, visit the up tD I year old and children or tD &lt;d!evlnle an appoint- O'Bleness Annual Support Gommilitee whioh includes.
' y.
.
.
:· • Eat at least five servings park or play in the yard. tD age 5.
ment. Eveoing appointments April Cr~ Jodi Daugllerty (Employee Support Chair).
: bf fruits and vegetables Enjoy a spo1t togeda. Try
HOW 10 APPLY liOR are available upon request.
AI leop. Julia Nehls, Shawna Stum1", Tim Trout. Chad
· ~ day! Sctve at least one stating, biking or hiking WIC! Applicants must meoet
Soune: Nutrition Ma1tus Wmgett and Judith Woolery.
•
;fruit or vegetable at every with your childtm.
income eligibility guide- Inc.

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TheEaltNeffPediatricfundatHolaUerlcaltenlef~tDbeSI~~"lrted~.,.,~~

~

from Rio_Grande.. For. mor:e irlfornuJilon._
call Jun Allen ar (800} 282
7201.

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o'f ~ Hi!if'1 School's f'ive iTwemty \local

Euseniblle perfotm at O' Bieness · MemC!)rial lios,pital's !Pillar
Society
The Pillar Society inclwliles 'l!lonmrs who
hale~ more tmm $1.00 tmwar~the noSJ)ital's digital

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Items

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tograp~ ~~t·~=

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S!ludeo~

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~'1 ""'!m , and fclllures an
1llcrediblc IMtmlw of doah
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23 Lawful

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~20 3:0D

.16. .1hogs
. 21 'l1ortuniiollor's dad&lt;
22 Dem or Bush

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open onoe agam from I0
a.m. tD 110011 on 1\Jesda~
an~ noon. to 2 p.m. 0!'
Fndays m the _Greor
men~ Y~·

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April1861t 7:011

i1f--1inll

'
9'711' . . .
Memt&gt;ers of the Foundatioo for Appalachian Ohio SCholarship Comml11l!e are, from left,
Diqlus Brook
Christa Meyers, Carta lowery, Marianne Campbell, Deborah McDavis.
· an~ Laura Risler.
·

upstairs arcbi~ area IS

fl

"lHUIIBEUNA"

11~

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~

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1 ftllile' 'M:ilii••

I'

~re~ts

stoppmg by the .
M•"':'IID foc lbe April 22
~g/a"':ards sbow, and ·
will app!ICCillle lbe excdleqt
~by the young~ 3l
Rio ~- AR:a ~
are al~ mvital tD ~ lll
~ vtew the exlnbtt up
until May 3.
.
.
The ~useum IS open tD
the public from I m..;.&amp;.nlTuesdays_ ~~ S
Y~
and ~SSH_JD 15 ~· ~

evd....,

for tile
S.rd'] n.es~Setlfi•lli lie
A disease began attacking Qllt lie ocm' ,~ t, llrifilr6

'.
I

~cbairaodasso-

art e,;h1b1t featunng !iOIIIe of aile. pufessol- of sa!)prure
tbe best w~ fn?m ""~ It OU.
at the U_ruvers1ty. of Rio
~o _ ~ _regularly
Gr.mde will be on display_ at brings m outsJ_de Judges fur
~e Greer Museu~ begtn- the a!!DIJ!Il.~g sbow, and
mng T~y. ~
the ednbll IS always an
The ex.bibil will run ~ excellent showcase fur the
April 22 through May 3 m quality arti5lic wed: the Rio
th_e Greer Mn!ie•nm 00 the Grande studesds c:unplde
Rio 9rande ClllllfUS· and an ~~ lhe )'eM:. .
.
openml! eoeption/a~~s
The juried show IS open
sh~ will be beld begtnm"ll to , an Studi:Dls. lium all
at 1.~0 P·~ !~Y- .
gnide levels • Rio Grande.
This e~blliS ,a :Juried _art .aod allows tile univenity to
~bow. w'!kh nrans 011~1 de display 1;10me, of the best
JOO$CS will b_e brought 111 tD wOI;t. done on campus durdecl~ which artworks ing the year. Before the
9ualify fW: tb,e show. The judges decide which ~s
JU~ges will alfi? award will be in tbe show, 11 is
pnzes to lbe top P'~ and impossible to determine
some ca.'ih pm.es will be just bow the ex.bibit will
h~ 0~:b.t
·n feature look o.- which pieces will
e _ex 1 1 . Wt
be inclncled
works mall dlffere'!t f~s
FliCUIIy member Jim
and styles,. as 1t _will ·~ ~ !hnngh, that be
mclude pamtmg, d!awmgs, lli cwemng to see several
photo~rap~y, 5 CI!IptureJi outsranding pieces in the
ceramtcs and pnnts,
nhjhjt dris year. and added
7~l~ted by Rio Grande daal the show is always
s ulbenudgs. c ..._ -"'bit
. eJ
e_s.or~e!UU_
~ be Kcvm E~ ~ \'IslUng pro~esso~ of pamln\g at
OhiO Umverstty, and Duane

~vincyand.

Volney saw ·the red grapes Ohio
the Ill~
l l , _ Ill IM Milil.,-y
growinginGallipolis,aselt850s River
and grapes
by thein late
7«-••rilk, , OJUo .
tlement Volney referred to .1'860s, grape growing in n11Jl.)
·

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S.mday, April20, 2008

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PageC2

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(740)
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•••, limd ·6t11tintl .

YOUR HOMETOWN

.

Gallia played hand in grape production
BvJAMESSaPP!S

as ..damp, shabby and
struggling " he reco~zed
them as the same kind of
grapes (Red Fox.) that be
bad seen growing wild all
across the frontier.
In the book, A History of
Wrne in America it says:
«The settlers, whalever tbcir
ideas about the origins of
tbeir vines, were under oo
delusions as .to the quality
of me wine llhey made, calliDg it, Volney tells us, 'merchant Surenc.' The wines of
Sw:esnes, near Paris, ' w~ a
byword for sourness; a mer·
chant Suresnes woUld thus
be a superlatively thjn and
sour wine." About H96, ads
appeared in the l'triladelphia
papers about wine made at
Gallipolis call Scioto wine.
. In time, vinevards started
lium "ladtings.r ioadc from
~U.S. ~~gao to
show up m Gallipolis; hence
tbe stn:et nameS Grnpe and
Vme. 1bc:re was a latge vineYllld in Gallipolis that ran

GalliaCountyasacommercial enterprise was pretty
much .finished, at least in
the 19th century. The strong
temperance movement may
also have helped the demise
as well as the development
of lbe beer industry in
southern Ohio.
Vines here that did survive the 19th century were
probably those planted by
Satgue, the famous
Gallia hermit.
' German immigrants to ,
O&lt;Xdlem Ohio .revived Ohio
wine making in la!cr years
and today Ohio ranks IOih
among all sillieS in the produruon of gt:¥es.lt is a distant lOntb from the leader
California, which produres
90 percent of all the grapes
grown in the U.S. Grape
growing in southern Ohio
began to revive in the ~960s
when hatdy disease-reststant .
French-American grapes
were planted here. Those
. grapes produoed a wine less
sweet ·t bantheolderwinesof ·
oordlemOhio.
By the way, the leading
grape ·oountry in 1he world is
· litaly, followed by France,
U.S., Spain and Turkey.
Consumption of grnpes in
the U.S- has gone from 2.1
~ per ~~ . Year
111 1970 tD 8
·. tOday.
A\\1 aibitoflrivia, lhe .b ride's
father in ancient Babylon
would supply ·a month's
wol'lh of mead (booey:wine)
tD his new !iOn-in-law. The
time of dlc fu:!e mead wu
r.a!!rvl ~ney IDOII!h~ which
we now call "'honeymoon.~
(1_, Sub if • rpetilll

At the staJ1 of the Civil
War, Ohio was the leading
producer of grapes in tbe
. United States. Gallip&lt;llis
:had a hand in that history as·
·the vineyard developed by
·tbe French 500 at Gallipolis·
in 1792 was one of the first
ones on the west side of the ·
Allegheny Mountains and
the first in Ohio.
.
The .first wine made at
Gallipolis was made from
the native grapes that grew
wild on Gallipolis Island.
The French had some fascinating stores to tell about
how grapes .happened to
·have landed there.
One story had it that t!he
grapes on the island were '
the offspring of grape vines
plantedbythefrenchatFmt
Duquesne in 1754. That fmt
was bumed to the ground
aDd with it went t!he grape
viBes dill! stood inside the
fott. It was imagined by tbe
Frenct! lba.t bears bad wan- 00m Gmpe SullCl to Vmc
~into die JUins oftlle Slmetandlrom'lbiniAvenue
fott anll some gr.tpe seeds to Foudh Avenue dial was
had clung to lbeir fur. A~ the ·Siill around in the 1840&amp;.
bears wound their way
That vineyaRI :aDd 1Jlbers
south, over lime libe seeds close by covered 6 .acres
took roots ill various ,places. and J!!R&gt;d'!Nld 1,000 gallons
Amther e'xplanation lias, of wine per yeat. The
it t!hat the French soldi~ at .Frencl! ca1l the ,grape, the
Fort Duquesne, m OJ!der to Cape of Good H'?.= §'llpe.
deprive t!he Bnglish of lbe but it was most tike1y the
luxury of the french-plant- Sohu:ytill Museatel &lt;thai
·ed grapes. r{lt)ted t!bem up came fivui ~
when the British defeated
The~ was located oo
libe French and threw the · ThinJ Avenue. AlSo growing
vines into the river. In time, ~ were peadl trees. In
the vines li!lded on fact, durit\g lhe Civil War,
Gallipolis Island,
many of die Allies held to
Of morse grapes bad " recruit soldiers f0r ·!he Union
grown wild in Ohio for lli1IIY were bcld . in •that ~~~~
many y.ears. When FFencl!

historian

Constantine

lean

Annual Student Art ~b~t at Rio be~ Tu~~Y
RIO_G~J?-Anew

22:

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I 0H(l411)-.un5 '

SUND/i.Y Puz
· ZLER
.

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37 EWIQI&amp;Ehi:

39 Poivale (lllbr.l
41 Eject
43-U!ria
44 So8son
45 Ci1y in Venezuela
48Melalf50 Sword
52 Be neiii1D
55 lineal """'"""'
ST Food and drink
59 SometiN;t
evoking
63 GOa1oe

64 Magical drint .

66 AUIDITobile part

, POMEROY ·
The young people," said scholFoundation for Appalachian arship · committee ·c hair
j
Ohio's scholarship commit- Marianne Campbell. "By
j
tee met in Pomeroy on helping make ,celk:gc arealThursday, April 10 to review ity for high school students
scholarship applications and in this region, we are work·!1
select the students who will ing toward reduclng povetty
;t
. receive this year's awards.
rates and impmving the
FAO administers several economic future for citizens
1
scholarship funds with the of Appalachian Obi(&gt;.~ . ,
t~ .. goal Qf helpm!f'itudcilti 111
· • Among the idiOianbipi
j
Appalachian Ohio have bet- FAO administers are the
:1
· ter access to secondary edu- Bachtel awardS; which go to
4
.cation. This regioo currently ·four seniors at Meigs County
;
:bas a 30 percent mllege High School each year,
1
· attendance ra~. compared These scholarships am made
f.
.to the 62 percent national possible hy an endowed fund
•
average.
. created by the late ·I&gt;r. Hally
"Access to education is , ·Kcig in bonor of one of his
the key to success for our high school teacbers. Keig's

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.t

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· $500,000 bequest makes
passible four $2,500 scbolarships each year, two in
mcognition of academic
achievement and two for
ath1dic achievement
' 1lbe &amp;~;holarship commit!lee will present its decisions
'before the FAO board of
directors for_ ~val anq
all t!Cboljlrsbip ~ will
be annonnced .later this
spring.
For more information
about fAO or to find ow
how you can creare or help
grow scholarship resources,
visit
www.appalachi·
anohio.org or call (740)
753-JJJ/ . .

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fi:'.IUIOIMING Amqmt

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iii~
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FAO Scholarship Committee meets in P(}meroy

· ~ r~,_;~ ~

Cll-.urtSfllr
Ill
R

82

.,~

68Fitof~

69lDyal
70Holidaydrink
72 Farm of a kind

73 Rying saucer
74 Ligt1t brown
75 Prnjudice

76 Intimidated
78 Cove
79B&lt;itishgun

eo s.a inlet
S2Taproom
83 Quavering SOIRI

. . .

.

· .

.

~IIIAIIIIRI-

90 l'l8liminary !lloeldl

101AidarYelow
. 101! Aloilile
1DU)-1Md .

(

:y-JSUal Art studen1s showcase works at Rio

92 &lt;launi!De

93 Helat
94Zilch
95 Ulle with olt18rs
96 ·M iilad.., An:l**&gt;gill ~• tm
!l8Wart&lt;IIMI

'US 66illllbi ,

:ma-.g

'*"*

106 fuMy
107 Mike "'Y dly
109~

110 City illllln
111 Happr

: ~ RIOGRANDE-Anew · Ibis piece. she took.· a boo·)It exhibit at the Univenity quct of flowas aod dipped
Rio Grande's Greer it in p11111er clay. Sbe -then

:fl!

99 - illiliiJISii&amp;i

101 Fill!inaCI!l
103 Spaid*' dly
104.for one's oge,

, 112 Han; d'OIIMIIS, e.g.
(2 wdo.) ' •
1151'«M••
117 Mlrlini fruil

11~

.

If...in...,

l'lrluiM

~~~Et·120
prolollld

19 Clroolo
' 21l·Sowmsd

31 Merit
33-

11!!-nle
124 Spilllhe beans
126 Poar grade
128Diaws, in a way

35 Higt'ly 8Bti Ml8d
38-pods
40 "llMne &lt;Jomadf pool

42F-

1&lt;12V8190 ·~

44 Son o!Ad!n and Eve

4BA , I !00
47 - R Ctlamel
43-lal

144 Noi;llbcM of Chile

'

1&lt;18 Cen!al grillS
1&lt;18 Lmxic

51 L.l&lt;e child's play

52 Oiedolon

151 Coiiii6C6
153 Org. aJUiin
155 Fn!l\ch ..... - lola

53Fn!ndlpainler
5&gt;4Piaan~
56~

157EII:IIim&amp;
158 Eniovs

58 Held -!Sibte

OOT...e-

1581'1dotl
111D Duk:ll-&lt;11118

61-larsale

. 62~

161 Deleolo
162 Pul iniD ollice

64 Say IJBC8
85The....,t

163 ~loci&lt;

.

..)hmdmg young .usts.

.

1m! Daei; ...... job
110 01 B!eOP 111tlcM
lj
114 Judgl! ·-

1:!9-saeat
192 Short alelp
134 Encoul1er '
136 Color
ol .. lilioid!Od linan
137141 Similrlcoealu!e
1&lt;16 Fleming
andr•1

·· \ :aoo ~signs from ~ out-

107 ....... part

118~ .,
'I·
119 Roquinl
1
121 ~ ii lliVIniil

11!! Qllli rntifilll
123 firlt (lllbr,)
125 Girm
127 In a1Jnlle

: ttuseum is showcasing a

, :iwide range of lll1islic styles

1:!9 Cll!*n
130 Mu&amp;ical dnlna
131 Be-yo!

· · :: 1be e~ featllres the
: ~ of Rill Gi'iiide 'lll!lii&lt;in; •
- ~ .MidleiJe Thoma&amp;, ' who is
:Jiom Ash,villc;. Bdsy Poff,
:'11/bo is from Cin:levi!Je; and
~ Brianna Allison, whois also
'from Cin:leville.
·
:: 1be exhibit opened on
. :~10.

133Darp

135 Chal.... illit
138Cilyinldlllo

139Lqt140 Honoit
1&lt;12 Alllgt IU1Ibef
143~telow

145 081tn:lldicll

.::ronym

147 Clan .
150 P&amp;wive

152 W'll1lef ..,,
' 154 L8tters on 8 WIIIPB

1560amoge

87Smlllbollle
69 MakO

164T.. -

11 Urm:'!t
75 W''91d cruatures

85~

76Willrway
77 Hlng in ldds

86 Abbr. on a map
87 Roll
88 Higtu:ald
89 FISh paddle
90 Wine sediment
93 Car type

79- qua non
81 Rress
82 IJIIIDI1Dp81""'19d8d.84 v.&gt;;cold

96 Of vaoous sor1s

89 tJnyiekling

the clay flower
and placed them
against phOtos of flowers,
after she bad changed the
~s,

~of lbc tJQwers. The been~toputrogedtend ~.-is ·'ll!i inletestlng ··· c!iTOr' campus and OOIIIIDIJoiand &amp;triking woili of art.
ty groups mch as the Atdton

campus .

This exiDbit will be fullowedbyajuricdemibitfcaIUI'ing the wed: of !le\ICGII
Rio Grande art students. This
exhibit will open on Thesday,
April12 with a special recrp.
.tioq, and cash prizes will be
aw~Rkd fur the IQp ~
The Greet Mu.scUm is
open from I to 5 p.m.
Tuesdays through Sundays
at Rio Grande. The museum
i~ free and open to the publie and brings in a wide
range of types of artwod; by
regional artists and artists
from the area.
For nwtr information em
both of these ahibits a1 the
Greer Museum, call Jim
AtknaJ(800}281-720l..
·

87G~Iigtt

•·
PLEASANT,::,..day_will eentel-liU\IP!I bow
.,
- G;illeiy at 409, an · to wrlte and publish sue: iut/educational gallery, is cessful~ botb ttaditiooal
· pleased to announce a sneak and ebooks, · a quick and
: preview of the gallery space profitable way to publish. .
: with a book signing and
Admission will be 525
: publishing seminar on and includes all events for
: ~aturday, April 26 from 10 the day. ~ for SIS
:a.m. until 4:30 p.m.
off the admission price are
: ~ The
Get
Published . available by e-mailing
·Seminar will have several gallery409@gmail.com or
: local well-known authors . call (740) 339-0530 for
: available for ' signing lbeir .lliQre infm'matioo. .
· : books and asking questions.
At 3:30 .P·!IL· the doors ·
' !J1e theme throughout the will open to the public at no

.

dwgc_{QfJhose who w.ould
like tD • meet tbe authors,.
purchase books or ~ve
booksauro~

Gallery at 409 is located
at 409 Main St., as part of
the historic Lowe Hotel in
Point Pleasant. The gallery
is planning an official grand
preview at a .future date. It
will feature works of art by
local artists, educational
materials, classes in a variety of subjects and educational seminars.

r

p CRJP•:•
4 ~--·­
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cottc...-.·s

.... IIJmcc. JllllridL'I; it pDIId

.,. ..lbilic. .. w •••• , ......

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blme.-:ioa.i&amp;Caay.

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

Wi:I"K:Nidc~~lm'
..,. hla:nQsin}W'IIorKd
...

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Call us today at:
(fm) 646-5566
for this FREE program. ot• b'
more information, ph II cllll

O.ewkwltdpMb• variety
d..moa.IID:
•Afp
•n· lility
.• RcuM:Iy li&lt;miloii:aa. q,.y m-~
•llsDI:Ria&lt;r UiCULI)' ir¥ioi1Cil

man11g! unt,
IDol, IPS e(ti lr'8

I

1Dr. John Peny

-·
'

... ... ..

"·

~·

.. .

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·~t PUblished sen1inar set April 26

851'11)1ing CBfd

95 Secn!l agent

used

she has designed. YtSitors tD
the IDII""IIJI are able t!J gd
ontoarnmptn«!hat isinthe
exlo'bit and easily move fiuin
one website to HDiodrt. 1be
websites include ~
sites, aloJig with sites she has

Poll, who will receive her Alumni AssociatiOn.
bachelor's of scieace degree
One of ber favorite pieces
with a wmprebeosive major in the exhibit is ~alt of
in visual arts in May, placed Aberration." a ,ooto that at
several of her sculpture and first looks like it is just
oenunic works into lbe someone standing in bare
:: Thomas, who is double ex.hibit.
feet. Visitors to the Greer
.inajoring in llllllteting and
One of her favorite pieces Museum will especially '
910 lndividu8lly
:fine arts, with a focus on is "Self PoltJait" With this want tD look at this image a
W14JIIi8dCoils
: paphic design, collecled mixed media piece. she took linle closer, though, and find
: IICVeral pieces fur the exbib- her baby blanket that ber out what it reaJiy sbows.
:it, including her wod in . grandmother made fo.- her,
Thomas, PoffandAllison
·Jfigital pbotograpby, ttadi- and placed a watercolor are all proud of having
, : tioual · photography and painting of her against it. their works displayed in the r-~---:=~-----.....;,....-------:--;-------:---.
: ~dentity packages.
Sbe lilres the piece so much Greer Museum and are
: : . The identity packages because it shows ber child- hoping area residents will
· Include design work such as hood, while at the same time stop by the museum to. see
: Jroohures and logos fot local it sbows how she is an adult. the artworks !bey have ere. Allison placed several of ated. The students are fm·
:business, campus groups aod
:Charitable organizations.
her digilal pbotogtapbs, tradi- ishing up ~eir academic
· : One of her favorite pieces tiooal pbolographs liQd prints · careers at Rio Grande, and
: jn the ewbit is titled, ..As in the exlobit. Sbe is also said they enjbyed their time
, Delicate As A Aower." With ex.bibiting six of the websites and learned a lot while on

.

'

O'Bleness holds Pillar
Soci·ety recepb"on

,..

91 Whaellpllllls

Perry named April's PhysiCian of Month at HMC
dALLIPOLIS - Dr. John Perry of
Surgery was selected as the April Phystcian
of the Month at Holzcr Medical Center by
the hospital's Physician Satisfaction Team.
Perry earned his medical degree from the
State University of New York in Buffalo.
Before joining Holzer, Dr. Perry worked
, with in Canton at his private practice for
·eight years.
·
Perry is a mentber of the Society of
' Thoracic Surgeons. He was born in
Jamaica. West Indies, and oow resides in
. Gallipolis with his wife Ursula and three
children, Alexandria, 16, Amanda. 14, and
Blake. 12.
In his spare time, be enjoys art, writing
and soccer.
The Physician Satisfaction team presentc
: ed Perry with the Physician of .the Month
:award based oh comments ·by staff and
· peers. For his special honor. Perry received
a framed certificate and designated .parking
spot for the month of April.

'

Help your child grow up healthy

~

;,\~

6plll ... 5

26Kilctlenilem
29 Enemy
00 Gentine

•

......

n"'*'l*lli4t....,IIY c:amtJll!gfll.

!u

~A~a

7

24Show25 Nepal neigllbcM'
26 Fold in a garment
21 Relative
of !he weasel

cara

~

Q.l

·•lfl.t

Olganimtiuns. The Pediatric Fund, in elistence for 7 e&amp;!'¥ 30 ,ears. has supplied I
led toys, equipned: and enleltaM~
,•
iner1t tD the thousands d pedilltric jiiO:IIIS Who have 1ec:eiWld care on Holler U Ji: al Cenlef's .Pedialric Unit. V'tfa.eh.1
HalleyWood funeral Hocre, n;p
IIBI in the phbrlo aiJcNe at left tJr Gene Wood; and RiM floot Honda, rep~esenled by
.
•
•
.
.
,
Bob.CoK inlhe pt10ID atfWJt, are this 111011tli's sponsors. Also pidtnd is linda Lester reptesesltillglhe Holler~
~-.0 Blcoess Memotial HO!lj)Jtalilelda~n
'lhe errtiJe staff of Holzer Me llical Cenler joins in eajllessirlg lheir (pliblde, alorlg with the )'OUIIg dlii!Rn and lheir filmi- , ~ Api13 tD ~ ~ ""bo ve made ~-s mm~nbu­
Jies~ for lhese 1 eous .wubil~ to Ure Eat Neff Pediatric fund. Anyone who~ like 11101e iofumlation or is inter- ~ 110 11IJII!"'l. ~ llCIVIoeS 0 81eness plmo&lt;I!IOS to S001!:tcast
ested in making a donation maywutact the Holmr r-tdation at (740) 446-5217.
Obioby ~~as m~Dbor!i of die P.illarSooieJy..
1be ,1911 Pilbr Socielty was established ro il'OOOg;DJH iDdJriduals.wbo give $100or roore for ~c projoots l!ha! betJ,
etit O'Blcoess. Curtl:ody7 O'Bleoess ilas r.aised $355,000
rowan~ a goal of '$JIOO,OOO ro fund .a diglita'l breast liml!ging
campai:gn. The new digital mamJlilog;aj)hy ledmology wiil
replaoe ronl.'ellliona!l film for breast iJru®img and will sm&lt;e
BY Runt l.amMr, LPN
• Go outside! Cbildren · lines..Rl£ e-anq!le· a liunily 30 pcroe.m more paliem:s. Test resulrs cam be easilv sent ro
GIIUJA OOUNtY ~ llEIWmiENI'
who play outside are more size ~ 2, 1r••tlhly inmme spociali!is far seoond OjMIDons or ~rg,jcal planning~
AND atiU1R9I
• Drink less soda and active. Fmd a safe area fur ~ aooed $2,139; fami.. 'lbe Pillar Society refioots.lhe rommul'lity l!raditioo o f gmng
otbec sweetened drinks. your child to play.
ly size of 4-$3.269 family support bO' Bicoess. The hospita'l was established in 192116
: Nodling is stronger than a Onlcr milk 01' Willa' if you
• Fmd Olbe£ childrea 1o ~ 5 - $3,814; family size Sbdtering Arms - a i~-m hospital for matemily cases.
· habit. Your young child · is eat away frod:l hnmc Do not play wi!h. It is fun tD play 6 - $4,379. l'kue note: A
At the~ dooors rereived a "'J'lCCially-oommisSiomOO
, learning beallby habits. keep soda in your refrigaa- with odtc:rs. V'tSit a local pregnant woman 0011nrs as 6-indt by 6-indl li3e with a picture of the SbeJtering Alms
; which will last his lifdiJIM"
park or play area. Join a play more !han ooe famiJ.y mem- ooUage tim hangs m the Castmp Center in lhe O'Biemess
torathome
' Hen: are some ideas tD . • Drink more water! grouporprescboolpoyam bet: A pmon who cunmdy Medical Pad. The Iitle was produced by Passioo Wo!ks. a
: ~lp your child ·develop Water is a healthy cboioe
with odJer dilldren.
receives
Medicaid, l9cal ~ t1a is involved in colJlab&lt;mltive at~~-malcing
:.hc:althy eating and physical
You
are
your
child's
best
CareSouroe,
Unison
or between attills witb and -.vilbout. developJ11ent di~bilities.
·• Eat more whole grain
activily habits:
breads. pasta and ClCI'eals. role model Remembc£ to Molina health oovenge. Each tile has 1111 Jlllea of four "'modaalions" which can be added
btaurt
They are great b fib!:£ and eat sman and be ac1i.ve with food Sl3lllpS, or Ohio Worlcs . during the followillg four years for additional gifts.
· . •. Drink skim o.- I (dcent lllllrition.
your child. Your cbild is · Fn (OWF) automalically
Followi"" lbe mrentiion &lt;md distribution of mfitS; the Five
.
Bedw:
.; ~l Otildren over the age
learning from you!
·
IDedS the iornme eli,gibility Tweoly··~ E~le of Alexand(lr Hi""'"School per,
uf 2 years can drink skim oc
WHO CAN APPLY criteria fur W1C.
• Watch less television.
fonnod. Guest speakers were Mike Sostaii~ O'Blenes'
, 1 (dcetJt milk-they are low Tly tD watch two hours or FoR WIC! Women wbo
Please call the Gallia Devduproent Council chair :and Russell Norris. annual sup' In fat aod calories. It iS a . less each day.
are pregnant, breaslfeeding, County WIC Offioe at 441- pon oommittec chair.
, Sleallby choice for your
• Do more family activi- or jusa had a baby; infants 'N17 fur fin1hel" infurmalioo . The event was coordinated by members of the
''.famil
ties. Go fur a walk, visit the up tD I year old and children or tD &lt;d!evlnle an appoint- O'Bleness Annual Support Gommilitee whioh includes.
' y.
.
.
:· • Eat at least five servings park or play in the yard. tD age 5.
ment. Eveoing appointments April Cr~ Jodi Daugllerty (Employee Support Chair).
: bf fruits and vegetables Enjoy a spo1t togeda. Try
HOW 10 APPLY liOR are available upon request.
AI leop. Julia Nehls, Shawna Stum1", Tim Trout. Chad
· ~ day! Sctve at least one stating, biking or hiking WIC! Applicants must meoet
Soune: Nutrition Ma1tus Wmgett and Judith Woolery.
•
;fruit or vegetable at every with your childtm.
income eligibility guide- Inc.

·""'" c~"Jl

'

1 ........

""epliioi•.

TheEaltNeffPediatricfundatHolaUerlcaltenlef~tDbeSI~~"lrted~.,.,~~

~

from Rio_Grande.. For. mor:e irlfornuJilon._
call Jun Allen ar (800} 282
7201.

I

'""'~!

7

o'f ~ Hi!if'1 School's f'ive iTwemty \local

Euseniblle perfotm at O' Bieness · MemC!)rial lios,pital's !Pillar
Society
The Pillar Society inclwliles 'l!lonmrs who
hale~ more tmm $1.00 tmwar~the noSJ)ital's digital

-~ P~r....t

Items

«:

~llt'EIIt fiiiiOtiiT ~OtliDA

,. _,

tograp~ ~~t·~=

;;;

$'

S!ludeo~

f.'

~'1 ""'!m , and fclllures an
1llcrediblc IMtmlw of doah
~t

jl:.! '

( '

'' 1'~4;._,.

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

23 Lawful

'

,.

~20 3:0D

.16. .1hogs
. 21 'l1ortuniiollor's dad&lt;
22 Dem or Bush

.

alsO

open onoe agam from I0
a.m. tD 110011 on 1\Jesda~
an~ noon. to 2 p.m. 0!'
Fndays m the _Greor
men~ Y~·

I

u rt_'ti!j;

April1861t 7:011

i1f--1inll

'
9'711' . . .
Memt&gt;ers of the Foundatioo for Appalachian Ohio SCholarship Comml11l!e are, from left,
Diqlus Brook
Christa Meyers, Carta lowery, Marianne Campbell, Deborah McDavis.
· an~ Laura Risler.
·

upstairs arcbi~ area IS

fl

"lHUIIBEUNA"

11~

I

~

, -.llftNIS

1 ftllile' 'M:ilii••

I'

~re~ts

stoppmg by the .
M•"':'IID foc lbe April 22
~g/a"':ards sbow, and ·
will app!ICCillle lbe excdleqt
~by the young~ 3l
Rio ~- AR:a ~
are al~ mvital tD ~ lll
~ vtew the exlnbtt up
until May 3.
.
.
The ~useum IS open tD
the public from I m..;.&amp;.nlTuesdays_ ~~ S
Y~
and ~SSH_JD 15 ~· ~

evd....,

for tile
S.rd'] n.es~Setlfi•lli lie
A disease began attacking Qllt lie ocm' ,~ t, llrifilr6

'.
I

~cbairaodasso-

art e,;h1b1t featunng !iOIIIe of aile. pufessol- of sa!)prure
tbe best w~ fn?m ""~ It OU.
at the U_ruvers1ty. of Rio
~o _ ~ _regularly
Gr.mde will be on display_ at brings m outsJ_de Judges fur
~e Greer Museu~ begtn- the a!!DIJ!Il.~g sbow, and
mng T~y. ~
the ednbll IS always an
The ex.bibil will run ~ excellent showcase fur the
April 22 through May 3 m quality arti5lic wed: the Rio
th_e Greer Mn!ie•nm 00 the Grande studesds c:unplde
Rio 9rande ClllllfUS· and an ~~ lhe )'eM:. .
.
openml! eoeption/a~~s
The juried show IS open
sh~ will be beld begtnm"ll to , an Studi:Dls. lium all
at 1.~0 P·~ !~Y- .
gnide levels • Rio Grande.
This e~blliS ,a :Juried _art .aod allows tile univenity to
~bow. w'!kh nrans 011~1 de display 1;10me, of the best
JOO$CS will b_e brought 111 tD wOI;t. done on campus durdecl~ which artworks ing the year. Before the
9ualify fW: tb,e show. The judges decide which ~s
JU~ges will alfi? award will be in tbe show, 11 is
pnzes to lbe top P'~ and impossible to determine
some ca.'ih pm.es will be just bow the ex.bibit will
h~ 0~:b.t
·n feature look o.- which pieces will
e _ex 1 1 . Wt
be inclncled
works mall dlffere'!t f~s
FliCUIIy member Jim
and styles,. as 1t _will ·~ ~ !hnngh, that be
mclude pamtmg, d!awmgs, lli cwemng to see several
photo~rap~y, 5 CI!IptureJi outsranding pieces in the
ceramtcs and pnnts,
nhjhjt dris year. and added
7~l~ted by Rio Grande daal the show is always
s ulbenudgs. c ..._ -"'bit
. eJ
e_s.or~e!UU_
~ be Kcvm E~ ~ \'IslUng pro~esso~ of pamln\g at
OhiO Umverstty, and Duane

~vincyand.

Volney saw ·the red grapes Ohio
the Ill~
l l , _ Ill IM Milil.,-y
growinginGallipolis,aselt850s River
and grapes
by thein late
7«-••rilk, , OJUo .
tlement Volney referred to .1'860s, grape growing in n11Jl.)
·

"'

S.mday, April20, 2008

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PageC3

CoMM

PageC2

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(740)
1

�· Page{4~·

CRI.EBRATIONS

s "4'/\

.20,-

ON THE BOOKSHEJ.:F

Rio Bookstore holds 60-secQnd shopping spree

an 11n6kely heroine
Some of any fri~nds don't
. iJI8TI)mllarly .care for shon
&lt;stories. · ~ would' 'Wilter lhat
liDOS! of ·them would like
!ibis cCollection,
Olive
fffmeriilge . by !Elizabeth ·
Strout. ii1hese L3 stories .all
.!place in &lt;Crosby,
·.Maine, .and JtTe .connected
. !l!Y .a ceentral .chomcter, one
Oli;ve IKitteridge, junior
!high mafll teacher. ln most
iof ilhe stories s he is a
:w oman "of a certain ~~ge,"
lnot beautiful, not 'brilliant.
llOOI!g &gt;her own life with all
ns :flaWS .and 'JITOblems in a
'!iiiUIII; cguiet town.
.'She is the most impres:-si.v.e mature female characrter ihave met in ~iterature
;5ince 'Sayw.ard LuCkett ·in
!/'he !/'rees, !/'he Fieldo, and
!/'he !/'own. Olive is married.
~o llllen~, .a ·p hannacist, .and
has one son, Christopher,
whom iihe loves, but does
not c~~~~derstand.
10ne enjoyable ·story finds
!())Jive ly.ing on her ~on 's
lbed, listening to the sounds
•of ·guests in the house, pre·sent .at .her son and new
daughter- ill-law's wedding
· recc;ption. She is a large
woman, a tired woman,
secldng a moment of solirude .after a trying day. She
is .a bit intimidated by her
'"'penfect" daughter- in-law,
~ne: a _gastroenterologist whom !Christopher has
hown orily .a shon time.
'She overhears pan of a con·,.erSJition in which a lady
-says, '1But lhe father is a
OOIL !" "She llears that lhe
new wife thinks ·the dress
·she chose/made for the
weddi11g is tacky.
So ... (i)live carefully
removes from her son and
his wife's bedroom on of
her shoes, a pair of frilly
panties and makes an ugly
'black 1l1lllik down the sleeve
:of one of'Suzanne.'s perfect-.
5Jy folded sweaters. Olive
'ktiows this will drive the
iJ!erfecily organized new
'Wife nuts, and she thinks her
:son doesn't need t"' be marlried to a woman so sme of
)herself.
· li'hi~ is the story of an
• •ordinary life, filled.' with
.ewaordinary moments, as
:w.hen she .and some neigh.
:bon; try to save a young
:woman from anorexia
·w hen she and Henry are
lleld ·hostage by druggies
;trying to rob a hospital
:emergency room, when one
:of her former students
&lt;returns, thinking -of suicide.
'We are with Olive, sharing
.her .ahxieties as she and her
:.husband age, as
he
"becomes helpless, as she is
.appalled by ·the. way her
grandchild is being raised
in New YoFk City, as she
learns to love again .
On the upper floor of her
son's Brooklyn townhouse

!t'?_

a

WEDDING

MARTIN
ANNIVERSARY

TH·AXTONNOR.THUP

ENGAGEMENT
VIINmN - :St:qihen .and ~ela ThaK\Qn of Vinton
wOOid llike tto .anneunce tthe ~~~gement .and approaching
\llllllllil!ge &lt;Of :their daughter. Lmdsey Thaxton, to Shaun
Nortluijl, son ·aflffiram.and ~udy Northup of Bidwell.
11he'bride :ii&gt;:a 2003 ~te of !River Valley High School
.andcurrently.enrolledJUlhe Uni;versizy ofRio 'Grande, pursui'1g .a .degree dn .eat'Jy childhood education.
.
Her lfiance :ii; .a 1003 graduate of !River Valley High
SChool. and .a 1007 Q.aduate of ihe IUniversizy of !Rio
Grande !With .a~ liD clectronic netwoik systems. He is
..aum:ent1y emple~ lby Qptilent 'Solutions in iClhillicothe.
1lbe w.cddi~~g will\Uike ;place \0ll 'Saturday, June 7, 200S,
:at Raccoon CJreCk C &lt;Junljy P.aiJc (0 !0. 'Mdlntyre IP.ar"k) .at the
1Humniinffiir11 Gazebo.

Young scholars place.in
annual MLK essay contest
RIO GRANDE-Six fifth :and $0011 gmde sbJi!rmtS lfmm
G.llia, llwiktcm ;and vmaoo &lt;C0Wlllcs- ~JTW'IUJ,y
fm-libe ~-pmrakiing ~li Iiiiey emcred iin"iihe .amw;a'l ),1JIIIIiD I !#ln KiiD,g Jr.,~ IOOIDe!IL
The ~ iit; ~ by 1ibe Gllliii-JadktiOII-V'UIWII
Rdi1M SeDiar ~'Jun!r!er 1\ugrml (RSVP) .tnd Vdlunteer
Nawedt:: f'.cmtcr RSVP iii spen!lm'Od lby die Uni"".ersity .at'
_ROO Gqmile in Ga1lia CJamny .IIIId has ~ Glillia. ooumy
d&amp;etOIII die Riiof'..,..aeqp:qu1!&gt;.
. . Susan ~~&lt;11£Ga'llia-,l.llclf!laii•Viin1Qil lltSVP
and l1ibe
_,. ~-· (Jtmier, c~. that the
essay OOIIIeSt Uwlwled stndc:nt-; ifrem sdboo1s sudh .as il:be
I"'*"""' Oily Sdboots., Clluiistian lJife :Acai!emy, Oak: Hill
Sdlools; ruma Qnmty I.Jeca1 Schools, Glillipdlis City
SChools, 0100 v~ Clluii&amp;tiian Sdhool, Wellsten City
Sdlools, Sts. Peter .and P.aul School .and tthe Vinton
CJt?unly Sdbools.
"We had wmelllllt!!lliMiu,g esuys ttbis year,~ R~ said,
ad4in.g tthat ~ :Biso an Ulorease in \the mumb&amp; rof
&gt;CSsays wl1111ittNI. 11 'Was v.my ~ &lt;011 libe juqges ltD
dooille onltbe ~~ flbe said.
.
The .uw!lges iinclllllcd 'ie'Vmll mJmd ltt:atibers 'Who wmik.
with die RSVP program. "The essay llantest was ·.diW.dc:d
JintG il:btee rreffiens; .and die ~ iin each rn;gien :received
.a scbo'lardii,p ita Rio GQmde. All tthree of ;the winners .and
ithe liliu:: seooM place wmncrs eaCh mceived $50 gift .cer!Tfficate&lt;i to libe Rio Grande~.
The winners iU¢luded Amy 0lli'S ofGallia Ce~, ~
llamilum of Jacks&lt;m Celinty .and !Hunter ~~· ,of
Vmaen &lt;Jounty. llum:lcrHql inc1u&amp;4 Tanner Reed .of
Jri-Mil Clmuay, Klrc1yn Reave- rof Gallia County . .and
Devan DaVis J Jacbcm County.
The essays .U 1Wcll 'Wiiinen and included some

I

I .

~mes~.

'

Athens film fest to screen

j _record number o[tlicks
\

-·

.

.

.

.

.

"'S~ .as .a i12-year-&lt;lild, yeu .may wonder !bow I can
lllllk ;a ' erence lin my rommuni.ty,fl Ours wmte in her

essay. ""But there are many way~; young ;people can «JDtribute in ttheirilAIDmunity.l was in!ijlil:Mitbrougb !1he death
,of my grandfather, Ra'pb Durst.~
·~ 'W.IW &lt;lib9!!t-!J"i'M1f;
's Ol!llf~li llllt&amp; with
cancer, .and t111!ced llboot 'how she went on to ·h onor him by
v~ 'With the .American Cancer Society .and
singing in ber dbmob i8lld &lt;in die oommunity.
Hamill@n'1&gt; &gt;Olisay rtalkt; .about !bow 1be w.ants w become a
Wheat fmnerwbcn he :grows up, .and1how he hopes to lll!llke
.a .dift'crence in 1be wocld.
· ~I .coUld bC'lp my tOOJTIITIIIDity lQy gi..,ing SOIDe f!Jod 1o ithe
people who &amp;loot bave eoougb food, IW:penbolf wrote in
his .award-winni~~g essay.
He also w.liito!l .about picking IW litter &lt;in Ibis tewn, wori::iing w.ith Ibis Boy Scout troop" oo projects, d!Jnating-clotbcs
ItO prq&gt;1e in need .and even -~ up guardrails and fenres
·so mi1D!I1s are oot hit by cars.
. " .\s I get elder, I would like to stan trying ·Out some of
my ideas so 'fhat ~can !Jclp my community," 'R iepenboff
wrote. " I think that all of these ~ will &lt;iuglrove my
omnmunity, and it w!JUld be nice to IICIC tUS iin .a ibetter envi-

St,mohy, Aprilm, 2008

I

Meet Olive

MILLIRON-HAYDA

PageCs

RIO GRANDE - Two
lucky students from the
Univer-sity of Rio . Grande
were recently treated to a
one-minute -shopping spree
the
!Rio
Grande
in
!Bookstore.
li'he lijJree had .a few fun
-conditions for the 11tudents,
.and it :turned out &lt;to be a
great .event for winner-s
Britney 'Walker, a senior
from I(Jleveland, and lenn
Carson,.a seniorfrom Heath.
'Manager David Ding
eKplained 1hat the shopping
spree . w.as a promotional
.event for the bookstore and
helped i t with its 'TIUII'keting.
Grande ·student
!Rio
Rachel 'King, assistant manager of ·lhe bookstore, said
the store was looking for
11ew .ways to reaeh out to
students to tell them about
specilil s ales and ev.ents.
While the bookstore can
contact students by e-mail,
these messages are not
·always effective in reaching ·
the students. .
1t's more effective for the
students lo be contacted
through the•! . Facebook
·~ounts and stmllar on-l_me
Sites, and the 'Shoppmg
-spree was one way to get
students to give the information for these accounts to
the store.
·
'King, who is from
Jackson, got the idea forlhis
shopping spree at a business
seminar she attended and
explained lhat students voluntarily gave their contact
information while registering for the contest. 1n seven
days, more than 60 students
signed up for the . contest
and gave lheir contact information to the store.
T.be ·stvdents were fir-st
told there would be one
winner chosen, and ·that student would have 60 seconds
to go through the store and
chOose as many items as be
or she wanted. Some .areas
ofthe·store, such as the textbook section, were off limits, but a great number of
items were available.
Carson was so hopeful
that she would win, that she
visited the store early on the
day of the spree ·to study
which .areas of the store she
WQWd vi:;itjf-she was selected and everi bad someone
time her iiS slie wm~&lt;ea over
her prefeired COIII'SC. .
Cw:son was the first ·student chosen as a winner,
and then Ding drew '
Walker's name and told the
two student!; that they
would team up for the event
and be taped together.
Carson and Walker had one
minute to travel ·together
through the store, working
with each other to make
sme each student got the
items she wanted.
:Whiie Carson
lmew
exactly where she wanted to
go, Walker was not so sure,
and she said she just
grabbed items while Carson
led the way.

Bnuly
GlU

live• 8 f undamentalist
.Christian young .man
whose pet parrot keeps
s quawking 'lPraise God"
and "God is 'King," Olive
feels that "'the fu-st lime
Christopher married someone mean and pushy now
he"'s man;ied s omeone
dumb and nice ." She thinks
iRenry .would like this second wife.
The writing is wonderfully descriptive and seems to
get the voice of ihis woman
just .Tight. There .are pass~~ges where you will be
close lo tears and others
where you will uiugh aloud.
"'Olive had a sense of just
how desperately hard every
person in the world was
working to get what they
needed . For most, it was 8
sense of safelY· in the sea of
terror that life increasingly
became. " "Olive pictured
two slices of Swiss chees6
pressed together, such holes
·they brought to this union
- what pieces life took out
ofyou 1"
1 can always tell when 1
really lov~ a book. I am
sorry to close the cover after
reading that . last line.
'Elizabeth Strout leaves you
wanting more from Olive
Kitteridge. She is an authentic character, someone who
might live next door. Many
women "of a certain age"
will identify with ' this
woman.
I chose Looking For
'Salvation ,AI Th e Dairy
Queen by Susan Gregg
Gilmore ·because of the title
and because I , too, would
like to hang out at the Dairy
Queen and eat ice cream on
summer evenings. It is the
~70's in Ringgold, Ga., in
thi~ ·light nnd e njoy.llhle
novel. Catherine Grace
Cline, -preacher's daughter,
plots how she can get out of
town to Atlanta. She has a
little sister, a slightly shady
older woman friend, and a
dream.
m('Jther
Catherine 's
drowned when she was
quite young, and all her
young life, she longs for a
mother. Her father is not
what he seems. Her
boyfriend wants ·the smalltown life, ·so Catherine is
one conflicted young lady.
Readable, enjoyable, a shot
of Kooi-Aid compared with
band-squeezed orange juice
in Olive Kitteridge.

The two were cheered on
by other Rio Grande students during their oneminute shopping spree, and
did a .very good job of moving together throughout the .
store ani! grabbing the items
they wanted.
· Carson eruieil up with
$1 35 worth of items, while
W.alker w.as .alile to grab
$21"1 . worth of items. For
clothing items, the two students
were
able
to
exchangeitems tolllllike sure
they recei¥edttherigbt sizes.
111e evem was 1ough, as
there was not much time
and it was 'hard to walk
around and grab things
while 'they were 1aped
together, but Carson and
Walker both said they
enjoyed the event and were
·thankful for what they ,won.
"It was fun," Carson said.·
For more information on
the ~io Grande Bookstore,
call the Ding or King at
( 800) 282-7201. For additiona/ information on the
store, as well as information
on the wide range of acade- •
m1c progra~ off~red on
Rw Grande s seem~ ~ampus, log onto www.no.edu.

·
. , . !Jet....,
Both winners ari! -pictured holding some of the treasures
they gathered from the 6Q.second shopping spree sponsored by the Rio Grande Bookstore . Left is Jenn Carson and
right is .Britney Walker.
·

•Pomeroy
•Jackson
•Waverly

Food Stores

Pepsi Products
24 Pack Cubes

·lnSiore Retail ..........$5.99 « s ea ($17 .97)
Less Coupon Value ........................ ·3.00

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-After Coupon

on purchase of 3
¥our-Final Cost on 3 ....................$14.97
~

VouBuva
After Coupon

w . , . ;ca..

. ...' ~ .... ~. "-"""I$(1W,.... )II&lt;I1Hf1~
~•.t'l. fl l&gt;'l ltl.......,_....._

SHOEMAKERRILEY

ENG~G EMENT.

: AiHENS- The 2008 Athens lnremati0WI'l Aim+ Vtidee
NOR'JIDJP - !Emily Shoemaker and Pat Riley are
Fcslival will screen more dum 200 films and W1c0s duri11g
.announcing :their engagement and approaching marriage.
jts 35th annual observBDCe A,pril25 'IG May l.
The bride-elect is the daughter of Carroll and Anita
· Among the 24 feature films in this year's lntemJational
Shoemaker of Northup. She is a 2000 graduate of Gallia
l1eatiire Film Showcase are "Taxi to the Thuik Side,~ itbe
.\cademy High Spbool and graduated f rom Marshall
Unive(Sity in 2005. Sbe is employed at Cabell Midland
•.:.\cadomyAward--winning .doc"J'!!CIItaJy about mnure and
Hilili School.
Jhe abuses of U.S . milit~ey p0Wel' in A(gbanistan; "'The
'il'be tprospectiwe !bridegroom is the son of 'C hester IRiley
Band's Vtisit," an engaging ilragi-oomody ~- qypwm
JllldJennieRiley, •both ofllilarbollJ'Sville, W.Va. He is a .1999
band on tour that finds itself stranded in a small'lo'illage in
Israel; "J&gt;ersep0lis," the world.,acc1aimed .animaftod feature
graduate of Cabcll Midland High School and graduated
from Marsluill Uni..,ersity in 2004. lH.e is .e mployed at tile
lYsed e n a graphic oove1.de,picting areenager 's mpsy-turvy
Collins Career Center.
,Ue in post-Shah Iran; and "YOUth Without YButh,= .the bitThe wedding will be4:30 p.m . Saturday~ June 14. 2008, ·
est film by legendary director Fnincis FW'd Oopp!Jia.
at
Steele Memorial 'Methodist Church in Barboursville. . ·
: In addition to the film screenings, !(he festival will we1rome six of the feature filmmakers to present and discuss
Jbcir films. Among them School of Film alumnus Igor
II se
A fillfJe
Kovacevich, who co-produced "Downloading Nancy," ooe ronment.~
Of l&lt;i films .nominated in the .dramatic comPetition at 1be
WeC..IIz ..
F&lt;N .nw~ infortmation on rhe essay c ontest or on the
2008 Sundance Film Festival.
llSVI' program, call Rogers ar (800) 282-7201 &gt;Or 2B6: Screening venues include the Athena Oinema, Arlx:n•
4918.
(lrand, Bakec University Center and StuliJll' s Opera Hoose
In Nelsonville.
.
: T'u:kets for shows ·starting after 6 p.m. at tbe A1bena
Cinema and tbe Athena Grand are $6.50 ($550 .age 60
JDd older or 12 and younger). Admission to OOIHlOIII,J»OtiO!Il &amp;bows swti.ng prior to (j p ..m. is $5 . All shows
~ed lit Snwt' s Opera H0Use and Baker Center
Tbeatre are fmc, as are competition shows prior to 6 p.m.
)It tbe Athena Cinema.
: Six-show passes may be purchased for $30. Advaooe
ZMW.Z..IIIIIt
.~.
cickets Jll'e available starting Monday at the Athena
: Ccmp/ere information is available on the festival web sire
. . -11(&amp;
" ltttp:llvocNspr.vocus.com and hrrp:l/www.athensfesr.{}rg;
.U...LCI&amp;iiptt4 programs ~ available at many stones, Cafes. libraries
-Cii
,.
~ mller pliblic ploces amund Athens.
fl

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Design Center Hours
!tlo11-Fri 8:1111to 5:00 and By Appoinr"''"'
S&lt;p: By woilnM~nt
SMll: By lll'fHJi~ttlf""'

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Mllli-f_., Ho•es.

Pomeroy
(Between Five Points and Chester)

•

I

'

�· Page{4~·

CRI.EBRATIONS

s "4'/\

.20,-

ON THE BOOKSHEJ.:F

Rio Bookstore holds 60-secQnd shopping spree

an 11n6kely heroine
Some of any fri~nds don't
. iJI8TI)mllarly .care for shon
&lt;stories. · ~ would' 'Wilter lhat
liDOS! of ·them would like
!ibis cCollection,
Olive
fffmeriilge . by !Elizabeth ·
Strout. ii1hese L3 stories .all
.!place in &lt;Crosby,
·.Maine, .and JtTe .connected
. !l!Y .a ceentral .chomcter, one
Oli;ve IKitteridge, junior
!high mafll teacher. ln most
iof ilhe stories s he is a
:w oman "of a certain ~~ge,"
lnot beautiful, not 'brilliant.
llOOI!g &gt;her own life with all
ns :flaWS .and 'JITOblems in a
'!iiiUIII; cguiet town.
.'She is the most impres:-si.v.e mature female characrter ihave met in ~iterature
;5ince 'Sayw.ard LuCkett ·in
!/'he !/'rees, !/'he Fieldo, and
!/'he !/'own. Olive is married.
~o llllen~, .a ·p hannacist, .and
has one son, Christopher,
whom iihe loves, but does
not c~~~~derstand.
10ne enjoyable ·story finds
!())Jive ly.ing on her ~on 's
lbed, listening to the sounds
•of ·guests in the house, pre·sent .at .her son and new
daughter- ill-law's wedding
· recc;ption. She is a large
woman, a tired woman,
secldng a moment of solirude .after a trying day. She
is .a bit intimidated by her
'"'penfect" daughter- in-law,
~ne: a _gastroenterologist whom !Christopher has
hown orily .a shon time.
'She overhears pan of a con·,.erSJition in which a lady
-says, '1But lhe father is a
OOIL !" "She llears that lhe
new wife thinks ·the dress
·she chose/made for the
weddi11g is tacky.
So ... (i)live carefully
removes from her son and
his wife's bedroom on of
her shoes, a pair of frilly
panties and makes an ugly
'black 1l1lllik down the sleeve
:of one of'Suzanne.'s perfect-.
5Jy folded sweaters. Olive
'ktiows this will drive the
iJ!erfecily organized new
'Wife nuts, and she thinks her
:son doesn't need t"' be marlried to a woman so sme of
)herself.
· li'hi~ is the story of an
• •ordinary life, filled.' with
.ewaordinary moments, as
:w.hen she .and some neigh.
:bon; try to save a young
:woman from anorexia
·w hen she and Henry are
lleld ·hostage by druggies
;trying to rob a hospital
:emergency room, when one
:of her former students
&lt;returns, thinking -of suicide.
'We are with Olive, sharing
.her .ahxieties as she and her
:.husband age, as
he
"becomes helpless, as she is
.appalled by ·the. way her
grandchild is being raised
in New YoFk City, as she
learns to love again .
On the upper floor of her
son's Brooklyn townhouse

!t'?_

a

WEDDING

MARTIN
ANNIVERSARY

TH·AXTONNOR.THUP

ENGAGEMENT
VIINmN - :St:qihen .and ~ela ThaK\Qn of Vinton
wOOid llike tto .anneunce tthe ~~~gement .and approaching
\llllllllil!ge &lt;Of :their daughter. Lmdsey Thaxton, to Shaun
Nortluijl, son ·aflffiram.and ~udy Northup of Bidwell.
11he'bride :ii&gt;:a 2003 ~te of !River Valley High School
.andcurrently.enrolledJUlhe Uni;versizy ofRio 'Grande, pursui'1g .a .degree dn .eat'Jy childhood education.
.
Her lfiance :ii; .a 1003 graduate of !River Valley High
SChool. and .a 1007 Q.aduate of ihe IUniversizy of !Rio
Grande !With .a~ liD clectronic netwoik systems. He is
..aum:ent1y emple~ lby Qptilent 'Solutions in iClhillicothe.
1lbe w.cddi~~g will\Uike ;place \0ll 'Saturday, June 7, 200S,
:at Raccoon CJreCk C &lt;Junljy P.aiJc (0 !0. 'Mdlntyre IP.ar"k) .at the
1Humniinffiir11 Gazebo.

Young scholars place.in
annual MLK essay contest
RIO GRANDE-Six fifth :and $0011 gmde sbJi!rmtS lfmm
G.llia, llwiktcm ;and vmaoo &lt;C0Wlllcs- ~JTW'IUJ,y
fm-libe ~-pmrakiing ~li Iiiiey emcred iin"iihe .amw;a'l ),1JIIIIiD I !#ln KiiD,g Jr.,~ IOOIDe!IL
The ~ iit; ~ by 1ibe Gllliii-JadktiOII-V'UIWII
Rdi1M SeDiar ~'Jun!r!er 1\ugrml (RSVP) .tnd Vdlunteer
Nawedt:: f'.cmtcr RSVP iii spen!lm'Od lby die Uni"".ersity .at'
_ROO Gqmile in Ga1lia CJamny .IIIId has ~ Glillia. ooumy
d&amp;etOIII die Riiof'..,..aeqp:qu1!&gt;.
. . Susan ~~&lt;11£Ga'llia-,l.llclf!laii•Viin1Qil lltSVP
and l1ibe
_,. ~-· (Jtmier, c~. that the
essay OOIIIeSt Uwlwled stndc:nt-; ifrem sdboo1s sudh .as il:be
I"'*"""' Oily Sdboots., Clluiistian lJife :Acai!emy, Oak: Hill
Sdlools; ruma Qnmty I.Jeca1 Schools, Glillipdlis City
SChools, 0100 v~ Clluii&amp;tiian Sdhool, Wellsten City
Sdlools, Sts. Peter .and P.aul School .and tthe Vinton
CJt?unly Sdbools.
"We had wmelllllt!!lliMiu,g esuys ttbis year,~ R~ said,
ad4in.g tthat ~ :Biso an Ulorease in \the mumb&amp; rof
&gt;CSsays wl1111ittNI. 11 'Was v.my ~ &lt;011 libe juqges ltD
dooille onltbe ~~ flbe said.
.
The .uw!lges iinclllllcd 'ie'Vmll mJmd ltt:atibers 'Who wmik.
with die RSVP program. "The essay llantest was ·.diW.dc:d
JintG il:btee rreffiens; .and die ~ iin each rn;gien :received
.a scbo'lardii,p ita Rio GQmde. All tthree of ;the winners .and
ithe liliu:: seooM place wmncrs eaCh mceived $50 gift .cer!Tfficate&lt;i to libe Rio Grande~.
The winners iU¢luded Amy 0lli'S ofGallia Ce~, ~
llamilum of Jacks&lt;m Celinty .and !Hunter ~~· ,of
Vmaen &lt;Jounty. llum:lcrHql inc1u&amp;4 Tanner Reed .of
Jri-Mil Clmuay, Klrc1yn Reave- rof Gallia County . .and
Devan DaVis J Jacbcm County.
The essays .U 1Wcll 'Wiiinen and included some

I

I .

~mes~.

'

Athens film fest to screen

j _record number o[tlicks
\

-·

.

.

.

.

.

"'S~ .as .a i12-year-&lt;lild, yeu .may wonder !bow I can
lllllk ;a ' erence lin my rommuni.ty,fl Ours wmte in her

essay. ""But there are many way~; young ;people can «JDtribute in ttheirilAIDmunity.l was in!ijlil:Mitbrougb !1he death
,of my grandfather, Ra'pb Durst.~
·~ 'W.IW &lt;lib9!!t-!J"i'M1f;
's Ol!llf~li llllt&amp; with
cancer, .and t111!ced llboot 'how she went on to ·h onor him by
v~ 'With the .American Cancer Society .and
singing in ber dbmob i8lld &lt;in die oommunity.
Hamill@n'1&gt; &gt;Olisay rtalkt; .about !bow 1be w.ants w become a
Wheat fmnerwbcn he :grows up, .and1how he hopes to lll!llke
.a .dift'crence in 1be wocld.
· ~I .coUld bC'lp my tOOJTIITIIIDity lQy gi..,ing SOIDe f!Jod 1o ithe
people who &amp;loot bave eoougb food, IW:penbolf wrote in
his .award-winni~~g essay.
He also w.liito!l .about picking IW litter &lt;in Ibis tewn, wori::iing w.ith Ibis Boy Scout troop" oo projects, d!Jnating-clotbcs
ItO prq&gt;1e in need .and even -~ up guardrails and fenres
·so mi1D!I1s are oot hit by cars.
. " .\s I get elder, I would like to stan trying ·Out some of
my ideas so 'fhat ~can !Jclp my community," 'R iepenboff
wrote. " I think that all of these ~ will &lt;iuglrove my
omnmunity, and it w!JUld be nice to IICIC tUS iin .a ibetter envi-

St,mohy, Aprilm, 2008

I

Meet Olive

MILLIRON-HAYDA

PageCs

RIO GRANDE - Two
lucky students from the
Univer-sity of Rio . Grande
were recently treated to a
one-minute -shopping spree
the
!Rio
Grande
in
!Bookstore.
li'he lijJree had .a few fun
-conditions for the 11tudents,
.and it :turned out &lt;to be a
great .event for winner-s
Britney 'Walker, a senior
from I(Jleveland, and lenn
Carson,.a seniorfrom Heath.
'Manager David Ding
eKplained 1hat the shopping
spree . w.as a promotional
.event for the bookstore and
helped i t with its 'TIUII'keting.
Grande ·student
!Rio
Rachel 'King, assistant manager of ·lhe bookstore, said
the store was looking for
11ew .ways to reaeh out to
students to tell them about
specilil s ales and ev.ents.
While the bookstore can
contact students by e-mail,
these messages are not
·always effective in reaching ·
the students. .
1t's more effective for the
students lo be contacted
through the•! . Facebook
·~ounts and stmllar on-l_me
Sites, and the 'Shoppmg
-spree was one way to get
students to give the information for these accounts to
the store.
·
'King, who is from
Jackson, got the idea forlhis
shopping spree at a business
seminar she attended and
explained lhat students voluntarily gave their contact
information while registering for the contest. 1n seven
days, more than 60 students
signed up for the . contest
and gave lheir contact information to the store.
T.be ·stvdents were fir-st
told there would be one
winner chosen, and ·that student would have 60 seconds
to go through the store and
chOose as many items as be
or she wanted. Some .areas
ofthe·store, such as the textbook section, were off limits, but a great number of
items were available.
Carson was so hopeful
that she would win, that she
visited the store early on the
day of the spree ·to study
which .areas of the store she
WQWd vi:;itjf-she was selected and everi bad someone
time her iiS slie wm~&lt;ea over
her prefeired COIII'SC. .
Cw:son was the first ·student chosen as a winner,
and then Ding drew '
Walker's name and told the
two student!; that they
would team up for the event
and be taped together.
Carson and Walker had one
minute to travel ·together
through the store, working
with each other to make
sme each student got the
items she wanted.
:Whiie Carson
lmew
exactly where she wanted to
go, Walker was not so sure,
and she said she just
grabbed items while Carson
led the way.

Bnuly
GlU

live• 8 f undamentalist
.Christian young .man
whose pet parrot keeps
s quawking 'lPraise God"
and "God is 'King," Olive
feels that "'the fu-st lime
Christopher married someone mean and pushy now
he"'s man;ied s omeone
dumb and nice ." She thinks
iRenry .would like this second wife.
The writing is wonderfully descriptive and seems to
get the voice of ihis woman
just .Tight. There .are pass~~ges where you will be
close lo tears and others
where you will uiugh aloud.
"'Olive had a sense of just
how desperately hard every
person in the world was
working to get what they
needed . For most, it was 8
sense of safelY· in the sea of
terror that life increasingly
became. " "Olive pictured
two slices of Swiss chees6
pressed together, such holes
·they brought to this union
- what pieces life took out
ofyou 1"
1 can always tell when 1
really lov~ a book. I am
sorry to close the cover after
reading that . last line.
'Elizabeth Strout leaves you
wanting more from Olive
Kitteridge. She is an authentic character, someone who
might live next door. Many
women "of a certain age"
will identify with ' this
woman.
I chose Looking For
'Salvation ,AI Th e Dairy
Queen by Susan Gregg
Gilmore ·because of the title
and because I , too, would
like to hang out at the Dairy
Queen and eat ice cream on
summer evenings. It is the
~70's in Ringgold, Ga., in
thi~ ·light nnd e njoy.llhle
novel. Catherine Grace
Cline, -preacher's daughter,
plots how she can get out of
town to Atlanta. She has a
little sister, a slightly shady
older woman friend, and a
dream.
m('Jther
Catherine 's
drowned when she was
quite young, and all her
young life, she longs for a
mother. Her father is not
what he seems. Her
boyfriend wants ·the smalltown life, ·so Catherine is
one conflicted young lady.
Readable, enjoyable, a shot
of Kooi-Aid compared with
band-squeezed orange juice
in Olive Kitteridge.

The two were cheered on
by other Rio Grande students during their oneminute shopping spree, and
did a .very good job of moving together throughout the .
store ani! grabbing the items
they wanted.
· Carson eruieil up with
$1 35 worth of items, while
W.alker w.as .alile to grab
$21"1 . worth of items. For
clothing items, the two students
were
able
to
exchangeitems tolllllike sure
they recei¥edttherigbt sizes.
111e evem was 1ough, as
there was not much time
and it was 'hard to walk
around and grab things
while 'they were 1aped
together, but Carson and
Walker both said they
enjoyed the event and were
·thankful for what they ,won.
"It was fun," Carson said.·
For more information on
the ~io Grande Bookstore,
call the Ding or King at
( 800) 282-7201. For additiona/ information on the
store, as well as information
on the wide range of acade- •
m1c progra~ off~red on
Rw Grande s seem~ ~ampus, log onto www.no.edu.

·
. , . !Jet....,
Both winners ari! -pictured holding some of the treasures
they gathered from the 6Q.second shopping spree sponsored by the Rio Grande Bookstore . Left is Jenn Carson and
right is .Britney Walker.
·

•Pomeroy
•Jackson
•Waverly

Food Stores

Pepsi Products
24 Pack Cubes

·lnSiore Retail ..........$5.99 « s ea ($17 .97)
Less Coupon Value ........................ ·3.00

...,

-After Coupon

on purchase of 3
¥our-Final Cost on 3 ....................$14.97
~

VouBuva
After Coupon

w . , . ;ca..

. ...' ~ .... ~. "-"""I$(1W,.... )II&lt;I1Hf1~
~•.t'l. fl l&gt;'l ltl.......,_....._

SHOEMAKERRILEY

ENG~G EMENT.

: AiHENS- The 2008 Athens lnremati0WI'l Aim+ Vtidee
NOR'JIDJP - !Emily Shoemaker and Pat Riley are
Fcslival will screen more dum 200 films and W1c0s duri11g
.announcing :their engagement and approaching marriage.
jts 35th annual observBDCe A,pril25 'IG May l.
The bride-elect is the daughter of Carroll and Anita
· Among the 24 feature films in this year's lntemJational
Shoemaker of Northup. She is a 2000 graduate of Gallia
l1eatiire Film Showcase are "Taxi to the Thuik Side,~ itbe
.\cademy High Spbool and graduated f rom Marshall
Unive(Sity in 2005. Sbe is employed at Cabell Midland
•.:.\cadomyAward--winning .doc"J'!!CIItaJy about mnure and
Hilili School.
Jhe abuses of U.S . milit~ey p0Wel' in A(gbanistan; "'The
'il'be tprospectiwe !bridegroom is the son of 'C hester IRiley
Band's Vtisit," an engaging ilragi-oomody ~- qypwm
JllldJennieRiley, •both ofllilarbollJ'Sville, W.Va. He is a .1999
band on tour that finds itself stranded in a small'lo'illage in
Israel; "J&gt;ersep0lis," the world.,acc1aimed .animaftod feature
graduate of Cabcll Midland High School and graduated
from Marsluill Uni..,ersity in 2004. lH.e is .e mployed at tile
lYsed e n a graphic oove1.de,picting areenager 's mpsy-turvy
Collins Career Center.
,Ue in post-Shah Iran; and "YOUth Without YButh,= .the bitThe wedding will be4:30 p.m . Saturday~ June 14. 2008, ·
est film by legendary director Fnincis FW'd Oopp!Jia.
at
Steele Memorial 'Methodist Church in Barboursville. . ·
: In addition to the film screenings, !(he festival will we1rome six of the feature filmmakers to present and discuss
Jbcir films. Among them School of Film alumnus Igor
II se
A fillfJe
Kovacevich, who co-produced "Downloading Nancy," ooe ronment.~
Of l&lt;i films .nominated in the .dramatic comPetition at 1be
WeC..IIz ..
F&lt;N .nw~ infortmation on rhe essay c ontest or on the
2008 Sundance Film Festival.
llSVI' program, call Rogers ar (800) 282-7201 &gt;Or 2B6: Screening venues include the Athena Oinema, Arlx:n•
4918.
(lrand, Bakec University Center and StuliJll' s Opera Hoose
In Nelsonville.
.
: T'u:kets for shows ·starting after 6 p.m. at tbe A1bena
Cinema and tbe Athena Grand are $6.50 ($550 .age 60
JDd older or 12 and younger). Admission to OOIHlOIII,J»OtiO!Il &amp;bows swti.ng prior to (j p ..m. is $5 . All shows
~ed lit Snwt' s Opera H0Use and Baker Center
Tbeatre are fmc, as are competition shows prior to 6 p.m.
)It tbe Athena Cinema.
: Six-show passes may be purchased for $30. Advaooe
ZMW.Z..IIIIIt
.~.
cickets Jll'e available starting Monday at the Athena
: Ccmp/ere information is available on the festival web sire
. . -11(&amp;
" ltttp:llvocNspr.vocus.com and hrrp:l/www.athensfesr.{}rg;
.U...LCI&amp;iiptt4 programs ~ available at many stones, Cafes. libraries
-Cii
,.
~ mller pliblic ploces amund Athens.
fl

s

____......_,

__ ________

,.,.....
.......
----.......... ___ _
_,:
••a••

KARR

CONTRACTING .
740-985-3444

t

OHIO VALLEY
C\SHING
&amp;LOAN

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

34740 St. Rt. 7

Be amazed with modular.
The better, stronger, faster way to build.
• Feabn i::&amp; Ral:cl:, .CIIUI Cod, two S1Dry, lid

• a.. .... : :a ...._.

'

•

www.karrcontracting.com
www.allamericanhomes.com

Design Center Hours
!tlo11-Fri 8:1111to 5:00 and By Appoinr"''"'
S&lt;p: By woilnM~nt
SMll: By lll'fHJi~ttlf""'

-"-------------

;__

Mllli-f_., Ho•es.

Pomeroy
(Between Five Points and Chester)

•

I

'

�Page C6 • The Sunday limes-Sentinel

Sunday, April20, 2008

Middlepmt • Pumewy • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pjcasant, VWV

...

.

Sunday, APril 20, 2008

·

Page Dl- The Sunday Times Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

L

HOLZER CUNIC

•

ASSISTED LIVING
GALLIPOLIS

you the latest Healthcare News

April is ·Occupational Therapy
Month
mductmg: bospimls, out-palilMl clinics, kxl.g u:rm
facllitie11, IIChoola, and home care.
OeclJJJI&amp;Iiicmal thaapy TeiCIIrdl proves thlll kcepiag
poop,Je active and healthy u they age will not only
implrove their quality of life, it wiU l(lWer their
hcllllhcam ll(ISlS u well. 'That is why there are OT
prog~rams that focus an wel.lneu and prevmnian as

She received OT training front NOI!th Adu.h
Education Program'in 1980. Lia haupocial intcr.."lit
in l:lCUtologic:al ·rcbabilitlti6n atJd tacilitatcs a stroke
support Pllfl in Oalli.a and Meigs counties. She
also is llll insiJUCIOr of Tai Chi and pcrfonns aquatic
thllfiPY. Swtt Ridout, COTAIL has 'been at the
Sycamore facility for O\'ct 11 years. Hc graduflled
from Shawnee State University in 1992. He has a
special interest in custom splinting, hand and liJIIlef

j

....------=======----Ho1ar c.!_"~!Wc
p:yr:~:1f'e
.=-0w.tg ....... ~ Holzer ainic-Sycamore Caeility offers occutllempy services inchlllin.t:., ·but notlimi!cd
0 !!.~"@_.
•...,. •

•

_

'--------~'-------Occtipation.al Therapy tOT} i11 a dient-orirnled
approach to life ski.ll development OT foCUlllell on
enabling people to do activities of daily life. The
word ..occupation" means an activity which "occupies" om ti.nie. Jt is the ta&amp;b !hilt have value and
meanin!l tn a per!llln.. Eltliiiiple!l of tbese ·activities
are: getring dressed. .using 11 comp~, writing a
check. fishing, dri\ing, or houiiCWork. Yo11 will find
occupational therapy in a nwnber or llettingll

The Ohio Department of Aging
r~ently conducted a
-.-- Resident Satisfaction Sarvey
· and awarecl
The flsslstecl Uving Team
a score of 95.6
flncl oatstandlng ratlnglll

exltcmity rc:habihtation.. and sports related rehabil.)..
tation. 111 addition, Dana Saunders. COU111_ i~ associated with die Sycamore facility and her wodt is
based in the ciry school system. She has been work· fi • H lzcr Cl' . r. 14
D
1D&amp; or · 0
mu: ~- ~· ~il' gnlduatcd
, from Shawnee Slate Un1V¢1'$1l)' rn 199.,
.

'onal

shoulder, elbow, 'WriBl and .band mhah, DI!IJI"'1ogK:al ,.,ffiooa '(IIICh as strokes), ergoaomicll, pedi·
mica., as well as' an os~ fi'bnxuplgia and
Tai Chi prof1J111Ds. . There are 1iJree OT praclitianet'S
at 'ibe Holzer C~ycamore branch- Brookt
Sauer, OTllil. has lleen 11 this Dcllity fur over 11
years.. She pduated fiom Eastern Micbigln
Uaivenlity iD 'l M. .Brooke focllii!S oo upper
eXlnlmity llld hand rebab, ergoQomics and schOOl
baled thempy. Ua Butc, COWL has been in occudaelip)· with Boker O i•ic for 17 yean.

· The Ohio Department of ·
lth
recently condacted their
flnnaal Sarvey and
The Assisted Uving Team
earned anotber ·
Deficiency Free Sarveylll

J*"'""'

A Pr clamation for National
-oeeupatioaal Tlaerapy Mo t

"

WI EREAS. fie An•ican ()rn'P"tianal Therapy Anociation Ms
~.: ITMI'J of April ~· to ·tH! known as ~~"!lal Therapy
WHEREAS , 1he Plufession of Geajpit1ionallherapy makes valuable
conlributions in helping p II JSOI I$ master the *skills for the job of 1;mg• after
an illlwa or injury; and

·

WHEREAS, the 11aras af occupational therapy are available to ciliziiwls of
~s. Gallia County, Ohio th1'DUgh hospitals, home healltl agenQes..
sdlools. cinics and nursing homes; and
WHEREAS. the healtl and productivity of our citizens depend upon 1he ·
elle live .,.. ~health g n moun:es. including the itiPOIIant SllfVices of
oa;upalionallhelapists and occupationallherapy auislants.
NCIN, THEREFORE. 1he Galipali&amp; City Commission of the City of Gallipoh,
Ohio. does haq p er &amp;m tne month d April2008 as Occupalional Thenlpy
and .cal upon al dtial1s to recognize the achievemeills and COiibhl·
tiona of than Will led haiti• profaaaional&amp;.

Mol•••

..

Medical Excellence.
Loall Carinp;

'

•

o.ted this 2nd day of April2008 . .

HOLZER
CLINIC

www.holzer.org
100 Briarwood Dr..
.ltcohlo.org
Galllpoilis. 0"
7 .441.9633 · v.-.YLv.goldenbackeye.com

Our Occupational Therapy .,
Departruent is dedicated to
making our patients feel their
best...

'

Please call for more information ur to wchedwe an appoiutmem

740.446.5769
•

J

•

I

.

�Page C6 • The Sunday limes-Sentinel

Sunday, April20, 2008

Middlepmt • Pumewy • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pjcasant, VWV

...

.

Sunday, APril 20, 2008

·

Page Dl- The Sunday Times Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

L

HOLZER CUNIC

•

ASSISTED LIVING
GALLIPOLIS

you the latest Healthcare News

April is ·Occupational Therapy
Month
mductmg: bospimls, out-palilMl clinics, kxl.g u:rm
facllitie11, IIChoola, and home care.
OeclJJJI&amp;Iiicmal thaapy TeiCIIrdl proves thlll kcepiag
poop,Je active and healthy u they age will not only
implrove their quality of life, it wiU l(lWer their
hcllllhcam ll(ISlS u well. 'That is why there are OT
prog~rams that focus an wel.lneu and prevmnian as

She received OT training front NOI!th Adu.h
Education Program'in 1980. Lia haupocial intcr.."lit
in l:lCUtologic:al ·rcbabilitlti6n atJd tacilitatcs a stroke
support Pllfl in Oalli.a and Meigs counties. She
also is llll insiJUCIOr of Tai Chi and pcrfonns aquatic
thllfiPY. Swtt Ridout, COTAIL has 'been at the
Sycamore facility for O\'ct 11 years. Hc graduflled
from Shawnee State University in 1992. He has a
special interest in custom splinting, hand and liJIIlef

j

....------=======----Ho1ar c.!_"~!Wc
p:yr:~:1f'e
.=-0w.tg ....... ~ Holzer ainic-Sycamore Caeility offers occutllempy services inchlllin.t:., ·but notlimi!cd
0 !!.~"@_.
•...,. •

•

_

'--------~'-------Occtipation.al Therapy tOT} i11 a dient-orirnled
approach to life ski.ll development OT foCUlllell on
enabling people to do activities of daily life. The
word ..occupation" means an activity which "occupies" om ti.nie. Jt is the ta&amp;b !hilt have value and
meanin!l tn a per!llln.. Eltliiiiple!l of tbese ·activities
are: getring dressed. .using 11 comp~, writing a
check. fishing, dri\ing, or houiiCWork. Yo11 will find
occupational therapy in a nwnber or llettingll

The Ohio Department of Aging
r~ently conducted a
-.-- Resident Satisfaction Sarvey
· and awarecl
The flsslstecl Uving Team
a score of 95.6
flncl oatstandlng ratlnglll

exltcmity rc:habihtation.. and sports related rehabil.)..
tation. 111 addition, Dana Saunders. COU111_ i~ associated with die Sycamore facility and her wodt is
based in the ciry school system. She has been work· fi • H lzcr Cl' . r. 14
D
1D&amp; or · 0
mu: ~- ~· ~il' gnlduatcd
, from Shawnee Slate Un1V¢1'$1l)' rn 199.,
.

'onal

shoulder, elbow, 'WriBl and .band mhah, DI!IJI"'1ogK:al ,.,ffiooa '(IIICh as strokes), ergoaomicll, pedi·
mica., as well as' an os~ fi'bnxuplgia and
Tai Chi prof1J111Ds. . There are 1iJree OT praclitianet'S
at 'ibe Holzer C~ycamore branch- Brookt
Sauer, OTllil. has lleen 11 this Dcllity fur over 11
years.. She pduated fiom Eastern Micbigln
Uaivenlity iD 'l M. .Brooke focllii!S oo upper
eXlnlmity llld hand rebab, ergoQomics and schOOl
baled thempy. Ua Butc, COWL has been in occudaelip)· with Boker O i•ic for 17 yean.

· The Ohio Department of ·
lth
recently condacted their
flnnaal Sarvey and
The Assisted Uving Team
earned anotber ·
Deficiency Free Sarveylll

J*"'""'

A Pr clamation for National
-oeeupatioaal Tlaerapy Mo t

"

WI EREAS. fie An•ican ()rn'P"tianal Therapy Anociation Ms
~.: ITMI'J of April ~· to ·tH! known as ~~"!lal Therapy
WHEREAS , 1he Plufession of Geajpit1ionallherapy makes valuable
conlributions in helping p II JSOI I$ master the *skills for the job of 1;mg• after
an illlwa or injury; and

·

WHEREAS, the 11aras af occupational therapy are available to ciliziiwls of
~s. Gallia County, Ohio th1'DUgh hospitals, home healltl agenQes..
sdlools. cinics and nursing homes; and
WHEREAS. the healtl and productivity of our citizens depend upon 1he ·
elle live .,.. ~health g n moun:es. including the itiPOIIant SllfVices of
oa;upalionallhelapists and occupationallherapy auislants.
NCIN, THEREFORE. 1he Galipali&amp; City Commission of the City of Gallipoh,
Ohio. does haq p er &amp;m tne month d April2008 as Occupalional Thenlpy
and .cal upon al dtial1s to recognize the achievemeills and COiibhl·
tiona of than Will led haiti• profaaaional&amp;.

Mol•••

..

Medical Excellence.
Loall Carinp;

'

•

o.ted this 2nd day of April2008 . .

HOLZER
CLINIC

www.holzer.org
100 Briarwood Dr..
.ltcohlo.org
Galllpoilis. 0"
7 .441.9633 · v.-.YLv.goldenbackeye.com

Our Occupational Therapy .,
Departruent is dedicated to
making our patients feel their
best...

'

Please call for more information ur to wchedwe an appoiutmem

740.446.5769
•

J

•

I

.

�PageD2

1:rtbune_- Se;ntinel - Regt~ter

&amp;mcMy, Aprilzo, 21008

..

CLASSIFIED

GOSA honors Gallia fair electrician

Ninth in state

GALLlPOLIS - Ralph
Young .of· Welsh Electric
WI!S honored recently by the
Greater Ohio Showuian's
Association (GOSA) as the
Outstanding Fair Electrician
in 2007.
. Ralph has served as the
Gallia County · Junior Fair
electtician for 18 years.
,
In &lt;mler to receive ·this ,
award, Ralph had to be
nominated by a member of
GOSA and then voted on by
the membership of GOSA.
Ralph received the award at
the Ohio Fair Managers ,
Association
Regional
Spring meeting held near
Zanesville.
Each year, the GOSA
organization recognires one
person in each of the four
regions of the Ohio Fair
Managers AssOciation for
their outstanding. oontribu tions
to
the
fair
industry. Last year, another
Gallia County resident,
Katie Massie, assistant treasurer of the Gallia County
Agricultural Society, was ·
honored by GOSA for her
contributions to the Gallia
County Junior Fair.
On hand fQr the presentation were Rod Young, and

511 nllted phGtD

Buckeye Hills Career Center hosted the FFA District 10
Tractor Troubleshooting competition. Levi Rosenberger
(Jackson) and Dustin Beaver (Gallia Academy) of BHCC
.placed first in the competition. They went on to represent
BHCC and District 10 in the state competition held on
March 7 at the University of Northwestern Ohio in Lima. Levi
and Dustin placed ninth overall in the state competition and
each received a $1 ,000 scholarship. They are shown here
with their ninth in the state plaque for ' Tractor
Troubleshooting Competition.

FFA members place

'

County
OH

,,'
'

In One Week With Us
~~@!;:~ribune. com REACH OVER 285,000 ·PROSPECTS

Justih Ray, a freshman at Gallia Academy High School and
a first-year FFA member, competed in the Extemporaneous
Public Speaking contest and placed fifth. The event requires
participants to deliver a speech on one of three agricultural
topics, after they are given 30 minutes to prepare. At the
• end of the speech, the judges may ask the participant questions related to his/her speech. Lindsay Brown, also a
freshman at GAHS and first-year FFA member, competed in·
the annual Creed Speaking Contest and placed fourth. Tbis
i:ontest is designed to recognize olftstanding FFA members
for their ability to present the FFA Creed from memory and
answer questions on its meaning and purpose. The intent is
. . to develop the-paFtieipants'-abili.ty to uommunieate in pow·
. ~r.ful , organized, and profe~&gt;slonal manne[; llQ!! t their s~lf­
confidence; imd earn recognition.

a

t!Owpokes tOr Kids
set for Apri126
BY RICHARD STEPHENS

I

•'

Gallia County Extension
and the Galli a County
Cattleman Association are
partnering up to offer area
youth an educational program in the beef industry on
Saturday, April 26.
Area youth that exhibit
beef projects at the fair will
receive their annual quality
assurance credit from the
program. Exhibitors and
youth interested in the beef
industry , should call the
extension office to register
by Friday. April 25. That
number is (740) 446-7007.
The program has been
changud '--frotll la~t year.
There will be five stations
this year that the participants
will rotate through. Beef
Quality Assurance will cover
basic animal health. food
safety, and vaccination methods to ensure the meat we
produce enters the consumer
at its highest quality. A showmanship clinic will be
offered to discuss with youth
the new ideas of showing
their cattle. Two individuals
will have live cattle there to
demonstrate proper showmanship ~echniques along
with questions and answets
that will help exhibitors
beoome better showman.
Cattle grooming and fitting will done on Jive cattle
to help parents and participants understand how to
Illllke their cattle 'look their
best the day of the ihow.
Meat quality will also be on ·
the agenda, so that participants understand bow all
their hard work gets put into
the food chain.
Jamie Graham from R&amp;C
Packing will be discussing
things we can do at home to
insure thai when oar cattle
get to the consumer plate,
we are offering the best and

·

safest product we can. A
new item for this year will
be fair preparation and
tools. Parttcipants will gain ·
knowledge in how to handle
fair days with theii by learning tricks of the trade from
some seasoned showman.
To wrap up the day, the
Gallia County association
wiU be providing a beef
brisket lunch to all participants. Registration will start
at 9 a.m. with the program
beginning at 9:30 a.m. The
program will end at noon
where the participants can
enjoy a won~erful beef
meal and talk to the speakers one on one.
1''01' I!Kil'e information,
please call the OSU
Extension office at (740)
446-7007.
(llkiMnl Ste!lteu is
,~c-m,~{or
APllltltn fUUI Nahlnll
ll~-s, OIUo Stcte
.Urthersily Exmuw11.)

Qtrtbune

To Place

c.,;...-:;
·

s

assistant treasurer; Kelley
Fellure, director; and Tim
Massie, secretary of the fair

Gallia County Fair Board
members Mike McCalla.
treasurer; Katie Massie,

winter time. However, due
to the larger stems, moisture, and bulk of some of
the above options at harvest,
it may be better to plan to
harvest these types of crops
as a high moisture hay crop
and wrap the bales or place
in a bunker or upright silo
versus 'liying to make dry
hay from these crops.

•••

Or Fu To {7401446 3008

-;; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ;: : :; t
I

Ul-.....
~

----y

- -..Good· farm
....aoo

=-2~~

Ie·

~

tor

~- 7~

Irb

llo.rW.oom

2ndAve.Galipolis.,

Driver Ed

pro11 T..:hlng

1 c rtlon

open in the
Gallipolis and Meigs area.
Aeodble hours. Must be able

•

Yard

•r-------.
.

Well-Muscled/Fleshed. $46-$54.
Medi.um!Leao, $40-$47.
Thin/Lis!:ht, $10-$35.
Bulls, $52-$65.

-~

gold, pm 1935

.,_.,. 10 Rooco Cllllds

call 740-388-0884. H no

CLASSIFIED INDEX

• -- 1eaw

-

'-

.

.. For Sole......- ..............:........- ......... 725

.......

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

~ -Auto P.t:l &amp; '
e.tlwa ••••••;••- ••- ..... M
Aulollepelr ...............................................-7711
- f o r Sole ........................- ................_710
for Sale ..................- ..... 151
' 8ulldltllg SfJPPIIII ....................................-550
•· ee Ph
.nd Bulldlngi .....- ....._ _ ..... MO
II Ill
Oppartunlly..- ............, ................210
.. h
lnolnlng.......................................140
Cia $ I a &amp;llolor ~ .............-·•·-··· 710
I
Eqe It ;ail ..............._ •.,.._ _.. c.da of 'llllnb..................- ...- ....010

lloldl•caz.....

~C.. -.......................- .........1 .
EleclllcliiiAifila . ation ................................ .

Equip ,,.,,forRont.....................................-

.-

Equ..............- ................................110

-

for Ront............................................A311
for Sole..................:...................._, __

~""""""""0'_'_

.: ' .___Found............................................
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .- ...
3511
I .........................- ........................... .

_, .

-~

.. .........., ..._ _ .......... - ..." ....170

: ; om •.... ~ ... ctw r .......................140

'

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

: ~ ....... Hanioa f o r - - ....................- .' ........ - f o r ......_ ......................1111

"::
•

.

~

n

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

_..........._..___

erc ... a4Wt Jill&amp;-........... _ , _ , .
............ ...·--·-····---:---11D

7

~..
• lllliiw.ta .....................- ....··--·--·--•
Sole ............- ...............____ _

-tor
Plulnblni 1 .111

I •• liiiiO

u

. . . .-

. . . . . . . . . . . . ._ _ _ _ _ _ _

~

~

...., ' - . Footll ...........................- -

. . lla • ...-.......................................1liD

'.

......
tor-.... ,.......................................-... llt4 o.a ...........................................UII
_ . . . . Sole ................_ .......................nll
,_tor
..............-..........................-· .715
. . . - , ..:................................................170
.... For ......................................- ....-1211
. .

7

'

..

lluy ..........................--.--.....-

StDIIuy-F.,9'ppll• .............-aD

..

... t d TO OD ............- ..................- - -..1 ·

..

-

Do you wan! to make a difference? If you are
compassionare · and committed to providing
quality care come and be a pwt of our Long
Tenn Care/Home Care 1eam.
We have !he following positions available '

celebra1ion

of

Ohio

Conlad Hollie
Staff

Burroamo&lt;

Personal Care Aides- Per Diem
Hg'= Hmvir:;
Personal Care Assislanl
Qg'= "eor Cm;
Therapist-Per Diem:
'I'T -.6FTE
•LPTA .6FTE
JWm §rojpr em Ceptsr;
Health Care Coordinalor!RN
· RN-PT
•

ltENf-1-0WN

cUenl• with challenging 9263 for Passport/Private
betlavlora. High school Care Office, Competitive

p

StaltiftJ Pay

Call Today!
t..e77 •e,• .e""C7
.Ext..23C

$8.0().512.011/hr.

7

+Health Insurance
+401(k)

+Profit Sharing

led

..., ·H·ill .

7~1:13n eres7~
or

NOW HIRING

•

M . . t
. lnagemen

·

Resident Assislanl

Oe'telopment

CoordinatorO 7"'0·992·
6472. EOE &amp; A Porticlpant
a1 Tho Orug-Freo Wor1q&gt;lace
.. l'rogiom . .

An Exceltent way to eam
rnDilfiY· The New Avon.
ColiMa~~~~

AVON! All A198SI To Buy or
Sell. Shlrlay Spool&amp;. 304-

.ll. . . . . . ,
675-1429.

For details please give Bart&gt; PeleTSOn,
Director of Human Resources for our Long

Tcnn Care/Home Care division a call a1 740441-3401 or email~ al pelerson@holzer.org
or visit us on the web at www.hol1..er.org.

PHARMACIST

Pleasa"' Valley Hospital is currently
accept'mg resumes 1or a f u11 -1·1me
·
Pharmacist. lf.S. Pharmacy, Pharm.O.
Cleaner- in tile Point Pharmacy or Ph.D Pharmacy from
lor - - accredited college or univeJSity. WV State
clal 1ac11Riol. lrnmodlale Pharmacist Ucensure. O.yshilt position.
oponlng lor part lime Send resumes to:
ib P.O.Boo
Pomero;,
Ohio
c1o The Dally

' .. -

·-

...............- ..............- ........470

•=•=

Cilooll- tlo .....- ....- .................- ..1172
,_. a 1
..,.IJdle.......-·-··-·---07•
--...
11 .............................,.-tnl

Olltpkiymorrt. Ewning ohill

...

. . -. Monday l t l r o u g l l M

fridlr;. NO ••' a Ida. Must
bo ablo 10 paa a - ·
ground chaclk, drug loa1ond

lioorwo. Call
1lUIIcling 11
1-304·346·1675 lor more
-

core a1 parwrlll coli

~

•

N'

..._lteloun:es

Clf.,.,

011line Ill
sa fuiiiJ.011

AA/EOE

8

~-~

"~ ................ ...

PIMSIIII...._
..
_ , .._....
,.....,._,

c/o ttuM•Iesoiiwces

2528 ¥IIIey Driw ·
P1Dit1t ........._ WV 255!111
(!ICIC) fi~MO, £d. 1J07

Or lax:

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Hlilp Wanted

Help Wanted

NEIGHBORHOOD DINE!t
EXCEPTIONAL FRANCIDSE

OPPORniNITY
Nation al rrstaunmt brand sccl...s new hand,·on

Franchi sL-e for existing corporat~·run

re~taurant

located in Portsmnuth: OH. QLW.iified bu~cr~
!I'U!.•.w:d vc....a II tlw,..l&gt;!'nofi &lt;&gt;- nLil- complete
franchi ~c !!y~t cm "'ith J minimum . ..:~pit~\

investment .
Contact: Debra Webb

atS00-418-9555 &lt;&gt;11303
""'""'.buddlehouse.rom

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

v R.\t:~
Ohio. ti nh· ersit~· Southern
A!!iSAclar~ OcJ!:I'l't' ~ursing Program

Thr fol lowing

IJ\hll l on~ are u'ailuhle

tor

acad~·m1..: ~ ("Jr ~(l(l~·2ll(l4 .
A:..~clj:iaw

Dm:t' lu r nl A,.;.n,: iall' Dcgrel."' Nun.mg

Program . -\!--M~t:ml Pn,tc~M'I { l enure·tf",K~ 1
! P:\'JUI:'Cl7l
\\ \\ \\ .OhiOUill ~ Cl"!-11~ ]&lt; lh" .~•\fl1 ,1pp\IC:tnt~ l('tJlltr&lt;~l 1 (!UI&lt;."

Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently
accepting resumes for a full-time Patient
1.1- md=~ -Cl fl
1
Representative. A minimum ol 2 years
ln!&gt;t mctnr. ~llf'lll}: tm'Ji ·t t·nurc- tra;..·~ 1
d1'n1Ci1
· I (a---)
care e"""rl·en.;..,..
(I'" IO'i,( !li.'il
~"'
..,- _. Cll·n,·cal
\\
w..-.
.oh1nun1
\en.
it~
l&lt;'t"o" ,·um &lt;I Jlllhcani!•.ICrntrul ?qm~·
management ronsidered ·beneficial.
l.lmJ =C.4224
. Bachelors degree in nursing required ,
FQr more infomlalHln and''' ltnuhnut un app·
(BSN) or current enrollment in a BSN
licatioo p lea~(' gn to lh(' \.\'Ch,lh' li~tl·d \lith the
program.
po~i t nHl For ftr..,t .·tm, ldaati on _ aprlr~mton:-.
Send resumes to:

- - ..........
I_,I....,.._

~~.

s..tdrJti ~ tJr iKIIIIOIMt ta
-

c/o

1 _..

iubmfton

Excellent math and Excel skills, general
oofflpulur knowll'idflllt ]iniv. ffi@\t h!in!lliffil
exper a plus.1.1ust be willing to travel (OHWV-KY-IN) and wo11&lt; OT. Require very
good·worl&lt; elhics and willingness to learn.
Training provided. Starting pay $16-17 /hr.
These projects are 2 yrs+, 1st shift, travel
costs and holidays ' paid. Fax resume
immad. with "Mat.Coord." on cover page lo
(614) 716-2272. Excellent company!
EOE

F~~-===~~

8

_ _ _ _ _ __
Par1-Tirne Store Clerk look ·

$10.00, after traimng .Call 1· 1ng tor a triendly outgo1ng
304·373·10~~
clerk to assist campers w1th
reservatKNlS and camp store
purchases. FaJC resume to
(740)992-4030

Help.Wanted

========~===~===
Help Wllnllld
Help Wllnted
j:=~·Hlt~p~WIInled~~~:..;=~Help~~W~~~n~teel~::;

filllclld
To watch~ to three cftlldren
agos-10~. Muotbo
abt8 to come 10 our hOme
and 1&gt;0 . . . . - 10 wortr
Monday .friday. Pieaoe
oond 7211-35,
45789

rehab company. Join the !Jynergy
.team at Overbrook Care Center, a
beautiful comprehensive rehab
SNF in Middleport , Ohio. Also
imerviewing for pan-time or per
diem OTRIL; LPT, and SLP.

Material Coordinator:

'n' lbjpg• Jpw·.

·

ing health insurance and
mileage reimbursement

Cost Technician:
Accounting background to track project
costs, some report development, indus)rial
or process plant background would be
helpful, procurement and contracts
experience beneficial. Proficient in Excel
and Word, some PowerPoinl experlenee
EEO-MFDit .
JU:.'NT·WWN
would be a plus. Muit be willing W travel
-"
~=~~~~;=: and work OT at different planl sites in the
----;:;:;::-;;;:;:;east region (OH-IN-WV-KY) due' to the
-=l:llll:p::W:'a:ll&amp;d=::::;;;;_;:=l:le:lp:::W:•:nted:;:::::; revolving nature of conslr/plant upgrade
r
projects. You may be away from home for
extended periods. These projects are 2
yrs+. 1sl shift.· Travel costs and holidays
paid. Training provided. Starting pay $1416hr.
II qualified fax an updaled resume to:
Certified Occupational Therapy
614-716-2272
denotmg "Cost Tech" on·the
Assistant (COTA) full-time position
cover page. lmmed. cons•deration .
with Synergy Rehab Solutions
l;:xcellen1-company!
lLC a new Southern Ohio contract
.
EOE

Help Wllnted

Accounting Clerk- Ff ·
-- Awlicants for :Ml!min&amp; .illimru eJalSCS
Hr'= &amp; • 'n' IJyigg. Gelljmfb;

Resident Assislants- PT

No eJq&gt;erience necessary.
Criminal background check
required. Must have relio~e
transportation. Hourly rate

· or

LPN - Ff
STNA- Ff or Yf

Qe'= !

'

diploma or GED required. wages· and benefits lnclud-

Call Cynthia Campbell, Rehab
Dir.ector, ar 7-#J-992~6472
740-357-0405

. . ... . . . :. . . . . . 1. -nl .,.

Pe f I I 111111 . . ul ..,_...................._....IJO
11oo11o, TV acaRop~~~r.......-......................1.,
- - · · ! ......................................

Choole flam our1011HaiA; '***&gt;~•. lndudlrt aurGC2300 n GC2e00 s.n., our hlnl ~ .
1500 8lltll aompMIII (1128, 1U2, 1DS, 11140),.n our IIIJI8Id 21011 2WD utility natal'. Whlll•
vou Wllltlnu lot? Llw '-111· o.-n big. And- 1 ""· S. your Mnuy fergulon llaillr ...,_,or
. .. -. r
A: at LAi.ODm.

A

ute .. OWrtlrook
Center,
l.oc:aled .. 333 Page 511e1.
M;iitlepo",
Is pleased
to announce we are accept·
ing applicllio!1S for LPN&gt; to

LPN

~ ~· Us

1•

*EO
Assembte crafts, wood
119ms.To$480/wt&lt;Moterials
provided. Free Information
pkg. 24Hr. 801~

""' • Grllln.............................................,....MD
Holp W.JIId ....................- ....._..._..,_ .....110

I.-..-

I

10DW0Att£Rs f

FumhiiWMI-...........................~....-.__.
Goo 111 tt.utlng-............- ......................... Gt;aa J............. ~......................... _.,.........o4D
~Ada.......................- .•- .........- ..... -

_1.

•DMoiaft

"?'" Ema em;

join our -dl~ and dodicatod S1a11. Appllcanlll mull be
depondoblo, Toam !'layerS
!!Ill ~ I!!!!1!!!!!!Ul.]!!!!!.
us in providing -ldiog.
quallly caroto o u r -·
Slop by ond 1111 ou1 .. applioation M·F
9AM·5AM.

For'-.....................................................For Sale ...................................., .......;.......-515
ForSioleor-.......- ..............................•
f'UII &amp; .. a , I '••...- ..........-.--....•

long T-C../HomeC..

• meooage.

Can Call Coiled
wlnting 10 Buy Junk Cars.

AnncMI,_.ullnt ...................................-·-····•
Anllq-........................:........................._;530
300-IIJS-2176
Ap biM~ far flllnt: ................. - ••- ...... ..0 ,

Home ........ , .....ta.........--···-· .. --.-~.110
- f o r Sole ............................................l10
. , _ _ Qoocla ...~................. _ .....-110
- f o r -.............................._ ......... 410
• In ......a.m ..............................................-010
· ·. ...,. am.,...............- .........................

(740) 446-9777 • (740) ,446-2U:.4_ _ _ _ _~~===;:.

~~

Pols. 31)4.675-6145

Ohio Valley Home Health .
Inc hiring STNA, CNA .
Home Health A.ides and
Personal Care Aides , Full
Time and· Per Diem poSI·
tion s available. Accept1ng
applications tor RN and
LPN 's. Apply at 1480
Jadc:son · Pike. Gall1polfs..

and Training
Full Benefffs

-lankerondhozmaloorl. 592 _2444
needed. Local trips . 7 4().

r=·~HIIp~~W~•~I~I&amp;d~=;.:~Hit~p~Winlld~~~-~

Hw&gt;WM'IDJ

MRJOO. Needs to be able phone 441 ·1393 for Skilled
and willlftg to physically Office or apply at 1456
Intervene at timet for JaCkson Pike. phone 44 ~ ·

County

us - - - - - - -

IriD

tiel Wanted

drivers call

. Dollar - ~·- ..,...fiiilii 018:30 AM unlll
.
,..,..,. 011 ---· 5:00 PM Monday tllrough ~ """'" at Dam Herne
any
·
&amp; wr/gold
tot&lt;/IWIBKcoins,
gOld ~ry.
f!idaY
GIWP Horne. 740-992-5023

£1 CI . . . .............- ......... ~ .................._ .. 11311

2150 EASTERN AVENUE, GALLIPOLIS, OH

E~rienced COL

Hw&gt;Wm

Professkmal Wotk
Afmo:sphete
Paid vacations, HoHdays

the

currency, proo1/mln1 sets, .
LOST: btacklbfown male ~ MTS Coin Shop.

~

Back to the Fann:

JIM'S FARM EQUIPMENT, INC.

$8.50/hour FT+bonuS
Outbound / Inbound
Ce/IC8nter
Day and E~Shitts
Available

Iro

Trainer Position
Are you inte rested in a
rewarding pos1t1on? PAIS is
currently accepting applica ·
lions tor full lime/ part t1me
Dally Trb.me, P.O. BOx 469, direct care positions 1n
Gallipolis, OH. 45631 ClA Ripley", WV providing resi ·
Bok 10ol
dential/c:ommunity skill train ·
ing with individuals w1th

vaney

I

i~~~;~t:P"P:·:-:::R:klge~~R~d. _w.;:!____
~.'•\/Of1UO,
Gal~i&amp;.-.
to_bu_y_Junk--ea-..

'

Itt f'wJ

Openi9l

llw&gt;W.oom

Wanted: An experienced
dental asst.and or raoeptiouist to work in GallipoliS.
Smoke tree environment.
Send resumes to: Gallipolis

reqUirements. Call
Brook Concrete corpora1e local Home Health ·Agency
office a1. (~)77~5519 10 now hiring PCA's STNA's
schedute an inleMeW.
and HHA's 1or
Meigs

........... l

Lorll· 18 mon1h old white male Gmt Dane,
Reword, (740)9411-3089

Cows-Steadyn..ower

..................... ~ .......... "

Rio

1o1o p1us Cor8lgnmem fmm

j ·

740-992-6572.

(.~
~

addedtoyourclossifiedads
Borders$3.00/perad .
Graphics SOC for small
1.00 for large

Customer Sales
Pl. Pleaaarn Hooll8hald The Vllage "'
Grande Is - 7
' Colleclions
Losr All)
1 incturlng: - ·- c-... accepllng applications for ----~·- - Security Olficers _
"
l"ouNN
• ,__ Power .W&amp;sll&amp;r, Desk, ltle poaRion of part 1ime ,
FEDERAL
New Hal/On wv S7 oo . ' Delivery
.
Ou1door Fumttura: GHder. summer mowing help. The
POSTAL JOBS
s7 66 per h~ur ~hill ~ork o,pom.lily 1G G.,..!
FOUNO: . In Ito nu...aon
•"'"''Il
. appradmate
.
ly 20 $17 .8Q..$28.27htr., now hir. hours
. vary. Must, have a high,
. more · Jim (JC) ..,.....•·
..•on 16
Male dog large, white. Cowan .J.uctloneer, Uc. OH houlli per week. minimum ing. For application and tree __.. 1 d. 1
GED
Apply online
.
&amp;WVft1674
.
.
lll&gt;!rOO
rpoma or
,
Friendty'3D4-674-6744
. wag~ ~nd no benefits. gove~ant Job Info, ca!l dean criminal history, pass
www.r2o.com
WANIDI
Applications can be picked Amencan ·Assoc. of labor 1· drug screen and back·
Lorll Call Phone-GaiHpolis
· T08uv
up alltle Vilage Municipal 913-599-8226, 24ilml. amp. ground-· Call 1-eooArea, G~norouo Roward tlull!ing Olirlng ragular_buoL Hfll,
- - - 2rH3!Jg-M;F 8,30., 0 "lO.
..':-IIJIII-~ at_~[_

275-415 lbs., Steers, $70-$116, Heifers, $60-$95;
425-525 lbs., Steers, $70-$110, Heifers, $60-$87; 55(!)625 lbs., Steers, $70-$98, Heifers, $6o-$84; 650-725 '
-lbs., Steers, $70-$88, M@if!lrs..-$611-!180: 750-850 lbs"
Steers, $70-$84, Heifc:T8, $60~$!10.

1. ..,,.... . . 1 . . . . . . . . . . . ....

..

operating equipment and .
ends. 20 to 25 hOul'l 8 extra &amp;kills such ~ welding
week. Job entails classroom a plus. Starting pay based

Ohlo

Ir•

Hw&gt;Woom

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

Sale

G'-

Feeder Cattle-Lower

4M2K2•99Nl55
'
. •·

Experience is pietalred but
not neoessal)'. Must be wil·
ing 1o do pr~nce
on trucics and ~nt.
yard/plant and other mi9cellaneous taalc&amp;. EJtperience

110 IIIIIOr'k evenings and week·

YAID S.w;.
Pr.Pui:.AsANJ

valid driver lioense, pass
background Checks. EOE.
Mall resumes to: M.A., 1414
T'MJ plclura .
12th Street, Portsm?uth,
53 112 X 100 &amp; 531/2 X122
AuCtion Ewry Sablrday
05662 A11n: Dnv.Ed
5DX54- .. WOOCI.
6pm, Henderson Comm. Dept., or Fax resufne to:
740-992-3514.
CenlorApti19New&amp; Used 740-351.()537

GM.LIPOUS - Ullited l'rotblurs lttc. -ut
~~eport fro• GG/Jipolis for silks co~~Mu:ted 011
Wewllles4ay, April I&amp;.

.. -. ,, litldW i .

Iro

COtniide Bar and Grill now Orivors needed:
COL
seeking applications for Drivers willing to drive tor
qualifi&amp;d line COOks and local ready-mix company.
cishwashers., fltease B.AMY Two (2) poaltions open at
·in person qr cad to set up an Robertsburg, WV (near
interview. · U1-9371 , 308 Buffalo,
WV)
plant.

r:::::=:=:I·

r

Hw&gt;WAN!m

Housung teaetling and behind the on ~rience and driving
":::~. A~lot
Behind wheel rnstruction tor new record. Benefits including
Slyrofoom bore"" good lor A
181h, 19111,&amp; . Quall1lodcandidales heollh insuronce, owllabW!
atonlge 1 packing Items
must have a HS Diploma, after. m&amp;eiiAg employment

LlvFsTOCK RE:PORT

rut

Now you can hove borders and graphics

s

PuPPI' found 11 Pomeroy
Potr Ollloa 4-12.Shor11egs:
Free for the hauling. Heavy small; brown coat with biac*
metalroofingtoriQ'IP.Call ·noae. Very1riandly,graatwirh
740-985-3805....
klds,walt bahlvad. To claim
OI" ~ Jennlar0740-3361171 .
'
------.,
YAIID &amp;!£

men

Breeding bull, bred heifer and cow sale, noon,
Wednesday, April 23.
.
May I, 2, 3, CODA-AI School.
Direct sales aod free on-farm visits.
For more information, call DeWayne at (740) 3390241 (lr Stacy at (304) 634-0224. Visit the website at
·
www.uproducers.com.

YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED
Jm

GivEAwAY

One last· option with aoy
of the above summer anuuals would be to harvest
these crops one or two tinies
during the summer and
make a late summer seedi.ilg .
of Iegume(s) and/or grasses.
After the , last couple wet
springs, late suJI1Dier seedings for hay and pasture
seems like the best option,

Upcoming specials:

675-5234

Monday thru Friday
7:30. a.m. to 5:30 p.m.

304-882-243S

I

992-2157.

Or Eu To

·

~ ·

I

........ ,

(740) 44&amp;-2342 (740) 992~2156 (304) 675-1333

.Oeatltiru

board and president of the
Ohio
Fair
Managers
Association.

CowiCalf Palm, $525-$785; Bred Cows, $200-$710;
Baby Calves, $35-$80; Goats, $18-$8 I; Lambs, $1 05-&lt;dn.

Regtfiter

Sentinel

I -..,...

From left are Tim Massie, president ·o f the Ohio fair Managers Association and secretary
of the Gallia County AgricllltlJral Society; Rod Young and Ralph Young, Gallia ·County Fair
electricians: Mike McCalla., treasurer of the Gallia County Agricultural Society; Katie
Massie, assistant treasurer of the Gallia County Agricultural Society; and Kelley fellure , a
director of the Gallla County Agricultural Society. Ralph was awarded the OlftStanding f!iir
Electrician Award by the Greater Ohio. Showman's Association at the recent OFMA Spril:lg
meeting held in Zanesville.
·

BY Buz MIUS
.not lend itself to dry hay
____G_A_LL_IA_s_wc_o_ _ _ . production as readily as
sudaograss and needs to be
From early March until harvested at a shorter plaot
the middle. of April we height to realize better qualexperienced one, maybe ity forage. Newer varieties
two days which were dry with higher digestibility are
enough to seed legumes known as brown midrib
and/or grasses. If you were varieties. They have the
not able to make your characteristic brown discolplanned spring seeding oration on the main stem of
and neecl additional forage the leaves. They commonly
for grazing this summer or .have greater animal preferforage to feed your live- ence and performance verstock this winter, there are sus the normal varieties of
still several options to sorghum-s udangrass.
pll!nt some summer annu- Cutting height sbou:ld be a
als for short term forage few inches off the soil surproduction.
face to encourage regrowth
Oats can still be planted on all · members of the
either in a field you planned sorghum family.
to make a hay seeding or in
Millets are not members
a pasture where last year's of the sorghum family and
drought or this winter's wet do not produce prussic acid.
condition combined with They are smaller stemmed
heavy cattle traffic have and leafier than sorghums.
lesse.ned the grass prOduc- Pearl millet regrows after
liQil, Oats llat:Yested for- hay harvest, but cutting height is · .
in the•early heatling to milk more critic.al than with thi!
stage proVide decent ton- sorghums~ There are also
nage though oats take a lit- German and Foxtail millets,
tle longer to cure aod can be but these do not regrow
a little dusty. In a pasture after cutting. Japanese milsituation, rotational grazing let grows best in wet soil
or limiting access to the oats conditions.
will better utilire the crop
Some companies bave
.from a grazing standpoint.
seed mixtures labeled for
Sudangrass is a leafy, fine late spring, early summer
stemmed plant that is proba- planting. These mixtures
bly the best of the sorghum may contain legumes such
family for grazing. It usual- as cowpeas and/or soybeans
ly has less prussic acid pro- along with annual grasses:
duction and less yield than The addition of legumes
the other ·members of the can increase the protein
sorghum flimily. There are content of the forage but
also sudangrass hybrids usually at a higher cost.
which are higher yielding When these mixtures are
but have a higher level of initially harvested only ihe
prussic production. These grasses will regrow.
can also be made for hay.
All of the above options
Sorghum.- s udan$.ras s can be mechanically barhybrids are also available. vested for forage used by
They are generally taller, the livestock during lhe
with larger stems and
leaYes, plus they are higher
yielding. This · hybrid does

.Ute.&amp; &amp;y 'D l ··~•;:

Websites:
www.mydailytribune.com
www.mydailysentinel.com
www.mydailyregister.com

.. ..... R AD

Late spring/early .swluner seeding optionS

_-.i......,

Meigs County, OH

Gallia

•

•

6...., G;lwn!-6adiad • Page D3

• Gallipolis, OH.• Pt. Pleasant, WV

s

•

2528 ¥IIIey Driw

PoiiiiPIIImll't, WV 15550

(!ICIC) fiJS-4340
Or lax:
~7S-H15.

ar ~an line Ill .
........ , 01'1
M/EOE

'huuld he su ltmllwd b\ M n~ ~ :OliO!:( F-nr ltdJI 110nal alo.~hllm. ·e ,,,u ,_,m L".all Pam Pt1nc1 "'
App !h.aiiOil~

trt1111 u..,ln"k'n. mtnorill("' . \(.'lcran' .
"nh dl,ahlnl!tt~~ arc ('nl'OI.IrJ~ed
Cand1dut~·, mu ' t h4l\l' .lll l! nlkr,tandm~ ,,t .md
C(lnlnHIMl("nliO atTumull\l' aCIIflM

and

peNm~

and CQU:I i ('J'fK'Ilunitte~ .

Oh1r• I ' llll "t , .1/ TI l' an l ..qwl f f:.mf1/0IItlr'IH
Op('ffl"'llnlt\ ~l'hr-mu/1\'t" .o\o ·twn ,._mpl&lt;&gt;\o

1

�PageD2

1:rtbune_- Se;ntinel - Regt~ter

&amp;mcMy, Aprilzo, 21008

..

CLASSIFIED

GOSA honors Gallia fair electrician

Ninth in state

GALLlPOLIS - Ralph
Young .of· Welsh Electric
WI!S honored recently by the
Greater Ohio Showuian's
Association (GOSA) as the
Outstanding Fair Electrician
in 2007.
. Ralph has served as the
Gallia County · Junior Fair
electtician for 18 years.
,
In &lt;mler to receive ·this ,
award, Ralph had to be
nominated by a member of
GOSA and then voted on by
the membership of GOSA.
Ralph received the award at
the Ohio Fair Managers ,
Association
Regional
Spring meeting held near
Zanesville.
Each year, the GOSA
organization recognires one
person in each of the four
regions of the Ohio Fair
Managers AssOciation for
their outstanding. oontribu tions
to
the
fair
industry. Last year, another
Gallia County resident,
Katie Massie, assistant treasurer of the Gallia County
Agricultural Society, was ·
honored by GOSA for her
contributions to the Gallia
County Junior Fair.
On hand fQr the presentation were Rod Young, and

511 nllted phGtD

Buckeye Hills Career Center hosted the FFA District 10
Tractor Troubleshooting competition. Levi Rosenberger
(Jackson) and Dustin Beaver (Gallia Academy) of BHCC
.placed first in the competition. They went on to represent
BHCC and District 10 in the state competition held on
March 7 at the University of Northwestern Ohio in Lima. Levi
and Dustin placed ninth overall in the state competition and
each received a $1 ,000 scholarship. They are shown here
with their ninth in the state plaque for ' Tractor
Troubleshooting Competition.

FFA members place

'

County
OH

,,'
'

In One Week With Us
~~@!;:~ribune. com REACH OVER 285,000 ·PROSPECTS

Justih Ray, a freshman at Gallia Academy High School and
a first-year FFA member, competed in the Extemporaneous
Public Speaking contest and placed fifth. The event requires
participants to deliver a speech on one of three agricultural
topics, after they are given 30 minutes to prepare. At the
• end of the speech, the judges may ask the participant questions related to his/her speech. Lindsay Brown, also a
freshman at GAHS and first-year FFA member, competed in·
the annual Creed Speaking Contest and placed fourth. Tbis
i:ontest is designed to recognize olftstanding FFA members
for their ability to present the FFA Creed from memory and
answer questions on its meaning and purpose. The intent is
. . to develop the-paFtieipants'-abili.ty to uommunieate in pow·
. ~r.ful , organized, and profe~&gt;slonal manne[; llQ!! t their s~lf­
confidence; imd earn recognition.

a

t!Owpokes tOr Kids
set for Apri126
BY RICHARD STEPHENS

I

•'

Gallia County Extension
and the Galli a County
Cattleman Association are
partnering up to offer area
youth an educational program in the beef industry on
Saturday, April 26.
Area youth that exhibit
beef projects at the fair will
receive their annual quality
assurance credit from the
program. Exhibitors and
youth interested in the beef
industry , should call the
extension office to register
by Friday. April 25. That
number is (740) 446-7007.
The program has been
changud '--frotll la~t year.
There will be five stations
this year that the participants
will rotate through. Beef
Quality Assurance will cover
basic animal health. food
safety, and vaccination methods to ensure the meat we
produce enters the consumer
at its highest quality. A showmanship clinic will be
offered to discuss with youth
the new ideas of showing
their cattle. Two individuals
will have live cattle there to
demonstrate proper showmanship ~echniques along
with questions and answets
that will help exhibitors
beoome better showman.
Cattle grooming and fitting will done on Jive cattle
to help parents and participants understand how to
Illllke their cattle 'look their
best the day of the ihow.
Meat quality will also be on ·
the agenda, so that participants understand bow all
their hard work gets put into
the food chain.
Jamie Graham from R&amp;C
Packing will be discussing
things we can do at home to
insure thai when oar cattle
get to the consumer plate,
we are offering the best and

·

safest product we can. A
new item for this year will
be fair preparation and
tools. Parttcipants will gain ·
knowledge in how to handle
fair days with theii by learning tricks of the trade from
some seasoned showman.
To wrap up the day, the
Gallia County association
wiU be providing a beef
brisket lunch to all participants. Registration will start
at 9 a.m. with the program
beginning at 9:30 a.m. The
program will end at noon
where the participants can
enjoy a won~erful beef
meal and talk to the speakers one on one.
1''01' I!Kil'e information,
please call the OSU
Extension office at (740)
446-7007.
(llkiMnl Ste!lteu is
,~c-m,~{or
APllltltn fUUI Nahlnll
ll~-s, OIUo Stcte
.Urthersily Exmuw11.)

Qtrtbune

To Place

c.,;...-:;
·

s

assistant treasurer; Kelley
Fellure, director; and Tim
Massie, secretary of the fair

Gallia County Fair Board
members Mike McCalla.
treasurer; Katie Massie,

winter time. However, due
to the larger stems, moisture, and bulk of some of
the above options at harvest,
it may be better to plan to
harvest these types of crops
as a high moisture hay crop
and wrap the bales or place
in a bunker or upright silo
versus 'liying to make dry
hay from these crops.

•••

Or Fu To {7401446 3008

-;; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ;: : :; t
I

Ul-.....
~

----y

- -..Good· farm
....aoo

=-2~~

Ie·

~

tor

~- 7~

Irb

llo.rW.oom

2ndAve.Galipolis.,

Driver Ed

pro11 T..:hlng

1 c rtlon

open in the
Gallipolis and Meigs area.
Aeodble hours. Must be able

•

Yard

•r-------.
.

Well-Muscled/Fleshed. $46-$54.
Medi.um!Leao, $40-$47.
Thin/Lis!:ht, $10-$35.
Bulls, $52-$65.

-~

gold, pm 1935

.,_.,. 10 Rooco Cllllds

call 740-388-0884. H no

CLASSIFIED INDEX

• -- 1eaw

-

'-

.

.. For Sole......- ..............:........- ......... 725

.......

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

~ -Auto P.t:l &amp; '
e.tlwa ••••••;••- ••- ..... M
Aulollepelr ...............................................-7711
- f o r Sole ........................- ................_710
for Sale ..................- ..... 151
' 8ulldltllg SfJPPIIII ....................................-550
•· ee Ph
.nd Bulldlngi .....- ....._ _ ..... MO
II Ill
Oppartunlly..- ............, ................210
.. h
lnolnlng.......................................140
Cia $ I a &amp;llolor ~ .............-·•·-··· 710
I
Eqe It ;ail ..............._ •.,.._ _.. c.da of 'llllnb..................- ...- ....010

lloldl•caz.....

~C.. -.......................- .........1 .
EleclllcliiiAifila . ation ................................ .

Equip ,,.,,forRont.....................................-

.-

Equ..............- ................................110

-

for Ront............................................A311
for Sole..................:...................._, __

~""""""""0'_'_

.: ' .___Found............................................
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .- ...
3511
I .........................- ........................... .

_, .

-~

.. .........., ..._ _ .......... - ..." ....170

: ; om •.... ~ ... ctw r .......................140

'

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

: ~ ....... Hanioa f o r - - ....................- .' ........ - f o r ......_ ......................1111

"::
•

.

~

n

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

_..........._..___

erc ... a4Wt Jill&amp;-........... _ , _ , .
............ ...·--·-····---:---11D

7

~..
• lllliiw.ta .....................- ....··--·--·--•
Sole ............- ...............____ _

-tor
Plulnblni 1 .111

I •• liiiiO

u

. . . .-

. . . . . . . . . . . . ._ _ _ _ _ _ _

~

~

...., ' - . Footll ...........................- -

. . lla • ...-.......................................1liD

'.

......
tor-.... ,.......................................-... llt4 o.a ...........................................UII
_ . . . . Sole ................_ .......................nll
,_tor
..............-..........................-· .715
. . . - , ..:................................................170
.... For ......................................- ....-1211
. .

7

'

..

lluy ..........................--.--.....-

StDIIuy-F.,9'ppll• .............-aD

..

... t d TO OD ............- ..................- - -..1 ·

..

-

Do you wan! to make a difference? If you are
compassionare · and committed to providing
quality care come and be a pwt of our Long
Tenn Care/Home Care 1eam.
We have !he following positions available '

celebra1ion

of

Ohio

Conlad Hollie
Staff

Burroamo&lt;

Personal Care Aides- Per Diem
Hg'= Hmvir:;
Personal Care Assislanl
Qg'= "eor Cm;
Therapist-Per Diem:
'I'T -.6FTE
•LPTA .6FTE
JWm §rojpr em Ceptsr;
Health Care Coordinalor!RN
· RN-PT
•

ltENf-1-0WN

cUenl• with challenging 9263 for Passport/Private
betlavlora. High school Care Office, Competitive

p

StaltiftJ Pay

Call Today!
t..e77 •e,• .e""C7
.Ext..23C

$8.0().512.011/hr.

7

+Health Insurance
+401(k)

+Profit Sharing

led

..., ·H·ill .

7~1:13n eres7~
or

NOW HIRING

•

M . . t
. lnagemen

·

Resident Assislanl

Oe'telopment

CoordinatorO 7"'0·992·
6472. EOE &amp; A Porticlpant
a1 Tho Orug-Freo Wor1q&gt;lace
.. l'rogiom . .

An Exceltent way to eam
rnDilfiY· The New Avon.
ColiMa~~~~

AVON! All A198SI To Buy or
Sell. Shlrlay Spool&amp;. 304-

.ll. . . . . . ,
675-1429.

For details please give Bart&gt; PeleTSOn,
Director of Human Resources for our Long

Tcnn Care/Home Care division a call a1 740441-3401 or email~ al pelerson@holzer.org
or visit us on the web at www.hol1..er.org.

PHARMACIST

Pleasa"' Valley Hospital is currently
accept'mg resumes 1or a f u11 -1·1me
·
Pharmacist. lf.S. Pharmacy, Pharm.O.
Cleaner- in tile Point Pharmacy or Ph.D Pharmacy from
lor - - accredited college or univeJSity. WV State
clal 1ac11Riol. lrnmodlale Pharmacist Ucensure. O.yshilt position.
oponlng lor part lime Send resumes to:
ib P.O.Boo
Pomero;,
Ohio
c1o The Dally

' .. -

·-

...............- ..............- ........470

•=•=

Cilooll- tlo .....- ....- .................- ..1172
,_. a 1
..,.IJdle.......-·-··-·---07•
--...
11 .............................,.-tnl

Olltpkiymorrt. Ewning ohill

...

. . -. Monday l t l r o u g l l M

fridlr;. NO ••' a Ida. Must
bo ablo 10 paa a - ·
ground chaclk, drug loa1ond

lioorwo. Call
1lUIIcling 11
1-304·346·1675 lor more
-

core a1 parwrlll coli

~

•

N'

..._lteloun:es

Clf.,.,

011line Ill
sa fuiiiJ.011

AA/EOE

8

~-~

"~ ................ ...

PIMSIIII...._
..
_ , .._....
,.....,._,

c/o ttuM•Iesoiiwces

2528 ¥IIIey Driw ·
P1Dit1t ........._ WV 255!111
(!ICIC) fi~MO, £d. 1J07

Or lax:

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Hlilp Wanted

Help Wanted

NEIGHBORHOOD DINE!t
EXCEPTIONAL FRANCIDSE

OPPORniNITY
Nation al rrstaunmt brand sccl...s new hand,·on

Franchi sL-e for existing corporat~·run

re~taurant

located in Portsmnuth: OH. QLW.iified bu~cr~
!I'U!.•.w:d vc....a II tlw,..l&gt;!'nofi &lt;&gt;- nLil- complete
franchi ~c !!y~t cm "'ith J minimum . ..:~pit~\

investment .
Contact: Debra Webb

atS00-418-9555 &lt;&gt;11303
""'""'.buddlehouse.rom

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

v R.\t:~
Ohio. ti nh· ersit~· Southern
A!!iSAclar~ OcJ!:I'l't' ~ursing Program

Thr fol lowing

IJ\hll l on~ are u'ailuhle

tor

acad~·m1..: ~ ("Jr ~(l(l~·2ll(l4 .
A:..~clj:iaw

Dm:t' lu r nl A,.;.n,: iall' Dcgrel."' Nun.mg

Program . -\!--M~t:ml Pn,tc~M'I { l enure·tf",K~ 1
! P:\'JUI:'Cl7l
\\ \\ \\ .OhiOUill ~ Cl"!-11~ ]&lt; lh" .~•\fl1 ,1pp\IC:tnt~ l('tJlltr&lt;~l 1 (!UI&lt;."

Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently
accepting resumes for a full-time Patient
1.1- md=~ -Cl fl
1
Representative. A minimum ol 2 years
ln!&gt;t mctnr. ~llf'lll}: tm'Ji ·t t·nurc- tra;..·~ 1
d1'n1Ci1
· I (a---)
care e"""rl·en.;..,..
(I'" IO'i,( !li.'il
~"'
..,- _. Cll·n,·cal
\\
w..-.
.oh1nun1
\en.
it~
l&lt;'t"o" ,·um &lt;I Jlllhcani!•.ICrntrul ?qm~·
management ronsidered ·beneficial.
l.lmJ =C.4224
. Bachelors degree in nursing required ,
FQr more infomlalHln and''' ltnuhnut un app·
(BSN) or current enrollment in a BSN
licatioo p lea~(' gn to lh(' \.\'Ch,lh' li~tl·d \lith the
program.
po~i t nHl For ftr..,t .·tm, ldaati on _ aprlr~mton:-.
Send resumes to:

- - ..........
I_,I....,.._

~~.

s..tdrJti ~ tJr iKIIIIOIMt ta
-

c/o

1 _..

iubmfton

Excellent math and Excel skills, general
oofflpulur knowll'idflllt ]iniv. ffi@\t h!in!lliffil
exper a plus.1.1ust be willing to travel (OHWV-KY-IN) and wo11&lt; OT. Require very
good·worl&lt; elhics and willingness to learn.
Training provided. Starting pay $16-17 /hr.
These projects are 2 yrs+, 1st shift, travel
costs and holidays ' paid. Fax resume
immad. with "Mat.Coord." on cover page lo
(614) 716-2272. Excellent company!
EOE

F~~-===~~

8

_ _ _ _ _ __
Par1-Tirne Store Clerk look ·

$10.00, after traimng .Call 1· 1ng tor a triendly outgo1ng
304·373·10~~
clerk to assist campers w1th
reservatKNlS and camp store
purchases. FaJC resume to
(740)992-4030

Help.Wanted

========~===~===
Help Wllnllld
Help Wllnted
j:=~·Hlt~p~WIInled~~~:..;=~Help~~W~~~n~teel~::;

filllclld
To watch~ to three cftlldren
agos-10~. Muotbo
abt8 to come 10 our hOme
and 1&gt;0 . . . . - 10 wortr
Monday .friday. Pieaoe
oond 7211-35,
45789

rehab company. Join the !Jynergy
.team at Overbrook Care Center, a
beautiful comprehensive rehab
SNF in Middleport , Ohio. Also
imerviewing for pan-time or per
diem OTRIL; LPT, and SLP.

Material Coordinator:

'n' lbjpg• Jpw·.

·

ing health insurance and
mileage reimbursement

Cost Technician:
Accounting background to track project
costs, some report development, indus)rial
or process plant background would be
helpful, procurement and contracts
experience beneficial. Proficient in Excel
and Word, some PowerPoinl experlenee
EEO-MFDit .
JU:.'NT·WWN
would be a plus. Muit be willing W travel
-"
~=~~~~;=: and work OT at different planl sites in the
----;:;:;::-;;;:;:;east region (OH-IN-WV-KY) due' to the
-=l:llll:p::W:'a:ll&amp;d=::::;;;;_;:=l:le:lp:::W:•:nted:;:::::; revolving nature of conslr/plant upgrade
r
projects. You may be away from home for
extended periods. These projects are 2
yrs+. 1sl shift.· Travel costs and holidays
paid. Training provided. Starting pay $1416hr.
II qualified fax an updaled resume to:
Certified Occupational Therapy
614-716-2272
denotmg "Cost Tech" on·the
Assistant (COTA) full-time position
cover page. lmmed. cons•deration .
with Synergy Rehab Solutions
l;:xcellen1-company!
lLC a new Southern Ohio contract
.
EOE

Help Wllnted

Accounting Clerk- Ff ·
-- Awlicants for :Ml!min&amp; .illimru eJalSCS
Hr'= &amp; • 'n' IJyigg. Gelljmfb;

Resident Assislants- PT

No eJq&gt;erience necessary.
Criminal background check
required. Must have relio~e
transportation. Hourly rate

· or

LPN - Ff
STNA- Ff or Yf

Qe'= !

'

diploma or GED required. wages· and benefits lnclud-

Call Cynthia Campbell, Rehab
Dir.ector, ar 7-#J-992~6472
740-357-0405

. . ... . . . :. . . . . . 1. -nl .,.

Pe f I I 111111 . . ul ..,_...................._....IJO
11oo11o, TV acaRop~~~r.......-......................1.,
- - · · ! ......................................

Choole flam our1011HaiA; '***&gt;~•. lndudlrt aurGC2300 n GC2e00 s.n., our hlnl ~ .
1500 8lltll aompMIII (1128, 1U2, 1DS, 11140),.n our IIIJI8Id 21011 2WD utility natal'. Whlll•
vou Wllltlnu lot? Llw '-111· o.-n big. And- 1 ""· S. your Mnuy fergulon llaillr ...,_,or
. .. -. r
A: at LAi.ODm.

A

ute .. OWrtlrook
Center,
l.oc:aled .. 333 Page 511e1.
M;iitlepo",
Is pleased
to announce we are accept·
ing applicllio!1S for LPN&gt; to

LPN

~ ~· Us

1•

*EO
Assembte crafts, wood
119ms.To$480/wt&lt;Moterials
provided. Free Information
pkg. 24Hr. 801~

""' • Grllln.............................................,....MD
Holp W.JIId ....................- ....._..._..,_ .....110

I.-..-

I

10DW0Att£Rs f

FumhiiWMI-...........................~....-.__.
Goo 111 tt.utlng-............- ......................... Gt;aa J............. ~......................... _.,.........o4D
~Ada.......................- .•- .........- ..... -

_1.

•DMoiaft

"?'" Ema em;

join our -dl~ and dodicatod S1a11. Appllcanlll mull be
depondoblo, Toam !'layerS
!!Ill ~ I!!!!1!!!!!!Ul.]!!!!!.
us in providing -ldiog.
quallly caroto o u r -·
Slop by ond 1111 ou1 .. applioation M·F
9AM·5AM.

For'-.....................................................For Sale ...................................., .......;.......-515
ForSioleor-.......- ..............................•
f'UII &amp; .. a , I '••...- ..........-.--....•

long T-C../HomeC..

• meooage.

Can Call Coiled
wlnting 10 Buy Junk Cars.

AnncMI,_.ullnt ...................................-·-····•
Anllq-........................:........................._;530
300-IIJS-2176
Ap biM~ far flllnt: ................. - ••- ...... ..0 ,

Home ........ , .....ta.........--···-· .. --.-~.110
- f o r Sole ............................................l10
. , _ _ Qoocla ...~................. _ .....-110
- f o r -.............................._ ......... 410
• In ......a.m ..............................................-010
· ·. ...,. am.,...............- .........................

(740) 446-9777 • (740) ,446-2U:.4_ _ _ _ _~~===;:.

~~

Pols. 31)4.675-6145

Ohio Valley Home Health .
Inc hiring STNA, CNA .
Home Health A.ides and
Personal Care Aides , Full
Time and· Per Diem poSI·
tion s available. Accept1ng
applications tor RN and
LPN 's. Apply at 1480
Jadc:son · Pike. Gall1polfs..

and Training
Full Benefffs

-lankerondhozmaloorl. 592 _2444
needed. Local trips . 7 4().

r=·~HIIp~~W~•~I~I&amp;d~=;.:~Hit~p~Winlld~~~-~

Hw&gt;WM'IDJ

MRJOO. Needs to be able phone 441 ·1393 for Skilled
and willlftg to physically Office or apply at 1456
Intervene at timet for JaCkson Pike. phone 44 ~ ·

County

us - - - - - - -

IriD

tiel Wanted

drivers call

. Dollar - ~·- ..,...fiiilii 018:30 AM unlll
.
,..,..,. 011 ---· 5:00 PM Monday tllrough ~ """'" at Dam Herne
any
·
&amp; wr/gold
tot&lt;/IWIBKcoins,
gOld ~ry.
f!idaY
GIWP Horne. 740-992-5023

£1 CI . . . .............- ......... ~ .................._ .. 11311

2150 EASTERN AVENUE, GALLIPOLIS, OH

E~rienced COL

Hw&gt;Wm

Professkmal Wotk
Afmo:sphete
Paid vacations, HoHdays

the

currency, proo1/mln1 sets, .
LOST: btacklbfown male ~ MTS Coin Shop.

~

Back to the Fann:

JIM'S FARM EQUIPMENT, INC.

$8.50/hour FT+bonuS
Outbound / Inbound
Ce/IC8nter
Day and E~Shitts
Available

Iro

Trainer Position
Are you inte rested in a
rewarding pos1t1on? PAIS is
currently accepting applica ·
lions tor full lime/ part t1me
Dally Trb.me, P.O. BOx 469, direct care positions 1n
Gallipolis, OH. 45631 ClA Ripley", WV providing resi ·
Bok 10ol
dential/c:ommunity skill train ·
ing with individuals w1th

vaney

I

i~~~;~t:P"P:·:-:::R:klge~~R~d. _w.;:!____
~.'•\/Of1UO,
Gal~i&amp;.-.
to_bu_y_Junk--ea-..

'

Itt f'wJ

Openi9l

llw&gt;W.oom

Wanted: An experienced
dental asst.and or raoeptiouist to work in GallipoliS.
Smoke tree environment.
Send resumes to: Gallipolis

reqUirements. Call
Brook Concrete corpora1e local Home Health ·Agency
office a1. (~)77~5519 10 now hiring PCA's STNA's
schedute an inleMeW.
and HHA's 1or
Meigs

........... l

Lorll· 18 mon1h old white male Gmt Dane,
Reword, (740)9411-3089

Cows-Steadyn..ower

..................... ~ .......... "

Rio

1o1o p1us Cor8lgnmem fmm

j ·

740-992-6572.

(.~
~

addedtoyourclossifiedads
Borders$3.00/perad .
Graphics SOC for small
1.00 for large

Customer Sales
Pl. Pleaaarn Hooll8hald The Vllage "'
Grande Is - 7
' Colleclions
Losr All)
1 incturlng: - ·- c-... accepllng applications for ----~·- - Security Olficers _
"
l"ouNN
• ,__ Power .W&amp;sll&amp;r, Desk, ltle poaRion of part 1ime ,
FEDERAL
New Hal/On wv S7 oo . ' Delivery
.
Ou1door Fumttura: GHder. summer mowing help. The
POSTAL JOBS
s7 66 per h~ur ~hill ~ork o,pom.lily 1G G.,..!
FOUNO: . In Ito nu...aon
•"'"''Il
. appradmate
.
ly 20 $17 .8Q..$28.27htr., now hir. hours
. vary. Must, have a high,
. more · Jim (JC) ..,.....•·
..•on 16
Male dog large, white. Cowan .J.uctloneer, Uc. OH houlli per week. minimum ing. For application and tree __.. 1 d. 1
GED
Apply online
.
&amp;WVft1674
.
.
lll&gt;!rOO
rpoma or
,
Friendty'3D4-674-6744
. wag~ ~nd no benefits. gove~ant Job Info, ca!l dean criminal history, pass
www.r2o.com
WANIDI
Applications can be picked Amencan ·Assoc. of labor 1· drug screen and back·
Lorll Call Phone-GaiHpolis
· T08uv
up alltle Vilage Municipal 913-599-8226, 24ilml. amp. ground-· Call 1-eooArea, G~norouo Roward tlull!ing Olirlng ragular_buoL Hfll,
- - - 2rH3!Jg-M;F 8,30., 0 "lO.
..':-IIJIII-~ at_~[_

275-415 lbs., Steers, $70-$116, Heifers, $60-$95;
425-525 lbs., Steers, $70-$110, Heifers, $60-$87; 55(!)625 lbs., Steers, $70-$98, Heifers, $6o-$84; 650-725 '
-lbs., Steers, $70-$88, M@if!lrs..-$611-!180: 750-850 lbs"
Steers, $70-$84, Heifc:T8, $60~$!10.

1. ..,,.... . . 1 . . . . . . . . . . . ....

..

operating equipment and .
ends. 20 to 25 hOul'l 8 extra &amp;kills such ~ welding
week. Job entails classroom a plus. Starting pay based

Ohlo

Ir•

Hw&gt;Woom

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

Sale

G'-

Feeder Cattle-Lower

4M2K2•99Nl55
'
. •·

Experience is pietalred but
not neoessal)'. Must be wil·
ing 1o do pr~nce
on trucics and ~nt.
yard/plant and other mi9cellaneous taalc&amp;. EJtperience

110 IIIIIOr'k evenings and week·

YAID S.w;.
Pr.Pui:.AsANJ

valid driver lioense, pass
background Checks. EOE.
Mall resumes to: M.A., 1414
T'MJ plclura .
12th Street, Portsm?uth,
53 112 X 100 &amp; 531/2 X122
AuCtion Ewry Sablrday
05662 A11n: Dnv.Ed
5DX54- .. WOOCI.
6pm, Henderson Comm. Dept., or Fax resufne to:
740-992-3514.
CenlorApti19New&amp; Used 740-351.()537

GM.LIPOUS - Ullited l'rotblurs lttc. -ut
~~eport fro• GG/Jipolis for silks co~~Mu:ted 011
Wewllles4ay, April I&amp;.

.. -. ,, litldW i .

Iro

COtniide Bar and Grill now Orivors needed:
COL
seeking applications for Drivers willing to drive tor
qualifi&amp;d line COOks and local ready-mix company.
cishwashers., fltease B.AMY Two (2) poaltions open at
·in person qr cad to set up an Robertsburg, WV (near
interview. · U1-9371 , 308 Buffalo,
WV)
plant.

r:::::=:=:I·

r

Hw&gt;WAN!m

Housung teaetling and behind the on ~rience and driving
":::~. A~lot
Behind wheel rnstruction tor new record. Benefits including
Slyrofoom bore"" good lor A
181h, 19111,&amp; . Quall1lodcandidales heollh insuronce, owllabW!
atonlge 1 packing Items
must have a HS Diploma, after. m&amp;eiiAg employment

LlvFsTOCK RE:PORT

rut

Now you can hove borders and graphics

s

PuPPI' found 11 Pomeroy
Potr Ollloa 4-12.Shor11egs:
Free for the hauling. Heavy small; brown coat with biac*
metalroofingtoriQ'IP.Call ·noae. Very1riandly,graatwirh
740-985-3805....
klds,walt bahlvad. To claim
OI" ~ Jennlar0740-3361171 .
'
------.,
YAIID &amp;!£

men

Breeding bull, bred heifer and cow sale, noon,
Wednesday, April 23.
.
May I, 2, 3, CODA-AI School.
Direct sales aod free on-farm visits.
For more information, call DeWayne at (740) 3390241 (lr Stacy at (304) 634-0224. Visit the website at
·
www.uproducers.com.

YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED
Jm

GivEAwAY

One last· option with aoy
of the above summer anuuals would be to harvest
these crops one or two tinies
during the summer and
make a late summer seedi.ilg .
of Iegume(s) and/or grasses.
After the , last couple wet
springs, late suJI1Dier seedings for hay and pasture
seems like the best option,

Upcoming specials:

675-5234

Monday thru Friday
7:30. a.m. to 5:30 p.m.

304-882-243S

I

992-2157.

Or Eu To

·

~ ·

I

........ ,

(740) 44&amp;-2342 (740) 992~2156 (304) 675-1333

.Oeatltiru

board and president of the
Ohio
Fair
Managers
Association.

CowiCalf Palm, $525-$785; Bred Cows, $200-$710;
Baby Calves, $35-$80; Goats, $18-$8 I; Lambs, $1 05-&lt;dn.

Regtfiter

Sentinel

I -..,...

From left are Tim Massie, president ·o f the Ohio fair Managers Association and secretary
of the Gallia County AgricllltlJral Society; Rod Young and Ralph Young, Gallia ·County Fair
electricians: Mike McCalla., treasurer of the Gallia County Agricultural Society; Katie
Massie, assistant treasurer of the Gallia County Agricultural Society; and Kelley fellure , a
director of the Gallla County Agricultural Society. Ralph was awarded the OlftStanding f!iir
Electrician Award by the Greater Ohio. Showman's Association at the recent OFMA Spril:lg
meeting held in Zanesville.
·

BY Buz MIUS
.not lend itself to dry hay
____G_A_LL_IA_s_wc_o_ _ _ . production as readily as
sudaograss and needs to be
From early March until harvested at a shorter plaot
the middle. of April we height to realize better qualexperienced one, maybe ity forage. Newer varieties
two days which were dry with higher digestibility are
enough to seed legumes known as brown midrib
and/or grasses. If you were varieties. They have the
not able to make your characteristic brown discolplanned spring seeding oration on the main stem of
and neecl additional forage the leaves. They commonly
for grazing this summer or .have greater animal preferforage to feed your live- ence and performance verstock this winter, there are sus the normal varieties of
still several options to sorghum-s udangrass.
pll!nt some summer annu- Cutting height sbou:ld be a
als for short term forage few inches off the soil surproduction.
face to encourage regrowth
Oats can still be planted on all · members of the
either in a field you planned sorghum family.
to make a hay seeding or in
Millets are not members
a pasture where last year's of the sorghum family and
drought or this winter's wet do not produce prussic acid.
condition combined with They are smaller stemmed
heavy cattle traffic have and leafier than sorghums.
lesse.ned the grass prOduc- Pearl millet regrows after
liQil, Oats llat:Yested for- hay harvest, but cutting height is · .
in the•early heatling to milk more critic.al than with thi!
stage proVide decent ton- sorghums~ There are also
nage though oats take a lit- German and Foxtail millets,
tle longer to cure aod can be but these do not regrow
a little dusty. In a pasture after cutting. Japanese milsituation, rotational grazing let grows best in wet soil
or limiting access to the oats conditions.
will better utilire the crop
Some companies bave
.from a grazing standpoint.
seed mixtures labeled for
Sudangrass is a leafy, fine late spring, early summer
stemmed plant that is proba- planting. These mixtures
bly the best of the sorghum may contain legumes such
family for grazing. It usual- as cowpeas and/or soybeans
ly has less prussic acid pro- along with annual grasses:
duction and less yield than The addition of legumes
the other ·members of the can increase the protein
sorghum flimily. There are content of the forage but
also sudangrass hybrids usually at a higher cost.
which are higher yielding When these mixtures are
but have a higher level of initially harvested only ihe
prussic production. These grasses will regrow.
can also be made for hay.
All of the above options
Sorghum.- s udan$.ras s can be mechanically barhybrids are also available. vested for forage used by
They are generally taller, the livestock during lhe
with larger stems and
leaYes, plus they are higher
yielding. This · hybrid does

.Ute.&amp; &amp;y 'D l ··~•;:

Websites:
www.mydailytribune.com
www.mydailysentinel.com
www.mydailyregister.com

.. ..... R AD

Late spring/early .swluner seeding optionS

_-.i......,

Meigs County, OH

Gallia

•

•

6...., G;lwn!-6adiad • Page D3

• Gallipolis, OH.• Pt. Pleasant, WV

s

•

2528 ¥IIIey Driw

PoiiiiPIIImll't, WV 15550

(!ICIC) fiJS-4340
Or lax:
~7S-H15.

ar ~an line Ill .
........ , 01'1
M/EOE

'huuld he su ltmllwd b\ M n~ ~ :OliO!:( F-nr ltdJI 110nal alo.~hllm. ·e ,,,u ,_,m L".all Pam Pt1nc1 "'
App !h.aiiOil~

trt1111 u..,ln"k'n. mtnorill("' . \(.'lcran' .
"nh dl,ahlnl!tt~~ arc ('nl'OI.IrJ~ed
Cand1dut~·, mu ' t h4l\l' .lll l! nlkr,tandm~ ,,t .md
C(lnlnHIMl("nliO atTumull\l' aCIIflM

and

peNm~

and CQU:I i ('J'fK'Ilunitte~ .

Oh1r• I ' llll "t , .1/ TI l' an l ..qwl f f:.mf1/0IItlr'IH
Op('ffl"'llnlt\ ~l'hr-mu/1\'t" .o\o ·twn ,._mpl&lt;&gt;\o

1

�.Page 04 .• • ..,

hnf.

Sul'tUy, April 20, 2008

Pomeroy • Mlcklleport • Gallipolis, OH • Pt. Ple"'sant, WV

Mliwf·

r·

'

1
R&amp;L calfienl. one of the In Homo Child CliO, N.B·
nation's targoost tamily 4ynt , Mf Good Ratingo, rv1:
""'*' LTlmotortroigh! CM· erenceo providod. Apple
- · has _,. Gro.o. WV 304-576-2500
lng&amp;
lor
part·timo , -,_--,~,--~
---,,-trimctericaVdatalentry bitting~-·--· """
,
positions, 2n&lt;1 s hitt(M· F tnooeolio-. c a l 7 4prn-10pm). Must type min 6861 or7~7636
30 wpm oaJUoacy -.
'~- ~-~ ...._._,
possess strong t:omrnl.lliCa- a.-..... -.re ~·- · .._.."'Il

lty"""".-olr.goo-

3PR. 3.5 IIIII. 2000 oq.W.. largo room ocm·
condo tn . ftoridl on ple1ely oedar ·opan~ onto
~ tatand. Boat J1ip patio Apoclt - · Hoalall in
&amp; ·· ·settl 446- IJ'OIIndpoolendooodbypt.
1822
vacy loncinll and fond.
41&gt;r, 2 N;, ~. Ctry Now ~· F.,_ 2 ·cor
Haven, '$15;500 ran
garaoe ·~ to ·hol.a
flpm 304 593 8871
n - • ·t•••I3.CM

Huntington Rd. Galllnnlis
...-

I

*'

yro

job erMronmem or Bachelor
Degree in Mechanical
. Engineering .along with

&gt;SMALL ENGINE

SERVICE TECH
EJ!parlence Necessary.
Appty at Bidweh Hardware
St Rt 160

Supervision . of

to wOrk

machine be able

shpp personnel, write CNC hours and possess eNoellem ' Own a COR1)uter? Put it to
pn::IQI'ams, perform machine customer service skills.
work! Up to $1500 to
setup and operate CNC or Apply in petSOn, no phone
$7500/mo PTIFT.
manual machines. Design callS please.
Fme Information!
and build fiictures, read
www.familybti:123 .com
drawings, use hand inspec- Upooming certified nursing BP""'_ _ _ _ _ _.,

i

u--·

'I

t. lon tools, complete pur- assistant
dass.
. h -~-'
d' 1Must
· have
GEDa
,...,.,,
chase orders. Proficiency in htg
~ R.~U~ 1P oma or
1 ~·~'
10
to apply. Applations may 1,""''_,.;,;li""""'iliOiiio-,.1
AutoCAD,
Welding
&amp;
Fabricating process in a be picked. up at Lakin
high volume manufac!uring Hospital,
Monday8 through
**'"'OTI"'I!**
.
·d
4
1...
.._,
env
. ironment. Generating &amp; Frt ay,
. am- pm
.
:·
st
·
b
maintaining
Standard Appl tea tOns
mu
e
Operating
Procedures, returned iri no later than Borrow· Smart. Contact
at COB . E.o.E.
the Ohio Divii:ion
expertenoe in machine tool u~~
.. U£1.....
rebuilding. Able 10 use Word
Financial
Institution'&amp;
Warrted:
omoa of ·consume
and ExceL Please send
resume 10 1 Colome! Dr., 29 Serious Poopk&gt; to Wori&lt; Affaios IIEfiORE you refi.
from home using a comput- nanoe your hBorneEWIWo;l
:!,~~ ~::_5601 · No er. ·up 1o $500.00 to obtain a Joan.
- - - -- - -- $1.500.00
PT/FT of rfor any large
Need Someone to Plow 3
www.HomatncomM-U.com
advance payments ·
small
Gardens
in
feesot"insuranoe.·tallthe
Harrisonvile Area. CaP 7-40- Wanted: Lawn Maintenanoe Office of Cortiume
and grounds keeper 1or the Affairs toll tree at 1~
742 3015
_ _-_ _ _ · · · - - - - - Haliday .tnninGal"pols. Full 278-000310 team If
'
Now hiring emplc:Jt'eeS to set

::mer•mpepl~an:U:~ ~

mortgage

L1J and predelivar lawn and will be consktered
·
based on
09 equipment. FP resume ......__.nee. Pick up oppti·
to 740-446-9104
t--""'" -

I .,
"

service

·--· I:;:::;::::::::::::
r
I

..

c.--

-

..

OcDide Salel
RepraeentaHve
Ohio Vttlley Publishing with
offices in Pome117J,
Gallijlois and Pt.Pioasant
is accepting resumes for a
full time outsiete sales
representative. AppJicants
must be organized,
creative and able to
manage an established
account list while calling
on new customers.
Candidates must be

.,

c;l!f~pl [ned , selt·moliyated
•~u !GI1!1 r&gt;ll!yertll.l! understands 1he

importance of developing
strong, mutually ~neficial
business relationships with
our~~ . Sales

experience and reliable
transportation necessary. ·
H you can sell and you
want to work ft.il time. t
would like to hear from
\

'•,

you.
Please send resume.
cover letter and three
references to:
Gallipolis DBily Tribune
A.ttn: Matt Rodgers
· P.D.Brnc 469
Gallipoirs, Clti 45631
or email to

!

SECURm' _ ,
No Fee Unless

Accrediting
ColiegM

Martin
card ol Th8nks
SINC ERE
· mANKS

The Family of
Russell

Maxi~

would likL to
o:tend a sinc~rf!

" Thonlc "''" " to all
Jho$&lt; that conifvrted

"'" family thlring

qiiUCitl
po ...,
•en:; !Dr

cllaorlmiMikiR...

will"'"

Thloow 1 ;

luiiOWIIIiltf ..:IICpl

=*
-·
loin
YioiiiiDn . . ... ... OW
•11u11

far .1 'flil

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

tntarnaii"IIWIIII
dw8ftlngl.-.u

ln

=~!,..:.
~=_....,.=~~:==~

br. 2 ba. w/ 'Jg. bonus room
vinyl sided ranch has new
,

roof, attached carport, 2 car
garage , refinished h._rd!t'ood floors is ready to
mCMt•in, central air &amp; nlllural
gas fumaoe, stone FP in
LR. Kitchen has new I)Jik
cabinets, new vinyl flooring,
lg. pamry&amp; laundry ·room
Spacious mast8r suite w/
F.P &amp; pri~tate errtrance.
'Priced 10 seN M;M Now
$88,000. call {740)645-8751
Smell2 Br. house, ·Racine
Aftlla. 2

=e, =~=in
2PR, 2 baths, 3 acres more

.. .
'

'•
•f

•

'

Your words of
t!rtcourage!Nnt .
prayers. and
thoughtful gifts

·
Deposit. No smoking. No
Syracuse. $500/month + pets. Call740-446-3667
237.0077
depostt Hud App. No Pots
- -- - - - - - (304)675·5332 ·weekends Taking applications for 3br,

Meigs Co. 5 acres on 740-591 -0265

r ~::0 1
~

16X80 3 - - 2 Bath
VInyl Siding. Shingle Roof.
: :.per month. ,74Q.B85-

1.66 aCM. custom 'kltctton,
3PR, 2 bath. $142,900: Call 2 bed. 2 bath, 299 a ·mortlh.
740-258-9247
740-446-3570,

Announcements

$375/month

Saturday,
April 26, 2008
10:00 a.m.

Announcements

, $200 dep. ~ 3617 ,

State Fair Special
Friday, April 25
7:30 pm sharp
Fayette County Fairgrounds
Washingtorf House, Oh.
Selling 120 head.
Feb&amp; March
Farrowd
Barrow 8i Gelts

Located at the Hartwell
Storage units 34055 Laurel
Cliff Rd., Pomeroy, OH. Units
#47, #59, #72, #76 #19, #60

Just right for those August &amp;
September shows

Dan Smith Auctioneer
OH#13449

Very large selection top quality of pigs for chis
area. For ll) Ore info Fred Hoppes

Positive ID

.
Auctcon

Auction

GET MOHf HOME
FOR YOUR MONEY!

..

. L

'

pats, 7C0-992•221 B.
'tBiil Apt 1n Spring Valley.
WID
hook
up&amp;.
Vis~

·www. spring-valley-proper~

ties,tom or cati3:J9.0062

--------

1br ,Apt, allutiltiospeidnear
1DWn In Pt. Pleasant · 304• 382.0163

2IIR apl. (740)441.0194
2Br$295 plus
3 '-$395
~.
.._
p1 • ·~lilies• R ·
-.:·· us "" . aclne ,
. OhiO. 740-247-4292.
Apia. -lit .aa.an
: - . 52 Westwood
• DrMI. from $365 to $560.
740-446·2568,
Equal
Housing Opportunity. This
institution is an Equal
O!oiJortunny Provider and

,

--...u

oE..,toyer,

__
--

QAII POI.A, OM
...ft...,oc., . . ..

~.

U.t1L"IIla:4t\"ll. t~IAIW IIIU.U;

.

- •;JU )'l.Ufi:··wA.JY. r~

.
t &amp;!i'lllliiii.Ilti51iitt- -.·-

-

'

Special thank.r to the ministerS, bearers,
singers, piano players. and Men:en ,ille
. Bapri.~ t Church. Thanks to Abigail RanJ..in
for. being a special friend·to Mi.r;.'l Faye. To
aff wh11 unt cards , emails ,flowtrs..food,

!liit"" I JJIIIJM.U P\~ tl.A.T"!IIID IUI' t•fll.ll.'r"! t,l!.

,

a-J•

11!1-·-v.

Estate A.,. .Counby

Cltlii..O OIL\ "4frtlln.

....__,..,2

~ J . . ()II.1..l)'1 .....

l 'O..IJ(TlO" t.:lJ'ftlli;

~ .,

'

.•
,.

•

3 Yr Old Cedar Cape Cod Hoene
no,ooo Minimum lid ·m

3 · 4 Bedrooms 1% Bath
.i Woo•4 Acres
~t.., May 17, 2001
12 Noon

CASH.

located appi'Q)L 2 riles ~ ,aJ'
McAtthUC' .. 34121 St. lt:L 93 S,

Harnden, OH (Mailing Address)
EXTR.EME.l. Y nice home p~vio usly listed M
~rolil: . S119,000 &amp; wUI sell • t auaion w/ f.
Minimum Bid Of $)0,000! wo.tll Beautiful
home hoiK front &amp; re•r porche5, e• Hn kh:chen ,
dlnin·g rm ., 6 bedrm on main floor : upstafn ,

designed into 2 or 3 bedrms.: full -bAsement
has conCrete floor w/ w.atkot.lt door. Home

--·

~

•

2002 John Deere 790
diaeel engine. . . ..
.good heavy . d'*' loadar
tires, tires loaded w/
metbanol, Iron! bumper wl
weights , side entry stop,
f88r 9N!Y arms, one owner,
low hourwpprox. 309 hrs,
Contod l'aul at 740-446·
s1n ar 740-645-2399

1

-·

w/ llfnyt windows . dril~ ... n A

ianl&lt;. The Cingerlc:h'• did not Ule lertrk tberefo rt: the homt ~ no e:lectiltJl,.
This c;uutd bf nice yt!ar round home: or w.k·
eftd retrNt ....j ust • few mllet from lAkle
llolport Sote Parlt.

1Iash

CO

, ·. . . 0 YOUII LAWN OWl IS, AND
fiLAN 10 STAY AU. !DAY!

by "-1 '' · •

ot l imo of Nile; b.alolla! • po..e••lon
2008; -n!d ,,.. • dur prior to dosfnt:
~· promtd to closing datt!: ...ld In PN·
sen1 as~ h. condition; no contlngend u : GIWHI
emPtor.
Moses R. ~ Ameli• A. CIQgtrk:h, ()wnen

CALL FOR FH£ 'SitOCHUR£ 1!1
STANL£'1' &amp; SON, INC. (740) 77S·UJO

John Kenneth &amp;

~

WWWSTANLE'I'AMJSOftLCOM

IT'S HMM • TillE. it

•• •

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

OW)04 ; '

LICIJI1.

.

8

""*DJIM

.... '"US. Gil 711 ... ltlJ
.. . . . . C:O,.D' llh-1...
-.wwow,
2UD

wv .......

()llfJ(';[:. . . .. .,.,.~
CD..l.:__.}"Jt3-JIU
u..-l_........ .......~.tow.. ·

SOMETHING

2005 29' Puma Camper. like

new. Two slides Ac &amp; Heat.
$17,000. 74Q-367-0463 or
645-0734

Shop
Classifieds!

o.r.-_........_

-~

'

I

Compressor. Dual sliding
clean
$3,200
~•.
'

Edipse .-_

Spyder GT Conv. 11.500

mls, exc. Cond. garage kept,
1 · owner, all services by
au1h.
dealer,
loaded,
gray/r;ay. $22,500. 740-4467861
.
1998 Buick Clntury, 68,000
miles, white, wJair Bfld
power everything, $4800,
call daytime _ , 7-4 at
{740)992·2067

......
Ha
o.·~-2001
rioy
.;....., 883
Sportster, 5500 tnites, Very ·
Good Condttion . $4500
Firm: {740)384-5443

Public Notice
Public Notice Of
lloCIIIng Meigs caunty

p .m .

Location ol II I lh19:
Pomeroy
Putolic
Library, 216 w.....
Pomeroy, Ohio
Purpooe of - " I I '
The Meigs County
Transfer Station is an
trana1er .f acility (PTI

106-6130 and Core ID

======= =======

Get a taste qfyour own medicine.
hot-!r'-"'"'-""- "'l&gt;&lt;........r , " .. '

11

Nursinl! Open House
April D . 8-iJ~maildl•Spm
Tecumseh loom
Adeu Regional Medical Center

.. S.glgi i!!!Ti g
•!iiW!i;tYtqSenfbs " ..,·

oi Mrediciil5u'Jicll

. . iJ - . JA
. _. ._,,,~1~ - ~·

.

71

1

. .

IJ

expanMn -

(~) .2i

PUblic Notice

•AadeC.e

To ifPPir tor pasltlonl PIR!e vfllt

hf1t

mocllflcstlon to the
faCility- wiiii1MIIvcl
the ~·ion ol the
iaclllty'o cottenJ1acl
lower waste lwldllng
area by appmxlnlely
15' by ' 38'. This ......
Pl'84ld exp~~nsion is cu11f8011y comprieed
o1 soli and gr8vel.
There are ol
t h e - - 21111' ol

•Ur~CIIN

• Prhn~trJ c.te

' '

I U

.

. Ill" call

$79,000

,_,,.,.J'IU
.

IGtreatFamily Home. 112 Union Avemie
'
Pomeroy, Ohio
~

.

f

-·-- -- --:--10 HUL

Contact Shirley Mash
For More Information

10 !SUC~1o . TO C~Rt.

April

2008

1-740-591-1657

The Annual rnBBiing a! the
KCHS Alumni !Viii be held
atthe River Valley HS on May 24, .
·
2008. Social .hour is at 5;30 pm ,
and dinner at 6:30. $15:00per

· lost in Rio Grande Area
Female Chocolate Brown lab

740-645-1571
or7~,352~8

~

35th
I

Anniversary Dance

call Becky Meaige at74D-3194
by May 20th.

Meigs Senior Center
April26
8pm,11 pm
MuSic by "Still Standing·

••

light Refreshments
$5 in advance • $6 at door
Everyone Welcome1

CHANNEL
MARKER

'

.Customer Appreciation Dayl!!
INSURANCE PLUS AGENCES
417 Secoiid Ave.
S1ql by for reiTeshments
April24, 2008 11 :0010 1:00

.

CONOOS'l
· Openlngl from Mly thru Sept .
~Man thru fri.

..a OUT OF S1ll1E ar o

I IlOVE ONU
&lt;:ONOESIION Sli\IID
-E- ....... - tD ... t'•
acl '"""

-.....---,.

2o games for ·$20

Thursday,
. . '
April24

apen 5:30, Ga111816:30 flt'n

GallipOlis VfW • 3Td Ave.
Door prlal- 0oc &lt; I len•
Adt&gt;alu tlcic8l..,.... 1111ft1Bin

(Did Splltlcle Supply Building)

/
. ~

IPBCIII d!twtngl

AdvatU tJa.t . . .
'

446--2631 ext. 265« 253
{not aftlliatld wfth lo1Qilbtiig81

P••'-'Co.)'

62 North of Pt. Pleasant,
' Auctioneers:
Rick Pearson #66
R:F. Stein #1510
JOe Arrington #1462

wv

304-675,5463
NOTICE
Eagles Ae:ie #2171
Nomination and election of
all officers and one tr.ustee
Nominations

'

'

plus 3 x·games for $5

3319 State Route 141
Ftaturlng:
TuppiCWMI, AI Hom.Amnl,
PBI11111,01d Ct111, HolM 11-.lo!l, .
TiiiBlully Simple;, 9odv Shap •
Home, T.-lul T - - .,
Ullboml Book&amp; Ill Home, x.ngo,
balkclls, fnllke.up, Cllldlel
&amp; crlllls

Rt

aASKET BINGO

Register for door p!ll8
.

•

I

2nd Annual Tad( Sale
Sat., April 26th
6pm
Mason Co. FairgroYUdS

OVB Busy Bees Team

4126108 · '
10amto3pm

I

2 row ocean view.

Mason County Fair

Tomato Stakes
$9.50/doz sharpened Oall
.61 VtneSt. •
Open M-F 7 -6; Sat..B-S

61 Vine St Gallipolis
OPEN M-F 7 to 5
AR.BT05, SUN. 10T04

Open House

,Norttl Myrtle Beach
Sleeps 6, fully fumi&amp;hed,

O'Dell True Value lurriler

pe11011. Send ,1'81Jai'Vations to 1~~"---...._....;,.
:&gt;u....n;..
!lB.:.Y....1Cl-4
~-.-.-""""'..........J
' .
Kyger Creek Atumni.
O'Dell True Value lumber
P.O. Box350
We Rent RUG Dr. Carpel Cleaners
Cheshire, Ohio 45620 or
CaH 74[)-446-1276 to Reserve

'

flc:lilly

WMII-hlndllng -

~-'!~~,.~~~---·• PfHdftliuiOII testing

The

·

prapaeedsion of the COI!Ctwle
.11110· lhlo .,.. would
lmpcove the elllclclncr
and
envlronmentlil
conlnlll of the kMer·

• fiHt f'VIII

.

.

Ohio.

' DWrlllriB~a

the
The

~~~·1.!1 ~. ~~;:;:.____
• Crltiowl C.. SM&gt;iwiiCUI
CltdiiC ICU

' 130927) II localeel at 34878 Rode
Spring• Raacl, lll4llgs
Courily,
Pometoy,

DEADL IN E 2:00P.M . FRI.

Real Estate

----

I

FOR YOU!!

BULLETIN BOARD

f.o4,.,.... .. ile

em • ~-.,....

-c:ASH.aCQ{SJ

Q I
FRJIUIOCEIITS
OR U.S OF fiiU IS41 f

HAS

ttK'K~ A~CO-AN\'

1•:aes 111111 c.M:tes uu

CJTIE

·
Mountaineer by
2004
Montana"Trave1Tra iler, 33.5',
·2 slides. sleeps 6. EKoellent
Condkion. (740)379-2418

existing ~lid WIIS1e

table very ettacttve $750,

- - - - - - - - . Have yoU prioed a John
(3011111'2-3017 Hot Tub I SWim Spa Outlot Deere lately? You 'll be surprisad! Ched&lt; out oor used
$1000 off. Hugo selec1ion,
New Styies. Free DeiMI)'.
inventory
at
Top Quality. 606-929-5655 W W W . C A A E 0 . C OM
Carmichael Equipment. 740JET
446-241~
AEAI&lt;TtON MOlORS
·Fumiahad Apt. 2nd Ave. Repaired, Naw &amp; Rebull! In Sale "" King Kutter Tillers.
•Upstairs, Aa Utilities pd. "Sttx*. Call Ron Evans, 1- 4, 5 &amp; 6 ft. Jim's Farm
Equipment Call 740-44618R, No Pals, GallipoWs, 800-537·9528.
ClloC46-9523
m?

'

nat-

5pm.

Martole corner Garden Tub. 500 Ford Tiodor. $2900 Cal
•
. •OWner- water, _,., ·new $1 .500 304-675-791l1 4ol6-0373

)

of l'lllai-NDis, 27 cartons of floor Wes wmt
g/118, lund,tools &amp; much, much more, lots uf
·ltlaf MWI
CfJelled. Ilion!
rhliM f JHIOUS fumitur8 tmdtools 8te sffll
·oomingin.

...THE

740·~92-ll219.

r'

7 puppies need her!

app/illncs, lots of IDys, chair pads. 77' round
pool, akicfricaJ SM;8spet3, infants OUI door
srilgs, blanket, C&lt;ltTlfotl8rs, books, truo1c
Speakers, coolno&lt;a,.,, pillow, small appliance.
lamps, CD stereo, piclu,.,s, fishar price toys.
bali.fans, st;anding fans, Coleman camp
...,..., Kerosene heaters, HP printer,
aquariums, loy train 5BI wmt track and6
new 26 rolls walllr , _ , borc/er, lots and lots

Mitsubishi

I

German flo1twellers , 1st
shots, wormed.good ,marl&lt;·
ings,parents on &amp;ijjhl.$1 soM.- $160-F non-negotiable

Nursing~r-

·MI8c.: 6" snap pool. frJt5 of dishes, kilchen

07

Cuii'I'JIS &amp;
MoroR lloMfs

shots , wormod , tai~docked

llucih - · "' .... , Daktable.wilh51egs
&amp; 31eaWIS, · Victoiten dresser with
brown mall&gt;/e &amp; mirror. oryan stool wmt
claiNfld feet. Dunphyfi: table earner chairs
from 1887, coffBe grinder, Wayner Skillets,
fiddle &amp; case from 1911, accordion, much
. more48rflliredLongabeger&amp;sk91s,
costume jewelry, rolling pins.

i

r

$300 aect1. 7.of0.388-8788

$51).$60Jrnonttj

~INC.

wi.!f! ligflt.

mo.....

CKC Miniature Pinschers,

•• ~1:•1 een.

. ·~ hutch

13 HP Cod Cadet Riding
.
Mowar and 2 pooh
01 Oodge Dakota Club Cab.
.
Call
·
4•4, Exc. Cond., New
4-Pigs Whne &amp; Hamp Cuss
toreslbrakes. always servgilts8VIIi- Cal 7iood. 446-o795or441·7971
4073 or 7 «J-9.U--472S
·
1985 Ford F150, 4x4 ,
$2750. 44~·7514 or 256~
4-H $150. 740-992·
6926 ask tot Je
1606.
Lazy FleeOEi
rry.
Uvastoc:*.
01
Hyundai
Accent
V.w;;
Hatchbar:J&lt;. 5 speed trans.
b SAul
5 years old P&amp;rtonnanoa 65.310 miles. good conditostod BlatCt Angus Bull lion. needs catalytic oorwort- 1999 Plrmouth Voyager,
from Southern Bull test, 1()9-6339
er. Asking $2200. cau 7.t0-- run&amp; great. 10 month war$1 ,500 304-895-3496
'
rarity
on
AIC

4-wheeler 300EX. $1.000
{740)446-4060

7:::-:::-:----:-:-:--

Eleclllt E101rtise T6oling Phone---11 04 ahiit

•All - . averaging

"--(A-....,_

JP 7n:'IM

:AIIIII estate

Fumlluno: slackable stprage drawetS, night
stands. - . Strm.ge cabinet, matching
cribs wmt mallmsse!l. dinning table, srriall
table wittJ 2 chairs, cedar chast, end tables,
chairs, glass table top, white chest, bench,

.

SAVI...GS

llatlilf9: 51231118 6:1111

...._,====':::'::==&lt;~:;;n~~=· P.: ~

•Conh!!Lhill llle - - .
•Walhorldryei hoetiU!&gt;

__,...__"__

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

:!'!· $13125.000900
-=
- -----'

Get A Jump
on

Boston Terrier &amp; Pug m~ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - · Males, 9 wks old .
~ncemecltll
•-I'IOUI1
•
ts
Annoclncec'*IIS
puppoes.
..,,
1CIIIh&amp;i
Prindle in color. $1 00. Call
74().379-2467

~..,.._,.

~

_._ £~ .. • .,
·~O&gt;ftl&amp;

- , -~ ..-··
obo. 740-388-~ 520

I

~

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guar· ·
antee. Local references furnished. Established 1975.
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 4460870, Rogers Basement .
Waterproofing

1l'ncieJ St.tlon
·0... and Time o1

........
......... fltN!I
. . . TNt. ....
. . . . . . . .*' 0111
... tlllll_...
T_...,,..,
...._....,.
__ _,..,.,....._._,.,.,.....,

Aptf4 • · -· t •.,..

1

...

CUI 21~

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

Auc:tion

,.

r

...............;c- Dllod................. ...,...s,_.

AcniNfrom '-

,.o,

,__
...

'"",:a:;wl "ICIII'I!Nm.~~:', ~;....(f"O"ili t

Vftl•~ ,:;a; t-f"~ riWI-I\2if..t,t;

tlf llf(l . . . .o\ll,"":'li U""IQII."". U11l.Ul.P

MW.... _. :!' a"~'I"-'M.W

f amily an4fri£ndsfor your concern .

' 'felocllai

I

.

2003 Anlc Cal, 4-Whaelor
90, $700--32115

756 1

I ;I" I'I!'IU!I.\JtlliiMI.I1!U. '\"l'li.ltHIM. \~ 1:\iJ hJi

· ,....,.,..."". r~w.lii PI!oAU m.rll o&lt;Js.ut

loved you all. Also. thanks to the residents,

........ _._. ....._............................................................................. ......_........
GINGERICH ,, A

l_

r ..t~t!I"S
ltl ....,. • •

Jl4r,DIJ ANi!OC5 .

Apai botlidS

WU.: ft.III..PIJNP!I

~ .t.("!'lf("

r

Blm Y'lew

""'"~ n:atii.IJVl .,...;.o,Dt*

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

-~ .

bolh, CIA. Carpotllia.-

- ~I!WI-Iill!i

.. . . . . . . . . . ft."P&lt;"&lt;~a!tllti'OI•U" - -

...,.."

i

·rO

Dining Table: 48" round Qak,
reeded pedestal column
with 12" leal.· lour (4) Foench
Coumry ladder baok chain; ,
Made by PennsylVania
Amish. Purchased in 2003
for$1 .041 . SeiinglorS400.
Excel.lent Condition.
-'-·- .- - - - - Mutti-colored living room
suite. Burgundy, beige &amp;
brown.Likenew.$150. 441 -

a.

Backlloa. D_, S5,500 corn $4.00 a bushel 304- "m"o
'',:_Alison••-

!

:_ks

ftoors, tit appl. included:,
WID ~ . No pels PAl"
· Alrqllo storage aval~ 91 Simplicity, 17 hp· Kohler
able. Dep. Req. 44s-75s.t
eng, 48M mower deck_,
- - - - - - - - chains. 5' blade, not started
last year. $75. 10x1o dog lot
$100. 15ct upright ·freezer
$75. Patio sat w/ 5' glass top
•2&amp;Sbodooomapartments 4 chairs $125. 740-388- 500 Kawasaki M•k&gt; .$2200

~NN:t.~ n ~

Mill: , . L\IIJ

- N IIIiW'HWfl'1i

a loOrm

~

GlwN ·,;

40

Caii740-25WB90

built. Has on~ 8So brogonal
miles. Maroon Metall~ tan!&lt;

2005HondaCRF450Rwilh
a factory connection sus·
•
pension , good plastic and
01 ~Chevy Silveracta 2500 tires, many extras, good
foJ Sale 60 bu&amp;hels d ear HD LT, Cfew Cab, Long Bed, shape $3300 . ' 304-675·

:m:: , '. ,. 140-446Ferguson

iO

2005 Harfoy - ~
Foclory CUotom 1 of
1,~-oiiiiioiilioiiiiiiioioiiioo.'
200

ca•

r . . .._ Ir§

WWW.CARIIICHAEL ·
TR LEAS COM

Massie

2004 Yamaha 450 VFZ C : P " " ' - = - - - . ,
$2,900 304-576-2951
J:loME;

&amp; tins .. Witlo e mbossed
flames lhroughout. Price :
&lt;lnt1&gt;,!1l~, Dallwoo30k $16,000.00 MUST SEE to
Aegi11orod' Ptad&lt; Angus mi., 88 Lac.. 6 C!b, 60 ""'"'· API'AECIM'EI Pk&gt;ase
7 am-5pm 740"949-2217 &amp;
BuR. 740-441-7205 or 740- 446-7278 .
446-7410
.
6pm-9pm 740-949-2216

6 week , old Boston Terrier
'
Angus Bulls, show heifers.
pups. 4225. 388·9143 · or
~
•
1-3
Excellent Breeding , Top
44 755
.
.
Perlormance,
Priced
20x30 room ·avatla~le for AKC Reg Shill
.
1 R e a s o n a b 1y .
rent Ideal lor an office, small
·
u ~·
www.slaterunangus.com,
group or business . Located
olwldh," fin;t (MshOts)·
{740)286-5395
1 btotCt from the park cal voown
"0
'
'
U868B21or
info.
blacklwhtte (M). $300. 740.
more
·
446o0091 or 740-645415 Clth pigs tor sale; Af Si"ed
- - - -----;-•~
· _ from lop Boars In oountry;
1!::"'~~----, AKC Registered Yoride PJgsrightagetorMasonand
ll4ulmow
Male, 1 112 years old, Very Meigs~. Clll for .vi
Golni
small. 3 tbs. $600. 741J«S. IIPI!I.flhoeobend Show Pigs,
. 11855
7.00.258-1380

11.10

: - - - - - - ..-;:--:llowntown .,~. 3PR, . 1 112

--J~ UYIW."'I -

fl"lt

...

..aon&gt;o
•un~·'" '"""

1740)645-3372.

Bll - I I El
:-Sa-le~::-Pa-rba-r-,.Ca-rpat-:-$5-,95- J:i:'r'-000::---~
Townhouse apartments, yd remnants $40.00 &amp; up.
FARM
O!ldlor small houses FOR Mollohan Carpet. 2212
FlQurMFNr
RENT.. Call 1740)44H11t .Eastem Avo, Gallipolis,~ "--oiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiliii-,.1
fur -'icatooo &amp; oniormation. 7 4().448.7444
.

---

..

. ,..A?~- ~

.,

I

SPACE

FORibNr

(740)992.0165
Mollohan Fum. Porter, OH
'
.
17 3
CIICIVENENn.'f LIICAT· 388-0

MY

a eld.l.Wiflli.l.'IIID

i

1 year old male ooon·
hound with ,.._.....
nJ&gt;.--rc: $200 .
_

,..----- -

' ..... _.,.........., ......... ._.1111 ........

- ~...,L!'-"Ili.M."ltlti

no

, - : - - - - - - --

J.fl'ilii • • RI IIS• .,..._.PIII fvr!I L.- ..-f'.M~tiiNIJtW ·
'h.mut.lltC......tfln.

w

•

Mlddlaport .

&amp;ecurtty deposit requ~red,

. ,_,.fiii:I&amp; ........ WIII (knl; lll t .. .... ~. T- . . ~- ~ ... O.ION

W

·

3 2002

Pu.obrod Ar95 Butt. t/2
l'l&gt;rrtiac Clrand Am,
years &lt;*1. 44&amp;07il8 or 446- 4dr, 75000 mltas. 4 cyt • .,.0.
·btatCt. chromo wbeels.
4410
sharpl $4200 Cal 740-388o . - ~ · - 1 w~ 0010
' '"'"' . - - ·
~
doe$7S&amp; 1 "'-wethoir 4CIII. 5Taurs, SUn. 8vans.
$50. 7 - . s m
05 . 300LT, OO Must., n

Beech St., Middleport , 2 br. New couch &amp; chairs S325. Sheffie No~ $100 oacll 1st
apt., no pets, Table &amp; 4 chairs $200. Full
1""-r-•
'
ShOt &amp; wornwid, no ~rs .
dap.&amp;
ref.
reqUired , BIS &amp; mattress $150 .

...._£_ tte-~W - at ttt iiO

0.

!lldiD'"'.

red

EQUIPMENT TRAILERS,
CARGO . EXPRESS &amp;
H 0 M E S T E •A D E R
CARGO /CONCESSION
TRAn.ERS. S.W GOOSENECK
HitcHES ..
CARMICHAEL
EQUIPMENT ICARM ICHAEL
~RS SALES Ao SER·
VICE. Sl:'ECUIL 2llFT
GOOSENECK Fti\TBED
$3999. VIEW OllR ENTIRE
TRAILER INVENlORY AT

fUmiihad

._.....

...... w

IQI Roo'

· ·and,
·1'omaroy

........,...._.,w_,..., 2.....

-........

~

--

~· furnished
and u~~
and houses on

Auction

~NI-MtZ

_.,,__

C

I •.

ArliRrMtNrs

mshad

=-~

.

l

elderly/disabled , call 675- shots 8. wormed asking
6679
$300 304-S£13.:!820

t •nd 2 bedroom apan.

,._a
lAWN eau••••rt A
tlllllllNIAY. -.21 n :OOM

~

r

no pets. $275/month lost for Hud..ubsidozed . t -Ilt long haired Dachshund,
ir1ckldes WB1ar and sewer. apartm~
for
the 6man1hs, crate trained, all

'

'

pol~,

2Apartrnents
Bed
, Very Spacious,
turos ,'
'g
rooms, CIA, 1 112
Bath Aduft: Pool &amp; Baby moldslsn'1ker&amp;, guns, lmtveS,
,
trap~ Oldahoma Camp minPool, Patio. Stan $425/Mo. now tntp toys power toos
No Pets, Lease Pills hand toois Mudt More
'
Security Deposit Roquorod ,
(740)367.0547.
Prn; ·
IOlSAul
Twin R
1i
. ccept·

: : - , - - - - - - - - . ~~ - ower.,:a .
Taking applications for 2BR, ~
iea11ons . . walt•ng · 1 CKC registered male

HOPPES BARROW FEST

. ....,.. fOWU liTQ'aiMti

\

pets.

2
or pooplo, refer·
-enoes no petS 5 miles from
. •
·
·Gallln. no calls after
llpm.441.Q181
~-::--:----. -'lloblk&gt; home for rent on the
Bo-11 area . NO PETS.
74().4.41 -5551
~~

The Grand Finally of the
pig sell season

Auction

-----

The famil)' of Faye Sanders would liU to
express our llranks lo all the staff of Hoh,er
Senio r Care Center for ullthe cure and love
shown to our mother during her stay there; she

ql

no

~-·~I

Landaker or Cook Rds.
$300Jd&amp;,J. 44&amp;361~ ·
$19,900. Salem Ctr_ 19 - - - - - - - -

I.AM·---otff.QWM·L.MtN~ I

of respect we,.t"
rnMch upp reciated

Family

3

tract. 740-532-7123 or 740-

........ '"""""

the "'cent dearh

of Maxine,

L

outbuildings,ca.r·

•'··•u,_,.,.......

CBrdafTtlllnks .

,,,,
h.

S400 month $400

deporiift ~-3652·

3 11d. houoein l'omor&lt;J¥.
4 Podn&gt;orn Houaa for Rent
N-Mll
1 f /2 lllth. air, 1ul base- ssOO/rent . '$800/cleposit
~
• ment.2cargeroge , $650. · (740) 446-4000 or 367-7762
6 acres mil on Loft Follt Rei 740-949-2303.
near..lldclon &lt;Ptke. Prioldto
Small 2br conage, Buiavllte
&amp;elt. 446-7.52li
3 . bedroom house in Pille, Waterllras h pd, no
1'omaroy, · HUD approved, pats. Rei. Req. $ 350/clep
- - - - -- -'-- No pets, S400 mo+ S400 $S50- 388· 11 00
6110 of an acre tot on T...,. secu""' ......... ~ . {740)992·
for ent
Ad, ·in GdiPotis. 500 ·ft out· 331,4"' "..,....
Sinall. clean house
r ·
side tolty limits. water lllp, - ' -- - - -- - Liv. Rm., BR, Eat·in K$300n
: &amp;
sewer. WII9EIII on land conBedmom House In Ba~. $300 per mo..

740-828-2750 ·

Cash

Houle in New Haven,

. No Pols

~~

LoJs&amp;

M..o~ .~~""'...... 1 a- ·~lng

213 "BR 00 2 e.aes, fenced
back van:t. Up&amp;laira: 2 1!2
BR &amp; ba1h. ~stairs: L.A.,
F.R, D.A.. Kit. &amp; bath .
.
_
.
.
~d 5 mikE from ~olzer,
. Tli'"Jll!!tifllul Ptom.Qress-;!lltr OOio!oo!ia "" """'"';
Alli.Site 1-:-2. Worn only i!lt Ponl!f" R~ ~ · 554, !tiR+t~Q
Meigs, Must see. 740-992· $85,000: _,y ...
3483.
call for mare Info. 388-0044

The Family ofFaye Sunders

Okty &amp; Irene

--.~lon,au
••,.
tamiHai..,.«"NIIIOnlll
ar1g1n, or..,. intlnllon 1o

Three ·beautiful Prom dTeSSas.Size 1 ~2. Worn only at
Meigs. 'Must see. 74(HJ92·
348a.

Avg. Pay $20/hr or

.

ly hOme •. on 1 acre ml1 wf
bact&lt;yard privacy 1Bnoe in
Galltpolis. tnis2100SQ"A. 3

,, 3tJ&lt;

Ra RINr

· ~-iiHIH' . . .....

POST OFFICE NOW
HIRING

lW wuulil like tv
thank everyone
who sent cards &amp;
family for ri!R
gifts and special
dinner fo r our
60th wedding
Anniversary.

&amp;ldtwtiw .._,.
P''*''.....,
lllniMtion or

0 down payment 4 bedrooms. La1g0 yard. Covered
docl&lt;. Attacf1od garage. 740367-7129

'LOWboy
10.000
lbs,GWI Brakes on tme Pie
w/ramps $2!JOO 080
742-4011

dunatirm s, R~fts. , called or w me by with a
kind word,' and to all ofyou who he~
in anyway. thanks.' Tha nks w Willis
Fu neral R ome , Dr. Richard Simpson. and
Pat Fisco f or their care .
'

Card of Thanks

~

Rlx!iJ!S

(aiD V.., Iiri_l ..... ~----·to.MC81!C!Iit'l) Qo.2..... 'ICI
C..... .p. "T-Itir;II D ..........

1~94

All replies will be kept in
strict confidence.

$57K/yr, ind uces
Federal Bene1its, OT.
ortered by Exam Services,
not offered w/ USPS Who
hires.
1--866-403·2582

· for an updated lam·
Looking

dl.,.lwMndon._...on

,._, ~-&amp;mtWI • Page DS

~ u.tng 1 and 2
NIO USED IITHL EIIY. INTEGRITY. KEFER I'OIIod/looeloods. 2Puls. 12 2001 Fonl - g Cpe. 2003 Honda
XR100 . R\1 Ser'Yioe at Carmk:hael
Bedroom Apts . a t Vilk&gt;ge s- e-ns. Pipe Rebar BUILT,
VALLEY ·old, 1 Haifor. 10 black. 86,000 orig. miles. Exoellont Condftion . $975 . Tra iklrs 740-446-3825 ·
Manor and Ri...- Apts. in For Ccoorete, ~. HORSE / LIVESTOCK mon1hsold, $600each:J04. new tires, garage kept, Ca~740-446-9 708
Middleport, 1rom S327 to Channel, Flo! Par, Steel TRALERS. LOAD MAX s.z774
$6700 080, 1740)742-2404

$592. 740-9!12-5064. Equal Grating
For li..rns,
Housing ()ppootriy.
~ &amp; -ays. L&amp;L
l!BR, 2 balh, al eloctric .
.
Scrap~ ()port Mondar.
(AEP) CIA. 9101 SA 7 N, Midoleport N.3rd ......,2 Br. Tuesllay; VVedo-y &amp;
CllOohke Cinio.
740- unfur!'Mshed,no pets,dep. &amp; Friday, Bam-4~. Ciooed
446-4234 or 740-208-7B6t - . ,..... 740-992.0165. Thursday,
SatiJfday &amp;
::::::--:---~- ::---:----~- Sunday. {7.00)44&amp;-7300
!BR, 2 bath, $47!ilmonth. NewHa...,, tbedroomfa"·
. 740-367·77'Cl2 .
apt. ...... &amp; ioler- Orig. GriiiiiiOid cast Iron
-:--:---:-----'-...,.
~.
' onces. No peto.740·992·
~ ~
"-· . ~-~•. ;
• bedroom, 2 bath with Pool. 0165
atoo-12 SldloC has,_ ring11800 month plus depos~ ,
.
A·1 $890. for both. Ironton ..
Gallipolis Ferry 740-041- Nice quiet 2BR apt. 0 .·74Q.533.3870
9931 7
"' 40-4467227
References &amp;
doposk
Reduction l.nventory Sale
94MH, 2BR2bath, ,&amp;ace- mquired. Nol'llts. 44&amp;1271 tOBBrown .S t. Mason, IW
fu1 location. $400/month + or 709-1657
304-773-S296n.-anower
Uliillies. 6 ~ from Holzer
1ry later. Aluminum ~
In Alo GTande. 44&amp;-6865
Tara
Townhouse Boat Trailar/\Aotor fishing

depoolt--3652

......ftl'l},,..,.• ....,

mrodgtlfSQ mydailytribun&amp;.com

j

,.._-Oil
socw.

.galiipOiiilcaree!OOIIege.ectu

Accredited Membar
Councl lor

~~-""'
••-.~-...
~·

or loss iri740-446-7029
Gallipolis. Allking
l'lllliiiBlNAL
' $80.000.
Survo;s
· New Jog horne sitting on

Cornpetltivo ....gos &amp; bene.,.,........"""
fits including heanh insurance and mileage.- Phone Gill; 11
c.....,.
740-441 ·1393 for more inlo (Ca-. C-To Home)
or apply at 1480 Jackson Clll Todoyl 1~,
Pike, Gallipolis, ~io.
1-800-214-0452

~

m,.tt;uaQII!aiiQfr~.oom

Public Auction

All• - a d 0 ltu6ng
tnWI••• I I ·11
8libjlcttottw,...._

7

Sowns

Midwest

M-

AUction

Duplex lor Sale on Land $45,000, 7.of0.94!1-2539.

announoem

~;,Val~ Hcwne HeaRn. :•.::a~daskNo ~:ish~:C:::n~:l

~:m:r~PNo! . r!ICI

.n

,.

' LMI)

mymidoestl.,.no.oom
- - -- - - -NEW ·- 4 br · 2ba
1.700 sq tt $49,989

r-

same as rent. .

I::!:::::12;..,_;__.J
flexible

- $ 5 5,000 0110. 740-.
441· 1115.

.:o•

51900 - . , Sow$50001
7
2750.

acres S45 sooo .Reedsville 1
acres $ 1 4 . ~ . Danville B
mymidWesthome.com
.acres $22,500. Gallia Co. 7,
New 3 Bedroom homes from ·aor 10 acres $12.500! Cali
LoCators. ing, fenced yard, clC88 to
74P441 ~ 1492 for maps or
sch~s.
Excellent 5214.36 per mOnth. lhcludes
many
upgrades,
deli~~ery &amp; visit www.brunerland.com.
Condition! 740-441-1202.
We finance!
Sal·l.l'· {740)385-2434

Mortgage
(740)36?..()000

Managar knOWledge. the SUper 8 ·Mmel is looking lor
posflion will require Direct .a front desk associate. MUS1

lflil1l and' 90ic20

flnood In

M - 7·"82" ~50
_,.. 17"'

Largo 2 -story home on
o-utLo~n·o ~~.:"'" perfect cred~ Locust Stroot. Galtipalis. 4
recolmnlenrjsl
Bedrooms. 2 Path. KIT, FM,
• Payment could be the OR, LR, Laundry, out~bultd-

---::'cc:c-:::-:-c-:::--

.

AND..-. ,.,.. 3
bod. 2 1&gt;1t1t. land,
gerage
u n -. INdY 10 move into. Only 3119
ExcO!Ientcondl!lonn&gt;adyto a month (wac). 866·564·
moYO irt $255,000.00, can: B679.1111STSALE
{740)949-2217
.;__.;___ _ _ _ _ _ - ----!I..-.-RS·I80'--=0hi:"',0:"--.largesl&gt;display

·
All iilkwd
.
Ferry ' WV 25515. Pt1 800BlarE
local oornpony - g "NN
669-1809 or taxt~30H75OlitoKruonY
DOWN PAYMENr pro4682 .
MIFIDN
EOE ~::::;;;:~ grams br you to buy your
w w w . g o r I c:; . c o m
hOme instead of renting.
www.rtrtlc.com
• 100% financing

Machine/Fabricator
SL
Manger: Appl icant must
have 2 year ~ree or reiat·
eel eJCperienoe, 10 years in'

.

Beautiful doubllwidl with

r·

----

2llr at Jollnsono Mobile
Homo ParCc. Clll446-2003
,
211r, 1 bolh. l 636 Cha1hem
Ale. 740-44&amp;-4234 or 74021141-7861

3br House in Muon. No
Pots, $400 month. $400

od...,. ool. 74!!-742-4011 .

93 Ctayton 3PR, 2 bolh
$10,000. ~ 112. Cio,ton
28R, 1bolh$7.000. -IIO
8 1 - - - - - d a n . -. CII740-JW.1179

&amp; Trimming. 11M Est&gt;oColi {740)441-1333 or
(740ll! 45 054e
·
Need flalp wllfl oaring for a
lcwed one orhouset aaping?
Reterenoas and 18
eoq&gt;erienoe 740-311Hl82:1
.
·
77 . Jolawfhorno Ln., Pt.
Need Your Vllld - ??? Pteosant. 3br. t ba, tOIMiF
Call Adam 304-675'3795 or New """'ringo, 304-6 ,..
p,~nt.
now heat po.mp
7 5016
519,000 3()4..593-6979

rO .

1iait,
2008 3 bodroom 2 bolh ooc- - - f o r sale 1170 \IOBILE HOME LOT FOR 3 Bedloom. Full ·B
tionol home $279 por month 2 lldnn. 12XBO Tr. in good RENT. 1031 Georges Cntek lalllO Lot. No Pols 304-6753431
7~7671 .
"""""forogollUrTOIItiy-· Ad, 441·11 11

'=:

tionlphonolgellOf&amp;i office
SkHls. We o1lar a very corn1)01111W-anda"""l'"'"
hens.lve benefits pa~ge
that inclUdes a 401 k ~
mont plan a nd free 101CIIIi0n
lodging at our empl oyee
rosonsinA.MyorsBeact1&amp;
Daytona Peach. FL. Big
Bear Lake. CA. and Pigeon
folgO, TN . Come tot a personal interview .. 81 6,36

• Pt, Pleasant, WV

I

2000 CUstom Buin Cope HOu80 for Sll8 in Roaino
Cod. 48R 2 BA Fin, 11r01. Approlc. 4 """"'· al
P ·, nont, lotolod- polossionolly -oped
of Rio Grinde in a - Rand&gt; style ~ ..., 4
localion. $1!!·~ · bodoouoo6, IMng
~
Cd for., oppt 7~ ingmom,-. -.-~
0125

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, oH

•

April 21st, 2008
7:30pm

Election
May 5th, 2008
7:30pm
FriBndtl I F1mlly Slle
Sundly. April 20 12-8 pm
40% off Rig. Pncl
30%m.tildown '
Splc(al After Hourt ~
5-8 flt'n SO% off Reg.
Price 30% oil Markdown

FASHION BUG
Ohio RM!r Plaza Gallipolis

$GOLD$
is at ~s highesi

price in over 25 years.
~- We lluy llroke!l gol d jewelry;
chains, brac'eiets , rings,

coins etc.
thai you no longer want
or wear.
Tom ~ into cash or trade us
for new gold jewelry.
Bring Valid 1.0.

A.L Terry Jewelers
• 214 Broadway Slreet
Downtown Jackson, Ohio

740-286-2326

· --

�.Page 04 .• • ..,

hnf.

Sul'tUy, April 20, 2008

Pomeroy • Mlcklleport • Gallipolis, OH • Pt. Ple"'sant, WV

Mliwf·

r·

'

1
R&amp;L calfienl. one of the In Homo Child CliO, N.B·
nation's targoost tamily 4ynt , Mf Good Ratingo, rv1:
""'*' LTlmotortroigh! CM· erenceo providod. Apple
- · has _,. Gro.o. WV 304-576-2500
lng&amp;
lor
part·timo , -,_--,~,--~
---,,-trimctericaVdatalentry bitting~-·--· """
,
positions, 2n&lt;1 s hitt(M· F tnooeolio-. c a l 7 4prn-10pm). Must type min 6861 or7~7636
30 wpm oaJUoacy -.
'~- ~-~ ...._._,
possess strong t:omrnl.lliCa- a.-..... -.re ~·- · .._.."'Il

lty"""".-olr.goo-

3PR. 3.5 IIIII. 2000 oq.W.. largo room ocm·
condo tn . ftoridl on ple1ely oedar ·opan~ onto
~ tatand. Boat J1ip patio Apoclt - · Hoalall in
&amp; ·· ·settl 446- IJ'OIIndpoolendooodbypt.
1822
vacy loncinll and fond.
41&gt;r, 2 N;, ~. Ctry Now ~· F.,_ 2 ·cor
Haven, '$15;500 ran
garaoe ·~ to ·hol.a
flpm 304 593 8871
n - • ·t•••I3.CM

Huntington Rd. Galllnnlis
...-

I

*'

yro

job erMronmem or Bachelor
Degree in Mechanical
. Engineering .along with

&gt;SMALL ENGINE

SERVICE TECH
EJ!parlence Necessary.
Appty at Bidweh Hardware
St Rt 160

Supervision . of

to wOrk

machine be able

shpp personnel, write CNC hours and possess eNoellem ' Own a COR1)uter? Put it to
pn::IQI'ams, perform machine customer service skills.
work! Up to $1500 to
setup and operate CNC or Apply in petSOn, no phone
$7500/mo PTIFT.
manual machines. Design callS please.
Fme Information!
and build fiictures, read
www.familybti:123 .com
drawings, use hand inspec- Upooming certified nursing BP""'_ _ _ _ _ _.,

i

u--·

'I

t. lon tools, complete pur- assistant
dass.
. h -~-'
d' 1Must
· have
GEDa
,...,.,,
chase orders. Proficiency in htg
~ R.~U~ 1P oma or
1 ~·~'
10
to apply. Applations may 1,""''_,.;,;li""""'iliOiiio-,.1
AutoCAD,
Welding
&amp;
Fabricating process in a be picked. up at Lakin
high volume manufac!uring Hospital,
Monday8 through
**'"'OTI"'I!**
.
·d
4
1...
.._,
env
. ironment. Generating &amp; Frt ay,
. am- pm
.
:·
st
·
b
maintaining
Standard Appl tea tOns
mu
e
Operating
Procedures, returned iri no later than Borrow· Smart. Contact
at COB . E.o.E.
the Ohio Divii:ion
expertenoe in machine tool u~~
.. U£1.....
rebuilding. Able 10 use Word
Financial
Institution'&amp;
Warrted:
omoa of ·consume
and ExceL Please send
resume 10 1 Colome! Dr., 29 Serious Poopk&gt; to Wori&lt; Affaios IIEfiORE you refi.
from home using a comput- nanoe your hBorneEWIWo;l
:!,~~ ~::_5601 · No er. ·up 1o $500.00 to obtain a Joan.
- - - -- - -- $1.500.00
PT/FT of rfor any large
Need Someone to Plow 3
www.HomatncomM-U.com
advance payments ·
small
Gardens
in
feesot"insuranoe.·tallthe
Harrisonvile Area. CaP 7-40- Wanted: Lawn Maintenanoe Office of Cortiume
and grounds keeper 1or the Affairs toll tree at 1~
742 3015
_ _-_ _ _ · · · - - - - - Haliday .tnninGal"pols. Full 278-000310 team If
'
Now hiring emplc:Jt'eeS to set

::mer•mpepl~an:U:~ ~

mortgage

L1J and predelivar lawn and will be consktered
·
based on
09 equipment. FP resume ......__.nee. Pick up oppti·
to 740-446-9104
t--""'" -

I .,
"

service

·--· I:;:::;::::::::::::
r
I

..

c.--

-

..

OcDide Salel
RepraeentaHve
Ohio Vttlley Publishing with
offices in Pome117J,
Gallijlois and Pt.Pioasant
is accepting resumes for a
full time outsiete sales
representative. AppJicants
must be organized,
creative and able to
manage an established
account list while calling
on new customers.
Candidates must be

.,

c;l!f~pl [ned , selt·moliyated
•~u !GI1!1 r&gt;ll!yertll.l! understands 1he

importance of developing
strong, mutually ~neficial
business relationships with
our~~ . Sales

experience and reliable
transportation necessary. ·
H you can sell and you
want to work ft.il time. t
would like to hear from
\

'•,

you.
Please send resume.
cover letter and three
references to:
Gallipolis DBily Tribune
A.ttn: Matt Rodgers
· P.D.Brnc 469
Gallipoirs, Clti 45631
or email to

!

SECURm' _ ,
No Fee Unless

Accrediting
ColiegM

Martin
card ol Th8nks
SINC ERE
· mANKS

The Family of
Russell

Maxi~

would likL to
o:tend a sinc~rf!

" Thonlc "''" " to all
Jho$&lt; that conifvrted

"'" family thlring

qiiUCitl
po ...,
•en:; !Dr

cllaorlmiMikiR...

will"'"

Thloow 1 ;

luiiOWIIIiltf ..:IICpl

=*
-·
loin
YioiiiiDn . . ... ... OW
•11u11

far .1 'flil

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

tntarnaii"IIWIIII
dw8ftlngl.-.u

ln

=~!,..:.
~=_....,.=~~:==~

br. 2 ba. w/ 'Jg. bonus room
vinyl sided ranch has new
,

roof, attached carport, 2 car
garage , refinished h._rd!t'ood floors is ready to
mCMt•in, central air &amp; nlllural
gas fumaoe, stone FP in
LR. Kitchen has new I)Jik
cabinets, new vinyl flooring,
lg. pamry&amp; laundry ·room
Spacious mast8r suite w/
F.P &amp; pri~tate errtrance.
'Priced 10 seN M;M Now
$88,000. call {740)645-8751
Smell2 Br. house, ·Racine
Aftlla. 2

=e, =~=in
2PR, 2 baths, 3 acres more

.. .
'

'•
•f

•

'

Your words of
t!rtcourage!Nnt .
prayers. and
thoughtful gifts

·
Deposit. No smoking. No
Syracuse. $500/month + pets. Call740-446-3667
237.0077
depostt Hud App. No Pots
- -- - - - - - (304)675·5332 ·weekends Taking applications for 3br,

Meigs Co. 5 acres on 740-591 -0265

r ~::0 1
~

16X80 3 - - 2 Bath
VInyl Siding. Shingle Roof.
: :.per month. ,74Q.B85-

1.66 aCM. custom 'kltctton,
3PR, 2 bath. $142,900: Call 2 bed. 2 bath, 299 a ·mortlh.
740-258-9247
740-446-3570,

Announcements

$375/month

Saturday,
April 26, 2008
10:00 a.m.

Announcements

, $200 dep. ~ 3617 ,

State Fair Special
Friday, April 25
7:30 pm sharp
Fayette County Fairgrounds
Washingtorf House, Oh.
Selling 120 head.
Feb&amp; March
Farrowd
Barrow 8i Gelts

Located at the Hartwell
Storage units 34055 Laurel
Cliff Rd., Pomeroy, OH. Units
#47, #59, #72, #76 #19, #60

Just right for those August &amp;
September shows

Dan Smith Auctioneer
OH#13449

Very large selection top quality of pigs for chis
area. For ll) Ore info Fred Hoppes

Positive ID

.
Auctcon

Auction

GET MOHf HOME
FOR YOUR MONEY!

..

. L

'

pats, 7C0-992•221 B.
'tBiil Apt 1n Spring Valley.
WID
hook
up&amp;.
Vis~

·www. spring-valley-proper~

ties,tom or cati3:J9.0062

--------

1br ,Apt, allutiltiospeidnear
1DWn In Pt. Pleasant · 304• 382.0163

2IIR apl. (740)441.0194
2Br$295 plus
3 '-$395
~.
.._
p1 • ·~lilies• R ·
-.:·· us "" . aclne ,
. OhiO. 740-247-4292.
Apia. -lit .aa.an
: - . 52 Westwood
• DrMI. from $365 to $560.
740-446·2568,
Equal
Housing Opportunity. This
institution is an Equal
O!oiJortunny Provider and

,

--...u

oE..,toyer,

__
--

QAII POI.A, OM
...ft...,oc., . . ..

~.

U.t1L"IIla:4t\"ll. t~IAIW IIIU.U;

.

- •;JU )'l.Ufi:··wA.JY. r~

.
t &amp;!i'lllliiii.Ilti51iitt- -.·-

-

'

Special thank.r to the ministerS, bearers,
singers, piano players. and Men:en ,ille
. Bapri.~ t Church. Thanks to Abigail RanJ..in
for. being a special friend·to Mi.r;.'l Faye. To
aff wh11 unt cards , emails ,flowtrs..food,

!liit"" I JJIIIJM.U P\~ tl.A.T"!IIID IUI' t•fll.ll.'r"! t,l!.

,

a-J•

11!1-·-v.

Estate A.,. .Counby

Cltlii..O OIL\ "4frtlln.

....__,..,2

~ J . . ()II.1..l)'1 .....

l 'O..IJ(TlO" t.:lJ'ftlli;

~ .,

'

.•
,.

•

3 Yr Old Cedar Cape Cod Hoene
no,ooo Minimum lid ·m

3 · 4 Bedrooms 1% Bath
.i Woo•4 Acres
~t.., May 17, 2001
12 Noon

CASH.

located appi'Q)L 2 riles ~ ,aJ'
McAtthUC' .. 34121 St. lt:L 93 S,

Harnden, OH (Mailing Address)
EXTR.EME.l. Y nice home p~vio usly listed M
~rolil: . S119,000 &amp; wUI sell • t auaion w/ f.
Minimum Bid Of $)0,000! wo.tll Beautiful
home hoiK front &amp; re•r porche5, e• Hn kh:chen ,
dlnin·g rm ., 6 bedrm on main floor : upstafn ,

designed into 2 or 3 bedrms.: full -bAsement
has conCrete floor w/ w.atkot.lt door. Home

--·

~

•

2002 John Deere 790
diaeel engine. . . ..
.good heavy . d'*' loadar
tires, tires loaded w/
metbanol, Iron! bumper wl
weights , side entry stop,
f88r 9N!Y arms, one owner,
low hourwpprox. 309 hrs,
Contod l'aul at 740-446·
s1n ar 740-645-2399

1

-·

w/ llfnyt windows . dril~ ... n A

ianl&lt;. The Cingerlc:h'• did not Ule lertrk tberefo rt: the homt ~ no e:lectiltJl,.
This c;uutd bf nice yt!ar round home: or w.k·
eftd retrNt ....j ust • few mllet from lAkle
llolport Sote Parlt.

1Iash

CO

, ·. . . 0 YOUII LAWN OWl IS, AND
fiLAN 10 STAY AU. !DAY!

by "-1 '' · •

ot l imo of Nile; b.alolla! • po..e••lon
2008; -n!d ,,.. • dur prior to dosfnt:
~· promtd to closing datt!: ...ld In PN·
sen1 as~ h. condition; no contlngend u : GIWHI
emPtor.
Moses R. ~ Ameli• A. CIQgtrk:h, ()wnen

CALL FOR FH£ 'SitOCHUR£ 1!1
STANL£'1' &amp; SON, INC. (740) 77S·UJO

John Kenneth &amp;

~

WWWSTANLE'I'AMJSOftLCOM

IT'S HMM • TillE. it

•• •

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

OW)04 ; '

LICIJI1.

.

8

""*DJIM

.... '"US. Gil 711 ... ltlJ
.. . . . . C:O,.D' llh-1...
-.wwow,
2UD

wv .......

()llfJ(';[:. . . .. .,.,.~
CD..l.:__.}"Jt3-JIU
u..-l_........ .......~.tow.. ·

SOMETHING

2005 29' Puma Camper. like

new. Two slides Ac &amp; Heat.
$17,000. 74Q-367-0463 or
645-0734

Shop
Classifieds!

o.r.-_........_

-~

'

I

Compressor. Dual sliding
clean
$3,200
~•.
'

Edipse .-_

Spyder GT Conv. 11.500

mls, exc. Cond. garage kept,
1 · owner, all services by
au1h.
dealer,
loaded,
gray/r;ay. $22,500. 740-4467861
.
1998 Buick Clntury, 68,000
miles, white, wJair Bfld
power everything, $4800,
call daytime _ , 7-4 at
{740)992·2067

......
Ha
o.·~-2001
rioy
.;....., 883
Sportster, 5500 tnites, Very ·
Good Condttion . $4500
Firm: {740)384-5443

Public Notice
Public Notice Of
lloCIIIng Meigs caunty

p .m .

Location ol II I lh19:
Pomeroy
Putolic
Library, 216 w.....
Pomeroy, Ohio
Purpooe of - " I I '
The Meigs County
Transfer Station is an
trana1er .f acility (PTI

106-6130 and Core ID

======= =======

Get a taste qfyour own medicine.
hot-!r'-"'"'-""- "'l&gt;&lt;........r , " .. '

11

Nursinl! Open House
April D . 8-iJ~maildl•Spm
Tecumseh loom
Adeu Regional Medical Center

.. S.glgi i!!!Ti g
•!iiW!i;tYtqSenfbs " ..,·

oi Mrediciil5u'Jicll

. . iJ - . JA
. _. ._,,,~1~ - ~·

.

71

1

. .

IJ

expanMn -

(~) .2i

PUblic Notice

•AadeC.e

To ifPPir tor pasltlonl PIR!e vfllt

hf1t

mocllflcstlon to the
faCility- wiiii1MIIvcl
the ~·ion ol the
iaclllty'o cottenJ1acl
lower waste lwldllng
area by appmxlnlely
15' by ' 38'. This ......
Pl'84ld exp~~nsion is cu11f8011y comprieed
o1 soli and gr8vel.
There are ol
t h e - - 21111' ol

•Ur~CIIN

• Prhn~trJ c.te

' '

I U

.

. Ill" call

$79,000

,_,,.,.J'IU
.

IGtreatFamily Home. 112 Union Avemie
'
Pomeroy, Ohio
~

.

f

-·-- -- --:--10 HUL

Contact Shirley Mash
For More Information

10 !SUC~1o . TO C~Rt.

April

2008

1-740-591-1657

The Annual rnBBiing a! the
KCHS Alumni !Viii be held
atthe River Valley HS on May 24, .
·
2008. Social .hour is at 5;30 pm ,
and dinner at 6:30. $15:00per

· lost in Rio Grande Area
Female Chocolate Brown lab

740-645-1571
or7~,352~8

~

35th
I

Anniversary Dance

call Becky Meaige at74D-3194
by May 20th.

Meigs Senior Center
April26
8pm,11 pm
MuSic by "Still Standing·

••

light Refreshments
$5 in advance • $6 at door
Everyone Welcome1

CHANNEL
MARKER

'

.Customer Appreciation Dayl!!
INSURANCE PLUS AGENCES
417 Secoiid Ave.
S1ql by for reiTeshments
April24, 2008 11 :0010 1:00

.

CONOOS'l
· Openlngl from Mly thru Sept .
~Man thru fri.

..a OUT OF S1ll1E ar o

I IlOVE ONU
&lt;:ONOESIION Sli\IID
-E- ....... - tD ... t'•
acl '"""

-.....---,.

2o games for ·$20

Thursday,
. . '
April24

apen 5:30, Ga111816:30 flt'n

GallipOlis VfW • 3Td Ave.
Door prlal- 0oc &lt; I len•
Adt&gt;alu tlcic8l..,.... 1111ft1Bin

(Did Splltlcle Supply Building)

/
. ~

IPBCIII d!twtngl

AdvatU tJa.t . . .
'

446--2631 ext. 265« 253
{not aftlliatld wfth lo1Qilbtiig81

P••'-'Co.)'

62 North of Pt. Pleasant,
' Auctioneers:
Rick Pearson #66
R:F. Stein #1510
JOe Arrington #1462

wv

304-675,5463
NOTICE
Eagles Ae:ie #2171
Nomination and election of
all officers and one tr.ustee
Nominations

'

'

plus 3 x·games for $5

3319 State Route 141
Ftaturlng:
TuppiCWMI, AI Hom.Amnl,
PBI11111,01d Ct111, HolM 11-.lo!l, .
TiiiBlully Simple;, 9odv Shap •
Home, T.-lul T - - .,
Ullboml Book&amp; Ill Home, x.ngo,
balkclls, fnllke.up, Cllldlel
&amp; crlllls

Rt

aASKET BINGO

Register for door p!ll8
.

•

I

2nd Annual Tad( Sale
Sat., April 26th
6pm
Mason Co. FairgroYUdS

OVB Busy Bees Team

4126108 · '
10amto3pm

I

2 row ocean view.

Mason County Fair

Tomato Stakes
$9.50/doz sharpened Oall
.61 VtneSt. •
Open M-F 7 -6; Sat..B-S

61 Vine St Gallipolis
OPEN M-F 7 to 5
AR.BT05, SUN. 10T04

Open House

,Norttl Myrtle Beach
Sleeps 6, fully fumi&amp;hed,

O'Dell True Value lurriler

pe11011. Send ,1'81Jai'Vations to 1~~"---...._....;,.
:&gt;u....n;..
!lB.:.Y....1Cl-4
~-.-.-""""'..........J
' .
Kyger Creek Atumni.
O'Dell True Value lumber
P.O. Box350
We Rent RUG Dr. Carpel Cleaners
Cheshire, Ohio 45620 or
CaH 74[)-446-1276 to Reserve

'

flc:lilly

WMII-hlndllng -

~-'!~~,.~~~---·• PfHdftliuiOII testing

The

·

prapaeedsion of the COI!Ctwle
.11110· lhlo .,.. would
lmpcove the elllclclncr
and
envlronmentlil
conlnlll of the kMer·

• fiHt f'VIII

.

.

Ohio.

' DWrlllriB~a

the
The

~~~·1.!1 ~. ~~;:;:.____
• Crltiowl C.. SM&gt;iwiiCUI
CltdiiC ICU

' 130927) II localeel at 34878 Rode
Spring• Raacl, lll4llgs
Courily,
Pometoy,

DEADL IN E 2:00P.M . FRI.

Real Estate

----

I

FOR YOU!!

BULLETIN BOARD

f.o4,.,.... .. ile

em • ~-.,....

-c:ASH.aCQ{SJ

Q I
FRJIUIOCEIITS
OR U.S OF fiiU IS41 f

HAS

ttK'K~ A~CO-AN\'

1•:aes 111111 c.M:tes uu

CJTIE

·
Mountaineer by
2004
Montana"Trave1Tra iler, 33.5',
·2 slides. sleeps 6. EKoellent
Condkion. (740)379-2418

existing ~lid WIIS1e

table very ettacttve $750,

- - - - - - - - . Have yoU prioed a John
(3011111'2-3017 Hot Tub I SWim Spa Outlot Deere lately? You 'll be surprisad! Ched&lt; out oor used
$1000 off. Hugo selec1ion,
New Styies. Free DeiMI)'.
inventory
at
Top Quality. 606-929-5655 W W W . C A A E 0 . C OM
Carmichael Equipment. 740JET
446-241~
AEAI&lt;TtON MOlORS
·Fumiahad Apt. 2nd Ave. Repaired, Naw &amp; Rebull! In Sale "" King Kutter Tillers.
•Upstairs, Aa Utilities pd. "Sttx*. Call Ron Evans, 1- 4, 5 &amp; 6 ft. Jim's Farm
Equipment Call 740-44618R, No Pals, GallipoWs, 800-537·9528.
ClloC46-9523
m?

'

nat-

5pm.

Martole corner Garden Tub. 500 Ford Tiodor. $2900 Cal
•
. •OWner- water, _,., ·new $1 .500 304-675-791l1 4ol6-0373

)

of l'lllai-NDis, 27 cartons of floor Wes wmt
g/118, lund,tools &amp; much, much more, lots uf
·ltlaf MWI
CfJelled. Ilion!
rhliM f JHIOUS fumitur8 tmdtools 8te sffll
·oomingin.

...THE

740·~92-ll219.

r'

7 puppies need her!

app/illncs, lots of IDys, chair pads. 77' round
pool, akicfricaJ SM;8spet3, infants OUI door
srilgs, blanket, C&lt;ltTlfotl8rs, books, truo1c
Speakers, coolno&lt;a,.,, pillow, small appliance.
lamps, CD stereo, piclu,.,s, fishar price toys.
bali.fans, st;anding fans, Coleman camp
...,..., Kerosene heaters, HP printer,
aquariums, loy train 5BI wmt track and6
new 26 rolls walllr , _ , borc/er, lots and lots

Mitsubishi

I

German flo1twellers , 1st
shots, wormed.good ,marl&lt;·
ings,parents on &amp;ijjhl.$1 soM.- $160-F non-negotiable

Nursing~r-

·MI8c.: 6" snap pool. frJt5 of dishes, kilchen

07

Cuii'I'JIS &amp;
MoroR lloMfs

shots , wormod , tai~docked

llucih - · "' .... , Daktable.wilh51egs
&amp; 31eaWIS, · Victoiten dresser with
brown mall&gt;/e &amp; mirror. oryan stool wmt
claiNfld feet. Dunphyfi: table earner chairs
from 1887, coffBe grinder, Wayner Skillets,
fiddle &amp; case from 1911, accordion, much
. more48rflliredLongabeger&amp;sk91s,
costume jewelry, rolling pins.

i

r

$300 aect1. 7.of0.388-8788

$51).$60Jrnonttj

~INC.

wi.!f! ligflt.

mo.....

CKC Miniature Pinschers,

•• ~1:•1 een.

. ·~ hutch

13 HP Cod Cadet Riding
.
Mowar and 2 pooh
01 Oodge Dakota Club Cab.
.
Call
·
4•4, Exc. Cond., New
4-Pigs Whne &amp; Hamp Cuss
toreslbrakes. always servgilts8VIIi- Cal 7iood. 446-o795or441·7971
4073 or 7 «J-9.U--472S
·
1985 Ford F150, 4x4 ,
$2750. 44~·7514 or 256~
4-H $150. 740-992·
6926 ask tot Je
1606.
Lazy FleeOEi
rry.
Uvastoc:*.
01
Hyundai
Accent
V.w;;
Hatchbar:J&lt;. 5 speed trans.
b SAul
5 years old P&amp;rtonnanoa 65.310 miles. good conditostod BlatCt Angus Bull lion. needs catalytic oorwort- 1999 Plrmouth Voyager,
from Southern Bull test, 1()9-6339
er. Asking $2200. cau 7.t0-- run&amp; great. 10 month war$1 ,500 304-895-3496
'
rarity
on
AIC

4-wheeler 300EX. $1.000
{740)446-4060

7:::-:::-:----:-:-:--

Eleclllt E101rtise T6oling Phone---11 04 ahiit

•All - . averaging

"--(A-....,_

JP 7n:'IM

:AIIIII estate

Fumlluno: slackable stprage drawetS, night
stands. - . Strm.ge cabinet, matching
cribs wmt mallmsse!l. dinning table, srriall
table wittJ 2 chairs, cedar chast, end tables,
chairs, glass table top, white chest, bench,

.

SAVI...GS

llatlilf9: 51231118 6:1111

...._,====':::'::==&lt;~:;;n~~=· P.: ~

•Conh!!Lhill llle - - .
•Walhorldryei hoetiU!&gt;

__,...__"__

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

:!'!· $13125.000900
-=
- -----'

Get A Jump
on

Boston Terrier &amp; Pug m~ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - · Males, 9 wks old .
~ncemecltll
•-I'IOUI1
•
ts
Annoclncec'*IIS
puppoes.
..,,
1CIIIh&amp;i
Prindle in color. $1 00. Call
74().379-2467

~..,.._,.

~

_._ £~ .. • .,
·~O&gt;ftl&amp;

- , -~ ..-··
obo. 740-388-~ 520

I

~

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guar· ·
antee. Local references furnished. Established 1975.
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 4460870, Rogers Basement .
Waterproofing

1l'ncieJ St.tlon
·0... and Time o1

........
......... fltN!I
. . . TNt. ....
. . . . . . . .*' 0111
... tlllll_...
T_...,,..,
...._....,.
__ _,..,.,....._._,.,.,.....,

Aptf4 • · -· t •.,..

1

...

CUI 21~

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

Auc:tion

,.

r

...............;c- Dllod................. ...,...s,_.

AcniNfrom '-

,.o,

,__
...

'"",:a:;wl "ICIII'I!Nm.~~:', ~;....(f"O"ili t

Vftl•~ ,:;a; t-f"~ riWI-I\2if..t,t;

tlf llf(l . . . .o\ll,"":'li U""IQII."". U11l.Ul.P

MW.... _. :!' a"~'I"-'M.W

f amily an4fri£ndsfor your concern .

' 'felocllai

I

.

2003 Anlc Cal, 4-Whaelor
90, $700--32115

756 1

I ;I" I'I!'IU!I.\JtlliiMI.I1!U. '\"l'li.ltHIM. \~ 1:\iJ hJi

· ,....,.,..."". r~w.lii PI!oAU m.rll o&lt;Js.ut

loved you all. Also. thanks to the residents,

........ _._. ....._............................................................................. ......_........
GINGERICH ,, A

l_

r ..t~t!I"S
ltl ....,. • •

Jl4r,DIJ ANi!OC5 .

Apai botlidS

WU.: ft.III..PIJNP!I

~ .t.("!'lf("

r

Blm Y'lew

""'"~ n:atii.IJVl .,...;.o,Dt*

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

-~ .

bolh, CIA. Carpotllia.-

- ~I!WI-Iill!i

.. . . . . . . . . . ft."P&lt;"&lt;~a!tllti'OI•U" - -

...,.."

i

·rO

Dining Table: 48" round Qak,
reeded pedestal column
with 12" leal.· lour (4) Foench
Coumry ladder baok chain; ,
Made by PennsylVania
Amish. Purchased in 2003
for$1 .041 . SeiinglorS400.
Excel.lent Condition.
-'-·- .- - - - - Mutti-colored living room
suite. Burgundy, beige &amp;
brown.Likenew.$150. 441 -

a.

Backlloa. D_, S5,500 corn $4.00 a bushel 304- "m"o
'',:_Alison••-

!

:_ks

ftoors, tit appl. included:,
WID ~ . No pels PAl"
· Alrqllo storage aval~ 91 Simplicity, 17 hp· Kohler
able. Dep. Req. 44s-75s.t
eng, 48M mower deck_,
- - - - - - - - chains. 5' blade, not started
last year. $75. 10x1o dog lot
$100. 15ct upright ·freezer
$75. Patio sat w/ 5' glass top
•2&amp;Sbodooomapartments 4 chairs $125. 740-388- 500 Kawasaki M•k&gt; .$2200

~NN:t.~ n ~

Mill: , . L\IIJ

- N IIIiW'HWfl'1i

a loOrm

~

GlwN ·,;

40

Caii740-25WB90

built. Has on~ 8So brogonal
miles. Maroon Metall~ tan!&lt;

2005HondaCRF450Rwilh
a factory connection sus·
•
pension , good plastic and
01 ~Chevy Silveracta 2500 tires, many extras, good
foJ Sale 60 bu&amp;hels d ear HD LT, Cfew Cab, Long Bed, shape $3300 . ' 304-675·

:m:: , '. ,. 140-446Ferguson

iO

2005 Harfoy - ~
Foclory CUotom 1 of
1,~-oiiiiioiilioiiiiiiioioiiioo.'
200

ca•

r . . .._ Ir§

WWW.CARIIICHAEL ·
TR LEAS COM

Massie

2004 Yamaha 450 VFZ C : P " " ' - = - - - . ,
$2,900 304-576-2951
J:loME;

&amp; tins .. Witlo e mbossed
flames lhroughout. Price :
&lt;lnt1&gt;,!1l~, Dallwoo30k $16,000.00 MUST SEE to
Aegi11orod' Ptad&lt; Angus mi., 88 Lac.. 6 C!b, 60 ""'"'· API'AECIM'EI Pk&gt;ase
7 am-5pm 740"949-2217 &amp;
BuR. 740-441-7205 or 740- 446-7278 .
446-7410
.
6pm-9pm 740-949-2216

6 week , old Boston Terrier
'
Angus Bulls, show heifers.
pups. 4225. 388·9143 · or
~
•
1-3
Excellent Breeding , Top
44 755
.
.
Perlormance,
Priced
20x30 room ·avatla~le for AKC Reg Shill
.
1 R e a s o n a b 1y .
rent Ideal lor an office, small
·
u ~·
www.slaterunangus.com,
group or business . Located
olwldh," fin;t (MshOts)·
{740)286-5395
1 btotCt from the park cal voown
"0
'
'
U868B21or
info.
blacklwhtte (M). $300. 740.
more
·
446o0091 or 740-645415 Clth pigs tor sale; Af Si"ed
- - - -----;-•~
· _ from lop Boars In oountry;
1!::"'~~----, AKC Registered Yoride PJgsrightagetorMasonand
ll4ulmow
Male, 1 112 years old, Very Meigs~. Clll for .vi
Golni
small. 3 tbs. $600. 741J«S. IIPI!I.flhoeobend Show Pigs,
. 11855
7.00.258-1380

11.10

: - - - - - - ..-;:--:llowntown .,~. 3PR, . 1 112

--J~ UYIW."'I -

fl"lt

...

..aon&gt;o
•un~·'" '"""

1740)645-3372.

Bll - I I El
:-Sa-le~::-Pa-rba-r-,.Ca-rpat-:-$5-,95- J:i:'r'-000::---~
Townhouse apartments, yd remnants $40.00 &amp; up.
FARM
O!ldlor small houses FOR Mollohan Carpet. 2212
FlQurMFNr
RENT.. Call 1740)44H11t .Eastem Avo, Gallipolis,~ "--oiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiliii-,.1
fur -'icatooo &amp; oniormation. 7 4().448.7444
.

---

..

. ,..A?~- ~

.,

I

SPACE

FORibNr

(740)992.0165
Mollohan Fum. Porter, OH
'
.
17 3
CIICIVENENn.'f LIICAT· 388-0

MY

a eld.l.Wiflli.l.'IIID

i

1 year old male ooon·
hound with ,.._.....
nJ&gt;.--rc: $200 .
_

,..----- -

' ..... _.,.........., ......... ._.1111 ........

- ~...,L!'-"Ili.M."ltlti

no

, - : - - - - - - --

J.fl'ilii • • RI IIS• .,..._.PIII fvr!I L.- ..-f'.M~tiiNIJtW ·
'h.mut.lltC......tfln.

w

•

Mlddlaport .

&amp;ecurtty deposit requ~red,

. ,_,.fiii:I&amp; ........ WIII (knl; lll t .. .... ~. T- . . ~- ~ ... O.ION

W

·

3 2002

Pu.obrod Ar95 Butt. t/2
l'l&gt;rrtiac Clrand Am,
years &lt;*1. 44&amp;07il8 or 446- 4dr, 75000 mltas. 4 cyt • .,.0.
·btatCt. chromo wbeels.
4410
sharpl $4200 Cal 740-388o . - ~ · - 1 w~ 0010
' '"'"' . - - ·
~
doe$7S&amp; 1 "'-wethoir 4CIII. 5Taurs, SUn. 8vans.
$50. 7 - . s m
05 . 300LT, OO Must., n

Beech St., Middleport , 2 br. New couch &amp; chairs S325. Sheffie No~ $100 oacll 1st
apt., no pets, Table &amp; 4 chairs $200. Full
1""-r-•
'
ShOt &amp; wornwid, no ~rs .
dap.&amp;
ref.
reqUired , BIS &amp; mattress $150 .

...._£_ tte-~W - at ttt iiO

0.

!lldiD'"'.

red

EQUIPMENT TRAILERS,
CARGO . EXPRESS &amp;
H 0 M E S T E •A D E R
CARGO /CONCESSION
TRAn.ERS. S.W GOOSENECK
HitcHES ..
CARMICHAEL
EQUIPMENT ICARM ICHAEL
~RS SALES Ao SER·
VICE. Sl:'ECUIL 2llFT
GOOSENECK Fti\TBED
$3999. VIEW OllR ENTIRE
TRAILER INVENlORY AT

fUmiihad

._.....

...... w

IQI Roo'

· ·and,
·1'omaroy

........,...._.,w_,..., 2.....

-........

~

--

~· furnished
and u~~
and houses on

Auction

~NI-MtZ

_.,,__

C

I •.

ArliRrMtNrs

mshad

=-~

.

l

elderly/disabled , call 675- shots 8. wormed asking
6679
$300 304-S£13.:!820

t •nd 2 bedroom apan.

,._a
lAWN eau••••rt A
tlllllllNIAY. -.21 n :OOM

~

r

no pets. $275/month lost for Hud..ubsidozed . t -Ilt long haired Dachshund,
ir1ckldes WB1ar and sewer. apartm~
for
the 6man1hs, crate trained, all

'

'

pol~,

2Apartrnents
Bed
, Very Spacious,
turos ,'
'g
rooms, CIA, 1 112
Bath Aduft: Pool &amp; Baby moldslsn'1ker&amp;, guns, lmtveS,
,
trap~ Oldahoma Camp minPool, Patio. Stan $425/Mo. now tntp toys power toos
No Pets, Lease Pills hand toois Mudt More
'
Security Deposit Roquorod ,
(740)367.0547.
Prn; ·
IOlSAul
Twin R
1i
. ccept·

: : - , - - - - - - - - . ~~ - ower.,:a .
Taking applications for 2BR, ~
iea11ons . . walt•ng · 1 CKC registered male

HOPPES BARROW FEST

. ....,.. fOWU liTQ'aiMti

\

pets.

2
or pooplo, refer·
-enoes no petS 5 miles from
. •
·
·Gallln. no calls after
llpm.441.Q181
~-::--:----. -'lloblk&gt; home for rent on the
Bo-11 area . NO PETS.
74().4.41 -5551
~~

The Grand Finally of the
pig sell season

Auction

-----

The famil)' of Faye Sanders would liU to
express our llranks lo all the staff of Hoh,er
Senio r Care Center for ullthe cure and love
shown to our mother during her stay there; she

ql

no

~-·~I

Landaker or Cook Rds.
$300Jd&amp;,J. 44&amp;361~ ·
$19,900. Salem Ctr_ 19 - - - - - - - -

I.AM·---otff.QWM·L.MtN~ I

of respect we,.t"
rnMch upp reciated

Family

3

tract. 740-532-7123 or 740-

........ '"""""

the "'cent dearh

of Maxine,

L

outbuildings,ca.r·

•'··•u,_,.,.......

CBrdafTtlllnks .

,,,,
h.

S400 month $400

deporiift ~-3652·

3 11d. houoein l'omor&lt;J¥.
4 Podn&gt;orn Houaa for Rent
N-Mll
1 f /2 lllth. air, 1ul base- ssOO/rent . '$800/cleposit
~
• ment.2cargeroge , $650. · (740) 446-4000 or 367-7762
6 acres mil on Loft Follt Rei 740-949-2303.
near..lldclon &lt;Ptke. Prioldto
Small 2br conage, Buiavllte
&amp;elt. 446-7.52li
3 . bedroom house in Pille, Waterllras h pd, no
1'omaroy, · HUD approved, pats. Rei. Req. $ 350/clep
- - - - -- -'-- No pets, S400 mo+ S400 $S50- 388· 11 00
6110 of an acre tot on T...,. secu""' ......... ~ . {740)992·
for ent
Ad, ·in GdiPotis. 500 ·ft out· 331,4"' "..,....
Sinall. clean house
r ·
side tolty limits. water lllp, - ' -- - - -- - Liv. Rm., BR, Eat·in K$300n
: &amp;
sewer. WII9EIII on land conBedmom House In Ba~. $300 per mo..

740-828-2750 ·

Cash

Houle in New Haven,

. No Pols

~~

LoJs&amp;

M..o~ .~~""'...... 1 a- ·~lng

213 "BR 00 2 e.aes, fenced
back van:t. Up&amp;laira: 2 1!2
BR &amp; ba1h. ~stairs: L.A.,
F.R, D.A.. Kit. &amp; bath .
.
_
.
.
~d 5 mikE from ~olzer,
. Tli'"Jll!!tifllul Ptom.Qress-;!lltr OOio!oo!ia "" """'"';
Alli.Site 1-:-2. Worn only i!lt Ponl!f" R~ ~ · 554, !tiR+t~Q
Meigs, Must see. 740-992· $85,000: _,y ...
3483.
call for mare Info. 388-0044

The Family ofFaye Sunders

Okty &amp; Irene

--.~lon,au
••,.
tamiHai..,.«"NIIIOnlll
ar1g1n, or..,. intlnllon 1o

Three ·beautiful Prom dTeSSas.Size 1 ~2. Worn only at
Meigs. 'Must see. 74(HJ92·
348a.

Avg. Pay $20/hr or

.

ly hOme •. on 1 acre ml1 wf
bact&lt;yard privacy 1Bnoe in
Galltpolis. tnis2100SQ"A. 3

,, 3tJ&lt;

Ra RINr

· ~-iiHIH' . . .....

POST OFFICE NOW
HIRING

lW wuulil like tv
thank everyone
who sent cards &amp;
family for ri!R
gifts and special
dinner fo r our
60th wedding
Anniversary.

&amp;ldtwtiw .._,.
P''*''.....,
lllniMtion or

0 down payment 4 bedrooms. La1g0 yard. Covered
docl&lt;. Attacf1od garage. 740367-7129

'LOWboy
10.000
lbs,GWI Brakes on tme Pie
w/ramps $2!JOO 080
742-4011

dunatirm s, R~fts. , called or w me by with a
kind word,' and to all ofyou who he~
in anyway. thanks.' Tha nks w Willis
Fu neral R ome , Dr. Richard Simpson. and
Pat Fisco f or their care .
'

Card of Thanks

~

Rlx!iJ!S

(aiD V.., Iiri_l ..... ~----·to.MC81!C!Iit'l) Qo.2..... 'ICI
C..... .p. "T-Itir;II D ..........

1~94

All replies will be kept in
strict confidence.

$57K/yr, ind uces
Federal Bene1its, OT.
ortered by Exam Services,
not offered w/ USPS Who
hires.
1--866-403·2582

· for an updated lam·
Looking

dl.,.lwMndon._...on

,._, ~-&amp;mtWI • Page DS

~ u.tng 1 and 2
NIO USED IITHL EIIY. INTEGRITY. KEFER I'OIIod/looeloods. 2Puls. 12 2001 Fonl - g Cpe. 2003 Honda
XR100 . R\1 Ser'Yioe at Carmk:hael
Bedroom Apts . a t Vilk&gt;ge s- e-ns. Pipe Rebar BUILT,
VALLEY ·old, 1 Haifor. 10 black. 86,000 orig. miles. Exoellont Condftion . $975 . Tra iklrs 740-446-3825 ·
Manor and Ri...- Apts. in For Ccoorete, ~. HORSE / LIVESTOCK mon1hsold, $600each:J04. new tires, garage kept, Ca~740-446-9 708
Middleport, 1rom S327 to Channel, Flo! Par, Steel TRALERS. LOAD MAX s.z774
$6700 080, 1740)742-2404

$592. 740-9!12-5064. Equal Grating
For li..rns,
Housing ()ppootriy.
~ &amp; -ays. L&amp;L
l!BR, 2 balh, al eloctric .
.
Scrap~ ()port Mondar.
(AEP) CIA. 9101 SA 7 N, Midoleport N.3rd ......,2 Br. Tuesllay; VVedo-y &amp;
CllOohke Cinio.
740- unfur!'Mshed,no pets,dep. &amp; Friday, Bam-4~. Ciooed
446-4234 or 740-208-7B6t - . ,..... 740-992.0165. Thursday,
SatiJfday &amp;
::::::--:---~- ::---:----~- Sunday. {7.00)44&amp;-7300
!BR, 2 bath, $47!ilmonth. NewHa...,, tbedroomfa"·
. 740-367·77'Cl2 .
apt. ...... &amp; ioler- Orig. GriiiiiiOid cast Iron
-:--:---:-----'-...,.
~.
' onces. No peto.740·992·
~ ~
"-· . ~-~•. ;
• bedroom, 2 bath with Pool. 0165
atoo-12 SldloC has,_ ring11800 month plus depos~ ,
.
A·1 $890. for both. Ironton ..
Gallipolis Ferry 740-041- Nice quiet 2BR apt. 0 .·74Q.533.3870
9931 7
"' 40-4467227
References &amp;
doposk
Reduction l.nventory Sale
94MH, 2BR2bath, ,&amp;ace- mquired. Nol'llts. 44&amp;1271 tOBBrown .S t. Mason, IW
fu1 location. $400/month + or 709-1657
304-773-S296n.-anower
Uliillies. 6 ~ from Holzer
1ry later. Aluminum ~
In Alo GTande. 44&amp;-6865
Tara
Townhouse Boat Trailar/\Aotor fishing

depoolt--3652

......ftl'l},,..,.• ....,

mrodgtlfSQ mydailytribun&amp;.com

j

,.._-Oil
socw.

.galiipOiiilcaree!OOIIege.ectu

Accredited Membar
Councl lor

~~-""'
••-.~-...
~·

or loss iri740-446-7029
Gallipolis. Allking
l'lllliiiBlNAL
' $80.000.
Survo;s
· New Jog horne sitting on

Cornpetltivo ....gos &amp; bene.,.,........"""
fits including heanh insurance and mileage.- Phone Gill; 11
c.....,.
740-441 ·1393 for more inlo (Ca-. C-To Home)
or apply at 1480 Jackson Clll Todoyl 1~,
Pike, Gallipolis, ~io.
1-800-214-0452

~

m,.tt;uaQII!aiiQfr~.oom

Public Auction

All• - a d 0 ltu6ng
tnWI••• I I ·11
8libjlcttottw,...._

7

Sowns

Midwest

M-

AUction

Duplex lor Sale on Land $45,000, 7.of0.94!1-2539.

announoem

~;,Val~ Hcwne HeaRn. :•.::a~daskNo ~:ish~:C:::n~:l

~:m:r~PNo! . r!ICI

.n

,.

' LMI)

mymidoestl.,.no.oom
- - -- - - -NEW ·- 4 br · 2ba
1.700 sq tt $49,989

r-

same as rent. .

I::!:::::12;..,_;__.J
flexible

- $ 5 5,000 0110. 740-.
441· 1115.

.:o•

51900 - . , Sow$50001
7
2750.

acres S45 sooo .Reedsville 1
acres $ 1 4 . ~ . Danville B
mymidWesthome.com
.acres $22,500. Gallia Co. 7,
New 3 Bedroom homes from ·aor 10 acres $12.500! Cali
LoCators. ing, fenced yard, clC88 to
74P441 ~ 1492 for maps or
sch~s.
Excellent 5214.36 per mOnth. lhcludes
many
upgrades,
deli~~ery &amp; visit www.brunerland.com.
Condition! 740-441-1202.
We finance!
Sal·l.l'· {740)385-2434

Mortgage
(740)36?..()000

Managar knOWledge. the SUper 8 ·Mmel is looking lor
posflion will require Direct .a front desk associate. MUS1

lflil1l and' 90ic20

flnood In

M - 7·"82" ~50
_,.. 17"'

Largo 2 -story home on
o-utLo~n·o ~~.:"'" perfect cred~ Locust Stroot. Galtipalis. 4
recolmnlenrjsl
Bedrooms. 2 Path. KIT, FM,
• Payment could be the OR, LR, Laundry, out~bultd-

---::'cc:c-:::-:-c-:::--

.

AND..-. ,.,.. 3
bod. 2 1&gt;1t1t. land,
gerage
u n -. INdY 10 move into. Only 3119
ExcO!Ientcondl!lonn&gt;adyto a month (wac). 866·564·
moYO irt $255,000.00, can: B679.1111STSALE
{740)949-2217
.;__.;___ _ _ _ _ _ - ----!I..-.-RS·I80'--=0hi:"',0:"--.largesl&gt;display

·
All iilkwd
.
Ferry ' WV 25515. Pt1 800BlarE
local oornpony - g "NN
669-1809 or taxt~30H75OlitoKruonY
DOWN PAYMENr pro4682 .
MIFIDN
EOE ~::::;;;:~ grams br you to buy your
w w w . g o r I c:; . c o m
hOme instead of renting.
www.rtrtlc.com
• 100% financing

Machine/Fabricator
SL
Manger: Appl icant must
have 2 year ~ree or reiat·
eel eJCperienoe, 10 years in'

.

Beautiful doubllwidl with

r·

----

2llr at Jollnsono Mobile
Homo ParCc. Clll446-2003
,
211r, 1 bolh. l 636 Cha1hem
Ale. 740-44&amp;-4234 or 74021141-7861

3br House in Muon. No
Pots, $400 month. $400

od...,. ool. 74!!-742-4011 .

93 Ctayton 3PR, 2 bolh
$10,000. ~ 112. Cio,ton
28R, 1bolh$7.000. -IIO
8 1 - - - - - d a n . -. CII740-JW.1179

&amp; Trimming. 11M Est&gt;oColi {740)441-1333 or
(740ll! 45 054e
·
Need flalp wllfl oaring for a
lcwed one orhouset aaping?
Reterenoas and 18
eoq&gt;erienoe 740-311Hl82:1
.
·
77 . Jolawfhorno Ln., Pt.
Need Your Vllld - ??? Pteosant. 3br. t ba, tOIMiF
Call Adam 304-675'3795 or New """'ringo, 304-6 ,..
p,~nt.
now heat po.mp
7 5016
519,000 3()4..593-6979

rO .

1iait,
2008 3 bodroom 2 bolh ooc- - - f o r sale 1170 \IOBILE HOME LOT FOR 3 Bedloom. Full ·B
tionol home $279 por month 2 lldnn. 12XBO Tr. in good RENT. 1031 Georges Cntek lalllO Lot. No Pols 304-6753431
7~7671 .
"""""forogollUrTOIItiy-· Ad, 441·11 11

'=:

tionlphonolgellOf&amp;i office
SkHls. We o1lar a very corn1)01111W-anda"""l'"'"
hens.lve benefits pa~ge
that inclUdes a 401 k ~
mont plan a nd free 101CIIIi0n
lodging at our empl oyee
rosonsinA.MyorsBeact1&amp;
Daytona Peach. FL. Big
Bear Lake. CA. and Pigeon
folgO, TN . Come tot a personal interview .. 81 6,36

• Pt, Pleasant, WV

I

2000 CUstom Buin Cope HOu80 for Sll8 in Roaino
Cod. 48R 2 BA Fin, 11r01. Approlc. 4 """"'· al
P ·, nont, lotolod- polossionolly -oped
of Rio Grinde in a - Rand&gt; style ~ ..., 4
localion. $1!!·~ · bodoouoo6, IMng
~
Cd for., oppt 7~ ingmom,-. -.-~
0125

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, oH

•

April 21st, 2008
7:30pm

Election
May 5th, 2008
7:30pm
FriBndtl I F1mlly Slle
Sundly. April 20 12-8 pm
40% off Rig. Pncl
30%m.tildown '
Splc(al After Hourt ~
5-8 flt'n SO% off Reg.
Price 30% oil Markdown

FASHION BUG
Ohio RM!r Plaza Gallipolis

$GOLD$
is at ~s highesi

price in over 25 years.
~- We lluy llroke!l gol d jewelry;
chains, brac'eiets , rings,

coins etc.
thai you no longer want
or wear.
Tom ~ into cash or trade us
for new gold jewelry.
Bring Valid 1.0.

A.L Terry Jewelers
• 214 Broadway Slreet
Downtown Jackson, Ohio

740-286-2326

· --

�•

.
: Page D6 • The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Middleport • Pomeroy • Gallipolis, OH • Point fle&lt;!sant, VWV

Sunday, Apri121J, 2008

Book club serves
as forum for
diverse opinions, Aa

HMC hosts 'Footprints
to Footsteps' ·
Celebration, A6

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
:;o CL\''1S • \" ol.

'I 0\' ll \\ . \PR I L 21, 2ooR

.-; - . '\u . 1 &lt;) :!

""" . '"' cl .rr h "'"'"" I • .. ,"

•

SPORTS

ColtJJnbia Gas to replace pipeline in P9meroy

•Cavsopen
playoffs with win
fNer Washington. ·

Seehgl: 81

POMEROY -· Pomeroy
will be one of the ftrSt communities to benefit from
Columbia Gas of Ohio's $2
billion improvement til its
existing _pipleline systein.
Columbia
Gas
will
replace around 10,000 .feet
of pipeline in Pomeroy and
have already begun notifying customers when the
work will begin as ~ell as

when individual streets will
be done. An initial listing of
streets where work wiU be
done includes Legion
Terrace, Mulberry Avenue,
Anne Street. East Second
Street. West Second Street.
Court Street, East Main
Street, West Main Street,
Butternut Avenue, Lincoln
Terrace, Mechanic Street.
AU customers will be notified before consuuction
begins possibly this month.
Customers· will also receive

updales throughout the con- pipeline replacement could restore any landscaping that
suuction. As for who
take several months. In is disrupted.
pay for this upgrade. the cost addition to the replacement
Questions about the proof building•. maintaining and of main gas pipeline, ject can be directed to
replacing the pipeline system Columbia Gas will also be Columbia Gas employees
is shared by all customers replacing service lines that or by calling 1-800-344and is part of the monthly bill connect to the main pipeline 4077
or
going
to
they pay. Colwnbia Gas says from a home or business. www.ColumbiaGasOhio.c
customers won't have to pay and the company will relo- om.
sjJecifically for the improve- cate gas meters outside the
Columbia Gas is replacment for their Pomeroy home if not already outside . ing portions of their pipline
neighborhood.
Some digging will be nec- systems with a longer-lastWmt on individual prop- essary for the project but ing, · s~cially-designed ,
erties will be completed in Columbia Gas claims it will plastic
replacing the
one dlly though the entire do as little as possible. and existing steel pipe. ·

will

P•Pe·

Final meeting
set on Syracuse
distress grant
BY BEnt SERGENT

.

BSERGENTOMYDAILYSENT1NELCOM

OBnuARIES
Page AS
• Melvin c. Coen, 86
-

INSIDE
_._!_Print OOIIEIQtierut _

K8nfledY MilseUm.

.See.,. Al

• Conference to
discuss locally
grown foods demand.

SeePa&amp;eAl
·• Web site helps
people ~ disabilities.

SeePageA3
• Childlen's Maypole
wrapping and tea party
planned. See Page A3
•· Meigs County 4-H
:News,•.,jee Pale AS
.• BlooSnobile collects
46 units. See Pale A6

' BY BAlAN J.

REED

BREEDOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

MIDDIJEP()RT- "We don't know
who is goin&amp; to be the next president.
but we kn~. will be a Democrat."
"It may bC ·a while before we know
who it is going to be. If it is Senator
Clinton, the ftrst woman President will
be a Democrat. If it is Senator Obama,
the first
of color to be President
will be a Democrat. That's something
we can be proud of."
Meigs County Democratic Party
Chairman .Henry Hunter told the
party faithful Saturday night that

i'

person

WEATHER

theirs was the "party of inclusion,"
and said its membership is at a record
high, not only across the nation but in
the county, as well.
The Pll!lY held.its annual JeffersonJackson Pinner ·Saturday night at the
Riverbend Arts Council. Athens City
Councilwoman Debbie Phillips, candidate for the Ohio House. of
Representatives, was the keynote
speaker. Hunter was elected party
chairman in March. His sister, Sue
Maison, resigned as ·party chairman in
January, when · she assumed a new
position with the . Ohio Bureau of
Motor Vehicles. County Commis~ioner

_Court nixes AEP rate hike
BY DIANE PorrOHFF
NEW HAVEN, W.Va. Mason County is going to
have to wait a little longer
for construction to begin on
the Integrated Gasification
Combined Cycle plant next
. zS~-1ZPAGES
to
American
Electric
Power's
Mountaineer
Plant
Annie's Mailbox
in New Haven.
In a ruling filed last week,
Calendars
State
the
Virginia
· Classifieds
Corporation Commission
(SCC) denied .a request
Comics
Bs from Appalachian Power
Co. (APCo), an affiliate of
Editorials
A4 AEP, for a rate increase that
would help the company
Movies
B6 · recover costs with the consuuction of the plant.
Obituaries
"This decision is disappointing,"
AEP S('?kesman
Sports
8 Section Phil Moye
s81d. "We
Weather
A.6 ' believe Appalachian Power
presented an excellent case
© •oo8 ohio v~ P ........ eo. for both the need .for the
plant and recovery of the
'costs in Virginia.
"We still believe that
lGCC p(Jwer generation
4 teehnology is the best way

INDEX

PIMNseeDa•aaaiiii.AS

Pia•~- Gr..t. AS

SHS Prom RoyalfY.

request for Mason County plant
()lUI 10 UFOMVtWLVJiB~ISlS:UXlM

SYRACUSE- The third
and final meeting of the
Community Development
Block Grant I Distress
Grant will be held at 7 p.m.,
Tuesday, April. 29 at the
Syracuse
Community
Center.
The final meeting is to
inform residents what the
majority bas chosen as worthy projects for the grant
funds and how those grant
funds will be distributed if,
in fact, the grant is awarded
to the village. All projects
were chosen by the residents via surveys which had
been !listributed and collect·
ed af the two, . previous
meetings. The $300,000
pant is used for community
Improvements and was_____
most recently reeeived by
Pomeroy which used the
funds for fire equipment,
the demolition of condemned homes and sidewalk replaCement.
The grant also requires a
$150,000 match which
does not necessarily mean
the village has to come up
with $150,000 cash, but
$150,000 worth of .local
improvements projects in
Mick Davenport had served as the act- the
village
such
as
ing chairman until the party organized improvements to Syracuse
following the March pri.mary.
M uni ci pal Park or the
Bunter said he reviewed voter regis- Syracuse
Community
tration records after the March primary, Center. At ·neKt week's
and said many long-time Republican meeting · Village Grants
families are now Democratic ones.. Writer Fred Hoffman will
Nearly twice as many registered voters also present the status of
in Hunter's home precinct in Chester several grants he has
Township cast Democratic ballots this applied for which will
year than two years ago.
count towards the $150,000
"I saw names - entire households match. The Meigs County
- that I never believed would come Commissioners
have
over to the Democratic Party, and they already promised $20,000

-'

to meet the growing
demands of our customers
i!fid to ensure future energy
supplies by allowing us to
continue to use domestic
coal reserves with Jess environmental impact" Moye
added. 'This decision continues to demonstrate the
difficulty in getting needed
power plants approved by
states when we don 'I have
clear direction regarding
future requirements to
address .climate change."
He said it is the company 's strong belief that coal
has to continue to be a bigger part of the country's
energy mix and that the
IGCC represents the best.
way coal can be ut;ed in an
environmentally-friendly ·
. manner.
AEP intends to appeal
V'~rginia's ruling .
·
Last month, Appalachian
Power received authority
Beth Set genl/photo
from the Public Service
This
past
saturday
night,
amid
a
pirate
ship
and
sandy
beach
,
Courtney
Ginther
and Tyler
Commission
of
West ·
V'UJinia to build the 629- ~1rcle were named the Southern Hi~h School Prom Queen and King, respectively. Ginther
ts the daughter of Jeff and Cindy utnther of Portland while Circle is the son of Jeff and
Sonia Circle of long Bottom.
Piun-••-.AS

..
•

A

•

..

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