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LiviNG

ALONG THE RivER

n.e lle•llliy Plaie: Recipe for Herb-rubbed

Goodwill offers job opportunities, bargain
. hunting in Middleport. Cl

.

Grilled Scallops, D 1

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Hometown News for _Gallia &amp;: Meigs countie!i)

911 .vendor cdecision expected

SPORTS
_• Eastern boys win lVC
,HockinQ title. Set Pale Bl

BY BRIAN J. Rem
I!REEOCIMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY
- · Meigs
County
Commissioners
expect to choose a ve11dor
of equipment for the county's uew 911 emergency
system on Monday.
Mid:
Commissioner
Davenport said the county's
9ll committee will meet
agam Monday to select an
equipment package, software and maintenance

agreement. Two vendors
have met with the commit·
tee about the equip~,q,t,
Verizon · and Eniergi@li.
Veriron representatives met
most recently with the committee, at Thursday's regular commissioners' meeting.
Emergitecb . provided the
equipment used by 911 centers in both Athens and
Gallia counties, Davenport
said. The 911 committee
bad chosen Emergit.ecb as ·
the vendor earlier this year,

but Veriwn countered with dent addresses, fire rones
a proposal of its own.
and other information needDavenport said the com- ed 19 implement the service.
mittee must compare the
·Earlier
this
year,
two proposals carefully, but Emergency
Medical
hopes to finalize a decision Services Director Doug
Lavender, who is working
Monday.
.
"We want to make sure closely with commissioners
we're making an apples-to- to implement the 911 sysapples
comparison," tem, said the cost of equipDavenport said. ·
ping the new ·911 center is
Verizon is already work- . estimated at $120,000. It is
ing with the 911 committee expected to take 60 to 90
in another capacity, devel- days to install.
oping the database of resiInstallation of the con-

soles and other equipment
will be the final step in
preparing the 911 center for
operation, because it must
be carefully monitored for
temperature and other con·
siderations.
1be 911 committee is also
close to a decision on where
to locate the 911 center. The
sheriff's department bas
-been eliminated as a possible choice, and earlier plans

PI•- tee Dedlloa. Al

Foster .parents.·help
keep kids in Meigs
BY BETH SERGENT

county.
Currently there are 11
children in foster care in
MIDDLEPORT
Meigs Clilunty . tho.ugb that
Emergencies never happen number could shoot up
when it's convenient and ovemigbt if an emergency
when they happen to chi!- arises. A foster borne .may
dreri in Meigs County who , be needed for a weekend, a
require foster care, where do month or years, depending
those children go? •
on the situation which a fosCurrently the Meigs ter parent bas control over.
County Departm~nt of Job
Shank said his agency
and Family Services is works with the foster parent
attempting to ensure those to place the correct child in
children stay in. the county the right home by allowing
but the agency needs more that prospecti·ve parent to
foster homes to accomplish guide the process. The fosthat goal.
ter parent tells the agency
· Ohris Shank. social ser- what type of child they are
BSEAGENTOMVDAILVSENTlNELCOM

OBITUARIEs
Page AS
. •Gary Philip~-

: • Linda K Patterson
• Mary K Sowards

.,·-· Davis

. • ·C..Inh

~leo Bradley Shaw
~Wa!are A.

Smilh Jr.

INsiDE

Classo£2008

h&amp;ell•

lvl~·ce~&amp;~·coordin;~·~ator~~~~or~D~JFS~,~~~·~~to~
by
-:nd the licensed adoptive
medical issues, etc.

~~J!e.,.:-. ...,

-:.~Capital? -

parents .as well as contracts
with foster care networks
out of me county to place :
Juanita, left, and Miirion Pierce toast llleir l iv.es togetlier after their maniage ·.
were children. Shank said he'd
renewed on Friday at Scenic Hills filursin_g Center, Wlilere they ililav.e resided 'lOr ttl" past like to see that number of
year. The couple has been together for 25 years. ·
local fasterers •total around
.l 0 ta keep •the diS1111Jltion in
. !)le children's !lives tQ. a min'

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fostering sus1aiAable
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tourism. Slle P.ie A7
,... Point Pleasant man·
"1&lt;illed in accident.
Seti'IIJieA7

Together forever

·Couple renews wedding vows at center_

•

BY KeviN KELLY

followed by a reception.
KKELLVCIMVDAILVTI'IIBUNE.COM
Marion Pierce celebrated
his 94th birthday on
GALLiPOLIS - It is Saturday, while, :Juanita's
said love springs eternal, age was not immediately
and perhaps no better available .
demonstration of that senti- . Formerly of Gallipolis,
ment was seen by residents the couple has resided at
and staff of Scenic Hills Scenic Hills since 2007.
Marion, dressed in a Navy
Nursing Center on Friday.
In an afternoon ceremony, blue suit and Juanita, wearScenic Hilts residents ing a lavender and white
Marion and I uanita Pierce lace gown, had their vows·
renewed their wedding renewed by the Rev. Alfred
Holley before a lighted arch
VOWS. They both manied
late in life and have been and to •the delight of fellow
together lfor 25 years. The residents and staff who
ceremony was ammgcd by attended. A cake and punch
the facility's staff and was were served afterward. and

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Peiebrations

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·. whO -J,.ve wo.ilted _$ 0 hard_i~Jwards

.comirunUment day. Seize · the day ilnd .·.
nul}' al~ 1~' ~l'ea_ms

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C4
DSection

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Obituaries

SportS
Weather · ·

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the couple toasted the staffs
blessing .o f amther quarter
of a century together.
Life · Ambulance, Basket
Delights and That Special
Touch donated to the ceremony, said Holly Rowe,
Scenic Hills' director of
admissions aild markflting.
"lt's a good thing for the
public to know that we take
interest in our residenis'
li~es," Rowe said. ·
The ceremony was one of
the last activities planned by
Scenic Hills as part of its
observation of National
Nursing Home Week, she
added.

By keeping foster homes
in the county, this allows
children to stay in the
same school, to stay in
contact with their friends
and it's easier to work
w~tb children and their
families fFom a case work·
er's point tlf view if bom
are located are in th~ same

Missing man search ends at parkfront

. --:.

u;All _
Our LOcal Graduates.. ~
Here~_ tt~ all the young men atUI ~men

Jmum.

The process to become a
foster .parent includes the
following: Everyone in the
home must have a physical
comJ?leted by a family
fbysJcian, the home must be
mspected by the frre marshal, and there must be
background checks done by
the FBI and BCI.
·
As an incentive, the DJFS
pays for the background
obecks and fire inspection.
There is also 36 hours of
training required which .can
be obtained. in Athens on
weekends though Shank said
"· ...... M 'IS. Al ·

NEWSDM'fllAILVTI'IIBUNE.COM

GALLIPOLIS ·
Authorities TCGOvered the
body of an 80-year-old
Gallipolis man from the
Ohio · . River near the
Gallipolis City Park · on
-···
Friday.
The identity of the man
bad not been . officially
released prior to presstime
Saturday, but reports identift.ed him as Ralph Davis. ,
Gallia County 911 said it

received a repon early in
the afternoon from a family
member that Davis had
been missing since midmorning. The relative bad
been searching for him for
about three hours without
· success. Local authorities
were notified and given a
description of Davis and the
car be was driving to conduct a well-being check.
At 2:35 p .m., 911 was
informed the car had been
found at the city park. But a
few minutes later, another

relative who bad heen
searching
for · Davis
infooned police be found
him in the river just south of
the boat launch area. where
a Glillia County EMS unit
remained to assist with
recovery.
·Due-to West Virginia .hav. Hope RauM/pholo .
ing jurisdiction · ov.et the Re-enactor Doug Wood discusses various aspects of 18th
nver, the . Pomt . Pleasant _ .century life with a group of students during Friday's ei~
Volunteer Ftre Department annual Siege of Fort Randolph at Krodel Park tn Potnt
was ~spatched to the sce_ne Pleasant, W.Va. ·childre(l from various schools in Ohio
With Its boat;· along wJth were on hand the majority of the day to receive an up-close
Pltue ... 1'1 d ~ Al
history le~on .

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�PageA2

REGIONAL
Graduating today Where is real the Walleye Capital?

6unbap liam-ientixtl

Kenneth Voglesong

~111h Wachter

Morgan Werry
....:·-·

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These ·five Eastern High
School seniors a~e among
the 57 graduates who will
receive diplomas in ceremonies today. Their senior
• photos were unintentionally
omitted from the graduation
special section in Friday's
Daily Sentinel, and are
printed here.
Submitted photoa

Erie come to spawn here,"
he said. "From the biology
standpoint, this is the most
fertile part of the lake for
feeding and spawning. Most
of the walleye fishing goes
on in the waters of-Ottawa
County."
With all those fish ,
anglers have a better chance
·of successfully baggmg the
coveted fish, he said.
Add Captain Wylie, the
17-foot-long
fiberglass
walleye the city drops from
a crane on New Year's Eve
and the annual Memorial
Day weekend Walleye
Festival, and Snyder is confident no body of ,water can
beat Port Clinton s part of
the lake.,
,
But that doe_sn t · mean
other areas li!C w1thout great
wal~ey~ fishl!lg.
,.
~1shmg _IS Baudette s
mml' attractmn, and It, too,
draws anglers from across
the coun , Cauble said .
Since try 1959 , . Willy
Walleye, the 25-ton, 40foot long fiberglass wall. eye that dwarfs .Port
Clinton 's Captain Wylie.
has anchored the town of
I 100 people Cauble said.
·Each June, the locals celebrate Willy Walleye Days,
;i festival similar to Port
Clinton's Walleye Fe8tival.
Michigan's capitals don 't
have giant walleye statues,
but they have plenty to brag
about.
Lake Huron's Saginaw
Bay walleye numbers have
increased in recent years
after excellent spawning
·classes from 2003 to 2005
and in 2007, said Jim Baker,
fishe":es . unit manager for
the M1chigan Department of
Natural ResoUrces, Southern
Lake
Huron
Fisheries
Management Unit.

Lake of the Woods Tourism
PORT CUNTON (AP) Former Mayor Tom Brown Bureau abandoned its applimade up his mind the cation for the trademark,
minute he donned his wall- effe.;tively rendering its
eye hat II years ago.
effort dead, at least for now.
Port Clinton had long Bureau officials did not
been known for its bountiful respond to the U.S. Patent
fishery, especially the plen- and Trademark Office's
tiful and prized walleye.
. request for more informal! was time to cash in on tion ·on how they would use
the city's sterling reputation the walleye capital moniker,
with anglers, who trave l · according to the trademark
across the United States l\lld office.
beyond to reel in., the tasty
Bureau
Executive
fish.
·
Director Denelle Cauble
The city began its first said she didn't know the
New Year's Eve walleye application was abandoned.
"Everybody knows the
drop at midnight that year,
and what locals said for .truth," she said. "Lake of
decades was official: Port the Woods is the walleye
Clinton is the Walle ye capital."
Snyder . said Cauble's
Capital of the World.
There's just one problem, assertion is a kettle of fish.
At least SIX other towns m
"When you look at Lake
the United States claim to Erie, there is no other body
be the walleye capital. too. . of water that produces the
Baudette ,
Minn .; poundage per acre of wallGarrison and · Mobridge, eye that Lake Erie does,"
S.D.; the Big and Little Snyder said. '"fens of thouBays
de
Noc
near sands of anglers come here
Escanaba, Mich .; the to fi sh each year."
Saginaw Bay along Bay
What makes a walleye
City, Mich.; and Umatilla, · capital?
Port' Clinton has all the
Ore., are advertised as capitals .. And Brown mi ght ingredients to keep the wallhave swiped the title from eye capital .name, Snyder
the rest of Lake Erie, said.
Roughly one-third of the
which Fred Snyder, Ohio
State University Sea Grant 360 to 380 . marinas on
~;xtension specialist, said Ohio's Lake Erie shoreline
was known in the early are' ' located in the Port
'80s collectively as the Clinton area. With the nearcapital.
•
by islands and harbors in
Tourism officials in the area, .it is a prime locaBaudette knocked two other tion for marina · developMinnesota towns off the ment an!l therefore has an
walleye wagon last year advantage in attracting
when they obtained a state anglers, be said.
trademark for the term.
The city is located along
Then ·they applied for a fed- Lake Erie's Western Basin,
era! trademart to definitive- the shallowest part of the
ly milke Baudette · and its lake. Rife with sub';:led
Lake of dJe Woods the only ' reefs, the bas.in is a
ect
capital.
·
.
. 'place for walleye ·to spawn.
· In Januitry, however, the. , "Fish from all over Lake
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~ {AP) '--- A. req~ by 200J or lose
SQme · fedmll• fuoclinv. The
1· ~W • ~g\L~
" ' • --~ · ·tbi:
1.or'lime, federal law is namtii after

conv.
sq.'flll'eoder:S must
regie with' police is unconstitutional, a judge rt,iled.
The law, which took effect
in January, wrongfully
increases punishment without a court hearing and . is
applied to offenders who
committed crimes before the
law was passed in 2007, said
Cuyahoga County Common
Pleas Judge Ronald Suster.
Suster, who issued the ruling last week .in a .case ·
involving a man convicted
of sexual battery in 2003,
said the law's intention is
"to punish and ostracize this
unpopular group," rather
than
enhance public safety.
•
Kevin Kelly/photo
The
state Legislature
;Juanita McKean Saundef5!, left, accepted a proclamation
from Gov. Ted Strickland on behalf ot her sister, Mrs. Elmer passed the law last year to
E. (Jew~ll - McKean) Caldwell of Gallipolis, who celebrated comply with a federal one
her 100th birthday on May 15. The presentation occurred that requires strues to increase
sex offender registration ·
during the Kennedy Day recognition dinner hosted by
Gallia County Democrats on May 12. The gowmor, who
toured local industrial sites earlier in the day, was also the
guest at a reception hosied by Mrs. Saunders' son and
daughter-in-law, Brent and Shawn Saunders.

The law "goes beyond
mere 'official archives of
criminal records' into a system that effectively ostracizes offenders and subjects
the offenders to harassment
and ridicule as well as
potential abuse," Suster

Adam WalSh, a 6-year~ld
Florida boy abducted and
kiUed in 1981.
The state has about 23,000
registered sex offenders
under ei,ght classifications.
Under the new 'law, offunders · are classified under a
three-tier system. It requires
longer registration times for
felons and mandatory community notification for some
offenders once considered
low level.
The goal was to prevent
sex offenders from slipping
through the cracks and comniitting other sex crimes.
Suster's ruling backs the
arguments made in a f~
class-action lawsuit filed in
January by the Cuyahoga
County Public Defender's
Office on behalf of sex
offender registrants statewide.

Missing

Decision

fromPageAl

fromPageAl

We offer the
best prices
and protection
for you.

wrote.
The rulfug prevents the
state from enfon:ing the law
against Tramaine .Evan_s, 30,
who was convicted ·of sexual
battery in ·2003 and served a
year in priSon.
Evans was instructed to
register every year for I 0
years as a sexually oriented
offender. Under the new
law, he had been reclassi~
fled as a Tier ill sex offender who must register every
90 d,ays, notify neighbors of.
his criririnal record and live
by residency restrictions for
the rest of his life.
The state has 30 days to
appeal.

• :Q!&lt;ncy,, we can coilor

the best insuranct protcc:tion ••
competitivr pric:o;. Wr n:praent

only tht finest 161---.--,
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companies.

mcluding
Auro-Ownc:rs
lnsurancr:

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which has nuly urned obe
rtputarion as Tht "No Probltm...

Proplc0 . Ask UJ about

me

many other advan&lt;agOs of cloin&amp; .

blWness with an independent

msurancr agency:

Cpl. Jeff Sweeney of the to renovate ·a section of the
West Virginia Division of former Veterans Memorial
Natural Resources:
.
Hospital location for the
with child neglect causing
Gallia County, Coroner center have also been
. death in 2005. Therr son,
Dr. Daniel H. Whiteley was
Jacob, died in February of called to the scene and the tabled, due to cost considerthat year and three other victim was taken to the ations. ·
It is likely that the center
children
were
soon West · Virginia Medical
removed from their 'home Examiner's office in South will be placed in a section of ·
by the state.
. Charleston ·for a dete.rmina- the EMS building, located
behind the hospital buildThe new · charges were tion of death. , ·
ing, once renovations and
handed up Thursday by a
Funeral arrangements will repairs are completed.
Kanawha County g,::and be handled by the Willis
. jury.
Funeral Home.

Couple accused in child's ~dt
'CHARLESTON, ·W.Va.
(AP) A · Kanawha
Coun1 y CX/Uple accused in
the starving. death of their
3-month-old -son have
been indicted .on firstdegree· murder ch;u;ges_
Twenty•seven-year-old
Stephanie Raines and .28year-old Jerry Mcfarland
were ori ginally c harged

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he his currently working on a
Foster children in Meigs. higher likelihood the child
plan to allow local foster par- County range in age from 15 will stay in Meigs.
ents to possibly receive train 7 months to 17, with an averShank has worked for the
ing in Meigs County.
age age of around 12 at this agency for 17 years and said
Shank believes that by time, according to Shank. he's still seeing cases that sur· having eight to I 0 local fos- Foster parents receive, on prise and shod him when it
ter homes, nearly 95 percent average, around $23 to $28 comes to the abuse some of
of the county's placement per day fclr caring for a child
needs could be met.
though that number can these children have faced.
Unfortunately, the ab_use and
ln the last three )!ears, II . chan~e de~ljlding on the
neglea
doesn't seem to go
foster children have been childs need&amp;; . The county
legally adopted by their fos- pays for the ciUJd's medical away nor does the need for
ter parents. Of the II that · care and a . clothing loving, stable foster homes.
Those interested in blloom'.
are currently in foster care, allowance.
ing
a foster parent can call a
three are in the permanent
Shank said the ag~ has
special
botline set up by the
custody ()f the county and made a commitment Ill keepare available for adoption. ing kids as close to hoinc as DJFS at 992-CARE (2273).
Once a clilld is in the cus- possible and more 1~
The DJFS. will also hold a
to4y of the DJFS for 12 homes mean more I~ free infonnalional session 00
months, the a~ency is opportunities for those kids. OOcoming a fOSier pa~mt from
requiJed to examme termi- The more resources available 6 to 7 p.m., Thursday, May 29
nating parental rights.
in the .county traPslafes.illlo.a .. thef'omeaoy lilllw:y.

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SouthemHigh
School seniors
receiving scholar- ,
ship awards are,
from left,'.lront raw,
Trenton
Roseberry, Butch
Mamhout, Abigail
Jenkins, Wes
Riffle, Heather
Cundiff, Kaylyn
Spradling and
Ryan Chapman;
second raw,
Krystle Mar1er,
Courtney Ginther,
·Stephanie Cundill,
Ashley Weddle,
Sarah EI;-Dabaja
and Chelsea
Freeman; third
row, Whitney
Riffle, Bonnie
Allen, Morgan
Brown, Lindsey
Buuard and Erin
Chapman; fourth
raw, Ashley Kiser,
Morgan Reynolds
and Tyler Circle.
Freeman ~ OU
Gateway
Grant,
$600,
Chelsea
Freeman ;
Racine
Downtown .Athletic Club,
$500 each, Whitney Riffle.
Ryan Chapman.
Brent Patterson frolll the
University of Rio Grande
announced the following
students .received financial
awards from his universiiy
totaling nearly $75,000:
Bonnie . Allen , · · Ryan ·
Chapman, Abigail Jenkins,
Ashley
Kiser,
Butch
Marnhout,
Trenton
Roseberry,
Kaylyn
Spradling;
Southern
National · Honor Society
Scholarship,
$250,
Stephanie ·
Cundiff;
American Red Cross, $250
each,
Ashley
Weddle,
Kry stle
Marler;
Orri s
Gordan Fisher Scholarship.
$250, Tyler Circle; Harold.
Roush-Bill McKelvey FFA
Scholarship, $500, Whitney
Riffle; Helen Coast Hayes
Memorial
~cholars hip s,
$400 each, Lindsey Buzzard,
Heather Cundiff, Stephanie
Cundiff, Kaylyn Spradling:
Wayne Roush Memorial

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ISUioday. May 18, 2008 al bis

from 2:00- 4:00p.m. Roger a
retiree of Ra~,enswoo&lt;l Alumiouonl
wilh 30 years service and a
llllliilber of Middleport Church
Cluist. Roger's address is 45180
Baum Addition Road, Pomeroy,
· Ohio (5th house on right). H
unable 10 attend please 10nd card

to: 45180 Baurn Addition Rood.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Roger is tbe f1lllter of
Brenda LaDeaux, losephine Hill

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For Auiweu on A&amp;ing l11uea
Callt-800-131-2644 or
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This is program funded through a grant from Ohio Oeparturm of ~ 'in
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For details oontact: Sdlo.l vi Edumtioa, Uaivenity of Rio Gr••k. RioGr d , 011
45674. Phonenouphu . T. .245-7346or 1.._212-71GI oro eilagl'lati@riu61
lnfonnatioul mert' p:
May 11@ 6:311 pm in Allaiv~ Hat 313
A-a-tl4 @ 6:38 pm Allaiversiii"J 11111313

Scholarship, $400, Morgan . notified of the names of the
Brown; George f\1. Sayre recipients.
Memorial Sctlolarsbip, $400
The
Racine-Southern
each,
Ryan
Chapman, Alumni Scholarships will
Whitney Riffle; Wingett be announced at the annual
Scholarships, $1 ,150 each, alumni banquet.
Ryan Chapman, · Kaylyn
Spradling, Morgan Brown;
Ohio Board of Regents,
$2,250 for four years for a
total of $9,000, Sarah ElDabaja; The Creed . James
Scholarship, $2,000, Ashley
Weddle; Cooperative Parish
Scholarship, $500 each,
Krystle
Marler.
Erin
Chapman; Maude Sellers
• F-='EJ61J . . . . . ~
. . . . . .&amp; i . ~ Mepyaurbulilyllltl
Scholarship, $600, Lindsey
• 10 HIWil . . . _ .... w.lJINII1
Buzzard ;
McDonald's
• CMIIom 11111P9 - I'MIIIfl., ...,...., maN!
Scholarship, $1.000, Erin
m
Chapman; . Mason VFW
Scholarship, $500, Chelsea
Freeman.
·
There were six students
awarded
Dill-ArnoldCutler Scholarships to OU
and URG worth $450 per
year for four years for a
total of $10.800 . There
were I 2 students awarded
th e Kibble Foundation
Scholarship, $600 each for
a total of $7.200. The
school has not yet been

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Freeman, Courtney Ginther;
IISB'II3ENreMY!lAI.YSeHTINEL.COM Salutatorians, ·
Ryan
Chapman ,
Kaylyn
- Southern Spradling; Valedictorians,
. RACINE
High School's Class of Lmdsey Buzzard, Sarah El2008 was awarded an esti- Dabaja, Courtney Ginther.
mated $255,607 in scholar- US Army Reserve Scholar I
ships during
Friday's Athlete Award, Whitney
Senior Awards Day with Riffle, Ryan Chapman.
. !Jlat amount expected to
OHSAA State Award,
grow over the next few Paul Cardone; OHSAA
weeks when even more Scholar Athlete, Lindsey
scholarship winners are Buzzard, Ryan . Ch&lt;!p'!lan;
rurnouoced. In addition, stu- OHSAA Arch1e Gnffin
dents were also honored on Sportsmanship
Award,
Friday for their academic Stephanie Cundiff, J.R.
achievements.
Grady; OHSAA Courageous
'· · Academic awards given Student Award, Tyler Circle;
and received were: The Larry R. Morrison Female
Leadership Key, Mik.ayla and Male Athlete of the
Krider; Scholarship Key, Year, Whitney Riffle and
Whitney Riffle; Trav1s Ryan Chapman, respective-·
Achievement ly; Quiz Bowl, Sarah EIAdams
Award, · Hannah MiUer;. Dabaja, Wes Riffle; Worlt
Social Studies, . Mor~an Study, Mikayla Krider for
Brown; Home Econonncs, · beginning worlt study as a
Ericka Cogar and S3fah El- freshmari, Matt Lehew for
Dabaja; Science Award, mos~ improved work study
C~y 9inther for biolo- student, J.R. Grady for the
gy and Sarilh EI-Dabaja for work ethic award. _
The following students'
licience; Holzer Clinic
Science Award, Sarah El- received scholarships and
Dabaja; Botany, Mikayla · award amounts: Jim Adams
Krider, also recognized Memorial, $500 each,
Stephanie Cundiff, Krystle Stephanie Cundiff, Erin
Marler,
Wes
Riffle; Chapman ; Edison Brace
Mathematics, Sarah El- Memorial, $500 each, Wes
Dabaja; English, Lindsey Riffle, . Ryan Chapman,
,Buzzard and S~ El- Chelsea Freeman; Claren~
Dabaja;
TechooiOj!Y. and
Ruth
Bradford ·
Chelsea Fr;eeman; Fore1gn . Memorial, $500, Erin
· Language, Sarah EI-Dabaja Chapman; Clarence Frank
. and Lindsey Buzzard; Memorial, $500, Ashley
ftand, Andrew Smeck, Weddle; David B. Sayre
Courtney Ginther, Kaylyn Memorial, $100, Krystle
Chelsea M_arler; · Racine
Area
Spradling,
Freeman; Citizenship, Tyler Community Organization,
Circle, Sarah EI-Dabaja; . I I scholarships at $500
Activities,
Lindsey each to Lindsey Buu.ard,
Buzzard; Drama, Lindsey Sarah EI-Dabaja, Erin
Buzzard; WSAZ Best of the Chapman,
Kaylyn
pass, Lindsey Buzzard, Spradling, Whitoey Riffle,
!'arab El-DabaJa, Courtney Wes Riffle, Ryan Chapman,
pinther;
Perfect Chelsea Freeman, Heather
ji\ttendance,
Heather Cundiff, Stephanie Cundiff,
Cundiff, Stephanie Cundiff, Morgan Brown.
Mick Hall, Kevin Jamison,
Hill's
Classic
Cars
llustyn Smeck.
Cruisin'
Car
Show
; National Honor Society, Scholarship, · $600 · each,
~yan
Chapman, Teddy Trenton Roseberry, Ty,Ie.r
Prown, Lindsey Buzzard, Circle, Chelsea Freeman;
Erin Chapman, Sarah El- Morgan Reynolds; Gatling
Pabaja, Heather Cundiff.. Coal Scholarship, $1000,
Steplianie Cundiff, Kaylyn Sarah EI-Dabaja; Lost
Spradliitg,
Chelsea Brothers ·
Memorial
Freeman, Courtney Ginther, Scholarships, $1 ,000 each,
~shley Weddle, Whitney Lindsey Buzzard, Ashley
Jtime, Krystle Marler; Kiser, . ~an Brown,
tloonrs
Diplomas
I Ashley W
e, also recogHooorarians (students with nized by the Lost Brothers
)lt least a 3.5 overall GPA Memorial Scholarship orgaood at least 27 scored on the nizers was Superintendent
;ACT) Lindsey . Buzzard, Tony Deem· for his partici' Sarah E,l-Daba]a, Courtney pation in the new . scholarf]inther, Ryan Chapman, . ship
program ;
Ohio
Kaylyn Spradling, Morgan. Umversity Dr. James H. and
:Brown, Erin Chapman, Nellie Rowley Jewell Heather Cl10diff, Ashley Manasseh
Cutler
Weddle, Whitney Riffle, Scholarship Award, $73,800
:Stephanie Cundiff, Bonnie for foqr years of tuition at
:Allen, Krystle Marler, OU, Courtney Ginther; OU
:Abigail Jenkins.
Gateway
Excellence
: Awards of Merit, J .R. Scholarship,
$8,907,
(Jrady, Krystle Marler, Lindsey Buzzard, OU
:Whitney Riffle, Kaylyn Gateway
Scholarships
~. Ashley Weddle, $4,000, Sarah El-Dabaja,
Morgan Brown, Teddy $500, Chelsea Freeman; OU
Mrown,' Lindsey Buzzard, Gateway Bobcat Grants,
tko
Chapman,
Ryan $1 ,:l(p, Kaylyn Spradling,
~man. Heather. Cundiff; S I ,800, Chelsea Freeman;
Stephanie Cundiff, Sarah OU Academic Competitive
Jjl-Dabaja,
Chelsea Grant,
$750, ' Chelsea

.

Obio Needs Scien~ TeachCrsl

OR

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SouthemHigh
School seniors
receiving academic awards are,
from left, front roW,
Teddy Brown,
Abigail Jenkins,
Heather Cundiff,
Kaytyn Spradling
and Ryan
Chapman; second
row, Krys!le ·
Marler, Courtney
Ginther, Stephaslie
Cundiff, Ashley
Weddle, Sarah ElDabajaand
Chelsea Freeman;
third raw, Whitney
Riffte, Bonnie
Allen, Morgan
Brown, Uridsey
Buzzard and Erin
Chapman. ·

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Sunday, May 18, 2008

SHSseniors
•
receive ntore
·"than $255,000
jn schola•·ships

an

SIX

Heaven Westfall

;Celebrati:ng a milestone

"We'·re. v~ry fortunate,"
· Baker srud. ~e ~ave a l?t
. of fish m the p1pelineat th1s
point. Our ca~h of walleye
can match to JUSt about anybody's."
.
In the Upper Pemnsula,
. the Big and Littl~ Bays de
Noc that feed mto Lal(e
Michigan and Green Bay
draw some of the same
major fishing tournaments
as Port Clinton, said Steve
Masters, exeeutive director
of the Bays de Noc
Convention and Visitors
Bureau in Escanaba.
·
"We· re becoming such
establ ished
fishery,.~
Masters said. "Ice fishing i~
huge up here. Generally, in
the winter, we have thousands of ice shanties on the
Little Bay."
:.
Walleye Capital of th~
World is more than just
name. Touri5111 bureaus and
..
·t to promote th ..
cmes use 1 .
elr
·
area and bnng rn . anglers
and tounsts and thetr muchneeded money. ·
. .
Masters sru~ the ~anous
walleye cap1tals should
learn to .share the crown. .
'Tm for everyone su~:•
ceeding." he said. "If we
can all . use that to parlar
economic success, I don t
have a problem with that." •
But the loss of the brand:
like · '!lomker probabl·y
· wouldn t hurt most of them,
officials said.
Onawa County Visitors
Bureau Director Larry
Fletcher said he doesn''l
think the 70,000 anglers
who buy fishing licenses in
Ottawa County are going to
head elsewhere for walleye
if Port Clinton can't call
itself the capital.

PageA3

REGIONAL

.Sunday, May 18, 2008

�PageA2

REGIONAL
Graduating today Where is real the Walleye Capital?

6unbap liam-ientixtl

Kenneth Voglesong

~111h Wachter

Morgan Werry
....:·-·

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These ·five Eastern High
School seniors a~e among
the 57 graduates who will
receive diplomas in ceremonies today. Their senior
• photos were unintentionally
omitted from the graduation
special section in Friday's
Daily Sentinel, and are
printed here.
Submitted photoa

Erie come to spawn here,"
he said. "From the biology
standpoint, this is the most
fertile part of the lake for
feeding and spawning. Most
of the walleye fishing goes
on in the waters of-Ottawa
County."
With all those fish ,
anglers have a better chance
·of successfully baggmg the
coveted fish, he said.
Add Captain Wylie, the
17-foot-long
fiberglass
walleye the city drops from
a crane on New Year's Eve
and the annual Memorial
Day weekend Walleye
Festival, and Snyder is confident no body of ,water can
beat Port Clinton s part of
the lake.,
,
But that doe_sn t · mean
other areas li!C w1thout great
wal~ey~ fishl!lg.
,.
~1shmg _IS Baudette s
mml' attractmn, and It, too,
draws anglers from across
the coun , Cauble said .
Since try 1959 , . Willy
Walleye, the 25-ton, 40foot long fiberglass wall. eye that dwarfs .Port
Clinton 's Captain Wylie.
has anchored the town of
I 100 people Cauble said.
·Each June, the locals celebrate Willy Walleye Days,
;i festival similar to Port
Clinton's Walleye Fe8tival.
Michigan's capitals don 't
have giant walleye statues,
but they have plenty to brag
about.
Lake Huron's Saginaw
Bay walleye numbers have
increased in recent years
after excellent spawning
·classes from 2003 to 2005
and in 2007, said Jim Baker,
fishe":es . unit manager for
the M1chigan Department of
Natural ResoUrces, Southern
Lake
Huron
Fisheries
Management Unit.

Lake of the Woods Tourism
PORT CUNTON (AP) Former Mayor Tom Brown Bureau abandoned its applimade up his mind the cation for the trademark,
minute he donned his wall- effe.;tively rendering its
eye hat II years ago.
effort dead, at least for now.
Port Clinton had long Bureau officials did not
been known for its bountiful respond to the U.S. Patent
fishery, especially the plen- and Trademark Office's
tiful and prized walleye.
. request for more informal! was time to cash in on tion ·on how they would use
the city's sterling reputation the walleye capital moniker,
with anglers, who trave l · according to the trademark
across the United States l\lld office.
beyond to reel in., the tasty
Bureau
Executive
fish.
·
Director Denelle Cauble
The city began its first said she didn't know the
New Year's Eve walleye application was abandoned.
"Everybody knows the
drop at midnight that year,
and what locals said for .truth," she said. "Lake of
decades was official: Port the Woods is the walleye
Clinton is the Walle ye capital."
Snyder . said Cauble's
Capital of the World.
There's just one problem, assertion is a kettle of fish.
At least SIX other towns m
"When you look at Lake
the United States claim to Erie, there is no other body
be the walleye capital. too. . of water that produces the
Baudette ,
Minn .; poundage per acre of wallGarrison and · Mobridge, eye that Lake Erie does,"
S.D.; the Big and Little Snyder said. '"fens of thouBays
de
Noc
near sands of anglers come here
Escanaba, Mich .; the to fi sh each year."
Saginaw Bay along Bay
What makes a walleye
City, Mich.; and Umatilla, · capital?
Port' Clinton has all the
Ore., are advertised as capitals .. And Brown mi ght ingredients to keep the wallhave swiped the title from eye capital .name, Snyder
the rest of Lake Erie, said.
Roughly one-third of the
which Fred Snyder, Ohio
State University Sea Grant 360 to 380 . marinas on
~;xtension specialist, said Ohio's Lake Erie shoreline
was known in the early are' ' located in the Port
'80s collectively as the Clinton area. With the nearcapital.
•
by islands and harbors in
Tourism officials in the area, .it is a prime locaBaudette knocked two other tion for marina · developMinnesota towns off the ment an!l therefore has an
walleye wagon last year advantage in attracting
when they obtained a state anglers, be said.
trademark for the term.
The city is located along
Then ·they applied for a fed- Lake Erie's Western Basin,
era! trademart to definitive- the shallowest part of the
ly milke Baudette · and its lake. Rife with sub';:led
Lake of dJe Woods the only ' reefs, the bas.in is a
ect
capital.
·
.
. 'place for walleye ·to spawn.
· In Januitry, however, the. , "Fish from all over Lake
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~ {AP) '--- A. req~ by 200J or lose
SQme · fedmll• fuoclinv. The
1· ~W • ~g\L~
" ' • --~ · ·tbi:
1.or'lime, federal law is namtii after

conv.
sq.'flll'eoder:S must
regie with' police is unconstitutional, a judge rt,iled.
The law, which took effect
in January, wrongfully
increases punishment without a court hearing and . is
applied to offenders who
committed crimes before the
law was passed in 2007, said
Cuyahoga County Common
Pleas Judge Ronald Suster.
Suster, who issued the ruling last week .in a .case ·
involving a man convicted
of sexual battery in 2003,
said the law's intention is
"to punish and ostracize this
unpopular group," rather
than
enhance public safety.
•
Kevin Kelly/photo
The
state Legislature
;Juanita McKean Saundef5!, left, accepted a proclamation
from Gov. Ted Strickland on behalf ot her sister, Mrs. Elmer passed the law last year to
E. (Jew~ll - McKean) Caldwell of Gallipolis, who celebrated comply with a federal one
her 100th birthday on May 15. The presentation occurred that requires strues to increase
sex offender registration ·
during the Kennedy Day recognition dinner hosted by
Gallia County Democrats on May 12. The gowmor, who
toured local industrial sites earlier in the day, was also the
guest at a reception hosied by Mrs. Saunders' son and
daughter-in-law, Brent and Shawn Saunders.

The law "goes beyond
mere 'official archives of
criminal records' into a system that effectively ostracizes offenders and subjects
the offenders to harassment
and ridicule as well as
potential abuse," Suster

Adam WalSh, a 6-year~ld
Florida boy abducted and
kiUed in 1981.
The state has about 23,000
registered sex offenders
under ei,ght classifications.
Under the new 'law, offunders · are classified under a
three-tier system. It requires
longer registration times for
felons and mandatory community notification for some
offenders once considered
low level.
The goal was to prevent
sex offenders from slipping
through the cracks and comniitting other sex crimes.
Suster's ruling backs the
arguments made in a f~
class-action lawsuit filed in
January by the Cuyahoga
County Public Defender's
Office on behalf of sex
offender registrants statewide.

Missing

Decision

fromPageAl

fromPageAl

We offer the
best prices
and protection
for you.

wrote.
The rulfug prevents the
state from enfon:ing the law
against Tramaine .Evan_s, 30,
who was convicted ·of sexual
battery in ·2003 and served a
year in priSon.
Evans was instructed to
register every year for I 0
years as a sexually oriented
offender. Under the new
law, he had been reclassi~
fled as a Tier ill sex offender who must register every
90 d,ays, notify neighbors of.
his criririnal record and live
by residency restrictions for
the rest of his life.
The state has 30 days to
appeal.

• :Q!&lt;ncy,, we can coilor

the best insuranct protcc:tion ••
competitivr pric:o;. Wr n:praent

only tht finest 161---.--,
1murance

companies.

mcluding
Auro-Ownc:rs
lnsurancr:

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which has nuly urned obe
rtputarion as Tht "No Probltm...

Proplc0 . Ask UJ about

me

many other advan&lt;agOs of cloin&amp; .

blWness with an independent

msurancr agency:

Cpl. Jeff Sweeney of the to renovate ·a section of the
West Virginia Division of former Veterans Memorial
Natural Resources:
.
Hospital location for the
with child neglect causing
Gallia County, Coroner center have also been
. death in 2005. Therr son,
Dr. Daniel H. Whiteley was
Jacob, died in February of called to the scene and the tabled, due to cost considerthat year and three other victim was taken to the ations. ·
It is likely that the center
children
were
soon West · Virginia Medical
removed from their 'home Examiner's office in South will be placed in a section of ·
by the state.
. Charleston ·for a dete.rmina- the EMS building, located
behind the hospital buildThe new · charges were tion of death. , ·
ing, once renovations and
handed up Thursday by a
Funeral arrangements will repairs are completed.
Kanawha County g,::and be handled by the Willis
. jury.
Funeral Home.

Couple accused in child's ~dt
'CHARLESTON, ·W.Va.
(AP) A · Kanawha
Coun1 y CX/Uple accused in
the starving. death of their
3-month-old -son have
been indicted .on firstdegree· murder ch;u;ges_
Twenty•seven-year-old
Stephanie Raines and .28year-old Jerry Mcfarland
were ori ginally c harged

Meigs~~,. Al

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he his currently working on a
Foster children in Meigs. higher likelihood the child
plan to allow local foster par- County range in age from 15 will stay in Meigs.
ents to possibly receive train 7 months to 17, with an averShank has worked for the
ing in Meigs County.
age age of around 12 at this agency for 17 years and said
Shank believes that by time, according to Shank. he's still seeing cases that sur· having eight to I 0 local fos- Foster parents receive, on prise and shod him when it
ter homes, nearly 95 percent average, around $23 to $28 comes to the abuse some of
of the county's placement per day fclr caring for a child
needs could be met.
though that number can these children have faced.
Unfortunately, the ab_use and
ln the last three )!ears, II . chan~e de~ljlding on the
neglea
doesn't seem to go
foster children have been childs need&amp;; . The county
legally adopted by their fos- pays for the ciUJd's medical away nor does the need for
ter parents. Of the II that · care and a . clothing loving, stable foster homes.
Those interested in blloom'.
are currently in foster care, allowance.
ing
a foster parent can call a
three are in the permanent
Shank said the ag~ has
special
botline set up by the
custody ()f the county and made a commitment Ill keepare available for adoption. ing kids as close to hoinc as DJFS at 992-CARE (2273).
Once a clilld is in the cus- possible and more 1~
The DJFS. will also hold a
to4y of the DJFS for 12 homes mean more I~ free infonnalional session 00
months, the a~ency is opportunities for those kids. OOcoming a fOSier pa~mt from
requiJed to examme termi- The more resources available 6 to 7 p.m., Thursday, May 29
nating parental rights.
in the .county traPslafes.illlo.a .. thef'omeaoy lilllw:y.

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SouthemHigh
School seniors
receiving scholar- ,
ship awards are,
from left,'.lront raw,
Trenton
Roseberry, Butch
Mamhout, Abigail
Jenkins, Wes
Riffle, Heather
Cundiff, Kaylyn
Spradling and
Ryan Chapman;
second raw,
Krystle Mar1er,
Courtney Ginther,
·Stephanie Cundill,
Ashley Weddle,
Sarah EI;-Dabaja
and Chelsea
Freeman; third
row, Whitney
Riffle, Bonnie
Allen, Morgan
Brown, Lindsey
Buuard and Erin
Chapman; fourth
raw, Ashley Kiser,
Morgan Reynolds
and Tyler Circle.
Freeman ~ OU
Gateway
Grant,
$600,
Chelsea
Freeman ;
Racine
Downtown .Athletic Club,
$500 each, Whitney Riffle.
Ryan Chapman.
Brent Patterson frolll the
University of Rio Grande
announced the following
students .received financial
awards from his universiiy
totaling nearly $75,000:
Bonnie . Allen , · · Ryan ·
Chapman, Abigail Jenkins,
Ashley
Kiser,
Butch
Marnhout,
Trenton
Roseberry,
Kaylyn
Spradling;
Southern
National · Honor Society
Scholarship,
$250,
Stephanie ·
Cundiff;
American Red Cross, $250
each,
Ashley
Weddle,
Kry stle
Marler;
Orri s
Gordan Fisher Scholarship.
$250, Tyler Circle; Harold.
Roush-Bill McKelvey FFA
Scholarship, $500, Whitney
Riffle; Helen Coast Hayes
Memorial
~cholars hip s,
$400 each, Lindsey Buzzard,
Heather Cundiff, Stephanie
Cundiff, Kaylyn Spradling:
Wayne Roush Memorial

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D1r

Yul.ocal
•~~ Contact
Sera Cenllr for
~ Actil:ln

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, birli*J fl/-., T_,

ISUioday. May 18, 2008 al bis

from 2:00- 4:00p.m. Roger a
retiree of Ra~,enswoo&lt;l Alumiouonl
wilh 30 years service and a
llllliilber of Middleport Church
Cluist. Roger's address is 45180
Baum Addition Road, Pomeroy,
· Ohio (5th house on right). H
unable 10 attend please 10nd card

to: 45180 Baurn Addition Rood.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Roger is tbe f1lllter of
Brenda LaDeaux, losephine Hill

I

for all

Flat or Low·Sloped Roofs

j

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Residential • Commerdal·

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• MoBIL£ HOMES • MErAL ROOFS

EARN CO RATES Wirliour li-tE . (0
Open a Market-Watch now and get a 3.25%
Interest Rate (3.30% A.P.Y.) for the first 180 days
(6 months). After 180 days, current rates apply.

OHIO VALLEY
BANK.
'
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www.ovbc.com

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4ftl&amp;lit•• •
~ •l!f:IJ&lt; Olio

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740-992-7953. 740-591 4641
74G-416-1

SIMI S.uiala in Mln,IV:M41. Mligl, ilbooe,
Mtwuw•;Mollle.P11!r &amp; "•lMI:iiGkiu Coidel
•

MAR

.On
. &amp; Material
Labor ·

1-800 468-6682 '

APn'P•i oC a.a,.. llio llootio&amp; Voll.y ~ Dot I '"""" Diotti:t

"

. .I
Roof 1ng.
nc.

110 IIAIIRENAIICL NO rfAI.4Jff NEEIIEII!

~Area Agerx:y l1l Aging
For Auiweu on A&amp;ing l11uea
Callt-800-131-2644 or
Vllit www.areaaaeocyS.org

~

This is program funded through a grant from Ohio Oeparturm of ~ 'in
collaboration with Ohio Board of Reagems.

OpntS.....,.£ I tllft7M .

3.30% A.P.Y:

SAVE ON ENERGY Blll5!

•

For details oontact: Sdlo.l vi Edumtioa, Uaivenity of Rio Gr••k. RioGr d , 011
45674. Phonenouphu . T. .245-7346or 1.._212-71GI oro eilagl'lati@riu61
lnfonnatioul mert' p:
May 11@ 6:311 pm in Allaiv~ Hat 313
A-a-tl4 @ 6:38 pm Allaiversiii"J 11111313

Scholarship, $400, Morgan . notified of the names of the
Brown; George f\1. Sayre recipients.
Memorial Sctlolarsbip, $400
The
Racine-Southern
each,
Ryan
Chapman, Alumni Scholarships will
Whitney Riffle; Wingett be announced at the annual
Scholarships, $1 ,150 each, alumni banquet.
Ryan Chapman, · Kaylyn
Spradling, Morgan Brown;
Ohio Board of Regents,
$2,250 for four years for a
total of $9,000, Sarah ElDabaja; The Creed . James
Scholarship, $2,000, Ashley
Weddle; Cooperative Parish
Scholarship, $500 each,
Krystle
Marler.
Erin
Chapman; Maude Sellers
• F-='EJ61J . . . . . ~
. . . . . .&amp; i . ~ Mepyaurbulilyllltl
Scholarship, $600, Lindsey
• 10 HIWil . . . _ .... w.lJINII1
Buzzard ;
McDonald's
• CMIIom 11111P9 - I'MIIIfl., ...,...., maN!
Scholarship, $1.000, Erin
m
Chapman; . Mason VFW
Scholarship, $500, Chelsea
Freeman.
·
There were six students
awarded
Dill-ArnoldCutler Scholarships to OU
and URG worth $450 per
year for four years for a
total of $10.800 . There
were I 2 students awarded
th e Kibble Foundation
Scholarship, $600 each for
a total of $7.200. The
school has not yet been

MAY

{

school?
This program includes:
• free tuition
• keep your current job
• night and weekend classes
• Praxis U support
• finish program in a year

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

'•

j .........

Do you have a middle childhood science teaching license, but would like t9 teach high

....

'

Bv 8E11f SERGENT

t •lllfil~,,

Do you have a four year science bachelor's degree and would 1ike a license to teach?

~

'

·-

.

Freeman, Courtney Ginther;
IISB'II3ENreMY!lAI.YSeHTINEL.COM Salutatorians, ·
Ryan
Chapman ,
Kaylyn
- Southern Spradling; Valedictorians,
. RACINE
High School's Class of Lmdsey Buzzard, Sarah El2008 was awarded an esti- Dabaja, Courtney Ginther.
mated $255,607 in scholar- US Army Reserve Scholar I
ships during
Friday's Athlete Award, Whitney
Senior Awards Day with Riffle, Ryan Chapman.
. !Jlat amount expected to
OHSAA State Award,
grow over the next few Paul Cardone; OHSAA
weeks when even more Scholar Athlete, Lindsey
scholarship winners are Buzzard, Ryan . Ch&lt;!p'!lan;
rurnouoced. In addition, stu- OHSAA Arch1e Gnffin
dents were also honored on Sportsmanship
Award,
Friday for their academic Stephanie Cundiff, J.R.
achievements.
Grady; OHSAA Courageous
'· · Academic awards given Student Award, Tyler Circle;
and received were: The Larry R. Morrison Female
Leadership Key, Mik.ayla and Male Athlete of the
Krider; Scholarship Key, Year, Whitney Riffle and
Whitney Riffle; Trav1s Ryan Chapman, respective-·
Achievement ly; Quiz Bowl, Sarah EIAdams
Award, · Hannah MiUer;. Dabaja, Wes Riffle; Worlt
Social Studies, . Mor~an Study, Mikayla Krider for
Brown; Home Econonncs, · beginning worlt study as a
Ericka Cogar and S3fah El- freshmari, Matt Lehew for
Dabaja; Science Award, mos~ improved work study
C~y 9inther for biolo- student, J.R. Grady for the
gy and Sarilh EI-Dabaja for work ethic award. _
The following students'
licience; Holzer Clinic
Science Award, Sarah El- received scholarships and
Dabaja; Botany, Mikayla · award amounts: Jim Adams
Krider, also recognized Memorial, $500 each,
Stephanie Cundiff, Krystle Stephanie Cundiff, Erin
Marler,
Wes
Riffle; Chapman ; Edison Brace
Mathematics, Sarah El- Memorial, $500 each, Wes
Dabaja; English, Lindsey Riffle, . Ryan Chapman,
,Buzzard and S~ El- Chelsea Freeman; Claren~
Dabaja;
TechooiOj!Y. and
Ruth
Bradford ·
Chelsea Fr;eeman; Fore1gn . Memorial, $500, Erin
· Language, Sarah EI-Dabaja Chapman; Clarence Frank
. and Lindsey Buzzard; Memorial, $500, Ashley
ftand, Andrew Smeck, Weddle; David B. Sayre
Courtney Ginther, Kaylyn Memorial, $100, Krystle
Chelsea M_arler; · Racine
Area
Spradling,
Freeman; Citizenship, Tyler Community Organization,
Circle, Sarah EI-Dabaja; . I I scholarships at $500
Activities,
Lindsey each to Lindsey Buu.ard,
Buzzard; Drama, Lindsey Sarah EI-Dabaja, Erin
Buzzard; WSAZ Best of the Chapman,
Kaylyn
pass, Lindsey Buzzard, Spradling, Whitoey Riffle,
!'arab El-DabaJa, Courtney Wes Riffle, Ryan Chapman,
pinther;
Perfect Chelsea Freeman, Heather
ji\ttendance,
Heather Cundiff, Stephanie Cundiff,
Cundiff, Stephanie Cundiff, Morgan Brown.
Mick Hall, Kevin Jamison,
Hill's
Classic
Cars
llustyn Smeck.
Cruisin'
Car
Show
; National Honor Society, Scholarship, · $600 · each,
~yan
Chapman, Teddy Trenton Roseberry, Ty,Ie.r
Prown, Lindsey Buzzard, Circle, Chelsea Freeman;
Erin Chapman, Sarah El- Morgan Reynolds; Gatling
Pabaja, Heather Cundiff.. Coal Scholarship, $1000,
Steplianie Cundiff, Kaylyn Sarah EI-Dabaja; Lost
Spradliitg,
Chelsea Brothers ·
Memorial
Freeman, Courtney Ginther, Scholarships, $1 ,000 each,
~shley Weddle, Whitney Lindsey Buzzard, Ashley
Jtime, Krystle Marler; Kiser, . ~an Brown,
tloonrs
Diplomas
I Ashley W
e, also recogHooorarians (students with nized by the Lost Brothers
)lt least a 3.5 overall GPA Memorial Scholarship orgaood at least 27 scored on the nizers was Superintendent
;ACT) Lindsey . Buzzard, Tony Deem· for his partici' Sarah E,l-Daba]a, Courtney pation in the new . scholarf]inther, Ryan Chapman, . ship
program ;
Ohio
Kaylyn Spradling, Morgan. Umversity Dr. James H. and
:Brown, Erin Chapman, Nellie Rowley Jewell Heather Cl10diff, Ashley Manasseh
Cutler
Weddle, Whitney Riffle, Scholarship Award, $73,800
:Stephanie Cundiff, Bonnie for foqr years of tuition at
:Allen, Krystle Marler, OU, Courtney Ginther; OU
:Abigail Jenkins.
Gateway
Excellence
: Awards of Merit, J .R. Scholarship,
$8,907,
(Jrady, Krystle Marler, Lindsey Buzzard, OU
:Whitney Riffle, Kaylyn Gateway
Scholarships
~. Ashley Weddle, $4,000, Sarah El-Dabaja,
Morgan Brown, Teddy $500, Chelsea Freeman; OU
Mrown,' Lindsey Buzzard, Gateway Bobcat Grants,
tko
Chapman,
Ryan $1 ,:l(p, Kaylyn Spradling,
~man. Heather. Cundiff; S I ,800, Chelsea Freeman;
Stephanie Cundiff, Sarah OU Academic Competitive
Jjl-Dabaja,
Chelsea Grant,
$750, ' Chelsea

.

Obio Needs Scien~ TeachCrsl

OR

'

SouthemHigh
School seniors
receiving academic awards are,
from left, front roW,
Teddy Brown,
Abigail Jenkins,
Heather Cundiff,
Kaytyn Spradling
and Ryan
Chapman; second
row, Krys!le ·
Marler, Courtney
Ginther, Stephaslie
Cundiff, Ashley
Weddle, Sarah ElDabajaand
Chelsea Freeman;
third raw, Whitney
Riffte, Bonnie
Allen, Morgan
Brown, Uridsey
Buzzard and Erin
Chapman. ·

..'·..
....

W~o"G~ ·

"\.. ,•

'

a

.'

Sunday, May 18, 2008

SHSseniors
•
receive ntore
·"than $255,000
jn schola•·ships

an

SIX

Heaven Westfall

;Celebrati:ng a milestone

"We'·re. v~ry fortunate,"
· Baker srud. ~e ~ave a l?t
. of fish m the p1pelineat th1s
point. Our ca~h of walleye
can match to JUSt about anybody's."
.
In the Upper Pemnsula,
. the Big and Littl~ Bays de
Noc that feed mto Lal(e
Michigan and Green Bay
draw some of the same
major fishing tournaments
as Port Clinton, said Steve
Masters, exeeutive director
of the Bays de Noc
Convention and Visitors
Bureau in Escanaba.
·
"We· re becoming such
establ ished
fishery,.~
Masters said. "Ice fishing i~
huge up here. Generally, in
the winter, we have thousands of ice shanties on the
Little Bay."
:.
Walleye Capital of th~
World is more than just
name. Touri5111 bureaus and
..
·t to promote th ..
cmes use 1 .
elr
·
area and bnng rn . anglers
and tounsts and thetr muchneeded money. ·
. .
Masters sru~ the ~anous
walleye cap1tals should
learn to .share the crown. .
'Tm for everyone su~:•
ceeding." he said. "If we
can all . use that to parlar
economic success, I don t
have a problem with that." •
But the loss of the brand:
like · '!lomker probabl·y
· wouldn t hurt most of them,
officials said.
Onawa County Visitors
Bureau Director Larry
Fletcher said he doesn''l
think the 70,000 anglers
who buy fishing licenses in
Ottawa County are going to
head elsewhere for walleye
if Port Clinton can't call
itself the capital.

PageA3

REGIONAL

.Sunday, May 18, 2008

�..

•

Sunday, May 18, zoo8

Sunday, May 18, zoo8

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

6adlp a:mar.-6u•tlnd • Page As

:2stAnnual
I
I
I .

I
I

2008

I

FAVORITE FOOD·: SERVICES

IIIICIIMIIs
Filaroal Advisor
99().A Seccnd Ave

G E";ds, 0045631
740-441-9441

Favorite Barbf£1J11

Belt Convenlince Stprw ·• ·• . ~ Favorite Lunch Spot

'·-----:---:-Fayor!te Ampkf!sl Spot

1,

8

1.

1.

Best Burger

Best Fried Ch!c!!en

Favortle catering

~~~=
.1 . _ - - -I Flw!Ch Frill
·. . · • ·.' FIVC!rit!! Mexican Fooc!
1 ._

-~-----

.: • •. F~~·

favorll! qrt-•• Stprt ~·: . . "-~~Btfl s
1.

Fayorillt lti!IM Food

'··------'---

1.

c:: .: .! B

AUTOMOtiVE
1. _ _ __ _ __

.

Beat Service Station

Favorite rare Store
'· - - - - , - - - -

ier

1.

1.

Favorite ulled Car Dealer

FawO!Ili!Pil·Ciuiiaail Provider

Favorite Towing Service

Fivo!lll Auta.l?···

Favorite Window !!ntlna

1 . _ __

I

_ __ __

BEAUTY. APPAREh &amp;-=!ACCESSORIES

===:::;::::::~.

a..t Nil! l!!lm

F1yoritlt Plflce To BuY C!!l!dren'a
ClothIna

." !· ' ,•.

Fayor!te Place to BLnr llen'a ClothinG .
1. _ _ _ _ _ __

1.

Favorite Shoe StOre

' ··~- - - - - ,,c---

1._ _ _ _ __ ; _ _

Favorit! Consiqn!!!P!! Shop

HOLZER CUNIC .

.provide treatment for full range of
health care needs on walk-in basi!i.
From 'allergies to injuries. from
bee stings to stitches ... .

FtYO!III Jt!!!Wftrip·.,-.

Best Hair Salon

'··--,----+-'--

1.

Favorite ..._ To Buv Women's
Clothing
1. _ _ _ _ _ __

ELECTRONICS
Best Pllce To WOf1l

F1varlte

1.

' ·--~--

Favorite Mfa. Hout!na!llod. Home

'

.

llcz!!l!ltbtll · :

SALES
' PARTS -

()was-ICulla .,.._:

.

Ftvori!l!

T•yaWioe

- - c-........- c

BalltyC~

11dw ''

•

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INall
T•+ ·~-:

c

Favorlle Al:eount!na Finn

. .,...,

Pmvides Meolioal ~lienee. I; Local caring

GJ.aer Ioyer
.
.
IE:!!It
Jolll.fri t.Sfll• Sll-~ • E~ l11111 11 Apptillllell • •

740-446-5287

3J 3 Third Ave, Gallipolis, OH • (740) 446-2673

1._ _ _ _ _ __

F•vorlle Dey C.re Cfn!!r

(740) 446-3288

BOT8BEADT

WITH
PEPPO&amp;ONI

Fpvori!e Reai Esfa!e1.

1 . _ _ _ _ _ __

F1vorit8 Prlill Shop

EVERYDAY!

Favorite Anrnce eo.

1.

, -..

Pt. Plea•ant • GaWpoU.

1.

Favorite Pholoq,..:-

1.

....._.cu.EIS

. Jeep

Law Firm

1. .

.

1.

1 . _ _ _ _ _ __

flvor!te E!ectr!c!an

g..~

SERVICE
BODY S H O P

Frvorl!ll Pet Groomer

..

Fporillll 'pnk

Elillw MrrdrW&amp;

-

1.

1.

JedyK.Giul

s

.

Becutty Sctlon &amp; Cosmetic Studio

KririttaConley

. IW-~u....-c.re

1.

Sm11 1954 '

Strawberry Ha it

URGENT CARE

PLEASANT VALLEY NURSING
. &amp; REHABILITATION CENTER

1._ _ _ _ _ __

'

Gel Back IIIIo Aclitm Willi Dr. KeUy Roush
Chiropractic' Physicitut

is available when you need us...
7 Days a week/365 days a yeur
Hol~r Clinic's B9t1rd Ul'li,Md Phy11icians

'·--:--=-----

Favorite Car
Wnh!D!tailiilq

1.

1.

1.

_

F!!YO! Itt New ·Tfuak'i!

Best Coillalon Repair

u ~.

.::; .
. Kt. J!i u ..ndCI'SOD , wv
t.:mai.l: punrbt:JJN207~) yahoo.ccND
.104-675-lJJI •Hour~: M-Fl'l-!i, Sal fl. I • IIOD-819-9344
1._ _ _ _ _ __

1.

'l'hank \' ou Oh m 6 WP.sl Vngm1a fm Suppurlmg

-

Call Mike or Vickie Justus

I Steak

1 . _ - -- - ' - - - --

Favorite Auto Parts Slo!!

CIEIIIIfl PONTI~'

1.·- -- - , - - - - - -

food

1.

Kelsey M.lleary D5N) 773-S'nJ
.
Heather Edwards, LMT
· Massage Tben1pistj
' '
1065 South Second Stnet • Mason, WV 25250

1 . _ _ _ _ _ __

1 . _ ---~---

1.

Best Dell

Favorite Auto Repair Shop

HOLZER CLINIC

Best Wings

Favorlle Resu!uranl

~1._~~ -. ~1·-:~~

' ·-----,-~----

Favorlt!t Chi!!IH Food

1 . _ __ _ _ __

Ftyorill Chick crr!itna

1.

1.

BUSINESSES

SHOPPING
Flvortta Anligyt Stpnp
1.

PLEASANT VALL~\' HOSPITAL
HOME HEALTH SERVICES

Favorite Mr•!"' Therapy

'

~.-vortte
--Nu-rslnq
--'
ttome
--

842 2nd Avenue~ Gallipolis, OH

(304) 67S-74M

~avo
_
rite_Phl
_
nnacy
__

~-vori!11
----~
~-T-o-W~~~.-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=.==;~===.===~~~~~~~~=i~
All Major
nres
)~il ValeJ C~eck
Alignml9nl
. Cas~i11 &amp;L111
otr

'D
ico!'"'W
1. _ _ _ _ _ _

1. _ _ _ _ _ __

--C-,

furniture

F1vorite I "II btl

1.

1.

' Fayoritl
1.

Ho!nt lmpro••...,t

Tk rtUrt~ 1/. P~J,

Yq · ··'

Favorl!e Vhlion Center

Brand
Complete 4 Wheel

1.

Favorl!e Fann Equipment

Fn+illa Dilco!ant Start ..

Installations Every Day

Suppliea

1.

SJI

' ··--...,..----~

-fflf CPilbt
tl ""' ~·"' Qldf4
tltc W19u1c Fa..,n,ut

Aligulrot
or

F1vorite Swimming

Frtt Alipll!llt

Pool!spas Provider

w.purtl!lst
of 4 Ntw Tirts

'··--~---HOURS Mon ,..Fri.

·

-...tvr.ylllre coon

www•.....,_....

·

\.'--:('(?• •. , .
li_• ..., . . . . . .

. 216 Uppe-r 11 iftr 11 d.
Oallipoli~

OH 112 miloSou11!

o{ '~

S•le Rum

304 675-3331
a-5, S•t. a~1

li-·«1-».G•.-IIml
li-·~?5...........1

s i"'"" 13o-i&lt;leo

21111

OH

992.0~1

4116-21104

~/2~16187 .

w 211&lt;1 s.....

A:&gt;m~r"'l

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Favorite
Rld!o S!at!Dn
1.. _ _ _ _ _ __

1

1

1•. _

•••

1

??

.

'

Fpyoritt Night Spot

'

..,j •.

-

Favorite GoH Courre

~·

PtMtr
1 . _ _ __ _ _ _.__ _

F•vor!tie Bow!lna l.ll!!l!l

Byt Pl!ce To Buy Sporting Gocx!•

• Q&gt;.-i"ff

APPUANCES • ELECTRONICS ·

BALLOr::.

1. Only ballots cut from the Dally Papei a will be-cellfttedl•-'No Copies accepted.
2. Bualne11es nomiMted hllve to be In the Tr1(:ourJtr·Aiea. .
3. Enb ies may be mailed to or dropped off to 011e. otot.r daily offices:
' Readet'a Choice clo P.O. Box 489
.
. ..
• Galllpolla Dally Tribune 825 Third Ave.; tiiiUiiJC Ita; 0H 45631
·Point P1111int Register 200 Main Sta 11, Poillt.PI!iiaaant, 'l.2555iQIC::..
• The DallY Sa1Jtlioe1111 Court St., Potnarcy, CB t§831 .
4. Newtpaper emploveea are not eligible to entur.
.. •·

Address:

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
TJ, f~ f PH{uttilt.!t

~------------------·--~-------------------

Phone#~--~----------~------- - - - - - - - - - - -·- - - ·- - - - - - - - - - - ·- - -

• A.ffordlllll£ t)en&gt;la!s

••FAMILfQWNED"
Da&gt;id, Donna &amp; Brad Deal

(3041 675-6000
1461 KamtwhM St. • Pt. Plea.~aml

A B Cc;»ntract.ng
Modular nome DI'VIsloa

1;:!~
_;,.,._~

Your Name: ·

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

• ~•sslotulf

63,6 East Main Street
Pomeroy, OH
74-o-992·6121 .

.;;;;;;;;-..;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;..;;-.;-. I'

Our P~icians )Ire 'EverywliLre You ){rt

Ef.l-iOtt·s·

David K. Deal Dire&lt;10r/Lio

1. _ _ _ _ _ __

HOLZER CLINIC

141111.

in C~
Charlie H-, Dindor
S..m Ferrell &amp; Tom Wilson · A!.-.coc:illlos .

1.----~--

i. .

. 740-4461900
-

....

I

~

1.

So.9t
_ __ _ __

F't!p! l!e N!ahl

.H I

I

•

MikeSlgler
sales

Haffelt's Mill Outlet, Inc.
I
I

4247 State Route 160
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
(One mile noo111 .on Rt.' 160 pas1 Holzer Hospital)

~--·IIM44

I
Ownen;
1 Marlin &amp; Nancy

#t 41.. fU..~ ~...J.. .
(740) 446-2107
J ·800-317" 1655 ;

1512nd Avenue· Gallipolis, OH

740-446-2842

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�PageA6

OPINION

Obituari~

Sunday, May' t8, aoo8

·Media shield law in the pipeline
On the campaign trail,

825 Third A - - • G llpclls Ohio

(740) 446-2342 • FAX (740) 446-3ooa
-.mydal~

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

.

Dan Goodrich .
Publisher

'

..
I'

..

Kevin Kelly
Managing Editor ·

Diane Hill
Controller

,,
utters ro r~ edilor are we~. They slrould be less ·
,_. than 300 words. All letters are subject 10 .,Jiring and rrwst
, be signed and incluk addre:rs and 'tekphorte number. No
unsigned krters will be published urtLrs should be in
good lasle, addressing iss~U&lt;s, not personalities.

'TODAY IN HISTORY
~

:· Today is Sunday, May 18, the 139111 day of2008: There

are 227 days left in the year.
T~ay's

· Highlight in History: On May 18, l933,
Pres1dent Franklin D. Roosevelt signed a measure creating
the Tennessee Valley Authority.
·
' On this date: In 1642, the Canadian city of Montreal was
founded by French colonists.
· In · 1804, the French Senate proclaimed Napoleon
Bonaparte emperor.
ln · 1896, the Supreme Court, in Plessy v. Ferguson,
endorsed "separate but equalft racial segregation, a ooncept
that was renounced 58 years later with Brown v. Board of
Education of Topeka.
.
19~0
.
•
Pope
John
Paul
0
was
born
Karol
Wojtyla
in
- In
Wadow~ee, Poland.
·
·
··: ln 1926, evangelist Aimee Semple McPherson vanished
while visiting a beach in Venice, Calif.; sbe reappeared
more than a month later, claiming to have been kidrn!pped.
· ln 1927, a schoolhouse in Bath, Micb., was blown up
with explosives planted by local fanner Andrew Keboe,
~ho then set off a dynamite-laden auromobile; the attacks
ltiUed 38 children and six adults, including Kehoe, who'd
earlier killed bis wife.
· .
- In 1953, Jacqueline Cochran became the first woman 10
break the sound barrier as sbe piloted a North American F86 Canadair over Rogers Dry l..ak.e, Calif.
.
·
, In 1967, :rennessee Gov. _Bufool EUington signed a measure repealing the law agamst teaching evolution that was
used fO prosecute John T. Scopes in 1925.
. In 1980, the Mount St: Helens. volcano in Washington
state exploded, leavmg 57 people dead or missing.
· ln 1991, Helen Sharman became the first British citizen
fo rocket inro space as she flew aboard a Soviet Soyuz ..
sp~raft w1th two cosmonauts on an eigbt-ilay mission.
· Ftve years ago: A Hamas suicide attacker disguised as an
observant Jew killed seven Israeli bus passengers. Pope
rohn Paul U celebrnted his 83ni birthday with an open-air
Mass and requests for payers so be could eolitinue his
papacy. "Les Miserables" closed on Proadway afta' more
1ban 16 years and 6,680 paf.........__
..
• One year ago: Tbe White House and Cotwess failed to
strike a deal after exchanging rompt"tiilg offers 011 an Iraq
war spending biU that Democrats said should set a date for
U.S. troops _ro leave. French President Nirolas Sartozy .
named a radically revamped cabinet wbicb inCluded seven
women among its 15 members.
Today'~ B~ys: Actor Bill Macy is 86. Sportscaster
Jack Whitaker ts 84. Actor Robelt MO£se is 77. Actor and
television executive Dwayne Hickman is 74. Baseball Hall~~"Famer B~ Robinsoo is 71. Bluegrass singer-musicmn Rodney Dillard (The Dillants) is 66. Baseball Hali-QfFamer Reggie Jack::son is 62. ~ Candice Azzara is 61.
Country s~ller J~ Bonsall (The 0~ Ridge Boysj is 60.
Rock mUSlCl~ Rick: Wakeman (Yes) IS 59. Country singer
~eorge Str.ut 1s 56. Rhythm-and-blues singer Butch
,-avares (favares)-is 55. Actor Chow Yun-Fat is 53. Rock
;;inger:musici~ Page Hamilron is 48. Contemporary
~sllan mu_s1c~ Barry
(Me~yMe) is 47. Singeractress Mattika ts 39. Comedian-wnter Tma Fey is 38.
Rapper Special Ed is 34. Rock singer .Jack JobnSOJi is 33.
Rhythm-and-blues singer Darryi,Allen (Mista) is 28. Actor
Man Long is 28. Christian-rock musician Kevin Huguley
:!Rush of Fools) is 26. Acror Spencer Breslin is 16.
~. ;ntought for Today: "life is a j9k:e that's just begUn.";w.s. Gilbert. English librettist (1836-1911).
.

there is much talk ofbipaltisanship. but back on Capiro)
Hill, 1hat spirit bas van- .
Cokie
isbed. Tbe latest example:
and
collapse of Senate oegotialions to belp bomeownen
Sleven
threateoed wid! foreclosure.
Rob eats
However. one important
piece of legislation does
command strong suppon
across ~ lines: a federal and that's 00 swprise. This
sbield law giving journal- White House bas alway·5
ists greater protection from embraced secrecy and
overzealous la~yers and rejected aooounlllbility. The
prosecuro~ trymg to ~ last thing it wants is "swift
loose tbe1r ronfidential cmrection" of its · own
sources. Con~s sbould ~ unjust and unlawful actions.
pass 1t, ~ qu1cldy.
Fortunately,
many
Forty:m~
s~tes Republicans wbn value lini-(Wy~mmg lS the ~xoep~R?D) !ted pemment and civil
prov1de Joumaltsts wtth . liberties are standing up 1u
some f~ of safegwud, but the administration. Take
none extsts on the federal Rep. Mike Pence of Indiana
level. . A measure closing woo asked during lbe floor
that gap passed the House debate: "What's a ronservalas1 fall 398 to 21, and a live like me doing passing a
similar bill cleared . ~e bill that helps reporters?"
Senate
Judicwy His answer· "'The only
· Committee. I? fO 2. Sen. cbectongov~mmtpower
John McCain recently in real lime is a free and
joined his ~~c rivals independent press.ft . · . .
m supporung a sb.eld law.
Passage of a sbield law
In _a speech to the bas taken on new wgency,
Assoc1ated Press annual and one reason is a growing
meeting, McCain warned numbe.-of court cases aimecf
that sliCb a law could give at forcing reporters to spill
journalists "a license ID 'ilo dicir secretS. Fonner New
barm." But the benefits Yort: Tunes journalist Judith
outweigh the costs, be said, Miller spen! 85 days in jail
because ~ch_ a measure for refusing ro icleolify her
was also a license to do sources, and oow Tooi Locy
good, to disclose injustice a former staffer for USA
~nd . unlawfulness and Today, is facing futancial
mequ1t1es, and fO encour- ruin forlbe same ruson.
age their swift correction."
A vindictive federal
The Bush administration judge bas slannned L.ocy
has staged a fierce counter- widi a fine of $5,000 a day
attack against the proposal, and barred anyone el~

from · paying tbe debt,
because she woo't tell bim
wbO provided infunnalioo
for stories she wrote about
.anthrax attacks against govemment officials in 2001 .
True, journalists are 001
exactly filling up tbe
nation's jails. but eumples
like Miiier and Locy are
higbly symbolic. They can
scare lilllll'reS infO silence
· and reporters infO timidity.
As Clart Hoyt, public cdiror of the New Yort: Tunes.
Wrote: "B""*lng Toni Locy
... sends eucdy lbe wrong
signal in ali .eJa of increas-ing government sem:cy.fl
· Sen. Aden Specter, Illlllcing RepublicaiJ 011 tbe
ludicialy ()vmiJitw, raised
the .second reason for a fedellll shield law. Press fmedams "in fledgling ........,.__
racies"likt Russia are Ulllb
heavy
As a result, be
wrote in the Washington
Post, "Americans can sec
just how essential a free
media are to demooracy and bow easily they can be
chiDed."
Tbe thin! argument for
legislation flows from 1he
changing nature of the
media
~lace.
Investigative jouinalism is
both .expensive and time..
consuming lind since even
the most solid old-line outkts are lositlg money, cbe
· temptation 10 OIJl' costs and
downsize
investigative
units is enormous. The
. threat of le~al pressures
(and legal ~increases
incentives ro get out of 1he
ditt-iliggi.ng business.

fire:

.

· ~unba!' OCimts -~tntintl

lions

ll)'_...,or,__

-·--ln...
o.w_. ...........

OM,_. ............

-All)·

Wes~~inia

a

5

,...

. . -

-·Ill)·

II

~~~s~'W~epublican

ea..-,

•

- blogs, Web sites,~
jownalists - provide a
welcome divcnity of voices but don't have the
~ boi51Cji0WU" ID
lRak a IJi8 story lbat cballenges the government,
oolr:d former Los~
TUDeS editor Jolm CanoiL
"ADd if a ~ did manage
ro break: the story, it would
likely be crudled in lbe
atiaoulh," be added TbC
lawyers' fees .aloae •'ooufd
be a tic:kt to~-" .
Anyfedelllhbiddlaw~
to be reasonable. not
· absolute, and must rcue• ile
two essential Amrricail
pinciples: the right to mow.
and the rigbt to be Sldr.
Rqutm are ciriuns, too,
with obligllioos to pUIIOCt
nabonal .security and idmtify aiminals. And critics
make a fair point: lbe privilege must be JjmitocUo legitimatejoumali.as,aodsbould
not be ertcnded fO fomgn
agents posing as reportm. '
But witb a litde effort m:l
goodWill, these pmblanscan
be solved. All !bose foes of a
shield law iD the Bush White
House shunld think about
\Ibis for a lllOIDC:Ol Wbal if
BilliCk Obama beoomes
presWnt7 \\Widn't yoo ltd
IJIIlre wmf&lt;atii:Jie wilb a lme
aodbit:sspressholdi-.gbis
feeuo tbe fire?
·
(Stelle Robe.rts 'latest book
is ~My Fathers; Houles:
Memoir of .a Fmnily"
(W'dlimn . Morrow, 2005J.

SleW!tillldColcieRobe.rtsam
be COfiiQCted by e-n at

~@gmaiLcom.}

Mississippi roasts GOP dirty ·tricks machine

Gran!

·=

Deaths

..

Fayetteville man fostmng
sustainable tourism

Ralph Dans

GDIJ Philip lee

New players in the field

• Middleport • Gallipolis ·

~fJary Phillip lee. 70, 'Of Rul;bn~ · p;~,ssed . aw~y
Ralph Davis, 80, Gallipolis; passed away Friday. May 16,
wed{tesday, May 1, 2008,. at Riverstde Hospital to 2008.
Columbus.
. .
.
Arrangements :are mcomplete and will be annonnad b
He was born Jan. 10,1938. m Ka~ W.Va., spnofthe ' die Willis Funeral Home.
y
late John and Mabel ( Knapp} Lee.
·
· He was ·emp!oyC?ct as·a steel fabricator by LTI mElyria.
In addit1o11 to his parents. be was preoeded by a .gr.mdclnld; a SISI.el', Margaret; and brothers, John, Jr., Virgil ami.
Leo Bmdley Shaw, 24, Point Pleasant, W.Va., ·died
Leo
. He is Slll"Vived ·by his wife of 45 years, Dorothy l. Thursday, May 15, 2008, in .an auto accident.
(HoweH) Lee of ~udand; sons, !Phillip Vau.gh (Tammy)
Services will be I p.m. Sunday in lhe Wilcoxen Funeral
Howard of W;eslimlnster, Mel., and William Oavi.d (Judifh) Home, Point Pleasant. B.urial will be in the Apple Grove
Howard orf Finksburg, Md.; daughters, Patty Ann ( Ricky) Memorial GaFdens. Visitation was held in the funeral home
~vans and Linda K~y (Robert) Gorr, all fi-om Elyria, Geny from 7 to 9 p.m. Saturday.
Lyn {Carey) · Wobliver of Wellington, Ohio, and Ashley ,.
Brooke ud Kayla Dawn, at home; nine gt:andchildren and
four great-grandchildren ; a sister, Donna Rollins of
Maryland; and brothe~. Louie, Charles and Clareooe.
Wallace A Smith !r., ·90, Point Pleasant, W.Va., died
The service will be private and will be held at llhe con- Thursday, May 15, 2008, m Pleasant Valley Hospital.
venience mf the·family. There wi11 be no calling illours.
He was preceded in death by bis wife, Inez M. Smith.
· An:angements were bandied by the Anderson-McDaniel
Services will be 2 p.m. Sunday m the Deal Iiunet:al
Funeral Home in Pomeroy.
Home, Point Pleasant, wil!h Pastors Tmy and zenie Smith
officilllling. Burial wm be in Kirkland Memorial Gardens.
Visitation was held in the funei-al borne from 6 to 8 ·p.m.
Satu!'day.
Please visit dea1t:U~~eral@ suddenlinkmail.com to send e~da K Patterson, 60. of Point Pleasant, W.Va.• died
mail
oondolences to lite family.
Friday, May 16, 2~ at her residence
,
. She was bom My 1, 1947, in West Union, Ohio, a .
daughter to .lihe late John T. and Mary Kalihryn Newman
Butcber.
· She was a homemaker. She was a member of ·the of the
Mclison Freewill Baptist Ch'uroh at Addison. · '
· Besides her parents, she was preceded in deallh by: a
brother, Billy Lee Butcher.
· She is survived by ber husband, John T-. Patterson; a
MELVILLE, W.Va (AP) ·night's accident •OCCurred.
·daughter, Usa Day of Point Pleasant; a bt:olher, Richard
The West VIrginia Office , The cause isn't yet known.
and Sandra Butcher of Raome; several special nieces and
of Miners' Health, Safety and
A call to a spokesman for
beJ)bews; and a special fu.end, Pearley lfall.
i~
investigating
an
~
Va-based Massey
Training
,Services will be · I p.m. Tuesday May 20, 2008, in the
Deal Funeral HoR)e at Point Pleasant, wi1b Pastor Rick elect;oculllon at ~rna Energy, Aracotna:&amp; _,paant
Barcus otlficiating. Burial will follow mthe Meigs County Coal s Alma No. 1 mme, !he oompany, wasn't immediately
turned Saturda
Memory Gardens. friends may call at the funeral borne same ·Logan County mme
where
two miners died in .a re
Y·
l!rom 6 (O 8 p.m . Monday, May 19, 2008.
2006 belt line fire
Last month, the federal
Agency spokeswoman . Mine_ . Saf~ty and Health
Jama Jairett identified ilbe Administration presented the
latest victim as 24-year-old mine with a safety award.
'
Dove's death marks West
Mary K. Sowards, 85, of Gallipolis, passed away Nathan Oove of Chattaroy.
Thursday. May 15, 2008. at the Holzer Senior Care Cenlel.
Jarrett says the under- Virginia's second coal
· She was born Nov. i8, 1922, in Alice, daughter of the late ground e1ectrician was repair- mine-related death of 2008
Glen and Opal Mi{dfed Might McCarley.
ing a sbutllle car when friday and the nation ·s ninth.
Mary married John A. Smith. Sr., and he preceded her in
death in 1976. She ,then married Albert W. Sowards, and he
preceded her in death in 1986
Mary w.as a retired self-employed store owner. She was a
·member of Grace United Methodist Church and attended
Fairhaven Church in Kanauga.
,
She is survived by her children, John A. Smith Jr. of
Mobile, Ala., and Carolyn (Lewis SL) Taylor of Galllpc:llis;
four grandchildren, Lewis K. (Grace) Taylor Jr., Zachary S.
~ency Medical Services.
Taylor, John A. Smith Ill and Brian K. (Heather) Smith; 14
According to Vwlci Smith
great-grandchildren; and ¢ree sisters, Thelma Walk: of
with Aatrock vm. firelightGrafton, low a, Rmsemary (5elbert) Marshall of Alvedia,
EVANS, W.V.a. - . A Point er lascm Schultz \Willi ilhe first
Ohio, and Roxanna Lamier of 1Iffin.
.
Pleasant ·man•.as lcilled in a t0 amve aDd fOIIIICllhe vehiIn addition .to her parents, husbancls tohn A. Smith Sr. single-vehide accident on cle .oo its top. Bystanders
· and Al.be111 W. Sowards, sbe was preceded to-death by a sis- Spruce ltun Rood'i/near -the . also were presqut .and proter, Helen Cornwell, 'and two b~. Kenneth McCarley Mason/iJackson county 'line ceeded to flip ilbe vehicle
and Gerald '\Giggs" McCarley.
Thursday.
back: on its wheels.
Services will be I p.m. T.ue~day, May 2G, 2008, at lhe · t!=~at~L~,;;:
Once other firefighters
Willis Funeral Home. with Bob Powell officiating. Burial
"""
appeared oo the ·scene, 'they
will follow in Gra"el Hill Ceme!flry. fliends may caU at me Y
!I" "'Y 1Pffi0DOel.
usee! the jjaws lilf!life" extricafuneral home from 6 to 8 p.m. Monday, May 19,2008.
~011ding to a news tion a;tuipmeot
: Pallbearers wiU be Lewis Taylor Jr.• Zachary Taylor, John release from ·me Mason
Smidl said frrefigbters
Smith Ul. !Brian Smith, Mike Allen and Robert CornweU. ·C ounty ·
Sheriff's had to cut off the roof of the
Please visit www. willisfuneralhome .com to send .e-mail . Depalttment, officers were vehicle in order to get Shaw
oondo1ences.
dispatched to the scene at out. They also had to raise
4:28 P-Ill·
The investigation showed the dash in order to free his
that Shaw apparently had foot that was trapped under
been driving east and lost con- one of the pedals.
Emergency Crews were on
trol of his vehicle. The vehicle
rari off the roadway and struclc the scene for at least two
, employability skills of stu- an embanlcrnent before con- hours. Shaw was taken to
dents who complete a sec- tinuing east and striking a·tree. the . morgue at Pleasant
cateer-tecbniQal lt then •OVerturned.
ondary
Valley Hospital.
education program .in Ohio.
Senior Deputy Erick Lynch
lt was the second fatal
Scholarships and other spe- vehicle accident in Mason and Lt. Jeff Fields were the
RIO
GRANDE
Jtich;n:d Stephens, OS U cial awards will also be given County this year.
investigating officers. Tbey
~nsion agent for Gallia to studentS during the cereMembers of the Aatrock: were assisted by Cpl. K.M.
County. wiU be speaking to mony. Parents, family mem- Volunteer Fire Department Gilley with the Mason
l!he ·southeastern Ohio bers, friends and community responded to the scene, as did County Detachment of the
Safety Council at its May members are invited to attend a crew from Mason County West Vtrginia State Police.
27 meeting.
this special program.
Stephens wiU be sp_eaking
pn tbe topic of hebndes and
wrote
.pesticides and training that ·
IS necessary mdealing with
them.
ClEVELAND (AP) - A yQu,' and when they mquired
· Tbe meeting will be held at
GAlLIPOLIS -· Gallipols man who wrote hundreds of what that meant, be said. 'My
i1000 in Conference Room C
City Commi'ssion will meet in racially bateful letters appar- girlliiend left me for a black
of the Davis University
was motivated by a girl- man."'
Center on the campus of the special sess1on at 7 p.m. ently
Tuason 's defense attorney,
Thesday in the City Building, liiend who left him for a black·
University·of Rio Grande/Rio
man, the FBI said Friday.
Donna Grill, said friday she
.
Second
Ave.,
City
518
Graixle Community College.
Frank: Figliuzzi, head of eould not comment on the
Joe
Woodall
Reservations are necessary. Manager
the
FBI in Cleveland. said case. The Tuason family
Reservations must be made announced.
David Tuasoo, 46, of subur- attorney didn't imQ:oediately
no laier than Thursday, May
ban Pepper Pike. admitted return a call Friday seeking
22.
his motive when arrested ·comment.
To make reservations, call
two months ago.
. Phyllis Mason at(740) 245'1lle arresting agents, upon
, 7228 '0f Paula McCloud at
F ren&lt; '' Cri)
him, reported '1hat
arresting
. \ (740)
245-7170,
.
Estate Plan'' '"9
.
.
.
.

Jr.

..

Man· eleCtrocuted at

Massey Energy mine

Mmy K. 5owanls

Point Pleasant man
.killed in. accident

Ewiier this IIIOII1b, volmi
delivea- lbe d!ange dley wanl
in my old badyardof8aton
in Wasbingtun. All politics is
Rouge. La., fired die seoond
still local
warning shot aimed- at
Tbe oen lesSOD lium the
RqJublican di!NlSI« in
Republicans
desperate
~.:.SIS·&lt;:inno
. • ;. "-~lite GOP
enough to use the politics of
....,. -ry· ~ ,._
fear to win congressional
brand is long past its e~
races. Like the first one fired
lion date. The Repuhlnns
two months ago from forpd!td out all lbe ·S1ofJS to
mer House Speakrr Denny
win in Mississippi. They
Hasten's oonsli.t:uents in
rolled out an all-star liDo-up
Dlinois. ~s warning from
of OOP heavy-hi~
Mississippi, they srooped 10
my friends un the bayou
conquer with a negaliive ad including Vice President
apparently fell on deaf ears.
that tried to tie Childers ro Dick Cbeney, Gov. Haley
Now the good folks in the Rev. Jefe!lliah Wright BadJour, fumier pn:sicbitial
. north Mississippi just fired Why try to link: a oonserva- candidate Mike HoJclralwr
their shot- and it wasn't tive w!Jite Democrat wi.th a and fOI'DICr senator Tn:Dl
aa;oss the bow. It may have 'norlbem liberal preao
. her?. Ult1 ro help Greg Davis.
sunk the USS House GOP
Yoo ~ssed oorrectly: the Even President Busb, Joiln
battleship for 2008. And old divisive politics of fear McCain and Laura Bush
•
•
good riddance.
reoorded phone .calls for
and guilt by .asliOCiatimis.
Losing Hastert' s seat in
LETTERS TO THE
'
For the third election in a ~~:_ 8ofut GOPtbebir,ga-~
Dlinois' 14th congressional row, lite GOP was back- """'1""6
' .tliil ~y
..
EDITOR
distticr was han! enoUgh for slapped by vOters ton wor- served to vota:s, lbe more
Republicans to swallow. ried about having better . Mississippians ·turned away.
; l,eners to the editor are welcome. They slwuld be
"fess than 300 words. All letters are subject to editing, · Watching newly elected jobs, more affordable health It's no w!llllb-d:latnearly 30
Democratic Congressman care and lower g-dS and gro- Republican House me111hos
'f"JlSf be .figned.• and include· address and telephone
Oon Cazayoux win in Baton cery prices to fall for gutter decided Ill bang it up 1bis
rzumber: No unsrgned /.etten wiU be published. Letters ·
Rouge two months later. a politics. lnteUectually bank- year~ than face dte VOl~lwufl! _be in good ra~te. qddressing issues, not perseat held by the GOP for rupt Republicans ignored ers in Novembel with 1bat
sOTUJhttes. Letters of thonlcs to organizlllions and indi- ' more than 30 years, bad these
chaUenges. in favor of big "Rft nell! to lbeir name.
them gulping with fear. Now throwing the kitchen sink
~iduals will not be accepted for publication.
·
But the biggest lesson
•
they have lost Mississippi's - and, for good measure. ooming from 1he Magnolia
I st oongressional district the muck. that laid at the State this week is that
one of the most solidi y bnttom of the ·garbage dis- strong Democratic candiRepublican !leals iil America. pu.al - at their opponetll
dates, who .share tbe values
Reader Services
With the November eJec..
of
1heir districts and oomThe bill for dus failed
comin~ fast and fwious strategy is pretty belty. Tbe qtit to bringing change to
;
Ccaoa:lluio Pa11cJ
Third Avenue, Gallipolis, OH
over the borizoo, losing three National
• OUr main """"""' in all- I&amp; to be •l1631 . periodical postage paid
Republican Washington, can win .any·: accurate. ff you 1u1ow o1 an"""' in a a1 Gallipolis.
oonsecutive ruby-red ·diS· Congressional Committee where in America. ·
• ltofy, please call one of our ti&amp;WiiUUhB. . • • • r : Jhe Associated Press,
triOI$ i$ simply ~(Mt,O:) burned ihrough 20 .. Unless dte GOP can team
the West Virginia l'ress ·
The
stuillling
win
by
•
peroen1 Of its .cash. Its ' lhese les&amp;QDs - -and learn
. o.. ......... .D:
Association, and the Ohio
•
Democratic
CongressmanNewspaper Association .·
favorite 527 attack ·dog, them fast - it migbtbebest
G:nhat • Gallipolis; OH
elect Trdvis. Childers over Freedom's Watch, spent for them fO just go to &amp;ltlep
P - : Send address cor(740)tMZICI
roctlonl to the· Gallipolis Daily
Republican Greg Davis was more than $460,001. ln total, and 001 wake up until 2009.
Senolnel• Pomeroy, OH
Tribune , 825 Third Avenue,
a shot heard around the Republicans spent more than
For the time being, tbe
(740) -~55
Gallipolis, OH 45631 .
world of politics. lood $1.7 million ro IO!ie a seat in Democratic Party has plenl.qiJirr • Pt. Pleasant, WV
(31M)175-1333
enough to send shook:waves a district !bat President Bush ty to ~s busy.
letr cdpllon,.....
inro the heart of every WOO ~ily, twice (by 62 per- 1ionner
•
· presian.- ... .. ....."ta.27 .
Republican caQdidaie for the cent m 2004
Qwwe!
).
dential candidate John
an.,.. ..........."121.24
.t:mnr • Ga~ OH
House. This latest GOP
There life
big lessons Edwards' surprise eodor:&amp;e... ... . ....••••...•.'1.50
thumping
(in a seat that was- to be
1fum watcbiqg meut. of ObuDa !tours after
•
....
a...._
-~
Sentinel• Pomeoor. OH
n't ·even supposed fO be in tbe
'•
"ta.27
.
. .' . 1!1! bbroke Hill Clinton's ~win in
·:xi • play) is a clear signal that m
"taa•
sSI&amp;Sippt
ani! enc1 IIJl
has captured
l.ttitttr • Pt. PI '\ WV
V&lt;Jten
ev.erywhere
are
reject.
truly
bustfd.
FU'Siis
dlllt tbcir · the IJ)ed1a·s attention, and
......, 1 ., •.••• 1 .. .
dnld~ ...
S •OIIw'Tibne. No .
ing the Republicans • special- oonk:ie--cutter approacb. of everyone is chattering
•• I t ~ miiiPIIii-..d i ' l inF"Csts-driven
agenda. llying {0 nationalize House about the patty'-s need to
wtaellonw~.W..II•ar'+OwtHI!IJI g
\biers .are delivering a man- races doesn't waX. That dQg unite and wondering exactan.... • Ga!!ip*, OH
d:lfe for change and a new just dido 't bwtt in Illinois. li ly bow clamaging this
-·Ill)
~
'r .•
.....,Count)
direction in the nation's dido 't bUilt in Louisiana, and infighting will be when
Sentinel• "Poii'*D)'. OH
1 3 - . ········ ...'32.26
: - . -...., , . ,
''oge
capitol.
it dido' t even ~ up from its . November rolls around.
2 6 - .... : .......'64.20
........ • Pt. Pleasant, wv
Once
again,
Republicans
But ·as we talking beads
5 2 - ...........'127.11
nationalire
the
tried
to
cbaner .about, Otiklcorr;' vicll)~lei I :.ccllll
' .
au.....
House race by focusing · attack macbine was cranking !(X)' in Mississippi •tells us 10
~ :
(USPS •• 1401
1 3 - ... .. .... ...'53.55
their negative attacks on out negative ads, Olilders· !;hut up and take note. This
: :otolo V..ley Publllllitltl Co. l!eWeelao ...........'107.10 .
Barack:
Obama and Speaker was reminding folks that be campaign season is 001
Published every Sunday, 825 52 Weeks ... .' ... ....'214.21
Nancy Pelosi. Desperate in shares their values and will about fear. 11 will not be woo
X

Pom~

Sunday, May 18, 2008

•

•

•

by the politics of oW. ~
know what mattm; to ..._
~ lbey woo't be st~-;;d
euily by 11•11ii1•td, _,_
.-lllmbadl:jobs.Noloogucan
Democratic .candirlwtM be
t*t:odown
labdcd
~ve. In fact, it is .a

"!'being

banner ,t o dwnpioo wilb

pride. ~ want ~s.
Mississi~!.;._..

s and
Demoorats
alike.
Rqlublicans must COllie out
of this airing dul dley've
iost touch with basic
Americlin f'~ and

a1:1 · to .

·.

cannokqJc:rt!f~Calkto,IIIUdl

less solve, ilhc pol!lrms ooo-fmnting .Joe and Jane Smith.
Dell"" •ills must take it a a
warning not to get distracted
and Ill listm {0 votmi.
There are .always a mil~
.lion issues to ·ditiCIU&amp;S -abe
war to Iraq, bealdl care,
global w~, lbe eoooo- ·
my, P?rl'-baael spending,
ca"'P"'gn ·finance n:form,
se&amp;ng of delegatioos from
u~..~o;-n
---' A.orida, ·
···~
. ......
Obama's tdatioosbip with
~_former pastor, ~·~
VICKlUS temper. Some matter, some don'L Tbe message evecyooe sbould .. .
from Mississippi is to focus .
on , lbe things Chat matter
ancHeaveev~ ·dseiD

dJe pundits and oonsnltants.
Talk to voteR, anti they will ·
talk back. .Talk at voters, ·
and your patty's headed
toward a downfall.
.
Republicans leamed that
lesson well last Wednesday
when they watobed rubyred rum crystal blue in
Miasissippi's lst coqgressional district. W'tll they
cbaoge iitl&amp;y iD lime w
• avert electioo c••sh&gt;W&gt;Iwo
. 11
bope so, utbuwise it~d
make my job too
good competition that
me at the top of my g&amp;~J~e.
Come on, Kad, I know
yuu've got game, but it's
time you draft a new play-

.easl~

book.
(Donna Brazi,k is a polirical conurrmtator on CNN
ABC and NPR. contribut:
ing colllllut.i.fl to Roll Call,
the newspaper of Capitol
Hil~ and former campaign
,anager for AI Go~. }

•

Briefs

Speaker set
for meeting

·· one of!he first phrases out .of

Certificate
ceremony
RIO GRANDE - The
annual Senior Certificate
Ceremony of the Gallia. Jackson-Vinton
Joint
Vocational School District
jWiU be held on Thursday.
1J,ay 22, 2008 at 6:30 p.m.
.at Lyne Center on the campus of the University of Rio
Grande/Rio
Grande
Community College .
· Students from Buckeye
Hills Career Center -will
receive ·a Career-Technical .
Certificate of Completion
and a Career Passport. The
Career Passport is a creden.lialing tool that documents
the specific occupational
sk:ills, academic ski lis and

GALLIA COUNTY

Relay for Life
Friday, June 6.
GaUipolis City Parle

FBI:·Ohw man who
raa
thrmts rruulalwut ex-gi,y;inul

Commission
to meet

'

FAYETIEVILLE, W.Va. area, be said. Guides on ·
(AP) - Doug Arbogast of thege trips will receive
Fayetteville wanted to be safety and history training,
more than a raft guide.
be said .
"I had gotten married, had
Also, the DEP and
my first child;" he said. Arbogast are collaborating
"There was more that I on Travel Green West
could do with the industry. I Vir~a. a program that will
bad my fun. ft
reg.ster and certify the
ln October. 2007, he start- state's travel and rourism
ed
Travel
Green organizations as sustainAppalachia, a business that able. The pilot program will
is worl&lt;:ing to support and begin in midsummer, with
develop sustainable travel 20 to 30 businesses particiand tourism here.
pating, he said.
. "I was wondering if anyThe history of sustainone was going to step up able travel within lhe
and take a lead," hi: said. state's borders already has
"We are perfectly poised some roots. In 2001', lhe
here. In my opinion, it DEP and Division of
should have happened a Tourism signed a memolong time ago."
randum of agreement,
Sustainable
tourism committing to eco-tourism
helps preserve communi· development in the state.
ties' physical environment In 2002, the DEP and tbe
and culture, while still pro- Division of Tourism held
vJdmg
for
economic an eco-tourism conferenc~:
~rowth. In other words, in Flatwoods. ·
Jt's about making money, · However, with the chang=
while still respecting a ing thoughts on green trav:
place's physical beauty el, the memorandum is no
and history. ·
longer valid, because tbe
"For me, it's about the state and DEP are conCenenvironmental, economic trating their efforts on susand social effects of travel. tainable travel, said Greg
You can't sacrifice one for Adolfson of the DEP.
,
the other," Arbogast said.
A true eco-traveler woul4
Arbogast has been work- not disturb any of the envi~
ing in "green" business for ronment. "It's hard to ·be
years, including 13 years as truly eco," Adolfson said-.
a raft guide. He has a bach- Sustainable travel, on the
~lor of arts in environmental other , hand, is more pri.otigeoscience and master of cal, be said. ·
.
Like Arbogast, Adolfson
. science in recreation, parks
and tourism resources, both said
state
and
the
from
West
Virginia Appalachia are in a ·greaJ:
University.
spot for promoting sustain•
·
During and following able travel.
graduate school, be started
For East Coast travelers,
consulting with state agen- it's quite easy to get to West
cies,
particularly
the Virgmia without using an
Department
of airplane; thus cutting a travEnvironmental Protection, eler's
en vironment;U
.,
universities and communi- impact, he said.
For Arbogast, be's already
ties on how to put sustainliving the·'green life, particability into action.
"I wanted to do more of ularly when it comes to
this," he said. "As OPjl?Sed travel. He onl:y has one
to juSt getting a job wtth an vebicle, three btcycles and
organization, I decided that hasn't taken a plane ride iri
I might as well start my own more than a year, he said. .
When traveling to a conbusiness."
So far, Arbogast and ference mWisconsin eatlic:r
TGA have helped five this year, be drove to
,gr.aduate students from Pillsbm:gh, llOOk .a train to
West Virginia University Chicago and a bus tci
in developing a communi- Wisconsin, be said.
"I probably could have got·
ty-based tourism plan m
Ansted. At West Virginia ten on a plane for just as much
State Om versi ty, .he helped money as Amtrak:." he said.
· And, he wants travelers
develop a commumtybased tourism class 'for ·the and other businesses to realiLe that tOQ, he said.
.
sociology department.
Next on hts list of pro- . "I want to help it beoomr;
jects are eco-tours, which more maiJ;ostream. _Beins
allow travelers to experi- green or gomg green 1s ecoence Appalachia's natural nomically smart.... I lhini
beauty, but also learn we are on the doorstep," be
about the culture of the said.

his mouth was, ' You wouldn't ·
understand 'til it happened to

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CALL foR YOUR FREE

Luminary Ceremony - June 6
For general Relay for Life and Luminary irifonnation,
please contact:

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Joill 11s at dusk, Friday eve11U.g, Ju11e IS, 2008
for the lighti11g ofour lumillaries.

Luminary PuJ"chased For ($10 each):

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�PageA6

OPINION

Obituari~

Sunday, May' t8, aoo8

·Media shield law in the pipeline
On the campaign trail,

825 Third A - - • G llpclls Ohio

(740) 446-2342 • FAX (740) 446-3ooa
-.mydal~

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

.

Dan Goodrich .
Publisher

'

..
I'

..

Kevin Kelly
Managing Editor ·

Diane Hill
Controller

,,
utters ro r~ edilor are we~. They slrould be less ·
,_. than 300 words. All letters are subject 10 .,Jiring and rrwst
, be signed and incluk addre:rs and 'tekphorte number. No
unsigned krters will be published urtLrs should be in
good lasle, addressing iss~U&lt;s, not personalities.

'TODAY IN HISTORY
~

:· Today is Sunday, May 18, the 139111 day of2008: There

are 227 days left in the year.
T~ay's

· Highlight in History: On May 18, l933,
Pres1dent Franklin D. Roosevelt signed a measure creating
the Tennessee Valley Authority.
·
' On this date: In 1642, the Canadian city of Montreal was
founded by French colonists.
· In · 1804, the French Senate proclaimed Napoleon
Bonaparte emperor.
ln · 1896, the Supreme Court, in Plessy v. Ferguson,
endorsed "separate but equalft racial segregation, a ooncept
that was renounced 58 years later with Brown v. Board of
Education of Topeka.
.
19~0
.
•
Pope
John
Paul
0
was
born
Karol
Wojtyla
in
- In
Wadow~ee, Poland.
·
·
··: ln 1926, evangelist Aimee Semple McPherson vanished
while visiting a beach in Venice, Calif.; sbe reappeared
more than a month later, claiming to have been kidrn!pped.
· ln 1927, a schoolhouse in Bath, Micb., was blown up
with explosives planted by local fanner Andrew Keboe,
~ho then set off a dynamite-laden auromobile; the attacks
ltiUed 38 children and six adults, including Kehoe, who'd
earlier killed bis wife.
· .
- In 1953, Jacqueline Cochran became the first woman 10
break the sound barrier as sbe piloted a North American F86 Canadair over Rogers Dry l..ak.e, Calif.
.
·
, In 1967, :rennessee Gov. _Bufool EUington signed a measure repealing the law agamst teaching evolution that was
used fO prosecute John T. Scopes in 1925.
. In 1980, the Mount St: Helens. volcano in Washington
state exploded, leavmg 57 people dead or missing.
· ln 1991, Helen Sharman became the first British citizen
fo rocket inro space as she flew aboard a Soviet Soyuz ..
sp~raft w1th two cosmonauts on an eigbt-ilay mission.
· Ftve years ago: A Hamas suicide attacker disguised as an
observant Jew killed seven Israeli bus passengers. Pope
rohn Paul U celebrnted his 83ni birthday with an open-air
Mass and requests for payers so be could eolitinue his
papacy. "Les Miserables" closed on Proadway afta' more
1ban 16 years and 6,680 paf.........__
..
• One year ago: Tbe White House and Cotwess failed to
strike a deal after exchanging rompt"tiilg offers 011 an Iraq
war spending biU that Democrats said should set a date for
U.S. troops _ro leave. French President Nirolas Sartozy .
named a radically revamped cabinet wbicb inCluded seven
women among its 15 members.
Today'~ B~ys: Actor Bill Macy is 86. Sportscaster
Jack Whitaker ts 84. Actor Robelt MO£se is 77. Actor and
television executive Dwayne Hickman is 74. Baseball Hall~~"Famer B~ Robinsoo is 71. Bluegrass singer-musicmn Rodney Dillard (The Dillants) is 66. Baseball Hali-QfFamer Reggie Jack::son is 62. ~ Candice Azzara is 61.
Country s~ller J~ Bonsall (The 0~ Ridge Boysj is 60.
Rock mUSlCl~ Rick: Wakeman (Yes) IS 59. Country singer
~eorge Str.ut 1s 56. Rhythm-and-blues singer Butch
,-avares (favares)-is 55. Actor Chow Yun-Fat is 53. Rock
;;inger:musici~ Page Hamilron is 48. Contemporary
~sllan mu_s1c~ Barry
(Me~yMe) is 47. Singeractress Mattika ts 39. Comedian-wnter Tma Fey is 38.
Rapper Special Ed is 34. Rock singer .Jack JobnSOJi is 33.
Rhythm-and-blues singer Darryi,Allen (Mista) is 28. Actor
Man Long is 28. Christian-rock musician Kevin Huguley
:!Rush of Fools) is 26. Acror Spencer Breslin is 16.
~. ;ntought for Today: "life is a j9k:e that's just begUn.";w.s. Gilbert. English librettist (1836-1911).
.

there is much talk ofbipaltisanship. but back on Capiro)
Hill, 1hat spirit bas van- .
Cokie
isbed. Tbe latest example:
and
collapse of Senate oegotialions to belp bomeownen
Sleven
threateoed wid! foreclosure.
Rob eats
However. one important
piece of legislation does
command strong suppon
across ~ lines: a federal and that's 00 swprise. This
sbield law giving journal- White House bas alway·5
ists greater protection from embraced secrecy and
overzealous la~yers and rejected aooounlllbility. The
prosecuro~ trymg to ~ last thing it wants is "swift
loose tbe1r ronfidential cmrection" of its · own
sources. Con~s sbould ~ unjust and unlawful actions.
pass 1t, ~ qu1cldy.
Fortunately,
many
Forty:m~
s~tes Republicans wbn value lini-(Wy~mmg lS the ~xoep~R?D) !ted pemment and civil
prov1de Joumaltsts wtth . liberties are standing up 1u
some f~ of safegwud, but the administration. Take
none extsts on the federal Rep. Mike Pence of Indiana
level. . A measure closing woo asked during lbe floor
that gap passed the House debate: "What's a ronservalas1 fall 398 to 21, and a live like me doing passing a
similar bill cleared . ~e bill that helps reporters?"
Senate
Judicwy His answer· "'The only
· Committee. I? fO 2. Sen. cbectongov~mmtpower
John McCain recently in real lime is a free and
joined his ~~c rivals independent press.ft . · . .
m supporung a sb.eld law.
Passage of a sbield law
In _a speech to the bas taken on new wgency,
Assoc1ated Press annual and one reason is a growing
meeting, McCain warned numbe.-of court cases aimecf
that sliCb a law could give at forcing reporters to spill
journalists "a license ID 'ilo dicir secretS. Fonner New
barm." But the benefits Yort: Tunes journalist Judith
outweigh the costs, be said, Miller spen! 85 days in jail
because ~ch_ a measure for refusing ro icleolify her
was also a license to do sources, and oow Tooi Locy
good, to disclose injustice a former staffer for USA
~nd . unlawfulness and Today, is facing futancial
mequ1t1es, and fO encour- ruin forlbe same ruson.
age their swift correction."
A vindictive federal
The Bush administration judge bas slannned L.ocy
has staged a fierce counter- widi a fine of $5,000 a day
attack against the proposal, and barred anyone el~

from · paying tbe debt,
because she woo't tell bim
wbO provided infunnalioo
for stories she wrote about
.anthrax attacks against govemment officials in 2001 .
True, journalists are 001
exactly filling up tbe
nation's jails. but eumples
like Miiier and Locy are
higbly symbolic. They can
scare lilllll'reS infO silence
· and reporters infO timidity.
As Clart Hoyt, public cdiror of the New Yort: Tunes.
Wrote: "B""*lng Toni Locy
... sends eucdy lbe wrong
signal in ali .eJa of increas-ing government sem:cy.fl
· Sen. Aden Specter, Illlllcing RepublicaiJ 011 tbe
ludicialy ()vmiJitw, raised
the .second reason for a fedellll shield law. Press fmedams "in fledgling ........,.__
racies"likt Russia are Ulllb
heavy
As a result, be
wrote in the Washington
Post, "Americans can sec
just how essential a free
media are to demooracy and bow easily they can be
chiDed."
Tbe thin! argument for
legislation flows from 1he
changing nature of the
media
~lace.
Investigative jouinalism is
both .expensive and time..
consuming lind since even
the most solid old-line outkts are lositlg money, cbe
· temptation 10 OIJl' costs and
downsize
investigative
units is enormous. The
. threat of le~al pressures
(and legal ~increases
incentives ro get out of 1he
ditt-iliggi.ng business.

fire:

.

· ~unba!' OCimts -~tntintl

lions

ll)'_...,or,__

-·--ln...
o.w_. ...........

OM,_. ............

-All)·

Wes~~inia

a

5

,...

. . -

-·Ill)·

II

~~~s~'W~epublican

ea..-,

•

- blogs, Web sites,~
jownalists - provide a
welcome divcnity of voices but don't have the
~ boi51Cji0WU" ID
lRak a IJi8 story lbat cballenges the government,
oolr:d former Los~
TUDeS editor Jolm CanoiL
"ADd if a ~ did manage
ro break: the story, it would
likely be crudled in lbe
atiaoulh," be added TbC
lawyers' fees .aloae •'ooufd
be a tic:kt to~-" .
Anyfedelllhbiddlaw~
to be reasonable. not
· absolute, and must rcue• ile
two essential Amrricail
pinciples: the right to mow.
and the rigbt to be Sldr.
Rqutm are ciriuns, too,
with obligllioos to pUIIOCt
nabonal .security and idmtify aiminals. And critics
make a fair point: lbe privilege must be JjmitocUo legitimatejoumali.as,aodsbould
not be ertcnded fO fomgn
agents posing as reportm. '
But witb a litde effort m:l
goodWill, these pmblanscan
be solved. All !bose foes of a
shield law iD the Bush White
House shunld think about
\Ibis for a lllOIDC:Ol Wbal if
BilliCk Obama beoomes
presWnt7 \\Widn't yoo ltd
IJIIlre wmf&lt;atii:Jie wilb a lme
aodbit:sspressholdi-.gbis
feeuo tbe fire?
·
(Stelle Robe.rts 'latest book
is ~My Fathers; Houles:
Memoir of .a Fmnily"
(W'dlimn . Morrow, 2005J.

SleW!tillldColcieRobe.rtsam
be COfiiQCted by e-n at

~@gmaiLcom.}

Mississippi roasts GOP dirty ·tricks machine

Gran!

·=

Deaths

..

Fayetteville man fostmng
sustainable tourism

Ralph Dans

GDIJ Philip lee

New players in the field

• Middleport • Gallipolis ·

~fJary Phillip lee. 70, 'Of Rul;bn~ · p;~,ssed . aw~y
Ralph Davis, 80, Gallipolis; passed away Friday. May 16,
wed{tesday, May 1, 2008,. at Riverstde Hospital to 2008.
Columbus.
. .
.
Arrangements :are mcomplete and will be annonnad b
He was born Jan. 10,1938. m Ka~ W.Va., spnofthe ' die Willis Funeral Home.
y
late John and Mabel ( Knapp} Lee.
·
· He was ·emp!oyC?ct as·a steel fabricator by LTI mElyria.
In addit1o11 to his parents. be was preoeded by a .gr.mdclnld; a SISI.el', Margaret; and brothers, John, Jr., Virgil ami.
Leo Bmdley Shaw, 24, Point Pleasant, W.Va., ·died
Leo
. He is Slll"Vived ·by his wife of 45 years, Dorothy l. Thursday, May 15, 2008, in .an auto accident.
(HoweH) Lee of ~udand; sons, !Phillip Vau.gh (Tammy)
Services will be I p.m. Sunday in lhe Wilcoxen Funeral
Howard of W;eslimlnster, Mel., and William Oavi.d (Judifh) Home, Point Pleasant. B.urial will be in the Apple Grove
Howard orf Finksburg, Md.; daughters, Patty Ann ( Ricky) Memorial GaFdens. Visitation was held in the funeral home
~vans and Linda K~y (Robert) Gorr, all fi-om Elyria, Geny from 7 to 9 p.m. Saturday.
Lyn {Carey) · Wobliver of Wellington, Ohio, and Ashley ,.
Brooke ud Kayla Dawn, at home; nine gt:andchildren and
four great-grandchildren ; a sister, Donna Rollins of
Maryland; and brothe~. Louie, Charles and Clareooe.
Wallace A Smith !r., ·90, Point Pleasant, W.Va., died
The service will be private and will be held at llhe con- Thursday, May 15, 2008, m Pleasant Valley Hospital.
venience mf the·family. There wi11 be no calling illours.
He was preceded in death by bis wife, Inez M. Smith.
· An:angements were bandied by the Anderson-McDaniel
Services will be 2 p.m. Sunday m the Deal Iiunet:al
Funeral Home in Pomeroy.
Home, Point Pleasant, wil!h Pastors Tmy and zenie Smith
officilllling. Burial wm be in Kirkland Memorial Gardens.
Visitation was held in the funei-al borne from 6 to 8 ·p.m.
Satu!'day.
Please visit dea1t:U~~eral@ suddenlinkmail.com to send e~da K Patterson, 60. of Point Pleasant, W.Va.• died
mail
oondolences to lite family.
Friday, May 16, 2~ at her residence
,
. She was bom My 1, 1947, in West Union, Ohio, a .
daughter to .lihe late John T. and Mary Kalihryn Newman
Butcber.
· She was a homemaker. She was a member of ·the of the
Mclison Freewill Baptist Ch'uroh at Addison. · '
· Besides her parents, she was preceded in deallh by: a
brother, Billy Lee Butcher.
· She is survived by ber husband, John T-. Patterson; a
MELVILLE, W.Va (AP) ·night's accident •OCCurred.
·daughter, Usa Day of Point Pleasant; a bt:olher, Richard
The West VIrginia Office , The cause isn't yet known.
and Sandra Butcher of Raome; several special nieces and
of Miners' Health, Safety and
A call to a spokesman for
beJ)bews; and a special fu.end, Pearley lfall.
i~
investigating
an
~
Va-based Massey
Training
,Services will be · I p.m. Tuesday May 20, 2008, in the
Deal Funeral HoR)e at Point Pleasant, wi1b Pastor Rick elect;oculllon at ~rna Energy, Aracotna:&amp; _,paant
Barcus otlficiating. Burial will follow mthe Meigs County Coal s Alma No. 1 mme, !he oompany, wasn't immediately
turned Saturda
Memory Gardens. friends may call at the funeral borne same ·Logan County mme
where
two miners died in .a re
Y·
l!rom 6 (O 8 p.m . Monday, May 19, 2008.
2006 belt line fire
Last month, the federal
Agency spokeswoman . Mine_ . Saf~ty and Health
Jama Jairett identified ilbe Administration presented the
latest victim as 24-year-old mine with a safety award.
'
Dove's death marks West
Mary K. Sowards, 85, of Gallipolis, passed away Nathan Oove of Chattaroy.
Thursday. May 15, 2008. at the Holzer Senior Care Cenlel.
Jarrett says the under- Virginia's second coal
· She was born Nov. i8, 1922, in Alice, daughter of the late ground e1ectrician was repair- mine-related death of 2008
Glen and Opal Mi{dfed Might McCarley.
ing a sbutllle car when friday and the nation ·s ninth.
Mary married John A. Smith. Sr., and he preceded her in
death in 1976. She ,then married Albert W. Sowards, and he
preceded her in death in 1986
Mary w.as a retired self-employed store owner. She was a
·member of Grace United Methodist Church and attended
Fairhaven Church in Kanauga.
,
She is survived by her children, John A. Smith Jr. of
Mobile, Ala., and Carolyn (Lewis SL) Taylor of Galllpc:llis;
four grandchildren, Lewis K. (Grace) Taylor Jr., Zachary S.
~ency Medical Services.
Taylor, John A. Smith Ill and Brian K. (Heather) Smith; 14
According to Vwlci Smith
great-grandchildren; and ¢ree sisters, Thelma Walk: of
with Aatrock vm. firelightGrafton, low a, Rmsemary (5elbert) Marshall of Alvedia,
EVANS, W.V.a. - . A Point er lascm Schultz \Willi ilhe first
Ohio, and Roxanna Lamier of 1Iffin.
.
Pleasant ·man•.as lcilled in a t0 amve aDd fOIIIICllhe vehiIn addition .to her parents, husbancls tohn A. Smith Sr. single-vehide accident on cle .oo its top. Bystanders
· and Al.be111 W. Sowards, sbe was preceded to-death by a sis- Spruce ltun Rood'i/near -the . also were presqut .and proter, Helen Cornwell, 'and two b~. Kenneth McCarley Mason/iJackson county 'line ceeded to flip ilbe vehicle
and Gerald '\Giggs" McCarley.
Thursday.
back: on its wheels.
Services will be I p.m. T.ue~day, May 2G, 2008, at lhe · t!=~at~L~,;;:
Once other firefighters
Willis Funeral Home. with Bob Powell officiating. Burial
"""
appeared oo the ·scene, 'they
will follow in Gra"el Hill Ceme!flry. fliends may caU at me Y
!I" "'Y 1Pffi0DOel.
usee! the jjaws lilf!life" extricafuneral home from 6 to 8 p.m. Monday, May 19,2008.
~011ding to a news tion a;tuipmeot
: Pallbearers wiU be Lewis Taylor Jr.• Zachary Taylor, John release from ·me Mason
Smidl said frrefigbters
Smith Ul. !Brian Smith, Mike Allen and Robert CornweU. ·C ounty ·
Sheriff's had to cut off the roof of the
Please visit www. willisfuneralhome .com to send .e-mail . Depalttment, officers were vehicle in order to get Shaw
oondo1ences.
dispatched to the scene at out. They also had to raise
4:28 P-Ill·
The investigation showed the dash in order to free his
that Shaw apparently had foot that was trapped under
been driving east and lost con- one of the pedals.
Emergency Crews were on
trol of his vehicle. The vehicle
rari off the roadway and struclc the scene for at least two
, employability skills of stu- an embanlcrnent before con- hours. Shaw was taken to
dents who complete a sec- tinuing east and striking a·tree. the . morgue at Pleasant
cateer-tecbniQal lt then •OVerturned.
ondary
Valley Hospital.
education program .in Ohio.
Senior Deputy Erick Lynch
lt was the second fatal
Scholarships and other spe- vehicle accident in Mason and Lt. Jeff Fields were the
RIO
GRANDE
Jtich;n:d Stephens, OS U cial awards will also be given County this year.
investigating officers. Tbey
~nsion agent for Gallia to studentS during the cereMembers of the Aatrock: were assisted by Cpl. K.M.
County. wiU be speaking to mony. Parents, family mem- Volunteer Fire Department Gilley with the Mason
l!he ·southeastern Ohio bers, friends and community responded to the scene, as did County Detachment of the
Safety Council at its May members are invited to attend a crew from Mason County West Vtrginia State Police.
27 meeting.
this special program.
Stephens wiU be sp_eaking
pn tbe topic of hebndes and
wrote
.pesticides and training that ·
IS necessary mdealing with
them.
ClEVELAND (AP) - A yQu,' and when they mquired
· Tbe meeting will be held at
GAlLIPOLIS -· Gallipols man who wrote hundreds of what that meant, be said. 'My
i1000 in Conference Room C
City Commi'ssion will meet in racially bateful letters appar- girlliiend left me for a black
of the Davis University
was motivated by a girl- man."'
Center on the campus of the special sess1on at 7 p.m. ently
Tuason 's defense attorney,
Thesday in the City Building, liiend who left him for a black·
University·of Rio Grande/Rio
man, the FBI said Friday.
Donna Grill, said friday she
.
Second
Ave.,
City
518
Graixle Community College.
Frank: Figliuzzi, head of eould not comment on the
Joe
Woodall
Reservations are necessary. Manager
the
FBI in Cleveland. said case. The Tuason family
Reservations must be made announced.
David Tuasoo, 46, of subur- attorney didn't imQ:oediately
no laier than Thursday, May
ban Pepper Pike. admitted return a call Friday seeking
22.
his motive when arrested ·comment.
To make reservations, call
two months ago.
. Phyllis Mason at(740) 245'1lle arresting agents, upon
, 7228 '0f Paula McCloud at
F ren&lt; '' Cri)
him, reported '1hat
arresting
. \ (740)
245-7170,
.
Estate Plan'' '"9
.
.
.
.

Jr.

..

Man· eleCtrocuted at

Massey Energy mine

Mmy K. 5owanls

Point Pleasant man
.killed in. accident

Ewiier this IIIOII1b, volmi
delivea- lbe d!ange dley wanl
in my old badyardof8aton
in Wasbingtun. All politics is
Rouge. La., fired die seoond
still local
warning shot aimed- at
Tbe oen lesSOD lium the
RqJublican di!NlSI« in
Republicans
desperate
~.:.SIS·&lt;:inno
. • ;. "-~lite GOP
enough to use the politics of
....,. -ry· ~ ,._
fear to win congressional
brand is long past its e~
races. Like the first one fired
lion date. The Repuhlnns
two months ago from forpd!td out all lbe ·S1ofJS to
mer House Speakrr Denny
win in Mississippi. They
Hasten's oonsli.t:uents in
rolled out an all-star liDo-up
Dlinois. ~s warning from
of OOP heavy-hi~
Mississippi, they srooped 10
my friends un the bayou
conquer with a negaliive ad including Vice President
apparently fell on deaf ears.
that tried to tie Childers ro Dick Cbeney, Gov. Haley
Now the good folks in the Rev. Jefe!lliah Wright BadJour, fumier pn:sicbitial
. north Mississippi just fired Why try to link: a oonserva- candidate Mike HoJclralwr
their shot- and it wasn't tive w!Jite Democrat wi.th a and fOI'DICr senator Tn:Dl
aa;oss the bow. It may have 'norlbem liberal preao
. her?. Ult1 ro help Greg Davis.
sunk the USS House GOP
Yoo ~ssed oorrectly: the Even President Busb, Joiln
battleship for 2008. And old divisive politics of fear McCain and Laura Bush
•
•
good riddance.
reoorded phone .calls for
and guilt by .asliOCiatimis.
Losing Hastert' s seat in
LETTERS TO THE
'
For the third election in a ~~:_ 8ofut GOPtbebir,ga-~
Dlinois' 14th congressional row, lite GOP was back- """'1""6
' .tliil ~y
..
EDITOR
distticr was han! enoUgh for slapped by vOters ton wor- served to vota:s, lbe more
Republicans to swallow. ried about having better . Mississippians ·turned away.
; l,eners to the editor are welcome. They slwuld be
"fess than 300 words. All letters are subject to editing, · Watching newly elected jobs, more affordable health It's no w!llllb-d:latnearly 30
Democratic Congressman care and lower g-dS and gro- Republican House me111hos
'f"JlSf be .figned.• and include· address and telephone
Oon Cazayoux win in Baton cery prices to fall for gutter decided Ill bang it up 1bis
rzumber: No unsrgned /.etten wiU be published. Letters ·
Rouge two months later. a politics. lnteUectually bank- year~ than face dte VOl~lwufl! _be in good ra~te. qddressing issues, not perseat held by the GOP for rupt Republicans ignored ers in Novembel with 1bat
sOTUJhttes. Letters of thonlcs to organizlllions and indi- ' more than 30 years, bad these
chaUenges. in favor of big "Rft nell! to lbeir name.
them gulping with fear. Now throwing the kitchen sink
~iduals will not be accepted for publication.
·
But the biggest lesson
•
they have lost Mississippi's - and, for good measure. ooming from 1he Magnolia
I st oongressional district the muck. that laid at the State this week is that
one of the most solidi y bnttom of the ·garbage dis- strong Democratic candiRepublican !leals iil America. pu.al - at their opponetll
dates, who .share tbe values
Reader Services
With the November eJec..
of
1heir districts and oomThe bill for dus failed
comin~ fast and fwious strategy is pretty belty. Tbe qtit to bringing change to
;
Ccaoa:lluio Pa11cJ
Third Avenue, Gallipolis, OH
over the borizoo, losing three National
• OUr main """"""' in all- I&amp; to be •l1631 . periodical postage paid
Republican Washington, can win .any·: accurate. ff you 1u1ow o1 an"""' in a a1 Gallipolis.
oonsecutive ruby-red ·diS· Congressional Committee where in America. ·
• ltofy, please call one of our ti&amp;WiiUUhB. . • • • r : Jhe Associated Press,
triOI$ i$ simply ~(Mt,O:) burned ihrough 20 .. Unless dte GOP can team
the West Virginia l'ress ·
The
stuillling
win
by
•
peroen1 Of its .cash. Its ' lhese les&amp;QDs - -and learn
. o.. ......... .D:
Association, and the Ohio
•
Democratic
CongressmanNewspaper Association .·
favorite 527 attack ·dog, them fast - it migbtbebest
G:nhat • Gallipolis; OH
elect Trdvis. Childers over Freedom's Watch, spent for them fO just go to &amp;ltlep
P - : Send address cor(740)tMZICI
roctlonl to the· Gallipolis Daily
Republican Greg Davis was more than $460,001. ln total, and 001 wake up until 2009.
Senolnel• Pomeroy, OH
Tribune , 825 Third Avenue,
a shot heard around the Republicans spent more than
For the time being, tbe
(740) -~55
Gallipolis, OH 45631 .
world of politics. lood $1.7 million ro IO!ie a seat in Democratic Party has plenl.qiJirr • Pt. Pleasant, WV
(31M)175-1333
enough to send shook:waves a district !bat President Bush ty to ~s busy.
letr cdpllon,.....
inro the heart of every WOO ~ily, twice (by 62 per- 1ionner
•
· presian.- ... .. ....."ta.27 .
Republican caQdidaie for the cent m 2004
Qwwe!
).
dential candidate John
an.,.. ..........."121.24
.t:mnr • Ga~ OH
House. This latest GOP
There life
big lessons Edwards' surprise eodor:&amp;e... ... . ....••••...•.'1.50
thumping
(in a seat that was- to be
1fum watcbiqg meut. of ObuDa !tours after
•
....
a...._
-~
Sentinel• Pomeoor. OH
n't ·even supposed fO be in tbe
'•
"ta.27
.
. .' . 1!1! bbroke Hill Clinton's ~win in
·:xi • play) is a clear signal that m
"taa•
sSI&amp;Sippt
ani! enc1 IIJl
has captured
l.ttitttr • Pt. PI '\ WV
V&lt;Jten
ev.erywhere
are
reject.
truly
bustfd.
FU'Siis
dlllt tbcir · the IJ)ed1a·s attention, and
......, 1 ., •.••• 1 .. .
dnld~ ...
S •OIIw'Tibne. No .
ing the Republicans • special- oonk:ie--cutter approacb. of everyone is chattering
•• I t ~ miiiPIIii-..d i ' l inF"Csts-driven
agenda. llying {0 nationalize House about the patty'-s need to
wtaellonw~.W..II•ar'+OwtHI!IJI g
\biers .are delivering a man- races doesn't waX. That dQg unite and wondering exactan.... • Ga!!ip*, OH
d:lfe for change and a new just dido 't bwtt in Illinois. li ly bow clamaging this
-·Ill)
~
'r .•
.....,Count)
direction in the nation's dido 't bUilt in Louisiana, and infighting will be when
Sentinel• "Poii'*D)'. OH
1 3 - . ········ ...'32.26
: - . -...., , . ,
''oge
capitol.
it dido' t even ~ up from its . November rolls around.
2 6 - .... : .......'64.20
........ • Pt. Pleasant, wv
Once
again,
Republicans
But ·as we talking beads
5 2 - ...........'127.11
nationalire
the
tried
to
cbaner .about, Otiklcorr;' vicll)~lei I :.ccllll
' .
au.....
House race by focusing · attack macbine was cranking !(X)' in Mississippi •tells us 10
~ :
(USPS •• 1401
1 3 - ... .. .... ...'53.55
their negative attacks on out negative ads, Olilders· !;hut up and take note. This
: :otolo V..ley Publllllitltl Co. l!eWeelao ...........'107.10 .
Barack:
Obama and Speaker was reminding folks that be campaign season is 001
Published every Sunday, 825 52 Weeks ... .' ... ....'214.21
Nancy Pelosi. Desperate in shares their values and will about fear. 11 will not be woo
X

Pom~

Sunday, May 18, 2008

•

•

•

by the politics of oW. ~
know what mattm; to ..._
~ lbey woo't be st~-;;d
euily by 11•11ii1•td, _,_
.-lllmbadl:jobs.Noloogucan
Democratic .candirlwtM be
t*t:odown
labdcd
~ve. In fact, it is .a

"!'being

banner ,t o dwnpioo wilb

pride. ~ want ~s.
Mississi~!.;._..

s and
Demoorats
alike.
Rqlublicans must COllie out
of this airing dul dley've
iost touch with basic
Americlin f'~ and

a1:1 · to .

·.

cannokqJc:rt!f~Calkto,IIIUdl

less solve, ilhc pol!lrms ooo-fmnting .Joe and Jane Smith.
Dell"" •ills must take it a a
warning not to get distracted
and Ill listm {0 votmi.
There are .always a mil~
.lion issues to ·ditiCIU&amp;S -abe
war to Iraq, bealdl care,
global w~, lbe eoooo- ·
my, P?rl'-baael spending,
ca"'P"'gn ·finance n:form,
se&amp;ng of delegatioos from
u~..~o;-n
---' A.orida, ·
···~
. ......
Obama's tdatioosbip with
~_former pastor, ~·~
VICKlUS temper. Some matter, some don'L Tbe message evecyooe sbould .. .
from Mississippi is to focus .
on , lbe things Chat matter
ancHeaveev~ ·dseiD

dJe pundits and oonsnltants.
Talk to voteR, anti they will ·
talk back. .Talk at voters, ·
and your patty's headed
toward a downfall.
.
Republicans leamed that
lesson well last Wednesday
when they watobed rubyred rum crystal blue in
Miasissippi's lst coqgressional district. W'tll they
cbaoge iitl&amp;y iD lime w
• avert electioo c••sh&gt;W&gt;Iwo
. 11
bope so, utbuwise it~d
make my job too
good competition that
me at the top of my g&amp;~J~e.
Come on, Kad, I know
yuu've got game, but it's
time you draft a new play-

.easl~

book.
(Donna Brazi,k is a polirical conurrmtator on CNN
ABC and NPR. contribut:
ing colllllut.i.fl to Roll Call,
the newspaper of Capitol
Hil~ and former campaign
,anager for AI Go~. }

•

Briefs

Speaker set
for meeting

·· one of!he first phrases out .of

Certificate
ceremony
RIO GRANDE - The
annual Senior Certificate
Ceremony of the Gallia. Jackson-Vinton
Joint
Vocational School District
jWiU be held on Thursday.
1J,ay 22, 2008 at 6:30 p.m.
.at Lyne Center on the campus of the University of Rio
Grande/Rio
Grande
Community College .
· Students from Buckeye
Hills Career Center -will
receive ·a Career-Technical .
Certificate of Completion
and a Career Passport. The
Career Passport is a creden.lialing tool that documents
the specific occupational
sk:ills, academic ski lis and

GALLIA COUNTY

Relay for Life
Friday, June 6.
GaUipolis City Parle

FBI:·Ohw man who
raa
thrmts rruulalwut ex-gi,y;inul

Commission
to meet

'

FAYETIEVILLE, W.Va. area, be said. Guides on ·
(AP) - Doug Arbogast of thege trips will receive
Fayetteville wanted to be safety and history training,
more than a raft guide.
be said .
"I had gotten married, had
Also, the DEP and
my first child;" he said. Arbogast are collaborating
"There was more that I on Travel Green West
could do with the industry. I Vir~a. a program that will
bad my fun. ft
reg.ster and certify the
ln October. 2007, he start- state's travel and rourism
ed
Travel
Green organizations as sustainAppalachia, a business that able. The pilot program will
is worl&lt;:ing to support and begin in midsummer, with
develop sustainable travel 20 to 30 businesses particiand tourism here.
pating, he said.
. "I was wondering if anyThe history of sustainone was going to step up able travel within lhe
and take a lead," hi: said. state's borders already has
"We are perfectly poised some roots. In 2001', lhe
here. In my opinion, it DEP and Division of
should have happened a Tourism signed a memolong time ago."
randum of agreement,
Sustainable
tourism committing to eco-tourism
helps preserve communi· development in the state.
ties' physical environment In 2002, the DEP and tbe
and culture, while still pro- Division of Tourism held
vJdmg
for
economic an eco-tourism conferenc~:
~rowth. In other words, in Flatwoods. ·
Jt's about making money, · However, with the chang=
while still respecting a ing thoughts on green trav:
place's physical beauty el, the memorandum is no
and history. ·
longer valid, because tbe
"For me, it's about the state and DEP are conCenenvironmental, economic trating their efforts on susand social effects of travel. tainable travel, said Greg
You can't sacrifice one for Adolfson of the DEP.
,
the other," Arbogast said.
A true eco-traveler woul4
Arbogast has been work- not disturb any of the envi~
ing in "green" business for ronment. "It's hard to ·be
years, including 13 years as truly eco," Adolfson said-.
a raft guide. He has a bach- Sustainable travel, on the
~lor of arts in environmental other , hand, is more pri.otigeoscience and master of cal, be said. ·
.
Like Arbogast, Adolfson
. science in recreation, parks
and tourism resources, both said
state
and
the
from
West
Virginia Appalachia are in a ·greaJ:
University.
spot for promoting sustain•
·
During and following able travel.
graduate school, be started
For East Coast travelers,
consulting with state agen- it's quite easy to get to West
cies,
particularly
the Virgmia without using an
Department
of airplane; thus cutting a travEnvironmental Protection, eler's
en vironment;U
.,
universities and communi- impact, he said.
For Arbogast, be's already
ties on how to put sustainliving the·'green life, particability into action.
"I wanted to do more of ularly when it comes to
this," he said. "As OPjl?Sed travel. He onl:y has one
to juSt getting a job wtth an vebicle, three btcycles and
organization, I decided that hasn't taken a plane ride iri
I might as well start my own more than a year, he said. .
When traveling to a conbusiness."
So far, Arbogast and ference mWisconsin eatlic:r
TGA have helped five this year, be drove to
,gr.aduate students from Pillsbm:gh, llOOk .a train to
West Virginia University Chicago and a bus tci
in developing a communi- Wisconsin, be said.
"I probably could have got·
ty-based tourism plan m
Ansted. At West Virginia ten on a plane for just as much
State Om versi ty, .he helped money as Amtrak:." he said.
· And, he wants travelers
develop a commumtybased tourism class 'for ·the and other businesses to realiLe that tOQ, he said.
.
sociology department.
Next on hts list of pro- . "I want to help it beoomr;
jects are eco-tours, which more maiJ;ostream. _Beins
allow travelers to experi- green or gomg green 1s ecoence Appalachia's natural nomically smart.... I lhini
beauty, but also learn we are on the doorstep," be
about the culture of the said.

his mouth was, ' You wouldn't ·
understand 'til it happened to

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CALL foR YOUR FREE

Luminary Ceremony - June 6
For general Relay for Life and Luminary irifonnation,
please contact:

Bonnie McFarland at (740) 446-5679
Joill 11s at dusk, Friday eve11U.g, Ju11e IS, 2008
for the lighti11g ofour lumillaries.

Luminary PuJ"chased For ($10 each):

1.---'-----------'---'..,....--Please circle one:
In Memory
ln Honor

.2.-------------In Memory
Honor
3. ::-----,.--:----~------,,..,.,---'-P~a se circle

one:

ott 451M

992-3600

Ohio Mutual •
lns\DOce Group

Or visit us .on the web· www.reedbaur.com
Home
Auto Fann Business

•

In Memory

In Honor

4. ~---,---,---:-:--:----~-Please circle one:
In Memory
In Honor
I
From _
_ _ _ _....,.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Amount Enclosed
~•erur.

In

P/east circle one:

S---------

�Page AS

REGIONAL

Inside

Sunday, May 18, 2008

'

l,l:ly .........
k

IIi the Opal, .... 84
'

BY BRIAN J. REED
BflEEOOMYDAILYSENTlNELCOM

•

-·

S11nday, May 18, 20ClJ
,,

;}~!~~~~

The Top 10
Scholars of
Eastern High
School's graduating class are,
from left, Kelsey
Holter, Katie
Hayman, co-valedictorian.Morgan
Werry, Alex Kuhn,
co-valedictorian
Kyle Rawson, covaledictorian
Andrew Bissell,
Cassie Hauber.
Megan Broderick,
Salutatorian Ryan
Davis and
Hannah
Helgesen.
...... J. R

Prep Track and Field - TVC Championships

SPOKI'S BRIEFS

.American Legion

baseball tryoutS
~r GaUia County

TUPPERS PLAINS Driving rain, unfavorable
field conditions, and a 24hour interrni ssion weren't
enough to slow down the
Eastern Eagles, who defeated the Waterford Wtldcats 91 Friday to win their
Division IV sectional final.
Senior Kyle Gonion had
three hits, and juniilr Derek
Grilf'm went 3-for-4 with a
double and two RBis, belp-ing the Eagles baseball team
win its fourth consecutive
sectional title.

s

r

; ;TUPPERS PLAINS !astern High School will be
hOlding its 1Oth Annual
~ Basketball Camp on
May 27 through 30 frOm 9
a.m. to noon for boys and
8i£Is entering grades 4, 5,

"'d 6.

.

.

Eric Raiidulpl.... .,._

.

Pictured above are LJ)embers of the 2008 Eastern High School boys track and field team
that won the Tri-Valley Confurence Hocking Division title at this week's TVC Championships
at Nelsonville-York High School in Nelsonville.

· ~.Camp staff will include
players and coaches from
tlle 2007 .()8 EHS boys and ·
p-Is basketball ICanJS. The
qmp will focus on fuodafllentals, most of which are
~ by players of all levels,
ibat are essential for pro-.
O!Jcing winning basketball.
~- Cost per ·player will ·be
l35 pre-registration or $45
· llie f'ust day · of camp.
{!!eluded in the cost will be
fhmp T-shirt. ·
:··cheCks should be made
payable to Eastern Athletic
Boosters. Checks and regis- .
!ration forms should be sent
tQ Howie CaldweU at 4087!1
Old
Seven
Road,
Jkedsville, OH 45772 or at
Eastern Hi2h School, 38900
SJt 7, leeds ville, OH

TVC
BY Ellie RAIIooLPH
ER.lN~YDAI.LYSENTINELCOM

NELSONVILLE
Track and field teams from
Mei,g~.
Eastern, . and
Southern high schools cer~ly left their mark on the
2008 Tri-Valley Conference
Championships. Witlt the
qualifying rounds happening Tuesday ud the finals
mostly happening Thursday,
the boys and girls from
Meigs County likely came
back from Nelsonville-York
High School with a
deseiVed sense of accomplishment.
Arguably ·accomplishing
more than ' anyl:f!7 was

~72.
c

CoNTACI'US
1-740sM&amp;-2342 ext. 33
,.. '""1-7~3008
- - oporl!O~.com

ary.n ...... Sports Wl'lllr
(740) H6 2342. 0111. 33

-.omydaiytribuno.com

E1tc: ~. Sports Writer
(740) 446-23&lt;12.- 33
.... ~ •Omyctall} Mntinet.oom

I.M:y ~·Sports Wlfter
(740) H8 ZM2 eJ&lt;I. 33
lclumOmydolyregiater.com

'

du~ng qualifying of the Tri-Valle~onference Championships

Tuesday at Nelsonville-'Vl&gt;rl&lt; High School in Nelsonville.

OVC Championships

•

lEFTEastern
senior
Kyle
Gordon,
lef):,

takes a
leadoff of
third
base dur:
ing
Thursday'
s Division
IV sec·
tional
final
against ·
Water for
din
Tuppers
Plains.
Eric

A.nclolph
/photo

pfnwsee'I1K.82

Annual PVH Hospice Tribute
'

'

0 PVH Main Entrance

ONoon
0 Special gift to all who attend
0 Public is cordially invited·

&lt;.For 1lfiJI'e inforwtation ahouJ dW .rpeciol ewmt ..

FREE SHIPPIN.G I. 1.866.MOBILITY - ATT.COM/WIRELE SS - VISIT A STORE ·

. .or to letim IliON abotd Hospk:e, g; the "Wbtgl"
Grief~ Groff', plea#ecoll. (301) 67~7400. .~

·TEST US·fOI JO.DAYS. SA'IISMC110N IS GUMANI I '·
lwilll*l

.

JO...,.""'-."! ......,...

l,.. -~ oillflf , _ ............

,,

AlJ.l hl9'f$

'
mostly cloudy. A 50 percent
chanee of showers. Lows in
the mid 40s.
'nm !lay-Cloudy witlt a
SO percent chance of showers. Highs in the_ uwer 60s.
Tllt&amp;llay
llipt aad
Wedaesda'y ... Mostly
cloudy. Lows in the lower
50s. Highs in the lower 70s.
Wedllnd1y ........ Partly
cloudy. Lows around 50.

. . . . . . lod!q&lt;Wio!lell. 7ll EMUoll, ~. 6
(l&lt;IOJlll-10
•n..~ 71 EHola!SL, 17«ll 2JI6.- .

. .u

I

I I•

{7«1) 992-lllS

Eloclrooia. 1~ N2nd"'"'·
'

IWI! 8&amp; ~ I rh' m.'red , _
River Valley senior Sean Sands runs dur1ng a relay event
on Friday at the 2008 Ohio Valley Conference Track and
Reid Championships held at Dawson-Bryant High School
In Coal Grove. The Raiders finished third overall at the
six-team event, while the Lady Raiders were fourth.
Complete results were not available at press time , but a
full story on the OVC meet will be in 'Tuesday's sports edi·
tllln·of the Gallipolis Daily Tribune.
t

'llnlnday ... 'I'hunday
aipt...Mostly
cloudy.
Highs in the mid 70s. Lows
in the mid SOs.
Friday-Mostly cloudy in
the moming ...lben becoming partly sunny. A 30 'per·
cent chance of showers:
Highs in the upper 70s.
•

B:s

0 Thursday, May 29, 2008

AL.ItWRilW IUTAJlCKS

:M••••Y ·

Please see EaaleL

Butterfly Release &amp; Celebration

.'

w.iDds

'ther da
ea
y, racking up II hits
in J~or Zach Hendrix had a
d bl
ou e and a walk, and
Pieroe bad a single and an
RBL
Sophomore Nick Brannon
reached base and scored in
all four of his plate appearaoces. He finished witlt a hit
and two walks:
Eastern also got hits from
junior Ben Buckley and
. sophomore
Andrew
Benedum.
The Eagle t didn' t wait
long to open the scoring.
Brannon walked with one
out and then had a short stay
at first as Grilf'm doubled
him home ooe batter later.
Griffin scored his ftrst of
two runs on Pierce's single,
and Eastern Jed ·2-0 after
one.
Gordon got his ftrst hit in

Fisher. ·Wb all was said
and done, the senior had
two individual ftrst-place
finishes, two relay fJtSt. place finishes, apd two stadium records
.
' helping him
take the boys Ohio Division
Individual High Point
Award with 25 points.
Belpre won both the boys
and girls meets witlt 122
and I 09. points, respecti·:e- .
ly. Each ftrst place was ·
Eric Raidulpta/ptAltaa worth I0 team points, secMeigs senior Btandan Rsher competes in the 100m dash ond was worth eight points,

·_ RVHS competes at .

Local Weather

as.

Sophomore Titus · Pierce
pitched a solid game · for
Eastern and earned the win.
He struck out I0 batters and
walked six.
·The
contest
started
Thursday, and the teams
played five full innings
bc!fote persistent heavy rain
forced a suspension of play
until Friday with Eastern
ahead 7-L
·
The day layoff dido 't
seem to affect the Eagles,
·who added two more runs
for good measure and easily
dispatched the Wtldcats.
Waterford finished with
just two hits - one on
Thursday and one on Friday.
Eastern, meanwhile, had no
problems making contact

Grtrlln

Me!cf"~ter ,li\Pildan

~~

: SUDday-Showers in the
morning ...Then
partly
lonny witlt a chance of
SJtowers in the afternoon.
ltreez · with highs in the
mid
West winds 10 to
20 mph. Chance of rain 80
percent. .
- Sunday
ni&amp;ht.-Partly
. aoudy with a 20 percent
Chance of showers. Lows in
t:be lower 40s. West winds
lO to 15 mph with gusts up
to 25 mph.
~:~y-Mostly sunny.
Hips in the mid 60s. West
;to to ts .mph with
8UIIb .., to 25 mph.
!~~Pt.-Partly
Cl®dy
in
the
eveniog ...Then becoming

Eagles win fourth
straight sectional title·
EIIANtlOiJ&gt;HOI.LYS£NT1NELCOM

The
Qallia County American
Li:gion will be holding tty9Uls for American Legion
»&amp;eball this season on
1!'ednesday, May 21. at
~im. at the Universily of
!Jio Grande baseball freld.
: .Any high school baseball
p~yer interested in playing
lJiis summer should attend
Ibis tryout.

•tplloiD

.,

BY ERic RH11101J1H

·,.
·Rio GRANPE

lOth Annual Eagle
Basketball Camp

:; The following ·academic scholarship recipients were
fi:cogmzed: Ale~~: Kuhn, Sarah Wachter, and Hannah Pratt,
~stem Local 'Education Association Scholarships;
{)'~el Buckley, Devon Riggs Memorial Scholarship
{$1 ,500); Andrew Bissell, Jewell Mannaseh Cutler
Scholarship ($80,000, and stipends); Andrew Bissell,
Ghio Academic Scholarship; Morgan Werry, Maude
gellers Scholarship ($600); Andrew Bissell, OhiQ
University Gateway of Excellence ($8,900); Alex
Burroughs, OU · Gateway ($500); Amanda Eason, Ben
.Manley Scholarship ($1,000); Morgan Werry, Ben
t;!anley Scholarship ($1 ,250); Morgan Werry, Meigs
County Scholarship ($1,000).
Katie Hayman, Musldngurn College Faculty Schblarship
f$9,000); Kelsey Holter, Land Grant Scholarship/The
Ohio State University ($1 00,000); Kelsey Holter, Ohio
Yalley Bank 4-H Scholarship ($2,000); Katie H~b=~
Chester Alumni Association/Bill and Wilma Wi ·
Scholarship ($500); Joel Lynch, Cbester Alumni
Association/Pepsi Cola Scholarship ($500); Daniel
Buckley, Chester AllliiJrii Association ($500); Morgan
Werry, Chester Alumni Association ($500); Morgan
Werry, Fred W. Crow, Jr. and Eleanor Karr Crow
Scholarship ($500).
.
~ ·Certificates of merit were presented for academic
i!Chievement by the Ohio Board of Education to Andrew
IJissell, Ryan Davis, Kelsey Holter, Kyle Rawson, Morgan
Werry, Hannah Helgesen, Nildta Young, Cassie Hauber,
~tie Hayman and Courtney Scyoc.
·
· Honors diplomas will be awarded to. Andrew Bissell,
Ryan Davis, Kelsey Holter, Kyle Rawson, Morgan Werry,
Hannah Helgesen, Nikita Young, Cassie Hauber, and Katie
Hayman.
· ·
Otherawuds
Underclassmen Ashley Duffy and Josh Riffie were recognized for perfect attendance. Dee Dee Cross, president of
the Eastern Athletic Boosters, recc:.ived the OHSAA
Sportsmanship, Ethics and Integrity Award.

..

'

'

11JPPERS PLAINS - Faculty at Eastern High School
presented graduating seniors wnh academic awards and
IICholarships valued at over $350p00 during the school's
annual senior awards assembly Fnday.
. Principal Scot Gheen announced the Top I 0 Scholars of
!be Class of 2008: Andrew Bissell, Morgan Werry, Kyle
(lawson, co-valedictorians; Ryan Davis, salutatorian; Alex
Kuhn, Megan Broderick, Katie Hayman, Cassie Hauber,
.
Hannah Helgesen, and Kelsey Holter.
1
'
Ac:ademic awards
· The followinj! academic awards were presented:
Psycholo!Q-': Nikita Young, Sasha Collins; Andrew Bissell,
Ryan Davts and Morgan Werry, all A's; Current World
AffairS: Heaven Westfall, Tyler Keams; Tyler Keams, Jesse
Long, Matt Sebo, Katie Hayman, Kelsey Holter, Heaven
Westfall, Alex Kuhn, Saralisha Powell, all A's. ·
'Economics: Samantha Jordan, Kyle Rawson; Andrew
Bissell, Daniel Buckley, Ryan DaVIs, Kaitlyn Dewhurst,
·. Cassie Hauber, · Kaitlyn Dewhurst, Cassie Hauber,
Samantha Jordan, Tyler Keams, Courtney Scyoc, Heaven
Westfall, Nathan Carroll, Sasha Collins, luliane Draehn,
Hannah Helgesen, Kelsey Holter, Kyle Rawson, Saralisha
Powell, Morgan Werry, Nikita Young, all A's.
World War IT History: Justin Whaley; Drafting: Man
Sebo, Industrial Technology: Tyler Keams; Art: Aaron
Martindale, Saralisha Powell, Courtney Scyoc; English:
Morgan Werrj; General English, Heaven Westfall,
Saralisha Powell; Physics: Kyle Rawson, Alex Kuhn,
Courtney Scyoc, Christopher l,aunderrnilt; Mathematics:
Morgan Werry; Government: Morgan Werry, Ryan Davis.
Choral Music: Justin Bissell, Juliane Draehn; Drama:
Sarah Wachter, Sara Jordan; Yearlxlok: Kyle Edwards,
Nathan Carroll, Nick Schultz, Kenneth Vogelsong, Heaven
Westfall, Sasba Collins,' Hannah Helgesen, Nikita Young,
Courtney Scyoc, Sara Wachter.
. Kyle Rawson, Ryan Davis, Nikita Young, Kelsey Holter,
Megan Broderick, Andrew Bissell, Nathan Carroll, Hannah
Helgesen, Morgan Werry, Kaitlyn Dewhurst:Tassie
Hauber, and Tyler Kearns were recognized as senior mem·
bers of the National Honor Society.
Morgan Werry, Cassie Hauber, Zack Newell, Ryan
Davis, Sarah Wachter, Hannah Helgesen, Andrew Bissell
and Kelsey Holter were recognized as senior members of
Student Council.
Athletic awards
U,S. Marine Corps Distinguished Athlete Award was
presented to Hannah Helgesen. Senior Athlete Awards
were presented to Amanda Eason, Cassie Hauber, Kelsey
Holter, Kathryn Bland, Sasha Collins, Sarah Wachter,
Hannah Helgesen, . Megan Broderick, Katie Hayman,
Morgan Werry, Ryan Davis, Daniel Buckley, Tyler
Kearns, Alex Burroughs, Aaron Martindale, Kyle
Edwards, Nathan Carroll, Joel Lynch, Craig Hensley,
Nick Schultz, Zack Newell, Alex Kuhn, Kyle Rawson,
Z:yle Gordon, and Josh Collins.
.
.
: Kyle Rawson and MOI'j!an Werry received the Ohio High
School Athletic Association's SchQiar/Athlete Award. Kyle
Gordon and Kelsey Holter · were ·awarded the OHSAA
Archie Griffin Sportsmanshi_P Award. Katie Hayman and
Kyle RawSOII- wete !lec:ogiiUed u ·the «an 8. Wllllrlcr
Athletes of the Year. ·
·
. .
?"Alex ·IWhli·~ ihe (}HSA:A Courapus MNtce·Award. Katie Hayman aud Ryan Davis received the Don
tackson Me~Wshi.ps. • . •• .
•.· : ·~-·
· ~- The Carrie Wi,ggins Memorial Academic Scholarship
was awarded to Cassie Hauber. Wiggins Softball
Scholarships were awarded to Sasha Collins and Kathryn
Bland. Kelsey Holter was awarded the $1;000 Carrie
Wiggins Smile Award.
.

B3

~ Gt · · nw•nde•p, Par:ell4

Eastern seniors awarded academic keys, scholarships

:

--·ends, ...

. 6utdlap Gtimts -6tntintl

•

•

•

..

..

.

'

! .1 i

'·

-·1

'·

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....

Supfl! ;n '(, ;·, wi 1---

~.

�Page AS

REGIONAL

Inside

Sunday, May 18, 2008

'

l,l:ly .........
k

IIi the Opal, .... 84
'

BY BRIAN J. REED
BflEEOOMYDAILYSENTlNELCOM

•

-·

S11nday, May 18, 20ClJ
,,

;}~!~~~~

The Top 10
Scholars of
Eastern High
School's graduating class are,
from left, Kelsey
Holter, Katie
Hayman, co-valedictorian.Morgan
Werry, Alex Kuhn,
co-valedictorian
Kyle Rawson, covaledictorian
Andrew Bissell,
Cassie Hauber.
Megan Broderick,
Salutatorian Ryan
Davis and
Hannah
Helgesen.
...... J. R

Prep Track and Field - TVC Championships

SPOKI'S BRIEFS

.American Legion

baseball tryoutS
~r GaUia County

TUPPERS PLAINS Driving rain, unfavorable
field conditions, and a 24hour interrni ssion weren't
enough to slow down the
Eastern Eagles, who defeated the Waterford Wtldcats 91 Friday to win their
Division IV sectional final.
Senior Kyle Gonion had
three hits, and juniilr Derek
Grilf'm went 3-for-4 with a
double and two RBis, belp-ing the Eagles baseball team
win its fourth consecutive
sectional title.

s

r

; ;TUPPERS PLAINS !astern High School will be
hOlding its 1Oth Annual
~ Basketball Camp on
May 27 through 30 frOm 9
a.m. to noon for boys and
8i£Is entering grades 4, 5,

"'d 6.

.

.

Eric Raiidulpl.... .,._

.

Pictured above are LJ)embers of the 2008 Eastern High School boys track and field team
that won the Tri-Valley Confurence Hocking Division title at this week's TVC Championships
at Nelsonville-York High School in Nelsonville.

· ~.Camp staff will include
players and coaches from
tlle 2007 .()8 EHS boys and ·
p-Is basketball ICanJS. The
qmp will focus on fuodafllentals, most of which are
~ by players of all levels,
ibat are essential for pro-.
O!Jcing winning basketball.
~- Cost per ·player will ·be
l35 pre-registration or $45
· llie f'ust day · of camp.
{!!eluded in the cost will be
fhmp T-shirt. ·
:··cheCks should be made
payable to Eastern Athletic
Boosters. Checks and regis- .
!ration forms should be sent
tQ Howie CaldweU at 4087!1
Old
Seven
Road,
Jkedsville, OH 45772 or at
Eastern Hi2h School, 38900
SJt 7, leeds ville, OH

TVC
BY Ellie RAIIooLPH
ER.lN~YDAI.LYSENTINELCOM

NELSONVILLE
Track and field teams from
Mei,g~.
Eastern, . and
Southern high schools cer~ly left their mark on the
2008 Tri-Valley Conference
Championships. Witlt the
qualifying rounds happening Tuesday ud the finals
mostly happening Thursday,
the boys and girls from
Meigs County likely came
back from Nelsonville-York
High School with a
deseiVed sense of accomplishment.
Arguably ·accomplishing
more than ' anyl:f!7 was

~72.
c

CoNTACI'US
1-740sM&amp;-2342 ext. 33
,.. '""1-7~3008
- - oporl!O~.com

ary.n ...... Sports Wl'lllr
(740) H6 2342. 0111. 33

-.omydaiytribuno.com

E1tc: ~. Sports Writer
(740) 446-23&lt;12.- 33
.... ~ •Omyctall} Mntinet.oom

I.M:y ~·Sports Wlfter
(740) H8 ZM2 eJ&lt;I. 33
lclumOmydolyregiater.com

'

du~ng qualifying of the Tri-Valle~onference Championships

Tuesday at Nelsonville-'Vl&gt;rl&lt; High School in Nelsonville.

OVC Championships

•

lEFTEastern
senior
Kyle
Gordon,
lef):,

takes a
leadoff of
third
base dur:
ing
Thursday'
s Division
IV sec·
tional
final
against ·
Water for
din
Tuppers
Plains.
Eric

A.nclolph
/photo

pfnwsee'I1K.82

Annual PVH Hospice Tribute
'

'

0 PVH Main Entrance

ONoon
0 Special gift to all who attend
0 Public is cordially invited·

&lt;.For 1lfiJI'e inforwtation ahouJ dW .rpeciol ewmt ..

FREE SHIPPIN.G I. 1.866.MOBILITY - ATT.COM/WIRELE SS - VISIT A STORE ·

. .or to letim IliON abotd Hospk:e, g; the "Wbtgl"
Grief~ Groff', plea#ecoll. (301) 67~7400. .~

·TEST US·fOI JO.DAYS. SA'IISMC110N IS GUMANI I '·
lwilll*l

.

JO...,.""'-."! ......,...

l,.. -~ oillflf , _ ............

,,

AlJ.l hl9'f$

'
mostly cloudy. A 50 percent
chanee of showers. Lows in
the mid 40s.
'nm !lay-Cloudy witlt a
SO percent chance of showers. Highs in the_ uwer 60s.
Tllt&amp;llay
llipt aad
Wedaesda'y ... Mostly
cloudy. Lows in the lower
50s. Highs in the lower 70s.
Wedllnd1y ........ Partly
cloudy. Lows around 50.

. . . . . . lod!q&lt;Wio!lell. 7ll EMUoll, ~. 6
(l&lt;IOJlll-10
•n..~ 71 EHola!SL, 17«ll 2JI6.- .

. .u

I

I I•

{7«1) 992-lllS

Eloclrooia. 1~ N2nd"'"'·
'

IWI! 8&amp; ~ I rh' m.'red , _
River Valley senior Sean Sands runs dur1ng a relay event
on Friday at the 2008 Ohio Valley Conference Track and
Reid Championships held at Dawson-Bryant High School
In Coal Grove. The Raiders finished third overall at the
six-team event, while the Lady Raiders were fourth.
Complete results were not available at press time , but a
full story on the OVC meet will be in 'Tuesday's sports edi·
tllln·of the Gallipolis Daily Tribune.
t

'llnlnday ... 'I'hunday
aipt...Mostly
cloudy.
Highs in the mid 70s. Lows
in the mid SOs.
Friday-Mostly cloudy in
the moming ...lben becoming partly sunny. A 30 'per·
cent chance of showers:
Highs in the upper 70s.
•

B:s

0 Thursday, May 29, 2008

AL.ItWRilW IUTAJlCKS

:M••••Y ·

Please see EaaleL

Butterfly Release &amp; Celebration

.'

w.iDds

'ther da
ea
y, racking up II hits
in J~or Zach Hendrix had a
d bl
ou e and a walk, and
Pieroe bad a single and an
RBL
Sophomore Nick Brannon
reached base and scored in
all four of his plate appearaoces. He finished witlt a hit
and two walks:
Eastern also got hits from
junior Ben Buckley and
. sophomore
Andrew
Benedum.
The Eagle t didn' t wait
long to open the scoring.
Brannon walked with one
out and then had a short stay
at first as Grilf'm doubled
him home ooe batter later.
Griffin scored his ftrst of
two runs on Pierce's single,
and Eastern Jed ·2-0 after
one.
Gordon got his ftrst hit in

Fisher. ·Wb all was said
and done, the senior had
two individual ftrst-place
finishes, two relay fJtSt. place finishes, apd two stadium records
.
' helping him
take the boys Ohio Division
Individual High Point
Award with 25 points.
Belpre won both the boys
and girls meets witlt 122
and I 09. points, respecti·:e- .
ly. Each ftrst place was ·
Eric Raidulpta/ptAltaa worth I0 team points, secMeigs senior Btandan Rsher competes in the 100m dash ond was worth eight points,

·_ RVHS competes at .

Local Weather

as.

Sophomore Titus · Pierce
pitched a solid game · for
Eastern and earned the win.
He struck out I0 batters and
walked six.
·The
contest
started
Thursday, and the teams
played five full innings
bc!fote persistent heavy rain
forced a suspension of play
until Friday with Eastern
ahead 7-L
·
The day layoff dido 't
seem to affect the Eagles,
·who added two more runs
for good measure and easily
dispatched the Wtldcats.
Waterford finished with
just two hits - one on
Thursday and one on Friday.
Eastern, meanwhile, had no
problems making contact

Grtrlln

Me!cf"~ter ,li\Pildan

~~

: SUDday-Showers in the
morning ...Then
partly
lonny witlt a chance of
SJtowers in the afternoon.
ltreez · with highs in the
mid
West winds 10 to
20 mph. Chance of rain 80
percent. .
- Sunday
ni&amp;ht.-Partly
. aoudy with a 20 percent
Chance of showers. Lows in
t:be lower 40s. West winds
lO to 15 mph with gusts up
to 25 mph.
~:~y-Mostly sunny.
Hips in the mid 60s. West
;to to ts .mph with
8UIIb .., to 25 mph.
!~~Pt.-Partly
Cl®dy
in
the
eveniog ...Then becoming

Eagles win fourth
straight sectional title·
EIIANtlOiJ&gt;HOI.LYS£NT1NELCOM

The
Qallia County American
Li:gion will be holding tty9Uls for American Legion
»&amp;eball this season on
1!'ednesday, May 21. at
~im. at the Universily of
!Jio Grande baseball freld.
: .Any high school baseball
p~yer interested in playing
lJiis summer should attend
Ibis tryout.

•tplloiD

.,

BY ERic RH11101J1H

·,.
·Rio GRANPE

lOth Annual Eagle
Basketball Camp

:; The following ·academic scholarship recipients were
fi:cogmzed: Ale~~: Kuhn, Sarah Wachter, and Hannah Pratt,
~stem Local 'Education Association Scholarships;
{)'~el Buckley, Devon Riggs Memorial Scholarship
{$1 ,500); Andrew Bissell, Jewell Mannaseh Cutler
Scholarship ($80,000, and stipends); Andrew Bissell,
Ghio Academic Scholarship; Morgan Werry, Maude
gellers Scholarship ($600); Andrew Bissell, OhiQ
University Gateway of Excellence ($8,900); Alex
Burroughs, OU · Gateway ($500); Amanda Eason, Ben
.Manley Scholarship ($1,000); Morgan Werry, Ben
t;!anley Scholarship ($1 ,250); Morgan Werry, Meigs
County Scholarship ($1,000).
Katie Hayman, Musldngurn College Faculty Schblarship
f$9,000); Kelsey Holter, Land Grant Scholarship/The
Ohio State University ($1 00,000); Kelsey Holter, Ohio
Yalley Bank 4-H Scholarship ($2,000); Katie H~b=~
Chester Alumni Association/Bill and Wilma Wi ·
Scholarship ($500); Joel Lynch, Cbester Alumni
Association/Pepsi Cola Scholarship ($500); Daniel
Buckley, Chester AllliiJrii Association ($500); Morgan
Werry, Chester Alumni Association ($500); Morgan
Werry, Fred W. Crow, Jr. and Eleanor Karr Crow
Scholarship ($500).
.
~ ·Certificates of merit were presented for academic
i!Chievement by the Ohio Board of Education to Andrew
IJissell, Ryan Davis, Kelsey Holter, Kyle Rawson, Morgan
Werry, Hannah Helgesen, Nildta Young, Cassie Hauber,
~tie Hayman and Courtney Scyoc.
·
· Honors diplomas will be awarded to. Andrew Bissell,
Ryan Davis, Kelsey Holter, Kyle Rawson, Morgan Werry,
Hannah Helgesen, Nikita Young, Cassie Hauber, and Katie
Hayman.
· ·
Otherawuds
Underclassmen Ashley Duffy and Josh Riffie were recognized for perfect attendance. Dee Dee Cross, president of
the Eastern Athletic Boosters, recc:.ived the OHSAA
Sportsmanship, Ethics and Integrity Award.

..

'

'

11JPPERS PLAINS - Faculty at Eastern High School
presented graduating seniors wnh academic awards and
IICholarships valued at over $350p00 during the school's
annual senior awards assembly Fnday.
. Principal Scot Gheen announced the Top I 0 Scholars of
!be Class of 2008: Andrew Bissell, Morgan Werry, Kyle
(lawson, co-valedictorians; Ryan Davis, salutatorian; Alex
Kuhn, Megan Broderick, Katie Hayman, Cassie Hauber,
.
Hannah Helgesen, and Kelsey Holter.
1
'
Ac:ademic awards
· The followinj! academic awards were presented:
Psycholo!Q-': Nikita Young, Sasha Collins; Andrew Bissell,
Ryan Davts and Morgan Werry, all A's; Current World
AffairS: Heaven Westfall, Tyler Keams; Tyler Keams, Jesse
Long, Matt Sebo, Katie Hayman, Kelsey Holter, Heaven
Westfall, Alex Kuhn, Saralisha Powell, all A's. ·
'Economics: Samantha Jordan, Kyle Rawson; Andrew
Bissell, Daniel Buckley, Ryan DaVIs, Kaitlyn Dewhurst,
·. Cassie Hauber, · Kaitlyn Dewhurst, Cassie Hauber,
Samantha Jordan, Tyler Keams, Courtney Scyoc, Heaven
Westfall, Nathan Carroll, Sasha Collins, luliane Draehn,
Hannah Helgesen, Kelsey Holter, Kyle Rawson, Saralisha
Powell, Morgan Werry, Nikita Young, all A's.
World War IT History: Justin Whaley; Drafting: Man
Sebo, Industrial Technology: Tyler Keams; Art: Aaron
Martindale, Saralisha Powell, Courtney Scyoc; English:
Morgan Werrj; General English, Heaven Westfall,
Saralisha Powell; Physics: Kyle Rawson, Alex Kuhn,
Courtney Scyoc, Christopher l,aunderrnilt; Mathematics:
Morgan Werry; Government: Morgan Werry, Ryan Davis.
Choral Music: Justin Bissell, Juliane Draehn; Drama:
Sarah Wachter, Sara Jordan; Yearlxlok: Kyle Edwards,
Nathan Carroll, Nick Schultz, Kenneth Vogelsong, Heaven
Westfall, Sasba Collins,' Hannah Helgesen, Nikita Young,
Courtney Scyoc, Sara Wachter.
. Kyle Rawson, Ryan Davis, Nikita Young, Kelsey Holter,
Megan Broderick, Andrew Bissell, Nathan Carroll, Hannah
Helgesen, Morgan Werry, Kaitlyn Dewhurst:Tassie
Hauber, and Tyler Kearns were recognized as senior mem·
bers of the National Honor Society.
Morgan Werry, Cassie Hauber, Zack Newell, Ryan
Davis, Sarah Wachter, Hannah Helgesen, Andrew Bissell
and Kelsey Holter were recognized as senior members of
Student Council.
Athletic awards
U,S. Marine Corps Distinguished Athlete Award was
presented to Hannah Helgesen. Senior Athlete Awards
were presented to Amanda Eason, Cassie Hauber, Kelsey
Holter, Kathryn Bland, Sasha Collins, Sarah Wachter,
Hannah Helgesen, . Megan Broderick, Katie Hayman,
Morgan Werry, Ryan Davis, Daniel Buckley, Tyler
Kearns, Alex Burroughs, Aaron Martindale, Kyle
Edwards, Nathan Carroll, Joel Lynch, Craig Hensley,
Nick Schultz, Zack Newell, Alex Kuhn, Kyle Rawson,
Z:yle Gordon, and Josh Collins.
.
.
: Kyle Rawson and MOI'j!an Werry received the Ohio High
School Athletic Association's SchQiar/Athlete Award. Kyle
Gordon and Kelsey Holter · were ·awarded the OHSAA
Archie Griffin Sportsmanshi_P Award. Katie Hayman and
Kyle RawSOII- wete !lec:ogiiUed u ·the «an 8. Wllllrlcr
Athletes of the Year. ·
·
. .
?"Alex ·IWhli·~ ihe (}HSA:A Courapus MNtce·Award. Katie Hayman aud Ryan Davis received the Don
tackson Me~Wshi.ps. • . •• .
•.· : ·~-·
· ~- The Carrie Wi,ggins Memorial Academic Scholarship
was awarded to Cassie Hauber. Wiggins Softball
Scholarships were awarded to Sasha Collins and Kathryn
Bland. Kelsey Holter was awarded the $1;000 Carrie
Wiggins Smile Award.
.

B3

~ Gt · · nw•nde•p, Par:ell4

Eastern seniors awarded academic keys, scholarships

:

--·ends, ...

. 6utdlap Gtimts -6tntintl

•

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•

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Supfl! ;n '(, ;·, wi 1---

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�Page B2 • ~ 1!m1d :6 uliud
1be Eagles' 4x800m boys
. relay team also fmished second with a time of 8:52.78.
Team members included
fnmPageBl
Martindale, Johnson. senior
.
.
.
· Josh Collins, and junior
third was worth stx IJ?10ts, Keith Aeiker. Southern's
and fourth through etghth 4x800 team, made up of
~ worth five through one juniors Drew Hoover and
pmnt
Kyle Goode and sophol_be Marauders as a team mores Colby Rose~ and
~tshe:d second on the boys Dylan Roush, fimshed
s1de w1th 97 (Xlmts and third fourth at 9:15.70, and ri~bt
on the g1rls w11h .84.50. 1be behind them was the Metgs
Eastern boys team placed team in fifth. Senior Nathan
third overall w11h 90.50 . ~ut Cook, JuniOrs Andrew
wer~ .tops among .. Hocking O'Bryant and .Brandon
Dtv1s1on teams as Belp~ Hanning, and sophomore
and Me1gs both compete 1.n .Zachary Whitlach comthe TVC ?h 1 ~· Eas_tern 5 bined for a time of9:18.12.
gt~s firushe!d s1xth w11h 59
English was second in the
pomts. The Sou~ boys 1OOm dash . with a time of
fi~shed 12th wtth I0 II. 7 1 seconds and third in
pom~.
.
.
the 200m dash with a time
Metgs had four top fimsh- of 23 _74 secoods.
es, and Eastern had two.
Meigs junior Catie Wolfe
fisher won the I OOm dash had a pair of third-place finand the 200~ dash, ~d ishes. In the girls I OOm dash
fishe.r. Cornelius Enghsh, she finished in 1352 secCro_ckett Crow, and Jeremy onds, and in the 200m dash
Snuth together won both the he fin
'shed in 27 85 sec·
. 4x200m
and
4x lOOm s d 1 1·
relays.
on s.
. •
.
Also placmg, 10 th~ girls
Fisher's time in the I OOm
dash was I 1.62 seconds, lOOm dash, With a time . of
and his time in the 200m 14.~2 ~nds,_ was Meigs
dash was 23.27 seconds. semorPattJ Vmmg. .
The Marauders' 4x200m
Collms took sec;on~ 10 ti:te
time was 1:34.33, and the 800m run, fi_mshmg m
4xl00m time was 45.46 2:07.49. Manmdale was
seconds. Stadium records fifth at 2:1~.10, _and
were set in all four events.
~oseberry was e1ghth wtth a
Eastern's top finishes ume of 2:13.73.
.
came courtesy of seniors . Marundale was al~ tl;t1rd
Katie Hayman and Aaron m the 1600m run._His lime
Martindale.
":as 4:44.96. Aetker was
: Hayman, who also set a e1ghth ~ 4:?.5. 14:.
-.
);tadium record. won the
On ihe g1rls st~e,
:girls 300m. hurdles wilh a Newland was fifth, runmng
.
time of 49.34 seconds, and the rode m 5:41.86.
Martindale won the boys
J1:1mor Devan Soul~by of
;3200m run with a time of Metgs was second m .the
10:33.1 J.
grrls 800m run. Her lime
: The Eastern Eagles took ":as 2:25.1_6. Newl~d was
Second in the boys and girls · etghth With a .lime of
~x400m relays. The boys 2:40.46.
.
.
team, made up of senior . S~ulsby, along With
Alex Burroughs, sopho- JU!IIOrs Morg~n Lentes,
more Mike Johnson, and Kimberly Sw1sher, and
freshmen Devon Baum and Jes~ica Holliday, placed
Klint Connery. finished in third in the grrls 4x800m
:3:40.8. Hayman, junior relay. rtbeic lime was
.
:Alyssa Newland, sopho· . II :04.18. ,.
)nore · Audrionna PuUins, ' Meip· junior Adrian
and
freshman
Emeri Bolin took . . . in girls
Connery made up the girls . lOOm hwdles; finishillg in
team, and they finished in 17.53 seoonds. · CDnnei'y
4:25 .'65.
· .
was fourth iat HU.8, and

TVC

•

Sunday, May 18, aoo8 .

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis
Meigs seniOr Casey Smith Bunuughs. Hoover, juniors
was fifth at 18.64.
Weston Roberts and Jobn
Meigs senior Cassady Wilcox and sophomon:
Willford finished third in Sean Coppick made up
lhe boys shot put with a Soulhern 's team, and they
lhrow of 43 feet. seven and finished eighth with a tim::
a half inches, and junior of I :47.17.
teammate Mason Metts was
The girls 4x200m relay
fourth at 42 feet, three inch- saw Meigs finish second.
es. Eastern .senior Zack Soulsby, Wolfe, F'telds, and
Newell took sixlh with a Lentes combined to run the
lhrow·of 41 feet, three and a two-lap race in 1:54.42.
half inches.
Eastern wasn 'I far behind in
Newell took second in lhe third with a time of I :58.
discus, where his lhrow was Their team consisted of
130 feet; one inch. Metts lfayman., Well)', Burt, and
was fourth at, 121 feet. 10 Emeri CDnnery.
incl)es.
.
In the boys 300m hurdles,
~ the g~s shot put. . Johnson was fourth with a
Metgs . .semor Melissa time of 44.68 seconds.
Gtueser placed third. Her Meigs ·sophomore Jacob
throw was 30 feet, five Well was right b.t.ind him
inehes·n__.__
Eastern •~
· fifth . His ume
· was .....
"" 87
:..........
lD
Hale:y ra...., ~ vwu• at seconds .
29 _feet. five mches, and
Well · was founh in the
Metgs sopho~ A~hley 110m hurdJes, finisbibg in
Good was etghth V:tth a 17.12 seconds. Crow placed .
throw of 27 feet. one 1 ~
eighth with a time of 19.09
Grueser was also third m
the discus with a throw of seconds.
.
.
100 feet. · and Perdas was
Also . placiD!]:
wtth
fifth at 84 feet, nine and a Hayman 10 the girls 300m
half inches.
. h~es were .Connery ~
Jeremy Smith took sec- ~ C:Onnery was third
'ood in lhe 400m dash, atid with a tune ~ 50.21 seche was foUowed by oods, and Bohn _was fifth at
Burroughs
and
KJint 50.47 seconds.
.
Connery. 'Their resPective
Bwroughs was fifthmthe
times. were 52.67, -53.29, boys long jump,~ 19
and sf.l6 .seconds.
feet, OlltHfWid:er inch from
Pullins was fifth in the the ~ In the boys high
girls 400m dash where her jump; · Johnson tied for
time was 1:06.6:i.
fourth, clearing five f~t,
Eastern was seventh in eight inches.
Aeiker placed s~th in the
the boys 4x lOOm relay.
Newell, Baum,.junior Zach 3200m run. His time. was
Moore, and freshman Jamil II :03.56. Goode WllS etghdt
Stephney combined for a at II :30.95.
.
_.
time of 50.31 seoonds.
Pullms placed etghth m
Meigs' 4x.l OOm girls relay the girls long jump with a
team was second with a mark of 14 feet, one and
time of 53 .46 seconds. one-quaner inches, and Burt
Team members included was seventh in the girls higb
Wolfe, Vining. Bolin. and juffip with. a_ clearance. of
junior . Emily
Fields. four feet._ SIX mches: Vmmg
Eastern's girls were sixth lied for e1~hth, cleanng four . ·
with a time of 57.15 sec- feet, four mches.
Casey Smith was foudh
onds. Team members were
Hayman, senior Morgan in the gi~s pole ~au~t She
Werry, junior Morgan Burt, cleared SIX feet. SIX inches.
and fresh!tan Beverly Swisher was seventh at five
Maxson.
feet, six inches.
Complete results of the
The ~gles took fourth in
the boys 4x200m relay, 2008 TVC Track and F'teld.
Their time was I :40.53, and . Championships are on the
team . members
were web
at ·
Connery, Baum, Moore, and www.baumspage.rom
&lt;·

.
. Snnd'Q', May 18,

zoo8

Si

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gwltipolis

ltt~i

4i l.p g 113

[Lady Raiders drop heartbreaker to Wellston, 2-1
••
~:

BY •

• Wauas

~.COM

,_.

1!
.•- - - - - - - - - ~ WFl.l.SlUN -

In a softball

~ with few scoring opportuni-

Pes.

somebody had ro take a
WlaJICA". Seventh-seeded River
t{auey ~ late - and failed
:._during a 2-1' ~ k to host
Wellstoo during a thrilling
Division m scdiooal final Frida

r::'!:!!··

Lady

.

catcher Briaooa .UU was waiting
-with the ball- about 20 !eel up
the line for the evealual final out of
the contest.
Thai ~ out allowed the Blue
and Gold - wbo won their third
sttaigbt TVC Ohio tide this season
- ro clincb their third oonsecutive
sectional crown. That out also
ended lhe Lady Raida's' season at
t0-12 overall.

Rai~ hits~=~~Sisq=

fDia'ed the sewenlh inning lniling
~:.()and were down to their final at-

~ as the SOCIOIICHecded Lady

~'?'ids (19-5) Sladl:d that frame
ra:uding two~ outs. The

jj.

!)as~~ ~~ni!'!

also sroreJess after three fuU
innings of play. RVHS strailded
just three runners on base, while
the~ left a lOCal of five on the
bags. WHS also committed three
euurs in the triumph, while the
guests made only one miscue in
were

Britllllly Hardway and Kirsten their finale.
pua to pul the tying runs on first Scoreless tluUugb three-and-ail}ld secoiJd
half innings, WeD~ sind; first
:•Sophomore Jeooa Wani fol- blood offensively in the founh
by blooping a fly ball down thanks to a walt and two base hitS.
left field line - which eadcd up ~ Trainer led off with .a
being daoppcd by WHS lefifielder walk, the8 Amber 'King followed
Cbelsie Folden. Haniw.,. came with an RBI double two biittecs
jiiiOOild from second to5alleon the later to soore Trainer for a 1-0
tmJr and Clll1a' got the go-ahead advantage. Otarity E!l.line also sinfrom the third base. coacb to try . gled in the fourth, but the hosts left
and
bolh runners stranded on base. ·
: : Folden, however, quickly RlOOVThe Lady Rodets added an allt:Rd bet- misate and gunned a bul- importmt insurance run in the bot~ to home' plate. " " - Carter tom of the sixth . when Trainer
~ thinl ~ards home, WHS again led off the frnme with a

JGWed

.,

·Aaron Martindale- 4x800

scm:.

.

'

iASL
;.... baseball-softball toume
'
. .......
.........us
. Y5

.

John Wdcox- 200m dash

·'

rombfued 0-for-4 oo the day as
weU.
RVHS starttt Kari M:cFum
went the distanoe l'or the IQI•Jhluci:. loss, aliowing just ooe
earned run, three hits and four
walks while f.anning II ova- sii
innings of wort. WHS Sl31ttr Erin
Stwgill picked up the win, allowin,g ZJerO earned runs, three hits
and
walk OV« seven lRmcs
while striking 0111 one..
Carter, Hardway and Tara .
Porter each had ooe hit l'or lhe
Lady Raiders, while Hall, Kiu.B
and Exline had a safely each b:
the hosts.
It was the final IJW! scJtcd .
game for RVHS seoiol-5 cmer,
Hardway, Porter, Mcfann., Holly
Taylor, · Kayla Payne and
Slephanie Griffith. The Lady
Raidca-s were also :5-5 in Ohio
Valley Corucrenoe play this yea:.
Well~ advanoes to the
di&gt;trict semifinals on Mooday, May
...,.. 7 ""''"'] 19, at Northwest High Scbool..,
Membefs of lhe Ri\oer Valley softball ~ shake hands wit11 \WIIIS1oo 101- where the Lady Rockets will Iaiiie
!owing Friday's DiVision Ill sectional final loss at WHS.
on Plortsmouth ~ at 6 p.m.
walk, followed by a single from hit through six innings before
Hall RVHS committed an error as producing two in the seventh, (7) fl VOlley ·llOO •000 ~ - ~ 3 1
well on the Hall hit, which allowed which resulted in the final end- o(Z) 'WeiiSIOn 1000 ~B~ • - 2 3 s
Trainer to score for a 2-0 lead after ing. The guests' final safety
AVHS ~10-12) : KilriUCF•nnand1Tena­
six oomplete.
came from the seven -bole bitter. WHS
g.5); 6rin Sturgill ond 8rionno - ·
River Valley managed just one 1be eight and nine spots were a WP - (1'StuTgiH;
II...P - Mcftenn.
~r-:...,..--,..----...,

one

o..m

--z.--.1

Eagles
from Page 81 .

: AlliENS -The Athens Sandlot baseball and softball the third., Bmmlon walked
leagues will be hosting a series of youth baseball and for the second time, and
)SOftball tournaments in June and July for boys and girls Hendrix doubled as the lead
increased to 4-0.
ages 7-14.
•
Waterford' s lone score
~ Baseball tournaments include a 14 and undec toumac
came
in the fourth on two
inent on June 20 through 23, 13 and under tournaments
luae 20 througb 23 and July 4 through 6, an •11-12 year walk~ and a double to deep
.,ld tournament Jllly 4 through 6, a 9-10 year old tour- left field, but in lhe bottom
pammt June 27 through 29, and a 7-8 year old coach of the inning the hosts sem ·
pitch toUIIJllinent July 4 through 6. Entry fee for the 14 three more across home
and 13 and under tournaments is $250, and the first plate.
Senior 'fYler Keams was
eight paid teams in each will be reserved a spot. Entry
hit
by a pitCh, freshman
fee for the. 11-12, 9 -1 0, and 7-8 year old tournaments
'fYier
Hendrix walked, and
!-'ill be $200, ;md the ftrst 12 paid teams in each wi II be then oonsecutive
singles by
reserved a spot.
Gordon, · Brannon, and
:: Softball tournaments include two 14 and -under girls Griffin put the Wildcats in
(Jst pitch tournaments, two 12 and under girls fast pitch the 7-1 hole they'd find
~nts, two 10 and under girls fast pitch touma- themselves in when play
)Bents, and two eight and under girls coach pi.tch tour- was called.
·
):iaments. The tournaments will be round robin format
Pieroe struck out !Our of
~th all teams guaranteed four games. The dates for
the seven batters he faced
~h softball tournament wiU be June 20 lhtough 23 and
on Friday, including three in
...y II through ll. Entry fee is $250, and the first 12 the sixth.
p.id teams in each tournament will be reserved a .spot.
Eastern scored two in the
: · For more information, visit www.atheossandlot.com bottom of the sixth.
Brannon reached on a fieldca11 740-594-nss . .

\? . . . . . .
Pictured above &lt;Me memiM!!S of IJle Eastern baseball team duri!lg the pte easun. The
EllcRa

7

Eilgles captured their fourlh consecutive Division IV seaional championsbip friday 1!1iCIIiltg
wi1tl a !H victory over visiting Waterfoo1. ·

ing emJ£ and scored on a
second when Bencdum
grounded to the shortstop.
Griffin
singled
after
Brann(Jn's at-bat, aild he
al.so soored on a sacrifiee by

.

Buddey.
Grande. Stan time for the
Waterfonl .went three up. dimid. !,aiDC will be S p.m.
lbree down ro end tbe game. ·
~s.
11::&amp;11
The Eagles oontinue IOIJI'· .
Waletford 000 10110 - 122
nament play on Wednesday E _ , 202 :1112 K - 9 11 1
at tbe Uruversity of Rio
WP-' Plorce; 1.1&gt; -lloCuk:hoon.

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'

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·

Devan Soolsby- 4~

.:Crockett (:J,'OW, Sean topi)kk t

110m
. burdles

Josh Collins, Colby Roseberry - 4x800

Bradley Coppick- 110m hurdles ..:
' - - - - --·- - -.

----~--.!..-

.

Your trade is worth more. 3 month

~

�Page B2 • ~ 1!m1d :6 uliud
1be Eagles' 4x800m boys
. relay team also fmished second with a time of 8:52.78.
Team members included
fnmPageBl
Martindale, Johnson. senior
.
.
.
· Josh Collins, and junior
third was worth stx IJ?10ts, Keith Aeiker. Southern's
and fourth through etghth 4x800 team, made up of
~ worth five through one juniors Drew Hoover and
pmnt
Kyle Goode and sophol_be Marauders as a team mores Colby Rose~ and
~tshe:d second on the boys Dylan Roush, fimshed
s1de w1th 97 (Xlmts and third fourth at 9:15.70, and ri~bt
on the g1rls w11h .84.50. 1be behind them was the Metgs
Eastern boys team placed team in fifth. Senior Nathan
third overall w11h 90.50 . ~ut Cook, JuniOrs Andrew
wer~ .tops among .. Hocking O'Bryant and .Brandon
Dtv1s1on teams as Belp~ Hanning, and sophomore
and Me1gs both compete 1.n .Zachary Whitlach comthe TVC ?h 1 ~· Eas_tern 5 bined for a time of9:18.12.
gt~s firushe!d s1xth w11h 59
English was second in the
pomts. The Sou~ boys 1OOm dash . with a time of
fi~shed 12th wtth I0 II. 7 1 seconds and third in
pom~.
.
.
the 200m dash with a time
Metgs had four top fimsh- of 23 _74 secoods.
es, and Eastern had two.
Meigs junior Catie Wolfe
fisher won the I OOm dash had a pair of third-place finand the 200~ dash, ~d ishes. In the girls I OOm dash
fishe.r. Cornelius Enghsh, she finished in 1352 secCro_ckett Crow, and Jeremy onds, and in the 200m dash
Snuth together won both the he fin
'shed in 27 85 sec·
. 4x200m
and
4x lOOm s d 1 1·
relays.
on s.
. •
.
Also placmg, 10 th~ girls
Fisher's time in the I OOm
dash was I 1.62 seconds, lOOm dash, With a time . of
and his time in the 200m 14.~2 ~nds,_ was Meigs
dash was 23.27 seconds. semorPattJ Vmmg. .
The Marauders' 4x200m
Collms took sec;on~ 10 ti:te
time was 1:34.33, and the 800m run, fi_mshmg m
4xl00m time was 45.46 2:07.49. Manmdale was
seconds. Stadium records fifth at 2:1~.10, _and
were set in all four events.
~oseberry was e1ghth wtth a
Eastern's top finishes ume of 2:13.73.
.
came courtesy of seniors . Marundale was al~ tl;t1rd
Katie Hayman and Aaron m the 1600m run._His lime
Martindale.
":as 4:44.96. Aetker was
: Hayman, who also set a e1ghth ~ 4:?.5. 14:.
-.
);tadium record. won the
On ihe g1rls st~e,
:girls 300m. hurdles wilh a Newland was fifth, runmng
.
time of 49.34 seconds, and the rode m 5:41.86.
Martindale won the boys
J1:1mor Devan Soul~by of
;3200m run with a time of Metgs was second m .the
10:33.1 J.
grrls 800m run. Her lime
: The Eastern Eagles took ":as 2:25.1_6. Newl~d was
Second in the boys and girls · etghth With a .lime of
~x400m relays. The boys 2:40.46.
.
.
team, made up of senior . S~ulsby, along With
Alex Burroughs, sopho- JU!IIOrs Morg~n Lentes,
more Mike Johnson, and Kimberly Sw1sher, and
freshmen Devon Baum and Jes~ica Holliday, placed
Klint Connery. finished in third in the grrls 4x800m
:3:40.8. Hayman, junior relay. rtbeic lime was
.
:Alyssa Newland, sopho· . II :04.18. ,.
)nore · Audrionna PuUins, ' Meip· junior Adrian
and
freshman
Emeri Bolin took . . . in girls
Connery made up the girls . lOOm hwdles; finishillg in
team, and they finished in 17.53 seoonds. · CDnnei'y
4:25 .'65.
· .
was fourth iat HU.8, and

TVC

•

Sunday, May 18, aoo8 .

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis
Meigs seniOr Casey Smith Bunuughs. Hoover, juniors
was fifth at 18.64.
Weston Roberts and Jobn
Meigs senior Cassady Wilcox and sophomon:
Willford finished third in Sean Coppick made up
lhe boys shot put with a Soulhern 's team, and they
lhrow of 43 feet. seven and finished eighth with a tim::
a half inches, and junior of I :47.17.
teammate Mason Metts was
The girls 4x200m relay
fourth at 42 feet, three inch- saw Meigs finish second.
es. Eastern .senior Zack Soulsby, Wolfe, F'telds, and
Newell took sixlh with a Lentes combined to run the
lhrow·of 41 feet, three and a two-lap race in 1:54.42.
half inches.
Eastern wasn 'I far behind in
Newell took second in lhe third with a time of I :58.
discus, where his lhrow was Their team consisted of
130 feet; one inch. Metts lfayman., Well)', Burt, and
was fourth at, 121 feet. 10 Emeri CDnnery.
incl)es.
.
In the boys 300m hurdles,
~ the g~s shot put. . Johnson was fourth with a
Metgs . .semor Melissa time of 44.68 seconds.
Gtueser placed third. Her Meigs ·sophomore Jacob
throw was 30 feet, five Well was right b.t.ind him
inehes·n__.__
Eastern •~
· fifth . His ume
· was .....
"" 87
:..........
lD
Hale:y ra...., ~ vwu• at seconds .
29 _feet. five mches, and
Well · was founh in the
Metgs sopho~ A~hley 110m hurdJes, finisbibg in
Good was etghth V:tth a 17.12 seconds. Crow placed .
throw of 27 feet. one 1 ~
eighth with a time of 19.09
Grueser was also third m
the discus with a throw of seconds.
.
.
100 feet. · and Perdas was
Also . placiD!]:
wtth
fifth at 84 feet, nine and a Hayman 10 the girls 300m
half inches.
. h~es were .Connery ~
Jeremy Smith took sec- ~ C:Onnery was third
'ood in lhe 400m dash, atid with a tune ~ 50.21 seche was foUowed by oods, and Bohn _was fifth at
Burroughs
and
KJint 50.47 seconds.
.
Connery. 'Their resPective
Bwroughs was fifthmthe
times. were 52.67, -53.29, boys long jump,~ 19
and sf.l6 .seconds.
feet, OlltHfWid:er inch from
Pullins was fifth in the the ~ In the boys high
girls 400m dash where her jump; · Johnson tied for
time was 1:06.6:i.
fourth, clearing five f~t,
Eastern was seventh in eight inches.
Aeiker placed s~th in the
the boys 4x lOOm relay.
Newell, Baum,.junior Zach 3200m run. His time. was
Moore, and freshman Jamil II :03.56. Goode WllS etghdt
Stephney combined for a at II :30.95.
.
_.
time of 50.31 seoonds.
Pullms placed etghth m
Meigs' 4x.l OOm girls relay the girls long jump with a
team was second with a mark of 14 feet, one and
time of 53 .46 seconds. one-quaner inches, and Burt
Team members included was seventh in the girls higb
Wolfe, Vining. Bolin. and juffip with. a_ clearance. of
junior . Emily
Fields. four feet._ SIX mches: Vmmg
Eastern's girls were sixth lied for e1~hth, cleanng four . ·
with a time of 57.15 sec- feet, four mches.
Casey Smith was foudh
onds. Team members were
Hayman, senior Morgan in the gi~s pole ~au~t She
Werry, junior Morgan Burt, cleared SIX feet. SIX inches.
and fresh!tan Beverly Swisher was seventh at five
Maxson.
feet, six inches.
Complete results of the
The ~gles took fourth in
the boys 4x200m relay, 2008 TVC Track and F'teld.
Their time was I :40.53, and . Championships are on the
team . members
were web
at ·
Connery, Baum, Moore, and www.baumspage.rom
&lt;·

.
. Snnd'Q', May 18,

zoo8

Si

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gwltipolis

ltt~i

4i l.p g 113

[Lady Raiders drop heartbreaker to Wellston, 2-1
••
~:

BY •

• Wauas

~.COM

,_.

1!
.•- - - - - - - - - ~ WFl.l.SlUN -

In a softball

~ with few scoring opportuni-

Pes.

somebody had ro take a
WlaJICA". Seventh-seeded River
t{auey ~ late - and failed
:._during a 2-1' ~ k to host
Wellstoo during a thrilling
Division m scdiooal final Frida

r::'!:!!··

Lady

.

catcher Briaooa .UU was waiting
-with the ball- about 20 !eel up
the line for the evealual final out of
the contest.
Thai ~ out allowed the Blue
and Gold - wbo won their third
sttaigbt TVC Ohio tide this season
- ro clincb their third oonsecutive
sectional crown. That out also
ended lhe Lady Raida's' season at
t0-12 overall.

Rai~ hits~=~~Sisq=

fDia'ed the sewenlh inning lniling
~:.()and were down to their final at-

~ as the SOCIOIICHecded Lady

~'?'ids (19-5) Sladl:d that frame
ra:uding two~ outs. The

jj.

!)as~~ ~~ni!'!

also sroreJess after three fuU
innings of play. RVHS strailded
just three runners on base, while
the~ left a lOCal of five on the
bags. WHS also committed three
euurs in the triumph, while the
guests made only one miscue in
were

Britllllly Hardway and Kirsten their finale.
pua to pul the tying runs on first Scoreless tluUugb three-and-ail}ld secoiJd
half innings, WeD~ sind; first
:•Sophomore Jeooa Wani fol- blood offensively in the founh
by blooping a fly ball down thanks to a walt and two base hitS.
left field line - which eadcd up ~ Trainer led off with .a
being daoppcd by WHS lefifielder walk, the8 Amber 'King followed
Cbelsie Folden. Haniw.,. came with an RBI double two biittecs
jiiiOOild from second to5alleon the later to soore Trainer for a 1-0
tmJr and Clll1a' got the go-ahead advantage. Otarity E!l.line also sinfrom the third base. coacb to try . gled in the fourth, but the hosts left
and
bolh runners stranded on base. ·
: : Folden, however, quickly RlOOVThe Lady Rodets added an allt:Rd bet- misate and gunned a bul- importmt insurance run in the bot~ to home' plate. " " - Carter tom of the sixth . when Trainer
~ thinl ~ards home, WHS again led off the frnme with a

JGWed

.,

·Aaron Martindale- 4x800

scm:.

.

'

iASL
;.... baseball-softball toume
'
. .......
.........us
. Y5

.

John Wdcox- 200m dash

·'

rombfued 0-for-4 oo the day as
weU.
RVHS starttt Kari M:cFum
went the distanoe l'or the IQI•Jhluci:. loss, aliowing just ooe
earned run, three hits and four
walks while f.anning II ova- sii
innings of wort. WHS Sl31ttr Erin
Stwgill picked up the win, allowin,g ZJerO earned runs, three hits
and
walk OV« seven lRmcs
while striking 0111 one..
Carter, Hardway and Tara .
Porter each had ooe hit l'or lhe
Lady Raiders, while Hall, Kiu.B
and Exline had a safely each b:
the hosts.
It was the final IJW! scJtcd .
game for RVHS seoiol-5 cmer,
Hardway, Porter, Mcfann., Holly
Taylor, · Kayla Payne and
Slephanie Griffith. The Lady
Raidca-s were also :5-5 in Ohio
Valley Corucrenoe play this yea:.
Well~ advanoes to the
di&gt;trict semifinals on Mooday, May
...,.. 7 ""''"'] 19, at Northwest High Scbool..,
Membefs of lhe Ri\oer Valley softball ~ shake hands wit11 \WIIIS1oo 101- where the Lady Rockets will Iaiiie
!owing Friday's DiVision Ill sectional final loss at WHS.
on Plortsmouth ~ at 6 p.m.
walk, followed by a single from hit through six innings before
Hall RVHS committed an error as producing two in the seventh, (7) fl VOlley ·llOO •000 ~ - ~ 3 1
well on the Hall hit, which allowed which resulted in the final end- o(Z) 'WeiiSIOn 1000 ~B~ • - 2 3 s
Trainer to score for a 2-0 lead after ing. The guests' final safety
AVHS ~10-12) : KilriUCF•nnand1Tena­
six oomplete.
came from the seven -bole bitter. WHS
g.5); 6rin Sturgill ond 8rionno - ·
River Valley managed just one 1be eight and nine spots were a WP - (1'StuTgiH;
II...P - Mcftenn.
~r-:...,..--,..----...,

one

o..m

--z.--.1

Eagles
from Page 81 .

: AlliENS -The Athens Sandlot baseball and softball the third., Bmmlon walked
leagues will be hosting a series of youth baseball and for the second time, and
)SOftball tournaments in June and July for boys and girls Hendrix doubled as the lead
increased to 4-0.
ages 7-14.
•
Waterford' s lone score
~ Baseball tournaments include a 14 and undec toumac
came
in the fourth on two
inent on June 20 through 23, 13 and under tournaments
luae 20 througb 23 and July 4 through 6, an •11-12 year walk~ and a double to deep
.,ld tournament Jllly 4 through 6, a 9-10 year old tour- left field, but in lhe bottom
pammt June 27 through 29, and a 7-8 year old coach of the inning the hosts sem ·
pitch toUIIJllinent July 4 through 6. Entry fee for the 14 three more across home
and 13 and under tournaments is $250, and the first plate.
Senior 'fYler Keams was
eight paid teams in each will be reserved a spot. Entry
hit
by a pitCh, freshman
fee for the. 11-12, 9 -1 0, and 7-8 year old tournaments
'fYier
Hendrix walked, and
!-'ill be $200, ;md the ftrst 12 paid teams in each wi II be then oonsecutive
singles by
reserved a spot.
Gordon, · Brannon, and
:: Softball tournaments include two 14 and -under girls Griffin put the Wildcats in
(Jst pitch tournaments, two 12 and under girls fast pitch the 7-1 hole they'd find
~nts, two 10 and under girls fast pitch touma- themselves in when play
)Bents, and two eight and under girls coach pi.tch tour- was called.
·
):iaments. The tournaments will be round robin format
Pieroe struck out !Our of
~th all teams guaranteed four games. The dates for
the seven batters he faced
~h softball tournament wiU be June 20 lhtough 23 and
on Friday, including three in
...y II through ll. Entry fee is $250, and the first 12 the sixth.
p.id teams in each tournament will be reserved a .spot.
Eastern scored two in the
: · For more information, visit www.atheossandlot.com bottom of the sixth.
Brannon reached on a fieldca11 740-594-nss . .

\? . . . . . .
Pictured above &lt;Me memiM!!S of IJle Eastern baseball team duri!lg the pte easun. The
EllcRa

7

Eilgles captured their fourlh consecutive Division IV seaional championsbip friday 1!1iCIIiltg
wi1tl a !H victory over visiting Waterfoo1. ·

ing emJ£ and scored on a
second when Bencdum
grounded to the shortstop.
Griffin
singled
after
Brann(Jn's at-bat, aild he
al.so soored on a sacrifiee by

.

Buddey.
Grande. Stan time for the
Waterfonl .went three up. dimid. !,aiDC will be S p.m.
lbree down ro end tbe game. ·
~s.
11::&amp;11
The Eagles oontinue IOIJI'· .
Waletford 000 10110 - 122
nament play on Wednesday E _ , 202 :1112 K - 9 11 1
at tbe Uruversity of Rio
WP-' Plorce; 1.1&gt; -lloCuk:hoon.

#1 USED CAR STORE gives you more!
'

90 Days until your first payment! (That's August)
Interest Rates as.Low as 5.5% with select lender's approval. (That's low.inlel•)
Money Down! Plus 100 gallons of gasoline with purchase S!J,!Y"'.icle (JWs 10Dplan)

·

Devan Soolsby- 4~

.:Crockett (:J,'OW, Sean topi)kk t

110m
. burdles

Josh Collins, Colby Roseberry - 4x800

Bradley Coppick- 110m hurdles ..:
' - - - - --·- - -.

----~--.!..-

.

Your trade is worth more. 3 month

~

�I

Po ... a

~

.

'•'~~'

HI• ·" ' ·

•

has it lhat tbe Ohio

DiYi!.ioo ot Wl1dlif~ is Cl'lll·
si4lcrillg a system oM!er~

deer' IMm~ ooulll cllock in
tbcir deer via ~ (Jf
tbe Ula:ML ~ dris
mip1 SOUIICI radical il ilm"t

In the
Open

~g~1~
gmj!w -systoms· ~ aliacily
in u\e in Wttes like

:and
Kmnrly. along wit!:! others.
Go 1M •:aily speakin,g. bcR:
is bow it ...oo.s.
.
Attct- harv~ - y.our tmpity. you 3litadh a lmlplll'aJY
~ ., tbe deer. ]just mike you
do _ ._Yoo diem call a rollIRic mm'hcr m go online
:ad !il!!vnit die infumunlioo
:about~ deer or !iv~ it ro

:n~~ lling
~~~·::ir':~:i!~
'SOmewllcre ar.ounci 211

""""*"111:

e~

Mol.t likdy dJe DiW&amp;ioo
of W"ddlife Mil IJMO_gnin:
1i01De fioanoial savi'\gs by
,...;qg dowl1 on dJe :anwmt
of paperwork. llwvest
Rl00l1110nns a mct.a1 Cllgs
.assorii•ed utb tt.adiliooa!
dcca' dlcdiqg How~v6
llihiK is ....clv:r&lt;Obwiou!O n:a1iOII lit~ wi1h tdqJhooe or
iDtaiDet deer dwdiing, ooe
· . dJ.al: ""nefits CVCIYOOC: fuel
u~s.

While it mliY !like .a oo~le
gallons of gasoline (f'rice
$3.191;pllon at lime of writiog~ m go to llbe d!eak stalion, llbe :amount of fuel con. sn1Mcl is m~iliieci gr.eatly
When yoo drink a1!M!Jut .an .01'
the bunters gOO!g to the
dloak swion.
()msjcler _llhis._ lut yell'
""""""'in Ohio !lilled !!lightly IIICft tbaa 130.000 dceJ:.
The year before dra! 11mnten&gt;
ki!lod
ll7.]16
deer.
Somc:riJDC!&gt; it is~ ll0DlfOtimes less. This is munting
only !bose~~}' bar-

auiblr

Vesfed~

milles-Jlllf-ga1lon &lt;(whidh !s a
pwtty ~enorous ·~l!lmlllellhe ll'~ty ms •JlFObahly SGmewhat less). and 'that the
bunter ms W•lthin five mile~ of
die nearest cbecl; station
(anollhell' guess, .agam prOba~ly~tbe!ow side). · .
Usmg that hypothetical
data. that means successful
bunteii'S in Ohio dJlive a tatal
cf 2~00ll(i)() miles JUSt
dhedbng m deer. .a .distance
ro~y GO !1!imes llhat lfimm
the eat1lh lo the mMn. \'~s,
~ m{lJJ'.e llhan &lt;0IJe
deer ms llranSJ'(!JI'Ied al .-a lllme
w the dleCk -statll.on Is Mnveniently ~ooated ()n 1&lt;he way
.to llbe bouse; 1tbat ili ·v.lby I
made (l(I)JlseJWatiiw.e estlimates.
T~ lrn&lt;cl &lt;that -distance. our
bM)l(ill!hdica! piclql il!mulks
drivmg !1G-miles ·(mund
Oiip~ :aru1 getting 2(} miles w
illbe :galon, waulld 'bum
4M.OOO :flll11ons of ifuc'l o(oc
dian '$ U7 mdllionj.. '
Thic, 400JOOO !!¢lens js a
llltK dmp in l:be llmckel
~ to l:be lllliHe lhan .
350 million ~s used
•e&gt;.&lt;ery day &lt;in 1lhe United
States, bowever, we'II'~ still
ltallcin_g .about enoi.J1lh fuel to
fill .at least 51 :tanleer trucks
&lt;(9 -~ :gallons e~h~, and
lhat"s ..1ust •t@ check m _!!leer'-!!
.one ~;an_d ~very ilittJC bit
be1,ps; espeaally these days.
Ohin !hunterS l)lr&lt;0ba'bly
woo't 'See te~one ~linter­
net deer •cj]yorljt1g llhis {a]],
.but it III!IY ibe available lin
lf.alll009.
.
'

WHITE PLAINS, N.Y.
Ol)'Uipian Tmm
Mootgoml:2y bad everything
bee\a' wantM.
•
Once blo!illll as die
~wcrlld"s
fastest
mail,~
Mollt2omav won a ·iilver
l1ICIIafin 1bC -400 rday .at llhe
1996 Oly;Jqpici and
in

-A:f.

•

fJT .at jim.ft;eemarr@Bh.llllCdn&amp;net

Montgomery, :wearing a
white T-Bhir.t: .and baggy

lamented ilhe wms lllis
life has illll1cn as be asked the
judge for leniency just~bcfm:
the 46-month sentence :was
Unposed
MontJiemery 10ld llhe j~
be lha4-let ether ~ run
pants,

ll'i£ht decision. "' feel tike J
made ltbe right decision for
me .and my family,~ Cobble
said. "'The mocation, the envimlllJ)CIIt and baYing a fair
.:lhance of 'being .able to play
( w,eui.all famoo; in my deci-

Rio Grande !head coach
Ken firendh is p1e.a"'".d to be

__ __

·
.l h' . . _ W , , .
SPECIAL romE TIMES-SENTINEL

.

~10 ~RANDE l'be
Umverstty of IR!ia Grande
men 's bas'ketball .pFogram
has _been _very busy of 1ate
Sl!lffing ,players they hope
wtU return the IRedmen to
the upper echelon -of the
Amen can
Mideast
Gl'mference. The l.a!Cst to
SJgD en the lilotted lme for
-lR:il'lisQuintas'"Bud"Teer¢
Cleveland Heights.
'feer, a ·6-foot•6 forward
was the team' s captam and
.Most ValWlb]e IPlayer 1ast
season, leadmg Clevcland
Heights in rebounding. Teer
nabbed 1 st team all-1eague
henors and was NoFtheast
Ohio honer.a"b]e mention.
Teer w.as also a palll of the
state
champ1on~p
Lutheran East "'quad in
2004..
·
"We BJle v.ery excitc}d
.about ~gmng Quintas Teer
.and!fedbemsaFectfufor
&lt;OllT !Pmu.am, · -said ~a
Grande bead .ooadh Ken

.........

I
·I

·I

9on).~

Rio·· hoops·SJ·gat

tas T.I _eer
•

Q
. u_·i n

French. "'Bud js a tough 6'-6
lcid who has the &lt;Opportunity
to .develop into a special
player. He will be aple to
play both the four and five
spot.
.
"He as a very physical
player who can alse step out
and knock down the 15" -18"
foot jumper." French added.
"He will give us another talented b.ig-man to utilize in
our mtation."
feels good about his
l!«dsioti to sign with Rio
Grande. "l feel very posftive
and e~.:cited about this
opportunity to become a
Redman ,~ Teer said. 'II was
impressed with the encouragement and suppon of 'the
Rio-coaches:
"I enjoyed meeting and
playing WJtb the team during
an· earlier visit,'' Teer added.
Teer
discus~d
•his
strengths and weaknesses as
a player. "Sooting, rebounding a.nd being aggres&amp;iYe
(are .my strengths) and I
need to work on ball lJan:.
dling, .. be s&amp;d.

Teer

He plans to major in education and was aware of
Rio"s n;putation for producing cducatocs prier to his
signing with Rio Grande. '1
lrnew that Rio was known
for having a good Jli'O_gnuD
for students who wanted to
become teachen;," Teer s&amp;d.
Teer will not be alone
when 'he travels from .the
northem pan of the state &lt;Of
Ohio to rural southeastern
Ohio. hls sister Quincy
already anends the universlty and will be bere with him
in the fall.
His goals while playing
for Rio Grande are "to
improve all basketball skills
as an individual play~r.~
Teer said. "To offer and provide the team outstanding
performance and -d edication."
Teer joins ·B rad Cubbie
from Oayton"s Trotwood
Madison High School .and
•Corey Taylor of South Point
High School as the current
crop of Rio Grande recruits
for the 2008-09 season.

Rio hoops adds South Point's Taylor
~

SPECIAL TO lllE TIME5-SENTINEL

IUO GRANDE - The
•U ruversity of Rio Cirande
1IlOII' s basketball .continues
10 stock pile :talent for the
&lt;U,pCOming 2(i)(i)8.@9 season.
11he latest is Carey Tayli'II' ·of
.South P.oim High 'School
He is the second I'CCI'IIit to
Ibis nationallener .of intent ito

.lim . l'merwm i&amp; w.iJiJlife
tgJllCia1.ist for the Meig5 Soil
oNl Wztu Con-tion play fOil' Head c . ~
Dimid. He i1oiJ be tJOrlloote4 oweek4ay.at 74(})..991-1282 firench and R1o Grande.
jci&gt;ining point guani Bud

&lt;ly••apian Montgomery gets
46 monh for chtd fraud
(API -

Sdhooi.

Jun Ftttman

IIIIIJI:lba. The confumati0n
...~ !!oe&amp; on tbe ~ ancil
-~•ics die deer ro die
taricbmist w ht»dvv
11 -mds prrtiy siniPJe..
Te'ql"llle w inttmctt deer
IICICIDS liD be a IGgic.! ~ in lhe mmsfomnaCioooflnmtingintolhemocilem era; hunting linc:nses
bave '-o ;avJn,ah)e via the
intemct for sever.a'l years
1110... wilh 1110 ~t
issues. You can !buy buntii11g
0.. fi~ lioeilses now
widnll m~ amp iniiD
m..n. However, just likie
bwllin~: a
fimmg license
'ltl ¥4s haWII'tgooe .aw.ay, it
i.JO lilldy cbcck 'SI.atimts will '
mnai• ro.- diose deer
I!
b ..mo like the camarwlerie of•!lbe cbcd:: stallion

s

Lay. Jl.ay dl, ......

RIO GllANDE - The
University of Rio GJ:ande
men's lbas\dha11 team has
its first t.ea.uit for lhe lMS&lt;09 season in ltbe f&lt;'ilci He is
B!Jid OUbbie fuml Dayton's
Tmtw.ood .Madison High

()ubhie, a 6-foot-2 p0int
•gwn:d. WliS &lt;Cll]!ll.ain of die
ha&amp;eiball Iteam .and made
. 2JDd Imam ..all.,oonier,cooe
I(GWOC). Cobble was
.
tta'b'tled .as lihe Defen!iive
chediqg ~ At point all0f !hose deer bad to · PJayer {'# l:be Year iin the
be 11ranspooted frtom the ~and is a member of
woods. loaded inlo the baok Rams in Action.
()f .a pi~ itiUo'k or dlber
(Jdbbie !feels that signing
oonvey.ance, and hauled to a w.i:th Rie Grande was the
doer cl!eck su.mon.
.

NiS'SOUli. · Winois

s

P.•- 'OJ • Jfiddleport • Cs"ijtn'is .

•
1 ;,May I &amp; , -

Cubbie ili:om Trotwf~Gd
Madison High Scboo1 in
Dayr.On.
Taylor, a -6-foot- 3 ~mer in
high school, pmpuced nearly
a dmubJe'llilouble .all season
for the Flainters. He av.eraj.led
!t5 points and 9.4 !TeOOunds
. including toumamcnt ,play.
.Taylor was a key factor in
helping 1lhe Pointers put
·togethell' an unbeaten .regular

season a1 20-0 and winning . wise and discipline-wise be
the Ohio Valley Conference fits in. ·l k comes from a
ilharnPionsbip.
good prilgram... smd French.
He .knows the transition to "If be can defend and
college is going tn be tough. rebouDd. and the quicker be
·but he feels that be can .han- buys into that the quicker he
die [L "If s a nice school and will move up the ladder and
ifs-small butlknow it"sstill .e;u:e.L"
.g oing to be ·tough." said · South Point coacb Gaty
taylor. ''l'Uplay jayVees and Norms s&amp;d Taylor proved to
llthink I ~ve a good~ be a good defender and
to mov~ up, I have to prac- rebouruler llhis past 1ie350n
ltice .as bard ·as I can and F.t and expects him to continue
biggell' and stronger. lltbink his styfe at the college level.
I"U get better as I get older...
Taylor· is confident be can
firench agreed with his lat- make the t:raasition fmm
est recruit"s assessment. "'He -playing the post position in
has the ability to mat:Jiioulate bigb scbool ·to being away
tlu:ough·our ,program. lt"s up from the basket at the colle.to him bow he works and giate level.
lblicates hlmself.~ said
Tay.lor is accomplished in
French. "He knows .bow to the classroom as well as eviplay. ~biggest thiiig be dencedbyhls3.5gradepoint
needs IS streqgtb."
average.
French mentioned other Corey is the son of Debbie
aspects of Taylor"s make..up and Randy Taylor of South
ilhat he likes. "'Character- P.oint.
•

Rio's Pe_ny ·
f-A
te ·..
W compe
at Nab.OnaJs
·

·

SPECIAL "TO THE 'IIMES-SENllNEL

'·.'

RIO GRANDE - Senior •
sprinter !Josh Pen)' will ~ '
resent the UIIWersity of Rio
Grande trac1c. and field f1uad
.at the 57th Annwil Men s &amp;.
28th Annual Women's ·
Outdoor TTIICk &amp; Field
Championships. May 22-24.
2008 at Ralpb Korte.
Stadium in Edwanisvilk. m. .
Josh Pmy, a IRio Grande
native. qualified for ·lhe 200
meter dash ai the Coastal
Carolina Outdoor Track
meet and forthe2008 NAIA
Outdoor Nattonals in his
first outdoor meet of the season._He ran a 2L35 in 200 :.
.meter daSh Which is a new:Grande . outdoor ttac'k:~
record. iPetiy later topped ~ .
that II1IP'k with a time of ;
2127. He enters the competition ranked fourth in the :

.Rio

nation.

.. :

Rio Grande bead -coach: .
Bob Willey says it1s a great ·
accomplisfunent for Pcay.:::"1-k had a great season, ~~e-:
broke · his own · school:•

leC9I'd.~Willey said "W~·rc ~

all pretty excited Bbout1t. :~
"Ifs very e11.citing. ifS::
goiilg to be a great ttip."': :
Willey added
: ..He will tun the 200 ~:

)iminarics on May 22 at 6: 1():_:
p.m. CDT. :Should be"'
advance to the semifinals ~
that would tJike place on- :
May 24 313:30 p.m. with me;:
fina1s to fOllow Ill 5 p.m. :
He qualified for the ·I 00::
by hllt~J1g the ~8' Standard, :
and enters the Nationals ranked 22nd but will not:

COJilpde .in 1bal event.

;:

"We decided just to ~
hlm in the two. tccause be's
running very well in that..
right now." he said "Each,:
meet be's gotten a little ~
· faster and that" s what you :
want, yoo want ro run your~.:
best at the end and be•,· •
doing that right now."
•

~i:~or: 9.~ =~~~:.Z!

soronds in lihc 100-meter ADd bis ' llawyer., Tunuthy
· dalih.
- ~, uid M~
Tve
!i&amp;OOcl
00
top
.X
dw!
llad been !led :astra
_ ov .bv,
-......:ft ft . . _ .....:..
&gt;'
,.
arnrll),g&lt;llllcrs.. ill'llak ~
But Mosneomrnr"s oocc- Manon Jones. Jones. who
..:dobt t: 1 liK has beca oo .a ha4 a soo with M.ontg0mery,
diJwnwanl spiral lor years is ~ ber own 6-montb
after a &amp;pale of llep1 pUb- prison •t am for lying about
!em&amp;._ ~ ~ ~ Montgomery' s mvo1vement
~
a Vmtinia ;~., in llhe cbec1: scam and about
pcdopbiles
_... _.. her use &lt;Of . perl'ormanceThe wodd lllOOI'd. and all .eobailcing drugs.
his oda pclfiMJJII!JlMS ~
1lbc chock case • also
Mwdl31,
were Wiped ensnared _Montgomery's forfulm.dle lv'Ok· .and -b e - mer ooach. ar~d medalist
lwu!Oil from itmck for tw.o .,
Riddi
- d
_ 'Year&amp;. . t'O£ ~ing linked liF ..,.tev.e ·
_an agent,
tbe invcdi......... '«BAlLO ~s Wells. Bolh pie.J!drd
.~
,
~U.U'-::1·
tbe lab a 111e .ca~~a
a
••,.. thers.
8. ut· the . II.udge• """"
n:roid scandal in spotU;
:o
~ oevcr ·tested wc:re not to blame m . tbe
polilive fur drugs, but lbe abed; case.
tSiRd after the ban was
"'"':~ should commit ~ank
i 11,.a 1
fnwd IS •DOl •the same as You
And oo Friday. a ftJderal sboul~ eat ~s.··· Kall'as
jlllll!e .,...,..,.,. llhe fQ11DCT said. · 'There ts not a single
.! illr to oeady four ycaJ'li shred of e\lidence ben: tliat
ia piBon fO£ -dealing in bad this was anyone else's fault"
dJenks
A small ·group of family
"'lbc•~, all those and ~s ttaveled to the
people
· dla was·part sentencmg from South
Of ••4Ja world." be said. Carolina.
Montgomery's
'1a jlil. my status is gone."
father. Eddie Montgomery.
Judge Keanclh Karas also asked the judge for lemency,
wa:wl Mtugonay. 33. that saying the supportive _family
the evidence agamst him wo~ help keep h1s son
"does not '«" a 1o be flim- straJght after pnson.
d' ill J1111 ongoi~ case in Kall'as praised the family
":~a, where be 1s aa:used but s&amp;d close family ties only
c'! idlinJ brmin. A con~ showed . that . Mon~gomery
0011 dlr.re would carry a nnn- had ·no difficult childhood or
~ mandatory five-year broken home to lllame for his
wrongdoing.

. . . . . ._ u;;'m

2m!,

m

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Qtb' fiallipolts JDallp GtriiiDllt.
Qt ·Jaiut 'lta~ut

.,.._,t
and The Daily Sentinel . .

have launched a oew ~every
Friday ealled "Faith and,Family".
If you bave a testimonial..,,·
·
. event about yourself
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'•'~~'

HI• ·" ' ·

•

has it lhat tbe Ohio

DiYi!.ioo ot Wl1dlif~ is Cl'lll·
si4lcrillg a system oM!er~

deer' IMm~ ooulll cllock in
tbcir deer via ~ (Jf
tbe Ula:ML ~ dris
mip1 SOUIICI radical il ilm"t

In the
Open

~g~1~
gmj!w -systoms· ~ aliacily
in u\e in Wttes like

:and
Kmnrly. along wit!:! others.
Go 1M •:aily speakin,g. bcR:
is bow it ...oo.s.
.
Attct- harv~ - y.our tmpity. you 3litadh a lmlplll'aJY
~ ., tbe deer. ]just mike you
do _ ._Yoo diem call a rollIRic mm'hcr m go online
:ad !il!!vnit die infumunlioo
:about~ deer or !iv~ it ro

:n~~ lling
~~~·::ir':~:i!~
'SOmewllcre ar.ounci 211

""""*"111:

e~

Mol.t likdy dJe DiW&amp;ioo
of W"ddlife Mil IJMO_gnin:
1i01De fioanoial savi'\gs by
,...;qg dowl1 on dJe :anwmt
of paperwork. llwvest
Rl00l1110nns a mct.a1 Cllgs
.assorii•ed utb tt.adiliooa!
dcca' dlcdiqg How~v6
llihiK is ....clv:r&lt;Obwiou!O n:a1iOII lit~ wi1h tdqJhooe or
iDtaiDet deer dwdiing, ooe
· . dJ.al: ""nefits CVCIYOOC: fuel
u~s.

While it mliY !like .a oo~le
gallons of gasoline (f'rice
$3.191;pllon at lime of writiog~ m go to llbe d!eak stalion, llbe :amount of fuel con. sn1Mcl is m~iliieci gr.eatly
When yoo drink a1!M!Jut .an .01'
the bunters gOO!g to the
dloak swion.
()msjcler _llhis._ lut yell'
""""""'in Ohio !lilled !!lightly IIICft tbaa 130.000 dceJ:.
The year before dra! 11mnten&gt;
ki!lod
ll7.]16
deer.
Somc:riJDC!&gt; it is~ ll0DlfOtimes less. This is munting
only !bose~~}' bar-

auiblr

Vesfed~

milles-Jlllf-ga1lon &lt;(whidh !s a
pwtty ~enorous ·~l!lmlllellhe ll'~ty ms •JlFObahly SGmewhat less). and 'that the
bunter ms W•lthin five mile~ of
die nearest cbecl; station
(anollhell' guess, .agam prOba~ly~tbe!ow side). · .
Usmg that hypothetical
data. that means successful
bunteii'S in Ohio dJlive a tatal
cf 2~00ll(i)() miles JUSt
dhedbng m deer. .a .distance
ro~y GO !1!imes llhat lfimm
the eat1lh lo the mMn. \'~s,
~ m{lJJ'.e llhan &lt;0IJe
deer ms llranSJ'(!JI'Ied al .-a lllme
w the dleCk -statll.on Is Mnveniently ~ooated ()n 1&lt;he way
.to llbe bouse; 1tbat ili ·v.lby I
made (l(I)JlseJWatiiw.e estlimates.
T~ lrn&lt;cl &lt;that -distance. our
bM)l(ill!hdica! piclql il!mulks
drivmg !1G-miles ·(mund
Oiip~ :aru1 getting 2(} miles w
illbe :galon, waulld 'bum
4M.OOO :flll11ons of ifuc'l o(oc
dian '$ U7 mdllionj.. '
Thic, 400JOOO !!¢lens js a
llltK dmp in l:be llmckel
~ to l:be lllliHe lhan .
350 million ~s used
•e&gt;.&lt;ery day &lt;in 1lhe United
States, bowever, we'II'~ still
ltallcin_g .about enoi.J1lh fuel to
fill .at least 51 :tanleer trucks
&lt;(9 -~ :gallons e~h~, and
lhat"s ..1ust •t@ check m _!!leer'-!!
.one ~;an_d ~very ilittJC bit
be1,ps; espeaally these days.
Ohin !hunterS l)lr&lt;0ba'bly
woo't 'See te~one ~linter­
net deer •cj]yorljt1g llhis {a]],
.but it III!IY ibe available lin
lf.alll009.
.
'

WHITE PLAINS, N.Y.
Ol)'Uipian Tmm
Mootgoml:2y bad everything
bee\a' wantM.
•
Once blo!illll as die
~wcrlld"s
fastest
mail,~
Mollt2omav won a ·iilver
l1ICIIafin 1bC -400 rday .at llhe
1996 Oly;Jqpici and
in

-A:f.

•

fJT .at jim.ft;eemarr@Bh.llllCdn&amp;net

Montgomery, :wearing a
white T-Bhir.t: .and baggy

lamented ilhe wms lllis
life has illll1cn as be asked the
judge for leniency just~bcfm:
the 46-month sentence :was
Unposed
MontJiemery 10ld llhe j~
be lha4-let ether ~ run
pants,

ll'i£ht decision. "' feel tike J
made ltbe right decision for
me .and my family,~ Cobble
said. "'The mocation, the envimlllJ)CIIt and baYing a fair
.:lhance of 'being .able to play
( w,eui.all famoo; in my deci-

Rio Grande !head coach
Ken firendh is p1e.a"'".d to be

__ __

·
.l h' . . _ W , , .
SPECIAL romE TIMES-SENTINEL

.

~10 ~RANDE l'be
Umverstty of IR!ia Grande
men 's bas'ketball .pFogram
has _been _very busy of 1ate
Sl!lffing ,players they hope
wtU return the IRedmen to
the upper echelon -of the
Amen can
Mideast
Gl'mference. The l.a!Cst to
SJgD en the lilotted lme for
-lR:il'lisQuintas'"Bud"Teer¢
Cleveland Heights.
'feer, a ·6-foot•6 forward
was the team' s captam and
.Most ValWlb]e IPlayer 1ast
season, leadmg Clevcland
Heights in rebounding. Teer
nabbed 1 st team all-1eague
henors and was NoFtheast
Ohio honer.a"b]e mention.
Teer w.as also a palll of the
state
champ1on~p
Lutheran East "'quad in
2004..
·
"We BJle v.ery excitc}d
.about ~gmng Quintas Teer
.and!fedbemsaFectfufor
&lt;OllT !Pmu.am, · -said ~a
Grande bead .ooadh Ken

.........

I
·I

·I

9on).~

Rio·· hoops·SJ·gat

tas T.I _eer
•

Q
. u_·i n

French. "'Bud js a tough 6'-6
lcid who has the &lt;Opportunity
to .develop into a special
player. He will be aple to
play both the four and five
spot.
.
"He as a very physical
player who can alse step out
and knock down the 15" -18"
foot jumper." French added.
"He will give us another talented b.ig-man to utilize in
our mtation."
feels good about his
l!«dsioti to sign with Rio
Grande. "l feel very posftive
and e~.:cited about this
opportunity to become a
Redman ,~ Teer said. 'II was
impressed with the encouragement and suppon of 'the
Rio-coaches:
"I enjoyed meeting and
playing WJtb the team during
an· earlier visit,'' Teer added.
Teer
discus~d
•his
strengths and weaknesses as
a player. "Sooting, rebounding a.nd being aggres&amp;iYe
(are .my strengths) and I
need to work on ball lJan:.
dling, .. be s&amp;d.

Teer

He plans to major in education and was aware of
Rio"s n;putation for producing cducatocs prier to his
signing with Rio Grande. '1
lrnew that Rio was known
for having a good Jli'O_gnuD
for students who wanted to
become teachen;," Teer s&amp;d.
Teer will not be alone
when 'he travels from .the
northem pan of the state &lt;Of
Ohio to rural southeastern
Ohio. hls sister Quincy
already anends the universlty and will be bere with him
in the fall.
His goals while playing
for Rio Grande are "to
improve all basketball skills
as an individual play~r.~
Teer said. "To offer and provide the team outstanding
performance and -d edication."
Teer joins ·B rad Cubbie
from Oayton"s Trotwood
Madison High School .and
•Corey Taylor of South Point
High School as the current
crop of Rio Grande recruits
for the 2008-09 season.

Rio hoops adds South Point's Taylor
~

SPECIAL TO lllE TIME5-SENTINEL

IUO GRANDE - The
•U ruversity of Rio Cirande
1IlOII' s basketball .continues
10 stock pile :talent for the
&lt;U,pCOming 2(i)(i)8.@9 season.
11he latest is Carey Tayli'II' ·of
.South P.oim High 'School
He is the second I'CCI'IIit to
Ibis nationallener .of intent ito

.lim . l'merwm i&amp; w.iJiJlife
tgJllCia1.ist for the Meig5 Soil
oNl Wztu Con-tion play fOil' Head c . ~
Dimid. He i1oiJ be tJOrlloote4 oweek4ay.at 74(})..991-1282 firench and R1o Grande.
jci&gt;ining point guani Bud

&lt;ly••apian Montgomery gets
46 monh for chtd fraud
(API -

Sdhooi.

Jun Ftttman

IIIIIJI:lba. The confumati0n
...~ !!oe&amp; on tbe ~ ancil
-~•ics die deer ro die
taricbmist w ht»dvv
11 -mds prrtiy siniPJe..
Te'ql"llle w inttmctt deer
IICICIDS liD be a IGgic.! ~ in lhe mmsfomnaCioooflnmtingintolhemocilem era; hunting linc:nses
bave '-o ;avJn,ah)e via the
intemct for sever.a'l years
1110... wilh 1110 ~t
issues. You can !buy buntii11g
0.. fi~ lioeilses now
widnll m~ amp iniiD
m..n. However, just likie
bwllin~: a
fimmg license
'ltl ¥4s haWII'tgooe .aw.ay, it
i.JO lilldy cbcck 'SI.atimts will '
mnai• ro.- diose deer
I!
b ..mo like the camarwlerie of•!lbe cbcd:: stallion

s

Lay. Jl.ay dl, ......

RIO GllANDE - The
University of Rio GJ:ande
men's lbas\dha11 team has
its first t.ea.uit for lhe lMS&lt;09 season in ltbe f&lt;'ilci He is
B!Jid OUbbie fuml Dayton's
Tmtw.ood .Madison High

()ubhie, a 6-foot-2 p0int
•gwn:d. WliS &lt;Cll]!ll.ain of die
ha&amp;eiball Iteam .and made
. 2JDd Imam ..all.,oonier,cooe
I(GWOC). Cobble was
.
tta'b'tled .as lihe Defen!iive
chediqg ~ At point all0f !hose deer bad to · PJayer {'# l:be Year iin the
be 11ranspooted frtom the ~and is a member of
woods. loaded inlo the baok Rams in Action.
()f .a pi~ itiUo'k or dlber
(Jdbbie !feels that signing
oonvey.ance, and hauled to a w.i:th Rie Grande was the
doer cl!eck su.mon.
.

NiS'SOUli. · Winois

s

P.•- 'OJ • Jfiddleport • Cs"ijtn'is .

•
1 ;,May I &amp; , -

Cubbie ili:om Trotwf~Gd
Madison High Scboo1 in
Dayr.On.
Taylor, a -6-foot- 3 ~mer in
high school, pmpuced nearly
a dmubJe'llilouble .all season
for the Flainters. He av.eraj.led
!t5 points and 9.4 !TeOOunds
. including toumamcnt ,play.
.Taylor was a key factor in
helping 1lhe Pointers put
·togethell' an unbeaten .regular

season a1 20-0 and winning . wise and discipline-wise be
the Ohio Valley Conference fits in. ·l k comes from a
ilharnPionsbip.
good prilgram... smd French.
He .knows the transition to "If be can defend and
college is going tn be tough. rebouDd. and the quicker be
·but he feels that be can .han- buys into that the quicker he
die [L "If s a nice school and will move up the ladder and
ifs-small butlknow it"sstill .e;u:e.L"
.g oing to be ·tough." said · South Point coacb Gaty
taylor. ''l'Uplay jayVees and Norms s&amp;d Taylor proved to
llthink I ~ve a good~ be a good defender and
to mov~ up, I have to prac- rebouruler llhis past 1ie350n
ltice .as bard ·as I can and F.t and expects him to continue
biggell' and stronger. lltbink his styfe at the college level.
I"U get better as I get older...
Taylor· is confident be can
firench agreed with his lat- make the t:raasition fmm
est recruit"s assessment. "'He -playing the post position in
has the ability to mat:Jiioulate bigb scbool ·to being away
tlu:ough·our ,program. lt"s up from the basket at the colle.to him bow he works and giate level.
lblicates hlmself.~ said
Tay.lor is accomplished in
French. "He knows .bow to the classroom as well as eviplay. ~biggest thiiig be dencedbyhls3.5gradepoint
needs IS streqgtb."
average.
French mentioned other Corey is the son of Debbie
aspects of Taylor"s make..up and Randy Taylor of South
ilhat he likes. "'Character- P.oint.
•

Rio's Pe_ny ·
f-A
te ·..
W compe
at Nab.OnaJs
·

·

SPECIAL "TO THE 'IIMES-SENllNEL

'·.'

RIO GRANDE - Senior •
sprinter !Josh Pen)' will ~ '
resent the UIIWersity of Rio
Grande trac1c. and field f1uad
.at the 57th Annwil Men s &amp;.
28th Annual Women's ·
Outdoor TTIICk &amp; Field
Championships. May 22-24.
2008 at Ralpb Korte.
Stadium in Edwanisvilk. m. .
Josh Pmy, a IRio Grande
native. qualified for ·lhe 200
meter dash ai the Coastal
Carolina Outdoor Track
meet and forthe2008 NAIA
Outdoor Nattonals in his
first outdoor meet of the season._He ran a 2L35 in 200 :.
.meter daSh Which is a new:Grande . outdoor ttac'k:~
record. iPetiy later topped ~ .
that II1IP'k with a time of ;
2127. He enters the competition ranked fourth in the :

.Rio

nation.

.. :

Rio Grande bead -coach: .
Bob Willey says it1s a great ·
accomplisfunent for Pcay.:::"1-k had a great season, ~~e-:
broke · his own · school:•

leC9I'd.~Willey said "W~·rc ~

all pretty excited Bbout1t. :~
"Ifs very e11.citing. ifS::
goiilg to be a great ttip."': :
Willey added
: ..He will tun the 200 ~:

)iminarics on May 22 at 6: 1():_:
p.m. CDT. :Should be"'
advance to the semifinals ~
that would tJike place on- :
May 24 313:30 p.m. with me;:
fina1s to fOllow Ill 5 p.m. :
He qualified for the ·I 00::
by hllt~J1g the ~8' Standard, :
and enters the Nationals ranked 22nd but will not:

COJilpde .in 1bal event.

;:

"We decided just to ~
hlm in the two. tccause be's
running very well in that..
right now." he said "Each,:
meet be's gotten a little ~
· faster and that" s what you :
want, yoo want ro run your~.:
best at the end and be•,· •
doing that right now."
•

~i:~or: 9.~ =~~~:.Z!

soronds in lihc 100-meter ADd bis ' llawyer., Tunuthy
· dalih.
- ~, uid M~
Tve
!i&amp;OOcl
00
top
.X
dw!
llad been !led :astra
_ ov .bv,
-......:ft ft . . _ .....:..
&gt;'
,.
arnrll),g&lt;llllcrs.. ill'llak ~
But Mosneomrnr"s oocc- Manon Jones. Jones. who
..:dobt t: 1 liK has beca oo .a ha4 a soo with M.ontg0mery,
diJwnwanl spiral lor years is ~ ber own 6-montb
after a &amp;pale of llep1 pUb- prison •t am for lying about
!em&amp;._ ~ ~ ~ Montgomery' s mvo1vement
~
a Vmtinia ;~., in llhe cbec1: scam and about
pcdopbiles
_... _.. her use &lt;Of . perl'ormanceThe wodd lllOOI'd. and all .eobailcing drugs.
his oda pclfiMJJII!JlMS ~
1lbc chock case • also
Mwdl31,
were Wiped ensnared _Montgomery's forfulm.dle lv'Ok· .and -b e - mer ooach. ar~d medalist
lwu!Oil from itmck for tw.o .,
Riddi
- d
_ 'Year&amp;. . t'O£ ~ing linked liF ..,.tev.e ·
_an agent,
tbe invcdi......... '«BAlLO ~s Wells. Bolh pie.J!drd
.~
,
~U.U'-::1·
tbe lab a 111e .ca~~a
a
••,.. thers.
8. ut· the . II.udge• """"
n:roid scandal in spotU;
:o
~ oevcr ·tested wc:re not to blame m . tbe
polilive fur drugs, but lbe abed; case.
tSiRd after the ban was
"'"':~ should commit ~ank
i 11,.a 1
fnwd IS •DOl •the same as You
And oo Friday. a ftJderal sboul~ eat ~s.··· Kall'as
jlllll!e .,...,..,.,. llhe fQ11DCT said. · 'There ts not a single
.! illr to oeady four ycaJ'li shred of e\lidence ben: tliat
ia piBon fO£ -dealing in bad this was anyone else's fault"
dJenks
A small ·group of family
"'lbc•~, all those and ~s ttaveled to the
people
· dla was·part sentencmg from South
Of ••4Ja world." be said. Carolina.
Montgomery's
'1a jlil. my status is gone."
father. Eddie Montgomery.
Judge Keanclh Karas also asked the judge for lemency,
wa:wl Mtugonay. 33. that saying the supportive _family
the evidence agamst him wo~ help keep h1s son
"does not '«" a 1o be flim- straJght after pnson.
d' ill J1111 ongoi~ case in Kall'as praised the family
":~a, where be 1s aa:used but s&amp;d close family ties only
c'! idlinJ brmin. A con~ showed . that . Mon~gomery
0011 dlr.re would carry a nnn- had ·no difficult childhood or
~ mandatory five-year broken home to lllame for his
wrongdoing.

. . . . . ._ u;;'m

2m!,

m

uu

(

Qtb' fiallipolts JDallp GtriiiDllt.
Qt ·Jaiut 'lta~ut

.,.._,t
and The Daily Sentinel . .

have launched a oew ~every
Friday ealled "Faith and,Family".
If you bave a testimonial..,,·
·
. event about yourself
or even a poem that you would ...
like to share please email to:

kkelly@mydailytribone.com .
nfields@mydaHyregister.com
boeOich@mydailysentioel.tom
Liinit your story to
500-750 words.

Please indude a phone number
in your emaiL
••

..''

.

/

�•
•

.Pla •· :ii

'

s......,,.., 11, spoil.

z-••:.·....4ii...,il.1!11

t

So"""*y, May 18, :zoqB

. Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

James scores 32 in Cavs·win, forces G8me 7

Women changing look Of auto radng~
nice 10 answer oew goes- old dwsis, ~~!ow ~
""5PORTS-11ER
· 'lions. 1M's kind &lt;Of· what tace 011 ovak IIIII tw:.•~
ilhBl docs. ReaDy,. it'ii jllit fl'be couldn't b~s ~
INDIANAfOLIS
gooddwnqHo•sbippnints.~ ItO ~ 'What adjust.;
Despite vastly difierent perIf Pmid, !bas ·prow:n ay- mcatnm~: " Xi! ~ lllllkC
soDalities "8lld resumes, ilbe ,11iing, !it's .that .anyooe an ilbe car.~- This yel[;
women of this year•s Indy win .races given ilbe p~ 'ofl'be' s chiW~g b Dreyer •
500 share a common goal: .equipment, the .rqpn skills Reinbold. Filbcr's old ·t eam;
Each believes lSbe can and ,a level daYma field .lllld.isillciDgc~dby~~
Change the face of .auto !111C- Patrick · chi~s fOr kldretti liiiCJ' IRL regular ·R~
ing ·in ber own way.
Green Racing, one of die Bllbl, ooe of 1be tteam s ~
Danica Patrick, 'S.a rah Indy Racing League's !best- owners.
.
fisher and Milka Duno funiled teams .~ from
11he ·c ombination haS ·
work. just yards apart .in the Asblcy lf_'oroe. ~ l f. l a· :· s made Duno illlOie comfonlndianapolis
·Motor -· .and u ·meet~~!!! - per- .able .and o01 •.r..iellt.
Speedway ·garages,=
.haps die blrgest.e~~
"R.Qbbie lis an .cll:pl'll'i.eoce
.a1l tave their own
of .any. woman ·driver 10 his- drivel' that "knows how tQ
.to tbe liport, even [f
face •tory.
.
lteadh,~ ·sbc iliid "He ~
lthe same hurdles.
Andretti 's four dri'la'S 'bow to &lt;tnmsmit infomlatioD
''It's not like the spon is were-expected to contend for and~ you understud.li
flooded with females," . the P~?le 'last w.cetcnd, and is a big bclp .for me, and the
fisher a native of central Patmck wound &lt;qp as me Clll' is beUcr and better and
Ohio, ~d Wednesday. "Veu team:'s tqp qualifier with .a better." ,
!llill ha¥e to lbe able to oom- four-~ I!:Verage of 225.197
RorFisher .and Duno, May:
pete and dl]ve .and that's the mph. She evl:o spent 34 is just be_giming. ·
IOOttom lline. You still hne to mmntes on Idle ip0lc ibefme The .rain lias made.a mes~
do "!"ell.~
.·
geq 'bumped_ to fifth tin ,of tbeif ....Mlulcs.and ,~
. lncr.eas.ingly, women in
the field, ihe nnddle Gf Idle. &lt;OUt :ihe ~day ,of qualifuFIIIS of li'IICing are succeed- SCCODd row, a 111n that tdrew f¥in.1: last'Snnday. when 'bath
mg.
·
praise frem ~ oWDCI' ~ lhougm they :liOOid ~ it
Since !.anet Guthrie .and l~gtime lnd~ lfavan.te inw Idle stming fiel~: No!"
Shirley Muldowney started .~ch&amp;el Andretii. . .
dle.Y must ·tlf to qualify this
knoclcing down geilder bar'She was pretty ilq]fe&amp;- . weekend with speeds ,that
riers in the late 1970s, there sive 'because the Clll' was iDOl are fasteoough to bqJ them
have been more women dri- real great .B!Id she hung ·o n," from gettQig humped from
\Vers, mare women l?wnc:rs Andretti ~d. . ,
the field. They'D. have !0 da
and, yes, even a growtng list
But &lt;Patnok •s~ t the odly it agamst a stronger .Jine~q~
of women winners.
woman
driver
.at than last year because of~
. lllhc. encore 10 Pat;fiCk~ s l ndiliJUII!Oiis with historic former OJamp Car driv~
.
"
APiflldo ;historic ·l ndyCar wm m accomplishments. ·
that have retUmod .to Indy as
·Cincinnati Qeds • Jlerr¥ ~airstnn Jr., 1Dp, •is tagged •Out at &lt;hame by Cleveland ilpdia"s.. catj:h- Japan last month came the
Fisher was the . first part Gf Open-wheel Acing's
er . Victor Martinez (41) ·in the thirxl inning 'Of .an interleague &gt;baseball !flame Fnday m following
week
when . woman to ev.er _w m an unification.
'
Cirminnati. +iairston was 1r¥ir)g &lt;to score on .a hit lb¥ teammate ·Ken Griffey Jr.
Ashley 'Force beat ..her 9ad. · lndyCar pole bact llD 2002,
P.edlaps the most lasting
•
John, to beco'!le ~ first at Kentucky, .a_nd produced inwact of these women driwoman champion
. '!rag
fin- Vert; will show up in future
-UJ
.
(g
racing's F unny &lt;Car d.iv1s1on. •shes dunng
years as .more women move
!Less than 24 hours after seasons en the crrcmt. Smce 1q1 through the developmenstrand ,a runner .at ·!third. while allowing 19 earned Patrick's victory, Simona De 2004, she has. SlliUg$1ed ~o tal series.
ASSOCIIITED PRESS
liranci!IOO &lt;Jon:lero l{riU:bed ,a runs in 20 innings.
Silvestro became the second find a full-fm!e nde m
In addition to De Silvestro
,pellfect runt~! for bis eighth
Afterward, W.edge said woman to win a race in ~ . lndyCars, so this ye~ she and Legge, . two other
.CINCINNATI - It's been sav.e
Chances.
Sewers ·was !headed back to developinen.tal
Atlantic started ber own team, Sarah women _
23-year-old
a
lang , time
since
The mterleague series the minors.
Series, joining three, time Fisher Racing.
.
Brazi!i!lll Ana i&amp;eatriz and
Cleveland's pitching staff · matched .tw.o &lt;teams from
"He gave us every chance winner · iiCa~erine .Legge,
::.e.:~e~,eld ~ 22•year-o1d Sw.i&amp;s Cyndic
gM walked oo this way.
10pJ105iu: ends of llbe state ·to win the ballgame,"Wedge ..W.O new drives •to~~m~g.cars &lt;C
. Pomt, Ohio, !S Allemam _ ba¥e fulf·timc
• Adam Dunn homered .and .and i0p,p(il&amp;ite ends af the said. "iBut we just weren ':t· in iEurope.
noyo ~ammg &gt;the n~s - .. rides 00 •the DWs F.iJ-stoqC
drew .a .tiebrealcing w.alk: ·standings. 11he Indian~ lead able te do any,thi.ng beyond
Even !Formula One lleam.s ,.andpt.tfalls-&lt;ofdomglbulil- lndyhgbtscircuit. Bodlm
with the bases 1eaded ·in llbe •the AL Cenu:8l, wliile &lt;the th0se (three) heme runs."
are talking abGut finding ness .in the spa;!. She ~Q~CDt eJqleCied 10 drive .
.n en
eighth inning Friday llight, Reds ~ last in ithe Nl7s
Dunn added a solo shot women to compete in the· !hepast1WO wccb SCIUUilg- weet•s 1\ieedom 100, meansending the &lt;Jincinnati !Reds collllleipalit .d,i;Vision.
. .d eep intQ the [ndians. series.
~ for &lt;CaSh after 'ber. two iqg.a mcord five women will
to lbei:r season-high ifoU111h . "'W1:•re playjng good right blillJ!IlD in &gt;the second inning
Next ·week, the 33-car biggest . spon!lDI'S . d.idn 't ibe on :the historic Indy .oval
Straight win, 4-3 Ov.er 1he 110w,~ Dunn ·said. "We'il'e for a 3.() lead that looked Starting grid at Indy could come &gt;througb Mill .1he this month.
.·
intrastate 'llivalloilians.
finally gettitm some timel.;v solid the way rookie Johnny include three women for ':he money .theY 'had lli'OIIIiKd Beatriz grew lql racing ~
• 'The Reds got lhmne .runs bi~. W.C've been getting Cueto was dominating. The second stratght year, wtth after Fisher ~ ~ 'bus- bits
ihe only woman iJi
frnm Brandon ~ and pitcb1J1g .all . year., 'but the 22-year-Old didn't .allow a Patrick . again creating the band, ~y 0 ·G~ ~vest- the !Brazilian · series · and
bonn. lthcn wen it with &lt;tqe offense has \been scuffling. hit through the frrst fi v.e biJ!!lest buzz ~~f~!Und the 2.~- ed thetr life savmgs 10 the ..utcd 1\vith 1be .~ COICti
I'IIIY mn m die .game oot D~JPefuUy, this .is ~ ~- innin~s against a ·lineup see-: mile oval. She s even this ..team.
,
as f01111er .IRL Jll(lints dllm~ure&lt;Jlby.al:wtnn.
(K'!nt,btr.akoutscncs. . . .ing his 951J1Ph fastball for week's cover girl on Sports
~~s '!""80' Jl1o/C time pion Tony ·Kanun. She
l'jii.:;ine?fi lmoiLr.it )the
Bolli !teams !have been · the first time.
I·11Jllustta1ted. .
mcetJ.ng wtth potential spon- envisions inqn'oving · !Oil
1Jatcs
011 Joey haVing problems scotiing
.Just like that, he lost his
afar cry from the early sors, m;m: ~and. what:theCUJ,mlllwomendri~
V!JI:to•s &lt;.ilolil&amp; ;and .a pliir Of mns.11he Indians have ever- touch.
·
days when Guthrie, the fll:st ~ m part t0. persistent i.rers have acoompliribed.
Cueto gave 4P a leadoff woman to start at Indy m ram at lndY. less tune on the
.. want
do ·better. oi
walks lfmm .Jensen.Lewis (6- .come ifhem ·w.ith .exquisite
1
10
ZJ, wha was pimhing .in ibis J!itcbln8- f0W' shutauts .in bamer •to 1Casey Blake .in the 1977, acknowledges ;it was ~· 8utfishersb.owed !Jcr Beainz.said.
"I admire&gt;thmi
'hometown &gt;911 'his 24th i1Jit1b- ilbe last :sill ,games.
..
sil,th. Designated hitter ·difficult for women to find bustDess IICUIDell by Joc:ting
d their work and what
day. He.decided ·.the game lby . Left~der
· Jeremy Travjs Hafner, forced to .~ ·SJXlllsors or chances.
up two deals ~sday to
doing; 'but 'Want to
1 nces
:'Back then, I predi~ it help her get through the do~. i ·wam to win
missing wjth .a tull~eunt .Sowen; ~Wasn•t :~q~ to recent bench in an NL~k,
ta Dunn, one Gf the mandards.
pinch,hit and ho
. off 1111ght be two generations month.
and .
h
. _.,..;ft " ,
· bt-field .au
&amp;
I poe
l
"I'
-•:ways busy, •,y never For
wmp a. ~·mpt~...,.
most selecti;ve!hilter!i.
Phillws· . . !Upper-deck the
·
111~
(before a woman won ),~
' .m ...
.ck,. g·
~ "He threw me smnc =illy llcmlcr ~y ended ilbree jntches later.
Guthrie said last month. have a day off because fm
·~
,;more ~
good pitches," Dunn said. ""II CJe,ve1aDd's .-slreak: ~.nearWhen Jbonny 'Peralta also •mut it .turns 011t to be just a in charge of the business and .a senes ti.tle remaut ·
was seeing .theJn pretty ~ pitchiJUl in !the first homered to tie it one out generation and a half."
· matten; and it takes.a lot of ,goals.
.
.
good. I just didn' t ·want to moing. 'llhe t:wO.run sbot off later, Cueto .!lllgrily threw
Patr.ick:' s success has time," she said. "But I enjoy · .Fisher, bowev«, IS , begmget tpyself aut"
S0wen; produced the fir1it baCk his .cap, .grabbed the changed everything. ,
it. I .enjoy ~eanring, and I rung to look. ~oward. the:
· · !Lewis attended higb earned wns eff Iowans resin bag and filung it down.
Her ·glitzy photo shoots .e njoy it when something futurefull...• • She envtSt~~II!
~cbool in Oincinnati .and lllattcrS in 52 innings.
Cu&amp;ita :has given .up U opened &gt;the door .to new mar- goes completely right."
l1me o~ m
ne~
estimated that more than 56
For
good
measure, homers in 111ine starts.
keting oi1J!Orlunities, and~ . In , ·me. .case of Du!lo,
~~~~
:fmnil~ membeni and friends Ailllips.Wd.allittle ·sk9'as he
"They hit one home .run dri"'ing savvy and tenactty there s ·sllll a 1arge leannng
to~~..
g
.
were in the stands. Manager crossed the plate ~amst 'f:he and yeu think, wen, OK, no have proven she's ~very bit cUrve 10 overcome.
on that side .o f ihe sport, too,
!ericWedgetalkedto'himfoc team 1hat gave up on lrim p!Vblem, no :big deal," man, as taii:nted as the boys. A
The
36-year-otd
"1bme orfi117 or tO years
l! ·few minutes in the comer two years ·ago. He knew .all ager Dusty ·Baker said. win May 25 at 'Indy wo'!ld Venezuelan has four. n;w- from now, fd like to 'be: able
,Of the clubhouse after the abouUhenm oHnilliancc by "Then be started centering be considered the most stg- ter's ~groes but limited to. :walk away from ~ II
~ame.
·
,Cle\fl:land's rotation.
the hall. He was still throw- nifi.cant achievement for experienlle in the pow~ ~ver"~be an OWDCC, .-,
. ~Not exactly the home"¥ou ihear something like ing strikes, but 'they were women in this ·traditionally lndyCars. 'She made JUSt satd. I d puJbably have~
l:Joming you .e nvision," that, it gets ~ou really .ampcd bad strikes, and they 'know male-dominated sport.
seven
starts last _year, g&lt;! race go;karti or so_mc;
[.ewis said. "Obviausly, up for the game," Phill.ips what to do with had strikes."
That's not bow the 26- her rookie season, wtth a thing to ~ the fiu~s
!here' s
some
emotion said.
.
. · The
intrastate series year-old lllinois. Jllllive bestfini&amp;hofllthatl"eus. out. .so Its lhanJ ·to say if
mv0Jved in pitching in front
Sowers was called .up ear- .remains
popular .
in views it. While winDing in At last y.ear'~ SOO, alle was ~WIUDJ ~'!id n:dace ~
- family .and friends. .l t'ii lier in the day to make ·his Cincinnati, with 33,433 fans Japan may forever ~ even wliCiied m the Wllllllllp, JUY ~ dri~.
that :s
fust time ['v.e come second start of the season. shGwing~q~onPridaynight. it:heperceptionofwomenm two .days before the nee, whatldllkCto~. .
.
and ·pitched here."
He has failed 1to beat :the. By comparison, ·the Reds racing, •Patrick .insists _it bas ·that
wo.uld .be 1 black . As for Ouno, :like .the rest
:David Weathers (!. -2) IReds-thete:amft¥1tGrigi- sold only 12,756 .tickets for only fueled her .passl(}l] to flagged ,ifshe:wenttQoSiow ~:tbeboys.~:JU&amp;twantsto
JsCl~Jled a threat in the nally ,drafted him - in four a game two . days earlier win more often.
•o n :race day. 1nsle.ad, Duno J01D PatriCk m VICtory~.
~h, forcingthellnd.iansto career starts, · going r0-2 againstf1orida.
. 'll 'Still get nervous," she dim~ t.o 22nd before
''T?.meit's~d!at
!laid last week. "I feel just as .crashing. .
. (Patrick:~ won, . Duno ~
much pressure to do . well
Duno believes last sea- ·"But when I wm my race, It
1:verytune I get on 'the.~ Bllo's ditliculties can be Mll,;be more intcmltiag for
It's nice to have .that wm. 'It s · blamed at least partly on an me. .
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Owners may opt out of labor deal
•

" NEW YORK (AP) ~ tJWnen could opt out of
their agreement with the
j layers onion. ne~~:t week,
~!laving o,pen lhe possibility
jf :a 20iQ
without a

season

Ja1atJ1 cap.·

·

• .. • The 1~ :agreement i~ on
' ~ .ageix1a for lhe league
· ioeetings in. Atlanta on
~y

. _ In me ~ment sjped in
l.tarclJ of 2006, botli sides
1w1e siv.eo the right to get
fiUt df die deal by Nov. '8,
~· ~~s noted·
tJili: doeso't mean that a
jjecillioo coUld 110[ ·be made
~
·
•· that contract was due to
"~xpre at !\le end of 'the 2013
. ietion. If ihe owners nullify
l, • move that . has -~
)Jev.-,Je for a while, tl
p1cl ead· after die 2011
teE llll w,ith 2010 · being
ie'" d
of ihe ~eemeot
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l.it diCii: will be a work

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out also .could lead 10 eaiiier former commissioner Paul
·talks on a new deal, which Tagliabue, who ~ed to
the owners feel 'has ~ p~t toge~ a c~llon Qf
100 far toward lhe players - . · htg!Hevenue, mtddJe,rev,
Ups6aw 'a lready 'has . bad enlljl and low~revenue teams
several preliminary .meeh to ratify the -contract.
·
inj:s. including one recently
Only t wo . low revenue
~nth ferry Richardson ~of teams, Cinciun~ti . and
Carolina and Pat Bowlen of ·Buffalo, vo!.lld .agamst tt.
Denver. two of the owners . •Since then, however, highexpected to be involved in revenue owners, · such as
the negOOations.
.
New England'~ Robert
A1la despite predictions· Kraft, •have also supported
1hat ownet11 with more cash negotiating for a new deal.
would comer the market ·on And if a vote tis taken, 24 of
6tar playen; in an IIIICliPJle(l the 32 reams would have to
year, there are safeguards vote to extend it, something
•j!ainst
. that, notably .a provi· that is highly unlikely to
ston in the contr.act, first happen:
signed .in 199'3, that extends . one problem, lell$ue offithe period needed from free cials note, are rismg and
from four years to unpredictable -bond rates,
SlX if that happens:
.
which leave teams like
1'he early termmatlon of Dallas and the New York
the labor oootract has been Giants and Jets, who are
expected for at least the last building new stadiums, with
six months. · ·
rising costs and rising debt
Several owners have com- on their · bonds. The
plaiDed that the current deal, Cowboys' Stadium is schedwhich gives 60 ~t of uled to open nell:t season.and

~

~~t th~en;~l }ac~l{cy'r!0~

play. was done at the las~ moment New York teams is sched-

~'-l0li . But1be early opt and was the last major act of uled to open in 2010.
I

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KARR
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Be amazed witiJ, modular.·
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Race driver Sarah Asher prepares to 00\le durl~ practlOe for the Indianapolis -!'!00 auto 11110e
at ·the Indianapolis Motor Speedway in Indianapolis. on Thursday. ·Fisher, f1o!C with Danica
Patrick and Mllka Duno, of Venezuela, are the three women that are entenld for the lliOI!.

'

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So"""*y, May 18, :zoqB

. Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

James scores 32 in Cavs·win, forces G8me 7

Women changing look Of auto radng~
nice 10 answer oew goes- old dwsis, ~~!ow ~
""5PORTS-11ER
· 'lions. 1M's kind &lt;Of· what tace 011 ovak IIIII tw:.•~
ilhBl docs. ReaDy,. it'ii jllit fl'be couldn't b~s ~
INDIANAfOLIS
gooddwnqHo•sbippnints.~ ItO ~ 'What adjust.;
Despite vastly difierent perIf Pmid, !bas ·prow:n ay- mcatnm~: " Xi! ~ lllllkC
soDalities "8lld resumes, ilbe ,11iing, !it's .that .anyooe an ilbe car.~- This yel[;
women of this year•s Indy win .races given ilbe p~ 'ofl'be' s chiW~g b Dreyer •
500 share a common goal: .equipment, the .rqpn skills Reinbold. Filbcr's old ·t eam;
Each believes lSbe can and ,a level daYma field .lllld.isillciDgc~dby~~
Change the face of .auto !111C- Patrick · chi~s fOr kldretti liiiCJ' IRL regular ·R~
ing ·in ber own way.
Green Racing, one of die Bllbl, ooe of 1be tteam s ~
Danica Patrick, 'S.a rah Indy Racing League's !best- owners.
.
fisher and Milka Duno funiled teams .~ from
11he ·c ombination haS ·
work. just yards apart .in the Asblcy lf_'oroe. ~ l f. l a· :· s made Duno illlOie comfonlndianapolis
·Motor -· .and u ·meet~~!!! - per- .able .and o01 •.r..iellt.
Speedway ·garages,=
.haps die blrgest.e~~
"R.Qbbie lis an .cll:pl'll'i.eoce
.a1l tave their own
of .any. woman ·driver 10 his- drivel' that "knows how tQ
.to tbe liport, even [f
face •tory.
.
lteadh,~ ·sbc iliid "He ~
lthe same hurdles.
Andretti 's four dri'la'S 'bow to &lt;tnmsmit infomlatioD
''It's not like the spon is were-expected to contend for and~ you understud.li
flooded with females," . the P~?le 'last w.cetcnd, and is a big bclp .for me, and the
fisher a native of central Patmck wound &lt;qp as me Clll' is beUcr and better and
Ohio, ~d Wednesday. "Veu team:'s tqp qualifier with .a better." ,
!llill ha¥e to lbe able to oom- four-~ I!:Verage of 225.197
RorFisher .and Duno, May:
pete and dl]ve .and that's the mph. She evl:o spent 34 is just be_giming. ·
IOOttom lline. You still hne to mmntes on Idle ip0lc ibefme The .rain lias made.a mes~
do "!"ell.~
.·
geq 'bumped_ to fifth tin ,of tbeif ....Mlulcs.and ,~
. lncr.eas.ingly, women in
the field, ihe nnddle Gf Idle. &lt;OUt :ihe ~day ,of qualifuFIIIS of li'IICing are succeed- SCCODd row, a 111n that tdrew f¥in.1: last'Snnday. when 'bath
mg.
·
praise frem ~ oWDCI' ~ lhougm they :liOOid ~ it
Since !.anet Guthrie .and l~gtime lnd~ lfavan.te inw Idle stming fiel~: No!"
Shirley Muldowney started .~ch&amp;el Andretii. . .
dle.Y must ·tlf to qualify this
knoclcing down geilder bar'She was pretty ilq]fe&amp;- . weekend with speeds ,that
riers in the late 1970s, there sive 'because the Clll' was iDOl are fasteoough to bqJ them
have been more women dri- real great .B!Id she hung ·o n," from gettQig humped from
\Vers, mare women l?wnc:rs Andretti ~d. . ,
the field. They'D. have !0 da
and, yes, even a growtng list
But &lt;Patnok •s~ t the odly it agamst a stronger .Jine~q~
of women winners.
woman
driver
.at than last year because of~
. lllhc. encore 10 Pat;fiCk~ s l ndiliJUII!Oiis with historic former OJamp Car driv~
.
"
APiflldo ;historic ·l ndyCar wm m accomplishments. ·
that have retUmod .to Indy as
·Cincinnati Qeds • Jlerr¥ ~airstnn Jr., 1Dp, •is tagged •Out at &lt;hame by Cleveland ilpdia"s.. catj:h- Japan last month came the
Fisher was the . first part Gf Open-wheel Acing's
er . Victor Martinez (41) ·in the thirxl inning 'Of .an interleague &gt;baseball !flame Fnday m following
week
when . woman to ev.er _w m an unification.
'
Cirminnati. +iairston was 1r¥ir)g &lt;to score on .a hit lb¥ teammate ·Ken Griffey Jr.
Ashley 'Force beat ..her 9ad. · lndyCar pole bact llD 2002,
P.edlaps the most lasting
•
John, to beco'!le ~ first at Kentucky, .a_nd produced inwact of these women driwoman champion
. '!rag
fin- Vert; will show up in future
-UJ
.
(g
racing's F unny &lt;Car d.iv1s1on. •shes dunng
years as .more women move
!Less than 24 hours after seasons en the crrcmt. Smce 1q1 through the developmenstrand ,a runner .at ·!third. while allowing 19 earned Patrick's victory, Simona De 2004, she has. SlliUg$1ed ~o tal series.
ASSOCIIITED PRESS
liranci!IOO &lt;Jon:lero l{riU:bed ,a runs in 20 innings.
Silvestro became the second find a full-fm!e nde m
In addition to De Silvestro
,pellfect runt~! for bis eighth
Afterward, W.edge said woman to win a race in ~ . lndyCars, so this ye~ she and Legge, . two other
.CINCINNATI - It's been sav.e
Chances.
Sewers ·was !headed back to developinen.tal
Atlantic started ber own team, Sarah women _
23-year-old
a
lang , time
since
The mterleague series the minors.
Series, joining three, time Fisher Racing.
.
Brazi!i!lll Ana i&amp;eatriz and
Cleveland's pitching staff · matched .tw.o &lt;teams from
"He gave us every chance winner · iiCa~erine .Legge,
::.e.:~e~,eld ~ 22•year-o1d Sw.i&amp;s Cyndic
gM walked oo this way.
10pJ105iu: ends of llbe state ·to win the ballgame,"Wedge ..W.O new drives •to~~m~g.cars &lt;C
. Pomt, Ohio, !S Allemam _ ba¥e fulf·timc
• Adam Dunn homered .and .and i0p,p(il&amp;ite ends af the said. "iBut we just weren ':t· in iEurope.
noyo ~ammg &gt;the n~s - .. rides 00 •the DWs F.iJ-stoqC
drew .a .tiebrealcing w.alk: ·standings. 11he Indian~ lead able te do any,thi.ng beyond
Even !Formula One lleam.s ,.andpt.tfalls-&lt;ofdomglbulil- lndyhgbtscircuit. Bodlm
with the bases 1eaded ·in llbe •the AL Cenu:8l, wliile &lt;the th0se (three) heme runs."
are talking abGut finding ness .in the spa;!. She ~Q~CDt eJqleCied 10 drive .
.n en
eighth inning Friday llight, Reds ~ last in ithe Nl7s
Dunn added a solo shot women to compete in the· !hepast1WO wccb SCIUUilg- weet•s 1\ieedom 100, meansending the &lt;Jincinnati !Reds collllleipalit .d,i;Vision.
. .d eep intQ the [ndians. series.
~ for &lt;CaSh after 'ber. two iqg.a mcord five women will
to lbei:r season-high ifoU111h . "'W1:•re playjng good right blillJ!IlD in &gt;the second inning
Next ·week, the 33-car biggest . spon!lDI'S . d.idn 't ibe on :the historic Indy .oval
Straight win, 4-3 Ov.er 1he 110w,~ Dunn ·said. "We'il'e for a 3.() lead that looked Starting grid at Indy could come &gt;througb Mill .1he this month.
.·
intrastate 'llivalloilians.
finally gettitm some timel.;v solid the way rookie Johnny include three women for ':he money .theY 'had lli'OIIIiKd Beatriz grew lql racing ~
• 'The Reds got lhmne .runs bi~. W.C've been getting Cueto was dominating. The second stratght year, wtth after Fisher ~ ~ 'bus- bits
ihe only woman iJi
frnm Brandon ~ and pitcb1J1g .all . year., 'but the 22-year-Old didn't .allow a Patrick . again creating the band, ~y 0 ·G~ ~vest- the !Brazilian · series · and
bonn. lthcn wen it with &lt;tqe offense has \been scuffling. hit through the frrst fi v.e biJ!!lest buzz ~~f~!Und the 2.~- ed thetr life savmgs 10 the ..utcd 1\vith 1be .~ COICti
I'IIIY mn m die .game oot D~JPefuUy, this .is ~ ~- innin~s against a ·lineup see-: mile oval. She s even this ..team.
,
as f01111er .IRL Jll(lints dllm~ure&lt;Jlby.al:wtnn.
(K'!nt,btr.akoutscncs. . . .ing his 951J1Ph fastball for week's cover girl on Sports
~~s '!""80' Jl1o/C time pion Tony ·Kanun. She
l'jii.:;ine?fi lmoiLr.it )the
Bolli !teams !have been · the first time.
I·11Jllustta1ted. .
mcetJ.ng wtth potential spon- envisions inqn'oving · !Oil
1Jatcs
011 Joey haVing problems scotiing
.Just like that, he lost his
afar cry from the early sors, m;m: ~and. what:theCUJ,mlllwomendri~
V!JI:to•s &lt;.ilolil&amp; ;and .a pliir Of mns.11he Indians have ever- touch.
·
days when Guthrie, the fll:st ~ m part t0. persistent i.rers have acoompliribed.
Cueto gave 4P a leadoff woman to start at Indy m ram at lndY. less tune on the
.. want
do ·better. oi
walks lfmm .Jensen.Lewis (6- .come ifhem ·w.ith .exquisite
1
10
ZJ, wha was pimhing .in ibis J!itcbln8- f0W' shutauts .in bamer •to 1Casey Blake .in the 1977, acknowledges ;it was ~· 8utfishersb.owed !Jcr Beainz.said.
"I admire&gt;thmi
'hometown &gt;911 'his 24th i1Jit1b- ilbe last :sill ,games.
..
sil,th. Designated hitter ·difficult for women to find bustDess IICUIDell by Joc:ting
d their work and what
day. He.decided ·.the game lby . Left~der
· Jeremy Travjs Hafner, forced to .~ ·SJXlllsors or chances.
up two deals ~sday to
doing; 'but 'Want to
1 nces
:'Back then, I predi~ it help her get through the do~. i ·wam to win
missing wjth .a tull~eunt .Sowen; ~Wasn•t :~q~ to recent bench in an NL~k,
ta Dunn, one Gf the mandards.
pinch,hit and ho
. off 1111ght be two generations month.
and .
h
. _.,..;ft " ,
· bt-field .au
&amp;
I poe
l
"I'
-•:ways busy, •,y never For
wmp a. ~·mpt~...,.
most selecti;ve!hilter!i.
Phillws· . . !Upper-deck the
·
111~
(before a woman won ),~
' .m ...
.ck,. g·
~ "He threw me smnc =illy llcmlcr ~y ended ilbree jntches later.
Guthrie said last month. have a day off because fm
·~
,;more ~
good pitches," Dunn said. ""II CJe,ve1aDd's .-slreak: ~.nearWhen Jbonny 'Peralta also •mut it .turns 011t to be just a in charge of the business and .a senes ti.tle remaut ·
was seeing .theJn pretty ~ pitchiJUl in !the first homered to tie it one out generation and a half."
· matten; and it takes.a lot of ,goals.
.
.
good. I just didn' t ·want to moing. 'llhe t:wO.run sbot off later, Cueto .!lllgrily threw
Patr.ick:' s success has time," she said. "But I enjoy · .Fisher, bowev«, IS , begmget tpyself aut"
S0wen; produced the fir1it baCk his .cap, .grabbed the changed everything. ,
it. I .enjoy ~eanring, and I rung to look. ~oward. the:
· · !Lewis attended higb earned wns eff Iowans resin bag and filung it down.
Her ·glitzy photo shoots .e njoy it when something futurefull...• • She envtSt~~II!
~cbool in Oincinnati .and lllattcrS in 52 innings.
Cu&amp;ita :has given .up U opened &gt;the door .to new mar- goes completely right."
l1me o~ m
ne~
estimated that more than 56
For
good
measure, homers in 111ine starts.
keting oi1J!Orlunities, and~ . In , ·me. .case of Du!lo,
~~~~
:fmnil~ membeni and friends Ailllips.Wd.allittle ·sk9'as he
"They hit one home .run dri"'ing savvy and tenactty there s ·sllll a 1arge leannng
to~~..
g
.
were in the stands. Manager crossed the plate ~amst 'f:he and yeu think, wen, OK, no have proven she's ~very bit cUrve 10 overcome.
on that side .o f ihe sport, too,
!ericWedgetalkedto'himfoc team 1hat gave up on lrim p!Vblem, no :big deal," man, as taii:nted as the boys. A
The
36-year-otd
"1bme orfi117 or tO years
l! ·few minutes in the comer two years ·ago. He knew .all ager Dusty ·Baker said. win May 25 at 'Indy wo'!ld Venezuelan has four. n;w- from now, fd like to 'be: able
,Of the clubhouse after the abouUhenm oHnilliancc by "Then be started centering be considered the most stg- ter's ~groes but limited to. :walk away from ~ II
~ame.
·
,Cle\fl:land's rotation.
the hall. He was still throw- nifi.cant achievement for experienlle in the pow~ ~ver"~be an OWDCC, .-,
. ~Not exactly the home"¥ou ihear something like ing strikes, but 'they were women in this ·traditionally lndyCars. 'She made JUSt satd. I d puJbably have~
l:Joming you .e nvision," that, it gets ~ou really .ampcd bad strikes, and they 'know male-dominated sport.
seven
starts last _year, g&lt;! race go;karti or so_mc;
[.ewis said. "Obviausly, up for the game," Phill.ips what to do with had strikes."
That's not bow the 26- her rookie season, wtth a thing to ~ the fiu~s
!here' s
some
emotion said.
.
. · The
intrastate series year-old lllinois. Jllllive bestfini&amp;hofllthatl"eus. out. .so Its lhanJ ·to say if
mv0Jved in pitching in front
Sowers was called .up ear- .remains
popular .
in views it. While winDing in At last y.ear'~ SOO, alle was ~WIUDJ ~'!id n:dace ~
- family .and friends. .l t'ii lier in the day to make ·his Cincinnati, with 33,433 fans Japan may forever ~ even wliCiied m the Wllllllllp, JUY ~ dri~.
that :s
fust time ['v.e come second start of the season. shGwing~q~onPridaynight. it:heperceptionofwomenm two .days before the nee, whatldllkCto~. .
.
and ·pitched here."
He has failed 1to beat :the. By comparison, ·the Reds racing, •Patrick .insists _it bas ·that
wo.uld .be 1 black . As for Ouno, :like .the rest
:David Weathers (!. -2) IReds-thete:amft¥1tGrigi- sold only 12,756 .tickets for only fueled her .passl(}l] to flagged ,ifshe:wenttQoSiow ~:tbeboys.~:JU&amp;twantsto
JsCl~Jled a threat in the nally ,drafted him - in four a game two . days earlier win more often.
•o n :race day. 1nsle.ad, Duno J01D PatriCk m VICtory~.
~h, forcingthellnd.iansto career starts, · going r0-2 againstf1orida.
. 'll 'Still get nervous," she dim~ t.o 22nd before
''T?.meit's~d!at
!laid last week. "I feel just as .crashing. .
. (Patrick:~ won, . Duno ~
much pressure to do . well
Duno believes last sea- ·"But when I wm my race, It
1:verytune I get on 'the.~ Bllo's ditliculties can be Mll,;be more intcmltiag for
It's nice to have .that wm. 'It s · blamed at least partly on an me. .
IIY M

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Owners may opt out of labor deal
•

" NEW YORK (AP) ~ tJWnen could opt out of
their agreement with the
j layers onion. ne~~:t week,
~!laving o,pen lhe possibility
jf :a 20iQ
without a

season

Ja1atJ1 cap.·

·

• .. • The 1~ :agreement i~ on
' ~ .ageix1a for lhe league
· ioeetings in. Atlanta on
~y

. _ In me ~ment sjped in
l.tarclJ of 2006, botli sides
1w1e siv.eo the right to get
fiUt df die deal by Nov. '8,
~· ~~s noted·
tJili: doeso't mean that a
jjecillioo coUld 110[ ·be made
~
·
•· that contract was due to
"~xpre at !\le end of 'the 2013
. ietion. If ihe owners nullify
l, • move that . has -~
)Jev.-,Je for a while, tl
p1cl ead· after die 2011
teE llll w,ith 2010 · being
ie'" d
of ihe ~eemeot
DUt ncoessarily mean
l.it diCii: will be a work

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out also .could lead 10 eaiiier former commissioner Paul
·talks on a new deal, which Tagliabue, who ~ed to
the owners feel 'has ~ p~t toge~ a c~llon Qf
100 far toward lhe players - . · htg!Hevenue, mtddJe,rev,
Ups6aw 'a lready 'has . bad enlljl and low~revenue teams
several preliminary .meeh to ratify the -contract.
·
inj:s. including one recently
Only t wo . low revenue
~nth ferry Richardson ~of teams, Cinciun~ti . and
Carolina and Pat Bowlen of ·Buffalo, vo!.lld .agamst tt.
Denver. two of the owners . •Since then, however, highexpected to be involved in revenue owners, · such as
the negOOations.
.
New England'~ Robert
A1la despite predictions· Kraft, •have also supported
1hat ownet11 with more cash negotiating for a new deal.
would comer the market ·on And if a vote tis taken, 24 of
6tar playen; in an IIIICliPJle(l the 32 reams would have to
year, there are safeguards vote to extend it, something
•j!ainst
. that, notably .a provi· that is highly unlikely to
ston in the contr.act, first happen:
signed .in 199'3, that extends . one problem, lell$ue offithe period needed from free cials note, are rismg and
from four years to unpredictable -bond rates,
SlX if that happens:
.
which leave teams like
1'he early termmatlon of Dallas and the New York
the labor oootract has been Giants and Jets, who are
expected for at least the last building new stadiums, with
six months. · ·
rising costs and rising debt
Several owners have com- on their · bonds. The
plaiDed that the current deal, Cowboys' Stadium is schedwhich gives 60 ~t of uled to open nell:t season.and

~

~~t th~en;~l }ac~l{cy'r!0~

play. was done at the las~ moment New York teams is sched-

~'-l0li . But1be early opt and was the last major act of uled to open in 2010.
I

··~CONTRACTING
KARR
740815 34t4
34740 St. Rt. 7

Panlelvr

(81tw11n Five Points and Cheater,

Be amazed witiJ, modular.·
The better, stronger, faster way tO build.

•ncy

t:i
i ::a"tt1~P~~= :!1 ':e~ue~toone-J'~~~i
lid: out ·the
1

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www.allamericanhomes.com

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Race driver Sarah Asher prepares to 00\le durl~ practlOe for the Indianapolis -!'!00 auto 11110e
at ·the Indianapolis Motor Speedway in Indianapolis. on Thursday. ·Fisher, f1o!C with Danica
Patrick and Mllka Duno, of Venezuela, are the three women that are entenld for the lliOI!.

'

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Pomeroy, Middleport, Gallipolis, OH • Poiut ~. WV

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Sunday, May ,18. 2008

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fiooduall Slol8 tl ·11g111 a.tha....
Rul1 Eliflllnlu', a Point Plbasaict, W.Va.,
!?'he now 1 wing as a 11 • ·111181Y in lncia, _...her puidiiiiS&amp;. e.st-. was puidwsil~g
jlil:tln luau as to use as glls fof Ia" ..if•••lii'Y c:huld1es.
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bargain hunting in Middleport .
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Pomeroy, Middleport, Gallipolis, OH • Poiut ~. WV

.

Sunday, May ,18. 2008

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fiooduall Slol8 tl ·11g111 a.tha....
Rul1 Eliflllnlu', a Point Plbasaict, W.Va.,
!?'he now 1 wing as a 11 • ·111181Y in lncia, _...her puidiiiiS&amp;. e.st-. was puidwsil~g
jlil:tln luau as to use as glls fof Ia" ..if•••lii'Y c:huld1es.
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bargain hunting in Middleport .
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YOUR HOMETOWN

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-COMMUNITY CORNER- -w.Ml~ petrqglyphs get I!Vtf'iooked,:
could
be
lost
due
to
erosion
-:
:
Fishing derby time retUrns in Meigs
pounds. all Qf whidt has now
boon delivered to tbe Meigs
CooiJ'tllliveParish.
Have you beard of the
GOld Star family license
aaatene plates which can DOW be
Huellch. pun::hased through the Ohio

It's about fishing de!by
lime ~ Dave Docdec of

HURRICANE (AP) -A Army 0Jrps of Fap. as Amcrialn lndiMS
_
quirlcy pieoe of locll folk- _.a p• r JW • Hr+..,
Mrl a*iilid1bel-'c(
lore is in danger of deterio- University, believes bpCh lbe gtp is
lila die
rnting ill Hurricane.
drw•ies- n.tnlly OIU&lt;il2 dress mr:rdy is • wU - • :::
loaoomecofaf*=
· lcJl
,._ofit:;-.;;;.iont.ciAlb- ·lkllky'S drw•' '
aJoog Main"-~..a
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.-m.. ~ay - . A
-IS'''P ,•••y @1M ·ca+
hidden bclrind an .......... w•i."lilaih!iati.61,aill (itilpiiafL+•i
a.eW,
police mnse.-. is a~ pet- . When die saoae ..s fiat 'ftld •' ·
~
mglyphwithasu.icdp!ISt.
~~F'
dn:a,intbel940s,Ar!Jadrlr4J
The "Water MOOSier's olici•llalilln!lcyW ' J a~lbe
.sa·ldij.~Y4,...cldi.z
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pia:e ,CJf
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~ was a tourist ll8lac- ~icallf' lllfiu anwort., wilb
coal
c:lliteh,'!.'
lion, and it's !&gt;1iU a SlOp on ••' fbatlldle l&amp;lOs.lie Jotasluuti said,. 1he
preschool tours of Putnam tbcoriJJe4 ' die .._ was whole ~.""'· W
County' s historical sites.
~""'
~
7 's
tilld CJf
TherocklllinOdupinthe ~~""'
- : 1 " t " - fdl..,._"
early 1990s, ri,ght ·olf lbe leaden of ttibes.
,.
. R&amp;:pdbs of ils or~f ,
lnta!Stat,e64exit, wbmland
In bis 1993 book, die~ mak ~~t· be llcacr
was beiag 1\JDleCl fur a new "Sha-'5 Stoty,~ Braley ~ ~#id- · . ·
allllJ!oobile deala'shiP- .
used lbe 7lell of lbe.WalMl · "1 was ~ - · • a Jal'
Back !ben, no one
Ohep die pur(IOitld biSIOI)' . . . -(the ••• - g) was
quite ·sure What it was, mad of . lbe Oda...-: ttibe,_ ., way fliat, bnlid.
~tber than rislt mining a i• ytt ... •
,;~of die · 1be i!MF oa die._ is
potential historical land- Woll!iel
'li DaugiJJI:I-, faded, aod· the cutite ad
malt, developeD paid ID - his name for it - and itself is mosdy Clbotiudtlll
bave it moved 10 lbe ceoiCl' ~ 05her West Vqinia lium public view. Bul: itli
of town. right brirind tbe pc:U~1Jlhs:
, out in the opco, VIS! qllible
~ station 011 Mllili Slim.
IUsmoe!bc puN* .m of to lbe d! meats.
Since then, 1beories about 1M: bonk 111111}' apats ~
A Hunicaae bructJwe
the stone have beell swirling. ~~~die WalianOlum, ~in;!OO!d lilllilh::
The77-incbimagecarved fiadiug it .ID be a bon, w..-t.~~ .. ~sD;,W*ras
in the rock resembles a pro- ~ 10 lbe Ow..,l fm a !OBi!l aanoo.
file of a woman in a 101J8, \\btVa:giniaAnlullogy.
lt also is d a teatum11
creasedgown.
1)11 casts doubt on SlOp for area pn:schoQI
Some believe the carving Bnley'li dlcnly about lbe toulli, along wiiJl lbe
dated .back «l!Wries, and .,._. Colll'ly pdloglypb. Cllesiie ~caboose musew.as the . work of Qdy !i1111Eii1IIJ'.
Ulll,~ ~· Btmda Qldweil,
American IDdians..
.
BraleY could oot · be Hanicaae' s r'~ .ad
Olllel!s argue it~s just tbe m: * II
tollliil!Ddiat&amp;JL
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, l;t t9l9 --- ~-- liO · - ' ~h;Jt:ftiG A ·, · · · the battle between
NJA .• .... ( 1 J :? .. . ....
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most duilliDg dUngs
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-:Ieven · he bad evet seen. Said
Hairston, ·"Whon dte :gmae
w.ould become ill! ·NBA m •piiii( tbe' ..,._( 'WB:doo was over Tarzan came
1949, &lt;
but it ~y did not Wooders. ln 1938 aod 1939. down to~ end of !be oourt
involve the best pro basket- tbe Waterloo lads played and smashed !be grandf&amp;- ·
ball teams in America Fot: under two names, the tber clock: there There was
dill reuon Hmy flannip W . • lo.!IJ Woiiii!H
tbe .• 1•••
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. ..a·-limy
1fie
Worlld- f&gt;ruie
~ i;;'
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-- Baltetball T~ . IID· a "
•
e ''«cidle ~~nevcrbccnh'M...,
be •ta;red ~ (Jbi.-....lio t N*f · , _,·. Bi"'""'wl aClbio. . . ·. .
dJe best p;o lltia-, ·•·
beouuW d .
At:bl.ettc ~IIPJI!Y
bot¥! ~team. De fiDitlllr- . t-,n also ~ the a,thlO
·oey was beld in ~a~eu . ~
o• . •·· :QJ ,
or tile NBL \that
of 1939.
· ·
\that ·,._- , four yea, bill when Orl~
Invited to pall!ic{ g WatmoQ boys; , , aayi Robats 1P burt,in .a Wlll
wa'C ..till two Haays .a. Dnammoud, · , Wyman over Spiagfie1d, ·the UDdesidercd tile l2 best pro bas- Ruberts, Otiyn
IIIII . feated ~lumbustWcmdcrs
tf!lha11 1eanJs in Amaica, Gut McMahcm;
team qwcldy went OoWD·
luclndod were teams from Wdmec Hoskl:t . t
· hill. ~ .a ~matdl wi1ll thci ·
the NBL:as well as traveli!Jg 9io 115 Hotbt bad iiUUul ltens ill 1939, ·the N.ew
lclms l.ike !be Celtics, at. Ohio State and Berens at \'.odlmi won easily 52-41
Globelrotters, Pbiladelpbia Ohio University.
as die W011ders had to plily
Spabs (la~ kno~ as the
Staled 1he Dispatch of the without 01\lyn ltoberts.
Philadel.phia Wamors) and. game: "Conung from Tbe Hens used only five
tbe New "idrk Rens.
behind m four occasions, players, !hree of 'Who were
One of the great moments the Atbletic Supply cagers about 6-foot-4 .and above
in sports history came in succeeded in doing what (uitu&amp;Ual fur that ern). The
ffiBt tournamem on MarCh numerous otber Columbus Wonders .also only ·used
27, 1939, when the two best outfits had unsuccessfully five players, but only one
black . basketball teams in attempted for the past 15 was talk:r dLan 6 feet.
Amenca,
the Harlem years. 1be Columbus pros
1be New York Rens'
Globetrotters and the New eked out a 4~ decisi_on moord from 1923 to 1949
York Rens,. played ~e over the Relllllssanoe qUlll-- w,as 2,3UI wins and 381
-1.00.0 fans m the Cbngo tet before an oyetflow !Qsses. In 1942 •they would
Coliseum. In a great pme, uowd of VSOat the K ofC become the Wodd Champs
.tile Rens prevailed 27- 23. gynmuium SWiday night.~
· WbeD boM1 ~
.De next night the KensThe Columbus/Waterloo ~ ·
'
~one
~ the championship by •team - ·behind by se¥en year IIi the. Washington
. belriog the Oshkosh Alll- points at the .balf, · but Bears. In l948 ~ Re~s
_Stars, membersoftheNBL,. tbnk-s to the~ of lost the .dlampJoosbip
36-33. Oshkosh had anum- BeJ&gt;ens
and
Wyman game .of the Wodd
be.- of great players, ioclud- Roberts. tbe Wooilt:n were Toum~t
to _ the
.iDg ~s the best "bill able 'ID take tbe bd and . Mi1J1!1"'1110h~ ~ m one
inan of the 1930s, Cowboy hold 011. Swriog fur the ~ dlec.~ games of .all
~ards.
Woildcrs w.c:re DnmunOod, time. ~·11: ~ 500IIld
. · The Rens finished lbe t2~ Wyman ROberu, " '8~ 49 p!)lllf:S m the 14-~1
teaiOD, not only as Wodd ·HoslrZt. II; Odyn Roberts:,' fAen; Will. The Jteas. ~~~~~
~· but victors in t OIJ' 9; t.fcMJdKlo. 1; . and had ftlp Gates, bllt lhcir
of
ir 116 games. Beaens, 8.
·
real star dial yu,r wu Nat ·
fac&amp;r"'cd on the Rens' rosFor lbe ·Rens. they were ~sweetwllel'~ Clifton.
tel' in 1939 :were such nota- lal by Pop Gates' 1.5 and
(: -. S••• ir • ipr irrf
b1cs l i Pop Gates, Tauan T117J!D Goq"""s ll. ~ cornqtqlfe.t folr 1M
Cdoper, Wee Willie Smith, Bell ·b.l!:l 2, FMs lenlrioS4, Sir•' 7 n.ft-S f -1 lk
Fats Jenkins and two fel- Saitcb 3. ~ 7, Wee ·ca•ClG ' bf.,·•if'e
lcnn who hearne better Wlllic: Sinitli 4 and Isaacs t. IIIII lfiJilw7. P f,
...,.,n in other sports. had 2.
i
Zmm_., ,..IVIL~ :
h

Wason~

losteS

Ui 'f9JI:B . came

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SUNDAY PUZZLER

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ACROSS

:J~va

piopoilioi I
.6Kilgly
11 Coriic or'llnding
16 Phi Bela21 WOld of woe
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22Banisltment
23 Coi..,oopilllelallow
24 Gnlek-epic
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30 Poew&gt; iiJed amotl'lt
31 BaiDie
33 Shouts
55 Pointer

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58 Si&lt;j
S9VIII40 llrwlld bMrlgl
41 IJrurokanj
42 Linelr ni11181n
44RIIHd
48 Kind Of collie
51 RibiJod liltiiC
54 C11ioi
55 -11!18 1oTicl1el
57 Suno!Oioid

1

61Enliood

62T-wouon
63~-

65 Mi111 wpalis'SI.b.ntJ

66 CUil&gt;.ISde
67 Room 1or a lllllf
70 fiil1io!ed
72 Part of Sclind.
73 A-(a!D.)
74 Engra.e
' 75 - and halo
77 Slai! post
79 Weight 11i1
80 - lhe Red
\ 82 O&lt;tyinllnizi,
1or short
85 Spud
liS' A.....a.
117 Sopl1is1iJaled
89 Blue
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91

0.. ... CliiiJon

92 Witt1tlii1Cis un hip&amp;

1M Imagine
96 Hlm!l a a ts**•

dlok~~eml tcteening lOllS! the: 'Cime of the test.
call die bealrb department
cai1 thc: Gallia , Couoty
aod scJwlnk an appoinl· 1k tl!b Di\11• u•ear • (7..0)
~Dt. Fastin&amp; for 12, ~ 441 -29SOUJ wcMJnJc: adlopnor o cbe screerung •s le
.
.
~OIIliJieDdecl. Regularly · stero1 ~~CJCCPmg ~t­
scbcd.uled prescrlp!ioo ~1 « for Ill!£ , iilfoonamedicatioos may be tak.en ~on. The ~tb departme?t
with a sip of watec. There ts located 10 the Galha
is no charge for !be testing County ~ice Centec, 499
4!'ld results will be given at Jack.son Pik.e, Gallipoli s.

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Scbo01 and clruroh amps.
ln the fall. she wiU be
a11tending the University of
Charleston., where she
wilimajor in chemistry.
later ·pursaimg a ~ in
pharmacy.
Tessa Saxon is the daughter of Brett aniil Lori Saxon
of GallipOlis. She will graduate from Gallia Academy
High School, where she is
listed in Who's Who Among
High ·Scbool.Studems. As a
post secondary option stu·
dent, Tessa plans to attend
~he
Uni vetsity of Rio
Grande and major in ,math
education.
While in kigb school,. she
was .a member of the KeY
Club, the Dible Club,
STAND, FCCLA and !be
Fel.lowsbip of Christian
Athletes. She has participated i n volleyball ancl was
a member of tbe Madrigals
for l!hree years, .and pamcipated in three high school
musicals~ She is an accomplished .church soloist and
was privileged to sing the
National Anthem during
during the Republican

Patty conference.
Davicl Rwnley iis 1ibe ~n
of John and Lisa Rumely
of Galai....
.-~ lis. A d!mesport aliblete f0r ltbe B~ue
Devil~. David ·w,as f"trst
team All 'SEOAL in football and lbas.kerbaLL He
was selected by galli.asports. com
as
Ga!lia
Academy's Athlete of the
Yeai, For two years be
serv.ed as . al) American
Cancer Sociely volunteer
and was .a student mentor
for ·the .'Stay Tobacco Free
Athlete Mentor Pmgram.
He was also ,a :member
·.of
the · Felilowsbip
oK:hristian Athletes. He is
member of First Baptist
Ch!p'ch, where he volunteers in the · nursery,
Children's Church and
Bible SchooL He has been
a member of 4-H f0r five
years, winning numerous
blue ribbons, rosettes and
first place trophies for
pFoject~; completed at the
Gallhia County Junior Fair.
In the fall, be plans to
attend Tiffin University and
major in business manage-

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ment, playing football for fall, majoring in nursing.
the Dragons.
, Michael Robie will be
Holly Taylor is tihe gradu.alling . from River
daughter of James
· ·and Va:lley High School &lt;this
Carolyn Taylor of CbeshiFe spring.Wlhile . at RVHS.
Holly will @e graduating
·
from Ri,.er Vallley High MiChael lettered i.n both
School, where she listed on football and golf, :providthe National Honor RoH all ing team leadership to his
four years. ·She bas plllllici- peers. This fall, he will
pated in the Acakmic conl!inue his football
Festival, as well as pan:ici- Clllieer as he will be attend,
pating in the RVHS An
show for three years. She i.og Defiance College and
was a National History Day playing football .
winner both on the local
He will be studying psyand district level, thus . chology wtw.e in college,
qualifying herto go to ilhe pursuing a career a5 social
state leveL
wor.k:er. He was a member
She has b~n a member of tibe Fel!lowship ,0 f
of the Gallta Barnyard
· . .
Buddies 4--H Cdub for 14 Christian Athletes, the An
years, where she was a " Club, 'SADD, as well as
Sbowmansbip ·class winner bemg a member of the
in the steer division, she show choir. He participat· also placed first in !Equine ed in the high ·s choel
Novice Showmanship. Her musical "iLil' Abner.~ In
c0mmunity serviced num- addition, he aided in rbe
bered several .relief efforts, H b't
t. f
H
·t ·
including the Key Club
a 1a
or
uma~ tes
Tsunami project apd the effo':s and att,ends Vmton
Katrina relief effmts .
Baptist Church, where 'be
She will be attending is active in their youth
Marshall University this program.

Longoria Parker: oot afashion diva at home

, :.cANNES, France (AP~ we bave, every interview,
..;. Eva Longoria Patter every red carpet -everySotS to play iilress-up at the thing is already planned
and dresses are fitted, and
Cannes Film Festival ~ libedoesa't even ha\'e I just put on what ·someIf pack bee own suitcase. body gives me,:" the 33:,.~My bag is packd when
year-old ,aoiJI1ess ~o)d
Priess
t:eome becaulle my stylist At&gt;~ociated
. (flmtcs about evecy .event lielevision.

25 - F&amp;Mue
26 01 COIT1I1ll!1ity 27Slml
28- Claus
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ROI.ary. _
· Memorial Dime1;_ Numerous volun;;cholanhip for the 2007- t=c ~oizations for
Q89 school year w~ which s
a-ssists wid!
r_....,.,y ~· by J'm include Ried Cross and
. Morrison, Rowy Club Special OJy~- .
~sident.
.
She plans to attend Ohio
~ients include Kayl.a Ncxlbcm Univen;ity, plll'SDawn Payne. Michael illg a camer ·as :a clinical
SJevm Robie, Holly fleann ~st.
'fayb, Tessa Reoee Su.on,
Kayb McGomas is lhe
David W:ayme Rumley and . daughterofTim McComas
Kayla Daaielle McComas. · and Lisa HaFder. Sbe is .a
·~ Kayla Payne is the
senior at River VaUey
daughter of Richard and High School, wbe~ she is
Robin Payne of Bidwell. a member of tbe National
Sbe wi lJ ·gradWIIe from Honor RoD. She parliici. R.iver Valley High School, pated in National Hi.Sl&lt;M)'
where she was both a dis- Day, winDing at at lllile district
and
State ttiiot level, qllllht)'ing her
HistoryD!ilay winner, and to compete at the State
was a part of dJeir home- level. She also was a compoming .queen ooutt. She petitor in dle Disuiot Fait
· hils held numerous offioes, competition. 'S he w.as .a
including Beta Club secre- member of tihe Beta Club.
tary for four years,
K.ey Club, .Art Cl11b,
; She was a member of tbe Freocb Club, .as well as
ftady Raiders Softball pm- being a member of tbe
~am for fuur )'c:al'S and Fellowship of Christian
'P!ayed volle~ for two Athletes.
years. She is .an active
Sbe :attends Wbite Oak
nlember of Moimt Cannel Baptist Cburoh, where she
Baptist Cburoh. 'She was a is active in Vacation Bible

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1 Mathomalic:al

Department Offers chQlesterol screening

GALUPOUS - The
Gallia C&lt;Mllliy Healdl
llqt•tmeD! aJIIlOUDCCii !hat
·cllolesrerol scrceniJl&amp; will
be offered at the: bealtb
diepanment facility oo
M.ooday, June 2 and
Tuesday, June 3 from 8:30
to 11 am.
Gallia County residents
interested in receiving !he

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,Gallipolis Rotary awards scholarships to graduaks

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s..n.~ay, May 18, 2008

•••i.-,

dteMcigsCountyFishand
Game Association t"s out
.00 •about gathering up
prius to be awardOO to the
huodredouoboysandgirls
who oome out to fish.
.·The dertly will be be1d
BumauofMOIDrVehicles?
from 8 a.m. ID noon on June
Any immediate family
14and the kids will fish in a
mc:mber of a person who
weU-stock.eil pond at ihe·
died in a combat zone while
farm located in the &lt;llester sitting 011 me bank holdilig a a memlJec of any brnncb of
~~a.Kidsu£tol5yearsold fi~g pole and patiently theU.S. anned foroesmay
IR ~~ted or a day of free
wanmg for fiOIDe umuspect- purchase one at no additioofunauu fond.
·
· ing fish lotllketbcirbait.
al charge. They can evcil_be
In a
drawing, m
personalimd for an addi~des Y&lt;iU be given .away
Meigs cOuntians are geo- tional i:e.
4hen lbere will beam- erous when it oomes to
Tbc plates feature an
t:ty df otbel- prius fur Jhe helping others. 1 marvel at i.mage of a large fi\'e-1)0int
· y.r.inoc:rt.in ~e ~ in the elfcxts of some dedicat- star eocirclcd bx five smallse~ cJasses, like die .ed ~sideots wbo work so eqitlrs. leo oombat zones
bjggest 6sli or.,rhe lllOSI fulL bald to help others.
. have ~ designated to
'The kids are to take dleir That generosity became appear above the star
oWD fishing poles. bring even mon: appmmt wbeti image; iraq, Afghanistan,
their own bait, l!l!bo!Jp tbe Pomrroy postal wod=s Desert Storm, Grenada.
some will tie .available appealed for food to go to Lebanon, Persian Gulf. ·
!bore, IIDCI be .I!•••IJwrird fiJI dle.ae.:ly ~pantry : Panama , Korea, Vietnam
byaJ!Illent. 'Qij$.isaotaa sbel~ . ,a the M~ .andWoddWarll.
event when: p11tcats t.~te COOJ! . ·i.-we ~ • Mai!Y ·· , ·
.
tbeirbdsanddl'opltlcmq11. low11"•••• . '.81. ~ :. Wow. Cool Whip now
As longasdiediii!ISblyK.. tagedf .Ja~Jmoe- • c_lmtesinacan.lt'sreministhe parent is · tct .-emain tum .IO fili¥.P••esiiD ~ . cicot of yeats past when the
11link of it as beiqg quality •dno;Cb die • .. tr. ·• -LL...;. · fil5l cans of topping in a can
tinle spent togetbeL ·
Ld ~ die ~·- ~ Ollllketed and delightPave says the pond inidl ~"f.~' _, \_!l,
cd many a youn_gs, ter who
smriwl, Whicb means ;ibout "
-~*~~**the
hi
uth
1
....,._.a!JOY.•!be
expo·'
... ·p«
_r.llll
s mo
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..-sspousedf,orma tasty
-·t
evtl)' uwu
...,_,_ pllt' ::.-~
___,_ a
._ .
riellce _ _. •w• ilbo..,.t ~r ---.
...,_.
do .... ?
cwbiq......FJ.i;u;.-y~
'f -~ · ('~u""'};«}lidl is !he woods.
J""e&gt;
lk*i's iutel:~ but ibiot(dti.soneli:;mPutaboutl30.kidsu•wad~ ,;:~~ ~~.!"t· •,--: it w1 rrr-qer of11re BobMaslowski.udin:d bebdie•llkaitpattof ly villibll:
would be
tbel!!!!!!al.eYetJt.IU~II .
~"-s ·~
cl$1l p ·"
Sellliul
;, archaecrlogist for dte U.S• . lbe aniDg door:. by pu!IC('I...t~
-~~·espejt bof e ,·; 1 •'I ~;1D • , r.,. ll VJ.) .

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~I .ac~ually put on w.b at's
Longoria Parker, who is
bittm;g the red .carpet f10r clean," she said Thursday:
L'Oreal, i s having a . "Usual!ly f ' m tn s:w.eats or
Versace
moment
.at · jeans ..Tony's favorite outCannes. BUt when she's at , fit is me in jeans .and a Th@me wi.tb her husband, shirt."
San Antonio 'Spurs point
Longoria Parker stars on ·
g.uatrd Tony Parke!:, she's ABC's
"Desperate
Heusewives." .
hardly a fashion diva. .

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YOUR HOMETOWN

I••'•P liard -iadiad

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-COMMUNITY CORNER- -w.Ml~ petrqglyphs get I!Vtf'iooked,:
could
be
lost
due
to
erosion
-:
:
Fishing derby time retUrns in Meigs
pounds. all Qf whidt has now
boon delivered to tbe Meigs
CooiJ'tllliveParish.
Have you beard of the
GOld Star family license
aaatene plates which can DOW be
Huellch. pun::hased through the Ohio

It's about fishing de!by
lime ~ Dave Docdec of

HURRICANE (AP) -A Army 0Jrps of Fap. as Amcrialn lndiMS
_
quirlcy pieoe of locll folk- _.a p• r JW • Hr+..,
Mrl a*iilid1bel-'c(
lore is in danger of deterio- University, believes bpCh lbe gtp is
lila die
rnting ill Hurricane.
drw•ies- n.tnlly OIU&lt;il2 dress mr:rdy is • wU - • :::
loaoomecofaf*=
· lcJl
,._ofit:;-.;;;.iont.ciAlb- ·lkllky'S drw•' '
aJoog Main"-~..a
·
""
I
· P .... r; IC'J ~
::a
.-m.. ~ay - . A
-IS'''P ,•••y @1M ·ca+
hidden bclrind an .......... w•i."lilaih!iati.61,aill (itilpiiafL+•i
a.eW,
police mnse.-. is a~ pet- . When die saoae ..s fiat 'ftld •' ·
~
mglyphwithasu.icdp!ISt.
~~F'
dn:a,intbel940s,Ar!Jadrlr4J
The "Water MOOSier's olici•llalilln!lcyW ' J a~lbe
.sa·ldij.~Y4,...cldi.z
..·
Daughter,~ as it's Do-. il.a lit ·1Mf' '
pia:e ,CJf
,,_3
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~ was a tourist ll8lac- ~icallf' lllfiu anwort., wilb
coal
c:lliteh,'!.'
lion, and it's !&gt;1iU a SlOp on ••' fbatlldle l&amp;lOs.lie Jotasluuti said,. 1he
preschool tours of Putnam tbcoriJJe4 ' die .._ was whole ~.""'· W
County' s historical sites.
~""'
~
7 's
tilld CJf
TherocklllinOdupinthe ~~""'
- : 1 " t " - fdl..,._"
early 1990s, ri,ght ·olf lbe leaden of ttibes.
,.
. R&amp;:pdbs of ils or~f ,
lnta!Stat,e64exit, wbmland
In bis 1993 book, die~ mak ~~t· be llcacr
was beiag 1\JDleCl fur a new "Sha-'5 Stoty,~ Braley ~ ~#id- · . ·
allllJ!oobile deala'shiP- .
used lbe 7lell of lbe.WalMl · "1 was ~ - · • a Jal'
Back !ben, no one
Ohep die pur(IOitld biSIOI)' . . . -(the ••• - g) was
quite ·sure What it was, mad of . lbe Oda...-: ttibe,_ ., way fliat, bnlid.
~tber than rislt mining a i• ytt ... •
,;~of die · 1be i!MF oa die._ is
potential historical land- Woll!iel
'li DaugiJJI:I-, faded, aod· the cutite ad
malt, developeD paid ID - his name for it - and itself is mosdy Clbotiudtlll
bave it moved 10 lbe ceoiCl' ~ 05her West Vqinia lium public view. Bul: itli
of town. right brirind tbe pc:U~1Jlhs:
, out in the opco, VIS! qllible
~ station 011 Mllili Slim.
IUsmoe!bc puN* .m of to lbe d! meats.
Since then, 1beories about 1M: bonk 111111}' apats ~
A Hunicaae bructJwe
the stone have beell swirling. ~~~die WalianOlum, ~in;!OO!d lilllilh::
The77-incbimagecarved fiadiug it .ID be a bon, w..-t.~~ .. ~sD;,W*ras
in the rock resembles a pro- ~ 10 lbe Ow..,l fm a !OBi!l aanoo.
file of a woman in a 101J8, \\btVa:giniaAnlullogy.
lt also is d a teatum11
creasedgown.
1)11 casts doubt on SlOp for area pn:schoQI
Some believe the carving Bnley'li dlcnly about lbe toulli, along wiiJl lbe
dated .back «l!Wries, and .,._. Colll'ly pdloglypb. Cllesiie ~caboose musew.as the . work of Qdy !i1111Eii1IIJ'.
Ulll,~ ~· Btmda Qldweil,
American IDdians..
.
BraleY could oot · be Hanicaae' s r'~ .ad
Olllel!s argue it~s just tbe m: * II
tollliil!Ddiat&amp;JL
___
,_, ,.....
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scraw 1·tog o f some local · ,.._,
_,.,..
. ,...
.., had.
, """" s oot•..... many o f
kids who were pla.,;na ill al~~mV« beeo r ........cal of dlese arouud an..-. ~I

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~ tl:iliWOizders
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&amp;lttled t ' e.lfin boys
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1. . ... · ,' ·. · Bl11iser 5 . ·6-·-~•r
:;a ; Acoo~ ·to' . Tum
_ . , ..
..~ " "' .
,,, .nd •
1 ;' :'• ~~ tbiitstud, who was at the
, l;t t9l9 --- ~-- liO · - ' ~h;Jt:ftiG A ·, · · · the battle between
NJA .• .... ( 1 J :? .. . ....
..;."'11 'pri»i
most duilliDg dUngs
' I+' t- ~ ~~ r '

,. $ ;,

C'Np
· of , ' f eibJ3l
. was .an ..... f?'

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s·;;·..:".• •·-·~andHosketwas0tte
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-:Ieven · he bad evet seen. Said
Hairston, ·"Whon dte :gmae
w.ould become ill! ·NBA m •piiii( tbe' ..,._( 'WB:doo was over Tarzan came
1949, &lt;
but it ~y did not Wooders. ln 1938 aod 1939. down to~ end of !be oourt
involve the best pro basket- tbe Waterloo lads played and smashed !be grandf&amp;- ·
ball teams in America Fot: under two names, the tber clock: there There was
dill reuon Hmy flannip W . • lo.!IJ Woiiii!H
tbe .• 1•••
·
. ..a·-limy
1fie
Worlld- f&gt;ruie
~ i;;'
]_!Lg_ -- ~
-- Baltetball T~ . IID· a "
•
e ''«cidle ~~nevcrbccnh'M...,
be •ta;red ~ (Jbi.-....lio t N*f · , _,·. Bi"'""'wl aClbio. . . ·. .
dJe best p;o lltia-, ·•·
beouuW d .
At:bl.ettc ~IIPJI!Y
bot¥! ~team. De fiDitlllr- . t-,n also ~ the a,thlO
·oey was beld in ~a~eu . ~
o• . •·· :QJ ,
or tile NBL \that
of 1939.
· ·
\that ·,._- , four yea, bill when Orl~
Invited to pall!ic{ g WatmoQ boys; , , aayi Robats 1P burt,in .a Wlll
wa'C ..till two Haays .a. Dnammoud, · , Wyman over Spiagfie1d, ·the UDdesidercd tile l2 best pro bas- Ruberts, Otiyn
IIIII . feated ~lumbustWcmdcrs
tf!lha11 1eanJs in Amaica, Gut McMahcm;
team qwcldy went OoWD·
luclndod were teams from Wdmec Hoskl:t . t
· hill. ~ .a ~matdl wi1ll thci ·
the NBL:as well as traveli!Jg 9io 115 Hotbt bad iiUUul ltens ill 1939, ·the N.ew
lclms l.ike !be Celtics, at. Ohio State and Berens at \'.odlmi won easily 52-41
Globelrotters, Pbiladelpbia Ohio University.
as die W011ders had to plily
Spabs (la~ kno~ as the
Staled 1he Dispatch of the without 01\lyn ltoberts.
Philadel.phia Wamors) and. game: "Conung from Tbe Hens used only five
tbe New "idrk Rens.
behind m four occasions, players, !hree of 'Who were
One of the great moments the Atbletic Supply cagers about 6-foot-4 .and above
in sports history came in succeeded in doing what (uitu&amp;Ual fur that ern). The
ffiBt tournamem on MarCh numerous otber Columbus Wonders .also only ·used
27, 1939, when the two best outfits had unsuccessfully five players, but only one
black . basketball teams in attempted for the past 15 was talk:r dLan 6 feet.
Amenca,
the Harlem years. 1be Columbus pros
1be New York Rens'
Globetrotters and the New eked out a 4~ decisi_on moord from 1923 to 1949
York Rens,. played ~e over the Relllllssanoe qUlll-- w,as 2,3UI wins and 381
-1.00.0 fans m the Cbngo tet before an oyetflow !Qsses. In 1942 •they would
Coliseum. In a great pme, uowd of VSOat the K ofC become the Wodd Champs
.tile Rens prevailed 27- 23. gynmuium SWiday night.~
· WbeD boM1 ~
.De next night the KensThe Columbus/Waterloo ~ ·
'
~one
~ the championship by •team - ·behind by se¥en year IIi the. Washington
. belriog the Oshkosh Alll- points at the .balf, · but Bears. In l948 ~ Re~s
_Stars, membersoftheNBL,. tbnk-s to the~ of lost the .dlampJoosbip
36-33. Oshkosh had anum- BeJ&gt;ens
and
Wyman game .of the Wodd
be.- of great players, ioclud- Roberts. tbe Wooilt:n were Toum~t
to _ the
.iDg ~s the best "bill able 'ID take tbe bd and . Mi1J1!1"'1110h~ ~ m one
inan of the 1930s, Cowboy hold 011. Swriog fur the ~ dlec.~ games of .all
~ards.
Woildcrs w.c:re DnmunOod, time. ~·11: ~ 500IIld
. · The Rens finished lbe t2~ Wyman ROberu, " '8~ 49 p!)lllf:S m the 14-~1
teaiOD, not only as Wodd ·HoslrZt. II; Odyn Roberts:,' fAen; Will. The Jteas. ~~~~~
~· but victors in t OIJ' 9; t.fcMJdKlo. 1; . and had ftlp Gates, bllt lhcir
of
ir 116 games. Beaens, 8.
·
real star dial yu,r wu Nat ·
fac&amp;r"'cd on the Rens' rosFor lbe ·Rens. they were ~sweetwllel'~ Clifton.
tel' in 1939 :were such nota- lal by Pop Gates' 1.5 and
(: -. S••• ir • ipr irrf
b1cs l i Pop Gates, Tauan T117J!D Goq"""s ll. ~ cornqtqlfe.t folr 1M
Cdoper, Wee Willie Smith, Bell ·b.l!:l 2, FMs lenlrioS4, Sir•' 7 n.ft-S f -1 lk
Fats Jenkins and two fel- Saitcb 3. ~ 7, Wee ·ca•ClG ' bf.,·•if'e
lcnn who hearne better Wlllic: Sinitli 4 and Isaacs t. IIIII lfiJilw7. P f,
...,.,n in other sports. had 2.
i
Zmm_., ,..IVIL~ :
h

Wason~

losteS

Ui 'f9JI:B . came

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SUNDAY PUZZLER

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:n-e
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:!ri..n:

ACROSS

:J~va

piopoilioi I
.6Kilgly
11 Coriic or'llnding
16 Phi Bela21 WOld of woe
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22Banisltment
23 Coi..,oopilllelallow
24 Gnlek-epic
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30 Poew&gt; iiJed amotl'lt
31 BaiDie
33 Shouts
55 Pointer

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58 Si&lt;j
S9VIII40 llrwlld bMrlgl
41 IJrurokanj
42 Linelr ni11181n
44RIIHd
48 Kind Of collie
51 RibiJod liltiiC
54 C11ioi
55 -11!18 1oTicl1el
57 Suno!Oioid

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61Enliood

62T-wouon
63~-

65 Mi111 wpalis'SI.b.ntJ

66 CUil&gt;.ISde
67 Room 1or a lllllf
70 fiil1io!ed
72 Part of Sclind.
73 A-(a!D.)
74 Engra.e
' 75 - and halo
77 Slai! post
79 Weight 11i1
80 - lhe Red
\ 82 O&lt;tyinllnizi,
1or short
85 Spud
liS' A.....a.
117 Sopl1is1iJaled
89 Blue
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91

0.. ... CliiiJon

92 Witt1tlii1Cis un hip&amp;

1M Imagine
96 Hlm!l a a ts**•

dlok~~eml tcteening lOllS! the: 'Cime of the test.
call die bealrb department
cai1 thc: Gallia , Couoty
aod scJwlnk an appoinl· 1k tl!b Di\11• u•ear • (7..0)
~Dt. Fastin&amp; for 12, ~ 441 -29SOUJ wcMJnJc: adlopnor o cbe screerung •s le
.
.
~OIIliJieDdecl. Regularly · stero1 ~~CJCCPmg ~t­
scbcd.uled prescrlp!ioo ~1 « for Ill!£ , iilfoonamedicatioos may be tak.en ~on. The ~tb departme?t
with a sip of watec. There ts located 10 the Galha
is no charge for !be testing County ~ice Centec, 499
4!'ld results will be given at Jack.son Pik.e, Gallipoli s.

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Scbo01 and clruroh amps.
ln the fall. she wiU be
a11tending the University of
Charleston., where she
wilimajor in chemistry.
later ·pursaimg a ~ in
pharmacy.
Tessa Saxon is the daughter of Brett aniil Lori Saxon
of GallipOlis. She will graduate from Gallia Academy
High School, where she is
listed in Who's Who Among
High ·Scbool.Studems. As a
post secondary option stu·
dent, Tessa plans to attend
~he
Uni vetsity of Rio
Grande and major in ,math
education.
While in kigb school,. she
was .a member of the KeY
Club, the Dible Club,
STAND, FCCLA and !be
Fel.lowsbip of Christian
Athletes. She has participated i n volleyball ancl was
a member of tbe Madrigals
for l!hree years, .and pamcipated in three high school
musicals~ She is an accomplished .church soloist and
was privileged to sing the
National Anthem during
during the Republican

Patty conference.
Davicl Rwnley iis 1ibe ~n
of John and Lisa Rumely
of Galai....
.-~ lis. A d!mesport aliblete f0r ltbe B~ue
Devil~. David ·w,as f"trst
team All 'SEOAL in football and lbas.kerbaLL He
was selected by galli.asports. com
as
Ga!lia
Academy's Athlete of the
Yeai, For two years be
serv.ed as . al) American
Cancer Sociely volunteer
and was .a student mentor
for ·the .'Stay Tobacco Free
Athlete Mentor Pmgram.
He was also ,a :member
·.of
the · Felilowsbip
oK:hristian Athletes. He is
member of First Baptist
Ch!p'ch, where he volunteers in the · nursery,
Children's Church and
Bible SchooL He has been
a member of 4-H f0r five
years, winning numerous
blue ribbons, rosettes and
first place trophies for
pFoject~; completed at the
Gallhia County Junior Fair.
In the fall, be plans to
attend Tiffin University and
major in business manage-

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ment, playing football for fall, majoring in nursing.
the Dragons.
, Michael Robie will be
Holly Taylor is tihe gradu.alling . from River
daughter of James
· ·and Va:lley High School &lt;this
Carolyn Taylor of CbeshiFe spring.Wlhile . at RVHS.
Holly will @e graduating
·
from Ri,.er Vallley High MiChael lettered i.n both
School, where she listed on football and golf, :providthe National Honor RoH all ing team leadership to his
four years. ·She bas plllllici- peers. This fall, he will
pated in the Acakmic conl!inue his football
Festival, as well as pan:ici- Clllieer as he will be attend,
pating in the RVHS An
show for three years. She i.og Defiance College and
was a National History Day playing football .
winner both on the local
He will be studying psyand district level, thus . chology wtw.e in college,
qualifying herto go to ilhe pursuing a career a5 social
state leveL
wor.k:er. He was a member
She has b~n a member of tibe Fel!lowship ,0 f
of the Gallta Barnyard
· . .
Buddies 4--H Cdub for 14 Christian Athletes, the An
years, where she was a " Club, 'SADD, as well as
Sbowmansbip ·class winner bemg a member of the
in the steer division, she show choir. He participat· also placed first in !Equine ed in the high ·s choel
Novice Showmanship. Her musical "iLil' Abner.~ In
c0mmunity serviced num- addition, he aided in rbe
bered several .relief efforts, H b't
t. f
H
·t ·
including the Key Club
a 1a
or
uma~ tes
Tsunami project apd the effo':s and att,ends Vmton
Katrina relief effmts .
Baptist Church, where 'be
She will be attending is active in their youth
Marshall University this program.

Longoria Parker: oot afashion diva at home

, :.cANNES, France (AP~ we bave, every interview,
..;. Eva Longoria Patter every red carpet -everySotS to play iilress-up at the thing is already planned
and dresses are fitted, and
Cannes Film Festival ~ libedoesa't even ha\'e I just put on what ·someIf pack bee own suitcase. body gives me,:" the 33:,.~My bag is packd when
year-old ,aoiJI1ess ~o)d
Priess
t:eome becaulle my stylist At&gt;~ociated
. (flmtcs about evecy .event lielevision.

25 - F&amp;Mue
26 01 COIT1I1ll!1ity 27Slml
28- Claus
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ROI.ary. _
· Memorial Dime1;_ Numerous volun;;cholanhip for the 2007- t=c ~oizations for
Q89 school year w~ which s
a-ssists wid!
r_....,.,y ~· by J'm include Ried Cross and
. Morrison, Rowy Club Special OJy~- .
~sident.
.
She plans to attend Ohio
~ients include Kayl.a Ncxlbcm Univen;ity, plll'SDawn Payne. Michael illg a camer ·as :a clinical
SJevm Robie, Holly fleann ~st.
'fayb, Tessa Reoee Su.on,
Kayb McGomas is lhe
David W:ayme Rumley and . daughterofTim McComas
Kayla Daaielle McComas. · and Lisa HaFder. Sbe is .a
·~ Kayla Payne is the
senior at River VaUey
daughter of Richard and High School, wbe~ she is
Robin Payne of Bidwell. a member of tbe National
Sbe wi lJ ·gradWIIe from Honor RoD. She parliici. R.iver Valley High School, pated in National Hi.Sl&lt;M)'
where she was both a dis- Day, winDing at at lllile district
and
State ttiiot level, qllllht)'ing her
HistoryD!ilay winner, and to compete at the State
was a part of dJeir home- level. She also was a compoming .queen ooutt. She petitor in dle Disuiot Fait
· hils held numerous offioes, competition. 'S he w.as .a
including Beta Club secre- member of tihe Beta Club.
tary for four years,
K.ey Club, .Art Cl11b,
; She was a member of tbe Freocb Club, .as well as
ftady Raiders Softball pm- being a member of tbe
~am for fuur )'c:al'S and Fellowship of Christian
'P!ayed volle~ for two Athletes.
years. She is .an active
Sbe :attends Wbite Oak
nlember of Moimt Cannel Baptist Cburoh, where she
Baptist Cburoh. 'She was a is active in Vacation Bible

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1 Mathomalic:al

Department Offers chQlesterol screening

GALUPOUS - The
Gallia C&lt;Mllliy Healdl
llqt•tmeD! aJIIlOUDCCii !hat
·cllolesrerol scrceniJl&amp; will
be offered at the: bealtb
diepanment facility oo
M.ooday, June 2 and
Tuesday, June 3 from 8:30
to 11 am.
Gallia County residents
interested in receiving !he

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,Gallipolis Rotary awards scholarships to graduaks

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s..n.~ay, May 18, 2008

•••i.-,

dteMcigsCountyFishand
Game Association t"s out
.00 •about gathering up
prius to be awardOO to the
huodredouoboysandgirls
who oome out to fish.
.·The dertly will be be1d
BumauofMOIDrVehicles?
from 8 a.m. ID noon on June
Any immediate family
14and the kids will fish in a
mc:mber of a person who
weU-stock.eil pond at ihe·
died in a combat zone while
farm located in the &lt;llester sitting 011 me bank holdilig a a memlJec of any brnncb of
~~a.Kidsu£tol5yearsold fi~g pole and patiently theU.S. anned foroesmay
IR ~~ted or a day of free
wanmg for fiOIDe umuspect- purchase one at no additioofunauu fond.
·
· ing fish lotllketbcirbait.
al charge. They can evcil_be
In a
drawing, m
personalimd for an addi~des Y&lt;iU be given .away
Meigs cOuntians are geo- tional i:e.
4hen lbere will beam- erous when it oomes to
Tbc plates feature an
t:ty df otbel- prius fur Jhe helping others. 1 marvel at i.mage of a large fi\'e-1)0int
· y.r.inoc:rt.in ~e ~ in the elfcxts of some dedicat- star eocirclcd bx five smallse~ cJasses, like die .ed ~sideots wbo work so eqitlrs. leo oombat zones
bjggest 6sli or.,rhe lllOSI fulL bald to help others.
. have ~ designated to
'The kids are to take dleir That generosity became appear above the star
oWD fishing poles. bring even mon: appmmt wbeti image; iraq, Afghanistan,
their own bait, l!l!bo!Jp tbe Pomrroy postal wod=s Desert Storm, Grenada.
some will tie .available appealed for food to go to Lebanon, Persian Gulf. ·
!bore, IIDCI be .I!•••IJwrird fiJI dle.ae.:ly ~pantry : Panama , Korea, Vietnam
byaJ!Illent. 'Qij$.isaotaa sbel~ . ,a the M~ .andWoddWarll.
event when: p11tcats t.~te COOJ! . ·i.-we ~ • Mai!Y ·· , ·
.
tbeirbdsanddl'opltlcmq11. low11"•••• . '.81. ~ :. Wow. Cool Whip now
As longasdiediii!ISblyK.. tagedf .Ja~Jmoe- • c_lmtesinacan.lt'sreministhe parent is · tct .-emain tum .IO fili¥.P••esiiD ~ . cicot of yeats past when the
11link of it as beiqg quality •dno;Cb die • .. tr. ·• -LL...;. · fil5l cans of topping in a can
tinle spent togetbeL ·
Ld ~ die ~·- ~ Ollllketed and delightPave says the pond inidl ~"f.~' _, \_!l,
cd many a youn_gs, ter who
smriwl, Whicb means ;ibout "
-~*~~**the
hi
uth
1
....,._.a!JOY.•!be
expo·'
... ·p«
_r.llll
s mo
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..-sspousedf,orma tasty
-·t
evtl)' uwu
...,_,_ pllt' ::.-~
___,_ a
._ .
riellce _ _. •w• ilbo..,.t ~r ---.
...,_.
do .... ?
cwbiq......FJ.i;u;.-y~
'f -~ · ('~u""'};«}lidl is !he woods.
J""e&gt;
lk*i's iutel:~ but ibiot(dti.soneli:;mPutaboutl30.kidsu•wad~ ,;:~~ ~~.!"t· •,--: it w1 rrr-qer of11re BobMaslowski.udin:d bebdie•llkaitpattof ly villibll:
would be
tbel!!!!!!al.eYetJt.IU~II .
~"-s ·~
cl$1l p ·"
Sellliul
;, archaecrlogist for dte U.S• . lbe aniDg door:. by pu!IC('I...t~
-~~·espejt bof e ,·; 1 •'I ~;1D • , r.,. ll VJ.) .

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~I .ac~ually put on w.b at's
Longoria Parker, who is
bittm;g the red .carpet f10r clean," she said Thursday:
L'Oreal, i s having a . "Usual!ly f ' m tn s:w.eats or
Versace
moment
.at · jeans ..Tony's favorite outCannes. BUt when she's at , fit is me in jeans .and a Th@me wi.tb her husband, shirt."
San Antonio 'Spurs point
Longoria Parker stars on ·
g.uatrd Tony Parke!:, she's ABC's
"Desperate
Heusewives." .
hardly a fashion diva. .

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CEI,EBRATIONS

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Sunday, Mayt8, 2008

s......,, "'!Yd!, 21008':

Former band·diredor
returns to Wahama

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$chool ofBusiness honors top students
: RIO GRANDE -

The Ontstanding EBrepreneurship was given to Michelle to Tessa Haggeny.The
Evans School Business at Student Aw.anl, which was Thomas, who also served as award for the Top Score on
t2lc . University of Rio presented by Bob High, direc- the presiaent of .the Rio a
Business
Policy
Grande honored several of tor of 1hc Center for Small Grande · .c hapter . of the Simulation Course for the
Marketing fall semester went to
outstanding .students during Business Entrepreneurship at Americlllil
an awards ceremony on Rio Granile. High exnlained Association
(AMA). Mo'chelle Thomas and
~ 24.
thai Stapleton has w~ as a Th&lt;Jene sai!!l that Thomas is Chelsey Wood, while the
• .lbe finrt award banded out financial manager for herfam- very meaculous in her work award for the Top Score on
«luring
•1he lundheton reremo- ily lbusines
.·
s, done well in the and is very goal oriented.
B usmess
·
p o I'ocy
•
a
11y was presented to Tessa classroom and has ideas for
"We're looking for big Simulation Collrse for the
Haggerty, who won the Wall ber own business.
tlhings from Michelle," spring semester went to
Street .Journal Award
. "She is driven by chal- Thoene said.
Tessa Haggerty and Scott
Professor lenges,~ High said
The W. Lowell A. "Buzz" Saunders.
·A SS!Stant
Wesley
Thoene
gave
The Outstanding :Business . Call Mark of Ellcellence
Thoene led the . awards
Haggerty libe award and Management
Stu!!lent Award was jilfesented to Katie
described her as a hard- Award was preseoned to Peters. Carol 'Smith, ildviS9f . ceremony and said that all
woddng student who was a Stephanie .Scites. As'si'stant fOr the Students In 'F ree of the winners did excelpleasure .to have in class.
Professor John Hill said that 'Ente..,;se (SIFE) program at · lent work during their
· "Sh
•
f
•
•"-• is ali elloellent
· student Rio Grande,
' ''"'
· e s one o the best ru.u
said that Peters time at Rio Grande. He
Wl'iters I have ever seen," he and is very de!ierving of this has done very well academi- also told the graduating
honor.
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call y and has also shown students that the faculty
The
Outstanding
"She's serious about her great leadership skills.
and staff at Rio Grande
Tiulene ,added that Peters wish them well and will
Accounting Student Award education,'' Hill said.
was presented to. Rita
The
'Outstanding was also the top salesperson always be there to provide
Stapleton.
lnfm:mation Technology for the AMA this year.\
assistance.
"She's an ex:cellent stu- Student Award was presemThe two students who
"You always have a home
dent,"
said
Assistant ed to Christina •Coglietti.
won
the
Outstanding at Rio Grande," Thoene said
Professor
Richard
"f really love ·the school," Associate's
·
Degree
Campbell. He added that Co.glietti said. "I've enjoyed Stu!!lent Awards were Eva
she woUld go far in her my time here."
Aldrich · and
Marc
.work as an accountant.
. The
Outstanding Stump. The Business Field
Stapleton also won .the ·Marketing Student Award Test Award was presented

of

TiiDI ROiidl Mel Daniel ec.y

Roach-Kay engagement

;Venoy-Sheppanl engagement
· WNG BOTFOM - Craig and Brenda Venoy of !Long
Bottom announce the engagement and approaching marriage of ltheir daugb.ta:. Megan Lee Venoy, to Thomas

'f'heodnrr: Sbcp,pard.

: · lhc~is a.2005 gratlnateofEastem~'School

and 'is IPMi•tg Wasbington State COOIIIIIIIIity Co1lege. She
lS OIIICiifl)' mpoycd :at lbe Kroger store in Belpre.
:' &amp;:r fiaooe , 11011 d A:nita Shepparo of :Sy.nooosc. .and Bob '

·POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - Torza N. Roach of Point
Pleasant and Daniel E. Kay of New Haven. W.Va .• would
like to announce their upcoming wedding. .
Tirza is the daughter of Teresa Roach and Tim 'Roach,
both of Point Pleasant. Her grandparents are Marlin and
Kathleen Huglies ofGallipolis, and Mary and Cecil Roach
of Point Pleasant.
·
·
She is a 1998 graduate of Point Pleasant High School and
graduated in 2006 with a bachelor's degree from Concord
University. She currently is employed by the Mason
County Board of Edu&lt;;ation as a substitute teacher and also
by Holzer Clinic. .
.
·Danny is the son of Do'iina and Bob Kay of New Haven. His .
grandparents are doe/late Cecil and Lena Byus of Point
Pleasant, and doe late Florence and Fred Kay of New Haven.
He is a 1998 graduate of Wahama High School an!!l a
2007 graduate of the West Virginia Corrections Academy.
He is a iS-year member of the New Haven Volunteer.fire
.Department and is employed by the West Virginia Division
of Corrections and works at the Lakin Correctional Center
as a correctional officer.
'The wedding will take place at 6 p.m. Saturday, May 2'4.2008, in the Chapel at Cedar Lakes Conference Center in
Ripley.

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Foster-Leake wedding

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'RACINE - Rebecca Lynn (Napper) Foster and Mike
Leak, Jr. were married on April i9, 2008, on the beach
at Myrtle Beach, S.C., by Terry Grainger of the
Wedding Chapel by the Sea.
The bride is the daughter of Lena and the late David
"Gabby Hayes" Napper of R!utland. 'l'he groom is the son
of Janet -and David Brandt of Concord, Va., and Mike
and Dawn Leake Sr. ·o f Troutdale, Va.
·
They currently reside in Racine.

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Dtlytime i 'Tiu! VieW' to
go backstage for 1 show

that' will not be seen,"
NEW YORK (AP) Daytime's "The View" will Geddie said. .
rerun one of its shows in
two weeks from an entirely
different view thai lets fans
3l, 2008, .•
'Wllilnul 'Sired Oburob of aorist :in !Bclpre.
know a little about . what
goes on backstage.
Producers will attempt .the
ellperiment
with
the
Memorial Day episode,
which is being taped a week
earlier. That episode will
feature an interview with
Dina Lohan and daughter
Ali, and a performance by
Ryan CaiJrera.
Qn Friday, May 30, "The
View" will air a version of
that show with backstage
footage that explains what
went into making it. Only
about half of the original
show will be seen.
· The rest will catch what
went on behind the scenes to
put the show together, such
as doe meeting' where the cohosts discuss in advance ·
what they' II be talking about
on the "Hot Topics" session
at .the sbow's beginning, said
Bill
Geddie, executive pro,.
ducer.
He said he believed
:
an.nlfolnw., and U.ah•
the show's fans are savvy
and will appreciate the extra
access. ·
"Of all the . daytime
shows, 'The View' is clearly
the most raw," ·Geddie said . .
"You' can tell when someone is hurt, you can tell
when someone is angry."
lf it works. doe episode
may prove to be atemplate
for future programs, either
on the air or as an online ·
companion, Geddie said. "If
it really (stinks), we won' t
do it again,'' he said.
Don' t e~t a glimpse of
Barbara Walters, Whoopi
Goldberg,
Joy
Behar, ·
Co. FCLS as a .E lisabeth Hassel beck or
Sherri Shepherd pre-makeup, however.
"'There are some doings

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Recital Weekand

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ipil&amp;&amp;i'

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Mod Ddtibie.'Sbqprd.of Mineral Wells, W.'li/a., puated ·
· fiiDm 'Soudlcm ~ Sc!hool in 2004, 1IDd i s ·etnp1oyed
Wilb:Americaa.Fhltt:ic Power Co.
· 'The -v~ c Ming &gt;Will tiE p1are al.5 :30 p.m. on Satmday, June

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of Gama
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lliltii_III'FIIIII'IIIW*
Ard, ~ lliab Sdbnnl will ·. uaulbels ar the~« 1~7at Gallia AcademY High

far ltbeir ., ,aannal ~ Mllt li~Qgnize&lt;h11he 2,00711tunion d 1he GAHS
, ·;!", ~. ~Y 24.. ~.!...~~c·Thlty'!!!-r'• •union 11 Saturday, May
ia'ti-Giuq»lisOily.Patt. _"', ,. .. ..._~· . " ..".
·· ·
" . rdllll
"~'".= illlm
-~"1Uid
&lt;hlunw light
... •o year's·lndnc=w~ beHObatt d Jrimson"-5 'S~
--• ·--- ..,.. ._... ..... •
"Junior" Wilson Jr., fur ibis
Payux:ut of .ilueti, rcgistra-.... harlo ·.aD ·be •~1~2\Y~ld at llliii1Y )'lll'S of mvo!Yaiitllll lion :BOd meal is '$1;0 per per- --a lhgsjpes11 nw:ting willo :11oe w:hool ·by ~ son. Reservalions for the
will
foDow. 1'be business ""-....!. jbc local
_,,
be made by
, __ .. '""'" -'--'-....... ,......, '"""'~&gt;"
newspaper, .......... may
-,con•
·"~ 'oo.w ..,......., ouuu- all facetsofGAHS sportnnd
tacriqg Ina Bc:llc Sibley at
I_ ti •t!f.,.w.'ICbOiarShip .cvmts since graduation with 446-()186 by mday, May
W
tailti••m• ·•• .and .GAHSCboss&lt;of ~9.52.
23. Dues and ,....,;stratiQn can
~ ~08 of . the . Also ~ fue business be •paid on ~y and, if
Cba 1:1 .liJS8, .cdihwing m· ting,.&amp;ction will beheld grivlnsrte~ choose, they are
*if .50th reunioo. Olber for 0ffiecrs to serve during the welcome to bring a picnic
es t:e1t!ihrllting .special nnnnmino,
and election lunch.
. 4tnswill41e~. ;;y:--~-c members for 2008
For fuither information, ·
•· A 111w:ial •"""ogoitioo will through20H .
please caJJ · Mrs. Sjbley,
~ zi~~a~ :to - ~ GAHS
The brunch atld meal will W!lma Brown at 446-6280 or
. . . d'fiomt,,;,doir6iJn. This be provided
by Brent
.
. Johnson Bertie Roush at 446-4274.
1 'd 7

..;ill

:;:

*

we rem.ember those who have passed away
and are eSpedaBy dear to us.
On Monday, May 26, we will publish a special page devoted to those who are gone but not
forgotten. They will be similar to the sample below:

y
. ear

wltih, O!!led oae of the-following FREE ...... below In

......,.,,_-tribute.

I. We hold you in our thoughts and memories forever.

guide JOII aDd
protect·you
. throaghoat time.

.'

10 REMEMBER YOUR WVED ONE IN 1HIS SPECIAL WlY,
. 'SEND $8.50 PEl USTING • $151F PJC11JRE INCLUDED

seww .

tGCtEA
presents scholarships to ·three s.eniors ·
.. .

.
• CiAI.UJ'!OI,IS The
County · Local
~IJII Assooiation is

._.,ia

His hand.
4.11wol. yoo for !he wonderful da y' we shared toge!her. My pnoyers
will be with you until we meet agoun.
5. The days shared were sweet. I IDnf. LOsee you again in God's
heavenly glory. .
· 6. Your~ and bravery stilt inspire u~ all, and the memory of your
smile fills us wi!h joy and laughter.
7. 1'hough out of sight. you'll forever be in my hean and mind.
8. The days may come and go, bUI !he 111111" we shared will always remain .
9. May God's angels guide you and protect you througho ut time.
10. You were alight in our life 1hat bwns forever in our hearts
11 . May God's graces shine oyer )'OU for all time.
12. You are i11 our thought! and pr:ayers from morning to night and from
y~ to year.

.e

May God's • ....,

:KI 1

ani! has Jllll1icipated in -sev- Kirsten js a member of the
eral .community service pro- Iburman United Methodist

_..

Fdl out the (orm below an4 drop off to or mail:

,_"'"''

The Gallipolis Daily Tribuni
With Food~-Memories
825 1\ird Ave., P.O. Box 469 Gallipolis, Ohio 4.5631
DEADUNE: WEDNESDAY, MAY 21 BY 5:00PM
Pick ap ·photos within 30 days o~ in memory running.

jects. He is a :member of the . Chun:h, where she has taught
·
GAHS
golf am, marobiqg Bible School and participated
~ 1ilree -lll::holarsbips
seniorS. The band and National !Honor in youth activities. She has
......... arc awarded to Society. M~w is the liOO also played volleyball, bas.. +t•rs -whose .parent. is a of Jeff and Linda Baird. His ketball and softball while in
is a iteatCher .at South high SQhool.
1 i lw:a for .G allia County
Ir----~--------------------------~-----,
Please publish my tribute in the special Memory Page on Mond ~y. MAY 26.
I
Vance Fellure will be grad·
i.aatl Sdlools and a mem- Gallia High School.
Kirsten Carter is .the uating ~ South Gallia
I
I
'-otdleGCI.EA.
High
'School
and
plans
to
Kelly
~ ohave 11-ltf*r c!LI..any e ..-w~ excellence Carter. Her pimDIS ~ at alllcnd the University of Rio IIIN~m~--------------~----------~-------------------l
Relationship to me
Number of selected verse - - - - I I
il-*»bc~for South'WCII.t tril :Elementary. · Grande. He is the son of
I
Her moiher u:.:bcs a ·her Richard and Becky Fellure,
llilnlid.
Dale of passing - - - - - - - - - - I Dale of birth
father
is an administrator. who .teldocs at .Hannan Trace
. : J' 5 w Baird is gradnat·
·
from Galia Academy Kirsten will be .attending Elcn ICIItal y.
IPri ·
h
!fWd. He plans to Marsh811 University 10 pur- · Vance has been acti ve in 11 nt your .name ere --------------------------- - - - - ' - - - -- - - - - - 'PFA, SCORES, and a class
·II f M.wibaU University . sue a odcpiCC iii nursing.
I Addrcs; - - - - ------ -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Phone' mnnher - -----------il
She
l5 a member of officer. He played football,
m,jor ill miaobiology.
Zip - - - 1
"ds - ~ Scout Nlcional Honor~, Beta basketball and baseball in
high
school.
Vance
helps
... • mealber Of (JoocJ Olib, Kiley Oub, Art Ouh,
Make Cheek hyable to THE GALLII'OI..IS DAILY TRIBUNE
HXLAa~ staff at with PRIDE and is a member ·
llews BaptiSt Chw"ch .
.l:;;iiiii;;;;iiiii-;,;;iiliiii-iiiiii.:,;;~
•• He is .also actiYe in ~ River Valley High School. of Liberty Chapel Church.·

eo ····•ing

mother

.ne:

+

VALLEY
CASHING

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204 •• 2111111traet

2147 JACKSON PIKE • 448 0724

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2. May God cradle you in His arms. no'A· and forever.
· 3. l'o!oV&lt;r missed, never forgotlen. May God hold you in !he palm of

.July 10, 19&amp;1-'Maf S, 1810

La••'""
[Llwson-Kemery
engagement
•.

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MASON, W.Va. A
reception for Wtlliam Duer,
first full -time band director at
Wahama High School, will
be a feature of doe alumni
gathering to take place at the
school on May 24.
A · pre-alumni banquet
reunion for musicians of the
Duer era, 1949-1953, will
take place from 3 to 5:30
p.m. in the band room.
Approllimately 40 of those
band members .are ex:pected
to . be there to share time
with Duer, his wife Pat, two
William Franela Duer
of their children, and three
of their ~randchildren.
retiring in 1990. He currently
lt was Dr. Edward directs the St. Marys
Spencer of Virginia who Community
Band
and
graduated in the Wahama remains active as a guest con..:
class of 1952 who suggest- .ductor of bands in Ohio, WcsC
ed the reunion of those early Vuginia, Kentucky and;:
band members with Duer.
· Pennsylvania, as .well as se!:YOne graduate credited Duer ing as music director for the
with "taking a few musicians Marietta Chamber Orchestra.
and quickly turning them into
A group picture of DUCJ'
an award-winning marching · and his family with his for~
and concert band, as well as mer Wahama students wilt
developing a junior high band be tlken at 5:30 p.m. in ~
of seventh and eighth grade band room.
students · before leaving the
At the banquet; Duer will
area." Prior to Duer, John present the Bill Duer
Martin traveled between Scholarship to a Wahama·
Point Pleasant and Wahama student. All former studentS: .
to teach music. Duer came to of Duer are invited to attend:
Wahama soon after graduat- the_reception honoring him:
ing from Ohio University.
After ·leaving Wahama,
Duer taught band at high
schools in St. Marys, W.Va,
Fairport · Harbor, Ohio,
Willoughby,
Ohio, Cllld
Parkersburg, W.Va., -before

.
.
.
~ -~ ol Business students at~ University of Rio Grande honored during the recent awards 06181ti011y were,
~ left, ·Rita ~. Ohoistine Coglietti, Chelsey Wood, Michelle Thomas, Scott Saunders, Stelanie Sciles, Tessa
':""ggetty and Kathryn f&gt;eters. ·
.
·
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.

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CEI,EBRATIONS

PageCs

COMM·

PageC4

Sunday, Mayt8, 2008

s......,, "'!Yd!, 21008':

Former band·diredor
returns to Wahama

.

....,._.,_

$chool ofBusiness honors top students
: RIO GRANDE -

The Ontstanding EBrepreneurship was given to Michelle to Tessa Haggeny.The
Evans School Business at Student Aw.anl, which was Thomas, who also served as award for the Top Score on
t2lc . University of Rio presented by Bob High, direc- the presiaent of .the Rio a
Business
Policy
Grande honored several of tor of 1hc Center for Small Grande · .c hapter . of the Simulation Course for the
Marketing fall semester went to
outstanding .students during Business Entrepreneurship at Americlllil
an awards ceremony on Rio Granile. High exnlained Association
(AMA). Mo'chelle Thomas and
~ 24.
thai Stapleton has w~ as a Th&lt;Jene sai!!l that Thomas is Chelsey Wood, while the
• .lbe finrt award banded out financial manager for herfam- very meaculous in her work award for the Top Score on
«luring
•1he lundheton reremo- ily lbusines
.·
s, done well in the and is very goal oriented.
B usmess
·
p o I'ocy
•
a
11y was presented to Tessa classroom and has ideas for
"We're looking for big Simulation Collrse for the
Haggerty, who won the Wall ber own business.
tlhings from Michelle," spring semester went to
Street .Journal Award
. "She is driven by chal- Thoene said.
Tessa Haggerty and Scott
Professor lenges,~ High said
The W. Lowell A. "Buzz" Saunders.
·A SS!Stant
Wesley
Thoene
gave
The Outstanding :Business . Call Mark of Ellcellence
Thoene led the . awards
Haggerty libe award and Management
Stu!!lent Award was jilfesented to Katie
described her as a hard- Award was preseoned to Peters. Carol 'Smith, ildviS9f . ceremony and said that all
woddng student who was a Stephanie .Scites. As'si'stant fOr the Students In 'F ree of the winners did excelpleasure .to have in class.
Professor John Hill said that 'Ente..,;se (SIFE) program at · lent work during their
· "Sh
•
f
•
•"-• is ali elloellent
· student Rio Grande,
' ''"'
· e s one o the best ru.u
said that Peters time at Rio Grande. He
Wl'iters I have ever seen," he and is very de!ierving of this has done very well academi- also told the graduating
honor.
...........
call y and has also shown students that the faculty
The
Outstanding
"She's serious about her great leadership skills.
and staff at Rio Grande
Tiulene ,added that Peters wish them well and will
Accounting Student Award education,'' Hill said.
was presented to. Rita
The
'Outstanding was also the top salesperson always be there to provide
Stapleton.
lnfm:mation Technology for the AMA this year.\
assistance.
"She's an ex:cellent stu- Student Award was presemThe two students who
"You always have a home
dent,"
said
Assistant ed to Christina •Coglietti.
won
the
Outstanding at Rio Grande," Thoene said
Professor
Richard
"f really love ·the school," Associate's
·
Degree
Campbell. He added that Co.glietti said. "I've enjoyed Stu!!lent Awards were Eva
she woUld go far in her my time here."
Aldrich · and
Marc
.work as an accountant.
. The
Outstanding Stump. The Business Field
Stapleton also won .the ·Marketing Student Award Test Award was presented

of

TiiDI ROiidl Mel Daniel ec.y

Roach-Kay engagement

;Venoy-Sheppanl engagement
· WNG BOTFOM - Craig and Brenda Venoy of !Long
Bottom announce the engagement and approaching marriage of ltheir daugb.ta:. Megan Lee Venoy, to Thomas

'f'heodnrr: Sbcp,pard.

: · lhc~is a.2005 gratlnateofEastem~'School

and 'is IPMi•tg Wasbington State COOIIIIIIIIity Co1lege. She
lS OIIICiifl)' mpoycd :at lbe Kroger store in Belpre.
:' &amp;:r fiaooe , 11011 d A:nita Shepparo of :Sy.nooosc. .and Bob '

·POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - Torza N. Roach of Point
Pleasant and Daniel E. Kay of New Haven. W.Va .• would
like to announce their upcoming wedding. .
Tirza is the daughter of Teresa Roach and Tim 'Roach,
both of Point Pleasant. Her grandparents are Marlin and
Kathleen Huglies ofGallipolis, and Mary and Cecil Roach
of Point Pleasant.
·
·
She is a 1998 graduate of Point Pleasant High School and
graduated in 2006 with a bachelor's degree from Concord
University. She currently is employed by the Mason
County Board of Edu&lt;;ation as a substitute teacher and also
by Holzer Clinic. .
.
·Danny is the son of Do'iina and Bob Kay of New Haven. His .
grandparents are doe/late Cecil and Lena Byus of Point
Pleasant, and doe late Florence and Fred Kay of New Haven.
He is a 1998 graduate of Wahama High School an!!l a
2007 graduate of the West Virginia Corrections Academy.
He is a iS-year member of the New Haven Volunteer.fire
.Department and is employed by the West Virginia Division
of Corrections and works at the Lakin Correctional Center
as a correctional officer.
'The wedding will take place at 6 p.m. Saturday, May 2'4.2008, in the Chapel at Cedar Lakes Conference Center in
Ripley.

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

1

Jr.

Foster-Leake wedding

.
'RACINE - Rebecca Lynn (Napper) Foster and Mike
Leak, Jr. were married on April i9, 2008, on the beach
at Myrtle Beach, S.C., by Terry Grainger of the
Wedding Chapel by the Sea.
The bride is the daughter of Lena and the late David
"Gabby Hayes" Napper of R!utland. 'l'he groom is the son
of Janet -and David Brandt of Concord, Va., and Mike
and Dawn Leake Sr. ·o f Troutdale, Va.
·
They currently reside in Racine.

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Dtlytime i 'Tiu! VieW' to
go backstage for 1 show

that' will not be seen,"
NEW YORK (AP) Daytime's "The View" will Geddie said. .
rerun one of its shows in
two weeks from an entirely
different view thai lets fans
3l, 2008, .•
'Wllilnul 'Sired Oburob of aorist :in !Bclpre.
know a little about . what
goes on backstage.
Producers will attempt .the
ellperiment
with
the
Memorial Day episode,
which is being taped a week
earlier. That episode will
feature an interview with
Dina Lohan and daughter
Ali, and a performance by
Ryan CaiJrera.
Qn Friday, May 30, "The
View" will air a version of
that show with backstage
footage that explains what
went into making it. Only
about half of the original
show will be seen.
· The rest will catch what
went on behind the scenes to
put the show together, such
as doe meeting' where the cohosts discuss in advance ·
what they' II be talking about
on the "Hot Topics" session
at .the sbow's beginning, said
Bill
Geddie, executive pro,.
ducer.
He said he believed
:
an.nlfolnw., and U.ah•
the show's fans are savvy
and will appreciate the extra
access. ·
"Of all the . daytime
shows, 'The View' is clearly
the most raw," ·Geddie said . .
"You' can tell when someone is hurt, you can tell
when someone is angry."
lf it works. doe episode
may prove to be atemplate
for future programs, either
on the air or as an online ·
companion, Geddie said. "If
it really (stinks), we won' t
do it again,'' he said.
Don' t e~t a glimpse of
Barbara Walters, Whoopi
Goldberg,
Joy
Behar, ·
Co. FCLS as a .E lisabeth Hassel beck or
Sherri Shepherd pre-makeup, however.
"'There are some doings

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Recital Weekand

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ipil&amp;&amp;i'

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Mod Ddtibie.'Sbqprd.of Mineral Wells, W.'li/a., puated ·
· fiiDm 'Soudlcm ~ Sc!hool in 2004, 1IDd i s ·etnp1oyed
Wilb:Americaa.Fhltt:ic Power Co.
· 'The -v~ c Ming &gt;Will tiE p1are al.5 :30 p.m. on Satmday, June

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of Gama
.
.
.
lliltii_III'FIIIII'IIIW*
Ard, ~ lliab Sdbnnl will ·. uaulbels ar the~« 1~7at Gallia AcademY High

far ltbeir ., ,aannal ~ Mllt li~Qgnize&lt;h11he 2,00711tunion d 1he GAHS
, ·;!", ~. ~Y 24.. ~.!...~~c·Thlty'!!!-r'• •union 11 Saturday, May
ia'ti-Giuq»lisOily.Patt. _"', ,. .. ..._~· . " ..".
·· ·
" . rdllll
"~'".= illlm
-~"1Uid
&lt;hlunw light
... •o year's·lndnc=w~ beHObatt d Jrimson"-5 'S~
--• ·--- ..,.. ._... ..... •
"Junior" Wilson Jr., fur ibis
Payux:ut of .ilueti, rcgistra-.... harlo ·.aD ·be •~1~2\Y~ld at llliii1Y )'lll'S of mvo!Yaiitllll lion :BOd meal is '$1;0 per per- --a lhgsjpes11 nw:ting willo :11oe w:hool ·by ~ son. Reservalions for the
will
foDow. 1'be business ""-....!. jbc local
_,,
be made by
, __ .. '""'" -'--'-....... ,......, '"""'~&gt;"
newspaper, .......... may
-,con•
·"~ 'oo.w ..,......., ouuu- all facetsofGAHS sportnnd
tacriqg Ina Bc:llc Sibley at
I_ ti •t!f.,.w.'ICbOiarShip .cvmts since graduation with 446-()186 by mday, May
W
tailti••m• ·•• .and .GAHSCboss&lt;of ~9.52.
23. Dues and ,....,;stratiQn can
~ ~08 of . the . Also ~ fue business be •paid on ~y and, if
Cba 1:1 .liJS8, .cdihwing m· ting,.&amp;ction will beheld grivlnsrte~ choose, they are
*if .50th reunioo. Olber for 0ffiecrs to serve during the welcome to bring a picnic
es t:e1t!ihrllting .special nnnnmino,
and election lunch.
. 4tnswill41e~. ;;y:--~-c members for 2008
For fuither information, ·
•· A 111w:ial •"""ogoitioo will through20H .
please caJJ · Mrs. Sjbley,
~ zi~~a~ :to - ~ GAHS
The brunch atld meal will W!lma Brown at 446-6280 or
. . . d'fiomt,,;,doir6iJn. This be provided
by Brent
.
. Johnson Bertie Roush at 446-4274.
1 'd 7

..;ill

:;:

*

we rem.ember those who have passed away
and are eSpedaBy dear to us.
On Monday, May 26, we will publish a special page devoted to those who are gone but not
forgotten. They will be similar to the sample below:

y
. ear

wltih, O!!led oae of the-following FREE ...... below In

......,.,,_-tribute.

I. We hold you in our thoughts and memories forever.

guide JOII aDd
protect·you
. throaghoat time.

.'

10 REMEMBER YOUR WVED ONE IN 1HIS SPECIAL WlY,
. 'SEND $8.50 PEl USTING • $151F PJC11JRE INCLUDED

seww .

tGCtEA
presents scholarships to ·three s.eniors ·
.. .

.
• CiAI.UJ'!OI,IS The
County · Local
~IJII Assooiation is

._.,ia

His hand.
4.11wol. yoo for !he wonderful da y' we shared toge!her. My pnoyers
will be with you until we meet agoun.
5. The days shared were sweet. I IDnf. LOsee you again in God's
heavenly glory. .
· 6. Your~ and bravery stilt inspire u~ all, and the memory of your
smile fills us wi!h joy and laughter.
7. 1'hough out of sight. you'll forever be in my hean and mind.
8. The days may come and go, bUI !he 111111" we shared will always remain .
9. May God's angels guide you and protect you througho ut time.
10. You were alight in our life 1hat bwns forever in our hearts
11 . May God's graces shine oyer )'OU for all time.
12. You are i11 our thought! and pr:ayers from morning to night and from
y~ to year.

.e

May God's • ....,

:KI 1

ani! has Jllll1icipated in -sev- Kirsten js a member of the
eral .community service pro- Iburman United Methodist

_..

Fdl out the (orm below an4 drop off to or mail:

,_"'"''

The Gallipolis Daily Tribuni
With Food~-Memories
825 1\ird Ave., P.O. Box 469 Gallipolis, Ohio 4.5631
DEADUNE: WEDNESDAY, MAY 21 BY 5:00PM
Pick ap ·photos within 30 days o~ in memory running.

jects. He is a :member of the . Chun:h, where she has taught
·
GAHS
golf am, marobiqg Bible School and participated
~ 1ilree -lll::holarsbips
seniorS. The band and National !Honor in youth activities. She has
......... arc awarded to Society. M~w is the liOO also played volleyball, bas.. +t•rs -whose .parent. is a of Jeff and Linda Baird. His ketball and softball while in
is a iteatCher .at South high SQhool.
1 i lw:a for .G allia County
Ir----~--------------------------~-----,
Please publish my tribute in the special Memory Page on Mond ~y. MAY 26.
I
Vance Fellure will be grad·
i.aatl Sdlools and a mem- Gallia High School.
Kirsten Carter is .the uating ~ South Gallia
I
I
'-otdleGCI.EA.
High
'School
and
plans
to
Kelly
~ ohave 11-ltf*r c!LI..any e ..-w~ excellence Carter. Her pimDIS ~ at alllcnd the University of Rio IIIN~m~--------------~----------~-------------------l
Relationship to me
Number of selected verse - - - - I I
il-*»bc~for South'WCII.t tril :Elementary. · Grande. He is the son of
I
Her moiher u:.:bcs a ·her Richard and Becky Fellure,
llilnlid.
Dale of passing - - - - - - - - - - I Dale of birth
father
is an administrator. who .teldocs at .Hannan Trace
. : J' 5 w Baird is gradnat·
·
from Galia Academy Kirsten will be .attending Elcn ICIItal y.
IPri ·
h
!fWd. He plans to Marsh811 University 10 pur- · Vance has been acti ve in 11 nt your .name ere --------------------------- - - - - ' - - - -- - - - - - 'PFA, SCORES, and a class
·II f M.wibaU University . sue a odcpiCC iii nursing.
I Addrcs; - - - - ------ -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Phone' mnnher - -----------il
She
l5 a member of officer. He played football,
m,jor ill miaobiology.
Zip - - - 1
"ds - ~ Scout Nlcional Honor~, Beta basketball and baseball in
high
school.
Vance
helps
... • mealber Of (JoocJ Olib, Kiley Oub, Art Ouh,
Make Cheek hyable to THE GALLII'OI..IS DAILY TRIBUNE
HXLAa~ staff at with PRIDE and is a member ·
llews BaptiSt Chw"ch .
.l:;;iiiii;;;;iiiii-;,;;iiliiii-iiiiii.:,;;~
•• He is .also actiYe in ~ River Valley High School. of Liberty Chapel Church.·

eo ····•ing

mother

.ne:

+

VALLEY
CASHING

Gllll•

••acr

'F II •AM••

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2147 JACKSON PIKE • 448 0724

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2. May God cradle you in His arms. no'A· and forever.
· 3. l'o!oV&lt;r missed, never forgotlen. May God hold you in !he palm of

.July 10, 19&amp;1-'Maf S, 1810

La••'""
[Llwson-Kemery
engagement
•.

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MASON, W.Va. A
reception for Wtlliam Duer,
first full -time band director at
Wahama High School, will
be a feature of doe alumni
gathering to take place at the
school on May 24.
A · pre-alumni banquet
reunion for musicians of the
Duer era, 1949-1953, will
take place from 3 to 5:30
p.m. in the band room.
Approllimately 40 of those
band members .are ex:pected
to . be there to share time
with Duer, his wife Pat, two
William Franela Duer
of their children, and three
of their ~randchildren.
retiring in 1990. He currently
lt was Dr. Edward directs the St. Marys
Spencer of Virginia who Community
Band
and
graduated in the Wahama remains active as a guest con..:
class of 1952 who suggest- .ductor of bands in Ohio, WcsC
ed the reunion of those early Vuginia, Kentucky and;:
band members with Duer.
· Pennsylvania, as .well as se!:YOne graduate credited Duer ing as music director for the
with "taking a few musicians Marietta Chamber Orchestra.
and quickly turning them into
A group picture of DUCJ'
an award-winning marching · and his family with his for~
and concert band, as well as mer Wahama students wilt
developing a junior high band be tlken at 5:30 p.m. in ~
of seventh and eighth grade band room.
students · before leaving the
At the banquet; Duer will
area." Prior to Duer, John present the Bill Duer
Martin traveled between Scholarship to a Wahama·
Point Pleasant and Wahama student. All former studentS: .
to teach music. Duer came to of Duer are invited to attend:
Wahama soon after graduat- the_reception honoring him:
ing from Ohio University.
After ·leaving Wahama,
Duer taught band at high
schools in St. Marys, W.Va,
Fairport · Harbor, Ohio,
Willoughby,
Ohio, Cllld
Parkersburg, W.Va., -before

.
.
.
~ -~ ol Business students at~ University of Rio Grande honored during the recent awards 06181ti011y were,
~ left, ·Rita ~. Ohoistine Coglietti, Chelsey Wood, Michelle Thomas, Scott Saunders, Stelanie Sciles, Tessa
':""ggetty and Kathryn f&gt;eters. ·
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PageC~
&amp;mday, May t8, 2008

COMM

Dl

6u..-a, Cillld -6enthrd

Smoking during pregnancy poses·ris~
8Y PATTY TOLER, RN ·
PROJECT 01 LCIOH
WOllEN'S HEALTH wmces
-nnRW
~ .

eo:

face increased risk of senous bcallb problems such
as: cerebral palsy, mental
retardation, an even i!tatb
If a woman SlOpS smoking
by the end of her fll'SI
trimester of ~gnancy. She
is no more likely to have a
low-binh weigh baby.
Smoking haS been associ~ wilb a n~ of ~g­
n::lj'\;ingcomplij(auons.
S
· also doubles a list
of de"e
- ' - t a .....,_
•. . · ...........
,.,via (low lying tJlacenta) aDd
placenta atxuption (m which
the placeata peels away
fro!'! the ulmls) befo~
delivery. ~ can result m

weigh baby is ioCl1C ud bj

50 percent

[f ' ~

·women smoke liiiR dian '
pack pel' day tbe list ofdeliv~
ering a low bidb wagbt blbJ.
is inm:ased by 130 pci.....
Aside from !be olber ~

In tbe UoDcd Stales more
than 20
womm
---"·
to tbe
ectopic JII"CrDC)'. oral
Oigaoiz.alioa, a
·
reduced bead size,
' similar ,.,mlw of WOIIIal in
mofiJr skills, oogniliw:
•
. odJa" OllU1IIries rrnri-e and
cancer
and
e.
v
en
about 9
· of
' ·111
pciCCIII
womeo
Babies ean ·. · also have
dew:JcJping
OOWJiries
lillllllre
increaSed bear! rate and
Many of lliese WOilJell srnnl&lt;e
blood
pn:ssure, depresSOIJ
while tbey an:
lbis
neMlUS
.sy.slml, blood ~­
· is a majcX"
probting disonlers, too mucli
1em lvgnse not ooly .can
amniotic
fluid. thrush, lllld
smoking balm a women's
Jf:lriCi • iqpl Clc
urinary ttad infeclions. Risks
:-:ngO:rcat~~ associated with premam!dy
. ·~'Video gwna fans 811joo;ed a fri8l lily game d Super Smash Bros. Brawl on a Ni otelldo Wi bea1lb but smoking dQring ,
· SJ I m cUing gamer's f1i!t11 at1he De swd Mem01iaiU!r&amp;IY on lluaday. ().lar 251188. youths pegnancy cao. ~ to preg- unborn ehild. Smolriag can include.: anemia. infediou;
~ complicabons aJ!d cat1se a WOIIIal's risk of pre- bli~ deafness, intestinal
•4Bd In 1ha eo.&lt;ant. which was organized by 1he lbnlly and the C a,.~•llis .Kiwanis CUJ.
scnous . bcallb problems Ill ma111n: ruptUre of tbe mem- problems, bleeding of brain;
:
~ from tbe United ~· k also plays a role in and meolal RCIIdation.
As you can see there is nd
good reason to srnnl&lt;e wbill!
States an:
[fall
. .pre.gnant wome11 ~ • tbe smo ·
mothers
go you an: pregnant The pllll:l"ni
RIO
GRANDE
be looking for you."
are registering every day. ~ni.ted States Sloppelli~- lhrougb withdrawal :s~ ta develops hard pliices;
decreasing !be oxygen to lbl;
...
illThebclupdalated
AI1... alumnithare inbv_ited to : , . ,
baby. The niootine in ciga:
v•......,
W
p UIDDIIt:iiiLOU......_. 1oo.. Over ewe Site, 1Og · ·stillboms alllf S • · rt
..,
-:t· . •.b.•
RUes
catlseS tbe blood new Web Site where tbey ~~or sJICCi!d ev~ts and in and register, and all area .;:dncrioo in~=.~
" .
t womal · ~
9:1s
to
constrict in the Ulllbih
Can interact with other acllVIties, or !M'PlY if tbey residents and friends of the · acOOnting to tbe U S
avoid ~, hio.;i ·~
ical
cool
and tbe Clldiovas;
alumni, look for- job oppor- want~ keep m.~·
university are also eDCOUr· Health Service ,.,.:...:-.., • .. 100. 'Ibis can quse 50IJie .or
tunities, find information on
The informanon mcludes aged to look over the site.
· .__.......J'• •. 'the same poblems. ·Babiies
other alumni and keep ·alumni participalion in alb''Our al
· bould ha
least 1~ pm=t of womm m whose motbet'.s ....,... is
·-&amp; - - " '
bo
,....,_
r-_._
.
umru s
ve theUniledStatessnv*edur- : : : .
m...... die g~oo and on.fu closinJ lhl;
lwOuu"u a ut campus ~ ~· v•~ orgamza- fun with this new site," · ' .
·
,.,
lill1e:s ~ ~:1 to
.swents. •
lions or different groups on Ward said. "We're also OpCi1 . mg pregnancysii.oh oontains· .
snddrn infant de3dt syn- evidence suppol1s there IS 110
smolcing, 11 ii
. The Site has places that . campu.s. what years they to their suggestions and . ~., cnn cllemicals . ~· Od;l« .rdaled brcilb- saw: level
can only be accessed by w~ m school and what
.
d
Dllll"C. dlim *"""'
· ~ oompiirations an: bron- impOrtant to avoid · iieoond
repstered al~
~d they studied. Many alumni ' comments, ~ ~e ·Yi.anl It i.s .DOJ PoWJ;l for.~ dlilis,
~ aslb- hand smob:. Afta: bidh, it il
1
friends of the uruvers1ty, may not remember others feedbac~ on ~t. think lt sa ~w.bic:h , .o(f~ ~s . ma. Motbcrs also mcrease impOl1ant to keep lilbies in (
and abo
that simply by their names, but milly mce Slte ~ 1. hope are harmful to a developing tbl:ir risk: of lung canre.r, heart SIIIOk'e free environment peG'
are open to .t be
lie.' The will know tbem through tbe tbat '?veryooe enJOys lt and baby. However, both nioo- disease srrote and emphyse- pie should BOt smoke in tbe
•site can be
· by logging extra information about !be uses ll"
tine and cabon monoxide ma.~ Mardl of Dimes has house or car or anywlae
onto the main Rio Graode items they w~ involved
For more ~ 011 are believed to play a role ·i n done IJIIldi RT cb oo !be near tbe baby. We need to do
web site, www.rio.edu with on ~·
.
tM rn;w W~b..site or 0!' causing poor pn:gnancy risk of smokiUf lind tbey sup- an we can do to have a IIIJIP)'
&lt;httD:/Iwww.rio.edu/&gt; , and
The website also has 8 aliUfUU acttvltles at R1o outcomes.
port that oimJne and Clllbon bea1lby baby tbey descne it
clicking on the link for' . mes~e board, where Grr.uule, call Want at (800}
Smoking nearly doubles a monoxide reduce
fetal and so do you.
.
alumni and friends.
allllllpl can post COilllllents, 282-7201. For additional woman's risk of having a growth.Formoreinfurmalion
For more information coo"Everythin¥. on here is ask questions; and disCuss a informalion on alumni rela- low-birth weigh baby (less go to
http://www.uuir- tact tbe Gallia County Health
free," explamed Annette wide range of topics.
tions, upcoming events and lhan 5.5 pounds), compared chofdimes.oom.
[)qJartment at 446-8S38.
Ward, directOr of alumni
More than 200 alumni tMWilki'QIIgeoftJCIMiemic toanaverqe.of7.5pomwts
lfpregnantwomcnsmoke
R-rees: March of
relations at Rio Grande. The have already registered on programs at Rio Grtllllk, for babies born of non- less ibaii a pack pel' day. tbe Dimes and the Ohio
Site bas numerous important the new website, and more log onJo www.rio.etla.
• smokers. Preterm babies risk of delivering a low bidb Department of Health.
parts to it,. including information on upcoming Rio
Gnnde events such as tbe
~ 19 Alumni Weekend

MHealtb

pubbc'1:f.j;'

'*'

•
.
:New website at Riofl'Or a1umnt .
PAlfuRi"&gt;'o"i~ tbe_nowUnibavers~ve"ty8

.~~~

oompe~

:::=-:cSCJg~
~

- - - - - - - - - - · - - - - - .-----------------. ------

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. ~~

~ ;:!tt;'.:!; .toms~f!!"beexJ.7~~.:,', ~s
l"'lbbk

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of

...,.,IJlOI!ia,

has=••wi:r

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vities.
.
Oae pllt 1blt DilDY alumpi will WJIIIt to look vp il111e

P"~~
~

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,.;.

1ille to -

.,

;

..., ••," Ward ...,
,..,... IIIII a!umai am illvlled to lead . in their OWl!
i!N&amp; to ·~ to tbe .• .
waaa i• 1ookiD&amp; ror -...
Df Mat~ and activis;::;

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·'

•

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-.

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....
r· ..
0
'

pampus, or pictures of
alumni IICtiviti.es. Sbe is also
llcJpiq to receive &amp;ome old
JUO Grande~ to
add to tbe site.
· · "We also have job opportunities posted on one of the
pap," \Vard said.
' The job O,PPOrtunities
include· positions at Rio
Grande, as well as positions in companies and
organizations where. Rio
Grande alumni work. The
alumni are invited to post
these positions oo the Web
site in order to let otber
alumni know about these
opportunities. Even teachers are invited to post job
opportunities at their
schools.
"It's a ~place for net-

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IS OUR TOP PRIORITY

'

With the summer fast-approaching, we are pleased to offer
. ~pite ..care to the oommunity. Our team is co~mitted to

providing your loved one with the continued attention and
support they need while you are away. We ensure thai our

wllltin2," sbe added.
· The Web site will

)

also
have information posted on
tbe activities of different
alumni.
·· ''We also want tO select an
alumni of the month," Ward

.

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temporary home away from home will provide you with peace
of mind during this holiday season. You and your family are

Said

:· She is looking for .nominations for this honor and
invites alumni to e-Diail her
with the suggestions.
: The website also has linb
to
the
Rio
Grande
Bookstore so that Web
surfers can ~ Rio
Grande clothing aod .appll'el. and links to the Gmlk
Organizations on campus.
i\notber . link on tbe Web
site leads to the Uberty
Mutual site, as Liberty .
Mutual is offering sa~ ~
oppommities to tbe alumm.
Alumni can also
online gifts to tbe IIIIi~
lhrougli ·the website, and

what matters most.

• 24-hour nursing care
• Social activities
• Rehabilitation therapy services • Religious gatherings
~Secure · and safe environment
•.·Delicious meals·
...

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·

'I"

mae

~~bdtoRio

..

. All alumni ari: aked to
register on the website, and
tbe re~ poce!IS is
very simple. The ~­
!ion allows diem accets lO
all piiU ol tbe lile,llld aiJo
ioswa !bat the iDfuru!Mjoo

V&gt;

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...

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... ~

Arbors afGallipolis ·

1

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' .. REHABIUTATION
CENTER
.
'

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Che alumni n:lllioas ciffice

36'i59 Rocksprings ltoad. Pomeroy, OH 45769
wwvi.rockspringsskilled.nursing.com

bas on each gaduate is

ICalnte.

; "We ._. the ·-~
io
to the Web
6:,~anltheirsaid~or~~~;

.

lmportaat to do this in part
IN&gt; ""C **'*"'OIC else may
I

. ..

'

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740.992.6606

'

•

A NURSING AND REHABIUTATION CENTER
.
170 Pinecrest Drive . Gallipolis. 0 H J45631
~ww .gallipolisskillednursing .com
740.446.7112
•
.

•••

•

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'

PageC~
&amp;mday, May t8, 2008

COMM

Dl

6u..-a, Cillld -6enthrd

Smoking during pregnancy poses·ris~
8Y PATTY TOLER, RN ·
PROJECT 01 LCIOH
WOllEN'S HEALTH wmces
-nnRW
~ .

eo:

face increased risk of senous bcallb problems such
as: cerebral palsy, mental
retardation, an even i!tatb
If a woman SlOpS smoking
by the end of her fll'SI
trimester of ~gnancy. She
is no more likely to have a
low-binh weigh baby.
Smoking haS been associ~ wilb a n~ of ~g­
n::lj'\;ingcomplij(auons.
S
· also doubles a list
of de"e
- ' - t a .....,_
•. . · ...........
,.,via (low lying tJlacenta) aDd
placenta atxuption (m which
the placeata peels away
fro!'! the ulmls) befo~
delivery. ~ can result m

weigh baby is ioCl1C ud bj

50 percent

[f ' ~

·women smoke liiiR dian '
pack pel' day tbe list ofdeliv~
ering a low bidb wagbt blbJ.
is inm:ased by 130 pci.....
Aside from !be olber ~

In tbe UoDcd Stales more
than 20
womm
---"·
to tbe
ectopic JII"CrDC)'. oral
Oigaoiz.alioa, a
·
reduced bead size,
' similar ,.,mlw of WOIIIal in
mofiJr skills, oogniliw:
•
. odJa" OllU1IIries rrnri-e and
cancer
and
e.
v
en
about 9
· of
' ·111
pciCCIII
womeo
Babies ean ·. · also have
dew:JcJping
OOWJiries
lillllllre
increaSed bear! rate and
Many of lliese WOilJell srnnl&lt;e
blood
pn:ssure, depresSOIJ
while tbey an:
lbis
neMlUS
.sy.slml, blood ~­
· is a majcX"
probting disonlers, too mucli
1em lvgnse not ooly .can
amniotic
fluid. thrush, lllld
smoking balm a women's
Jf:lriCi • iqpl Clc
urinary ttad infeclions. Risks
:-:ngO:rcat~~ associated with premam!dy
. ·~'Video gwna fans 811joo;ed a fri8l lily game d Super Smash Bros. Brawl on a Ni otelldo Wi bea1lb but smoking dQring ,
· SJ I m cUing gamer's f1i!t11 at1he De swd Mem01iaiU!r&amp;IY on lluaday. ().lar 251188. youths pegnancy cao. ~ to preg- unborn ehild. Smolriag can include.: anemia. infediou;
~ complicabons aJ!d cat1se a WOIIIal's risk of pre- bli~ deafness, intestinal
•4Bd In 1ha eo.&lt;ant. which was organized by 1he lbnlly and the C a,.~•llis .Kiwanis CUJ.
scnous . bcallb problems Ill ma111n: ruptUre of tbe mem- problems, bleeding of brain;
:
~ from tbe United ~· k also plays a role in and meolal RCIIdation.
As you can see there is nd
good reason to srnnl&lt;e wbill!
States an:
[fall
. .pre.gnant wome11 ~ • tbe smo ·
mothers
go you an: pregnant The pllll:l"ni
RIO
GRANDE
be looking for you."
are registering every day. ~ni.ted States Sloppelli~- lhrougb withdrawal :s~ ta develops hard pliices;
decreasing !be oxygen to lbl;
...
illThebclupdalated
AI1... alumnithare inbv_ited to : , . ,
baby. The niootine in ciga:
v•......,
W
p UIDDIIt:iiiLOU......_. 1oo.. Over ewe Site, 1Og · ·stillboms alllf S • · rt
..,
-:t· . •.b.•
RUes
catlseS tbe blood new Web Site where tbey ~~or sJICCi!d ev~ts and in and register, and all area .;:dncrioo in~=.~
" .
t womal · ~
9:1s
to
constrict in the Ulllbih
Can interact with other acllVIties, or !M'PlY if tbey residents and friends of the · acOOnting to tbe U S
avoid ~, hio.;i ·~
ical
cool
and tbe Clldiovas;
alumni, look for- job oppor- want~ keep m.~·
university are also eDCOUr· Health Service ,.,.:...:-.., • .. 100. 'Ibis can quse 50IJie .or
tunities, find information on
The informanon mcludes aged to look over the site.
· .__.......J'• •. 'the same poblems. ·Babiies
other alumni and keep ·alumni participalion in alb''Our al
· bould ha
least 1~ pm=t of womm m whose motbet'.s ....,... is
·-&amp; - - " '
bo
,....,_
r-_._
.
umru s
ve theUniledStatessnv*edur- : : : .
m...... die g~oo and on.fu closinJ lhl;
lwOuu"u a ut campus ~ ~· v•~ orgamza- fun with this new site," · ' .
·
,.,
lill1e:s ~ ~:1 to
.swents. •
lions or different groups on Ward said. "We're also OpCi1 . mg pregnancysii.oh oontains· .
snddrn infant de3dt syn- evidence suppol1s there IS 110
smolcing, 11 ii
. The Site has places that . campu.s. what years they to their suggestions and . ~., cnn cllemicals . ~· Od;l« .rdaled brcilb- saw: level
can only be accessed by w~ m school and what
.
d
Dllll"C. dlim *"""'
· ~ oompiirations an: bron- impOrtant to avoid · iieoond
repstered al~
~d they studied. Many alumni ' comments, ~ ~e ·Yi.anl It i.s .DOJ PoWJ;l for.~ dlilis,
~ aslb- hand smob:. Afta: bidh, it il
1
friends of the uruvers1ty, may not remember others feedbac~ on ~t. think lt sa ~w.bic:h , .o(f~ ~s . ma. Motbcrs also mcrease impOl1ant to keep lilbies in (
and abo
that simply by their names, but milly mce Slte ~ 1. hope are harmful to a developing tbl:ir risk: of lung canre.r, heart SIIIOk'e free environment peG'
are open to .t be
lie.' The will know tbem through tbe tbat '?veryooe enJOys lt and baby. However, both nioo- disease srrote and emphyse- pie should BOt smoke in tbe
•site can be
· by logging extra information about !be uses ll"
tine and cabon monoxide ma.~ Mardl of Dimes has house or car or anywlae
onto the main Rio Graode items they w~ involved
For more ~ 011 are believed to play a role ·i n done IJIIldi RT cb oo !be near tbe baby. We need to do
web site, www.rio.edu with on ~·
.
tM rn;w W~b..site or 0!' causing poor pn:gnancy risk of smokiUf lind tbey sup- an we can do to have a IIIJIP)'
&lt;httD:/Iwww.rio.edu/&gt; , and
The website also has 8 aliUfUU acttvltles at R1o outcomes.
port that oimJne and Clllbon bea1lby baby tbey descne it
clicking on the link for' . mes~e board, where Grr.uule, call Want at (800}
Smoking nearly doubles a monoxide reduce
fetal and so do you.
.
alumni and friends.
allllllpl can post COilllllents, 282-7201. For additional woman's risk of having a growth.Formoreinfurmalion
For more information coo"Everythin¥. on here is ask questions; and disCuss a informalion on alumni rela- low-birth weigh baby (less go to
http://www.uuir- tact tbe Gallia County Health
free," explamed Annette wide range of topics.
tions, upcoming events and lhan 5.5 pounds), compared chofdimes.oom.
[)qJartment at 446-8S38.
Ward, directOr of alumni
More than 200 alumni tMWilki'QIIgeoftJCIMiemic toanaverqe.of7.5pomwts
lfpregnantwomcnsmoke
R-rees: March of
relations at Rio Grande. The have already registered on programs at Rio Grtllllk, for babies born of non- less ibaii a pack pel' day. tbe Dimes and the Ohio
Site bas numerous important the new website, and more log onJo www.rio.etla.
• smokers. Preterm babies risk of delivering a low bidb Department of Health.
parts to it,. including information on upcoming Rio
Gnnde events such as tbe
~ 19 Alumni Weekend

MHealtb

pubbc'1:f.j;'

'*'

•
.
:New website at Riofl'Or a1umnt .
PAlfuRi"&gt;'o"i~ tbe_nowUnibavers~ve"ty8

.~~~

oompe~

:::=-:cSCJg~
~

- - - - - - - - - - · - - - - - .-----------------. ------

.-

.. .

--·

-

--

=

=i!fm
. ~~

~ ;:!tt;'.:!; .toms~f!!"beexJ.7~~.:,', ~s
l"'lbbk

==-~~:::=
of

...,.,IJlOI!ia,

has=••wi:r

·

.

vities.
.
Oae pllt 1blt DilDY alumpi will WJIIIt to look vp il111e

P"~~
~

.

,.;.

1ille to -

.,

;

..., ••," Ward ...,
,..,... IIIII a!umai am illvlled to lead . in their OWl!
i!N&amp; to ·~ to tbe .• .
waaa i• 1ookiD&amp; ror -...
Df Mat~ and activis;::;

.

·'

•

'

-.

...

....
r· ..
0
'

pampus, or pictures of
alumni IICtiviti.es. Sbe is also
llcJpiq to receive &amp;ome old
JUO Grande~ to
add to tbe site.
· · "We also have job opportunities posted on one of the
pap," \Vard said.
' The job O,PPOrtunities
include· positions at Rio
Grande, as well as positions in companies and
organizations where. Rio
Grande alumni work. The
alumni are invited to post
these positions oo the Web
site in order to let otber
alumni know about these
opportunities. Even teachers are invited to post job
opportunities at their
schools.
"It's a ~place for net-

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•J~!·"·

.•o:' .

:
a
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IS OUR TOP PRIORITY

'

With the summer fast-approaching, we are pleased to offer
. ~pite ..care to the oommunity. Our team is co~mitted to

providing your loved one with the continued attention and
support they need while you are away. We ensure thai our

wllltin2," sbe added.
· The Web site will

)

also
have information posted on
tbe activities of different
alumni.
·· ''We also want tO select an
alumni of the month," Ward

.

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temporary home away from home will provide you with peace
of mind during this holiday season. You and your family are

Said

:· She is looking for .nominations for this honor and
invites alumni to e-Diail her
with the suggestions.
: The website also has linb
to
the
Rio
Grande
Bookstore so that Web
surfers can ~ Rio
Grande clothing aod .appll'el. and links to the Gmlk
Organizations on campus.
i\notber . link on tbe Web
site leads to the Uberty
Mutual site, as Liberty .
Mutual is offering sa~ ~
oppommities to tbe alumm.
Alumni can also
online gifts to tbe IIIIi~
lhrougli ·the website, and

what matters most.

• 24-hour nursing care
• Social activities
• Rehabilitation therapy services • Religious gatherings
~Secure · and safe environment
•.·Delicious meals·
...

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'I"

mae

~~bdtoRio

..

. All alumni ari: aked to
register on the website, and
tbe re~ poce!IS is
very simple. The ~­
!ion allows diem accets lO
all piiU ol tbe lile,llld aiJo
ioswa !bat the iDfuru!Mjoo

V&gt;

.,

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...

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Arbors afGallipolis ·

1

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' .. REHABIUTATION
CENTER
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Che alumni n:lllioas ciffice

36'i59 Rocksprings ltoad. Pomeroy, OH 45769
wwvi.rockspringsskilled.nursing.com

bas on each gaduate is

ICalnte.

; "We ._. the ·-~
io
to the Web
6:,~anltheirsaid~or~~~;

.

lmportaat to do this in part
IN&gt; ""C **'*"'OIC else may
I

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740.992.6606

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A NURSING AND REHABIUTATION CENTER
.
170 Pinecrest Drive . Gallipolis. 0 H J45631
~ww .gallipolisskillednursing .com
740.446.7112
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iaaurli~·itntintl DOWN .ON THE

PageD2

FARM

Undercover

Sundl.y, May 18, 2008

~EXTENSION NEWS.;
How does your lawn look today?
BY HAL KHEal
How is your lawn;s
appearance? Are die weeds
growing f aster than the.
grass? Now is the time to
apply a weed and feed application to control the
broadleaf weeds in your
lawn and to feed the grass to
grow into the space left by
die dying weeds. If you have
already aeplied lawn fmilizer use a liquid berbicide.
The re8son for waiting
until now, is so \!lal sufficient
babicide lands on the weed
bf swflloe to be absorbed
into the plant for bella" weed
Cllllllol. ·Read label insuuctions bef~ app1 · • Some
to-bed r:rJ!fto;;.:.
wben.

~it
........

~;-wt;;;
weed leaVes are moist sa the
.dry chemical is absorbed
tbrough the bf area Note
that sooie bcabicides require
twenty four to forty ciJdJt
bours of &lt;ky weaiiJer aAer

Qr:rtbune - Serttinel CLASSI.FIED

rum is exttcmely difficult to
control as it produces lots of
seed and widerground dllZOiliCS (roots).lf you anempt
to dig up the plant and
pan of the root system, it reo
sprouts. Control of Ibis plant
mquires a lot of wort: and
patience. Cut the weed down
now and cootinue to cut it
every two or lhree weeks. A
scythe or lawnmower work;i
wen. This will reduce tht
weed's ability · to send op
new sprouts and 'reduce food
for further growth. Ill mi4August or early September,
spray the young growth with
a gl)11SQphare product (like
Round-up) or one of its simi1ar sister products. Tn tbe
late summer the chemical
will ttanslocate into the root
system and kill . the
plant.Remember
that
seedlings will sprout next
year however cutting die
area every oouple of weeks
will control its growth.

allow

E~l

classified@mydailytribune.corn

.........- - - - -·_ _ _ _Or
:;.;.,;Foiiiiiiiu To

r
r .. IBrincte-..............
..,__
~

Olllo YliiiiW
p. bill···
..

This

. eow.61f

Back

Upcoming

.Some wine grape grow~rs turning to dry farming _methods

r.n:e

Farm:

C-s..

-

Njodor_..,

3ld AMual KCHS Alumri
Reunion 1958-1989, May
24, llpm-1am Moose lodge

lnlo 446-3488 or67~1

-;;;;;;;;;a;;c·;;i·~;.a
IIIICII'h?' c.l, we'l

S

_....._ J....JG-MJI

,r

74NIIHI5II. - · · - ....,...
gol HOIEYlllllll

~

(304) 675-1333

992·2157

GlvfAwAY

cc-

2

Can Coil Collect

Equipmonl

r·O

Tachnkjan tor Farm ..c1/or
Lawn Eqoi!lment mpair &amp;
maintenance. MuS1 have
experience. Mustbeableto
use oompute!' on a limited
basis. Competitive wages,

• 10n
~

.

-puppies,--mllisd--braed-.-

.

7

wi&lt;S old. 1 male 1 ~1188

female Siamese

of Fnat/We.

·

1nGall~oMs740-446-405t
.

r
r:

I
~:::::::::::=~·
YAIID SAlE

• "'"'Y """' - . miiOid ~
breo&lt;f In , _ of loving
h&lt;xnes. 2 (M), 2 If). 446- lafgo
1765 Of ~1..Sl03
O.H

.

kill-.
calloo&amp; tiger
-..o1n

YAID S,uF,.
G~

-lOPYanl

s,. -""fU'V
--

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*&amp;!nut

&amp;tripe&lt;~.

I.Jd1 Chance. Booullful blad&lt;
Lab mix puppiK, 2 112 mo
old, 4(FI 3 (M), healthy &amp;
play!U. &lt;41.0365

CLASSIFIED INDEX

. : ....... For S.le •.••••....•_, ______________ ___ ____,,, 725

Announcernenl .•..••••.•...•.•••..••...••••-·-···· .. 030
Anllqueo ....................................................... 53D
Apabuontw for Ron1._..___................. 4411
Auction ond
Auto Parta a Ac c.n•DiiM~-···--··--···· 780
Auto Ropolr-.............................................- .7711
Autos for s.le .........................................-110
f -&amp;llotoraforS.Ie ..........._ , _...... 75D
:· Building
-550
, Buill.-- Bullcllnga...........- :&gt;.......... MD
' B u - ~................................ .210·
: Buot-Trailnlng .................................... 14D

Flea--.. . . . . .... . ..__

s....-.......................... ..........

.' c.nplng
C.•peo•·--....................
_..:710
Equlpmenl ................................... 710
• c.rdo &lt;11 ~ .........................................010
; Oolld/Eidol1y C... ....................................... IIO

; F' ct1ca""-"igei.tlot1.... - ..........................140
• Equl_,t far .....................................:• F....,
Elu:aualll.
··-··········································~. .
Eq~............... .........................110
, • F.....,ofar RenL ..........................................430
• F.....,olor S.le ................................. ............ 330

................................................. 110

; -lmpoo...n-t-.............,;........."........810

. - f a r S.le ............................................ 310
. -~ ............ ................,......... 510
: Hou8osf"fRonl-......::................................ 410
.................. _ .........:................0.20

............~ ....... _ ............................ 130

. l...nm &amp; Garden FqnlpF"'"..rt- .••~................. 160:

U\e.e ck ..............................................- .....830

..__ ........................................ 010
Lola &amp; Ac:o-. ...........................- .............. 350
: - -............................................. 1711

. - - -.........................540

·
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Moblle-Aopotr....................................eeo
Mobile - f a r Ron1 ...............................420
.Mobile- for s.le................................S20
llonoy to .._............................ .................. 220

: l!lolu&amp;c,_ 6 4 -

....................- ...740

. MuslcallnabWfteaa•ls ................................... 570

·-lor

. - 1. ..................................................... 005
Selo ...................................... ......... SIO
PI-ng 6lloello1Q .............................. ..... I20
Pwofslllonaf Sill.r1cls ......:••.••••..••.••.•. .... _ •. 230
· TV 6 CBIIoipolr ..........................- ..180 .

, _... e.t.t. WwaW ..........................._.;_ ... aea

.._.w.-.
....:. . . . . . . . ,.. ...........
. .. . - ..,_lor Ronl..............................
lor-.
. . .........................
... . . . .
. Upl\ai""'
L.............. .:.. .. .. .. .....
-.1211

. SpontngQooda ......................................- .. 520

· IUV'olor : 1'nlclui

............................................120
715

I70
. ;.; le..............................................730
: Ira kJto Buy ........:.:...........- ..............-0111
Wwttlcl to Buy- F.-m Set~ pU11 ...........,.__ ao

· , _ T o Oo ....................................... - ... 110
' liiMntod to Ron1 ............................................470
Y

s..Pt;; PI ill

ill

nt .............................- 071

.

Repair

lloiJIIr Selliw c- C..l&lt;r is a Five Slar
Fa:ility aJMI .,. are lookilt&amp; f« ........,.,..
Wloo ID ....., a d i l l ' - O..t ...,

bul;;·~d

paid

AlmuooA""e

G~

Help Wan1ed

,....inf ,

1-877-4634247

FOOD LAND

Ert2347

Now Accepting Experienced

war

Department Head and Store
Management Resumes

to eam

Call Marilyn :ll0-682·2645 .

PRODUCE- MEAT· DAIRY· DEU- AND

Help Wanted

Local Positions, Good Be11elits
and CompeiiHwe Pay

Help Wanted

Send Resu- to: .

FOODLAND
P.O. BOX769
GALLIPOLIS; OHIO 45631

Holzer Medi&lt;al Cenfer-Vallipolis is seeking part
time Food Service: Aides. Duties of this position ·
include pert'orming basic food preparation: dish
room and pot and pan duties; patienl tray delivery.
Shifts would ioctude 6:00am - ~; 30 pm or 10:30
am -7:00pm.
Required Qualifications are: High School
graduate or equivalent preferred . ·EK-perience is
preferred. Must demonstrale accounlabilily and
pride irr the job and the organizatiou.
If !nterested, please contact

HUMAN RESOUllCF.S
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER·
GALLIPOLIS
tOOJ-Piie

ELECTRICIAN
aruu-timeE~&lt;M:ian .

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

POSITIONS AVAILABLE FOR
COTA, OTRIL, LPT, AND SLP
Full-time position for COTA with
Syllergy Rehab Solutions. LLC, a new
Soulhem Ohio contract Rehab company.
Join the Synergy learn at Overbrook Care
Center, a beautiful Comprehensive rehab
SNF in Middlepon. Ohio. Also
.
interviewing for pan-time or per diem
OTR/L, LPT, and SLP.

Synergy Rehab Solutions, LLC
11664 Gallia Pike. PO Box 222
Wheelersburg, Ohio 45694
800-577-4310

.

Qualifications: Either trade school,
apprenti~hip program. or on the job training as
an electrician is required .

Help W.med

,:;:::::::::::::.::::::::::::=:;:
,

Primary rcsporl~ibilities include testing and
repairing of eled:ricaJ t.quipmenr; Installing new
equipment and using the building managemen1
oompu1er sys1em. Additional duties as needed to
support the overall function of the Maintenance

BODY SHOP
·A SSISTANT .

The seleded candidole will assist with
estimating, sd!eduling, and other dulies as
needed. Must hoVe el\Cellent customer
relolion skilk. Must be detail orienJed.
Experience in body shop work preferred
but not reqvited. Full time posihon wilh
generous benefits. Immediate opening.
Pleose wbrnit resume to:
MID Me d. lolly. Sltllp ManaJt

D.nw.oclfonl
Interested 1ndividuals may contact:

Human Resources DepartJnent

Holzer Medical Center
tOO Jackson Pike
Gallipolis. OH 4563 1
Phon&lt;: (740) 446-5 105
F.,: (740)446·5106

areA day and evening shift
avail.w.e . lea...e message

740-441-7360

illformalioa call Bull ~.
IJiredDr ol H . - Kesourtes for Lool£
'l&lt;ml Cale· at 74Cht41·~· . email - at
petenoD@holr.a'Mg, or rlsll us on..., web
F.- -

at ....................

. F.qul Opportuaity Elliptoy..-

Help Wanted

HelpWantlcl

KENT-2-0WN
. SlaJ1ing Pay
$U0-$12.tl0/hr.
+Health Insurance
t401K

Help Wanted

Holzer Medical Center. Gallipolis, OH is :;eeking

Experience: At leas~ two years perfonning
-elec,trician duties.
·

.-ram seeldng full

time...- emploree. MUS!
have '81 least 3 years tood
prep experienoe. Btdwell

+Profit Snaring

NOW HIRING

* Management

• Customer Sales
• Collection•

Md/or lledh::al ••artre
Pleasant Valley Hospital is cunently
accepting applications for a full time
Licensed Practical Nurse and/or Medical
Asst. for a new physician office. LPN's
must have cunent West Virginia license.
Send resumes to:
P!trrt v.ley lloipital
cJo Hu- "-c:es

* Delivery

l5ZG Valley DriiN!

.~uaily 1o Gro..!

Apply online
www.r2o.com
Or apply at any
RENT-2-0WN
Help Wanted

at 740-992-6472 or 740-357-{l4()5 .

Help Wanted

Dqlanmeor.

r

POintPiasMit. wv 25550
Or!ax:
38H75-fi75. or applr on-line at
aa Ofitaler-011
'

AA/EOE
HelpW.med

HelpWamed

Call Cynthia Campbell , Rehab Director

Gallipolis, OH 45631
- : (741)446-SltJi
EOFJADA Employer

HelpWanled

Busy

STORE MANAGEMENT

NEEDED IMMEDIATELY .
FOOD SERVICE AIDE

IS

AOON(RN)
IIN-PT
LPN-Ff .
STNA-PT
Residmt !ienices I Adivili&lt;s- Ff

Home 740-992 5023
.
•

Help Wanted .

1· 1.cam

CeiiTodarl

"r"Y 8

s;m.

hoi~.

)ohiiC8mlictlaeiOc:araq.a:m

~

............. to

Fax 74!H46-9104 or Email H e l p - 111 Oars! Home

Full Ben8fi1s

. lalla ala Ntructlon.....................................110

. ..... 'Pl.m. Fertt- ......................- ..... .

I

P•cle · 1nal Work

An ExceRent

: Forl.oue ..................................................... ...
• For s.le....................................................... l l l
• For "'· ~..... - .................................510
~ Fruita &amp; 'Vegata:bl-..................................... 510
! Fumlohod R_,. ......- ..- ..................... 450
; Houllng ......... _._ ...._ .................l90

: =:;:::::::::::::::::::::=:::::::::::::::::::::::::
:
Holy • Grlln .................................................l40

u.ur,_
.our
nJtt.~ .. a.:v

money. The New A\1011 .

4898

Glvoawal'. 2 Female miiOid
·lleli(jlo 7 M. old f'ulipjas.
740-909-2188.

.

Cenler
.
Day ond EYO!liig Shifls
-

254 f'&lt;l&lt;1er Ad.

Free lo good home, beautiful
kill8ns, litter I!Bined. 446-

' -

imrnedialoly. Bam2pm. Mir1irum of $30. per
&lt;loy. BronQa &lt;46-2451

SI.IQihaur FT + banus modern
~~.
~......s
I!Bin_ .. .,._ .., &amp;hop,
_,...., continuous
lng. health insuranoe.
OUiboondllnbound Cal
mal...,_ fl!ti19fllef11 oor11fi-

- - - - - - - bool&lt;caw.
Fruo Good Female Hunting er &amp; _,and, !able &amp;
Dog Please call 304-675- chairs, beds, a lot at ~.
3686
rNsc., oanRIIf*'ll for evory- - - - - - - MO. May 191h &amp; 20111, Spmfi9e 10 good homo, boaullfiJI Bpm. E"'"'))hing must go!

' Iii -

1r•

lbuWMm&gt;

Moving: 2 handy workers

I

I

LOST:

' ~·
ty et181getiC. 675-215

Help -

~

1~..r·_IIDJ'_w._-_.,.~1 r• _lbuWANIDJ 1r•

I

apay9d

•
'
:
•
:
•
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IIDJoWMm&gt;

13 -

1 yr old Labla.Qoodle, Cat 600 -

vn

j

l\egt~ter

Tenio&lt; &amp; Pug Absolute TOll Dollar • si· Aocopting
lor
old. -/gold
coins,
any pao1-lime - . muot be
.-.go. IOK/1«/181&lt; gold jowelr'j, ......... 1o _ . all slifts.
Cal379-2467
- 1 gold, pn&gt; 1935 US nophonocalsplease, ;IP!Jiy
curiancy. proof/mln1 sets. 111 Par Mar t39 af '2264
,.,~
l.oiUNI
dioiKH«&lt;s: MTS. Coin Sh&lt;lfl._ 5eaJnd s( Mason, WV' flf
F01NJ
151 2nd Awnue, Gallipolis. Par Mar m 1547 Nye - ·
.f.46..2SI2
PDmeroy, Oh
loot . ~ 1o G
.
------•
_,a b " "Orman
,l,~f All ......, To0 Buy
N'nha.
" ' - Wanled 1o buy Junk Car&gt;
·
.
·
.or
Alfoed/;;,arwal~w/Shade: coli 740-388~,. W ...; SeH. Shirlol' Spem, 304klendly, .-ani (740)696- . , _ ,, leave, a message. _67_5-_1429_._ _ __
mix~

Ylftl GeiHpolio...................................on
s.a1 Pomaao 1 ~t~lcktle ......,..................074

•

Or Fu To

.1t ~~ 1t''

GlwAWAY

•.

Cows-Steady

446 30118

Mole -

Fed Cattle
j

~..mydailyregister.com

Monday thru Friday
:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

Feeder Cattle-Steady

.

www.mydailytribune.corn
www.mydailysentinel.corn

OearltirM

l.IvFsTOCK REPoRT

·'

Websites:

Sentinel

.ca,;...":w... ·(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156

·Gallipolis FF1\ chapter places in·skills contest

'

Qtrtbune

To. Pia~

~don't 'waDi to use

Meigs Co=ty citizens,
berbici~ ~ou can dig out the .seventeen year periodic
the dandelions, thistle and cicadas are not emel"(!ing
Make: to from Meigs County soil in
sever&amp;\ fuches of 2008 but will be emerging i!J
.
.
.
c ,•
..., ~
- ~~~,J
root or, tbe Weeds will 2016, we are pan of BrOOd
These young trees, located at the comer of Third Avenue ~ Locust Street In Gallipoli!f; t.ave b9en ()(Mlied in a
~ ~th several new V. However, Gallia Count)'
of plastic as a means of protection against the uplioming outbreak of locusts or cica~; ·e~ed around ~.region
stems. Weeds like creeping homeowners ·near Rio
ing the next several weeks.
·
.. •
Charlie, clover and speed- Grande and south are
•
well can be' pulled out by included in the Brood XIV,
hand. In II))' youth, we which is emerging this yeat.
received 50 cents a bushel Brood XIV takes in an area
basket. full, however today, from the eastern part of
it may be few dollars if the . Cincinnati
. to
the
kids
or
gnmdchildren
are
Gallia1Mei$s
County
line.
GALLIPOLIS The
enlisted to help. In any case,· The extension office has a
Gallipolis FFA Chapter
most weedy la'wns will need fact sheet, HYG 2137-,
recently sent 11 members to
to have weeds removed for "Periodical and Dog Day·
participate in the Skills
a
second or third time Cicadas" available, giving
Classic
Career
bef&lt;n the summer is over.
belpful hints as to how tO
Development Event. The
distract
the pest from attack'Skills Classic allows special
Mexii:an
bamboo
or
ing
small
twigs of shrubs
population students the
Japanese
knotweed
is
and
trees.
Access the fact
opport!lnity to
ll~~~~:~~:all aloug the sheet via internet www.ohi~
against other sbldents
H
nvaftunt Oliile.osu:eau or arop11y oiir
same ability level in
priis~i:s.
This
is
the weed office to pick U{' a ccpy. . :
ic agricultural related SJ(ll.IS.
has
a
stein
that
looks
(Hill Klue11 11 tiN Mrift
Ann Saxon parti.cipated in
like a jointed cane, with Co•IIIJ EIIIICtiiDr for
Personal Finance. This CDE
gteen
oblong leaves, and A.fritultun,
NIIIUnd
area allowed the contestant
white
flowers
in
tbe
middle
Resoureallltd
eo-..iq
· to demonstrate banking
of the sum!neJ:.•This invasive J)ne/spltU.IIl, 0/Uo Stau
sk:ills as well as sk:ills in
weed, Polygonium cuspida- Uilinrrily &amp;uui111t.}
.
making change.
Brandon Welch participated in Hand Lawn
Mowing. This area required
the cuntestant to demonstia_te his ability to safely
and efficiently use a hand
GAUIPOUS - Ullild PrtNluun l~te. IIUII'bt
lawn mower. .
r~Jf1011 fro• Gallipolis for silks collllucud · 011
Trevor Bryan and Adrian
Werbte..,, Mt11 14.
·
SlitliriiiW .,._
Miller participated in Small
Engines. This area allowed Mel!lbers of the Gallipolis FFA chapter seen here competed in the recent Skills Classic
the members to demonstrate Career Development Event, where the team placed second overall in Ohio.
275-415 lbs., SteerS, $80-$115, Heifers, $75-$114;
their ability to identify
425-525
lbs., Steers, $80-$1128, Heifers, $75-$100;
and
testant to participate in a job construction, and- lawn" Amphibians,
small engine parts.
550-625 lbs., Steers, $80-$105, Heifers, $75-$92; 650Frogsffoads.
Adrian
Miller
and interview and· to demon- maintenance.
725 lbs., ·Steers, $75-$95, Heifers, $75-$90; 750-850
· Courtney .Saxon participate strate the ota1 and written
Jessica Northup and · Olivia Thomas and
lbs., Steers, $75-$90, Heifers, $70-$85. ·
ed in the· (Floriculture) skills needed when. applying Olivia Thomas participated Chelsea Wickline particiCorsage Making. This CDE for a job.
in Animal Care. This is pated in the Aquarium .
' .
allowed the contestants to
Kevin Bostic participated where contestants demon- Management Contest. 'Ibis
demonstrate their ability in in the Painting and Ladder strate their animal identifi- required the contestants .to .
(Second WNI..,.,ay of the month)
.identifying tools, materjals, Safety. This CDE ~ows the cation skills as well as their demonstrate their ability to
design greens, and cut contestants .to demonstrate knowledge .of animal man- identify Tropical Fish and
Choice - Steers, ~; Heifers, $87-$92. ·
.S elect- Steers, $83-$86; Hcifen, $82-$85.
Aquarium Equipment.
flowers used in the retail their"capjJbility to prepare a · agement.
The team placed second
Holsteins - Steers, $~$75:SO.
Ann Saxon and Chelsea
floriculture
industry. surface for painting, use
Contestants also demon- painting tools, paint a sur- Wickline participated in overall in the state of Ohio.
strated their ability to con- face, clean up a painting the Meats ldenllfication. Courtney Saxon placed first
sl.rul:t a three flower cor. area, and use a ladder.
CDE allows the con- in Corsage. Jessjca Northup ·
Well-Musc1ediFieshed, $54-$64.
sage using basic principles
Cody lewis participated testants to demonstrate placed second in Job
Medium/Lean, $46-$53.
practiced by the floricul- in the Commercial Lawn their ability to identify var· Interview. Ann Saxon
.
1bin/Light,
$35-$45.
placed first in Personal
- ture industry.
Mowing contest. where he ious meat cuts.
Bulls,
$55-$68.
.
Brandon Welch and identified mowing equipCody Lewis participated Finance. Cody Lewis placi:d
Courtney Saxon participat- · ment and performed safe in the Natural Resources second in Commercial
to the
Identification. This CDE Lawn Mowing. , Ol.ivia
ed in the Flower and equipment operation.
Vegetable Identification
Trevor ' 'Bryan and Justin allows the contestants to Thomas placed first in:
~ S3S0-$16C,l; ·~
$240-$775; ·
area where they demonstrat- Northup participated in the demonstrate their ability to Animal Care .and 5eOOOd ia ' Baby c.Ms,'$5&gt;.$240;· ~·~$130; LIIDbs, $115ed their ability to identify Tractor Operation. This identify Mammals, Non- Aquarium Ma~U~gement.
dn.; Hop,- $35-dn. ·
' . .
·
.
Gamebirds, Chelsea Wickline placed
flower and vegetable plants. CDE allows the contestants Gamebirds,
Jessica Northup partici- to demonstrate abilities Wildflowers, Food/Shrubs, second
in
Meat
'spedals:
pated in the Job Interview. learned in the operation of Marsh
and
Aquatics, Identification and frrst in ·
· This area required the coo- tractors used in agriculture, Undesirables, . Reptiles/ Aquarium management. ·
Ohio approved feeder sale,lO a.m. Wednesday, May 21. :
.Direct sales and free on-fann visits.
.
Manure free to haul a~ay.
For more mformation, call DeWayne at (740) 339-.
0241 ~ Stacy at (304) 634-0224. Visit the website at .
www.u)iroduci:ts.com.
intensely · flavored grapes I)' cultivated, mUlched and
BY MICHELLE LOCKE
old traditions.
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
"What you find out is and wines; too little water kept under close scrutiny. ·
grape yioes are incredibly leads to raisins.
"Oh, it's filthy, dirty wort."
KENWOOD, Calif. · - . adaptable," said Thomas.
. W\IIDPle, who has studied Williams said. with a JUefu1
Vmeyard ·manager Steve . At the 600-acre Kunde irrigation. techniques for : !au~ The reward, be
Thotpa;s grasps the.lnJ!!k of 11 Estate, about 100 acres are years, sees irrigation as a·u:;e- believes, "is wines 'm uchz.iliflindel vine. a redwood of dry-farmed . The rest are fill tool in the winegrower's deeply connected to the soj1,
:the vineyard, gnarled with asc grown coilvcntionall.y.
arsenal. althoilgh he agrees wines much full« in 11avot!1 · •
and planted in the days whcit
WlllC grapes are grown careful Water management Is . Thomas says dry farmiq
irtiption meant a ~I of without artificial irrigation critical bec•nsc of concerns is also about rnn.;....;,..;. to
the past.
...,..,._-- •
water on a lxne-drawn c.vt. in parts of lhc W!X'ld such as about climate change.
The work hones and Cll'tl Spain aild FraDce, where
"The challenge is under·
lfe uses a tnJck, not a
li.'e IOIJIJODC. But these old 10111e reJions have laws for· atandina how to best utilize · horse, to naviaate the twiltl
zin vines at Kunde Batate in blddlns use of lniaatlon, water as a management and turns of the terraced .,_
vineyards of Kunde Eltate.
Sonoma County still set aald Roben Wample, chair· tool,'' he said.
Dry farming starts before But sometimes when hc'1
their water the old falh- of the viticulture and enoloioned way, from rain, dew IY at California State the vlnea n planted, said out in the fields &amp;eeiDJ how
John Williams, founder and the vlne.slll'e doiDJ, he dliJW
iuld 1 ~root system. . Univ_enity, Fresno.
They
it "dry fll'l!lina."
Dry faimina: in Cllifomia wlnemaker It the Frog's Leap about past vineyard wOibn.
''When I visualize a flmil)'
which is what qriculture it uniuual. altfiouah there Is 1 winery in the Napa Valley and
member out here at the tum Of
used 10 be before plastic ho&amp;cs trencUoward ulina: len water. a chainplon of diy farming.
Fanning dry means more the cenrury behind a hone,
booked up to a water supply
"We're leamfng ·to be
made deserts bloom. A few much more precise early in than Just not irrigating, plowing thls thing, thai's pn!tthink
vintners are returning to it
the growing season so we Williams said. "It's an ty incredible when
fact
They are driven by con- can contto[ the vegetative active 'form of preserving about it," he said..
moisture
in
the
ground
so
that
they're
pruning
the
same
cems over dwindling water growth, minimize the total
supplies, the belief it pro- water consumption and then you don't need to irrigate." vines aixi worrying about the
That tUrn.s out to involve same thin~s, frost and whatevduces wore intensely fla- follow that with good manvomffruit, and, in Kunde'.s agement practices," he said. getti.ng up close and personal er else, _this is a kind of comcase, by a desire to rerum to
Less water means more with dirt as fields are careful- mibnent that's passionalc:"

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS '

830 East State S11eet. Ath,ns, OH 45701
for more inlormotioo you may contact

MaR Dillard al f7.401 589-3636 or

mdillordOdonwood.com
Also on the web ot www.don wood .com

Nurses
There is no need to drive so far for omploymeat ..-. you hove
Ro&lt;J&lt;sprinp Rehab ill your bad&lt; yard! .Save gas money and we will
pay for your insurulot dllling your 90-&lt;lay introductory period!
Exrilillg Opportunilieo and AC haa&lt;e to Make a llilfeoeooe
Caring for others who are often unabit• to care for rhemst"ll·es is an
importcmt job: OIU' thai requirt'.s skills of a different nature ...indil,iduais
who arr kn ah·ledge(Jblt and...J.:ompa:iSi(male can lfl[n.drdioory
situatlori.\' into remnrkobfe orhii!w~mrms.
..

....

M•

"

As a leading provider of short.tenn subacqte and rehabilitative
services. as well as long tenn healthcare. Extendicare Health Services
is seeking RN 's and LPN's wbo want to make a difference caring for
othefs. We currently have opportunities avai)able for caring individuals

at Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center located in Pomeroy. We are
looking for profesl'lionals committed to providing excellent post acute
rehabilitation and post surgery ser"' ice~ 10 residents rr.rnsitioning hack
home after being discharged from .tbe hospiu l as well as residents
requiring long tenn care.
If yoo po5oess the following qualiriClltiorui:
• Excellent clinical skills
• Compassion and customer service

• The a~ilif)' and desire to perl'o nn in a fast-~ environment
• Strong leadership skills
ADd
are looking for die cbance to makt a d l l r -; ~ .,UI
to
to yop!
.
PI?""' comacr: .
Debbie Waylalld, Stafllng Coordinalor
l'lloM: (740) 99~

you

If"

Fu:: 740-991-26711

E.O.E.

OONWOOD
AUTOMOnVE

-·-

Or apply"' ......... at!
36759 .Ro&lt;ksprillp Rd.
l'omtn&gt;y. Ott 4S769
E~: lendicarc

Heall h Sel'\lites is a.n equal oppnrtunit)' employer encouraging
wort lace di\'ersi

�••

iaaurli~·itntintl DOWN .ON THE

PageD2

FARM

Undercover

Sundl.y, May 18, 2008

~EXTENSION NEWS.;
How does your lawn look today?
BY HAL KHEal
How is your lawn;s
appearance? Are die weeds
growing f aster than the.
grass? Now is the time to
apply a weed and feed application to control the
broadleaf weeds in your
lawn and to feed the grass to
grow into the space left by
die dying weeds. If you have
already aeplied lawn fmilizer use a liquid berbicide.
The re8son for waiting
until now, is so \!lal sufficient
babicide lands on the weed
bf swflloe to be absorbed
into the plant for bella" weed
Cllllllol. ·Read label insuuctions bef~ app1 · • Some
to-bed r:rJ!fto;;.:.
wben.

~it
........

~;-wt;;;
weed leaVes are moist sa the
.dry chemical is absorbed
tbrough the bf area Note
that sooie bcabicides require
twenty four to forty ciJdJt
bours of &lt;ky weaiiJer aAer

Qr:rtbune - Serttinel CLASSI.FIED

rum is exttcmely difficult to
control as it produces lots of
seed and widerground dllZOiliCS (roots).lf you anempt
to dig up the plant and
pan of the root system, it reo
sprouts. Control of Ibis plant
mquires a lot of wort: and
patience. Cut the weed down
now and cootinue to cut it
every two or lhree weeks. A
scythe or lawnmower work;i
wen. This will reduce tht
weed's ability · to send op
new sprouts and 'reduce food
for further growth. Ill mi4August or early September,
spray the young growth with
a gl)11SQphare product (like
Round-up) or one of its simi1ar sister products. Tn tbe
late summer the chemical
will ttanslocate into the root
system and kill . the
plant.Remember
that
seedlings will sprout next
year however cutting die
area every oouple of weeks
will control its growth.

allow

E~l

classified@mydailytribune.corn

.........- - - - -·_ _ _ _Or
:;.;.,;Foiiiiiiiu To

r
r .. IBrincte-..............
..,__
~

Olllo YliiiiW
p. bill···
..

This

. eow.61f

Back

Upcoming

.Some wine grape grow~rs turning to dry farming _methods

r.n:e

Farm:

C-s..

-

Njodor_..,

3ld AMual KCHS Alumri
Reunion 1958-1989, May
24, llpm-1am Moose lodge

lnlo 446-3488 or67~1

-;;;;;;;;;a;;c·;;i·~;.a
IIIICII'h?' c.l, we'l

S

_....._ J....JG-MJI

,r

74NIIHI5II. - · · - ....,...
gol HOIEYlllllll

~

(304) 675-1333

992·2157

GlvfAwAY

cc-

2

Can Coil Collect

Equipmonl

r·O

Tachnkjan tor Farm ..c1/or
Lawn Eqoi!lment mpair &amp;
maintenance. MuS1 have
experience. Mustbeableto
use oompute!' on a limited
basis. Competitive wages,

• 10n
~

.

-puppies,--mllisd--braed-.-

.

7

wi&lt;S old. 1 male 1 ~1188

female Siamese

of Fnat/We.

·

1nGall~oMs740-446-405t
.

r
r:

I
~:::::::::::=~·
YAIID SAlE

• "'"'Y """' - . miiOid ~
breo&lt;f In , _ of loving
h&lt;xnes. 2 (M), 2 If). 446- lafgo
1765 Of ~1..Sl03
O.H

.

kill-.
calloo&amp; tiger
-..o1n

YAID S,uF,.
G~

-lOPYanl

s,. -""fU'V
--

-

5ale.
*&amp;!nut

&amp;tripe&lt;~.

I.Jd1 Chance. Booullful blad&lt;
Lab mix puppiK, 2 112 mo
old, 4(FI 3 (M), healthy &amp;
play!U. &lt;41.0365

CLASSIFIED INDEX

. : ....... For S.le •.••••....•_, ______________ ___ ____,,, 725

Announcernenl .•..••••.•...•.•••..••...••••-·-···· .. 030
Anllqueo ....................................................... 53D
Apabuontw for Ron1._..___................. 4411
Auction ond
Auto Parta a Ac c.n•DiiM~-···--··--···· 780
Auto Ropolr-.............................................- .7711
Autos for s.le .........................................-110
f -&amp;llotoraforS.Ie ..........._ , _...... 75D
:· Building
-550
, Buill.-- Bullcllnga...........- :&gt;.......... MD
' B u - ~................................ .210·
: Buot-Trailnlng .................................... 14D

Flea--.. . . . . .... . ..__

s....-.......................... ..........

.' c.nplng
C.•peo•·--....................
_..:710
Equlpmenl ................................... 710
• c.rdo &lt;11 ~ .........................................010
; Oolld/Eidol1y C... ....................................... IIO

; F' ct1ca""-"igei.tlot1.... - ..........................140
• Equl_,t far .....................................:• F....,
Elu:aualll.
··-··········································~. .
Eq~............... .........................110
, • F.....,ofar RenL ..........................................430
• F.....,olor S.le ................................. ............ 330

................................................. 110

; -lmpoo...n-t-.............,;........."........810

. - f a r S.le ............................................ 310
. -~ ............ ................,......... 510
: Hou8osf"fRonl-......::................................ 410
.................. _ .........:................0.20

............~ ....... _ ............................ 130

. l...nm &amp; Garden FqnlpF"'"..rt- .••~................. 160:

U\e.e ck ..............................................- .....830

..__ ........................................ 010
Lola &amp; Ac:o-. ...........................- .............. 350
: - -............................................. 1711

. - - -.........................540

·
:
•
·

Moblle-Aopotr....................................eeo
Mobile - f a r Ron1 ...............................420
.Mobile- for s.le................................S20
llonoy to .._............................ .................. 220

: l!lolu&amp;c,_ 6 4 -

....................- ...740

. MuslcallnabWfteaa•ls ................................... 570

·-lor

. - 1. ..................................................... 005
Selo ...................................... ......... SIO
PI-ng 6lloello1Q .............................. ..... I20
Pwofslllonaf Sill.r1cls ......:••.••••..••.••.•. .... _ •. 230
· TV 6 CBIIoipolr ..........................- ..180 .

, _... e.t.t. WwaW ..........................._.;_ ... aea

.._.w.-.
....:. . . . . . . . ,.. ...........
. .. . - ..,_lor Ronl..............................
lor-.
. . .........................
... . . . .
. Upl\ai""'
L.............. .:.. .. .. .. .....
-.1211

. SpontngQooda ......................................- .. 520

· IUV'olor : 1'nlclui

............................................120
715

I70
. ;.; le..............................................730
: Ira kJto Buy ........:.:...........- ..............-0111
Wwttlcl to Buy- F.-m Set~ pU11 ...........,.__ ao

· , _ T o Oo ....................................... - ... 110
' liiMntod to Ron1 ............................................470
Y

s..Pt;; PI ill

ill

nt .............................- 071

.

Repair

lloiJIIr Selliw c- C..l&lt;r is a Five Slar
Fa:ility aJMI .,. are lookilt&amp; f« ........,.,..
Wloo ID ....., a d i l l ' - O..t ...,

bul;;·~d

paid

AlmuooA""e

G~

Help Wan1ed

,....inf ,

1-877-4634247

FOOD LAND

Ert2347

Now Accepting Experienced

war

Department Head and Store
Management Resumes

to eam

Call Marilyn :ll0-682·2645 .

PRODUCE- MEAT· DAIRY· DEU- AND

Help Wanted

Local Positions, Good Be11elits
and CompeiiHwe Pay

Help Wanted

Send Resu- to: .

FOODLAND
P.O. BOX769
GALLIPOLIS; OHIO 45631

Holzer Medi&lt;al Cenfer-Vallipolis is seeking part
time Food Service: Aides. Duties of this position ·
include pert'orming basic food preparation: dish
room and pot and pan duties; patienl tray delivery.
Shifts would ioctude 6:00am - ~; 30 pm or 10:30
am -7:00pm.
Required Qualifications are: High School
graduate or equivalent preferred . ·EK-perience is
preferred. Must demonstrale accounlabilily and
pride irr the job and the organizatiou.
If !nterested, please contact

HUMAN RESOUllCF.S
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER·
GALLIPOLIS
tOOJ-Piie

ELECTRICIAN
aruu-timeE~&lt;M:ian .

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

POSITIONS AVAILABLE FOR
COTA, OTRIL, LPT, AND SLP
Full-time position for COTA with
Syllergy Rehab Solutions. LLC, a new
Soulhem Ohio contract Rehab company.
Join the Synergy learn at Overbrook Care
Center, a beautiful Comprehensive rehab
SNF in Middlepon. Ohio. Also
.
interviewing for pan-time or per diem
OTR/L, LPT, and SLP.

Synergy Rehab Solutions, LLC
11664 Gallia Pike. PO Box 222
Wheelersburg, Ohio 45694
800-577-4310

.

Qualifications: Either trade school,
apprenti~hip program. or on the job training as
an electrician is required .

Help W.med

,:;:::::::::::::.::::::::::::=:;:
,

Primary rcsporl~ibilities include testing and
repairing of eled:ricaJ t.quipmenr; Installing new
equipment and using the building managemen1
oompu1er sys1em. Additional duties as needed to
support the overall function of the Maintenance

BODY SHOP
·A SSISTANT .

The seleded candidole will assist with
estimating, sd!eduling, and other dulies as
needed. Must hoVe el\Cellent customer
relolion skilk. Must be detail orienJed.
Experience in body shop work preferred
but not reqvited. Full time posihon wilh
generous benefits. Immediate opening.
Pleose wbrnit resume to:
MID Me d. lolly. Sltllp ManaJt

D.nw.oclfonl
Interested 1ndividuals may contact:

Human Resources DepartJnent

Holzer Medical Center
tOO Jackson Pike
Gallipolis. OH 4563 1
Phon&lt;: (740) 446-5 105
F.,: (740)446·5106

areA day and evening shift
avail.w.e . lea...e message

740-441-7360

illformalioa call Bull ~.
IJiredDr ol H . - Kesourtes for Lool£
'l&lt;ml Cale· at 74Cht41·~· . email - at
petenoD@holr.a'Mg, or rlsll us on..., web
F.- -

at ....................

. F.qul Opportuaity Elliptoy..-

Help Wanted

HelpWantlcl

KENT-2-0WN
. SlaJ1ing Pay
$U0-$12.tl0/hr.
+Health Insurance
t401K

Help Wanted

Holzer Medical Center. Gallipolis, OH is :;eeking

Experience: At leas~ two years perfonning
-elec,trician duties.
·

.-ram seeldng full

time...- emploree. MUS!
have '81 least 3 years tood
prep experienoe. Btdwell

+Profit Snaring

NOW HIRING

* Management

• Customer Sales
• Collection•

Md/or lledh::al ••artre
Pleasant Valley Hospital is cunently
accepting applications for a full time
Licensed Practical Nurse and/or Medical
Asst. for a new physician office. LPN's
must have cunent West Virginia license.
Send resumes to:
P!trrt v.ley lloipital
cJo Hu- "-c:es

* Delivery

l5ZG Valley DriiN!

.~uaily 1o Gro..!

Apply online
www.r2o.com
Or apply at any
RENT-2-0WN
Help Wanted

at 740-992-6472 or 740-357-{l4()5 .

Help Wanted

Dqlanmeor.

r

POintPiasMit. wv 25550
Or!ax:
38H75-fi75. or applr on-line at
aa Ofitaler-011
'

AA/EOE
HelpW.med

HelpWamed

Call Cynthia Campbell , Rehab Director

Gallipolis, OH 45631
- : (741)446-SltJi
EOFJADA Employer

HelpWanled

Busy

STORE MANAGEMENT

NEEDED IMMEDIATELY .
FOOD SERVICE AIDE

IS

AOON(RN)
IIN-PT
LPN-Ff .
STNA-PT
Residmt !ienices I Adivili&lt;s- Ff

Home 740-992 5023
.
•

Help Wanted .

1· 1.cam

CeiiTodarl

"r"Y 8

s;m.

hoi~.

)ohiiC8mlictlaeiOc:araq.a:m

~

............. to

Fax 74!H46-9104 or Email H e l p - 111 Oars! Home

Full Ben8fi1s

. lalla ala Ntructlon.....................................110

. ..... 'Pl.m. Fertt- ......................- ..... .

I

P•cle · 1nal Work

An ExceRent

: Forl.oue ..................................................... ...
• For s.le....................................................... l l l
• For "'· ~..... - .................................510
~ Fruita &amp; 'Vegata:bl-..................................... 510
! Fumlohod R_,. ......- ..- ..................... 450
; Houllng ......... _._ ...._ .................l90

: =:;:::::::::::::::::::::=:::::::::::::::::::::::::
:
Holy • Grlln .................................................l40

u.ur,_
.our
nJtt.~ .. a.:v

money. The New A\1011 .

4898

Glvoawal'. 2 Female miiOid
·lleli(jlo 7 M. old f'ulipjas.
740-909-2188.

.

Cenler
.
Day ond EYO!liig Shifls
-

254 f'&lt;l&lt;1er Ad.

Free lo good home, beautiful
kill8ns, litter I!Bined. 446-

' -

imrnedialoly. Bam2pm. Mir1irum of $30. per
&lt;loy. BronQa &lt;46-2451

SI.IQihaur FT + banus modern
~~.
~......s
I!Bin_ .. .,._ .., &amp;hop,
_,...., continuous
lng. health insuranoe.
OUiboondllnbound Cal
mal...,_ fl!ti19fllef11 oor11fi-

- - - - - - - bool&lt;caw.
Fruo Good Female Hunting er &amp; _,and, !able &amp;
Dog Please call 304-675- chairs, beds, a lot at ~.
3686
rNsc., oanRIIf*'ll for evory- - - - - - - MO. May 191h &amp; 20111, Spmfi9e 10 good homo, boaullfiJI Bpm. E"'"'))hing must go!

' Iii -

1r•

lbuWMm&gt;

Moving: 2 handy workers

I

I

LOST:

' ~·
ty et181getiC. 675-215

Help -

~

1~..r·_IIDJ'_w._-_.,.~1 r• _lbuWANIDJ 1r•

I

apay9d

•
'
:
•
:
•
'

IIDJoWMm&gt;

13 -

1 yr old Labla.Qoodle, Cat 600 -

vn

j

l\egt~ter

Tenio&lt; &amp; Pug Absolute TOll Dollar • si· Aocopting
lor
old. -/gold
coins,
any pao1-lime - . muot be
.-.go. IOK/1«/181&lt; gold jowelr'j, ......... 1o _ . all slifts.
Cal379-2467
- 1 gold, pn&gt; 1935 US nophonocalsplease, ;IP!Jiy
curiancy. proof/mln1 sets. 111 Par Mar t39 af '2264
,.,~
l.oiUNI
dioiKH«&lt;s: MTS. Coin Sh&lt;lfl._ 5eaJnd s( Mason, WV' flf
F01NJ
151 2nd Awnue, Gallipolis. Par Mar m 1547 Nye - ·
.f.46..2SI2
PDmeroy, Oh
loot . ~ 1o G
.
------•
_,a b " "Orman
,l,~f All ......, To0 Buy
N'nha.
" ' - Wanled 1o buy Junk Car&gt;
·
.
·
.or
Alfoed/;;,arwal~w/Shade: coli 740-388~,. W ...; SeH. Shirlol' Spem, 304klendly, .-ani (740)696- . , _ ,, leave, a message. _67_5-_1429_._ _ __
mix~

Ylftl GeiHpolio...................................on
s.a1 Pomaao 1 ~t~lcktle ......,..................074

•

Or Fu To

.1t ~~ 1t''

GlwAWAY

•.

Cows-Steady

446 30118

Mole -

Fed Cattle
j

~..mydailyregister.com

Monday thru Friday
:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

Feeder Cattle-Steady

.

www.mydailytribune.corn
www.mydailysentinel.corn

OearltirM

l.IvFsTOCK REPoRT

·'

Websites:

Sentinel

.ca,;...":w... ·(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156

·Gallipolis FF1\ chapter places in·skills contest

'

Qtrtbune

To. Pia~

~don't 'waDi to use

Meigs Co=ty citizens,
berbici~ ~ou can dig out the .seventeen year periodic
the dandelions, thistle and cicadas are not emel"(!ing
Make: to from Meigs County soil in
sever&amp;\ fuches of 2008 but will be emerging i!J
.
.
.
c ,•
..., ~
- ~~~,J
root or, tbe Weeds will 2016, we are pan of BrOOd
These young trees, located at the comer of Third Avenue ~ Locust Street In Gallipoli!f; t.ave b9en ()(Mlied in a
~ ~th several new V. However, Gallia Count)'
of plastic as a means of protection against the uplioming outbreak of locusts or cica~; ·e~ed around ~.region
stems. Weeds like creeping homeowners ·near Rio
ing the next several weeks.
·
.. •
Charlie, clover and speed- Grande and south are
•
well can be' pulled out by included in the Brood XIV,
hand. In II))' youth, we which is emerging this yeat.
received 50 cents a bushel Brood XIV takes in an area
basket. full, however today, from the eastern part of
it may be few dollars if the . Cincinnati
. to
the
kids
or
gnmdchildren
are
Gallia1Mei$s
County
line.
GALLIPOLIS The
enlisted to help. In any case,· The extension office has a
Gallipolis FFA Chapter
most weedy la'wns will need fact sheet, HYG 2137-,
recently sent 11 members to
to have weeds removed for "Periodical and Dog Day·
participate in the Skills
a
second or third time Cicadas" available, giving
Classic
Career
bef&lt;n the summer is over.
belpful hints as to how tO
Development Event. The
distract
the pest from attack'Skills Classic allows special
Mexii:an
bamboo
or
ing
small
twigs of shrubs
population students the
Japanese
knotweed
is
and
trees.
Access the fact
opport!lnity to
ll~~~~:~~:all aloug the sheet via internet www.ohi~
against other sbldents
H
nvaftunt Oliile.osu:eau or arop11y oiir
same ability level in
priis~i:s.
This
is
the weed office to pick U{' a ccpy. . :
ic agricultural related SJ(ll.IS.
has
a
stein
that
looks
(Hill Klue11 11 tiN Mrift
Ann Saxon parti.cipated in
like a jointed cane, with Co•IIIJ EIIIICtiiDr for
Personal Finance. This CDE
gteen
oblong leaves, and A.fritultun,
NIIIUnd
area allowed the contestant
white
flowers
in
tbe
middle
Resoureallltd
eo-..iq
· to demonstrate banking
of the sum!neJ:.•This invasive J)ne/spltU.IIl, 0/Uo Stau
sk:ills as well as sk:ills in
weed, Polygonium cuspida- Uilinrrily &amp;uui111t.}
.
making change.
Brandon Welch participated in Hand Lawn
Mowing. This area required
the cuntestant to demonstia_te his ability to safely
and efficiently use a hand
GAUIPOUS - Ullild PrtNluun l~te. IIUII'bt
lawn mower. .
r~Jf1011 fro• Gallipolis for silks collllucud · 011
Trevor Bryan and Adrian
Werbte..,, Mt11 14.
·
SlitliriiiW .,._
Miller participated in Small
Engines. This area allowed Mel!lbers of the Gallipolis FFA chapter seen here competed in the recent Skills Classic
the members to demonstrate Career Development Event, where the team placed second overall in Ohio.
275-415 lbs., SteerS, $80-$115, Heifers, $75-$114;
their ability to identify
425-525
lbs., Steers, $80-$1128, Heifers, $75-$100;
and
testant to participate in a job construction, and- lawn" Amphibians,
small engine parts.
550-625 lbs., Steers, $80-$105, Heifers, $75-$92; 650Frogsffoads.
Adrian
Miller
and interview and· to demon- maintenance.
725 lbs., ·Steers, $75-$95, Heifers, $75-$90; 750-850
· Courtney .Saxon participate strate the ota1 and written
Jessica Northup and · Olivia Thomas and
lbs., Steers, $75-$90, Heifers, $70-$85. ·
ed in the· (Floriculture) skills needed when. applying Olivia Thomas participated Chelsea Wickline particiCorsage Making. This CDE for a job.
in Animal Care. This is pated in the Aquarium .
' .
allowed the contestants to
Kevin Bostic participated where contestants demon- Management Contest. 'Ibis
demonstrate their ability in in the Painting and Ladder strate their animal identifi- required the contestants .to .
(Second WNI..,.,ay of the month)
.identifying tools, materjals, Safety. This CDE ~ows the cation skills as well as their demonstrate their ability to
design greens, and cut contestants .to demonstrate knowledge .of animal man- identify Tropical Fish and
Choice - Steers, ~; Heifers, $87-$92. ·
.S elect- Steers, $83-$86; Hcifen, $82-$85.
Aquarium Equipment.
flowers used in the retail their"capjJbility to prepare a · agement.
The team placed second
Holsteins - Steers, $~$75:SO.
Ann Saxon and Chelsea
floriculture
industry. surface for painting, use
Contestants also demon- painting tools, paint a sur- Wickline participated in overall in the state of Ohio.
strated their ability to con- face, clean up a painting the Meats ldenllfication. Courtney Saxon placed first
sl.rul:t a three flower cor. area, and use a ladder.
CDE allows the con- in Corsage. Jessjca Northup ·
Well-Musc1ediFieshed, $54-$64.
sage using basic principles
Cody lewis participated testants to demonstrate placed second in Job
Medium/Lean, $46-$53.
practiced by the floricul- in the Commercial Lawn their ability to identify var· Interview. Ann Saxon
.
1bin/Light,
$35-$45.
placed first in Personal
- ture industry.
Mowing contest. where he ious meat cuts.
Bulls,
$55-$68.
.
Brandon Welch and identified mowing equipCody Lewis participated Finance. Cody Lewis placi:d
Courtney Saxon participat- · ment and performed safe in the Natural Resources second in Commercial
to the
Identification. This CDE Lawn Mowing. , Ol.ivia
ed in the Flower and equipment operation.
Vegetable Identification
Trevor ' 'Bryan and Justin allows the contestants to Thomas placed first in:
~ S3S0-$16C,l; ·~
$240-$775; ·
area where they demonstrat- Northup participated in the demonstrate their ability to Animal Care .and 5eOOOd ia ' Baby c.Ms,'$5&gt;.$240;· ~·~$130; LIIDbs, $115ed their ability to identify Tractor Operation. This identify Mammals, Non- Aquarium Ma~U~gement.
dn.; Hop,- $35-dn. ·
' . .
·
.
Gamebirds, Chelsea Wickline placed
flower and vegetable plants. CDE allows the contestants Gamebirds,
Jessica Northup partici- to demonstrate abilities Wildflowers, Food/Shrubs, second
in
Meat
'spedals:
pated in the Job Interview. learned in the operation of Marsh
and
Aquatics, Identification and frrst in ·
· This area required the coo- tractors used in agriculture, Undesirables, . Reptiles/ Aquarium management. ·
Ohio approved feeder sale,lO a.m. Wednesday, May 21. :
.Direct sales and free on-fann visits.
.
Manure free to haul a~ay.
For more mformation, call DeWayne at (740) 339-.
0241 ~ Stacy at (304) 634-0224. Visit the website at .
www.u)iroduci:ts.com.
intensely · flavored grapes I)' cultivated, mUlched and
BY MICHELLE LOCKE
old traditions.
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
"What you find out is and wines; too little water kept under close scrutiny. ·
grape yioes are incredibly leads to raisins.
"Oh, it's filthy, dirty wort."
KENWOOD, Calif. · - . adaptable," said Thomas.
. W\IIDPle, who has studied Williams said. with a JUefu1
Vmeyard ·manager Steve . At the 600-acre Kunde irrigation. techniques for : !au~ The reward, be
Thotpa;s grasps the.lnJ!!k of 11 Estate, about 100 acres are years, sees irrigation as a·u:;e- believes, "is wines 'm uchz.iliflindel vine. a redwood of dry-farmed . The rest are fill tool in the winegrower's deeply connected to the soj1,
:the vineyard, gnarled with asc grown coilvcntionall.y.
arsenal. althoilgh he agrees wines much full« in 11avot!1 · •
and planted in the days whcit
WlllC grapes are grown careful Water management Is . Thomas says dry farmiq
irtiption meant a ~I of without artificial irrigation critical bec•nsc of concerns is also about rnn.;....;,..;. to
the past.
...,..,._-- •
water on a lxne-drawn c.vt. in parts of lhc W!X'ld such as about climate change.
The work hones and Cll'tl Spain aild FraDce, where
"The challenge is under·
lfe uses a tnJck, not a
li.'e IOIJIJODC. But these old 10111e reJions have laws for· atandina how to best utilize · horse, to naviaate the twiltl
zin vines at Kunde Batate in blddlns use of lniaatlon, water as a management and turns of the terraced .,_
vineyards of Kunde Eltate.
Sonoma County still set aald Roben Wample, chair· tool,'' he said.
Dry farming starts before But sometimes when hc'1
their water the old falh- of the viticulture and enoloioned way, from rain, dew IY at California State the vlnea n planted, said out in the fields &amp;eeiDJ how
John Williams, founder and the vlne.slll'e doiDJ, he dliJW
iuld 1 ~root system. . Univ_enity, Fresno.
They
it "dry fll'l!lina."
Dry faimina: in Cllifomia wlnemaker It the Frog's Leap about past vineyard wOibn.
''When I visualize a flmil)'
which is what qriculture it uniuual. altfiouah there Is 1 winery in the Napa Valley and
member out here at the tum Of
used 10 be before plastic ho&amp;cs trencUoward ulina: len water. a chainplon of diy farming.
Fanning dry means more the cenrury behind a hone,
booked up to a water supply
"We're leamfng ·to be
made deserts bloom. A few much more precise early in than Just not irrigating, plowing thls thing, thai's pn!tthink
vintners are returning to it
the growing season so we Williams said. "It's an ty incredible when
fact
They are driven by con- can contto[ the vegetative active 'form of preserving about it," he said..
moisture
in
the
ground
so
that
they're
pruning
the
same
cems over dwindling water growth, minimize the total
supplies, the belief it pro- water consumption and then you don't need to irrigate." vines aixi worrying about the
That tUrn.s out to involve same thin~s, frost and whatevduces wore intensely fla- follow that with good manvomffruit, and, in Kunde'.s agement practices," he said. getti.ng up close and personal er else, _this is a kind of comcase, by a desire to rerum to
Less water means more with dirt as fields are careful- mibnent that's passionalc:"

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS '

830 East State S11eet. Ath,ns, OH 45701
for more inlormotioo you may contact

MaR Dillard al f7.401 589-3636 or

mdillordOdonwood.com
Also on the web ot www.don wood .com

Nurses
There is no need to drive so far for omploymeat ..-. you hove
Ro&lt;J&lt;sprinp Rehab ill your bad&lt; yard! .Save gas money and we will
pay for your insurulot dllling your 90-&lt;lay introductory period!
Exrilillg Opportunilieo and AC haa&lt;e to Make a llilfeoeooe
Caring for others who are often unabit• to care for rhemst"ll·es is an
importcmt job: OIU' thai requirt'.s skills of a different nature ...indil,iduais
who arr kn ah·ledge(Jblt and...J.:ompa:iSi(male can lfl[n.drdioory
situatlori.\' into remnrkobfe orhii!w~mrms.
..

....

M•

"

As a leading provider of short.tenn subacqte and rehabilitative
services. as well as long tenn healthcare. Extendicare Health Services
is seeking RN 's and LPN's wbo want to make a difference caring for
othefs. We currently have opportunities avai)able for caring individuals

at Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center located in Pomeroy. We are
looking for profesl'lionals committed to providing excellent post acute
rehabilitation and post surgery ser"' ice~ 10 residents rr.rnsitioning hack
home after being discharged from .tbe hospiu l as well as residents
requiring long tenn care.
If yoo po5oess the following qualiriClltiorui:
• Excellent clinical skills
• Compassion and customer service

• The a~ilif)' and desire to perl'o nn in a fast-~ environment
• Strong leadership skills
ADd
are looking for die cbance to makt a d l l r -; ~ .,UI
to
to yop!
.
PI?""' comacr: .
Debbie Waylalld, Stafllng Coordinalor
l'lloM: (740) 99~

you

If"

Fu:: 740-991-26711

E.O.E.

OONWOOD
AUTOMOnVE

-·-

Or apply"' ......... at!
36759 .Ro&lt;ksprillp Rd.
l'omtn&gt;y. Ott 4S769
E~: lendicarc

Heall h Sel'\lites is a.n equal oppnrtunit)' employer encouraging
wort lace di\'ersi

�•

Sunday, lilly 18, 2008

Plge D4 •

a na ll

u

s1

1.

PomeiOJ • llicldleport • Gallipolis, Ott • Pt. PI•

C ~ I

Garman ·Roll . aile'· 111
·- g o o d ..,.....

~

-·
7-··
=-"""'=--=--=-=---

-· -I

........ dol. """'"'
ani 'i ne coolt lq&gt;ly in plr·
son
« 1~9371
to
.
. ."'
_aMI
__
_. 301!

2nd-

Oolle ,_

Aog -

·QUiilliod OPJib ...

t ...... , ..,. . . Page D5

all:t Flnll lhots and

·-

740-37HUO

"'-""

him It

-~~~BQnWM==::~,.:..J.

v~.

-.good ...,good-;22

prii;:;;;;;;-;,;i

:::-:--:-----2001 tioon, auto, •nioo &amp;

02 Hlll!ln ~. 24,000

mpg-good llOnd. 740-gv2, 6 0255.

-

·I1,

f'.ot!ipn"s

2

Vo¥ager,
runs
12,5110, (740)992·

gv l'tymou1h
1"11,000 .- .,

r

.__.,..,..._ $1!5 ~ III!Fonr-.~~~ogonV!I
~ . . ani- ·-

,

-~ l~t ~~

t

., wv

PunleiOJ • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • PL Pleasant, ytV

·::~;C: miles. 13500 =-oOo· 740-=;""'"
.::= Cawlier:--:.--:-$4--- 11115 Yamaha XV1100
2003

UUihiUIOWII - r i e s , Ca lia S22.o:ro· :::: llirogo, 2 · 12971
- " - - · Rhubarb at
va. ' .. 1
mleo. $21!00. Cell 304s5937
Caval10r $2,000 "10-256- 5010 882-o!S16 or675-6955
Fa
011
-

~!!!!!rm

6169

·-

.- -·- --:--::----:--

- - - ' - - - - - "1996 - . Royal S1Br
2006 ,Jeep Wranglof, &amp; iTouring ~ lrllllcrq&gt;do,
speed, !IO!tmp.16,000 ..... 1400a: will) bog&amp; &amp;
•r---=~--, $16,900. ·441-9335 or ~1&amp;-" wind&amp;hield: Sapphire t;ue

:1 0800, lea~ message.

FAb

Hgt=r '.
......llliiiiiliiiliiiii-._;1 91

loader,--·

5000 l'ord lmie&amp;el -

-end

·
&amp;icl&lt; Century,

1S3k OICDII!teril c:ondilion. Aoking

con- $4,000 ~04-6.7!;-2314 "'
- · fl~M.599o6S56

· ...... 4 door, ..citlon $400Q or -

,good......_.~ 379.2732

""'"1o0941

=:-===--- -92-c1

and ,white with a lat. ~
chromo. ~I .Biloi m

'

of Pre-Owned Vehkles Rated

2001- G-.g end

-c'G::-ranll--flll:-_-..,-50K- Escapade 1nltter. ·
·mites, l'lorido, car, mlloogo. 7~ 152

Buicl&lt;:.

&amp;1', INtEGRITY, KIEF'ER actual

·Choose from the IARGESr Seledion

Low

Higllny
Oil Clronga
and Tires for Life

BUILT,
VALL'EY loaded, , _ tiles, immacu- 2006 ftonda Goldwlng. Low.
HO~S£ / LIVESTOCI&lt;" la1ll a&gt;ndiliM 38,000, V&amp;, Low orllleage, Iliad&lt; choiT)I.
;mAJI£RS, UliAil IIIAX 30mpg,' $4.800 .F irm 740- 7~121 or 740-645EOOIPMENT TRAILERS, - 9 6
CARGO T:XPRESS &amp; :::-:::----:-:--:-lH 0 M € S T E A D E 'R 95 Mercury Marquis, 28
. CARGO/CONCESSION mpg, B6k mi, - · """
TRAILERS. B+W GOOSE· tires, maint &amp; car tar:
NECK
lilfDHES . records. '$2900 740-645&lt;CIU!MICHAEl
EQUip- 6496
'
'III'E'NT ICAR\HCH AEL
TRAIL£RS SAL!;S &amp; SEA· Police lmpo.... !· Cars ·from
'VICE, SPECIAL 20FT $500!, Hondos, Chevys,

+MPG

0891
- -- -- - Honda !Ill TAX 4 - I S,
lil&lt;e ,, _, paid $2500 each,
!liking $11400 each. EJ.1Jsme

50 4 paid $1100
IIBklng SSOO. 741).256.1 306

r .

~ Bo.mi&amp; ~

-SALE

·

I

GOOSENECK Fl.f,TBED Jeeps IFonl&amp; &amp; mlll81 for
$3999. VEW OUR ENTIRE tisti9 ~ 76 OK V4ll5 02 1811 8aao Traoksr Bool,
l'I'IAIL£R INVENlOAY AT .
02 Mercury .2.0 HP Eng. 02
W W W. C A AM I CH AEL . Qu illy CIIIS. truol&lt;s
ttaller, 9.8 Nissan Dutboanl
llliAIL£RS.COM 74().446. sta~ a1 $1500 ID
MOior, 2 trolling motors.

s::

31125

Financing available with

'Have you priced a J~ warranty.

~~·

54900 · J40-

CDOK - - , - - - , - - , : - - : - -

,_. talill'? You1

be BUr· ' MOIOH532B.-onPII&lt;e. 18' Champion Bass Boat
pad! ~ Dill o.. UBOd 74Q.446.0103
matclltng 1nllter. 1sotfl'

at

•inventory

r~5

w w w. c' REa ,. c·a M .

C..rmichle1Equipment. 740- ·~

'JillxD

I'ORSAIE

Deer A 1947 liaCIDI',
Elof*lc S1Brt High .&amp; ·low
Transmiuion, New Rims.,
Tlnls &amp; Paint 2002 Han!
Top For CJ7 Jeep, 2003

1740 . MCCormicl&lt; Rd in
Gaii&gt;OIIS or c:alt 74!Hl45-

·r
'

~&amp;

~a-

1985

2311

pull

1

.

~~...22~!:!2:!l..., 'jiB

I.M!snxx

. __ _ _~_..

'L

~

4I4

•••••,

'1111-.ne C81~t!r, . """''·
thing works, good cond.

ow Nghway,

5faW.,lll'l,lr;r.,lllr.,.-

1,000 Miles, Auto., Air. V6,s.I,MDrW.2•••

$f0,999

SfB!J0°'• ·SJ2,999

80,000 ml, 5

. new tiles,
1• Trallots
R\1 Servioo a1 Carmichael
7.a-.3825
56300. 441-7307

Foe S.w&lt;:

•••••tory

•
20(M. Ford A8nger 4 Or,4x4,
1
Iliad&lt; LinDJaine &amp;II,
yr
oil-road Tramer pkg
1300 lbs. S800. Cell JR $8995.00. 2002
lsuzu
7.4().256.8180 or coli 304·
...,....
Sport2 dr.,aulo,SOII 1op,
~
751 ~
$6995.00.
1999 Chevy ' 1.,~-iiiiiiiliiiiiiiiciiiiiliiiio.l
----:---~ r.-5 IPd 4&gt;&lt;4,$4495.00.

Old.

i' . . .__

IUIO,K~

a,.
•
.,.,
......

2007 ,.,.. 2006

behind

13500. 740-742·1900
Chrome,
Fully
loaded, - - - - - - bUy • · 14'X50' all Salling $13,500, won1 last 88 Winnebago Motor horna,
·mobllfi home.rea- long! (740)441-7201 or 2311, loaded, sleeps 4, 18

IIONIIJ!y prilled, 304-882· (740)446-0350

•

tMl, · - .,_
$90,000. Selling due lo
health reasona. Call 74044&amp;-6748 or 446-7529

1800 for"""" inlo.

"-'""i

-c

..

&amp;liver, auiD,AIC, pwlpt, C/0, 4 yoiiiS. Completely self·
slidlng,..rgtus, - ·paok· , inct. air/hea1, T.V.,

---:::-:::---:::-::-:2004 fJMC Sierra, Ext. Cab,
mute, Call !N!l- EJUlellan1 Condl11on with
ZIOSfor information.
ll!mole lllar1, BlnlJmdy wilh

._,to

cover.

1999 Dodge Ram ""' C1b EaJje 1raller, Only 12 ooun;
4x4 1500 series white over on •unft, hu been ltored b

age, ate, Quad cab w/4 dr.
,rebu!H Iitie. 99,916 odual
$1199.00 end up. HuiT)I white mi, great running. 5.2 V-8
eng with J1Rl011inls. Only
lhoy last
IIBklng $8900. See truok at
John

custom

' - -- - - - 2002 Welloraft bOat, 26' with

-12

,J im'l Farm 'Equipment Inc.
2 150
Eaatem
Ave,
Gallipolio, Ohio, 740·446ffT77. 4, 5, 6 ' and 7' SPT.
Flnillhing mowers lllarling a1

:1 KRS,

1$7250.00. 446-1759

-!"""-~--...,

..

IT
ttG
UnCOi dlioi 111:1 Hfetime guar~
-roy.Clhlo.
antee. Local references fur(740)992-3490.
niahed. Estobliahed 1975.
~ t..-&gt;Tractor3yrs ~=:-=:-:--:-=::­ Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446condllion 16.5 95 ClMC 314 ton 4)&lt;4 2500, 0870, .Rogers Basement .
HP, 42", 6 opeed, cover V-8, high mites. runs good, WaiBqlrOOfing.
includad 740-iJ88.0147
' $2,500 (740)992-o730
Reg'd 8McA&lt; Al1gt.- bulla 14- R - -

26 mon. old $1100.·$1300. IIbov!!

2 B1oc1&lt;s

McDonatds,

••sa •

old,--

BULLETIN BOARD
~-1011

~..o

or tolliree a1

The Family of David Jay Woolcill'idge

1-1!77·373-1011 .

. THANK.lml

'
Warned: Front De&amp;k Clol1&lt;,
must be 00111&gt;uter 111ef81e
and irtendly. Ous1omer
Service £KP9rlenoe pre1etTed but not mandatory.
Apply in pe'""" at the
Gai!JlOiio Holiday Inn Front
De&amp;k. Absoluloly NO .phone

'

The Family ofChtwlie Chi/gren would
like to thank the !M.ff at Hol~r Senior
Care Center&lt;Jnd Pat Fisco ,CNPfarall
the loving car'e and •upporr provided rwt
only to Charlie bUI to his family as well .

callo.

c.ntorn.nu
Ohio Volley Home Health,
Inc. hiring STNA, C~A .
Home Health Aides arid

'Personal Care Aid8s. Full
Time and Per Diem posi:
1ion&amp; · availabl~;~ . Acoepting

applications for RN anc
LPN~. Apply a1 1480
. ~aobon Pike, GallipoJU;,
phOne 441-1393 for Skilled
Ol!loe or apply at 1456
Jld&lt;son Pille, phone 441 ·

8263 for Passport/Prhmte
Core Office. Compe&lt;IIM!

......-

.

1v11get1 and indud·
ing heatth Jnsurance and

;

~ll.lfMIAI
Thel'amily of
Jim Ki.slds would lik~
to thcmt t've,-yont' for .
the carrls.food,
donations. prayers
&amp; H&lt;Jrd.&lt; of
encouragement
during our recent
~

loss.

1 hal'e Jeamed from experience that you
can teach sldlls but )VJU &lt;L'Ilnnot infuse
caring, it comes from the hearr.

the Joss &lt;!&gt;f our loved one; .
CC. Caldwell Trucking, Boo Evans

Truclcing. Foster Trucking
and Triangles 4- Club.
Also, as opecial thanks to all who helped
with the benefit dinner and donations to
the Children's fund .

We will miss you
so much!
Willi all OUT .

love,
Kim, David Jr.,

'

~

~merrrbered

'
''

'

contributions during our time of mourning

Thank you for ·making hi•last day.! so
relliarkabk and for the genuine Ull'ing
care -that you put into every aspect of his
care whik he wasm Holzer Senior Care!

Your kindMss K&gt;il/
always b. .

'

woold like to thank the following people
and organizations for their help and

..__..

Nick, Clrris,

C#uisiiM
(Chuckie),
&amp; Milc:ey

Atteatioa disloaded workers,
jOO ~en aad employers!
One-stop .r mploymmt aota:s
committed to the~ .
assistance
ol'bothjob
Sft!ken and local employers ·

WORK
OPPORTlJNIT\' .

'16.863 Acres, F......,c Buiklinz Sill: or ·
Huatm Plradioe in Mei!;S County.

R&lt;!daeed

CENTER
, ....,.f'rlM]
7:60IUIJ 104:36 plll
(7461 #6-3212

$79,000
Great F1111ily
Home
112 Union
Avenue

Pomeroy, Ohio

Conlaet Shirley Mash

For Man: lnfQ!Jillllion
l-740-591-1657

I

LAWRENCE
co~

WORKFORfE
DEVEWPMENT
RESOURCE CENTER
MIHtdGy - FrUitzy
W:OO 1U1J 10 #:JO JNif
(7461 SJJ.JUO .

Mined~

Wife- Deb.
Children - Josh, Nick,
·Amber. Dakota,
Cheyenne &amp;: Crrf'
Grandchildt'fn
Mother-in-law - &amp;tty ·
. Spt'!Cial F,-iend-- Mardf'

CHANNEL
··MARKER
CONDOS .

0WULSit.-0W . . . . . . Ut.
W llllforftdaa:s •1111dP.c.
304-llJ.S44t Or JM.m-51'15

Tenns ·citsb Or Check WilD. MUll Have
Of Credit Unless Known to AIJ(:Iiort Ol•~
Announcements Made Day Of Sale
Over Wrioen Marerial.

PLEASANT VALLEY
HOME HEALTH &amp;
HOSPICE

UU LCI !Uf§. In Athens, exn·,from Rt. 50132 onto East State
~.tum east go less1hanllaH a·mile, tum north ontoA\101'1
Place, go haH a mile on tum right onto PleasantviewOrive' -watch
I
·for signs.
condition (check photos on our web site), Westpoint Rocket amaH
child's wagon, 2-die oast model cars (1gs9 cadillac Eldc)lddo &amp;
1957 Corvette), ornate oval lamp table, omate loot stool, organ
stool w/glass ball feet, complete set of pink depression dinnerware
(&amp;e1Vice for4) , 2·irnn beds (1-double/1-single), iron baby bed,
Vtetoriari parlor cf'1air &amp; settee, ~ rocker, Duncan Phyfle drop
leal dining table, 6-Hacp back chairs (2-captain's chairs), ornate
Ingram sheH clock,
· ,,
"
'

.
7 year old Cap Cod on I 0 secluded
acres. 3400 plus sq. ft. 2 full 2 half
baths. 2 to 4 bedrooms, large 2 to 3
car detached garage.
24x24 shop. Just 15 minutes form
town, 5 minutes from hospital
•
and new high school.
Too much to list. A must see at

$215,000
Call (740) 441-9265

'S; Vety
nice ·cf1eny dining table w/4 chairs, China cabinet, Cooctec npooary
style drop leal dining ·table w/4 chaics, rocking chair; Steams &amp;
Foslerllide-a•bed sofa, lforalloveeeet, flotalsofa &amp; n.c&amp;i•IQ
loveseat, end table. Ia~. Sylvania console TV, Magnavox 19" TV,
~anasonic 13" TV wNCR, -innwll unit. 2·1arge P a speakers, round game table, single bed oomplete, d.- al
ma-rs, 2-vanlty dreasers, some bedding, I8Y8t1ll bocU oei119S, 4dr. filing cabinet, ollice chair; computer desk, •edwood deck
furniture (never been outside), porch chairs, round patio table,
flower boKes (1-wrougllt iron &amp; 1-wooden), aet o1 n&lt;·traya, Hoover
s..aeper'*"&lt;&lt;ie Track Wale Fh machine, few !land tools, n other
mi&amp;Oellaneous items,
TEl 15 : Cash or check w/positive I.D. No Credit Cards. Checks
over $1000 must have bank aujhorization Of funds avalable. All
sales are final. Food will be ava-. Not l:ll8pOil8lble for 1o1111 or
accidents.

KCHS Alumni wiN be held

Tennis Les8ons
Private/Group
All ages
All ab@ies
Call Joan Sojka
740-645-3362

Election of Officers
May 19th
7:30pm

Mercerville/Hannan Trace Alumni

KCHS
3rd Annual Alumni Reunion
Classes of 1958-1989
May 24th 8 pm - 1 am
Moose Lodge
Into 446-3488 or 675-4831

call Becky Meaige at
740-446-3194 by May 2oth.

Homegrown Strawberries,
asparagus &amp;.mubart&gt; at
McKean Farm on
Centenary Rd. , Gallipolis
446·9442

'

Due to .inclement weather
conditions in Florida,
the transportation of the
buHerf1ies has been ·
postponed.

serves victims of domestic
violence call 446-6752 0r

We have reschedUled the
Rekiase &amp; ~ration ,for
· · Thursday, May 29
at Noon in the PVH front
Clrcutar Driveway. The public
Ia cordially lnv~edl

"Spring Alng" ai Mason Bowling Lanes
· ·Bowling at $1.00 a gamell
FrH stioeal Hot d0Q!12/S1, Mod Pop 50e
Sat May 17 5 pm lo 2 am
Sun., May 18 2 pm to 2 ai'n
304-773·5300
Brlng yo~~r family &amp; hM tunl l

Serenity House
1-800-942-95n

Caring Pet
Cremations .
GVC
740-446-3745

For mor1 lnfotmatlon piHM
c:atl, (304) 675-6100. •

Wf're Moving!
Wolfe's Auto Repair
Is re-locating to

OWNER:"'' . . 6 ...._.H. Than....,
SHAIIROCK AUC liON SERriCE
AUCTIONEERS: Jahn Plllllek .,._.. ~..
Keny . . ..ut•• ...,.. . . . King
Apprellllce Au clot I • ll!llallord
LloenMd lllondedln Ohio - Ma :1M of Ohio A NfllllllklaMIIIIII

American Legion Post 27

reseJVations to ·
Kyger Creek Alumni.
P.O. Box350
Cheshire, Ohio 45620 or

Butterfly Release &amp;
Celebration

ANTIQUEs &amp; COt.1.EC11BLES: 7-hand made quilts in excellent

Tennis Anyone???

person. Send

446-2206 Mon thru Fri.
or leave message

EVENING AUCTION
27 Pleasantview Dr., Athens, OH
thursday, May 22, 4:00 p.m.

"The Annual meeting of the

at the River Valley HS on May 24,
2008. Scicial hour is at 5:30 .pm '
and dinner at 6:30., $15.00 per

North MyJtle Beach ·
Sleeps :S, fully furnished,
2 row ocean view.
Openings from May thru Sept.

HOU$ettoyJ fUAfRSI.I!iS &amp;piqn MEOUfll

GAILIA COUNT\'

Price Ralaad $S9,900

............. ~ s.IIJ '

DEADLINE 2:00P.M. FRI.

.lick Parsoa
Auction Co. #66

USED FUR!I!ITURE STORE
Moved to Below Holiday Inn
· In Kanauga. Ohio
Open· Wed- Thurs-Fri-Sat

805 Raccoon Rd.
oft SA 7 South Gallipolis

Stop in and Save

. 740-446·1588
for more information

740446-4782

•

PH: 7411-ft2..gtoOI'...,.tH122

J

- --

We Pay Cash for Scrap Gold
(Chains,
Class
Rings,
Wedding Bands, etc) and U.S.
Silver and Gold Coins.
Over 30 Years

May 24, 2008 .
Hannan Trace Gym .
Doors Open 4:30pm
Dinner 6:30 pm
$1 8.00 per person
ReseJVations,
Call
,.

BUSH'S BAIT &amp;
TACKLE

(740) 256-6051 or (740) 446·7379

Rt. 7 &amp; 218
NOW OPEN

-

Hillbilly Hog Roast

44

May24
Gallipolis Shrine Club
Dinner 6to 8
8-12 Entertainment

Sassy Scissors
May Manicure Special

$3.00 off

Bub Williams
Open to Members &amp; Guests
See Shriner for tickets

~

with this coupon
Please call fer ~
appointment

O'Dell True Value Lumber
Your NEW STIHL i=ull Lin~
Dealer!

740-441-1880

Trtmmera Starting at $138.95

Rio Grande Catering by

61 VI"- St. 446-1276

•a~tl"

Milling_, 111J alldlr dar
For all of your oattr1ng nMdJ

BASKET BINGO
May 18th
VFW Post 4464

7~5-58110

211 N. Colitgl A.,., RIO Clrandl, OM.

3rd Avt. GaHipotiJ

00011 Open • 2 pm
Gamet 0 3pm
20 games S20

2 Special Games
Door Prizea

Xtreme Cheemastics
I

Auctlaniu'a "-IIIII on
Email: ShaM ckAuc:illon•eoi.-

WE8: www..,_noc:Al--'ctton•~COin

NEED CASH?

•

Expe~ence

ACQUISITIONS
151 2nd Ave.
Gallipolis, OH

740-446-2842

Courtside
Bar &amp; Grill
presents
"Blue Z:
Friday, May 23
10 pm • 2 am

�•

Sunday, lilly 18, 2008

Plge D4 •

a na ll

u

s1

1.

PomeiOJ • llicldleport • Gallipolis, Ott • Pt. PI•

C ~ I

Garman ·Roll . aile'· 111
·- g o o d ..,.....

~

-·
7-··
=-"""'=--=--=-=---

-· -I

........ dol. """'"'
ani 'i ne coolt lq&gt;ly in plr·
son
« 1~9371
to
.
. ."'
_aMI
__
_. 301!

2nd-

Oolle ,_

Aog -

·QUiilliod OPJib ...

t ...... , ..,. . . Page D5

all:t Flnll lhots and

·-

740-37HUO

"'-""

him It

-~~~BQnWM==::~,.:..J.

v~.

-.good ...,good-;22

prii;:;;;;;;-;,;i

:::-:--:-----2001 tioon, auto, •nioo &amp;

02 Hlll!ln ~. 24,000

mpg-good llOnd. 740-gv2, 6 0255.

-

·I1,

f'.ot!ipn"s

2

Vo¥ager,
runs
12,5110, (740)992·

gv l'tymou1h
1"11,000 .- .,

r

.__.,..,..._ $1!5 ~ III!Fonr-.~~~ogonV!I
~ . . ani- ·-

,

-~ l~t ~~

t

., wv

PunleiOJ • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • PL Pleasant, ytV

·::~;C: miles. 13500 =-oOo· 740-=;""'"
.::= Cawlier:--:.--:-$4--- 11115 Yamaha XV1100
2003

UUihiUIOWII - r i e s , Ca lia S22.o:ro· :::: llirogo, 2 · 12971
- " - - · Rhubarb at
va. ' .. 1
mleo. $21!00. Cell 304s5937
Caval10r $2,000 "10-256- 5010 882-o!S16 or675-6955
Fa
011
-

~!!!!!rm

6169

·-

.- -·- --:--::----:--

- - - ' - - - - - "1996 - . Royal S1Br
2006 ,Jeep Wranglof, &amp; iTouring ~ lrllllcrq&gt;do,
speed, !IO!tmp.16,000 ..... 1400a: will) bog&amp; &amp;
•r---=~--, $16,900. ·441-9335 or ~1&amp;-" wind&amp;hield: Sapphire t;ue

:1 0800, lea~ message.

FAb

Hgt=r '.
......llliiiiiliiiliiiii-._;1 91

loader,--·

5000 l'ord lmie&amp;el -

-end

·
&amp;icl&lt; Century,

1S3k OICDII!teril c:ondilion. Aoking

con- $4,000 ~04-6.7!;-2314 "'
- · fl~M.599o6S56

· ...... 4 door, ..citlon $400Q or -

,good......_.~ 379.2732

""'"1o0941

=:-===--- -92-c1

and ,white with a lat. ~
chromo. ~I .Biloi m

'

of Pre-Owned Vehkles Rated

2001- G-.g end

-c'G::-ranll--flll:-_-..,-50K- Escapade 1nltter. ·
·mites, l'lorido, car, mlloogo. 7~ 152

Buicl&lt;:.

&amp;1', INtEGRITY, KIEF'ER actual

·Choose from the IARGESr Seledion

Low

Higllny
Oil Clronga
and Tires for Life

BUILT,
VALL'EY loaded, , _ tiles, immacu- 2006 ftonda Goldwlng. Low.
HO~S£ / LIVESTOCI&lt;" la1ll a&gt;ndiliM 38,000, V&amp;, Low orllleage, Iliad&lt; choiT)I.
;mAJI£RS, UliAil IIIAX 30mpg,' $4.800 .F irm 740- 7~121 or 740-645EOOIPMENT TRAILERS, - 9 6
CARGO T:XPRESS &amp; :::-:::----:-:--:-lH 0 M € S T E A D E 'R 95 Mercury Marquis, 28
. CARGO/CONCESSION mpg, B6k mi, - · """
TRAILERS. B+W GOOSE· tires, maint &amp; car tar:
NECK
lilfDHES . records. '$2900 740-645&lt;CIU!MICHAEl
EQUip- 6496
'
'III'E'NT ICAR\HCH AEL
TRAIL£RS SAL!;S &amp; SEA· Police lmpo.... !· Cars ·from
'VICE, SPECIAL 20FT $500!, Hondos, Chevys,

+MPG

0891
- -- -- - Honda !Ill TAX 4 - I S,
lil&lt;e ,, _, paid $2500 each,
!liking $11400 each. EJ.1Jsme

50 4 paid $1100
IIBklng SSOO. 741).256.1 306

r .

~ Bo.mi&amp; ~

-SALE

·

I

GOOSENECK Fl.f,TBED Jeeps IFonl&amp; &amp; mlll81 for
$3999. VEW OUR ENTIRE tisti9 ~ 76 OK V4ll5 02 1811 8aao Traoksr Bool,
l'I'IAIL£R INVENlOAY AT .
02 Mercury .2.0 HP Eng. 02
W W W. C A AM I CH AEL . Qu illy CIIIS. truol&lt;s
ttaller, 9.8 Nissan Dutboanl
llliAIL£RS.COM 74().446. sta~ a1 $1500 ID
MOior, 2 trolling motors.

s::

31125

Financing available with

'Have you priced a J~ warranty.

~~·

54900 · J40-

CDOK - - , - - - , - - , : - - : - -

,_. talill'? You1

be BUr· ' MOIOH532B.-onPII&lt;e. 18' Champion Bass Boat
pad! ~ Dill o.. UBOd 74Q.446.0103
matclltng 1nllter. 1sotfl'

at

•inventory

r~5

w w w. c' REa ,. c·a M .

C..rmichle1Equipment. 740- ·~

'JillxD

I'ORSAIE

Deer A 1947 liaCIDI',
Elof*lc S1Brt High .&amp; ·low
Transmiuion, New Rims.,
Tlnls &amp; Paint 2002 Han!
Top For CJ7 Jeep, 2003

1740 . MCCormicl&lt; Rd in
Gaii&gt;OIIS or c:alt 74!Hl45-

·r
'

~&amp;

~a-

1985

2311

pull

1

.

~~...22~!:!2:!l..., 'jiB

I.M!snxx

. __ _ _~_..

'L

~

4I4

•••••,

'1111-.ne C81~t!r, . """''·
thing works, good cond.

ow Nghway,

5faW.,lll'l,lr;r.,lllr.,.-

1,000 Miles, Auto., Air. V6,s.I,MDrW.2•••

$f0,999

SfB!J0°'• ·SJ2,999

80,000 ml, 5

. new tiles,
1• Trallots
R\1 Servioo a1 Carmichael
7.a-.3825
56300. 441-7307

Foe S.w&lt;:

•••••tory

•
20(M. Ford A8nger 4 Or,4x4,
1
Iliad&lt; LinDJaine &amp;II,
yr
oil-road Tramer pkg
1300 lbs. S800. Cell JR $8995.00. 2002
lsuzu
7.4().256.8180 or coli 304·
...,....
Sport2 dr.,aulo,SOII 1op,
~
751 ~
$6995.00.
1999 Chevy ' 1.,~-iiiiiiiliiiiiiiiciiiiiliiiio.l
----:---~ r.-5 IPd 4&gt;&lt;4,$4495.00.

Old.

i' . . .__

IUIO,K~

a,.
•
.,.,
......

2007 ,.,.. 2006

behind

13500. 740-742·1900
Chrome,
Fully
loaded, - - - - - - bUy • · 14'X50' all Salling $13,500, won1 last 88 Winnebago Motor horna,
·mobllfi home.rea- long! (740)441-7201 or 2311, loaded, sleeps 4, 18

IIONIIJ!y prilled, 304-882· (740)446-0350

•

tMl, · - .,_
$90,000. Selling due lo
health reasona. Call 74044&amp;-6748 or 446-7529

1800 for"""" inlo.

"-'""i

-c

..

&amp;liver, auiD,AIC, pwlpt, C/0, 4 yoiiiS. Completely self·
slidlng,..rgtus, - ·paok· , inct. air/hea1, T.V.,

---:::-:::---:::-::-:2004 fJMC Sierra, Ext. Cab,
mute, Call !N!l- EJUlellan1 Condl11on with
ZIOSfor information.
ll!mole lllar1, BlnlJmdy wilh

._,to

cover.

1999 Dodge Ram ""' C1b EaJje 1raller, Only 12 ooun;
4x4 1500 series white over on •unft, hu been ltored b

age, ate, Quad cab w/4 dr.
,rebu!H Iitie. 99,916 odual
$1199.00 end up. HuiT)I white mi, great running. 5.2 V-8
eng with J1Rl011inls. Only
lhoy last
IIBklng $8900. See truok at
John

custom

' - -- - - - 2002 Welloraft bOat, 26' with

-12

,J im'l Farm 'Equipment Inc.
2 150
Eaatem
Ave,
Gallipolio, Ohio, 740·446ffT77. 4, 5, 6 ' and 7' SPT.
Flnillhing mowers lllarling a1

:1 KRS,

1$7250.00. 446-1759

-!"""-~--...,

..

IT
ttG
UnCOi dlioi 111:1 Hfetime guar~
-roy.Clhlo.
antee. Local references fur(740)992-3490.
niahed. Estobliahed 1975.
~ t..-&gt;Tractor3yrs ~=:-=:-:--:-=::­ Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446condllion 16.5 95 ClMC 314 ton 4)&lt;4 2500, 0870, .Rogers Basement .
HP, 42", 6 opeed, cover V-8, high mites. runs good, WaiBqlrOOfing.
includad 740-iJ88.0147
' $2,500 (740)992-o730
Reg'd 8McA&lt; Al1gt.- bulla 14- R - -

26 mon. old $1100.·$1300. IIbov!!

2 B1oc1&lt;s

McDonatds,

••sa •

old,--

BULLETIN BOARD
~-1011

~..o

or tolliree a1

The Family of David Jay Woolcill'idge

1-1!77·373-1011 .

. THANK.lml

'
Warned: Front De&amp;k Clol1&lt;,
must be 00111&gt;uter 111ef81e
and irtendly. Ous1omer
Service £KP9rlenoe pre1etTed but not mandatory.
Apply in pe'""" at the
Gai!JlOiio Holiday Inn Front
De&amp;k. Absoluloly NO .phone

'

The Family ofChtwlie Chi/gren would
like to thank the !M.ff at Hol~r Senior
Care Center&lt;Jnd Pat Fisco ,CNPfarall
the loving car'e and •upporr provided rwt
only to Charlie bUI to his family as well .

callo.

c.ntorn.nu
Ohio Volley Home Health,
Inc. hiring STNA, C~A .
Home Health Aides arid

'Personal Care Aid8s. Full
Time and Per Diem posi:
1ion&amp; · availabl~;~ . Acoepting

applications for RN anc
LPN~. Apply a1 1480
. ~aobon Pike, GallipoJU;,
phOne 441-1393 for Skilled
Ol!loe or apply at 1456
Jld&lt;son Pille, phone 441 ·

8263 for Passport/Prhmte
Core Office. Compe&lt;IIM!

......-

.

1v11get1 and indud·
ing heatth Jnsurance and

;

~ll.lfMIAI
Thel'amily of
Jim Ki.slds would lik~
to thcmt t've,-yont' for .
the carrls.food,
donations. prayers
&amp; H&lt;Jrd.&lt; of
encouragement
during our recent
~

loss.

1 hal'e Jeamed from experience that you
can teach sldlls but )VJU &lt;L'Ilnnot infuse
caring, it comes from the hearr.

the Joss &lt;!&gt;f our loved one; .
CC. Caldwell Trucking, Boo Evans

Truclcing. Foster Trucking
and Triangles 4- Club.
Also, as opecial thanks to all who helped
with the benefit dinner and donations to
the Children's fund .

We will miss you
so much!
Willi all OUT .

love,
Kim, David Jr.,

'

~

~merrrbered

'
''

'

contributions during our time of mourning

Thank you for ·making hi•last day.! so
relliarkabk and for the genuine Ull'ing
care -that you put into every aspect of his
care whik he wasm Holzer Senior Care!

Your kindMss K&gt;il/
always b. .

'

woold like to thank the following people
and organizations for their help and

..__..

Nick, Clrris,

C#uisiiM
(Chuckie),
&amp; Milc:ey

Atteatioa disloaded workers,
jOO ~en aad employers!
One-stop .r mploymmt aota:s
committed to the~ .
assistance
ol'bothjob
Sft!ken and local employers ·

WORK
OPPORTlJNIT\' .

'16.863 Acres, F......,c Buiklinz Sill: or ·
Huatm Plradioe in Mei!;S County.

R&lt;!daeed

CENTER
, ....,.f'rlM]
7:60IUIJ 104:36 plll
(7461 #6-3212

$79,000
Great F1111ily
Home
112 Union
Avenue

Pomeroy, Ohio

Conlaet Shirley Mash

For Man: lnfQ!Jillllion
l-740-591-1657

I

LAWRENCE
co~

WORKFORfE
DEVEWPMENT
RESOURCE CENTER
MIHtdGy - FrUitzy
W:OO 1U1J 10 #:JO JNif
(7461 SJJ.JUO .

Mined~

Wife- Deb.
Children - Josh, Nick,
·Amber. Dakota,
Cheyenne &amp;: Crrf'
Grandchildt'fn
Mother-in-law - &amp;tty ·
. Spt'!Cial F,-iend-- Mardf'

CHANNEL
··MARKER
CONDOS .

0WULSit.-0W . . . . . . Ut.
W llllforftdaa:s •1111dP.c.
304-llJ.S44t Or JM.m-51'15

Tenns ·citsb Or Check WilD. MUll Have
Of Credit Unless Known to AIJ(:Iiort Ol•~
Announcements Made Day Of Sale
Over Wrioen Marerial.

PLEASANT VALLEY
HOME HEALTH &amp;
HOSPICE

UU LCI !Uf§. In Athens, exn·,from Rt. 50132 onto East State
~.tum east go less1hanllaH a·mile, tum north ontoA\101'1
Place, go haH a mile on tum right onto PleasantviewOrive' -watch
I
·for signs.
condition (check photos on our web site), Westpoint Rocket amaH
child's wagon, 2-die oast model cars (1gs9 cadillac Eldc)lddo &amp;
1957 Corvette), ornate oval lamp table, omate loot stool, organ
stool w/glass ball feet, complete set of pink depression dinnerware
(&amp;e1Vice for4) , 2·irnn beds (1-double/1-single), iron baby bed,
Vtetoriari parlor cf'1air &amp; settee, ~ rocker, Duncan Phyfle drop
leal dining table, 6-Hacp back chairs (2-captain's chairs), ornate
Ingram sheH clock,
· ,,
"
'

.
7 year old Cap Cod on I 0 secluded
acres. 3400 plus sq. ft. 2 full 2 half
baths. 2 to 4 bedrooms, large 2 to 3
car detached garage.
24x24 shop. Just 15 minutes form
town, 5 minutes from hospital
•
and new high school.
Too much to list. A must see at

$215,000
Call (740) 441-9265

'S; Vety
nice ·cf1eny dining table w/4 chairs, China cabinet, Cooctec npooary
style drop leal dining ·table w/4 chaics, rocking chair; Steams &amp;
Foslerllide-a•bed sofa, lforalloveeeet, flotalsofa &amp; n.c&amp;i•IQ
loveseat, end table. Ia~. Sylvania console TV, Magnavox 19" TV,
~anasonic 13" TV wNCR, -innwll unit. 2·1arge P a speakers, round game table, single bed oomplete, d.- al
ma-rs, 2-vanlty dreasers, some bedding, I8Y8t1ll bocU oei119S, 4dr. filing cabinet, ollice chair; computer desk, •edwood deck
furniture (never been outside), porch chairs, round patio table,
flower boKes (1-wrougllt iron &amp; 1-wooden), aet o1 n&lt;·traya, Hoover
s..aeper'*"&lt;&lt;ie Track Wale Fh machine, few !land tools, n other
mi&amp;Oellaneous items,
TEl 15 : Cash or check w/positive I.D. No Credit Cards. Checks
over $1000 must have bank aujhorization Of funds avalable. All
sales are final. Food will be ava-. Not l:ll8pOil8lble for 1o1111 or
accidents.

KCHS Alumni wiN be held

Tennis Les8ons
Private/Group
All ages
All ab@ies
Call Joan Sojka
740-645-3362

Election of Officers
May 19th
7:30pm

Mercerville/Hannan Trace Alumni

KCHS
3rd Annual Alumni Reunion
Classes of 1958-1989
May 24th 8 pm - 1 am
Moose Lodge
Into 446-3488 or 675-4831

call Becky Meaige at
740-446-3194 by May 2oth.

Homegrown Strawberries,
asparagus &amp;.mubart&gt; at
McKean Farm on
Centenary Rd. , Gallipolis
446·9442

'

Due to .inclement weather
conditions in Florida,
the transportation of the
buHerf1ies has been ·
postponed.

serves victims of domestic
violence call 446-6752 0r

We have reschedUled the
Rekiase &amp; ~ration ,for
· · Thursday, May 29
at Noon in the PVH front
Clrcutar Driveway. The public
Ia cordially lnv~edl

"Spring Alng" ai Mason Bowling Lanes
· ·Bowling at $1.00 a gamell
FrH stioeal Hot d0Q!12/S1, Mod Pop 50e
Sat May 17 5 pm lo 2 am
Sun., May 18 2 pm to 2 ai'n
304-773·5300
Brlng yo~~r family &amp; hM tunl l

Serenity House
1-800-942-95n

Caring Pet
Cremations .
GVC
740-446-3745

For mor1 lnfotmatlon piHM
c:atl, (304) 675-6100. •

Wf're Moving!
Wolfe's Auto Repair
Is re-locating to

OWNER:"'' . . 6 ...._.H. Than....,
SHAIIROCK AUC liON SERriCE
AUCTIONEERS: Jahn Plllllek .,._.. ~..
Keny . . ..ut•• ...,.. . . . King
Apprellllce Au clot I • ll!llallord
LloenMd lllondedln Ohio - Ma :1M of Ohio A NfllllllklaMIIIIII

American Legion Post 27

reseJVations to ·
Kyger Creek Alumni.
P.O. Box350
Cheshire, Ohio 45620 or

Butterfly Release &amp;
Celebration

ANTIQUEs &amp; COt.1.EC11BLES: 7-hand made quilts in excellent

Tennis Anyone???

person. Send

446-2206 Mon thru Fri.
or leave message

EVENING AUCTION
27 Pleasantview Dr., Athens, OH
thursday, May 22, 4:00 p.m.

"The Annual meeting of the

at the River Valley HS on May 24,
2008. Scicial hour is at 5:30 .pm '
and dinner at 6:30., $15.00 per

North MyJtle Beach ·
Sleeps :S, fully furnished,
2 row ocean view.
Openings from May thru Sept.

HOU$ettoyJ fUAfRSI.I!iS &amp;piqn MEOUfll

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Price Ralaad $S9,900

............. ~ s.IIJ '

DEADLINE 2:00P.M. FRI.

.lick Parsoa
Auction Co. #66

USED FUR!I!ITURE STORE
Moved to Below Holiday Inn
· In Kanauga. Ohio
Open· Wed- Thurs-Fri-Sat

805 Raccoon Rd.
oft SA 7 South Gallipolis

Stop in and Save

. 740-446·1588
for more information

740446-4782

•

PH: 7411-ft2..gtoOI'...,.tH122

J

- --

We Pay Cash for Scrap Gold
(Chains,
Class
Rings,
Wedding Bands, etc) and U.S.
Silver and Gold Coins.
Over 30 Years

May 24, 2008 .
Hannan Trace Gym .
Doors Open 4:30pm
Dinner 6:30 pm
$1 8.00 per person
ReseJVations,
Call
,.

BUSH'S BAIT &amp;
TACKLE

(740) 256-6051 or (740) 446·7379

Rt. 7 &amp; 218
NOW OPEN

-

Hillbilly Hog Roast

44

May24
Gallipolis Shrine Club
Dinner 6to 8
8-12 Entertainment

Sassy Scissors
May Manicure Special

$3.00 off

Bub Williams
Open to Members &amp; Guests
See Shriner for tickets

~

with this coupon
Please call fer ~
appointment

O'Dell True Value Lumber
Your NEW STIHL i=ull Lin~
Dealer!

740-441-1880

Trtmmera Starting at $138.95

Rio Grande Catering by

61 VI"- St. 446-1276

•a~tl"

Milling_, 111J alldlr dar
For all of your oattr1ng nMdJ

BASKET BINGO
May 18th
VFW Post 4464

7~5-58110

211 N. Colitgl A.,., RIO Clrandl, OM.

3rd Avt. GaHipotiJ

00011 Open • 2 pm
Gamet 0 3pm
20 games S20

2 Special Games
Door Prizea

Xtreme Cheemastics
I

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NEED CASH?

•

Expe~ence

ACQUISITIONS
151 2nd Ave.
Gallipolis, OH

740-446-2842

Courtside
Bar &amp; Grill
presents
"Blue Z:
Friday, May 23
10 pm • 2 am

�Page~ .
Son Millay, May t8, 2008
.I
.I

BYDEMFc&amp;u

.

eredwoodonberocky~t-

·

wasb from an ~rodiog
slope.
• Treescaping or land. scaping witb trees. "That
depends largely upon their
sizes, . but you
.c rraJe
some intcreSiiog shapes
with ~ tRies you bav~
growing in your yard,"
Shimim said.
• Labyrinths, pathways
and geudy curved ~
beds. "Evea smalllrllils can
aeare tbc .illusioo of spllli:
or ~ potential for disoovel)' liiOOIIII ~ next bend,"
Shimizu said.

·

• Every home has enough
space .for some dream. building - an out-of-theway 1pOl for relaxing after
~ bcctic day's wort., a
guiet comer . where your
iniJ)d is he to drift, a site
too distant to bear tbe
doorbell's chime.
With some thoughtful
landscaping, rhose oot-of- ·
lhe-way spots can eJ~~eiEe
as meditation gardens, ·
· ~t garilens, healing gar- .
dells or Japanese rock gardens. All are created to
raise consciousness or
redullC stress.
. ~Just . as there are many
forms of mcditalion, people
bave a variety of needs from
a medi•ation garden." said
JlfJCOie Kistler:, an artist and

environmental

' I

i

M~tation

~the breeze-drivell rustling

icare clatter of bamboo.
Warc:c ~from a foonWn or splashing from a
waterfall. Muted foliage
worb.belter dian a distracting bold. .along witb lhe
seent of blooms or llabs
that have been crushed

·--

.

A garden wilh running water is ~ her! in lhis undated
photo at Longwood. Galdens"'in Kennett Squant, Pa.
Ronning water is generally a standard fixture in any medItation garden. whether it be a stream, pond, fountain or a
waterfall. The sound iS soolhing and the sbJ!uary SBMIS
as a focus.

and 1)131)1ically.

"These should be healing

aiJd ·relaxing gaRiens. Low
maioteJiance. NOt large. Not
andctfoot.
·
places where you have to
"[ · often see dJrec: key work."
said
Osamu
elements in gardens for Shimizu, a Japanese_gan:len
liCtlection and meditation: designer from Glen Echo,
water, lush green plants Md, who created a, rooftop
and oomfortable seating," meditation ganien at Mount
Kistler said.
Holyoke College in South
Moving water masks dis-. Hadley, Mass., and several
landtractions like tbe noise of Japanese-inspired
traffic. Plants provide scapes at the Lewis Ginter
in
shade, visual interest and Botanical Garden
pxygen. Natural lighting . Richmond; Va. ·
abJo is an important ingmli"11 would be oioe to have
in 111e ~ mix. .
diem SIIJ]OUIIded by hedges
. ~ Cultinlillc the minillllllist or we&amp; 10 they•« il:ol.....,
look .is plus for .I ll)' medi- . fmm e\'ery•lii•.g It also
lation ganlen, .a rtistically would be llJI)C ito have areas

a

,,._

with tbc proper plant ~lee­
.
lion: Shimirn suggests everc
Colo!ful tuljps are in blassrun 6n the lawn a1 the
greens in wintec and perenStatehouse in MotJtpelier. VI. in this 2006 file photo.
nial plants lhat ~ .in
T$ make a gl8al c:enteljNece whether they are
succession. And tbey can be
bought from a florist or picked from the garden.
· enjoyed night and day witb
propa ligbting - lights
aimed at .trees or fountains
can be dramatic
Even city-dwellers can
create meditation gardens
BY .JoHN RABY
that overoome the racket
.ASSOCIAlED PRESS ·WRITER
made by
b~licopt~rs,
silens, jackhammers and
· Witb Mothec's Day jtist around the COJDei', lllOIDS
SRet ttaffic.
evecywbere are ~t .t o get bombarded witb flowers:
"Thm tbings inside oot.
·
·
How long they ~ 1S up to mom.
Install or tab: advantage of
For ~s. carnatiomi and mixed arrangements, the
a large wiDdow and enjoy · key is a clean vase, cool water and stems that are cut
your (Qleditation} garden
before adding to the vase. ·
.
from indoors," be ' said.
Thlips, however, may 1W.'led someema attention. A few
"You also cOuld place an
simple~will extend the life of these spring gems:
intercom near a fountain to
•
· . tulips should have flower beads that
bear $he splashj!l£ warer or
are closed
sbow only a bit of their oolor. .
somewhere ~ you
• Bef9re putting IUlips in a vase, the sterns should be
could pick up the sounds of
cut with a sbarp lrnife to allaw them the
plant~ blowiq ill tbe wind.
amoont of water absolplion. Fill a clean vase with
lbe mteroom an act as
water. ~move any fofulge that will be under water.
your own oalur.al wind
• Thlips take on a life of their own in ·an arrangemenl
cllime."
Despite being cut, their stems oontinuc to grow and
But beware the temptathey lean towaro light and 1Jend over time. So today's
tion to oontinuc addiO£ on.
arrangement may be tomorrow''!~ dcH!ver.
"It's human nature to add
• CiJt tulips don't react weD to heat. Don't allow the
room to get hot and keep them out of~ sunlighl
more and - · If you have
.a pond. then you add an aer• Like other store-boogbt flowers, tulips usually come
ator. Then you add some
with nutritional packets that are added to the water. If
fi~. Then you have to add
not. Shelly Kolean. ~er of Nelis' Dutcb Vtllage, a
filters," Shimizu said.
popular tulip grower in the Lake Michigan shoreline
"People ·c an lose what
community of Holland, Mich., suggests adding 1 teathey're seeking in a meditaspoon of sugar and a penny 10 the .bottom of the vase.
tion gmden by ma!cing il too
The sugar adds nutritlon and ibe penny's alloys procomplicated,· . too mucb · vides minerals, she says.

that you can focus on using
some scillplure, pottery or
·water."
·
Many of the elements
designed into meditation
gardens are borrowed from
Zen or temple· ganlens.
Examples include:
• Rocks, gravel and sand
that can be~ with a
rake to symbolize the look
of .rippling water, islands
rising from the sea, moontains · peeking above the
clouds or anything your
im~narion

migbl s~st.

. • atural pieces reinforcing the took of the immediate , surrouadings. That
miglrt COilsist of some
goaded mnnants of wcalb-

w~"

L-----------------------------~

~

..

: Less

is . more

w~n

lien; where the minil!llllist
approach can be func:tional
as well a5 aesthetically
. pleasing.. These ~ ;a,
meant for dreammg, not for
tending.
&lt;lloose low•maintenance
· plaats - for the most part
pcmmials -, with features
dial appeal to the ~ses..'
Here are some selections
tbal have prowen papular in
j.1ream gardens. Maiiy were
!nsPimJ by the temple gardens of Japan.
· • lapane~ maple ttees.
More than 400 different cuitivars have been developed.
making this a great, all-purpose, · all-season bee
'Wbether it's used as a center·
~ or in groups. Japanese
'!I'Pks are not the bal:diest
Of trees but usually do weD
ih USDA zones 4 through 8.

seanlal tiUe. See ..-. a1

EAsTERN, So
.

GRADUATIONS HElD

.

Japanese maples are prized
for their fall colors, but they
also oulpelfonn many olher
sbowy ilrnamental.s with
tl;leir springtime radiance.
Tbeir .iipCCtaCular · leaves
oontinuc "flowaing" long
after fruit trees have
dropped their blossoms.
.• lipanese or Siberian iris.
The~ are simple to grow.
They do best m acid soils
and require full sun for at
least half the day. Both varieties like water, which.
. makes them· good choices
for planting . alongside
ponds or near streams. The
Siberians are Iwdy from
Zones 3- W; Japanese iris is
partial to Zones 4 through 9.
• Apricot and daeny ttees
do double duty by flowering
and providing fruit. They
also can be pruned or sb"P"'!'
to add more interest, summer or winter. Zones 6-9.
• Water fixtures. Few
sounds are mpre lulling than

OBITUARIES
' Page AS

: •Unda K Patterson, 60

.• MeMn Pillow, 81

I

• Okla W()6(f 100, 78

with her friends just prior to
Sunday's commencement exercises at Eastern High SChooL Also pictured
are, Katie Hayman, Megan Broderick, Morgan Werry and Kelsey HoHer.

Eastern graduates 56 in
Sunday.commencement
BREEDOMYOAILYSENTINELCOM

INSIDE

. ,.J
'

.'

• I .

..!
''

:. NalionallnfaAI
.lmnulization

w-..

••
:i
I

..

SeeJI-.eAl
• If there's no desite,
:what do you do?

SeeJI-.eA2
. I,

• Chila ljlolding 3
:daYs Of moumilg
Jor quake victims.

;See l'lgeA3
.:. Local Briefs.

SeeJ:IaieA5

WEATHER

TUPPERS PLAINS - "It is time
for this generation to step up to the ·
plate and be the leaders ~s nation
needs u~ to bee"
;)
Kyle Rawson, OO-v)l!ed1ctorian of
the Eastern High ~I Class of
2008 encouraged his classmates to
follow their passions and dreams,
and to make a change in the world
"Eveu with our diversity as a
class, there is one thing that sets this
class apart from all past classes, and
,that is tbe leadership potential of
eacb and every indivtdual from one
to fifty siJC'
Rawson,
co-valedictorians
Andrew Bissell and Morgan Werry,
and !lalutatorian Ryan Davis Graduates file onto the stage at
·addressed their fellow graduates at Eastern High School to the familiar
the school's 51st annual commence- strains of Elgar's "Pomp and
Circumstance.•
ment exercises Sunday.
Bissell is the son of lbdd and
Diana Bissell of Long Bottom, means. This graduation is the beginRaws0111he son of Andy and Connie ning of the hopes and dreams we've
Rawson of Tuppers . Plains, and planned for every day,"
Werry the daughter of Raymond and
"Like it or not, today is the day
Weny of Chester.
we start a new chapter in our Jives,"
is the daughter of Dan and Werry said. "I hope your dreams
Rb10D1:la Davis .()f Pomeroy. In her take · you . to the comers of your
reiDlll'ks, she recal,led her kinder- · smil~s. to the highest of your hopes.
garten graduation in 1996.
to the windows of your opportuni"Our caps were made of paper ties, and the. most special places
and yam. Now, if someone asks me . your heart has ever known. "
if I lim ready to graduate, I will
"1 do not like to say gooc!bye, so
panse and hestiate for a second Jet's say 'see you later,"' Werry told
because a part of me wa,nts to move her classmates. "A farewell is neeon to something new and different, essary before you can meet again.
but the other half wants to stay here Meeting again, after moments or a
will all my friends," Davis said.
"This is not the end by any
PI xe see Eastem. AS

W~esviUe

.

·';"'."·

,· .

'

.· (ioftt~l i·i8~ ~51Dile
· cue~~hua: ,· · ;. '•

•

INDEX

..

;

af,.;.

,

·~IUi. .BliTIIII rJn haun tel '

. ' kJDII'Iiwrldl•ltl•;
• IWat 'Wilt diu.
' Afford t '1 lOW eDit. pricing.

(

~

our highty·trained staff,
a3n~·ieftt hours and wait time,
and $:59 offi~ visits,~ can't .

..... w11U1

afford not to visit Ohio QuidCare
for your medical needs.
·~

'

We 1M patients age 12 mol!ld)j Mil older, NO NAitC011C MIN MEDICATION
WIU.IE PII!SCitiiED OR IUPI' ON SITE. ft I 1 lilit -~for 8
fullilt olh•s we tNIIIn Mlliwi WI ..wilL

Southern seniors walk into future
BY

BEnt

SERGENT

BSEAGENTO MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

RACINE -It's said tomorrow
often comes too soon and for
senior$ at Southern High School,
tomorrow, and the rest of their lives,
arrived after last night's graduation
ceremony complete with goodbyes,
The Class of 2008 entered the
packed Charles · W:. Hayman
Gymnasium to a processional tune
perf.otrned by the Southern Higli
School Band under the direction of
Chad Dodson. Courtney Lee
Ginther, vice-president of the Class
of 2008 then gave the welcome.
Senior Kaylyn Renee Spradling
gave the invocation while RyM
Keith Olapman, president of the
Southern Student Council, led the
Pledge of Allegiance.
The band then performed "Into
the Storm" by Robert W. Smith, a
song which introduced
the
Salutatorian addresses by Ryan
Keith Chapman, son of CT and
Tammy Chapman of Syracuse, and
Kaylyn Renee Spradling, daughter
of Jerry and Charmele Spradlin!l of
Racme. In addition to thankmg
family, friends, teachers and faculty, ·
both the salutatorian and valedictory addresses had distinct messages
for the Class of 2008.
Co-Salutatorian Ryan Keith ·
Chapman spoke about the history
· of .his class . by contrasting local
milestones with world events
which occurre~ in the last I 8 years:
Begmmng m t989, the year he and
most of his classmates were born.
he touched upon notable, historic
events ranging from the San
Francisco Earthquake, to the death
of Dr. Seuss, to the terrorist attacks
of 9/11 and how the world had

set up a sheltered workshop so
that residents could be paid for
the arts and crafts they made.
'
WILKESVILLE- Jane Ann
When the facility began dis·
Buins of Wilkesville is qne of
charging residents, Mrs. Burns
12 exceptional seniors who will
worked with the PYA as they
be inducted into. the Ohio
bought land and built four
Senior . Citizens Hall of Fame
homes for senior residents With
. ' .·~· ~ ..
during a ceremony at · the ,
no place to 'go 'after discharge. :
Z ·SI!CnONS -1.2 PAGES
Capitol Theat:j:e in Columbus, 2
She formed a group of volun:
to 4 p.m. Thl,li'Sday. .
teers to create the Wilton Civic
Annie's MailbOx
The recognition of achieve-,
Association. a · not-for-profit.
ment
of
the
12
·seniors
for
their
organization
. that built the
Calendars
dedication, wisdom and compasWilk.esville Community Center,
sion comes from the Ohio
Classifieds
Jane Ann Bums
which opened in I 993. She orgaDepartment of Aginjl. and mem·
nized an annual U.S. Cycling
.
.
Comics
bers of the Ohto General with · the
Retrred
Semor . Federation 72-mile bicycle race
Assembly. "This year 's class of Volunteer Program and the to raise funds for the center.
Editorials
honorees · includes teachers, Foste~ Grandparent Pr~gram,
Mrs. Bums currently serves as
activists and volunteers who and .d1fected the res1dents band president of the Area Agency on
Movies
have worked to improve their ~d chot~..She was mstrumental Aging, District 7 , Inc., and has
Obituaries
comniunities and the lives of m org_ant~mg two not-for-profit served in other offices and on
their neighbors. We salute their
.th~ Volunteer committees. She was the only
B Section commiunent to making a differ- orgamwt10ns;
Sports
Serv1ces Assoc1allon ~nd the Southeastern Ohio resident to be
ence in the lives of others," said · Parents Voluntf:(!r Assoetauo~.
tapped for induction in the Senior
Weather
Barbara E. Riley, ODA director.
!he. . Volunteer ·Services Citizens Hall of Fame this year.
Volunteering has been a way Assoctat1o~ ra1sed funds to pur·
Since 1977 more than 300 indi- ·
of life for Jane Ann Burns. c~ase Ch~1stmas presents and viduals have' been inducted into
. During her career
at the birthday ·gtfts for the 2,400 reS I' the Hall of Fame. Native-born
Developmental dents of the factllty. The Parents Ohioans or state residents for at
Gallipolis ·
Center, she ·was director of vol· Volunteer Assoc1at1on (PYA)
Please see Burns. AS
, unteer services. She worked .were parents of residents who
BY CHARLENE HoEFucH

~·

Belh 5ergentlphotos

The processional for the Class of 2008 at Southern High School began
here with students filing into the gym to the sight of flashing cameras and
the sound of tlie Southern High School Band.

woman tapped for Hall of Fame

HOEFLICHOMYDAILYSENTINELCOM

•

BrianJ.~

BY BRIAN J~ REED

• I

those made by moving .
water. Ponds, streams.
wilte!falls or f&lt;iuntains are
design standards for meditation gardens, often serving
as tbe focal P\)int. 1bcy also
attract . many species of
wildlife.
• Ferns and moss provide
lush green color from early
sJ?!:i:ng through the first few
killing frosts and beyond.
between
Moss placed
paving stones invites walkmg barefoot through the
garden. Ferns and moss do
6est when planted in areas
tending toward shade and
moisture. ·Hardiness varies
according to type but all are
safe to grow in Zones 5-8.
• Eve1greens add fourseason interest and serve as
efftcient sound baffles on ·
borders. Cedars and certain
old-world species of juniper
ttees are attractive choices,
suggesting the twists and
turns of Bonsai.

a laugh

Cassie Hauber, center, shares

I

creating a meditation.garden

4bigning a meditation gar-

.• Southern~ wil D-N

I

~- ·Simplicity is the standard when

•

SPORTS

gardens can

.Sugar, coin among suggestions
· for caring for cut tulips ·

e.

I

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

become year-mund relreatS

designer

where peup1e feel comfortlillie and safe will be a good
plalle to meditate." .
· A meditation ~n
ibould be sensory-ncb iicb in plants, trees · or
shmbs that are aromatic,
soothing to the ears and
lQJPea]ing to tbe eyes.
.
. -That would mean such
plming background soonds

Celtics eliminate
Cleveland, Bt

om

fmm Suttle. ..Any space

M omamental~!f~Ss, the del-

.

Southern FFA attends
convention, As

Creating.quiet: Make your own meditation garden
• fOR liE •S!JOCIATED ""~$$

/

{I

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of the graduating Class of
· at Southem High School p're·
pare to make that long walk into
the gymnasium to receive their
diplomas.
·
changed. More importantly, he
spoke about how his class had
changed; how they' d faced their
fears of a consolidated elementary
school the same year the
Columbine shootings occurred;
how patriotism across the nation
had a resurgence during his years at
Southern just as the district's athletic programs had surged forward,
persevering to banner seasons.
"We have a unique family sitting
on this stage and many of us have
persevered in different situations."
Chapman said before speaking of a
football injury his sophomore year
which temporarily sidelined him.

Please see Soldheril. AS

Memorial Day
service set for May 26
STAFF REPORT
NEWS OMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY- A parade through downtown
Pomeroy will kickoff the aDI!!lal Memorial ·
Pay observance of Dr~w , ',Vebster Post 39,
Americari Legion, Monpay; May 26, with a
program to foll()w on the parking lot stage.
The parade will form at I 0 a. lli . on the old
Pomeroy Junior High School lot, Easl M~in
Street and move out at I 0:30 for a trip
through town, up Butternut Avenue to Second
and down Linn to the stage area.
Howard Mullen is again this year organizer
of the pamde imd invites bands. walking
units, patriotic floats, horses. police, fire and
emergency units, and antiques vehicles to join
in the kickoff.
·
Mullen said that floats or groups with a mil·
itary theme or those honoring the Anned
Forces are especially welcome and needed in
this celebration in tribute to those who have
served and now serve in the military service.
He noted that no advance registration is
required but suggested that interested persons
or organizations or those with questions call
him at 992-3782.
.
Legionnaires and Auxiliary members will
participate ill-. the Memorial Day service at
the stage.

•

•·

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    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
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      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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        </elementTextContainer>
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    </elementContainer>
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      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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        </element>
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      <name>davis</name>
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      <name>shaw</name>
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    <tag tagId="7">
      <name>smith</name>
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</item>
